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C, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\nNo. 277\nCity Appeals\nRADCLIFFE CASE\nSee Page 3\nH0L1EN METAL KILLS 22 IRON WORKERS\niONNINGTON MISS BREAKS SKULL; 30-FOOT FALL\nMID CRACKS\n\u00abL-H FAIL\nf BONNINGTON\nown Thirty Feet to the\nRocks When River\nBank. Caves\nPTOR REMOVES\nPART OF SKULL\nI\ne   Madeline  Harris\n' Serious State at\nHospital\nin\n50-foot fall, a fractured skull, ana\n(living, is the experience of Mad-\nJ Harris, 11.year-old daughter of\ntnd Mrs. Alfred Harris, of Bon-\njon.\nurday afternoon she wus walk-\n\u2022Vlth some of her playmates along\nriver bank at a point where there\n| drop of about 30 feet to the\nB below. As the girls were walk-\nTtlong, a portion of the bluff gave\nJ and  Madeline fell to the rocks\n:l\"\nBOTH LEADERS\nTO TAKE PART\nINBYE1ECTI0N\n; I Assurance  Given  Strathroy\nLiberals That Premier\nWill Speak\nNOMINATIONS TAKE\nPLACE AT NOON\nStretcher From Overalls\n\u25a0 D. Bldge, a lineman for the\nI Kootenay Power & Light com-\n', found the little girl unconscious,\n'was wearing combination over-\nand made a stretcher out of\ni, and went for help.\nH. H. MacKenzle ot Nelson\nout In his car and made a\nJr operation. He then brought\n[Jn to the Xmatatmy Lake General\nrltal, and performed a more serl-\n'\u2022arttr iumpllcauid ouerlitliW 'icing a portion of the skull,\nlie doctor mpwt-M that the injury\nvery serious' but that the little\nj) condition Ittat flight wns favor-\nTHE   KING  OF  8PAIN\nvi,o fl t\u201e visit this cpitlnent in\n1927. ,c'*jaln ts again turuin*. hei*\neyes toward the western world, nnd\nKing Alfonso's airmen are mapping*\nout air tomes to the Americas in\nthe 20th century just aa Spanish\nnavigators on e charted tbe seas on\nthi'lr voyages to the Xew* World.\nTRAlDfFOR\nTHE Ef IRE IS\nrap CRY\nLabor Premier Says British Diplomacy Failed at\nGeneva\nkt\nft High and Dry\nTop of Coney\nIsland Ferris Wheel\nfew YORK, March 21.- -The big\nis wheel at Coney Is'uml. the\neat In the world, run today In\n\u25a0r of the arrival of spring, lt\n>ed at 6 o'clock. Hours Inter a\neman. leaving the deserted beach\nhe wake of the crowd, mw * a\nburst of flame from the top of\nwheel. He also heard a cry from\nilr. The owner of the wheel was\nIleal, but finally consented to\non the power again. As each car\n! down the policeman peered Into\nIn one of them he found a\nled figure, who first said. \"I got\nhigh and dry\u2014very dry,\" and\nIdentified himself as Miles Kchoe\narsey City. He might have been\nat the top of the wheel all night\nhe not set fire to hia handker-\nFII.ACK ia*nN. Lancashire. Eng\u201e\nMarch St.\u2014Former Piemler Ilnjnsay\nMacdonald, refeiring to a speech here\nto the Leaguo at Nations meeting\nat   Geneva   said:\n\"Wo have just witnessed one of the\nmost trcgi? failure* British diplomacy has ever met. It Is doubtful\nnow .whether the league wiU survive.''\nHe said that Sir Austen Chamberlain must tel] parliament' and the\ncountry the whole story. Sir Austin had tiled his \"free hand.\" and\nhad   committed   suicide   by   It.\nMr. . Macdonald assorted in the\n\"Pinion of thi firmrr Labor premier.\nChambf ilali, and thu Conservative\nparty had mad* a great blunder at\nGtnevu whi'h had decreased Brit-\ntsh  prestige In   Ijtarope.\n\"it was not long slnie.\" he continued, \"that Groat Hi I tain stood\nw i iu the forefront of European\ncouncils. Whcie ae we tocay.\" Sir\nAusun It is believed has not been\nli the best of health tor the part\nfew days. His work ut . Geneva\nt-rwJv fatigued him. dm Ing that\nperiod   prior  to  his   return   to   Lon-\nDOCTOR GIVES\nCURE BY RADIO\nMeighen Also Expected to\nTake Part in West Mid-\ndlesex Campaign\nHanna Enters Slander\nWrit  Against   Ahey\nin the Snm of $10,000\nA writ of slander, directed\nagainst F. T. Abey of Kaslo,\n,was entered In supreme ' court\nat Nelson Saturday by Donaghy\n& Matthew, solicitors of L.\nHanna of Nelson, claiming $10,-\n000  damages.\nThe salt fuIIow8 publication\nIn the Kaslo Kooteiiaiun of a\npaid advertisement over the\nname of Mr. Abey, making reference to Mr, Hanna, and to re-\ncent litigation between Mrs.\nHuse Mugllo and Mr.  Abey.\nMYSTERY FIRE\nMAY LEAD TO\nREALRESCUE\nFirst Search ol Island for\nMissing Family Is Fruitless, Though\nPEOPLE ON MAINLAND\nSEE FLAMES AT NIGHT\nSTRATHROY, Out., March 21. \u2014\nThere Is every likelihood that Premier W. L. Mackenzie King and Rt.\nHon. Arthur Meighen will take part\nIn the West Middlesex byelection\ncampa'gn this week, assurance has\nbeen given Strathroy Liberal headquarters that the prime minister will\nspeak here toward the end of tbe\nweek.\nThe first week of the campaign\nwas almost entirely devoid of issues\nof a  political   nature.\nThe nomination meeting at 12\no'clock tomorrow noon Is awaited expectantly, and it is reported that\nboth Thomas Elliott, noin'nee, and\nJ. C. Elliott, Liberal candidate, have\npapers well signed. Hon. R. J.\nManion of Fort William, will speak\nhere tomorrow and at Parkhlll in\nthe evening In the interests of the\n\u00a3on \u00bb>:er vat Ives.\nHon. 3. C.' Elliott spoke at Keyser\nlast ^evening. . .In sopoort.. uf Mr.\nEPtytt was Duncan Marshall, federal\noriraiiizej* of the Liberal party.1\n\u25a0 \"Thr earn* party that is now com\nplaining,\" said Mr, Marshall in die-\nHissing the Conservative nttitutp to\nthe Australian treaty, \"not so many\nyears ago created trade In bogus\nbutter\u2014oleomargarine. They were\nhigh proUctlon'sts In butter, but\nfr\u00bb'2  traders  In   bo^us  butter.\"\nShip   Speeding to  Port;   Captain Is Stricken With\nPneumonia\n\u25a0\nncouver Man\nGoes Bail for Man\nj in Trouble; Loses It\nHN'COUVHR.     March     21.\u2014Thomas\nJforpe   of   North   Vancouver   Is   out\naa   a   result  of   k'ndness   to   Ed-\nL.    StairB.    the   accused   having\n>ed from Missouri penitentiary.\nn Stairs was arrested here for ex-\nKion    to   U.S\u201e    Home   became    his\nsmart. When the case was called\nsrday Stairs failed to appear, and\n'was ordered estreated.\nIncrease in\nKootenay Mines\nProduction This Year\nINCOUVER, March 20.\u2014A greatly\njawed production of lead, silver and\n;in the Kootenay this year is pre-\nU by A. U. Langley, lit addressing\nocal mines chamber. He expects\nmber of new mines to be added,\nlipping lists shortly,\niter Worker Falls\nInto Pot of Molten\nMeted at Kellogg\nIKLLOGG, Idaho, March\n\u2014John Jeffrey, a#cd 26, em-\nof the Bunker Hill ami\nsmelter here, died Sat-\nnight from burns roetitwd\nlie stepped hack war I Into\npot of molten rock, Ikiuu-jI\ndegrcu* l<'filii'cn.ii'it. Vt\u00bb\u00bb\nday follow work nun mid Jcf-\nf stoppiil tnackwafnl whll \u2022\nrkhtff near thy molten pot,\n\u00abix-rt and plunged into Ute\ntal ih>u HI* clothing wus\nkind from him.\nHALIFAX, Uirch Si, \u2014 According\nto wlreltss massages received here by\nthe Marconi company, an unknown\nDanish freighter who gave her position\nas 7 j ml., off Halifax harbor, is\nspeed4nf to Loufebarg. Caps Breton.\nthe nearest port In a race against\ndeath, Tft* first message intercepted\nsaid that the frefgtiter's captain had\nbeen strlckjn with pneumonia and requests tuiJicil advlc. there being HO\nphysician aboard. Officials of the\n.YT.tu-\"tii ci un pany immediately communicated wilh the Victoria General\nhospital, and treatment prescribed, by\nDr. Cameron was transmitted to the\nvessel.\nA few hours later another message\nwas received from tlin freighter stating th\/t the captain had rallied somewhat under the treatment prescribed by\nwireless and that the vessel wus making  for   Louisburg,\nWill Investigate\nLumber Industry\nIn the Interior\nVICTORIA. March 21. \u2014 Members\nof J U. MeNlven's board wh'ch will\nadminister the new provincial minimum wage law. will go into the in-\nter'or to Investigate conditions in the\nlumber industry. A general conference of Interior lumbermen to meet\nthe board .s beln.T arranged now under\nths auspices of the Mountain Lumbermen's association, Sir. McNiven stated\ntoday. A soon as the lumbermen are\nready to get together, the board will\nbe prepared to meet them and discuss\nwa\u00abe   matters.\n\"Ws want a good deal more Inform**\nJon before we fix the date on which\n.he new law wilt go |nto effect tn the\nh'inber   Industry,\"   Mr.   MeNlven   __u.'d.\nSportsmen Fear for\nSafety of Frenchman\nSailing in Yawl\nPARIS, March 21.\u2014Parisian sportsmen are considerably alarmed over\nthe safety of Alain J. Gerbauit, noted\nTrer\/h tennis player and dm ing\nyai-hLfinan, who, sailing alone arotfnd\nthe ttifM In a small yawl, ls long\nover due at Tahiti, the-largest of the\nSociety islands group In the Pacific.\nHe left the island of Galapagos more\nthan two months ago and should\nhave reached the Society Islands\nwithin 40 days.\nFarmer Getting Out\nHis Harrows Near\nRegina; First of Year\nREG1NA,' March 21.\u2014J. Willie,\nfarmer at Liberty, who spends his\nwinters ln Regina expects to have\nhis harrows out on his farm at\nLiberty near here Monday. If he\nachieves what he is setting out to\ndo he will be one of the first in the\nprovince to be on tho land this\nspring.\nPremier King Takes\nPart in Byelection\nat West Middlesex\nOTTAWA, Raroh 21.-Premier W\nL Macktns!* Kins will, according to\ntentative plans. pirCclpate ln thp by\neiectiun campaign In West Middlesex\nIn eupport of Hon. J. G. Elliott,\nnewly appointed minister of lubor.\nThe prime minister Is expected to address u meeting at Strathroy on Sat*\nurday next. Hon. W. It. Motherwell\nand other cabinet members will prub\nably also spoak.\nDUNNING TAKES\nHIS SEAT TODAY\nMinister    ef    Railways    aud\nCanals Will Be Sworn\nIn This Morning\nOTTAWA,'March 21.-Hon. Charles\nA. Dunning, newly appointed minister\nof railways and canals, will take his\nMat in the house of commons tomorrow afternoon. Mr. Dunning will\nbe eworn in tomorrow morning as the\nduly elected member for Regina. II.\nwill lie introduced in tho house bj\nPremier W. h. Mackenzie King an I\nHon. Ernest Lipointe or Hon. W. R.\nMotherwell,   minister  of  agriculture.\nThe writ showing the return ol\nMr. Dunning h,<s been received by\nthe chief electoral officer; and hi;\nelection was gazetted on Saturday in\n\\ special i-sucof the Canada ga\/,ctte.\nShortly after his arrival today, Air.\nDunning hid a lengthy confe:ei\\ce\nwith  the prime  minister.\nSEEK RAIL LINE,   ,\nTO MINING AREA\nWinnipeg: Business Men Press\nfor Immediate Construction\nof  Manitoba   Line\n\"WIXXIPEG. March 21.\u2014A commit-\ntee of Winnipeg business men will\nbe formed to press for the immediate\nconstruction of a railway into tite\ncentral Manitoba mining field, with\nconnections it feasible, with the\nOntario   Ited   kike   district.\nMayor Ralph Webb presided at a\nmeeting of business men Saturday,\nwhen prominent engineering experts\ndiscussed the need for a railway and\nthe- difficulties in the way of Its\nconstruction.\nIt    was   stated    thit    the    proposed\nrailway  would cost  In  the  neighbor\nhood  of  $1,300,100  or  about  fliJ.OOO\nmile.\nMayor Webb toljl the gathering that\nthe opportunity to make the city\ncenter for mining suppllce might\nnever occur again. The city would\nbe responsible If this business waa\ndiverted to the east.\nPredictions ' were made' that ' wit!\nthe mining field developed through\nrailway communication, an addition of\n100,000 to the population of Winnipeg\nwould   result.\nFamily Believed Drowned in i\nlake Erie May Yet\nBe Alive\n8AKDU&KY,   Ohio,  March  21.  \u2014  Al(t;ilm'-   '\nparty which  left  Kelley's Island today   T,\"'u,Ut\nn  search of the Phlpps family, miss-\nng    slmc    March    ],    returned    late\ntonight    without    having    seen    any\ntrace   of   the   Phipps.\nG'xhei Musician\n\u2022~'   Bb*\"*     ji <*v__I\nBe             '\n* ,\n'\ni* f\n\u00bb\n'\u2022'     1 tmma        \"      *   :\nMONA   BATE3\ninternational\nWORKERS DIE\nWHEN MOLTEN\nMEffl. FLIES\nTwenty-two Worker* Killed\nand Four Still\nSerious\nEXPLOSION SHATTERS\nIRON WORKS FURNACE\nCause   Unknown;    Broken\nSteam Pipes Make Situation Worse\n:tar\nncert    tours\nin\nnist   of\nrecently   i\nevecal year\nin    Europe\nMisa Batts\nturned   tu\nspent   in J\nand    the I\nmade h\n'soloist   with\nJ tras.\nfirst publi- appearance when she wan\n7   years  of  age,   was   honor  graduate\nuf    Toronto   Conservatory    while   still\nj in her early teens, has made su^-exs-\nI.EAMIXGTON*.   Ont.,   .March   21.   \u2014 fnl a;ipiaranee\u00bb in Maw YorU, London,\nBelief   that   James   Phipps.   his   wife   Dresden.    I'rugue.    Hudapest.   Vienna\nand   four   children,   thought   lost   ml1\"\"1 othtr capitals in concert and\nI-ako    Erie,    March    1,   may   still   b\nalive,   caused   a   rescue   expedition   to\nstart across the ice from Kelly Island\nto   Middle   island   \",ite   today,   to   tea\nIf   the    family    is   there.\nMiddle island, which is a lighthouse\nstation in the summer. Is uninhabited\nin winter. Fires which may have 1\nbe-en kindled OS signals, were seen\nther^ today, and the rescue expedition\nwas organized to go Immediately to\nthe Island.\n. 1'htpps and his family, whu live\nherj*. started for Petee Inland March\n\u25a0U \u201edriy>t\u00bbK ncvMS ths. 4ca- WJierw\nthey   fal'ed   to  return   it   was   believed\ntht-y   had    remained   oo   Pelee,    but\nmail carriers com'ng here Marcb- \u25a0*.\nreported they had left the island for\nLeamington late in the day, March I.\n,\\ r.idlo broadcasting station\nstated    that   these    signals    had    been\nFIND BQDiE\nFOUR BABIES\nin mm\nBIRMINGHAM. Ala., March\n21.\u2014The death' Hit resulting\nfrom an unexplained explosion\nof furnace Nd. 2 of the Woodward Coal & Iro'i company's\nplant here *tood at 22 today,\nand in addition faur men were\nreported tp tc in a serious con-\nh\"s-ldition in\/hosoi'ala. Of the 22\n\u2022nen killed by the explosion Saturday,\/ll were white and the\nrcm'.Win..  11 negroes.\nThof cau.*<c of the blast, which\nburst asunder th_ husre furnace\nand ,'sent 4fl0 tons of molten\nmetal swirling across the foundry^ floor, still was undetermined,    but   the    belief   was\neM'*rs.C'J    ii\n\u2022jjuLlt**    tlU't    lt\niii_.l   int'H-nal\nAim*\n.\"ill..\nobserved     from     the\n*il''0.\nTwenty Thousand\nWorth Stolen Jewels\nRecovered by Police\nDETROIT, March 21.\u2014Jewelry estimated to be worth S29.001) was found\ntoday by police uhen raiding a dwelling house here. Hix men and a\nwoman were arrested. Police tore up\nthe floor of a bedroom and removed\nthe baseboard in the kitchen to find\ntho jewelry. A driver's licence with\nthe address of the house on it. found\nafter the robbery of a jewelry store\nlast Friday, furnished the clue that\nled to the recovery of the Jewelry.\nVancouver Woman Is\nAttacked and Beaten\nand Then Robbed\nVANCOUVER, March 21.\u2014Knocked\nto the* ground by a sudden blow,\nMiss M. Cattwrlght was left lying\nstunned In a street after a bandit,\nwho had struck her, had fled with\nher purse, containing a bank note\nand   110.\nFive-Day Week Goes\nInto Force After First\nDay of May at Coast\nVANCOUVER, March 20. \u2014\nCarpenters, stonemasons and\nbricklayers of Vancouver, through\ntheir union, hsve notified contractors hero that they will work\non the flve-day-a-wetk plan after\nMay 1. They will ask fcr no\nchange in pay. Plasterers of ths\ncity already have accepted the\nfive-day week. Plumbers and\ncontractor* are still negotiating\na new wags scales th* plumbers\nasking for $7 a day and employer* offering |8.80.\nNATIONAL ARMY\nNOW IN RETREAT\nRetire    Toward    Peking    und\nEvacuate    Tientsin\nDistrict\nTIENTSIN', lurch 21.\u2014The Kuomlnchun (national army) forces apparently are retiring today toward\nPtk'ng. with the Intention of abandoning Tientsin to troops antagonistic\nto ihe Peking govfumeiit.\nThe Kuomlnchun ire drawing In\ntheir lines toward Tientsin, both\nfrom the north ami thp south, under\npressure of Marshal Chang T?o Lin.\ndictator of Manchuria, and those of\nhis allies from the p-oVlnce of Shantung. The Kuominehun have 1-ft\nonlv a small fur'1\" flt I.utai. on the\nPeking-Mukden railway, to halt tb*\npursuing forces from the Pengtien\ndfstrict of Manchuria, which have\npreyed   them   hard   for  week*.\nThe populace In Tientsin Is calm.\ndesplU the seeming preparations of\ntbcf Kuomlnchun to evacuate the\nrit;\\\nGets His Bride After\nFifteen-Thousand-Mile\nJourney to Canada\nNEW VORK. March 21.~Herbert J.\nA. Griffin, wealthy Peruvian exporter, started last night on the\nlast lap of his 15.000-mile Journey\nfor a br'de, sailing with him for\nhis home in Callao was Mrs. Griffin,\nformerly Mins Constance Prindle o(\nPreston,  Ont.\nTho romance bad its inception in\nCallao. where Miss Prindle became\nengaged to Griffin after *x two-day\ncourtship. The marriage took place\nIn   Preston   laat   Thursday   night.\nfee Jam Breaks\nbut Later Piles\nand Causes Flood\nWere Wrapptd in OM Clothing; Authorities Now Investigating\nMAl.TINKi:ri;u. \\\\. V*.,. March 21.\n--Authorities of Morgan county today raid they were proceeding on a\nmurder theory in tin* liivoatiga'KBa of\nthe mysterv surrounding tbe finding\nof the bodies oi four Infants in the\nattic of an unoccupied hours at\nCherry Curt, last Friday. No o.-.\u00ab\nhad been tal.\"ii into cuatoJy Unljy,\nand ihe sheriff and district it Porn y,\nII. D. Allen, declined tu sa.\\ wheth-\nther anyone was -under suspicion. They\nsaid, however, that arrests might\nbe   expected   FOon,\nDiscovery of the remains of ths\nbabies wa? brought about by boys,\nwho tound one of tbe bodies In a\npile of rubbish \u00abn the bank \u00ab f h\ncreek. The rubbish bad been carried\nfrom a re bit'nee owned by (\\ 1.-\nButts rd Mnrtinsburg. by u man\nwho had been bird! to rl\u00bb-in the\nhou*\u00a9. The authorities were notified\nand a Search of the hmise rrt\"ult\u00absl\nin the findiii'.T or the other bodies,\nwrapoed iii n.d clothing an! concealed   In   a   corner   <\u2022['   the   attic\nwu* due   to  an   unexplamM   1\n'Tin\"  V'l.fnit  rfwl   Iron   qnamr gave\ntvi hour   warning,  snd   the   whir\nidvwlsh   ih i: tanif  w.t'i  iIk- do.ttn-\n*.f    ire':l    told    those    outside\nwhat had  happned.\nrkers wew catisht in\n^>re   and    killed    lain tease   heat    of   tho\nI dlrer.ly in  the path\nihower   war*   caught\nheets,    nlii.li    In-\non   vrrecked  ptaani  and\nsent   their  coutenta\nThi-  irking  of water\nand   bumIhS   coke\nFINANCIAL CRISIS\nBAHAMAS' TROUBLE\nA  %*.\nOIL   CITY,   Penn.,   March   21\nIce,    which    had    covered    the    Al-1 \t\nlegheny river lure elnce  February 28, j Recejl'   Robberv   Leads   In  (\"ill*\n\u2022tarted   dow\u201e   stream   ut   lax   thi*      tailment   if   Government\nafternoon.      The    movement    however, I . .,\nwa. material!.- cheeked m  half an I       Improvement Piognm\nhour, the ice piling up at the eastern\ntnd of the city, with the result that!\nthe loner parts of Oil City, along the\nriver were flooded. The OU City\npower plant was put out of commission by the water. Water was pouring Into the pump house at the city\nwaterworks, hut emergency pumps\nwere keeping it from the fires, store\nba-ements were also flooded and\nsome surrounded.\nHON. M. BOBlLLAtiD\nDIES SUDDENLY\nMOXTilKAU March LM. -- Hon.\nClement Rubilhfd. mem Ik r of the\nlegislative council, having re| relented\nthe district Of Pe I-anuadierc in tho\ntjpptr houst' of tjuebes since 1911*.\ndied suddenly h\u00abre on Saturday evening.\nMr. Roblllatd wus horn vn May\n80,   18^0.   at   Lavallrle.   Que.\nVancoayer Girl\nBreaks Leg Above\nthe Knee in Fall\nVancouver;  March  si.\u2014while\ngoing home from school Dorothy\nReynolds, aged 11. caught hold of a\nchain trailing from a truck. When\nthe car speeded up sha mas unable\nto let go. Hhe finally lost her hold\nand in her full broke a leg above the\nknee.\nVANCOUVER, March 20. \u2014 Mrs\nJessie AlcD-ougalt. 74, died In hos-\nplta.1 yesterday as the result of injuries received Friday evening, when\nshe was  struck by an auto.\nMIAMI,   Ma'rli   -1\npatch tti the Miami   l>.\nBays    thai    Wiih    guv.':\nadmitting that n fin.j\npends lis a ri suli of\nColonial govt rmnent's\nsuu, Bahama Islands.\nnd   silver  last\ngold\ncolonial\ndon ment\nthe    govi\ngram.\nThe I.-*\n$300.\u00bbmiii.\nvested,\nthan tZ\\\nonly cash\nrency in*\nNews today1\nI. Iii .ifflciull\nit!   1*1 L.*i!H   ini-\nl.btrj- of the\ndill ut N'aJ-\n1 \u00ab 17.1)1)11 ill\nanosday.  the\nuiliitr. abuil-\npeered\nby Eugefevds at\nToronto Welcome\nTORONTO, March -i\\r-\\ Tceptlon\nsu-'h as i.j accordtd tewSpotablei was\nnlven    Held   Marshal   VU&uunt    Allen-\nhy at Massey hail hwf*\\ SalurAn\nntfjlif.   when  he addiMMd  a icsptuittf\naudience under tha'au'pices <\u00bbf the\nnational council of education. He\nnn - chewed far s*me minutes when\nhe rose to spp'ik and applaudc-J when\nhi-   had   roncb'de I  his  address\nLord    All\"hby   upok-    of   bis   nam-\nfalgn.'   'n    !'ii itint'   and   Syria,   inod-\nsily   Hlludbi r   tn   his   i >ui   woik   and\nprslsing   th it   of   his   [tut*,\n!     \"The T\" I'i-li nrmj   waa ntorc com*\n| pletely   cltitroye.l   titan   any   army   In\n| the hlshtrv of Ivittb-'   he said.   More-\no\\ er.    fJermuny's    dr.vim    of   east era\n\\ Wtstlge   +'-*   ~m*r>*yv I.\n\\N0NP0LITICAL CABINET\n!   FOR CZECHOSLOVAKIA\nttailn\ncut    pre\nIs  of  whb\nleft   bebi\n.-i!   reprene\nsupporting\n. ind   Or\n\u25a0     The\n! \"igned\nI in \u25a0lea-,*\nRKAf,, Murch II.\u2014AdMoea\nCa^t-ho-Hlocaklan consulate\nte that a new nonpotitlcal\nhi'-i been rmmed tn Caecho-\nluuded   by   Premier  Cteny.\nV in tnib s oi the former\nMio remain art Ur. Edouard\nu-'liin   minister,   Dr.   Knglia\nKailey.\n'jecho-Bh.vakiiid   cabinet   re-\nii    the   f;u f   demands   for\n1 wag s froiy the civil serv-\nt.-:  an export tux on wbtftU\nThe Weather\nThomas Finally\nVotei Coniiience        I\nby Labor People\nDBBBT.  Baflud,  March  81,\u2014J. H.'I\nThomuH, Kenernl aeiretary ot the National Union ct' Runway men. attended\na   meetiiiK   \"f   lh\u00ab   trades   union   8nd I\n(eneral labor Helejtatu here Saturday. I\nat which  he encountered considerable .\ncriticiHtn trom section*, nt the ultend-\nants.    t illics of Mr.  T * mias alleged j\nthut he hail anti-labor sentinienlfi. nnd\nreferred to his wearing of court dress,\nhis eoinpanlo'ishlji with  the caijltallst\nclasi ut dinnetH, und  iiartietilarly his\nsignlnt.   of   the   recent    l.tactt   award\nby the ntitlonal waKes bourd.\nKventttally, aeeordinjf to the report\nof the tnectln*; handed out at ita eon-\nelusion, a resolution of confidence In\nMr. Thomas waa overwhelmingly carried, and the meetin*. dispersed to the\netralna of \"He'a a Jolly Cloud Fallow.*'\nbelow   sre   for   the\nterday afternoon at\nS.VITHD.WN   \\VK\\THKK\nHIT\nIcinKy\nHtlA.  March 20.\u2014Nelaon\n(ienentlly  fair and   mil'\nMln.\nNKi.sn:\nVictoria\nover\nKamloups . . . .\nllarkcrville ...\nI'Mnee   ltupelt\nt*stevan    \t\nCiilKary    \t\nUlntilpeK   \t\n1'oitland  \t\nWaa   Francisco\nSeattle    ..\t\nSpokane   \t\nt'cnti;toil\nVet non     \t\nllrand   Forks  .\nKaslo   \t\nt'nutbronlt\nKdmonton\nPrince Albert  .\n3b\ntU\n4 4\n1 I\n;s\n3<;\n44\nM\n81)\n48\n54\n4S\n84\n42\n40\n3d\n15\n27\nSO\nU\nund\n1\n.Max.\n52\n*iH\n02\n40\n\u25a0IS\nB2\nH\n50\n56\n58\n' 68\n61\n51\n50\n54\n52\n58\n_______________\n Page Two*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\nDecrease in World\nPlantings of Bread\nGrain Is Slight\n..WASHINGTON, March 21.\u2014A decrease of 2.3 per cent In the world\nplan\\igs of winter-sown bread grains\nlu 15 leading grain countries exclusive\nof Russia was reported today by the\ndepartment of agriculture, \\vhlch\nstated that the outlook for the crop\nwas  favorable   ln  western   Europe.\n\"Reports from Europe indicate a\nhealthy appearance of the winter-\nsown crops,' the report declared. \"The\nrecent rains In Spain and Austria\nhave proved beneficial. The outlook\nin England Is very promising. Favorable conditions have resulted ln Increased activity in the preparation of\nthe land for spring sowing.\"\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n\u2022I^^\/cm.\naWte.\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms with Running Water,  Private  Baths and en  Suite.\nHeadquarters   for   all   Travelling    Men     Mining    Men,   Lumber   M-n\nand Tourist*.\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $100. Rntarian   Heaniuartors.\nTme Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City '\nIIL'ME-J. ,W\nA. C.  Brook. -,}\ni i  iiii iwiMiis\u2014nssfc\u2014 y-\ntmtth . J.- H. Riches,' nu-rhind; I*. J Moon* H. Buchanan, J\n, nttpry, M. \\fMjn, J. i'> HaRgert Calgary^ L. Badler, Edtnen-\nAllwln, A. K.*\\Vr-,>d, J V\\ Fellord E. inn; I' H. Ore J. J. Dinswood, E. C\nJ?a(uufln. K S.\\ Roi Inso;. H. W. Char- While. K. F MacQu rrie E A Br:r\nrfhers. T. I\\. Wmeltj T< H. Currle A Littl.john, Toronto; I.. Doupe, \\V\nVancouver; T. *J_ Truss Braatford; F Humpltrt-ys K, MacKeiuie. Winnipeg\nC. Drores. C. R Row;, T H Hall.1.1. A, Kourc*, Rt.*Paul; F W God <1\nMontreal;   J.   V., \\.heeler,   West   Sum-    V cturia;   Florence   Turner.   Cranbrook.\n\u25a0     #\nNEW   SAMPLE   ROOMS.\nALL    DAYLIGHT\nFREE    BUS    FROM    STATION\nAND   BOAT.\nHotel Strathcona\nEUROPEAN PLAN\n\"A Horn* tn:'. 7ho \u2022  Atf\/i?! Prom Home\"\n\u25a0'NEXCI'l.l.ED SERVICE\nTug Burns and Then\nSinks in Northern Coast\nWaters; Crew Rescued\nVANCOUVER. Murch 21. \u2014 While\nproceeding to Vancouver from northern British Columbia logging camps\nwith a tow of spruce, the Mll-\nFoot motor,, tug. Barnum, caught fire\nand funk on Friday nl_ht In Ma-\nlanpina strait, off Myrtle point, ohout\n75 miles northwest of here, according\nto word received   by   her nscnts.\nThe message stafd that the tug\nSt. Clair hid picked up the liarr-\nson's ims-age, and Ii is presumed sir,\nrescued   her crew.\nThe Hanson, valued at $11,000, .vill\nhe a  cmplele loss.\nDo Your Bowels\nEver Become\nConstipated?\nA froo motion of the bowels, even\nAny, should be the aim of every one\nwho aspires to perfect health, for\nonce the bowels become clocked-up\nall the other organs of the body get\nderanged, and all kinds of diseases\nand disorders are liable to attack the\nsystem.\nIf you take our advice and use\nMilburn's\nLAXA-LIVER\n\u2022PILLS- -\nfon will find that they will regulate\nand keep your bowels and liver in\nprnper shape, and when this is done\nthere is not much chance of you ever\nbeing sick.\n\"\u2022 This valuable remedy has been ok\nthe market for the put 32 years;\nput pp only by TJie T. Milbara Co.,\nLimited, Toiouto, Ont.\nCRUEL   PILES\nNew Grand Hotel\n\u00abie  VERNON   ST.   EAST        J \u25a0    E.   MILLS,   PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters   for   l* *,er. body      liot   and   Cold   Water.\nTelephones in Al Kooms.\nFREE    BUS   FRPM    STA* ION   AND    BOAT\nNEW GKAN'D \u2014 A. D. FV:k i..\n~yon;  Mr.  and  Mrs. C \u25a0 A   CwY, y,\nj. Bberwtn, Ainaworth; I. Arm.\nt. Arrowhead; K. I.ee, Minucilosa;\nA.   J.  Harris,   Ilonniilgton.\n\u2022~T~-\nQueen's itfote;\nTHE CENTER OF COfcVEN'tNCE\nHot and cid water fh eery room\nStaaa heat.d.\nI I\nA.  LAPOINTE, Prop.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2.2   Blocks   East   of   Post   Office\niteam heated. Hot arjd cold water\nRooms   by   day   or   week.\nAlso   Furnished   Suites.\nP.  H.   BUSH, Prop.\nMOTHERS\nI       AND THEIR CHILDREN\niffiU\u00abmi.a\u00ab_i__iMw^M\nI\nTHE    MITTEN     \\M>\n\u2022HANKY'\nDRAWiat\nQue   Mother   Bays:\nGloves anl mittens, lost, strayed\nor otherwise missing, have bean a\ntreat problem in our house. Now\nwe hi.ve Nt aside -i drawer in ,i\ndesk near the outside door. Into it\ngo mittens and gloves for young\nund old. Wo also keep a supply of\nclean handkerchiefs there, to be\nused when goins back upstairs :tft\u00ab?r\n\u25a0i forgotten \"hnndky\" might mean\nbeing late for school.\nCANADA'S POLICY\nTO BE DEBATED\nSixteen Hundred\nSail to Canada\nOver Week-End\nLONDON, March 21.\u2014In connection\nwith the migration of families to\nCanada 1G00 persons sailed this weekend from Liverpool, Southampton.\nGlasgow   and   Belfast.\nDr.   Vsn   Vleck   Found   Genuine   Relief\nWhich   Is   Healing   Thousands\nSend   Postal   fcr   Dollar   Trial   FREE\nuf firing   from   ribs   w*\nimlted   offer:     Send   uj\nyour     address    an*.\nreturn     mall     wll\nbring you a regubi\nI^llar   Package   of\nl>r.   Van   Vtec&'S   \u00a3\nfold     Absorption\nTreatment for itsh-\nInff,   Bleoding,   Protruding   Piles,   am\nsuch    Tile   tr< u-\nMe\u2014all   In  plnin\nVi    wrapper    \u2014    TO\n\/    TRY   FREE.   Dr\n\u2022      Van    Vleck,    ex-\nsurgeon     U.     tf\n\u00abTiT     army, spent for-\n'\u00abT\u00bbW ty years perfecting hla no \\\\\nv. nrld famous Absorption Method. .Si\nknifo. nn paint, no doctor lulls -Just\nsimple home treatment that ran b<j trie*'\nI' anyoflfe wltuont oost. Th-ni, tftei\ntrying, r you are fully satisfied wit)\nthf rel'ef and comfort It given you, sen\nan One Doll r If not, it costs yoa nothing-. Vou decide and we taia yoa:\nword. We don't know bow wf couh\nshow more unbounded faith In our remedy. It Is relieving almost every stage\nand condition of Itching. Bleeding, Protruding Files, even after whole life-\ntin, -a of misery We have received hundreds of letters telling us of the success of Mile remarkably effective system after e\\ erything else, InclodJnp\ncostly and dangerous operations, hai\nfailed even after 30 and 4ti years ot\nsuffering. The milder cases nr*; often\ncontrolled In a single (lay. Won't you\ntry i' at our expense? Address Dr. Van\nVleck IV. Dent .IK13, Jackson, Mich.\nSt ml ao money.    Send  today.\nQVT-oi\nn. &!.\u25a0',\u25a0\nColur ol\n,N:-,\n~ '\u2014 -\nA-\nBonn\n- A. w. Roberts, Riondel;\nTfay\/ O. Massey nnd wife.\nI rdeM; Wis i B Nm brand,\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 .; 'A K. McIihov. Klm-\n\u25a0;. H. Itowe, Toronto; C.\n'ig*o;..\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNtir C. P. R. Station.\nRooms   a'.   Reasonable   Ratea\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor\nSAVOY HOTEL\nBAKER ST.    NELSON B.C\n2 BLOCKS FROM DEPOT\nSTEAM HEATED\nHOT -'.COLD RUHWNG WATER\nIHROQHS.   .,.      .   \u201e\nI savoy \u2014 E, F. WHght Kimberley\nj M Hreljax, Creston; K. Melver, Cran-\nI brook; G. Huxtahle. O Smith, A. Q\nI Noomer,     Vancouver;   ?H.     L     D-vlin\nLethbridge; H. L. Muliett. Hana; J\nI li.   Harnice,   A.   B.   8.   Stanley,   Miss  U\nAun.strong,   Trail,\nNelson's Best Cafes\nTHE WHITE LUNCH\nHome Cooking\nAll  White  Help\nProprietor\u2014P. L.  6LOAN\nNext to Overwaitea Store\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement    and    Delicacy    Prevails\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nt.un beon    11:30  to  2    \u2014 35c\n-<pi ial   Dinners..  5;so  to  8    36*\nH>  SpodotMa In Chop Sut-y and\nNoodles.\n\u2014PHONE  182\u2014\nResponsibility    for    Complications Arising From Foreign\nPolicy of United Kingdom\nOTTAWA, Manh 21.\u2014Canadian responsibility for coin plications arising\nfrom tbe foreifin policy of tho United\nKingdom will b< debated in the house\nof commons tomorrow. Tbe question will be braised on a motion by\n.!. S. Woodsworth, Labor member\nfrom Winnipeg, thit: \"Canada should\nrefuse to accept any responsibility\nfor complication- arising from tbe\nforeign policy of the United Kingdom.\"\nIt   wns   scheduled   to   come   before\n'be   house  ayweek  ago,   but   deferred\nfile   ground   tbat   such   discussion\nbe    Inappropriate    while    the\nassembly    waa    In    session    at\nwould\nleague\nGtonevs\nNow.\nwith tbe league gatherings\nover, it Is expected that tbe debate\nwill give rise to some important\ndeclarations, It Is possible, in this\nconnection, the government will indicate Its attitude toward the I_ooarno\ntreaties. References to the Hamilton\ndeclaration by Ut. Hon. Arthur Mel*\nchen. Conservative leader, is also\nprobable. This was that in the event\nof another war, not only should parliament !>e consulted, bul the opinion\nof the people should be taken in a\ngenera] elect ion lie fore troops are\nsent out of  Canada.\nThe coming week will be the last\nbefore an Easier recess of 10 Aays\u2014\nif a motion which Premier King in-\n'(nds to move Is adopted by the\nhouse. After Easter, the principal\nbusiness will be tiie budget. There\nhave already been intimations that\nits proposal1! will mean u reduction\nfn   taxation.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.  C.   TOWNER,  Proprietor\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty   rooms  of  solid   comfort.\nWe  serve  the   best  meals  iu   Nelson.\nIt's   tin;   cook.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-Heated   Roome  by  the  Day.\nWeek   or   Month.\nEvery consideration shown to guests.\nCor.  Baker and  Ward  Sts,  Nelson\nTHE L D. CAFE\nKUMMt-etjaippOd Restaurant in th*\nCitv OPBN DAT AND NIGHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nin*l Hot iJrinkn, .Vice, dean, fur-\nnshed rooma: hot and cold water\nWa   Cater   to   P-ivate   Pa rt lee.\nMADDKN \u2014 E. McNeil, J. C. Gilker,\n| ISomi'tigton; J. Crossman, F. V. Yen-\nj \u00aber, K, J Barrett Spokane; G. Kcckcr,\nI  tnntsfsit,  Alta.;   H.   It'ppeti,   Sandon.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n820   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special  Lunch  35c\n5:30  to  8:00   p.m.   Supper   . 35c\nPhone  154\n- DODD'S \\\n\"'iBETtS  B.,\nNEITHER HYMNS\nN0RSE10NF0R\nMR. COOLIDGE\nEpiscopal Service Used at\nSimple Service Amid\nGreat Snowstorm\nPLYMOUTH. Vt\u201e Mnrch SI.\u2014\nWith utmost simplicity funeral service* were held Saturiiny for Olonel\nJohn C. Coolidge, father \u00bbt the president, in the white Vermont farm\nhouse which  was his  home.\nButial took place immediately afterward In the little hillside cemetery\nti quarter of a mile from the bouse,\nwith the president, Mrs. Coolidge,\ntheir son, John, and old-time neighbors clustered  abou   the  grave.\nFrom the graveyard, the president\nreturned by sleigh and automobile\nto his special train at Woodstock,\n16 miles away, for an overnight\njourney    to    Washington.\nAlthough the storm which had\nbeen sweeping the countryside since\ndawn had abated slightly by the time\nof the funeral, snow, wet and fine,\nwhipped into the faces of the mourners ns they slowly made their way\nthrough high drifts to the cemetery.\nNo Hymns or Sirmon\nThe funeral MJVlOt was conducted\nby the Kev. John White of Sherburne, who preached during tbe summer at tbe little meeting house\nacroKs the road from the Coolidge\nhome. The revised burial service of\nthe Episcopal church was used. No\nhymns were sung, and no sermon delivered.\nThe casket rested in the parlor,\nwhich adjoins the sitting room in\nwhich Colonel Coolidge by lamp light\nIn August, 1923, administered th'\noath of president to his son.\nCrowded into the farm house for\n(he services, in addition to the president's family and old-time neighbors,\nWere Attorney-Governor Sargent,\nclose friend of the colonel; former\nGovernor Stick ney of Vermont,\nwhose staff the dead man once\nHelved; Governor Killing)*, and Or. A.\nM. Cram, who attended hi;n during\nhis last illness. Six Vermont nation\nal guardsmen cat ried the body t<\nthe grave.\nThe service at the house lasted 15\nminutes.\nAt   the   head  of   the  procession   to ,\n: the    cemetery    was    a    snowmobile j\nwhich   cairitd   the   Rev.   Mr.   While, |\nwho wore a heavy fur coat over his\nvestments.     In   ihe   rOar   of   the   car\nwere  part  of the  floral  pieces.\n\\      Behind   came  the   htarse,   mounted\non  lunnes   and   dawn   by   two   black\nhorses.   At  its rear   marched  the  six .\n\u25a0 body-bearers. I\nExposed to the storm and a biting\ni wind   from   the   north,   the   president\nrode   In   the   first   sleigh   with   Mrs.\n' Coolidge  at   his  side   and   their  son,\nI John, and Mr. Sargent In the middle\n\u25a0 seat. The president wore a high silk\nhat. I\nDozens of photographers recorded\nthe movements fu the funeral party,\n, some of them from high snowhanks,\nj others from the roof of the church\nand   nearby  telephone  poles.\nFake Paperhanger \\\nand Steamfitter Is\nin Hamilton Jail\nHAMILTON, Ont., March 21.\u2014\nFrofewed inability to work and a\ndisposition to earn money by means\nwhich, to say the least, were peculiar, earned James MaHin a sentence\nof 15 months in Jail. Ht has a\nwife   and   eight?  hlldron.\nMartin's practice was to call at\nhouses and take contracts for paper\nhanging, steam fitting, or papering.\nSecuring advances from the residents for \"material\" He would then\ndisappear and never return. To show\nhis bona fides it was his custom to\ntake the furnace apart or strip the\nwalls of a room of its paper. There\nwere 14 chaiges against htm. i\nMURDERERWAS\nCOOL AFTER HE\nMURDERED SIX\nCoins  Visited  Friends  Between Shootings in\nCalifornia\nTOLD THEM HE DID\nNOT WISH TO LIVE\nShooting May Have Resulted\nFrom Information Supplied Police\nSACRAMENTO, Cal., March 21. \u2014\nRevelation of the motive that led John\nM, Goins, Stockton business men, to\nslay six persons, was made by Oolns\nIn talks wllh two Eldorado county\n\/trends, Joseph R. Windlc and Frank\nX. Walsh, according to the Sacramento\nBee. In visits he paid them between\ntbe time of the slaylngs and his suicide, Thursday afternoon, he told them\nof his troubles but did not mention\nthe killings. His hosts were unaware\nthat he was a sextuple murderer,\nThis feature of the case,' revealed\ntoday, clears up speculation as to What\n(Joins did for the four hours from the\ntime he was seen at Slough house,\nSacramento county, about 4 o'clock\nThursday afternoon, nnd 8:30 o'clock\nthe wmc\/ night, when he committed\nsuicid^.\n\"I'm a ruined man; I have lost my\nall; I don't care if T don't live until\nmorning; my wife's family Is against\nmc. and has caused hie a lot of trouble.\"\nThese were among the statements\nattributed to Goins during his conversation  with   Wlndle.\nCool cud Collected\nPLACBRVILLR, Cal.. March 20. \u2014\nCharles Green, a merchant of Diamond\nSprings, wes; or Here, today identified\nthe body of John M. Goins as the man\nto whom he sold a gallon of oil and\nseven Rallons of gasoline at 5:2!) p.m.\nThursday. Goins, Green said, asked\nhim how Frank Walsh, a rancher, was\ngetting along, and told Green that he\nwas going to a ranch he used to own\nnear Pleasant Valley. Green did not\nknow of the murders and Goins w:is\na  stranger  to him.\nGreen said that the murderer was\ncool and collect'J. He told Oreen that\nWalsh was a \"fine man,\" and seemed\nto   bear   him   no   ill   will.\nWilliam Watkins, a carpenter. Raid\ntoday that he talked to Goins here\nabout a week a^o, and that Goins said\ntbat he was coming back some time\nto kill the family of J. B. Juckes, who\nlive about a mile from the 'old Goins\nranch. Three yiars apro Sheriff Wood\nraided (Joins' house Tor moonshliiing\nbut found nothing hut a burned still.\nNo charges were drought, but It ls\nthought Goins believed Juckes had informed   the   officers \"against   him.\nSmart Spring models J\ndainty designs, at mbi\nerate prices. These ai|\ngoing very strong.\nWe   are   offering   oi|\nMillinery  Trimming\nFlowers, Braids, Ribbon\nOrnaments, and all Trin|\nming,  at most attracti^\nprices.\nDO NOT OVERLOOK\nOUR SELECTION OF\nSPRING COATS,\nTWEEDS, VELOURS,\nETC.\nNelson Dry Goods Cj\nLadies'   Wear   Specialists\nDARING RESCUE\nOF LIGHTHOUSE H\nFrench War Veterans MaroJ\nfor Two Months by\nStorms\nMay Film Life\nHistory of Edward\nSeventh in England\nMen's Hosiery\nCottun  Sockl*,  4 pah*    ..(1.00\nI.I.-li*   CIncked    50tf\nSee     our     Riui(.e     of     Fancy\nHwlwy  65(* 'o $1.25\nW,  liouKht  What\nAppealed  to  Us\nan Tip-Top Values,\nOur  Cuntomers  Are\nSustaining Our Judgment.\nCUFF-TOP    HOSIERY\nFor   Boys   and   Girls\nLisle   or   Wool.\n75* f $1.15\nJB\nLONDON-, March 21'.\u2014The approval\nof the British government ia being\nsought for a \"film biography\" of King\nEdward VII, the intention being to\npreserve the picture as a historical\ndocument for future generations. The\nproject has given ris*e ,to discussion\nof possible film biographies of all\ngreat   ir^n.\n\"We filiall not do as the Americans\nperhaps would be tempted to do\u2014\nmake a romance of the life of the late\nKing,\" said the director of the company which la negotiating Vfcith the\ngovernment officials.\n\"We shall instead treat the subject\nwith absolute regard for the truth,\nwithout elaboration. Such scenes as\nthose at the coronation and various'!\n.stale functions will be truthfully but\npicturesquely portrayed.\"\n -..     a%tm i    \u25a0\nReal Estate Man of\nWindsor Robbed; Two\nHeld by the Police\nWINDSOR. Ont., March 21.\u2014\nThomas Heffernan, real estate operator, Windsor, early today was\nheld up by two armed men believed\nto be from Detroit, who bound and\ngagged him, after taking\" approximately 1600 from his office safe,\nwhich they compelled him to open\nat  tho  point  of a revolver.\nHarry Berns, aged 25, and Mayer\nCohen, both of Detroit, were arrested at the Windsor ferry docks,\nfive finutes after Heffernan sent\nIn   an  alarm.\nPARIS.   March   21.\u2014Cut. of ty \\\nthe world by two months of_,\u00abtl\nweather,    two    lighthouse    k&\nMandollni    and    Feraccl,    mutl |\nCorsfcan veterans of the world\nhave been  relieved at the Poim\nRaz light, one of the most dany\npoints on  the  French  coast.   W |\nolini has been there since TJeco\n2.     Feraccl   joined   him   JanuUi |\nafter  which  for  many  wcjiis  it\nimpossible for boats to approach\nrucks   on   which   the   light   et\nTUeir    supplies    were    just    b\nenough  for  four weeks.\nRepeated efforts to reach'\nfailed. In the meantime evidenJ\nthe strain they were under deveil\nIn the irregularity of the service.l\nlight failed several times. The f\nhoin was silent at a_ critical moi\nnnd the brig La Surprise ran or]\nrocks. ''-\nFinally, just before the last!\ntempt to reach them, the flag oi|\nlighthouse wns seen flying at\n[ rnuBt. A volunteer Crew made'!\nroic dash to reach the lighthJ\nThey got only close enough to m\nglimpse of both keepors, who, th<|\niUve, appeared to be in a statJ\ngreat excitement. - The boat ha|\nturn  back.\nLater   the   storm   subsided\nwhat    for    the . first    time    in\nmonths, anfi a relief boat waa ab|\nget   alongside   the    lighthouse,\ntwo    men    ^yere    almost    prosttj\nfrom tbe prolonged strain when |\nwere  relieved. , ..\nHindenburg Takes\nPart in Cologne\nLiberation Servl\nCOLOGNE, Germany, March 21\nThe liberation of Cologne did \\\n\u25a0ecm complete until President\nHindenburg entered the lavishly \u00abl\nrated metropolis to the accomm\nmHtt of peals of the reconstni\nFt. Peter's bell of historic fame,\"\nJubilantly acclaimed by over a\n\u2022Ired   thousand   people,    \u25a0 v ,.    II\nAfter driving to the town\nwhere he' inscribed \u25a0his name' tnl\n\"golden book of the city of ColoJ\n'be president proceeded to the T\nexhibition hall, where before\n-hrnmnd exultant' Rhlrielanders,|\nMheraMon   was   formally   held.\nAfter   the   brilliant   oration   of|\n'-\u2022\u25a0<\u00bb   mavor,   Dr,   Adenaur,   the\nremarks of Von Hindenburg beli\nIn   a   deep   soldier's   voice   wae   i\neffected   hy  contrast.\n\"I accent the honor of ynur chl\nti' nn behalf of myself but -aJ\n'ndicEition of your loyalty toward!\n-Hell, and expression of your joy ]\n-\"stoved liberty, which today .in\nbraled with the representative^\nfhe reich,\" he said. \"For, to ua\n'he Rhine symbolizes the eve|\nh'ptory of Germany. Hero the\nman kings and emperore were chj\n^nd crowned\/' \u2022 -   '\n\u00a3   GU MPS \u2014CLAP   \" A N D S - H F. R E   CO M F. S   A***}\n\"W HARMS OF\nWINNIPEG D\\\nVVA  VOOVvVNd TOR C.VK&S\nNOT   %KRCJv\\HS - VOWtN \\\nCUH*  \"WNT   TV\\t\n\\NCNR%  W  -A-.&        \/0?tW   N DOOR  \\   >NN-rV\n\".WEDO - Of COURSE\/\/ PtOPU   \\0   W**N  TVCTE\n*_ro,ooo.(.o   \u00ab   >nK*  To* vfvure fcEce\\\\iCT>-\\\n\\ rww^j tt - now  vu. evwox or-\n\\NVEV4  TW\u00ab * 50,000.00 \\V CiOHE\nT\\...   SMAt   V\\TTVE &rt WW   fAM>T\nVT   \\N\\U-   K\\M.fc   SOtAfc   (AORfc-\nr\\ GOOO  WORST   DTSWNTS\nA GOOD   e.U^NKET   A,Nt> ><OU\nvJVt*   N  VJM\\  w>c>.R\\V*<_.\nfc   TOWKfS   W*\\TOR.A\n\/\n'V%^__. R,|  U 5  P.l  fit. bMMb, 19*4.\n\u25a0WINNIPEG, March. 81.\u2014.\nWalter Harris, asflessment torn\n\"loner and city surveyor* of. 1\nnlpeg from 1882 to 1916, died n|\nhome here today. He was 81. y\nof age 'and a native of Kfempf\nOut.  ' '**'$\"\nMr. Harris had tpken art ft'\npart ln religious and _(**\u00a3lal 'llf\nthe city for many years. Ha w\nmember of the Engineering Inst\nof Canada and an author of a t\nber of work . on higher 'nvithenu\n    __>\t\nFormer Preachers Nou)\nServing' Term Taken t\n\u25a0 : \\Los Angeles Hem\nLOS Angeles, Mart* i\\.\u2014He\nWilson,  former London, Ont.,  trrt\ner,   serving   a   life   sentence   In\nQuentin    prison    for   murdering\npal  in an   attempted  Jail  break,\nwill   be   brought   here   under\nguard in the next feW days to tel\nat   the   trial   of   Harry   P.   ftobll\nfederal   authorities  announced   Si\nday.    Robinson is accused of pu|\npatlon    in    the    million    dollap\nrobbery here November 8.  1821,\nwas alleged  to  have been  stagel\na band led by WHeon.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\nPage Hires\n&6\nI CHARGE\nOVER FOR\nONE MORE DAY\nMagistrate to Read Up Authoritative Work on\nEvidence\nCHIEF CAN'fFlND\nANY PRECEDENT\nQuotes    Case    of   'Sonny'\nWhite, Convicted, but - .\nNow Released\nBecause Chief of Police Thomas H.\nLong, In several hours' perusal of\na standard work on evidence, could\nnot find any precedents of conviction on purely circumstantial evidence, the case of crown vs. John\nHunter, accused of attempting to\nbreak and enter Emory's store, was'\nremanded until this morning at 10\no'clock, when judgment will be\ngiven. Magistrate William Brown\nwae unwilling to give a Judgment on\nthe case until he had referred to a\n| work on circumstantial evidence.\nI Cites White Conviction\n* Chief Long cited the case of Sonny\nWhite ln Vancouver, who had been\nJ convicted of murder on purely circumstantial evidence, but who was\n.granted a new trial and on a point\nfit law waa acquitted of the charge.\n\/The chief had no official record of\n[this case, only newspaper reports,\n\\ He argued tnat Hunter had denied being in the alley when Constable Hale took him in charge, but\n\"had afterward admitted he had been\nin there. Half an hour before, when\ntho officer made his rounds, the\nwindow had been intact, but after\nlocking Hunter up he went back\nand found the broken pane and the\nnewspaper cut which lt was alleged,\nhad been used to break the pane.\nThe magistrate before remanding\nthe case said, there were certain\ndamaging things that Hunter had\n\u2022aid, and there were several things\nagainst him. One was his denial\nof being ln the alley when it was\nproved he was. Another was his unsatisfactory explanation of why he\nhad been wandering ln the alley at\nthat time of night, after coming out\nof the mission at 9:00 o'clock.\nRule That Applies\nMagistrate Brown made the following statement:  .\n'The rule of circumstantial evidence appears to be that in order\n'to justify the Inference, of guilt the\ninculpatory facts must be Incompatible\nwith the innocence of the accused\nand Incapable of explanation upon\n[any other reasonable hypothesis than\nthat of his guilt.\"\nExtra Tooth on\nColt's Face Is\nRemoved by Surgeon\nCOBOURG, Sask., March 21.\u2014\nSuffering the Inconvenience of a\nminiature tusk, which had forced\nits way through the flesh between\nthe eye and ear, a young colt from\nsi farm In this district is recovering frofn the most unusual operation\nperformed  here  in years.\nA local anesthetic was administered\nto the animal and the bony growth\nremoved through an incision four\nInches long. The attending veterinary claimed tfrat the growth, was\nreallv an extra tooth and explained\nita presence by a peculiar freak of\nnature, which had intended the colt\nto be one of twins. This, he said,\nhad been prevented by some prenatal  Influence.'\"\"\n; The tooth was two inches long,\none and a quarter Inches in diameter\nahd four Inches ln circumference.\nMeeting of Edmonton hotel men decided not to serve women With beer\nin future.\nPeterboro Ministerial association\nprotested court censure of minister\nwho married  girl  of  16.\nAn Evening Frock\nMany of the newer evening frocks\nchoose two shades of the same color\nifor their medium. The effectiveness\nof this scheme can easily be realized\n'when one sees the striking frock\n'above, developed in yelloW taffeta,\nitrlmmed with flat bands of taffeta ln\ndeep orange. The roses are of a\ncreamy-orange tint, with shaded\n(petals that go to deep orange, Taf-\nl\u00bbta of * *oft variety Is being strong-\nty sponsored for spring. This same\nfrock would be effective in pink with\ntone bands.\nRossland Loses\nio Smeller in\nHoop Contest\nTRAIL, March 21.\u2014Rossland's basketball team met defeat nt the hands\nof Smelter five last night, by a score\nof  83-22.\n- Wright, Smelters* brilliant forward,\nwas In a slump. He missed easy\nshots, although his defrnc? playing\nwaa savage and effective. He and\nHargraves scored 13 points each,\nwhile Atwell, playing Venter, was\nresponsible for seven. Mclntyre, who\nreplaced Murdock in (tha- second\nperiod, and Halllwell, all failed to\ntally.\nLafvre of Rossland played hlJ usual\nconsistent game, and tossed five\nbaskets., Martell scored five points.\nFox five and Hendrickson two. Ross-\nland's play was ragged. Many chances\nto score were missed' for lack of\ncoordination. OallinattI was also \\n\na slump.\n.CORNISH\nDOUGLAS\nARE WINNERS\n-. . .  i . .\nThirteen Couples Compete\nin Badminton Mixed\nDoubles\nIn the concluding- games of the\nmixed doubles American badminton\ntournament In the fair building Saturday, Mrs. A. J. Cornish and G.\nN. Douglas won first honors, having gone through the entire tournament without losing a game. The\ntournament was played Thursday\nnight, Friday night and Saturday,\nwith    13    couples   competing.\nMrs. B. W. Dawson and E. C.\nWragge took second honors, winning\n10 sets and losing two sets.\nOne of the most interesting\nmatches of the tournament was witnessed when Miss Aloise Wragge\nand Phillip Trail beat Mrs. G. S.\nGodfrey and A. W. Idlens, the final\nscore being 24-21, after a most exciting contest,\nMrs. P. G. Morey and C. B. 'Garland tied with Mrs. A. W. Idlens and\nC. P. Faulkner for the consolation\nprize. The playoff ln this will occur   next  Saturday.\nIn addition to the six couples mentioned above, competing were Mrs.\nA. E. Parlow and It. W. Dawson,\nMiss Marlon Blackwood and A.\nE. Parlow, Miss Clarice Blackwood\nand A. Hutchison, Miss Violet Hamilton and G. B. Godfrey, Mrs. H. R.\nTowrtfend and. W. A. Richardson,\nMrs. E. C. Wragge and Mrs. C. P.\nFaulkner and Mrs. Q. N. Douglas\nand   P.   G.   Morey.\nTRAIL PLANSTO\nKEEP IN TOUCH\nPUCKCHASERS\nExecutive Named; Buchanan\nHonorary President of\nClub .\nTRAIL, March 21.\u2014To insure\nplenty of good players being on hand\nln the fall, Trail Hockey club plans\nto keep in touch with their Interests\nalt through tho summer, both Benlors\nand intermediates. A committee will\nscout for new players among Incoming workers and try to Induce such\nmen to reside permanently for the\ngood of the game ln Trail.\nThe following officers have been\nelected for the 1926-27 season: James\nBuchanan, honorary president; Percy\nHallett, president; Sam Stewart, vice-\npresident ; J. A. Wads Worth, secretary-treasurer^ executive committee,\nDick Dimmock, Ray Jones. Percy\nHallett ls appointed T. A. A. A. representative. P. Mclntyre and Frank\nWillis are appointed West Kootenay\nleague delegates,\nDeath Reveals\nHand as\nFormer Minister\nLAWRENpE; Mass., March 21.\u2014\nDeath has revealed an aged mill\nhand here as a former minister, who\nat 68 was forced to turn to manual\nlabor to support himself. Samuel H.\nAnderson, who died* at the city hospital, had toiled In the Pacific Woolen\nmills since 1910. Those with whom\nhe worked knew him only as a gentle\nold man who said little about himself\nand nothing of his past. To them\nhe waa Just \"Old Sam.\"\nDeath has bared his secret. Born\nIn Rochester. N. H., in 1847, he was\neducated at the University of Rochester, and was ordained to the ministry In 1876.\nFor more than 30 years he preached\nto little flocks in the smaller towns\nof Vermont and New Hampshire.\nThen illness overtook him. Bills piled\nup and his small savings soon vanished. Unable longer to assume the\nburden of a pastorate, he turned to\nmanual labor to eke out an existence.\nLady Zaharoff, wife of Sir Banll\nZaharoff, reputed richest man ln\nEurope, d'ed at Monte Carlo.\nCapt. J. Van Buskard, car ferry skipper, was convicted and sentenced ae\nrum  smuggler  at  Cleveland.\nMiss R. Mogrldge of Chatham 1s\ncritically ill after swallowing bichloride nf mercury.\nCITY APPEALS\nTHE DISMISSAL\nOF RADCLIFFE\nWill     Contend     Judgment\nAgainst Weight of,\nEvidence      .\"..'\nMAGISTRATE HELD\nWITNESSES SHAKY\nAppeal Will Be   Heard  in\nCounty Court\nApril 13\nAppeal has been taken by the\ncity of Nelson, ln county court,\nfrom the Judgment of Magistrate\nWilll.im Brown In recently dismissing the beer gelling charge against\nJackson Radcllffe, second-hand dealer, whose trial took parts of four\ndays.\nThe crown's material evidence was\nfrom stool pigeons, who claimed to\nhave purchased beer from Radcliffe\nwith money supplied by the police,\nand Magistrate Brown, while finding\nthe evidence of Radcllffe and his\nwitnesses very shaky, held that the\nmain crown witnesses, who were\nparties to the alleged breaking of\nthe law, must be regarded with suspicion, in addition to which he\nfound their evidence contradictory.\nHe based his dismissal of the caBe\non the ground of reasonable doubt,\nthe crown case not having been made\nout   to   his   satisfaction.\nO'Shea & Garland, city solicitors,\nhave entered the appeal, which will\ncome before Judge J. A. Forin in\ncounty court for hearing on April 13.\nDonaghy & Matthew defended\nRadcllffe.\nFRUtT CABLES\n(The approximate f.o.b. price in Canada may be figured by deducing the\nfollowing charges from tho wholesale\nprices: Nova Scotia, $1.12, and Ontario $1.98 fnr barrel stock; British Columbia,   $1.35   per box.)\nCARDIFF, March I,\u2014Nova Scotia\napples ex S.S. Canadian Victor and S.S.\nOxonian barrels Baldwins No. 1. $3.15;\nNo. 2, $2.56; Dom., $2.43 to $2.91; No.\n3, $2.30; Stark No. 1, $3.15 to $3.it);\nNo. 2, $2.67 to $2.91; Dom., $2.43; No.\n3. $2.06; Fallawater No. 1, $3.88; No. 2.\n$3.16; Dom.. $2.91 to $3.15; No. 3, $2.67;\nGolden Russets No. 1, $6.56; No. 2,\n$5.83.\nSOUTHAMPTON, March (.\u2014Oregon\nNewtowns boxes extra fancy, $2.43 to\n$3.40; fancy. $2.43 to $3.15; Winesaps\nextra fancy, $2.67 to $2.79; fancy $2.43\nto   $2.67.\nLONDON.. March 6\u2014Nova . Scotia\napples ex S.S. Bosworth, barrels Baldwins No. 1, $5.15 to $4.37: No. 2, $2.91\nto $3.88; Dom.. $2.18 to $2.91; No. 3.\n12 to $2.43; Starks No. 1, $2.91 to\n$3.64: No, 2, $2.12 to $2 91; Dom.. $2.30\nto $2.91; No. 3, $1.88 to $2.18; Colden\nRussets No. 1. $6.80 to $7.29; No. 2.\n$5.58 to $5.83; Dom.. $4.86 to $5.34;\nNo. 3. $4.37 to $461; Seeks No. 1 $4.86\nto $5.34; No. 2, $4.37; Dom.. $3.03; No.\n3, $3.15; Ben Davis No. 1. $3.64 to\n$3.88; No. 2. $3.15 to $3.40; Dom, $2.43\nto $2.67; No. 3, $1.18 to $2.24; Oano\nNo. 1. $4.37; No. 2, $4.13; Dom,, $2.79:\nNo. 3, $2.18; Inesai'R No. 1, $2.43 to\n$2.91; Newtowns No 1. $3.15 to $3.88;\nDelicious  No.   1 .$2.43  to $2.91.\nGLASGOW\u2014Ontario apples ex S.S.\nGracla. barrels B,*n Davis No. 1, $3.15\nto $4.13; No. 2. $2.73 to $2.79; Dom..\n$2.43 to $2.67; Mann No. 1 $5.10 to\n$6.34; No. 2, $3.64 to $510; Dom..\n$3,76; Baldwins No. 1, $4.37 to $5.31;\nNo. 2, $3.41); Dom.. $2.43 to $3.40;\nJonathans No. 1, $3.88 to $6.07; No. 2,\n$3.88; Stark No. 1, $3.76; No. 2. $2.67;\nDom.. $2.55: boxes Spv No. 1, $2.06;\nNo. 2, $1.82 to $2.06; Wageners boxes\nfancy, $1.82 to $2.06; Oregon Newtowns\nfancy, $3.03 to $3.28; Arkansas Black\nextra fancy, $2.43; pound quoted at\n$4.86.\nMANCHESTER. March 9.\u2014Scotians\nex S.S. Manchester Brigade and S.S.\nManchester Corporation, apples barrels\nBen Davis No. 1, $2.91 to $3.64; No. 2,\n$2.06 to $2.43; Dom.. $1.94 to $2.43;\nNo. 3, $1.45 to $2: Fallawater No. 1.\n$3.88 to $4 86; No, 2. $2 to $8.64; Dom.,\n$2 to $3.64; No. 8, $2.18 to $2.43; Twig\nNo. 1, $4.\u00ab1; No. 2. $2.91 to $3.15;\nDom., $3.21; No. 3, $2.67; Cano No. 1.\n$3.15 to $3.64; No. 2. $2.43 10 $2.67;\nDom.. $2.43 to $2.67; No. 3. $2.06; Stark\nNo. 1. $1.94 to $4.98; No. 2, $1.51 to\n$3.15; Dom., $1.45 to $3.15; No 3\n$133 to $2.12; Baldwin No. 1, $3.15;\nNo. 2, $1.57 to $2.91: Dom., $1.57 to\n$2.43; No. J, $1.76 to $1.\u00bb4; Virginia\nAlbermarles No. 1. $6.13; New Tork\nBaldwins No. 1. $2.67 to $4.61; Gano\nNo. 1, $4.37 to $4.86; Oregon Newtowns\nboxes extra fancy, $2 91 to $3.88; fancy. $2 67 to $3 88: C, $2.67 to $3.64;\nWinesaps extra fancy. $2,67 to $315;\nfancy. $2.91 to $3.15; C. $2.67; Arkansas Black extra fancy. $2 to $2.91; fancy.  $1.94 to $2.67; C.  $2.06 to  $2.43.\nHAMBURG. March 4.\u2014Washington\nanples boxes Winesaps extra fancy.\n12.88 to $3 36; fancy, $2.64' to $3.12; C,\n$3 to $8 06; SpUzenberg extra fancy.\n'3 60 to $3 84; Newtowns extra fancw.\n$3 60 to $4.32; New York Baldwins barrels No. 1, $4.32 to $6; Columbians ex\nS.h. Roman Star, Southampton, February 23, apples boxes Newtowns extra\nfancy, $2.67 to $3.60; fancy, $2.9t to\n$3.64; C. $2.67 to $3.15; Grimes Golden\nfancy. $2.18 to $2.43; Mcintosh fancy,\n$2.06  to  $3.16.\nLIVERPOOL \u2014 Apples ex S.S. Dln-\nteldyk. February 22. Spltxenbergs extra lancy, $2.43 to $2.91; Newtowns extra fancy. $3.64 to $\u00bb.S8; fancy. $3.15\nto $3.64; C. $2.91 to $3.16; King Davis\nextra fancy, $1.94 to 8:2.43; Wlnesap\nfancy, $2.18 to $2.91; Grimes Golden\nextra  fancy,   $2,43   to  $2.91.\nLIVERPOOL, ex S.S. Montcalm, February 24\u2014Grimes Golden extia fancy,\n$2.06 to $2.43; Jonathans showing\nbreakdown, extra fancy, $1.82 to $2 67*\nfancy,  $1.82  to $2.30.\nAMSTERDAM, March 6.\u2014American\nWinesaps extra fancy. $3.30 to $3.86.\nLIVERPOOL. March 10. \u2014 Ontarlos\nex S.S. Montrose apples barrels Spies\nbest No. 1. $6.0J to $6.31; other No. 1.\n$3.15 to $4.13; No. 2. $2.18 to $3.88;\nDom., $2 tn $3.91; No. 3. $1.94 tr,\n$2.49; Golden Russets No. 1, $7 04 to\n$7.53; No. 2, $5.83 to $6.80; Dom., $5.83;\nNo. 3, $4.86; Stark No. 1. $3 64 to\n$4.13; No. 2. $2.91 to 13.03; Dom.. $2 67\nto $2.91; No. 3. $2.18 to $2.49; Ben\nDavis Nn. 1, $2.43 to $3.64; No 2\n$2.43 to $2.91; Dom.. $2.4.1 to $2 91: No.\n3, $1.94 to $2.49; Baldwins No. 1 84.13\nto $4.37; No. 3. $3.34; Dom.. '$3.43;\nGano No. 1. $5.10; Dom., $3.46; No 3,\n$2.79; New York Baldwins No. 1 $2 91\nto $6.80; Golden Russets No. 1, $8.14;\nVirginia York Imperials No. tt $8.fll to\n$9.72; boxes extia fancy, $3,15 to $3.40;\nAlbermarles barrels No 1. $5 83 tn\n$8 99; boxes extra fnncv, $3.64 to $3.83*\naen Davis No. 1, $2.91 to $6.07; Oregon Nt jvtowns boxes extra fancy, $3,16\nto ;\/.40; fancy, $2.91 to $3.15; Winesaps extra fancy. $2.67 to $3.40; fancy\n$:,\u00ab7.to fS.lK* C, )2.4S to ]..},,\nFormer Treasurer\nfor Moose Jaw Dies\nin United Church\nMOOSE JAW, March 21.\u2014Wtlttbm\nP. Goodlo, for 15* years tieasurer of\nthe city of Moose Jaw, dropped dead\nhere while addressing a meetlpg of\nfhe board of managers of St. Andrew United church at tbe close of\n\"\u25a0'rvlctes this morning. Death was\ndue  to   heart   failure.\nThe late city treasurer was 63\nyears of age and was for 40 years a\nresident of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The deceased will bo buried\nwith  full  civic  honors.\nCONCENTRATOR\nIS WINNER OF\nGirl Bellringer\nTRAIL TITLE\nBattle Town Team to Three-\nPoint Victory in Keen\nGame\nFIRE OUTBREAK\nIN TRAIL HOME;\nDAMAGE SIViALL\nHome of Miss L Pickthall Has Damage From\nSmoke\nTRAIL, March 20.\u2014Quick net Ion\nhy tho fire department mf vented a\nfire from aHsumlng large proportions\nin the home of Miss I.. Piekthnil.\n17r>0 Oak  street,  tonight.\nRcflpondins to n rail at !*:20, the\ndepartment. found the smoke-filled\nhouse in rtarknens except for the slow\nof smoldering draperies ready to burst\ninto flame*.\nChemical extinguisher and diligent\nprobing for burning material removed\nthe danger. J\nThe value of dnmago^flone Is not\nyet estimated. Furniture in the sitting room, where an overheated stove\ncaused the fire; waa badly heat-\nscorched. Bedrooms were practically\nunharmed,\nThe furniture Is covered hy insurance, but whether insurance on the\nbuilding, reapplied for by the owner,\nAxel Lund, is in force will not be\nknown  till tomorrow.\nMisa Pickthall, a singer of note\nhere, hnd not returned from assisting\nat a sacred concert in Liberty theater,\nHer mother, awakened in bed by\nsmoke, alarmed neighbors, who called\nthe  department.\nCONCRETE BOAT IS\nAT WORK DAILY\n'War Bubble* Turns Out as Seaworthy aa Any Other\nShip\nSAN FRANCISCO, March 21.\u2014Alluded to as \"it\" hy seafaring men\nrather than \"she.\" as is befitting any\nworthy swagning craft of steel or\nwood, the concrete ship McKittric^ is\ndoing dally duty in the bay of San\nFrancisco that belles the derision of\n.shipping   circles.\nAlthough the war was over before\nthe McKlttrick took the ways\u2014under\nthe coldly official designation of\n\"Concrete Tanker No. 1\"\u2014the ship\nwas nevertheless a creature of the\ngreat conflict. Its genesis was the\nneed of the nation to build boats faster than the enemy's submarines could\nsink them.\nPrivate huUders working under the\ncritical eye nf the government laid\ndown three concrete vessels of 7500\ntons. The first of these, the Faith,\nwas at the outset, pronounced a success, for it made the trial trip in\nfirst-class fsHhion. Rut, under more\nsevere conditions, it developed a condemning un wield in ess. Similarly, the\nother two proved failures, but, profiting by experience, the government had\nthe tanker   built.\nVM   Lighter   Mixtura\nA lighter mixture was used and improvements were effected in the steel\nreinforcing. Triple expansion englm-s\nof 1500 horsepower were installed. The\ntanker went to Mexico on its test and.\nreturning with a load of oil, weathered\na tremendous storm in the Caribbean\nsea. Tho commanding officer declared\nIt as seaworthy as any ship he had\never handled; hut the wnr was over.\nThere was now a plentiful supply of\nsteel and timber. Tbe boat which had\ncost a half million to build was about\nto be sold by the shipping board for\n$15,000.\nGeorge D. Zeh, traffic manager of\nthe Associated Oil company, thought\nthe tanker was worth more than this\nto his company. He was deaf to the\nridicule of hla associates and negotiated the purchase.\nZeh has kept a record of the tanker's performance, and the \"stone boat\"\nabout which he has been joshed has\npaid for itself several times. It has\nnever lost time because of storm or\nneeded repairs and, although capable\nof only eight knots an hour, lt plods\nits way across and around the bay, day\nafter day, transporting '20,000 barrels\nof oil at a time.\n\"I don't suppose there will ever be\nanother concrete boat built,\" Zeh\nsaid. \"There is no longer any need\nfor1 them, but this one ls far from being the 'dud'  It has been called.\"\nTRAIL. Mnrch 21.\u2014Cone, ntrator five\neinehed the City Lensue hoop championship HJturrtay nighr. They bottled\nthe Town team to a 3-point victory In\nthe most \u00abtreau<ni_dy foiighi RBatoh of\nthe whole series. At half-time thpy\nled by i pointH, the score being 15-11.\nFinal scores wm- '\"\"onctntrator 25,\nTown 22.\nPlay was exceptionally fast. Teamwork was good. Passes were short\nand smappy. Shooting mnde in the\nface of severest checking was accurate. Roth teams were well knit nnd\nwere as aggressive en defence as on\noffence. At no tirnf was a pronounced seigp permit ted by eiiher team.\nAnderson   Xl   Stat\nAnderson, invariably well supported,\nwas the star basket getter. From\nUlfl starting whistle he was away at\nhis old tricks, dropping them through\nthe honp from all angles with a speed\nand precision which seemed but a continuance of the forwards' passes. He\nnetted- 19 points. Weldon ringed one\nfield and one penalty. MeDomld made\none field goal. Hurgexs, the stnunch-\nest defence man on the floor, converted a penalty.\nPlester X* Oood\nPlester starred for Town with thre,\nfield goals.- Hulmer was n much marked man, and made only one fioid and\ntwo penalties. P. Demidoff scored\ntwo goals, as dirt A. Dermonff. who\nsubbed on defence well. j. Demidoff\nscored one and converted two penalties.\nTbe championship team is: B. Weldon, W. McDonald, forwards; P. Anderson, center; J, Rurgess, J. Rrydeu\nand  P.  Nichols, guards.\nThp runners-up arp: F. Hester, p.\nDemidoff, forwards; V, Rulmer, center;\nJ.-Demidoff, J, w. Mix and A. Demidoff,  guards.\nReferees\u2014A. EL Allison and C.\nWright.\nSuns Rays Through\nan Aquarium Sets\nTable Cloth on Fire\nGUELPH, Ont., March 21.\u2014Smell -\nng smoke in her home, Mia. A. II.\n'Htehfield investigated and found\nhat tho sun's rays, shining through\nan aquarium containing a number of\ncold fish, had focused on a table\n^loth in one of thi bedrooms and\nhad set it on fire. The blaze was\nextinguished before it had done any\nmaterial    damage.\nj fef\n\u25a0*\u25a0?*.: ^\n\u2014  \"       >   fry   ..  >JF*\\          __   >*\n'3. |\n1\n1\n: fl\n^M\nfl          ;\nfl\nfl\n_____$*\nti: v\nmi         '\u2022 m\nrang the tenor bell, weighing 2600\nlbs. These are the bells which, according to the old English rhyme,\nsang \"Granges and lemons, said tho\nbells of St. Clements.\"\nLost to Premier\nThe Ladies' Guild of Change  Ring\nera  In   England  recently  kept   op  the\nringing   Of   the   bells   at   the   Church j\n_ f   ft.   Clements    Danes,   the   Strand,\nCAPT.  D.   L.  BURGESS,   M.C.\nThe soldier-settlor who opposed\nPremier Mnrkenzie King in the Prince\nLoudon, for'3's boms, and Miss K. Albert byelection and who was de-\nHawkesuurth. in the picture, age-l  IS, Icisively beaten.\nThe Delicious Flavor\ndrawn from the leaves of\n\"SALADA\"\nGREEN TEA\nhas won it millions of users. Finer\nthan any Japan, Gunpowder or\nYoung   Hyson.      Ask  for  SALADA.\nMrs. Mary Blaker of Chertsey, tbe\nonly woman town crier in England,\nhas decided to retire.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice  Smelting   and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   jtOLUMBIA\nSmelters anil Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Oopper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAt,  TRAIL\nFifty-year-old parrot owned by Mr.\nand Mrs, E. Pennlson at Pembroke,\nOnt., is still great talker\nEVERY LOAD OF OUR\nCOAL\ndumped into your cellar or bin means\nsolid comfort and fuel economy, for\nour coal throws out a fine, even heat\nand doea lt with far less coal than li\nrequired when ordinary coal la used.\nTry a ton or so and keep a record of\nhow long It lasts. That will prove the\neconomy of ordering your coal here.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHpNE 33\nOur Pledge to MilkJJsers\nTHIS is our pledge to you\u2014a simple\npledge of simple goodness.\n1. Perfect Purity \u2014 Carnation Milk\ncomes to you pure and fresh, wholesome and absolutely safe.\n2. High Food Value \u2014 Carnation contains all the nourishing qualities of\nrich, full-cream milk, concentrated to\ndouble richness.\n3. Delicate Taste\u2014Foods acquire a finer\nflavor, coffee 'takes on a richer savor,\nwhen Carnation is used.\n4. Creamy Smoothness\u2014The texture of\nfoods is improved when this cream\/\nmilk is used in cooking.\n5. Economy \u2014 Carnation goes T farther\nthan ordinary milk, with less spoilage\nand wastage. And it cuts cream bills\nin three.\nThese qualities are Carnation's pledge\nto you. Prove them to yourself. 4 Then\nyou will understand why Carnation has\nbecome the biggest selling brand of\nevaporated milk in all the world. Tell\nyour grocer you want Carnation.\nCOCOA\u20143 tbsp. cocoa, 2 tbsp. sugar,\n1 _ cup hot water, few grains salt, lVa\nenps Carnation Milk diluted with lVa\ncups water, \\f_ tsp. vanilla. Scald the\ndiluted milk in a double boiler. Mix\ncocoa, sugar and salt and add the hot\nwater. Cook over a low flame from\n10 to IS minutes stirring occasionally\nto prevent burning. Add to the cocoa\nthe scalded milk; return to the double\nboiler and continue cooking for 10\nminutes. Whisk with a dover egg\nbeater just hefore serving. Place a\nmarshmallow in the cup and pour over\nit the hot cocoa.   This serves four,   m\nWrite for a free cony of Mary Blake's\nCook Book. Address Carnation Milk\nProducts Company, Limited, 134\nAbbott  St.,  Vancouver.\n**Frofn Contented Cows'\nProduced in Canada\n Tape Fonr\nb&HPVb\nTUV. NET.WW M7LY NEWS,. MOOT'AY MOP.NIW, MARCH 22,1926\nHIE DAILY NEWS\nPubllHhed every mornlni except Bun^\nBay by Tin? News Publishing company\nt. mi ted,  Nelson,   BC\niliiHlriess Utters ehnuld be \u25a0ddreat.el\nand check* and money orders m*of\npayable to The Newa I'tiblls'i'tig \"nm-\npuny. Untiled, and In no cast* u> Imfl\nvidua! memberH of the etaff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.JJ.C\nfait-, tie n<s uf ctroulaMon ma'led at\nr>qilSHt, or nny be t>\u00aben et the office ol\nti.y   advertmitig   agency   r khu^   b>\nttie CariH'Ilhn l*re'ss H*\u00abocl8tlon.\nat'liSCItil'TiUN   RATU8\nBy meil (country), per month....t   .\u00ab6\nPer   yem          <.oo\nHy  Mfl  telly), per year   I J.Of\nfj tit side Canada, per month 76\nter   year        7 50\niMIvered, ptr week 2&\nPer year   ,   i.Viiti\nPayable In Advance\nMember Aaflit Bureau of Circulation ~\n--*\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nThe\nLighter Side\n^Q_MMMKln(M_ti)V_}twlwt,un\u00abn<tiivt^mfnfiMfir\nKeaa.re of Ttie Dally News\noontrlbute many of the best tteiof\nto this column. Just sign yout\nasms or Initials, or nom-de-plt-me\nand send In your brightest Ideas\n\u2014Editor.   Lighter  Side\nMONDAY,   MARCH\nCollege Worship by\n\u2022Compulsion\nCompulsoiy attendance at\nchapel is probably one of the\nincidents of life of students\n; _ all Canadian universities,\n1 ntigh there may be institu-\n1 ons, perhaps several or even\nT my, that furni.^h exceptions.\nI.*. jst Canadian college grad-\ni \u2022*teI> can look back on a college\ni'tict that commenced daily\n\\. th' \"chapel.\"\nGeorge Fitch, in \"At Good\nOKI S'wash,\" used io tell of\nte cold-blooded and mean\n\" nidnigtit-oilers\" who used to\nr ive Up their ch.-.pel \"cuts\" and\n;;i the beautiful sprii \u2022jtime go\ncut wa'king with va'ioua en-\n>'antvasFe.\" of thai i-educa-\nt .ral inri iiition whilt 'he un-\nr>rtuna'ef who had i warded\nthemselves as said ,i*. hant-\n: esses' \"eteadiss\" had ><\u25a0 sit\nr'-ained in the classroom .iole-\nf illy viewing thia tread 'ry\nf 0:11 the windows.\nAt Yale, the great >'.ew Enii*\nland university, contpuls .\ncVanol ha3 just been h.iviuj*. i\nlard buffeting, but it has re-\nrained on the university codi\nof rules, though modified.\nThe compromise proposed at\nYale in the compulsory chapel\nconflict is r.o more logical th*tn\nc^mnromises usually are; bus, |\n0\" frequently happens, it i.-l\nrhundantly indicative of the\\J\nr-otives at play.\nOn Sunday, of all daj s. at-1\nt ndafice is to ba optional. That |\nii   because,   on   Sunday,   com-\npilsory   attendance   \"has   in-\n.rued religious interests.\"    On\nweek-day.*, apparently, there is\nr t such question.    As  is  the \\\ncase  with  lectures  in  all  the,\/\nlarge universities, chap *'  is a |\ni^eans of checking up . r.*_ stu \u25a0 |\n'     ts, a device of polite regnlv\nt'on.   Seniors are to Ui fixe i ,)t\n- - '*>ot tecause they da not s .nd\ni'  need cf religion-  (\"cerises.\n1 \"t because they h ive generally\nreadied down in their (dibits.\nTi the pa-*t, one gathers! -even\nT ''lday  Chanel   was  largely  ;i\nrol'ce   regulation*.       Iltsreafte:\n\"ether means\" r. e !   be devised\nt\") keep etudsnte fron\/ ahsp'nt-\nI*'g themselvw at week-end par-\nt'es or in this sinful metropolis.\nSuch illo:T*i; is inevitable when\nold institution**: conflict with\nchange. Vale was founded as\nE protest against the relaxation\ncf puritanic rigors at Harvard.\nF en row it :.', proposed to re-\nc 'ire \"the study ot religion in\nthe academic curriculum.\" If\ni f result is familiarity with\n1 'blical literatuie and with the\nhi tory' of religious thought,\nrmch good will be accom-\n; I' Jied.\n\"\u25a0\u25a0obably all Canadian uni-\nt\u00ab* sHies have courses of study\ni the Bible, some from the\nwpoint of religion, some of\nI ' fofjr, and some of literature.\n7' : book of Isaiah, in the King\nri \"es version, is largely mag-\nl'fher.t h'ank verse. No stu-\n<\"' t of the English language\n1 t goe3 to the Bible, in the\nr etherized version, for simplic-\ni** * and purity of expression.\nBut compulsory attendance at\nc'apel. for grown men and\nwomen, without which they are\nrot to twelve degrees for otherwise * f '11 and conscientious\nr'ears of .study of the curricula-\"1., cannot now be considered\n'\u2022*> be in progress with the\ntimes or in consonance with\nideals of real relitrious freedom.\nABNTHET\n\"My taffeta has got too tight,\nan' I can't decide whether to\nt.et a new one or spend two\ndollars fur them rednclu' tablets.\"\nJ    Efficient\nJ Housekeeping\nj        Or u.tlata   a.   itbimax\naElfflilJlil iv t. \u25a0\u25a0 f ii ,.i.l::\nKXW  DISHES  THIS  WEEK\nTOMOET.OWT.   MEKU\nBnatfust\nOrsnges\nCereal\nScrambled   Eggs\nTo.ist e.ir.'.\nI.*. n. 'if on\nailed   M...;u'tini  ,.ii_  (\",nc\nLaitucr\nV. I\nWll<\nJelly\nDinn r\nCelery\nHump  I'.iim   of   1\nMflshcil   l'oi_io.*.\u00ab\nI'ln.-pplc  Ci\nCoff. r\nt,  Onivy\nHplnai-t\nKEEPING THE ROAD CLEAR\nSteamed CurrRnt Pudd njr:\nSethc-r two cap\u00ab nf nrdiii\nriour, 3^4 tranponns ol ba't \u25a0\ni pineh of sail and 'E c tp\niaied miirar. With tl.41 f ax*\nin     thre \u25a0     tfiblei*p-:on.-:     u*.\nRift   in-\n:-y   bre>d\n;   powder,\nif sranu-\ntips rub\nlonening.\nenrranli\nNelffhbora are people who trade you\nsympathy for the details of your misfortune.\narc those in which\nhas (tiouRh of your\nck  gamblers  out  of\nProsperous tin\nNow Tork  a'wn;\nmoney  to help\ntight   pljces.\nTHE BEBT CURE FOB A MAN'S\nLOSS OF MEMORY IS TO HAVE HIS\nDESERTED WIFE INHKHIT SOMETHING.\nA hallo\nIt never\njltld  next.\ntire\nwill    IS   soft,\nalso.\nwin\nA  woman who really adores children\nardly ever thlnkr.   li necessary ti> say\nmnv he unpremeditated, but\nare   tleltberat?.\nwon a recent hog-calling con\nli h \u25a0(! been an effort to cal\ns    what    they    are,    no    ladi\nmtv'~'i o fair. Tha girl who has\nbe n ku \\ before knows tow to\nput a aa. rhtfal kiok in It.\n*\"'\ny    public    nian    can\nexample   nfior   he's\noirth   c\t\ncontrol   IV,\nA    ,i rale, s man hae climbed s>\nW# . as he ls go!n\u00abr by the timet he\n\u25a0 onus  inteitelecl in  symptomi.\nlovable Patient\nDies After Years of\nIllness and Pain\nTORONTO, Ont.. March 21.\u2014There\nrflss^d away recently at the hospital\nfor incuiablefl one of the moat In-\nterestinK and lovable patient* that\never entered the hospital, Edith\nEmily Whoatley. Btricken down for\nthe fourth time with a species of\nrheumatism at the age of 17 year*,\n_\u00bbnd for 27 years thereafter lying In\none position, the disease was active\nln warping and twisting every joint\nIn her body until finally those became rigid. Some eight years ago\n*he became almost totally bi'.nd.\nlegislature of Jamaica Will he\nlinked- to Increase duty on aoap to\nprotect  native  Industries.\nALM<\nTiMic r\nTHE L<\nthreat\ngin, \u25a0\n\" ANY CAR IS A \"LIFE-\n:\u25a0 IF VOC'RE IN IT WHEN\n(MOTIVE DOES ITS PTl'FF.\nwntence\ni;iiik  me,\"\nfails to\nn da-:\ni llttb\nrod.\"\nVignettes From a\nHoliday in Europe\nCXLIII\nARSENIC   IN   AMERICAN   AP-\nPLES   INJURES   SALE   OF\nCANADIAN   FRUIT\ni._\nLONDON\u2014Satpsmon in fruit stores\ntoll me that .the sale of Canadian\napples is helnn injured as ;i con-\nsequence of the discovery that nome\nfhlpmenti of American apples\u2014\nchiefly Newtowns\u2014are Impregnated\nwith n iiercentage ol. nrseni \u2022 high\nenough, in the opinion of the health\n\u25a0ni Itorlilea,   t\u00bb>  en4asimr   health.\nThe arsenic (s the. rccidu\" of a\n'\u25a0''a-h iisci to destroy codling moth,\nii impreanatee the skto of the apple\nind   j)-   Home  cones  the   core.\nSo fa j- no shipment* of Canadian\nipples ha\\*e been ftf'md lo show\nsigns (f arsenic, hut the public is\ninclined to Associate the f'nnadinn\nfruit wiih that from the United\n.States.\nThe difficulty hns been met lo pome\n<nter.t by dealers by refraining from\nIs belin g the apples with the name\n\"Canadian.\" \u2022\nBritish health authorities nnd the\nmagistrates before whom charges\nH.'TiiinM dealers of selling poisoned\nAmcrimn fruit have been heard have\nshown a disposition to deal with\nthe matter as leniently an possible,\nind there is no apparent tendency\nto use the unfortunate circumstances\nas an argument against thp importation of fruit from overseas. Never-\n'heless. until the American growers\ncan clear their apples of the Imputation of poisoning with arsenic,\nCanadian sales of fruit over here are\nhound to be hurt.\nAdvertising of the results of anal-\nV\u00bbW of Canadian apples, proving thnt\nthey are free of any pol\u00bbon, would\nhelp, r.  F,  P.\nFire did considerable damage to\nstables nt fsrio owned by the Prince\nof Wales In Devon, but all horses\nwere saved.\nParking pet dog awakened Mrs.\nA. H. Cox, and she saved bf-rself\nwhen her home was burned at Brant-\nford,  Ont.\nW. E, Tench, 54, builder, of NMag-\nara Falls Gorge Route Scenic railway, died at Detroit after a motor\naccident.\nor sweet mili\nl> .,;' mild Amer\nir very finel;\nmelted, remov.\n\u25a0    At).I   the   heat\nand fold ia thi\ng whites. Tun\ninto r. butterei'\nand bake for 20\nDredge  %  cup ef dr\nan additional *-, cup of flour. Ad*\nthese to the rrlxture. then mt in on<\ncup of cold, Fweet milk, .'ind one brat\nen e^e. 'i urn an in \u25a0> Itiiiier.-U mon\nor empty baking powder can, pm ni\ntight-fitting cover, dnd Rloam tWi\nh..ms.     Serve   hoi   filth   n   hard   ;*.auce.\nCheese Souffle; Mi It two t ible\nspoons of butter In a saucepan niv\nrtb   into   it   three   tabli aj onna   of   flou\npreviously     mfurrl     t\\\"lih     ',     hR8| \u25a0\nesch or salt,   p prka   and   dry   rnuatan\ngradually   ada   '-   cu\nfeald.'.t. Next ;. 3d '\u00bb i\nlean cheese, grated\nehopped, nnd wh* n\nsaucepan f.'oni the fi\nen volks of three fsm\nthree stiffly-beitcn \u2022\nthe ni'xture nl once\none-quart baking di:>ii\nminutes in a moderate\nto 400 degrees Fahrenh\nMarble Cake: Crean\nof butter and rub into\nRianulnted fttgar; add\ntwo eggs l.t'Tt'ii till thick, and stir in\nlBi cups of ordinary bread flour sifted\nwiih three teaspoons of baking powder, and 'i teaspoon of salt. ;it the\nsame tune arising l,i cup uf cold eweet\nio Ik. i-'\u00ab'<\\ in two stlfiiy whipped egg\nwhite:, and then divide this butter\nturn ns one-third i f it into another\nin vl. To this one-third add one table.\nSJ OOP of III'das.-'- s. an 1 i... te ispiion\ntn -li ii f gn>und e inn-mn i ii and ground\nnutmeg. Turn all Into a buttered loaf-\ncake pan, altemat .::\u25a0: I he litrlit and\n\u25a0lark I,alters tn hive Ihe \"marbled\" ap-\n!'e rai.ee, Rnke hi a nu-deratp oven\ni Sail to ion degn es Pahrcnheli i for\nabout 45 minutes, frost with an ordinary uncooked chocolate icing while\nlb\"  cake   ls   silll   hot,\nTomorrow \u2014Answers   to   in pi tries,\n(me of ihe finest highways i.i Canada'dl ihat leadinsj Irom Port Arthur\nim' Foci William to Duluth nnd known as the Bcott highway, which In\notinnier opena ~ ppnoiama of wild boauty tu tiie tourist. In winter, how-\n>ver. the roadway le often hlddca in snowdil.'ts, but a daily bus service\ns maintained, and the photograph .-bows freqt snowplowa nl work clearing\n.he roadway for the motor bus, after 9 recant storm.\nCHILDREN PLAY PUSHBALL\ncup\nthr\nAddress   inquiries    in    Mins   Kirk man\nand    Ineltw    stamped-addi>t\u00bb4<ed   eiivil-\nr.pe   for   ri-lilV       Kilter\nHOLINESS IN MATRIMONY\nfURNED   INTO   FARCES\n! 1.  \u2014  Il\nTORONTO, Ont., Mar,\nflaiinK ihul ho ini-i* In matrimony\nwin* I.i in. turneil inln a fare. Kev.\n.M. A. ArmKtrong of thp Chuich oi\n:!:f l'.e:l. :n r. i-onilnuing hi^ sfi*i*s\n\u25a0if M'niiiui- oo \u25a0Chilm iiii.i Hi,-\nIloine.\" ri-Mi.iiii.il Rtrongly r.ilnlstei..\nwho piifiim nuirrlaKeH fiom ;tir-\nulanps or un:! r oil.pr extiaonllnaiy\n\u25a0ii* iii;ipi'':iii'!:i.lf i'iiiiiIIUdiw. Such\nweddlnga t.ndei] to dratioy thp\naanctltj*  nl*  murrlwl  ll.'c,  h,. stutcil.\nIN WILL SHE LEAVES\nSUM FOR HIGH MASSES\nTORONTO, (mt.. March 21.\u2014By a\nwill made In 191J, Miss Mary Ann\nHlavin, wno died in Toronto leaving\n$7200 perianal estate, bequeathed\nto the paiiwh priest of St. Francis*\nchurch $1000 for two hundred re-\nqulem high masses to be said once\na* week, and $2000 foi two thousand low masses for the repo' l> of\nher soul, and the tmuls of hrr father,\nmother mil Mater. The residue goe_)\nto   Hannah   Klavin,   4  cousin.\nA Caiet Model\nA pushball clasa\nvisitors  pursue   ttieii\nwhirl.\nsapds at Cannes, where tbe children of northern\ntion   while  the;r parents are enjoying the social\nBISHOP TRAVELS     p\nFAR IN NORTHS\n\u25a0r   the   trtlrd   time   In   its   history,\nPiiUsh and  Foreign   Bible mm iety\nissucd    10,000,000    Bibles    i'i     12\nmonths.\nKeeps in Touch With Scattered\nBands  Indians and\nEskimos\nMussolini a proposal to give Italy\n:i stand ng army of 220,000 men and\n1 ompuleory service of six months was\nadi'iiled by senate.\nWith the cape coming lnio a place\nof great ;_shlm Importance, what\ncould be more effective than a spring\ncoat modeled after the cadet's top-\ncoot? The one above is developed in\ndark blue tweed, with dark blue velvet facing the tailored collar. A\ncoat of this typo would be smart in a\ncolored  twoed  of tan and brown.\nWINNIPEG. Murch i\nif a diocese reaching h\ncircle to the Cniiel Si\nwith an ave' as ' w'dth\nRlshop A. D. Dewdney\nU on his per,W)dic tour\ndid ion. Tie tr:ivi*ls npproximate'y\nIR i ki miles a yeur, mostly nmoug\nIndians   and   Bsquimaux.\nKach year I lis]int. Oewdnev visit-'\n(ome pert of his dioeese an\u00abl every\ntwo   years   takes   a   tiip   to   the   more\nremote   par's,   eieb   trip   Inking   : n1\nliree months.    I,a.-i   year he mad' the\n' \u25a0   f om   Montreal   v'a   the   Hi     l.i.v-\nreiice river, aloni; ihe I.leak mi-t .if\nl.ahi\u25a0tilo.- thnmyh Ihe Hudson stmU*\n>nd across the b\". in Fori r.mveh'...\nIlij iiMjai route into the north i'> by\nbe Hudson F:'v rilwav and then\nhy canoe to Vnrl\u00bb Fn \"\"\"\u25a0.\nFiohtoro  Days' Trip\nFrom T-out lak '. which is in i*\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nheart or the Patricio district of New\nOrtiiin     tb\"   bt-h'-r,   t~->*o   n    sHo   fi'>\nlast   year   involving   a   canoe   journey\nif    IH   days   duration.      \"We   did    not\nmeet    a    single    person    during    the\nwho1'   tr'p,\"   be   s i'd.\n(tjibwav,   Bwampv  Crees   end   Ch'p-\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022VI-. T-iMan- a\u00abd vnHoni trii.es ol\nEsi|iiimeaux, all have claim on the\nhisdion's m'.nlsterv. lie Is al\u00abn rc-\n\u2022tnonslble for the gpl-ltual welfare\nof resb'entfl in numerous pulp wood\nsettlements, mining retners. lumbering\nirejts nnd riilwny divisional   points.\nAl tii1 nresoht timo Bishnn newd-\nnev ii looking 'or nn fl-<sl'tint to\n\"ii'-ry On missi'inary worV nmrwtg the\nRequlmaux. The Church of Kng-\nland. he Pays, Is the only bnlv m-v-\n:ng on mUslonary work anion\" these\nnorthern   tribes.     The   efforts   of   the\nhu-eh hud proved highly satisfactory\nin   lmp\"ovtng   tb*>   ftihlts    n pr' \u25a0 \"\u25a0\u25a0 ~o,t'^\nind general condition of the people.\n- In    charge       P.emier Khodes of Nova  Scotia told\nm tiie arctic j denotation   he   was   opposed   to   pro-\nes boundary, ' htbltlon,   but   counselled  delay  before\n.(   300   miles I chuhgin*.  law.\nof   Keewat'ti 1\nf   tbe   luri\u20141 ^\"\u2022^'iitiiitUUfPiilll\nI\nI\nMarriage Licence\nOfficial Answen:\nMany Queer Questions\nTORONTO, Oni\u201e March 81.\u2014The\ncity l&iuer o. maniafi Ifcnces gets\nsome curimiH queries sometimes. The\nother day h? ie-eived a letter saying: \"There aie two brother- burn\nof the yam\" father but different\nmothers, The daughter of one\nbrother wishes to marry her father's\nhalf brother,- Tbe answer, of Co'Jrgee,\nwas In  the  negative,\nAnother query recently received\nwas in regard to the legality of a\nmarriage which took place on a\nhoat in lyofl on the high seas by\nan American minister in. the presence\nof only on? witness. The clergyman declttred it 10 be \"under the\nordinance of Qod and the international  law.\"    The  issuer advised the\nI That Body\nj   of Yours\ni     \u00bb>   JAMES   W.   BAHTOBf,   KJfc,\nnihii'ii, .Hi \u25a0\"\u25a0 '\u25a0\u2022\u2022'\" -j \u25a0 \u25a0 l- \u25a0\u25a0 l. -ijiiu 1 pJ' >\u25a0 \u25a0 m:^ umi|ffif|y \"\"^'\u25a0'\"'ffWftgtJWgB\nDentistry and Medicine\nS.,me 'il. a of where dentistry and the\ndenial proTession are heading can he\nRafiivHl v.-In n wf learn thnt at some \\mi-\nVTKi.ies the dmtal and medical stu-\ndents take a great many of their lectures  together.\nTills Is not hard to understand when\nwe 1-ruictul.t-r that medical and dental\nMm! iits must both understand anat-\nomy, physiplogy, chemistry snd f-o\nforth, l>ui thev must go along together\nsiill fur! her, became now a great many\ni.f the ailments thit attack the entire\nbody are known to be caused by poisons\nfiom Uu- teeth, In fact, our dental\nIY'1 nds are do ng considerable research\nwork along ttiis line.\nla common with medical research\nmen 'they are finding that abscesses at\nthe roots of teeth, where the nerve has\nA Few Doses\nof\nDr. Wood's\nNorway\nPine\nSyrup\nMay Stop Tbat Cough\nMr. Frank D. Come\u00bbn, Wert Bath-\nnr\u00bbt, N.D., writei:\u2014\"I bad a ~rj\nbad col,l and cough that settled on mj\nlungs, and I thought that I would\nnever ^ct rid of it\nOne da; a friend spoke to me about\nyour wonderful rented\/, to I lent and\ngot a bottle of it, and after the first\ndo_o I took I got relief, and bj th*\ntimo I had finished the bottle I naa\ncompletely relie-red of all my trouble.\"\n\"Dr. Woody la put up only by\nThe T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,'\nOnt.\n(Tolorailo parka d<-7mrtment reports\nlhat 284,**la people visited grave of\nliuffnlo Bill on Lookout mountain\nlast year.\nFlashlights\nand Batteries\nWe wish to advise the public that we have received\nanother large shipment, of the famous\nBURGESS BATTERIES\n\"The Kind That Louts Longer\" \u25a0\nWe have them for Radio, Engine and Flashlight.   All the\npopular styles.\n\u2014PRICES RIGHT\u2014\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON PHONE   21 , B.  C.\nbeen   killed,   may  be     causing     serious\nheart, kidney and intestinal ailments.\nBefore  tbe advent of  the X-ray the\ndentist   went   calmly   on,     killing     the\nnerve and Tilling the teeth, and as long]\nas the teeth gave no pain he fMt that\nhis work was well  done.\nThe X-ray showed him that 90 per\ne.-nt of these teeth where the nerve had\nheen killed, had 110 root filling, or else\n-ncomplete ones.\nIn other wor^s, he is now able to see\nInst what his work looks like below\n.he gums. Instead of Just above the\nKUDtH. If his filling does not get down\nto the root of tho tooth he knows It.\nuid if alter repaattd attempts he is not.\niaccestfvt, he can then conscientiously\n\u25a0xtraei  the tooth.\nThe X-r~y abo shows np teeth that\n-,\u00abve not come through the gums, Impact rd   teeth   they   are   called.       These\noften cause the severe neuralgia ln tha\nface.\nThe degree of pyorrhoea ls likewise\nwell shown by a good X-ray film.\nNow, sr these conditions causa general symptoms, you can readily eee that\nthe dentist and the physician will often\nhave to come together tn the treatment\nof a ca.ie.\nWith a good X-ray man, the dentlft\nand the doctor, the patient Is going to\nhave one opinion based on the consults-;\ntion of all three, instead of having the\nopinion of the dentist only, the physi*\nclan only, or perhaps the X-ray man\nwho doesn't agree with either of them.\nAll three of them should have a great\npait of the'r training together at the\none college.\nIt ls being done e\\ ^ome places, \u00abr.T\nthere is so much common sense ln It\nthat tbe Idea will likely grow.\nAfood to study on.to play on\nWHEAT\nChildren like its crispness\nStationery for\nPoultrymen\nIt pays to use printed, businesslike-looking letterheads, billheads and envelopes.\nWe can provide a cut showing the breed you specialize in.    There is no extra charge for it.\nTell us your requirements.\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPT.\nTwo Phones (143 and 144)\nPRINTING-RULING-BOOKBINDING\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your billr\nof Building Material. Cna*>\nLumber a specialty. ;*:\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nYour Best\nInvestment\nThe day when you will appreciate having protection\nwiil inevitably arrive\u2014whether that protection takes\nthe form of life insurance, accident or sickness insurance, automobile insurance, or any of the other many\nforms of insurance which can be obtained. When that\nday arrives yon will appreciate that it has been your\nbest investment.\nIf you are considering insurance, consult with any\nof those listed helow, whom you will find leady to\noffer you sound ad,'ice based on years of experience:\nFor Fire Insurance\nAutomobile\u2014Life\u2014Accident and Sickness\u2014Plate\nGlass and All Other Forms ol Insurance\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nR. W. DAWSON\nH. E. DILL\nG. A. HUNTER\nc. f. McHardy\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON\nR. J. STEEL\nFor Life Insurance\nC. W. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.    '\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, The Great West Life Assurance Co. 1   .\nR. W. DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.\nH. E. DILL, Mutual Life of Canada.\nE. H. HANLEY, North American Life Assurance Co.\nS. C. LATORNELL, Dominion Life Assurance Co.\nC. P. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.    ,\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON, Canada Life Assurance Co.\nG. G. CUMMING, Sun Life Assurance Company of\nCanada; Phone 673L. .   \u25a0\nJMSEilimiima^^\n *       THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\nf   Page\"rive\"1 ;\n\"Th Idea! Shat for Children\"*\nHurlbut\nl Shoes\nKre the Best\nFoot-Form lasts.   Made\nf the best of materials.\nNEW PRICES\ntraps\u2014     .\n5 to 7M  ,....?3.00\n8 to 10i\/2  $3.50\n'xfords\u2014\n5 to 7l\/\u201e  $3.25\n8 to 10'\/2  ?3.75\nAndrew & Ca.\n\\Leaders in Footfashion\nSTATES' DOLLAR\nHELPED SAVE\nCHINESE_PORT\nBritish and States Plan Got\nJaps Off the Mainland\nIf\nPHOTOGkAPHS\nYour Children\nNever Grow Up\nGeorge A. Meeres\n(Campbell   Art   Gallery)\niONE 46    \u2022   715 BAKER ST.\nAMERICAN CONSUL\nHONORED BY CHINESE\nInteresting Feature in Boxer\nRebellion Told in\nPeking\nxlcan   I^bor   party   in   conven-\nat   Mexico  City   passed   resolu-\nurglng   congress  tip adopt   pro-\nIon. v *\nrlon  reports \"Lloyd  Oeorge   may\nprohibition issue in another ef-\nto Vally   the   dwindling   Liberal\nPEKING, \u2022 March 21.\u2014How an\nAmerican consul, rearing that the\npartition of China was threatened\nafter the Boxer uprising In 1900,\nmaneuvered to save Amoy, its finest\nsouthern port, for China, has been\ntold here by Captain \"Tom\" (T. C.)\nHutchins, erstwhile naval attache to\nPeking.\nThe Intimate story, never before\npublished, discloses that American\nsilver .dollars 'averted a mutiny of\nChinese troops, caused the execution\nof'some Chinese outlaws, effected the\nevacuation by. the Japanese of the\ninland of Kulangsu through a ruse\nin which the British consul participated and, finally, brought into being the present day International\nsettlement lnj South- China's great\nharbor.\nThe account shows (.he practical\nnature of America's- friendship for\nChina and reveals ths resourceful\nmethods employed by an American\nconsul\u2014A. Burllngaine Johnson \u2014 to\nbefriend the ancient empire at a\ncritical   time.\nOffered    Island\nChina out of gratitude offered io\nmake America a gift of the Island\nof Kulangsu hut the United States\ndeclined. China's gratitude then\ntook the form of decorating Consul\nJohneon, with the order \"Double\nDragon of the Rising Snn.\" He\nnow is a member of the California\nstate senate, having retired a fur\nnearly 20 years in the consular service.\nCaptain Hutchim. said that in the\nyear of the Boxer uprising, similar\ndisturbances were occurring ln Southern China but on a smaller scale.\nSerious trouble threatened foreign\ncommerce  in   Amoy.    TUe  Japanese.\n. J-UX\"\nThisMagnificent\nHigh Grade Piano\nWill Be Placed in Your Home for\na Small Cash Payment\nfall or write for our booklet of prices and easy payment\nplan.\nHeintzmah & Co., Limited\n._   The name  is your guarantee.\n511 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\ndome of ths Victrola, Sonora and  Brunswick Phonographs and  Victor\nRecords.\nWw 1\nfflress\n^makers\nuse Ijlx\nIN the handling of fine ftbrics, particularly silks, satins\nand crepes, it is very easy to pull a thread and damage\na dress in the making. v \\\nDress-makers tell us the exclusive use of Lux as a house-\nbold soap keeps the hands soft and white, the skin\niaiooth, so that they can handle the most filmy and\ndelicate of things, without danger to the fabric.\nYou will appreciate the gentle efficiency of Lux, even\nthough you do not do your own sewing. \t\nhaving acquired the Island of Formosa, landed a detachment of marines and blueJacketB on the mainland. Formal protests Were mnde\nto the Japanese consul and to the\nsenior Japanese naval officer that\nthe landing was unnecessary and an\nInfringement of China's rights, but\nthe Japanese stayed on. Thereupon\nthe British and American consuls\nput their heads together.\nBritish Do Share\nJohnson suggested to Rear Admiral Henderson of the British navy\nand British Consul Mansfield' that\nthey land marines on the Bund adjacent to the Japanese, thus complicating tho International problem.\nJohnson would file a protest similar\nto that he and the British had made\nto the Japanese landing, then trust\nto complications arising which would\nrender it advisable for both to withdraw.\nThe British landed marines. They\nhoisted the Union Jack Just across\nthe street from the Japanese and\ndragged field pieces to points of\nvantage. Then the American consul\nprotested receiving from tho British\nthe reply that Japan had made,\nnamely; that the Chinese government had lost control; there was no\ncentral government at Peking; it was\nnecessary  to  protect   nationals.\nNeither Johnson nor the British\nbelieved there was any breakdown of\nlocal authority and both thought the\nJapanese landing was In anticipation\nof the partition of China. Amoy was\nthe finest harbor ln South China,\nrwiii'ist to Manila and hem.o John-\ncon's anxiety that this harbor ba no;\nalienated.\nPeking was in the hands of the\nPoxers, 'the legation just' omer._:irK\nfrom a long sieger the emperor and\n(Dower Empress were refugees. Still\nthe American consul protested the'e\nwt*s no disorder In the city warranting the presence of either Japanese\nor British troops. '   '.\nBut the ruso nearly Vent awiy.\nChinese troops garrisoned Lhcie. wete\non the verge of mutiny because tlieir\npay  was in arrears.\nConsul Johnson tvas popiila:* with\nChinese officials. They comLded 1 o\nhttn that unless they coul 1 produce\nimmediately $40,000 to pay the troops\nthey would mutiny and lojt the city.\n.Tohnson deliberated; thei assured\nthe Chinese officials he wield provide the funds if certain peace and\norder would be maintained\nSioi'is    Looted\nThe following night some Chinese\ns;ik stores were looted, but thp loiters were caught. The officials repotted to Johrtson these arrests a;\nevidence of the potency of the Chinese government of the region. Johnson directed the matter he kept s:\ncret until ufter the outlaws wen\nexecuted. He demanded that the\nexecution take place ut sunrise next\nmorning. u\nAt sun up troops, prisoners and\nhead men assembled for the evecu-\ntion but at a signal, the soldier\nthrew down their arms, refusing Lo\nproceed Unless their arrears of pay\nWere forthcoming. It was feared\nthey would join the looteis, Tho\nAmerican consul hastened to the\nscene and pledged tho unruly soldiers\nhe would bring thtir money to the\nYaman. The outlaws . wero beheaded and their heads swung on\npoles with placards proclaiming the\ncrime and warning others to he-\nhave.\nDraws  on   Treasury\nJohnson drew on the secretary of\nstate for $-10,000, which he received\nIn silver dollars. He spent hours\ndividing the money Into sacks of $100\neach and that night supervised its\ndelivery to the Chinese military.\nThen he called a consular confer-;\nence and reiterated that the troopa\nwere not necessary since order was\nbeing maintained. He cited the\nexecution as evidence. The British\npromptly agreed to Investigate and.\nif warranted, have the British force\nwithdrawn, providing the Japanese\nmarines were. A few weeks later\nboth British and Japanese troops\nwe removed sjmultaneousiy. Some\nmonths later the Chinese authorities\nrefunded the $-10,000, and made the\noffer of the Island of Kulangsu. The\nMcKinley ndministnition declined to\nacoept it and suggested it bo su^\naside as an international concessloh\nunder consular control. Kulangsu\nha\u00ab since remained an international\nsettlement.\nRadical and Rociallat were returned\nin double elestion in the Marne de-'\npartment, which showed Left gain\nfrom   Conservatives. ,*\n'    '        I    '    \u2014\u2014 -^~ i   \u25a0-'   mm\nThe  Gift\nShop\nA. T. NOXON\nYour Jtwelsr\n^'SOCIETY\nThis column is being conducted\nby Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news\nof a social nature, Including receptions, - privattt entertainments,\npersonal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear In this column. Telephone\nMrs.  Vigneux at her residence.\nMiss Itorls G. Ju.iiison entertuiiretl\nat tbe hum* of Mrs. A. T. Richards,\n310 lnnis street, at a farewell party\nfor MLss Eva Moir, who leaves shortly\nfor Cranbrook, to accept a position\nwith the East Kootenay Telephone\ncompany. A most enjoyabln evening\nwas spent lu gumes and music. WIss\nThelma Neelln won the firi\u00bbl prise\nnnd Miss Edith Fletcher the cutiso-\nlatlon iu the cleverly arranged contest.\nTin- supper table was prettily decorated with green and white, and centered with a silver basket of freesias\naud lighted green tapers in silver\nholders. During the evening Miss Muir\nwas presented *\u00bbth an emtruld ftngwi\nring from her coworkers of the British Columbia Telephone company. The\ninvited guests included Mrs. R. Ilngt\nsart and -MlsHflfc Thelma Neelin, Irene\nLnughton, Eileen Simpson, Irene Mc-\nPherson, Venm Meliougiill, Jessie Ben-\nzUs, Edith Wai tou. Hazal Maundrell,\nMuriel Maundrell. Hazel Johns, Margaret Scanlan, Orpha Manhart, Edith\nFletcher, Frances Chupnuin, Dorl\u00ab\nJohnson and Mrs. A. T. Klehorda.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs Tl. H Hasamd, 511 Silica street.\nhas taken up residence at till: Mill\nstr,et. #    *    %\nP. <J. Truss of Brantford, Out., spent\na few days ih town.\n\u2022 \u2022   '\u2022\nDr. W. 11. Williamson of Trail* *pent\n.Saturday in Nelson oa a vistt to his\naunt,   Mrs,. Kelman.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nA. Defleux of Bennington spent Sut-\nuiiJay   in  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.' Atklnsoh.' bceffmpartltfl tr\/ her\ndiiughter,. Mist*- Adelaide Atkins, iu\nKoshland, spent Saturday Khoppi.ig ,n\nNelebb..      :  1 *   - k, ,J  :   ; V   .r \/,.'\nMiss Elizabeth McKinnon of Proctei\ntpent the week-end with her mother\nMrs.   L., McKinuon. \u25a0     \u25a0 ,  \u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\u2022* i\nMrs. Frank Wilson and her Why\ndaughter arrived In the city Friday\nnight from the coast. While In Nelson Mrs. Wilson will visit her mother\nMrs.   Irvine,   Kerr   apartments.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nMrs. B. A. Stimmel of Trail was i\ncity shopper Saturday.\nJ S. Slater, formerly of Nelson, now\nof Vancouver, spent a fu\\v days in Nelson last week.\nMrs. Robert Hill of Longbeach wax\na city visiter riaturday.\nMis. P. McLeod, 810 Vernon streei.\nentertained her friend* Friday alw\nSaturday afternoons at a very deligbi-\n1 ul tea. Tite living room and tea table\nwere beautifully decorated in daffodil,\nami pussy willows. . Mrs. N. Murphy,\nMrs .1. A. Forin, Mrs. 8. Hartln ami\nMrs. W. U. Rose poured the tea while\nMrs. .1. \\. Skellern, Mrs. U. fi. Godfrey,\nMrs M, Gibbf-, Mrs. J. C. Hooker. Mrs.\nW H Hoare, Mis. P. LaughtoU anil\nMm. I\u00bb, McLean aMsisteri the hostess\nto serve. The invited guests were Mr*.\nC. Stalk. Mrs. T. F. McKechnie, Mrs.\nT. (J. Carter. Mrs. II. McArthur, Mrs-\nft. A. Peebles. Mrs. O. S. Oodf re\\.\nMrs. M. Gtbbs. Mra. I>. McEachem.\nMrs. J. W. Holmes. Mrs* N. Murphy.\nMrs J, Brodie. Mrs. L. L. Boomer.\nMrs J. A. Forin, Mrs. J. B. Bennett-\nMrs. J. C Hooker. Mrs. W. R. Thomson. Mrs. J. Ml tin Is, Mrs- D. Kerr, M\u00bb,\nB. Dawson, Mrs. George Johnstone.\nMrs A. T. Walley. Mrs. Hector Mae\nkenxle. Mrs.' J. Stobo. Mrs. W. O. Rom\nMrs. H. H Pitts. Mrs. G. Hartin. Mrs\nW, H. Hoare. Mrs. R. D. Barnes, Mrs\nI) n McLean, Mrs. D. Latighton. MrH\nJ. Sktllern. Mrs. F R. G. Drudge, Mis-\nWhite. Miss Wtghtiiian. Mrs. A. McL,\nFletcher, Mrs. F. Ritchie, Mrs. A. D.\nCmory and Mrs. J. B Gray.\nFrank Martin of Bonnington was a\nbusiness   lysitor   Saturday.\nMrs. J, Potosky of South Sloean\nvisited   Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nBllSS Muriel Hedpath of Salnio Spent\nthe week-end with her parents, Mr. ami\nMrs. E.   It. Redpath.     -\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Kelman spent Saturday in\nTrail.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Price of South Sloean sp ml\nSaturday   in   Nelson.\n\u2022 *    *\nAt the conclusion nf the badminton\ntournament. Saturday afternoon, tea\nwas served bv Mrs. P. G. Morey an.i\nMrs. H. R. Townsend. Thoxe present\nwere Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Douglas. Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Si Godfrey, Mr. and Mrs\nA, E. Parlow. Mr. and Mrs. 1\". G,\nMoray. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Mr\nand Mrs. A W. Idlens, Mr. and Airs\nW. A. Richardson. Mr. and Mrs. C, B\nGarland, Mn and Mrs. R. W. Dawson.\nMrs. A. J.. Cornish, L. S. Mackersey.\nMisses Marlon and Rabe Blackwood,\nMiss Aloise Wragge, Miss Violet 'Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs F. P. Faulkner, A,\nHutchison and ft Trail.\nMr. and Mrs; E. Watts motored to\nNelson from South Sloean, Saturday,\nto i-'pend  the day.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nCapt. ,Q. K. Ashby from South Sloean spent a day shopping In Nelson.\n\u2022 *    *\n\u25a0 Mrs, W. F\\ K\u00abntel of Vancouver \\ls-\nIted Nelson Saturday, the guest of Mrs.\nFrank Wilaop. She left for her home\nSaturday  Bight. \u25a0  ,i\n\u2022 #    *\nW. D Ridge motored from Bonnington   to  town to visit for the day.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Belle McGauley of* Castlegar\nspent Saturday in town, shopping.\nMiss Margaret Allen attended the\nSouth Sloean dance Friday evening, being the. guest of Mr. and Mrs. E\nWatts.. -.\u25a0   i  .    \u2022\u2022    -\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nC. B. White, of the Silversmith, Sandon. spent the Week-end In town on\nbusiness.'\n\u2022 \u2666   \u25a0 \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W, C, Motley, of Bonnington  were city  visitors Saturday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nE., Tersian, ef the Gold**' Age mine\narrived in Nelson, Friday night, with\nbis bride; after spending a honeymoon\nin Portland, Seattle und Spokane. Mrs\n611 Baker Street.  Plume 200\nK%\ni NEW TWEED COATS I;\nM $17,50 to $35.00 Each\nThis new , shipment of Coats just arrived, fend includes aotne\nof the smartest models shown this season. They-are made on\nmannish tailored lines, or jn flared styles, with novelty ^collars.\nThe materials are, all-wool English or Scotch Tweeds.' 'They\ncome in sizes 14 to 38, and are wonderful values at 817.50,\n?22.50 to $35.00 EACH, -i f_; n ,\u2022' '.'\u25a0\u25a07,'.\nv NEW TWEED SUITS\nAt $32.50 to $45.00 Each ;\nBoyish Suits in double or single breasted styles with wraparound Skirts. Made of fine weave all-wool Tweeds., Coats\nare silk lined and many have braid trimming. Sizes 16, 18 and\n20. SPECIAL VALUES AT 832.50, 835.00 TO $45.00\nEACH.\nNEW TRIMMED HATS\nAt $10.00 to $15.00 Each\nA new shipment of Hats just cleared through the customs,\nand these are the smartest yet shown this Season. There are\nall the wanted colors in the lot, and they come in small,\nmadium or larger head sizes. See these todav at $10.00.\n$12.Kl TO $15.00 EACH.\nFar tit whale fo-aulj wash, [or\ndisbvo%hrn%, hathing and\nsbamfmng. Lax ha ~ equal.\nAnd L*x ir_\"m safe to me as\nSift tutor.\nA\n!1;:,\nLcrcf Blotters Limited, Torowo\n\"^ C\nSteel Briggs and Ferry'j package SetAt\nSeeds in Bulk\nGolden  Bantam  Corn     'V Mangel Seed\nAmerica*  Wondef  Peaa Turnip   Sew.\nImproved   Stratagem   Peal Whit* Clever 'Seed\nYellow  Globe Onione Sweet  Clover Seed\nQueen   City   Lawn   Graaa   Seed Red Clover Seed\nAifalfa   Seed Alaika Seed\nHIPPERSON\nk\nLook for thi Red  Hardware 6tore\nPHONE 497\nCO.\nP.O. ^OX 414\nTerzian, beforu her marriage, was Miss\nLillian   Flyi   of   Portlnnd,   Ure.\n8.   J.   Crocker of   Vancouver  was  a\nbusiness  visitor ovfv the  week-end.\nsit\nMr. \u00abnd Mrs. Hobson of Willow\nPoint   were city   .-hoppers   Saturday.\nHarry Robinson of Trail spent tin\nweek-end visiting his parents.\nGeorge StDenis of Birehbank visited\nthe  city  over   the .week-end.\nMrs. J, H. Kublnsun, who is leaving\nfor Vancouver shortly, whs th\u00ab gwi_ri\nof honor recently at a brlt'.gi party\nheld nt the home of Mrs. Hatty A mas.\n133ti Ward street. During the evening\nthe bridge dub presented Mrs. Robinson with a handsome silver basket\nThose playing w\u00bbre Mrs. F. Wilson,\nMrs. W. Moore. Mrs. H. Bush, Mrs. It.\n(J. McKeown, Mrs. R Gammon, Mrs\n<.. F. Hunter. Mrs. T. Renwlck, Mrs.\n13. Tltsworth. Mrs. F. E. Wheeler. Mrs,\nHarry Amas. Mrs. C. D. Shaw and\nMrs. J. H, Robtnsrtn.\n*     \u2022    M\nI. R. Poole has same to Vancouver\nUl a business trip for a few days.\nMrs. W. ElRdon ot Bonnington *p\u00abnt\nSaturday jn   town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. M Hnrrop of Harrop was a elty\nskoppaf fluturu'ay.\nTo**\nBob McLean of Trail spent the\nweek-end  in   town,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Gertrude McDonald visited ber\nparents. Mayor and Mra J. A. McDonald, over the week-end, returning tu\nCastlegar Sunday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFjii ran Archibald, Salnio, spent the\nweek-end with his parents, Mr and\nMrs.   C.   I.   Archibald.\nDm I Its In KxpluHion\nBIRMINGHAM.   Ala.,   March   21.\u2014j\nAt least   lfi men killed and   17 others I\ninjured   in   explosion    that    WtWJked\nfurnace of Woodward  Iron company. ,\nGeneral Stewart\nVisits Whitewater\nMine at Kaslo\nKASLO, March 20.\u2014General Stewart\nof Vancouver, having visited thf\nWhitewater on Wednesday, pronounced\nhimself well pteitsed with the work\ndone, and returned on Thursday's bout\nto the coast.\nKaslo Students\nGive Concert and\nExcellent Party\nKASLO. March 20. \u2014 Kaslo high\nschool entertained the town on St. Patrick's day ntRht at a concert and a\nplay. The program Included violin\nsolo, Kathleen Butler; piano solo.\nWinona Rouleau; chorus of seven girls\nrendered \"Kathleen Mavourneen\"; two\nIrish Honirs by Veronica Murphy; comic\nreading by Phyllis Macqueen; violin\n9\u00a9lo by  John  Stubbs.\nThe musical program was followed\nby a. comic rendering of \"The Readers\" and the \"Pot Boilers.\" the prominent parts being taken and well acted\nby Nell Moody and Peter Fowler.\nPay 11 is Macqueen also belnp a \"star.\"\nTbe whole cast, and all performers had\niken Kreat pains with thslr pirts.\nAftt.r refreshments, * short dance program finished a well spjeyad evening.\nTrappers Favor\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE'\nI\nto Fled Lake 'Rush'\nWill <\u00ab<\u25ba t<> 1'tmdon\nPARIS, March 21.\u2014Minister of\nFinance Peret announces he ls going\nto London soon to fix amounts of\npayment of French war debt to\nRUtain. He announced he hoped to\nsecure a moratorium for n while.\nFrance registered new low at 28.33\nto   dollar   today.\nIHg  Hall  lYjyram\nVLADIVOSTOK, March 21.\u2014Soviet Russia embarks on ambitious\nrailroad consUuctlon program for Siberia. ......\nWill Hetir WVt Lain\nWASHINGTON, Marcli 21.\u2014Likely\nofficials Of Various wet Canadian\nprovinces will he invited to explain\nto  senate   operation   of   wet   laws.\nSimple FuiH-itil\nPLYMOUTH,   Vt..   March   21.\u2014Funeral  of Colonel Coolldga, father of\nthe   president,   a  simple   but   hnpres-\nslve   ceremony.\n(luirlty   I*iomntrr*  Rob\nNKW YORK. March 21.\u2014Public\nWelfare Commissioner Colef nn-\nnounces more than $10G,OOt).000 is\nswindled from people in l'nited\nSlates yearly by bogus charity promo-\nEDMONTox, Murch 21.\u2014(By Canadian Pn\/Hs)\u2014While dispatches from\neastern Canada Indfeato that the Red\nLako foHi fields will see a genuine\n\"rush\" riext spring, trappers scattered\nthroughout tire Northwest Territories\nare making their - way to the scene\nof \\hfft reported -silver strike near\nT-t- 'McMurray and to Fort Smith,\nfrom* where stories have come of a\npfouftishig platinum And. \u25a0,.   ^      t \u25a0-\nTl&e trek to both these,, centers\nwhi.^e It has not assumed the pro-\nP\u00b0r)tions of a \"rush\" .has bfeen one ot\nK,'*ady movement. Many trappers\nli Uve already **Uanfln\u00bbed their trap\n1 li nes in response to the. ijior.8, al-\nhJNInf urge of hidden wealth. X)ld.-\ntjmei prospectors from many pointy ,ln\nthe nrovlnco are preparing x*> leave\nfor the north early next spring, while\na mi\/nber of adventurers have already    left  to  slake  claims.-\nSeveral shipments of horses and\nfiiippli. -<y will leave for Fort McMurray this month, and definite exploration work Is expected to get\nunder wvy with tbe break-up of\nwinter.       *\nFaniHTij l{<-ni..lr> Neutral\nSTRATHROY, Ont., March 21.\u2014\nFarmers' political organization decide to remain neutral In byelection\ncampaign caused by calling of Hon.\nElliott   to    federal   cabinet.\nTo   Move   BectsH\nOTTAWA, March 21.\u2014 Premier\nKing will move that house adjourn\nfoi* an easier recess lasting from\nMarch   2\u00ab   to  April   6.\nFind OM City\nCHICAGO, March 21.\u2014Lost City\nof Opifl found by Field-Oxford university nreheolofelsts (n Mesopotamia\nthought evidence of 3000 years old\nculture and forgotten art making\npottery,  found.\nBattel Rcteswed\nTORONTO, March 21.\u2014K, Clarence Settel. former secretary of\nlt\\Ao Fir Adam Beck, sentenced tn\nKingston penitentiary in 1\u00bb24 for\ntheft from Ontario hydro electric\ncommission, released todsy on ticket\nof  leave.\nNo OhjcHthui to O invention\nWASHINGTON, March 21.\u2014United\nStates government has no objection\nto a conference of nations to dlsctisa\ntheir reservations to the world's\ncourt, it is officially announced today.\n'Snobbish' Pekinese      :i\nPap Is Regarded With\nRespect by Dog Trainer\nWINNIPEG-. W.an., March tl. \u2014\nA Pekinese puiA is to most folk*\njust a little canine* snob, who spends\nhis time sitting im somebody's lap;\nsneering at the rest* of dogdom, but\nChnries B, Morgan*, famous dog\ntrainer, and winner or The Pas 200-\nniile dog derby, rega\\rds him with\nrespect. \u2022 ' \\    '\nMr. Morgan figuratively rubs the1\nveneer off tho surface and' gazes on\nthe sterling qualities that He underneath. With judicious handling, of\nhis progany, ho says, the Peke may\nbecome an ancestor ln the direct line\nof a furry, ferocious, hide' hound\nhusky. <\u25a0 ;   i-N*'\nHe says that the Peke was 'in**\ntroduced to this country by the Ba-\nkinmux wh\u00ab are of oriental extras-\ntlon. The Ksklmaux were also afflicted with the Ksquimo dog, an ant-\nma I of no particular standing. In\ndue course of events another breed\ncame into evidence, and was later\nknown as the husky. Further = astute Intel breeding will produce remarkable results, Mr. Morgan -said.\nHe added that he hnd known of\ndogs as large as a Saint Bernard,\nwho could claim a pekenese pup for\na distant grand parent.      *.\u25a0 ,.\"\nCalled by United States government\non private mission, Ur. A. Halfensteln.\nknown as \"the Australian Edison,\" has\narrived in America.\nCONDENSED'WANT'ADS ORDER FORM\nUn thla blank en whloh ts write your condtnted id., ono word In oach ipico. Encloaa mont*. ardor\nar ohack and mail dlract ts Tha Daily Nawa, No'ton, B.C.\nRatal Ona and a half cant a word oach Inaortion, alx conaacutiva Iniartlona for prloa ai four\nwhan caih acoompanlaa ordar. Minimum, 29s. Each Initial, fiouro, dollar aignt, ate, ssunt aa sna\nword.   Na charga laaa than 80 canto.\nPlaaaa publiah tha advartiaamant balow  \u2014\u2014 , . tlmoa, for which I sneloae % ,\n'\nH daalrad, rapllaa may aa addrasaad ts box numbora at Tha  Dally Nawa Offlaa.    If  papllaa arc\nto ba ma Mod, anolsaa 10s axtra ts sovor coot of saatage and allow fiva words axtra far box number.\ni ,,\n ' ' fage Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY; NEWS,'       MONDAY MORNING. MARCH S3,'\\ffl\nSCENES FROM NEW GOLD RUSH\nMl.\n%     .'*\n-.*\u25a0\"(*\nTINY TOT IS HIT AT\nUKRAINIAN BALLET\nTORONTO, Out.'. March 21.\u2014In the\nUkrainian Ballet given here recently by local Ukrainians, under the\ndirection of a European ballot-master, VaBlle Avramtnke, the hit of\nthe evening was weored by a little\nOshawa girl. Marie Yourievich, not\nquite fiva yeara old. She waa thow-\nered with boxes of chocolates. \"She\nlooked  like a  little fly in  the sun\nshine,\" she wrote. \"The child was\nso small that, ln the national clothes\nwith the flowing ribbons, she looked\nlltefally as Irroad as she was long.\nBut with great earnestness and with\nnever a smile on her round face, she\nwent through a great variety of complicated stops, doing eau'ly ihe\nquaintest of dancing that any child\nhaa ever offered on a local Hfage,\"\nsays a critic in tho \"Mail.\" Theie\nwere other good dancers among the\nlittle folk especially the gHl and\nboy who did a Cosoack dance. The\nnumbers     included     many     festival\ndancers of the Ukraine. Jlke\nwedding and spring dances., vomi\nwhich were done by both adults f\nchildren. A group of 10 men j\nthe Arkan, the oldest of the\ndunces of the Ukrainians whicrl\nalso an exceedingly ttrenuoua j\nfair, especially as it nears its J\nmax. \u25a0 V > ' -\nValuable   art    treasures   wert'4\nstroyed when fire razed Luploa htj\nLord Chuston's seat at ChUston\nI rers,   Devonshire. . .\ntrail from  Red Lake, the scene of  the present  gold\nRoger Longe of Kenora. set a new record when he covered  the 130-mile      trail from  Red Lake, the scene oi  me prvavm  pwu  iu\u00bbh  m  Northrn On-\nin  three  days,  or  33  hours of actual  travel.   He is  shown,  at   the  upper  left,  with  one  of  his  dops,  and  a  closeup  of  the  animal\nIndian woman and her papoo.se,  carried  in  native fashion.   The  \u00a9other and  child  were\n. tario, to  Hudson\nis   shown -below.    U   the  upper  right   are  two views  of  an\nphotograph ed\nNEW ERA SEEN\nINIRELAKOBY\nIrish   Boundary  A greer \u00bbnt\nLeads to More Benefit:\nAU Around \\\n\u2022GOVERNMENTS BOTH\nREAP BENEFITS\nFree State Relieve! of C)b-\nligati\nion in War\nLoan\ni\\vd  haa\nVrBTKiV i:\nLONDON, March 21\u2014Tho i,.w\nboundary agreement has nahci \u25a0'\nnew era. characterised by th\" \u25a0\nness and cooperation s7i.r.-i t'1 i\nIrish governments In Tela \u25a0\neach other and with 'lis Im: \u2022\u25a0\u25a0. .\ninet   at   London. I\nThis was the const nus of\nby the Canadfun Fn^ of\nof the Dublin and Pelf aet pe:\nand other leaders of bofl. siiyJi\nof whom even sp <e hopefuUU\nprospects of ever ual union A>(\nland. The agree ieut hss b\/\/en\natlon nearly  tin\nPresident   Wl\nthe Free Stat.'\noatisfled   with    'he  r-sul\ndon   agreemrni p tiiu!   wi')h\nrelations    between    tbd\n<w   facllltat\/d.\n.u.rctu) allj ar\nt,  Sir .!\nIr expected soon. Similar cooperation\nh^s been arranged in other phases of\nadministration.\nItnth governments have benefited financially by the agreement, which relieved the Free State of Its obligu-\nj tlon to pay a share ot me British war\ndebt. This prospective burden was a\ngreat handicap to the Dublin regime,\ntnd its removal caused an Immediately\nfavorable reaction. The market quotation of the Free State national loan\nrose at once, and remains at two to\nthree  points premium.\nNew Free State loans, which must\nbe floated in connection with the\nRiver Shannon power development\nscheme nnd other Enterprises, will he\nmarketed much more easily because of\nthe removal of tbe war debt obligation, which meant an undetermined liability estimated as high as } 1,000,0*80,-\n' 000. The Ulster government also has\nreaped financial gain by the facilfta-\n1 'ion of settlement of pending difficul-\n\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0CH between llelfiist and London.\nHo Forcing\nThe agreement has caused a benefl-\nhange in the relations among the\nS along the border and of the\nnalist minority m Ulster with\n\u25a0st of the Orangemen. There is\nnger any question <'f forcing the\nunion with the Free\ncouth frankly recognizes\n|*mat unlf>n can only come In time by\nbet ween t lie two go ver n-\ny\\     The\nHUBBIES LEAVE\nGIRLS\n\\      :\u2022<\u2022 Lh    int.\nn   J   \u00abS(atC, and\nf   i*that  union\n1 i agreement    bet ween    the    two\n'     jtgjlsntl   on   the   basis   of   equallt;\n'\"'\"* Nationalists   tn    the   north,    no\nTwenty Thousand Cut From\nHome Duties; Is War's\nAftermath\nLONDON, March SI. \u2014 More husbands are being SOUglit by the I'oor\nlaw authorities for deserting their\nfamilies than was ever the case before\nthe war. Tt Is estimated that at least\n20,000 husbands are \"wanted\" by\nboards   of   guardians   In   Great   Britain.\nSome of the hushai\\ds have been\nmissing for years, and the guardians\nhave spent thousands of pounds in\nmaintaining their wives nnd families\n\"Wanderlust\" born ot wartime experiences, dissatisfaction with home conditions, and unemployment are thi\nohlef causes of the Increase, states a\nI'oor law officer,\n\"Many   men   h\n ..\/\nHum    T,   \/,'os. raio    .\u2022\nspinet salCt.    i sm vel\nwhich   It\nhas been '\nIn Belf\nof  the  T\nfully  a\nbllltles      .\nStlT\u00ab \u25a0\nchare\nwho- si\neach i     \u25a0\nI '\n:\"Ndrti\ntogether\nfriendly\n\u2022 ii meats\nresult\n\/,,\npre\nnler\nhlle\nng   ref. \u00bb ;; c.'\nunVn, ptren\neare-\n\u25a0 the posfli-\nthe cooper-\nelatloni   Ho\na  neighbors\n\u2022    who  *tsh   to  oblige\nilms tl*~;t economies.\"\nBe   Vwiru\u00bbors\nH.'* I Iftud must live\n-k said the Ulster\nImlListratlons must\nfr >m those matters\n1 them in the past\naffairs   that   really\nof    the     people.     H<>\nIreland,  ant  nut   one\ne  prosperous.\"\na:I(    O'Donnell,    arch-\nlb All\n,m   as\nK*\n\u2022Hm'I\nturn   their   i hi\nwhich  haV.    li\nand   Concent   ,\naffect   the   w\nthat the who\npart alone,  n.\nCardinal     P..\nbishop   ot Arm gli,\nunion, \"It ceemi to me reneiM-aMr to\nInfer that the success which the northern government has had over the\nboundary question and the satisfaction\nresulting therefrom, will leave a situation tn which the northern unionists\nmay more readily consider the advantages of Irish unity later on,\" lie\ndeclared.\nI Work for Unity\n1 And Joseph Devlin, leader nf the\nUlster Nationalists, that party In the\nnorth which hopes for the union of\nail Ireland, told hfs followers: \"Tbe\nproper way to bring about unity is\nhot by fighting for It, but by working\nfor It. Ulster cannot be coerced Into\nunity wtth the rest of Ireland by\nforce. The only real union can be\nbrought about by allowing the old pas- :\nsinus to die and by depending less\n. upon shibboleths and more on charity\nand good will.\"\nA survey of official and other authoritative opinion on both side:* nf the\nborder showed a prevalent belief that\nWhat has happened In Ireland c n best\nbe Illustrated oy two Feb rua ires, a\nContrast of the reigning peace with\nthe terrible days of 1922, when no\nhian's life seemed safe on either side\nOf the disputed border. In February,\n1022, the Ulster border was literally\nringed with steel; thousands of Ulster\nspecial police were mobilised; raiders\nfrom the south had penetrated Ulster\natid selg'd hostages; Ireland south of\nthe border was a sealed book to those\nWho lived  In   Ulster.\nCordial JUlatlons\nFebruary, 1926, round normal and\ncordial relations between Dublin and\nBelfast, and with London. Sir James\nCraig's advice, that north and south\nshould turn their mindu from those\nmatters which have divided them, is\nbeing followed. The north has reduced\nlti costly police force. There has been\na speedy release of political prisoners.\nThe London agreement, by abolishing\n\u2022he abortive council of Ireland, which\nwas most Irksome to Ulater, has substituted   friendly   cooperation.\nOne of the most Important common\ninterests lit agriculture. Soon after\nthe London agreement wa\u00ab signed the\nUlster minister of agriculture went to\nDublin with hie staff to consult with\nthe free Bute's minister of agricultural and a reciprocal visit to Belfast\nlonger\nable   to   rely   on   support   from   Dublin,\nI .\\     abandoned   their   boycott   of   the\nI r     legislature,     and     Nationalists\narranging   to   take   thrir   places  as\nofficial   parliamentary   opposition.\nin no field  is tho  new era better ex-\nnpllfied   than   in   sports,   which   have\nxerted   a   great   unifying   influence   in\nIreland.\nSport Has No Bounds\nRxaetly four years after the great\nraid of February. 1*22, ever the border Into L'lster, Ernest Crawford, captain of the Irish rugby football team\nwhich recently defeated England for\nthe first time since 1911, rose at tbe\ndinner celebrating the match, and said;\n\"Sport knows no boundary From Ulster and Munster. from Connaught ami\nLelnster and all Ireland our team was\nrecruited.\" Ulster and Cork teamed together, while the score which clinched\nthe victory was made by Frank Hew 111,\nson of a business man In Sandy Kow.i\nthe hub of Ulster Orangeism, from a\npass by Denis Cussen, a Dublin Catholic.\nBefore the match Timothy Healy.\nonce hated by all Ulster Unionists and\nnow governor-gene ral of the Free\nState, passed among the players, from\nnorth and south together, and wished\ntiiem   the  best   of   fortune.\nThe picture Irish leaders paint is\nnot all rosy, though hope and friendliness are pronounced. Sir James\nCraig is i'dvacating the removal of\nthe customs barrier between the two\nstates, while Ernest Blythe, the Free\nStale finance minister, emphatically\ndeclares that It will be maintained.\nThe north generally believes the customs belt Is stereotyping Irish partl-\nIlon   as   nothing   else   could.\nAnother shadow in the picture Is the\nsentimental legislation passed by the\ndail eireann, such as the creation of a\nseparate coinage. Issuing of stamps\nwithout the King's head and expunging\nthe King's name from official docu-\nm* nis. All this bos an adverse effect In Ulster, und In Belfast there Is\na popular saying tbat nothing would\ndo more to bring the north and south\ntogether than for the dail to take a\nholiday for a year.\nunable  t\nordinary\nbroader\nadded.\n'Other\n.\u25a0It!.\nound\ndown   tn\nthemselvei\nhumdrum\nseeing     i\n.erseas.\"    h>\nexistence     alter\nIde    of    life\nget tired of struggling along\nn  po>\ndart.\n.11 v\nud  set\nnt   to   make\nlie\ntampered.\"\nA Manchester official said that a\nlist of 93 missing husbands and 10\nmissing mothers, which has been published by Ihe local authority with an\noffer of V- reward for information of\nthe whereabouts of any of the persons\nnamed, was larger than the previous\nlist, which was published in 1920, and\nmueh   larger   than   prewar  ones,\nIi represented only a proportion of\nthe men who were missing, since u In-\neludi d only those who could noi be\ntraced by ordinary means and for\nwhom they were advertising only ns a\nlast r\" source. Appended are reports\nfiom  some   of   the   principal   town:\nLiverpool\u2014No fewer than 500 husbands are wanted for desertion\u2014out\nof   a   total   population  of   800.000.\nBirm'ngham\u2014Many husbands missing. No reward la offered, the guardians   I, aving   it   to  the   police   author!-\nDENIES CRITICISM\nOF AMATEUR HOCKEY\nMEDICINE DAT. March 21. \u2014 A\nrecent dispatch from Boston, the text\nof which if was claimed emanated\nfrom William C. Trout, prominently\nidentified with the amateur athletic\nmovement of the United States, which\ncast serious reflections upon the amateur status ot the athletes making\nup the personnel of the Canadian\nhockey team at the Olympic games.\nThe alleged statement was promptly\nchallenged by officers of the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada and\nthe Canadian Amateur Hockey aMO\nelation, as well as the Canadian\nOlympic committee. Chairman B. W.\nBellamy, of the publicity committee\nof the A.A.U. of C, announces that\nMr. Prout, In hla reply, expresses\nkeen regret that any of his remarks\nhad been so Interpreted, and he adds:\n\"I cannot make it too clear that I\nhad absolutely no Intention of reflecting on the amateur standing of\nany Canadian athletes or the In-\ntertfrelatttm ftf Canadian amateur\nrubs, whether in hockey or any\notln r   sport.\"\nAccording to Mr. Bellamy. Prout\nexpressed siiipri-ie that any Buch alleged sentiments had betn given\npublicity In the daily press of Canada   or   the   United   States.\n\"Anything I said In the way of\nrriticlsm,\" Mr. Prout explains In his\nletter, \"was directed at amateur\nhockey in the United Slates, and I\nsurely had no intention of reflecting\nin any way on Canadian amateur\nhockey. I am sure that my remarks\ncipiild not be understood as being\nsuch a reflection, as you know that\n1 havo thi\" greatest admiration for\nthe Canadian athletes and the manner\nin which amateur athletics in Can\nids.   nre   conducted.\"\ntie\nliud   the   m<\nby   general    lit-\nig.      No    row.\nqulries.\nHuil\u2014A    few\ni fined.\nNot! Ingham Fifty nusbands \"wanted.\"    Reward  Jl\".\nPortsmouth- Thirty husbands miss-\nIng out of a'.total impulatlon of 250,-\n000. Reward -JiP. It is the experience\nof the gu i-dlanli that it is easier in\nfind the men when they go abroad than\nif they   rt main   jn   this country\nDcibv\u2014Tbe number Is considerable\n$5   reward.\nSouthampton\u2014Many   ' missing.      Re-\nward   Jl\".\nLeicct.\nward   $10.\nSwansea \u2014There are 97\nmissing. In 19_!5 a raw rd\noffered.\nCard'ff-\nwho   havt\nchildren   I\ncut   cbib'.i\n--Number    not    large.\nRe\nhusban\nf |10 w\n-The    number    of    husbands\ndeserted    their    wives    and\ni   191.   and   another   20   with- )\nn  have deserted their wlv\nTo Kill Unwanted\nAnimals by Means\nCarbon Monoxide\nPITTSBURGH, Pa., March 21. \u2014\nA way to make use of the carbon\nmonoxide poisoning in the exhaust\nof on automobile has been discovered\nby officials of the Western Pennsylvania Humane society. Suffering\nand unwanted animals will be asphyxiated   by   the   exhaust.\nSuperintendent L. W. Ahn of the\nHumane society, after conferring\nwith Dr. H. lt. Hhw.vm- of the Pittsburgh station of the United States\nbureau of mines, reported that death\nhy carbon monoxide poisoning Is\nbe*t suited for the disposition of animals because It ls swift, painless and\nsure.\nTrucks of the Humane society\nhave been equipped with an outfit\nso that suffering animals found on\nthe street and elsewhere may be put\nout of their misery without taking\nthem to the society's headquarters.\nwhere a lethal chamber hai also\n^been   Installed.\nBritish exeine figures for the past\nyear show ihe consumption of wine\nIncreased Ul per cent., while that of\nother it;i ti*. rx dropped.\nAfter A Bath.\nWith\nCuticura Soap!\nDu.t With\nCuticuraTaIcum|\nD.Mo.i.lr M.dio.t.d\nOr n*..in_   Fr\u00ab_ran\u00ab\u00ab\nFOR CYSTITIS,\nPROSTATITIS OR\nURINARY ILLS\nTake Our Verbal Xemtdiss\nArticle on Diseases of Men not\nmentioned In medical works.\nHooks on fikln Diseases, pamphlet on Diseases of Women, Treatise on 6ft commonest complaints,\nand advice, free by mall. Thirty\nyears' experience here and In Old\nCountry. Without wishing to disparage your local medical men,\nmay we suggest you write us before believing your case   hopeless?\nTHS ElfGLISH HERBAL Dig-\nPENSAEY,   LIMITED\n1359 D*Tle Vt, Tanoouvsr, B.O.\nBC.'s Oldest Herbal Institution\nOur Specialty Treatment by Mall\nSpecial\nSailings\nto EUROPE\nFrom New York\nNow is the time to make\nyour reservations to Europe\non these luxurious cruise\ns hips, sail ing from New York.\nMonoclass (one class) cabin\nand third class passage is\navailable on the\nS. S. MONTROYAL\nto LIVERPOOL\nApril X, 19X6\nafter cruising the West Indies.\nFirst, second and third class\nreservation! can be made\non the\nEmpress\/Scotland\nto Southampton\nApril X3, X9X6\nwhen this splendid ship will\nbe back from her annual\ncruise around the world.\nCanadian Pacific service and\nhospitality give unusual\nenjoyment*\nFurther information from\nlocal steamship agents or\nJ. 6. CARTER\nDistrict   Passenger  Agent\nNelson.   B. C.\nian\npOOKfortheOster-\n-\\_,moor label and for\nthe Ostcrmoorcdgt tape\nbefore you buy.\nJja everywhere in Canada t\u00a3\u00bb\nCountless thousands rest better\non Ostermoors yet save money\nAre you getting as sound and\nhealthful sleep as your neighbor? Are you saving as much\non your bedding as she?\nYou can answer \"yes!\" only\nif you are sleeping on an\nOstermoor. For more than 30\nyears it has been without question Canada's finest white\ncotton felt mattress. Its record\nsales of last year prove again\nthat its comfort, long-life,\nand value have no equal.\nSee the Ostermoor today at\nyour merchant's. Huge production alone makes its low\nprice possible. Long life\nmakes its nightly cost less\nthan cheaper mattresses.\nBe sure to find the Ostermoor,\nlabel. And ask to see the famous\nSlumber King spring, $12.\nOstermoor\n'Built for Sleep by\nSIMMONS\n\u2022rri(_i-T.i.uo:x_iii-Uit-i.x___S'.X'3\nMore to Be Proud of\nYour home means more to you than almost\nany other place. You are proud of the things\nthat help make it home. You like to have\nguests come, friends stay, to share in those\npleasures.\nAdvertisements give you a new pride of\nhome. They help you put inside it better\nthings to live with, relax in, listen to, enjoy.\nThey describe these better things, tell where\nyou can buy them. With the aid of advertisements you can keep your home in excellent\ntaste. You can put on your table the world's\nfinest foods, in' pleasing table settings. You\ncan provide soap, towels, linens\u2014a joy to use.\nYou can entertain with music that comes as a\ngift You can know of the new things that\nwill deserve your greater pride, and obtain them\nwith surest ease.\nRead the advertisements.   They tell honestly of\nconveniences to make your home happier.\n.; .\nMt\n THE KELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\n\"Page Seven\n3o1\nlOUGARS DEFEAT ESKIMOS 3 TO J\nSI GUE\noralis\nkate    Around... Edmonton\nTeam Ior Three-One\nVictory\nj Fort William Is\nProtesting Game\nWith Kingston\n>NE COUGAR GOAL\nIS DISALLOWED\n[fans Litter Ice With Every*\nthing Hancfy; Play Again\nin Vancouver\nVICTORIA,       March      21.\u2014Letter\nttilck's   world's   champion   Cougars\nok   another   step   nearer   to   their\ncond   consecutive   Western   Hockey\nague   championship   here   Saturday i\nght when they stepped around the \u25a0\ndmonton Eskimos for a 3 to 1 win. I\nwas the first game of the  finals I\nthe   title.      The   Cougars   enter .\n|e   second   game   in   Vancouver   on i\nondfly  night  with  a two-goal  lead. |\n'lie niay be sufficient to bring them\nirough If the champions can  mnin-\nkn   the   stout   defence   which   they\nkve held  bo  far ln tbe playoff seta.\n'A   great   uproar   occurred   In   the\nSlid period when Ion called back a\n\u2022nt on Victoria. The score at the\nwas   S   to   0   in   favor   of   the\nUmgars.     Halderson   netted   a   clean\nI >al   on   a- pass   from   Frederickson\nFORT WILLIAM, March 21.\u2014At the\nconclusion of last night's Kingston-\nFort William Junior hockny game, local\nfeeling ran so high against Mitchell,\nthe eastern umpire, that he had to bo\nescorted under police prntect'on to the\nY.M.C.A., with the crowd pelting him\nwith Ice and snowballs. Later, he was\ntaken out of the building through an\nentrance In the rear of the basement\nand escorted to his hotel, The local\nfans were of opinion thnt he had given\nthe Fort WllliHni boys the worst of\nthe deal, and hud allowed the visitors\nto hold and trip without penalizing\nthem.\nManager H'.ne, of tbe Fort William\nteam, is quoted aa saying tbat the\nseries with Kingston will be appealed\non the grounda of Inefticent referee-\ning and short time in tbe last period\nof Saturday's game.\nVflRSlffllTS\nGUNNERS'TEAM\nBY 10NE eOftl\nMAROONS HAVE\nTWO-GOAL LEAD\n0NPI1TSBURGH\nSpeedy   Game   in   National\nPlayoffs; 12,080 Fans and\nMany Turned Away\nSPEED OF PIRATES\nUSED BY THE MAROONS\nPittsburgh    After    Taking\nLead Are Beaten at\nOwn Game\nPITTSBURGH, Murch 21. \u2014 The\nMaroons of Montreal, by virtue of\na well planned systematic form of attack, have a two-goal margin on\nPittsburgh in tbe piaydown for the\nNational Hockey league championship.\nWith the une of strategy Bddl\"\nGeirard led the holders of the\nACond position in the league to an\nhonestly earned 3 to 1 victory Against\n'he locals Hat urday night. It was\nrip-tearing   battle   from   the   start\n-^&~\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\n..-\n-s\nSCOTTISH   Cl'p\nGLASGOW, March ft.-4ti.ul__ ln\nthe semi-final iouik! of the Krottlxh\nFootball association cup competition\nplayed Saturday:\nAberdeen,   1;   Celtic,   2.\nSt.   Mirren,   1;    Hangers.   0.\nWRRXHAli; Wales, March 21 \u2014\nBnflaad defeated Wal__ Sutuiday in\nan international soccer match by two\ngoals   to   one.\nGn, \u2022      .      \u00bbl     ,   i ! with  tin? Pirates displaying a spred,*,\nunner nayer in Accidental; offensive  and  tbe  Montreal  .,..,\n.a        c ii]\"'     \u2022      rt     i  answering will*\nMove scores Winning Goal ami an iron \u2022.*.\nAgainst Own Team\nh   m.ichinelllie\n1 defence. Mora than\n12,000 jammed  DuQuwme Guillen for\nthe  tray,   another  2000   were   turtitd\n.  [awav   owing*  to  the  lack   of  seating\nOTTAWA,  March  21.-After  ono  ot  \u00abl'ace, _bnt  the  seats sold   were   little\n'\u25a0he   most   exciting   struggles   of   tiie\nused    for   it   was   the  sort\nif   battle\nKeats    protested    so   effectively i local   hockey   season.   Toronto   Varsity  that  \"\"tSJ  u'c  galleiy  o:i  its  f.?t.\nVit'he got  Ion to change his  mind,   defeated   Ottawa   Gunners   here   last       , fMI\u00ab \u00bber Hnnml\nihe goal decision did  not please the   night,   5   to   4,   In   the   first   gai.-_   of      '\"  'h,s rll>' \u25a0*\u2022 I'\"\"\"\u2122  ?\u00ab\"  'a,v\"\nInn, who littered the ice with every. I a home-and-home series  for the east-   \u00b0r(\"'   ''y  \"8  'n\"ch,  \" \u2022  \"?\u201e 3 .'*'   \"\"';\n\u25a0Ting that wasn't  nailed down. ern   Canada   amateur   hockey   cham-  F\"r [_* V.1\".  T \u25a0   .     I\"?ta\" **\"'\n\u25a0 The calling hack of that goal kept plonshlp. , charge aft. r charge Into the Mont-\n\u25a0Mrnontln ln the fight. KIght on The second and final game will J\u2122*1 territory. The Matoons were\n*iV   of   this   Kdmonton   got   through ! be   played   on   Toronto   ice   tomorrow   <*\"\"\">  '\"'  \"*\u201e'       defensive  and   the\n\"     their   only   goal.     The   Cougar. ' night,  and   the  students  have  a  one-  J1'\"*^ * 1'terally   poured   rubber   Into\n>re still hot under the collar at the   goal   margin   to   work   on   In   the   re-  *__*   6-_\\F'J'___, \u00ab'J?.\u00ab   JJ^Li-   !\u00ab\nRverse  and could   not  ballast  them- ; tutn  engagement.     Lady.Luck   laid  a    \"f*,   *'' \"'^.\u201e\u201e,?_e     SitfEoe.I     \u00bb\"\nwhen    Stanley   kidded   them I heavy   hand   on   the   chances   of   the    \"g ,, '?*      ''  a\"'\"<\"\u25a0'\"\"_\",\"'\"t'J.\u00bb\n\u25a0 to giving him an opening to shoot. I local tetm. and it was a fluke goal \"\"'' fr\"*\"\"ni llne \u00bb'\"} ' cu\"\u00ab\"*\"'\nLnfey. master that he ta with a that gave the h!g blue team Vl,' iZtata^L^S^F^r'nlZ\nKick, went close in. made no mis. margin on the evening's scoring. uk?'*,!\u00a3__.____)\" .Jf0. .'i\"(.hn\u201e Vhe gr \"\n\\ke   and   beat   Holmes.     The   game ] With   the seore  deadl^Uoj  \u00ab\u201eh   .i,\u2122, ute\u00bb r\".m \"\"   I\"1\"\"1\" \"\u25a0''  lh0 *'\u25a0'\nmuch  more  open  than the  se-\nwlth      Saskatoon\n_,,        , minutes   to   go,   there   was   a   faceoff\n,.u   ,. Edmonton    l\u201eBldp   the   Qunn\u201e   red   \u201e M e   '\nsened up with, three-man rushes that   \u201e_. Hudson t,_n  h...\u201ej .    ,\\   '\u2122orln\nfd the Cougars rattled.    The Cham-    wit, __,\u201e,,'? at lhe *_*\u2022\nMunson missed, but Moran connected.\nling efforts ot tbe Pirates finally\nbote fruit when Roger Smith, lanky\ndefence ninn Jumptd In the opening\ngoal  of the  game.    The  Montreal*)\nBy AL DKMAREE\n|pormer Pitcher New York  Glanto.)\nEvery   ball   club   Is   split   up   into\nIiommates during the spring  train-\ng and playing season, aa two  play's are alloted to each room in the\niteli  around   the   circuit,\nI had quite si collection of room-\n! ates myself during my 17 years in\ngame.    Fred    Snodgrass,    .Mm\nIhorpe,   Milton   Stock,   Heinle   Zlm-\nlerman. Bill Rarlden, Walter Holke\nfid   Larry   McLean   were  some   of\n'\u25a0e boys thot I shared a room with\ni r   a   season   or   more.\nI There Is something pathetic about\nommates.        Two   players   will   be\nrown into almost constant contact\n(Jth each other for yearn, day and\nght and then one or both of them\nill drift out of the league and bo-\n\u2022me separated, and quite often\ntrough a strange prank of fato their\nlads never cross again. They only\niWw where their former buddy Is by\n[eing his name In the box acoro of\ndistant  league.  \u25a0, .. .,\nstrong   tactics   around   their   cltade\nbut to the onlooker it \u00abeem*d  they\nwould   be   forced   down   before   the\nsuperior tpeed of Cleghnin's charges.\n_ ..--.-- ,     With the coming of the second pe-\nConsideration must  be made for the  riod,  however,  Geirard sent his  men\nfact  that  the  Toronto  team   took  the tn t0 figljt th(i Pir;ite crow with thtir\nIce handicapped through sickness and  own     weapon      lightninglike     speed.\nthat   neither  TrottiPr nor  Porter  were   Ke}\u00bb   Stewart,   the   CPiiter   pin   of   the\nIn   uniform,     The   latter   was   taken   Maroon    attack,    led    his   wings   ou,\nto  a   local   hospitnl  after   arrival   b (rushes far Into the Pittsburgh tone.\nthe c!ty.on Saturday with ear trouble.The   Pirates   fought   buck   viciously,\nbut   the   bruising   they   bad   received\nto    his    own    men,    he    clubbed\nstraight  into   the  Gunner   net,   giving\nVarsity the odd   goal   In  nine. '(\nToronto   Crippled\nions had  seen  nothing like  that  in   25\"j;   a't'tTmpting   ^\"'pnss^JrS  had   bten   playIm'  w,,h   Wepttonally\n'e     SaHkntoon     battles     and     were    --     \u2022\u2022 '      *    \"'   pass    ll    \"acK  ntranm   tanHn-   **-__\u201e__    \u00bb,,,,,\u201e   \u201e\u25a0\u201e.,__\nught  right   out   of  their  stride.\nJust    a    Minn'fc\nIt   was  a   miracle   that   the   Eskl-\nos  did   not  get  through  and   score\nthe first half of the opening\nriod. They had some grand op-\nrtunltlcs, but Holmes turned them\nck with hair raising saves. The\niugars finally steadied down and\naypd man for man. The sting of\ne Edmonton attack was pulled and\n*fi champions went out to take their\nace in the sun. Hefore the first\nriod had ended thp Cougars were\ntstepping the Eskimos nnd had\nid many sizzling shots on Stewart\n;mour.\nThe -Ksklmon wore outplayed In\ne second pet Iod and goals by Poy*\n\u00bbn and Halderson came as the relit of a continuous pressure by the\nmgars. The two fast forward lines\nI the champions were too fast for\ne reliables of Edmonton and only\nme thrilling clearances by Dtewait\n\u25a0pt  Victoria   from   moving   farther\nthe front.\nHart gave the Cougars another\n*1 in the third period and then\nme Stanley's counter after the\nuabble. The game was unmarml\nf any rough play. It was the fill game of the season here and\nis witnessed by a capacity crowd.\n(Roomies' Often\nPart Forever\nAfter Season\nT.    O'Neill\nRockburn\nHalliday\nH.   O'Neill\n\u2022   O'Conner\nand   a   bud   case   of   the   flu,   whiK.\nPorter's     condition     prohibited     him\nmaking the trip to Ottawa.    However.\ntbe  rest   of   the   team   showed  a  real\ngood  game  throughout.    Jess   Carrick\ndid    not    accompany    the    team,    but\nTroisier's    illness    here    prompted    a\nwire    being    lent    to    Toronto,    and\nCarrick arrived on  a later train,  and\nwas    in    uniform     before    the    first\nperiod   was  very   long  under   way.\nLineup\nVarsity Pns'tion Gunners\nGoal\nSullivan       Seed\nDefence\nWright    \u25a0 \u25a0\t\nKirkpatrick   \t\nCenter\nPlaxton     \t\nWing\nHudson   \t\nRichards   \t\nSubstitutes\nPark      ,..      Wagner\nCarrick          Moran\nMueller \t\nReferee\u2014He wit son,   Toronto. *\nSummary\nFirst period\u20141, Gunners, O'Connor,\n4:10; 2, Varsity, Plaxton from Hudson.   11:30.\nSecond period\u20143. Varsity, Plaxton,\n6:21; 4. Varsity. Richards from Plaxton, 2:39; 5, Gunners, O'Conne\", 3:21;\n6, Varsity, Kirkpatrick from Plaxton.   2:00.\nTb'rd period \u2014 1, Gunners. H.\nO'Neill from Holiday. 5:30; 8, Gunners. HsJUday, 8:4$; !\u00bb, Varsity, Hudson, 4:09.\nPenalties\nFir** period\u2014H. O'Neill, Plaxton\nand Kirkpatrick, two minutes each.\nBecond period\u2014l'lax ton, O'Connor,\nRichard! and Rockburn, two minutes\neach.\nThird period\u2014Richards, Carrick, H.\nO'Neill and O'Conner, two minutes\neach.\nKING GEORGE IS\n'GATE CRASHER'\nTurns    Up    Unexpectedly    at\nEnglish-French Rugger\n. Battle\nLONDON, March 21.\u2014King George's\nprocMvity for. traveling and appearing\nin public often causes remark, even\nin these' days when hardly a day\npassos when Home member of his\nmuch-traveled royal family does not\nJourney   to  some   public   function.\nThe King Is particularly fond of\nappearing unexpectedly at football\ngames and other events which attract large crowds. Recently, without any announcement of his Intention, he motored to Twickenham\nfor the rugby match between England and France, and the royal automobile was caught Ih the mile-long\nstring of vehicles moving slowly to\nward -the Reld. '\nKing George reached the grounds\nonly a few minutes before the kick-\noff, but seemed to enjoy the experience of being caught ln the traffic\nJam at the gates. When hla car\nreached the entrance R was foUnd\nthat all parking* space Inside was\nfilled. While officials were holding\na hurried discussion as to how to\nprovide for His Majesty, the King\nand his party left their motor and\nproceeded into the field on foot. The\nKing took his place ln the long line\nof football fans and the only distinction made in his favor was that the\nAt   Augusta-\nToronto   1,  Detroit  7.\nAt  Sarasota\u2014\n'few York 4, Washington  3.\nAt Fort Worth\u2014\nm_|     Chicago   5,   FVt   Worth   4.\nturnstile  keeper passed   him  without -At St. Petersburg\u2014\n(demanding a ticket.      , '    Philadelphia 1, New York 6.\nat the hands nf the-Maroons in the\nopening stanza had effectively weakened them. Most of their dash was\ngone and they willingly fell back\nto t!'e defence of their cage\nBut the Montreal bombardment\nwas -int to be denied and after 14\nmlnufes of the hrated charges, Reg\nNoble tor? ih rough and *ii seconds\nmore had been ticked off by tbe\nclock when \"Punch\" BroadbEnt and.\nCharlie Dinsmore, the latter cluing\nsub, rushed with a smooth working\ncombination nnd (he second Montreal\ntally was registered. Ting oal went\ntn Dinsmore on a hammering shot\nfrom  close  In.\nPhillips   Scores\nThe final 2() minutis of play was\nnearly a repetition of the second peiiod, only the ailing hand of Ger-\nrard appeared even Stronger. The\nfinal goal of the contest went to Billy\nPhlilipa, spectacular forward line\nreserve, after one of the prettiest\npieces of stick handling of thp evening. Capturing the puck away fiom\nConacher ntar center ice with a\npoke check, the diminutive sub went\nsquirming through the slashing Pirate opposition to send a choppy\nbackhander behind Worters from\nclose-in.\nBoth teams left for MontreaHtfaRt\nnight   where   they   will   clash   in   the I\nfinal game tn decide who shall meet [\nthe Ottawa  Senatois for the National |\nHockey    league    championship    and\nthe Prince  of  Wales trophy.\nl.iiNii|i\nMontreal      position      Pittsburgh\nGoal\nBenedict       Worters\ndefence'\nNoble       Conachcr\nHolway       Smith\nCenter\nStewart       Milks\nWings\nBroadbent       Delragh\nSiebcit       MeCu:\u00aby\nSubstitutes\nRotheohlld     Cotton\nCarson   . i     Drury\nPhilips   _  Lowery\nDtnemore  ...'.   Spring\n ,\u2014       Btrliniiuette\nReferee\u2014S. If. Eaton, Montreal,\nSummary\nFirst pdiod\u20141, Pittsburgh, Smith,\n16:20.\nSecond period\u20142, Montreal, Noble,\n14:00; 3, Montreal, Dinsmore, 1:45.\nThird perfad\u20144, Montreal, Phillips,\n5:34.\nFenaltios\nFirst period\u2014Stewart, Broadbent,\nLowrey.\nSecond period\u2014Stewart, Lowery,\nMcCurry.\nThird   period\u2014Broadbent.\nHelen Wills and Her\nPartner Win Finals in\nthe Mixed Doubles\nLONDON, March 2\\.~Soccer games\nplayed Saturday in England:\nENqiJSH LEAGUE\nFirst  lHwslon\nArsenal, l; Manchester city, 0.\nAstofl   Villa,   2;   Sheffield,   2.\nBolton-Birmingham   not  played.\nBurnley,    5;    Sunderland,   2.\nLeicester City,   1;  Cardirr, 2.\nLeeds United,  2;  Blackburn.  1.\nLiverpool, l; Huddersfield, 2.\nManchester   L'nited, 0;  Everton, 0.\nNewcastle,   4;'   Bury,   i).\nNotts County,   0;   Rromwich,  0,\nWest Ham United. 3;^!tiit. nh*M_, 1.\nK.itond DhbiiAn\nFulham,   1;   Hull  City,   1.\nMiddle-bro. 3; Southampton, 0.\nOldham,  1;  Clapton,  1. mm   ,\nPortsmouth,  6;  Notts For'eat, I.\n1'refton,   6;   Blackpool,   4.\nThe Wednesday, 0; Portvale, 2.\nSouth Shields, 2; Da:lU\\gton, 4.\nStockport County, 0;  Cfattea, 0.\nStoke   city,   1;   Bmnsley,   Z.\nSwansea, 1; Bradford fiiy. 0.\nWolverhampton,   2;    Derby   County,   o.\nTldrd Division\u2014NorCiprn Section\nAccrlngton, 2; Barrow, o.\nBradford, 2; Doncaster, 0.\nChesteifldd,   3;   Southport,  0.\nDurham,  0;  Aahlngton, 0.\nGrimsby,    1;    Wrojcham,    0.\nHalifax-Nelson,   unplayed.\nHartlepools, 0; Wlganboro, 0.   ^,\nRochdale,   2;   New   Brighton,   1,\nRotherham. 2; Coventry City, 1. \u25a0\nTranmere   Rovers,   2;   Crewe   A.,   0.\nWalsall,   i);   Lincoln   City,   0.\nThlul DUislon\u2014Solium n PiHiion\nBournemouth.   0;   Mitlutall.-O.\nBUstol   Koveis,   0;  'Bvistid   City,   1.\nCharlton A., 3; Northampton, 3.\nIlxei r City,  0;   Southend \u00ab.,  1.   *\nGill Ingham,  0;  Aberdara A,,  U\nLuton   Town.   4;   Brentford,   2.\nMu-ihyi   Town,   0;   Brighton   and\nHove,\nNew]\nQoeei\nPalace,   3.\nReading.   2;   Norwich   City,   0.\nSwindon   Town.   2;   riymouth   Ar-\ngyle,   n.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nlir-i   IMvUl m\nCMtie.St. Johnstwie not  played.\nDon dee   United,   i;   Airdrle,   2.\nFalkirk,    1;    Cowdenbeath,    1.\nHibernians,  2;   Raith   Rovers, 0,\nKilmarnock, 5; Hearts, 1.\nMorton,   3;   Hamilton   Acada,   1.\nMotherwell,  2;  Dundee,  0.\nQoeens   Park,   4;   Clydebank,   1.\nI'attitk.    3;    St.    Johnstone,    1.\nSecond Division\nAllna.   1;   East   Stlrllnfcrfllre,''0.\nBathgate,   3;   Clyde,    7,\nBones,  2:   Armadale,   1.\nBroxborn United,  1; A;lhuilie,  2.\nDumbarton,   1;   St.   Bernards,   0.\nDunfermline,  2;   Ayr   United,  1.\nEast  Fife, 4;  Arbroalfr,  0.\nKings Park. 3; Third Lanark, 3,\nNithsdale Wandeieie, 3;  Sienhouse-\nmuir,   1.\nQueen of the South, 3; Albion Rovers,  3.\nESKS FIGURE\nON A VICTORY\nTHISEVENING\nShore, Star Defence Man,\nProbably Out of the\nGame\nVANCOUVER, March 21.\u2014Edmonton Eskimos arrived here this morning from Victoria where they encaged the Cougars on Saturday ni^bt\nin the first of the two-game series\nTor the Western Canada Hockey\nleague championship and tho right\nto go east to contest for the Stanley cup. The Eskimos spent the\nday resting up in preparation for the\ngame tomorrow night, and the Victoria team will be in on tomorieiw\nafternoon's boat. Indications *are\nthat the game will be witnessed by\na  capacity  house.\nManager Kenny McKenzie, in an\nInterview tonight, said he looked for\na win in the coming game, but he\nhlght be hnndicappi'el by the loss\nof Shore, star defence man, who ls\nsuffering from a bad leg and who\nwas bumped around considerable\nSaturday night. If he is unable to\nplay, Bobby Benson will be started.\nOtherwise the team will be as last\nnight.\nThe Edmonton team figure Saturday   night's  game  should   have   been\na tie, two of the Victoria goals being\nof the soft variety.\n\"If we have any luck and get an\neven break tomorrow we should overcome that lead and beat the Cougars\non neutral Ice,\" McKenzie said. A\nlarge crowd of Victoria supporters\nare Veported to be coming over- for\nthe game and the local sale is\npretty well completed. The arena\nwill   seat   10.000   persons.\nMickey  Ion  will  referee with  Carl\nBattell  as  Judge  of  play.\nUncap*\nVictoria\u2014Holmes, Loughlin, Fraser, Walker, FredeHckson, Hart, Meeking, Foyston, Oatman and Halderson.\nEdmonton\u2014Stuart, Stanley, Shore\nor Benson; Gagne, Keats, Sheppard,\nSparrow, Anderson and Brenot.\nADANACS WIN\nSENIOR HOOP TITLE\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.. Mac\/h\n21.\u2014Defeating the Duncan team here\nlast night 36 to 14, New Westminster\nAdanacs annexed the British Columbia basketball championship In the\nsenior A division.\nThe fastest mile recorl for walking\nfor an amateur Is held by Murray\nof Australia, in 6 m'nntes 22 4-5\nseconds, and by Oeorge Gouldlng,\nCanada, in America, ln . minutes 23\nseconds.\nA    new   football    policy   has   been\nj adopted bv Mldlebury collects  In Ver-\nMarch  21.1 mont.     Tbe   eleven    will    meet   only\ni teams    \"her   own    size.\"    instead    of\nand   former   Rutgers   roMege   captain,   tat'klinf  Iflr\u00abe   \u00bb\"<*\u2022\u25a0  8UCh  M   *\u00bb\u00bb\u2022\nSCHENECTADY,   N.   Y.,\n-Hcrbilt Meyer of the Newark A. C.\nraced to a new world's record of\n7 1-10 seconds ln the 60-yard low\nhurdles raco.\nand   Harvard.\n(Additional Sport on Page Nine.)\nrt.County, .1; Watford, 3.\ni   Park   Ranger*,   1;   Crystal\nWRESTLING   AND\nBOXING\nMiddleweight   Championship   of   Canada\nK.   P.   HALL,   TRAIL,   MARCH   24\nERNIE   ARTHUR,   Canadian\nv..\nSAM    PROKOS,    Ex-World'a\nChampion\nChampion\nBOXING\nFrank  Hilt vs. Slim  Meredith      \u2014      Jack\nOther   Prelimirmrie\nMcliaac vs. Joe Dominlco\nAdmission:   Ringside,   $1.65;   V\nenernl,   $1.10.\nPAISLEY AND\nCELTICS 09 TO\nCOTTESH FINAL\nCANNES, France, March 21.\u2014Miss\nHelen Wills, the American tennis\nchampion and her partner, Henri\nCochet,, won the finals in the mixed\ndoubles of the Cannes tournament\ntoday, defeating Miss Jean Radcllffe\nand Captain Bernard Meyer, 7-6,\n6-1.\t\nEXHIBITION BASEBALL\nRd*>nrprft add Aberdeen De-\nfeated in Semi-Final\nGames\nOLASOOW, March 21.\u2014The finalists of tin Scottish- Vup aie Celtics, the- present holders, and Pals-\nley Kt. Mlrien, theae clubs moving\nInio the |a\u00bbt stages of the com-\npetiilon by virtue of their victories\niver Abeid'en tmd Rangets, respectively, yesteiday. For the second\nyear in succes. inn Rangers were\nknocked out in the somi-flnal, but\nwluieas the deed in 1K2& was done\nby Celtics by five goals to nothing, it was accomplished yesterday\nby   St.   Mirren   by   a -solitary   goal.\nThe game was played at Celtic\nPark before 65,000 spectators. The\nPaisley team gave the best display\nof the  season and  all  through.\nSt. Minen's score came In the\nsecond half from Thomson. At Edinburgh, where the Aberdeen-Cetlc\ngame was payed 30,000 fans turned\nout and witnessed a fierce affair with\nmany hard knocks given and taken.\nThe game throughout was thrilling.\nCeltics won by two goals to one.\nrobsoTgirls\nbadly beaten\nTRAIL, March th\u2014In order that the\nproposed Robson vs. Trail ladles' has-\nketball match sliould proceed, three\nTrail girls went on the, lineup of the\nRobson team. Only two Robson .girls\nwere able to keep t'neir play engagement.\nHad the Robson team come as a\nunit, the disastrous defeat of 22-3\nwbich Robson sustained might have\nbeon  averted.\nThe  ten ma  were:\nRobson \u2014 Kathleen Bingay, Beatrice Jackson, forwards; Lillian Kre-\nmenko, center; Jean Butorac and\nOoldle Hall, guards.\nTrail\u2014A?nes and. Marie Roseman,\nforwards; Hetty Kerr, center; Betty\nWarden, M  Lauriente, guards.\n1 out of 4\nSelected!\n\u25a01\t\nTHE Goodyear Selected Dealer plan of selling tires helps to keep Goodyear prices low,\nhelps to increase the quality of Goodyear Tires,\nand improves the service you receive.\nIn two ways.\nFirst, it reduces selling costs.   Goodyear\nsells to only 2500 of the 10,000 tire dealers\nin Canada. Goodyear needs only salesmen enough to call on 2500 dealers\n, instead of 10,000. Goodyear needs\nonly billing clerks and stenographers and shippers enough to\nhandle the business of 2500\ndealers instead of 10,000. So\nGoodyear saves immense        -\nsums of money which help\nto keep Goodyear prices low\t\nor go into tire improvements.\nSecond, it enables us to select the best dealer out of every four.\nBecause Goodyears are the largest selling tires in Canada, most\ndealers would like a Goodyear franchise. But there are strict\nstandards to be met. Every Goodyear Selected Dealer must be a\ngood business man, running his business efficiently so that he does\nnot need an exorbitant margin of profit. He must appreciate the\nsavings to be made by concentrating on Goodyear Ti^es and so\nreducing his investment. He must pass these savings on to his\ncustomers in the form of service\u2014advice on the care of their tires,\nhelp in getting the most mileage from those tires.\nThis service is available to you from your nearest Goodyear\nSelected Dealer.\nGoodyear means Good Wear\nOOOD\nMADE\nCAN.V'A\nJE^L*%\nTHE  UNION  GARAGE,  P.O.\nBox 315, Trail, B. C.\nHENDRICK'S    GARAGE    &\nMACHINE   SHOP,     Kaslo,\nB.C.\nH&g.\nCOLUMBIA   GARAGE,   Ross- :\nland, B. C. ,'     \"-; *,\nW.  C.  DONALDSON,  Salmo,\"'.   \u2022\nB. C. .     : . -,      \u2022\nGobdvear Selected   Dealer in Nelsin Is        \u2022\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD. <\n** * *. *. \u25a0., . *.\nCor. Vernon and Stanley Streets.   Phone 35   _ \u25a0 \u2022    \u2022 \u2014 -, \u2022\u25a0;.**.'*\u25a0\u2022 '\n\u25a0\u25a0________________________\u25a0\n Page EigKl\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\nMarkets\nRESISTANCE FELT\nON ML STREET\nPressure Renewed With Motors\nand High Industrials\n.J' Feeling It\nNEW   TORK,   March   ?0.   \u2014   Belling\npressure   was   renewd  in   *r\u00bb*ay'\"  br'\u00ab*f\n\" sestlon  of  the  stock market,  but except   tn   the   motors  aim   a   i\u00abw   .ml\u25a0...-.-\ntrial  specialties,   particularly   the  bik.lt-\nfrlced issues, it encountered stronger\npslstance. Both the rail and industrial average!) showed jtnui.11 net gains\non the day. Total sales were 815,200\nshares.\nHudson was the target of another\nbear attack, being hammered from an\nearly high of H% to a new 1926 low\nat 81V closing at 92 fur a net loss of\n4^4 points oa the day or over 17 points\non the week. General Motors waa\nhammered down to 1X14. but snapped\nback to 122^4, off 1 net. Jordan re-\nCoveied an early loss of over 1 point\nand Mack Trucks closed fractionally\n. higher at 115H. after having touched\nIU  early   ln   the  session.\nWith the exception of' General Petroleum, which closed a point lower at\n62 on profit taking, most of the oil\nshares moved to higher ground. An\nextreme ?ain of \\\\ points in Standard\nOil of New Jersey and a 2-point gain\nIn' Barnedall \"A\" were among the features.\nA rather thin market developed for\n-'ome of the high-priced industrial specialties. General v \u25a0 *ic broke 6 V4\npoints,   to   808^ \u2022', at   the   bot\ntom.    Du Pont \\ 7  points   to\n110, a r .-: low i \" ur, and then\nral\" m  i. i t.t.    Wwi toppled o\n\u00ab|   pi.  na   to   a   new \\ 161^,   and\n-th\u00bb i    rty.imdea to   1'\nTho   ritn ng   iifldtrl\npor:   jipiisnnt   ,vr   bc\nrath'-!     etc'i:sive    h\nome ftiiw >ti li' I aliare\n\u25a0'.... Allied  CJ't-mlwl.   Amelia,\nfornla racking nnd Post urn\n'\u2022un.ong 'lie many active ls\u00ab\nnet ga'tv of a pcriut or mt\nTradh'n     in    MM*    rails\n*-*l\u00ab.\u00bbt. btt   ir.otieiate (ruins\n, Pd   by   S,    Paul   ts*ua*    Atli i\nT.'n*     Lo-   svilo    A    N_._rl.vn'\nPacific an1   J~rie  first  prefer:\nforeign    \u25a0 Tt hain.*\u00ab    t.\u00ab1ii\nquiet    tn.fi!\nquoted     aro u\nfrancs   Just   .\n3.53    cents,\npoints    to   12.\nvere   largely\nAmer. Loco.\nAmer. T. & J. .\nAmer. Tobac. . ..\nAna. Copper ...\nBait. * Ohio ...\nCan. Pacific ...\nCorn Products . ,\nGen.   Motors   ....\nInt.   Nickel   \t\nKenne. Copper ..\nN.   Y.   Central    ..\nNor.   Pacific    \t\nPacific  Oil   \t\nPhillips    Petr.    . .\nItatfM   Corp\t\nKMtaM Union OIL.\nPtan.   Oil   Cal.   .,\nIt**, on n. j. ..\nBtUt Corp ....\nTWt Gulf Sulph.\nPn. P-ciflc pfd..\nU. S. Steel pfd...\nWillys   Ovid.   pfd.\ni\"Ti\u00bbmi    merlin*:\n1441ft     and     Pn\nyesterday's   low\n\u2022 h   iloiy* rallied\n\u25a0 nt,.     Qiher  ohaii\n'.\"al *\nXarltt  3'tetfc tons\nL.^w     Cl\nWHEAT PRICES '\nCLOSE LOWER\nCorn    Stubborn   and   Finally\nScores  Gain  in\nthe Pit\nCHICAGO, March 21. \u2014 Immense\nliquidation sales in wlileh houses with\neastern connections took the lead, resulted today in forcing the wheat market to go 10He a bushel under the\nweek's best prices, but corn proved\nstubborn and finally scored gains.\nLeading eastern holders of wheat were\nsaid to have closed out their accounts.\nInfluenced a good deal by exceptionally favorable domestic wheat crop\nconditions.'\nClosing quotations on wheat were\nunsettled, %c to 2^c net lower, Ma>\nnew ft.67% to 11.57%, and July $1.38\nto %l.3$%, with corn at %c to %c advance, oats unchanged to \\4c higher,\nand provisions from 27c decline to a\nfiso of 2c.\nSterling Exchange\nMONTREAL. March 21. \u2014 Sterling\nexchange steady at |i.81 & 60-day bills.\nand  14.85%   demand.\nKoreign  bar  silver\u20146fic.\nCanadian dollars\u201411-32 discount.\n\u00bbanc*s\u2014Demand,   3.51^c.      *\n\u25a0 Lire\u2014Demand,   4.02c.\nNelson approximate rate sterling,\nMil, r\t\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, March 21.\u2014Eggs and\nbutter, firm; cheese, easy.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns, 21^c; finest   easterns,  47c.\nEggs\u2014Fresh extras, 40c to 41c; fresh\nfirsts.   35c.\nPotatoes,  per bag,   not  quoted.\nK'gh\nUi\nill\n\u2666SJ\n'&-'.\nIS-,\nM\ntill\nHi\nUt.\nSS=V_\nU2H\nsWa.\n97S_\n111*\nltH*.\nu_\\\n\u00ab*\nto '.\n02 _,\n112%\ns-\u00bb\n44\n2Si_\np \u2022',\n41 tt\nSS\nJ54\n[8IV4\nin*\n%r\\\n'_;*\nM*\n\u25a0 \u25a0th.\nUS\n**.\ntiC\n*i '.\nn%\n125*.\n97'5\nWIMHIFEO   ORAIH   QVQTo.T-.OVS\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh      Low\nOlo\u00ab*\nHay    .. .\n14N_,\nUS\"*     14\u00ab_f\n147.1,\nJuly   ...\n146 4\n14\u00ab1_     144H\n145**-,\nOct.     .. .\n129!,\n130         128%\n12:; ,i\nOats\u2014\nMny   ...\n46 V,\n4\u00abK       4t\u00ab,\n+\u00ab*\nJuly   ...\n47H\n47Vi       47\n4   '<\nOct\n\u25a0 4:.\nBarley\u2014\nHay    .. .\n60\n\u00ab'\".          OD';\n60\nJuly   ...\n\"%\n\u00ab1        MVi\n'I*.\nFlax-\n7\nHay    . . .\n195%\n1'JK\".\n1.5H    : IB\nH8 4    IMS\n19:,\nJuly   ...\n'?\"!\nOct.    ...\n191\n197U    19\u00ab\nii.K\nRye-\nMay   ...\n17\n\u00ab7         M\\\nli-M\nJuly   ...\nttU\n\u00ab8            *\u00ab%\n87\n84%\nt ANCOUVER STOCKS\nBid\nAaked\nnc.   Mvi r\n....' (Jt\n1.05\nCork   Pr  vine*    ..\n.05\nDunwell\n...    2 12\n2.20\nOlaciet\n12%\n.15\nOladt*..'.* \u25a0\u25a0   .\n...       37\n.39\nHow*   Sound   .\n...  32.50\nIndian   Mln\n'8     ...\n..      .07\n.119\nlm,    Cul\n.15\n.18\nL'.irky    JJin\nPUOItlhray\n.70\nNotion  1    .*\u25a0\nlver\n...      .12%\n.15\nPrenu-rr\n...    2.26\n2.35\nS.lvee   Crest    ...\n...      .14\n.15\nSllv.rsml'h\n...       .45%\nLe.'lsm.\".'*\n...     .0714\n.07%\nB.  C.   Mont\nana\n.00 3\n.5-16\nl>r.   Petroisu'.\n.l*2\u00bb_\nIRAK SLOW ON\nTORONTOMARKET\nBrazilian Active; Smelters Sell\n.    High, Then Ease\nOff\nTORONTO, March 21. \u2014 Trading was\nalmost at a standstill several times\nduring the two-hour Saturday market\non the . stock exchange. Brazilian\nTraction was the most active stock on\nthe list, closing at Ht%_ a recession of\n114 Clog'ng quotations were stronger,\nhowever, at \u00bb0% to SOU.\nSmelters sold as high as 205, and\nthen eased off to close at 203\\. Closing quotations on Smelters w\u00abre at\n205 \u00ab4   to  203%.\nOther changes: American Salesbooks\ncommon, off IS. ex-dividend; F. N.\nBurt, off H; Brompton, up V, Canners preferred, off 1'j; Steamships\npreferred, off \\; International Nickel,\noff  %; and Twin City, off IH-\nSPOKANE STOCKS\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nBid   Aaked   Close\nBrallllan           S9 ft\nWinnipeg   Electric         51\nSmelteri          J03%\nAmer.   Loco       99 \\\nC. P.  R     164\nStan.   Oil   New   Jersey          44\nAbltlbi            7\u00ab.\nAmer. Car A  Foundry    ;,.      18 %\nTeck   Hughea   ...  3 116\nHowe   Bound    12 50\nLucky   Jim    UK\nGladstone     37%\nSilversmith     47\nBurdens     03 ft\nLeadsmith     08\nCanadian  Steamship Ltnea  preferred,\ntl bid; common, 12%.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, March 31. \u2014 Flour\n10c to 20c lower at 19.15 to $9.35 a\nbarrel.\nBran\u2014523.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern, $l.r>5*t\u00a3 to\n$1.58%, May $1.51.\u00a3. July $1.40%.\nCorn\u2014No.  3  yellow,   67c to  69c.\nEASIER TREND ON\nWNTREAL MARKET\nSui rday Has Dull and Narrow\nMarket; Smelters and\nBrazilian Up\nMONTREAL, Marcfi 21. \u2014 Stock!\ncontinued to exhibit an easier ten-\nd( ncg in Saturday's dull and narrow\nma i net on the Montreal stork ex-\n<-hur<pe. Twin City, Sherwin-Willians,\n\u25a0VUvtG and Western (.Irocartt were the\nw->\\ issues to suffer declines of a\npoint or more, while strong spots In-\nulttdi-d Brompton and Montreal 1'ower.\nI.i.\u2022 s.'H nearly doubled the number of\nga!, s in an extremely narrow list.\nSini iters and Hrazillan ngain monopo-\nIit.,.,1 the trading, together furnishing\nuVrtr half of the entire turnover of the\nri'.nlng.\nConsolidated Smelters, thi' active\nleitdtr, closed nt 202 4 for a net gain\n\"f 14. Brazilian came second In vol-\nnvie of trading, and closed at 94 for a\nj :u-t loss of 14. National Breweries\nI Otm\u00ab third in activity and closed at\n*0   fnr a   net   loss  of   >i-\nMontreal Tower and Hank of Montreal, each up 1 point, were the Strong\nspots of the session's list, while Sherwin-Williams and Twin City, each\nwith a net loss (.f 1%, were the weak\nfeatures.\nOther changes: Asbestos, up %;\nAtlantic Sugar, off %: Brompton, up\n\\; Lyall. off ~\u00bb; Spanish River, off\nK; Western Grocers preferred off 1;\nand Winnipeg Electric,  up  H>.\nTotal sales \u2014 6754 shares; bonds,\n$29,1)00.\nClosing prices: Asbestos, PO Vfe; Asbestos. 76; Brazilian, 30; Breweries, 60;\nBrompton. 34 HI Cedent, 108; B. E.\nSteel second preferred, 8; Spanish common, 103H_; Montreal Power. 216; Quebec Power, 124; Smelters, 203%; Steel\nof Canada. 103; Atlantic Sugar, 25;\nTextile. 92; Winnipeg Electric, 61; U.S.\nSteel,   126; C.P.R.,   N.T.,   154%.\nMontreal Sal**\nMONTREAL, March 21. \u2014 Stock\nsales on the Montreal market Saturday: 60 Abltlbi, 50 Asbestos Corporation, 70 Atlantic Rugar, 18 Bell Telephone, 15 Belgo preferred. 200 B. E.\nSteel second preferred, IMS Brazilian.\n5 Canada Cement preferred, 10 Canada\nOar preferred, 73 Canadian General\nElectric preferred, 15 Canadian Steamships preferred, 15 Detroit Railways,\n35 Dominion Bridge, 20 iKiminlon Coal\npreferred, 10 Dominion Textile, 35 Famous Players preferred. 200 Lauren\ntide, 158 Montreal Power, 10 Montreal\nTramB, 96 Mackay preferred 536 National Breweries, 40 Ogilvie Milling, 10\nOttawa Power preferred, 200 Quebec\nPower, 121 Shawlnlgan. 25 Sherwin-\nWilliams, 10 Sherwin-Williams preferred, 1985 Smelters, 80 Spanish River, 6 Steel of Canada, 8' Steel of Canada preferred. UO Twin City, 160 Wln-\ni tdpeg Electric, 54 Woods Manufacturing. 4 Western Grocers, 3u Western\nGrocers preferred.\nGovernment bonds\u2014100 War loan\n1B25, H,0 Victory loan 1924, 750 Victory loan 1933, 400 Victory loan 1934,\n20,000 Victory loan 1937. 1000 refunding loan 1943, 1600 refunding loan\n19*1\u00bb   3500 refunding loan 1944.\nBonds-^-1000 C. C. Rubber, 500 Montreal Tram A.\nBanks\u201450 Montreal, 1 Nova Scotia\nand 17 Royal.\nPREMIER MINE\nNETSOVERTWQ\nMILLION, YEAR\nDecrease   Due   to   Lower\n\u25a0 Grades of Ore; Total Net\nProfit $2,013,481\nSPOK.WE, March \"21.\u2014The Premier Gold Mining pomp-iny, operating at Stewart, B.C., and nwn'd by\nresidents of Spokane and other placea,\ncanned $2,013,481 ln 192.'>. according\nto the annual report of II. A. Guess, ]\nvice-president and managing director.\nThia is before deductions for depli1-\ntlont depreciation nnd other expense*\nand  is  $708,124 less  than  In   1924.       1\n\"This decrease is due to the gradual exhaustion of high-grade ore, so\ncharacteristic of the earlier production years, and the consequent lower\naverage grade of tho ores mined,\"\nsays Mr. Guess. \"It was in view of\nthis condition that the doubling nf\nthe milling capacity for low-grnde\norea was undertaken last year. The\nbenefits will begin to appear on the\ncompletion of the new mill unit in\nMarch. j\nTax  Charge   Higher |\n\"Taxes were $405,848 in 1925, as\ncompared with $188,332 in 1924, although the earnings In 1925 were less.\nThis Is due to a ruling made last\nyear by the finance minister of British Columbia with respect to permissible deductions from earnings ond\nore depletion. Metal mining operations in British Columbia are taxed\nheavier than'in any other province.\n\"Tho estimated ore reserves at the\nend of the year were as follows:\nBroken In stapes, 243,511 tons averaging .64 of an ounce of gold am!\n1.47 ounces of silver to the ton or\n$21.62 groRS to the ton with gold al\n$20 and silver at 60 cents nn ounce.\nOpen   Fifth    Lewi   Thit   Year\n\"Assured \u00abnd probable unbroken\nore down to the fourth level, 315,481\ntons averaging .5 of an ounce of gold\nand 13.8 ounces of silver or $18.56 a\nton gross. As stated In the 1024 report, diamond drilling Indicated 146,-\n000 tons averaging .39 of nn ounce of\ngold and 3.2 ounces of silver below\ntho fourth level. More information\nconcerning the possibilities o$ this\nground is expected from exploration\nin 1926 on the fifth level, 270 feel\nbelow   the   fourth.\"\nStork in the Premier receded from\n$2\/36 to $2.15 since the appearance of\nthis report in stock exchange cities.\nJt advanced from $2.15 to $2.66 a\nmonth before the Issuance of the\nreport. The buying followed reported\ndiamond drilling disclosures in 192fi\nand a continuance of assuring conditions in the B. C. Silver, in which\nthe Premier owns 38 per tent, according   to   brokers.\nBusiness Facts\nRATES OF BXCHAH6E\nKEEP INTERNATIONAU\nTRAPe \u00bbAIA*CED\nInternational train has advantages\nfor  every   nation.\n*        *        r.\ninternational trade ( oap r.ol offer to\nanv nation the oppmiunity to get rich\nby constantly selliim more to torei__n\nmitlons than lt la baying from them,\nand plliiiR up the sntplim 'treasure.\"\nAlthough this might seem possible If\na nation continued With the balar.ee ot\ntrade always in her favor, in actual\npractice the adjustment of rates of\nexchange among nation* prevents such\na movement being retried   to extremes.\nAt present just such a movement has\namassed more than one-half the gold\nof th.\" world in the l'nited Stntes. The\nresult here is Readily rising prices.\nwhich in time will tend to affaM Hdjust\nthe balance  of  trade.\nThere are. howev r. definite advantages of international commerce. In\nthe first place, it enable! every country to enjoy goods which it does not\nitself produce, and, in ihe second plat**1.\nit enables each country to specialize\nin the form of production to which it\nis best suited and thus enjoy a maximum of satisfaction with economy of\neffort.\nEGGS DROP TO\nTHIRTY-FIVE\nCENTSJARKET\nRadishes and Greens Put\nIn Appearance in the\nStalls\nMINING MARKET  .\nHAS DULL FORENOON\nSaturday   Market  as   Dull   as\nAny During Past\nWeek\nTORONTO, March 20. \u2014 The closlnp\nRemlOQ of the week of the Standan:\nMining exchange, Saturday, was as dull\nas any of the week, and there have\nbeen some quiet Ones. Coincident with\nthe slight volume of trade, however,\nthere was a slight sign of firmness.\nNo remarkable chant; en took place.\nPome Mines firmed i>e, ni $18.50; anil\nColumbus Kirkland sold up I .\u00bb. at .1.\nfrown Reserve, gaining 1 \u2022% at 17-%,\nwas a firm spot in the silvers. Kirkland Lake ea*ed 1, at H\u00bb0; snd Tough\nOakes fractionally higher. Castle Trethewey at 162, ami MeKinley Itarragh\n1, at 19'\u00a3.\nToronto   Quotations\nBid\nKeeley              163\nMining   Corp\t\nN'ipissinB      \t\nWest   Dome     20 %\nDome     '      1945\nHoliinger          IvsO\nKirkland           mi\nLake Shore        1025\nMclntyro          2450\nTeck   Hughes           305\nAsked\n185\nlinn\n1 SIX!\n103\n111.'10\n2490\nA 10c drop on eggs was the feature\nof the Saturday market. Four week&\nago eggs were selling at 50c the dozen.\nTwo weuks ago they dropped 5c on the\ndozen, and lSc on two dozen. Saturday they sold at 35c the dozen and $1\nfor   three.\nApples were priced the same as last\nweek,   but   sales   were   slow.\nThree new items made their appearance\u2014homemade potted meat, local\ngreenhouse radishes and radish  greens.\nThere was a' good bake table where\nhomemade hread sold quickly at 16c a\nloaf, and rolls at 30c a dozen. Sales\nwere fair at the fretwork stall, where\nprices   ranged  from   16e  to  $2.\nThe  following are  prices quoted:\nKggs.   doien,   16c 3 dox for $1.00\nButter   lh 4fic\nFowl,   lb 30c\nSpring milk fed chicken, lb 40c\nBeef,   lb 10c to 25c\nBabv   beef,   lb 10c to 25c\nPork,    lb 20c to 30c\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, March 21. \u2014 Toronto \u2014\nWholesale, extras, 38c to 39c; firsts,\n34c to  85c; seconds.   29c to   30c.\nMontreal \u2014 Wholesale\u2014Extras, 39c;\nfirsts,   35c;   seconds,   30c.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wholesale\u2014Fresh extras,   38c;   firsts.   30c;  seconds,   24c.\nCalgary \u2014 Wholesale\u2014Extras, (9.50\nper  case;   firsts,   $8.50;   seconds,   $7.\nVancouver \u2014 Wholesale\u2014Extras, 28c\nto 30c; firsts, 20c to 2Sc; seconds hnd\npullets,   22c.\nChicago\u2014 Freeh, spot, 16% C; March.\n26\";,c; 'April, 28%c; November, 30 He;\nDecember. lO^C.\nNew York \u2014 Extra firsts. 30c to\n31c; firsts, 28^c to 29c; April, 29%c;\nDecember, 32?i,c.\nUsed Articlet\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nAdvertising\nHelpWwtea\nPosition* WnM\nLost end Fond\nLirestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Minei\nClassified Advertising Rates]  City Property for Sale\nWant  and  Classified  Advertising  \u2014\nOne and a hajf cents a word per insertion. If paid In advance. 6c per wcrd\nper week, or 22.4c per word per month.\nTiansient adh accepted ^nly on a casb-\nir-advance basis. Each initial, figure,\ndrllar Bign, etc., counts as one word.\nMinimum 25c, If charged 50c.\nBirths, Marriages, Dealhf and In-\nmemoriom Cards\u2014Three cents per word;\n50c minimum.\nLocal Beading- Notices \u2014 Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word. Blackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-five\nper cent discount If run dally without\nchange of copy for one month or nuru.\nWhere advertisement ls set out in short\nlines the charge Is 15c a line for Roman\ntype. 20c for blackface and 25c for blackface capitals. Minimum 35o, If charged,\n50c.\nIdste of WoddiniT Preeente, and Plor.\nal Tributes at Funeral*-\u2014 Ten cents pti\nLine.\nTWO LEVEL LOTS, cleared, no rocks,\nno stumps; water installed. Hox\n2501, Dally News.  (2501)\nFor Sale or Rent\nMale HeVp Wanted\nttXPEWENCET) NIGHT PORTKR \u2014\nApply from 9 to 11 a.m. New Cnind\nHotel. UJ64)\nWANTED\n\u2014  Ire\nempty.\ninarr\ned\nman.\nwithout\nfamily.\nto man\nstate  s\ntae ii\nit.\n. Ap-\nplicathn\nI   must\nJarr\nrequired\nand piv<\nreferences.    B\nrx 25\nb.\nDaily\nNewa.\ntmy\nMEN WANTED to learn Auto Tractor,\nBattery, Ignition, Oxy-Acetylcne\nWelding nnd Vulcanizing. We also\nteach Brick-laying, Plastering and\nTile-setting. Write or call. Hemphill Auto Engineering School, 10\nHastings St. E., Vancouver, B.C\n        <2257)\nILAS81K1ED ads bring  results qulckl)\nand economicalW     i He s  word\nFemale Help Wanted\nLADIES WANTED to learn Beauty\nCulture. Write or call for free catalogue. Moler College of Beauty Culture, 10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver.\nB.C,   f22r,m\nSituations Wanted Female\nFASHIONABLE DltESSMAKINO \u2014\nHandwork a specialty. 510 Carbonate street.    Phone  724. (2545)\nTOUNQ WOMAN warns worn by the\nhour; no washing. Box 2500, Dally\nNews, C25002\nMATERNITY CASES cared for; graduate nurse in attendance. 510 Carbonate.     Phone  724. (2489)\nI'l&L   your   wants   through   The   Dally\nNew\u00ab    olnsioifW    ontnmn\u00bb\nAgents Wanted\nCOMMERCIAL MEN \u2014 We have legal\ndevice to take place of slot mschlne.\nSide line. Commission only. Confidential. Business Stimulating Devices Ltd.. Box 98, Moose Jaw. Sask.\n(2092)\nFor Exchange\nEXCHANGE EQUITY $1450. new four-\nroom modern bungalow, 66-ft. frontage, on paved street, one block from\ncar. Point Gray, Vancouver, for store\nbuilding. Kimherley, or good interior\ntown. Particulars. Box 2516, Dally\nNews. (2516)\nBaiTISH COLUMBIA XGQS\nFresh extras. 28c to 30c; freeh firsts,\n26c  to 27c;  pullets,  24a\nLiver,   2 lbs.  for\nRahblt,  lb\t\nOx tongue, lb\t\nPotted   meat   \t\nHead  cheese,  lb.\nPotatoes,  7  lbs.  for\nCabbage,   lb\t\nCarrots,  6  lbs.   for   .\nLeeks,   bunch\n25c\n.. 25c\n.. 25c\n. . 20c\n.. 20c\n.. 2bc\n.. Bc\n.. 25c\nBe\nOnions, lb ,..    5c\nHorseradish,  lb   20c\nArtichokes,   4   lbs.  for      2Bc\nPlants, up from   30c\nMormamde.   lb 80c\nApples, 6 lbs., 2Bc; box $1 to $1.60\nTurnips,  lb     Be\nParsnips,  6 lbs. for  25c\nCheese,   lb 85c\nSausage, lb 20c\nCorned   Beef,   lb IBc\nRadish,   bunch       10c\nRadish   greens,   lb   10c\nFretwork     15c to $2.00\nHomemade bread, losf     15c\nHomemade   rolls,   dozen       30c\nHomemade   cakes    40c to $1.50\nFRUIT AND VEGETABLES\n. WINNIPEG \u2014 Ontario apples barrels\nSpy No. 1, $7.50 to $8.50; No. 2, $6.5\"\nto $7.50; Hampers No. 1, $2.76; No. 2.\n$2.50; Baldwin No. 1, $6.50; No. 2, $ti;\nGolden Russet No, 1, 17.50; No. 2, J6.\nTolman Sweet No. 1, $5; No. 2, $4.50;\nGreening. Hampers No. 1 and 2, (2.\nConsiderable quantity barrels Hampers\npoor quality. British Columbia apples\nboxes Delicious extra fancy, $3.50 to\n$4; Spitzenberg, Staymen, Newtown\nextra fancy, *3.25 to $3.35; fancy, $3;\nRome Beauty extra fancy, $3; fanry,\n$2,75; onions, Yellow Standard, cwt\n$3-50 to }2.75; imported celery 125-11\ncrate, $13; tomatoes, lug $5.50: Manitoba potatoes white Canada B, cwt.\n$2.10; onions Yellow Standard, cwt,\n$1.75 to $2. Car arrivals, March 4 to\n10; Ontario\u20141 apples (bushel baskets); Saskatchewan\u20141 potatoes; Manitoba\u20146 , potatoes; .Imported\u20142 tomatoes, 2 celery, 4 vegetables, I lettuce\n8 apples.\nREGINA \u25a0-- Business fair \u2014 Ontario\napples barrels Tolman Sweet, Baldwin,\nCranberry Pippin, Stark No. 1, $6.25\nto $6.75;- No. 2, $5.50 to $6; prairie potatoes Green Mountain Canada B, cwt.\n$2,50 to $3.25; white, $2.25 to $3; C\n$1.75 to $2; B.C. Delicious, Yellow\nNewtown extra fanev, $3.50 to $3.75;\nfancy, $3.25 to $3.50; Rome Beauty,\nWlnesap fancy. $2.75 to $3; Salome\nfaney, $2.60 to $2.75; C, $2.35 to $2.50;\nBaldwin fancy, $2.50 to $2.75; onions.\nYellow Standard crates, $3 to $3,25;\ncwt sacks, $2.75 to $3; potatoes Got*\nCoin, Netted Gem cwt, $3 to $3,25;\nWhite Cana**\". B, $2.75 to $3; tmporteo\ntomatoes Mexican lug, $6 to $6 50:\nSpanish onions, 140 lbs, $6 to $6.50;\nWashington apples Wlnesap C, $2.75 to\n$3; other varieties, $2.40 to $i:.60; Ciil-\nfomia celery cwt, $12 to $13. Car arrivals, March 3 to 10: B.C.\u20141 apples:\nAlberta\u20142 potatoes; Saskatchewan\u2014j\ncabbage;   Imported\u20141 apples,  1  lettuce.\nEDMONTON \u2014 Potato price* unsettled. Cariot mowuiu. *_ .\nFruit market fair, B.C. apples boxes\nGano and Greening fancy, $2.35; c-'-tes.\n$1.75; imported Yellow Newtown, Wlne-\nsnp C, $2.65; lettuce #\u00bb**\u00bb,\narrivals, March 4 to 10; \u2022 Imported\u2014\n2 apples, 1 lettuce.\nTELL   your   wants   througn   The   Dftlll\nMmra   oiftqalfieri   \"olumns\nLive  Stock for Sale\nGOOD P.EKKSHIRE SOW. two years,\nlong type, cheap. Mackereth, Brond-\nwater,   Lower   Arrow  Lakes,       (2557)\nJERSEY BULL. i4 months (papers);\nToulouse gander and two geese\n(purebred); two R. I. R. romters.\nMrs.  Grovenhuysen.  Silverton.   (2527)\nPUREBRED JERSEY BULL, two years\nold. from excellent R-O.P. stock\nlarge, good type; price reasonable.\nJ. B.  Markell,  Grand Forks, B.C.\nI       (2B25)\nYORKSHIRE  PIGS,   $6.50  each. Booth-\nby, Edgewood. (2379)\nYOU DONT-HAVE\nTOBEAMAGICIAN\nTO TURN THOSE\n1HK-W-11IIN(5\na IHT0 MONEY   \u25a0\nUSE, A\nARROW LAKES HOTEL. EDGEWOOD\n(furnished) \u2014 Twenty-one bedrooms,\ntwo bathrooms, ladies' lounge, gentlemen's lounge, large room for dancing, dining room, office, fifty dollars per month. Apply W. J. Williams,   Edgewood,  B.C. (2556)\nFOR \"SALE~OR RENT\u2014House on Sil-\nica street four lots and fruit trees.\nApply L. Grodzki, C.P.R. Flats, back\nof   simps,        (2543)\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nGOOD,   CLEAN   COTTON   HAGS,   five\ncents a pound.    Daily  News,     (1155)\nHIDES \u2014 J. P   Morgan. Nelaon. BC.\n(2256)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED   Housekeeping   Rooms   \u2014\nApply  Mack's Billiard Hall.       (2222)\nFURNISHED   TWO-ROOM    SUITE   \u2014\nKerr Apartments.         f2212>\nBoats and Automobiles\nWANTED\u2014Motor launch in good condition. Write J. Martin, Robson.\nRC. (2526)\nFOR  SALE\u2014Ford car and pole wapron.\nS.   P. Pond      l2493*\nFOR  SALE \u2014 McLaugiilln-P.uick Mas-\nter-Six     5-passenger     touring,     four\nwheel   brakes,   run   only   2600   miles;\nlike   new;   $1500   cash.     Apply   R    J.\nAnderson    Boiinin*rfon. < 2r-isi\nPoultry and Eggs\nHATCHING BGG8\u2014S. C. Rhode Island\nReds, University strain, $2.00 per 15.\nPostmaster,  Thrums. (2375)\nWE ARE STILL In the Leghorn Baby\nChick business. Appleton Bros., Procter. (2351)\nTOM BARRON AND TANCRED White\nLeghorns. 260-egg strain, three dollars setting. Rosen Richards, Box\n312,   Nelson. C2M1\nFarms-Ranches for Sale\nFOR  SALE\u2014Two full bearing ranches.\nPostmaster   Taehum f2.1R3>\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR RALE \u2014 Chicken bouse. Applv\n205 Silica street. (2560)\nCHILD'S COT, btiffet. Wilton rug, electric grill, kitchen table, fretsaw with\nmotor.    Boyd, 411 Cedar street\n (2544)\nEIGHT PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE,\nquarter-cut oak.^Phono 312L1.   (2514)\nONE CRITERION SIX-HOLE COOK\nSTOVE, with large water- reservoir,\nforty-five dollars; one Universal\nheater with twenty-four inch firebox, eight dollars; one Aladdin table\nlamp, seven dollars; all splendid condition.    Sam Nivcn,  Erie, RC   (2490)\nLOVELY, LATEST GLADIOLI \u2014 We\ngrow them. Twenty choice varieties\nnf peonies. Send for catalogue. M.\n&  0.   Dodds.   Sorrento,   B.C.       (2208)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS,\nBARBED  WIRE,  ETC.\nComplete line Pipe and Fittlngi,\nall sizes; Special 1-lnch Pipe, 80\nper foot. New Galvanized Barbed\nWire, (4.00 per spool. Roofing\nFelt, 1-ply, $1.60; 2-ply, J2.00;\n8-ply, J2.6S per roll. Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, 90 lbs. per\nroll, Special, J3.25. Mixed TVIr\u00ab\nNails, (2.00 per keg. Wire Rope,\nCanvas, Logging Supplies and all\n' kinds equipment.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C.\n (2254)\nDARNELS. KEC.S AND EMPTY sacks\u2014\nMacDonald Jam Company. Nelsun.\n  ' (2255)\nInsurance\nLower Rates on\nAUTOMOBILE INSURANCE\nThe new low rates on Automobile Insurance are now available.\nIrft us explain our Policy to you.\nDon't take risks when rates are so\nlow.     Phone   J 80.\nH.   E.   DILI,\nWard   St.,   opposite   Madden   Hotel.\n(2,',4!1)\nBusiness Opportunities\nFOR TEN DAYS ONLY, good caah\ncorner grocery business for sale. Low\nrent.    Apply Box 330. Nelson   <2H9)\nMachinery for Sale\nMINE. MILL AND CONTRACTOR'S\nEQUIPMENT \u2014 Boilers, air compressors, receivers, drills* engines,\nmotors, generators, plp\u00ab, rails, dump\nwagons, graders, tractors. Prompt\nresponse to enquiry. Good usable\nequipment priced to sell. Machinery\nDepot, No. 4 Mackie Block; wa-e-\nhouse, 20th Ave, and 2nd Kt. E.. Calgary, Alberta. (2178)\nFor Rent\nFOUR-ROOM houBe fcr rent, close i\nJ.  E.  Annable. \u00ab230\nNursery Products\nIE IT'S FRUIT OR NUT TREES, set\nfor our Spring Price List. You w\nbe pleased. Empire Garden Nureeri*\nClayton, R.R. 3,.Cloverdale, B.C.\n(248\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Nicely furnlihed houi\ncentral. Careful tenants. Telepho\n532R.    ' (26\u00ab\nTELL your  wants through  The Dal\nNews classified columns.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL m\nDIRECTOR!\nAccounting\nCHABLBS  T. HUKTEB\u2014\nAuditor, MacDonald Jam Bnlltil\nBox 111)1. Nelson, B.C.  (Mi\nTransfer\nATKINSOK   TBABSrEB\nWood.   Phone 421. ^_\nWILLIAMS'      TRAWSFBK\u2014 Bagg\nCoal and Wood.   Phone 106.       f_\nCoal i\n(22t\nWood Working Factor;\nLAWSOV\u2014Below    market.    Cabin,\nand Cedar chests. Hardwood so\n  s (22(\nPlumbers\nW\nJ. rrinr\u2014Plumbing and  Hm\nInc.    1.124  Stanley  St. (Jit\nChimney Cleaning\nWS\nPOWLBS,     Official    OMma\nCleaner. Sj\nInsurance and Real Esta\nRW.   DAWSOH\u2014\n\u2022 Re&l   Estate,   Insurance,   Beata\nnnable Blk., P. O. Box 73J. Phone 1\nH.\n <2J\u00bb\nB.  dill, nreiTBAXoa,  *__\u25a0\nAHD   CITT  TBOPBBTT.\n508 Ward Street (tit\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL      ft     BITCBIB,     HOB\nMEHTAL   CO.\u2014P. O. Box W_,  N\nson, BC.   Telephone tf 4.     {_)_\nChiropractors\nDR. ~ B. ORAT \u2014 Chtropracto\nPhones: 115. Res. 521Y. Gllker Bl\nHrs. 10 to 12 m.. 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 pm. 8a\n9:30 to 12 p.m.   Consultation free.   (j8\nALLAH a. DODDS, D.O\u2014Pho_\u00abS: tl\nOffice hours: 10-11: 1-4 and 1\nappointment Aberdeen Blk. Nelson, B\n (III\nFlorists\nG\nBIIZELLE'S   ORBBHBOVSB,   Bl\n\u25a0on.  Cut flowers and floral desli\nW- a. JOHHSOH\u2014\n\"      Phons  842.  Cut flowers. Potti\nPlants and Floral Emblems (22T\nWholesale\nA MACDOHALD ft CO.\u2014\n\u00a3\u00bb\u2022 Wholesale Grocers and Prorlsh\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Coffee\nSrtcee Dried Fruits. Staple and Fan<\nGroceries. Nelson  BC (827\nEngineers\nGteen Bros., Burdei| c\nBBLIOB,  B.O.\nCXT1L    AHD    KIHIHO    UMUH\nB.O.,   Alberta   and   Bomlaloa\nLand Bnrreyora (227\nD.   DAWSOH,   Land   \u00abn_Tej\u00bb\nMining   and   Civil   Engineer.\n Kaslo, B.C. (117\nH\nAssayers\nE.\nW. WIDDOWSOH, Box A110I, Ne\neon, B.C.   Standard western charge\nAuctioneers\nW     CUTLER\u2014\n\u2022 Goods sold privately and at a-aotto\nNelaon   Auction   Mart,   Vernoa   etre\nFuneral Directors\nD.J. ROBERTSON\np. d. s. ft a.\nClean, Bright  Sanitary  Parlors.\nPh.   aaa.      pine  Auto   Be\n\u00abw\n-JffiSl\nnOrSEr\nStandard\nCo. \u2014 Undert_ _\nFuneral      Director\nAuto Hearse, up-t\na~t date  chapel.\nm) wnrlceB.     Prtoe\n\u2022-y    reasonable.      (2271\nBRINGING DP FATHER\n\u2014:\u2014      By George McMauu\nififf <iOLLX- THIt)  LOOKt-\nLIKE  JOHNNX  OOC,AvN\nCOMIN'      _4fk \u2014\n.40\n.09\nLeon Benjamin, known a* \"model\natudent of a Brooklyn high ftchool,\"\nhas been sentenced to prison for\ntheft.\nTrial of . man letnenced for fraud\nat New York wai traced by cakei\nof soap he carried off from various\nJbotela.  '\n y>1\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\nPage Nine *\nKINGSTON WINS\nFROM FORTS IN\nHARD STRUGGLE\nScore Two to One in Fast\nGame on Fort William Ice\nREFEREE GETS\nSOME CRITICISM\nTeams    Formerly^ r Played\nThree-All Tie; Kingston\n. Meets Calgary\nBreezy Sport Briefs : l\nFrom Here and There\n*-\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont.. March 21\n\u2014Kingston defeated Fort William\n3 to 1 here Saturday night and won\nthe semi-final series in the playoff\nfor the Canadian Junior Hockey\nchampionship. The Kingston sextet will meet the Calgary Canadians\nfor  the   title.\nThe two teams had played a 3 to\n8 tie in the first game and by virtue of Saturday's vlctoiy Kingston\ntook  the  round   5  to  4.\nThe first period, as it happened.\nWas the deciding one, every goal\nscored being made in the first eight\npiinutes, with Kingston having very\nslightly the edge on the play, though\nthere were more shots on Taugher\nthan on Htrang in this period. Tho\nperiod began by a rush down the\nice by Hall, but the defence relieved\nand presently Kingston was press -\nIng on the Forts' net. They mixed\ntnatters lip close to the Fort William\ngoal and the first counter was .put\nin by Patterson in.four minutes ami\nft5 seconds. Ftom the face-off, Fort\nWilliam took the offensive and\npushed the piny back into the Vis\n(tors* territory and in three minutes Hogg took the puck on a nice\n, pass from McLeod and hit the twine.\nThe tie was broken in five second1*\nwhen right from the face-off, Hartley broke through and beat Strang\nWtth a close In shot and scored\nwhat proved to be the winning goal.\nMcLeod, who rushed matters up a\nbit   during the   game,   was   penalized\nv for bunting and shortly after he\nleft the box the period closed.\nKingston lias Advantage\nThe second period opened with\nboth sides fighting hard, but the\nKingston boys hud the advantage\nof   the   exchanges,   and   a   noticeable\nj element of loughness began to creep\nIn. Mitchell, who was handling the\ngame   in   company   with  Alex   Gray,\n. kept very close tab on offsides but\nseemed to fall to note some of the\nheavy bodying and bunting. However,\nMcKelvey got a penalty for tripping\nand he was followed shortly by McLeod.    When    McKelvey    came    out\n\u2022 ioeWwrt\u2014fotTOTf^ MCLeod lrit5 the\nbox and Fort WilJlum was left with\none . forward on the ice. Cardinal\nstanding the brunt alone, as h->\nhad done in the previous game. Kingston took the opportunity of trying\nto rush the net, but the defence was\nupdeniaMe  and   Cardinal   played   his\n\u25a0 lone hand so aggressively that he\ntwice broke through the line and\n\u25a0hot back to the defence. Toward the\nend of the period, Hurtley was hurt\nIn a collision, but recovered and went\non playing. The period closed with\nthe  score unchanged,\nRough I'lay\nThe third period was marked by\nrough play on both sides, with Fort\nWilliam boys making desperate, but\nfruitless efforts to cut the lead dow\nand again tie the score. Hogg\nplayed a whale of a game as did\nMcLeod, while Held and Patterson\netarred in the early pnrt of the\nperiod for the visltoi s. Patterson\nwas handed two penalties for bunting soon after the beginning of the\nplay and McLeod had a spell In the\nbox of the same offence. Kingston\nthen staged a desperate attack and\nStrang had to stop close in shots\nthat came thick and fast. Again\nFort William suffered, at the hand;\nof the referee. Hall gettfng a mln\nute off for slashing and Daley join-\n\u00ab Ing him. In splto of thla Fo't\n.William still did not allow the puck\n\u25a0 to reach the net. As the period\ndrew to a close the game grew\nrougher   and   rougher,   and   Mitchell\n\u2022 began to hand out penalties much t\nthe disgust of the Fort William\nfane, who accused him of partiality\nMcLeod and Patterson were sent\nto the box together. Patterson having\nhit McLeod and McLeod retaliating.\nCardinal was put off for a poke ni\nVoss, and Lockhart was also penalized. When McLeod and Cardinal\ncame out the referee sent them\nback and the most unfortunate fncl-\n, dent of the gnme occurred when McLeod.    Irritated    by    Mitchell,    made\na pass at him and was again off the\nIce.     Then   pandemonium   began   to\nreign   and   the   game   was   finished\namid   a storm   of  protests   and  cat\ncalls at the referee.\nLineup\nKingston   Position    Fort William\nGoal\n    Strung\nDefence\n '.    Coomb*\n '   .Loi'khaiL\nCenter\n * Hogg\n, Wing\n.Hartley   ....!'.'    McLeod\nPatterson -.. \u2022. Daley\n\u2022ubstitutes\nMoPhersoh ..\u00bb..' ,.. Cardinal\nMolson    \u25a0   \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nSummary \u2022\nFirst  period\u20141,  Kingston,  Patter-\nAm     -i--:   2.   Fort   William,   Hogg,\nfrom    Method,   3:00;    3,    Kingston,\nHartley,   :6.\n\u2022 . Second period\u2014No score*\nThird period\u2014No score.\/\nlYnultivri\n.First period\u2014McLeod.\nSecond period\u2014McKelvey, McLeod,\nLpckhart. fg\nThird period\u2014Patterson, McLeod,\nHall. Daley, Patterson, McLeod, Cardinal,   Lockhart,  McLeod.    .\nShots on goal\u2014On Strang1, 2\u00ab. on\nTaugher,   18.\n\u25a0    % Millers Win\nMINNEAPOLIS, March 21.\u2014Experimenting with a passing game with\nwhich they hope to continue their\nsuccesses in the flnul playoff for .the\nchampionship, the Millers stormed the\nHibbing-Eveleth net in the late\nperiods of Saturday's battle at Minneapolis.\nDuluth Victors\nDULUTH, March 21.\u2014The Duluth\nHornets increased their standing ir\nthe Central Hockey league here last\nnight by defeating the St. Paul club,\nT to 1, In a speedy and clean exhibition. No penalties wero called\nduring tbe iracus.\nParis Tennis Players Win\nPARIS, March 21.\u2014The Paris tennis\nplayers triumphed over the London\nteam, 12 matches to 8, in the international three-day team contest on\nthe covered courts, which closed to \u25a0\nday. The leading players of the\ntwo countries appeared in the final\nsingles. Jean Borotra, the French\nstar, defeated O. G. N. Turnbull after\na   hard   fight,   9-7,   6-3.\nCricket Is Draw\nKINGSTON, Jamaica, March 21. -\nThe final test match between the\nAll-Jamalw Cricket club against the\nEnglish eleven ended yesterday in a\ndraw. The Englishmen complied BIO\nruns for six wickets, the partnership of IJolmes and A^till being a\nwonderful exhibition of thrilling\ncricket. Holmes scored 244 and Astlll\nl.-)6.\n* Armour Wins Golf\nST. A UGUST1NB, March 21. \u2014\nTommy Armour of Sarasota today\nwon the first annual winter professional golf tournament, defeating\nJohn J. Farrell, Quaker Ridge club,\nNew- York. In the 36-hule finals,\n9   up   and   8   to   play.\n\" Play Off in Central\nDULUTH, March 21.\u2014Announcement has been made tbat the first\ntwo games of the semi-finals In the\nCentral Hockey league will be played\nhere next Tuesday and Thursday with\nthe Winnipeg Maroons meeting the\nlocals. The same two will play the\nsecond two games of the semi-final\nseries at Winnipeg, Saturday and the\nfollowing Monday. Total goals for\nthe four games will count, the winner\nmeeting  Minneapolis   for  the  title.\nHill Shakes Off Jinx\nCULVER. Cal., March 21.\u2014Rennet\nfain, known on the board tracks i\\$\nthe hard luck driver, shook off his\njinx and won the 250-mile automobile\nrace at the Culver city speedway\nhere today. Driving a nonstop tH'M,\nhe established a new record for 250\nmiles, covering the distance in\n1:51:53:45, an average speed of 130.59\nmiles an hour. He received 110.000\nLas the winner's prize, and |W0fl additional   in 'hip   prizes.\nSCOTLAND WENS\nR TITLE\nND  TIMEIATNINETY-SEVEN\nCaledonians Win Calcutta\nCup and Sassenachs Take\n'Wooden Spoon'\nLAST LOYALIST\nDIES\nMme. Degollado Was Mem-\nMaxii\nCourt\nber of Maximilian's\nLONDON, March 21.\u2014Scotland laid\nihe    \"Twickenham    Jinx\"    yesterday.\nfor the first  time since  the  English\nRugby    union    began   playing   their\nInternational   game   at   Twickenham\n15 years ago, they were  defeated on\nthat  ground   and  the   Scots   made   it\ndecisive    enough,    ringing    up    two\ngoals, one dropped goal und  one try\nagainst    England's    three    tries     10\npoints  to   9.     Incidentally  the  Caledonians   retained    the   coveted   Calcutta cup,   while the Susf-senachs  had\nto   rest   content   with   thf|   \"Wooden\nspoon.\"    Scotland  thus,  for   the  second year  In succession,  won  the international    championship,     securing\nthe   points   over   Ireland   by   a   bare\n[margin in  scoring average.  Only otic\nmore   game   remains   to   be   played, r     with li r death\nWales   and   France,   having   the   Irm j in   m.xIoo   loses\nfixture   to   contest,   but   the   Welsh j marfeable  figures\ncan hope for. no better position than ! ed with aflTentur\nthird   place   at   the   best   while   tho ! of today could re\nGauls  were  out  of the  running  long j J'''\nWAS ARISTOCRATIC\nBELLE OF VIRGINIA\nMad Empress Carlotta Only\nSurvivor of the    \"\nGroup\nMJBXICO CITV, March 21, -\u2014 Mrs.\nOtil'a Jordan df Degollado* only Am.r-\ni i';i it it' fii: In it of iii** cuurt of Kinncror\nMuxiniiUnn and lust ^uitivirifr number\nOf th. ill-fated household of the Mexican emperor, except tne in id BmpffM\nCarlotta, bus died Iwre at the n_;e of\nth\u00ab\nago.\n1     Saturday's   stirring   encounter   ~\u00bb > . t\nWitnessed  by  His .Majesty  the  King. I t\nto whom the players were presented\nprior  to   the   game.\nerlcttn colony\nin-   of   its   most   re-\nwhose life m  fili-\nsuch as few  women\ntint.    Madam Degol*\nsite  was known  to her friends\nI here,  retained ail the imperial glamor\nj tr.  her  lust moments, and perhaps  w;m\nns ' \"'- last faithful loyalist In Mexico, re-\n|ng   \u2022   vain   but   secret   hope   that\nKmpire   days   might   sopte   day   return\nto   Mexico.\nDOUBLE CHANCE .\nIS WITHDRAWN\nTaugher\nMcKelvey\nVoss  ....\nReid\nNO  PAY  INCREASES\nVANCOUVER, March 21.\u2014No Increases for any civic employee this\nTear the city Council has decided,\nWEST VANCOUVER\nBARS INDUSTRIES\nGrand   National   Winner   Last\nYear Cannot Compete in\nLincolnshire\nLONDON. March 21.-Official withdrawal had been made of !>ord Las-\ncelles* Laigeon from the Lincolnshire\nhandicap and Fred Archer's Double\nChance from ' the Grand National.\nThe latter's scratching was a sudden\nblow to the turf world today, from\nthe report ho had gone lame again.\nDouble Chance won the Grand National Inst year and Archer hud se-\ncuredJohn Anthony lo ride him next\nFriday. Anthony rode OJd Tay Rridge\nto second, place last year. With the\nelimination oT Double Chance, An -\nthony, one of the best steeplechase\nriders of tbe turf, will again ride Old\nTay Bridge, Mrs. W. H. Dixon's veteran jumper. Aga Khnn's Zionist Is\nptill tjie favorite for the Lincolnshire\nhandicap. The call-over of betting\nodds placed Zionist at 100 to 15.\nOther leudlng contenders were backed\nas follows: Donzelon, 9 to 1; Nothing\nVenture, 10 to 1; Lustucru. 13 to 1:\nRfrch Broom, 100 to 7; Pasha and\nFirst Edition, 20 to 1; Argela, 33 to 1.\nFAIRVIEW FOOTER\nJUNIORS ORGANIZE\nA junior football team was organized In Fairview, at a meeting\nheld Friday night, in the Hume school\nhall.\nWhite was the color chosen, with\na large green shamrock In front.\n\u25a0 Tho following officers were elected;\nHonorary president, W. A. Curran;\npresident, Ross Fleming; Vice-president, ?i. B. Sparkes; executive, A. fr\\\nHorswill, J. P. Morgan, H. Ward,\nJ. Smith, F. Chapman, J. Notman:\nsecretary-treasurer, WHIiam Brown;\nmanager, George Marquis; coaches,\nJ. Rothery, William Brown; captain,\nR. StDenis; vice-captain, H. Rothery.\nCALGARY   WOMAN   DIES\nOTTAWA, March 21.\u2014Mrs. liwart\nWilson Berry, 30, died ut her home\nhere today following a brief illness.\nAccompanied by her husband, who is\non the geodetic survey staff, she\ncame from  Calgary last October,\nDR. BARNETT DIES\nIN LONDON, ONT.\nLONDON, Ont., March 21. \u2014 Dr.\nJames Davis Barnett, former chief\ndraughting engineer of the Grand\nTrunk railway, died in hospital here\ntoday. Dr, Barnett was a prominent\nbenefactor of tbe University of Western Ontario. Several yeurs ago he\n\u2022donated to the university his library\not thousands  of valuable  volumes.\nPresident Will Eat\nEaster Eggs Costing\nHandred Per Dozen\nLAFAYBTTE. Ind., March 21. -\nEaster morning breakfast can be :n\nexpensive feast at the White Houm\nthis year, for  President Coolidge am\nhis family will have |10Q-a-do2~r\neggs   ready   to   lervei\nThe eggs tire those of the Araucan.t\nand will be. the gift oi' L. H. Schwartz\nof the poultry department of I'urdut\nuniversity,   owner   of   lite   flock.\nNor will dyeing be required tu\ncolor the egg* in true Easter iashfon,\nfor    they    have    a    natural    tuniuo:se\n\u25a0hade.\nSchwartz obtained two Araucans\nhens and a rooster last yt'ar from a\nzoological garden ln Buenos Aires,\nand now lias 25 birds. They thrive\nin Indiana, subsisting on ordinary\npoultry diet, und their eggs, similar\nto those of American varieties, boil\nwell, without losing their color. They\nhave the sume flavor as other U ns'\neggs.\nTite Araueana is a native of 1'iiiir\nbut even there it is not plentiful. It*\norigin Is, indistinct. The bird Is\nheavy-budled, with sleek dark-brown\nplumage. Through Inbreeding an 1\ncross-breeding, Schwartz hopes to de\nvelop chicken* with more prolific\nlaying powers and whose eggs have .t\nhigher  fertility.\nWas Miss Jordan\nHistory   records   that    In   her   youth\nMIsh   Otilia  Jordan,   member  of one   of\ntbe ar'stocrssy of Virginia,  created a\nfurore   In   Washington   society.     Later.\nr  career  when   she\nlean   belonging   to\nand Bmpreai C ir-\ntady-ln-watting   to\nthe   empress,   she   was   Considered   th\"\nst leautiful girl of the pefi.nl.\nsblngton  she   married   Mariano\nDAgollado.   later  a   membe*  of   Mail-\nniilian's   diplomatic   corps,   and   son   of\n(Jen.   Santos   Degollado,   Mexican   pat-\nHe was the true type of hidalgo\ncity   rather   than   the\nng-the Latin  peoples,\ndied   IS   years   ago,\nherself In  a  small\npartmeftt here, and  up\nto the time of her death retained about\n'a   court.\"   all   her own,   consisting\nhair lens   rhihuahua   midget   dog\ntwu   faithful   servants.    All   who\nt through ii formula of court\nlu   the   bio\nwas   the   only   Ann'\nKm per or Maximilian\nlotta's    suite,    and\nIII\nriot,\ndon,\ncommonpls\nMariano   Degollado\nHis   widow  close.\nhut  luxurious\nof\nand\ncalled  w  \t\netiquette;   much   like   Madam   begolTf\nherself had lived during the brief three\nyears of  the   M< Kioto empire.\nNever In Fovervy\nMine. Degolljtda never lived In poverty, us did many of the emperor's followers t:\\ter injllfe^ She was at one\ntime a WtSlWy property owner In\nMexico City, and the rentals find tfi'ud-\nual.aule of tllj&ap im tresis b\u00abre kept\nlor supplied wki. ail the necessary\nI und.-; to maintain her own court In\nher declining wnrs. Mlif> and her husband possessed ut one time one of the\nfinest collection^ of ke\/peskes of the\nemperor. Thcs# she \"gradually gave\naway to friends nr disposed of after\nthe  death  i-f  Dun  Mariano.\nWhen Maximilian was executed\nistiT and his wife became III\nKurope. all their followers were\neidedly   persona   non   grata   in   Mex\n i   Mariana  and  Mine.   Degollado  w\nforced   lo   flee   the   country,   their   li\nbe less likely to arouse' suspicion than\na man. \u25a0\n> She was buried In the French cemetery beift next^to her husband. \"Tell\nmy friends to send no flowers,\" she\ntold her attending physician a few\nminutes before she \u2022 died. A pyramid\nof , floral wealth accompanied her,\nnevertheless, to the grave. She Indicated In expressing her wish, thut her\nend need not be softened by flowers,\nfor her life, which started with such\nbrilliancy ln Washington, had been a\ndisappointment und u failure, as, in\nfact, everything connected with the\ncourt of Franz Joseph's brother and\nCarlotta.\nSeeks Land Tract\nLady Egah Dies\nin Ottawa Just Few\nMonths After Husband\nOTTAWA,  March  21.\u2014Lady  Egan,\nwidow of the late Sir Henry Egan,\nphilanthropist and lumberman of international repute, died at her home\nlate today only a few months'after\nthe death of her husband. The funeral will be held Tuesday afternoon.\nLady Egan was prominent in\ncharitable, religious and huminltarlan\norganizations. She was one of the\nfounders of the Ottawa Women's\nArt association, and the Ottawa\nbranch of the Women's Canadian\nHistorical    society.\nA daughter of the late W. A.\nHimsworth, clerk of the Queen's\nprivy council, Lady Egan Is the last\nsurviving  member of  her family.\nPREMIER  JOHN   OLIVER\nOf British Columbia, who presents\na demand on behalf of this province\nfor the return to provincial control\nof 11.000,000 acres of land in Peace\nRiver. This was part of the railway\ntract handed over to the Dominion\nat the time of Confederation which\nIleitis'.. Columbia now wants back to\nuse in subsidizing railway construction  in   tbe  Peace  River district.\nXru(,\nPEP\nthe CEREAL\nCHILDRENLOVE\nWatch them pep up.\nThey love PEP. Contains bran. For pep\neat PEP.\nTHE  PEPPY BRAN FOOD\nYouth Under Arrest,\nLeaps From Auto and\nGets Away From Police\nVANCOUVER, March 21.\u2014Leaping\nfrom the wheel of 'an atrtcj flrhich\nhe had stolen, and in which ;h$ wan\ndriving with a policeman* to the\nstation, a 15-year-old youth narrowly\nescaped Injury and got away before\nthe policeman could draw a revolver. Meanwhile the constable Managed to grab the Wheel as the car\nsteered straight for a store; \u2022\nLONDON, March 21.\u2014A Constantinople dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph reports a severe eartrutyake ,ln\nAdalia, Asia  Minor,  with  15 deaths.\nCANADIAN ju,, MCIFIC\nSTMKSMIPS t^r-~\nWINTER SAILING   t\nFrom Saint John to Europe\nTO  LIVEBPOOL i'  V\nMar. 2d    Mrmtnaiirn\n\u2022April 2    ,. Montrose\nApril *) . .    i .Montcalm\n\u2022April    16     Moatclire\nAprtl  2S   ...._....\u2022..... Meragams\n\u2022Calls at f*r*enock fbr Olargow\nTO CHERBOUKQ-SOUTHAMTO*.\nA*TWB*\u00bb      '\/     tf\nApril   i ittnfcidoaa\nApril   lfi ,:...Meliu\nTWO   SPECIAL   SAXftOrwf\nTaXOM  Saw YOjfiE ,\nApril   l    ;..Montroyal\nApril 13      Empress Scotland\nFor ratea, detailed Information, and\nreservations, apply t>\/ Local Agents\neverywhere, or write \u25a0 \u2022*\nJ. B. CA*TB\u00bb\nDiet. Faaitra- Agt\u201e Kelson. MjO.\n J\nj , \u25a0\nclassified\/ ad    bring   iu.\niults.        \/ ;\nin. <i,\nosscd th.\nUuatfii\nMABELLE, Ont., Marcli I! I.\u2014 A\n200-pound olack bear thnt has\nwrought much havoc in this district\nand generally alarmed the community\nduring  the  past  year,   U no  more.\nTrappers throughout the district\nhave trailed the anlruul ttnd resorted\nto devious plans in an effort to sla>\nthe beast. , Enjoying on apparent\n'charmed life, It consistently \u2022 defied\ncapture and, to add Instil* to injury,\n,uald regular visits to tho tumb i\ncamps and farms, where he replenished his larder, in addition to\ni'oing much damage.\nRecently old bruin was caught tupping near his lair ln the woods.\nThe ponderous beast was uroused\nfrom Its slumbers by the flume of j\nbirch torch, which bad been fixed\nto the end of ;i long pole. Frightened\nby the flame, the unlmal bolted amid\nsavage snarls and growls. Its re-\n1 treat wan checked by a well-pluced\n,shot.      Although    seriously    wounded.\nthe bear turned upon his assailants\n'and sent them to .cover. The mu-\nIrauder was not subdued before a half\ndozen   bullets  hud ^ound   tlieir   murk,\n\u25a0fi  r-u\nelided\ndisguised as   farm\nborder nnd found i\nall    City,    h\nfn\n:dn\ntil. .*.\nWat\n'resldf nt Juarex and they\nreturned here to reside until their\ndeaths Th. v made one trip to Kurope\nti,   visit   the  empress,\nWanted no Flowers\n.Mm.'. Degolludo seemed |iev\u00abr 1\" tire\nnt' relating narratives of the thrilling\nlife i,r Kmpiess Carlotti. \"Poor Car-\nlotto,\" were the words sb* favored in\nall ber recounts nf the daye when, us\nrhe \"nee said, 'She held ..fl a band of\nhighwaymen, single-handed, when they\nattacked the stage coach In which 1\nwas traveling.\" as the bearer of secret\ndocuments the emperor had confided\nto ber. l.eliextng that a woman would\nSTAON\nVANCOUVER, March 21.\u2014The\ncouncil of West Vancouver has officially announced thut Industries are\nnot   desired   there.\nImprove YourJ Property\nIncrease the efficiency of your farm\u2014add \u2022 to the comfort and   conveniences of your home\u2014by having a plentiful supply of water WHERE}\nDeer; Park t\nYOU WANT IT.\nnr.' -\t\nm qp t   _  ._.           _#\t\nWood- Irrigation*\" Pipe\nWILL BRING IT TO YOUR MOST CONVENIENT DISTRIBUTING.    ,\nPOINT, both for irrigation and domestic use. im     \u00ab,a'\n'      2-inch, 3-inch and 4-inch sizes our specialty.\nWrite us and let us give you the benefit of our experience as to\nyour needs. It costs you nothing to find out. Tell us size of pipe\nrequired, distance from source of supply, and' approximate drop\nin level. \u25a0   v \u25a0'._   V ,   .'....__   <\u25a0\"\u00ab_\u25a0..,___*.__\u25a0..\u00ab*\u00ab*!\nDeer Park Wood Pipe Company\na_v-.-.**.v\u2022.---.*-.\u25a0_,_-;.,.,\u25a0.-.,-.- --.^DEER PARK, B. C.     \u00bb<\u00bb*.\u25a0* .J.     \u2022 \u201e.i1li>HJ\nIfoframy'fiafi (Eompane\nHome Sewing \\Jtyeek\nThe Home Dressmaker will be we !1 repaid by a visit to our store to\ninspect the wide range ol the very latest Spring}' Fabrics. We have ior\nhtr choice new Novelty Dress Silks and Wash Fabrics with suitable trimmings, at prices which will undoubt edlv please fcer.\nDo not forget Buttericks have a style ior evejry taste.\nTWEEDS, in plain or check design, su itable for suits and children's coats. Colors: Grey, fawn and blue.    54 inches   wide.    Yard'  $3.25 and $3.59.\nHONEYCOMB CHECKED TWEED, suitable for Spryng coats. Colors: Sand\nand brown and grey and green.    54   inches   wide.     Yard    $3.50\nSILK AND COTTON PONGEE, in strip es of saxe, fkjr, pink and mauve. 36\ninches wide.    Yard $1.50 \u2022\nCHAMBRAYS, suitable for children's d \"-esses, rompeis, etc. Colors: Rose, green,\nnavy, mauve, sky and grey.    27 inches wide.    Yard 25<\nCREPE STANLEY, a fine soft material, suitable for lingerie. Colors: Cream,\nmauve and grey.   38 inches wide.    Yard  i, $1.95\nFINE QUALITY SHADOW STRIPED SATINETTE, suitable for underskirts\nand bloomers. In shades of coral, sky, mauve, purple and** navv. 36 inches\nwide.   Yard 65<\nFANCY CHECKED RAYON, in self colors of giey, reseda, saxe, apricot and\nwhile.    36 inches wide.    Yard $1.50\nEMBROIDERED VOILE DRESS LEN GTHS\u2014Colors: Grey, saxe. rosewood,\ncoral, jade and sand.  48 inches wida.   Three-yard lengths, each, $6.50, $6.95\nLADIES' SILK GLOVES, double tips.  Colors: Black, mode, mouse. Pair ..$1.25\nCHILDREN'S WOOL SOCKS, fancy turn-over tops. Colors: Fawn, mouse and\nbrown.   Sizes 6'\/2 to 9.4    Pair  98<, $1.10, $1.25 .\nCOATS' SEWING THREAD\u2014200-yard  spool.   In black and white.   Spool     lOf\nSHOULDER STRAP AND CAMISOLE TAPE, in colors pink, mauve, yellow,\nblue and sand.    One inch wide.   Two yaids  <_. 15^\nWASHABLE LINGERIE BRAID\u2014Colors: White, sky, pink and mauve. Six-;-\nyards, with threader, for 1\u00a9^\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nD. & A. CORSETS, in a heavy plain Coutil. Elastic at top. Lacing at back. Suitable for medium-stout figure.   23 to 30  she.-.    At $_f.50\nD. & A. WRAP-AROUND GIRDLES, in satin striped Coutil. Two wide elastic\ninserts.   Suitable for slight figures,    23 to 20 sizes.    At $1.75)\nGOSSARD. CORSETS, in \u00ab satin figured Coutil. Low bust. Lacing in front. Air'\n.excellent summer corset for slight figures. '23 to 30 sizes.   At $4.50\nGOSSARD CORSETTE, in heavy Satin Broche. Fastening at side. Elastic inserts at sides.   34 to 42.   At  $5.95. r\nShoe Department\nWe have just received another shipment of Ladies' Slippers and Oxfords, made\non EE and EEE lasts.   These arc the la ?t word in comfort and case. ,,'.\nDUAL STRAP, 2-BUTTON BLACK SLIPPERS, very soft uppers, medium heels.\nwith rubber tap-piece, cushion insobs.     At $3.50\n1-STRAP SLIPPERS, low heels with ru bber top-piece, broad toes. Very easy fit-  \u25a0\nting.    At  $2.65.*^\nPLUCHER-STYLE  BLACK  KID  OXFORDS,   cushion   insoles,   medium-height' '\nheels  and  medium-weight   soles.    At  $3.95\nIn. EE and EEE widths.\nSport\u00abGoods\nSelected for Their Usefulness and Values\nLAWN TENNIS RACQUETS\u2014The Black Prince.   Well strung with good qual-..,'.\nity gut, and frame strengthened  jus';  whera the extra strain comes.   In sev-,, ,\neral weights.   At  $5.50** \u25a0\nTENNIS BALLS\u2014Vulcanized seams and  stitchless.    Correct in size and weight, \u2022\u2022\nand made in accordance with tha rul ei cf the L. T. A.   Can be used on gras3>\n_or hard courts with best results.    At 50^:..-\nGOLF CLUBS\u2014Every player has his   own fancy for a special club, but for a   '\nlow-priced club of valued  worth our   St.  Andrews, at $2.50, is a winner,,.\nForged steel heads on hickory shafts.    Other  makes  at  $2.75,   $3.50  and\n' $5.00 each. \u2022\u2022\nGOLF BALLS, each  '. 40* and 50*\nAN EXTRA FANCY BALL FOR MATCHES is the Harlequin at 85*.   Longet) r\nflight and truer in distance for this ball is claimed by many clubs, which have' ;\nadopted it for their standard.   Try on e and prove it for yourself. \"\"\"\n t'a^e Ten\n'THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1926\n1\nThe Ark\nSPECIALS\u2014 KIck-Kack Uraiil, all col-\n<>.\u00bb, li yarda, 25\u00a3. Valenciennes and\n\u20221'irchon Laces, 5^ 1\" 15\u00a3 Per yard.\n\"S-adtes' Fancy Corselettes, $2.25.\nSilk-and-Wool Hose, 80\u00a3. sllk Hcise,\nfAie*. Silk Bloomers, $1.75. Heavy\n;F'*\u00bbnnelettet*i, 25<^ yard. Wallpapers,\n3!W ,u TtQti double roll. Hues, Pur-\nelttire, Kanges.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 534 606 V\u00abrn\u00abw  St\n!l!!lll!!liHI!l\n\"\"\"\"III,,,\ni:>\n\/l WHETHER\nj Mvk T.'.'tF'Aiwmwy\nhri.\\\/i<i jiie .\nO.K. BAKERY\nI TH  Sl.nl.)   St. I ' \u00bbr|   1&\nWHOLESALE    ANO   RE.Aii\nYou   Mu\u00bbt   H.ua   It\nFor   Perfect   Toest    in   Ihe    M i\u00ab;   \u2022<\nA REUABLE DRUi. STOPt\nPure   Drugs\nReliable   Medicines\nMAIL  ORDERS,   PROMPT   EE^VICt\nRutherford Drug Co.\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nAgents   for\nALBERTA    CLAY    PRODUCTS\nSEWER   PIPE  A  DRAIN   TILE\n306 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\nGossip From a\nMountain Garden\nBy   EDITH   STEVENSON   lUTHKIlFORD\nI've been taking a day off after a | soda,\nstrenuoua enrounter with the climb- | soda,\nIns roses along the pergola, from\nwhich I emerged saying, ln the words\nof the poet, \"My head Is bloodLd\nbut unbowed,\" for in spite of cold\nwindy and the dinner hour approaches I stayed with the job until all\nbut one nf the posts has its embracing cluKttr of brigot green stems and\nf.hnson   buds.\nHair   Nets   Now   Safe\nTine, thrre is a nice red scratch\nright on the tip of my nose, and\nmy fingers are full of thorns, but\u2014\none of the bugbears of the spring\nhas been overcome, and every time\nI look that way I can envision the\npergola draped in roses in orderly\narray on the posts Instead of trailing\nin all directions to the imminent\ndestruction of carefully arranged\ni oiffures and hulr nets. Indeed, I\nliad almost decided I must bob my\n'iiir nnd eschew hair nHs forever,\niq j?rent is the slaughter of these\ntrail defences in a garden such as\nmine, where every vine and every\n*Xmm seems to have a mischievous\nbrunch or tendril ready to scratch a\nhair   net   from  an   unwary   head.\nTh.1 climbing roses which were\nkilled right back to the giound the\n,viii! r of 1 :<24-2B made tremendous\nn >wth last summer, but Instead of\nIrst a few stout long canes, sent\n\u25a0tn  tioi.-uns of slender branches, some\nf ihem only a yard or so ln length.\nI do not know if nitrate of\neven in small doses, is quite\n'according to Hoyle,\" for riol-cts, but\nI have a twofold purpose in using\nIt, for, aside from the fact that It\ngives the plants a bit of a boost,\nand I hope\u2014lengthens their stems\u2014\nI believe It helps to keep away the\nwi etched cut worms who dearly lova\nto go along the row and tat, not\nthe leaves, bul tht- biggest, fattest\nbuds Just ready to break into purple\nodorous  bloom.\nVou remember the summer of 1914,\nwhen we hid the army worm. I\nnoticed then that on one row of\nsweet peas that had received a little\n\u2022p inkling of nitrate the worms never\nappeared, and have used It ever since\nto protect my violets, and though I\nsometimes find ;buds chewed off, 1\nbelieve there would be many more\nsacrificed if I did not use' the nitrate.\nI pass this on to y m for what it If\nworth, but If you should use nitrate\nbe sure to give only the tiniest\nsprinkle, and do not let It touch\n\u25a0 ither the leaves or the roots, but\njust sprinkle the surface.\nErosion    Uncovers    Roots\nTruly \"eternal vigilance Ih the prlca\nof success\" in a garden, as else-\n, here, 1 was so proud of two rows\nif thrifty little anemones in my seed J\ntied this spring, but neglected to\nwatch them, and those sharp frosty\nirigh.ts we had for a couple of weeks,\nfollowed  by bright sunny days,  cut a\nWhatDoYouThink?\nThe Dally News Invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public interest. A nom-de-plum* may,\nIf desired, be employed, but' every\nletter must be signed by the writer\nMB a guarantee of unod fntth.\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief, and\nmust avoid personalties. 'Tin\nDaily News does not hold Itself,\nIn any way, responsible for the\ntlews of correspondents. Let tern\nwhich contain advertising matter,\nor propaganda which Is classed as\nadvertising, will not be accepted\nunder any circumstances.\nMr. Rees Far Astray\nin Picture ol Ireland,\nContends Mr. Ebbs\nGYROS PROVE\nEXPERT WITH\nSHOVEL, RAKE\nSome  Twenty Members of\nClub   Have   Sore\nBacks Today\nMUCH WORK IS\nDONE IN THE. PARK\nJt some quite ^0 feet long. I have j nlce opfcn furrow akmg the rowa\neen taugh how to train roses prop- \\ ond exposed the roots, and 1 fear i\nrly oa a pole by an English garden- ; have  lofit  ubout   haIf ot  my  pret.iolie\nthat is, to twine them mound the I\nDotes all  in one direction,  and  never j\nlllowlng   them   to   cross   each   other,\nind  when  there aie  a  limited   num* I\nber   of   canes   to   tie   up   it   is   most\ninteresting  to   disentangle   them   and j\nlain   them   in  the* way   they   should i\nto, but this year such nicety was out\nof   the   question.     So   we   Just   tied\n'.hem   around   the   poles   as   well   as\nwe   could,   and   then   tied   the   long\nndfl along the top, and I am hoping\n\u2022hey   will   make   a   really   good   show\nthis   year  to  compensate   me   for   tbe\nabsolute  bareness   of  last   season.\nBefore   tackling   the   loses   I   had\n\\>   dig  out   three  enormous   roots  of\n\\ matiB,   the   wild   variety,   with   a\ntilth   of   feathery   greenish    white\nVoms    known    as   Traveler's    Joy,\nHi    grew   so   rampantly    lhat    I\nMt quite impossible to cope with\nv ls   a   most   lovely   vine   and\nyu   the   same   time   as   the\n\\ros:s,    and    is    a    charming\n\\ for them, but its place   Is\n\\ or trellis to  hide  some-\nt)     \u00ab ^tly   and   not   where   one\nwi : Vow    anything   else,    or\nwin \\ubetaore     has    to     be\ncur i tart misgave me when\n\\\\I   ca \u25a0    last   big   root   uf   this\ndecided to try It for\nd see if I could not\nfor its long grace-\nuke a lovely lacy\non   the   path   if\n.1   a    little   while\nmaking   It   keep   its\nPICTURE FRAMING\nMcGregor bros.\nAnnable  Block\nitems\n,.n. mi\nI*.'.. il\nti('   vine\ntima\t\nl *<*._m\ni *i*'*.*\u25a0'  \u00ab*\u2022\n!_*\u00ab..\n\u2022i\nQuality and Service\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialist\nIn business for yoi'\nfill your prescript.\npromptly executed.\ni'i II\nBhoi\nIII*.     UU U\u00bb I\nMull  oufjer. i\nrn]   wiiii tot\n.   1.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's '.'  periling Chemists\n. Films,   K\nMall   On\nbox *ioe\n'.<ki,    drugs,\ni'r'.llip'ly\nNslson,  B.C.'\nStationary.\nP?spfltched.\nPHONE 34\nCLA--:\n\u2022ULTb.\n:r;\u00a3[)     ADf,     BRING     RE.\nGOOD GLASSES\nIf yon need tbem.\nOOOD   ADVICE\nti you   Son't,\nOptical   Jtenair*   Attended   to\nPromptly.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST   &   OPTICIAN\nNelson Business College\n:   EVENING CLASSES\n' Individual   Tuition\nIncrease Your Saiar>\nFor Satisfaction, Try\nDOMINION   DAIRY\nPHONE   183L2\nOur Milk  is FRESH, and  la delivered   to   you   from   our  own   herd   in\nless than 6 hours.\n(fcjavr.1 WtNiMngl\nt *\u25a0..;\u2022 those weekly tasks! It Is\nnigh Impossible to keep them\na\u2022\u25a0j^impltsh* i'. One is so apt to say\n\"' 'It ii wo! t matter If I don't do\nthffU now , can easily do it all next\nv; ok,\" ,i id jo the time goes on, and\n!\u25a0 l:'t;. i.ask becomes an unman-\nj    abb    ' .rden.\n1 trading  the   gardening  ud-\nnca on*j of our coast papers la^t\nweet, .ind came upon this delicious\nl<l >it \"I never advise weeding at this\ni* \u2022 because even where 'every\npi nt has been carefully marked in\nbe fall, some of tbe markers may\nhave gotten lost and as a result\nthere ls always some uncertainty us\nto what Is what. ... So in all i\ncasts put off pulling weeds until the |\nmiddle of May,\" This to me, who!\nfor the last week have been My ing\nover to myself as I wrestled with\nchickweed. grata, and sorrel roong\nmy violet plants, Shakespeare's advice\nto gardeners or rather his warning:\n\"Now 'tis tbe spring;   and weeds are\nshallow-rooted;\nSuffer them now, and they'll outgrow\ntha    gaiden,\nAnd choke the herbs for lack of hus-\nbandry.\"\nAVJiat a wonderfully observant man\nhe  must have been to  notice such a\nuii'le   as   that.     And   yet   no   mean\nirifie either, for It  is a fact that all\nweeds   and   even   grass,   the   hardest\nherb   of   all   to   eradicate,   haVe   a\nvery slight hold on the earth and are\neahfiy   pulled   now.   By  all  meanB  do\nnot   leave all your weeding till May,\nor   you   night  as   well   abandon  your\ni garJ\u00abn  to  the weeds for keeps.\nThis    winter    has    been    so    mild\nthat  evtry  weed Is up and  at  lt al-\nj ready.    The groundsel is yellow  with\n; bloom Where it was allowed  to grow\nlast    fall,   and   tho   chlckwced,   that\nnaughty trcader on  the   heels of the\nisnow,   is covaed  with  Its  multitudes\n| of   white   stars.     In   one   part  of   my\njlmnI. n    where    late    cabbages    were\n1 M'own    last   season,   and    were    not\ncleared  till after the first  frost,  this\nubiquitous    weed    makes    u    perfect\n! carp* t   of   delicate   green   anil   white,\n| lovelj'   indeed,   but   ft\u00bb   It    ripens   Its\ni f  od   almost   Immediately,   tbe   edict\n! has   gone  forth,  and   the  first thing\non    Monday    It    wi I    be    dug    under,\nthei i by   furnishing  a   most   valuable\nmanure to the solt\nNhrate to Protect Vlolrta\nWhat a virtuous feeling one has\nwhtn one has accomplished an un-\npuasani but necessary duty. Darning\n\u2022tocklngi always givis me a snug,\n\u25a0self -satisfied feeling, and It ls a\nsomewhat similar feeling that I\nhave as I Contemplate my row Of\nviolets, which I have gone all over,\npulling out every weed, tucking In\nstray roots and tendrils heaved out\nby the frost, and sprinkling near\nthe roots ft small feed  of nitrate  of\nplants,\nAnother row of seedlings of Adonis\nVernalia that I was gloating over\nmet ihe same fate, and will, I fear, be\na total loss. It Is maddening to lose\nthete special tilings that are so difficult to grow juet because one was\ncareless. I knew perfectly well that\nalternate freezing and thawing would\nleave roots ot such things out of\nthe ground, and should have .seen to\nit that they wero covered every\nnight. However, I took heart of\ngrace when I walked down to a\niittle corner by the stone steps aud\nlooked at my beautiful blue Primula\nund remembered how many times\n. when it was a wee baby plant of two\nI leaves I had pressed it back Into the\n| earth again when I found it with its\nI roots In the air. This Primula is a\nI great treasure because I grew It\nfrom seed, and have waited three\nyears to see it bloom. Unfortunately\nI three years has been long enough\nj io wash the name off the label, so\nI do not know the name of it, but\nit is a. beauty and ' quit? different\nfrom anything I have seen before. The\nleaves are covered With a powdery\ndust, as if sulphur had been spilled\nover them, and the flower Is of the\npolyanthus type, with a thick stem,\nstill very short but lengthening every\nday, and the flowers thickly clustered\nat the top are a most exquisite shade\nof blueiHh mouve, very similar to\nMrs. Tom Jones sweet pea. It is\nreal acquisition, and I shall save\nseeds of it if possible and grow ;\nlot.\nI'm really ft bit mad about prim\nroses and they are certainly very\nhappy with ine in my shady garden\nWhen they love to nestle under a\nrock' beneath the cherry trees. Thert\nare three or four more plants not yet\nshowing bloom, so I have an excitin;\ntime lo look forward to. as each may\nl>e something entirely new. There ii\nno question about it, by far tbe most\ninteresting way to make a garden\nIs to grow everything possible from\nseed. One feels almost like a parent\nto such plants, or at least, one has\nthe Interest of the artist who creates\nB   picture.\nBluebirds Favor Mr. Selous\nDon't you think fate has been a bit\nunkind to me? Every day I've\nlooking and listening for bluebirds\n\"shifting their light load of song from\npost to post,\" but no, not one ap-'\npeared! And then this afternoon.\nwhere should I see a happy pair\nbut in Mr. Helous' garden in town!\nThere they were, the brilliant blue\nMister Bluebird and his more soberly\ndressed wife flitting about the garden\nand probably scouting for a home. [\nfelt quite abused that they had\nchosen to make their first appearance\nin a town garden, when an orchard\nand bird boxes awaited them here.\nThey are great darlings, and we always watch with delight their preparations for setting up a home. They\nhave built in bird boxes here every\nyear for a long time, and we like to\nthink it Is the same pair that comes\nevery spring. They fly In and out\nof the house, then Mother Bluebird\ngoes inside and father stands at\nthe door and looks ln, and no doubt,\nthey discuss the facilities for\nnurseries and such domestic details.\nThen she comos out and sits at the\ndoor while he investigates the interior, and one can almost imagine\nthem saying, ''I think this will be i\nvery   snug  home,   don't   you?\"\nI-ast year they did not appear sat\nisf led; lt showed In every line of\ntheir feathers and the tone of their\nvoices, and sure enough, they wen'\noff, and built in quite a new plact\nand brought up two families, no less\n1 love to see their .exquhito blut\nforms flitting about the garden and\nhear their rather wistful calls,\nThoreau describes it, \"The faint\ndlvery warblings of the bluebird\nas if tbe last flakes of winter tinkled\naa they fell,\" and Burroughs says,\n\"Ami yonder bluebird with the earth\ntinge on hfs breast and the sky\ntinge on his back\u2014did he come down\nout of heaven on that bright March\nmorning when he told u\u00ab so softly\nand plaintively that If we pleased\nspring had come?\"\nNelson,   March   20,  1926.\nWhen You Overhaul Your Launch, Use\n* Bapco MarinelPaint\nWhite, Red and Green\nCOPPER BOTTOM PAINT AND BAPCO SPAR\nVARNISH\nWe can also supply you  with  Paint and  Varnish\nRemover, Sandpaper, Steel Wool, Brushes, etc.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON,   I   C\nRETAIL\nTo the I'Mttor of The Daily News:\nSir\u2014In your Issue of the 17th, St.\nPatrick's day. you have a letter from\nthe pen of one of our most esteemed\nctttsan, Mr. O. S. Rees, 1 was some-\nwl at intertHtcu bui much amused in\nth'l letter. I always read his articles.\nHe Is an able scholar and prolific\nwriter, always* liiterestfio,' and profitable lo read, but something must have\nhappened to him. and I re__Ttt that the\ngentleman felt himself out of sorts on\nthis special occasion\u2014a clear case, of\nIndigestion brought on, 1 believe, by\nhis -able effort to get for our city a\nproper Isolation hospital, and 1 hope\nwhen St. Patrick's day conies again\nhe will be restored to his usual goon\nhealth, and with an open mind end\nwithout prejudice give us a Ulk on\nIrish history, for in hU< letter he has\ntvaded the rnort Important points In\nthe   Irish   problem.\nI ballev# In tiie law ot' cause and \u00bbf-\nfect Just as strong as i do in \u201eu law\nof supply and demand, ami in de.illng\nwith the sorrows and unhappy divisions of Oty people, we must bear in\nmind the causes, then note the effects.\nBackground of Oppression\nIreland a land of tenant farmers,\ngovtrned by a landlordism that, lo say\nthe least, Was most oppressive! Time\n'.nd (-pace will not permit to deal In\ndetail. The Irish tenant held his land\ntt the absolute mercy of ihe landlord.\nirid an soon as he maile his patch of\nsruund become productive. Ihe landlord\nraised the rent, and If he was unwlll-\n\u25a0iifr or unable to pay promptly turned\nhim out of the holding and put u new\ntenant fn.\nTell me what incentive would a man\nhave to work, progress, or improve under such   laws'\nIt has been proven beyond contradiction by eminent men that there was\nenough food produced to give every\nman. woman and child three meals, a\nday in 1847, but not enough to pay\nthe rent and Ihe landlord must be\npaid, and the food th;1. t the people\nshould have bad was c irted past the\ncabin door to pay an absentee landlord that lived in Yorkshire or somr\nOther shire clothed fn purple and faring  sumptuously  every  day.\n\"Ill fares the land to hastening lib\na prey where wealth accumulates and\nmen decay\" Beware, ye lords of England that the belin do not ring for you\nin another alarm in the proposed lane\nscheme of that much loved and much\nhated\u2014no. not an Irishman this time\nbut a fighting man from Wales.\nBeautiful Dublin Diity\nAnd now our worthy citizen has arrived at the capital, the o.-ar but dirt)\nDublin. I have met many travelers\ntalked with many people in mv day\nand it \\h the first time I have evei\nheard thi term applied \"dirty Dublin'\nmy native city. Surely I have th-\nprivilege, being In t\".i_s iand of free\ndom, to any a word in defence of nv\ncountry and the place where I first\nsaw the light. I Ih'nk I know m\\\nnative eity as well or tutter than au>\nman   in  British  Columbia.\nI have vlsted in other cities, a<td\nDublin will con i pa re favorably with\nethers for cleanliicss that 1 have seen\nOur friend happened to cross O't'on-\nnell bridge at fhe tlma when tiie tidi\nwas out, but If he had passed In th*\nafternoon ' he would have seen th*\nwater clear as crystal. Of course >\nprefer a drink of Guinness' ale or NX\nporter, and if our townsman had taker\na bottle Of Dublin stout It would hav*\ncured him of bis iiidlrestlon. sin\nwould be a well man today, und he\nknows that even the piety of Father\nO1 Flynn can't slop the tides. He would\nhive had a clearer vision, and not be\nlooking for dirt  and smalt  things\n1 think he wus dqwn In the County\nCare and not too much mounta i\niir ironnshine. He could only set\ngulls, donkeys cabins and pigs, but hi?\nvision WUS not clear enough to see i:\nchurch, school or college, not even\nTr'nlty college. Pity the man In hi-\naffliction of Indigestion* that could\nnot see the scenic beauty of the Und\n(f the shamrock, Instead of looking at\nthe donkeys, and dazzled by the beauty\nof the HubPn lassies.\n. If he did not like the low back car.\nthen take the bus. motor or tram, only\nthree miles to (iontarf, from Sackvllle\nstreet Get tho breeze from sea. then\non to Bray. MHahlde, Bill of Howttl\nhack to (Stephens* Green, Merion\nSquare, Fluthland and Mount Joy, on\nto the Fhonex park strawberrv beds\nLucan. Tell me of the beauty\" of the\nlandscape. Did you see that monument In the Fhonex park? No, that Is\n\"\"\"' New York policeman, that is the\nstatue uf an Ir'sh soldier who brought\nglory to the British arms on the field\nnf Waterloo, and the .writer saw another Irishman, Lord Duffris. governor-general of Canada. No, I haven't\ngot my return ticket In my Jeans, I\nwill t3ke my chancs tor a return If I\nwant one either in Dublin or Belfast \u2014\nthe Irish are far famed for their hospitality\nA New and Brighter Bay\nIrishmen, lift up your heads. The\nsun has risen over the hilltops of the\nJHsh Free stale. We hope for a\nglorious future. Great are the people\nwho have faith In themselves, nnd in\nthe soil upon which they live. Read\nyour histories. The land of every\ncountry belongs to th\" people of that\ncountry, because the Creator made it\nas a voiutary g'ft to them. No mar\nmnde It, It is fie original inheritance\nof the species, and now we earnestly\npray for unity of spirit, and the bond\nof peaes. No more will It be the home\naf impassioned orators, fox hunters and\nfunny men. No, old times and old\nsystems are past. A new and brighter\nday has come lo us. Det us Improve\nour day. and teach our children as we\ndo In this, our adopt*! country, the\nland of liberty freedom and tolerance.\nThen we wil be able to celebrate our\nSt. Patrick's day in proper spirit, and\nwe can  afford to be sentimental.\nIt grows through the bogs, through\nthe brakes and the mire lands, that\ndear little, sweet Utile shamrock of\nIreland,\nWILLIAM  EBBS.\nNelson, B.C.. March  20, 1926.\nRocks, Stumps, Sweat and\nJoshing Fly at Saturday Bee\n\"Get that above I busy; dj you th'nk\nyou are a natural beauly-spo:?\"\nThis, and many other such witty remarks were heard on Ha'un.ay : f ter-\nnoon mar the Gyro swimming pool in\nHouston \u25a0 park, where some 20 members of the Gyro club ware holding -\ncleaning-up   bee.\nAs a result of tbe work, some ex\ncellent Improvements around the p'trk\nhave been made. The clyb will continue these Saturday and Wednesday\nafternoon \"pick and shovel\" gangs until the park-Is thoroughly cleuned up\nand ready for the contemplated opening\nabout \u201eMay  21.    .\nOu Wednesday last a smaller gang\nof Gyros took a whack at the pick,\nshovel, axe and rake, but Saturday the\nnumber was increased to about 20\nmembers. Here's tbe secret. If a\nmember falls to turn out, be has to\ndig up %'i for the club secretary, and\non Wednesday and Saturday practically\nall of the Scotch members had done\ntheir bit, and saved the necessary \"two\nbones.\"\nOh, That Rock!\nOn Saturday Dr. G. A, C. Walley\nmade an excellent walking bows. In\nfaci, he walked almost uli afternoon\nlocordfhg to his fellow-workefs. K. L.\nBuohsnan did a hard day's work with\ni 18-pound sledce on some of the larg-\njr rocks around the pool. No doubt\nhe would have done several hourp'\n.note work had not a piece of rock\nisen and \"smitten him on the bean\"\nfollowing this incident J, 0, Magi o\nocal contractor, took the sledge und\n,avc \"Buck\" a hssou on \"how und\nvheti to use the hammer.\"\nDr. E. G. Smyth, assisted by s;v-\n\u25a0ral other Gyro members, spent the\n(roster part of the afternoon fishing\ntut a huge boulder. After it was out\nl kept the doceor busy scrap ng up\nr.aterial to fill the \"cavity\" left where\nhe rock had rested. Dr. Smyth, it is\naid, could have easily taken oyt the\nock alone, with the aid of hs \"luf.-\nng-lron.\"\nR. D. B i rues, club president,\nbe Job, and. assisted by J, A\non, city engineer, did moat\nboaslnf\" for the afternoon.\nArguments of interest during\nf .ernoon included a lengthy on\n;u\u00abt wb'- a' gang of seven or\nellows should spend an afternoon\nng out a huge boulder, while the oiliei\n.line or ten were doing real llonest-to*\ntoodneas hard work with rake, shovel\nixe and grub-hoe.\nWhat of the rownt-i'nf\nAnother    argument,    far    more    exe't\n'ng and  interesting, was that betweet\nH.    D.    Barnes   and   Eugen-   Poulin,   ii\n-egard to a spray or spouting fountali\nswimming  pool, ami  just how\nfirst\nno   winner   to   the\nar} rumored th t  Mr,\ngated as a  eommfi-\nwns or\n,   l'\"ergu\nof    th.\nat*i\ntak-\nIt Pays to Be\nWell Dressed\nWELL made, correctly tailored garments from good\nfabrics are not an expense\u2014they are an investment in good appearance, which yields handsome dividends\nin satisfaction and service. It will pay you to see our\nnew fabrics and models, and to know how well yoi^ can be\ncorrectly dressed in the finest tailored clothes for so little\nmoney. \u25a0'   '\n?25.00 TO ?45.00\nYour Money's Worth\nor Your Money Back\nNELSON PROTECTIVE\nASSOCIATION\n(A 1500 Chili)\nWe still want more application*-* for\n.)->\u00ab _\u201e,,.. v.,l.\u201e. ana *e want tlltiu\nquick.    Why  not Join  now?\nColt of Joining*, 98.00    AgV Umtt, 65\nPer.oM cf Iltlur lu EUjlbli\nFor full particulars apply to\nB. J. STEEL, Secr\u00abf_rT.\n\u202201   158 KELSOH,  B.O.\nCLASSIFIED\n1ULTS\nADS    BRING    RE.\nVELOX\nAll tiie pains you took to obtain the picture that's one\nchance in a thousand may go\nfor naught unless skillful finishing   is   applied.\nThe amateur who InsisLs on\nVelox anticipates the best possible prints. It's the paper used\nby skillful finishers-a paper\ntliey know wi.l fit the film.\nAnd the rearon\u2014'Velox gives\nevery amateur negative four\nchances. The negative may be\ncontiasty, average, Hut, or extremely flat\u2014there's a g;ade of\nVelox  to  match  it.\nInsist on Velox. The name is\ntightly  tinted  on  the  buck,\nJ.  H. ALLEN\nAmateur  Finishing\nPicture   Framing\nGet The Daily\nNews Every\nDay\n\u25a0\"All the Newa Whila it la\nKewr\"\nDelivered to your door\nin Nelson before breakfast\nevery day for 25c a week.\nBy mail outside Nelson,\n60c a month, $6 a year.\nFull cable, telegraphic\nand British Columbia newt\nnervice.\nAll the best feature*.\nSubscribe\nToday\ndan\nirguni\nswim in\nil ty\n.'or   the\nIhe pool should be filled,\nThere\nnt, bill\noulin will be\n\u2022ve of one to look after tk<\n\u2022>ool filling, and ihe advisability of\nirtotlni a fountain in tbe middle of It.\nSome S or 10 benches Wert disir touted through the park by the workers\nduring the afternoon. They Mere set\nmt at vantage points, and were si*\ntady in use by the crowds which\n\/isited the park yesterday afternoon.\nMost of Saturday's work was in the\n.icinlty of the swimming pool, and\nliter the greunds aie sufficiently\nclean, grass will bo planted.\nWork ia proceeding on \"Lookout\nPoint,\" the bluff behind the Kooten-y\nLake    (Jen e ial    hospital,   where\nrock   wall   Is  being   built,  and   i    ,\t\nsnade constructed around the edge of\nthe jutting rock. A huge elecLric.il\nsign wili be creeled at this point, too.\nSeveral more bees are planned, and\nalthough much arguing and good-natured Joshing is heard, Ihe Gyro members are accomplishing much. Wives\nof Gyro members will no doubt be\nqiad of the scheme as their \"hubb'efi\"\nwill no doubt be only \"too glad\" to\ndig up the back yard and  plant a  few\n\u25a0mvtis this spring,\ndry\nPostal Employees\nto Receive Lost\nMoney in Strike\nOTTAWA, March 21.\u2014Postal employees, who went on strike in 1924,\nwill now receive the money lost by\nthem, .as a result of the reinstatement\nas postal helpers at tha minimum\nrate of $86 a month for July and\nAugust  of  that  year.\nThis promise was given by Hon.\nCharles Murphy, postmaster general\non Saturday to a delegation of postal representatives.\nSome 2500 postal employees will\nbenefit. These include neatly 1600\nemployees in Toronto, 700 in Montreal and the remainder in other\nplacea. The amount Involved ln the\nreadjustment is about $112,o6o.\nLittle Boy Dies\nof Appendicitis\nCarl William, 9-year-old gon\n->t Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Thorslupd,\ndied in the Kootenay Lake Utn?ral\nhospital Saturday morning frotn appendicitis. He was the only child,\nfiaving lost a sister three years ago\nfrom  the   same affliction.\nThe little boy was born in Phoe-\nilji, but had been living on the Granite   road    for   some   time.\nDon't Depend On\nSale Bills-Read\nThe Daily News\nA few years ago it was easy to stop Old Dobbin\nand read the sale bills at the cross-roads. But now\nno one parks Lizzie in the ditch and stops to read\n\u25a0\u25a0a'e bi'ls. T'ey step on the gas and go home and\nread The DaNy News. That's why an ever-increasing\nnumber of wise men advertise their sales in this'\npaper.\nIn truckload of artichokes which\nook Eire on Htxeet of San Francisco\n)ollce found  4.'i  cages of  whisky.\nNelson News of the Day\nFear Huge Ice Jam\nin St. Lawrence Near\nMorrisburg, Ontario\nOGDENSBCHG, N.Y., March 21. \u2014\nFear that an Ice Jam of etudendous\nproportions was forming Delow% the\n<ctiy In the St. Lawrence river, was\nexpressed tonight' by r(ver men, who\nmade a hurried survey of the channel\nbetween Ogdensburg and Morrisburg,\nOnt. With the Ice field above rapidly\nmelted and already breaking up in\nsmall epots, a repetition of the Morrisburg Jam uf tltree years ago was\n.foreseen.\nAt that time buildings along the\nriver section were destroyed, streets\nwere. flooded and a - hug'e property\nloss averted only atfer a week of\nstubborn battling against the elements with dynamite.\nDaughters and Wati\nwill meet tonight at\nMemorial Halt,\nSave money!\nto  Watson's.\ns    of    England\n7:3D   sham   *r\n(2535)\nSend your shoe repairs\n(ffHi\nDog saved blind man at Ottawa\nwhen fire started in his home and\npet pulled at his clothing.\nw-J'Jiy*1 OBWEBJU. MEETIWO\nE25MH   AHD   \u00bbWT*XCT   BOS   AND\nSFiL,0LTrB' *\u00bb good Bromvf.\n?\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3 MAM A *10 mon to\n\u2022 U\"Jf5-J\"=ETIKO TOWIOHT AT f\nP.M.. CITT HALL. COKE AWD HBLF\nALONG  1KB  GOOD  WORK. (253^)\nOft Q. A. C.  Walley,\nBlock.\ndentl-\\ Griffin\n  (2363)\nNorth American Life. 1-2 and I Aberdeen Block. K. H. Hanley, District\nManager. (2aS8)\nRev.    W.    P.    rreeman\nRSttl   meetings.  Baptist\nnight   this\nMonday,\nconduct\nChurch,  each\n.  commencing   tonight,\no'clock.   ' (2561)\nMesdames Dill and Poole assure you\nthe best of home cooking for sale at\ntheir delicatessen table at tho 1,0 D.E.\nTea tomorrow,   Tuesday. (2508)\n' Have you the lucky guets on the\nShamrock Ham? Find out at the IO.\nD.E.   Tea  tomorrow. (265\u00bb)\nThe funeral of little Carl William\nTborslund will take place tomorrow\nafternoon. Tuesday, from Robertson's\nUndertaking Parlors. (2661)\nTonight:\nPay Nite\nJoseph Co nrads\n\u2666VICTOR FLEMING\"\u00bb\u00ab'!\u2022\u00bb\nPERCY MARMONT-SHIULIY MAStfN\nKOAH BEERY- RAYMOND HATTOH\nA HE greatest adventure story of the sea.   Written\nby the greatest master of fiction the world\nhas ever known. . > .. .   . . , -*\nA tale of life and strife and love on a romantic\nSouth Sea island. Produced by the director' of\n\"Empty ilands.\" ; * * '' **. *\"\nI\nComedy, 'Cuckoo Love*\nPathe Newt\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1926_03_22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0402314","@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":"1926-03-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1926-03-22 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0402314"}