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Full leased wlr* aenrloe\niof Canada Press, Limited.\nI4IIIIH MIIIIIHI\nIfcto\nvol. 18\nKELSON, B. C\u201e SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1920\n.ME OF COLONIZATION\nAFOOT IN WEST; PLAN IS\njiillion and a Half Dollars Behind Enterprise; Scheme\nLaunched at Conference in Calgary; Would Place Good\nSettlers on Western Land, Initiate Campaigns to Obtain\n'Them and Supervise Welfare Work; Will Collect and\nSupply Information Regarding Land\n'\ni\nCALGARY, i April 2.\u2014A million and a \"half dollar colon-\nation-scheme, which seeks to place good settlers on western\nlands and assist them in getting prosperously located, was\naunched under the auspices of the Industrial Development\n|ssociation at a conference here today of prominent business\nyien of the west. Mayor Brown of Medicine Hat was chair-\nan. '.',.\u25a0\u25a0\nFour different department of the association will be\nestablished. The head office will carry oil. the policy of the\njtssociation under the direction of an advisory board, initiate\ni8d direct campaigns for obtaining settlers, supervise welfare\njyork throughout the west and supervise the different branches.\nTrbvincial offices will be established to supervise district of-\nces, bear general responsibility for the agricultural develop-\nient of  the provinces,  compile  de-^  .      '\n-jails   of   all   lands   for   sale   \\vlthin\\\nhe   provinces,   direct   lnterprovlncial  POLES  REJECT\n:olonization and generally supervise\npvelfare work,\nS Eastern Canada offices,' to be established in Toronto and St. John,\nwill   direct   lnterprovlncial   colonlza.\nSOVIET PROPOSAL\nSAY DELEGATES\nTO PEACE MEET\nEXTRAVAGANT^\nLONDON, April 2.\u2014Charges\nthai, the government hod indulged In reckless ' extravagance at\nthe peace .conference In 'Paris\nhave been made in connection\nwith its bill of \u00a3503,880 for llie\nexpenses of the British delegation. When the bUl was presented in the house recently,\nSir Alfred Mond, the first commissioner of works, was sharply\nquestioned as to whether his bill\nfor hotels hi Purls covered tlie\ncost of champagne, food and\ndances. He replied that his department was not responsible\nfor the payment of bills tor food\nniifl clothing for typists, dances\nor wines.\nMAY CALL OUT\nGeneral Strike Threatened\nas Protest Against Conviction of Labor Leaders\nWINNIPEG, April 12.\u2014Assembled\nin the' beard of trade convention\nhall today approximately 4000 persons protested against the continuation and detention In jail of the convicted    Winnipeg    strike      leaders.\njJVARSAW, April a.\u2014The- Polish\ngovernment has rejected a counter-.\nWon and supply information'regard- proposal by the Russian Soviet gov- ^Speakers Indicated that a Dominion,\ntag western lands and opportunities, eminent for an armistice along the wide agitation.for the release of the\nptotrlct offices will list, inspect and entire battle front during the pro- i men had begun and that, following\nvalue all lands, provide information pose,j' peace negotiations between the lead of the Montreal trade\ndescribing the resources of the dls- Poland an^ Sovlet Russla.\ntrlcts, locate settlers, report on the;. It waB ln thelr n0t6 rejDotlng lhe\nbrogress of the settlers investigate, armlstice ronosal that tha Poles (iI\n|reasons for settlers leaving the dis-\n[tricts, attempt to direct any set.\ntiers   leaving   the   district   to   other\nso  opposed  the holding of the\nference   In   Esthonia,   as   had   been\nIparts of western Canada so that no\nproposed     by     the    Bolshevik\nFREED FROM JAIL\nSettler should leave tho Dominion, answer *\u00b0 the acceptance your\n,and bear general responsibility for Paflera ** the Poles- who sweated\nthe  agricultural  development  o\u00a3  the Borteov as the seatfprnegotiationa.\ndistrict* * \\ \u20142 ^ f\n\u25a0It is  planned   to   raise   $500,000   a  WILHELM'S   COUSIN\nyear for three years from five different    sources.  .  Funds   for   'initial\nexpenses   will,   be   raised 'from   ten\nwesterners and ten easterners who BERLIN, April 2.\u2014Prince Joachim I vlcted were passed unanimously.\n\u25a0Will have their names inscribed in AIbrecht of Prussia, cousin of form * Telegrams were read \u25a0 frtirn' repre-\nthg original minute jbookof the Emp_5ror \"W-illiam, -who was.' re-V-aentative eastern and, western neuters\nflounders.\" Then fhe ihariUSfadftiret*.^e^tly arreated and iniprisoncd in th^pledglhg the- support,.botft~ifl*ora-Tfr\n\u25a0wholesalers, banks, loan and Insur- Moabit prlson) charged with having and financially of various libor bodies\n '\"\"     \"'^    ,\"1\"\"1-   \",\"1  fomented   an  attack  on. members- of Following  aro  the  resolutfoils  pass^\nunions, a ballot may be taken on a\ngeneral strike, W. H. Hoop, one of\nthe speakers, declared that labor\nwould be solid in the next provincial election and would make a jje-'\ntennlned attempt to elect eight out\nof ten of the members to the legislature as a means to secure the release  of  the convicted  men.\nResolutions condemning the attitude of the government toward the\ntrial\" of the seven accused .of seditious conspiracy and pledging support to any legitimate . ieffort to\nsecure   the   realease   of   tnose ' con\nfeiiiOe companies, the railways and\nHudson Bay company, and the \u2022 western   Canadian   retailers   will   be   re-\nthe  French   commission  in   the  Hin-.ed\ning   room   of   the  Hotel   Adlon,   was!\n\"Be it resolved that  th|s'body in\n&%\u00a3 worl'40 fUnda f\u00b0r \u00b0arry\" ~d   from   Prison W*5   and  noting assembled reaffirm our eon\nidg on the work.         '     \u25a0     .    __    ,\u201e*,,,,;,\u201e-    t\u201e    _..M.    ,\u201e  fldence in the men now .fti jail am\n*A committee representing the three haa    been    tortiidden   to    reside    in\nprovinces will visit different eastern Berlin.\n, manufacturers   to    obtain   subserlp-   ^^ ^(jjgj\nThe advisory   hoard  elected  were;\nAlberta\u2014Mayor   Brown,     Medicine\nHat; \u2014James   Ramsay,   M.L.A.   and\n\\. General McDonald.\n*    Manitoba\u2014N.\nTORONTO,        April\nT.   McMillan,' L.   T,' Drury  today expressed annoyanoe  at I\nfldence In the men now .in jail and\npledge ourselves to use every legitimate means to have thnro WOTsed;\nand .. V\n\"Resolved that this meeting go on\nSPFNPF\"4   fHARf-F 'record as expressing the utmost con-\n_ir_.wi.i_ o v.n-w.'uc tempt for the aotlon of the g0V\u00a3,rn.\n.    I ment and the method of conducting\n2.\u2014Premier ,h0 pl.oaccutlon of these men.\"'\nI'Walls, A. H. McKenzie.\nSaskatchewan\u2014J. P. Cairns, Sas-\nJkatoon; J. H. Kern, Moose Jaw, and\nI J, \u2022__. Mclnnls, Regina.\n!\nRepresentative Goes to Interest England in Big\nIndustrial Exhibition\nOTTAWA, April 2\u2014Lieut.-Col. ,.G.\nL,. McDonnell, who Is proceeding to\nEngland in the service of the Brit-\nffiish Columbia and Alberta Industrial'\ni,association Jias been interviewing^\nya-ldus members of vthe government.\nCol.' McDonnell is going to England\nwith \u00bb view of interesting British\nmanufacturers and others in the\nlarge_ industrial convention to be\nheld \"in western Canada in the eaily\npart of June at Lethbridge, Calgary,\nEdmonton, Vancouver- and the west\ngenerally. The meetings at each\nof these places will synchronize\nwith the to,ur?df the Canadian Manufacturers association. Tho overseas\ndepartment of trade\" and commerce\nhas been requested by SHf George\nFoster to give every possible aid td\nCol. McDonnell's mission.\nFRANCE AFTER\nv GERMAN SHIPS\nPARIS, April Y 2\u2014The merchant\nmarine, committee of the chamber\ntoday listened, to a recitation by\nPaul Gignon, under secretary for\ntransport and merchant marine, Of\nthe results of the, negotiations which\nhave? been in progress In London\nconcerning 200,000 tons of former\nGerman shipping which the committee jflshes France to obtain.\nGroat'. Britain desires France to\npajf for the shipping in pounds sterling but the committee considers that\nthe cost of the vessels should be\ndebted against France's reparation\naccount, as it Is claimed the German fleet, was surrendered to diminish Germany's debt\nJUDGE TO HEAR\nSTOCKYARDS DISPUTE\n,C-I_C-_GO,  April  2.\u2014Federal Judge\nS-HBUel   Altshuler   today   agreed   to\nhejlar    the :  wage    dispute    between\n;   eitookyards   representatives   and   the\n}!   companies,'    The   hearing   will   open\nMonday.\nBUILDING TRADES\nI'\na statement credited to Rev. Ben I-I\nSpence, secretary of the Ontario\nbranch of the Doirilnion alliance, that\nthe government had changed its\nattitude on the question of the advisability of removing tho exemption o\u00a3 the Ontario Temperance act\nwhich permits the sales of native\nwines and that this apparently had\nbeen brought about by represu.ila-\ntions made to the government by\nprominent and influential parties\nwho .advised that the sale of native\nwines should not be prohibited. 'The\ngovernment    has    not    changed    Its\nattitude,\" said the premier. \"We have ,        ,   ,,       ,ti-       *\nhad  no influential representations  of of a general strike  of the  diffeiont\nany sort. [trades comprisin gthe building trades\nGeneral Strike of Union\nTKreatejtts; Carpenters Re-\nject Sliding Wage Scale\nOTTAWA,   April   2.\u2014The   prospect\nBEGIN LARGEST\ncouncil to -occur May 1 unless In the\nmeantime an amicable\" settlement is\n.- . .- ,,\u201e-__ made with all the trades by the \u00abm-\nJAP BATTLESHIP P'o^rs, drew nearer last night when\nit became known- that tho district\ncarpenters had positively decided to\nreject a sliding wage scale, and the\ni   TQKIO,  April  2.\u2014Construction   has\nbeen started on the battleship   Tosa, ,.,,.,\nVhich   will-bo   the   largest   of   its:asbestos workers' had decided to re-\nKind in the. Japanese navy    She will \u2122l\"  \"\u2122  in  thelr  demand   \u00a3or   ,5\nbe 700 feet long and will carry ten\n16 inch guns. . It is expected she\nwill be launched In 1922.\nAVERS SHIPPING\n\u25a0    BOARD A FAILURE\nLOS ANGELES, April 2.\u2014The United States shipping -, board was- a\nfailure, H. M. Robinson, former\nmember of if, said in a speech 'here\nlntst night. \"The effort of the government to ' operate 200, merchant\nships was a perfect absurdity,\" he\ndeclared. . -\nSOVIET NEWSPAPER\nEDITOR ARRESTED\nPARIS, April 2.\u2014Emil Giraud, editor of the newspaper \"\"The Soviet\"\nWaB arrested today charged with\nplotting against the safety of the\nstate, in inciting to' murder and\npillage and urging soldiers to disobedience, f\nJAPS BUY GERMAN\nPHOSPHATE COMPANY\nBERLIN, April 2.-\u2014A Japanese firm\nhas acquired the* German Pacific\nPhosphate company, according to the\nTageblatt\nBANDITS HOLD UP\nTRAIN IN IRELAND\nDUBLIN, March 2.-^-Flfty armed\nmen today held, up a train at Killon-\nan, near Limerick, and escaped with;\n\u00a33000. Thempney was to havo been\nused to pay off workmen-\ncents an hour.\nIn addition to the announcement\nof the declBlon of the two above-\nmentioned'trades, it was further announced that a general meeting of\nthe building trades council had been\ncalled for Monday night, at which\nit is said the entire question of the\nnew agreements offered the employers will bo fully discussed and\na definite line of action framed.\nThe carpenters have decided to remain firm in their demand for 85\ncents an hour\nThe demands. of the bricklayers,\nstonemasons and marble setters, -who\nIn them\" new agreement ask for $1\nan hour, as against 75 cents an hour\nwhich they received .under the old\nscale, have, It was said practically\nbeen conceded by the employing\nbuilders. About 350 of these workers\nare affected by the now. scale.\nMERCURY IS SIX\nBELOW IN CALGARY\nCALGARY,' April 2.\u2014With the\nthermometer registering six below\nzero this morning, Calgary experienced the coldest Good Friday in\nmany years.. Tonight the mercury\nis hovering around the zero mark,\nFo.otball games 'scheduled for today\nwere- cancelled.\nAVIATORS CROSS\nSAHARA DESERT\nPARIS, AUrll 2.-rThe French\naviatbrs h^vii arrived, at Dakarn,\nAfrica after a flight acrofis the\nSahara desert, a, distance' of 3500\nmiles. They made -several stops_ on\nthe \"Way.      i\t\nBRITISH EMBASSY IN WASHINGTON IS\nPICKETED; BY WOMEN FAVORABLE TO\nIRISH REPUBLIC; HOLD DEMONSTRATIONS\nWASHINGTON; ApriJ 2.\u2014Efforts of the state department today to haW the Washington police authorities break\nup the picketing oi the British embassy by women favorable\nto an Irish republic failed. The police said that in the light\nof the decision of the federal courts in the case of the\nsuffragists who picketed the White House two years ago\nthey were powerless to act unless there was disorder.\n' The women were picketing this morning, a dozen of\nthem marching ufi; and down the sidewalk' in front of the\nembassy displaying banners criticizing the British government. This fact was brought to the attention of the state\ndepartment and officials iromediatsly conferred with the\nDistrict of Columbia commissioners and police authorities.\nIt was said that the British embassy had made no complaint.\nThe women undertook a demonstration' at tbe capitol\nyesterday,but were.|urned away by the police. Before going\nthey staged an intpromptu demonstration on Pennsylvania\nopposite the White, House.\nSecretary of ..State Colby, in a statement today said that\nas soon as iull'information regarding the nature of the\ndemonstration had been received the government would\ntake effective means to perform its duty of hospitable courtesy to the British ;embassy and to preserve its own dignity\nagainst conduct which tends in the least degree to a breach\nof that courtesy to the representative of a friendly power.\nT\nIs NO IICITI OF\nDREED EASTER REBELLION\nFIVE THOUSAND\nOF BUILDING\nTRADES STRIKE\nROCHESTER, N.Y., April 2.\u2014\nThree thousand laborers and\nabout two thousand electricians,\nste am fitters, plumbers and allied\nbuilding trades workers are on\nstrike today following refusal of\nthe contractors association to\ngrant their, demands^ for increased wayes. The kuifeuipg, 4m R?-s\nChester  is seriously, hampered.   -\nGRANITE CUTTERS OUT\n\"CONCORD, N.H., April 2.\u2014\nTwo hundred and fifty granite\ncutters quit work here yesterday,\npending action by local unions,\non ah agreement reached in Boston by which granite cutters\nwould be paid $1 an hour for\nan eight hour day beginning\nSept.  12.\nFEED PROBLEM   '\nLOOKS SERIOUS\nEDMONTON, April 2.~In the\nlegislature Thursday Hon. Duncun\nMarshall, minister of agriculture,\nga've a message respecting the fea-i\nsituation in the province. \"We are\nfacing a serious situation. The government haa obtained practically ajl\nthe hay It can buy. in the -east.\nNearly 800 cars of hay are on order\nln Ontario and these are coming\nwest at the rate of about 25 cars\ndaily, but we are being deluged with\norders for feed from between 700 and\nplaces in the province right now\nand we simply cannot supply the\nfeed that Is required. Farmers and\nothers in need oC hay must tike\nwhat steps they can to get this\nfeed without depending on the government. We have done everything\npossible, but owing to the unprecedented conditions we simply \"an-\nnot provide relief for alt at the present time.\"\nWHEAT BOARD IS\nAPPEALED TO\nTORONTO, April '2.\u2014Douglas\nCampbell, a prominent miller of this\ncity, replying to the request made\nby a deputation of miller.} to Hon!\nGeorge Poster, acting;., promler, Ottawa, Wednesday, for an increase of\n45 cents a barrel in flour, safti that\nthe millers could not prorlace under\nthe present order of the Canada\nwheat board and that this accounted\nfor the lack of mill'feed, about which,\ndairymen and farmers were complaining. \"We have had this appeal\nbefore the Canada wheat board for\nthe, past, three months, but .h.tve not\nbeen given any satisfa'ction. Our'\naction was similar to an appeal to\na higher court\u2014tho government,', he'\nsaid.\nWheat fn. store In all elevatorfi\ntotalled on March 26,82,275,677 bushela\nas compared with 31,637,984 bushels\non March 19. There was 17,339,807\nbushels oats In store as compared\nwith 17,466,796 bushels\" the previous\nWeek\nWORLD-WIDE\nSTRIKE PLANNED\nGENEVA, April, 2.\u2014Preparations\nfor a world-wide 24 hour strike on\nMay 1 are being made in Switzerland by Sos^aliBts, Communists and\nother radical - elements. Foreign\nSfgitators are active in \u25a0 the mover\nment. It is virtually certain'-'tho\nSwiss will join in the movement\nconsidered, which 'was launched by\nNikolai Lenine, Bolshevik premier of\nRussia, as an experiment of the\nsolidarity - of   the   world* proletariat.\nDUBLIN,    April    2.\u2014Freeman's\nJournal, in an  article  today, advances   the     belief     that     Field\nMarshal   Viscount   French    is    to\nresign his post as lord lieutenant-\nGeneral   of   Ireland   and   that   he\nwilt   .be    succeeded    by    Decies.\nThe     newspaper    says    Viscount\nFrench  probably will go to Canada as governor general.\nSir Hamar Greenwood,   under secretary   for   home   affairs   has   been\nappointed   chief   secretary   for   Ireland,   according   to   an   official   nn-\n-wu^eipfiilt^ this v   afternoon.      Sir\n\u25a0Hamar  \u25a0'Sticceeds    Ian    MacPherson,\nwho, resigned   yesterday.\nFrederick KelIeawa;>o secretary to\nthe minister of munitions, will succeed Sir' Hamar in the overseas\ntrade department. Mr. MacPheraon\nhas been appointed minister of pensions.\nSituation Normal\nThe situation in Dublin today was\nnormal. There was not the slightest sign of any Easter rising, rum\nors concerning tho possibility of\nwhich recently became so general as\nto provoke questions on the subject\nin parliament. The resignation nf\nJames' Ian MacPherson as chief\nsecretary for Ireland did not cause\na  ripple   of excitement here.\nIrishmen regard Field Marshal Vis\ncount   French-   as   solely   responsible\nfor    the    direction    of    affairs,    and\nseem   not   to   be   interested   in   air.\nMac.Pherson's  successor.\nSome fears are entertained that\nthere may be trouble in Cork whsn\nthe result of the inquest into the\ndeath of Lord Mayor MacCurtain\nis announced. The inquest is still\nproceeding.\nThe lord mayor of Dublin has received a letter from Premier Lloyd\nGeorge dated March 30 alluding to\nthe impossibility of securing evidence in the ordinary way calculated\nto lead to the arrest and conviction\nof murderers in the formidable campaign of terrorism now menacing\nIreland. The letter says this fact\nplaces the authorities under great\ndifficulty because they do not desire to arrest the. guiltless, 'oh the\nother had it says the first itiuty\nof the ' executive is to leave no\nstone unturned to lay hands on\nthose terrorizing society and it\nmay be really necessary to advocate in some degree the normal life\nof tbe community.\nThe premier expressed the belief\nthat the terrorist campaign is\nprompted largely by a,desire to prevent the settlement of \u25a0 the Irish\nquestion .\u00b0y reason and good will,\nwhich he believes the only means\nfor attaining unity and conciliation.\nHe declares that the government\nwill not tje deflected from what it\nbelieves the only course Consistent\nwith reason and common sense, by a\n\"^\u25a0iithloss . and cruel campaign of\nAssassination,\" but says he is anxious\nto make ? as easy as' possible the\nWtsk of those ^endeavoring to carry\non the administration 'of the country on reasonable lines, and if\nthere are any tmeans by which moderate men can be helped or encouraged to withstand or .^oppose tho\n\u25a0present campaign of Intimidation so\nas'to bring, nearer a settlement of\nthe Irish question \"I will gladly cooperate In bringing them into effect.\"\nGOVERNMENT; IS! DISARM\nGeneral Strike Called Off And Work Will Be Resumed\nToday; Government Troops Disregard Order and\nContinue to Advance; Are Out of Control; Have Captured Hamborn; Red Troops Are Handing Over Arms\nAccording to Agreement\nDUSSELDORF, April 2.\u2014(Associated Press)\u2014Control by\nthe workmen ceased theoretically at noon today throughout the\nRuhr jjistrict under the peace terms ratified last night at\nEssen. Today being Good Friday, religious ceremonies were\nobserved. The turning over of their arms to the police in the\nvarious cities is expected to be a gradual process.-' The general\nstrike was called off this morning and resumption of work\nwill take place tomorrow. Street cars, however, were operating\nin most places today. \u201e,\u25a0,..._       ,\nSoldiers of the workmen's army in the Ruhr district must\nmake a delivery of their arms to local authorities before April\n10 under the agreement. They will not be considered rebels if\nfighting ceases throughout the district by noon today.\nThe commander of the Communist troops before Wesel\n . gave   pledge   to   the   conference   for\nthe  -trict ohaervance  of  the  agree-\nYUKON WANTS\nPLACER   MINING\nLAWS AMENDED\nDAWSON, T. T., April 12 (Canadian Press).\u2014The Yukon Development league, composed of miners\nand merchants, will ask the Dominion government to amend, the\nplacer mining laws for the Yukon\nterritory to permit of extensive prospecting of low grade placer creeks\nand valleys for the pupose of inducing gold dedglng . companies to\nextend their operations.\nSeveral large dredges, representing investments of millions ot dollars, have worked out their original\nground and may be shipped out of\nthe country if low grade placers\ncannot be secured.\nPICKED UP FIRST\n-GOLD NUGGET; DIES\nGOLD IS FOUND\nNEAR 0K0T0KS\nCALGARY, April 2.\u2014Discovery of\ngold similar to that made, a Alsask,\nSask., last week was made late today nine miles north., of OKotnks,\nabout 80 miles south of Calgary, and\nmany' claims have been .staked.- Excitement, prevails in the' district\nand prospective gold miners were\nbusy today filing claims.'\nDAWSON, N.Y., April 2 (Canadian\nPress).\u2014Kate, the noted'Taglish Indian woman, who was a member of\nGeorge Carmack's party, which made\nthe startling Klondyke gold strike\non Bonanza creek, August 17, 1896fc\nis dead at Carcross from influenza.\nShe picked up the first gold nugget\nfound on Bonanza, creek. All the\nother members of the discovery party are now dead, with the exception\nof Carmack, who Is living in Seattle,\nWash.\nGALE BELIEVES IN\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nQUEBEC, April 2 (Canadian\nPress).\u2014Mayor R. H. Gale of Vancouver has arrived in tho city to\nspend Easter with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Gale of this city.\nX dinner will be tendered him' Saturday evening by a number of his\nQuebec friends.\n\u25a0 In an interview here today, he\nsaid: \"Our labor leaders are very\nsensible and practical.\" He said\nthat business at the coast was booming and that there was a wave of\nprosperity sweeping over British Columbia.\n^ Referring to the development oi!\nthe province, Mayor Gale expressed\nconfidence that British Culumlnft'\nwill occupy a leading position, if\nnot' the ttrst place in confederation,\nwithin the next few years.\nNEVERFELT BETTER\nBORDEN DECLARES\nASHVILLE, N.C., April 2.\u2014Sir\nRobert Borden, premier of Canada,\nand Lady Borden arrived here today for a month's rest. Sir Robert\nrecently returned : from London,\nwhere ho nccompanied Admiral\nJelllcoe on a trip for his health\nand said he felt better than in\nmany months,\nment. He declared he had a really\ngood army, but It la not continuing\nfighting because he lacked ammunition and asserted all looting, had been\nsuppressed, I will shoot with my\nown pistol, he said, any Communist\nsoldier   who   disobeys   the   order   to\nwithdraw and  disarm.\n*        \t\nGovernment Army Moves\nLONDON,  April  2.\u2014A dispatch   to\nthe    Dally    Mail    from    Dusseldorf,\ndated  Friday,   says:\nThe government troops, disregarding the Munster arrangement of\nyesterday, are advancing rapidly.\nThey have been taken back by Red\ntroops from the Wesel southward\nand have captured Hamborn. They\nare expected here tomorrow. The\nRed troops are handing in their\narms all over the Ruhr district according to  agreement. ,'\nThe Essen Council has telephoned\nBerlin concerning the advance of the\ntroops. The governmen^replied that\nthe troops, were out oif'Jpand. Two\n\u25a0coat\u25a0'tnineSUarQ; Te^orte.d; already t&\nhavo   been   destroyed; .\u00ab\u25a0._   * '\nSend Troops\nBERLIN, April 2. \u2014 (Associated\nPress)\u2014The German government announced in a communication to the\npress that it has resolved to dispatch ,\ntroops to the Ruhr region as sooij\nas the entente consents. This decision was reached after a three-\nhour cabinet meeting today. The\nstatement declared this action was\ninevitable in view of the unchecked\nlawlessness there.\nDANISH STRIKE\nORDERLY ONE\nCOPENHAGEN,- April 2.\u2014The organizers of the strike aro preaching\nstrong policy of. resistance. .Nevertheless, they are emphasizing upon\ntheir followers the importance of\nan  orderly   conduct  of  the,  strike.\nLast night the streets and public\nplaces were filled with crowds and\nat midnight thousands of persons\ncheered Danish and Swedish speakers who demanded, the establishment\nof a republic. There were no untoward inpidents.\nThe. bakers are working ,20 hours\ndally in an attempt to keep the\nbread   supply   going.\nFARES INCREASE;\nPUBLIC WALKS\nPARIS, April 2.\u2014The increased\nfares which went into effect today\nin the subway and on the tramways\nand auto-busses resulted in the\ncrowding of the streets this morning by the pedestrians on their way\nto business. All classes were represented among the walkers and rrood\nhumor prevailed everywhere.\nLABOR WOULD\nPUT DOLLAR BACK\nVANCOUVER, April 1.\u2014ijabor\nhere, as represented by the International Trades 'and \u25a0 Labor Council,\nlast night joined hands wi^tt\u00abHhe\nArmy and Nayy Veterans nsfiQCiiVtion\nin boycotting foreign tnaSfe goods\nfrom countries where the Canadian\ndollar is not accepted, at par. A-resolution endorsing the veterans'\nstand was unanimously-- passed. The\ndelegates recommended that . only\ngoods manufactured in Canada by\nwhite workers be used.\nPRINCE GOES TO\nSUNNY SOUTHLAND\nPANAMA, April 2.\u2014The Prince of\nWales, . aboard the . British battle\ncruiser Renown sailed today for\nSan Diego, Cal., after his visit to\nthe\" canal zone.\nIt developed that the, cruiser suffered .damage to her starboard pro-\npellor in the Culebra Cut on Tuesday, where it was .necessary to\nblast obstructions .In the channel\ncaused '\"by the recent ea*rthelide, before the Renown could-pass through.\nLIQUOR HOUSES\nGRANTED GRACE\nTORONTO;' April 2;\u2014The Unuor\nexport warehouses in Ontario, whose\ncertificates expired automatically and\nsitnultaneously on starch SI, jnay\ncontinue to do business a little while\nlonger. These warehouses aro licensed by the Dominion government\nbut certificates aB. to the ;B'Uito.bility\nof the\u201epremises ore .Issued by the\nprovincial government-:'-1 It was stated in the legislature. Tuesday night\nthat with tho expiration of these\ncertificates none would'.be< reissued\nand no action inconsistent With that\nstatement will be takenv1'^\nThe' chairman of the \u00a9ntario license bqard, J. D. Fla,ve!_e> has been\ngiven full discretion In the matter\nartd it is understood that the\".vendors\nwill be given* a reasonable time to\ndispose of their sto'eks.\nNO DELAY ON\nPEACE RESOLUTION\nWASHINGTON, April 2.\u2014Prompt\nadoption by the senate of the house\nresolution, declaring . the state of\nwar with; Germany at an -end is, expected by Republican leaders. They\nhad a conference today, to. QIbcubs\nfuture legislation at.this Session' and\nSenator Lodge said later that he did\nnot anticipate any great delay ift'\nthe senate.    '*\n ^rage 8\nTHE: DA-L^i NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1920\njLqqdin^ Motels of the West\n\".?i Where the Travelling Public May Obtain. Superior Accommodation\n-ffl=\nTHE\nHotel\nSERVICE   UNEXCELLED\nA  La Carte Table  D'Hoto\nSPEC'IAL   SUNDAY   DINNER   51.00\nX\nINC,btWPARABLY tHfeXNESTTKA ROOM IN B.C.\npp^n.  Daily' 10>.m. to Widniflht - Mimic and   Dancing\nThe Latest Sundaes, Ice Cold Drinks and  Ifcei\n<, '   Afternoon\" Tek'^S *p.m-' *V Sp.'nii), 25c    \u25a0\u25a0'\nHead quarters  r\u00bbor All Travelling   Men, .Joining  Men. and Tourittt\nEUROPEAN   PLAN       '. \u2014* !  i W    *   ROOMS*, $1.b6  UP   \"\nUIJWK\u2014 L.    A.\n\u2022 r? W*.\nOamphi'll, Kossland;\nJohn1 W. Shiuv. Toronto: John Speer,\nWV U Lfltten, Vancouver; ^Hs* Philip,\nKclgeWodd-: D.W\\ McDonald, 0. ftVDUfc\nkee. Ros-<lanrt: Mrs. 1>. U. Scott, Kaslo;\nMr. and Mrs. I.esllo .jpossmlth. Marguerite Kill. Calgary; P. W. Mr-en.\nVancouver; 12. H. Brookes, Red peer;\nTHos. A. B. Ferris, Vancouver; R. H;\nBar Met t, Vancouver: J. Klwlier, Hall,\nMabel Marrow. .Trail; Grace l.ouBrneed,\nTrail; F, A. Large. OiYinha. Neb.; J.\nit. Mntherson, ,1.. Armstrong. *. .1. \u00ab-';m*niS\nRa'lfour; Mcs. W'm,' Mills, pernio; Fred\nP.l IieaTtl, ' Wa.ri.nGr; IA. B, Harrison,\nralgory;-Seiri Bemlo.* Manchester; -A .\u25a0\nM.  .pat-is,   Vancou -       '    '\nrd;   Mw,\n-asl;.;\nVaflftrt-v*\nMrs. \u2022 R;   A.   Rnglanfl,   K In- ton\n!. Hradluy, Milestone,\nM. \\VIlson. KOKlhrn,\n.Sank.: Donald. Hope, BalEour; ,i, A.\nLeienrtocker, Spokane: lfarvv and Mrs.\n\u25a0VVriglu, Trail; J, li, Craig*, Calgary;\nJ no, ..T, ftihns. Vancouver: A- B,, Atac-\ndonald, Cranhrook; A. PaHiinee, W. U\nMcDoiipald, New Denver; Ri A. 'Paulson'\/ c. 11. Paulson, Spokane; R. fl.\nApcii, l.etlihrldge.; H. Jft MJnton, Ferule; t_rv. N. M. .Lynn, ('ninbror.h; Mrs.\nY-Oiing': J. H, t.nrdnn. Toronto; T. 'P.\nMnslH, Montreal; Airs, 1_. ivowefv, Victoria; T. C. Black, . Toronto; C. C,\nI Brown, * (.rand Forks; ..Irs. .!,,!! Fra-\nhwir.   Greenwood:   C.   A.   Browne,   Pentle-\nmcmm\n#*-eX\nm\nPre\nNelson'-  Leading  Hotel,\t\nFor Travellers and tourists\nSample   Rooms  all   ground   floor  with   natural   linht..   Moat   co.-n-\nfortabr) furnished'rotunda'in the interior..\nLarge   Drawing   Room   for   Ladies\nEuropean  Rate $1.50\nAmerican   Plan  $3.50\nSTRATHCONA\u2014Wm. A.\" Bead oriel wife:\"f'npi. and Mrs. Crompton, Crev\n1011; Frank WattH and wife. Bpanli Watm, .Ir and wife, Retsina; Billy Lord.\nYrnr; A. Hlgsinhothnm and wife, city: ... K. Gorrith Spokane; J.'J Snel-\nbih'lri, Porto Rico: \u25a0_!. O. Clay. Vancouver; 10. U. PurnW .1. M..Ajwt-sT. M\nDallas, J. R. Finley,' Cranlirool:: W. C. Dobbyn. Cart* Lester: K Hm4\u00bb:SnO:\nkane; X W. Orr, Spokane; Jlarearet ..M.ala,    Revelstolie:    M.    K.    Hutchcrsoii,\nRpqltn...  ,,\nGlade:   Mr..'and   Mrs.   Fritz   othoff. Mrs.   Frip.\nMrs.'.).   M.   Smith,   Ralph   H.   .1.   TnrllnK,;. \\ jotorln.\nYmtr:    -Air.   and\nEurnpenn and. American Plan\n-Steam Heat In Every Room\nA. LA POINTS, Proprietor.\nQUEENS \u2014 Hdrr'y Mtll-er, * Salmo;\nJohn MeLeod,'Greenwood; I. M. Blnkei\nSlocan Park; K. .!. .l_lversldp;e, Crn*vv-\nforfl.* Bey; Mra. DuMont, Bridenllle;\n... %. tttchler. Midway; O. T. Matthew, Sfllmo; Miss (\"J-. Hansen, Mrs. T.\nHult'en,  Fred   Wilkinson,   amnion.\nGrand Central Hotel\n\" i_ 4. 'iptacK&pii, prop.\nOpposite Post Office\nBoom and Board, $40 per Month\nEuropean and American plan. '\nBOOMS   50c  VP\nGRAND OrcNTRAU\u2014W. i:cyna\\u],\nOntario;, H, W. Reed, Spokane; Fred\nHanson, Moosfi Jaw; lOd Holm, Moose\n,faTrV;*A. Bremnor, A. Krlsiianson, -Wm.\nWricson, Salmo; A. C, Mcliennan, RobJ,\n\u00bb:. Swing, Sandoit; D. Parks, T'rocidr:\n.las. Brown, W. Grant, Kootenay Landing; Mrs.' Clias, Sampson, K'aslo; Niot^\nRohan, K. C  King,  Trail. -  \u2022\nfmmTt\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS,   MAUvEiTEi   ProppletreM.\na; Homs \u00bbr tha tvTirld ait ti.BO a\nfa\u00bbj;.    iPl--t--lfi_a Dining Room..'\n. Comfortable Roorae. i '\nXI5 Vernon St.' :He\u00bbr Pott Office\n'\"\u2014ii\u00a3* \u00a3 -_ii \u25a0*\nKOOTENAT\u2014Wm. t:amphall. Btroft'\nBank; F. Matty, Pork Hiding; M. Mts-\ncovich, Arrow .fork; W. Method, <Pafr-\nhurri; G. W. Hu_hesi Kamloops; 0\nFore. elt.t; F. J. Steams. WesrhridRfi\n.loHh D. iWsterhDle; Trail.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nM.  J.  MADDEN,  I'roiirlctrciaa\nffl'EAM BfEA,TED\nCor. Baker and Ward St\u00bb., Nelson\nNew Grand Hotel\n6lij VERNON ST. 'EAST   ..\nf-infoitahl. Rooms, Hot and Cold\nWater.     Dining-  Room   ln\nConnection.\nRate-   $1   and   Dp\nWhere to Spend a. Holiday\nAppropriate Canadian Service Type; \"Up. and Down\nBaker Street\" to be Given\nuThe Nelson Cadet Corps has just\nrecplvnd 50 uniforms. Th\u00abso are of\nkhalii with brass nutVons nnd are\nmodeled Inrgely nn the type of the\nCanadian   serviro   uniform. \u25a0 '\nOwing to the prevolance pf iH-\nness, the corps ot late has been\nforcpning training and drills. \u2022 but\nthese> will ho 'lOKUTnod al an early\ndate. \u2022 \u25a0\nTho (.oncer! which the corps will\ngive' shortly'will take thf form of!'a\nrevue, ami will he entitled \"The\nMlniaturt* Dumbells in 'Up and' Down\nBaker Street.1-'\" and will consist of\nimpersonations, biirlf.si.ueK on local\nel...nu'_er.i, 'dances  and   songs.\nSPANISH ROYALTY\nOpE^ HOLY WEEK\nMADRID. April I'. -Ax is. pfUft of\nthe    Holy   \"Week    ceremonies   nt    the\nRoyal P-sUnee yestcrdny, Iving Alfonso washed the I'oet of 12 blind\nmen   WIvlle   the   queen   performed   ihe\n-same   office   for   12   beggar   women.\nThey were then presented with b'g\nbaskets  of   fond.\nSTEA-TtERAip\nON CUBAN COAST\n\\'i;w YORK. April -.\u2014Tho American steamship Eastern Ivlnff. New\nYork to Onban ports, is afire near\nRtigua De l.a tjraiide on '.he Ctthan\ncbti-t, aeenrdintr lo wireless mesa-\nttges. \u25a0\t\nWHERE THE FISHIM- IS GOOD\n0OTIET HOTEL\n\u25a0i~\\ PROCTOR\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Golf,\n'   ' Tennis   Courts\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied...   Grocery\nStore' irt Connection\nW. A. WARD, Prop,\nRates Reasonable\" Good Meals\nCONSTIPATION\nOR COSTIVENESS\nConstipation, although generally described as a disease, can never exist unless aomo of the organs are\nderanged, which is generally found\nto  be  the  liver'. \u00bb:*.\nThere is nothing more productive\nof general ill health than constipation of the' bowels, and a regular\naction is absolutely essential, to general health. One of the most common, gainful and troublesome ' troubles caused by constipation is piles*\nand unless the bowels are kept open\nby the use of a good laxative such\nas Mllburn's Laxa-Liver Pills, the\nwhole system will be poisoned and\nmany different eompltfcationa of dia-\n;eftaes arise, so if you would be well,\nkeep  your bowels  regular.\nMr. A. Rodcr, Hastings St. E.,\nVancouver, B. C, writes:\u2014\"I desire\nto express my thanks for what Mil-\nbum's Laxa-Liver Pills have done\nTor me. -I had beep suffqHng .from\nconstipation for two years, and also had a bad cough and headaches,\nf tried all sorts of cures and remedies, but got no relief until i was\nadvised to try your pills. I got\ngreat relief after the first, few!\ndoses.\".\nGet Mllburn's Laxa-Liver Pllla\nWhen you ask for them or send\n15c and they will be sent by return\nof mail by The TV \u25a0 Mil burn Co,,\nLimited,  Toronto,  Ont.\nSprings Hotel\nAitnow LA-Ei-8, b.'o;\nCndor entirely  new . management.\nRenowned  throughout the- west\nfor the wa.'ter'_ wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urlnlc Conditions, Metallic Poisoning.\n\u25a0 Special; Massage Givon.'\nGt'a^d scenery 'around the estate\nln a. most beautiful climate.   '\nLargo hot water swimming pools\nEnglish ch<jf*fe_id etatt.\n- American Wan,  *3 arid up  par\nJOWi. '-1. I'W wcclt.\nH. A. ukffkk, Manager.\nESS'tilr   A   VACATION   AT   THE\nHotel Grand\nj.    , NAl-TOP\nf;  \u00a9anli Hughes \u25a0& Son, Stmtn.\n.. Oil  tllft  lie.-tiitil'iil   Arrow   1-ikes,\nSplendid flslilntr and boating. Nice\nrooms, gooff meals, pleasant surrounding-, ' '\u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0- \u25a0'       \u25a0\u25a0 ' \u25a0   \u25a0\nMADDEN\u2014W. MoOonnlti, ICaalo;..--*;\nH. P. Tvan, Balmo;. t>. VV. .richa-d,\nBoulder:  K.  BlnnK, Salmo; .1.  1'.  Duffy,\n.vndway.\nt^iPT H0JEL\nF.  NILSON,  Prop.\nFurnished   Rooms   by   Day,\nW^eiik 'or Mbntn\nBAKER   STREET\nTKBMaNT-iB.n\u00bbi(\u00abrie. Cliarles LI-\n.hlck, G. Bnatf\\iant S. Johnson, Fred\nJohnson, jVortoi R-Ico; (J, Martins,\nBoulder Creokr N. \u00bb'i. Oofmiah. Cascade;\nSarh Kastlnuk, T_. Wnvrow, Brt Meers,\nflandon.       ' \u25a0   ,\nOccidental Hotel\nRun hy Canadians) All While Help.\nRoom and board, per month $40\ni*eek' *l0; day 91.50. Metila BOc,\nserrcd family style. Ucds Bttc. All\nyon can Cat and a good, clean lied\nto sleep ln. Give lis n'U'lal. Ante\nmeete all- trains and  boats.\n^'^'Ispf'jtfift-t. 'p-iopHet*..\n\"Hotel Menus\nWe print Hotel Menus, eltker\nwith complete menus or with\nJio different headings and blank\napaces for typing ln the bill of\nfare.\nThe Daily Nfws Job\nDepartment\nThe Horn* of Good Printing\nNelton, B. C.\nTlbe Standard Caffl\n^ B^pr Street, Nelson, B. C.   ,\n,       ' OCTSS' MI AND NIGHT  .\n11\u00bb to Mva, Speolal  rmrt-h,   Mo\nPhone 181\nSocial and Personal\nJ. Fisher of Hall Is registered at the\nHume.   ... \u25a0 _ -\nW. Lprd, of Tmir, is registered at the\nStrathcohai ,,-,,.\nC. C. Brown, of Grand Forlts, Is reg-\niRtred. nt.*>the, fjlume,\nH. iB. 'Minion of Fernie arrived In\nthe city last night.\nFred P. Leard, of Wardner, arrived\nin  the pity Inst, evening.\nA.  Vallaee,  of  NeW Denvei*,   was  a'\nty. visitor yesterday.   \/\nH. F. DIU made a flvlng trip >*es-\nrorday  to .rfopk's Siding.\nHarry Miller, of the Nugffet mine,\nin  refflstered at  the Queens.\nMrs. O.' L. Scott of Kaslo is visiting\nMrs.  Ernest Smith of Fairvlew.\nA. B. Macdon'aldi the Cranbrook bar-\nister,   arrived  In   the  city   last, niKftt.\nj. Armstrong of Balfour sanatorium\n\"was .imongst city nr-rtvnlp last -?venr\nnt*. \u25a0    \u25a0 \u2022 i.\nw. T. t'hoatV. returned last night\nfrom ii  Jioltrlay, jftunt \u25a0 throuph the S\\\\0:\nCajit. ami -Mrs,.'.Crompton, of Creston,\nwre amongst hist, night's arrivals Jn\n\u2022\u00ab\u2014 city\":     .\n\/.   .1.   M.ile\u00ab   has  ohr-iigefl   his   resl-\ne    I'rotn-    3ii     MHI     street     to    -ind\nHouston streot.\nMayor 11. G. Henderson, of Fernie,\nwho siient Thm-ariay , in Nelson, left\n'yesterday .for  the  Crow. '\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Grossrhith returned to the city yesterday after, their\n\u2022oupert   ongagohient  at   Trnil.\nMi'.s. D. >_. Wilson and son, who have\nspent _1(C winter with Mrs.- Bradley\nleft   yesterday   for   SasltatoQn,\nMr. and Mrs. G. P. Bradley and fam-\n.,   who  have  spent   the   winter  here,\nleft  for their home ot  Milestone, Susie,\non   Friday.\nP. ,1. Sheran left vesterday for\nSeattle, where he will take. in the\nInternational mining, convention, which\nwill .open  there neju, Monday.\nW. C. pohbyn, the school master of\nCamp Lister, arrived In tb city, vesterday to spend the Easter vacation\nwith his sister, Mrs. H. y?. Shore, of\nthe Strathcona. hotel.'   ,\nMiss Amy NutteK of the staff of\nthe Nelson Cafe, who has been at\nBeyelptpke for,, the past six weeks\nnursing, her father, who was seriouslv\nill,, returned  to the city last  night,\nMiss Maud .Sirnons entertained\nabout 20 guests at an informal party\nat, her home at 203 Silica street on\nThursday.* The evening was spent In\nmusic, games and dancing and about\nmidnight rljtinty refreshments were\nserved.\nFINAL VETERANS.'\nmUtCONCERT\nA remarkably attractive program\nhas. been arranged for tlie G.W.V.A.\nconcert, at the Opera house on .Sunday, this one being the final concert\nof the season.\nSeveral artists Well know to Nelson audiences will appear and will\ninclude: Miss Ivy Holt (Mrs, Neville\nCooper), of Trail, a prima donna of\nQueen's hall, London, who- will rentier several vocal select lone; Miss\n.ftiyllis WhiteAVifnd, who will give\npopular violifri selections, and J.- P.\nPitner who will also give vocal\n\u2022selections- Several selections wil.\nhe given by the G.W.V.A. band.\n' The -O.W.V.A.'iofUcials are anxious\ntho raise a stifficient amount, of\nmoney at this* last coiicerl to. bring\nthe.* total: receipts up to the point,\nwhere a. scholarship for some soldier's\norphan may be endowed. The sum\ndesired is,, in the neighborhood of\n$60. The t6tal receipts from , all\nconcerts will be made known at the\nconpert  on  Sunday.\n4 Co., 1%\nPhone 60.\nDEADLOCK ON\nLONGSHOREMEN\nLast Mtote Suggestions For Easier\nSILK GLOVES\nSltk HOSE, in Black or Colors\nSILK UNDERWEAR, fast In\nSILK  BLOBES  Very Fashionable\nSILK SKIRTS, New Models^ Poplin aand Taffeta\nAN EASTER HAT\u2014A host to choose from   '\nA NEW STYLE DRESS-Modelled on youthful lines\nA SUlf\u2014Reflecting the Best Spring Styles,\nA SMART SPRING, COAT\nALL DRESS ACCESSORIES ^^P9:7:\n^'AMAR'ABO^CAPE : * ?c:\"v ^\nDtalfiTY NECKWEAR\nCorrect Fitting CORSETS\u2014Designed for the new models in outer garments\nA New Style UMBRELLA, Etc., Etc.\nChech Up Your List of Needs and Come Right Down Today\nSMTlX_! & WEIR\n       LA-PIES'' WEAR. SPECIALISTS  '\nDrdp Freezone on a touchy\ncorn, then lift that corn\noff with fingers\nDoesn't hitrt a bit! iDrop a little\nFreezone onlan aching corn, instantly\nthat corn pwps. hurting, then you -lift\nIt right but. CTes, magic!   No humbug!\nA tiny botfle of Freezone costs but\na few cents nt any drug store, but is\nSufficient tojremove \"every hard corn,\nsoft corn, or corn hetween the toes,\nand' the calluses, without soreness or\nirritation.\nFreezone is the sensational discovery of a Cincinnati genius. It is wonderful.\nYour New\nSpring Shoes\n\\*-\nOur Stock was never more complete than\nnow. We enjoy showing you our shoes\nMEN'S SHOES LADIES' SHOES\nOur Men's Shoes for Spring\narc the best values we have\never offered. Come and see\nthem, ln mack or Tan, In\n.different lusls and toes\/   Prices\nNatty, stylish1 lasts that make\na pretty foo\u00a3 prettier. They\nadd appearance to your dress,\nand cotne in black, brown, grey\nand white, and other shades..\nPrices\n$7.00 to $15.0,0        $7,50 to $17.50\nMISSES' BOYS' and CHILDREN'S SHOES\nOur  Klines tor  tho  younger people are made  tu  stand  hard  wear,\nand ill  tin- same time they are neat and stylish,\nC ROMANO\n*    The Shoe Man\nX Want Ad. is both cheap and efficient Try it\nAVASHINC.TON, April 2.\u2014A conference of coastwise shipping interests nnd' longshoremen which convener! .nt the departt-mem * of labor\ntoday to attempt a settlement of\ntho slrikes at Atlantic and Gulf ports\ndissolved lato today wtthottt having\nreached an agreement.\nAssistant Secretary Post of the\nLabor department, said employees\nwere unwijllng \u00ab>\u25a0 recede from t^elr\ndemand- for an immediate' increase\nin wages and employers refused to\ngrant.' the increase .at- present \"he-\n.cause -hey arc already losing money.'\nAbout  20,000  men are on* srrikp.\nNelson News of the Day\nThe incorporation of the South Kootenay Farmers' Cooperative association,\nLtd., with headquarters at Fnmvnl\nis gazette\".\nFrom B. C. visitors in.\npayment of hotel\ncharges\nHotel\nBig Easter Monday .Dance at Eagle\nHall corpmencing. at 9 p.vn. Johnson's\nOrchestra will be; in attendance. Bring\nyour partners along ahd make it a big\nsuccess. There\" will' be a big table\nsupper at half tlttie. Tickets ?1.75 a\ncoi|ple. (7124)\nBuy a rose from the taggers on Sat.-\nurday and heln. the hospital. \/^Jl'll\n\u25a0urgently nefided. \u2022 (7163)\nBuy your Easier Lilies from Griit\nzolle's Greenhouses. Orders left al\nBean's Confectionery Store will receive\ncareful attention'. \u2022 .(7172)\nSuggestions\nJ. Niven will be in the market on\nSaturday with fre_h killed beef and\nmilk fed veal. (7184)\nC.P.B. Social, club will hold a whist,\ndrive and dance in \u25a0 Eagle Hall at 8\nn.m; Thursday, April s. Tickets can\n_e, obtained _rpny.,the executive., committee.    Admission 'by  ticket only.\n(7130).\nC.   P.   n.   Social   Club   Masquerade\nDance. Awll  2-fh. <xnx,i>\ni ' Mlsa Graco Brett will take puplla for\nballropm, classical, and bal)et, dancing\nat her home, 918 Silica street, or Phone\n_\u00ab\u00ab_.. . (X3X3)\n, .Mrs. Cooper, gold medallist, London,\nl-ngiartd, will sing twice at\" the Pres\nbyterian  clun'ch   Sumlny   eve,nin,ff.^\nis Sow ttli \"BAi:\nSOBTMENT  OV  ri.OWERB\nN   SALE   AT'  1\n1.0-w,    1IAKEB.    STB_|EI.\n\u25a0\"**'*$$\nSpecial  dihnei*' at1- ilie   Nelaon   Cafe\nRoster, Sunday ;from 5 to K p.m. (7193)\n- -Visit the Methodist Church ton^or\nrow. Hear the mitsie. See the decorations and n.joy the services, see the\nqhurch column..      - (,7186)\n. Remember the vy.C.T.U. sale of home\ncoolilug, doughnuts and fancy articjee\nat 621 Silica istreet today at, 2 o'clock,\nAfternoon  tea. (7109)\n\"'\u25a0\"\u25a0ihere  will  be'practice  of  St.  Saviour's choir, this eyanlOJT at 7.30. (7198)\n' In the eruption qt J768 Cotbp'avi. sent\ngshea ljo. MX&h\nHam Bacon Lard\nCreamery Butter\nQuality Unexcelled\nWhy Purchase American Goods When You Can Purchase\nCANADIAN PURE tOOD PRODUCTS\nHandled by All Leading Grocers and Butchers\nP. Burns & Co.\nCALG^p\nVANCOUVER\nEDMONTON\nmm\n______\n m&-WBE% PEWS,. SATURDAY.-VICJENING, APBIt..3, 102Q.\nSI\nS^JO:'\nMr. Winstead Says Recent]\nDevelopments Empasize\nthis Fact\nWriting of the persistence' of the\nore bodies of -the Slocan, and the\nSubstantial claims of tho district\nover anything yet proved . for' the\nPortland Canal district, W. R. Win-\nstead, of ^incton, the veteran Slocan-mining man, in a recent letter\nto F. A, Starkey, chairman of the\n. mining committee of the Nelson\nboard.1 of trade, saya:\n.In onr talk\u2014 motel Spokane lobby)\n\u2014recently as to ore going down $n\nSlocan   mines,   more   recent   develop- ,the   Arena,   Seattle,   .and   Will   there\nHE ClECTi\nIs Accompanied by Monster\nCartoon by Galena Pete\nWith Message From Mars\nOne of the ' finest ore collections\never assembled from ahe West Kootenay, consisting almost entirely of\nhand samples, will leave Nelson this\nmorning by the Great Northern for\nSeattle, in charge of Fred A. Star-\nkey, chairman of tho mining committee of the Nelson board of trade.\nIn addition to the collection as at\npresent made up, small lots of\nsamples from RIondel, Slocan City,\nand   the   Lardeau   will   go   direct  to\nOTTAWA, Apr! 2.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)Companlos incorporated in this\nweek's 'Issue of the Canada Gazette\nwill   include   the   following;\n,T< Coughlan & Sons, Ltd., ship-,\nbuilders,   Vancouver,   $2,000,000   .\nWilson, Patterson & Clifford, Ltd;,\nmerchants and manufacturers, dealers In pulpwood, Montreal, $1,000,000.\nUnited Farmers Guide, .Ltd., Winnipeg,  $\u00a350,000.\nBlack Star Line of Canada, Lt-1,\nMontreal,   $1,000,000.\nThe Winnipeg Livestock exchange,\nwhich' is to take over as a going\nconcern the Winnipeg Livestock exchange with its present, membership,\ndirectors and officers, together with\nIts duties, privileges, Its liabilities\nand assets, is also incorporated.\nThe operations of the corporation are\ncarried on without share capital and\nthe chief office of the exchange is\nat St.  Boniface,  Manitoba.\nmerits are* continually proving that\nour ttfres not only persist ln depth,\nbut had their own in values as weH.\nThe. trouble for a, lohg time, was\nthat our mine managers failed to\ngrasp the fact that t{ie zones o\u00a3\nenrichment In our fissures rake in\nthe   veins   at* very   decided   angles;\n\u25a0 ahd  therefore  the   place   to   look   fur\n. it- and find it at depth, is not\ndirectly by under the surface showing, but * whore the angle of the\nrake would BlrH.cc the level of development.\nThe Ramblor management was the\nifest to make such a blunder, their;\ndeep level being at least 1000 feot\nnorth of where it should have been\nlocated. Ten years ago I examined,\ntheir working for Spokane stockholders,   and   at   that   time   reported\nvtheir enriched zone raking south, and\nthat It would eventually go into the\nAlexander claims, aiid later at still\ngreater depth into Ryan's Soho\ngroup.\nRetallack mudo a similar blunder\nat Whitewater deep, and this I pointed out to him at> the time. The\norlg|nal Whitewater enrichment rakes\nto the east at approximately 35\ndegrees. His level cut tfie vein\nfull 2000 feet too far west,, for the\nmining of the, original zone. That\nIib found another zone of enrichment goes without saying, but its\nimportance is as yet insignificant\nas compared with tho  original.\n^Caldwell made the same land of\nblunder at Utica.\n; Again we do not get full advertising credit for our, exported ores.\nIn the past five years I should\nsa,y that more than half our Slocan\nproduct has gone to the, United\nStates with little or no mention.\nCoast infuences are pulling strong\nfor northern British Columbia on the\nstrength of the Aperation' v of the\nPremier and Dolly Varden. The two\ncombined have not shipped as much\nore. in the past threo years by half,\neither in tonnage or value, as '.he\nQueen Bess; and the latter's operating cost under Mr. Cunningham's\nmanagement have been far less\nthan that of the Premier or Dolly\nVarden. The Premier is arranging\nto build only a small capacity mill,\ndoes not indicate a large toWva^e\ndeveloped or expected tb date, is\nmy view of the, situation. My information is only 1150 tons has been\nj shipped to date, three years operation by the .present owners, and\nseveral years others. Why should\nwe   stampede.\nbe Incorporated with the exhibit. All\nthis ore, except a number of small\nnuggets, will be left in the Pusot\nSound city to advortise Kootenny\nmining.\nAlong with the collection is going\na unique poster pen and ink drawing\nby Galena ; Pete, known in private\nlife ,as Ivan DeLashmutt,. mine manager of the Standard mine at Silver-\nton. This huge cartoon, which has\nbeen on exhibit in tho Hume lobby,\ndepicts communication being set up\nbetween the solar system and Star-\nkey' system, in the form of a mysterious message- from Mars, saying\n\"Bring your ore samples to our con\nvention.\"- Mr. Starkey Is portrayed\ngoing full sail along his orbit, which\ncontains Seattle, Vancouver, Revol-\nstoke, Nelson, and Spokane, dragging\nby the halter rope a packmule latter,\nwith ore samples. Jack Mulhollaiul,\nthe president of the prospectors' association, Is Industriously jogging\nalong tho samo track a little to\nthe \u25a0 rear.\n,T, W. Mulholland, who is being\nsent to the Seattle convention by\nthe Prospectors association, also\nleaves this morning. He -will return\nby way of the Simllkameen, where\nhe will assist in organizing branches\nof the association,\nTRADE CONDITIONS\nGOOD, REPORTS SHOW\nWINNIPEG, April .2.\u2014The .^ weekly\nreport of the Canadian Trust association Indicates good business con-\n'ditions throughout Canada. In the\neast reports stale that the activity\nis somewhat curtailed in drygoods\nby, the shortage of merchandise;\nhardware better-^han at this period\nlast year, and boots and groceries\ngood. \\\nTho    prairie     provinces,     through\n'such   centres t as   Winnipeg,   Calgary,\nSaskatoon    and    Edmonton,    report\nbusiness good,  practically all  wiioli\nsale   houses   finding   business   ahead\nof  the  same  period   in   1919^     Difficulty! in   procuring   goods,   howeV\nis also a factor, as In  the east, this\nbeing  particularly   marked   in* hard\nware and drygoods.\nRetail business in the large centers\nis .fair, but 'in smaller towns not\nvery active. This Is somewhat duo\nto weather conditions, this being the\ncoldest Easter experienced \u25a0 in the\nwest for some years and continued\nsnowstorms  making   trade   slow.\nCpi)diyons for the. 1920; crop are\nreported on' as favorable indeed,\nmore so than for several years past,\nprovided, of course, that cold and\nstormy weather . is not prolonged.\n. This latter' is also having Its effect\n\u2022on collections, which are not up to\nthe usual average,...\nWOULD ABOLISH\nROYALTY ON.GOLD\nDAWSON, Y.T., April 2.\u2014(Canadian Press)\u2014Tho Yukon development,\" league will ask the federal\ngovernment to abolish the present\n\u25a0Royalty on gold. It is claimed* .that\ngold, has )ost half its ' purchasing\npower arid gold mining Is the only\nindustry which' uannot increase the\nprice, of its product. The present\nregulations, it is said, are seriously\nthreatening the continuance of min\ning   throughout   the   country.\nDECORATION FOR\"\nCHATEAU THIERRY\nPARIS, April 2.\u2014Chateau .Thierry\nIs' to receive the Legion of'Honor, it\nw!as announced today. \u2022 *\nWestphalia   produced   400   varieties\nRAILROAD VOTE\nCOUNTED TODAY\nCHICAGO, April 2.\u2014A referendum\non working agreements taken by\nmembers of the Brotherhood of\nRailway Trainmen employed on the\nChicago, Rock Island , and Pacifla\nRailway, will be counted tomorrosy,\nA. F. Whitney, vice-president of the\nbrotherhood,  said   tonight.\nWage increases are not involved-in\nthe vote, according to Mr. Whitney.\nShould 4he members vote to reject\nthe present working rules, the matter would be turned over to the general grievance committee for action,\nho said.\n. Hp denied that a secret order\nhad bpen sent out for a strike of\ntrainmen on the Rock Island system.\nCUSHIONED SEATS\nIN GALLERIES\nSUGAR RISES\nTWO   DOLLARS\nPER HUNDRED\nHALIFAX, April 2.\u2014The price\nof sugar was advanced $2 per 100\npounds   here   today.\nSTOCKS OF GRaTn\nIN  STORE   FOR  WEEK\nOTTAWA, April 2.\u2014Stocks of grain\nin 'store, received during the week\nand shipments during the past week,\nas compiled by the Dominion bureau\nof statistics, Stocks in stori Wheat,\n15,442,021 bushels; oats, 5,908)077;\nbarley 2,196,469; ,f lax, 218579; rye,\n517,176.\nReceipts during the week: Wheat,\n1,436,021; oats ,760,977; barley, 252,-\nfifiO;  flax, 15,080;   rye, 119,882.\nShipments during week:. Wheat,\n638,635.; oats, 881,466; barley 2o6,5B3|\nflax,  2024;\" rye,  1357.   *\n -or-\t\nA banyan tree on an island in the\nNerbudda  has 4300  trunks.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nIS STILL CLIMBING\nNEW  YORK,  April  2,-Storl.\ning   exchange  $3.90%  for  60  day\nbills  and  $3.94  for   demand.\nCanadian   Dollar,   92.25.\nLIVESTOCK MARKETS\n****   Chicago\nCHICAGO, April 2,\u2014Hogs, receipts\n60t)0, estimated tomorrow 80110. Market slow 50 cents to 75 cents higher tlym Monday. Bulk 15.00 to 16.50,\ntop 16.50; heavy 14.75 to 15.75; medium 15.35 to 16.15; light 15.75 to\n16.15; light lights 15.25 to .16.00;\nheavy packing sows smooth 13.50;\npacking rough 13.50.\nCattle receipts 5500, estimated tomorrow 2000, market strong. Beef\nBtcers, medium and heavy weight\nchoice and prime 13.65 to 15,75; -medium and good 11.50 to 13.65; -common 10.25 to 11.50; light weight\nchoice,.and good, 12.00 to 13.25; common and medium 10,00 to 12,40;\nbutcher cattle, heifers 7.75 to 1350;\ncows 7.75 to 12.00; canners and\ncutters 5.00 to 7.65; veal calves 16.50\nto .18.00; feeder steers 9.00 to 11,00;\nBlockers' 7.50 to; 11.50.\n'Sheep, receipts 9000, estimated tomorrow 1000, market stead. Lambs\n17,50 to \u00a30.25; culls and common\n14.50 to 17.50; ewes medium aiid\ngood 11.40 to 15.00; culls and com-\nmo nfi.00 to 7.50.\nJUGO-SLAVIA AND ,,  -\nHUNGARY TRADE\nOTTAWA, April 2.\u2014When the\nmembers return on Tuesday after\nthoir recess for Easter they will\nfind ii few changes in and about the\nchamber. Workmen iuiVe taken advantage oC the absence Of the members to fit out the galleries with\npermanent seating accommeilation.\nand instead of hard wooden chairs,\nthe occupants of tho galleries will\nfihd leather cushioned theatre seats\nfor their comfort.\nMAY \"STRIKE TO\nRELEASE LEADERS\nMONTREAL, April 2.*\u2014Trades and\nLabor council hero last night dls\ncussed the result of the Winnipeg\ntrial of. labor lenders and decided to\nll\\iJlaud's , refusal to deliver tho\nrefer to ' the local unions the question of calling a general strtke as oil\nalternative \u00ab to the release of the\nconvicted men.\nZBYSZKO REFUSES i\nTO TAKE DECISION\nNEW YORK, April 2,~4Stauilaus\nwrestler, last night refused to ac-\nwrestler, las tnight refuse*! lo accept the decision of a referW in his\nfavor after \"his opponent, Jonip FHo-\nburg of Chicago, had boon thrown\nfrom the mat and injured after the\nmatch had gone one hour, 19 minutes and  14 seconds without a fall.\nHISTORIC LETTERS\nTO BE PUBLISHED\nTH0 HAGUE, April 2.\u2014The DutaHl\ngovernment plans the publication of\nart orange book embodying all the:\ncorrespondence on the \"question* of\nthe former German emperor and in-'\neluding the allied reply to Holland's\nsecond refusal to hand Wilhelm over\nto the entente power for trial.\nThis reply v-fhtch was delivered by\nthe premier of The. Hague by the\nBritish and Frehoh ministry Tues-*\nday, serves to- \"put. ah end to the\ncorrespondence.\"\nAlthough it is no official intimation of i the text, it is learned\nthat there has been\u00bb' acceptance\nformer emperor but renewal of thfe\nwarning that Holland- will be responsible for any damage to the\nworld's   peace   which) Wilhelm   does.\nTORONTO, April 1\u2014No further\nlabor troubles In, connection with the\nbuilding industry in Toronto\" this\nsummer are anticipated by officers\nof ,the Builders Exchange. It is\nstated that negotiations with the\nvarious unions have resulted amicably in practically all cases. Plasterers started j;oday on the new\nscale, 90 cents an hour, with a further increase to ?7 an hour on May\n14. Bricklayers have a 90 .tents\nah hour scale now and In a Vew\nweeks will receive $1.\nJtWELVE SOCIALISTS\nGO TO RUSSIA\nLARGE MONTREAL\nBU1L0ING BURNS\nMONTREAL, April 2.\u2014The Worst\nfire which has Recurred in West\nMontreal since the burning of the\nArena., took place this morning when\na three story brick building situated at' the'corner of St. Catharines\nartd Gladstone streets, occupied i on\nthe ground floor by the Ryan Dry\nCleaning Works and the other two\nfloors being used as apartments V.y\nMrs. A. Shaw and H. Ayler, was\n(totally destroyed. The loss to the\nbuilding and contents Is estimated\nto   be   between   $J5,000   and   $100,000.\nRECORD PRICE\nPAID FOR BULL\nBRANDON, Vermont, April \u25a0-'.--1.\nG. Watson, secretary of the Ayrshire\nBreeders association, announced today that a record price of $15,000\nhad been paid fdr Auehbenbraln\nToreador, 4 yoar old bull, by Capt.\nA. Honey Illglinson, of South Lin\ncoin,, Muss.\nTHEFT POLICIES\nTO BE INCREASED\nNEW YORK, April 2.\u2014Increase*!\nof 25 per cent in the rates for burglary insurance In New York city and\n35 per cent in nearby territory were\nput into effect today, following a\nsecret meeting of underwriters last\nnight. Increase in robberies was the\nprincipal reason glvch, officials\nstated. ,Vi        '.,\nVOTE DOWN BEER\nAND WINE BILLS\nALBANY, N.Y., April 2.\u2014The\nassembly excise committee last night\nvoted down all the beer ahd wine\nbills which had been referred to i\nfor action. The bill permitting the\nmanufacture artd sale of Z% per Ci-nt\nbeer  will  be  reintroduced.\nBUILDING CIRCLES\nTO BE PEACEFUL\nROME, April 2.\u2014(Havas)\u2014A Socialist delegation of 12 members will\nleave for Russia, April 20, It was\nannounced today.       .,    ,\nSCHLESWIG OPPOSES\nPRUSSIAN RULE\nPARIS, April 2.\u2014The Temps says\ntoday It learns that deputations of\nDanish Inhabitants of Flensburg\nhavfe visited the international commission there, asking that central\nSchleswig be not handed over again\nto. Prussian   domination,     They   re-,\nINSURANCE\nSTOCKS RENTALS\nREAL   ESTATE\nD. ST. DENIS\nPhONE  39 509  WARD  ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nquested that Flensburg be Internationalized ' under the. league of i.v.\ntions. \"\u25a0 '.   ,\nAn   oil   well   at   Joy   Farm,   OhU>\ndrilled' In' 1864,   Is --till .ptoducingv^:\nc u ^ A R D\n\\      ANCHOR\nAnchor-donaldson\nAPPKOXIMATE  SAILINGS\nNEW  YOKK-I_rvi_R_?OOli\nCarmanla  Apr.  10\nKalserln Auguste Victoria, Apr. 24f h\nNEW TORK-CBSKBOtjnG? SOUTH ...\nAMPTON\nMatiretania Ap. 24 MaureataniaMay! 22\nNEW YOBK-PI\/O-Ot*---\nC_-E_tBOURG-SOCl-_-AAU>Tdl V\nRoyal Qeor. Ap 14Royal GeorgeMayJ 9\nNEW TOMS-PLYMOUTH- ' ,\n__A-_BU-IG-I_0-JDOS*\nSaxonia   'Apr'   lOSaxonia  May  lH'th.\nNEW YOIffi-MOVn_LE-GIiASGpW\nColumbia April 17<_oh_mbia   May   23\nNEW   YORK\u2014PATRAS\u2014TRIESTE\nPannonia April 10\nPORTLAND,   ME.-GLASGOW\nCassandra  Apr  24 ' '  j\nFOREIGN   MONEX   ORDERS   and,!|\nDrafts Issued at lowest rates.        j\nFor  all  Information   apply   to   Our1\nagents,  or  to   Company  office,        '\n622  Hosting.   St.  Wost,  Vancouver i\nPhono Bey. 8648. '\nI . nBosi.on   '32,-110^00     quarts     of\nbaked   be .an-  are  devoured  annually.\n'  Monauch,   the   largest, of   Yellow-\nStone's geysers, i_'<__6i_e<-ly irregular.;\nRussia lea  the world in petroiettm*\njuMfluctlon   from   189!  to  1901. '  *\u25a0\"\".\nAtlantic Sailings\nWhite Star-Dominion Line\nPO-tlanil,\nMo.-H-llf_l-t'\u00bbverpool\nFrom Po-ttand   Halifax\nCanada    ' Apr?17    Apr. 18\nAM-ilWCAN MNE\nNew   York-P'iyaabuth-Cher-ourff-S-ath-\nampton\n.New Yorli ,. ,,tMfU\\ 27 . Apr. 24\nSt.  Paul   ..._ :. ,?Apr.  3   May ti\nPhiladelphia      W.Apr. ]0   May  Si\nNew York-Hamburg   ,.-..'    Bi\nManchuria , 5iar. 27. May  8_\nMongolia    .......Apr. 10   May 22 x\nRED   STAR  LINE\nHew VorJt-Bouthampton-Aatw-ip      i\nKroonkuid ...Mar. 24   May   li\nLapland      .Apr.   3   May  8f\nFinland     \u25a0 '....Apr.   7    May 151\nWHITE STAR MNE\nHow Vork-ilverpool \"      . ,_\nCctlrlc .Apr. 10\nBaltic   : Apr. 17   May 22\nCeltic     , j '.May 15..\nHow Yorlr-Southaiupton via Chorhourg,\nPrance\nAdriatic Mar. 20   Apr.2*';:\nHew  Yori>Gibralta--NapI-s-G-noa   .\nCrcflc     Mar. 31   MaySSii\nCaaopic  .May ll:v\n\u25a0   For rescrvaijons and tickets apply to.-'\nlocal agents or Company's office, O. IP.':\nSargent,   61.   Second   Avonuo,   Seattle,\nWash ... .4j______________i\nSAILINGS    TO    EUROPE\nFrom West St. John, N.B., to\nSli'llliiii,    Apr.    2 Glasgow\nMcllta  Apr. 3 Liverpool\nGrampian Apr.!) Havre-London\n-mp, France Apr. 10. .Liverpool\nScandinavian  Apr. 16   Antwerp\nPretoria)!   Apr. 20 Glasgow\nMinuedosa Apr. 23 Liverpool\nMetagama   Apri. 24.    Liverpool\nFor particulars apply\nJ.   3.   70BSIES,   Gem.   Agent\nCan. Pac. By Station\nVancouver, B.C.\nBELA KUN AND\nCRONIES HUNGRY\nVIENNA, April 2.\u2014Bela Kirn,\nformer Hungarian dictator and his\ncompanions, who have been In Jail\nhero, have ended a hunger strike\nby wftich they sought to gain Iheir\nfreedom, They now hold the Impression that thiy are held on instructions to tho Austrian government from the entente attd consider a hunger strike\nBamboo   trees   grow   several  inches\na day when very youns\nFATHER VAUGHAN\nSCORES \"UNDRESSES\"\nLONDON, April 2\u2014\"In Hhe days\ngone by ladies dressed for dinner,\nnow tney undress for, it,\" declared\nRev. Bernard Vaughan, the \u2022widely\nknown Jesuit father, in a sermon\nassailing the prevailing fashions in\nWomen's gowns. \"VVomen,, in thoir\nmad eraze for what are known ills*\n'emotional gowns' sin against every\ncanon of good taste,\" he said. \"Such\ndresses   are   unhealthy.1'\nA    tiny    reed    seaweed' gives    tlie\nreddish  tinge  to the Red  Sea.\nOperations Avoided\nTho Possibility of Fatal Results\nPrevented\n\u25a0' lu kidney troubles, the surgeon 'i\nknife should be the last resort. Kidney trouble can be relieved ia a wonderful way by treating ia time with\nthe most efficient of all preparations\nfor toning up and rebuilding weak and\ndiseased kidneys\u2014Gin Pills,\nGin Pills are free from all trace of\nalcohol. They contain Juniper and\nseven other diuretics and a'ntiscptics.\nMuch time and profound study was\ngiven to perfecting the forinufU on\nwhich Gin Pills aro prepared 'and they\nfurnish quick ahd positive relief, immediately attacking the congested\ntissue, destroying tho poison, soothing,\nhealing and building ap thlfl emaciated\nand woakened organ so that it can\ntako up its work of purifying tha\nblood with efficiency; .    ..,:\n; Once the kidneys aro made normal,\n|ho pains, rheumatism, trwollen joints,\nand general debility disappear, the\nfetone Or gravel in the bladder are\neliminated, and good health and buoyant\nBpirits return. All druggistS'and dealers\nsell Gin Pills at 50o pnr'I;bb*, with a\nguarantee to return your money if you\ndo not receive relief. Tree Bample on\nrequest.   Address f\u2014\nThe' National Drug & Chemical! Co.\nof Canada, Limited, Toronto. United\nlUates Address, Na-Dru-Co., Inc., 202\nMain St., Buffalo, N.Y. 86l\nPARIS, April Z.\u2014Agreement has\njust been signed hy tho Jugo-Slavirt\nand Hungarian government by which\nHungary undertakes to deliver\nlarge number of railway cars o'rtd I\nlocomotives in return for wMiSh\nJugo ' Slavfa will supply Hungary\nwith 20,000 hogs, 70 carloads of\nbacon and C00  carloads  of wheat.\ndeclare war on\nbusy Beaver\n. ALBANV, N.Y?; April2;\u2014fyar was\ndeclared upon the beaver today by\nConservation Commissioner Pratt,\nForest * rangers were instructed to,\ndestroy all beaver dams and houflBB\nthoy found. Heavy damage-h-aa been\ncaused to property by the flooding\nof. streams  due   to  these  dams.\n# _\u00ab-?. J!*\ntd ttl(!\n'\",.\n'An_i0nt_ regardefl amber as a- cure\n(or insanity and lever. ,,\nThe    giant   bees    oi   India   build\ncomi'ii im -ii.iu.sexiB tm W><\nVICTORY BONDS\nWi! liny mill Hull tli.se bonds at the murkct [irlco plus\niii'ciiii'il Interest.\nWo recommend  the pureuaso of these -Cuurltles.\nW. ROSS ALGER & CO.\n,    \u2022       515 Maclean Block\nCALGARY ALBERTA\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOf Canada, Limited\nOffic.i, Smelting ind  Refining  Department.\n,. TRAIL,   BRITI8H  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS  OF  GOLD, SILVER,  COPPER  AND  LEAD  ORES\nPradunra of Gold, 8ilver, Copp.r, Blimlon., Pig Lead and Ztno\nTADANAC BRAND HH\nEUROPEAN\nTravellers\nI \u25a0 represent steamship lines with\nsailings from Montreal, Quebec, Halifax, New York, Boston, Philadelphia\njmd other points. Payment for all\ntickets accepted in Canadian money\nwithout discount. All necessary information regarding sailings, rates,\npassports, etc., furnished upon re-\nciflest.\n10.  U  BUCHANAN\nSteamship   Agent. Nelnon,   B.C.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED   1S6G\nCapital  Authorised \u2022.-,'..},..:^..-.;:.;..... .....vj..-. $ _5,0-0,_6-\nCapltal Paid Vp   ..'..,...... :.-. -.     17,000,000\nReserve  and' Undivided iFroflts   .. i..:  -.     18,000,000\nTotal   Assets     _.'i.., V \u25a0' $-33,000,000\nHEAD  'OFFICE,  MONTREAL\nSir H.   S.  HOLT,   Pfesldsnt;   E.   !_.  PEAK?;   viee-l'resldent   and\nMa-itfging Director; C. E. N1_1Tj7j. Genera) _lana_er.\nG30  BRANCHES'IN .CANADA NI_*.i'FOUNDl-AND\nCuba, Porto Rico, Doiiiinic'an -tepu'jllc, Cost.   Ttica. Antigua, Bahama..\nBarbados, Dominica, Gretnada, Venezuela, fiamajua. Triniiinii.   British\nGuiana, British. Honduf'af.'ario. at Barceln-_\\, Spain; London. England, i\nand New ^_ork City.\nKOOTENAY DISTRICT 'BRANCHES\nNation-\" Cranbf-ook-\nA. D. Mcleod, Mata\u201eer. If,   F_. Robertson. Munawr\nRowland-                        \u25a0.Of?\"fl Forks-\nB. J. Vandfcrwater, Manager. G, A. Spink, Manager.\nBU81NE88   ACCOUNTS   CARRIED   'JPON   FAVORABLE   TERMS\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT liJ ALL BRANCHES\nBANK IViONEY ORDERS\n'    A safe anS cheap way of retcittifig money is by\nBank Money 'Orders.\n\u25a0When sending even small  amounts always  safeguard yourself   by having: a Bank Money Order. ,   .\nreceipt.\nThis Bank isstw.s money orders payable in almost\nany part of the world.   Ask at our nearest branch.     :.\u00ab\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOP CANADA\nNELSON BRANCH,\nCRANBROOK BRANK-H,\nCRESTON BRANCH,\nJ. H. D. BENSON, Man.Jer.\nB. B. HOWARD, Man.gcr.\nC. W. Al.l.HN,Acting Miiii-iicr.\nunuiiiiiMiiiuiiiiiHHnniuiiiiiiHiiiiiuimnwiiHiiiBiunuiHiuiraninHnuniHiHiiuiiiiiLiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii^\nAflSFIES\nAVES\n_RVES\n\"Wee MacGregor\"\nSAW\nTHE   ORIGINAL   LIGHT   WEIGHT   PORTABLE,   QASOLINE S\nOPERATED    DRAG   SAW-.&   POWER    PLANT S\n(Frequently  Imitated Never  Equalled) =\n#                                    i \"_:\nThe \"WEE MacGREGOR'''d)i\"i!i!,''.Su,\\v  is an inuxpuusiv'^ .5\npractical and proven machine, pceiili'ai'Jy adapted for I he rapid ' E\nand accurate cutting of wood tinder any conditions, on land or S\n\u25a01    water.    \"Willi equal facility and proportionate rapidity it will qiit, the small or large log a\n\u25a05    tip to seven feet in diameter.   Depending upon size \"and character it will cut from either s\nS   green or dry logs, 20 to 30 cords of wood a day.        .     i,      \" g\nB          So light is its weight it can easily he carried from one point to another.   One-man k\nS    fcftn move it on the log and two men from log to log. > It has sawn a 2-foot log in1 B0 a\n=    seconds, a 4-foot log in 3 minutes and a 6-foot log in 0 minutes.    Its operating cost 'for a\nig    gasoline, oil and grease is approximately 4 cents a cord.                                             'f 5\njs          Full operatin'g instructions are furnished with each machine, and its mechanism is.so *5\n:\u00a7    simple' it can he operated and kept in order by any person.   Its power can he harhesSBtt .jg\n|5    to the. feed cutter, the pump, the circular saw, the churn or the separator.         ., rflftftll'sB\n|B           We oarry in stock at all times in our Vancouver Warehouses a full line of service a\n:S    parts.   In case of emergency there is no long wait for delivery.         .                  'i < \u2022 S\n5 Write For Our New Illustrated Folder 1 Sent Free If You Mention This PapsK  '\nI                                 '.\u2022                  Lft ':                I . I\nWEEMacGREGOR\nSAW MANUFACTURING CO.\n:=   310 Granville Street\nVancouver, B.O.\nThe \"Wee MacOregbr\"\nDrag SaW has heeh\nadopteil by the Dofnlh-\nliiii of Canada ln the\nFishorlo- fttt_ A_.I.ul.\ntural Branch.e, a_M \"by\nthe B. G. GtiWrhitaefct\nF'orestry Service \u00ab_.d\nProvincial Pari.\nImniM\n p\nf Page 3\nTHE DAILY NEWS,\nSATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1920\n\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   '    *'     : \u25a0 \"-       \"\"\u2022\"       ' '\u25a0\u25a0\"\"\n\u00aelje \u00a9ailfi\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The News Publishing Company,\nLimited,  Nelson,  B.C.,  Canada. ;\u25a0..\u2022'\nBuainesM letters should be addressed aiid checHs and money orders made\n' payable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and in no case to individual\nmembers of the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn detailed statements of' circulation mailed\non request or may itte, seen at the office of any advertising agency recognized\nt>y the Canadian mps Association. .\nSubscription rap***: B^ mail (country), 60 cents per month; ?2.B0 for six\nmonths, |5 per year. By mail (city), 60 cents per month, $3.25 tor six months,\n|6.00 per year. Delivered,'75o per month; $4 if or .six months; $7. GO per year,\n\u25a0payable ln advance.\nriL\nMom-or Audit Bureau of Circulation\nSATURDAY  MORNING,  APRIL  3,   1920\nThe Turk Making An Ass of Himself as Usual\nThe Turkish question is being considerably complicated,\nj and not to the benefit of Turkey, by the rising, of Asiatic\nTurkey against the British whq. were, compelled, in order to\nenforce peace terms, to occupy Constantinople.\nBritain, nor any of the allies, desires armed conflict with\nthe Turks, but the entente forces in Constantinople are not\n\u25a0 going to run away,-the rebellious Turks may rest assured.\nTurkey has no complaint against the peace terms decided\nupon by the allies. The United States would 'go much further; it would drive them completely out of Europe.   For a\n\u25a0 nation which played the traitor to traditional #nd very practical\nfriends and was then defeated, Turkey came out of the war\npretty fortunately. It would have been wise- to have accepted\nthe allied terms without cavilling tor attempting to get away\nfrom them.\nThe allies may yet be forced to \"drive the Turk out of\nEurope.\"\n,-*!#*\nThe Irish Bill \u00ab?\n. . So much has been said against the ,^jbyd George home\nrulebill that it must have come \"as a surprise to a great many\nthat the bill should have passed second reading by such an\noverwhelming majority.\nCertainly the result oi\\the division-will give the government a mandate to go ahead. It is \"suggested that important\namendments may be made to the bill in committee and it\nseems probable that there may be some changes, though the\nbig majority on second reading hardly suggests the necessity\nfor any Vital changes.\nThere will continue to* be a lot of criticism of the bill\nand it -will not go into force without a lot-of hpt discussion\nand possibly some antagonistic. actiQii iri. Iteland, but one is\ninclined to guess that if the act is given a chance it will at\nleast prove the ground work for a happy settlement of the\nIrish question.\nThe Late Thornton Fell\nFOSTER'S WEEKLY\nWEATHER BULLETIN\n-<$>\nWASHINGTON, D.C. April;..\u2014Warm\nwaves will roah Vancouver about\nApril 6, 11, 16, 21 and temperatures\nwill rise on all the'Pacific slope.-They\nwill cross crest of Rockies by clone\nof-7, 12, 22; plains sections 8, 13, 18,\n23; merldan 90, upper, great lakes,\nlOM-cr MissSippi valleys, Ohio-Tennessee\nvallevs 0. 14, 10, 23; eastern sections\n1(1, lfi, .2(1, 25, reaching vicinity ol\nNewfoundland about April 11, 1C, 21, 20.\nStorm waves will follow about one\nday behind warm waves, cool waves\nabout tone day behind storm  waved.\nThese four principal disturbances\nwill dominate the weather of . North\nAmerica from near April G to 26. Most\nsevere storms and most precipitation\nof April afe expected during the five\ndilys centering on 0 and 81. Thfcse are\nnot expected to be very great storms.\nProbably the most important feature\nof the month will be the frosts expected during tlie five days centering\non April  27.\n\u2022 Long ago these bulletins advised\nthat, drouth Would occur this year in\nlarge sections covering about one-third\nof the best agricultural lands of North\nAmerica. During March tlie newspaper\nreports declared that millions of bush-\nelse of the new wheat crop had been\ndestroyed by dry weather and high\nwindy. Other section** have etitirly too\nmuch rain, lust as these liii'letin announced month*- ago. 1 expect similar\ncropweatlier conditions to prevail during April, but not altogether t. In the\nsame   localities.\nIndication arc Unit cropweatlier and\ncrops for April will be about equal to\nthe 10-vear average, some large localities, to be very good, others very poor\nand about one-third equal to the long\naverages. There' has been no perman-\netft change in cropweatlier .on this continent; good and poor crops Will alternate in the future about as they have\nin the past. Cropweatlier is very largely controlled by evaporations of sea\nwater which furnishes the moisture\nthat   feeds   the   storms.\nThe locations of these sea water\nevaporations change at long intervals\nand, so far as J'know, no other weather writer > knows the causes. Perfect\nsuccess at .forecasting these changes\nis not posslbUe but to say the least of\nit, my recent successes in* this lino\nare immensely. Important to agricul\nturc.\nTlie greatest hope for agriculture lies\nin a more perfect system of Long\nRange weather forecasting. 1 am doing\nail that any one man can do and my\nprogress is all that unaided effort\ncan hope for. The basis of the new,\nuseful, valuaole system lias surely been\nfound nad richly deserves being more\nspeedily developed. Tlie I!. K. Weather\nBureauVs making no progress, really no\neffort, along this line and it is not\nbest that it should. There are no relations between\u00bbthe foundations of the\ntwo systems and the investigators of\none system ore unfitted for efforts\nIn .the other. The U. S. Weather,\nBureau, with its short range system,\nshould be In the same department\nas commerce and aviation, while the\nLong Range system should be in the\ndepartment of agriculture. These are\ntheir natural places and, although the\nprogress may be slow in that direction, will be the natural and inevitable final results. Long Range Forecasting now has a better standing\nthan short range had when the U. S.\nWeather  Bureau   was  established.\nKASP^R  HAUSER  WAS (,\nMYSTERY   OF^   EUROPE\nFor shear -strangeness the mystery\nol Kaapar Hatiser, which a little\ni ' than a century ago was one\nwhich'hed, .thc\u00bbattention of all Europe, has,-- probably neyer * been surpassed. , Doi-finfi, ,<>f extraordinary\ntales were .^vented, circulated, believed. Responsible writers advanced .the .theory that Kaspar Hanscr\nway a ;adn of .the . GVand Duke\nCharles of Baden, kidnapped by the\nCountess, of .fooenburg in order to\nsecure the succession to the children\nof .the 'Qia^d,\/Duke .Charles Fivd-\nf-'tick. Thousands- pored over the\n\"Almanach de-Got^ha\" in ruder lu endow  the  mysterious and  afflicted  be-\ng with Illustrious  birth.\nOne  morning  in   May.   1828,   in   yne\n1 the streets of the old walled town\nof Nuremberg, there was found a\nyouth of sixteen or seventeen years\nof a<go, dressed in^tasunt garb. Ho\nwas dazed anil mumbling jincolu'r-\nently. On his 'person was found a\nletter addressed ^o one of the town\nofficial.*. This 'letter,, was apparently\nfrom an IliitcTete workman and u -'\nlated that the boy had been left\nhis care when an infant and\nbrought' up in the strictest seclusion\".\nWithin the first letter \"there was\nanother letter, purporting* tp be from'\nthe boy's mother, and bearing marks\nof crudity, \"Saying that the lad's\nfather, had been an officer in a\ncavalary regiment. These explanations w,ere dismissed as unsatisfactory .*bn account of the youth's .pecul-\npersonallty. His vocal organs\nwere unimpaired\" yet he could not\ntalk;  the soles of. his feet were con-\nx and he could not walk. Sounds\nand the sight of the commonest objects terrified him. Tbe ringing of\na bell threw him into' paroxysms of\nweeping, and the^music' of a street\nband caused him' to swoon*.\u25a0 lie\nwould  eat (inly bread and water.\nUnder instruction be learned wtlJi\nextreme rapidity, and his own story,\nwhen', he was able t'p tell it, heightened tlie mystery. . According to. this\nfar back as he ,could remember\nhe had always lived in a cage or n\nhole in the 'ground so small that\nthe only way he, could rest wan\nsitting down with his feet stretched\nout in front. Until the morning (if\nhis discovery in Nuremberg He bad\nnever seen the sun or . heard the\nsounds of tlie outer world. Two\ntoy horses were the only objects of\nwhich he had any knowledge. Br>\nand water had been served to him\nby a person of whom he spoke a;\n\"the man.\"    One nign^ when he wa\nTOLD IN  RHYME\nThe death of Thornton -Fell, K.C.; for more thaii! 40:years\nclerk of the legislature at Victoria, removes the official of the\nhouse with the longest term to his credit.\nThe clerk of the house is \u25a0 the speaker's right hand man.\nIn actual pi'actiee, if not in theory, the clerk of the house\nprovides the speaker with the law when complicated questions\nof procedure or order arise. Occasionally there are speakers\nwho are great constitutional authorities, but all.have to depend\nto a. very large extent upon the clerk of the chouse, especially\nin the case of a man with the long experience and studious\ncharacter of the late Mr. Fell.\nIt speaks volumes for. Mr. Fell that he should have retained such an -important position for so many years, under\nso many governments, undeV such changing conditions, and with\nthe house sometimes ruled by the chaotical \"ins\" of the no-\nparty days and sometimes by one or other of the. two great\nparties since party government was established in British\nColumbia in order to give stability to government and save\nindustry from the penalties it suffered through the unstable\nand constantly changing political situation of no-party days.\nMr. Fell will be missed by members of the house.\nI\n$ : <t\n(Bradford    wood-spinners    are    stated   to   be   unable   to   escape   from   the\ndeluge    of    Wealth   (that    pours f upon\nthem    or    avoid    making    profits    of\nthree  thousand   two hundred  per cent.)\nAnd     so     you     thought     we     simply\nsteered\n(.Treat    motor    ears     to    champagne\ndinners\nAnd   bought   tiaras   and   were   elicureji\ny    hopes   of   breeding    Epsbnr winners; \u2022\nEh J    lad,    you    little    know    the    weird\nDreed    by    the    Yorkshire    spinners\nHow   hollow   are   thoge   marble   halls\nThe    place    I    built    and    deemed    i\n\u25a0 .show-thing,\nIts   terraces,   Us   waterfalls\u2014\nOnce   more   T   bear   that   sound   o\nloathing.\nThe   bell   rings,   and   a'stranger   calb\nTo   speak   of  underclothing.\nThey've      bashed       my      offices      U\nwrecks,\nThey've    broke    their    way    heyoin\ntlie warders,\nAnd   now   my   country   seat   they   vex\nThey       trample       my       herbaceouf\nborders;\nThey    chase    nie    u|\nchecks,\nThey, flummox   in\nCOLD  STORAGE\n' rich-quick   ideas   up  his   sleeva,   wliieti\n\u2022\u2022\u25a0when going nearly always go wrong.\n-Now Is the time for\nmen to sift the ashes\nhome fires early.\nill   economical\nmil  batik   the\nSomehow\n. should   mean   a   soda\nbut  it doesn't.\u2014Bosto\nfeel    that   \"physidst\"\nclerk,\nfountain\nTranscript.\nMrs. Gassing\u2014No, 1 don't care\nmuch for Mr. Smylhe. He always\nseems to be yawning when 1 speak to.\nhim.\nMiss Snap\u2014Perhaps he is only\ntrying   to  say   something,   dear..\nSaid the shrewd minister before the\ncollection was taken up, \"Those who\nare in debt need not put anything on\nthe plate,\" The Collection was double,\nthe usual amount.\n'Jack   is   perfectly-l devoted - to   that\nblonde.  His  family thinks  it Is a case\nof    hynotltan.\".  'Huh!    seems1    to    me\nmore   lik^ chemical   attraction.\"\u2014Bos-\n\u201etoft Tran^ript.\nFrom a' magazine\u2014\"Then she boiled two potatoes which she found in\none corner of an empty bag and made\na pot ol coffee.\"\nYoung man\u2014I thought I'd drop Hi,\n\u25a0 air, and tell you that since you refutfed\nto allow your daughter to marry me because I was poogjpi have acquired half.\na million dolhu*\nOld Roxley-T^rhasso? Whom did you\nmarry?\u2014Bostdij^Qfranscrlpt.\nWeary Trami^^-Can't you help an old\nsoldier,  jna'rnam?    v\nBenevolen_fc;ripady-\u2014Poor fellow! Here's\na shilling -fin1 'you. Were you wouhded?\nNo, ma'am\/ But 1 was among the miss-\nIn'  twice.  \\  y    .\n.Benevolent Lady-\u2014How terrible! When\nwa* It? f*\nWeary Tramp\u2014Just before the battles of the Homme and Vimy XUdge,\nma'am.\u2014London   Tit-Bits.\n\"There's talk; Of abolishing the\nnickel.\" H\n\"Tat shows that as a people we have\n\u25a0\u2022 no  sentiment.\" r..\n\"How   so?\" *\n\"Why.lf we had we would keep It'if\nonly as reminder of the good old days\nwhen *we could buy something with\nIt,\"\u2014Judge.\nMotor trucks Were firat Introduced\nInto Turkey during the  tfar.\n(From the Daiiy News, April 3, 11(00)\nNelson's delegation to the Liberal\nconvention . left for Vancouver yesterday and. included,, A. M. Johnson,\n,f. A, Gib-Ion, Ai R. Sherwood, \\y A.\nGalliher. find J. Lawrence.\n\" \u00bb    * - *\nune hundred men applied for work\nat the Duncan mine yesterday.\n..\u00bb \u25a0 *    *\nCralef Thompson, of the fire department, is anxious that the merchants iiv town \"Will use great caution in making fires of wastepapor\nin the. vicinity df their warehouses.\nf_ast eight he put, :oot several of\nthese 'fires which \"' had been left\nburning  close   to   tlie  rear  of _ build\nTWENTY YEARS  AGO TODAY  I\nt \u25a0\nTEN  YH-AllS  AGO TODAY\n-^\nJCFKtt!' tho Daily News,. April 3, 1920)\n\u25a0Thv general strike ordered in tho\nbiluhiinous coal district in, the Un\n1 ted-'\u2022states is not liable to cause any\ndisturbance among tho miners of\nl!he. Crow's Nest district, says a despatch frim Fernie.\n\u25a0 *   *   *      >_,!\u00bb\nUpwards   of  ?25,000   will   be  spent\nin   Improving   the   Canadian   Pacific\nrailway   roadbed   into   Phoenix,   says\na despatch from'that city.\ndown    with\nwith   prtlc:\nthe  billard-rc\nplaying    five-bob\nig   from   tin.\nthreats     a\nthey\nicy     bolt     me     to\nWhere   chaps   are\nsnooker;\nThey   see  me  dodgi\nThey     heed      no\n*\u2022 rebuker:\nWe've  got   thefe   nc\ngoom\"\nAnd  pelt me with   their lucre\nVainly   1   put   the   prices   up\nTo     stem      that     flowing     l\nvtches;\nThe  horror  haunts  me as I  su\nThe    unknown     guest    arrlv\npitches.\nHis ultmatum  in  my cup:\n\"The   people   must   have   breeches.\"\nI  shall   not  see   the skylark soar\nNor     hoar     the   cuckoo     nor     the\nlinnet, \u25a0    .\nWhen    Springtime    comes,    above    the\nroar\nOf  folk  a-hullering  each   minute\nFor   yarn   nt    thirty-two   times   more\nThan what I spent to spin it.\nEh,, me,   1   cannot  help but pine\nFor   days   departed    now   and   olden,\nWhen     I     could     drink     of    common\nwine, ...\nTo    powdered     flunkeys    unbeholden;\nDo    peas    taste    better   when   we   dine\nBecause the  knife   is  golden?\nOften   1   wish   1   might   repair\nTo    haunts    that    once    I    used    to\nenter,\nLike    \"The'   old    Fleece\" ' up  \u2022yonder\nthere,\nOf  which   1   was  a  great  freuuenter,\nNot   yet  a   brass-bound   millionaire\nBut just a cent-per-center,\u2014Punch.\n\\\\\\\\\\Y\\\\V\n.ping \"the man\" had awakened\nhim, taught him to stand, walk, had\nput shoos on his feet, and taken\nhim to Nuremberg, It was a talc\nthat roused w|de. Interest. The boy\nwas adopted by the authorities and\nplaced under, instructors; among\nthem . Prof. Daumer, who took him\nto bis home, where thousands .flocked to see the strange youth and hear\nthe mysterious  story.\nJn October,\"1829, an interest, t!jat\nhad been waning was fanned to* new\nlife. Daumer heard frightened cries\ncoming from his protege's room and\nrushilig in found Kaspar ,writhing on\nthe floor wijth blood flowing from a,\nwound in his head. His story, was\nthat \"tho man\" had eome with\nblackened face and stabbed htm. Tt\nwas impossible, however, to find any\ntrace   of   the   alleged   assailant.\nBut In greater numbers curious\ncrowds eamo from all parts of Ku-\nrope to see Kaspar. An eceenrric\n13iiglish nobleman, Lord Stanhope,\nadopted, him and sent him to Ans-\npacb to he educated. But his early\npromise was not realized. He showed, signs of intellectual degeneration.\nIn December, 1833, came another\nstrange attack, real or alleged: Kaspar staggered into Lord Stanhope's\napartment in Anspach with blood\ndripping from a knife wound In his\nside.'' \"Palace\u2014Uzen monument\u2014\npurse!\" lie gasped, and then fell to\nthe   floor,   dead.\nActing upon the clue. Lord Stanhope went to the Uzen monupient. in\nthe palace grounds and there found\npurse of violet colored silk* containing a slip of paper on which had\nbeen scrawled: \"Kasper Mauser, born\nApril 30, 1812., Murdered December\n14. 1833. Know by,-'this that I come\nfrom the Bavarian* frontier by the\nvifpX-t   These  are  the. initials  bf my\nff'P.    '    \u2014^ \u2014\t\nmirne. M,L.B.\" A reward ot five\nthousand florins offered-for the*' apprehension of the assassin by Lord\nStanhope ' led to nothing. People\nhad grown sceptical, and the belief\nwas general tnat the wound had\nbeen sqlf-Inflicted, though the youth,\nhad not cqunted - on Its proving\nmortal.\n -T-**-\t\nSHKLLAC ANi>  1'LUCi  HATS\nThe threatened, rise in the price\nof silk hats will .cause little exelte-\nmbnt, but among the reasons for\nthis advance is one which may arouse\ninterest. Shellac, \"-it appears, is the\nkey to the mystery, < T_\\ere aro few\nimported commodities, Men's Wear\nreminds us, which have been exploited like shellac,; which is largely\nused in stiff hat \"manufacture. Dealers in the past -lump often been made\nand ruined in a few'days over speculation in this slhie. .Shellac is expected soon to reach ten times its\npre-war  quotations.\nEXCESSIVE ACIDITY\n>\u201e^the bottom of most\nigeatos ills.\nKiMQIDS\n1 for indigestion afford pleasing and prompt relief from\nthe distress of acid-dyspepsia,\nMADE BY SCOTT & ROWNE\nMAKERS OF RCOTTS EMULSION\nCAltDEX   OF   KDKN   IN   MEXICO\n'A prehistoric race that lived In\nMexico centuries before Cprtcz ever\narrlVed there to crush ifhe power of\nthe Aztec kingdom, was a alvllizcd\n(ieopio who were flooded out of\nexistence by a deluge which' swept\nthe valley of Mexico,\\as relics picked\nup hear the capital city prove, and\nsome writers assert that Mexico was\nthe site of the; beginning of man\nand that. It was'nH'this 'valley that\nNoah set forth for his 4.0-day tour\nof tho flooded world. .i- ..\nSHIPS  AND  THKIR  NAMES\nPeace lias brought with it the incidental discussion in a section of\nthe* English press of the meaning\nof and reason for-the names *f certain ships in the British naVy? Truly\nmy lords of the admiralty;- \u2022 acting\nas sponsors, have gone to some\nstl-ange source1! for the nomenclature. Not. merely countries * and\ncitieTs have been drawn upon, but\nmany of the creatures figuring In\na menagerie havo been freely 'utilized. Then there are .the vessels\nnamed after tho public schools and\ninstitutions of England, such as Uppingham, Tonbridge, Westminster,\nItugby, Cheltenham, Epsom apd so\non. it Eton should feel jealous over\ntho matter of its neglect it can take\na kind of reflected comfort in tho\nfact that there is 9. desroyer called\nWindsor.\nFooid is feeling distributed In Petro\ngrad Qnly on prescription of doctors,\nused In the manufacture of Prussic\nacid. \\\nThe Mississippi river is .12 feet\nwide and IS to 18 inches deep at Its\ntjource .the outlet of Lake Itasca,\nA MARRIED SAMPLE\nJohn D. Rockefeller, -,Jr., said 'in\na discussion of, the divorce evil:\n\"Some men are, like Dr. Cutler. 'Doctor,' I said to him one1 day, 'how Is it\nI never see you any, more at .the\ntheatre^ or-restaurant with your former, sweetheart, Miss Amanda?'\n'Oh, Amanda's married now,' said\n\u00bbr. Cutler. *''Indeed!': tfaid 1. - 'To\nwhom?' 'To me,' said iJr, tfutler.\"\n-\u00bb~New York  Globe.\nHow,to Make\n\u2022    Coffee\nAllow one heaping tablcspoonful\nof Scalffirand Coffee to each cup.\nVoorfmb, boiling water over the\ncoffee. Simmer 5 minutes. Let\nstand a few minutes. Then serve.\nBe sure you use rich, full-bodied\nSEALBRAND\nCOFFEE\nWhole, gro_ind--\/.iw-grouriiI fcfr\nTricolators and ordinary percolators. Iri Yz, 1 and 2-Ib. tins\u2014ot\nall good dealers; Write for\n\"Perfect Coffee\u2014 Perfectly\nMade\".   Mailed free on request.\nCHASE&SANBORN,\nMONTREAL. z\n\/j\/Jin\nvAWWY\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nJosephine Street, Near Baker\n,Wb   buy   nll.ttlnds    of    SECONDHAND FURNITURE and Stoves and\nClothes, i Rag\u00a3r     Brass,    .Copper     and\nRubber. [ Wo  pay  highest  prices,\nJ. Raddific & Depatie\n'. O. Bojc 794 Phone 114\nVernon j Preparatory School\nicH,. '.sUuli-ft, clll-S room, KytrilliiH'Mlm,\netc., arc t.cHit; -i'ectc- lo aecomninrinte.\n^(t luoro. bolu'ilel'fi, Numbers ftextupl--\n-Hlo- war. \\l_oya 7-1 I. Tniill.il mil\nPfcbHlHJCt--. I\n\/i.lKHJSTJNr.   C.  DIA-XII-\nB._>.,M.A.,   (O'cmlab)  Headm-Stcr.\nMRS.\nHANBUR\nLIKES IT\nShe lias used Pacific Milk\n\u2022for everything\u2014iivst trying tt\nin a pudding,\nII has finally replaced fresh\nmilk   in   her   kitchen. %\n.She says: \"I know Pacific\nMl'lt. is better \u2022 for housohold\nuse than fresh milk\u2014for my\ncooking has improved since I\nfound it.\"\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLimited\nVanpouver, B.C.\nFactory  at  Ladner,   B.C.\nTlie llama, like the camel, is\nknown only in a state of domestication. .     \u25a0\nSPRING AILMENTS\nBelieved   by   a   Well-Known   Medicine\nof Superlative Merit.\nSpring ailments are due to impure,\nimpoverished,   devitalized   blood.\nAmong them are pimpls, boils and\notlir eruptions, loss of appetite, that\ntired fooling, a-run-down condition bf\nthe. system, and sometimes chronic\nweaknesses  mado worse.\nHood's, Sarsaparilla*. combines the\nroots, baa-ks, herbs, berries and other\nmedlcitial.'-s that- have been found, in\nmanv years of intelligent observation,\nto be most effective in treatment of\nthese, .ailments. ,'\u25a0*;\nsuccessful physicians prescribe these\ningredients for diseases of the blc-od,\nstomach, liver and kidneys, and in\ncases where alterative and tonic effects   arc   needed.__\nHood's. Sarsaparilla is the spring\nmedicine that purifies, enriches *_ind\nrevitalizes your blood; '' increasing\nl.Qw&r of 'resistance   to   disease.   *\nFor  a   laxative   take   Hood's   Pills.\n'\"PIIOOF Otf BIBLICAL TRUTH\n-Perhaps the most impressive fact\nof record concerning disease in nn-,\ncient times is found in the Bible in\nthe First Book of Samuel, where'we\naro told . that the land where the\nPhilistines were was overrun with a.\nplague of rats or mice and that 'there-'\nupdn the peoplo were srhitten with\nbubonic plague to punish them i'or\ntheir seizure of the Ark of the Covenant. Thousands of years later cur\nmodern science discovered that, rats '\nare 'the chief disseminators of that\npestilence.\u2014-New   York  Herald.\n\u2022The   original   home   of   the   coffee\nplant  is  Abyssinia. , ',  '\nPoison gas weighing 15,000 tons\n\\va_H supplied to tho British armietf\nin  the'field ill  1913. .\n40 Per Cent to 50\nPer Cent.\nWhen   you   buy  Birks'   Silver-,\nwar6\u2014plated    or    sterling\u2014you\nsave 40 per cent, to 50 per cent. \"*\u25a0\n\u2022 tyi Customs duty.    This is well\nworth   considering.       i . .'\nBirks'1 Silverware is , made \u25a0 in\nbur own\" factories in Canada\nhy Canadian workmen. It is a\n\"Home Product\" in every sense\nof the word.\nNote tho beautiful designs,\nand the splendid choice of\npieces shown in our Catalogue.\nVANCOUVER,   B.  C.\nMECHANICS1 . TOOLS\nWe have a splendid assprtment of\nSTANLEY'S TOOLS\nTo  Select  From,  InuluiUng\nPlanes, Squares, Screw Drivers, Try Squares, '\nOhisels, Etc.\nSee the New Dowel Machine*\nPRICES EIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nBAKER STKM1-T\nNELSON, II. O.\nJohn Burns & Sons GenS STrs\nSASH AND BOOK  FACTORY NELSON  1'1_\\N_-(G  MILLS\nVernon Slicet, Nelson, I;. O.\nKVERY  DESCRIPTION   OF BUILDING  MATEIUAL KEPT  IN  STOCK\nEstimates Given on Stone, Brick, Concrete nnd Frame Buildings\nMAIL ORDERS. PROMPTLT, ATTENDED TO\ni>. o. box 184 pnounc 17*\nThe art of camoo cutting ' w\u00ab8\nbrought to a high'stage of perfection\nby \u25a0 tlie' early  OreeHs.\nTake Your Time, Don't Hurry!\nThere is ho need for so much rushing on\nbaking days, hurrying to get your cakes in the\noven\u2014such exhausting exertion adds baking to\nthe\u00ablist of household drudgeries.\nVou can take your time yet d6 more witH\nRare Old Violins\nIF you are interested in obtaining a rare old. V^iolJ^'.\nlt-t us fiend you our special lists, tUty include^br^u*\nmens of the work of Stradivari, Gnarnerius, Guadag-\nnini, Amati, Guarncri, Pique, Vuillaume, Uank-J, Betts, \u00ab\u25a0\nDuke, Fotster\/. etc;'\n\/We will also he glad to include pur illustrated catalogue of fine modern\nviolins and trimmings, \/\nWilliams9 Special Violin Strings\nNo. 1 Williams' Kpcchl 3 let.!?lis \"H\" Strtnj;.   Erich 3jc.\n'i -Will.inns' S|.tci:il 2 Iciictns ' A\" String.   Ench 35c.\n3 fllttlm-H'' Special '_: lenj-llm \"U\" Striiig    }',\u00bbch -Wc.\n14 Wmfunttf KmfC-itl Viire Silver *T.\" ?_.rli.g.   \"Such fl.00.\ni Viclory Kcil Out 3 Imgtli \"H\" Strinif.   J'nrli Sfc\n6 Viitory H\u00abtl (Jut 2 length \"A\" .striiip.   Jincli 3\u00a3c.\n6 Victory Red Out 2 length \"D\" Siiinj;   Each 34c,\nProfessionals Please Enclose Card\nR.S.___-S_S^l?S?;iE^> LI\/VUItDj     faid\nDcpt.   f>i\n115 Tkii Street, ICBlKIO.Oin.\nBaldngPowder\nthan with other brands because the leavening action of Eeg-0 only ceases when your\ncakes are properly baked\u2014No matter if\n-you do have to wait several hours, for your\noven.\n' And don't Worry if your pven does cool\noff. Egg-0 will leaven your baking with\nless heat than most other brands.\nAiid above all, don't worry about fallen\ncakesj follow .the direction, on the label.\nYqu will  use  less  Baking Powder, and\n. have better' baking.\nEgg-O Baking Powder Co.\n\u25a0'':-,.'',      .   Limited        5 \\-j\n\u25a0   '   Hamilton.,, Canada\n27\nmm\nEarn all Aiito\ninlevfeiiinb spare time\nNo Guesswork-Results Are Sure*\nScmliit\" in tlio coupon bolow will briilff you\u2014free\u2014full pnrtleu-\nlars <>f how you can got un auto Jr any otltcr article you desire,\nThe B.C.VeteransWeeK^\nwill \u25a0 accopt .you as an agent In .your district to\nreceive subscriptions-^-eVery, otio, you get means\nan actual gain.    You will bij 'dumbfounded l\nwith our offer. y-\nANVONK  CAN   EAKN\ntho things they most dosiro by the systematic uso of thoir spare time. You will\nfind It pleasant work, and very pro (liable.\nDon't hesitate. ,. \u25a0'\nCoupon Now (Q\nFull factH will come to\nyou by return mall.\nTheB.\u20ac.\nVeterans Weekly\n05-0\u00bb Provlnt'o Ithlj;.,\nVancouver, 1$. C.\nTho B. 0. VeteranB V\/OBhly,\nI. Ofi-oo Province* Bldg,, Vancoh-w,\n\u25a0* (Si'utl mo full pnrticulffrs of nlVui-,\nI\n-[alno '\nAddr-s\n (0)\n mmm\nmm.\nIMP\nliv,^f!Ui,-j\t\n3^\nTOl CSTEY flEWS, S-'.Tt-lM HoUHINC,' APRIL S, 1920\nPage 3^\n*\nTry Our STAR SPECIAL\nTEA* per lb. - - - 70c\nPendray's   Water   Glaao,     CK-,\nquart  tins    -,., 001\/\n\u25a0Pendray's   Water   Glass,     QC\/\u00bb\n. pint tins ... '.. uOC\nCalifornia Grape Fruit, (%S ~\nfor    ..'.....:,   _SDC\n2\nj Florida' Grape \\,Fruit,\n2   for\t\n35c\nLarge Size Grape Fruit,\neach\t\n20c\ntO ARRIVE TODAY\nHoatl    Lettuce   Cauliflower,   Fresh\nSpinach,  Cabbage,.  Beets,   Turnips,\nCarrots,   Etc.\nClosed All Day Monday\nStar Grocery\nPHONE .10\nKing's Quality Flour\nGUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY\nManufactured by the He.ley-Sha\u00bb\n'   Milling Co., Ltd., M\u00abdlcln<<  I\nHat, Albert*.\nWrltt  HI for  _rlcej  on  Mur lot*.\nFLOUR AND FEED\nT. R. CLARK, H.p.  ,.\nP.O. Box MO Ntlion, B.C.\nUse Royal Crown Soap\nand Save the Coupons.\nABSORBINE\n' TBAOE MAB-.\u00bb[C.U.S.PitOtf.\nReduce- -(rained, Poffy Anitfel.\nLymphangitis, Poll Evil, fistula,1\nBoils, .Swellings; Stops LUmenesi\nand allays pain. Heals Sores, CutJ.1\nBruises,  Boot  Chafes.   \\i *\u00ab'\u00ab\nSAFE ANTISEPTIC AND GEHM1G1DE\nDoes not blister or lemovc-the\nhafr and liorse can be worked. Pleasant to use.\n$2. SO a bottle, delivered. Describe yourcase\nfor special instructions and Book 5 R freeJ\nABSORBINE, JR., intfieptle liniment for mmklnd.tev\ndu\u00abi Strain*. Painful, Kno;t-J, Swollen v.ini. Conccn*\ntntcd\u2014only a fctf drops required *tau application, J'ficq\n11.21 pet bottle it deafen or deli.ercJ. , .   r ,.\nV. F. YOUNG' lac, 445 Ly_uoi B|<J|., Montr-.., Can,\nAburblne ind Absorb inc. Jit., aic made la Canada,\nAwait You at Onr Store\nOur fitting gives you, COMPORT. The Style iri .our Shoes\ngives the smart appearance. The\nQuality of our shoes gives long\nwear. ,\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\n\u2014<\u00ab*,,-VW*W-\nBENTON ^NGItfiMS\nBtiNThNMJTOINfi, Alirlt 2: :\u2014 The\nBenton Pole und Lumber con-puny in\n\u2022prefitirlng to open its mill. The. winter cut of logs, .has been* considerably\nbirger tlmn u.suiil null u liusy .seaH-bn\nIs  expected.-    .; ,      \u00ab.\nMisw Mnry BarkJLey.is spending JSas-\ntor at home,*\nMr. nnd Mrs. Peter Carlson passed\nthrough here this week on thoir return from their honeymoon, trip to\nthe States., -,.,,\u25a0 .\u201e:    , . \u201e.:\nYOUR FRECKLES\nNcwl   Attention iii' MnrHt  ol\" Faco\nMay Stay. (.oyerfeU.\nttti'w la'tho tiriio to* take '.ipefci.il\ncare, of Hh\u00a3' conrtfolextoii'' ii you wish\nto loofe. well the rest of the year.\n\"the Match winds have * a strong\ntendency to. bring Out freckles that\n\u25a0I may stay all summer unless refnov-\nedV. Kbw is the time to uso Othihe\u2014\ndoiiblo strength; .. \u25a0.(\/.\u25a0 -\u25a0.,.-*.\n, This preparation f*r the remtfval\nof fteekles. was wtltten Hf a< prom\ninept physiciah, and is ;.\"\u25a0 usually so\nsuccessful that it Is sold- liy. druggists under guarantee to' rdftitid tho\nmoney if it falls. Getjiri ouncfe bf\nOthine\u2014dtttihle stre'nftth, and oven .a'\nftjttf. appHcatlbrfrt should show a won\nderful improvement, -some of the\nBtriallor \"fdeckles evert vanishing en\ntirely. \u25a0   '.\n\u2666 \u00bb\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u25a0\u2666\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u2022 \u00bb\u00bb\u2666 \u00a7>\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u2666\u00bb n\n* IttSffl?.?*! \" * * V^* \u00bb\u00bb \" \" '''\nPLAr TINT CITY\nAT INVERMERE\nINVBRMEREi .April 2. \u2014 Winder-\nrpere district arid Invermere in partiC'\nular is -.coming. Ihto its own as a tourist resort by the initiative qf the Tii-\nvere Hotel company, through the In*\ntroduotion of* outside capital to the\nextant of many thousands of doliurs.\nThis capital is tfoing to he at once\nexpended,In the construction of a tont\ncity oh, the old historic ground of the\nInvermere (loU and Country club,\nThis ground overlooks the pretty tt'ln-\nderemere lake on a high prop-iontory\ncommanding a splendid vtewi to the\nsouth out. over the blue watery of the\nlake and far. dbwn south to wbr.ru rhe\nhigh ranges of moulitaiwi shut out\nfurther view- Hoi;e in 11071 David\nThompson,, the first,> ifphlte mint in,\neBsayad* .to  establish; his   trading   post\nPull particulars of'the work\/ which\nthis company is andttt to -undertake\nare not yet available, hut tb state\nthem briefly, the work will consist, of\nthei construction of a fltst-class perm-\naifent raniphii;- ground, In Id out on entirely scientific principles'; including a\nsyate'm ot, waterworks and sewerage.\nAccommodation for this yeatS Wfill likely be afforded, -by the erection, of 25\nlog cabin tentsf,. of A\\ modern typo.\nThese as n start will afford accommodation   for   possibly   fifty  adults.\nIn addition to the home accommodation there .will be built a community\nh6use of 40. by BO. feet, 'for social\ngatherings and dancing. A huge fireplace will be built in this building.\nThere will also be a huge dining\nbuilding with the necessary kitchen\nand other arrangements for. good\ncuisine attached. At another point\nwill bo a livery for boats arid canpes\narid motor launches. There Is every\nlikelihood that further improvements\nwill bo made upon the gojf course and\nthat-a. \"pro\" may be ehgaged;\nTRAIL BUILDING\nBftLAfr DEFEATED\nTRAIL, AtfriY 2.\u2014The ' Municipal\nBuilding bylaw; which provides for the\nbuilding, ;of a new -city hall and fire\nhgll was' voted on yesterday, and was\ndefeated by a small majority, i The\nelection ..result was as follows: \" For\n$%, igainst 75, \u201e spoiled ballots 8.\nTotaf VQtsj 174, The majority (\u2022dulred-\nto pass, tbe bylaw needed to be f:i-5\nof the  total,\nThe concert held last everting in the\nStar theatre for the benefit of the\nG.W.V.A- memoplnl was well attended\nand provfed to be a great suocess. The\nprogram, was as  f.ollows:\nTrench Tales, by a \"Vet\"; song by\nMrs. f'ibrce,. step dance, \"Mickey Mercer\": ooniiert selfeottoti by the orchestra, song, by Miss Hall, reading by\nMtiH, Kolipiar. Three rounds of blindfold boriiiK by McKay and Mickey\nMercer was one of the big features of\nthe, evening.\nw, J. Owens was %- business 'visitor\nto Itossland  yesterday.\nTommy Boyce left last evening for\nNelson to spend a few days visiting\nfriends.\n\u25a0 Prod U.uJrlcJi left. Inst evening for\nNelson,' where he will spend a fe*H-\ndays visiting'. friends before \u25a0 leaving\nfor. San LMego, Cal. '\n,. Miss. EL Kania Has accepted a position   at   the  smelter . office.\nJ. H. Deschanjps \"of, Rossland was a\nvisitor   to   the  city   today.\nA meeting of tho Trail Amateur\nAthletic association was held In the\ncity hall last evening. About'110 people-\nWere, i-resbnt.   The -election of Officers.\n^T\n| TEJ-LS HOW TO REGAIN. PEJ$. |\nI FECT HEAI\/TH AND KEEF1 if I\nI !\u00a5\u00a3\u2022   IJATHINt;     INTEBNAIili^. |*\nAre -you awtirc that nearly oriti rtiiV\nHon bright, intelligent peopje. thrpugli,-\nbiii Cnpridii Arid thfe Uhit^' -fetntfes\nalonn bathe infernally instead of loading thejr. Hysterris wilh dr.tigs? ^hy*\ntiocause It 'keeps therii In better health\nin every  way.     ...\nIntGMuir bathing is the only sure\nmenus of. keeping the. intestines cleari\nand free from aapiimulnted waste, matter, which is sitre, Jo f*lbw|y poiHOn.\nthe 'fjystem and become food -for the\nmillIoiim of bacteria which Infest the\n?ystem. .thereby causing, rhouniatjsm.\nbppiiri! .blood, iiirHgostionj, tienditches-\nand iv- hundred' uthor .ailments which\nare directly'the rssalfc-of-eonsMDatlom\nIf you want to- bo hoal'.hy all the\ntime, yja would strongly aJvlse you to\n-;${ a J.-B.L. Ca_jc?ide, which .iu.the' only,\nleffectetl applianco ever * devised -for\nifficlentiy QlftftnBing the oolori ^and-\nlower intestines, it. is the Invention'\nof Dr.,Ghas. A. Tyrrell of New \\orJt,\nwho Is* a ApcelaHst on Internal Bathing, The J. 13.1., Cascade la shown nnd\nfXBlalned by. i Canada. \u2022 j?rug, ^,:.Bo9k\ncbfiipitny,. wndre you 'cAn ;rec6ivfi \u25a0. an\ninteresting book called \"Why Man of\nToday..in orily,, 5r0..Derf c?nV-Kfflntent'y\nIt will tell you, faotb about ,your3elf\nthat you probably bever realized before, or,write Tyrrell's Hyglonic Insti\ntttt\u00abt> 163 CoU\u00abg\u00ab gtr\u00abV Toronto.   \u25a0\nMake your.preparations for Easter n#\nNew, Correct and Exclusive Attire assembled here with .scrupulous care.   Every woman\nor miss, however critical her taste, may be supplied  Here  with  every  detail '\u00a7& her\n\u2022*> EASTER COSTUME.\nStunning SUITS, COATS, DRESSES, Beautiful MILLINERY, Pretty BLOUSE'S,  SKIRTS^' GLOVES,  HOSIERY,\nNECKWEAR, UMBRELLAS, etc., are here in surprising assortments. And prices are moderate for the quality of goods.\nWOOL JERSEY DRESSES\nSpecially Priced at $29.00 Each\nFor Easter\nColors, Sand Taupte, Nigger and\nBlue. AU up-to-date in style\nand excellent in quality. Your\nopportunity to secure one of these\nJersey Drosses a. a\\ d_0O AA\nbarsaln    '. tD-St\/iUU\nTAFFETA SILK DRESSES At\n$35.00 to $100.00 Each\nA beautiful showing; in all wanted\ncolors sUch as Sand, Copenhagen,\nBrown, Black, Navy, etc. Every\ntaste can be suited from this\nstock.\nTaffota Silk Is this Snrlng's favorite material fur Dresses. Secure a Taffeta\nDress now at,  each\n$35.00 to $100.00\nGEORGETTE   DRESSES  at  S\u00ab5 OO  to\n$150.00        \u25a0\u00ab\u2022\nTRICOLETTE   DRESSES at \u00bb95 00 to\n$150.00\nSPRING SUITS at $4<)M td $100,00\nEach\nAll the newer Materials such as Tweed,\nHomespun, Serge, etc., made up in the\nmost mannish styles; or; fancier types.\nIn fact every hew idea has its representative in our stock of Suits. Coats\nall Satin lined, Skirts in straight lines.\nPriced moderately, each'\n$40.00 to $125.00\nKID GLOVES at $2.50 to\n$5JS\nIn White, Black, Champagne and\ndrey. Excellent tiualltios, and\nnewest styles.    Prices, per pair\n$2.50 to $5.75\n\u2014. \u25a0~-\u2014^-\nSILK HOSE at $2.25 to\n$5.00Pair\nWhite, Black and all colors, in plain\nor fancy weaves. Excellent qualities at, per pair\n$2.25 to $5.00\nNEW SILK UNDERSKIRTS at $8.00 to $16.50\nWhite and Coiorc\/l China Silk Skirls' at\nFancy JER8feV; SILK SKIRTS, with\nacpordeon  pleated, fiourtoes, at\t\n ;\u2014~ -\"%% :\t\n $8.00\n$10.00to $16.50\nSPRING COATS at $25.00 to $125.00\nA largo showing of exclusive stylos, in Tweeds, Coverts, Serge,\nVelours, Tricotines. Colors and Grey and Brown mixtures, Navy,\nTan, Joffre, Brown and Sand, you wo. get a short coat, medium\nlength, or full lrngfh. Strictly\ntailored  nr   Dolman  style.   Brlcea\nT $25.00 to$125.00\nNEW BLOUSES at $9.00 to $35.00\nWash Silk, Georgette or Crepe-do-Cheno Blouses, in plain tailored\nor Novelty styles. Some very elaborately trimmed with beads,\nhand ombrnldory, braiding or lai-o. All colors and\nPrices\nfrom\t\n$9.00to $35.00\nUMBRELLAS at $12.50 to $14.00\nBeautiful    colore^   .Umbrellas,     Brown,     Green,\nPurple,   Taupe   and   Black.     Splendid   values\n$12.50 to $14.00\nHAND BAGS at $3.50 to $6.50\nTbn   newest'; in   leather.   Silk   and   Velvet.   All\nWiinlwl  colors at,  each\n$3.50 to $6.50\nMILLINERY\nNEW    TAILORED,\nPrices   very   reasonable.    Materials\nprocure a New Easter Hut at....\nTRIMMED    AND  PATTERN   HATS   FOR   EASTER\n:he..':cs,:...sty:cs..1\":'.. .NVr- ..v:'::.\u2122.$6.50 T0 $30.00\nThe Store for Style\nThe Store for Quality\n\u25a0\n\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0\n_j___\nfor the present year wns as follows:\nPresident, Dr. J. B. Thorn; honorary\npresident. Itev. A. M. O'Donnell; see-\nratary, Kmms Ileail; treasurer, H. C.\nBaldicoot;   auditor,   1\".   Maofc'arlan-.\nMr. and Mrs. (Irossnilth and eonl-\nnany gave an interesting cdncrt here\nTuesday evening. The concert was\nfallowed by a dance given In Swart-\nHall, the music being supplied by the\nt-rossmlth company assisted by a few\nlocal .musicians. ;... \u25a0.\nROSSLAND SCHOOL\nATTENDANCE OFF\nROSSLAND, April 2,\u2014PpllbWing is\nthe report of the attendance at the\nMcLean school for the month of\nMarch: .._.\u201e\u201e ,,.\n! Division I, 28.45; division 2, 30.-1:;\ndivision :., UiUt;; division 4,.84.93; < -\nvision r\u00bb, 34.3ri; division \u25a0\"!, ZtM\\ di-\nVlfllpn 7. 34;il<\u00bb; tlf.vlsfon, 8; 3t,\u00ab3: diyjs-\nioh 9, 30.60] division 1\u00ab, 32.71; divln-\nion 1', a4.lt>; division 12, 33.G2. Totals,\nmMi  Pehrvar^  totuis,  435.06.\nThe attendiiiibe during the latter\npart of the month was very Irregylar\noh decburit.of the (availing epidemics.'\n' The Lord Nelson shield, for the most\nregular attendance wns woi) by Miss.\ntracer's divisidn. \u2022 :\nHonor Bolls;\nDivlfdori   3,   Junloi'   Fourth\u2014Dorothy\nHall,   Dora   Millet,   Kvfl   Morrow;   Knut\nNbrdi  Chirlee   Sirilth^ .BeHSio   CaneHi.  '\ni Division 4, Senior Third\u2014Lea Nlm-\nRlek and Anne Wilson, Paul Gouldrey,\nMarjorle-. Cauut,. Helen lWdy, Dorothy\nl.ivans.^Eveli'n* White; George-JWetsitltl,\nMona   Coleman.\n\u25a0 i DIvlRlon 5, High Interniodiotpe Third\n\u2014MUriol:  HfllJ., Ralph   GoUlfli'ey;   ld!t\nKallls.  Louise  Harper, Albert Jackson,\nm aant*. ' ,       \"i, __\nl^tvlsioiv 12, Low .Intermediate Third\n-vudhdrt ' Anflel-Mttn,. Bilwniid > Kuelle,\nRmelia Cotno'ir, Thclma JMtt, Brio\nf*(.ord.\n, RivlHton, .\u00ab,.. Low MOX-rafiOM Third\u2014\nMarshal T-lioinsH, Mary Brjngn, Talnb\nWIlsHn, \u25a0 Htittt Smtter, Kennttli, Mlle'ri;\nil(ln*loT-i-Thlrd*--Dap)iiir, -i-timpeoni. itosa\nd3\u00bb3tto. LoIh Wall, Clarence Smith,\nRichard  Cuella.     !\n.Division 7. Junior Third\u2014Lavlna Hill,\nJack Hwjiin., t)bi-lH Chesbam, Uiiby\nVpW. sfftitdr Sefcobd\u2014RObeH Midllgali,\nI-\u25a0(ini! .lobfison,. Marjorle 'I'hO-rtit^, Ltin-\nimrt Johnson, Laura SSanunsl and Dorothy  Stevens. .\n^\u25a0'DlvUdOh ! \u00bb- Junlbr Second\u2014Kranlt\nt3aunt, P^xmar Johnson, .Frank Le-\nfiwe, -I:'erire>n Clifrrln^ton, John T'Ye-\nney. Tlrst Reader\u2014Alphonse Slubow-\nHki, Cyril Coelle, Jean Jones, Fred\nBH'h,.\n^Dlvbiloh 9, First R^ide'f\u2014H|i*t\u00abarH*\nDiinn; ^oy Mllbs. noy MacKenile,\nBetty Gllmour, Joy KemP. Jack Oliver.\nHigh Second i-rimor\u2014Ho\u00bb\u00ab ^Yi'inff, Con\nstance Potter, Edna McLean; Myrtle\nDally,  Edna  Smith.\nDlylsioti 1, Second Primer \u2014 Rose\nThorouj-food, . Marjorle Trembn Hi, 1 r-\nving Toomlis, Mnpletoii Colensu, Donald PYrgiflon, lCda l.eface. I'*h'fft Prlm-\nei*\u2014Rltn Nvans, Evd Hanna, Hessle\n(llennlo, Dorothy Keating, If_:il)cl\" (Iri*-\nl.utt, Coiistancc I-'ccIps, Eric Kor.s, Annie   Biancbi.\nDivision 11, First Primer. Class A\u2014\nMargaret (Jantz, Anna Belle Mae-\nKetizle, Ulay li'vln, Fstella Hacluiey,\nBunhpmla Mitchell; Mortimer Graham,\nC-wenddlyn Wilkes, .lack Page, lOlsle\nMorrlson.j Fred Hackney, Edna 1'ould,\nJohd Plester, George Gllmour, Class\nB\u2014Minnie Sanderson, Wilfred Pitt,\nArnold Ituetsala, Thomas Wa 1 msley,\nMutt Grublslc, Annie Rowe, . Ssihina\nSdaoi, Ellen Campbell, Angelina Blan-\nchi, Julia Solomon, John Pertty; Henry\nOliva,  Elsie Jackson.\nFRUITVALE NEWS\nFRUITVALE, Aj>rll 2.\u2014The monthly\nmeeting: of the l^armers' Institute w)is\nheld at the ftcncJolhouse on Saturday\nlast.'. Great interest was shown in\nthe coopratlye asfeouiatlon, several\nmembers com Ing forward to buy\nshares.\nMaster Walter Swift has returned\nto hlH home in Spokane, after spending\nA. Wilson was, in town looking\nover   some   property.\nThe Boys and Girls' club are organ-\nA Breakfast Food\nin Granular Form\nDiffeientfrom ther\nordlriatyprepared\ncereolinrharorwaiy*\nis \u00a5akea~ifor twenty\nHours, has a veiyliW\"\nable, nut-like flavor\nis easily digested and\nis particularly worth\nwhile because of it^\nstaunch, health building qualities. -\nGrapeNuUaee&l-Osu^-r\nIzhiR ft IMk club ror 1(120. They will\nrecelvo ih'Izoh Id tli- uourse of 1ft\nchiys tor the 1HI9 blub, The tbllq'wlnk\n[ire 111.' wiiuuTs: Tom t.'oli'H, I'h'Hl:\nDorothy Bni'l'Ctt, hccoihI;- Archie Barren, Ihird; Allien l.inilhnlme, I'mirth.\na long hnllitn'y with Ma mint; Mrs. i_.\nAlex. Mir a belli\nSHOEMAKER,   HARNESS   REPAIR.\nING\nSocond   Hand   Store   in   Conection\nCRESTON, B.C.\nMurray.\n,&-\u00ab*, s. Brewster Mpent the week-\neml Willi  Mr. mill .Mrs. AMer-trilth nt\nW.'lllelii.\nMr. Nil oliis has 6blil his ranch to\n\u2022A. Aiiilersnii. He has ulrcaily taken\npossession   itnil   slnrleil   liuiiriiveiiients.\nShine!  Shine.\nLadles or Gunts- -boes s-tined\nand urn slim-s died black.\nO. K. Barber Shop\nA. L. WILSON\nONLY TABLETS MARKED\n\"BAYER\"  ARE  ASPIRIN\nNot Aspirin at All without the \"Buyer Cross\"\nFor Colds, Pain, Headache, Neural-\/paokage -which containa completo dl-\ngia,* Toothache, Earache, and for j reciiionfl. Then you are Rotting real\nRhoumatinm, Lurabago, Soiatica, Nr.w-;Anf\u00bbirin\u2014th\u00ab .genv.lno Ar.nirin pre-\nritiB, take Aspirin marked with tho j scribed by phy-.lciann fn' over inne-\nimmc \"Bayer\" or you are not taking teen. year*. JUnv mndq in Canada;\nAspirin at, all, ,\u2022     i   Handy tin ho.:ca containing 12 tt^br\nAccept   only   \"Bayer   Tableta   of lotR * cotvt \u25a0 but a few. cents.   Druggist..\nAspirin1'   i\"   ah   unbroken   ''Bayer\", dbo noil largiir, \"Bayer\" packages.\nThroe is only one Aspiriii-^'aayer\"\u2014-yon\u2022tta^kt oay ''Boyof?\nAmlrih In tho trade jnar.c .roslptcted in-crvnnaM of -Boy^^Manulaiiurft'of ilono-\nacntlcacldestci' of f,Hl.cyllp,:cli_, \"\\Vhllw It ln ^ypl! l.nowni*fhit Acjilrln n.ean-; Bfcyer\nmanufueiuro,. t\u00bb asB.at ilia puhllo atfnlnttt Imltntlpim, thn Tablets tif Bayer Cbmoany.\n-.-ill bft st-nr-Dcd v.'itb ihoir ccacrai. trada r-i-rl:, V-c \"Eti\/cr Cc\u00abl\u00bb\"\n-_-____\u25a0\n^mtd\n rlPiifee (5\nTHE DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1920:> '...\nKOOTENAY BOYS\nNational Athletic Meet For\n%a$ W and Trail\nRangers Due in Fortnight\nre \"looking- forward\nBoys'\nenay   are,'1o'dlftng   forward   to   the\nthird   week   of   tye   present   month,\nwhen the big event of* their athletic\nyear will :be,. held.\nWith aty least 12000 boys taking\npart, living; afft\/BVer Canada from\ncoast to- coast, and from Point Peiec\nto Prince Rupert, Peace River and\nThe Pas, the Canifdian national ath-:\n.Jetlc contest for Trail Rangers and\n{Tuxis boys Will in point of numberp.\n,B.nd possibilities of developing ath-\nletei, b-e. the biggest athletic event\npulled p\"fr; in Canada. This big\nevent taj^es _place in tho week of.\n'April 10: to 24, and is under the\ndirection. of the national boys' worlif\nboard of Canada, which is tho cooperative body representing all the\nl*rptestant churches and the Y.M.CA.\n:'yrfth Fred J. Smith, national physical\neducation secretary of tho Y.M.C.A.,\nas manager and chief director.\n.The, contest Is conducted as a\npart of the i^ell known Canadian\nStandard Efficiency Training program.. The entries are made-^Jjj**;\ngroups, and any Tuxis square or\nTrail Ranger camp with a registered\njricntor cart enter. Two or, more\ngroups conduct their contests to-\nfeother, and a record la kept. Every\nboy must compete unless excused by\na medical man or.physical director as\nunfit, and the average, is taken of\n\/the group. The. Te cords are taken\nby the mentors, fynd forwarded for\ncomparison with^'-those of other\ngroups. The standards of excellence\nare varied according to the ages and\nweights of the boys, and the records\nare kept by points. The provincial\nand national championships will be\n.decided from these records, and will\nbe suitably recognized,\nlEMISB\nIN NELSON JAIL\nAlton Frisbie One of Six\nLiving Spouses of Woman\nHeld in Spokane\nHeld In the Nelson city hastile on\na vagrancy charge, Alton R. Friable; the seventh known spouse jf a\nmarital partner now in jail In\nSpokane, Is suspected of abstracting\na quantity of cocaine, and of heroin\nfrom the store of the Poole Drug\ncompany, apd, if the theft fa not\nbrought home to him, he can still\nho placed oh trial for forgery and\nobtain ing money under false pretences, \u2022 . ;\n_ , ^'riBbje arrived In Nelson nearly\ntwp .weeks ago, In consequence of\nbeing deported from the Unltod\niStates after a period of confinement\nhi, fBpokane,. and . adopted the name\nof IJnrry Woods to operate und-jr.\nOne rooming house that he favored\nwith\" his 'patronage missed a . shirt,\nand another missed some gramophone records and a volume on the\ntvnr, all of which were subsequently\nfound when his latest abode waB\nsearched.\nv, Locks forced\nJust one week ago the Poole Drug\ncompany's prejmlses were forced by\nway of the. front door,' and the\ncrook concerned in that enterprise\nshaved the moulding on the door\nsufficiently to expose the' crack, so\nthat a strip of tin could be inserted,\nby means of which to press , oack\nthe bolt* of the Tale lock. This particular 'lock has a safety device,\nwhich, 1'however, was^not put oh the\njob that, night. Cocaine and heroin\nto the extent: of half an ounce was\nmissed next -morning.\"''\nj The, same night the city Dairy's\n^premises .on Josephine street .were\nentered in the same way, two quart\n, The Trail Rangers, who are boys ^ottle\u00a3J of ^ilk being taken. A\nM5 and under or up to 17 and under foMed 8trip of rust tin waa found\nweight, -wUl have contests in stand-    u bei       .dtmtotle8B   what   the\ning hfoad. jump, running high jump   housebreake, ^ed. \u25a0   .\n.one potato   race,  three  potato   race}   SuspicIon   feH.    on   FrIabi0(     allM\n.Woods, \"Who took; a trip along the\nrlrm, Spent a night at the home of\na rancher, and the next day brought\nin a business1 letter from the rancher to post.    This letter Frisbie open-\n\u25a0^and floor push. The Tuxis bo^s,.\nwho are older, will compete In the',\nrunning broad jump, running high\nJump, three potato raco, five potato\nrace, and 8-lb. shot put.\nIn places where there is only one.\ngroup and a competition cannot bo\nheld, special arrangements are rria.de\nfor the group to have its contests,-by-\nUself. Each group must have at\nleast six members, and only members'\n, who come up to a certain standatd\n.of attendance at tho Sunday arid\nmid-week.' sessions of the camp'\" or\nsquare can compete.\nThe whole contest is a part of\nthe   C.S.E.T.   program   for   the   all\n.round development of the boys. T.\nH. Hutchinson, secretary of tlie\nboys' work department of the Y.M.\nC.A., and also \u00abf*-the r-boys' work\ncommittee of the'religious education\ncouncil, Is the executive head of the\ncontest management for Alberta and\n; British   Columbia.\nRev, J. P. Westman is the mentor\nof the only organized boys' group in\nNelson which has been reported to\nthe headquarters.\nNOTABLE SCRAPBOOK\nGOES TO MUSEUM\nREG1NA, Sask.\u2014A scrapbook com-\n. piled by the late Superintendent\nRouteledge of the Royal Canadian\nMounted Police and now in the\npossession of Assistant Commissioner McGibbon, is to be presented vtro,'\nthe museum at the University !.of\nSaskatchewan. Among the host- of\nother things,, the book contains first\ncopies of practically every newspii-\n: per printed in western Canada. \\;-Tt\nalso contains a detailed history '\u25a061;\nthe He'll Rebellion in. newspape^\nI clipping form. ;\nliPG COUGH\nStrains The Lungs\nThe, terrible, hacking, lung-wracking cough that sticks to you in spite\nof everything , you have done to get\nrid'of It, Is a great source of danger\nto your ; health,;\/and the longer it\nIs -lllowcd.. to stick the more serious\nth-j nWftaee becomes. t  .-_\nYou can1 easily.get rid of the cough\nor cold at its inception by using\nDr. Wood's1' Norway Pine Syrup, a\nremedy that^has \"been universally\nused throughout Canada for the\npas'  30 years.\nMrs. Samuel Matthews, Portage,\nP.E.I., writes:\u2014\"Last winter I caught\n#L.hea-\u00bby cold, and waa^laid up for\nsometime. I had such .a hacking\ncough I could not sleep at night, and\n$16* not think I could ever get over\nit\"., pne day a friend - dropped in to\nsee mo, and was surprised\" to se<\nhow had my cough was. She advised me to use Dr. Wood's Norway\n.Pine.,Syrup, so the next day I sent\njfoivif\u00a3;bottle and soon,got relief, and\nby';th'e.tlme I had taken two bottles,,\nmy, . cough was all gone. I doubt\n'ther-e is Anything t& equal it*\u00bb\nt Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup\nls>:'put. up in a yellow wrapper; 8\nplipa trees the trade mark; price 25c.\narifl \\ritfc' TVIanufactured only by The\nTv .IMllburn 'Co., Limited, Toronto,\n\/Hit!\", '{'..   \u25a0\u25a0 V'V:\ned and copied, and at the bottom of\nthe copy added that the writer owed\nthe bearer $5 for work, and that\nthe recipient should pay him. He\n-secured $4 from the party to whom\nhe delivered the. letter, notwithstanding that the1 epistle changed\nfrom a scholarly to an .ungrartinrmti-\ncal style.\nWith this cash, the deportee went\nto Trail and Rossland, Turning i;n\nln the city again about midnight\nWednesday, be wan run in by 'Sergeant Alex., Stewart. ^\nIn the meantime, Chief of Poiiee\nThomas H, ,Long had obtained FriHr\nbie's record from Spokane, which\nshowed him to have Iipmi n .lope\nfiend, having adtually been given the\ncure in Spokane. So. fur no trace\nof the drugs have been found In\nFrisbie's possession, and it is s.iid\nthat he denies the accuracy of the\nSpokane Information. He is also\nsaid to have done lime in Calgary,\nand the chief is now in eornmun.cn-\ntlon with'the authorities of Unit efty\non tiio matter.\nLadylove  Constant\nLetters are being delivered to\nFrisbie from his lndy lov<! lnnguisih-\ning in the Spokane jail, .while- the\nUnited States authorities Investigate\nwhether she is Canadian or American, with possible deportation In\nview.\nOf her seven \"husbands,-\" the first\ntwo, she claims, were actually wedded to her, the second after the de-Jtth\nof the first, who was a Chinese.\nOthprs have been French, Italian,\nCanadian and American, and her\n\u25a0present nationality turns,on whether'\nNo. 2 was Canadian or American,\na point she asserts she never discovered. . In addition to those\nspouses,    six    of   whom   are    living,\nshe informed the Spokane' police\nthere were other men she had had\nalliance!. With, but whom she did\nnot   regard   ln   suah   sacred   relation.\nSHIP QUANTITIES\nOF SEED OATS\nTOURIST HOTEL ,\nFOR JASPER PARK\nEDMONTON. Alta.-\u2014Considerable\nactivity In the shipment of seed oats!\nfrom the central and northern parts\nof the province is reported, now, the\ndrouth-stricken areas in the south\nhaving .already drawn upon local\nsupplies' for thoir spring\" requirements. ,More than. 800,000 bushels\nof need bats have been supplied from\nthe Dominion s(4d branch in Calgary in addition to what has. i_eei_\nbought direct from' farmers. The\nprice is $1.11 for No. 1 and $1.02\nfor  No.  2, ',\nVANCOUVER\u2014The Grand .'Trunk\nPacific Railway will spend $150,000\nduring the year in erecting a tourist\nhotel in Jasper Park, In addition to\nconsiderable sums In tent cities nnd\ncamps for mountalneera^and tourists\nin Robson Park, it has been , announced: ,'\u25a0\u25a0\nCANCEL RESERVES\nIN KOOTENAY\nBRITISH METAL\nCOMPANY COMING\n, VANCOUVIiiR\u2014Thnt a powerful\nBritish Iron and steel' company will\nIdeate In -British Columbia and\nestablish,-a complete plant for turning out all productM of the industry is the word reaching Vancouver frbpi England. Work on\npreliminaries connected with the\nfirm's flotation for activity in this\nprovince has already started. The\ncompany, U'lU be capitalized at five\nmillion pounds sterling, and will\nwork here \\yjth an established coal\ncompany having rait and water, connections. Native ores of British.\nColumbia are to be utilized.\nFLU HITS ALASKA\nOIL STAMPEDERS\nVICTORIA\u2014A bill , Introduced in\nthe'legislature would bring the large\narea of land alopg the British Columbia Southern and Columbia and\nWestern Ralway\" companies'\u2014 4,0-65,076\nacres\u2014in Slmilkameen and Kootenay\ndistricts, under the Ldnd act for\nid ministration, cancelling all existing reserves. . -\nSEATTLE, .Wash.*\u2014Influenza-- has\nspread among the scores ^of .Alaskarisr\nwho stampeded to the Katalia, Alaska, oil fields. The coastguard cutter .Algonquin with medicine and\ndoctors has left; Juneau for the oil\nfields, The fields were recently reopened when the .^resident signed\nthe Oil  Lands Leasing  bill.\nINDIANS PROTEST\nFISH REGULATIONS\nVANCOUVER\u2014Indians   have   -join\ned   hands   in   protesting   against   tho\nnew   fishing   regulations.    ' According\nto Chiefs Benedict and''Louise James\nthere are hundreds  of aged, orphans\nand   other   tribal   children   ,who   are\nunable   to   get   work   to   buy!   suffi\ncient  food.    '|The   government!}\"   said\nJames,   \"apparently   wishes   to   take\nthe   food   from   their   mouths;    and\nunder   these   conditions   we  shall   be\nwithin   our   rights   to* continue  fish\ning sufficient for food.\nTlje process  of making a mummy      Cactus  Is  seen.,In   perfection   only\nln  biblical  times  cost  $3725. when  supplied with water,    .\nSCIENTISTS CLAIM\nRAIN-MAKING SYSTEM\nCALGARY. Alta.\u2014Rain making by\nscientific means and human efforts\nis becoming . an accomplished fact,\nand according to the announcement\nmade by'Capt E, S. Brett, secre^\ntary. of the, \"McCall Aeroplane Co.,\nattempts tb prqetuce' rain in Calgary and district will be made by\nCapt. McCall whenever rain is .considered necessary. Certain scientific\nlines >vill ,be followed, as already\ntested in South Africa and Tasr\nmania.\nIf you have ,a>happy horne. keep it:,\nso;   if not, 'make it, so.\nIt  is  a poor hand  of charity  that\nsticks to the fingers. '\nBats  sleep . through   the,, winter.\nSEVEN MILLION\n\u2022   THEATER-GOERS\nEDMONTON, Alto'.\u2014During . tho\npast: year 7,374,333 people passed\nthrough tho doors of the theatres in\nthe province of Alberta, according to\ninformation given \"to the legislature\ntly W. M. Davidson, respecting\ntheatres for Alberta. The total receipts for the theatre tax during the\nyear 1013 was. $143,026, as compared\nwit'ly ?00,275 in-MIS.\nGOOD FOR FATHER\nAND GOOD FOR SON\nMR.    C.    HOY    PRAISES     DODR'S.i\nKII>NKY PILLS.\nHe  States .That  they  Relieved   His\nSon  of. Bed Wetting and  Himself \\\n$of    Bladder >- Trouble\u2014Ask-    Your \u25a0\nNelfjhiiors   About   I)odd% Kidney\nPHls.\nThivterge Office, BonaVerfture CO.,\nQue., April 2nd. (Special)'\u25a0\u2014That'\nDodd's 'Kidney Pills have been successfully used by both old and.young .\nas a remedy for kldiiey ills is again ;\nshown by- the statement of. Mr.' do- .*\nment Roy, of this place *'\" ' \u25a0\n. \"I am glad to ba.able to state,\"\nMr. Roy says, \"that Dodd's kidney\nPills relieved my little boy of bed\nwetting. They also helped my bald-\nder trouble. I cannot say too much\nin praise of Doild's Kidney Pills.\"\n' Dodd's Kidney Pills oiSa a kidney\nremedy puro and simple. But bladder and urinary troubles come as a\nresult of weak or. diseased \"kidneys.\nThe natural way to treat such troubles is to strengthen or h-^Ip the kidneys.   -\nMr.   Roy   acted   on   this   principle\nwhen   ho   used' Dodd's   Kidney   Pills.-\nfor his own  and his son's troubles.\nThe satisfaction he got is voiced by,,\nhis statement,\n,   If  you   have  not used  them   yourself,   ask  your  neighbors   if   Dodd's j\nKidney Pills are not the remedy for\nltidnoy ills. ,\nTHE WHITE \u00bbAN FOIiiWStj\nWHERE life INDIAN jjpr.\nThe saline water of Little Manitou\nLake, Saskatchewan, was for many\nyears used by the Indians to1 restore\ntheir sick and ailing to health. \"\nTo-day, the water from this same\nlake, one of Canada's greatest mineral resources, is available for your\nmedicinal use in a refined powder\nform called : '.- \\\nA glass every morning will refresh and invigorate.\nIt clears the head, purifies the organic system\u2014and\nbuilds up the body tissues:    ; ft'\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0$}.        \u25a0-.(\u25a0\nGet it the next time you are at tha druggists\u2014you\nwill find it always pays to keep a bottle in the house.\nLOP\n\"%\nA-;.;\nf][  D EFORE you are asked to buy or try Dunlop Cord Tires, tliey must undergo a test such as you would never give them.\nQ Tires just like your ga'ragemen and dealers now sell are put on our own test cars, and away speed the drivers.\n\u2014A Test that is kept up day and night. |\n\u2014A Test that takes in some of the worst roads in the country and the generality of bumps,\nbad turns, and all the sudden stops that go with them.\n-*A Test that specifies the number'of miles which must be made by. the drivers each day and night.\n\u25a0\u25a0*>   Q The results of this crucial test, naturally, have an important bearing on our manufacturing policy.\ni '      '\" '  ' ' '   : * \u25a0\"' -Vr'w * \"' '   \u25a0'      '\nQ Tested-in-Advance Service aptly apjJies to Dunlop Cord Tire<\u2014*' TracMon,\" \" Ribbed.\"    Can you ask for\na greater guarantee than the story the road tells\u2014a story Which in the case of Dunlop Cord Tires proves that our\nmanufacturing methods are not only Right but Dead Right? S\nDUNLOP THE UNIVERSE OVER-THE  WORLD'S   GREATEST  RUBBER   ORGANIZATION\nDunlop Tire & Rubber Goods Co., Limited\nHead Office and Factories-        - t\n*     BRANCHEif IN   THE  LEADING iCITIES\nTORONTO\n' AI31\n THE DAILY NEWS, SATURDA^ MORNING, APRIL 3, 1920\n*w flV\nKARAKUL LAMB\nThe furs known as Karakul, Persian\" Lamb and Astrakhan come to lis\nfrom the regions about \"Bokhara, in\nTurkestan. Before the war almost\nall of them were dyed and treated\n. at Leipzig, whore two houses alone\n. received 750,000 skins, with a value\not\" about $2,700,000 (at pre-war\nprices) every year.\nThe.raqe of sheep known as Karakul is native of Turkestan, and its\nspecial home is In the vast sandy\ndesert plains of Bokhara. The oasis\nof Karakul is washed by the muddy\nwaters; of the riverZerafchane, which\nswollen by, the snows of the Altai\n.-' mountains, falls into Luke Karakul,\nbut inundates a large area of sandy\ndunes on which many doep-rootcd\nbushes grow, Tn crossing the desert\nto the north, the wind Is laden with\nsalts of spaa, potash and magnesia,\narid th6se'i'n the dry season cover the\nground with white crystals. Many\nof the bushes bear tender green\n. shoots that are the favorite food of\nv the sheoJPV while their berries arid\ntwigs., dried upon the plant and\nthen cut,: for forage, supply, thoir\ndiet ln winter. \/ ' >\n'\u25a0 Thie laiiubs are born covered wl?h\nan .abundant fleece, down; tq their\nhoofs and as far as their,eyes. This\nfleece Is . formed of black strands\ntightly curled against the -skin. If\nthe anlmixl.be' killed within three\ndays of ' its birth and skinned at\nonce, the fleece remains unchanged,\neven\" humidity not affecting the curls,\nAs it grows,, howevor, the curls untwist, and after It once has been\n\u25a0 sheared the wool grows with scarce-\n.'. 'ly a trace of curl. .After five years\n. the wool of the fleece Is quite\nstraight.,; -After three years it-be\ncomes gray, and after seven a dirty\nwhite. .\n..The lambs,are born in February\nHnd killed trie second or third day,\nexcept such as are kept for reproduction \"or for wool. The rule is\nthat the fleece of a lamb .sells for\nthe highest price a sheep has brought\nin the past year. The skins of unborn, lambs, taken.from sheep that:\nhave di&gjSoqn before theidate. on'\nwhich they would \"\"have given birth,\nbring the, highest prices\u2014twenty tq\nthirty roubles.\n-,s- Efforts-were made before the war\nto .acclimatize ^he, Karakul sheep in\nBelgium1\u00a3nd Northern Germany, and\n'With some, success.\nAn YDEAL  WOMAN fc i\nSolomon's model woman would\n\"have made an ideal fdderated. club\nwoman!' First she began at home\nand the' heart of her husband-man\nsafely trusted in her, for she rose\nwhile It -was yet night to give meat\nto her household, She' was a financier, another qualification fitting her\nadmirably for  club  life,  for  we  see\n. her considering a -field and buying\nit. She\/wds a horticulturist, for she\nplanted a vineyard, i-ihe was a merchant, for.\" she bought her goods from\nafar,  and   perceived  that  they  were\n\u2022 good. She. was a manufacturer, for\nshe Is .$<*jtured as making-fine llnon\nand selMg. girdles to the merchants.\nShe wafc^aV wise councilor\u2014perhaps,\n- a m.omlfer^pf the national council of\ndefense:'*Twje knew she was a diplomat, former husband was known, in\nthe\" gaWpf^and so was she\u2014New\n' York  -Signing   Telegram.\n- T-ne Greeks and Romans used wax\ntabic books and continued to use\nthem long after papryus .was hnown.\nMANY STARS AS\n,        JARGE AS SUN\n\"Close-up\" photographs of the\nstellar constellation in the pitiless\nlight of modern photography prove\nthat celestial stars like certain other\nstars are. not always what they\nseem .to be when observed from a\ndistance ; favorabll. to the softening\nphysical defects. Speaking' to a\nlargely attended luncheon ot the\nEmpire club, Toronto, j?rof. Edward El\nBarnard, A.M., D.Sc, L.L.D., of the\nUniversity of Chicago, by means of\nlantern?\" slide reproductions of' astronomical photographs, demonstrated that the contour and general\nappearance of the heavenly bodies\nare totally different to what the\nlaymen would imagine' them to be,\neven when looking through the\nordinary star gazing telescope. The\nseemingly smooth and silvery surface of the moon was shown to be\nespecially deceptive, an intimate\nView of lima, disclosing mountains,\ncraters, huge ugly scars and canyons\naiid proving that satellite to be in\na state of physical disorder. Elaborating at length on his subject \"Photographing the Sky,\" the scientist\nshowed many views of the sun and\nstars. He stated that the sun was\nfrom 2,000 to 3,000 miles thick and\nthat the sup spots appeared on its\nrim, By a study of the sun predictions as to lean or prosperous\nyears could be made with an approximate degree of accuracy. He placed\nVenus in the satellite division, by\ndeclaring that this planet merely\nreflected the rays of the sun and\nwas not an 'illuminating factor\nthrough it own Hght^ supplying re\nsources. He declared that the stars\nwere really suns and, rose and set\nlike suns, and though to the casual\nobserver differing from the sun in\npractically, all respects, were really\nmyriads of suns diffusing their.- radV\nance over the heavens at night By\nthe same token the sun waB simply\na tsl.ar.\nPhotoflraphirifl the Sky.\nProfessor Barnajd said that the\ngreat value of astronomical photo*\ngraphy lay in its power to* represent\nthe heavenly bodies as they really\nare, as compared with the vague\nahd deceptive vision we get of thera\nfrom ordinary observation. The\nhuman eye and photographic plate\nreceived ivio widely different light\npulsations. Photography was discovered   in   1839,   and   soon   applied\nto securing representations of celestial bodies. It was not developed\nto an appreciable extent in this connection, however, till the 80's, when\ndry plates were discovered. The\nlongest exposure Professor Barnard\nmade was 11 hours. He did this in\norder that he might obtain views of\nvery faint nebulosities which could\nnot be detected by the naked .eye.\nThe sun and moon required the slowest plates.\nProfessor Barnard disillusioned any\nof his hearers who might have\nthought that the stars were smaller\nthan tbe central star of the solar\nsystem\u2014the sun. He showed views\nof thousands of them in groups and\nstated that they were all at least\nas large as the sun.\nTIMES HAVE CHANGED\nIt is said that the post office in\nPhiladelphia will lose $15,000 a day\nas the result of going from the\nthree-cent \u2022 back t* . the two-cgnf\nrate for letters,    '\nThat happens to be exactly the\nsum which Benjamin Franklin was\nable to turn over to Great Britain\nin annual revenues from the Post\noffices In the colonies in 1774, after\nhe had put in four years of hard\nwork in creating ,a postal syBtem.\nWINNIPEG TO BE\nHUB OF AVIATION\n\u25a0WINNIPEG, Man.\u2014Winnipeg Is\nexpected this coming season to become the hub of aviation in Western Canada. Preparations are being made by the local companies to\nrun aerial service from Winnipeg to\nthe beaches. A service \u2022 between\nWinnipeg, Minneapolis and St. Paul\nwill be commenced, while flights will\nbe made almost daily to the various\ntowns and cities within a radial\ndistance from the city. \u2022\u25a0 A scheme\nfor a service of largo passenger amd\nfreight machlties connecting Winnipeg with to*wns < and cities east,\nwest and south is being projected.\nWinnipeg will be the northern, station and will act as terminal, and\nwill also be a stopping place for\nall trans-con tin en tai flights in Can-r\nada.\nKEMEMBkat THEM\nWhat has become of tho old-fashioned days when thVre was serious\ntalk about dangers of over-production.\u2014Buffalo Courier.\nThe kernal of the bitter almoiuMs\nAIR PATROL FOR\nALBERTA FORESTS\nEDMONTON, Alta.\u2014The' scheme to\nestablish an air patrol of Alberta\nforest reserves will be put into ei-\nfeet during the coming summer, according to Col. R. H, Palmer, chief\nfire ranger for the ^northern section\nof the province. A patrol of the\neastern slope of the Bockey Mountains, beginning in the south, is to\nbe carried on thUi year. It will be\nentirely experimental at first*- Suitable landing-places* must be located\nbefore the patrol can really be established and wireless stations ,vlll\nalso \" be used for the purpose of\nlocating fires, the fact that a 65-\nmile  range  Is  possible  at an  eleva-\nStrictly   Clean   and   Pure\nAprOl\nThe   Sweetest   OH   from   Apricots\ntion of 5,000\" feet indicates the great\nusefulness- pf the air control,: as'an\naddition to the other protective:\nmeasures.\nThe Belgian parliament in- 1911\nvoted an old \u25a0 age pension for* coal\nminers. -V\n- The black satin shoe with the lQnjj*\nvamp Is to be very good this summen *\naccompanied by the'large square ob| L.\n\u25a0long and oval buckles of rhinestonelf*\nwhich have been so popular for evening wear  all winter.    Bome  very\nextravagant  sales   have  been   made\nrecently in these buckles.\nWOMEN BEAT OLD \"HI\"\ntf;\na\nThey use \"Diamond Dyes\" and Add Years of Vfcfiio\nOld, Faded Garments\u2014Really Funl; ,*\nIt's easy to diamond-dye your old garments\na new, rich, fadeless color, no matter if they\nbe wool or silk; linen, cotton or mixed goods. C\nHouse-dresses, ginghams, aprons, blouses, skirts,\nsilks, stockings, sweaters, children's coats, draperies\u2014*\neverything can be imule new and good for years of\nwear with \"Diamoiid'Dyea.\"\nThe Direction Book in package tells how to diamond-*\ndye over any color. To match material, havo druggist\nsnow you \"Diamond Dye\" Color: Card..\n\"California Syrup of Figs\"\nChild's Best Laxative\nAccept \"California\" Syrup of Figs\nonly\u2014look for the name California\non the package, then you are. sure\nyour child Is having the best and\nmost .-harmless physic for tho little\nstomach, liver and bowels. Children\nlove its fruity taste. Full directions\non each bottle. You must say \"Call1\nfornia.\"\nGIIOWING   DEAF   WITH\nHEAD NOISES?\nTRY THIS\nlf\\you ore growing hard of hearing\nand fear Catarrhal Deafness or if you\nhave, roaring, rumbling, hissing noises,\nin your eprs go to your* druggist and\nget 1 ounce of Parmlnt (double\nstren (stiff; and add to it % pint of\nhot water\/ and a little granulated\nsugar. Take 1 tabledpoonfUl four\ntimes a day.\nThis will often bring quick relief\nfrom ' the distressing liead noises,\nClogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus stop\ndropping Into the throat. It Is easy\nto prepare, costs little and Is pleasant\nto tak* Anyone who Is threatened\nwith Catarrhal Deafness or who has\nhead noises should give this prescrlp-\n] WHY SPRiNG BRINGS OUT      |\nt    FRECKLES AND ERUPTIONS |\nClearYourSci _\nSkin With Cuticura\nAfter shaving and before bathing\ntoh* dandruff and Itching, punplea\nSlackheads with Cuticura Ointment. \"vVash all off with CuUcura\n9__p_hd hot water, using pleitoy of\n<E_d best applied with the hands.\nOne*sSor_llu8es,*avlng,sham.\npooihg,bathing.\nH.W.Edwards\nT AX ID E R M1S T\nGAME  HEADS AND  ANIMAL\nRUGS  MOUNTED\n,i2nd Street, REVEL^TOKEr B.C.\n' P.O. BOX 804\nThe sudden appearance of freckles,\nslight eruptions or fine linos at thin\nseason Is' attributed by scientists to\nthe \"actinic ray,\" which is .unusually\nactive during the spring months.\nWhere the skin is so affected by this\ninfluence, If one will procure an ounce\nof- common> morcollzed wax at any\ndrug store, apply a little of It before\nretiring, like cold cream, she can\neasily overcome . the trouble. When\nthe wax Is washed off next morning\nminute flaky skin particles come with\nit. The entire outer cuticle is removed ln this way in a week or two,\nwith all  its  defects.\nNo bleach could so effectually remove freckles or blemishes. The new\nsurface is smoottf, clear, fresh looking.\nNo harm or inconvenience accompanies\nthis simple treatment.'\nDON'T\nDESPAIR\nIf you are troubled with pains or\naches; feel tired; have headache,\nindigestion, insomnia; painful passage of urine, you will find relief in\nCOtDMEDAL\n'T|I33__!Q_-P'\nThe world', standard remedy lor Iddney,\nliver, bladder end uric add trouble, end\nNational Remedy of Holland sine,* J6D&\nAll druggists, 50c. a box. Guaranteed.\nlook for tke same Cold MmU \u2022\u00bb ewr\nso* and accept ba trtttrtww ;\n*%.,\nL&\n^^^^>'^^\n$%\nV.\nN\nit*\n-feu- i, -jSjS?\n*Aj>'\n&\n:v<\nv*Y-\nn it\nThe Tire It Pays to Buy\nOnly the good survive.\nTime's old sickle strews\nthe way with the worthless jj\naifd# the public ostracises\nthe failures. Tire standards are ever higher and\nonly the best tires can\nreach^up to it. Tires thai\nsurvive the ordeal of time\nand experience' are 'the\nkind it pays to buy.   Such\nmm\nare\nPERGHA\nTIRES\n<*.\n<(\nThe Tires That Give Satisfaction \"\nGUTTA PERCHA & RUBBER, LIMITEL\nHead Offices and Factory, Toronto, Canada\nBrancKfes in all'leading cities of the Dominion   .\n %fH\u00bb 8\nffiBl fflffil HWS, SAT?p\u00bbAY: MORNING; APRIL .3, 1920\nTYROL WANTS\nGERMAN COMMERCE\nVIENNA, A^riir 2.\u2014A delegation\ntjt&tja, the Tyrol provisional govern-\nihoht has arrived in Vienna to lay\nhefore the Representative of the entente b, demand for economic fusion\nwith Gertiihhy. It ia 's&lfl the British and Aiflerictui commissioners vill\nrefuse  tp apftvr^them.\nd Amer^an \u25a0\ntitlT    \t\nChtirches\nllll   ill       I.\nThe\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness   Meeting\nI\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Sunday 'School.\n\u2014- ^L\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation    Meeting.'\nBright   Singing   and   Music ,at,\nthese meetings . . '.- \u25a0;\nYOU are invited to attend;.;'\nServices in Catholic and\nAnglican Churches Yesterday;  Festival Tomorrow\nGobd Friday and Easter, com-\nmehibirttting thb death hhd the Resurrection of the Savior, represent\nfdr Ch*rIsti.i__dohi tlie tragedy and the\ntriumph attending mankind's salvation. .\ni (jlervlces ' to comtnomdrate tho\n1886th .Anniversary oi! tho crucifixion\nbf Christ on Calvary wore held in\nthe1. Church of Mary Immaculate,\n^eitarday. \u25a0';\n\u2022 >J|he \"bare,*: flowerless altar, draped\nwith royal purple, the gleaming\nwjiite lighted, tapers, the arohia of\nthe iJne^nBft ,of sandlewood, and the\nmournful chants of psalms formed\npart of the service which has been\nexecuted' yearly in the Catholic\nChurch, since the early 'days ol\nChristianity. ..The themo of .the\nsermon was  \"The  Cross.\"\nIn the afternoon, \"The Way of (ho\nCross\"  service  was  sung.\nBAPTlSTCHURCH\nMorning Service at 10:30\nSubject:   \"THE   PASS-OVER\"\nSunday  School and Bible  Classes\nat 11:30.,\nEvonliig .Secviae at 7:30\nSubject:   \"THE  RESURRECTION\"\nr|;-Tftursday     Evening     at      8:00-^\nPrayer Service.\n^Friday  Evening at   7:00\u2014B.Y.PiU.\nYou   will   be  welcome   at  our\nservices\nSt Paul's Presbyterian\nCHURCH\nSpecial Easter Services\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"The   Difference   Easter, Morning   Made.\"\nMusic-\u2014 \u25a0\".' i *\n\"O  Sun  of  RigRteoushess\"     Nicol\n\"O   Lord   of   Life\" Nicol\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Sunday School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"Death   Is   Not-a^TerrriihWB But a  Thoroughfare.    There\nwe say not \"good by6* but 'good night\/\"\n\u2022  Music-\nSolo\u2014Mrs.   Cooper,   gold   medallist,   London,   England.\nHallelujah   Chorus   in   its   entirety   (Messiah) Handel\nSolo\u2014Mrs.  Cooper.\n8:45\u2014Special meeting W. M. S.   ' '\nMonday, 4 p.m.\u2014Juniors.  *. t .;  ,\u201e '.\nMonday, 7:15  p.m.\u2014Trail  Rangers.\nI-Mday, 12:30 to G\u2014Sale ofwork\".And home cooking by Ladies' Aid.\nEFiday,v*7(;:15-i-C.'0. I. T.       J\nATTEND  SOME  CHURCH  TOMORROW  A^ID   HEAR   MESSAGES.\nOF  HOPE IN  SERMON  AND  SONG\nRev. .T. A. Althoff, V.G., conducted\nllif  vuridijS  services.'\nAt St.. Saviour's church tlie, services proscribed by the Anglic;i n\nchurch tor Good Friday, which is\nobserved as a day of \"prayer and\nfateting, were'1 conducted by the rector,  Rev.  Fred  H1.   GraHam.\nTomorrow, corresponding to the\n\"third day,\" on wHich Christ lose,\nwill be a day of festival in the\ncliurches, and the message of the\ncompleted redemption will ,be told\nfrom the pulpit and choir.\nThe official advent of the Season\nof brightness, will Be rharked, doubtless, by tho* customary display of\nspring millinery and costumery.\nIS\nFRISCO'S FAVflBITE\nA chic pol-tralt of Edna Maloria,\n'\u25a0danscuso at the Palace Itose Room,\"\nSan Francisco, embellishtiE. the front\ncover of \"The Wasp,\" an illustrated\nweekly published at San Francisco\nand Los.Angeles. This popular Nelson girl, who has made such a\nfurore as a classicle dancer, is the\ndaughter of Mr, .and Mrs. J. J.\nMalone, of this city, and her paronts\nhave been spending the winter with\nher. jl\nOn \"The Passing .Show\" page of\nthe Wasp, under the heading \"Edna\nMalone, Famous Danseuse at\nPalace,\" Is the following appreciation   of   Miss   Malone:\n\"Miss Edna ittujoiie, the famous\nsoloist dunsouse, now appearing at\ntho Palace Hotel in\" a return engagement. Is probably the., highest\ndeveloped type of an interprot-ative\ndancer appearing before the public\ntoday.\n\u2022'Patrons of the hotel have been\nsurprised at the technique displayed\nin the original creations such as the\nOukid Nail, or Algerian street dance.\nTravellers from far off Algiers have\nremarked that it is-a transportation\nof costun*^, musftf&'and grace from\ntlie city of the far east to the city\nof the west. \u25a0\n\"Miss Malone has toured the United, States and danced in the principal cities of the country. Her\ncreative genius, so strongly evidenced in her adaption of the famous\nSpring painting of Boticilii, is given full scope in her original cro-\nutipn of .the Moon of Love. From\nthe pages of Greek mythology,\nknown to but few] students of\nliistrionism, she has taken the fable\nOf the Grecian maiden who, scorning tho faith of her people, the Greek\nGods of Might, turned In pagan rev-\nry to the Moon worshippers fetish\ncut, but when on the ove of the\nNew Year the wrathful high priests\nfind her in unholy adoration, they\ncast her forth from their people and\ncity, This adaption in dance, the\nfirst time on the American stage or\nballroom, has won tho favorable\ncriticism of the ldEding connoisetirs\nof classical tcrpsiehology, who predict for Miss Malone a stellar career\nIn her chosen art.\"\nEaster\n\"The Lord Is Risen Indeed!\"\nSt. Saviour's Church, Nelson\nEASTER DAT\n6:30 a.m , ,....   Holy  Communion\n8:00 a.m '... >..;....,;    Holy   Communion\n10:30 a.m Mattins and  Holy Communion   (Choral)\n3:00 p.tn     Children's   Service\n7:30 p.m      Evensong\n'EASTER MONDAY \"\u25a0\u2022*'      '\u25a0\u2022'\u2022\n10:30 a.m \".  Holy Communion\nST. ANDhEWrS-BY-THEJLAKE, WILLOW  POINT\n' EASTER TUESDAY ''- '\n,  10:30 a.m. -. .....Mattins and Holy Communion\nTrinity Methodist Church\n    \u25a0:\u25a0'(\u25a0   . \/\nREV. J. P. WE8TMAN,  Pastor\nPhone 10-:\nGlad   Easter   Services\nEastor ahd Son.  are Synonymous\nEaster Music and  Easter.Decorations\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"RESURRECTION   RESULTS.\"\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Sunday   School.    \u25a0\nEVENING   MUSICAL   PROGRAMME\n7:16\u2014Fifteen  Piece Orchestra.\n1. Morceau  Facile ' ; r\n2. 'Swing Song.        '   ''    . ! ;\u25a0'\n3. O Dry Those Tear'-.'  \"' j','.\n4. Tho Holy City^-Ins^'umonlal' Solo.\n7:30-\n5. Easter   _-ymn.'     ,,'.'.!. '\u25a0\u2022\n0. Anthem\u2014Uhfoid  Ye. Portals.\n7. Solo\u2014Selected: ,Ji_rs., Fflrtcatli.\n8. Hymn\u2014Recent \"Square^ -.\n\\ '.9.\" Anthem\u2014Hosuiina!       ,'(.    <\n?%. Qffertoire\u2014I Know a Lovoly Garden\u2014Orchestra.\n&:4\nSolo\u2014Mr. J. P. PItner. '    .   .\n-Hymn\u2014Miles Lane.\nAnthem\u2014T-ifo Your Glad Voices.\nEnding with  the  Hallelujah  Chorus.\nEyjninn .Subject! \"THE NEW LIFE AND THE NEW DAY.\"\nFIRSt 61      IpF CHRIST,  SCIENTIST\nCorner   .   C\u00ab_tenay and. -Victoria. Streets\nK.School Meets at _:30\n-Ices 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nUNREALITY\n:  GALATIANS 6:8\nTestimonial Meeting, 8 p.m.\nEE CIRCULATING LIBRARY\n,jr,and; Friday evening from 7 to 9\nexcept Sundays nnd public holidays\n>N IS EXfENDED TO A1.-1,,'\nRAIL COMMITTEE\nIS AT DEADLOCK\nWASHINGTON, April 2.\u2014In\nletter to the president, B. M. Jewell,\nchairman of tho railroad commission, which constitutes the Labor\nparty on the railroad hoard, said he\nregretted very much \"to advise yon\nour failure to obtain any bene,\nflcial results from these conferences.\" The employees, Mr. Jewel\nsaid, were keenly disappointed at ihe\nposition taken by tho \u25a0 railroud- executives' committee .which announced\nlast night a -deadlock and the Willi-*\ndrawal of the r'oalroad members from\nthe conference.\n49     Farms for Sale\nIf you are going to Calgary to take\na Motor Course, and wish to receive\na Proper Training, which means that\nyou should get expert Instructions and\npractical experience on many types- of\nautomobiles, tractors nnd stationary\nems engines from the day, yo,u comr\nmencc your training until graduating,\nyou should attend THE HEMFHII.lt\nMOTOR SCHOOL as it is the largest\nand best equipped trade school in Al*\nberta. 1   .\nEndorsed and approved by the leading automobile trade association and\ntractor firms. (tiUtiD)\nSmall   A-dvertiseiWents\nThat   Bring   Quick\nu i* n s\nID   Malt Help Wauled\nWANTED\u2014Third class engineer for\nshingle mill. Apply Kootenay Shingle\nCo., .Ltd.,   Salmo,   B.C. (7197)\nWANTED \u2014 Immediately, first class\nerlgerinan, sixty-five cents per hour;\nalso assistant trimmermati, fifty-five\ncents per .hour. Apply Bilker Lbr.\nCo,,   Ltd.,  Waldo,   B.C. (\u00a3U0)\nWANTED AT ONOE\u2014Foreman to tako\nout Jog drive. Good wages to right\nmnn. A. Macdonald & Co., Galloway,\nB.C.. . (7122)\nWANTED\u2014Night clerk at once.   Apply\n.'   Bume Hotel.\"  (7134)\nWANTED-\u2014Five   gangs   sawyers,   $1.75\nper  thousand.     Deschamps   Lbr.   Co.,\n.   B.rehbank.    . (7117)\nWANTED\u2014Linccnsod log scaler. Apply\nto   Slocan   Valley   Lumber   Co.,   at\n,, Koch ,Siding,   B.   C. (7082)\nWANTED\u2014Two gangs ol log cutters,\npaying $1.75 per thousand feet; good\ntimber, under ten logs to thousand\nfeet, level ground. Salmo Cedar Co.,\nParks Siding,  B.C. (7003)\nWANTED\u2014Third class engineer and\neflgennan for sawmill. ApjJly Forest\nMills of B.C., Htd., Cascade, or Nelson, B.C.   \u25a0 (7065)\nYOUNG men with talent for drawing\nshould read our Art Prospectus.\nCartooning, Illustrating, Designing\ncan be successfully learned by efficient homo < study methods. Pros-\ni-ectds :fte* International Correspondence Schools, Montreal.       (C574)\nWANTED\u2014Young man stenographer.\nPrevious experience  In lumber office\nI not abSblutely necessary. Bast\nKootenay Lbr.,' Co., Ltd., Jaffray,\nB.C.    '       \u25a0      * (7058)\nlOOD WAGES \u25a0 for home work. We\nj need' you to malte Socks on the fast,\n\u25a0 easily learned Auto Knitter, Experience unnecessary. Distance Immaterial. Positively no canvassing.\nYarn supplied. Particulars, 3c*\nstamp. Dept. 82o Auto Knitter Co,,\nToronto. '    , , .    . (667-7-fr\nWANTED\u20143 gangs sawyers, $1.75 per\nM; 3 experienced millwrights, 80c per\nhour. O. I. & M. Lumber Co., Boulder Creek, B.C. (7003)\nWANTED\u2014Sawyer Tor small mill, cutting ten thousand feet per day.\nWynndel Box Faotory, Wynndel, B.\nC. (6929)\nPRINTED ENVELOPES cost llttU\nmore than plain envelopes and they\ngive a .much better impression tc\nyour customers. Write The Dallj\nNews Job Department for sample*\nand prices.\nWANTED\u2014Dishwasher,    male\nmale.    Apply  The  Grill.\nor    fe-\n(6749)\nCOEUR   D'ATONE   UHVES\nWANTED \u2014 Miners, $5.75; muckers,\n$5.75; tlmbermen, $6.25; eight hour\nshift; steady employment; no blan-\nketff needed; modern boarding and\nrooming houses, with bath, 'steam\nheat,   electric, light,   reading   rooms;\nfood houses for rent to men with\nFimilles. Write or apply to Mines'\nEmployment Office, Geo. T, Edmis-\ntph, Mgr\u201e Wallace, Idaho. (6668)\n13 Situations Wanted Male\nWANTED   \u2014\u25a0 Day\"vwork   of   any   kind.\n\u25a0 Apply S. WhUtaker, J'ho.he 58. (7112)\nENGINEER   3rd   class,   B.   C.   Certificate requires season':! position. Plenty\n9   experience. ^Address Norman  Craigie,\n\u25a0;; Creston.   (7086)\nMALE BO'aKfCElilPlOlt, cart use typq-\nWrlter,   socks   employment   town   or\n; country, willing to holp in other\nways. Seven years present employ.\nFree middle of April. E. H.'Evans,\nB6x  1016,  Nelson,   B.C. (7073)\nFOR    first    olass    plastering    consult\n. Joseph J.  Ruzlcka, 714  Baker St.\n;    * \u25a0  (7016)\nWhen  ordering  goods  by   mall   send\nn \u25a0 Dominion  Express  Money   Order.\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Housekeeper, or girl for\nlight housework. Apply P.O. Box\n.428,  or 617  Carbonate   St. (7187)\nWANTED\u2014Girl at Nelson Steam Laun\ndry. (7173)\nWANTED\u2014Waitress.       Grand    Central\n. Hotel. (7171)\n\\VANTlj.D\u2014At   once,   woman   cook   for\nTrail Hospital.    AVcrage 12  patients.\nApply   Trail   Hospital,   Trail,' B.C.\n.(7162)\nWANTED\u2014Nurse,    not    necessarily    a\ntrained one. -.Phone 477L2.   .     (7135)\nWANTED\u2014Dishwasher, male or female.\n.\"The Grill.\" . ,:\nWANTED\u2014Girl   for   tea  room.'\nHume Hotel.\nApply\n(-6995)\nWANTED\u2014A chambermaid and a din-\n. Ing  room   girl.    Apply  Strathcona.\n(6838)\nDOMINION EXPRESS Money Orders\nare on sale in five thousand offices;\nthroughout   Canada.\nMIXED FARMING\u2014The C.P.R. has\nstill some Choice lands In well-\nsettled districts In Western Canada\nfor sale at low prices; twenty yeatfs\nto pay; irrigated lands In Sunny\nSouthern Alberta, wit* loan of $2000\nin improvements to assist new! settlers. Act now\u2014they are going fast.\nFor free booklets and full information Allan Cameron, General. Supt.\nof Lands, C.P.R., 985 1st St. East,\nCalgary, or H. H. Loughran, Cahadlan\nPacific Railway Statloh, Vancouver,\nB.C. (6573)\n22      Miscellaneous\nOPERATIONS\nUNNECESSARY\nH E P A T O L A . removes   Gait\nStones,    corrects    Appendicitis\nIn    24    hours    without     pain.\nRegistered    under    Pure    Food\nand    Drug   Act,      $6.00.      Not\nsold by  druggists.   ,   .\nSole Manufacturer\nMRS.   GEO.   ALMAS\n230    4th    Awe.    S\u201e    Saskatoon,\nSask.    Box  1073.    Phone. 4855.\nWANTED\u2014Mllo or more pipe forpow^\ner.; \"State ,full particulars. .Would\nremove from any location at right\nprice;    Address Box 2,  Nakusp,  B.C.\n.fl\u00bbtm\nREADING\nIn Church Bulb\nand t^Very afternoon\nA CORDIAL\n3W\nl^8^UUl-\u00bbmiWWIMU\u00a5'liri.i l\/\n\"HEAVEN and Hell\" \u2014 Swodenbbrg's\ngreat jtvork oil the life after- death,\nand a real world beyond. Over 400\npages, only 26c postpaid. A- G. Law,\n486  Euclid  Ave.,  Toronto.      . (6849)\n26   Machinery for Sale\nF(Rlf3AIjE^--ATcmnine^ V\njnant, with job press.    Apply to ,A.\nMclimls, New Denver, B.C.        (7181)\nFOR SALE CHEAP \u2014 One Hercules\nachlne, $50.\nB.C.   (718B)\nhorse  power stumping machine,  $50.\nC.   C.   Sailor.   Fniitvale.   \t\n45   Property Wanted\n^N^srwT?ei7T*^r^^^\nwith option of purchase, 'with bearing trees, house, outbuildipgs. Will\narrive Nelson April 8.    What' offers,\n' -Hfii iM \u00a3tt& -.WfiSHU''  -'- . viSfiMr\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER do'-'\nsires position. Apply Box 7147-\nDiiily  News.. :    ,'.. (7,147)\n27   Machinery Wanted\nWANTED\u2014One, horsepower electric\nmotor in good condition. Write giving full particulars and price to\nNews Publishing Company, Ltd.,\nNelson,   B.C. (6689)\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nBRIGHT, furnished' suite for rent.\nPhone 594. .   ,'       .       ,   (7159)\nFURNISHED ROOMS\u2014Clean,- comfortable, steam heat, shower hatha, ,$2.25\nper week, $9.00 and $10.00 per month.\n***mt a \u00bb fftfiKI.\n33 Fruits and Vegetables\n^^S_^Nj^-^<^%rf7^^^^V^^^^-\u00bb^-V^V--^^pN^V^__^-^V^V-*^Y^^^<S'V>\nONION SETS\u2014Garden Seeds Th built\nand packages; grafting wax, Soft or\nhard; formalin, lime sulphur, water\nglass (best quality),. poultry lice\npowder, ICresp (red mite killed), Nyal\npoultry tonic, My OWn gopher poison,\nfruit trees, roses, perennial plants,\neta. Mail .orders filled promptly.\nRutherford Drug Co., Nelson, B.C.\n\u25a0(7170)\n23   Property for Sale\n20 ACRES bench land with creek, near\nWInlaw, Slocan Valley: $700 easy\nterms, or $500 cash. Thos.. P. Inge,\n124-19th   avenue   N.E.   Calgary,   Alta.\nRANCH FOR SALE \u2014 80 acres, 12\nacres In meadow and clover and timothy; 10,0 fruit trees, part coming\nln bearing; 5 acres slashed and\nburned over, small barn, chicken\nhouse, root house, and . 2-roomed\nhouse* 28 fept by 14 feet. Three\nsmall horses, ages 2, 9 and 10 years;\n2 sets of harness, buggy, democrat\nand democrat sleigh, and tools. A\nbargain, part cash,  rest  terms,  at  6\nSor      cent,      $2200.     Wm.      Tipper,\n:ings Gate, B.C.    (7165)\nIF you want to buy good fruit land\n'etthet In ten, twenty, thirty, fifty\nor one hundred acres, call at 910\nHoover street. (7146)\nF\u00a9R SALE\u2014Four cultivated lost and\nthree roomed cabin in Rosemont.\nWhat offers? . Gordon B. Holllng-\nton, Trail. (7038)\nFOR IMMEDIATE SALE\u2014Kensington,\nabout 3 acres of land,' partly improved, good frontage} spring water\non land. Lot 7, Lot 304. Cheap for\ncash.    Box. 7107  Dally News.   (7107)\nFOR SALE\u20142-acre rancn, one mile\nfrom Nelson; 3 roomed house, chicken house, some bearing frUlt trees\nand small fruits. Will sell cheap\nfor cash.    Box 7108  Daily  News.\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap for cash, quick, 10\nacres at Castlegar; Block 56, lot 181,\nclose to . station. $275. Clear title,\nApply T. S. Box 411, Lethbrldge, Alta.\nFOR SALE or rent, 14 U acres, 7 clear,\nfruit trees and \u2022 small fruit, 3-room\nhoilse, stable and chicken house;\nplenty of water, one mile from Nelson.    Box   7093   Daily   News.   (7093)\nTEN ACRES, hll level, cleared, fenced,\nin Hay, three acre orchard; small\nhouse, barn 34x34; stone basement;\nstable. Twenty-two hundred Dollars.\nH. IS. Dill.   . (7067)\nFRUIT RANCH to rent Apply Strath-\nqona..  (6682)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two 4-room cottages, full,\nlevel 'lots. Cheap for cash. One\nmedium, size Taylor safe. P. O. Box\n172?    Thomas  Sargent. (6950)\nFOR    SALE\u20147%    acres    in    town   of\nCreston, known as Block C, and part\nof  Block  B.    Apply to ownerfc J.  B.\nBarreau, Vancouver, General Delivery.\n(6283)\nFOR SALE\u20141 roomed cottage on Slocan street. Electric light, hot and\ncold water; quick sale, $250. Apply\nU.K.   Bakery. 7015)\nFOR SALE\u2014Five acres of land at\nFruitvale, B.C., would make an ideal\npoultry or fruit ranch; dally train\nservice and closo to. good markots.\nA snap for quick sale. For price\nand terms inquire of owner at 2815\nDewdney St., Regina, Sask., or to\nW.   A.   Powne,   Fruitvale,   B.C.   (7014)\nBEFORE LOCATING anywhere, see\nGrand Forks Valley land for Fruit,\nDairy, Poultry or Stock Ranching.\nState what you want, amount of\ncash for first' payment, and we will\nsuit you. C. V. Meggltt & Co. (Tho\nOld-time Land Locator), Grand\nForkj B.C: (7059)\n32   For Sale or Rent\nFARM FOR RENT OR SALE on Columbia jriver, half mile to railway\nstation,( mile to school, postoffice\nand stores. Hundred fifty bearing\n'\u25a0\u25a0iapple jVccs; small house, stabler\n: twenty V'cres cleared, ton more started; unlimited range. Farmer with\nstock niime ills rbwn terms. Have\notlier interests. Peterson, Blueberry\nCreek.   ] (7145)\n18    Articles for Sale\nFOR   SALE\u2014Magnet   Cream   Seperator,\nBox  7183  Daily  News. ( 183)\nFOR SALE\u2014Five hundred feet of 4-ln.\npipe.    Just   right   for   pipe   line   for\n\u25a0' poWer or domestic use.    E. Hayward,\nSalmo,  B.C. (7194)\nGOULDS Hand Sprayer, fitted to barrel on low cart, with shafts for one\nhorse. There is no better outfit for\nspraying in rough orchard. $1.25. W.\nJ.  McKim, Nelson. (7177)\n19 POULTRY & EGGS\ns_-___-Y5^7__ra_n_E\u00a3\u00a3o-u(-r~\nBred to liar \u25a0\nHatching  Ekss. .... .315.00 per hundred\nDay Old Chicks 530.00 per hundred\nMay and June Delivery\nwe guarantee 100 per cent fertile eggs,\nand 100 pre.cent live chicks delivered.\n.Our Specialty\nPULLETS, two, three and (our molSth-\nold.\nLet us save you tho Worry, Trouble\nand Risk ln Ghlok. Raising. We ship\nPullets oh approval,. C.O.D., anywhere\nand any 'time.    Limited stipply left.\nOur Foundation Stock has been bred\nand trapnested for high egg production\nfor twelve years,. They are ralBed under natural conditions, with plenty of\nfree range On the largest exclusive\nWhite Leghorn Farm ln Western Canada.\nBreeders of Dependable Foundation\nStock.\nailEILYBBOOK    FAKM\n(8861) Parksvillo.   B.C.\nFOR SALB^-7 White Iiegllflrn inill-tB\nand one cockerel, properly mated,\n817.00.   R. B. Hay. . (7196)\nBUFF and Black Orpington, and Buff\nLeghorn eggs, $2.50 per 15. Special\npen of Blue Orpington; headed by\n1st cockerell at the' B. .C. provincial\nshow, Vancouver, eggs $G per .15.\nA. M..Seattle, Waldo, B.C.        (7182)\nWANTED\u2014At once, ten' White Leg:\nhorn pullets. Write, .stating price.\nBwing,  Perry  Siding,  B.C. (7161)\nGET your eggs from  hens  that  sur-\nSassed the high cost of living. My\nens Cleared . J3.17 each In 1919.\nPure bred White Leghorns and\nBarred Rocks, $2.00 per 10; 112 per\nhundred. B. Parkinson, New Denver,\nB.C. ,  (6960)\nWHITE LEGHORN COCKERELS .for\npale. In fine condition for niating.\nCrown Hill Poultry Farm, Balfour,\nB.C. (7106)\nIF YOUWANT Classy Stock try a\n-ettlHg of Wallach's MlnOrcas and\nAnccnas, bred to lay; \u00bb3.00 per setting.    Box 267 Nelson. (7091)\nBARRED ROCKS, exclusively. Visitors, call and see iny splendid mat-\nings:  52 per 15.* T.  Roynon, Phone\n. 431L2, Nelson.  (7102)\nHATCHING EGGS\u2014Prize-winning, rose\ncomb Reds, J2 for 15. A. Tregillus,\nBox 543,  Nelson. (7044)\n<_ET your, eggs from nens that surpassed the high cost of living. My\nhens .cleared $3.17 each in 1919.\nPure bred White Leghorns and\nBarred Rocks, J2.00 per 16; ?12 per\nhundred.    B. Parkinson. ...  (6960)\nBARRED PLYMOUTH ROCK and S.\nC. White Leghorn hatching eggs for\nsale. Heavy winter laying strain;\n$2 per 15, $12 per 100. Wlckham &\nMitchell, Robson, B.C. (6825)\nHATCHING EGGS\u2014S. C. White Leghorns, Barrons cockerel, heavy laying strain, $2.60 per 16. A. A. Pitch-\n-Ord,  Nelson. ' (6837)\nMAMMOTH  Toulous   Goose   Eggs;   50c\neach.'.   Mrs. Appleton, Proctor. (6686)\nCHOICE COCKERELS hnd 'TrlO_, Leg.\nLeghorns, Ancon_h~ and Reds.   Eggs\nfor hatching in season.    A. H. Blu-\nmenauer, Box 443, New Denver, B.C.\n(6687)\nHATCHING Eggs, White Wyandottes,\nRegal strain, two-fifty per fifteen,\nfour-fifty jier thirty, . $7 por fifty,\ntwelve dollars per ..hundred. Whlto\nLeghorns and S. (3. Reds, $2 per\nfifteen; five-fifty per 'fifty. Atkinson, RO'semdht, Nelson. Phono 591R1.\nif      (6980)\nWHITE    LEGHORN .Hatching    Eggs,\n. two dbllurs\u00bbper fifteen;  twelve dollars por hundred.   McDlarmid SQUlres,\nRobson,  B.O.   . (7013)\nCpi.imis.ion Merchants\nRANCHERS' PRODUCE solo oh com-1\nmission. G. W. Bartlott, William* I\n.Siding. , \u25a0 (6699) f\n42        Matrimony\nMARRY; many rich.   Particulars free. I\nF.   Morrison,   L-3058   W.   Holdon  St..\nSeattle,  Wash. (6698)\nSeiepnd. Hand  Dealers\nTHB ARK pays cash for second' hand j\nfurniture, etoves; 60.6 Vernori, Phone\n,651.    ,          . ,   ,     ,     (0684)\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\n. T. A. WAISH & CO.,  LIMITED\n. Saw  and   Shingle   Mill   and   Mining :\nMachinery, Yellow Strand Wife Ropo;\nLeather and Rubber Belting and Pack- (\nIng;   Acme   Shingle   Bands   ahd   Box\nStrapping. ~ B.    C.    Agents   Monogram\nOils and Greases. Buy and Sell Steel\nRails and Machinery.\n858-60   Camblo   St.,   Vancouver   B.   O.\n_ \u25a0      ' (6690) i\nH.   E.   DILJi\nFARM  AND   CITY   PROPERTY      \u25a0\nAll  Branches   of   Inaurauce   Written\n308 Ward St. Telephone 180.\n(6901,)\nLEE XEB & COMPANY^\nBoots & Shoes Macto to Order, Bepalrett\n.-,.   . B12H  PBONT ST.\nGASOLINE,    OIL   AND\nENGINES\u2014Fony   or   two   cycle,\nGAS\nover-\nImuled, ropairod and installed. Satisfaction guaranteed.    Box 122?, NELSON\nWholesale\nATT-555D^NAT_-^-^aTwH6T_Es_Xi-\nGrocers and Provision Merchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruit's, Staple and Fanoy Groceries,\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs? Chees\nand Packing House Produots. Officio\nartd Warehouse, corner of Front and\nHall streets. P.O. Box 10.96; Telo-\nphones 28 and 2-.           (6668)\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLE'S GREENHOUSE, Nel-\n-on. Cut flowers and floral do-\nBlgns.  .      (6681)\nAssayers\nB. W. WIDD.OWSON, Box A-J168,\nNelson, B, C. Standard western\nCharges. (6694)\nBarristers\nE. a.  MATTHEW\n. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc\nP. O. Box 38. Nelson. Phono B44\n'  (6697)\nPhysicians and Surgeons\nWHITE LEGHORN EGGS for hatching, from my cup winners, $5.00 setting. Several choice cockerels .for\nsale. F. J. Harblnson, Cranbrook,\nB.C. (6761)\nBREEDING PEN 6t Barred Rook birds\nfor   sale;   eight   hens   ahd   unrelated\ncockerel;   good   utility    strain,    $20.\nWlckham ,&  Mitchell,   Robson,   B.C.\n(7041)\nFOR SALE\u2014 Ono Old Trusty Incubator, with new lamp, $10.00. W. J.\nMcKim,   Nelson,   B.C. (717S)\nFOR KALE\u2014A- light delivery express\nWagon In good shapo, $65. A. Cameron,  Balfour. (7160)\nFOR SALE\u2014A quantity of poultry\nnetting, new and second-hand. A.\nMilton,  Mirror .Lake,  B.C. (7108)\nFOR  SALE\u2014Good  substantial   counter,\n16 ft. 6 in. long by 3 ft. wide, with\n. cash, drawer.    Howe\" Electric Co. '\n  \u25a0 (7118)\nPRINTED ENVELOPES cost, little\nmore than plain envelopes and' they\nglvcv W much 'better impression to\nyour' customers. Write The Dally\nNews  Job   Department   for   samples\nHllll    Or-lfAH\nFOR  SALE\u2014A  fine  violin  with  bow\n. and   case.   Thirty   years   in   present\nowner's    possession..    Two    hundred\n. dollars. Box 7081 Dally Nows. (7081)\nBOAT HOUSE\u2014for sale.  Good  site en\nwater  front.  Apply, box   198.  Nelson\n(7088)\nFOR SALE\u20141910 Chovrolet, thoroughly\noverhauled and \"repainted, run 'less\nthan seven thousand miles. The\nbiggest bargain lu B.C. Phono 491,\nor Box. 1090, city.    (6834)\n54    Articles Wanted\n_^\u00bb'^^vv\u2022N>y^s_\u25a0'\u25a0''^'>''^__,\"'\"\u00bb',\u25a0\u25a0'\",,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'v,^^\npfi\\WwANTED for cash. Must be\ncheap. Write stating\" maker's name.\nFred Thompson, General Delivery,\ncity.      . .   -      ' (7098)\n29    Lost Mid Found\nLOS'l\u2014Between The Bungalow and depot, between 3 and 4 o'clock Thursday,\na leather purse with  silver clasp; oon-\n,  tained    small   amount    of   currency.\nValued   as   a   keepsake.    Return   to\nTheiBungalow. (7191)\nSTKAWBIilKRY PLANTS \u2014 Six varieties; all stock true, strong, healthy\nplants. Prices very reasonable; satisfaction guaranteed. Address F.\nKesler,  Box   106,   Silvertoti,   B.C.\n(6879)\nA   DOMINION\"   Exprusa   Money   Order\n.for   five   dollars   costs . throe .cents.\n17    Houses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To rent, or buy on easy\nterms, C or G.roomed bungalow with\n\u25a0nt least two or three lots and fruit\ntrees.    Give description  of property.\n...location,  rent and  terms  with  first\nletter.    Reply Box 7190 Daily  News.\n.1 (.7.190)\nWANTED immediately\u2014Small furni-\nished house or bungalow. Write Box\n.7160 Dally News. .    .       (7100)\n16    Room and Board\nWA_5r-_n5~^--Itooni    a1uI~Kardr^rivat-\n. family, at once, for two weeks, for\nman, wife and baby.    W.. A. Cobb,\nY.M.C.A. \u25a0'\u25a0:\u2022'\u25a0,   <316,1)\nROOM  AND  iOARD  \u2014   624   Victoria\nstreet. ' '. (7046)\nROOM In private house, with  or wlth-\n.',    out board.   423 Carbonate street. '\n71;__' si__._' \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;-;:.   \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: \u25a0\u25a0'tfH-fl\nLOST\u2014In town, black and tan Colllo\nAlrdalo ptip, namo Rex. Reward. (1.\nGreenwood,   R.R.   1. (7149)\nLOST\u2014About 13th March, 1920, gold\nwatch, platu case, with initials M.W.\non front case. Case No. 43470, movement No. 6510545, fastened with gold\nloaf pin. Reward if returned tf \"m\nKootenay. St. '.'    \" (71287\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nFOR SALE\u2014Boat and Mvlnrude motor,\n$140,   A. Milton, Mirror Lake, B.C. '\n. '.    (7169)\nFOR SALE\u2014Motor boat, 20 feet long,\nspoed 7 miles, 3'\/- H.P. Coloy Perfection engine, good condition. Would\naccept rowboat for part payment.\n, Apply, P. O. Box 902. (7113)\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u2014Floyd- Ranch on Rossland\n\u25a0  Road,    consisting   of    approximately\n800   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.C.\n(7168)\nFOR    RENT\u2014Furnished    housekeeping\nrooms over Poole Drug. .    (7126);\nFIVE\u2014Room house to rent Latimer,,\nnear. Stanley, Apply \u201eT. J. Scanlan\nNelson. ,. ; (7090)\nFOR :RENT 'April 1st, one 3-room suite,\none 3-room suite, one single room;\nAtinable Block.       ,      '        ,      (7071)\nTO. RENT\u2014Offlces on upper floor K.,\n<W.   C.   block.     Apply   A.   Macdonald,\n\u25a0Cm    ._,.: \u2022,. !\u25a0    . \u25a0 %i,mi).\nX.    EMMS    BEAD,    __.B.O.B.A.\nARCHITECT\nBay  Avenue. Trail,   B.   O,\n-':'!!?- '(674_)\n20    Livestock lor Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014Two reliable ponies, suitable for driving, riding or wbrking;\nalso Jersey cow, 5 years bid, excellent milker. H. Townsend, expressman, Nelson. \u25a0 '     (718!)\nFOR  SALE\u2014A  few  pigs,   3%   months\nold,   $15   each.     R.   Qulhn,   Harrop,\nu.d >\"-\u201e    . ;      ;  (716D\nPURE-BRED registered. Jersey Bull\nfor service or .sale. Nelson Transfer.\nCo., J-td. . \u25a0 X4040)\nFOR SALE\u2014Good work team, 8 years\nold, with . harness, for immediate\nsale.    Nelson Transfer Co.,  Ltd.\n\u2022   (X10J.0)\nYoung  ChostBr White\n:ilt\u00bb young\nFOR   SALE    ,\nBoars, ready for service,\npigs ready for snipping end of April-\nh W. Slater, Harrop,', B.C. (7129)\nFOR SALE\u2014One brood sow, price $40;\nalso  one  cream   separator,   good   as\n\"*w. prico $25.   J. R. Sawrell, Fruit-\nJe,  p.C. (7123)\nval\nFQR SALE\u2014Two good.cows, one freshened end January, other duo ^ April,\n25; registered Ayrshiro bul!,( also 2\nyearling heifers.. It. II. Baker, Kootenay Bay,   (7180)\nBLACK Siberian Hares\u2014A trio- of this\nsplendid food apd valuable fur bearing breed, 5. months old, bargain\nprice, . Tho Babbitry, Grays Creek,\nKootenay Lake. ;    '        (7131)\nSS   C.   M.   FA8SETT   CO.,   XHC.\nSpokano,   Wash. '\nMining   and   Metallurgical   Bngine-rfj\n.    Assayers and Chemist-.'..    .\nQBE  IBICTB  A W-OUM^.\nNelson, B. O. \u00b0\nCIVIL   AHD   MININO   E-K-I-TEEHO\nB.  0\u201e   Alberta   and   Dominion\nCrown   Grant   A\u00bbe\u00bbtli.^Bluo   PrtoUwr.\n' . v.    , (6695)\nFOR SALE\u2014Che-ter White Boar, 9\nmonths old. N. Magllo, cor. Cedar\nand Innis, or Box 308.     (7127)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Two Nanny Kids, , 6\nmonths Old. Box 618, or Phone\n458X, Nelson, B.C. (7119)\nFOR SALE\u2014Five nice registered yearling Hereford .Bulls, fit for , service,\nSired by. Alberta JDoh 2nd. (J8630)\nHerd Bull above,firm, inspection invited, prices reasonable. Thos. Balrd &\nSons, Vernon, B.C.     .       \u25a0\"       (7079)\nFOR SALE^One extra good cow. Will\nbe fresh first part of May. Apply.\nBox 806, KaslQ, B.C. (7070)\nFOR SALE\u2014Jersey Cow and Calf five\nmonths old. .Cheap.. W. Doyol, Gas\nflats,   '. , (7065)\nFOR SALE\u2014Registered Ayrshiro Bull,\n' 4' years m June. Very feentle, .Pedigree furnished. H. Hartley, Greenwood,  B.C. (7047)\nPURE BRED Roglstere- 'H-l_tein cow\nfor sale; 2 years 9 montha old; good\nmilker! and.gentle. Price $160. Robert Kldd, Fruitvale, B.C..  ,      (7012)\nTHOROUGHBRED Oxford Down Ewes\nfor sale. Some with lamb's. James\nJohnstone.   ,Pox..198,  city,     ,(7026)\nFOR SALE\u2014One1, good team ranch\nhorses,' weight about 1000 lbs. Five\nyears old,'the 'other about. 1200. lbs.\nSound' and - good for all kinds of\nwork, single or double.    W. Nipkqw,\n. FrUitvate, i'B.C: (6990)\nFOR SALEr-Two year bid heifer, rade\nAyrshire bred to government Ayrshire, due April 9th. Also 3 year\n' old 'second calf, May. 18, bred same\nbull. Oakos, R. It. 1, Nelson, B.C.\n!'\u25a0 ;\u25a0\u2022'..( ,;      :\u2022\u25a0        ..\u25a0   (7940)\nPEDIGREED BBlglan, Hares, .splendid\nbig brood. Does $4. $5 and $6 each;\nalso young stock coming up. Pedigree with each hare. Address F.\nKcalor, Box 106, Sllverton, B.C.\n.!,\u2022'\u25a0.!    \"'\"..'.- '\u2022 (6980)\n21   Livestock Wanted\n-'vA^'__jj_'**'^x~n'wNn's''n^\n. horse, .between   1100. and .1250   lbs.\n.Ago about 5 io 8 years,    w. Cafct-\nDr. A. T. Spankie\nM.D., CM,\nEYE, KOBE, BAB AND THBOAS\nSPECIA-.IST\nOffice's\u2014Suite   121-122,   Heir   P.\nBurns Bldg, cor. 8th Ave. and\n..2nd I St.   E.     .\n' CA-UUSY\nPhonoB: ,'.\nOffice M_-43 Homo K30.7\nInterne and bouse surgeon of\nManhattan   eye,   ear,   hose   and\nthroat hospital, New York City,\n1911-1914.      Specialist     Calgary \u2022\nSchool  Board. (6693)\nArchitects\nPainters\nE. SCHOF_EI.D\nFainter, rnpporhanger and Baomtol\nTenders given for all kinds of work.\nPhone 594 608%  Baker St.\nKELSON, B. O. -\n< (6696)\nEngineers\nKASLO, B. O.\nH. D. DAWSON\nB. .C.   LAND   SURVEYOR\nCIVIL AND  MINING   ENGINBBR \u25a0\n.       -    (6821)\nA. 1. McODIiLOCH,\n: Hyraullo Euglnoor\nProvincial  Land' Survoyor\nBaker  St.  Nelson  B.  C.\n(6700)\nA.  D. NABH,\nMining Engineer\nConsultations,     Explorations     DevalOPH\nment Reports    _.       '\u25a0   i\nRpom. 2,   Royal   Bank   Bldg.,   Nelson,\nAuctioneer!\nG,    HORSTEAD,\nOpera   House-   Blk,\n<\u00ab70\u00bb,\nW.  CVTLEB\n.Auctioneer,     Appraisor,     Valuator\nGoods   sold., privately   or   at.Auctibn\n319 Word Street VhUM 77\n:    - '   (6708)\n,    ,      W. MATTHEWS tOO.\n'. Anctlonorra   .\nOffice 508 Ward St. Tol. 180 S; 339M\n.: ;.. ...       '\u25a0 ;.\"*\u2022  '.\"'! <-VW*iY\nBusiness Colleges\nDay   and   night classes.   Completo\n.business   course. Apply   P.   O.; Bo*\n746.              , (6705)\nAccountants\nW. H. PABBELL\nPubllo   Accountant   and   Andltol\nNELSON,   B.C.\nP.O. Box  1191 Phono  877\u00bb-\n(6706)\nW. H. PALDINO,\nPubllo Accountant,; Bank  of  Montreal\n.    .   Chambers,, Rossland, B. C.\n. ,.,.;;,,      , ; ,' : (6709)\nFuneral Directors\ntT^ROBBRTSON, F?D3r_T-CT?0o\nVlCortla Street, Phone 292; night\nPhone 157-J. (6708)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE COMPANY-i\nC. J. Carlson, Undertaker. Undertalcera\nahd Embalmers and Funeral Dirocwro.\nTho Finest and most up-to-date tinQ*^\ntaking parlors and chapel, ln; lnterlt\/.\nB. C. Lady attendant ,for. women kqk\nchildren. Day Phone  85, Night Ph'ojSi.\nm mu:     vim\n yn:\nTHE DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1920\nPagS 9~1\nEwrioui Outbreaks of In. luenza\nall over Canada\nGOOD HEALTH IS THE\nSUREST SAFEGUARD\n'\" 'TRUIT-A-T1VES\" Brings Vigor and\nVitality and Thin Prote-to\nAgainit Dii-\u00bb-o\nThere can be no ddubt that the\nlltuatiqn regaining the qpreid of\nInfliienza throughout Canada is pn'o.\nof gra,v,e concern. It is quHg -trus:\nthat the number of cases does not'\nconstitute an epidemio such as caused\nthe suffering and sorrow during the ,\nterrible days of 1918. Yet there is.\nno disguising the fact that everyone\nshould be on their guard against the\ndisease.\n\u25a0 via Montreal alone, from January\n20th to February 21st, three thousand,\nOB- hundred and tibenty-two cases of\nInfluenza and 189 deaths from the\ndisease, were reported to the Health\nDepartment.\nIf the. outbreak had come at the\nbeginning of the winter instead of\nthe end, we might reasonably feel\nthat the very cold weather would\ncheck the spread of the disease. But\ncoming as it has, at the end of the\nIrinter,. there is grave fear that an\nepidemic may occur. For spring,\nwith its slush and rain under foot,\nIts dampness and chill, ita constant\nchanging from cold to warm and\ntack Again, Is'a! prolific source of\ncoughs nnd colds, pleurisy and\npneumonia.\nThe best protection, la fact, the\nonly safeguard against the 'Flu, is,\nGOOD'HEALTH.\nThose who are not as well and\nstrong as they should be; those who\nare underweight; those who are\n\"*un-down\" through overwork or\nsickness; should build up at once,\n-What they need is a Blood-purifier,\na body-builder, a strength-giver, like\n\"Frait-a-tives\", the wonderful fruit\nmedicine.\n\" Fruit - a - tives \" regulates the\n' kidney, and bowels, causing these\norgans to eliminate waste regularly\nand naturally as nature intended.\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" keeps the skin active,\nand insures an abundant supply of\npure, rich blood. \"Fruit-a-tives\"\n\u25a0tones up and strengthens the organs\nof digestion, sharpens the appetite,\nbrings restful sleep apd renews the\nvitality  of the nervous  system.\n\u25a0 \"Fruit-a-tlves\" contains everything\nthat an ideal tonic should have; to\npurify the blood, to build up strength\nand vigor, and to regulate the\neliminating organs, so that the whole\nsystem would be in the best possible\ncondition to resist disease.\nNow is! the time to build up you.\nhealth and strength, not only as a\nprecaution against the ravages of\nInflnenza, but also-to protect you\nagainst \"spring fever\" and the\ninevitable reaction whicji-cdinps with\nthe. appearance of warmer weather.\nGet a box of \"Fruit-a-tiyes\" today\nand let this fruit jhedleine keep you\n: \"Fruit-a-tives'' is sold by all\n-lealors at EOij a' box, 6' boxes for\n52.50, trial size 20c, or sent postpaid\non receipt of price by _''-_) t-a-tivof\nLimited, Ottawa.\nNELSON BOWLERS\nDRAW FIRST BLOOD\nNelson bowlers gained, a victory\nover' their Cranbrook opponents at\nthe Y.M.C.A; last night with 75 pins\nto the good. Nelson was represented by J. Allen, W. Brown, Jr.,\n\"W;. Brown, 'Sr., K. G. Scholander and\nW. GraVes, The vsitors were: G.\nW. Farnley, M. Dallas, M. Ault, R.\nFairley and K. G. McTter.\nTeams composed of six men each*\nwill take the alleys tomorrow after-\nnqon and -will be composed of:\nCranbrook\u2014G. W. Farnley, M. Dallas,\nM. Anlt, R. Fairley, K. G. McTier and\nJ: Barret; Nelson\u2014H. Johnson, B.\nBrown, E. C. Hunt, iR, Fowler. G.\nWarton and E. Y. Brake.\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL\n'LONDON.       April       2.\u2014(Canadian\nPres-)-\u2014Good   Friday's   foothnll   results  were, as follows:.\nFirst Division\nBlackburn  Rovera 3;  Sunderland 0,\nBurnley   1;   Newcastle  United  0.\nChelsea   2;   Aston   Villa   1.\nEv-rton   4:   Derby   County   0.\n.,\"Manchester  United  0;   Bradford   1.\nNotts  County   1;   Mlddleboro  1.\nOldham   1;   Liverpool   1.\nPreston    North    End   2;    Sheffield\nUnited  0.\nSecond Division\nBn-nsley 0;  Bristol City (I\n_51ackpool ,1;   Bury  0.\n!   Clapton  Orient   0:   Hull City  2.\nGrimsby  Town ' 0;. Ftilhnm  2.\nSouth Shields 2;  Lincoln  City 2.\nStockport  City  I);   Leeds  City, 4.\nTottenham    Hotspurs   4;    Wolverhampton 2.\nWeslhnm United, r,; Noltfnshnm 1.\n, Southern Division\nBi'lKton and Hove 3; Southend\nUnited  0.\nBristol   City   4:   Exeter   2.\nBrentford   2,. Swlndow   Town   H.\nOililnghnm   2:    Southampton   0.\nMerthyi- 1; Queens Park Rangers 1.\nMllUvall A.   1;   Norwich  City  (I.\nNewport City  I;   Crystal Palace  0.\nPlymouth   B;    Northampton   II.\nHeading. 0:   Swapsea  1.\nWnlford 4;   Luton  Town   2.\nWINNIPEG CURLERS\nARE STILL MOVING\nWINNIPEG, April 2\u2014While tho\ncitizens of Winnipeg, shivered in ihe\ncoldest Good Friday 'in many years,\nthe local. curlers made the most of\ntile, wintry weather Tmtl several rinks\nhad games on excellent lee. There\nwas also considerable' skating but\nthe majority of the pr\\opJc enjoyed\nan  Indoor holiday. , ,\nNEWARK CLUB      .\nAFTER CARPENTIER\nWYCLIFFE SENIORS\n:      MISS THE TRAIN\nThe promised basket ball match\nbetween Wycllffe senldrB and Nelson, scheduled for tonight at thfe\nY.M.Q.A... will not take place owing\nto the non-appearance of the proposed visitors. It was learned iale\nlast night \"that the Wycliffe team ar-\nived in Cranbrook yesterday, .but\nmissed connection with the1 train\ncoming west.\nSEATTLE TO PLAY\nPICKED TEAM\nTORONTO, April' 2.\u2014The final\nround of-the hockey season In this\ncity will take place next Saturday\nnight when Seattle, the Paclflo ooaat\nchampions, will play a selected\nteam at the Arena.\nOLYMPIC TRYOUTS\nHELD MAY NINTH\nPARIS, April 2.\u2014May 9 has been\nofficially designated by the war minister as the' date for the first\nelimination trials among French\nathletes for the' selection of a tealn\nto represent prance at the Olympic\ngames in Antwerp from among soldiers now doing military duty.. Tho\nfinals will take .place at Strass-\nliurg. May  23 nnd; 24.\nCANADIAN   CYCLIST\nTQ   COMPETE   TOMORROW\nNKW YORK, April \u2022 2.\u2014Arthur\nSpencer, the Canadian cyclist, will\nride a 2-mile match race for I ho\nbest two out-of throe heats against\nFrank Kramer nt the Velodnm,\nNewark,  Sunday afternoon.\nTORONTO   LACROSSE\nTORONTO, April. 2,\u2014Toronto\nScottish today defeated Hamilton\nby 4 to 2 in the Brigden cup soccer\ngame. The game was a third round\ntie carried over from last season because of unfavorable weather.\n10 Years of Eczema\n\u2014A Sample Cured Her\nA-w yri* reading the w*wkly Canadian letter*,\nI   tailing stories of euirermg from akin j-Useasea\nHod liQW euro wai* effected?\nHere is part of a letter from Mra. Henry Har-\n\u25a0   rey. Black Lake, Que. Write her If rou desire.\n\"Ten years of eczema on tlie face-\nTreated unavailingly by doctorr.  A\nsample alone of D. D. D. cured me, etc.*'\nTbe ornof of the pudding fs In the eating;\n\u25a0h-   TVbnn a Drescripiion for akin disease has letters\n.   vt cure and endorsement from nearly every\niitv and town in the Dominion, surely it u\nwnouirn to convince the most skectica).\nk*o_ Belitf tram itching torment fc immediate,\nr**iuit try one bottle of D. D. D. today on our\n*^o\u00abitive guarantee. IW* bottle, Trv D.D D.\nNEWARK, April ' 2AOffi\"c1aIs of\nthe Newark Spdr-Uipon's qjub announced today they had- offered a\npurse of. ?50,000 to George^ Car-\npentier, the French pugilist, tq. meet\nCharley Welnert of this city In jtn\neight   round   no   decision, bout -h'?re.'\nThe first balloon whs built in \\1.783.\nIt was sent iiloft  without a  passenger.\nDODD'S '%\nif^l\nji\u00abbftpS  b\nm lotion for Shin Disease\nCanada   Drug   &   Book   Co.\nNELSON, B.C.\nimssm\nTomorrow AlrightfiFj\nGet at'i^ Box        *.fe\u00bb~-\nRiitherfor<*J*rug Ca^Mion. B C.\n*i\nMake That\nLazy Loafer Lay\n\/you can't'aj-tH to\"lie'-I)''a' lazy tlrd ajaout t_l\n' plaoe.   Every hSn must do a producer If Caimaa I\ndo   her   share   in- meeting,  the   world's   demand'\n... food.       ;- \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-  \u00bb ' -.' '  \u25a0   ' .\".\u25a0''\u25a0'\u25a0<  \u25a0\u25a0\nfj%0& Poultry Regulator\nis a guaranteed egg' prod titer.'   * v\"\n,   Turns the lasy bene Into ateady layera.   Keeps them ever,-\n' laatlngly on the job.   StarU.the yopng pullets laying early, too.Tl\nJ*rs. Jao. C. Fortune, of Huntingdon;'P.Q., *rlte\u00bb: !.W\u00ab kept]\nIten  pullets  over  for   winter  laying*,,. fPhese  wo   fed lf*jnUry -\nBegultttor.   On Nov. 30, wo got out. first\u25a0 cgjr.   For tlie.'month.\n! of Dec. we got 131; for Jan., 20C; Fe*., 201; March, 221, making '\na. total of 759 eggs from ten pullets.   So far thlH month we )\nbdire had 167 from only 6,hens, as 4 aro set.   We.never hn*J a .\n1 hen before, and nrf proper place fitted up for them.\"  j\nThousands of Canadian users of Pratta are doiiiff as well, ov\nbetter.      \u2022\nOrder Prtttts Poultry Regulator from your dealer in pqpijlar\npriced pkga,, or in money-saving 25-lb. palls or.lOO-lb. bags..\nMONEY BACK  IF NOT SATISFIED.\nWrits for FREE book on thfe care of Poultry.\nAlso use Pratts Animal Regulator.\nThe Guaranteed  Stock Tonic.\nPratt Food Co. of Canada, United\nSSOY.Carlaw Ava., Toronto.\n|P&\u00a3\nm&H\nEXHIBITION    BASEBALL\nPort Worth, Toxns, April 2.\u2014\n, R. H. E.\nPort Worth (Texns leagTie) 1 0.1\nPittsburg    (Notional)     ....'. 4    11     1\nCHEER STRIKE\nLEADERS IN JAIL\ncalgary;- i'-Aprrf t.^-a' ''-crowded\nmeeting this evening passed a ie-\nsolutton protesting the jailing: of the\nstrike leaders in 'Winnipeg. One\nof the '' ipost loudly ' cheered state-\nmerits was \"No faction of labor is\nknown'in' this fight. It is the'iignt\nof | ail labor. Christ Is being crucified again this day.'\", Alderman Mc-\nTaggart, a, prominent Presbyterian\nminister and Alderman White, prominent typograpJiical_ unioji man, j:id!\nothers   were   .speakers.\nCZECH ARBIY Ttt *\nFIGHT BOLSHEVIK\nWARSAW April 2\u2014Simon Petlura,\nthe Ukrani.'in leader, .has visited\nIPrague for the purpose of arranging\nfor the formation of a Czech army to\nbe used against the Russian Bolshevik' on the Ukranian front,, according to newspapers here. A force\nof 6000 Ukranians, newly recru^.otl,\n,was recently thrown against * the\nsbviet line on the southern, front.\nReports Indicate that the Bolshevik\nare withdrawing large nurnbers of\ntroops from the Odessa' region and\nit is believed they intend to make a\n!drive. on the northern front beforo\nspring.\nCHASE SEAMAN\nWITH BAYONETS\nBOSTON, April 2.\u2014The puhiBh-\nment which the navy now provides\nfor disgraced men furnished an\namusing spectacle at the Charlestown\nnavy yard today. Instead of clr.mn-\nmlnjr the man out, as in former days,\nbluejackets wiLh\" fixed bayonets\ndi*ovo a seaman from the ynrrt.\nExtend frencr\n!    i MfelTARY SERVICE\nPARIS, April\" 2!\u2014Andre I^efevre,\nthe wjir -minister, 'announced in the\nsenatd yesterday that the foreign,\nsituation, made it heo.esi.nry to extend for a* few wocka for tho .period\nof mllUiiry''service of the class 1913.\nThe ni'e'ij, Of this class, he said, would\nfoe discharged between June 1 and lo,\nMdhrBudson^\nI {-.\nBREED TURKEYS\nFOR PROFITS\nURGES SWITCHMEN\nTO GO BACK\nI CHICAGO,- April 2.\u2014A* mooting of\n:\"loya'l\" members of the1 'Brotherhood\nof Railway Trainn*ren, called tOdnv by\nA. P. Whitney, vice-president ; of\nthe organization, was., broken uft -by\nstriking switchmen CtthpQu waliiout\nlast night crippled .\"freiBbt sQfvlce\non. tho ' Chicago, MllwAiik.ie uiicj St.\nPaul railroad. C. H*. P- Onllagher,\nchairman of the brotherhood, was\nejected.\nMr. Whitney said the strike' was\nunauthorized and urged tho men to\nreturn to work. Demands of $1\nan hour for firemen, 93 cents for\nswitchmen time and a ha)f for overtime, and double time after eight\nhours overtime, were mad\u00a9 by ' the\n650 striking switchmen. The'strike\nhas  not affected  passenger  service.\nNOT TO WITHDRAW\nJAP FORCES YET\nHOrOLULV, April 12.\u2014-Premier\nHara of Japan has officially announced that Japanese forces in\nSiberia will not bo withdrawn \"until the. situation clears,\" according' to\na\\ Tokio cable today to. a Japanese\nnewspaper hore. \u25a0 i\nONTARIO LABOR\nVOTES SYMPATHY\nLONDON, April 2,T-WIthout a dis-\nsentirig vote and -with considerable\nenthusiasm the delegates assembled\nin the Masonic Temple today for the\nannual convention of, the Ontario\nIndependent Labor party, passed a\nresolution'' of sympathy with tho\nWing pnioLahor men who are- at\npresent in Jail in connection with the\nincidents arising out of the Winnipeg\nstrike last year. The resolution was\nmoved by*James McArthur Connor,\nand seconded by Peter Heihan, M.P.\nfor Kenora.'\nWESTERN PROVINCES\nSEND DELEGATES\nPvEGINA, A-riril 2.\u2014On the invlta\ntion of the secretary of the Sask'\natchewdn Social' Service council; representatives from the whole of \u25a0 the\nwestern provinces will \u00bbmeet here\nApril 8 to confer-regarding* the ref-\nerendurn  campaign.\nMinard:\nLiniment\nSpanish\nFlu\nColds\nAsthma\n\u25a0 More perhaps than any other *'one\n\".hing, the future, turkey crop depends on the present selection of\nparent stock, say a big breeder. The\nproper selection of parent stock should\ni>'e In accordance with several principles; Like begets like, and whatever'\n'qualities are wanted In the future\ncrop should be looked after In.' the\nparent  stock.\n. Big,* heavy, early maturlns young\n,can only be obtained from like old.\nBirds uniform in size, shape and\ncolor can only be had of parent stock\n.of like kind; Healthy, thrifty, vigor-,\nous young can only be raised from\nstrong, well-matured old, This Is the\nonly sound reasoning, based on common sense,' applicable no less\\to. turkeys than to. other farm Hv\u00bb stock,\nsays the writer of an article in the\nfarm section of the Seattle Post Intelligencer.\nAside from vigor, size is the first\nquality to be desired in the young.\nTo get this make sure of big breed-\nstock. This should mean, not only big.\nbirds of both- sexes but* a big breed\nand a big j_traln of that breed. Where\none already has good stock, ..the future breeders, especially the lum.s, may.\nbe chosen from one.'s own flock. But\nalways, these should' be the largest\nand best birds raised. This usually\nmeans the earliest hatched, for almost always the earliest hatched, of\na, season's crop make larger birds than\ntbose which come out later.\nWhere one does* not have large birds\nIt is better to buy them, even at a.\nrather high figure, than to keep small\nInferior, birds to produce the future\ncrop. The gobbler in any case should\nhe the largest obtainable, The gobbler ' Is half, the future crop, and\nthe oheapset means of Improving it.\nIn buying a new gobbler the aim\neach year shrould be to obtain something better thnn that used before if\npossible, and price should not too\ngreatly Influncc one's choice. Unless\nfancy stock is wanted,: weight, aside\nfrom pure breeding, should be the main\n.'cquirement      '      * \u25a0   ,\nBetween ft latc-ba*fchcd fifteen-pound\nrobhlor at ?10. and an enrly twenty-\nfive or thirty-pounder at $15 .or $JiQ\n..|io latter la much the better investment, If n pound or two on- each of\nthe young can. be gained by taking\n.lie larger bird, $5 to ?10 is hot worth\n-.qnsidcring: the larger bird Is wortli\nntich more thnn the difference in price\n.0 the turkey raiser. However, back\nif the new gobbler should be n big,\nvigorous strain, one that will insure\nmaximum size at full maturinty.\nBreeds and Brooding\nBreed does hot matter so much as\nquality of breed, but It should not\nsome one or another. Por the general market one or two or three, largest is advisable. Personally I would\nprefer the one big kind, which has\nbeen so generally tried out, but whatever, the breed hens and gobblers\nshrould be the same.\nj There Is seldom, if ever, any advantage In crossing breeds. As a\nrule, such crosses, means the loss of\nthp best qualities of, both breeds, and\ntrain nothing over either. But aside\nfrom this there is so much more satisfaction to be obtained . from a uniform flock, alike in size, shapo and\nheautiful coloring. Pure bred stock may\nbe obtained so cheaply and there Is\nrio reason why any turkey raiser\nshould produce a mongrel or mixed\nflock.\n\u25a0 ,To obtain vigor, parent stock must\nt)e   unrelated   and    well    matured.    A\nSrge profitable crop cannot be grown\nom closely related, overyoung parent birds. This Is another reason why\nthe largest, earliest hatched birds should\nhe chosen for future breeders, and\nwhy a gobbler from another* flock is\ngenerally advisable. There . Is nothing\n.40 disastrous to the future turkey\narop as close inbreeding. Kven. a single\nclose cross will seriously lower the,\nvitality of tho young and continued\nselection Of males and females from the\nsame flock wilt quickly result- In almost total failure. Young turkeys\nat best are very, tender; susceptible\nlittle creatures, and require all the inherent, vigor possible to. give them in\norder to keep thrifty and a weakly\nunthrifty little turkey is almost in-\nvarinbly a .tead one.\nVery immature breeding stock results\nmuch, the same ris Inbreeding, though\nperhaps not to quite so, marked an\nextent;: It Is a mistaken practice to\nsell off the oldest of the new flock\nand neep the youngest for breeders\nas so many turkey raisers do. If there\nis nothing left at this, time but these\nvery late, small birds,.better kilt these\nor sell them on the market and buy\none or two good ones unrelated at\nseveral times the value of the others,\nAt lenst get n now Well-matured gobbler,, and another Pall save the largest\nand best matured of the now crop.\nBuying a, Oobblor .\nIn birying a, new gobbler, get'one as\ngoon now as-\u00bbnosslble. This is advisable\nTor two.or, three reasons, Turkeys require quite a Mttle time to accustom\nthemselves, to new surroundings and\nshould be * introduced weeks beforo the\nlaying season for-bests results. Again,\nIfrrge, well-matured tom*8, are -much\neasier obtalhen now. than they will\nbe later,\n; J At the beginning iof tbe , breeding\nseason it Is often almost Impossible\nto  obtain, a   really   desirable  bird,  as\nAll Over This Store\nAn Easter Brightness of\nTHE WORLD will, come out into the Sunshine and Smile of New\n.Clothes on .Easter Morning. There is but one. day left in which\nto make ready, but with one day of such! Easter service as this\nstore is able to give, prodigies of Easter Shopping can be performed. \u2022 \u25a0\nTHIS STORE never looked quite as inviting with Smart, New\nStyles of Spring as it does today. ,\nYou'll   Have   Difficulty   Finding   tho   Equal   to   Our\nNEW SPRING 1920 SUITS\nEvery suit correctly tailored from Trlcbtines, Botany Serges or\nGabardines, qualities that not only stand-, tho test of in-,\nspection but the more exacting, one of service. The' coats are\nbeautifully silk lined and every detail of tailoring as complete\n^W-ZSS $48.50to $125.00\nNEW SPRING SPORT SKIRTS\nSuggestive oj long vvVtll*^,* fofltif. tfmnfs and boating. Tailored in\n.soft wool fabrics, in dark or light Plaids.. The pockets show\ngroat originality of design and tho skirts usually o(f plain\nlinos, shirred, or accordion plotted (P*| A PA $0\/1 KA\nstylos.     Priced      \u00abD1U\u00abOUtO iDO^oU\nA Beautiful Silk Petticoat for Easter\nSomo wltn very deep accjqjdlon pleated flounces, others have a\nnarrow accordion pleated flounce with fancy 2ig-zag tuckirtg\nabove.    You  will  be  di?ltkhted  with   them. (IJQ r7C\n\/'Queen   Quality\"   ..... ,_.>T       \\ \u00abD\u00ab\/*\u00bb \u2022 O\nSNOW WHITE TABLE DAMASK\nGood wearing qualities'and effective designs\u2014   \u2022\n60  inches wide,  per yard $1.50\n(18  inches wide,  per yard $1.75\n6? inches wide, per yard.,. $1.95\nfiG  inches wide,  per yard $2.25\nNew Store\nEASTER BLOUSES\nWomen Can Choose  Loveliest\nStyles\nExclusive assortments from which\nto select your Easter Blouse.\nGlistening Crepe-do.-Chenes, Rich\nGeorgette and Pretty Voile or\nSilk   model's\u2014\n$2.75x0 $25.00\nLadies' Smart Footwear\nfor Easter Wear\n-.adies' Mahogany Calf Dress\n\u2022 Shoes, brown buck top, Balmoral style, Lours heel,\nGoodyear\nwelt  \t\n$10.00\nLadies' Black Vicl Kid Pumps,\nstool   cut  buckle,  Louis  heel,\nturned sole.\nOur price ..\n$10.00\nLadies' Black Patent Pump,\nColonial effect, square cut\nsteel buckle, fl\u00bbQ AA\nLouis heel\nOUR MEN'S OWN STORE\nIs Well  Prepared to Supply Your Needs  in\nEASTER APPAREL\nYOUNG   MEN'S  SUITS\u2014Smart,  snappy  models..   The  last word  in\n1920   Spring   Styles\u2014\n$23.50, $29.50, $37.50, $52.00\nMEN'S   SUITS\u2014Conventional   styles,        <\u00a3Oft FA       fl?CO OH\nsmartly  tailored    \/ \u00ab0^O\u00bbOUtO J)0<\u00a3\u00ab\"U\nAllow Us to Help You Dress for Easter\nWhether You Are a Six or a Sixteen-year-old Boy\n.We, Have An  Easter Suit -to   Fit You\nAnd   you'll   find   each   emit,\"   each   pair   of   pants,   every   garment\nin this section tailored and finished its men's suits.\nMiinniph  in  stylo and mnnnlsh  in  matcfial, them isn't a suit we'd\nbe ashamed  to  turn  inside  oui.  before  the  most  critical   pafr, of\nYouthful  eyes. ,\nPrices   from\t\nOur Men's Own Store\u2014Main Floor\n$8.50\u2122 $24.50\nNotice to, Visitors Daring the Holiday\nWe shall be open for business all day on Monday, April 5th, and shall havo\non display, many lines of' Special Merchandise,which will well repay you for u\nvisit. v\nbreeders are generally pretty well sold\nout. Affafn', a new male may Ite bought\ncheaper now than nt the last minute.\nThere is always a brisk late demand,\nand such as breeders have on hand\nthen they hOld at hijrlicr prices, for\nthey know they can get them. I have\nsfien may future turkey hopes blasted\nby failure to get a good gobbler at a\nlate   hour.\nThe number of parent bird required\ndepends on the size'of the future flock\nflesired. As a rule, too few hens are\nkept. Always it is the bent and the\naim should be to keep hens enough\nto produce tbe desired number of young\nfrom tho first tw,o clutches of feggs\nlaid.\nEach hen may be \u25a0 expected to lay\naround twenty-five eggs in good season for hatching, and odlnarlly ten\nto twelve young birds may be raised\nto the hen. For a flock of a hundred\nearly-hatched young turkeys no less\nthan seven or eight hens should be\nlie saved. One gobbler to this many\nliens or even more, is all that need\nbe  provided.\nLastly, parent stock should be fed\nwith' an aim to their future purpose.\nThis means a, variety of grains rather\nthan a great abundance. Breeding stock\nshould net be fat at the beginning\nqf the season, but vigorous and active.\nThe object should be to induce\nearly laying of strong, well fertilixdd\neggs. This, -means parent stock at\nthe end of. Winter in normal, active,\nhealthy condition In early spring, and\nroup is deadly to turkeys, especially\nto tho future crop.\nPURE EREDS VERSUS\nGRADE DAIRY CATTLE\nThe old question \"would you advise\n\u25a0me to start Into tho pure bred dairy\ncattle business,\" is being asked\nas frequently these times.as ever before\nand is receiving. just as, many negative replies as-formerly. There nre so\nyiany factqrs which onter into tho\nproblem that i One has to study . the\nquestion from every angle. Good\npure bred', cattle of either sex are\nselling for such good prices now thai.\nmen who have proven themselves\nsuccessful with grade stock, cannot\nafford to continue wlt)\u00bbout pure hrods.\n\u25a0we all know of> certain grade herds\nmaking mpre money for the owners\nthnn some pure' bred herds ln tbe\nsame locality, - but every community\nhas examples-of men in the pure bred\nbusiness who, never should have* invested money In'live stock.\n- The most economical and the most\nsatisfactory ' way for the average\nfarmer to start into pure breds is to\npurchase good females to start' with.\ni,*hiv nhouhi be taken, to see that thoy\nuro good. They should he healthy, of\ntlie proper type, and- either proven\n^producers or. with proven ancestors.\nIt* is better to have only one good\n'cow than several medium quality\nanimals. A comparatively sninli outlay is necessary when starting in. this\n'manner.      -\ni It 18' remarkable how quickly a\nherd can .be built*.*, up from,' a few\nfoundation-, cpwa. vTJ\\e d(ilrj\u00bb herd on\nthe Agasslz Experimental Farm -was\nstarted by the purchase in December\nlftU, of twentyrelght grade cows nnd\ntho following, year ;threo pure bred\ncows.   TpfiQ ln*the  InU  of  lUv  two\npurebred heifer calves and the next\nyear a pair of two-year-old heifer;-\nalso pure bred were purchased. Today thero aro forty-two pure brod\nfemales In the herd, including the\nabove and their descendants. As the\npure bred herd increased In nize we\nhave gradually decreased the number of grades until at present only\ntwenty-one are on  hand,\nA yearly comparison has been made\nduring the last three years of the flve:\nmost profitable pure bred cows and\nthe five most profitable grade cows,\nin each instance Ihe pure* breds have\nbeen the more .successful from a commercial standpoint. On the average\nthe pure breds produced M7<i pounds\nmore milk and 15.1 pounds more fat\nppr cow per annum, and yielded an\naverage profit over feed cost of $27*8^\nmore per  cow  than  the grades.\nAfter a pure bred herd reaches a\nsuitable size the most money is made\nby selling the surplus stock for\nbreeding purposes. Tho Holsteln\nbull. Inka Sylvia Heels Posch, 1.(0$\nwas used as senior siro in the Agassis: herd from December 1MHJ to July\n1918. Prom his service during ihat\nperiod fifteen grade anil twelve pure\nbred females were raised and are in\nthe herd at the present time. Putting\nthe very topmost value on the fifteen\ngrade heifers they are worth $\\&1!h\nWhile the dozen pure bred heifers'are\nworth Just about twice that amount,\n,yet they cost no more to raise than\ntbe grades. The pure brod male\ncalves born In the herd during the\nsame .period were sold for $100 enoh\nHad up while the grade bulls were1\nsold for veal.\nNot only Is it more profitable to\niProduce pure bred cattle than grades,\nunder suitable conditions, but the\npleasure and interest aro much\n.greater.\u2014W. H. Kicks, superintendent. Experimental Farm, ' Agasslz,\nB. C.\ntN THE DAYS OF BE_AVKR HATS\n! In tho olden days in the United\n\u25a0States, soon after the Revolutionary\n\u2022war, a gbod beaver hat became a\nkind of family heirloom, and was'\nlanded down from father to son.\nFor somo strange reason it was considered to be rather frivolous and\nextravagant to bo seen .wearing a new\nbeaver hat, and it was tho custom\nwl)en a man bought ono to leayo it\nout \"in stormy weather beforo wearing it, to \"tako the nowness. off.\"\nTO TAKE BABVS PICTtTI*E\nAnyone who, has tried it knows It\nIs a difficult task to take an indoor\npioturo of un active child. By placing the subject near a sunny window\nbut not In the direct sunlight, and!\nwith a sheet fixed-at. bne sldo, high\ncnpugh:.no that it reaohos above t\\\\o\nsubject's head, good results may bo\nobthined. If the child sits on the\nflb6r, tho sheet will he high enough\nthrown over two chairs.  ,\nFIND  DATE. VALUABIrtti FOOD\nDates form the staple food of the\nArabs in a largo part of Arabia and\nare served in some form at every\nmeal. Sirup and vinegar are made\nfrom old dates, and by those who disregard the teachings of the Koran\na kind of Jirandy is distilled from\nthem. Tho date pit Is ground and\nfort to* the; cows and sheep, so that\nnothing of the precious fruit is lost.\nWhole pits arc used as heads nnd\neounlors for the Arab children hi\ntheir gami\u00bbs on  tho desert sand.\n\"ZOVAVS-.\"   FROM  ALGIERS\n\"Zouave\" is the'French name taken from that of a tribe in Algiers\nand this kind of light infantry was\nfirst employed in thai country in\n1831, tin- members being Algerians\nand dressed in soml-Moorlsh costumes. Other countries, Including\nthe United States, have adopted tho\nZoiKtye .system since. In the Civil\nwar, and. the Italian assault, upon\nHome In 1870, they were conspicuous, in the latter ease defending\nthe   papal  supremacy.\nHISTORY REPEATING ITSELF\nCivil war destroyed 35,000 Frenchmen in the horrible months following the. defeat of 1870. Today tho\nsituaiion Is reversed and civil war.\nIs' taking its toll of tho Germans, .\nwho had then looked* on unmoved\nWhile the French settled their ow.n\naffairs. Tn so far as may bo, the\nallies will be wise In allowing tho\nGermans to dispose of their own\ndifferences. In good time tho hotter\nsense of the Toutons will prevail.\u2014\u25a0\nLondon Free Tress.\nBEES DISTINGUISH COLONS\nExperiments have shpWjTIIlat bees\ndistinguish different cotpra,?j),Ut different colors acquire significance for\nhoes when tlie insects haveiySpVned\nthat certain colors are associated\nwith nutritive advantages. Tho been\naro not \"reflox-mnchlnes\"\u2014ihey aro\nnot compelled by any organic chro-\nmotropism to prefer certain colors\nto others. They accumulate experience and remember that certain\ncolors aro associated with certain\nnutritive benefits.\n\"The  banjo  Is   said   to   he   the   Invention of a Georgia negro..\n \u25a0- -  <mi\nThero    were    40,000,000   buffalo   In\nthe  United States in  1850.,\n\\:\n \u2014\nPage \"10\ni-TOP'OTDGr news. ?*A'rtmnAY morning,\nUNEQUALED FOR GENERAL US\nUI. P. TIEHNIY, General Sales Agent\ni| Ifalfon, -B.C.      i\nCars, Jppiy set, ft  all   railway  point.\nThis Is the Season  When\nBATTERIES\nneed AttMftion. We are now equipped '.tp__ overhaul and repair all\nmakes.^  '\nNeisln Transfer\nPHONE   15. \u2022\nChocolates f< r\nEaster  vik\nBe   sure   and. tike\nhome a box   of   Wik.\nlai-d's  Fork-dipt  Chftcor,\nlates.\n..' mf\n\u25a0' \"i\"\n.\nCanada Drug 4 Book &.\nKail Orders Filled Promptlj.\nPbone 81. Box lot.\nVOV HAT OBBESVB THAT\nTHE ARK\nhas no plate glass front, and Is an\nold-time building. It Is poor business\nto sell sour bread from a gilded wagon. . Our prices show that we are endeavoring to lower the cost of high\nliving. *\nBlack and blue sateen 45o to 60c per\nyard; Striped Gingham 36o a yard;\nFlowered Reph, $1.35 yard; Black,\nBlue and Steel Gray Poplin, 36 In.\nwide, $1,35- yard; Flannelette 35o to\n75o yard; Middy Cloth, 50c yard;-Cambric. 38 In. wlde,'42Ho yard; Curtain\nScrim, 20o yard; Ladles' Corsets $1.50\nto $3,50; Boys' Hercules stocklns, 50o\nto 60o pair;. Wallpaper, 40o 'roll;' New\nand Second Hand Furniture, StoVes,\nSewing   Machines.\nJoy Will fteet You at the Door.\nJ. W.  HOLMES\nPHONE 65L 606 VERNON 8T.\nHove   You   Placed   Your   Order\nFor   Extra   Fancy  ^\nEASTER ICE CREAM\nyet?     If   not,   order   now, \"the\nsupply is limited.\nSold  in   brloli-   with   colored\negg-shaped centers.\nEA8IE8T TO  SERVE\nCurlew' Ice   Croam   Satisfies.\nOrder  from   your   dealer  early\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nLADIES\n' SUITS\nAND COATS\nCleaned\nor Dyed\ntt. K.\nFoot\n* Hlgli-L'lu-s   Dyer   &   Cleaner\nC'AIRVIEW   -\n\u25a0  NELSON, B.C.\nmring; in That Frowning\n{}}\u25a0        Youngster\nThere Is something wrong. He Is\n.wasting too much energy. Studying\nIs a continuous, struggle. He Is\nharidl<&*pped;;in school. ' It affects his\nhealth,;. and.; may cause permanent\ninjury to his eyes.\n-\u25a0It W-:-\"\u25a0\u25a0\nPr_per Basses will make a decided\nchange. It -will poise the nervous\nBy-Jem and beneficial results will be\nnatural. J\"\n9.$\n1 0. PATENAUDE\nJOJrtojjietriet  and . Optician\n__k\nSpring Cleaning Made Easy by\nUsing   the\nPREMIER VACUUM\n,    CLEANER\nLot  ua  demonstrate ;jt  to -y*u.\nHowe Electric Co.\nOPERA  HOUSE  BLOCK\nP.  0.  Box  928 Phone 630\nIf It's NELSON BRAND\nMARMALADE It's Right\nRight for your customers becausi\nthe  quality   never   varies.\nRight    for   you    because    Nelson\nBrand   pleases   every   taste.\nGEM\nMatinee  Today  at  2:30\nlay Allison\n\u2014IN\u2014\n\"FAIR and WARM#\nThe play that made the\nweather famous; that pil-THfe\ncocktail   in the  hall  of fame.\nMYSTERY  OF  \"13\"\nSCREEN   MAGAZINE\nMonday\nThe Big, Smashing Mote-*\nDrama\n\"THE   LIFE   LINE\"\n..\\i;.;''^'-'\"--v';\"'.:\nOUR    MONUMENTS\nendure^ the ravages of storm and\nsunshine through endless time,\noutlasting those of inferior quality\nand   Workmanship,\nGOOD   GRANITE   AND   MARBLE\nare' assured in you come to us.\nWhether you purchase one of\npur seml-cp'rhpleted stones or we\nmake up a special design to your\norder, we do- only one kind of\nwork- and -that's -   \u25a0\nWORK   THAT   LASTS    -\nKoottmau Granite and\nMonumental Company\nBox 865, Neison; 8. C.     Phone 164\nIF!?\nSend Yohr Repairs to\nJi   Holland\n608 Baker St. Box 811\nIf j\/6u Vant results try a Clam*. Ad\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\nQraduale    Eyesight    Bpe'lallwi\nJc.EJws^examined ;and  properly\n'fitted.\nPunktal, Torlc and KryptoU\nLenses.\nK.W.C. BLOCK, NELSON, B.C\nWhen you overhaul your launch use\n&C0 MARINE PAINT\n=JSSJ=\nWHITE,  GREEN   AND   RED\nAnd Berry Bros. \"Luxberry\" Spar Varnish\nWe can  also  supply you with  Paint  and  Varnish   Remover,  Stool\nWool,  8and  Paper, Varnish .and  Paint  Brushes,  rto\nrWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nHospital\nAid\nBALL\nFRIDAY, APRIL 9th\n]JE\n3, 1920\nCRUELLY TREATS\nYOUNG DAUGHTER\nHoard's\nDairyman\nBalance   of   this   year  for  76c\nBalance  of this   year  and\nail   of   next    for  2,00\nNo    dairy    farmer    should    be\nwithout   the    Dairy   Gospel\nSend    us*   your1   subscription\nnow at the reduced price.\nCurlew Creamery Co.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nNEW YORK, April 2-r-Chargad\nwith cruel and inhuman treatment of\nhis -.17-year-old daughter Minnie,\nJohn Gallagher, known on the stage\nas Gallanda, a clay sculptor, was arraigned In a. B\/obklyn court today\nand held in $2500 for appearing\nlater. , Nearly . 100 Hoars were\nfound on the ' girl's body. Aft.-,\ndavits filed with the court alleged\nshe had been'branded with hot Irons,\nscalded, struck with ice picks, hat\npins and darning needles and that'\nsome of her teeth had been broken\nand .tlieh pulled out with pliers-\nMore   silk   appears   as   ruffles\ngeorgette,, dresses. ,\nA\/.circular  black  veil   has   a.  wl-Te\nborder of eoton  threads.   ,\nGive  Us Your Order  For\nfry Woiui, Lump\nand Nut Gait Coal\nAlso for Your\nFURNITURE and PIANO MOVING\nOrders   Promptly   Attended   to\nMacDonald .Cartage. &\nFuel Co.\n\/..S.ilorswill&Co.\nFinest  Black  Cod, lb 20tf\nSalt Labrador Herring 15#\nSea   Pearl   Sardines,  tin 25#\nSkipper Norwegian Sardines, 30<\u00a3\nSpinach,   per   tin 30*\u00a3\nDromedary   Dates,  packet....30(0\nLocal  Honey, 1 - lb. glass  45#\nCarrots,   per   lb -5#\nScotch Oatmeal, packet  .... -40c^\n\"Tobaccos and Cigarettes, Wholesale and   Retail\n: PHONE   121\u2014Prompt  Delivery\nANNUAL MEETING\n\u2014OF\u2014\nKootenay Kilties Association\nBand   Room,   Kootenay   Street\nTUESDAY,   APRIL'S,  at 8  p.m.\nMembership fee, $1\u2014Annual dues, $1\nOur everyday sack prices in Wheat,\nScratch Food, Wheat, Bran, Shorts,\nOats, etc., are at wholesale prices.\nWe ore after your Grocery Business with  our best service.\nOyster Shell''just  received\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW\nORY   GOOD8   GROCERIE8,   ETC.\nE s^er Specials\n\"Dress Para<_e'M920\n\"DRESS PARADE\" this year\u2014Easter Sunday\u2014the\ndress-up day of the year\u2014everyone \"3<n:.'a \u2022jo.ius mood\u2014\nthe usual exchange of greetings\u2014a leisurely stroll down\nthe square.\n....We're ready for you\u2014with good clothes; suits and\novercoats for men and'young men. ^tyles you will like;\nrich fabrics; quality you can depend upon; superb values\nat $65.\nOthers at\n$50, $55, $60 '\nJ.A.GILKER\nThe Little Davenport Me\nUnder new management, will endeavor to cater to the\npublic at reasonable prices.\nA special attention will be given to business men's\nluncheons and dinners.\nFruits and Green Vegetables served when obtainable.\nHYM SING and GEE GAY\nSuccessors to.i^^ert Stephen t\nMeals at All Hours, \"\u2022\"''?' Call and Give:Us a Trial\n%AST\n- mmameaammumai\nG. W. V. A. Sunday Concert\n\u2014ATi-   \u2022\u25a0.\"..\u25a0\nOperaHbuse\nFeaturing\nMiss Ivy Holt\n(Mrc.  Neville  Cooper) - .    ,\n3:45 P.  M.  8UNDAY\nPROGRAM:\nMARCH\u2014\"Our   Ulro-lor\" ........'.' '.    G.W.V.A.   Band\nSUNG\u2014Selected  v.   .Mrs.    Cooper\nVIOLIN   SOLO\u2014\"Venetian Love  Song\"  <Nev,in) MIbs White-read\nSBLKCTION\u2014\"Dream   Girl\" ,,'.. .G.W.V.A.   Band\nSONG\u2014Selected    '  3... ...Mrs.   Cooper\nVIOLIN   SOLO\u2014Selected    Miss Whltebread\nOVERTURE\u2014\"Tancredl\" .G.W.V.A.   Band\nBONGO\u2014Selected     Mr.   Pitner\nSONQO\u2014Selected    Mrs.   Cooper\nMARCH\u2014\"Washington. Grays\"   ..,., ft\"! .G.W.V.A.  Band\nGOD 8AVE THE KING\nUnder tho direction of FY Warner Smith,  Bandmaster G.W.V.A.\nFOR   SALE\nSavon-roomed house on- Hoover Street, stone foundation, full base-\nBlent.    A snap      ....$2850\nSeven-roomed house on Mines Road, hot water heating. A corner\nproperty    ........         ....;........:$2900\nFive-roomed house on Carbonate. Fully modern. Easy terms.\nPrice      ,....;..;         $2100\nHighest Market Prices Paid for Victory Bonds\nCharles F.McHardy\nINSURANCE PHONE 135 REAL ESTATE\n.   .    \u2014AT  THE-*\nIDEAL CASH GROCERY\nPHONE  265\nPICNIC HAM3, fresh from\nthe smoke - house, 6 to 8 lbs.\n\u00abftn..    Per   lb. '\"   35<l\nPREMIUM HAMS\u2014You know\nthe quality. About 12 lbs.\naverage. Whole ham, per\nlb. 53tf\n..Half Ham, per lb 55^\nPREMIUM   BACON,   lb.,  70\u00abS\nPEA MEAL  BACKS, lb., G5\u00a3\nEGGS\u2014Easter   Special,   strictly\nlocal new. laid, dozen..55tl*\nORANGES, sweet, juicy navals\n..-doien, 60*. 75*. 80\u00abS\nBLOOD ORANGES, doz, 75<J\nTANGERINES, 'dozen.. 60*\nGRAPE FRUIT-Sweet,. thin\n;,.skin, juicy Floridas, 3 sizes,\nA3 prices,  15^,   ITVm*  and\n22'\/**\nCalifornia's      10* and 12'\/.<.  !\n'B & K\"\nChick Food\nAnother,   large   shipment   of   oufl\nChick   Food  lfl   dije   any  day uowa\nThe - oatmeal   content     gives     ths\n\"B & K'-' brand a dlstinctlye vaiua\nGive yotir chicks tho right Btart,.,\nMILLING CO., LTD.\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nEASTER   SPECIALS\nNew*Laid lTgrgH..\nper  dozen. ...\".........\nSwift's   Premium   Bacon,\nper   lb;   ..\/\t\nSwift's Premium . Ham,\nper   lb.- -. .'I\t\nHeina'  Sweet Pickles,\nper . bottle    f\t\nHeinz* Sweet Mustard\npickles, per--bottle....\nFresh  Tomatoes,\nper   lb\t\n55c\n70c\n53c\n45c\n45c\n50c\nTHE GREAT SUPPLT HOrSK\nPHONE 161..\nKERR'S JITNEY\nAny  Hour Guaranteed to  Please Yoi\n*        . PHONE 491\nAgents for Nash  Cars, Kerr  Block*\nJES3E    L.    LASKY\n\u2022 PRE8ENTS\nVIVIAN MARTIN   '\n-IN-\n\"L0UISIANA\"\n'   PARAMOUNT   PICTURE\nDelightful comedy, . tenso\n.drama and gripping tragedy,\nall in this picture. A -story\nthat  is  \"different.\"\nOUTING  PICTURE\nand\nCHRISTIE  COMEDY\nMonday   and  Tuesday\nJAME8 K. HA0KETT in\n\"ASHE8  OF   UOVE\"\nMATINEE 3:80\nGreen Vegetables\nExpected\nlirtach,  Cauliflower,^Calory,\nLettuce,   Parsley,   Radishes\n\u25a0 \u25a0n_e.iieiiiM.--e ii   i ..__\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0__\u2014___\u00ab'\nBANANAS \u2014 Lame Golden,\n.for your fruit salad.\nPINEAPPLE, slices, tin, 25*\nand     ;    45JI\nOLIVES\u2014Easter Special Prices\nabout 25 per cent below market)\nPlain,   20*,   25*.   35*.\n45*. 50*. and 60*\nPimento       Stuffed,       25*.\n35*   and   60*\nHEINZ'   SWEET   GHERKINS,\nDozen    50*\nPint     50*\nFRESH      DAIRY      BUTTER\u2014\nib 65*\nPOTATOES,, Fine White\nMeaiiec, free from waste.\nTwo ton of American Wonder\u2014\u2022 *\nt-7.. 1be. .'.-.50*\ni\u00bb-\">\u00ab        81.00\nsack   ..\u25a0.....,   ...:.ge.50\n<\u00abSlif_!.l\u00bbj^i_^*'-.jP\u00bblw^W: \"'.'rr\nWYCLIFFE SENIQRS MISSED CONNECTIONS\nAT CRANBROOK\nNO BASKET BALL TONIGHT\n-Y..M. C. A.\nHouses For Sale\nPour   G.O-bW  lots   on   Observatory.\nSmall house, fruit trees, etc.    $850\n! 'easy  terms.\nLarge house which  would cost  $5000\nto buiidTVj-Tust be sold at sacrtficf\nprice bf $3000.   Very central.\nSeveral   small   Bungalows,   $120(1   to\n$3000;\nSoft  grey  arid  bel^e  are  Jhe .best\ncolors for long gloves.       . ,.\" .\nFrance * has   made   training   com\npulsory in all Efhopa..\nTexas     Ib    | producing      80,000,000\ncarrels of crude oil a year.\nNEW OFFICE\n410 Baker St.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nFOR HIRE\nAt Any\/ Hour\nNEW DODGE CAR\nPhone 18\nCITY CAB COMPANY\nJohn   Linobaugh\nMinnis Transfer &\nFuel Co. v\nCOAL   AND   WOOD  SUPPLIED\n-enerai  teaming.  Ordere  prompi .y\ndelivered.\nPhone   39 ,     509  Ward   St.\nJ, MINNI9\nNELSON TIRE REPAIR\nFor high-class Vulcanizing, Rer\ntreading, etc.\n411 Josephine Street\nNELSON,'B.C.'\nFURS\ntligli  class Furs froD-\nsolccted, skins kept oj-\nsioci? or madfi to orddr.   Customers's Furh\ntnadi' up, remodeled and repaired.\nSKINS DI.USSED AND MOUNTED  '\nC      CI    A^iRR HIGHEST I'HIOE PAID FO\u00bb\u00bb\nMil   WARD  ST. I'llONE   100 RAW   FURS\n\u25a0i ^wstx&m&ma&twmCiii^^zmmmii\niSR-MTS-n\nfflg.\n\u2014For fastef Wear\u2014\nYOU- CAN SELECT your new su:t, hatband furrfiphings.from a varied assortment selected to meet the requirement- of men with critical .tastes.\n7niM0RY & WAU1Y\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1920_04_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0396227","@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":"1920-04-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1920-04-03 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\/1.0396227"}