{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0384163":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"d250fa31-1771-4fce-a769-e1967acd1e1c","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2019-10-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1911-04-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0384163\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" CLASSIFIED ADS\nI CENT A WORD\nW\nIT PAGES-\n60 CENTS A MONTH\nVOL. 10\nNELSON. B. C. WEDNESDAY MORNING. APRIL 26. 1911\nNO. 9\nCOM HERE\nKootenay Columbia Preserving Works Is Organized,\nWILL PICK OWN\nFRUIT ON RANCHES\nTo Operate   Kootenay  Jam\nCompany's Factory\u2014R.\nC. Teviotdale Secretary\nThe announcement Ib made that a\ncompany has been formed to take over\nthe Kootenay Jain company's factory\nhere on June 1, next when a modern\njam manufacturing plant will be Installed in readiness for the opening of the\nsmall fruit season. It is stated that the\ncompany will conduct operation on a\nmost extensive scale and that it will be\nknown as the Kootenay-Columbla Preserving -works with \"K-.C. Brand\" aa a\ntrade mark.\nMaking Contracts for Fruit\n-Contracts for fruit are now being\nmade with the ranchers on the West\nArm, the new company proposing to\nput their own pickers in the fields to\ngather the fruit. This ls expected to\nsolve tbe difficulties which have hitherto confronted local growers of obtaining labor at the height of tbe berry\nseason.\nR. C. Teviotdale, accountant and bookkeeper for tbe Kootenay Jam Co. for\nthe past two years will act aa secretary-\ntreasurer for the new enterprise.\n4\/   ACCUSED OF SLAYING\nMOTHER AND 8ISTER\nMAIDSTONE, Vt.,. April1 26.-A special\nBrand Jury convened here today to take\nup the case of Arthur Bean, the 18-year-old\nyouth who has been confined in jail tor\nsome time on the suspicion of having\nmurdered his mother', and sister. The\ntragedy occurred at the Bean home on\nMarch 9 last. On the day of tbe murder\nyoung Bean, with a rifle slung over his\nshoulder,-entered the home ot a neighbor\nund calmly told, the persons there that ina\nmother, MrB, George Bean, and his sister\nMiss Nina Bean, had been shot and killed.\nNeighbors rushed to the Bean home end\nfound the body of Miss Nina In a pool of\nblood on the Iloor of the front ball, while\nthat of Mr**. Bean was in a bedroom on\nthe upper floor of the house. There were\nbullet woundB ln 'both bodies. Young Bean\nwas taken Into custody a day or two later,\nbut all efforts to Induce him to make\nconfession failed.\n8HORT CHANGE ARTIST\nCALGARY, Alta.,. April 26\u2014Harry\nWatson, said to be from several points\neast and west, tried to short change J.\nIt. Stewart, a Vancouver contractor, at\nthe C.P.R. depot thts morning, but was\ndeterred in his attempt and arrested.\nStewart was a traveller on his way to\nSaskatoon.\nCONFERENCE ON PILOTAGE BILL\nOTTAWA; April 25\u2014A large gathering of shipping men, including representatives of the Dominion marine association, the shipping federation of Montreal, and counsel for private parties,\nWere before the marine commission today, when the government bill for compulsory pilotage was taken up. It was\nannounced, however, that so far as the\nbill relates to pilotage of the. St. Lawrence, the clauses would be nbondoned.\nMANITOBA MINISTER AT OTTAWA.\nWINNIPEG, April 25.\u2014Hon. Robert\nRogers left for the east today and will\nhe In Ottawa for May 4 to confer with\nthe federal cabinet on the question of\nthe transfer of tiie Fort Osborne barrack grounds to tbe province of Man-\n' itoha. He will be Joined by other members of the committee appointed from\nhere.\nUNION METHODS IN\nWESTERN MISSIONS\n\u2022Question  of Cooperation  Now  Before\nAlberta    Presbyterian    Synod-\nFields on a Blook System.\nCALGARY, April 25.\u2014The principal\nmatter to come before the synod of tbe\nPresbyterian church of Alberta, which\nresumed its sessions this morning in\nKnox church, was tbe great question of\ncooperation before the Methodist and\nPresbyterian churches in tbe matter of\noverlapping the districts. The matter\ncame-up on the question of the status\nof augmented congregations under the\nnew agreement, antl a resolution was\nfinally, passed referring the matter to a\ncommittee.: The missionary field haa\nnow been reduced to a system, the\n\"question block system,\" Mr, Reld\nc* lied it, whereby each of the denominations Is represented by two clergy-\nmen, two laymen, and the superintendent, and each denomination is given\n. certain territory mutually agreed upon\nbetween Winnipeg and the Rockies, so\nthat no point will be left uncovered,\nand each will have full sway.\nS\nLicensing Board Make New\n.   Regulation.\nBARTLETT HOUSE ,\nUNDER DISCUSSION\nCommissioners View Application for Re-Issue\nUnfavorably.\nAt a brief but productive Bitting of\ntbe licensing commissioners held in the\ncity hall yesterday afternoon tbe licenses of the Royal and Lakeview hotels and the Grand and Manhattan saloons were transferred; the Stiver King\nhotel license was ordered to be transferred subject to the legal formalities\nbeing carried out; a wholesale liquor license was granted Thorpe & Co.; it\nwas decided to prohibit women from\nentering the premises of saloons and\nthe application for the re-issue of the\nrevoked Bartlett house hotel license to\nT. M. Ivens, was the subject of some\nunfavorable comments.\nThe aplicatlon for a wholesale liquor\nlicense for Thorpe & Go. was received\nfrom W. R. McLean, manager of that\ncompany. It waa explained that the\ncompany had previously had a license\nbut had allowed it to lapse.\nThe transfer of the Lakeview from B.\nL. Griffith to Napoleon Mellette; the\nGrand saloon from John Blomberg to\nH. S, Matheson and Hans Christenson;\nthe Royal hotel from Mrs. L. V; Roberts\nto John S. Barrett; and the Manhattan\nsaloon from John Svoboda and E. O.\nNelson to Caleb A. Barton and Donald\nA. McKay, were made en bloc while the\ntransfer of the Silver King from William\nNeuendorf to Norman McLeod was ordered issued on the production of the\nstatutory declaration and the payment\nof the necessary fees.        ..\nBartlett House Matter up\nW. E. Wasson, clerk of the board,\nread a letter from Fred C. Moffatt, as\nsolicitor for T. M. Ivens, regarding the\napplication for a transfer or re-issue\nof the Bartlett house license which was\nrevoked at the last meeting of the\nboard. Mr. Moffatt contended tnat if\nthe application were refused it would\nresult in a serious injury to the value\nof the property and to Those financially\ninterested in it. .He made the request\nthat the board should give some indication as to the attitude tbey would adopt\n\u201ewhen the application would come before\nthem at the close of the statutory period dating from the time when lt was\nfirst advertised. He argued that there\nwould be great need for hotel accommodation in the city the coming summer\nand asked the board to name as early a\ndate as possible for the hearing of the\napplication. Enclosed with the letter\nwas a petition and a number of per\nsonal letters stating that the writers\nconsidered Mr. Ivens a lit and proper\nperson to obtain a license.\nThe mayor referred to the letter as a\n\"peculiar communication\" and said thnt\nif a reference were made to the minutes\nof the last meeting of the board it\nwould be seen that a resolution was\npassed cancelling the license. It was\npossible that some persons apart from\nthe late holder of the license had suffered but that was no funeral of the licensing commissioners.\nMight Consider Application\nHe had been, he said, approached by\none of the petitioners who was interested in the property, and asked if there\nwould be any chance of the board granting the application and had replied that\nhe did not think so unless a suitable person could be found to whom to 'transfer the license. In the latter case he\nhad told his enquirer that the board\nmight consider the- matter supposing\nthat they hud the legal power to make\na re-Issue.\nV He continued tbat he had told the\npetitioner that he did not consider Mr.\nIvens a suitable person. Instead of attempting to find a fit and proper person, said tbe mayor, the owners of tbe\nBartlett house property had gone ahead\nand first tried to have the license revived and then to have lt transferred\nto Mr. Ivens.\nPetition Presented\nLetters to the effect that the writers\nconsidered Mr. Ivens a fit and proper\nperson to carry on the business of the\nhotel in -a reputable and satisfactory\nmanner were read from J. M. Lay, R. J.\nSteel, Dr. W. 0. Rose and John Hamilton. The petition which was to the same\neffect was signed by these four citizens and by C. D. Blackwood, T, G.\nProcter, George F. Motion, W. P. Tierney, the Kootenay Ice & Fuel Co., A. B.\nNetherby, Bert Lowell, J. W. Falls, Wil\nHam Davis, J. R, Hunter, R. G. Joy, A,\nS. Horswill, J. A. Irving ft Co., Alfred\nBunker, Dr. G. Hartin, Dr. W. 0. Rose,\nJ. Martin, L..K. Larson, McQuarrle ft\nRobertson, G. O. PeterR, D. C. McMorrls,\nE. F. Qigot and the Poole Drug Co.\n.... -The Mayor\u2014It seems that Mr. Moffatt presses for Information regarding\n( Continued on Page Foir.)   -i\nWaiting for Reciprocity to Open the Gates to New Pastures\nfor His Steeds\nENGLAND'S KING\nCOMMENDS BIBLE\nKing George Sends Message to Tercentenary Celebration in New York-\nCongratulates United States\nNEW YORK, April 25.\u2014King George\nV. of Great Britain sent a special message to the tercentenary bible; celebration held in Carnegie hall tonight. It\nwas dated at \"Buckingham Palace,\" and\nwas received by the British, ambassador, Rt. Hon, James Bryce. The king\nsaid:\n\"I rejoice that America and England\nshould join in commemorating the publication, 300 years ago, of that version\nof the holy scripture which has so long\nheld l.tB own among English-speaking\npeople.\nPromoted  English-speaking Welfare.\n\"Its circulation in. our homes has\ndone more perhaps than anything else\non earth to promote among old and\nyoung the moral and religious'welfare\non either side of the Atlantic.\n\"The version which bears King\nJames* name Is so clerly interwoven in\nthe history of'British and American\nlife that It hr right that we should\nthank God for it together.\n\"I congratulate the president and\npeople of the United States upon their\nshare in this, our common heritage.\"\nFREE LIST BILL\nUP IN CONGRESS\nDemocratic Leader Says It Is Only the\nBeginning of His Party's Revision\nof the Tariff\nWASHINGTON, April 26\u2014i'he free\nlist bill was taken up in the house today, and for several days to come it\nwill hold the centre of the stage. Chairman Underwood of the ways and means\ncommittee, ln explaining the proposed\nmeasure, acknowledged that it would\nmean a reduction in government revenues of at least $10,000,000 a year, but\ndeclared that this would be more than\nmet by government economies.\n\"This free list bill Is not offered as\ncompensation to the farmers for the\nproducts of his that were put on the\nfree list in the reciprocity bill,\" said\nMr. Underwood, \"because we do not believe the passage of the reciprocity\nagreement will in any way affect the\nfarmers' income.\n\"One of the objects of this bill Is to\nremove from the protected list these.\nImplements that the farmer uses In producing his crop, The other purpose is.\nto reduce the cost of living to -the\nmasses by putting their food products\non the free list\"\nMr. Underwood announced that this\nwas only the beginning of the Democratic revision of the tariff.\n\"We propose to revise the tariff\nschedule by scedule,\" he said: \"that ls\nin our opinion the only proper way to\nhandle the tariff question In congress.\nThe Democratic party does not stand\nfor tbe wiping out of the customs. We\nrealize that the expenses of tbe government may be borne by a judicious system of duties, but by lowering and\nadjusting prohibitive, duties we will\nmaintain the amount of customs revenue.\"   -\nThe minority report on the free list\nbill, signed by all of the Republicans\non the ways and means.committee, declares that the measure represents \"a\ntransparent attempt at the manufacture\nof political capital.\"\nWANT PARDON FOR  M'CANN.\nJOLIBT, 111;, April 25.\u2014The state\nboard of pardons met today to hear\narguments on the application for a pardon for Edward -McCann, former Chicago police Inspector. McCann wns in\ncharge of the so-called levee district\non the West Side ln Chicago and was\nconvicted of bribery In connection with\nthe alleged protection of red-light resorts. His conviction was affirmed by\nthp highest courtB and he Is now serving his sentence in the state penitentiary here.\nSINKS OFF CHINA\nChinese  Liner Rescues the\nPassengers\nPIRATE CRAFT AT\nREVOLVER MUZZLES\nAmerican Steamer Picks Up\nWireless Signal But Is\nForestalled\nTOKIO, April 25\u2014The Pacific Mail\nsteamship Asia from Hong Kong for\nSan Francisco has sunk off Finger\nRock, South China. Tbe passengers are\nreported rescued and the malls saved.\nThe Asia sailed from Hong Kong on\nEViday morning and was due at San\nFrancisco May 19. She operated regularly between these points and was commanded by Capt. H. Gankoyor. She\nstruck Sunday morning while feeling\nher way cautiously through the fog ln\nthe direction of Shanghai. Her wireless signal of distress was picked up\nby the steamer American of the Toe\nlusen Co., which was en route from\nShanghai to Hong Kong. The latter vessel immediately replied: \"We are coming to your aid.\"\nNo further message waa received by\nthe American, which pushed hard in the\ndirection of the Asia. The American\narrived off Mnger Rock at 3 o'clock\nyesterday afternoon but owing to the\nfog was unable to discover the whereabouts of the distressed steamer. The\nAmerican laid there until the weather\ncleared, when she found that the Chinese vessel Cbanghai of the Taku\n-steamship Co. had gone to the aid of\nthe Asia and .had rescued the passengers.\nPirates Raid\nSHANGHAI, April 25\u2014According to\npassengers who were rescued from the\nPacific Mail steamship Asia, after the\nvessel was wrecked on Finger Rock\nSunday, the officers had to use their\nrevolvers to keep a fleet of Chinese pirate craft at buy while the passengers\nwere being transferred. Directly the\nvessel was abandoned the pirates looted\nher. The loss ls $1,500,000. There was\nno panic on the wreck and the prompt\naction of tbe officers is highly commended by the passengers.\nDUMP SOUR GRAIN\nFAR OUT IN LAKE\nSo as Not to Menace   Port   Arthur's\nHealth\u2014Passenger and  Freight\nTraffic Opening Up\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont., April 26\u2014The\nboard of health has ordered that the\ngrain cargo of the steamer Dunelm now\nln drydock, which became -sour after\nbeing water soaked because of stranding on Isle Royal, must be carried' at\nleast eight nines out into the lake before being dumped to prevent Interfering with the city water supply.\nG. Maurai, an Italllan, -was sentenced\nby Magistrate Dody, to 15 months in\nCentral prison today for stabbing Martin Barran, an Austrian, on Sunday ln\na row ln the coal dock section.\nThe first passenger boata of the Reason are expected at Port Arthur from\nthe east tomorrow, the 'Hamonlc being\ndue from Sarnin and the Athabasca\nfrom Owen Sound. The Doris today\nbrought the first load of package freight\nand several other loads are expected\nbefore' tlhe end of the week.\nDUST STORMS HOLD\nBACK THE SEEDING\nWith  Good  Weather  Brandon   District\nWill   Finish  This  Week\u2014Well\nUnder Way at Perdue,\nBRANDON, Man., April 25.\u2014Since\nseeding operations began there has\nhardly been a break of any kind until\ntoday. The heavy wind and dust storm\nwhich commenced this morning haB\nmade it almost impossible to stay on\nthe land and.continue seeding operations. Great clouds of dust are moving\nabout everywhere. From inquiries today It would seem that about tf per cent\nof the wheat seeding is done In this\ndistrict. With the good weather which\nhas prevailed the farmers have been\nenabled to rush the work with great\nspeed. The first wheat reported above\nground ls a big field on J. S. Gibson's\nfarm. This grain was sown on April 13\nand it is now well up all over tbe field.\nIf the weather clears tonight it is believed that practically all the wheat\nseeding in this district 'will be completed by tbe end of the week.\nPERDUE, SaBk., April 25.\u2014Seeding\nin this part is well under way. Good\ncrops aare expected. The town of Perdue is tktng active measures to help\nthe Inevitable production tbat will be\nmade here.\nVANCOUVER ASKED .\nTO VOTE MILLION\nImportant Money Bylaws Will Be Submitted   in   June\u2014Indian    Chiefs\nWill Attend Coronation.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, April 20.\u2014The\ncity council has decided to submit\nmoney bylaws tor various improvements to the amount of $1,370,000 on\nJune 10. The largeat measure is for\nsewer extensions, for which $750,000\nls asked.\nSeven Indian chiefs from* British Columbia will attend the coronation ceremonies of King George. Chief Mathlus\nCapilano la now making a tour of the\nsettlements and will be the leader of\nthe deputation. On the way the chiefs\nwill visit Premier Laurier at Ottawa\nand present the allege^ grievances the\nIndians are suffering through the extension of settlement of the whites.\nDr. D. L. McAlpine, a pioneer physician of this city, passed away last\nevening at the age of 76 years. Death\nwas due to injuries received in a tram\naccident over a year ago.\nLabor difficulties here have led to a\npeculiar condition, as the Morton Griffiths company, who are building the\nlabor hall for the Trades and Labor\nCouncil, are members of the Builders'\nassociation, which has refused to pay\nmore than! J4.25 per day to carpenters.\nThe firm started non-union men on the\nbuilding yesterday and the trades council this morning applied for an Injunction restraining the firm from such\naction.\nDETECTIVE CHARGED\nWITH KIDNAPPING\nINDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 24\u2014Detective Burns was served with a warrant at 6 e'clock this evening, charged\nwith complicity ln the alleged kidnapping of J. J. McNamara. secretary-treasurer of the International Association of\nBridge and Structural Iron Workers and\nthe three attorneys thnt were nrraigned\nthis morning on the same caarge. spent\ntwo hours ln Jail because of delay In\nobtaining bonds for them. The attorneys Imprisoned were Walter Drew and\nJ A. O. Badert of New York, counsel\nTor the iNattonal Krector association\nand W, J. Ford, assistant district attorney of Los Angeles. Burns waa arrested on the street as he was on his way\ntn tho court of r Justice of t^e peace\nmeaning to surrender himself. Constables had searched for him all day.\nFe was released under $10,000 bonds to\nappear before the grand Jurjr and was\nInstructed tf testify tomorrow morning.\nParty Majority Votes Down\nRoyal Commission,\nBORDEN ARRAIGNS\nTHE GOVERNMENT\nMr, Northrup Claims Gross\nDerelictions Already Have\nBeen Proved.\nOTTAWA, April. 25.\u2014The house of\ncommons divided Its time today between a discussion of a motion by W.\nB. Northrup for the appointment of a\nroyal commission to Inquire into the\nconduct of the printing bureau and a\nsecond edition of the dispute over the\namendment moved by Mr. Sealey of\nWentworth to the reciprocity resolutions. Debate as to whether or not six\nConservatives voted for an amendment\nexcesslng approval of the reciprocity\nagreement with the exception of the\nfree fruit and vegetable proposals, was\neven more acrimonious than on Monday, and as on previous days no definite conclusion was reached.\nIn moving for the appointment of a\nroyal commission to inquire Into the\nprinting bureau, and the purchases ot\nother departments, Mr. Northrup said\nthat the Inquiry made by Hon. OharleB\nMurphy Into the bureau demonstrated\nthe necessity for It\nMr. Murphy, on the other hand,\naverred that there was no need for an\ninquiry, that the matter had been attended to, and ln view of what had\nbeen done and what would be done it\nwas the duty of the house to vote down\ntbe motion.\nThe debate war. continued by T\u00bb W.\nCrothers (West Elgin), who said that\nmost of the wrongdoing had occurred\nwhen the investigation was going on,\nand by Mr. Congdon, who complimented\nMr. Murphy on the character and the\nscope of the Investigation he had carried out. Gus Porter {West Hastings)\nalso spoke In favor of the motion;\nLaurler's Stand.\nOn the assurance of the premier that\nan investigation would be held if sufficient evidence was provided, Mr. Northrup asked If it would be sufficient if\nthe following were proved:\n\"Incompetency,\" \"lack of frankness\nby officials,\" \"lack of the1 spirit of loyalty,\" \"that branches of the house of\nshylock were operated in the bureau,\"\n\"laziness and insubordination, excessive drunkenness, contracts let without\ncompetition or any record in writing,\"\n\"dlBhonesty,\" \"defective bookkeeping,\"\n\"deception,\" \"forgery,\" \"perjury.\"\nSir Wilfrid Laurier replied that if all\nthese things were proven there would\nbe no need of further evidence.\nMr. Northrup then quoted extensively\nfrom  the  report of the secretary of\nstate to prove hia contention that all\nthese things had heen proved.\nMr. Borden's Arraignment.\nR, L. Borden, speaking after 1 o'clock,\nsaid he was surprised at the silence of\nthe colleagues of the secretary of state.\nIf members of the government were\nsensitive about those matters, they\nwould pay out of their pockets the\n$100,000 which had been lost in the\nprlntin? bureau since the time he\nmoved for a committee to inquire into\nthe deficit. That was In 1008, and in the\nfollowing year Mr. Ames had made a\nsimilar motion. On both occasions the\nanswers of the prime minister had been\na quibble, he declared that no depart\nment had been sufficiently inquired into by the civil service commission, but\nthe commissioners had stilted In their\nreport that they had only touched upon\nthe fringe of matters. In conclusion,\nhe said that there was no possible reason why a royal commission should be\nrefused.\nPremier's Reply.\nSir Wilfrid Laurier in reply, said that\nthe secretary of state had made a complete defence and that there waa no\nreason why his colleagues should not\ncome to his rescue. The inquiry conducted by the minister showed up\neverything favorable and unfavorable\nIn the department. It took some time\nto lay the preliminary ground work for\nthe Inquiry, but as soon as it was commenced in earnest there were results.\nSir WlKrld said that the weakness ot\"\nthe position of the opposition was that\nthe royal commission had not been] acknowledged at the beginning when Mr.\nMurphy's resolution waa tabled, but Instead It wub decided to conduct an inquiry before the public accounts committee, and that had been carried on for\nsome time. There wag no necessity for\na third Inquiry, and If the opposition\nwaa not satisfied it was at liberty to\nproceed with an investigation before a\ncommittee of the.house.\nMr. Northrup's motion calling tor a\nroyal commission was then negatived\nen a division of 93 to 55.\nLittle Transacted at the Opening Meeting.\nOPERATORS HOLD\nTHEIR SESSION\nBusiness Will Begin Today.\nChairman Gordon for\nSecrecy.\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., April 25\u2014Rev.\nC. W. Gordon, chairman of the newly\nformed conciliation board which Is to\ninquire into the industrial dispute pending between the operators and mine\nworkers in this district, arrived this\nmorning from Winnipeg, and is meeting\nthe other two members, Messrs. Carter\nand Macleod, today, to arrange the order of procedure to be observed during ,\nthe inquiry.\nThe district board members of the\nmine workers and International Board .\nMembers Morln of Iowa, and Garner and\nLemon of district 18, are here. The\noperators have convened at Macleod\nthis morning for a preliminary meeting\nbefore coming to Lethbridge this evening, when a meeting of the b oard is expected at which all interested parties\nwill attend.\nPair Wage Officer M\u00ab?-Niven Is here\nto be of whatever use possible In expediting the business of tbe board. This\nmeeting will mark the beginning of the\nreal business for which the board has\nbeen called.\nBoard Constituted.\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., April 25.\u2014The\nfirst meeting of the conciliation board\nwas held this afternoon in a room in\nthe courthouse, where Justice Scott Is\npresiding over the regular session of\nthe supreme court ln the courtroom.\nNothins of important!* waa traaeacted,\nother than to formally establish the\nboard and arrange for the opening of\nthe board tomorrow morning at 10\no'clock, when the operators will be here\nfrom Macleod, lt being found that that\nbody could not get through with Its\nMacleod meeting In time to reach Lethbridge in time for an afternoon meeting, as1 was planned earlier in the day.\nNo one was present at the first session\nexcept the members, and immediately\nafter it adjourned Mr. Macleod left for\nthe town of Macleod, and will return hy\nthe next train.\nChairman Gordon Is desirous of keeping the meetings as quiet as possible,\nand is giving out very little for publication.\nThe mine workers are ready for business, and seem anxious to dive into\nthe matter which has brought them\ntogether. The operators at Macleod\nare still maintaining a masterly silence.\nHow long this secret process will prevail cannot he told, but that an effort\nto keep things as quiet as possible is\nbeing made admits of no doubt. Mr.\nGordon thinks than an earnest effort\ntoward conciliation-should be made before anything like arbitration should\nbe attempted.\nTomorrow's meeting is for the purpose of getting the contending parties\ntogether and clearing away as much as\npossible all the small matters which\nhave been cauBtng friction between the\nfactions, so that there might be a clear\nfield for action with as much of soreness removed as possible. Mr. McNiven, fair wage officer of the department of labor, has consented to act as\nsecretary to the board, and will remain\nwith the work to the end.\nGREY COMMUTES\nDEATH SENTENCE\nAnnounces to Deputation  of Winnipeg\nCitizens That Bilowaa Will   Not\nbe Hanged\nWINNIPEG, April 25\u2014His excellency\nEarl Grey today acceded to the request\nof the petitioners for the commutation\nof the death sentence passed upon Nicholas I'liowus, submitted by a large\ndeputation of Winnipeg citizens, comprising the committee that has been\nactively engaged in securing signatures\nto the petition sent to the minister\nof justice at Ottawa last week. The\ndeputation was headed by Nicholas\nBawlf. In reply to the deputation which\nrepeated the request, his excellency\nEarl Grey said that he had already received the recommendation for a commutation of the sentence and said it\nwas with pleasure that he acceded to\nthe request.\nFORGET TO  SENATE.\nOTTAWA, April* 25.\u2014The Evening\nCitizen saya that lt ls understood that\nthe appointment ot Senator Roy of Edmonton \u00abs Canadian commissioner to\nFrance will be announced ln a few days\nand that former Governor Forget will\nI be called to the senate tn his stead.\n\u25a0_\u25a0\n- - -      .   \u25a0\u25a0- ..\n T\\\nPAOE TWO\n\u20ac'0t -fiatlp jitm-a.\nW6DNE8DAY .;. AHtH. 2*\nIn buying baking powder\nexamine Uie label and take\nonly a brand shown to be\nmade with Cream ol Tartar\nDr.PRICE'S\nCREAM\nBAKING POWDER\nA pure, wholesomcreliable Grape\nCream oi Tartar Baking Powder.\nImproves fhe flavor and adds\nto the heatthlulness of the food.\nNo Alum-No Lime Phosphate\nBoth Reduce the Heallhlulness\noi the Food.\n\u2022\u2022 I am quite positive tbat the nse ol alum basting\npowder should he condemned.\"\n\u2014Prof. Vagekm, Vnieemtyol NidUfu.\nRami the Label ami remember thai\n\"Alum, sodium alum, basic aluminum sulphate,\nsulphate ol aluminum, all mean tbe same thine-\nnamely. BUIINI ALUM.\"\u2014Konw. State Board ofHtdA.\nCENSUS MEN WILL\nGATHER NEXT MONTH\nMeeting With Special Officer Macphail\nof Ottawa Arranged at Revelstoke\n\u2014Mr. Docksteader Going\nThe census commissioners of the interior of British Columbia will meet\nB. S. Macphail of Otawa, Bpecial census officer, at Revelstoke on May S and\n9 for tbe purpose of receiving Instructions as to the manner of carrying out\nthe taking of the census in June next\nand for the discussion of matters affecting the work of the enumerators\nin this portion of the province.\nA. B. Docksteader, commissioner for\nWest Kootenay and the two Boundary\nprovincial ridings, will attend the meeting and immediately after its conclusion will Instruct the enumerators at\nRevelstoke. He will then proceed to\nthe Boundary district and afterwardE\nconfer with the enumerators of the\nNelson district.\nA Perfect Food\nGood for all Ages\nFrom infancy onward, Kellogg's\nToasted Corn Flakes is the best food for\neve.vbody.\nIts nutritive qualities and ease of\n.assimilation makes it more wholesome\nthan -meat or eggs\u2014besides it is much cheaper.\nServe it regularly and note how the health of the\nTOASTED\nSALMO TRADING,\nCOMPANY WINS\nObtains Judgment Against Trafford and\nLudwlg in Partnership Suit-\nJudge Raps Defendants\nJudgment waa given for the plaintiffs\nfor $297 and costs, less $40 exemption\nin the suit of the Salmo Trading Co.\nvs. Ludwlg and Trafford, an aetion dependent upon whether at the time the\ndebt was incurred the defendnts were\nin partnership, in the county court yesterday morning. The case was partially heard on Monday and opened yesterday morning with the cross-examination of William Mcintosh, the last witness for the plaintiffs by E. A. Crease\nwho appeared for the defence. Jumes\nO'Shea represented the plaintiffs.\nThe case for the defence opened with\nthe evidence of S. J. Trafford, one of\nthe defendants. He admitted the existence of the partnership during the\nfirst months of work and said that\nthe partnership was dissolved on Feb.\n5 at the suggestion of Mr. S. Ross.\nAfter that witness marked his posts\nwith a hammer and Ludwlg distinguished bis by a blue crayon mark. He said\nthat during the last two iwonthB owing\nto accident and sickness he cut only\n2,000 poles againat 11,000 by Ludwig.\nWitness said that he was not satisfied\nwith the count made by Mr. Mcintosh.\nHe figured that it was over 400 short.\nTo Mr. O'Shea witness said that during the two months he was laid off 20\ndays through sickness and six days\nwhen he could not work owing to the\nweather.\nLudwtg's Story\nH. R. Ludwig, the other defendant,\nsaid that he broke off the partnership\nwith Trafford because Trafford was\nsick a great deal and witness cut the\ngreatest number of ties.\nBoth defendants had pieces of paper\nupon which they said they jotted down\nafter each dayB work the number of\npoles each had cut. Mr. O'Shea devoted a considerable portion of his cross-\nexamination to this point, asking If the\nlists had not been made out at one time.\nHis honor also took a great deal of Interest In these pieces of paper, remarking of one to Mr. O'Shea, who commented upon its cleanliness and the regularity and evenness of the figures,\n\"Yes, I've admired it,\"\nIn giving judgment his honor said\nthat the case seemed rather plain. The\ntwo men arrived at Salmo without any\nresources and endeavored to establish\ncredit. Mr. Ross arranged with the\nSalmo Cedar Co. so thab-he could not\nbe beaten out of his money. They did\ntheir work, received their money und\npaid their bills as partners until February. Then \"without the slightest regard for their moral responsibility they\nhad attempted to evade the payment\nof the account.\" Continuing his honor\nsaid: \"The case has all the earmarks\nof a design to evade the payment of the\naccount.\"\nCHURCHMEN IN SESSION.\nWASHINGTON, April 25.\u2014Willi Justice Lurton of the United States supreme court as honorary chairman and\nmany leading bishops, rectorB and laymen of the Episcopal church in attendance from all parts of the country, the\n29th annual Episcopal church congress\nwas opened this morning with religious\nservices In St. John's church. The sub-\nrevision of the book of common prayer\nto meet present day'. conditions, the\neffect of woman's suffrage on religious\nand educational institutions, and the\nnecessity of comity In missions are\nthe leading subjects scheduled tor discussion.\nCRANBROOK FIRE\nGUTS RESIDENCE\nExtinguished After Long  Fight\u2014Prisoners Sentenced Respectively for\nTheft and Vagrancy\n(S-MOlal to The Dally News.)\nCRANBROOK, B.Cf, April 25\u2014A\nrather bad fire occurred here this afternoon, when the residence of J. C. Pickett waB completely gutted. The\nhouse waa a small frame structure and\nthe fire was started by some children\nplaying with matches, A large pile of\nlumber adjoining the house was also\nconsumed, as were also several outhouses and chicken coops in the adjoining yards. The fire brigade worked\nfor an hour and a half before tbe blaze\nwas extinguished.\nWilliam Palmer was -sentenced to\nfour months in the Nelson jail by Magistrate Ryan In the police court this\nmorning for theft. Palmer entered the\nstore of, the Cranbrook Agency and\nstole a small sum of money from the\ntil.- A man ln the rear office heard\nthe bell on the cash register ring and\ncame out Immediately and before he\nhad time to get away Palmer was\nseized and turned over to the police.\nHis worship also sentenced Lewis Taylor to six months' hard labor for\nvagrancy. Taylor had been hanging\naround several of the residences and\nscaring the women by asking them the\ntime. He asked the magistrate to give\nhim six months in the Nelson jail, and\nhis request, was granted, with the hard\nlabor thrown in for additional measure.\nMember Returns.\nThomas' Caven, M. P. P., returned to\nCranbrook Saturday from Victoria, He\nsaid that things had never been better\non the coast than they are at present,\nand stated that Cranbrook was the best\ncity In the Interior of British Columbia.\nThe local traffic on the C, P. R. in\nand out of Cranbrook has, not been affected in any way by the miners' Btrlke\nand Superintendent Wren's office said\nthis morning that no ere we had been\nlaid off, and that there was no noticeable effect west of Crows Nest.\nJ. S. Ruttan of Bnderly is In the city\ntoday.\nMiss Katherlne Macdonald, sister of\nM. A. Macdonald of the law firm of\nHarvey, McCarter & Macdonald,\nturned to her home in Nelson today\nafter visiting her brother here for the\npast 10 days.\nR. Joyce of Elko was in Cranbrook\nyesterday.\nMayor P. DeVere Hunt will return\nfrom Victoria tomorrow night. Mr.\nHunt had an interview with the premier and received a promise of a grant\nof $2,000 to the Cranbrook Agricultural\nassociation for the present year.\nF. M. Young and Mrs. Young of Fort\nSteele were in to* city over Sunday.\nG. G. Jewell-Jeffray is in the city today on business.\nE. B. Parkinson, deputy customs officer, Vancouver, is in Cranbrook for a\ncouple of days.\nR. W. Woods of the Trltes-Woods\ncompany, Fernie, is in the city on a\nbusiness trip.\nJ. A. Bullock and J. Telfer, Pfnchei\nCreek, arrived on the noon train.\nMrs. C. A. Foote, Moyle, and Miss\nCockburn, Wattsburg, are visiting In\nthe city.\nALABAMA   SUNDAY  SCHOOLS.\nANNISTON, Ala., April 25.\u2014Scores\nof delegates and visitors are in Annis-\nton attending the annual convention of\nthe .a l ib am a Sunday School association,\nthe sessions of which began today and\nwill continue until Friday. President\nE. Y. Mullins of the Southern Baptist\nTheological seminary at Louisville, Dr.\nL. W. Munhall of Germantown, Pa., Dr.\nJ. Wilbur Chapman and other religious\nworkers of note are here to addresB the\nconvention. Prof. E. O. Excell of Chicago is in charge of the musical features of the program.\nThe Miller says:\u2014\n\u00bbm\n\"SEAL  OF ALBERTA\nis a better flour, because I follow\nit through every stage.   First,\nI am mighty particular in tie\nselection of the wheat, and that\ncounts a lot.   In fact, it is one\nof the very biggest factors in making a\nsuperior quality of flour.   There is a big\ndifference in districts, you know, and\nfor Seal of Alberta  we select wheat\nfrom particular districts.\n\"Then  we are   careful   about   cleaning  it.\nIt is screened and scoured and washed.   It would\nbe hard to do any more than that, wouldn't it?\nThen we have searched the world for the finest\nmilling machinery, and we have it here.  When the\nwheat is milled it is tested and aged, and not a\nsack goes out to you until it is just right.   And that\nis why so many people say Seal of Alberta is a better\nflour.   Those who use it know it is better, because\nit makes a larger, lighter, whiter loaf of better texture\nand finer appearance.   Those who use it know it is\nbetter\u2014I have told you some of the reasons why.\"\nI \"*-\u25a0\nmmmmmmmmamnmn9nmmm '\nCRANBROOK FERTILE\nGROUND FOR HYMEN\nWeddings on Successive Days\u2014Benefit\nBall to Popular Railway Man-\nArena Rink to Be Improved.\n(Special lo The Dally News.)\nCRANBROOK, April 26.\u2014A pretty\nlittle weddins; took place Saturday at\nthe home of Trainmaster Weisbrod,\nwhen Charles Smith Unicume ot Brandon and Miss Cl:idys Pearl Kennedy o\nCranbrook were united in marriage b>\nRev. R. Hughes of the Methodist churcl\nIn the presence of a few friends. Aftci\nluncheon Mr. and Mrs. Unicume left on\nthe Spokane Flyer for the coaBt cities.\nAnother wedding took place last Fri\nday afternoon, when S. G. Clarke, ac\ncountant in the office of the Staple*:\nLumber company at Wycllffe, was united by the holy bonds to Miss Jennlr\nFlorence Hall, sister of Mrs. Whltmorc\nof this city. Rev. C, O. Main of the\nPresbyterian church officiated, and the\nceremony was performed at the home\nof V. S. Liddicoatt.\nThe Cranbrook Liberal association\nheld their annual meeting last Saturday\nand elected their officers for the ensuing year as follows; president, A. L.\nMcDermott; vice-president, J.Campbell:\ntreasurer, J. Kennedy; secretary, A.\nHalsall; executive committee, M. A. McDonald, chairman, Dr. King, George\nHoggarth, H. Campbell, F. J. Deane.\nSuccessful Benefit Ball.\nThe benefit ball given last Friday\nfor ex-Yard Foreman Cully was a great\nsuccess, in the neighborhood of 100\ncouples being present The Guerard\norchestra furnished the music and dancing waa Indulged In till a late hour.\nThe ladles auxiliary furnished tho refreshments and the committee in\nCharge deserve credit. The following\nwere the members of the committee:\nW. Harrison, J. W, Lodge, W. Roman,\nand the floor manager waa C, H.\nKnoche.\nThe directors of the Arena rink company have decided to go ahead and\nraise the money to put In a hardwood\nfloor In the rink so tbat Jt can be used\nfdr roller skating, and also erect a\nstage at one end of the building so tbat\nit can be used for any large productions\nthat may come to the city.\n. Timber Inspector Carney was ln town\nfor the week end.\nVk*f\n&*\u25a0\n4IP. Hi\nitbutts) (Thocolat\u00ae\nFruit is fruit in the Nellson Candy Kitchens.   Our flavors come from Iff Jlf\nthe garden\u2014not the chemist's laboratory.   We use no artificial flavorings.        J J  fljfl\nNeilson's Chocolates are flavored with real Strawberries, Raspberries, Oranges, II   (II\nLemons, Pineapples, Cherries, Peaches, Apricots,  Black Currants, eto. prepared by I 111 |||]J|\/\nexperts In our own kitchens. lllllHII\nThe best sugar cane in the world grows In the East Indies.   In making Neilson's 111 HI\nchocolate centres, granulated sugar refined from this best East Indian cane Is used 11 I\/J\/M\nexclusively.   A special secret process Is employed for boiling our sugara and In fllffi\/\nblending the flavorings which makes Neilson's Chocolates improve MmW\nwith age.   You cannot buy a slain Neilson's Chocolate,\nEverything is done with one idea\u2014to have Neilson's Chocolate*\ndifferent\u2014belter.   They are I\n33 different kinds\u201433 different boxes\u2014of these totally different,\ndelicious Chocolates.   Try one box.\nIf you aro unable to obtain Nellson \"a Chocolates In your vicinity, send us 80c, and we\nwill send you a special packaee of tho most delicious assorted Chocolates you ever at\u00ab.      1\n_\nWM.NEILSON LIMITED, TORONTO.\nSOLD IN NELSON BY THE POOL E DRUG CO. LTD.\na conference of delegates representing\nnearly all parts of the country met at\nthe New Wlllard hotel today to discuss\nways and means to bring about an extension of the parcels post system tn\nthe United States. It is probable congress will be asked to pass bills providing for a general parcels post up to\n11 pounds at 8 cents a pound, 1 cent\nfor eaoh two ounces; a cheap local parcels post on the rural routes and Insurance of all mall matter.\nVHrtard's Llntm*\u00bbnt fo<* idle evaf-vwhftr*\nFOREIGNER KILLED\nBY FALLING ROCK\nFirst Fatal Accident on Construction of\nKootenay Central Railway\u2014Was\nBlasting Near Wardner\n(Special to The Dally Newe.)\n^tm   W'VuO's -i-C.   April    25\u2014The\nfirst accident on the construction of the\nKootenay Central occurred yesterday\nnear Wardner, when a foreigner named\nAntonio Matlnussi was killed. It la alleged that he was drilling for a blast\nand in some peculiar manner a rock\nfell on him previous to the blast being\nmode. From the appearance of the body\nlt looks as though he might have been\nkilled by a blast. The remains'were\nbrought to Cranbrook and now lies dn\nBeattle's undertaking parlorB. The coroner has not viewed the remains but\nIt Is hardly likely he will consider an\nInquest necessary. \t\nWOULD EXTEND PARCELS POST.\nWASHINGTON, April 25.\u2014Under the\nauspices of the Postal Progreas league,\nDrink fl Imperially\nby drinking a Whisky of |\nImperial reputation, and |\ngenuine Scottish  origin.     |\nKing\nGeorge IV\" J\nLiqueur WHISKY I\nA kingly drink with a kingly title. f\nThe favorite beverage with Brit- f\nish subjects everywhere.   It has f\nthat delightful maturity and di- \u00a7\ngestibility associated only with\nthe best and purest Whiskies.\n WEDNESDAY  APRIL 26\n(Efje -ISKbg jletMfc\nPAGE THREE\nm\nWatch Burnaby Grow\n$500,000 to Be Expended in Roads\n$300,000 to Be Expended in Water System\n$70,000 Now Being Expended in Sidewalks\nNew tram lines under consideration and those now ln use being double tracked to handle the ever Increasing traffic.\nMillions of dollars being raised for great manufacturing plants, dredging the Fraser, hundreds of acres\nof land being cleared and high-class residences going up in every direction explains the reason for the ra\npid advance in values.\nWe still maintain that property In thla locality la too low, comparing Burnaby's superior advantages as\nregards situation and beautiful landscape around Burnaby and Deer lakes, and that at the tremendous rate\nboth cities are growing together, this ground is bound to occupy a central position in one of the -world's\ngreatest cities.\nNow is the time to buy. Get a lot or two in one of our new subdivisions before lt is too late. We will have\nto advance prices again at least fifty dollars per lot next month.\nThe Wright Investment Co., Ltd.\nNelson,',B. C.\nYou Can Make Money If You Buy\na Few of Our\nSouth-East Calgary Lots\nThe building of the big car shops will unquestionably assure the purchaser that his Investment will double its present price within the near\nfuture.\nLots are Belling fast the terms are so easy, $10 deposit and $10 per\nmonth.\n$125 per Lot\nB. C. United Agencies\nReal Estate and Financial Agents\n311 Baker St., Nelaon. ' 15 Armstrong Block, Calgary\nThe Nelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nW. R. THOMSON, late C.P.R. Bo at Bars, Managsr and Proprietor.\nRYE WHISKIES\nB. C. Five Year Old.\nCorby's Special Selected.\nO. & W. Special.\nWalker's Club.\nSeagram '83.\nPhone 260\nSTORE, VERNON ST.\nP.O. Drawer 11,9\nWATERS 8, PASCOE\nKootenay Like Sash and\nDoor Factory\nBuilders and Contractors\nIdaho Lime, White's English Fort*\nland and Canadian Cement,\nShingles, roofing and brick ln\nlarge and small quantities.\nSash, Doors, Mouldings and Turned Work tn stock or made to\nany pattern. Store fronts and\noffice fixtures.- .\nEstimates given on brick, stone or\nframe buildings.\nOut of town orders receive prompt\nattention.\nA special feature made of out of\ntown work and Jobbing. -\nFactory and Warehouse}- Front St.\nNelson, B.C.\nP.O. Box 835 Phene B194\nNOTICE\nla tiie matter of an application for the\nissue of a duplicate Certificate ot Title\nto ihe southerly t$ feat of Lots 23, 24,\n26 and 25. Block 79. town ot Nelson.\nNotice Is hereby given that ft la my intention to Issue, at the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereof,\na duplicate of the Certificate of Title to\nthe above mentioned land in the name ol\nJefcn Hepburn, which Certificate is dated\n13tli March, 1900, and numbered 2897K.\nSAMUEL H. BOS],\nDistrict Registrar.'\nLand ReaUttry Office,\nNehWi. B.C., AKU B, 1911.\nWatch\nRepairing\nIn watch repairing we guarantee you\nabsolute satisfaction. I personally do\nnil watch and clock repairing bandied\nin our store and nothing Is turned out\nwithout a very close test. If you are\nhaving trouble with your time pleca\nbring it to us and ypu will be satisfied.\nE. E.ROBINSOf\\\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\n\u00bbl7Va Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nOpposite Silver King Hotel\nGasoline Engines\nMARINE AND STATIONARY\nIf you want an engine with the power,\nhigh class material and first class workmanship, call and Idupeot the Barber. They\nare in a class by themselves. You don't\nknow the pleasure of boating until you\nInstall a Berber engine. They are built\nin all alies from ). to 8 cylinder, 2>A to\n100 H. P.,. high speed, medium or heavy\nduty. Call or write for catalogue, and let\nme quote you prices on either a marine\n\u2022r stationary. They are a high grade engine, at a reasonable price, and they are\nguaranteed to do their duty.\nI keep a -full supply of dry* batteries,\n\u2022Drect, from the factory. I test and guarantee them to register over 20 amperes before leaving the store: also a variety of\npocket flashlights and batteries, end every-\n\u2022King tor motor boats.\nTHOMAS SAIU3BNT,\nMotor Boat Supplies, BOB Stanley Bt\n\"hone U.   P. O. Urn ?73.      NELSON. BO\nWATER NOTICE\nX Joseph Brown, of Qutelius, B.C., give\nnotice that on the first day of May, llll,\nI intend to apply to the Water Commissioner at his' office In Nelson for a license\nto take and use one cubic foot of water\nper second from unnamed stream running\ninto Slocan river, on Lot WS8A1, in West\nKootenay district. The water Is to be taken\nfrom the stream about 5,000 feet from the\nnorth line or Lot 76WA1, and Is to bo used\non Lot 7688A1 for Irrigation purposes.\n5-4-U-aOd. JOSEPH BROWN.\nSPORTING NEWS.\nFRANK  PATRICK   SAYS\nRINK READY IN FALL\n(Special to The Daily. News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. 0\u201e April 25.\u2014Frank\nPatrick Is here In connection with the\nplan for the establishment of an Ice\nskating rink and hockey team here. He\nsays the Bite has been secured and\nthat the work on construction will start\nIn five weeks, the rink being ready by\nNovember 1. Patrick says that eastern\nhockey cracks can be secured and intimates that Tommy Phillips and St\nGriffiths, who are now on the coast,\nwould form the backbone of the team.\nCANADIAN NATIONAL\nHORSE SHOW OPENS\nTORONTO, April 25.\u2014Decorated In\ngreen and white, with festoons of the\nUnion Jack, the armories presented a\nbrilliant appearance today at the opening of the annual Canadian national\nuorse show. Many visitors from over\nche Dominion und also from the States\nare here to attend the exhibition. -Judging began soon after the opening today\n.ma will continue until the close af tbe\nexhibition Saturday night. There are\n3D classes this year, with $8,000 divided\namong them ln cash prizes, besides numerous cups and other trophies.\nVANCOUVER HORSE SHOW.\nVANCOUVER, B. 0\u201e April 25.\u2014Because of the prominence of many of\nthe exhibitors and the unusually large\nileld of show horses entered, more than\nordinary interest has been aroused in\nthe annual Vancouver horse show,\nwhich was Informally opened to the\npublic this morning. The exhibition,\nwhich will last until the end of the\nweek, Is declared to be the biggest of\nits kind ever held in Canada. There\nare 179 classes, and a number of new\ndepartures, that are expected to add to\nthe attractiveness of the exhibition.\nWOLGAST-HOGAN   BOUT.\nNEW' YORK, April 25.\u2014Fight fans\nin the metropolis are on edge in anticipation of the conteBt between Ad. Wolgast and \"One Round\" Hogan, which Is\nslated for decision tomorrow night In\nthe arena of the Madison Athletic club.\nThe Cattle Ib regarded as one of the\nmost Important that has taken place in\nNew York thlB season. Both fighters\nhave completed their work of preparation and are reported to be in excellent\ncondition for the go.\nUNION ASSOCIATION  IN MOTION.\nBOISE, Idaho, April 25.\u2014The newly-\norganized Union Baseball association,\not which W. H. Lucas Is the chief promoter and which* Includes on its roster\nof managers a number of former big\nleague stars, began Its first season today under auspicious conditions, Helena\nplaying its opening game at Oreat Falls,\nMissoula at Salt Lake and Butte at\nBoise. The schedule provides for a\nseason of 142 games.\nBURNS  AND   HOCK   DRAW.\nNEW ' HAVEN, Conn., April 25.\u2014\nFrankie Burns of Jersey City and\nTommy Hock of Philadelphia fought\n15 faBt rounds to a draw here, both\ntoeing weak and bleeding at the end of\nthe fight. '    \u25a0\nSUITER   GOES  UNDER.\nST. PAUL, Minn!, April 25.\u2014Walter\nMiller settled all doubts as to his ability to throw Suiter, who asplroB to be\ntbe welterweight champion when he\ntook the firBt fall out of Suiter ot the\nsit. Pnul Auditorium In 1 hour H mln-\nates, and a second fall tn 25 minutes.\nJOHNSON IS\nNOW OUT OF JUG\nBlack Champ Says  He'll  Continue to\nHit High Spots With, Auto\u2014   -\nScores Magistrate,\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., April 25.\u2014\nJack Johnson Is out of jail, but despite\nhis 25 days' moral Bpanklng hy Uhole\nSam for breaking the speed laws he is\ngoing to be as naughty as ever, sayirig\nthat be intended to drive as fast as\never,  having never hurt any one.\nJudge Treadwell, who put Jack behind, the bars, comes in for some caustic- comment, tbe champion alleging\nthat Treadwell jailed him in order to\ngain a little notoriety. What the justice thinks of a prize figher's arraignment of him Is unrecorded.,\nPRITCHARD  MAKES REPLY\nTO   JOE   MURDOCK\nThe following la a communication\nfrom Bob Prltchard of Phoenix:\n\"In reply to an article which appeared in The Nelson Daily News in\nthe Issue of April 20, regarding a boxing exhibition given at a smoker In the\nMiners' Union hall, Phoenix, on Saturday evening, April 15, I wish to contradict a statement made by your correspondent! regarding the exhibition\nbetween Jack Scholes and myself. He\nstates that Jack Scholes got the decision over me, which is untrue, no\ndecision being given, as prearranged by\nScholes and myself previous to the\nbout.\n\"I was somewhat amused at his ravings regarding weight, aud thus trying\nto pat himself on the back and blindfolding your readers into believing that\nhe Is a fighter of note, putting himself\nIn Abe Attell'e class, when he isn't\neven fast enough to wipe the sweat off\nthe famous boxer.\n\"Another statement which amused\nme was that I claimed the welterweight\nchampionship of the Boundary since\nBilly Biner's retirement, which Is true,\nowing to the fact that I happened to\nbe In the ring with the referee when\nBilly retired through coming in contact\nwith my left mitt In the seventh round\n'of the contest for the championship.\nFor the benefit of clean sport, the interests ot the sporting element and the\nreaders of your valuable paper I trust\nin future that the beforemeutioned\nwriter will refrain from rushing Into\nprint with such ridiculous statements\nIn order to get some cheap notoriety,\nwhich he never ea-rncd.\"\nBALL   RECORD.\nBATTLE CREEK, Mich., April 25.\u2014\nA baseball record was made here when\nthe Battle Creek team ot southern\nMichigan made two triple plays in a\nnine-Inning game with Grand Rapids.\nThe first was made by the catcher,\ncatching a bunt and retiring men at\nsecond and first, the other being a\nlong drive to shortstop with put-outs\nat second and third.\nMUST PUT UP SIMOLEONS.\nCALGARY, April 25.\u2014A message was\nsent to Bill Carney, the ex-manager of\nthe Calgary baseball team, last night\nby President Savage stating tbat he\nmust have the $400 at the Traders\nbank before today, or he must report\nhere immediately for the season. Carney Is managing the Rock Island team,\nand that team plays their opening\ngame in the league tomorrow. If Bill\nhaB not the money here today Mr. Far\nrell wilt prevent Carney from playing\ntomorrow.\nSPORTING SPOTLIGHTS.\nThe local gun club is well on the way\nto the most successful season of Its\nhistory. On Saturday there was a\nrecord turnout of 23 shooters, and yesterday's contest was also highly successful.\nThe knights ot the willow were in\ngood form yesterday afternoon when\nthe first practice of the season was\nenjoyed. There were quite a bunch of\nnew men and members of, last year's\nteam at the nets and Captain Butler\nexpects to have a good team lined up\nby May 24.\nJoe Lally, of Cornwall, is the original\nlacrosse missionary. Joe traveled\nacross the continent last fall preaching\nthe doctrine of starting the boy out in\nlife with a lacrosse stick tn his band.\nAnd his prenching has not been In vain.\nFrom Winnipeg, Regina and Calgary\ncome reports that tell of a new interest\nIn the game on the part of the people\nwho can do it good and get It going.\nJoe may not be much of a referee, but\nas an all-around lacrosse enthusiast he\nIs in a clasB by himself, and he has the\nfaculty of waking up men who love tbe\ngame but who have tailed to do justice\nto their affection. When lacrosse\ncomes Into Its own again, as it will\ncome, Joe may be remembered with his\nfailures, but the one beet bet is that a\nmonument will mark the spot where be\nfell flghttng for Canada's national game\n\u2014Toronto Telegram.\n\\\na AMBASSADOR  BRYCE 8PEAKS\nAT ST. GEORGE'S DAY DINNER\nNEW YORK, April 25.\u2014\"The historian of the future, when New York city\nshall cover the whole of New Jersey\nand stretch up to Kingston, will not distinguish between England as a country\nand the United States as a nation,\"\neald Ambassador Bryce at the dinner of\nthe St George society here last night,\n\"but will acknowledge what has been\ndone by the English-speaking people as\na people.\"\nThe ambassador said that King\nGeorge V. was trying to live up to the\nbleb standard set by his father and\ngrandmother and waa winning day by\nday the confidence ot hla people.\nSome one ln the audience asked'\n\"How aboat Ireland?\"\n\"There never was a time,\" Mr. Brycc\nreplied, \"when the relations between\nHER HANGS\nWERE\nHAD TO WEAR RUBBER GLOVES\n>cFrull-a-tives\"CcmipletelyCurodTtte\u00a3czema\nGrawdkLignr, Que,, Jan. 2nd, 1910\n\"My wife was troubled for three\nyeaw with Eczema nn the hand-* which\nmade her luiuls a'uiost useless. Tim\ndoctor gave h;r s.vcr.il ointments to\nuse, none of which Ind any effect. Hi\nalso advised her to wear rabbet gloves\n(she wore out three pairs).\nI persuadi-tl her, aa a 11st resort, to\ntry \"Fruit-a-tives\". The effect was\nmarvellous. Her hands are mow cured.\nWe both attribute our present health\nto \"Fruit-a-tivcs.\"\nn. jourmrvr.\nEczema, Rash, Pimples, Itching and\nBurning Skin are always caused by im-\nfiure blood\u2014due tochrouic constipation,\nndigestiou or so.ne weakness with this\nkidneys.\n\u2022'Fruit-a-tives\" is a positive cure for\naU Skin Troubles. It is the greatest\nblood purifying medicine in the world\n\u2014aud is the only remedy made of fruit\njuices.\n50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c.\nAt all dealers, or senton receipt of price\nby Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nSh\/MsCum\nEngland and Ireland were better; there\nnever was a time when the Irish people\nbad more money in their savingB bank:\nthere never was a time when they were\nbo near to becoming the owners of the\nland they tilled.\"\nA message from King George was received during the dinner, thanking the\nsociety for the greetings it had cabled\nto their majesties.\nMILLING   COMPANIES\nARE    CONSOLIDATED\nMONTREAL, April 25.\u2014A. J. Nesbitt,\nmanaging director of the Investment\nTrust, has confirmed the report that\nhe had concluded arrangements of the\nconsolidation of the International Milling Co., Ltd., ot Saskatchewan and Minnesota, and the Canadian Cereal & Milling company.*\nMr. Nesbitt stated that a holding\ncompany would be known as the International Milling company of Canada\nwith an authorized capital of $3,500,000\nof 7 per cent cumulative preferred\nstock, and $2,500,000 ot common, of\nwhich there will now be issued for the\nacquisition of the shares of the International and Canadian Cereal & Milling\ncompanies $2,600,000 preferred and\n$1,050,000 common, there will also bt\nan authorized bond issue of $2,000,000,\not which $1,500,000 will be outstanding.\nOf this latter amount $1,225,000 will be\nheld tn escrow to retire the present out\nstanding bonds of the International\nMilling Co., Ltd., and the Canadian\nCereal and Milling Co., Ltd., the latter\nhaving arranged to retire 1126,00c\nbonds this year.\nSUNDAY SCHOOL WORKERS  MEET.\nHURON, S. D., April 25.\u2014Many enthusiastic young people arrived ln the\ncity today to attend the annual meeting\nof the South Dakota Sunday School association. Beginning with a welcome\ndemonatratlon in the Baptist church\nthe sessions will continue over Wednee\nday and Thursday. Many promint-n:\nclergymen, educators ' and Sunda>\nschool workers of this and other state*\nwill address the convention.   '\nWEDDED  AT   LEAGUE   ISLAND.\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 25.\u2014\nMany naval officers and their wives nt\ntended the wedding today of Miss Heler\nHoward, daughter of Commander am:\nMrs William L. Howard, and Ensi*r*\nCharles C. Gill of Boston. \/Chapluii\nEvans, U. S. N., performed the mar\nriage ceremony at the home of th<\nbridge's parents at the League Islam\nnavy yam. Tho bride was attended b>\nMIsb Dannehower of New York ns maid\nof honor and tbe bridegroom had En\nsign H. Lee as his best man.\n^ Her Secret \u201e\nWty She Alwiys Looked So Y0U113\nEveryone rof.ers to her at one of\nth\u00bb m-iit attractive women In tows.\nIt wasn't her features, for while regular, they were not unusual. But the\ncharm lay In the head of eplendld,\nTlforous hair that made a veritable\ncrown. It had that peculiar tustre\nand the sun gave lt an added brilliance\n\u2014you couldn't look at her without\nunoonactc-uily commenttaf on the\nbeauty of her halt;\nWhen asked how she kept lt so\nbeautiful she replied that lt was ne\nsecret, simply proper \u2022hampooln***, regular ceroblng end vthe eoaeolentleas\nuse of Wl Hsu tone. #Bhe admitted It\nbad not always been Id that condition,\nbut that she found Hlrsutone the beet\nthing she ever rot for the hair. It\nrave the scalp such a cool, -refreshed\nfoeiiR-r, and the hair was ao. muoh\neasier to dress after Its use.    \u2022\u2022\nThere are plenty of \u201e -fceae* that\nwould be Just as attijattlve lor Hlrsutone soon brings the hair and soalp\nInto Rood  condition.\nYour N*yal Drug Store will cheerfully guarantee Hirautone to do aH\nMi at la ol&rmed lor y. and \u2022rerr \u25a0woman owes It to herself to try Ii\nSold and guaranteed by The Poole Drug\nCo., Ltd., and W. Rutherford, Nelson.\nOne for\nFred Irvine & Co.\nLadies' Wash One Piece\nDresses and White\nMuslin Dresses\nWe are now showing a large stock of ladies tub dresses in gingham,\nlinen and muslin\nDresses from $2.50 each\nJust the thing for summer wear.\nGirls' and Misses' Middle\nSailor Suits\nin Wash materials for girls 12,14 16 and 18 year sizes\nSec our stock of white summer one piece dresses from\n$5.00 each up\nFred Irvine & Co.\nJust Arrived\u2014A Carload of\nGas Stoves\nAll Sizes--Newest Designs\nml\ng-llaKwffl**!\n|k_\nw  '\n\u00ab^*#^\nW\\iJ\n& '\u2022\u25a0>*'\"\u25a0'\nPPr.\nA Specialty-Glass Ovens\nWater Heaters, Bedroom and Bath-\nRoom Heaters on view at the\nNelson Coke &. Gas Company's Showrooms\nNotice to the Trade\nla order to effect quick clear ance of stock In factory the Kootenay\nJam Co., Ltd., announce\nImportant Reductions on Jams, Jellies\nMarmalades and Bottled Fruits\nPrices on Application.\nKootenay Jam Co., Limited\nNelson, B. C.\nMalcolm & Butchart\nVernon tt.\nGeneral blacksmttiling, wheelwright\nIng ind expert horseshoeing.\nJust arrived a carload ot Studebaker\nWagons and John Deer Implements.\n\"PARISIAN\"\nFrench Dry  Cleaning\nand Steam Dye Works\nMull orrtirs nwelvo prompt attention.\n'MH Baker .trow. Nelson. B.C. P. O.\nIlea 7\u00ab. Phono 3U.\n PAGE POUR\n\u20acbe Baity $eh)0.\nWEDNESDAY   APRIL 2<\nCtic Batty #etosi.\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Horning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe New\u00ab Publishing Company. Limited\nW   G.   POSTER Manager\nWEDNE8DAY,  APRIL 26\nWHY NOT WORK TOGETHER?\nWhat was accomplished yesterday toward the cleaning up and the beautlfl-\ncatlon of the city illustrates In a small\nway what could be done toward the advancement of the Interests of the city\nof Nelson if her people would only pull\ntogether for the common good, forget-*\nting their personal prejudices and their\nsuspicions and admitting that after all\nthere may be some good In the other\nfellow even if they cannot discern lt.\nThe motto of every' resident of Nelson\nshould be \"Nelson, First, Last and Always,\" and all should work to that end.\nAs matters stand while every resident\nof Nelson, The Daily NewB believes, ls\nat heart as loyal to the city and its interests as could be desired at the same\ntime it must be frankly admitted that\nthere is a lack of cohesion and united\neffort no matter what proposition Is\nsubmitted looking toward the public\ngood. Why this should be it Is impossible to say. There is no reason for it\nand there is no excuse for it\n'Comment Is sometimes heard on the\nfact that Nelson is not going ahead as\nfast as some of the prairie towns. This\nmay be explained to a certain extent\nby the fact that the tide of immigration\nwhich is now flowing Into the three\nprovinces to the east has not yet been\ndirected this way to the same extent\nthat It will be later on but at the same\ntime lt must be pointed out that the\npeople of Nelson and tbe Kootenays\nand Boundary country generally are\nmaking not tbe slightest effort to ad-\nI was cured ot Acute Rheumatism by\nMINARD'S LINIMENT.\nBay of Islands.        J. M. CAMPBELL.\nI was cured of Facto] Neuragla by\nMINARD'S LINIMENT.\nBprlnghUI, N.S. WM. DANIELS.\nI was cured of Chronic Rheumatism by\nMINARD'S LINIMENT.\nAlbert Co., N.B. GEO.\"TINGLBY.\nvance their own interests by making\nknown tbe resources and possibilities of\nthis portion of western Canada, as\nare the people of the prairies their respective cities and districts.\nThis, of course, will be taken as harking back to the old question of publicity\nconcerning which there is more or less\nprincipally more, difference of opinion\nin Nelson The Idea of letting the outside world know of the resources and\nthe possibilities of the district. around\nNelson and of the city's many advantages appears repugnant to a section of\nthe community. Various grounds are\nadvanced against publicity work, but so\nfar as The Daily News Is concerned It\nhas yet to hear of one that really has\nany weight. Occasionally an excuse for\nthis attitude is heard, but it is always\nonly an excuse and a poor one at that.\nBut this matter of publicity is not the\nonly nor the most important matter\nupon which there has been up to the\npresent lack of united effort In the public interest. Does the Board of Trade\nreceive the support that lt should and\nmight not Its usefulness be Improved\nthrough the united efforts of the business men of the city? Does the Kootenay Lake General hospital receive the\nmeasure of support to which it is by\nevery law of human nature entitled?\nDoes the Annual Fruit Fair get all the\nassistance that the city's location ln\nthe heart of a rapidly developing agricultural country make it advisable It\nshould receive? Do other public institutions receive tbelr full measure of support? In this matter reference Is not\nmeant bo much to monetary assistance\nas to what la perhaps more Important,\nthe cheerful co-operation of all in tbe\nwork to be done from time to time.\n\u201e Few places enjoy such natural advantages as does Nelson and few can boast\na country of such, wonderful resources\nimmediately surrounding lt All that is\nrequired Is a realisation by her citizens\nthat It is necessary for them all, irrespective of personal prejudices or suspicions, to work together for their city's\nadvancement. Once tbe people of Nelson realise this fully and set to work\naccordingly tneir city will begin to\nforge ahead as it has never forged\nahead before. Why should there be any\ndelay in the matter? Why cannot all\npetty differences be forgotten in the Interests ol the common weal ?\nMETAL  MARKETS.\nNEW YORK, April 25.\u2014Silver, 6i%; standard copper, 11.70 to 11.80; 'lulet.\nLONDON, April 25.\u2014Silver, 21 16-10; lead,\n\u00a312, 18s, 3d. __\nEXCLUDE WOMEN\nFROM SALOONS\n(Continued lrom page one.\nthe status of the license.   I si\nthat we provide him-with a copy of last\nmeeting's minutes.\nCommissioners Wade and Gllker also\nexpressed objections to re-issuing the license to Mr. Ivens.\nThe mayor's suggestion tbat Mr. Moffatt be supplied with a copy of the minutes was adopted.\nWomen in Saloons\nThe question of women aad saloons\nwas brought up by a letter from Judge\nForin who stated, that a rancher from\nThrums had come to him with a complaint that his daughter ,two men and\nanother girl had been frequenting the\nOffice saloon and the Kootenay hotel\nand were there supplied with intoxicating liquors. At the Office saloon, said\nthe letter, the writer was informed that\nthe girls became on one occasion intoxicated and there, with their companions, acted in an unwomanly manner.\nJudge Forln said that he saw no legal\nremedy but expressed the opinion that\nhe had In all probability averted a tragedy by presuadlng the irate father from\nharming one of the men in question\nwhom he, the father, claimed was responsible for his daughter's downfall.\nHe asked that an Investigation be made\nby the commissioners Into tbe matter.\nA letter from C. W. Young, chief of\npolice, giving the 'acts of the case, was\nalso read. The chief reported that the\noccurrence complained of at the saloon\ntook place about 12:25 on the morning\nof April 14. Constables Reld and McLeod saw the two girls and their companions ln a box at the saloon. They\nwere talking and laughing in a loud\nmanner. At 1:20 one of the girls was\ntaken sick and was conveyed to the kitchen. She was taken to her home ln\nthe Kootenay hotel by the police. The\nother girl also left with her companion,\nNo Law Broken\nThe mayor said that as far -as the\nKootenay hotel was concerned o'ne of\nthe girls, not, the daughter of the\nThrums rancher, was employed there\nand that under the law ,ln common\nwith any othe> man or, woman, had a\nperfect right to obtain either food or\ndrink. With regard to the Office saloon the proprietors of that place had\nrecently equipped their kitchen and fitted dp two boxes for the use of patrons\nrequiring a light lunch which they supplied. There was nothing illegal in\neither men or women being served in\nthese boxes with food or drink though it\nhad always been understood ln the olty\nthat no women were allowed actually in\nthe bars. In the case under notice the\nparties had not gene into the bar but\ninto a box which was quite apart from\nthe bar-room and entered by- a separate\ndoor.\nMake New Regulations .\nAs a means of preventing any occur-\nPerid d'Oreille Lands\nWell watered, easily cleared and soil unexcelled In British Columbia\n' ) *\nUnimproved Lands from..$15 per acre\nImproved ranches from... .$40 per acre\nExperts agree that the lands in this valley bare the finest fruit soil.\nTou have only to see the fruit and. vegetables produced and you will buy.\nThese bargains are for a short time only as we are rapidly Belling.\nP. J. GLEAZER & COl\nP. O. Box 316\n412 Ward  Street\nWest Arm Improved Ranch for Sale\nWe offer you one of the best ranches on the arm. The land Is all\ncleared, the soil is of tbe best and without stone or rock, all fenced and\ncultivated and fertilized, about 500 trees, some of which are ln bearing.\nAll farm implements and stock go with the place.\nThis ls a place where you have a good revenue from the start. If Interested call at our office and we will take you to see it.\n-Hunter & Annable\"\n413 WARD ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nSave Money\nOn that Phonograph or Gramophone\nyou're going to buy.\nWe will meet any proposition or any offer that Is made on these\ngoods by anybody anywhere.\nIn buying from us you Just save the $4 and upwards that you pay\nfor expressage when you send away.\nRemember you can't buy these goods for a cent less from anybody\nanywhere than you can from us right here.\nCall or write us\u2014 Thomson's\nHudson's Bay Stores  :-:   Nelson, B. C.\nThe Stores of Satisfaction for Value and Quality\nSpecial Prices on Dry Goods\nFor Monday and Wednesday Only\nDress linen, 36 inches wide In all colors.\nCotton Repps, In helio, white, sky, gray, green, fawn and other shades.\nScotch Linen GlngbamB In plaids, rast colors, newest patterns, excellent\nwearing goods.\nThese Linens. Repps and Ginghams Are Fully Worth\n35c, but on Monday and Wednesday They Go at 25c\nA Snap in Table Linens\nass bleached Damask   Table\nSpecial Price $1.25\nThree dozen only grasB bleached Damask   Table   Cloths,   08x08,   regular\nprice \u00bb1.60.\nW. G. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer\nPhone 34\nNelson, B. C.\nrences of a similar nature in future he\nsuggested tbat the board make a regulation that no woman should be allowed\non any saloon premise's. Neither the\nKootenay hotel -nor the Office saloon\nhad broken any law, repeated the mayor\nbut It was necessary to take some step\nas that which he advocated. He had\nthought at first It would be a good\nplan to prohibit boxes but such a course\nwould work a hardship on certain places\nand he thought that such a course\nshould only be taken if further trouble\noccurred.\nA resolution to exclude all women\nfrom saloon premises and from hotel\nbars was passed.\nThe commissioners adjourned until\nthe first Wednesday In June.\nFoot Comfort\nNow that the balmy summer weather Is approaching you will naturally\ndiscard your heavy footwear for a pair of cool, comfortable low cut sboeB.\nOur range of Oxfords In Qun Metal, Tan and Patents are sure to please.\nFor Men at \u2022 $3.50 to $5.00\nFor Women at $2.50 to $4.50\nThis Store Will Be Closed on \"Arbor Dot,\" Tuesday, April 25th\nYours for Big Values and Uttle Price\nHudson's Bay Stores  :-:  Nelson, B.C.\nSIGHTLY CITY IS\nARBOR JAY RESULT\nGeneral Activity in Removing Rubbish.\nCity Supplies Teams\u2014Park Touched'\nUp\u2014Boulevard Work.\nFavored by magnificent\nNelsons Bpecial Arbor day yesterday\nwas a complete success, and the holiday was availed of by the citizens generally for the purposef'for which it was\nInstituted, making the. city more sightly Tiv civ nad a'large number of\nteams In service, covering the four dis-\n-fH'rMy KlapM condb-j, cnrei colds.\ntha llirra. and ImjuU-     * \"\" \u00b0 '\nBOOK SALE\nNOW ON\nSome Good Values-See Them\nComplete Line of Kodaks\nand Supplies\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box S02\nMail Orders a Specialty\n....* 5,745,000\nVice-President\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.\nCapital Authorised. 910,000,000\nCapital Subscribed S 5,913,000\nCapital Paid Up t 5,745,000      Rsserve Fund ...\nO. RWILKie, President.   HON   ROBERT    JAFFRAY,\n\u25a0\u25a0RANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook Fernle, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, New\nMichel, Moyie, Nelson, Kevelstoke, Vancouver and Victoria\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on  deposits at currsnt rate trom date of deposit.\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAY. Manager\n       '   \" '\nPREMIER M'BRIDE\nOPENS HORSE SHOW\nOver 1,300 Entries In Vancouver's Great\nEvent\u2014-Alberta,   Ontario    and\nWashington Compete.\nVANCOUVER, B. a, April 25.\u2014With\n1,305 entries, including some of the\nbest horses in America, with. promise\nof banner crowds, in Junelike weather,\nPremier McBrlde tonight formally\nopened Vancouver's fourth annual\nhorse show. Competition for the $8,000\nIn prizes, however, commenced this afternoon, when eight classes were judfet-u\nthe contest being keen in all.\nAmong these who lead In point of\nentries, which this year exceed by over\n600 tbe 700 at the first show four years\nago, are: President McGregor, T. J;\nSmith, J. A. Russell, and Mrs. A. D.\nMcRae, all Vancouver: Andrew Laid\nlaw, Spokane; tfarrell, Seattle; F. I'\nLowes, .Calgary; (iraiiam Ross, Clare-\nmont, Ont\nAmong easterners in the 200 exhibition are also Baxter Heed Co., Lid.\nOlds, Alta.; Mrs. Pat Burns. Louis Du\nrand, Calgary; Farris Stock Farm, Trin\ntrlcts which veer under-the charge of j vllle, Alta.; Lowes &-Co., Calgary, am:\nthe.'city engineer, G. C. Mackay, and a j It, G. J. Stralendorff, Okotoks, Alta,\ngeneral assault .was made on the lanes,' The judges are! Major Hendry o\nt>e rubbish lv ins- removed and dumped i Hamilton; J. R. Sutherland, Calgary\nInto tbe ravine behind-the car barns.' Colonel-Campbell, Montreal; James O.\nA barge was also dumping rubbish into j Marshall,, New York, and H. B. Maid,\nthe lane. \"..   :;<   Victoria,'B. C.\nTh\u00a9 citron** (.\u25a0piirraHjif.';were.observed \u25a0. n iw.-\u2014\nputting the finishing touches to their\nlawns; gardens, boulevards and yards,\nfor the bulk of the work had been done\nbefore, so stimulating had been the\ncampaign of enthusiasm conducted by\nthe Nelson Improvement association;\nThis also applied-to Fairview, where\nIndividual citizens were 'observed -acquiring a healthful tan...     \u25a0\n.  New Boulevards\/:\nTwo pieces of boulevard have b#en\ncompleted, possibly more! H. W.-Jtob-\nertson put, the finishing touches to his\nboulevard on the.corner of 'Stanley and\nLatimer street!,'*seeding lt.dowtt and\ncovering it with brush'.for protective\npurposes. T. 3. Scanian anfl George\nClark, the citizens next in order; down\nStanlpy street, propose to immediately\ncontinue it In front of their prppertles.\nThe boulevard in front of the Christian\nScientist church was finished on Saturday. Stanley street Is now pretty\nwell done for considerable sections.\nAt the city park behind the hospital,\nHarry Houston, of the park committee\nof the improvement association, wss\nworking, brushing from Front street\nsouthward, with the'assistance of volunteer helpers, both morning and afternoon. The bachelors did not turn out\ntn as large numbers as was hoped, however.\nOn the waterfront, W. R. Jarvis, of\nthe committee of district 8 of the association, directed the general cleanup,\nwhich wns of n very thorough order.\nHe also finished the plot at the foot\nof WaH street\nThe fire brigade had one run during\nt**e day, to the corner of Wall and\nSilica streets, but there was nothing but\nrubbish on fire.\nAs a result of the entire campaign,\nNelson Is the shiraier by 400 trees, or\nwill be in the future, and today Ib a\nmore sightly city than if there had been\ndo campaign.\nSpring Tired?\nAte. You Wwj and Run Down?\nAre You Sick and Depressed? Is\nYour Blood Thin ind Poor?\nDo you take cold easily? Do you\n\/\u00ab! shivery? Utterly fatigued out\nafter a little exertion! Is your complexion bad? Do you feel that life is\nnot worth living? Nearly every one\nhas some of these symptoms in\nspring; for winter, while apparently\nbracing, is all the time sapping your\nstrength. By spring every one is In a\nmore or less played-out condition\u2014\nlust right to catch any disease. Not\nalways sick; but tired, tired, tired. To\ncarry you through the changeable,\ntrying, disease-breeding weather of\nspring you need   '\nDuffy's Pure Malt Whiskey\nla an absolutely\npure, gentle and Invigorating - stimulant and tonlo. It\novercomes all weak,\nening, wasting and\nrun-down conditions ol the body,\nbrain and muscle,\ngiving the system\npower to tbrow off and resist coughi,\ncolds, asthma, grip, catarrh, bronchitis and lung troubles; it is a wonder-\nful remedy in the prevention and\ncure of consumption, pneumonia, malaria and low fevers, if taken as directed. Prescribed by physicians and\nrecognized u a family medicine every,\nwhere.\nAll liquor dealers, or direct, 11.60\na large bottle, Be sure yon get the\ngenlnnet substitutes and Imitations\nare Injurious. Medical booklet, containing rare common-sense rules for\nhealth, and testimonials, also doctor's\nial Bank of Canada\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED 1869\nCapital Paid-up $ 6,200,000\nReserve and Undivided Profits , % 7,200,000\nTotal   Assets .S92,O00,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nH. 8. HOLT, President   E. L. PEASE, Vice-President and Cen. Manager\nOne hundred and sixty-five Branches ln Canada and Newfoundland;\nfourteen Agencies tn Cuba and Porto Bloo^flve Agencies In British West\nIndies. London, England, 2 Bank Bldgs., Princes Street, E. C; New\nYork City, 68 William Street.\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings department\nat all branches.\n'ti.su\u00bb BHANCH A, B. NETHERBY, Managli\nBank of Montreal\nistabllshsd   (17 \u2022\nCJUItai \u00bbll Paid uo 114*00,000       Rest   .'.  ........   \u00bb1t,000,oo\u00bb\nHEAD OFFICE:'MONTRE   L\nHI. Hon, Lord Strathrona and M aunt  Rpyal,  G.C-M.G.,  Hon.  Presldam\nR.  I. Angus, President\ntlr Edwsrd S. Cloustsn, Bart,, V tes-Prssldsnt snd tan. Managai\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArmstrong, Chilliwack, Clcverdsls,   Fnds.oy,   Greenwood,   Hosm.r\n*alowna. Merrltt. Nelaon, New Denver, Nicola, New Westminster, Pan\nMcton, Prln:e Rupert, nonalanri. SJrnmeriand, Vansouvsr, Vernon, Victoria\nKELSON BRANCH \/y\" L. B. DEVEBER, Manage\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O.  LL.D., D.C.L., President.\nALEXANDER LAIRD, General Manager\nCAPITAL :.:TV.. .-r$ 10.000.000        REST    $7,000,000\nTHE SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\not the Canadian Bnnk of Cumin*;-ce will wefve deposits of |1 and up*\nwards, on which interest,la allowed at current rates   There ls no deia>\nin withdrawing the whole or any portion of the deposit   Small deposit*\nare welcomed;\nAccounts (may be opened tn tne names of two or more persons, to\n. be operated by any one of the n umber or by the1 survivor. A Joint account of. Ihls kind saves expense '<< establishing Ihe ownership of tbe\nmoney after death, and Is especially useful when a man desires to pro\nvide for his wife, or for others depending upon him, in the event of hi*\ndeath.\nNEL80N BRANCH J. L. BUCHAN, Manager\ntd-ftbe, tent -fee ejoinyon-a who writes.\niBltWiUKHOo.tlloaiM.mr.N.v.\nThe Duffy Mai\nHigh Grade Building Materials\nWe have always ln stock lime i-nd cement, common brick, pressed brick,\nfire brick, fire clay, plaster of parie. wood fibre, crystal finish. All kinds\nand sizes of window glass.   See us for prices on all kinds of building material.\nJOHN BURNS & SON NELSON, B.C.\nProcter Townsite\n\/ .'\nDuring the last few days a survey has been made of some choice\nlots facing the lake. These lots are double size, (B0xl20) and are the best\non tbe townsite.\nPrice for corners $250.00\nprice for Inside lots....... 200.00 i\n\u2022      ' i K t$% f\nTerms: One-third down, balance ln 6 and 12 months.     ,\nI have also several Improved farms In tbe locality.  Apply\nT. G. PROCTER\nRoom 10\nK.W.C, Block\nNelson, B. C.\nMlll'll,\nDaily News\nsefi\nda Get Results\n <\nWEDNESDAY  APRIL 26\nCtie Sail? Set\u00bb8.\nBell Trading Co.\nRanchers\n-We have just unloaded ten\ntons of Seed Potatoes, Scarlets\nand Porters, from Ontario; |3\nper 100 lbs.; $2.75 in toil lots.\nPoultry\nFanciers\nWe have a large stock of little Chick Food. Every pound\nof it food. Just the thing for\nlittle chicks, 6 lbs. 25c; 13.50\nper 100 lbs.\nuttle lihlcfc sundries\u2014uat-\nmeal Groats, Rice,' Cracked\n. Rice, Oatmeal, coarse, Cracked\nCorn, Corn Meal, 6 lbs. 25c.\nSpecial price quantity lots.\nDoi\nFanciers\nWe have placed in stock a\nquantity of Spratt's English\nDog Bread, put up ln 5 lb. sacks'\nSOc. each.\nHousekeepers\nwill be pleased to learn that\nHolbrook's Custard Powders in\nail flavors have arrived, 15c. a\ncan.\nSalad Dressing\n,Durk\u00abe's 40c.\nRoyal   35c.\nPure Gold, 2 pks. ........26o.\nLobster\nBright Clean Stock\ni   % lb. '.....:.. 25e.\nlib. 50c.\n'Tails  ;  4Bc.\nGenuine Boned\nChicken\nAlymer, tin 45c.\nShrimps\n.   Small   20c.\nLarge  .35c.\nSea Pearl\nSardines\nA dainty Uttle relish, 2 for 25c.\nBargains\nEveryOne\nWagstaff'B Lawtonberries, In\nglass, 25c.\nPkt Raisins, 3 for 25c.\nBulk Raisins, 3 lbs for ... .25c.\nCurrants 10c.\nSt Charles Cream 10c.\nLemon, and Vanilla Bxtract:\n2 oz. bott'e toe, 16 oz. bot. 75c.\nPost Toastles  10c.\nCorn Flakes   10c,\nTEA\nOur Kootenay Blend. Nelson's\nfavorite. V  .\n50c. tib'\"\nOur'Empire Blend saves you\n10c, a pound on your tea,\n40c S,!^\nOur 5c\nAssortment\nis a big favorite, Nut Bars, Milk\nChocolate, Butter Scotch,\nFrench Nougate, etc.       ('     '\nsssssssassssBssssssssasssssamsssaaasal\nBell\nTrading Co.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers   ~\n\u2022\u2022\u25a0 >. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022.rt.ff-   tal**.     .-.iS-.l\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nHUME-Wllliam Simpson, Mrs. E. N.\nButchart, Mrs.\"-'.Toe Stevenson, Ioxb, A',\nMoyer, Howsef; Louis Brodeur, Crescent\nValley; John B. Wlnlaw, Wlnlaw; H. P.\nMills, El. Alleyn, Spokane: J. C. McNalr,\nCalgary; Mrs. and Mrs, H. Crozler-Smitti,\nClub Landing; G. F. Attree, Queens Bay;\nJ. Ouellet, Phoenix; Mrs. M. Clunls, Grand\nForks; M. M, Talt, Montreal; James Ashworth, D. B. Crowtber, Fernle; J. F. G'.\nCarbit, Winnipeg; G. G. Dechton, V\nM. ROseliaum, Toronto; J, T. Russell, 8-\nMlle; G. C, McDonald, Spokane; J. S.\nHooper, Vancouver.\ng-i-o^-p^cnvA\u2014w. J, H1. Hrtnifw, W.\nF. De Voe, Mrs. Anderson, F. S. Paddon,\niiliris Paauon, Miss Morrison, V. F, Locke,\nKaslo; Miss K. Smith; Fernle; Mr. and\nMrs. H. W. Edwards, Seattle; Mr. and\nMrs. E,. Watson, Bnlfour; R. Lt. Long,\nCreBton; Charles O. Sterling, Spokane; H.\nL. Rodgers, Ymlr; Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nSwan, Vancouver; J. Tremont, J. Din-\nwoody, C. Dlnwoody, Toronto; R. T,\nPaterson, Sheffield. \u25a0\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.   LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nRates: 91.50 to $2.00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, $7.00 per week.\nBusiness men's,lunch, 36c.\nQUI5ENS-H. Howard, Harrop; A, McGregor, F. Mollctt, Calgary; M. Nelson,\nSalmo; W. RJeby and wife, Kaslo; M.\nMiles, Yakima; A. Blaney, Midway; v.\nBurden Crawford Bay; H. Stinson, Cranbrook; Mrs. T. Smith, Rossland.\nMadden House\nThos. Madden. Prop., Baker St\nWell furnished rooms  with\nbath.   Best board in the city.\nA Comfortable Home\nMADDEN\u2014Mrs. Davis, H. tLyall, city.;'J.\nSwanson, C. Begg, Northport; A. *oder,\nNnluiap.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelson.\nRANSOME  A CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 60c. up\nAmerican plan, 11,25 and $1.60\nMeals 35c.\nALL WHITE LABOR.\nSpecial Rates Per Month\nTREMONT\u2014J. Bremner and wife, Ymir;\nJ. swanson, Apex; W, Martin, Salmo; W.\nHalllday, C. Clarke, Erie; D, McLeod, M.\nMcLeod, W. Parkinson, Porcupine; J. McLeod, G. Ferguson, D, McLeod, Slamo; K.\nPaterson, F. O'Connor, H. McLeod, O.\nMclntyre. D. Masklll, W. McCae, M. Barrows,'J. Shernan, Erie; J, Mack, Moyle.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\n, American and European Plana.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGRAND CENTRAL\u2014M. Johnson, city;\nJ. Campbell, S. Brklcott, Athabasca; F.\nMartin, J. Tonkin, England; L. Mclnnls,\nGreenwood; J. Knap, A. Allan, A, Ward,\nHarrop; W. OlBon, M. Gold, Wlnlaw; W.\nGorman\", L. Bunett, Vancouver.\nUnion Men, when In Nelon\nPatronize\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall snd Vernon Streets.\nNAP.  MALL6TTE, Prop.\nWhite Union Help Employed\nOnly\nLAKEVIEW\u2014p. Qregor, T. Haslem, C.\nHubert, T. Wilson, J. Douglas, L. Olson,\nS. Olson, W. Gregg, J. Heylami, Slocan.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon Street.\nStrictly  Union  House\nHeadquarters for minora, ime!*\ntermen, loggers, railroad men.\nRates: $1.00 per day up.\nNELSON A JOHNSON. Prop*.\nKLONDYKE\u2014L. Olson, E. Brann, F.\nBrann, Spokane; A. Clarke, A. Anderson,\nJ. Smith, A. Swanson, L. Berg, B, Holm,\nO. Peterson,  Lethbnldge.\nCLUB\u2014J. DouKlas, Crawford Bay; J.\nFrancis, Sandon; R. Clare, England; L.\nPaine, Wlnlaw.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.\nfohb\nJfcnui.lt--,  ci\nfmit'.c.\"Sff '&&\u00a3\nBest on the\nContinent\nThat is what .authorities say regarding the medicinal qualities of\nthe water at Haleyon Hot Springs\nThe Sinitarium is now under\nnew management and has heen remodelled from top to bottom and\nnow otters every facility tor the\ncomfort and convenience of pat1\nrons;\n.Rates $12 and 115 per week or\n12 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nNelson Cafe\ntsrge and Commodious Dining\nRoom\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeals Served at all Houra\n*  Elegantly furnished rooms In\nconnection: $1.00 a day and up.\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nNELSON\u2014J. Gibbons, Spokane; B. Jessie\nW. Evans, D. McKenzie. Marcus.\nRoyal Hotel\nStanley Street,\nuuaer new management   Rates\n11.26 to $1.60 per day.   Nicely fur-\nPlBhed rooms,  with bath.\nMeal   tickets |6 Cor 20 meals.\nGood meals promptly served.\nBest brands only of llquers and\nand cigars kept.   Big beer 10a.\nJ. S. BARRATT, Prop.\nROYAL\u2014L. Morton, W. Baterman, England; B. Arnold, Calgary; O. North, E.\nStone, Mrs. Stone, Alberta; M, Pearson,\nNakusp. -..u*.W\u00abl\nWhen in Nelson patronize\nOccidental Hotel\nIt's a temperance house. The\noldest and best (or a dollar a\nday   In   Nelson.   Nice,   clean\nrooms and the best of board.\nED, KERR, Proprietor\nManhattan Saloon\nHaB been renovated throughout,\nand the bar is at all times stocked\nwith tho best wines, liquors and\ncigars. Large glass of beer lOcts.\n- We have \"comfortable, well furnished sleeping rooms In connection, by day, week or month.\nBARTON & MoKAY, Proprietors.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St.\nUnder new management.\nWell furnished rooms; $1 a\nday and up.   Bejit 25c. meal in\nNelson.\nBeBt brands of liquors and\ncigars served by union men.\nN. McLEOD, Proprietor\nSILVER KING-J. Hyland, P. Running,\nSlocan; R. Daweon, W. Forster, Fisherman; F. Mills, R. Mills, city; J, Evans,\nC. Linder. Vancouver. jf-\n1SHERBROOKE\u2014P. Allard, O. Bennett,\niKoclu.O. Johnson, Grand Forks; P. Smith,\nEliolt; R. Marlane, Lardo; H, Sohmltz,\nF. Schmltz, Alberta; J. Shanriort,'Slocan.\nKOOTENAY-S. Jones, C. Matforlca, M.\nIlson, J. Sopkle, Ed. Robinson, t.. Stevenson, L. Vendraklo, F. Cousll, JB< Viso, L.\nAgal, Cranbrook; -j '\nMlnard'i  Liniment Cures Diphtheria\nTelephone No. 454\nYour Repair Needs\nWe'll send for your shoes and return\nquickly; Whatever you spend for repairs In our shop you'll be surprised to\nsee how much you get for your money.\nC. Romano\n310 Ikker Stf-iet\nARCHIE BISHOP\nAT SPOKANE SHOOT\nBig Northwest Event Opened yesterday\n\u2014Large Attendance\u2014Chingren Was\nStar Performer\n\u25a0 (Special to The Dally News.)\nSPOKANE, Wash., April 25\u2014Despite\nthe high wind which prevailed today\ngood scores were made in the opening\nevents of the northwest trap shooters\nat the Moran Prairie traps. The 17th\nannual meet was greeted with a large\ncrowd.\nIn 'the first event H, Fleming broke\n15 straight and won first in his squad\nwith a score of 140 out of a possible\n150. E. J. Chingren of Spokane was\nthe star, breaking 25 straight in the second event and 21 out of a possible 25-\nin the Smith cup. He was also in good\nform in the 150 bird event, smashing\n139 out of a possible 150. He was high\naverage man in the three events.\nArchie Bishop of Nelson was a high\nscorer among the visiting marksmen.\nFollowing are the complete scores of\nthe three events;\nBishop   124\u201422\u201418\nBarklay  126\u201424\u201421\nReed 136\u201423\u201418\nO'Brien   128\u201420\u201420\nCramer 123\u201423\u201419\nDrydon 128\u201421\u201422\nFlemming  140\u201422\u201422\nHandlett    126\u201418\u201425\nGreene    ; 132\u201423\u201419\nM. Smith 128\u201421\u201421\nE. Cooper    108\u2014..\u2014..\nWilliams 120\u201420\u201418\nTrueadale 113\u201422\u201422\nBeck  118\u201412\u201418\nMoolne  .129\u201418\u201419\nEerger  131\u201422\u201424\nC. Cooper  132\u201419\u201417\nNoel   108\u2014,.\u2014..\nMalloy  116\u201418\u201421\nStair    101\u2014..\u2014..\nPoston  136\u201423\u201424\nUlrtch    102\u2014. .*-..\nMoBroom   136\u201421\u201419\nBowman  119\u2014..\u2014..\nRlehl    ' ,.. ,139\u201421\u201417\nPalmer 115\u2014.,\u2014,.\nChingren    139\u201425\u201421\nG. Holohan 125\u201420\u201421\nOwens 134\u201422\u201420\nMcElroy 139\u201423\u201421\nPennell  124\u201421\u201418\nParson    . 133\u201422\u201420\nTurner    108\u201422\u201421\nPennington    127\u201424\u201420\nQulsenberry  loi\u2014io\u2014n\nFarman  .136\u201421\u201418\nEgbars    132\u201423\u201421\nMorrow  ,130\u201417\u201421\nCopson    124\u201422\u201421\nNelson   95\u201417\u201416\nP. Holohan 124\u201423\u201418\nShort   106-^-20\u201418\nWare 121\u201424\u201420\nGage  81\u2014..\u2014..\nLogsdon   v 134\u201423\u201421\nWoodward   109\u2014..\u2014.,\nMcDowell 108\u201422\u201420\nC. Flemming  .123\u201420\u201418\nOliver  .119\u201417\u201419\nDa-Ike  110\u201419\u201410\nBASEBALL GAMES YESTERDAY\nNational League\n-   Won Lost\nPhiladelphia   8 2\nChicago    ,   1 3\nNew York     5 4\nPittsburg    5 4\nCincinnati       8 5\nBoston    .\u201e.   4 7\nSt.   Louis     3 tt\nBrooklyn     B 7\nAt Cincinnati\u2014 R. H. E.\nCincinnati    4   9   1\nChicago    5    9    1\nBatteries: Fromrae, Keefe, Burns and\nClark; Foxken, Brown and; Archer.\nAt New York\u2014 R. H. E.\nNew York    3 10    1\nBoston    18   4\nBatteries; Matthewson and Meyers; i-1a-\nheiiy and Graham.\nAt Brooklyn\u2014  ' R, H. E.\nBrooklyn      4    tt    2\n'Philadelphia     3   7    1\nBatteries; Barger and Bergen; Moore\nand Doolu.\n\u25a0M St, Louis-St. Louis 4, Pittsburg 9.\nBatteries: Zemlch, Harmon and- Wlngo;\nCuinnlz and Qlbson.\nAmerican LeagUe\nWon Lost P.C\nDetroit .'. 9.'\nNew York  .',  5\nBoston ...,, B\nWashington' \u25a0   4\nCleveland  .6\nChicago  'v..   6\nPlv.liuieli'hiii    8\nSt.   Louis    .,    3\nM\nPAGE FIVE\nHungry Nine for the second time, by a\nscore of 11-6. An excellent game was played by the All-Stars, especially in the batting, hitting both W. Ferguson and\nMurphy all over the field. The Une-up waa\nas follows:\nALL-STARS HUNGRY NINE\nC. Qrlzzelle Catcher G. Matthew\nH. Pitts  Pitcher   W. Ferguson\nR   Whitehead .... 1st base   P. Garde\nJ. Brennan   2nd base .... F. Ferguson\nJ. Middleton .... Short-sto*)   P. Bard\nG. Wolverton .... 3rd base   E. Murphy\nD. Lyonnals   R. field .... T  Cummins\nP. Larson C. field  It. Brown\nP. Grant   L. field   W. Hoskins\nUmpire:   Alec Mathleuon.\nEastern League\nAt Jersey City\u2014 R. H. E.\nToronto     4 12   0\nJersey City    3    5   3\nBatteries: Lush and Phelps; Bartley and\nKissinger and Lonnman.\nAt Baltimore\u2014 R. H. E.\nBuffalo    2   &   1\n'Baltimore       6   9    3\nBatteries'. Taylor and Koillfer; Vlckers\nand Egan. v   \u201e\nAt Newark\u2014 R, H. E.\nRochester ;   16   3\nNewark          2 10    3\nBatteries': \"Hughes and Mitciieil; Leand\nand Grady,\nAt Toronto\u201410 Innings\u2014 R. H. E.\nMontreal     4   6   2\nProvidence    6    9   6\n'Batteries: Balrbericli and Dubuc and\nRoth; Lavender and Steines and Fitzgerald.\nAmerican Association\nAt Milwaukee\u201410 innings\u2014 R.H. E.\nMilwaukee      4    9    0\nColumbus       3   8   2\nBatteries: Daughcrty and Marshall; Lessen! and Beml's.\nAt St. Paul- R. H.E.\nSt.   Paul       4 10   3\nIndianapolis       5 12    3\nBatteries: Laroy, Stelger nnd Spencer;\nSchlltzer, Merse, Cheney and Howell.\nAt Minneapolis\u2014 R. H. E.\nMinneapolis  18  H    1\nToledo    1    \u00ab    0\nBatteries: Patterson and Owens; W.\nJames, L. Jamesv Zallera and Haupp.\nAt Kansas City\u2014 R. HE.\nKansas   City     8    \u00ab   ?\u25a0\nLouisville   7    6   2\nBatteries: Powell, Brandon and Slelieri\nand James; Slagle and Rlchter and Oren-\nderff. '\nAt Chicago- R. H. E.\nChicago    6    8    3\nCleveland    2    4    1\nBatteries: Young and Sullivan; Paulken-\nhurg, Blandlng and Land.\nAt Boston- R.H. E\nBoston  ;...\u25a0   6    5    1\nNew York    8   V    2\nBatteries: Wood and Carrigan; Fisher\nand Warhop arid Blair.\nAt Philadelphia\u2014 R. H. E.\nPhiladelphia  .*.... 11  16    1\nWashington    2   3    2\nBatteries: Coombs and Lapp; Hughes\nand Gray nnd Sherry and Street.\nAt Detroit-Detroit 11, St. Louis 9 Batteries'; Lake, George and' Mitchell for St.\nLouis, and Cavet, Covington, Wlllett and\nStrange for Detroit.\nNorthwestern League \u25a0\nwon Lmt P.c.\nSpokane     7      1 .876\nSeattle    .' ' 6      2 .714\nVancouver     3.    4> .428\nVdctorla       3      6 .375\nTacoma     3      & .376\n-Portland       2(     6 .260\nAt Vancouver\u2014 R. H. E.\nVancouver     4    9    0\nTacoma  \u2022   0   5   1\nAt Spokane\u2014 R. H. E,\nSpokane  18 17    0\nVictoria    \u2022.   3   6    5\nAt Seattle- R. H. E.\nSeattle   4   3   2\nPortland    ;   2   3    0\nPacific Coast Leauge\nWTO Lost p.c\nSan Francisco 18      9 .607\nPortland    16     11 .692\nSacramento  ...,12     18 .480\nVernon 12     16 .444,\nOakland   Jl     16 .407\nLos Angeles  10     IS .400\nTHE DOOM OF THE HAREM SKIRT.\nThe harem skirt, jupe-culotte, or\nwhatever it may be called, is doomed\nto failure before It reaches the shore:1\nof Canada. Its death knell has already\nbeen struck in Paris, the home of iisr\nbirth. With much to commend it to\nthinking women the vagaries and extravagances of Its promoters have sentenced, it to an early death. Here, for\ninstance, is an exact description of the\ntype of harem skirt which is flaunting\nIn the streets of Paris,\u2014a flimsy arrangement of white and black striped\nmousseline de sole, showing black satin\ntrousers enwrapping and enfolding the\nlegs and ornamented from hip to ankle\nwith green silk buttons the size of a\nBhllling. The trouble is that tbe introducers have made a fussy, feminine,\noriental fashion of what should have\nbeen a plain, practical, masculine\nfashion. Harry Furnlss, the English\nillustrator, strikes the note that recommends it when he writes to the London\nTimes and calls it sensible, hygienic,\nsanitary. Lord Rosebery says he can\nnot imagine the harem skirt being\nmade of Harris tweed, but it it haa\nbeen made of Harris tweed instead of\nchiffon and pink satin it would have\nnad more chance of living. Any .woman\nwho goes much about the worldj using\nmotors and trams, riding and hunting,\nany woman who goes in extensively for\nsport, any woman who Is active, energetic and athletic, must have felt the\ndangers and short-comings 06 the present universal style of skirt over\ndiaphanous lingerie trimmed with lace\nand ribbon. So greatly have the disadvantages of this feminine garb been\nfelt of recent years that there has been\na decided move toward the general\nadoption of knickers under the skirt.\nThese knickers may be of any material\nbut are preferably of satin, as that material does not cling to the skirt above,\nIn England such knickers can be'bought\nin any shop and are constantly seen\nadvertised in the magazines, It would\nbe a good thing if our dry goods shops\nbrought them more forward and induced their women shoppers to buy\nthem more generally. Satin knicker:\nunder a short skirt may he said to meet\nthe requirements of decency and hygiene which certainly the long trailing\nskirts and transparent underwear dc\nnot. \u25a0'''\t\nOakland 0, San Francisco 1.\nSacramento 1, Portland 6.\nHUNGRY NINE LOSE\nTO ALU STAR NINE\nTn a fast and exciting game yesterday\nafternoon   the   All-Stars    defeated    the\nTo set the beat of Backache\nGet a Box of\nDr. Miles'\nAnti-Pain Pills\n' Otherwise Backache\nMay get the hest of you\nNothing disturbs the human\nsystem more than pain whether\nit be in the form of headache,\nbackache, neuralgia, stomachache\nor the pains peculiar to women.\nDr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are a\nstandard remedy for pain, and\nare praised by a great army of\nmen and women who have used\nthem for years.\n'A Wend was down with LaGrippe\n\u2022nd nearly crazed with awful backache.\nI gave her one Anti-Pain Pill and left\nanother for her lo take. They helped\nher right away, and she says she will\nnever be without them again.\"\nHas. G. U. Webb, Aasdhburg, O.\nAt all druggists\u201423 doses 25 cents.\nMILKS MEDICAL CO., Toronto,C\u00abn.\nSAihhb Cure\nSlickly slops co-i-lha. cum colds, hvila\n\u2022 throat aad Immit.     *\u00bb \u2022   *     95 casta.\nEvery Woman Can Afford\nPretty Neckwear\nOnly Necessary to Come to\nThis Store\nA woman who appreciates dainty trifles will be delighted with new\nneckwear we are showing, if she be an economist the trifling prices\nwhich prevail on many ot the charming stocks and jabots will make an\nequally strong appeal.\nIt Is astonishing that such fetching accessories should cost so little.\nEven if her fingers were sufficiently skilled no woman could make up\nsuch pretty neckwear at so small an expense.\nOf course, if she is seeking\nelaborate and elegant neck-\nfixings a woman may find\nthem here alBO, Some of our\nexpensive lace pieces are of\nrare loveliness. Stoles and\nscarfs of chiffon and messa-\nline edged with marshou and\nfur are shown for both evening and afternoon wear.\nSome of these in delicate pastel tints and changeable effects are quite the most becoming things imaginable.\nThey may be thrown about\nthe shoulders or used as a\nhead covering for carriage\nwear.\nAll the cleverest novelties\nproduced this season have\nfound a place in our new\nneckwear stock with an infi-\n\u2022nite variety of new ideas in\nstaple styles, such as tailored\ncollars, etc,\n35c to $3.50\nSpring Brings a Message Also for\nthe Separate Skirt\nFor the shirt waist girl, for wear with the popular long coat, fhe separate skirt is indispensable. Here Is a tempting assortment of new\nskirts emitting the latest fashion notes from every line and fold.\nSkirls are again cut on straight lines, narrow, yet permitting comfort in walking. The high waist effect\u2014quite two inches above the normal\u2014dispensing with a belt, is much favored.\nBut there are skirts smart as can be,\nwith the regular waist line. Some too\nbave a few plaits from below the knees.\nIn fact this season Dame Fashion has\npermitted such individual choice in\nskirts\u2014provided your selection bears\nthat indescribable ball mark this sea-\nOur offerings of the season's skirts\ninclude voile, worsted, serge and others\nof the modish weaves, made in different smart styles.\nPrices are not new\u2014they reveal the\nsame value giving characteristic of tliis\nBtore season after season in each and\nevery department.\n$3.50\nto\n$22.00\ns\nill\nI 1 '\nIt\ntt HI\nii1\nMEAGHER & CO.\nEagle Block\nBaker Street\nMaking Clothes to\nOrder\nThere is no better asset a mm can possess than a clean cut,\nwell dressed personal appearance.\nMake It a point to see our ringe of samples   and   get   our\nprices before placing your order tor a suit.\nRemember our guarantee of satisfaction or no sale.\nHall & Jessup\nSuccessors  to\nJ. H. Wallace\nSole Agents for House of Hobberlin\nTailored Garments\nmi\n X\nCfje Salt; ileum.\n6^(b(X|\nJ\nWEDNESDAY   APRIL 28\nr\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nReal Estate, Fire Insurance and Investment Brokers\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Manager.\nALEX. CHEYNE, Secretary.\nOffice Baker St., Nelaon, B.C.\nPhone 264 P.O. Drawer 1042\nIt's a Long Call from the Prairies to the Kootenays\nbut the results are worth the Journey.   Here is what you want:\n7 acres of best Kootenay soil 1 1-2 miles fro mctty limits. Flue investment, $2800.\n2 acres, all cleared with good house on city limits, $2000.\n10 acres ln best subdivision, close to transportation.   Water and all facilities, only 1100 per acre.   Two\nacres cleared.\nThe People of Nelson Are\nProgressive\n\"The Best Is None Too Good\" Has Long Been the Motto of\nNelson's Citizens.   We Nave a City to Be Proud of\nPOULTRY  AND   LIVE STOCK\nFOR    SALE\u2014Four   head   Heavy    logging\nhorses.   J. b. Wlnlaw, Wlnlaw, B.C.\n276-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Eggs, from pure bred S. C.\nHhode leland Reds, selected stock, $1.50\nper 16. 8. C. Rhode Island heds, Imported last season, $3 per 15. Pure bred\nBuff' Leghorns, carefully selected, grand\nlaying strains, (2 per lb. Blue Andahit-Luns\nand Mottled Anconas, from Victoria prize\nwinners, $2.50 per 15. 11. R. Shrum, Ymlr\nPoultry Yards, Ymlr, BX. 4-26\nFOR    SALE\u2014Three   dozen    thoroughbred\nbufl leghorn hens; fine laying strain; $16\nper doz. f. o. b. Phoenix.   Address P. O.\nbox 315 Phoenix, B. C. 291\nFOR SALE-Eggs for hatching, from tine\npure bred imported stock, Barred Rocks,\nBuff Orpingtons and Light Brahmas, $2\nper 15: $11 per 100. Wm. Johnston, Cemetery\nRoad, P. O. Box 13, *\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\nFOR SALE\u2014Belgium hares, Flemish Giants\nand rabbits.   P. O. Box 274.    \\       29\" oa\nFOR  SALE-One    tiny    gelding,   splendid\nsaddle   horBe,   Just   from   prairie.    Age\nrising four.   Price $100 f.o.b. Proctor.   Apply F. J. Sammons, Proctor, BX.    29B-tf.\nFOR-SALE\u2014WyckofMaylng strain White\nLeghorn egga,  $2  per 16.    Giant Pekln\nducks, $2 per 11.   Howson, corner Observatory and Cherry streets. <Wl-;!6\nFOR SALE\u2014S. C. White Leghorn eggs,\nWyckoff strain, J2 per 15. Mj* White\nLeghorns averaged 191 egga per bird last\nyear. It pays to get eggs for hatching\nfrom winter layers. T. K-alth, 217 Innis\nBtreet. 302-26\nHELP  WANTED.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGCNCV\nC, P. Hutton. Manaa*\"\nWANTED\u2014Setter, dogger, machine graders\n(planing mill), swampers, cookee, woman\ncook for hotel.\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY* FURNISHED.\nTHE WORKINGMEN'8 EMPLOYMEN\nAND  REAL  ESTATE  AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Teamster; grader; planer feed'\ner; laborers for railway construction,\nhouse carpenters; women cooks; housekeeper, $35; governess; waitresses; girls\nfor family places; nurBe girl; ship carpenter; setter; men for fruit ranch; 2nd\nclass engineer; -woman for general hotel\nwork, $35; waitress for first class hotel,\nKamloops; filer, $6; setter, $3.50; tallyman\nand grader, $3.50; laborers, $2.75; handy\nman for ranch, $3.\nFOR RENT\u2014Cottage, 2 rooms and small\nkitchen, partly furnished, on Houston\nstreet, $8, including water, also flats. Small\nhouse on Robson street, 3 rooms, Including\nwater, $10. Small furnished house, 4 rooms\nand oath, water, or will sell furniture,\nW.   Parker, 313 Baker street,  Phone 2B3,\nB.C. UNITED AGENCIES, 311 Baker St.\nAuctioneers Real  Estate\nEmployment Agents\nBox 232 phone 391,\nLast year with their usual zeal and enthusiasm the citizens undertook to revive the Nelaon Street railway.\nTwenty-seven thousand dollars were subscribed. The directors undertook to install the system with an up to\ndate equipment.\nIn doing so the cost exceeded the amount available hy approximately seven thousand dollars. Then we\nwere unfortunate by having an accident that cost the company one thousand dollars. As a further safeguard Inspector\nHae has instructed us to equip the ca rs with air brakes and air Banders. They are now on one car, No. 1, and\nare being installed on car No. 2. \/\nAir Brakes, Sanders and Installation Will Cost Us\nApproximately $1500\nThen lt was found durln-j the short time the cars were ln operation that the old track was in bad shape and\nthat a considerable number of new tieB would be required and the track ballasted and lined up.\nThe directors have freely given their time as well as the benefit of their experience to further the beat Interests of tbe Nelson Street Railway.\nEvery dollar received has been placed in the hank of the company. Every bill has been O. K.'d and passed\nby the directors while all checks are signed and countersigned by the president and secretary respectively.\nEquipment and supplies were bou ght by tender.\nThe booka and files of the company are open for the inspection of the shareholders at any time, also anyone in\nterested at tbe secretary's office, at the Ureat Northern Railway office, corne r Ward and Baker Sts.\nNow, the directors feeling confi dent that the people of Nelson want to see the atreet railway in operation and\na good, safe and well equipped syste ra have gone ahead with the work of installing air brakes and getting the road\nbed in first class shape, knowing that the people of Nelson would respond when called upon for money necessary to thoroughly equip tbe system.\nNow, If You Are a Property Owner\nwe want you to figure out how much 11 Is worth to you to have the street carB running.\nThe buslnesa men we want to figure how much the street cars in operation Is worth to them.\nWe want every citizen, man, woman and child to fill out the allotment form for aa much as they figure It Is\nworth to them and mail It to the secretary today.\nWe confidently expect that the N elson Street Railway will be a dividend payer. Nelson Ib growing. The profits of the street railway will grow wl th the city.\nH. E. DOUGLAS, Secretary,\nOffice Great Northern Railway Office, Cor. Baker and Ward Sts.\nJ. E. TAYLOR, President\nFOR SALE-Eggs and stock. Thoroughbred S.C. Black iMinoroaa, S.C. Buff\nLeghorns, Buff Orpingtons, White Wyandottes, Imperial Pekln ducks, bred to\nlay, fed for liigli fertility. Eggs $1.26 per\nsetting. Ch. Gansner, Williams Siding,\nnear Nelson, B.C.  304-12\nFOR   SALE\u2014Thompson's   Ringlet   Barred\nRock egga, $1.60 per setting.   Mrs. H._H.\nPitta, Box 308, Nelaon. 30o-12\nFOR SALE\u2014One Berkshire boor. Grand-\nview Proud Duke\u201421463\u20142 years old.\nCanadian Notional Record, Dominion Swine\nBreeders' association. One milch cow and\ncalf. Indian Runner Duck eggs. Seed\npotatoes\u2014\"Uncle Sam\" and \"Rose of the\nNorth. A lot of choice lake front fruit\nlands ln lota of 10 acres. Apply to F. G.\nFauquier, Fauquier's Landing, Lower Arrow Lake, Needles P. O. 307-12\nWOMEN'S     EMPLOYMENT    OFFICE\nOver Foote Drug Store.\nEntrance:  Josephine Street.\nFOR  SALE\u2014White Wyandotte and  Buff\nOrphington eggs, $1 a setting.   Apply H.\nRose, P. Burns & Co. 307-12\nWANTED\u2014A young horse, to drive single;\nmust weigh over 1200 pounds.  Wm. Mack\nNelson. 308-Li\nFOR SALE\u2014Registered Ayrshlres. Cow,\nrising eight, fresh, gentle, extra\ngood producer, $150; helgher, 14 months,\n$75; heifer calf, two months, '$40.\nThese are carefully bred and contain the\nbest milking strains In Scotland. Business\nprevents attention to them,   H. A. Giaa-\npell, Grand Forks. 308-7\nFOR-SALE-My Wyckoff White Legborn\neggs are proving highly fertile In customers\" hands. Stock bred 35 years for\nsuperior egg yield. AIcAvoy Houdans are\ngrowlngly   popular.    Eggs $2 for 15. _G\nPurvis,  Nelson, B.C.  309-1\nFOR SALE-Eggs for hatching, from Bar\nred Plymouth Rocks, high fertility, guaranteed, $1.50 per IE, 58 per 100. Brood liens,\n$150 each. T. Roynon, Somerset Poultry\nYards, Selwyn street, Nelson,\nFOR   SALE\u2014Team  light   horses,   used  to\nclearing   and   ranch   work;   gentle   and\nsplendid   workers;   easy   keepers.\nMorrow, Harrop.\n6-fl\nFOR SALE\u2014Royal Pekln duck eggs for\nhatching. It was no accident when tho\nChinaman evolved the Pekln duck Economic\ncondition In that Empire demanded the\ngreatest amount of food at the least cost.\nMy Pekln eggB are running 95 per cent\nfertile and hatching big, fine robust ducklings. Ciet a sotting to put under old Biddy,\nshe'll do all the work. I will replace all\nclear eggs. $1.60 per setting. John Norcross,\nNelson,  B.C. -, _W\nFOR SALE\u2014One-day-old chickens.   M. B.\nEdwards, Hume Addition. 8-t\nLOR8CH & CALDWELL\nReal  Estate, General  Insurance\nBox 658 Phone 110\nRoom 16, K.W.C. Bloek\nBeautiful garden and lawns.\nFOR SALE-Two lots ln New Westminster,\non (itii avenue, price $400, half cosh, balance monthly.\nFOR   SALE\u2014Large rooming  house,   nine\nbedrooms, all conveniences.   Price J4.MW;\n$1,500 cosh, balance to suit.\nFOR SALE-Five, Prince Albert lota, $150\neach.    Also six lots in Lethbridge, $175\nper lot; terms reasonable.\nFOR SALE\u201425-ft launch, seating capacity\nS, speed 14 miles per hour.   Bargain at\n$650.\nFOR SALE\u201420 acres, 14 cleared and cultivated, 200 fruit trees, 6 roomed house, and\nbarn.   Spring runs through property. Price\n$2,500, $1,000 cash,  balance to suit.\nFOR  SALE\u20143,400 acres  of  choice Salmon\nriver fruit land; one-third bottom land,\none-third bench, and balance hillside which\nhas enough merchantable timber to pay\nfor clearing. Price {16.60 per acre, one-\nquanter cash, balance at 6 per cent. Title\nperfect.\nFOR SALE\u2014Iiarge tracts of fruit, hay and\nfarm lands, 040 to 14,000 acres, suitable\nfor subdividing or for colonies.   Price and\nterms on application.\nFOR SALE-Two lots, 50 x 120.   Price $750,\nJ400 cash, balance to buR; 27 fruit trees,\nlarge quantity of small fruit bushes, well\ncultivated, good depth of soil, free from\nrock.   On Hoover street.\nFOR SALE\u2014The Crown Point hotel, Trail.\nFor price and terms, apply to Peterson\nBrothers, Trail.  \"No agents.\" 262?tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Few small tracts or the best\nland,   5 miles   on   wagon   road   west  of\nNelson.   School on land.   a. J. Laviolette,\nPostoffice, Nelson,       \/ 2U8-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Building brick   ln   large   or\nsmall quantities at Castlegar Brickworks,\nCastlegar, B. C. 291-tf\nFOR SALE\u2014Thoroughbred Aberdeen Terrier dog.   Apply 208 Vletorla street,       285\nFOR SALE\u2014A new sub-division of excellent fruit land; 8 to 15 acres each, at\nGrey Creek, one-half hiile from steamboat landing, postoffice 'and store. Land\nvery easily oleared; well watered; slopes\nto west, receives latest sunshine. Special\ninducements to settlers with school children. Also have an improved fruit ranch'\nwith 500 2-year-old trees. The above land\nis direct from the locator to the settler,\nH. L. Lindsay, Room 8, Griffin block.\n.   801\nFOR SALE\u201419 foot Peterborough rowing\ncanoe,  good as new.   For' further particulars and price apply to W. J. Astley,\nat the Nelson Launch and Boat club.\n307-12\nFOR SALE\u2014Six acres   at   Queens  Bay,\nsmall house on land, $1,500 cash.  Further\nparticulars address, Owner, P. O. Box 428,\nNelson. 809-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Two splendid tracts of land,\nabout 10 acres each, on lake, near Balfour, $100 per acre. Good easy terms; no\ninterest. P. O. Box 875. $12 per acre\nclearing. 4-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Cuthbert raspberry canes, $2\nper 100.   T. Roynon, Selwyn street, Nelson. 4-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Fifty thousand Magoon and\nBritish Queen strawberry plants, and\n1,000 blackberry canes. Cheap If taken\nimmediately. Wm. G. Buggins, Willow\nPoint. 6-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Three hundred apple trees,\nbest varieties, pruned low, Stark Bros.\ngrowing, for immediate delivery as I have\nnot enough ground ready. J. H. Morrow,\nHarrop. 6-1\nFOR SALE\u2014We have a large number of\nnew boats and canoes from Peterboro,\nvarnished and painted; also several launches, new and second hand, For particulars\napply Nelson Boat & Launoh Co., Ltd.,\nP. O. BOx 146. 6-26\nFOR SALE\u2014If you desire to locate water\nfront uncleared fruit land, on the main\nlake, where the soil and climate are superior\nto other districts, and prices range from\n$50 per acre upwards, call and see us. We\nare acquainted with the lands In this district, and will render you. all possible\nassistance. Write or coll.' Baker & Co.,,\nBaker's Landing, Pilot Bay, B.C.\n303-e.o.d-\nWhen In Need\n. Phone, day 86, night 269.\nSTANDARD   FURNITURE    COM PANT'\u25a0\nUNDERTAKING PARLORS.\n808 Baker St R. S. BRERTON .\nFuneral Director and Embalmer.\nThe best equipped undertaking parlors Is\nthe Kootenays,  with  experienced  attend-.\naaoe available at all noun.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nNELSON, B. O.\nHOTELDIRECTOiRY.\n\u25a0  NELSON HOTEL BAR\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\/\nINK ft WARD, Props.\nFor it cool, satisfying smoke try a\nSavannah cigar.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nMrs. Mallette, Proprietress\nA home for everybody.   Every con'\nvenlence given to the travelling public.\nElectric   piano.     Cuisine   unexcelled\nRates: $1.00 per day\nEMPIRE   TEMPERANCE   HOTEL\n(Under entire new management)\nBaker St., Nelson. B.C.\nThe   house   thoroughly   remodelled\nthroughout   Clean rooms, home comfort*.   Rate, $1 per day up.   Best cook\nIn the city.\nJ. Openshaw, Proprietor\nBARTLETT HOUSE\nQ. W. Bartlett, Proprietor\nThe best $1.00 a day house In town.\nA miner's home.\n8HERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelson, B.C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. 'ita\ntion.   Cuisine unexcelled;  well heated\nand Tentllated.\n, Boyer Bros., Proprietors\nFOR SALE\u2014Only two of those new boats\nleft, at cost.   See us at once.    Signed,\nWolverton & Co., Ltd. -7-12\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-Men and boys to learn plumbing. Plumbers earn $6 to $8 day; have\nshort hours; are in demand everywhere.\nBy my method I make you a skilled\nplumber ln a few months. Edw. McCaffrey Plumbing School, 20 Riverside Ave.,\nSpokane. \u00a356-78\nWANTED-Men and women to learn barber trade in eight weeks. Situations\nguaranteed. Wages from $18 to $26 weekly.\nIllustrated catalogue free. Moler System\nCollege, G09 Centre street, Calgary, Alta.\n206-tf.\nFOR  SALE\u2014Fruit and  ornamental  trees\nfor sale.   From the Riverside Nurseries.\nCan be seen on lots adjoining the Sher-\n'brooke ihotel.   V. Dynes, general agent.\nForm of Application\nfor Shares\nTo the Directors of the Nelson\nStreet Railway Co., Ltd.\nr hereby apply for. shares In the above named Company,\nand request you to allot me that number of shares and I hereby agree to\naccept same or any smaller number that may be allotted to me, and pay ior\nsame the sum of $ as follows\n? '. May 1st, 1911\n$ Aug. 1st, 1911\n? Nov. lBt, 1911\n* Feb. lBt, 1912\nand I hereby authorize you to register me as the holder of the same.\nName ln full\t\nOccupation  \u2022\t\nAddress  -\t\nDated    191....\nSignature '\t\nm\nWINNIPEG MARKETS.\nWINNIPEG, April 25.\u2014South African\nwarrants sold tills morning on the local\nexchange at $745, a drop of 25 points over\nlast sales. One warrant sold at $7t\u00bb nt the\nopening of the market, hut a flood of Belling orders depressed ttiom to Ma, at whlcn\nprice four were sold. The returns from\nOttawa for the weelt ending April 22 are\nas follows: Certificates Issued, 7,131; located by substitutes, 4,0:57; Instruments appointing substitutes, registered but not located, 779; outstanding, 1,118. Great West\nPermanent sold at. 125 and holders were\nasking an advance or & before the market\ndose!. Home Investment was strong; 140\nwas bid for Standard Trust, but none sold.\nListed stocks- Bid Asked\nCanadian   Fire      HO     ...\nCommercial Loan  -     106\nGreat \\vest Life     800      ...\nGreat West  Permanent      IM     L&\nHome Investment     U7     ...\nNorthern Trust     IjfJ     \"3\nNorthern Mortgage     JO,1\nStandard Trust     \u00ab0     ...\nUnlisted-\nEmpire Loan    J\u2122\nEmpire Loan, partly pd    iw\nOccidental Fire    Vti.\nPioneer Fire  \t\nSovereign Fire  \u2022    \u2022 \u2022\u2022\nWestern Trust     JJ0\nWinnipeg Fire     1\u00bb\nContinental Life     jw\nCentral Canada Fire     lw\nBanks\u2014\nCrown, c.f.e     *\u00bb\nNorthern,   c.f.e     **>\nTraders    \u2022\u2022   iW\nIndustrials\u2014\nBeaver Lumber Co     \u00ab\nManitoba Pressed Briok      lw\nTraders Building      W\nWests\u2122 Canada Flour  \u25a0\u2022\u2022   \u25a0 \u25a0*\nCarbon Oil      25\nPortland Canal      Li\nLucky Jim  \u2022   \u2022\u2022\u2022\nS. A. Warrants    \"*\nBales\u2014\n10 Great West Permanent \t\n1 S. A. Warrant \t\n3 S. A.  Warrants \t\nWHEAT MARKET.\nWINNIPEG, April 26.\u2014Liverpool   cables\nwe**e lower and Winnipeg May opeaed -Ac\ndown.  Chicago May %c, and Mfnneamifli\n\u25a0 T}4c.   There ws* a good demand for Nos.\n12%\n745\n4, 5, and G wiieat but very little inquiry for\nNos. 1, 2, and 8, and ln the higher grades\nthere was a widening of spreads. The\nworld's summary of crop was on the whole\nfavorable, and there was little news in\nthe gossip.\nWinnipeg May sold down to 93 or 1V&C\nunder Monday's close, but reacted later\nand held very stubbornly between 93W- and\n93%, ultimately closing at the last named\nfigure, %c under the previous close. More\ndistant months went off %c. Export was\nout of line. The oat market was really\nactive for low grade oats and It Is a little\npuzzle just where they are going, as they\nare not being -bought by the direct export\nhouses. There was not much doing In contract grades. May oats sold down to iM'A\nand closed 34%, or %c under Monday.\nMinneapolis May was active and closed\n%c down. Chicago May dropped lc while\nthe market closed lower.\nRAINS DEPRESS PRICES.\nCHICAGO, April 25.\u2014Fine rains falling in,\nthe dry sections of Kansas, Nebraska ana\nSouth Dakota carried down wheat prices\ntoday. There was a weak close, with last\nfigures from %c to l%c under the level of\n84 hours before. Besides the bear sentiment due to moisture where needed, advices were at hand showing that spring\nwheat seeding in the northwest would bo\nlargcfly completed on both sides of the international line in a week or so, and the\nCanadian planting would reach the huge\ntotal of 11,000,000 acres.\nSTOCKS ADVANCE.\nvtmi- yi-vRK, April 25\u2014Some progress waB\nmade in the direetlon of higher prices today, despite the fact that the pressure\nwhich has bees directed against stockB in\nthe last few days was not relaxed. A large\npart of the day's business again centered\naround United States Steel, and trading\nin these Bhares constituted nearly, one-\nthird of the dealing, many large blocks\nchafglng hands, The quarterly statement\nof the staei corporation, issued, after the\nclose of the market, Was disappointing, estimates of the earnings having been in\nthe neighborhood of *28,0*\u00bb.00O, as computed with |E3.E19,flOO snown In the report.\nThe unexpectedly small figures for the\n1 quarter were erplalned largely by the\nJanuary earnrag* wMeh were less than\n(5,000,000.   The successful floating of 819,-\n(00,000 of Seaboard Air Line bonds issued\nby the underwriters was announced, as\nwhs the sale of (10,000,000 4 per cent bonds\nof one of the subsidiary companies or\nLouisville & Nashville. Total sales, par\nvalue, (3,189,000. United States bonds were\nunchanged on call.\nLONDON MONEY IN  DEMAND.\nLONDON, April 25.\u2014Money waB la increased demand and discount rates were\nfirmer today. Carry-over rates were harder and Americans were quoted at 4 per cent.\nRenewed selling weakened home and\nMexlcun rails, and consols .were dearer.\nRubber stock recovered after tho early\nweakness foiling the decline of Is In the\nprice of crude rubber at the auction sales,\n\u2022 Unard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia\nPublic notice is hereby given that, under\nthe authority contained in section 181 of\nthe \"Land AM,\" a regulation has been\napproved by the Lieu tenant-Gevernor in\nCouncil fixing the minimum sale prices\nof first and second class landa at 810 and (5\nper acre respectively.\nThis regulation further provides that\nthe prices fixed therein shall apply\nlo ail lands with reaped to which\nthe application to purchase Is given\nfavorable consideration after this date,\nnotwithstanding the date of such application or any delay that may have occurred in the consideration of the same,\nFurther notlee Is hereby given that all\npersons who have pending applications to\npurchase lane* under the provisions of\nsections 34 or 86 of the 'Land Act' and who\nare not willing to complete suoh purchases\nunder the prices ixed by the aforesaid\nregulation snail be at liberty toJwithdraw\nsuoh applications and receive refund of the\nmoneys deposited on acoount of suoh applications.\nWILLIAM R. ROSS,\nMinister ot Lands.\nDepartment of Lands, ,   __\nVictoria, B.C., April 3rd, UU.       '   M-U\nBusiness Directory\nAUCTIONEER*\nCHAt,.   A.   WATERMAN    ft    CO.-P.   O.\nBox 225.\nCOLLECTION^ENCIES^^^\nW. CUTLER, COLLECTIONS OF ALL\nkinds, special attention given to rem\ncollection-.; books kept; prompt returns\nOffice 313 Baker street.\nCARPENTERS AND  BUILDERS\nDC-U^ETTE & L^WSOti^WE^wTLL\nbuild you a new home, China cupboards\nand flour bins made to order. Delighted\ncustomers our best advertisement. Workshop beliinil Scanlan'B store, Stanley St.\nP. O. box 1(5, Phone 101.\nAMALGAMATED SOCIETY OF OARPEN-\nters am] Joiners. All members arriving\nin town call and see secretary, James\nHolliday, 418 Gore street. 237-12\nCARPENTERS - ANYONE WANTING\nfirst i-iass caipenters, communicate with\nThe United Brotherhood, Box 202.\nHAIR   DRESSING  AND   MANICURING\nMME. KATHLEEN NOAH, HAlRDftESS-\nlng and manicuring parlors.- Room 38,\nK    W.   C.  blot k. \t\nSINGING  AND   VOICE   PRODUCTION\nH. TREBY II WALE-TUITION GIVEN IN\nabove, studio at olo Cedar street. Apply\nP. O. Hex 14, 'Phone A91.\nASSAYER?\nE.   W.    WIDDOWSOT^ASSAJf (FRO-\nvlnclal) Metallurgical Chemist. Charges:\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead 11 each,\nGold-Silver tUO: Silver-Lead tl.60- Zinr\n(2; Silver-Lead-Zinc (3; Gold, Silver-\nCopper or Lead, 82.50. Accurate assays;\ncareful sampling and prompt attention\nP. O.  Box  A1106. Nelson, B. C. ,\nASSAYERS'  SUPPLIES\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMlCAl-\n8UPPLY COMPANY, LIMITED, Vancouver, B. C, Assayer? supplies.\nChemical and Physical Apparatus, Balances and Weight*) of precision, eto.,\nSole Agents in British Columbia for the\nMorgan CruoIMa Company London, Bag-\nland; F. W. Braun, Los Angeles; tht\nBraui-Knecht-Heimann Company, San\nFranciaco; thM T. Baker Chemical com\npany's Analysed C. P. Acids and Cheml-\noalB, Way's Pocket Smelters; write for\npamphlet describing these smellers, complete assay outfits furnished at short\nnotirM.\nWindow and House Cleaning\nTHE M-.-80N WINDOW AND VACUUM\nCleaning Company.\u2014House cleaning ot\nevery uescrlptton undertaken. Window\ncleaning. Carpet cleaning. Chimney\nsweeping. Orders booked now for spring\nwork. Terms strictly moderate. Phone\n18. P. O. Box 1W. Corner Stanley and\nSilica, 2?*-26\nOBSTETRICS\niR8. BENNY will be pleased to reeefcra\nmaternlty patients at\n...\u201e \u201e  \u201e her home.   Excellent testimonials.   SM Observstory street\nPRIVATE   MATERNITY   riwe\nforts.   For teitns and particulars write\nP. O. Boa 768, Nelson, B.C. \u00bb7-M\nWANTED\u2014salesmen Ho! Salesmen wanted to sell the most complete line of\nnursery stock In the ' Northwest. Cash\nweekly, capital City Nursery Company,\nSalem, Oregon. Z7Mf.\nWANTED\u2014Britlsh Columbia farm lands\n\u25a0naked. I will stake and do all work\nnecessary for you to obtain 160 to 540 acres\nof good agricultural land in the Fort\nGeorge district, direct from the government at bedrock price, Small cash payment only 'necessary, and this may bt\nplaced In escrow until land is recorded in\nyour name. Special prices for large tracts,\nTins Is the best kind of Investment for\nworking man, farmer or big syndicate.\nGood soil. Fine climate. Write for particulars. Arthur A. Hale, 334 Granville\nstreet, Vancouver, B.C.. also at Fort\nGeorge, B.C., after March 31. 28   \"\nWANTED\u2014Several married men. to buy\nfive or ten acres of choice frutt land opposite Mirror Lake, Kootenay Lake, B.C.\nSmall amount required, balance by work.\nAddress Harris, The Honeymoon Place,\nKaslo P.O., B.C. 806-tf.\nWANTED-tntelllgont man to feed planer\nand band resaw.   Apply at mill, Koch's\nSiding.\nWANTED-Girl    for    stripping\nNelaon Club Cigar Factory.\nWANTEDFlrst   class   grader   and   tally\nman.   Address Robinson & Lequlme Lumber Co., Grand Forks, B.C. 309-5\nWANTED\u2014Agents,   Nelson    and   district.\nApply Room   0,   Grand   Central hotel,  D\nto 4. SJU-ti\nWANTED-A girl for housework.   Inquire\nat 3U5 Hall Mines road. 309-tf.'\nWANTED\u2014Certlileated nurse wishes position as companion-help or housekeeper.\nApply C,  News Office. 5-6\nWANTED-Engineer, with 3rd.olass certificate, far sawmill. Must be sober and\nexperienced. Wages (75 per month. Apply\nThe Jewell Lumber Company, Ltd., Han-\nbury, B.C. 6-i\nFOR SALE\u2014Six 5-acre blocks near Watson's Siding, Slocan branch. Partly\ncleared. Price reasonable; outside price\non pick 875 per acre, one-quarter cash,\nbalance In yearly payments. A. E. Colpltts,\nWlnlaw,   B.C.\nFOR   SALE\u2014Rolled top  office  desk and\nrevolving arm chair.   Apply 624 Victoria\nstreet, Nelson.       '   .  8-6\nFOR  SALE\u2014Baby  carriage and  go-cart;\nalso baby chairs and sleighs.   Apply f>2i\nVictoria street. 8-6\nPRIVATE SALE\u2014Household furniture.\nKootenay street.\nFOR   RENT.\nFOR     KifflNT\u2014 Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms.    Apply Carney block. 281-tf.\nFOR RENT-Housekeeping rooms.   Apply\nJ. W. Gallagher, 102 Baker street.    2S6-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Desirable room in quiet home,\nolose In.   Enquire P. O. Box 856.       305-tf\nFOR   RENT\u2014Two  roomed  house.    Apply\nChoquette Bros. 306-tf.\nFOR  RENT\u2014Nicely  furnished rooms,  421\nSilica street. 3-10\nFOR   RENT\u2014Five-roomed   furnished  oot-\ntage, on north shore West Arm, close to\nNelson.   Apply postoffice box 304, Nelson.\nFOR    RENT\u2014Bedrooms    and    furnished\nhousekeeping rooms.   705 Hall street, between Baker and Victoria, 7-*\nFOR RENT\u2014Nicely furnished front room,\nsuitable  for one or two gentlemen.   50S\nCarbonate street. 8-0\nFOR RENT\u2014For six months, a six-room\nmodern furnished house, with good garden; 10 minutes' walk from postoffice. Apply Croasdalle, Mawdsley & Co, -        8-tf.\nTRU8T COMPANIES\nEvery company receiving deposits of\nmoney or carrying on business' In the\nProvince of British Columbia as a Trust\nCompany, as defined In the \"Trust Companies Regulation Aot, 1911,\" Is requested\nto furnish particulars as to the corporate\nname of Uie company, and the name and\naddress of Its managing director to the\nInspector of Trust Companies, Victoria, in\norder to receive a supply of forms to be\nused In making the return as provided In\nsection 4 of said Aot.\nW. U. RUNNALLS,\n2-26       |     Inspector of Trust Companies.\nWANTED\u2014A lady, trained teacher from\nLondon. England, purposes to open about\nthe end of May, in Nelson, a day school\nfor girls of all ages, and boys between\nsix and nlnevyears old. Thorough education on modern lines; English in ail lta\nbranches; French and G\u00abrman grammatically and conversationally. Evening classes\nln above for senior pupils of either sex.\nRecommended by Sir W. Grey-Wilson,\nK.C.M.G., governor of the Bahamas; the\nLord Bishop of Nassau, and Chancellor\nMacdonald of Brockvllle, Ontario, who will\nanswer any Inquiries. For terms, la tne\nmeanwhile, apply to Charles W, Busk,\nKokanee, B.C., Box 391.      6-26\nWANTED-A reliable man for warehouse\nand assist In office.   State weight, height\nand age and where last employed.   P. O.\nBox^864, Nelson, B.C. 7tf.\nWANTEli-Lady stenographer; also young\nman for office assistant.   Apply Box W.,\nDally News. T-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Planer   foreman,    with    eight\nyears' experience, wishes position about\nMay 1st; three years In British Columbia.\nA(ldress_L. V., Daily News. 8-1B\nWANTED\u2014Immediately, housekeeper for\nbachelors' quarters. Must be good cook.\nScoteh or English preferred, Good wages\nto right party. Apply Box D. S,, Dally\nNews. 8-6\nWANTED\u2014Situation as circular saw filer,\nmill foreman or sawyer.   Best references\nfurnished.   Address K. S., Dally News.'\n8-18\nWANTED\u2014Lad or man for ranch work.\nbiate experience    and    wages expected,\nWrite P. O. Box 141, Nelson. . 9-2\nFOUND\u2014Valuable   pin,   on   Ward   street.\n' Apply to -provincial police, W.\nROSSLAND\nTHE HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND,\nB. C\u2014Green & Smith, Props. Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan,\nCommercial travellers will find light,\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry.\nPHOENIX \u25a0\nHOTEL BROOKLYN,' PHOENIX, B. C-\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to' roof. Best sample\nrooms In the Boundary. Bath room in\nconnection, Steam heat. Opposite Great\nNorthern depot   James Marshall, Prop,\nGRAND FOR Kb\nGRAND FORKS HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\nB.C.\u2014Finest lire proof hotel In Boundary\nAmerican and European plan, commercial travellers will find light, comfortable\nsample rooms.  M. Frankovltch, Prop,\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, B. C.-MOST\nmodern and up-to-date hotel in Ymlr;\nlocated directly opposite depot; best accommodation possible. Dining room in\nconnection.   J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nCASTLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEGAR\nJunction. All modern. Excellent accommodations for tourists and drummers.\nBoundary train leaves here at 9,11 a.m.\nW, H. Gage, Proprietor.\nTRAIL, B.C. i\nDOMINION HOTELr-NEW AND UP-TO-\ndate. Largest and best hotel ln Trail. A\nhotel for commercial or laboring class.\nAmerican and European plan. '        235-51\nPRODUCE\nSTARKEY ft CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\nerB in Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine street,\nNelson,,B.C.\nGROCERIES\nVj MACDONALD ft CO.\u2014WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchants\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nfruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House Produce. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.' P. O. Box 1095.   Telephone 28.\nMINER'S FURNISHINGS\nA.   MACDONALD  &   CO.\u2014WHOLESALE\nJobbers in Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nwarehouse, oorner of Front and Hall\nStreets.   P. 0. Box 1095.   Telephone 28.'\nRESERVE\nNotice Is hereby given that ail vacant\nCrown lands not Already under reserve,\nBltuated within the boundaries of the Land\nRecording Districts of Cariboo and LiUooet,\nand the Kamloops Division of Yale Land\nRecording District, are reserved from any\nalienation under the \"Land Act\" except\nby pre-emption,\nROBT. A. RENWICK,\nDeputy Minister of Lands.\n. ' Lands,\nVictoria, B.C., April 3rd. 1811. 103-26\nMINING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY ft SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and Circular sawmills. Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment   Spokane, wash,\n-IOT1CE TO DELINQUENT CO.OWNER\nNotloe to W. C. Wei la\nNotice Is hereby given that I, George R\nDevlin, oe-owner together with W, C.\nWells in the \"Devlin Lode\" mineral claim,\nsituated on Sheep creek and recorded on\nthe and dar of July, 1969, unless you, within a period of 90 days from the flrat publication of this advertisement, pay to me\nthe sum of (54.50, money expended hy me\nin performing the assessment work, together with half the costs of travelling to\nand from the claim, and together with all\nthe coats of this advertisement, your Interest In the said' claim will become vested\nIn me, your co-owner, who has made the\nrequired expenditure on the said mineral\nolalm' under Beotlon 21 of the \"Mineral\nAot.\" ....    \\   '\nThis   notice   ls   published -under' s\u00ab*lon\n2RP of the. \"Mineral Act.*'\nfl-4-H-Md.. GEORGB R. DEVLIN.\nNOTICE.\nTake notloe that. I, George Bartlett of\nthe City of .Nelson, British Columbia,\nhotel keeper, Intend to apply to the board\nof license commissioners of Nelson, at the\nnext meeting of the board, held 80 days\nafter this date, for the transfer or reissue to Thomas Martin Ivens of the said\nolty of Nelson, of. the hotel liquor license\ngranted for the Bartlett hotel, situate oa\nlots No. 11 and IS, In blook I, In the said\neity of i Nelson, according to the official\nplan or subdivision of District lot No, 95,\ngroup i, district of West Kootenay, in the\nProvince   of   British   Columbia.\nDated this 27th day of March, A, D. Wl\nGBORGE BARTLETT '\nTHOS. MARTIN IvENS.\nWltnemi! FRED C. MOFFATT.    2M.U-1M!\nNOTICE\nTake notlee that I, WlHim C. Neuendorf,\nIntend to apply to the Board of Licensing,\nCommlestoners for the CRy of Nelson,-,\nthirty days after the date hereof, for the\ntransfer to Norman McLeod of Nelson, ,\nBritish Columbia, of the hotel license now\n-held by me, for the premises known aa the\nSilver King hotel, situate. In said elty, and\nbeing situate on Lots six (6), seven <7), ,\nand eight (8), In Bloc* ten <1<0- of the .said\ncity ofNesfon. \u25a0     \u25a0    -   .\nDated ttiis lath day of April, UU.\ngoT-sod.       willum a. neubndorf.\n WEDNESDAY APRIL 26\nCfte Ban? $euM*.\nPAGE SEVEN\nThe Real\nMagnet\ntn tbe grocery business Isn't bluster,\nbut merit and \"your money's worth,\"\nOur guarantee Is behind every box ot\nStarch, Washing Powder and Bluing\nthat we sell.\nOur guarantee and our word is as good\nas gold and everybody knows it. Glv\nus a months' trial.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nCorner Mill and -Josephine Sts.\nPhone 19 P.O. Box 637\nFruit Ranch for Sale\nHere Is Something Choice\nAs Well As Cheap\n15 acres on tiie Granite wagon road,\nonly tour miles from the city, 3 acres\ncleared; trame bouse 18x30 with shed\nand kitchen; running water on property; 28 fruit trees; close to, school.\nPrice for cash only, 11400; on terms,\n$1600; one-third cash; balance ln one,\ntwo and. three years, with interest at\nS per cent\nR. J. STEEL\nQrlffln Block, Room 7        Nelson, B.C.\nWa attend to \"\u00abmr\nPLUMBING\npromptly and well.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nVictoria Street, near Opera House\nTelaphone 181\nCarpet Cleaning\nlAo. PER square: TARD\nWork sailed for and dellovrsd' promptly.\nClothes of all kinds  olsansd.  rsnovatsd,\nlyad and repaired \u25a0\nOen't Suits Cleaned and Pressed. T5a to\n.Ladles'' Skirts Cleaned, tl; dyad, tt.\nGloves Cleaned, 25c to \u2022>.\nSpecial rates for hotels, restaurants and\nsteamers.\nFamily washing, rough dry, Ke dosen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\n\u202201-901 VBRNON STREET.\nfilephone IM PAUL N1POT.J, Prop\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN 4 CO.\nCivil Engineers.  Dominion and B. C. Land\nSurveyors;\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsltes, Timber Limits, Etc.\nNelson, 616 Ward St., A. H. Green, Mgr.\nVictoria, Hi Pemberton Bldg., F. C. Green.\nFt. George, Hammond St., F. P. Burden.\nA. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice 'phone B86; residence 'phone B74\nOffice: Over McDermid & McHardy\n-    Baker St.. Nelson. B.C.\nGEORGE H PLAYLE\nChartered Accountant, Auditor\nNelson, B.C.\nE. H. SMITH\nAccountant, Auditor and Fire Insurance'\nRoom 7, .Griffin Block, Nelson, B.C.\nLarge hats and small picture hats and\nthose of tailored style are all the vogue,\nand all unite in their endeavor to conceal\nthe face of the wearer as completely as\npossible. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nVeterinary Remedies\nCOLIC CURE\nANTISEPTIC\nLINIMENT\nCOUGH CURE\nCONDITION\nWORM CURE\nDIURETIC\nHEAVE CURE\nFEVER CURE\nCAUSTIC BALSAM\nThese are Dr. McCann's celebrated remedies We are sole agents for\nthem\nThese goods are guaranteed In every way and are giving entire satisfaction\nA Valuable Horse\nIs often saved It you carry a small line of veterinary remedies ln your\nstables\nA Few Dollars\nwill possibly save you bundreds,Order now and you won't be to blame.\nSomething for Yourself\nThis Ib equally important.\nA Big Bracing Tonic\nA Blood Purifier\nYou need something on this line for spring.   Something that will\nmake life worth living,\nLIVER GRANULES QUININE AND IRON TONIC\nPAIN EXPELLER SYRUP HYP0PH0SPHITE8\nBLOOD PURIFIER BACKRITE TABLET8\nSARSAPARILLA\nAttend to Your Medicine Chest\nIt's Important\nPoole Drug Co'y\nNelson's Leading Druggists\nDay and Night Phone 25 - We Always Lead\nCUDAHY-BREWER   WEDDING\nSAN MATEO, Cal\u201e April 25.--E<lward J-\nCudahy, the young millionaire clubman of\nOmaha, who some yeara ago was the central figure >in a sensational kidnapping\ncase, was married here today to Miss\nLenora Brewer, a prominent -society girl\nof the Burlingame set. The ceremony was\nperformed tn St.\u00bbMatithew s Catholic church\nin the presence of relatives and a few Immediate friends. After o brief wedding\ntour the young couple will take up their\nresidence in San Francisco.\nToday's wedding was the culmination oE\na long engagement that was marked by\nmany vfciBSltudes. About three years ago\nMr. Cudahy came west for a visit with his\nBister, Mrs. Jack Cosaerly, and shortly\nafter his arrival she entertained at an\nelaborate musicals at her beautiful i*.i-\nCernlto in his honor. It was on this occasion that he first met Miss Brewer. U.s\nattentions to the attractive society belle\nwere marked from the first moment or\ntheir acquaintance, and little surprise was\nexpressed when their engagement wus announced a few months later. The date for\nthe wedding was set for the following\nSeptember. Almost upon the eve of the\nwedding' day, however, came the news of\nMr.   Cudahy's   illness   and   the   Indefinite\npostponement of the wedding. It was assumed by society that the engagement had\nbeen broken when, last summer, it was\n'learned that Miss Brewer was visiting at\nthe home of Mr. Cudahy's parents. Again\nlast fall it was reported that the-weuuing\nwas about to take place, but again the\nevent was postponed on account of the\nhealth of the brldgroom-elect. During the\npast winter, however, Mr. Cudahy's condition was greatly Improved by hla residence in California, and with the impediment of his Illness removed it was decided\nthat the marriage should take place without further delay.\nEAST KOOTENAY BALL LEAGUE\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nCRANBROOK, B.C., April 25\u2014There\nwill In all probability be a baseball\nleague formed In East Kootenay composed of Cranbrook, Fernie, Hosmer,\nBlalrmore, Frank, Hillcrest, Michel and\nprobably one more town. A meeting\nhas been called at Michel for tomorrow night and delegates will be present from each of the other towns.\nKootenay Lake Fruit Farm\nand Summer Home\nTwenty-six acres situated on the West Arm of the Kootenay lake with one-\nhalt mile ot lake frontage ln a fine little bay. The shore line contains a fine\nstretch of beautiful sandy beach.\nAs welt ae having the benefit ot C.P.R, steamboat service this farm has\ntrain service,, there being a railway station on the property, thus affording the\n\u00a3 . very best traffic and  Bhippingjacli ties..\nThere are several buildings on the property consisting of frame and log\ndwelling, fowl houses, and implement sheds. A fine feature of this farm\nis the water. From a permanent moantaln stream flowing through the land\na flume has been laid and water distributed over the farm and to the dwelling.\nThere are 160 fruit Wees four yeais old, comprising peach, cherry, and.\napple; also'there is a considerable quantity of small fruits\u2014strawberries, rasp-\n- berries, currants, gooseberries, etc.\nThere are about four acres of land cleared and cultivated.   The portion\nimmediately fronting on Kootenay lake has a fine natural grove of beautiful\nshade trees,       , .\n.,*        With its many natural advantages ln the way of good soil, well watered,\nsheltered ln a beautiful bay, sand beach for bathing, excellent transportation, \u2022\nmagnificent summer home Bite, small natural park and nearness to the city pf\nNelson, it Is indeed one ot the beauty spots on Kootenay lake: *\nAt present thla farm is not ln a spick and span condition\u2014hence the small\nprice; but with a amall Judicious expenditure it can be made into a dandy\nfruit farm and summer home.\nWe can give you the benefit of a very thorough personal Inspection. Snaps\nlike thla are getting scarce; act quickly.   Wire us and we shall arrange to\n\\  bold lt for your consideration.\nPrice $4,000 Cash.   Clear Title.\nToye&Toye   -\nP. 0\/ Box 147\nNelson, B. C.\nKELSON NEWSOFTHE DAY\nMrs. Prank Fitch of Ainsworth arrived\nin Nelson yesterday for a brief business\nvisit. _____\nJames Wcstby, who haB charge of the\nOre Hill gold mine of Sheep creek, Is stopping In Nelson for a few days, and is a\nguest at the Tremont.\nWilliam Lynch of Falrvlew lias been appointed caretaker of the Dominion government buildings here ln place of B. B. Smith,\nwho has handed In hla-resignation.\nThere will lie a sale ol\" work and candles\nand an dfternoon tea held In the K, of p.\nhall from 3 to 6 o'clock tomorrow aiter-\nnoon by the Ladies of the Maccabees.\nThe third annual general meeting of the\nshareholders of the Nelson Rink, Limited,\nwill be held on the evening of Monday,\nMay-1, at 8 o'clock, in the board of trade\nrooms.\nStarting with Wednesday, May ii, all\nstores of members of ihe Nelson Retail\nMerchants' association will he closed on\nWednesday afternoons, continuing through\nJune, July and August.\nThe date of the next sitting of the county\ncourt .has not yet been fixed, but the\nsession will -be presided over by his honor,\nJudge WilBon, In the absence of hlB honor.\nJudge Porln, who Is leaving early next\nmonth for a trip to England.\nW. <3. Martin, superintendent of the\nSummit gold mine of Sheep Creek, arrived\nfrom the camp yesterday, to purchase\nflies for the opening of the trout season.\nBoth Sheep creek and Wolf lake are said\nto be full of hungry trout.\nAt the special meeting of the hospital\ndirectors this evening at 8 o'clock, ln tl.e\niboard of trade rooms, a report will be presented by -the spectad committee, of which\nA. T. Walley Is chairman, which was appointed Hast week to formulate a plan of\ncampaign for the collection of the |30,til-j\nwhich Is needed for the erection of a new\nand modemly equipped, building.\nThis afternoon and evening in the parish\n\u25a0hall of St. Saviour's church tho ladles of\nthe parish guild are holding a sale of\nwork. Many useful and fancy articles will\nhe displayed for sale, and there will be\nBpeclai tables of home made cookery and\ncandy. In the afternoon from 3 to 6o'clock\ntea will be served, and ln the evening there\nwill be a whlBt drive, to which a small admission fee will be charged, and at which\nrefreshments will be provided without extra cost.\nSee the Variety Store advertisement on\nthis pagei 9-1\nGenuine 'bargains and good value In footwear at Welr'B old stand. 8\nDon't  forget  the  Maccabee  sale,  afternoon tea, home-made candles, and the doll.\nNow Is the time to order your screen\ndoors and windows. Made to any size at\nWaters & Pascoe. 306\nGET THE HABIT of having fresh flowers on your dinner table; of Bending flowers\nto that sick friend; or sending flowers to\nyour best girl; of taking home flowers to\nthat best of all girls, your wife. Presh\nflowers every day at Rutherford's Drug\nstore. Violets, Daffodils and Hyacinths.\nBaskets of flowers on order. Get the\nhabit. 7-3-e.o.d.\nA TREAT  FOR  NELSON\nTo hear this party.    .\n1.   Mr. Ruthven MacDonald\n(Canada's Greatest  Baritone.)\n2. Miss Bertha May Crawford  .\n(Leading Soprano\u2014Toronto.)\n3. Miss Mildred Gordon\n(Gold Medalist\u2014Reader.)\n4. Mrs.  MacDonald  (Planlste.)\nMETHODIST CHURCH,\nMONDAY,  MAY 1st.\nAdmission only 50 cents.\nAT THE THEATRES\nAfter the Ilrst performance of Marvelous\n\"Mental\" and Ms clever company at the\nNanalmo opera house a few months ago,\nManager Cole was heard to remark;\n\"Laughing wasn't In It, the audience fairly\nhowled at the many comic tests which\nProf. Mental put his hypnotised subjects\n-through.'' Miss Blllle Davis is also receiving great praise for her wonderful\nclairvoyance nnd mental telepathy. Arthur\nValll, the Australian sketch artist, and\nHammott, the humorous ventriloquist, also\nreceive a large share of applause. Dorothea\nDe Vere, the pretty little boilladlst, is\nwinning many frlonds with her latest songs.\nThe entire company will be seen at the\nopera house for two nights, commencing\ntonight.\nThat theatre-floors of this city are awake\nto the fact thnt iho musical comedy, \"The\nQueen of the Moulin Rouge,\" which comes\nto the opera house on Friday evening. Is\na production of extraordinary magnitude\nand lilgh standard. Is evidenced by an\nunusual number of requests that seats be\nlaid aside prior to the opening of the regular advance s*nlc The sale opens tomorrow\nmorning at the Poole Drug store and tho\nfirst in line will have the first choice of\nseats. Owing to the unusual Interest--manifested in tho engagement, and probable\nheavy demand for seats, it. has 'been decided not to sell more than 10 seats to any\nindividual, thus protecting regular theatregoers against paying advanced prices. \"Tha\noiieen \u00abf the Moulin Rouge\" comes here\ndirect from extended engagements ln New\nYork olty ami Chicago, with practically the\nnrlulnal cast, and promises to be the distinct novelty of the senson.\nIf You Will\nSend Me\n$1.50\nI will send you poBt prepaid a good\nwatch which is guaranteed tor one\nyear. I have all grades ot watches.\nJ. J. Walker\nOPTICIAN   AND  JEWELER\n^ GEM\nALUMINIZED   SCREEN\nOverture. Orchestra\nRELIANCE   FEATURE\nThe Trump Card\nIMP  FEATURE\nArmy Manoeuvres in\nCuba\nThe Dynamiters.\nDebt.\nA Good-. Chance Lost.\n10c.   ADMISSION    10c.\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at the foi\nowing rates:\nrlvate ward patients, week....f20.0C\neml-prlvate ward patients, week 16.0C\nAddress  applications to matron  a'\nOBpttal.\nNOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that starting\nWednesday, May 24th and continuing\nthrough June, July and August all\nstores of members of the Nelson Retail'\nMerchants' association will be closed\nWednesday afternoons.\nNelson Rink, Ltd.\nNotice Is hereby given that tbe third\nannual general meeting of the shareholders of Nelson Rink, Limited, will\nbe held on Monday, May 1st, 1911, at\n8 p.m. at the Board of Trade rooms.\nG. HORSTEAD, Secretary.\nNelson, B.C., April 20th, 1911.\nopened here today with delegates present from every state of the south.\nState commissioners of labor and many\nrepresentatives of labor organizations\nare Included in the attendance. The\nsessions will last several days and will\nbe devoted lo the discussion of proposed remedies for any existing conditions detrimental to children or women\nIn the labor in the south. Uniform\nlegislation to remedy the evils will be\nsought.\nCHILD   LABOR  CONFERENCE.\nATLANTA, Ga., April 25,\u2014The\nSouthern Conference on Child and\nv oman Labor, of which ex-Governor\nPatterson of Tennessee Is  president,\nLAWYER RECEIVES\nSIX YEAR SENTENCE\nPleads Guilty to Seven charges of Theft\nand One of Forgery\u2014Brought Back\nto Ontario\nCAYUGA, Out., April 25\u2014J. L. Murdoch, the absconding Jarvis lawyer, arrested in Cincinnati, Ohio, and brought\nhack here and who pleaded guilty to\nseven charges of theft and one of forgery, was sentenced this afternoon by\nI Judge CUne to six years in the peniten-\n' tlary. On the charge of forgery he\nwas sentenced to four years and on\nthe other, seven charges of stealing, to\ntwo years on each charge, the latter\n\u2022sentences to be concurrently. The\njudge spoke kindly but firmly and said\nit was a painful trial to him, knowing\nthe accused as he had for a number of\nyears. \t\nThe Nothing Over 25c\nVariety\nStore\nGreat Removal Sale\nSpecials for Wednesday and Thursday\nRemainder of Easter Novelties and Toys, 10c. and 15c. lines, sale\nspecial 5c. each; 26c. lines, sale special 10c. each.\n, The greatest value ever offered In Granlteware in Nelson, large grey\ngranite rinsing pans, sale price 25c. each. Only one Bold to each customer.\nEnglish earthenware soup and dinner plates, sale special 5 for 25c.\nNo less sold.\nAnother lot of 15c. flower vases offered as a sale special.  One 15c,\nvase and 15c. worth of artificial flowers, sate special 15c.\n20 per cent discount on all regular goods during the sale.\nm?\nA Splendidly\nAccurate Tailoring\nService\nFit-Reform Special Order Department\noffers you the genius and skill of the\ngreatest tailoring organization in Canada.\nYou select the style and pattern of suit\nor overcoat.\nWe will see to it that every garment is\na source of lasting satisfaction.\nWe offer you a splendidly accurate\ntailoring service that makes perfect fit a\ncertainty.\nWe also offer you a choice of patterns\nand effects that are as exclusive and\nelegant as they are worthy.\nIf you feel that your suits and overcoats must be made to your individual\nmeasure, the Fit-Reform Special Order\nDepartment is at your service to guarantee satisfaction.\n$35.00 to\n$16.50\n@m\\\nEMORY   &  WALLEY\nNobody Roasts\nthe Butcher\nwho buys meat here. For our\nroasts are so prime, tender and\njuicy, our chops and steaks so appetizing that only satisfaction can\nresult from marketing here. Try\nus with an order. We will deliver\nit anywhere in town, whether it\nbe large or little.\nP. BURMS ti CO. Ltd. nSKc.\nSAYS STRAWBERRY CROP\nWILL BE  LIGHT\nI\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nWYNNDEL, IU\\. April 25.-0. J. Wlgen,\nthe strawberry specialist of Wyimdel, has\nset the priot? for Ills strawberries governing: the season of 1911. In advising his\ncuRiomers of the season's price, he writes\nas follows:\n\"The strawberry crop of 1911 in British\nColumbia and tile western states will he\nvery short, owing to tbe prolonged drought\nduring August and September \"f last year.\nTiie finite liberal rainfall later in the season cajiifi too late to revive the plants to\ntheir full vigor. So tiiis season there will\nbe very few strawlii-ri-li's on tbe niarkt-1,\nexcept from localities and Individuals having control of irrigation.\"\nWINNIPEG OPTIONS.\nWINNIPEG, April 26.\u2014Closing options on\nwheat: May, ffi%i July, 94%: Oct., h\u00bbi.\nCash\u2014No. l Northern, O^i: No. 2 Northern,\n91): No. 3 Northern, KT-}.',; No. 4, 83%; No. 5,\nTS; No. 6. 77.\t\nWhite Rose Gasoline\nGives  Universal Satisfaction\nAll Ways\u2014Always.\nIn Choice Beef, Pork, Mutton, Lamb\nand Veal\nWe must have satisfied customers to stay In business- we propose\nto stay,\nBraidwood Bros. KiZV c.\nC X f\\ C It C We Offer, Subject to\nOlUL\/lVO Prior Sale\n200 Diamond Coal.\n10,000 Juno Mines.\n1,260 McGllllvray.\n2 Nelson Skating Rink.\n600-1000 Kootenay Gold Mines.\n1,000-5000 Society Girl.\n308 Kootenay Jam.\n100 D. C. Copper.\n1 South African Warrant\n10,000 Alberta Coal.\nMake us a bid on any of these.\nE. B. McDermid\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. CJ\n -\u2022AGE EIGHT.\nSome Good Buys\nTwo acres, S-roomed house, water\nand good cellar. Price 91,150; $400 cash,\nbalance terms.\nFour lots, C-roomed house, electric\nlight and water; 13-year-old fruit\ntrees. Price $1,800; $400 cash, balance\nterms.\nTen acres lake frontage, partly cleared, with small house. A chance for\ngood Investment.    Price J950.   Terms.\nForty acres lake frontage, 2% cleared, two storey house. An Ideal summer home.   Price $2,500.   Terms.\nCroasdaile, Mawdsley\n& Co.\nu\nFAIRH0LME\nKootenay River\n\u00bb\nEight miles west of Nelson on C.P.R\nSubdivided into plots of 7 acres and upwards.\n$65 per acre\nOne-third cash, balance 1 and 2 years,\nwith interest at 8 per cent.\nf. bTlys\nGriffin Block (Over Dom. Express Co.)\n\"Unequalled for General  Use\"\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent\nNelson. B. C.\nDarling\nOh, darling we have mlssera you;\nOh, welcome, welcome home.\nAre the thoughts of many dear mothers\nFrom whom their child did roam.\nThough you're seeking for your fortune\nIn that far off distant land,\nDo not forget dear mother,\nFor by you she'll always stand.\nJust sit down and write one letter,\nIf only a paragraph;\nBut do It right and with it\nSend dear mother your photograph.\nShe will prize it if it's natural\nAnd press it to her heart\nThen to please you both you must decide\nTo have In it Campbell's Art.\nCampbell's Art Gallery\n715 Baker St. Phone 46\nNext Door to Kootenay Steam Laundry\nReady for\nCleaning\nDay\nLawn Grass Seed, White Clover Seed and all the best Flower\nand Garden Seeds.\nLilac Bushes, 25c. 35c. and\n50c. and a long list of Perennial\nPlants.   Come early.\nMail orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist      Nelson, B.C\nFancy Bread\nBox Sodas\nA dandy tin Bread Box and about\n21 lbs. ot McCormick's Jersey\nCream Sodas.\n$3.25\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nCome and See Our New Stock of\nElectrical Fixtures\nWe have purchased an assortment of elaborate fixtures which\nwe are selling at prices ranging\nfrom\n$6 to $23\nThey are the newest designs\nand are the best bargains ever offered in Nelson.\nJ. H. MATHESON\nElectrical Supply House\n606 Baker St,\nMotor\nBoat\nInsurance\nWe can Insure your gasoline\nlaunch against accident and\nfire while on Kooetnay lake or\nwaters tributary thereto. The\nrates are very reasonable and\nwe shall be pleased to furnish\nyou with all particulars on application.\nH.&M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C.\nLumbermen, Attention!\nWe have just opened up a large consignment of the world famed\n\"22\n\" Crescent Ground\nCross Cut\nSAWS\nManufactured by the Simouds Saw Co.   Guaranteed to cut 10 per\ncent more timber than any saw m ade.   We also carry a full, stock of\nSaw Sets, Guages, Files and Axes\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail Nelson, B. C.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe playground committee will meet this\nevening ut the Y.M.C.A.\nNelson aerie No. 22, F.O.E., meet tonight\nIn the Eagle hall.\nThere will he a dunce ln the roller rink\ntonight from 9 to 12 o'clock.\nThe regular meeting of the CO.P. will\nhe held In the K. of P. hall tonight at tf\no'clock-\nMr. and Mrs. E. Watson of Balfour were\nvisitors to the city yesterday, registering\nat  the Stratlicona. f\nMr. and Mrs. H. W. Edwards registered\nat.the Stratheona last night and leave\ntills morning for Seattle.\nLieut.-Col. W. J. H. Holmes of Victoria\nreturned to the city from Kaslo yestertmy\nand is a guest at the Stratheona.\nCatcher Phillips, of the Nelson senior\nball team, has returned to the city and\n-will be a regular player at the practices\nin future.\nJames Ashworth, ex-manager of the\nCrow's Nest Pass Coal company, came In\nlast night and registered at the Hume.\nWith lilm is D. B. Crowther, also of\niPernle.\nOne spot which was missed by the city\nauthorities during the general cleaning tip\nyesterday was that near the fire ball on\nJosephine street, where are reposing a collection of old planks and other debris.\nConstable Stimson of Cranbrook brought\ntwo prisoners in on the Crow boat last\nnight and delivered them to the provincial\nJail. They are William Palmer, who is\nunder sentence of four months for theft,\n\u25a0and Louis Taylor, who Is to serve six\nmonths on a vagrancy charge. Taylor recently served 15 months as punishment\nfor a crime committed | at Fernle. uoth\nwere sent down by Magistrate Ryan or\nCranbrook.\nfamily   residence at  10 o'clock  tomorrow\nmorning, Rev. J. Smith officiating.\nLadles\u2014See   the   special   $2.95   shoes   at\nWeir's old stand. 8\nAil communications relating to the\nKootenay Col(*mbla Preserving Works\nshould be addressed to P. O. Box 110,\nNelson,  B.C. M\nGUY BLANCHARD DIED\nYESTERDAY   MORNING\nTho death of Guy Weston Blanchard, a\nson of W. R. Blanchard, occurred yesterday at Chatham street, Falrvlew. The deceased was in his 20th year and for the\npaBt 18 months has been employed at tne\npostoffice here.    He was a native of On-\nThe  funeral   will   take   place   from   the\nHAMILTON WINNIPtb\nWe can supply all your wantB for\nARBOR DAY\nSpades Tree Primers\nHoes Spading Forks\nRakes Lawn Mowers\nBarrows Sprinkling Cans\nRubber and Cotton Hose, Etc., Eto.\nWood-Vallaace Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail.\nNJsonB. C.\nV\u00bbNCOUV F C\nNAKUSP REJOICES\nOVER BONNINGTON\nWhole   Locality  Interested   in  Launching\u2014-Shipyard  Employes Defeat\nTownsmen In Soccer Match.\n(Special to The Dally. News.)\nNAKUSP, B. C, April 25.\u2014Yesterday\nproved a perfect gala day in connection with the launching of the new C.\nP. U. steamer Bonnlngton, the largest\nand latest addition to the now large\nfleet on these lakes. The weather was\nperfectly beautiful, the sun shining\nbrightly. Everybody waa in fine spirit,\nand the great event passed off without\nthe slightest hitch. Of the many similar occasions held here, and they have\nheen many, the performance of yesterday was the moBt aucsesBful yet. Captain Gore, the superintendent of the\nsteamship lines, was in high glee, as\nwas also J. M. Bulger, the builder.\nThere were hundreds of people on hand\nto witness the occasion, many coming\nfrom outside points in .launches\u2014from\nHalcyon, Sunnyside, Arrow Park, Burton City and Arrowhead.\nThe association football game between the town and shipyard crews was\na good play and resulted most fittingly\nin the latter winning by 2 to 0.\nIn the evening the opera house, a\nhuge building erected oply last fall, at\nwhich time it waB* conceded it would\nbe sufficiently large for town purposes\nfor many years, was crowded with\ndancers and onlookers. The affair was\nunder the auspices of the Nakusp\nQuadrille club and proved one of the\nmost pleasant features of the day. A\nprize of a beautiful cut glass set, valued\nat $35, and a gold handled umbrella\nwere offered to the best waltzers,\nM<s3is. Fraser, Boyd and Curran being\nthe judges. They were)\" awarded to W.\nHndsort and Mrs. George Jordan,\n\/mong the visitors to the launching\nwere Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Miller and\nc' lldren of Nelson, who arrived In their\nprivate car and left In the afternoon.\nOn Wednesday the quarterly meetins\n\u20acfy Sail? Jietofi.\nSpring Novelties\nThe latest from Paris and- New York. A beautiful stock of brilliant\nliarrettes and Stick Combs. The designs this year are new and something exceptionally good and refined. One of these ornaments will be\na permanent piece of jewelry.\nWe have received\nA Fine Line of Nuggets\nsuitable for jewelry.   This is your chance to plok Up nice specimens for\nlinks, Bcarf pins, chains, brooches and rings.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nManufacturing Jeweler and Watchmaker\nand Expert Optician   '\nChina Hall\nIs well stocked with Crockery,\nChina and Glassware, also second\nhand goods of aU kinds, at the\n. lowest prices ever known In Nelson. Inspection will satisfy you\nand us as well.    ,\nMunro & Nelson\n321 Baker'St. P. O. Box 588\nTelepbone A261.\nof the Kootenay rural deanery will be\nheld for the first time at Nakusp. Arrangements are being made for the\nentertainment of the visiting clergy\nwhile here, including a launch ride with\nafternoon tea aboard. They are to be\nguests of various members of St.\nMark's church,.\nJURY BRINGS IN A\nSUICIDE VERDICT\nRevelstoke Resident Died by Carbolic\nAcid, Self Administered   Divine\nDraws Inference In Sermon.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nREVELSTOKE, April 25.\u2014The jury\nempaneled to inquire Into the death of\nJohn Bailie, the young man whoBe body\nwas- found south of the city last Friday, arrived at the verdict on Saturday\nafternoon \"that the deceased came to\nhis death hy carbolic acid poisoning,\nself administered, and in our minds we\nfind the evidence Insufficient to indicate the motive.\" The cor\/oner, Dr.\n.Sutherland, in the morning held a post\nmortem examination and found Indisputable evidence of carbolic acid In the\nstomach, mid no other conclusion could\nbe arrived at than the foregoing. It\nwaB brought out at tbe Inquest that the\nyoung man was some $400 or $500 ln\ndebt and bad no means whatever to\npay off his indebtedness, and it is supposed this fact waB the direct cause\nof the despondency which drove him to\nthe rash act.\nIn referring to Mb death at the funeral service in the Methodist church\nlast night Rev. R. J. Mclntyre pointed\nout that the deceased had come to tbe.\ncity three yeara ago with some $900\nof a bank account, and drew the inference that tbe young man had lost\nhis earnings at the gambling table.\n\"Somebody had got that money, and\nwhoever it was,\" he said, \"was largely\nresponsible for his death.\"\nMinarri't Liniment Relieves Burns. stt\nHigh Glass Fruit Land\nKnown as BONNINGTON ORCHARDS, situated 9 1-2 miles west ot\nNelson, and PERRY SIDING GARDENS, In the fertile Slocan valley.\n, Either ot these properties will appeal to those wishing hlfih class\nfruit lands located In well populated communities, with excellent railway and wagon road facilities. The soil Is deep, rich chocolate loam\nand well drained; most of the lots are level and free from stone and\nwell burnt over, making clearing very light.\nA proportionate share ln the water record goes free with each lot\nPrice: $60 to 1100 per acre in 10 to 20 acre lots. Terms: One. third\ncash, balance tn four equal annual payments with Interest at 0 per cent,\ncall or write for pamphlet.\nE. B. McDermid\nBaker Street\nNelson. B.C.\nOranges\n20c, 30c, 40c, SOc, per dozen.\nLettuce\nRadishes\nPhone 223\nStewart & Co.\nIf It's from Stawart's It's good.\nWe handle\nSwift & Co\/s\nBlood and Bone\nFertilizer\nWe have ground bone fertilizer\nfor rose bushes,\nTaylor Milling &\nElevator Co.\nSuccessors to S. P. Pond\nFront St Nelson, B.C.\nLinoleum\nCheapest in the\nCity\nThe Ark\n606 Vernon St. Phone A396\nNew and second hand furniture.\nRoller Skating at the\nAlice Roller Rink\nUsual three sessions today.\nBruce PlacAulay - Manager\nWATER STARTS TO\nRISE IN EARNEST\nAt Nelson Gains Practically a Foot In\nFour Days\u2014Also on Main Lake\nand in Slocan\nThat the water 1ms started at last, after\nholding back till the rise is the latest for\nyears, waa apparent yesterday.\nAt Nelaon, the water guage of the -Nel_\u2014\nLaunch & Boat company allowed & rise of\n\u25a0fM, Inches for the day, 7 Inches for the\ntwo days, or lift Inches for* the four days,\nafter a week that reoorded only a gain of\nan Inch. It thus recorded last night a\ntotal rise above low water mark of 3 feet\nII Inches.\nA Wlnlaw resident In town last night\nreports that the Uttle Slocan river has\nrisen at least 8 inches in the four days,\nshowing that the Slocan country ls also,\nlooi-unlng up.\nOn the upper lake, at Ainsworth, the\nwater hardly made any progress till the\nlast two days, when In a night It overflowed the lower end of the wharf.\nIn the next few days the water will\ndoubtless Tnako up for Ha tardiness.\nOne year ago yesterday tha water guage\nat Nelson showed 7 feet 1 Inch above low\nwater mark. , \u2022\nDI8CU88 CHILD WELFARE\nWASHINGTON,    D.C.,   -Aprl    -K.-Tho\npresence of many men and -women inter-\nWEDNE8DAY\n APRIL!\nIf You\nAre   Looking\nfor a Hat\nYou will find we carry\n$1.26 to $7.\nIt will soon be time to\nIs now complete.\nChick Food\nA complete end well balanced n>|\ntion (or little chicks,\nAlso have Cracked Wheat, Cracked]\nCorn, Chick Grit, etc.\nPotato Backs\u2014About 500(1 on hand.\nTh? Brackman-Ker|\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nthe largest assortment In town.   Prices from\nthink about a Panama.   Our stock of then\nJ. Al GILKER\nAgent for Semi-Ready Clothing i \u2022 Nelson, B. C.\ns\nHacks ahd Carriages\nat any hour.   We are still In business at\nNelson Transfer Co.\nPHONE 35, day or night,\nthe same old' stand.\nPhone 35    ::\nThe Store of Quality\ncarries a eomplete stock ot\nFresh Hazelwood Butter In s\n(rocerles, provisions, fruits and vegetables.\n:ock.   Prompt service, prices right\nPP. Box 54     A. S. HORSWILL     Phone IP,\nNelson Opera House\nTWO NIGHTS ONLY\nWednesday and Thursday\nApril 26 and 27\nThe Great\n\"Mental\"\nand Company\nHypnotism, Mind Reading,\ngic, Illusions, etc. Senaal\nrook breaking.\nPrices: 25c, 50c, and 75b,\nOne Night Only\nFriday, April\nSamuel E. Rork's Sensational\nslcal Production,   Distinct\nNovelty\nThe Queen!\nNIGHT   LIFE   IN   PARIS\nCorrectly Portrayed in 150 minutes   without   waste of tim|e or\nmoney. .\nPrices: Lower Floor, 92 and ^1.\nBalcony, $1.50 and 91.\nGallery, 75c.\nPlan opens Thursday moriilng.\nnationally   prominent In   the   child\nmovement, at the opening here *\nthe second International congress\nwelfare lent added dignity to a oc\nthe Importance of which to the\nlarge can scarcely be overestlntet-d.\ncongress  meets   under the Joint uul.\nof the National Congrci-s.of Mothers\nthe Parent-Teachers' association,\nlations and duties of home, school,\nand state to the welfare of the ~\nto be the principal topics of disc\nDuring the six days of the <\naddresses will be delivered that\nmand the attention of the nation,\nbecause of the timeliness of the\nof the addresses, but because of t\nInence of the men and fgomen\nmake them. i\nSURVEYING ALA8KAN BOUNDARY\n'. thn\nfcr\nOTTAWA, April 26\u2014W.\nthe Canada Alaska branch of\nnational boundary survey left\nson City today.  He will join J, E,\nchief of the, Canadian party,\ncouver, and with him and Dougla^\nFrederick Lambert and A. C.\nwill proceed to tbe scene of\nson's work along the 141st mer\ntween Charley creek   and\nriver.  The party will return to\nabout the end of October of th!\nThis is the third season's worjt\nof the Yukon river.  It is eipeel\nwork will be completed as far,\nArctic ocean at the close of the\nof'iete*\"v\"\n.T study\nt&day at\nnn child\ni.ventlon\nrorld at\na. The\nusplcee\n\u2022rs and\nThe re-\nchurch\ncilld are\n; will com-\n*iot only\nlUbjeots\nJib prom-\n\u2022flho wltl\nim of\nInter*\nDaw-\nOraig,\nVan-\nNells,\nStewart,\nsea-\n, be-\nto '\ntie \u25a0\nPorcupine\nOttawa\ns year,\nnorth\nitjed'that\nas the\nseason\nLook a'\nHere,\nMr. Man\nYou Want a\nNice Home\nWe have been Instructed by\nMr. May-bury to offer for quick\nsale his five room cottage and\nfive lots on the corner of Latimer and Josephine streets, as\nhe is leaving town In a few\ndays.\nThe cottage has all modern\nconveniences and is in first-\nclass repair throughout Good\nchioken house and coal shed,\nbearing fruit trees, currant\nhushes, raspberry- plants, etc.,\nand a splendid piece of ground j\nfor gardening.\nTbe .cottage and,three inside <j\nlots we are authorised to sell\nfor $2800.   The two corner lots\n' for 1000,, or the whole property\nfor $3700.\nAb an Investment we do not\nthink there is anything better -\nIn Nelson residential property j\non the market today and aB a\nhome for a man with a small |\nfamily you cannot beat it\nRemember a five room cot- ;\ntage and five lots on good cor-.\nrier for $3700, and if you will I\ncall and see us we will show\"!\nyoti that It can be bought on\neasy terms.\nMcQuarrie &\nRobertson\n419 Ward Stmt\nNelna, B. C.\nGrafting and Pruning of Fruit]\nTrees -\nBstiiftotkm gfvsn.  A stoek of solans or *,\n(ratting, of to. bsst ausJItlw of Ires, oaf\nMad.   OrMrs shoold M suit In st one*. 1\nubsrnss .MMStaur shouldm mrtoi wit*.\n>mt d.isy. \u25a0 \u25a0  't\nL. POOUH, NtiMB. B. O.\nIN.ls.OM. IMIS .00 KOMKSW itKMS\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}