{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0386419":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"6d467b96-14e8-4124-a260-61ce94e9d217","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":"2019-12-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1915-06-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0386419\/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":" DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS\nAre An Effective Selling Force\n'a\u00ae.\ner-\u2014 \u2014r. \u2014-\u25a0\u2014-       T\nFULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE\nof the\nWE8TERN ASSOCIATED PRESS\nI\nVOL. 14   No. 42\nNELSON, B.C., FRIDA^ MOfiNINf}, JUNE 4, 1915\n50c. PER MONTHS\nBIG SUPPLY OF\n,;\nIf   British   Had  as  Much\nCould Drive Foe Back\nLLOYD\nNEED 0\nGEORGE\nURGES\nCREASE\nCompulsion Will Be Used\nin Oases \"Where It Becomes Necessary\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMANCHKSTIDR, England, June 3.\u2014\nDeclaring tho German victory im Galicia waa duo\" to an, overwhelming su-\n, periorlty in equipment and that if the\ntannics in iho west had been as well\n\u25a0equipped ttio German's would long ago\nnave .been driven from Franco and\nBelgium, David .Lloyd Georgo, new\nminister of munitions, made a stirring\nappeal tonight to employers nnd workmen to supply the British armies with\ntho necessary munitions.\nTho speech was delivered before employers In -the engineering trades and\ntrado unionists. Mr. Lloyd George,\nwho had previously lunched, at the\n{Clarendon club, received a remarkable\novation from the people of Manchester which was in striking contrast to\ntho manner in which he had been received in tho city on previous visits\nof a \"political nature, particularly when\nhe appeared at tho time of the Boer\nwajr as an opponent of that struggle.\nFighting for Life.\nI come,'' 'ho said, as an emissary ol\nstato to carry the most urgent messago over told to the ears of a Manchester audience. Our country is fighting for its 'life, for the liberties of\n\u25a0iBuropCs and upon what it docs, 'Upon\nWhat it is prepared to sacrifice, depends tho issue. It depends moro upon\ntho masters and men occupied in runf\niiin-g worlcshops than upon any part of\n\u2022tie community whether Great Britain\n\u25a0vill emorgo from lho colossal struggle\n.icaton, humiliated, stripped oi' power,\nlonor, influence arid a mere fljorjd slave\n3f cruel military tyranny, or whether\nA will como out triumphant, free and\nnoro 'powerful than ever for good in\n;ho affairs of men,\nI -como hero to tell you tho truth.\nUnless you know It you cannot be expected to make sacrifices. Our Rus-\ndan allies lu>vo suffered a severe set-\njack. Tho German's have achieved a\n, jreat success, not because of superior\n\u2022'd'lqr of their soldiers or strategy -of\n.heir generals. Tho German main trl-\nimph Is due entirely to superior oqui-p-\nnont, on overwhelming superiority of\nthot and shell and munitions and\nequipment, u was a battle won by the\niso they made of their skilled indus-\nrles an-d especially hy the superior organization of German workshops.\n200,000 Shells an Hour.\n'Two hundred sliells wero conccn\nirated in a single hour on the heads of\nlho gallant Russians, trad wo been Ih\ni position to apply tho samo process\n,o tho Germans oni our front the Ger-\nnnns-woiild havo been turned out of\nfranco and driven half way across the\ndevastated plains of Flanders. They\nvould have 'been well out of the country thoy bud tortured and tormented\n;Vlth dastardly cruelty. Moro than lhat\nvo should havo \"actually penetrated\nJermuny.\n\".For tho uiomon-t w0 havo nior\u00a9 than\nilonty of men for tho equipment\nvaleted. Moro men will come to thc\n\u2022all 'but wo want tho workshops to\n.quip them with weapons. The state\niow needs tho help of all nnd I nm\nlorfcctly certain that British engineers\nan d-o what the French engineers\niavo .already -done.\n'In Franco -private firms havo given\nho state assistance in this critical hour\n.-htch is ibeyond computation. The last\n\u25a0\u25a0Tench victories wero largely attribu-\nable to tho private workshops of\nTance.\n'I am here to ask you to help us\nquip our armies with th0 means for\nbreaking through tho German'lines\nfn front of our [gallant troops and I\npow you will do it.'*\nCompulsion Where Neeessary.\nTho minister said ho was not there\no brandish his (powers under th   Dc-\n\u25a0:\u2022\u25a0 CANADA MAKES MUCH \u00ab\u2022\n<\u2022> NEW   HIGH   EXPLOSIVE $\n$   \u00ab.\n<S> (By Dally News Leased Wire.) <&\n<-!> OTTAWA. June a.\u2014The min- <$\n<?-' -later   of  militia   returned   this *$\n<\u00a7 evening from a trip of inspec- <J>\n<i> tlon of a new plant in eastern <J>\n<\u2022\u25a0 Canada for the manufacture of -^\n\u25a0tg> trcnitro toluol, a new high ex- \u25a0S>*|\n<$> plosive.   Tho minister stated it \u2022$\n<\u00a3> was  decided   to   establish   the -$>\n<$> plant several weeks ago and it 4?\n<\u00a7> was jiot expected that it would ,'\u25a0*?$\n<j> be   ready  for  several  months. <\u00a7\n\u20223> Today tho plant was found  to <\u00a7>\n<j> bo fully in operation with a ca- <$\n<s> ipftcity   of   300,000 poun-ds per $>\n<$- month.    Other  plants are be- <&\n<& Ing erected for the same pur- <\u00a3\n<y pose. <$>\nDrop Bombs and Darts on\nHeadquarters\n29 PLANES MAK\nfenso of the Realm act, but they were\ngreat and the committeo appointed\nwould find the powers helpful in- enabling it to organize quickly and get\nrid of unnecessary difficulties, without\nloss of time, ibut there were a few\nwho lagged behind and these would\nhavo to be Jogged up.\nTo what extent and direction the\nmoral duty of each citizen to give his\nbest to tho stato should be converted\ninto a lcga]\u00bb,duty was a question not\nof principle hut of necessity, to be\ndecided from time to time as an emergency arose during the period of the\nwar. Theso questions, said tho minister, sprang up with great rapidity\nand should be dealt with with decision\nand iprom'ptlt'udo arid above all with\ncourage. Tho government which alone\nknew the facts, must bo trusted.\n'\"I do not mind guillotining ministers,'' said Mr, Lloyd George, \"but until\nthey reach tho scaffold Ihey ought to\nbe obeyed and, above all, do not unnerve them by sniping them from behind.\"\nConscription Only if Necessary.\nSpeaking of conscription he said:\n\"To Introduco compulsion as an important element iu organizing the resources of skilled industry and trade\ndoes not necessarily mean conscription in tho ordinary sense of tho term.\nConsoriptfor.i [means the raising .bl.v\ncompulsory methods of armies to fight\nGreat Britaiu't battles abroad. If the\nnecessity arose I am certain that no\nman of any party would  protest.\nWo won our liberties in this land\non more than one occasion by compulsory sen-ice. France saved the liberty it won In the revolution by compulsory service. The great republic\nto tho west won its independence and\nsaved its national existence by compulsory service and two of tho greatest\ndemocratic countries In Europe today\nFranco and itn'y, are defending their\nnational existence and 'liberties by\nmeans of compulsory service.\n\"ft 'has been the greatest weapon In\nthe hands of democracy many times\nfor tho winning ami \u25a0preservation of\nfreedom. All the same, it would be a\ngreat mistake to resort to it unless it\ns absolutely necessary.\"\nTho young men,\" continued the\nminister, \"have not refused to respond\nin sufficient number to the appeals\nmade to Iheir patriotism and they arc\nstill coming In far ahead of the equip\nment for them and I havo no doubt\nthat they will keep well ahead of the\nequipment.\n\"1 say to those who wish to dismiss conscription for the time being\nas a means of levying armies for\nfighting abroad, that they ought not\nthereby to assume that compulsion is\nunnecessary in enabling us to mobilize\nthe full strength of the country. Wo\nwore the worst organized natlqp in the\nworld for this war, which showod that\nwe had nothing lo do with precipitating it. It is a war of munitions and\nthe government has decided that compulsory powers are essential to utilize\nthe resources of the country to the\nbest advantage. The work of the\ncountry must come first because, unless it. does, there wfll bo no country\nworth fighting for.\nState Must Control Labor\n\"The employers aro now subject to\ncompleto state control for industrial\npurposes and If we are to make the\nbest of our resources for the shortening of tho wnr tho same purpose must\nextend to the wholo fletd of industrial organization whether it be capital or labor. There must be one situation\u2014tho control of labor must be under the control of the state.' '\nAfter referring to what has been\ndone In France and Italy, Mr. Lloyd\nMany  of   Missiles   Reach\nMark-All Machines\nReturn Safely\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, June 3.-\u2014The headquarters\nof the German crown prince wero\nbombarded this morning by French\naviators. Twenty-nine machines\ndropped 17S shells and so vera! thousand darts. Many of tho shells are\nsaid to have reached the mark. This\nannouncement was made in the official\nstatement issued by the war office tonight.   The text is as follows:\n\"Twenty-nine French aeroplanes between -I and 5 o'clock this morning\nbombarded the headquarters of the Imperial crown prince. They dropped\n178 shells, many of which reached tho\nmark, and several thousand darts,\n\"All the machines wero subjected to\na severe cannonade but thoy all return\ned s-ifc.\n\"There Is nothing else to report except new progress of our troops in tho\n'labyrinth'  to the southeast of Nou\nvlllo St. Vaast.\"\nBritish More Active\nLONDON, June 3.--The French\ncontinue their operations north of\nArras, where it is declared they are\nforcing the Germans out of strongly\nfortified .positions. iThe British on\ntheir part havo become more active In\nthe regions of Ypres and La Bassee.\nIrish Nationalist,  Party to\nHimself, Objects\nSOME RADICALS ARE\nAGAINST CHI\nUnofficial Opposition  Has\nBeen Organized iu\nBoth Houses\nSUNK BY PLUNGER\nBritish Submarine Sinks Large Vessel\nin Sea of Marmora\u2014Several Divers Operate There.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONiDON,  June  3.\u2014A  British  sub-\nmarlno torpedoed    a    large   German\ntransport    in    Pandemia, bay, sea of\nMarmora.\nThis announcement was givon out\nofficially In London as having been\nreceived from tho vice-admiral iii command at the Dardanelles. It is said\nalso that this submarine was one of\nseveral operating in. these waters.\nThe Gorman transport ia believed-to\nhave been the steamer Ratpha of -1000\ntons, formrly of tho German East Africa company or tho Corcovda, of 4900\ntons which was owned by the Hamburg-American line.\nWAR CONTRACT PROBE\nWILL BE THOROUGH\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 3.\u2014Sir Charles Davidson, lato chief justice of Quebec,\nhas arrived here aud arrangements\nwill be completed at once for the continuance of tho inquiry into the purchase of war supplies whicli Sir\nCharles has been commissioned to\nconduct. The inquiry will probably\nbe held in Ottawa and everything will\nbe done to make it through and effective.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.1.\nLONDON, June 3.\u2014Both houses of\nparliament met today for the first time\nsince tho formation of tho new- coalition ministry..\nThe new members of the cabinet,\nhowever, were unable .to take their\nplaces on the ministerial benches In\ntho commons owing to the law which\nmade them ineligible to sit until'they\nwere ro-clected by' their various const! tuenits,\nThe situation, however, was quickly\nremedied, for tho house of commons\npassed in all its stages a hill remov\ning this disability for tho period  of\ntho war.   Tho house of lords passed\ntho first reading of tlie same MH and\nwill tako up its further' stages tomorrow.    Tliere wero some multerings in\nthe lower house against the bill be\nIng rushed through at one sitting, thus\npreventing a general,   discussion    of\nPremier Asquith's decision calling up\non the opposition to assist him IH the\ncarrying on of tho war,   This was si\nlenced by Sir John Simon, tbe new secretary of state for home affairs, who\nled tho houso In the absence of the\npremier, promising to grant a day for\nthe discussion of political changes.\nIrrconcilablo Objects.\nLaurenco Ginncll, an Irish Nationalist, who follows tho leadership of none\nof the parliamentary parties, hut is\nthe leader and only member of .his own\nparty, was not to ibe denied, however,\nand despito tho censorship of the\nspeaker succeeded in saying that the\nmombers of tho house who formerly\nwore \"calling each other Mars and political assassins\".were now aspiring to\ngive oach other jobs and were afraid\nto face tiio electors.\n'After the passage of the suspensory\nbill, tiio commons passed the first\nradlag of a bill establishing a ministry of munitions over which David\nLloyd George will preside.\nChaplin Leads Opposition.\n\"While it -is expected the new government will have the support of the\nwholo commons and tho house of lords\nwith the exception of a few irrccon-\ncilables such as Mr. GinneM, thoro ts\nto bo an \"unofficial opposition\" in\nboth houses.   Tho leadership of that It)\nHALF MILLION SPENT\nON MISSION Wil\n(Continued on Page T-o.)\nPETER NELSON COMMITS\nSUICIDE BY HANGING\nPeter Nelson, onu of the city's oldest\nnd best (known, residents, without*\n\u25a0ord or warning of his intent went\nulctly out of his hotel Tuesday morn-\n18, and entering his launch proceeded ,ThIs is tho 'last tliat -was seen of him\np tho lake to Seven-Mile Point where\ne disembarked and entering tho woods\niok his own life\nMr Nelson, who for the ipast 15 years\n'\u2022as; associated in tho ownership of\nio Klondike hotel with John Johnson,\n3d been suffering for some weeks\n*om a condition, of nervous depression-\nduced iby constant 'brooding -over re-\njnrt  financial   losses,  .In   connedtlon\nlth his venture In the Golden Fawn\nilno at Sheep creek.    Although he\n,d ibeen sleeping but .little, and had\neen without appetite for food -for somo\nays preceding the, morning of his\neath, he showed no evidence of con-\niiwplating the deed which ended his\nfo. Beforo tearing the hotel Tuesday\nKirnlng hoi behaved in no way to\nrouse suspicion,\ntfi Mr, Johnsou that it\nlooked llko a good day for fishing and\nthat he thought he would try his luck\n\u25a0up the lake, ho took hia fishing tackle\nand made his way to'tho''boathouse.\nuntil yesterday morning, -when a search\nparty headed by Provincial Constable\nHI. W. King discovered the ibody in a\nclump of trees about 200 yards east\nof the Canadian Explosives' powder\nmagazine at Soron-Milo point. Nelson\nihad fastened one end of the painter\nof his -launch over the limb of a 'tree\nand hanged himself.\nThe first suspicion that something\nwaa amiss was aroused, in tho minds\nof his friends .when Charles Maltby\nof Canadian Explosives, Limited, arrived 4ni Nelson on his re.turn from a\ntrip to the company's magazine, brlng-\nwith him tho dead manfs launch which\nhe had found on tho rooks hear Seven-\nMile Point.\nNelson's partner. John Johnson went\nXttmtUmo  flo Pftffi pistd.\nReport  Is  Given  on  Weaker Presbyterian Churches to General Assembly at Kingston\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nKINGSTON, Ont\", Juno 3.\u2014The\nPresbyterian general assembly today\ndevoted the greater part of tho afternoon und the entire evening session to\nthe consideration ot the work In the\nweaker churches which are under the\ncare oL the home mission committee,\nof which Itev. A. S. Grant is thc chairman. Dr. Grant referred to the fact\nthat during the past year the denomination spent almost $500,000 In sustaining religious services in tho remoter parts of the country, an amount\ngreatly In oxcess of that expended in\nany previous year. Thc actual amount\nof money received during the year for\nthis purpose was only $854,974, leaving a deficit of $147,G32.\nThe deficit is largely due to tlie fact\nthat' a few years ago the church decided to increase the small remuneration paid tb Its representatives in the\nmission districts. A deficit has occurred each year since this decision\nwas-reached.\nJ. H. Edmlson, secretary of the home\nmission committee, stated that the\nCanadian church had beeu much more\nsuccessful than the American Presbyterian church in dealing with tho\nrural problems, in portions of tho\nUnited States only t percent, of these\nchurches were supplied with ministers.\nIn Canada such' n condition did not\nObtain, This year there had been 5\nsurplqs ot ministers available for\nWiSi \u25a0__\n(Continued on Pace Two.)\nATI\nSTOCK PYONETS\nWounded as Result of Refusal to Work\non Internment Camp Job, Is Unofficial Story.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., June 3.\u2014A despatch from Vernon, B,C, where an internment camp is located, gays that\nan outbreak occurred' this morning\namong the Germans ([here, it is unofficially announced that two Germans\nwero struck with bayontets, one prisoner being badly wounded, Tho prisoners aro being worked on road construction work in the neighborhood\nand ono version of the story says that\ntliis morning men were -..'allied upon lo\nwork but refused. One man while being marched along a road leaned 'back\non a 'bayonet which penetrated his\nback a few inches, It is stated.\nTO TELL KAISER HOW\nEELS\nPersonal Emissary of Count von Bern-\nstorff Will Go to Berlin to Set\nForth Situation,\n(By Doily News Leased Wire.)\nWAS-HJiN-GTOX, June 3.\u2014Colncideu-\ntally with tho despatch of President\nWilson's note to (iermuny, ther\u00ab will\nstart for Berlin u personal emissary of\nCount von Bcrnstorff, German ambassador to the United States, to lay bofore Emperor William and high officials of the German government the\nsubstance of what the ambassador\nlearned from President Wilson in his\ntalk relative to the tni\u00ab state of public opinion In the United States toward the German government and the\nAmerican point of view on submarine\nwarfare.\nVANCOUVER  MAN WILL\nHEAD REGINA COLLEGE\n(By Dally Xews Leased Wire,)\nHEOINA, Sask., June 3.-~-itov, B, W.\nStuplefqrd, B.A., of Vancouver, who\nholds the position of college secretary\nof the British ColumbU Methodist\nconference, has accepted the presidency of ReglniP college Which was recently, vacated by Hov. Dr. MiUikon,\nwho has accepted a cull to the Mctro-\n-KoUiw* skmh bw*  \u2014. a.*-^\nmm\nSTORMED BY MIC f\n15-YEAR-OLD SOLDIER\nIS\nDelliurr-e Love of Ottawa Has Nerves\nShatered by Experiences in the\nTrenches\u2014Waa Wounded.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 3.\u2014Delburno Love,\na lu-year-old Ottawa boy, who lias\nbeen with the first overseas expeditionary force since it left Valcartier\nand who has spent five months in the\ntrenches in northern France, has been\nInvalided back to Ottawa -with an impaired nervous system. Love suffered\nfrom the 'poisonous iguses used by\nthe Germans and \"was also hit iu the\nknee by a spent bullet.\nThe young soldier has two brothers\nat the front and last October desiring\nto join them he left his home tn the\nabsence ot his mother, mado his way\nto Quebec and stowed away on a troop\nship bound for England. The officer\nIn charge of the troops ou board was\nso struck with his pluck and desire to\nserve that he made him a foii-rler and\nhe was attached to the 19th Alberta\ndragoons.\nOn his arrival at Salisbury plain he\nmet his brothers and was allowed- to\njoin thc 2nd battalion which they are\nserving in. and crossed with thom to\nFrance, where he joined the Belglsin\nboy scouts and was employed as a\nwater boy. He went through the\nfighting at I,n Bassee and boars\nmark on his arm which was caused\nby Germnn gas, and also si woiiud on\nhis knee which was caused by a spent\nbullet which he got in the trenches\nnear La lMssee.\nGrand   Duke Draws His Men Back to  Conimandiiitf\nPositions \"Whioh Will Strengthen Operations on\nSan River-Amount of Booty Taken Is Not\nKnown-Russian Front Is Now Shortened\nPTE. INNIS DIES.\n(Bv Daily News Leased Wire.)\nAMHERST, N.B., .Tunc 3.\u2014Pte. William lnnis of Chatham, N.B.. of ths\n28th mounted rifles, died In a hosplto\nthis  morning of  pneumonia.\nHEN IN CAMP Bl\nEND OF NEXT WEEK\nCol.   Davi*   Returns   from   Victoria-\nTwo Regiments Are Already Under Canvas at Vernon.   \u2022\n\"The men Of the Tilth battalion must\nbo in camp at Vernon by the end of\nnext week,\" said Col. -W. M. Davis who\narrived In town lust nltfht No official dnto 3ias yet been decided upon,\nTho colonel -will communicate with the\nD.C.O., Col. Ogllvle nt Victoria bofore\nthe end of theiweelc and the announcement of tho date will t>e made on Mon*\n<hiy, Juno 7.\nTiio camp at Vernon Is now eatab'\nllshed. Six hundred of ihe C.M.B. who\nhavo been recruiting at Hastings park\nVancouver and lSf.O men of tho 47th\nbattalion from New \"Westminster ari\nnow ou the ffround, and the 62nd bat\ntalloii which Ih ibolti-g recruited from\nlho coast -district will follow as soou\nas tliey are up to strength.\nWILL HURRY WORK ON\nHARBOR IMPROVEMENTS\n(13y Dally News leased Wire.)\nUTTAWA, June 3.\u2014H Ir, officially\nannounced that tho $7,000.<-1)0 contract\nfor li arbor improvemcntf) at St. John,\nwhich Ih being taken out of tho hiW-dfl\nof tho Xorton-OriffltliH company will\nbo proceeded with at onco. The worli\nit is stated, will bo handed over to some\nother company ablo to proceed with it\nwith moro despatch, Arran-gements to\nthat end are now being made by the\ndepartment of public works.\nSOLDIERS WILL\nHOLDjIELD DAY\nAthletic Program to De Given by 54th\nBattalion at Two O'clock Saturday Afternoon\nThe officers and mon of tho N'elson\ncompany of the 54th battalion will hold\na field day at the recreation park on\nSaturday afternoon, starting at 2\no'clock. The program will consist of\nathletic contests between teams from\nthe battalion and Nelson organizations.\nKaces for children and women will also\nbe held.\nThis field day is open to the public\nand ovory effort will be put forth by\nthose In charge to make it a success.\nFollowing is tht program:\nComic football\u2014G'lth battalion vs.\nCity of Xutaott.\nBnsebull\u201454th battalion vs. City of\nNelson.\nTUg-of*war\u201454th battalion vs. City\nuf Nelson (eight men a side and three\nheats).\nEvents limited to tlie \u00bb4lh battalion\n\u2014Obstacle race, Victoria Cross race,\nthree-legged race, 100 yards dash, half\nmile, relay race (four mon) between\ndifferent squads, tilting tho bucket,\nbakers and sweep race, shoe race, soda\ncracker and ginger beer race, wrcst-\nHn. boxing In barrels. 100 yard dash\nfor officers,\nChildren's races\u2014\u2022>:, yards for boys\nunder 1); 25 yards for girls under 9;\n50 yards for hoys 9 to 14: egg and\nspoon raco for girja umlor 10.\niRaces for women\u2014Nail driving con-'\ntost; egg and spoon Nice; needle\nthreading.\nOpen\u2014loo yard dash and quarter\n-WUQi    ...j! .,\t\nAttain Main Object of (.Treat Thrust Commenced Month;\nAgo and Which Has Driven Russians Back\nFrom Positions in Carpathians\nUSED TO MIN SHELLS ON\nITES: FORTS IRE OF LITTLE USE\nLONDON, June 3,\u2014With the capture\nof Przemysl, which occurred at an\nearly hour this morning', the Austro-\nGerman armies achieved the main object of the great thrust which they\ncommenced against the Russian lines\nin western Galicia just a month ago\ntoday. They have yet to drive the\nRussians farther back and establish\nthemselves In easily defended positions\nwhich will ennble them to detach\nforces for operations against Italy and\nthe allies in the west.\nWhether or not they accomplish this,\nthe Teutonic allies have won u great\nvictory, but at terrible cost and with a\nsuddenness whicli overshadows all past\noperations of the war, It was only 10\nweek.\" ago ihat Przemysl fell to the\nRussians after a siege of six months,\nwhich was interrupted for a short timo\nIn November by an Austrian advance.\nWith the surrender of the fortress\nthere fell into Russian bands, according to official claims, 120,000 Austrians\nand 600 guns and an immense amount\nof war material. Most of the forts,\nhowever, had been completely destroyed by the Austrlans before they surrendered, and tliis is considered in\nmilitary circles hero to account for tbe\nfact that the fortress succumbed so\nquickly io the Austro-German attack.\nTeutons Had 1,000 Guns\nWhen lho Russians captured Przemysl tliey were pressing the Austrians\nnoross the Carpathian passes. Then\nJlay '<i came the news of a great Aus-\ntro-G.-niKii. thrust Into Galicia. Advancing slowly but surely and accompanied by u thousand guns, the Teutons compelled the Russians to fall\nbuck until the Russian line ran to Ihe\nriffht bank of the river San. Crossing thc river ihe Austro-Germans\nforced ihelr way to the north and south\nof the fortress and Tuesday Berlin announced that three forts to the north\nhnd been stormed, while Vienna slated\nthat the railway between Przemysl and\nLemberg was commanded by Austrian\nguns.\nThen; was Still hope In the allied\ncountries, however, that a. Russian\ncounter-offensive would hold the invaders off but this proved ill founded\nand this morning the Russians had to\ngive up the city which early iu tiio war\nhad cost them so much to win.\nof what booty tlie Austro-Germans\nhave eaptured with (lie fortress there\nis no estimate, but It Is fairly certain\nthat tiio Russians, having lots of lime,\ngot away as many men and as much\nmaterial as possible and destroyed tho\nguns und ammunition thnt remained.\nIt is not expected here that the victors will he satisfied with their gain\ncf Przemysl but they doubtless will\nendeavor to push on to Lemberg.\nRussians Win Some Success\nPJ3TROORAD,  June  2,  via  London,\nTunc  1. 3:2fj a.m.\u2014Thc following official statement, was issued tonight:\nThe   battle    in    Galicia   continued\nle 1 with tlie same desperation on\ntho whole front from the Vistula to\ntlie region of Nadwornn, On the left\nbank Of tlie lower San our troops, after\npowerful advance June 2, finally\npierced the enemy's lino and captured\nm Important position which the enemy\nhad fortified in tlie region of llouny-\nick, where wo took about 1,000 prisoners and somo guns and numerous machine guns.\nOur offensive  on   the whole   front\nfar as   the  mouth  of  the  Wlsloka\ncontinues to develop successfully.\nAdmit  Lobs of  Przemysl\n\"As Przemysl, in view of the state\nof its artillery and its works, which\nwere destroyed by tho Austrians before they surrendered, was regarded as\nincapable of defending itself, its maintenance In oui* hands only served our\npurpose until such time as our possession of positions surrounding tho\ntown on the northwest facilitated our\noperations on the San.\n\"The enemy having captured Juros-\nlau and Uadymno aud begun to spread\nalong the right bank of the river, tho\nmaintenance of theso positions forced\nour troops to fight on an unequal and\ndifficult front, increasing it by about\n24 miles and subjecting the troops occupying' these positions to concentrated\nfire of tlie enemy's numerous guns.\"\nGermans Stormed Last Position\nVIENNA. June 3, via London.\u2014The\nfollowing official statement was Issued tonight:\n\"In the Russian war theatre the German troops last night stormed the last\nposition on tbo north front of Przemysl\nand entered tbc town at 3:30 o'clock\nthis morning from the norths,\n\"Our 10th corps entered the town\nfrom thc west and south and reached \u25a0\nthc centre of the town soon after C\no'clock.\n\"Tlie importance of this success cannot yet be estimated.\n\"Thc attack of tlie allied troops in\nthe sector north of Stryj Is progressing successfully.\"\nHANDLES 1970 AT\nHOSPITAL IN WEEK\nCanadian    Doctor    Writes    of    Hoavy\nWork  Near Front After Battlo\nof Ypres\nOTTAWA, June 3.\u2014\"Writing May ^0\nto his mother here, Lieut.-Col. A. T.\nShillii.j-.ton, commander of the Canadian base hospital at Le Toquet,\nFrance, -says that during the week\nfollowing the great battle near Ypros\nthey bandied 1.970 transfer patients In\nseven days. Incidentally the doctor\naccurately forecasted the formation of\na coalition government at London.\n\"Le Toquet, Paris Plage, France,,\nMay 20.\u2014This terrible war still goes\non,\" he writes, \"and no sign yet when\nit will end, though a good many peoplo\nnow say August. It'seems more terrible to us now that we have Canadian patients all the time and some\nof them terribly wounded. During the\nweek following ihe battle of Ypres.\nwhere our Canadian boys did so well\nApril S2-25i wc handled 1,370 transfer\npatients through our hospital In seven\ndays, so you can understand we have\nbeen terribly busy. We have titiO beds\nand w\u00a9** have had 700 patients at one\ntime. We had thom all over the place\non stretchers. Just as soou as wc take\nout thc bullets, set tiie fractures nnd\nclean them up. we send them by hospital ships over to England. Tho\nCanadian boys arc not anxious to go\nand would rather stop with us till they\ncompletely recover but when we gel\nso rushed we cannot keep them. But\njust as often as possible we do keep\nthem.\"\nRECRUITS COMING IN WELL\nOPINION OF COL. W. M. DA VIS\nCol. W. M. Davis who arrived in\nNelson last night, expressed .his approval of the way in which the recruiting has been going forward in this\ndistrict \"f look for at least 100 men\nto come in from the north country,\"\nho said \"But since no reliable figures have been received from that\n-section yet, It is impossible to do more\nthan estimate the number, 'l am -con-\nvlnced,\" ho continued, \"thut we will\nbo 826 strong by June 0,\"\n[Nelson only requires five more men\non tlie role to bring the quota required up to tho mark, and theso will\nhavo come In before the regiment\nleaves  tho city.\nQuota.\nNelson    and\nKaslo      2i>0\nRossland\nand Trail. 150\nGrand Forks too\nFernie .-\u00bb.. too'\nCranbrook\nSe\nNeed.   Over\nGolden and\nCreston ..    200\n11*1\n8G\nRevelstoke .      50\n5-1\nKamloops\nand (North\nCountry ..    200\n60\nl&O\nSimilitameen\nValley  ...     50\n13\n37\nuoo\n7i'5\n37H\nCONOLLY  ELECTED.\n(Hy Dtsllj- News l.s*uss-sl Wiro.)\nUD.-UONTOX, Allss., Juiiu 3.\u2014Rov. J.\nW. Conolly of Xisiiuinuyo ia ths} nc-iv\niprsjSsttBn-a ol Uio Alberta Methodist\nsionferiios-s-. 'rise announcement of hits\nelection on the seeonsl biilsot waa received with mueli enthusiasm on Uie\npint of the delegates und after Re.v.\nW. A. Lewis, retiring president, had\nhanded over tlie t-avol. thore wtw nn\ninsisirlnj*- scene us Mr. Conolly voicsxl\nhis thanks. Itev. A. V. lUchards, Mac,\nIcpjl waa again elected sjecretarjr, ___J\n PiftE TWO\n\u25a0STbe Bailp $tm.' fee&t W\nFRIDAY. JUNE 4, 1915 J\nGrow Corns\nIf You Will\nBut don't keep them\nOne can't well avoid corns\nin these days of dainty shoes.\nBut it's folly to keep them, pare\nthem and doctor them.\nA chemist has invented a way\ntoend corns quickly. It is known\nas Blue-jay. Attach it and the\ncorn pain slops at once. Then a\nbit of wax\u2014called B & B wax\u2014\nloosens the corn very gently. In\ntwo days the whole corn disappears without any pain or soreness.\nIt seems magical. Alter a\nBine-jay plaster is applied, the\nshoe can't hurt the corn. After\n48 hours there is no corn to hurt\nFolks have proved this on\nsome 70 million corns. They arc\nremoving in this way a million\ncorns a month.\nThat's why corns are not\nso common as they used to be.\nBhie-jay plasters came\u2014folks\nfound them out\u2014and half the\ncorns that grow today aro quickly\nended by them.\nBlue-jay\nEnds Corns\nIS .nd 25 cent*\u2014at Druggists\nSamples Mailed Free\nB\u00bblier & BUck, Cssiuso mi New York\nMaker, of Physicists-.' Supplies,\nVON   DERNBERG   TO   RUN\nCAMPAIGN IN SCANDINAVIA\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n1 LONDON, June 3.\u2014A despatch to\nthe Exchange Telegraph rrom Berlin\ndeclares that von Dernbcrg will bo\ngiven charge or a press bureau for\nScandinavian countries with headquarters at Copenhagen.\nA pro-German campaign in thc Scandinavian press, the despatch adds, will\nthen be started with renewed energy.\nYour System\nDemands\nan occasional corrective to insure\ngood health and strength. Success\nis almost impossible for the weak\nand ailing. Enjoyment is not\nfor the sick. Impaired health\nand serious sicknesses usually\nbegin in deranged conditions of the\nstomach, liver, kidneys or bowels.\nare recognized all over the world\nto be the best corrective of troubles\nof the digestive organs. They tone\nthe stomach, stimulate the liver, regulate the bowels. They cleanse the\nsystem, purify the blood and\nact in the best and safest   way\nFor Health\nand Strength\nU-ftN-t Sals of Any Medleln* In (he World.\nSold \u2022-rcrrwhera.   In box*.*-. 25 cunii\nSHERIFF'S SALE.\nUnder and by virtue of an order of\nthe Supreme Court of British Columbia dated the 4th day of March, A.D.\n11*16, In an action wherein Gertrude\nMunro Is Plaintiff and George Alexander Macdonald Young and Arthur\nO'Kell are Defendants, I shall on Friday, the 4th day of June, at my office at the Court House, in the City\nof Nelson, British Columbia, at the\nhour of 12 o'clock noon offer for sale\ntut Public Auction all the right, title\n\u2022and Interests of the above Defendants\nin that certain parcel or tract of land\narntd premises, situate, lying and being\nSublot 140 of Lot -4595, in Group One\n(1) of the District of Kootenay in the\nProvince of British Columbia, containing 619.38 acres, more or lesg, and being more particularly shown and described on the plan attached to Certificate of Title numbered 18907 A.\nThe nature and particulars of the\ninterest of the defendants ln the said\nlanda are that they are the registered\nowners thereof clear of encumbrances\nsave only as to the following charges\nappearing on the register against the\nsaid lande:\n<a) Mortgage dated February 1st,\n1914, from George Alexander Macdonald Young and Arthur O'Kell to\nGertrude Munro for tho sum of $1180.00\nwith interest at 9 per cent per annum,\nregistered In the Land 'Registry Office\nat Nelson, British Columbia on an application dated March 14, 1914.\n<<b) The Judgment registered by\nGertrude Munro ln this action for the\nsum of 11280.95 aind registered on October 14th, 1914.\n(o) The judgment registered by R.\nV. Winch & Company, Limited against\nArthur O'Kell for the sum of $847.14\nand registered December 24th, 1914.\nThe amount of the judgment recovered by the above named Plaintiff\nagainst the above named defendants la\n$1280.96 together with the subsequent\ncosts of the above named Plaintiff and\ninterest.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 20th day\nof May, A.D. 1916.\nS. P. TUCK,\nSheriff of South Kootenay.\nPARLIAMENT WILL\nDISCUSS CHS\n(Continued from Page One.)\nthe lower houso has been assumed by\nRight Hon. Henry Chaplin, Unionist,\nwho today put the time-honored question of the leader of the opposition as\nto the course of 'business next week.\nBy the courtesy extended to privy\ncouncillors Mr. Chaplin sat on the front\n'bench oni the left, bf ithe speaker,\nwhere he had as companions new and\nold privy councillors, all known, supporters of the coalition.\n\u2022Behind them, however, was a tlittle\ngroup of radicals which -will accept\nnothing ibut a Liberal government and\nwhich, as a token of its disapproval of\nthe coalition crossed the floor of the\nhouse to seats from which it faced the\nministers and will ibe in a better position to cross-examine them. The\nNationalists retained their seats on\nthe opposition side where they are separated from all other parties and can\nwajtch closely everything (connected\nwith Ireland. It is said that they are\nprepared to make a fight as soon as\nthe government proposes to appoint\nJ. H. M. Campbell, unlomist member\nfor Dublin university, as (lord chancellor for Ireland.\nSpeak of   Italy's  Entry,\nThe proceedings la the house of lords\ntoday wero confined to the first reading of th\u00a9 bill relieving the new ministers from appealing for re-election\nand to a few remarks by the Marquis\nof Crewe anid Lord1 Lansdowne on the\nentry of Italy into the war. These two\nmembers, heretofore leaders of opposition parties, sat together on the government bench, the former us lord'\npresident of the council and the 'latter\nas minister without portfolio. Facing\nthem from the opposition bench sat\nLord Sa-lisbury.\nSir -Stanley Buckmaster, new lord\nhigh chantoellor, occupied the woolsack for the first time, ,the fact that\nhe has not yet received his peerage\nbeing no disqualification.\nGERMAN VICTORY\nTO\n(Continued from Page One.)\nGeorge said it might be dangerous to\ndepend entirely upon tho continuance\nof present conditions.\n\"We have enlisted men,\" he said,\n\"who would have rendered better service at home. We needed compulsion\nnot to send men to the front but to\nprevent them from going to the front.\nWe have been endeavoring to conduct\na war against the most formidable antagonist that hns ever attacked human\nfreedom with the ordinary untrained\nweapons of peace, You may as well\nsend our men to face shrapnel and\nhowitzers armed with picks and\nshovels as merely to go through the\nwar with the industrial army organized, equipped and armed with the ordinary shifts and experiments of\npeace.\"\nIn closing his appeal to the employers and mon, he said:\n\"Stand by your country, now that it\nhas risked its honor, its life In the\ngreatest war of its history.\"\nThe    meeting    passed    a   resolution\npledging   to   support   in   every   way\nthe  efforts  of  the  minister of muni\ntions  to  increase the  output of war\nmaterials.\nVANCOUVER   MAN   DYING\n\u25a0RESULT OF SHOOTING\n(By Daily News Leased W.*re.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C. June 3.\u2014Frank\nGralo is dying in a hospital here and\nNick Gentile is in custody on a charge\nwhich likely will be changed to murder. Gentile alleges that Gralo is a\nBlack Hand member and that they met\nby appointment at False creek on business, though he refuses to say the nature of tho business. Whatever it was\nguns were pulled and Gentile shot the\nother man in tho centre of the forehead and afterwards gave himself up\nto tho police. -When searching for the\nbody Gentile continued to mutter\n\"Black Hand\" and stated that he did\nthe shootin\u00ab in self defense. Graio\ncame here May 24 from Calgary and\nboth men stopped at the same hotel.\nGralo will not live.\nHOW IN PEOPLE\nCANPU\nON FLESH\n.  A  New Discovery.\nThin men and women\u2014that big,\nhearty, filling dinmer you ate last\nnight What became of all the fat-\nproducing nourishment it contained.\nYou haven't gained in weight one\nounce, That food passed from your\nbody like unburned coal through an\nopen grate, The material was there,\nbut your food doesnft work and stick\nand tho plain truth la you hardly get\nenough nourishment from your meals\nto pay for the cost of cooking. This is\ntruo of thin folks thc world over. Your\nnutritive organs, your functions of assimilation are sadly out of gear and\nneed reconstruction.\nCut out the foolish foods and funny\nsawdust diets. Omit tho flesh cream\nrub-ons. Cut out everything but the\nmeals you are eating now and eat with\nevery -one of those a single Sargol\ntablet In two weeks note th0 difference. Five to eight good solid pounds\nof healthy, \"stay there\" fat should be\nthe net result.' Sargol charges your\nweak, stagnant blood with million's\nof fresh, new red blood corpuscles\u2014\ngives the blood tho carrying .power to\ndeliver every ounce of fat-making material In your food to every part of\nyour body. Sargol too, mixes with your\nfood Hnd prepares It for the .blood\nIn easily assimilated! form. Thin peo-\niplo gain all the way from 10 to 25\npounds a month while taking Sargol\nand the new flesh staye put Sargol\ntablets are a scientific combination of\nsix of the best flesh-producing elements known to chemistry They\ncome 40 tablets to a package, are\npleasant, harmless and Inexpensive\nand all druggists l*cll them subject\nto an absolute guarantee of weight in*\ncrease or money back.\nPETER NELSON\n(Continued from Pns\u00ab OneO\nup to tho spot whore the launch was\ndiscovered but found no trace of his\nfriend. A search -party was then organized consisting of 20 men in charge\nof Constable King which proceeded' up\nthe lalte yesterday morning taking with\nthem a dog [belonging to the deceased.\nDog Finds Bed\/\nLanding at the point the dog was\nturned loose and almost immediately\ntook up the scent and led the party\ndirectly to the thicket whore It found\nthe \"body, hanging face downward the\nhands and lower part resting upon\nthe ground. Nelson had evidently tied\nthe noose about 'his nock and then\nthrown himself forward, thus strangling hy his own weight.\nNear the scene of the tragedy several pieces of rope wore found, in\n-which the destd man had made two\nloops and it Is thought that bo found\nthem too light for his purpose aa they\nwere -broken In several places and that\nhe then returned to the launch and\nremoving the painter, returned and\ncompleted the act with it.\nA letter from a brother in Council\nBluffs, la,, and a small sum of money\nwere found in the clothing. But he\nleft Tso message of any \"stlnd either at\nhis hotel or the scone of the tragedy.\nNelson was 65 years of age and was\nborn ln Aarhus, Denmark, coming to\nthis country when still a youth. He\nfirst became associated with his part\nner, John Johnson, about 30 years ago\nwhen they were in the hotel ibuslness\nnear Bulldog tunnel in the Boundary.\nHe was -unmarried and had no known\nrelatives with the exception of the\n-brother who is on his way from Council Bluffs. The body was examined\nby Dr. Vf. O. (Rose, coroner, who pronounced an inquest unnecessary. No\nfuneral arrangements will be made until the arrival the brother who is\nexpected in Nelson Saturday night.\nFIRE THREATENS TO\nWIPEOUT HOPE\nBrigade   Succeed*   in   Saving   .Large\nBuildings in Historic Town\u2014Loss\nAbout $35,000.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., June 3.\u2014A fire\nwhich for a time threatened to wipe\nout the entire town of Hope started\nearly this morning and it was not\nuntil 11 o'clock that the windi went\ndown and the danger to some of the\nlargest buildings in the town passed.\nHope is 80 miles cast of Vancouver,\nnear the entrance of the Fraser river\ncanyon. It -l'ies on the opposite side\nof the river from that traversed hy\nthe Canadian Pacific railway while the\nnew Canadian Northern and Kettle\nValley lines have been built through\nthe town.\nThe fire started shortly after 6\no'clock this morning and swept away\na number of frame buildings. The Co-\nquihalla hotel, Nichols' store, a picture\ntheatre and the Royal bank, which\nwere the most pretentious buildings of\ntho place were saved1. The loss Is estimated at $35,000.\n\u25a0No one was injured. The Eire started in the kitchen of the Busby restaurant and the buildings destroyed were\nas follows:\nBusby's restaurant, J. A. McDonald's poolroom, Mrs. McDonald's candy\nstoro, A. E. Rabb'a office, T, Martin's\npoolroom and barber shop, D. S. Campbell's meat market, P. N. iRaymond's\ngrocery, Mrs. Stromgreen-'s restaurant,\nN. P. \"Woods' shoe store, Lafayette barber shop, Schwartz candy store, Martin's jewelry   store.\nThe volunteer fire brigade and the\ncitizens had to make a hard fight to\nsave the Empress hotel, the contents of\nwhich were quickly moved out but finally the Indldlng was isolated from\nthe blaze without any damage -being\ndone,\nHope has long been an important\ncentre in the Fraser valley. More than\nhalf a century ago it was a roaring\nfrontier town, lying almost at the nead\nof navigation on the Fraser.\nJ.  RAMSAY MACDONALD TO\nLECTURE IN DOMINION\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 3.\u2014J. R. Macdonald, ex-chalrman of the Independent-\nLabor party of Great Britain, has accepted an invitation to give a series\nof lectures in Canadian cities. He will\nstart for Canada as soon as possible,\nprobably within a few weeks.\nThe \u25a0Invitation was sent by the Social-Democratic party of Canada.\nCAPT.  BELL GOES TO\nFRONT; SPECIAL MISSION\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 3.\u2014Capt. Graham\nBell, financial -controller of the railways and canals department, is leaving for the front. He has been invested with a confidential civil mission by the government and will spend\nsomo time with the troops both In\nFrance and England.\nIN CASUALTY LIST\nCapt. p. J. Locks, Reporied Missing,\nIt a Prisoner of War in\nGorman City\nSeveral local men are reported as\nhaving been killed In action In yesterday's casualty list's, while others are\nreported as missing and wounded.\nGeorge Jones of Cranbrook and\nFrank Cooke ot Grand Porks are reported missing and Percy Sims of Bull\nRiver is among the wounded.\nCapt, p. J. Locke, who was with tho\nfirst contingent, and reported missing\nsome time ago, Is now officially reported to be a prisoner of war at Bischofswerke.\nIn Wednesday's Canadian casualty\nlist, J, Lenzo, place of birth Italy, but\nwho has been serving with the 3rd\nfield company, Canadian engineers, is\nreported wounded. Lenzo was a member of th eflrst contingent from Fernie and bore the distinction of -being\nthe only member of that contingent\nwho was Italian born, but being a nat\nurallzed British subject, was allowed\nto enter the British ranks. Another\ncasualty ln the Fernie contingent Is\nunofficially reported by T. Mltchinson\nIn a letter to a friend at Fernie wherein ho states that Andrew Cameron has\nbeen killed ln action. The list:\n3rd Battalion.\nPrisoners of war\u2014Capt. Johns E. R.\nStreight, Islington, Ont.\nMajor Peter Anderson, Edmonton.\nLieut D. G. Alien, Toronto.\nMajor Arthur James Klrkpatrick,\nWest Toronto.\n4th Battalon.\nWounded\u2014W H Farr, Oakvllle, Ont\nJohn Mi'lltama, St Catharines\nMissing\u2014D. Hall, Hawkestonc, Ont.\nSergt. E. Dunhlll, Now Brunswick.   ,\nSergt. C. E. Turner, Oa-nupbellton,\nN.B.\nSergt. James Kcougha-n, Chatham,\nN.B.\nJames Manes, Midland, Ont.\nJ. J. Flynn, Hamilton-.\nSth Battalion.\nWounded'-sSergt. R. M. Stewart,\nVancouver.\nQ. B. Sparling. MInnedosa, Man.\nR. M. Fern, Lloydminister, Sask.\nCharles Graham, Saskatoon.\nCorp. G. D. Ho per, Saskatchewan.\n7th Battalion.\nDied of wounds\u2014Sergt. Robert Parker,  Victoria.\nWounded\u2014R. B. Molton, Tuppcnille,\nOnt.\nLeslie E. Cutt, Victoria.\nPrisoners at Blschofswerkc, Germany\u2014Llout John C. Thorns, Kltsllano,\nB.C.\nLieut. R. p. Stoevcs, Sussex.\n8th Battalion.\nKilled in action\u2014E. C. Bassnet, Ab-\nbervlllc, N.B.\nG. \\V. Harris, -Regina.\nWounded\u2014H. H. McNally, Clares-\nholm, Alta.\nEdward Brown. Lloyslmlustcr, Sask.\nIR. M. Cosh, Drake, ask.\nW. T. Elder,  Springs,  Man.\n10th Battalion.\nWounded\u2014Albert Bowerman, Wellington, Ont.\nIW. H. Whlteflled, Bow Island, Alia.\n13th Battalion.\nKilled Ins action\u2014Corp Leonard Manning, Toronto.\nPoter Brodye, Cumberland, >N\\.\nDied of Woundft-^Dunean Ferguson,\nToronto.\nWounded\u2014Sengt E. Wi Claris, Montreal.\nWilliam Evans, Vancouver.\n31th  Battalion.\nWounded\u2014W. J. Williams, Mon.\ntreal.\nF. J. Tiorton, Halifax.\nJ. D. Tipson, Montreal.\nF. Goucher, Montreal.\nJ. Townsend, Yorkvllle, N. Y.\nAlbert Sheldon, Fredeilcton, N. B.\nP. Kougnet, Colllngwood, Ont\nGeorge Jones, Cranbrook, B. C.\nSergt. Peter Cook, Springs*!!!, N, S.\nW. Lamey, Glenora, C. B.\nW. Kean, Toronto.\nH. Davis, Springhlll, N. S.\nMissing\u2014Corp. J. D. Stuart, Mon.\ntreal.\nA. B. Revel, Quebec.\nLawrence Dewar, Springhlll, N. S.\nM. E. Klttorldge, Lsarochelle, Que.\nW. A. Scott, Winnipeg.\nCorp. C. A. Cornwall, Montreal.\nWounded and missing\u2014Corp Ernest Mclntyre, Montreal.\nSergt. Edward Gibson, Montreal.\nSergt. J. H. Thomson, Montreal.\nF. H. Armstrong, British West Indies.\n14th  Battalion.\nWounded\u2014Carol Lemay, Shcltord,\nQue.\nThomas -Lawson, Montreal.\nC. Stronge, Montreal.\nA. A. Arial, Quebec.\nLance-Corp. W. G. York, Winchester, Mass.\n15th  Battalion.\nKilled In action\u2014C. H. Lewis, Montreal.\nAlfred Rae, Toronto.\nWilliam A. White, Victoria.\nAlex Daubert, Toronto.\nPrisoner of war at Blschotsweike\u2014\nIsteut. C. Fessenden, Peterboro, Ont.\nLieut. Frank J. Smith, Toronto.\nMissing \u2014 Frank Cooke, Grand\nPorks, B. C.\nThomas E. .Nicholson, Nanaimo.\nHAVE YOU A BAD SORE?\nDn so remember these facts\u2014Zam-\nBuk Is 'by far the most widely used\n\"balm In Canada. Why has it -become\nso popular? Because -it heals sores,\ncures skin diseases end does what is\nclaimed for it. Why not let lt heal\nyour sore?\nRemember that Zam-Buk is altogether different to the ordinary ointments. Most of these consist of \u2022animal fats. Zam-Buk contains no trace\nof any animal fat or any mineral matter.   It is absolutely herbal.\nRemember that Zam-Buk Is at the\nsame time healing, soothing and antiseptic. Kills poisons' Instantly and\nall harmful germs. It is suitable alike\nfor recent injuries and diseases and\nfor chronic sores, ulcers, etc. Test\nhow different and superior Zam-Buk\nreally Is. All druggists and stores at\n50c. box. Use also Zam-Buk soap.\nRelieves sunburn and sprevents freckles.\nBest for -baby's bath;  25c tablet.\nTURKS IN MESOPOTAMIA\nFLEE BEFORE BRITISH\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June  3.\u2014An   account   of\nthe fighting between tho British and\nTurkish,  forces In   Mesopotamia   was\ngiven out officially as follows:\n\"After hoBtlle columns which recently threatened us on the lines of\nthe Euphrates and Karum rivers had\nbeon successfully dispersed, as described In previous communications, a\ncombined naval and military attack\nwas organized the morning of May 31\nagainst the remaining hostile forces\nln the position a couple of miles north\nof Ksirisss.\n\"Starting at 1:30 a.m. our troops,\npartly by wading, partly by boats, successfully executed a turning mvement.\nThe enemy's guns were soon silenced\nby our artillery. Excellent practise\nwas made by naval guns and by a territorial battery which was especially\nconspicuous.   The heights occupied by\nthe Turks were seized by noon and\nthe enemy fled, leaving three 16-\npounders, completo with ammunition\nand nearly 250 prisoners in our hands.\n\"After harmlessly exploding several\nheavily charged mines of the Turks,\nwe continued our advance on June 1\nbut found that the enemy had hastily\nevacuated its camps at Barhan and\nRatta, leaving a number of tents\nstanding. They were observed retreating ln Bteamers, which were\nspeedily pursued by the naval flotilla.\n\"By evening we reached a point five\nmiles north of Ezras Tomb, somo 33\nmiles north of Kurna,\n\"The Turkish steamer Bulbul was\novertaken and sunk. We also captured two large lighters. One contained\nthree field guns, ammunition, mines\nand about 300 prisoners. The pursuit\nwas continued by moonlight.\n\"Our casualties have been trifling,\nabout 20 In-tall,\"\n\"\"William Tuck, Toronto.\nWilliam A. Wilcox, Salmon Arm,\nB   C\nCharles B. San-ford, Victoria.\nSamusl McDonald, Maragoe Forks,\nC. B.\nHarry Kent, Toronto.\nGeorge Henderson, South Maltland,\nN. S.\nWounded\u2014A. W. Ohaplln, Toronto.\nA. C. Nokes, Toronto.\nJohn  O'Brien, Peterboro, Ont.\nAlbert Barrln-gton, Toronto.\nCorp. Bert Macdonald, Pictou, N. S.\nH. G. Murray, Toronto.\nWilliam S. Barker, Kamloops, B.C.\nCharles H. Haynes, Vancouver.\nGeorge W. Boone, St. John, N. B.\nDavid R. Mathleson (formerly 30th),\nVancouver.\nGeorge Wiseman, Grand Forks, B.C.\n16th Battalion\nKilled In action\u2014Robert Thomson\n(formerly 30th), Nanaimo.\nAlbert E. Matthews (formerly 30th),\nEndorby, B. C.\nJohn Anderson. Perdue, Susk.\nLance-Corp. John R. Brock, Vancouver.\nDied of wounds\u2014Walter B. Smith,\nVancouver, May 28.\nP. A. McManus. Bonshaw, P. E. I.\nSuffering from shock\u2014Harry E.\nCroxford, Happy Valley, B. C.\nPrisoner at Bischofswerke\u2014Lieut.\nAlexander Maclean, Vssncouver, slightly wounded but doing well.\nWounded\u2014Lance-Corp. F. W. Phillips, Toronto.\nC. L. Moffard, British West Indies.\nAlexander C. McDonald, Vancouver.\nFrank Myson, Vancouver.\nGeorge C. Manson, Winnipeg.\nHarry Morgan, Sifton, Sask.\nPercy Sims (formerly 30th), Bull\nRiver, B. C.\nJames A. Moore, Spanish station,\nOnt.\nLord Strathcona's Horse\nWoundod\u2014W. M. Bolton, Guelph,\nA. W. McCarthy, Cubu.\nR. D. Waugh, Winnipeg.\n,    Patrick Gemmill, Winnipeg.\n7th Battalion.\nPrisoner at BiBChofswerke\u2014Capt. P.\nJ. Locke, England.\nWounded\u2014H, C, Milnes, England.\nH. O. Hannok, India.\nSuffering from shock\u2014R. Tuck, England.\nPrisoners at Bischofskerke\u2014-Major\nP. B. Hall, England.\nCapt. T. U. Scudamore, Channol Islands.\nLieut. E. D. Bellew, England.\nSergt. H. W. Trlmmel, England.\nS. Layovlch, Montenegro.\nlt. 11. Jones, England.\n10th  Battalion.\nPrisoner   at   Bischofswerke\u2014Capt.\nThomas C Fryer, England.\n13th  Battalion.\nWounded and missing\u2014F. A. Armstrong, West Indies.\nJ. A. Dunham, England.\nC. D. Grant, England.\nJames Ray, Australia.\nAndrew Allan, Scotland.\nLance-Corp. Thomas Mulrhcad, Scotland,\nLance-Corp. William Stonard, England.\nThomas Johnston, Scotland.\nT. W. Read, England.\nA. W. Huston, England.\nAlfred Cartwright, Montreal.\nW. P. Hanley, Montreal.\nJohn McNaught, Montreal.\nKenneth Armstrong, Victoria.\nF. J. RUery, Wales.\nEmile La-tour, Montreal.\n14th  Battalion.\nDied of wounds\u2014J. J. Hixon, England.\n15th   Battalion.\nKilled in action\u2014C. A. Coo, Toronto.\nW. M. Skimin, Toronto.\nE. T. Clarke, England.\nWilliam Long, Ireland.\nD. P. Qulnn, Ireland.\nJohn Rowley, Toronto.\nPlrsoner of war at BiBChofswerke\u2014\nCapt. Robert Cory, England;\nCapt. George H. Alexander, Toronto.\nLieut. H. A. Barwlck, Toronto.\nLieut. P. V. Jones, Toronto.\nCapt. Robert R. McKe-isock Montreal.\nLieut. F. W. McDonald, Toronto.\nMajor James Ernest Osborne, Toronto. I^l\nWounded\u2014H. D. Oliver, England.\n16th  Battalion.\nKilled in action\u2014H. G. Crolg, Brooklyn, N. Y.\nDied of wounds\u2014John Spears, England.\nEdward Ames, Ireland.\nSidney Campbell, England.\nT. W. Clark, England.\nSergt. P. Cr. Curwen, England.\nSergt C. O. Alexander, England.\nW. H. Gee, England-.\nCharles Maltby, England.\nGilbert Sawyer, England.\nPreviously -reported killed In action,\nnow reported wounded and mission\n\u2014J. A. Anderson, Scotland.\nMissing\u2014John Gordon, Victoria.\nCorp. F. T. Fraser, Montreal.\nCharles Chisholm, Boston.\nDavid Pernio, Scotland.\nF. W. Pike, Ireland.\nErnest Smile, England.\nWounded between May 20 and 23\u2014\nBen Johnson, England.\nJameB Blain, England.\nHerbert Giles, England.\nH. R. Wiley, England.\n3 B. Morgan, England,\np. J. Smith, England.\n\u2022   George Herbert, England.\nE. G. Palmer, Scotland.\nFred Sharpies, England.\nWarm Weather\nBrings Fresh Demands For\nYour Wardrobe\nWe are Specially Prepared\nto Meet the Season's Needs\nSUMMER DRESSES\nNew t\\nd Very Attractive.\nFINE LAWN WAISTS\nMIDDY BLOUSES H\nWHITE WASH SKIRTS\nSUNSHADES\nNew Colors and Designs.\nHOSIERY\nCotton, Lisle and Silk.\nGLOVES\nKid, Lisle and Silk.\nNECKWEAR AND FRILLING\nOUTING HATS\nFor the ladies and children.\nSmillie&Weir\nLADIES'  WEAR   SPECIALISTS.\nForest Mills of B, C, Ltd.\nHEAD  OFFICE,   REVELSTOKE\nMills: Casoade, Comaplix, Three Valley, Taft, Nation\nMANUFACTURERS  OF   LUMBER,  LATH,  8HINOLE*\nFor Sale: SLABWOOD, 4-foot,\nand 16-inch STOVEWOOD\nTtrms Cash.   Prompt Delivery.\nOrders taken byi\nD. A. MoFARLAND, Room 6, K. W. C. Blook.   P.O. Box 24.   Phona 49.\nJ, H, LEMMON, Manager Nelson Branoh,   Phone 15,\nTRAIL PEOPLE TO\nATTEND SEND-OFF\nEntertainment   for   Recruits   Will   Be\nHeld  at   Rossland\u2014New Train\nService Considered Inconvenient\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nTRAIL, B. C, June 3.\u2014As the Trail\nrecruits arc being trained in Rossland,\nit ha8 heen difficult to arrange for a\nfarewell gathering here for them.\nHowever, the Trail Rifle association\nstates that a special train has been\narranged for tomorrow at 6:15 p.m.\nfrom Trail for Rossland, where a large\nfarewell meeting is to he held to say\ngood-bye to the recruits from both\ncities. It is expected that a large\nnumber of Trail citizens will avail\nthemselves of this opportunity to give\nthe boys a good send-off.\nThe alteration in the train service is\nconsidered extremely Inconvenient as\nthe mall and newspapers do not now\narrive here until 2 o'clock In the afternoon, instead of 11 a.m. as formerly.\nVisitors from here to Rossland for the\nday now have only two hours in that\ncity instead of five.\naa COMES EOR\n(Continued on Page Pour.)\n(Speciul to Tlie Dally News.)\nFERNIE, B. C, June 3.\u2014C. Decastro,\nItalian consul here, on Wednesday received tho following telogram from the\nconsul general at Montreal: \"Please\ninform all Italians liable to military\nservice, born from 1876 to 1895, to be\nready to return to Italy at first call\nItalian government provides transpor\ntation. Complement officers must]\nleave immediately. Letter follows.!\nOwing to the large Italian population\nin this city and also within the district\nover which the resident consul haj\ncharge, when tho call is received\nlarge number of our Italian citizen|\nwill be required to respond.\nTn the police court on Wednesdasj\nThomas Harden had a prelim I narf\nhearing. He was charged with break!\ning into the premises of the Calgarl\nCattle company between Saturdaf\nnight and Monday morning. Thl\nmagistrate dismissed the case.\nBorn, June 1, to Mr. and MrJ\nThomas Oakley, a son and a daughter\nA. J. Carter, secretary-treasurer\nDistrict 18  United  Mine Workers\nAmerica,  left for Hillcrest, Alta.,\nTuesday,  where  the  question  of  r\nmuneration for certain dependents\nvictims of the Hillcrest disaster, whicl\noccurred a year ago this month, is tl\nbe decided before Judge McNeill. Th*\nadjustment is in connection with thT\nagreement between the company an!\nthe dependents,   which   was   enacteT\nthrough  the   efforts   of the   district\nunion officials some months ago, bul\nunder  the  terms  of which  the flrsl\npayment of compensation was not re\nquired to be made until the first of thi\nmonth.\nThere are six more prisoners of wa\nIn custody in the city jail, all of whoi\nare of Austrian extraction, the cause c\nthe incarceration being alleged attemp\nto escape to tbe United States.\nPte. James Blakemore of the 54t\nbattnllon and Mrs. R. Van Mechelh\nwidow, were married at the Methodli\nparsonage Tuesday.\nThe boys of thc 54th battalion wei\nroyally treated to a dinner In the base\nment of Knox, church Wednesda\nevening. A program of musical nun\nbers and speeches was rendered. O\nTuesday evening a number of the boj\nwere guests at a social gathering pn\nmoted by their personal friends an\nwere presented with wrist watches.\nPuny Children\nare generally tho victims of wrong diet.   They ma\/ eat enough, but\nit'a the wrong kind of food.\nIf your boy or girl don't thrivo\u2014don't gain and grow in physical\nand mental strength, it's a good thing to change food and start the\nchild on a regular morning dish of\nGrape-Nuts\n(MADE IN CANADA)     and Cream\nThousands of parents who have tried this wholesome, appetising\nfood have seen their youngsters grow strong, rosy and olesr-eysd.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nGrocers everywhere sell Grape-Nuts.\nCanadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, Ont.\n fl&\nFRIDAY, JUNE 4, '1315\nCtie Baity\nPAGE THREE\n3 COFFEES\nOF EXCEPTIONAL MERIT.\nJust off Jthe Roast\n\" \"We have taken particular pains\nto give yon something extra. Ask\nfor any of these Mentis, as your\npurse dictates:\nEconomy      3SC\nEmpire      40c\n.''Kootenay       .'. ,\u2014 50c\nMoney hack !\u00a3 we do not give\nyou a cup of exceptional value for\n-your money.\nHell Trading Co.\nBAKER   STREET\nThs Home of Good Groceries\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\n-^m\n*i';l**\u00ab     '\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab**     (hSSK-i- na,;\ntub tMkm *tf\n|T    c   .*\u2022\u25a0    .THE HUME\nA Iii Cart* Table d'Hot*\n-  George Bonwell, Prop.\nSpecial Daily Lunch, 35o\nHUME\u2014C. R. Calrnes, Throo Forks;.\nK. Popoff, Slocan; A. E. Severns, Half;\n\u25a00. W. Eusk, City; T.<H. Williams, Pernio; J. 8, Deschamps, 'Rossland; Benson Kvans', Wallace, Ida.; at, McLean,\nNow Denver; .Tames.kaken, Victoria;\n:\\. Dunham, Toronto; E. Bier, Vancouvor; D. A. Bucham, Mr.'arM Mrs. Mc-\nIxindcrs, John Jones, Victoria; J; Macau lay, Vancouver; A. C, Mesker, Midway; E. -Robinson*, Miss Qlidden, Mr.\nand Mrs, Georgo Johnstone-, Louis\nJohnstone, Br, Hawkey City; .Mrs.\nJj-ambort, Granite- Mr. and Mrs. Dack,\nMv. and Mrs. Cavorhill, Prod Irvine, J.\nT>nrllng; city; Mr. McLnchhm, Trail;\nMiss P. Johnstone, Miss I>o]a. Bennett,\nMr. Hold, Mi*, parley', J. A. Porin, Mr.\nnnd Mrs. Clayton, City; air. Bayley,\nWillow Point; Mrs. Mackenzie, City.\nThe Strathcona\nJames Marshall, Prop.\nSTB.\\TI-rCO>TA\u2014J; D. MODonald,\nRossland; T. Vf. Blngny, Trail; I. H.\nH.lllctl; Greenwood; Col. Vf. M. Da-vis,\nVancouver; c. A. Waterman, Craii-\nbl-oolc; Mm. Philip Hii-.-m.-in, Gi-and\nPorks; Mr. ssnd Mrs. Simons, London,\nOnt; Vf. Q. Hope-Thomson, E. G. Clay,\nD. Frost, Vancouver; Miss A. Simpson, Mrs. Ks'mhell, Col. Kembell,\nKaslo; A. a. Larson, ,c. A. K. Wshlto-\n'house, II. H. Mansell, Spokane; J, F.\nArmstrong, J. S, Alexander, J. R.\n.Mountain, Capt. Green, Victoria.; A. 13.\nTonsil, F. C. Wesley, Calgary; Miss N.\nTro-vles, Mrs. Vf. Fowles, 15. C. Player,\nCity; Mr, nnd.JIrs. K. Walley, Mr. ssnd\nMrs. -p. \u00ab. Guilett, Moiitreal; Alex.\nEandoli, Owen Spain, C. Chandler, Ro-\ne-ina; Harry F-ishei-, Monti-eal.\nQueen's Hotel\nBteam Heat In Every Room\nBusiness Lunch, UBo.\nRates: $1.60 and 92.00 Day\nQUEENS\u2014W. 1. Falls. Bear creek;\nMrs. G. Vf. Chittenden, Rosebery; H,\nC. Dorrig, Win-law: O, Upliill, Calgary;\nC. A. Mix, Grand porks; John T. Price,\n\u2022T. F. Campbell, Tunis-; Vf. It. Roll, California; M. B. Weston, Calcutta; ,T. B.\nThompson, Calgary.\nMadden House\nB. C. CLARKE\nCor, Bsktr and Ward 8ls., Nelson\n... MADDEN\u2014Martin Konaody, Silver-\nton; R. Hughes, Medicine H\u00abt; T. Mos-\n\u2022sirop and family, Ymir;, E.. Buxton,\nGrind Forks.\nGrand Central Hotel\n'    sH  i   \"'    ''\u25a0\u2022\u2022' 's':i\nOPPOSITE P03TOFFICB\nAnuria\u2122 and European Plans.\n\" H. M. PItTai Proprietor.    '\nI OHAND CBNTBAsLs\u2014Mrs. Shirley,\nIloveistal;e; D. McCuaig, Spokane; A.\nB. Maclonnan, Salmo; Johns Miller,\npstt-y; P. sisjroy, prootor; A,s C, Rob-\n\u2022jon, Marcus, -       a\nIs the winning number In our\nweekly drtiwinfe for a pair ot \u2022]\n\u00bb5 shoes.   Will -holder of this '\nnumber please call?\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION.\nTONE UP\nYOUR SYSTEM\nThis la the time of the Tear\nwhen a great many people require\na tonic for their health's sake.\nSome resort to medicine and the\ndoctor's advice, while others desire a much-needed rest.\n' For the benetit of those who are\nseeking relaxation from work and\nworry we invite you to The\nSprings. The medicinal value ot\nthe waters are unrivalled and will\nput you in shape to resume your\nlabors, whatever they may he.\nEvery care and comfort will be\ngiven you dyring your stay at the\nSanitarium.\nCome and be convinced.\nRates: $12 and $15 per week, or $2\nper day and upwards,\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakea\nNelson House\nEuropean  Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to Z\nPhone 87 P.O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014F. Martin, Vancouver; L.\nM. Kennedy, A. Vf. Smith, Sioux Falls.\nNew Grand Hotel\nBest Place In Town.\nS1.00 a day up.\nNEW GRAND\u2014Frank   Crosby,\nLnundermill., New Denver.\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar, B.C.   W. H. Gage, Prop.\nExcellent accommodation for\ncommercial men. Boundary train\nleaves here S :-l5' a.m. Mori.,' Wed.,\nand Pri, Trains between j Nelson\nand Rossland stop for breakfast,\nlunch and dinner.\nARRANGE YOUR TRIP TO\nSTOP AT\nArrow Lakes\nHotel\nTHE  HOTEL QF COMFORT\nAT\nEDGEWOOD, B. C.\nKootenay Falls Hotel\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nBeautiful location; anglora' paradise. Kates, $2 per day. Special\nweek-end rate to members of Kootenay and Slocan Rivers Anglers Association, $1.50 per day.\nCh. Gansnor, Tropriotor.\nTHE\nCentral Hotel\nAinsworth, B. C.\nJ. DEARIN, Proprietor.\nAlnsworth's famous Mot Springs,\nnt a tesniscwiluro of 111! degrees,\nnow running Into my plunge and\nbaths. Como and boil out rheumatism and cure your dyspepsia.\nTERMS  MODERATE\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nComfortable  Rooms\u2014Splendid\nTable,\nSMITH & BELTON,\nProprietor!,\nRAILWAY CROP REPORTS\nOF FAVORABLE NATURE\n(By Dally Newa Leasod Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Juno 3.\u2014Crop reports\nissued today by tho Canadian Enelflo\no-nd the Canadian Northern and Grand\nTrunk Pacific railways aro of a favorable nature. Wheat and oats seeding: ia praotlssally completed throughout the Canadian prairie west, while\nflO per petit of .the borlcy has boen put\nin and SO' per cent of the flax. The.\nweather la generally warm, some, portions of Saskatchewan and Alberta\nhaving- had rain, but Manitoba Is in\nneed of it, though at present few places\nreport the crops actually suffering\ntrom lack e-j moisture.\nSAM WATERS DSD\nDEATH OF A HERO\nStood Up and Fired at Germans Who\nWere Trying to Surround Canadian Force        -^\n(Special to The Daily Newa.)\nSILVERTON, B. 0., June 3.\u2014Confirmation of the death o\u00a3 Bam Waters\nof Silvorton, who was one of tho first\nvolunteers to join tho. first Kootenay\ncontingent, was received by letter un-\ntier date of May 14 from his father\nand mother, Mr. and Mrs. Gcorg-i\nWaters, Blyth. Northumberland, England, to Dan Brandon, Selkirk hotel,\nwhom they requested to notify as\nmany as possible of thoir son's friends\nthroughout the district. The follow\ning extracts from the letter show tlie\nheroic manner of his death:\n\"Just a line to say wo received a\ntelegram on May 8 from the war\noffice, saying that our dear son Simon\n(Sam) Waters had been killed in action. So would you kindly inform any\nof his friends. Since receiving tho\ntelegram we received a letter from\nArthur Levy, on behalf of the rest of\nthe platoon who nro le'ft, expressing\ntholr sympathy and sorrow in our sad\nloss. Ho said that ho.was killed outright and died with a smile on his\nface. He said the Germans were try\ning to surround them and that Sam\nwas standing upright, firing at thom\nto keep them back, when, ho was shot\nthrough the head.\"\nSALE\nHO\nOF\nEL IS APPROVED\nSerbs and Montenegrins Ask Natural!\nzation\u2014More Rossland and Trail\nMen Join 54th Battalion\n(Special to The Dally Nows.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, June 3.\u2014Yesterday afternoon Judge Forln approved of\nthe sale of the Central hotel by the\nreceivers to S. Irvin. Possession will\nprobably bo given June 18. He also\nexamined eight applicants for naturalization. These were Montenegrins nnd\nServians who are required to show-\nnaturalization papers before they are\naccepted as recruits in the 54th battalion. Their -papers will be Issued at\nthe July court providing no valid objection is taken In the meantime,\nA. n. Mackenzie arrived on the\nGreat Northern yesterday.\n%'. A'. Campbell, M. P. P\u201e has arrived from Spokane.\nJoseph Moron of Victoria wns married .to Kathleen Blytho of this city\nat the home of J. Blythe. They will\nreside at Victoria. Supper was served\nby Mrs. Blythe.\nOil Sunday in the Methodist church\nRov, J. J. Nixon will preach at both\nmorning and evening service. Special\nmusic, will bo given at both services.\nTiie farewell dance to tho volunteers\nof the 54th In the armory Wodnesda\nevening was a. big success. About 150\npeople were present and there were\nabout fiO couples on the floor all evening.   Tbe hall was nicely decorated.\nNew recruits1 include: \u00bb\nItobert Prultt, Houston, Texas,\nlaborer.\nJack Moliood, Trail, smelterman.\nCharles Stone, Rossland, miner.\nW. G. B. Fortoath, Rossland, auto\nmachinist.\nPhilip  Donahue,  Rossland,  miner.\nJames Gunning, Mint, Tenn., miner.\nA. L. Fisher, Ste. Marie, Ont., miner.\nH. E. S. McLeod, Trail, smelterman.\nMrs. R. T, Evans is* spending a\ncouple of weeks at the coast.\nMiss Ethel Raymer, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Raymer, left yesterday on a three-month visit to relatives in Vancouver and Victoria,\nTlie Ladles of thc Maccabees will\ngive tho soldiers of the 54th a hand*\nkerchief shower the eve of their de*\nparture. Tho presentation udll be\nmado at tho farewell to bo held on\nFriday evening at the rink.\nMrs. Braden and Mrs, B, Glover and\nson left yestorday for Victoria, where\nthey will visit relatives for a couple\nof weeks.\nGRAND  FORKS  NOTES\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B. C., Juno 3.\u20140.\nA. Spink, manager of tho local.branch\nof the Royal bank, accompanied by\nMriB. Spink, left yesterday for a visit\nto Spokane. Mr. Logan is relieving\nMr. Spink as mapager.\nJeff Davis broke his right arm above\njJ4he wrist yesterday. In cranking hia\nmotor it back fired.\nThere seems to be some doubt as to\n,thb fate of Sergt. E. C. Coy of the 15th\nbatlaJiop. Capt. Kirk received a wiro\nfrom the militia department last night\nsaying that ho was officially reported\nwounded on May \"fl, though the cas-\nHualty lists of tho next day reported\nhim as having died of wounds.\nLast night the Republic Presbyterian Ladies' Aid society brqught over\na largo company from their homo town,\nwho gave a successful entertainment\nin the Empress theatre, consisting of\nchoruses, instrumental and vocal solos,\nmedleys, rending, etc., the performance concluding with a vory amusing\nnegro';minstrel enlertalnmont. Ten per\ncont of the gross proceeds wero given\nto tho Daughters of the Empire, for\nwhich they have thanked tho women\nand others from Republic.\nCapt. S, G. Kirk roports this morning that the total numbe-r who havo\nonllstod at this recruiting offico Is 8a\nJOHN ODEY ELECTED\nSECRETARY OF IN8TITUTE\n(Special to The Daily Nows.)\nCOLUMBIA GARDENS, B. C, June\n3.\u2014Mrs. McColm and daughter have\nbeen spending a fow days in Rossland.\nA meeting of tho South Kootenay\nFarmers' Institute was hold to o|oct a\nsecretary-treasurer. Joh'n Odey was\nolectQd.\nAdditional   Kootenay   and   Boundary\nNtw\u00ab on Pago 8ix.)\nEvery Line of White Merchandise in the Store Is Embraced\nin This Big and Unique White Event, Featuring An \"All-Star\nCast\" of Brilliant Values.    The Event Opens This Morning,\nJune 4, and Continues Until June 19\nAGAIN WE DO THIS UNUSUAL! INSTEAD OF THE ORDINARY WHITE SALE WE LAUNCH TOMORROW A \"DIFFERENT\" EVENT\n\u2014A WHITE SALE IN WHICH THE VARIETY OF MERCHANDI.SE AND THE VALUES OFFERED ARE SO UNUSUAL THAT WE HAVE\nBEEN FORCED TO BORROW A TERM FROM THE THEATRICAL WORLD TO BRING OUT THEIR TRUE IMPORTANCE. A \"STAR\" IS\nAN ACTOR OR ACTRESS OF UNUSUAL BRILLIANCY-ONE WHO HAS ATTAINED A POSITION AT THE TOP OF THE PROFESSION\nBY A SKILL THAT SHINES HIGH ABOVE THE AVERAGE.\nIN THE SAME WAY DOES THIS GREAT WHITE EVENT SHINE HIGH ABOVE THE AVERAGE SALE. IT IS MORE THAN.A SALE\nOF A.FEW LINES OF WHITE MERCHANDISE\u2014IT IS A BIO, BROAD, ALL-EMBRACING EVENT THAT TsU-tES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT OF. THE STORE WHERE WHITE MERCHANDISE OF ANY S ORT IS CARRIED. IT IS A \"STAR\" EVENT ALL THE WAY THROUGH\n\u2014IN THE BROADNESS OF ASSORTMENTS, IN THE CHARM OF NEW SUMMER STYLES PRESENTED, IX QUALITY AND IN BRILLIANCY OF ITS VALUES. MONTHS AGO WE WENT TO THE BEST WHITEWEAR \"TALENT\" AND SAID: \"GIVE US MERCHANDISE\nTHAT WF, CAN TRUTHFULLY FEATURE AS 'HEADUNERS'-GI VE US 'STAR' BARGAINS IN THE BEST YOU HAVE.\" THE RESULT\nI.S SHOWN BV THE ITEMS BELOW.\nWE LOOK FOR A GREAT \"AUDIENCE\" OF THRIFTY SHOPPERS HERE \u25a0 TOD.VY AND EVERY DAY OF THE SALE. WE\nARE-PREPARED FOR BUSY TIMES FOR THERE WILT. BE MUCH ENTHUSIASTIC APPLAUSE IN TIIE SHAPE OF RECORD-BREAKING\nBUYING!\nLook for the Stars in the Store Starring the Great White Values\nLadies' White Underskirts\n75c\nwith frills ansl lasso,\nSTAR   SALE   PRICE\nAT 75e\u2014.\nFiise-Cotton, with litckcsl flounce of lawn or embroidery flounce.   Good width.   Lengths 38 to 12.\nSTAR   VALUE\t\nAT  $1.00\u2014\nGood Cambric, with wide embroidery flosince and finished with dual fi-ill of rnualln. Regular, $1.50. (U1 Art\nSTAR   VALUE Jpl ,UU\n, Ladies' Muslin Drawers\nAa endless variety ot Drawers, in Cotton and Nainsook, trimmed with lace or wide Swlsa embroiders-. All\nsizes, rnnRinR from (i.is to JO.BO. \/JET- j._. (CO OK\nSTAR VALUES, HALF PRICE... DOC CO tyO.-CU\nPrincess Slips at $1.25\nSoft finished Njsiiss.snk, with flosince^ trimijscd with embroidery'and\nlaoo, and embroidery trlnirninjj at iseek and .-sleeves to match. Sizes\nssi to 42. <hi nr\nSTAR SALE  PRICE.\/. \u00abpl .CO\nOTHER OHMBI.VATIONS-Slar Values. .$1,50, $M0, $2.25, $2.50 lo $5.00\nLadies' Nightgowns at 75c\nEneliKh Cotton, (rimmod \\vilh lace or oinhroidcry; made pull-over\nstyle.   Good full sizes. HTLr\\\nSTAR   PRICE.. \/OC\nAT $1.25\u2014Cotton, pull-ovrr style, yokes of r-mbrnidory with laoo\ntrimmings. <|J-|   n\\X\nSTAR   VALUE $1 .CO\nBelter Quality .Gowns of fine. XainsooU with, trimmings of laco or\nstar'^lues ;.', .....$1.50, $2.00, $2.50 to $5.00\nLadies' Cotton Combinations\nFlno Cotton Combinations trimmed with torchon lace. Sizes 3-1\nSTAR   VALUE. \/OC\nLadies' Combinations $1.25 to $3.75\nFine Cotton or Nainsook-, l;ss*e or embroidery  trimmed.    AU sizes\nstar values ..$1.25 to $3.75\nFrench Hand Embroidered Lingerie at Star Prices\nA splendid range of French Hand Embroidered Underwear, consisting of Nightgown!*, Di-aws-rs, Combinations, Cos-set Covers, etc.\nBeautiful work on fine French Cambric. Regular pi-Ices ranging from\n$1.60 to $15.00 per garment. j,.   1 r- .._  <I>-|nnO\nREDUCED DURING STAR SALE TO $1.10 lO plU.UU\nCorset Values\n$3.50 VALUES FOR 12.65\n. The Famous AMERICAN LADY and D. & A. CORSETS, all new\nmodels.   Fino white cositil coverings and extra fine boning.   Sizes 19\nto 20.   Regular price, 53.SO.\nSTAR  VALUE\t\nFine Cotton Drawers\nGood finality Cotton, trimmed with  heavy Torchon\nLace.   RoKular vnluo, 35c. OKr*\nSTAR SALE   PRICE CUC\nLadies' Corset Covers\nine Cambric Covers with trimming at nock and arms.\ni 34 to 42.    ReRiilar value, 35c. OKr*     t    ^   1     ' fi    'il \"^\n*c lockhvKie\nLadies' White Lawn Aprons ti 7LUn C^q\nPlain Lawn nnd Checked Muslin Aprons)  trimmed    VV l.lUfcr OuQlc)\n25c\n$2.65\nWomen's White Brassieres at 40c\nie  rifle\n40c\nGood flno Nainsook, reinforced   under  arms.   All   sizes.   Tlie   r.Oc\nkind.\nSTAR   VALUE\t\nWomen's White Silk and Lisle Hose\nTHREE   PAIRS   FOR  $.1.00\nSilk with Llslo Tops, slice even weave, nnsl full sizes. ,1,-.  r\\r\\\nSTAR   VALUE\u2014THREE   PAIRS   FOR $1.UU\nChildren's White Underskirts at 35c\nGood White Cotton trimmed witli embroidery and insertion.   Tteffu-\nIfir price, 7-\".c. nrr\nSTAR   VALUE OOC\nWomen's White Muslin Dresses\nVALUES   UP  TO $13.50 FOR  $3.95\nOne T>07.on Only in this Inf,   All fino Muslin or Voilb, with trimmings\nof laco or Swiss cmltroioVrv.    Values up to J1,{.ij0,\nSTAR   VALUE..\t\n.$3.95\nWhite Muslin and Vesting Blouses\nat $1.00\nFive Dozen fine Vesting, Voile and Muslin Blouses, nil this season's\ngoods. Made in a grent variety of stylos, from plain tailored to tlse very\nfancy low-nocked kind. Regulnr values up to $2.00.\nSTAR    PRICE\t\n,$1.00\nWomen's White Cotton Vests at 12 l-2c\nfr:\".i2i-2c\nFine Soft. Knit Cotton, wilh Bhort sleeves.   Good full sizoh.\nSTAR   PRICE\t\nVests at 20c\nKnit   Cotton .Vests   trimmed   at neck   with   narrow lace.   Short\nsleeves. on\nSTAR  VALUE... ZUC\nWomen's Knit Combinations at 50c\nt r.omt\nrtegip\n.50c\nCombinations, soft knit cotton, Rome with short sleeves and nome\nsleeveless.   We havo thom. witli tiRlit and loose legs*.   All size.--.   .Regular values, 7r.n.\nSTAR   PR ICE\t\nWhite Vesting at 15c\nExtra fine quality Whito Vesting in assorted patterns. All new\ndesigns, suitable for waists and dresses. Twenty-eight inches wide,\nKegulnr 25c value. -i r-_\nSTAR   PRICE    -IOC\nWhite Sheeting at 30c\nExtra quality Full-Bleached Sheeting. Two full yards wide. A nieo\noven, round thread,    Tlie kind that, will wear fnr years. o\/\\\nSTAR VALUE, PER YARD OUC\nStarVahps\nel\nWhite Lawn at 15c\nForty-inch-wide White Lawn, nlco smooth finish.   -|C\nSTAR  VALUE...,,...   IOC\nWhite Table Linen at 49c\nFull Bleached Linen, fino quality,  72 inches  wide.\n'      Assorted patterns.    Regular value, 7Sc. AGks*\n8TAR   VALUE   W *\u25a0>\nWhite Pique and Repp at 20c\nIfiO Yards Pino Quality jPtciue and Repp, 36 inches\nwide.   Regular selling price, 3fi*p per yard*. OArt\nSTAR   PRICE  fevt\nWhite Embroideries  at 25c\n25 Pjeces Embroidery Klouneing, Ifi to 24 inches wide.\nExtra   fino   work   on   muslin.     Values up to !30c per\nyard.\nSTAR   PRICE\t\n25c\n& CO.\nTHE STORE  FOR STYLE\nTHE   STORE  FOR  QUALITY\n PAGE  FOUR\n\u20acfit Batlt) -ftftoB\nCtje \u00a9auy jat\u00a9\u00bb\nPublished \u00a9very morning; except\nI Sunday by The News Publishing\nI Company, Limited, Nelson, B.C., Can-\n| tub,\nROBB  SUTHERLAND,\nEditor and Manager.\nBusiness letters should bo'addressed\nI a-nd cheques and money orders made\nI payable to Tho News Publishing Cmn-\nf pany, Limltetl, ansl in no case to in-\nI dividual members of. tbo staff.\nAdvertising rn.to carsls and sworn de-\nItrilled statements of ciroulation mailed\nIon request, or may bo seen at tho orifice of any advertising agens-y rccog-\nlnlzed by the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates GO cents per\n\u25a0 month; |2,G0 for six months; J5 per\nUreal.\n<--Sf8!\u00a7B>\n'FRIDAY, JUNE 4\n|PRZEMYSL    SHOWS    WISDOM    OF\nJOFFRE'S   STRATEGY.\nThe fall of Przomysl is a victory\nIfor tho (fei-manic. nllies over the Rus-\nIslanR which is of considerably moro\nllmportniico than Uio capture of the\n\u25a0 fortress (from  the  Austrians  a  few\n\u25a0 weeks ago.   Tho victory for the Ten-\n\u25a0 tonic forces has conie nt a time when\nlits moral effect upon Uuniiiniuand Bul-\nlgnrla ansl possibly Greece Is likely to\n(ibe of considerable advantage to the\nlenemies of the triple entente and\n|ltaly.    -\nIf. demonstrates once nsain the onor-\n|mous military powor whicli the Ger-\nls and Austrians are still able to\nconcentrate at a given point along the\nIbattlo lines without dangerously weak*.\n|ening their front, in other sectors.\nNothing could illustrate more clenr-\nIjy Ihe wisslom of tin* \"attrition\" pol-\nllcy of the sillies in the western arena\nfthun Ibis reverse for tlie Russians' By\ncontinuing hue policy of -\"nibbling''\nlist, ihe enemy General .loffre, backed\nIby great (slumbers of French troops\nland Kitchener's nrmy in reserve, Is\nIremly suit any lime lo frustrate tremeu-\nIdous efforts to advance such sis have\nIbeen mado hy tlie Csermans at. Ypres\n| and other points.\nTho time 1.0 advance nnsl to throw\nIthe new* armies in the scale will be\nI when tlie enemy has been sufficient-\nlly weakened to remove the danger sif\nIs, s*Ts-at. movement. BUCU as Hint, whis-lt\nlhas just taken placo in (lalioin. or\nI when a liugo supply of high explosive.\nIshells  has  bee nacoumiilatefl,\ncausing the war must rest is Austria.\nThe Ledger says there is uo proof\nthat Germany was consulted hy Austria before the ultimatum was sent.\nDocs not the Ledger know that Germany -prepared Tor mobilization, if It\nhad not already commenced it, before\ntho note wns sent to Servia; that Germans in British dominions were notifies! before tlto Austrian ultimatum\nwas sent, to remove iheir money to\nneutral countries; tliat Germany, even\nif its own story of Ihe negotiations is\naccepted, made no effort lo influence\nAustria against war, tliat there is evidence in abundance of weoks of prep-\nir.'ilion ia anticipation sif Ihe rusb of\nlis* German armies through Belgium;\nthat Germany Itself extended the zone\nf the etvuggile by declaring war on\nRussia?\nOf course Germany anil Austria\nhave mil. -published a verbatim report,\nof llie discussion's of their diplomatists\nor facsimiles of lite notes between the\ntwo countries wliich would expose the\ndiabolical plot, hatched .-it the Wilhelm-\nstrasse, lint, there is evidence enough\nwithout them.\nItaly was not notified because Germany so willed il. that Vienna should\nomit thut formality.\nIGENERAL    BOTHA    DOING    GOOD\nWORK    IN    AFRICA.\nLittle is hearsl of the movements of\nIGeneral Botha and ihe forces under\nIhis command in German South-west Af-\nIrica, hut by the capture recently ot\nlfsVlndhock ths* Boer commander prac*\nItically nohleVed the conquest of Ihe\nlgront colony or which it is the capl-\n|ial.\nI'roli.-slily no other insoiis in tin.'\nI world eould have accomplished the\nI work iu tne thin- in whicli it lins been\ncarried out hy tne South African\nliuit-s's.   ISnormous distances, havo been\ntravelsi'si by tin* troops; over a water*\njls'ss slesert, tiusler a torrid sun, in a\nIhostile country General Botha has led\nI his men to a victory which is virtu*\n|niiy complete.\nlt is inn- nun the German forces are\ni-isi sit iarus-. inn ihey have been'\nliors-esl to retreiil into tne wilds sn a\nI barren and tootlless rountry in which\n1 in turn's 01 iieai\" tils' white population\n111.111 io reply upon Imported supplies,\nlinen stirreuih-r, unless tbey ' \u25a0\"'\nJaeuieve uie niiitcuU tasi. 01 cntchiuts\n. miiiiIi siin-iin general i.'.v sa>-\nI prise ami sleii'iiliuK linn, appears I\" I\"'\nlimy :i matter sit ilina,\n|sJSE CARE T(J HHKVtNT LOSS BV\nKOnEST FIHE.\nTbe pi'iivincial forestry  ilepartmenl\nis turn year extending tue plan 01 em-\nI pnaslziiip tlie Imiiortuiice ol pro: ed ins\n; limner 01 Brttlsb Columbia ngniusi\n,.  tnrougn appeals on   the screens\n|ut tbo moving picture tueatres.\nThe idea  is an  1\nI hi'sim-nt i)S\u00bb\"(i.\njrat put  into\nlliisi year.\nouo slide which is oelns >:,'M \"\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nI thus year points oui. to wage earners\nI una inerohuntu that ths- lumber ln\u00abu\nI try distributes S'J.isOOO'.OOO jnnually 111\nIwugea in tins province. Auotuer em-\npusiHi\/.es uss* nisi, that Uio lorcsts pay\nIsuio the prisviucial treasury >l!,6uu,tiuu\n|ss year and Hint by 'preventing ti\u00bb\"\n\u25a0 public, will assist, in keeping taxes\nj spirit, a third slide shows that green\nloresis >uoi.s ah-als*!!' io*' IS\"-'\"' '\"'\"\nI provide clear water for fhll.__ \u2022.\n'the fire danger season Is approach-\nI iii-s. and it behooves all who have the\nI best Interests ot the province at heart\nIto <lo all in their power to prevent\nlinitbrenks of flro or the spread of any\nIvbtch they may discover,\nMAKE THEM WORK.\nThe time for enlistment in the r.-lth\nbattalion is growing short. .Men who\nwish to serve Uielr country should\njoin immediately.\nThe success of lite picnic at Proctor yesterday shows what tiio busi*\ns men of Xelson can accomplish\nwhen they get. together and work witli\na common end in view.\nAlthough ihe hour al whicli W\nPronch aeroplanes left, visiting cards\n11 tlie form of bombs and darts at the\nheadquarters cf the German crown\nriuce was imfas-hioliably early il. is to\ne liops-il thai his Imperial highness\n.-as at. home.\nDr. Bs-i'iiluirili Dornborg Is to be\nnindo hend'of 11 pro-German press bureau which will endeavor tss influence\npublic, opinion in ttio Scandinavian\ncountries. If he influences lt .iu the\nsame direction as lie has done in the\nUnited Slates ihe allies will have no\ncomplaint\n'hi- Untie Miner suggests Hint tbo\nlo has como when liis' Mexicans\nshould glvo .Mexico 10 whoever will\nilseii. Bill Hie nation which attempts\n1 inks- ii will have 110 easy task, ospc-\nall yas an invasion would probably\nintent tUo warring; factions into a\nlilted army defending its country.\nThere is something humorous In the\nofficial -report sent hy a United Slates\nconsul who was commissioned to inquire Into and report on a recent mutiny at the Canadian internment camp\nat Port Henry, near Kingston.\nWhen tho Germans und Austrians\nthere revolted and attempted io overpower tholr guards they wero mot\nwith a display of cold; steel and subsided. The German govern ment,\nthrough its embassy at Washington,\nasked Uncle Sam to investigate, thc\nbelief evidently being- that the Canadians in charge of Fort Henry were\ntreating the -iuternod allies shamefully\nto have induced.; them to ninthly. So\nlho United states consul tn Kingston\nwas  instructed to investigate.\nHo did so, and now reports to this\ngovernment that theso aliens are being well ifoci -and well housed; also ho\nadds the suggestion that. ii. would- Iks\nhotter for them if they were required to do'a little bard- work, and that\nthe loaders of the uprising should be\npunished.\nOf course this is not the sort of\nreport tho German embassy wanted.\nThey were looking for a. cause of -troublo at the embassy, and wil Ibe disappointed: because it. does not appear.\nHowever, we oro not, very much interested In the feelings of ihe German\nofficials at. ihe Wasliingtou embassy,\nand find the investigator's reji-ovt. interesting from the -fact of its suggestion that the able-bodied men or the\nenmp should he set. at work. With\nihat we thoroughly agree.\nilKs- s-*.i.tajs'l,o (majesty Is evidently\nfinding il. easy work to fill tho minds\nof theso idle aliens with mischief, and\nUio best way to coiniteras-l. the tendency to trouble is to let thom ail have\nthai, healthy -tired feeling that comes\niqnly to the hiaa who puts in bis full\n'day ai. some sort of hottest labor.\nT-herss can he no -good- reason ad*\nva-ns'ssd why theso people should lie\niniiiiiiniiii-il iu iildleness; there are\nmany gooil reasons why they shoulii.\nbe given -a {reasonable amount of\nwork lo do even If -it is only for\ntits* sake of the exercise It gives i-lsem.\n\u2014Calgary  lleralsl.\nDiSlGT HEN ON\nMill LIST\n(Continued from .Pus*- -I'*'0-)\nTil\nJlilii   1\n\u25a0 ,\nft!\nyin\n<1 Ul\nin\n\u25a0 si\nlustry at creston\nig.- nt development\n;u   \\\\\nilc\n1\n\u25a0 is\nalii\n> lo supply all Hie\nlonil\n.It.\nmi\nmi\nmil\nlinvo a surplus for\nex-no\ni.\n11\n\u25a0 ex\nend\nng the mixed farm-\nlug\n111\nnn\nry\nlis-\nho\nllstricl i.- aide to\nne which \\i;is for-\nmerl\nbusi]\nnd\n\u25a0in\nu\nhi\nrib\ni- K\nlie\newli\nlisle\n'nitcil Sillies. New\nire, Tliat is good\nmy and Boundary.\n\u25a0\u2022!'(\nsi l ion\nWl\nutei\n-A young person\nl.'lVi!\nlion,\nlisto\nnul 1\ntult.\nin\nrl.\ncli\nin\nw\nih\n>ive\ndln-g\nillii*\nuia\nlo\nin\nw\niinli\nil.o\ndo\nexcellent eduoa-\niiing. geography,\n-s, dance music,\nis, enter a respect-\nwashing and iron-\n11 ir.\u2014\nlh.'\nin\nIn\nnuu\nsun\nOX|\nj 1 Mi,.) News.\"\nions lacking ap-\n,i'i  knowledge   of\nmcti\nni\nIn-\nd-Av\n.mil\nof tin- tango and\nfox 1\not.\nyr-i-j-^r^i-'\u00ae**-^\n.: WHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING. *\n'!^^.-\u00ab\u00ab-*'-*-*'-''=--''-'*^^'-M'W\nAn  Admirable  Work\nHall  ami Ausirin,   1 lhi*> g\" '\" \u2022\u2022\n(.'OLD STORAGE\n\"Thc man who tells us of our fstnlts\nis out* best friend,\" quoth the philosopher.\n\"Yes; but. he won't be long.\" added\nHie mere man.\nDyer\u2014llighce   just\nhis fishing- trip,\nR.vi-i-   What did he\nDyes-\u2014A sltalc.\ngot   hack   from\nW. H. Bertram, Ireland.\nWilliam Cardie, Scotland.\nHubert Hynd, England.\nWilliam Woolston, England.\nDavid WntiRli, England.\nW. H. Stedman, England.\nCorp. Robert McGregor. Scotland.\nDied of wounds\u2014John spears, England.\nWounded\u2014Perclval Kirby, Victoria.\nSergt. J. B. Hammond. Unglnnd.\nS. V. Uoyd, Snglnnd.\nVV. Stafford, Kngland.\nIt. E. Evaiis, -North Wales.\nE. H. Appleton, Wales.\nCorp. H. C. Gibbs. England.\nCorp. .lames Beaton. Scotland.\nC. -N. Bywell, England,\n.lames Glover,  Scotland.\nJohn B. Wilson. Victoria.\nB. W. Rogers, Halifax.\nW. Ritchie, South- Pnrmington, N. S.\nHarry V. Butcher, Lake Hill, B. C.\nfl. G. Stewart, San Jose. Cal.\n.lohn W. Hensliii. Fernie. B. 0.\nPrincess Patricias.\nMissing\u2014William Scott. Wales.\nWounded\u2014Albert Arnold,  England.\nHenry Gillies, England.\nW. Ntehol,  England.\nAlfred 'Blitoli, Edmonton.\n1-*. A. Williams, Montreal.\nLord Stratheona's Horse.\nDied of  wounds\u2014George  Munyard,\nEngland.\nWounded\u2014T. O. Hughes. England.\n-I. 0. Ash, Eugiland.\nPerry Denton. lOngland.\nA. iVs'. McCarthy, CnJia.\nif. V. Iludeuson, Wnpolla, Saslt\nCorp. Max Eslgnv, lnulsfall, .'Ula,\nPrincess Patricias.\nWounded-\u2014-lohn Busby, Winnipeg.\nSergt. A. C. Champion, Ottawa.\nLord Stratheona's Horse.\nWounded-ijieiit.   0.   A.   t'-rlpley,\nOoelirane,  Alta.\n2nd Brigade, C. F, A.\nWounded\u2014sH.  J.  Cowan, .Montreal.\n3rd Field Company, Engineers.\nKilled  in  notion\u2014Sapper 11. Garrison, Ilorlons Bluff. N. S.\nWounded\u2014Lieut, S.  D. Parker, Ottawa,\n5th Battalion.\nDied of wounds\u2014Hal Snlion, Vancouvor.\nWounded\u2014Lance-Corp.    .lames    11.\nMcLennon, Vancouver.\nWilliam Sinallwnod, Vancouver .\nItobert.   l-ontlfox.  Bumnby     Lake,\nB. 0.\nGamaliel c.illis. Winnipeg.\nX. Hughes, South America,\nclient sine and\nsuits\nest   111\nihis prn\nI ITALY   NOT  NOTIFIED;   GERMAN,''\nKNEW  ALL  ABOUT  IT.\nThe Tauoinit Ledger puinls tss ihe\nhact ihat !MJ,y was not consulted lu\nlAustrln-Huugary when the note which\nl-was tho Immediate cause of thejva*'\nI was sent to Servia and uses this clr-\nIcumstance In support ot a suggestion\n1 tint perhaps Germany was not con*\nl-gulted and that therefore the uatitsn\nI ppon.  -whom  the  responsibility,  for\nin the Conliiion\n,-,1 Carson wlthssi\n\u25a0aiest \u25a0\u25a0! BritlBh\nInn\nHu\nDig ns Hu- sums-\nsnili  or   Lloyo\nid.   and   I'll''  \"I\nsta follow and\nas they have\nisi oths-r lender\nli riiiiiiiiii-riiiiu.\nEMBEZZLER DIES POOR.       '\u00bb\nV promlnenl lawyer aud lianker of\nt'llii-ago, ttlio tied thai city in UH.l,\nafler having embezzled $'u'(i,riOO (ront\nclients and depositors, whicli he declared he had lost, hi gambling, died a\ncharity patient iu tin- tuberculosis\nward of the county hospital in Chicago, .lust before he died he revealed\nbis Identity 10 a nurse and said.: \"Tell\nmy old friends I paid for my folly\nwilh my life. The money did me no\ngood.\"\nIt makes no difference where or\nhow Hio money went: the attempt Us\net. something for nothing always\nproves a raiture, \"Easy come, easy\ngoes\" is a true old saying.\nThe accumulation on money requires\nfar mors- than mere acquisition of it.\n.Thousands of men mako lots of money\nand have very litile. Thousands ot\nothers make vory litile. bin. manage to\nmnko ii multiply into considerable.\nA Inn kit wilh a. holo in lis bottom\nmay he filled with water repeatedly,\nbut soon goes empty again, while. 11\nlight bucket may stay filled even from\nordinary rainfalls.\nAnd. afls'r all, the pleasure in money\nlies not. iu its (possession so much as\nin its accumulation, it. is lbs' joy In\nHie game of making ii. of planning\nenterprise, sif giving oneself ts, it, and\nss.elug il. work out favoralilliy.\nThere Is direction connection lie*\ntween stealing nnd pauperism. Both\ngrow out of failure to properly appro,\ndale iho right purposes of property;.\nII is lust as natural. -Just as much\naccordance with rule, tor a thle\"\nto become pauperized as it is for 1\npauper to steal.\nThe man in. position io embezzle\n$11111,11011 and embezzled it. rolslieit himself most of all. He robbed himself\nof standing, public confidence, friends,\nBelf-rertpeot and all chance to live a\nwholesome, happy life. What greater\nloss eould be suffered.\"\u2014Montreal\nMail. - _____    ;-;'\"\n!>$<Sm<m-\u00ab'<*m>'i*8<S><*is>^^\n\u00ab '\u2666\n% THE WEATHER. o>\n*>\n<H*S-\"'. \u00ab-.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-?*.\ngrs-\nnnpsiil 1.\na ig  the\noalltlon   K'i\n-t   lin-l\nit:\u2014Ti\n8th Battalion.\nWouuded\u2014Sergt. S. Proudfoot, Winnipeg.\n, A. MdBride, Winnipeg.\nC Mapher, Russell, Men,\n,1. Meek, Dauphin, Man.\nH. 0, Wade, Dauphin, Man.\nL. Swift, saskatoon.\nCorp. William Safe, Saskatoon.\nJames Mansell), Rossburn, Man.', -.;\"\nC. C. Jones, \"Winnipeg.\nD. W. Inglls, Regilua... -     -\nA, W. Munnoeli. Winnipeg.\nKilled   in   action\u2014John   Robinson,\nSaskatoon.\nW. C. Matthews, Winnipeg.\nThomas Powers, Winnipeg.\n11. W. Worleck, Winnipeg.\nMOth Battalion.\nWounded\u2014N. Dickson, Winnipeg.\nW. Rockwell, Toronto. '\nE. McKenzie, Winnipeg.\nP. W. Yoiuighill, Winnipeg.\nSidney Wilson, Nanaimo.\nE. It. Shaver, Olioloks, Alia.\nH. G. Wilson, Saskatoon.\nHarry CutlO, Winnipeg.\ny, W, Johnson, Winnipeg.\nit. 0. Currie, Winnipeg.\nLance-Corp.   Woilliani    G.    Currie,\nWinnipeg.\n7th Battalion.\nSeriously ill\u2014Frank Boshier, Islington, England,\nWounded\u2014Russell Cbnffey, (formerly :iOI,h), Vancouver.\nDangerously   ill \u2014 Frank   Butter-\n.woirlh, Vancouver.\n16th   Battalion.\nKilled  in. action\u2014F.    C.  Blakeley,\nNorwich, Ont.\nLace-Corp. E. .T. Dunn, Vancouver.\nJohn .11. Brown (formerly \"rtl-h), .Vn-\nnatnio.\nWounded\u2014Lance-Corp, John S. Dee\n(formerly 30th), Victoria.\nThomas Gilinnre  (formerly   ?.0tli).\nPrince Rupert.\nCharles Albert Gilbert, Victoria.\n\/    Packet of    N\nWILSON'S    \\\nFLY PADS\n.WILL KILL MORE FLIES THAN\/\n\\$8\u00b0-\u00b0 WORTH OF ANY \/\n\\STiCKY TLY CATCHER\/'\nSTEAMER  ARRIVALS.\nAt Xew York\u2014Philadelphia, Liverpool.\nAt Glasgow- -Cassandra, Montreal.\nSee the Fine Showing of\nWedding\nJewellery\nIN- OCR CATALOGUE.\nGIFTS  FOR  BRIDES\nGIFTS FOR BRIDESMAIDS\nGIFTS FOR GROOMS,\nGROOM'S MEN and\nOTHER ATTENDANTS.\nTHE BIRKS\nWEDDING RING\nis the fashionable wedding: ring\nof Canada, lt. Is made to either\nplatinum or sold, is neat and\ncomfortable to wear.\nHenry Birks & Sons, Ltd.\nJewelers and Silversmiths,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nWest Transfer Co\nGEO. F. MOTION, Manager.\nGeneral Teamsters\nDealers in Coal\nand Wood\nPHONE 33.\nGOOD  DAIRY  BUTTER\n30c  PER   LB.\nLOCAL  RANCH  EGGS, $7.25  PER\nCASE.\nBOX 92, CRESTON.\nREFRIGERATORS\nNOW  IS  Till-:  TIME  TO  GET  READY FOR TUP. TIOT WEATHER\nAS  IT IS  ST-UELY COMING\nWE HAVE A NICE L1N1-: HE   E.N'AMRLLKI) I.IN'ED\nREFRIGERATORS    ALL    SIZES   AND    PRICES\nSCREEN   DOORS    ALL   SIZES   AND   PRICES\nMEAT   SAFES    *\u25a0>\u2022*'-'  EACH\nICE   PICKS ICE   CREAM   FREEZERS\nWINDOW   SCREENS,   ETC.,   ETC.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nP. O. BOX  1050\nNELSON.   B.C.\nBusiness Directory\nASSAYERS.\n\u25a0. W .WTDDOWSON, ASSATER ANT\nChemist. Box A1108, Nelson, B.C\nCharged Gold, silver, copper ai\nlead, 11 iach; Rc-ia-sltvsr 11.10j\nsllver-Ieaif, fl.SO. Othsr instil, os\napplication.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.\u2014Optra blk.\nWM,  CUTlsER  AUCTtONEER,  BOH\n474;' phons 18.\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACBONAIjD & CO., WHOHB-\nsals Grocer* and Provision Usr-\neliants. Importer,, ot Teas, Coffsss,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple anil\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese anil Packing\nHouse Produce. ORic* and warehouse corner of Front and HaU Sts.\nP.O. box 1095; telephone! 28 and II.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE.\nARE YOU TAKING advantnjra of tha\nreduced rates on your fire insurance\noffered by G. A. Hunter. If not see\nhim before renewing. His onmpanlss\nare absolutely reliable.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nGREEN  BROS, BURDEN * CO.\nCivil Engineers, Dominion an* M. V,\nLand Surveyor*.\nSurvsyi of Lands, Minis, Townsttaa.\nTimber Limits, ate.\nNelson, il6 Ward street, A. H. Gran,\nMgr.-, Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg.,\nF. C. Green; Fort Gtorga, Hammond\n\u2022treat, F, P. Burden.\nA. L. McCULLOCH\nHydraulic*  Engineer.\nProvincial Land Survsyor.\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nT. M. RIXEN, AUDITOR ANB Accountant   Room 16, K.W.C. Block.\nDANCJNG^\nMISS GLADYS 'ATTREE\u2014Private\" las-\nsens by appointment. Particulars nf\nclasses and prospectus on application\nBox S04.\nKOOTENAY LODGB NO 1\u00ab, LCO.*.\n\u2014Meets every Monday night ln Odd-.\nfellows' brill at S o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH LODGB\nNo. IB, I.O.O.F., meets first and third\nTuesdays, Oddfellow*' hall at I\no'clock.\nNELSON IsNCAMPIsHaNT NO. 7, I.O.\nO.F.\u2014Meets second and fourth\nThursday* ln Oddfellow** hall at I\no'clock.\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7\u2014MBBTU\n\u2022very second Tuesday In Oddfellows'\nball, at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEETS\nTuesday nights In K. ot P. hall,\nEagla block.\nC.O.F. I\njssnrt Keoienay Bella,\nmeets 4th Friday ln E.F.\nhall, Eagle block.\nJohn Burns & Sons\nlieneral Contractor!\nind Builders\nIA\u00bbH   AND   DOOR   FACTORY. NELSON   PLANING   MILLS.\nVERNON   STREET,  NELSON,  B.C.\nEvsry   Dsscription  of  Building   Material Kept in Stock.   EstimatM Qlvsn\nan Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings,\nMAIL    ORDERS    PROMPTLY    ATTENDED    TO,\n\u25a0OX   1*4. \"MOWS   17\u00bb\nSomething New!\n-Velvety and delicious- -\nSimplyfmakes the\nmouth* -water.'\nNot a milk chocolate.\nMMDfl!\nomA\nlYjm**1*^*\n\u25a0nil i'i\nil.iil\nThis Modern Soldier\n\u201eis- ssssts-ns .it drill end iraln-\nIssssks i'i ibe preparation ssf\nml iiis-n tin s-ssiiiiint. Fire con-\n]\u201e .Mini,.1 lendorshlp, lntolU-\nof cover in Indepehdont ac-\nl\u201e. individual sdldler, ability\nove'n resource in tlie mortiertt\n-ns-. nml nn understanding ot\non of every movement lu the\n,,,nili.-it are Use prin-\niow considered in the\nsoldier.   And high offl-\n;s Inrsts: anjount of Ihis\nBritish volunteers n-\n,-siliimi- nf practical In-\ntbey were ssent to tho\nlis Lord Kitchener de-\nNi-w   Vnrli  Bun.\nnf tin\n\u25a0\u2022It lakei\ngood man in bring Imme\n\"And It tsiltoB a bettsn- man than it\ndid a fow years, back. Meat products\naro on tho rise.\" \u25a0 ,\t\nNelson\t\nDawson   ......\nVancouver ....\nC.'ilgnry\t\n.Medicine Hat\nIIS-L'illil    \t\nWinnipeg ....\nToronto   \t\nOttawa\t\nQuebec \t\nSI   .lohn \t\nVictoria\t\nKuillloopss  \t\n|-'llUll>lltOIl    ....\nMoose .law ...\nPrince Albert\nPort Arthur ..\nKlugston \t\nMontreal  \t\n[\u25a0tollfax \t\nMin.\n.. 49\n.. \u00ab\n.. 4(1\n.. tl\n.. r,-i\n.. m\n.. 50\n..   fsl\n.. B0\n. 42\n.. 46\n.. 48\n.. 48\n.. 40\n.. 65\n.. B4\n.. 46\n.. 52\n.. 50\n.. 32\nMax.\n85\nin .\nin\nt'.o\n61;\n10\nSis\n111\n7-1\n76\n66\n62\n80\n60\n70\n76\n66\n64\n70\n66\nPTE  LEACOCK  ALIVE.\n(Canadian Associated Press..)\nLONDON, .Mine X\u2014Major Annatrons\nCiiniuiinii record officer here, lias re\neetceil liiliiiiiitlon that Pto. UoorKo Lf.tl\ncock <>f Un* 15IU battalion, 4-8th H4gh\nlenders., Toronto, was lucorrs*ctly re\nportesl dead1 from  the effects of gus\npoisoning.    Ho Is now smaklnt; good\nprogress in ono of the -French hospl\nf&ls,  Ut.-\t\nA. O. F. COURT ELLEN\u2014MEETS\nfirst and third Monday tn Eagle hall\nat 8 o'clock.\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 212, MEETS IN\nI. O. O. F. hall fltat and third Fridays at 8 p.m.\nI. O. H.\u2014 Meeta first and third Mondays in K. of P. hal< at 8 p.m.\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of tha Dominion\nIn Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, tha Northwest Territories, and ln a portion ot\nthe Provinco of British Columbia, may\nhe leased for a term ot twenty-one\nyears at au annual rental of 11 par\nacre. Not mon than L'lii'.o acres will\nba leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a laasa must bs\nmade by tbe applicant In person to tha\nAgent or Sug-agent ot tha district ol\nwbich tha rights applied fnr are sltu-\natad.\nIn aiirvejnii territory tha land muat.\nha described by sections or legal subdivisions of sections and tn unsurrayad\nterritory the tract applied for ahall tia\nstaked out by tha applicant himself,\nEaoh application must be accompanied by a fee ot SS which will ba refunded If tha rlghta applies for are\nnot available, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shall bs paid on tha merchantable output of the mlns at tha rats\nof five centa per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn raturae\naccounting for tha full quantity nl\nmerchantable coal mined and pay tha\nroya.ty thereon. If tha coal rolnlna\nrights are not being operated, such\nreturns should be furnlahsd at least\nonca a year.\nThe lease will Include tha coal min*.\nIng rlghta only, but the lessee maji\nba permitted to purchase wbatavas\navailable surface rights may ba considered nacsBnary for tha working ol\nthe mine at tha rata ot $11) an acre.\nFor full Information application\nshould ha mads to ths Secretary of tin\nDepartment of ths Interior, Ottawa, es\nto any Agent ot Sub-agent ot Dos-da-\nIon Lands,\nW. W. CORT,\nDeputy Minister ot tha Interior,\nN, B.\u2014s Unauthorised publication ol\nthis advertisement will not ha pal*\nfor. *     *\n5c. and 10c. sues.\nPOUND DISTRICT ACT, 1912, CHAP.\n1 AND AMENDMENTS.\nPursuant to tho provisions of Sections 11 and 12 of tho above not, no-\ntls-o is hereby given of tho resignation\nnf Mr. n. B, Hoillngton, ponndkooper,\nn.ml of tho appointment of Mr. Stephen\nPolling of Nolson, as I'oundkccper of\ntins peiinsl-eetabllshed in the lloseinont\naddition to-the City of. Nolson.\nW. .1 .BOWSER,\nMinister of .Finance and Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture, Vlctj_-^t\njac, May. iwh, i\u00bbii .._\u25a0* )'\u25a0-,..( -:..,.-.--I\n FRIDAY, JUNE \u2022**, 1915\n%\\)t mmiv\nSH\nPAOE FIVE\nTO ARRIVE  FRIDAY' MORN I NO\nice Dairy\nButter\nPOUND 35c.\nALSO NEW SHIPMENT\nNew Zealand\nButter\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10\nStore of Quality\nTHURMAN'S\nCarry a full line of all Hlgh-Grade\nTobaccos and BBB Pipes. Try a tin\not Thurman's Mixture.\nTHURMAN'S CIGAR 8TORE\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\nLOCAL AND PURE\nOur Ice Cream Parlor\nIs now opened.\nWe malte our own Ice Cream of\nlocal and pure Cream. Come In\nand try the real thing.\nChoquette Bros.\nBakers and Confectioners.\nPhone 258. 516 Baker St,\nNELSONNEWSOF THE DAY\nMrs. Philip Hayman ia visiting Nelson, Sho arrived at the Strathcona last\nevening from Grand1 Forks.\nJasper Wolverton, son of Dr. N.\nWolverton of Nelson, returned last\nnight from Brandon, Man., whero ho\nhas been attending college.\nA good cigar always makes you feel\n1 ,a little better. Try a Kootenay Stand-\n'\u25a0 'ard, made in Nelson by J. Thelln. (856)\nNelson Brand Jam Is made from the\nbeat Kootenay fruits and B.C. Sugar\nby British Columbia labor. At all\ngrocers. (699)\nThe Lady Foresters are holding a\nj hard times dance on Monday, June 7\n'in Bugle hall from 9 till 12 o'clock. Admission 25c. (889)\nA special  meeting of the  Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen will he held\nI'ltm 'Sunday, Juno 6 at 10 o'clock.   Im-\n;   portant ibuslness. (891)\nSUBSCRIBERS PLEASE NOTICE.\nIn asking for a change In your address, pleas\u00a9 give old address as well\nas the new. This Is important, as if\nthe old address is not given much\nvaluable time is wasted in searching\nthrough the lists to find it.\nNews of Sport\n\u2666 \u2666\n\u00ab FEDERAL LEAGUE. \u2022\u00bb\nFROM BUFFALO\nBrooklyn Takes Both Games of Double\nHeader\u2014-St. Louis -Defeats Chicago in Close Game.   -\nLeague Standing.\nWon   'Lost Pet.\nPittsburg ,.-.... 24 17 .685\nKansas City ..23 18 .561\nNewark  22 17 .'564\nChicago   ...23 19 .548\nBrooklyn   |  20 18 .513\nSt. Louis  i... 18 18 .500\nBaltimore  16 23 .410\nBuffalo     13 28 .317\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nBUFFALO, N.Y,, Juno 3.\u2014Brooklyn\ntook hoth -games of a double -header\nplayed here today. Heavy hitting featured the first contest and loose fielding the second.\nFlrat game\u2014 n.   H.   B.\nBuffalo  ..- ..!..... 7   14     2\nBrooklyn   \u25a0 10   ls3     2\nBatteries: Schultz, Ehmke, Watson,\nMarshall, Bed-lent and Blair; Seaton\nand -Lan-d.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nBuffalo  1     5     3\nBrooklyn   j.  3     8     2\nBatteries: Bedlent and Blair; Up-\nham and -Pratt.\nCHICAGO, IM., June 3.-\u00abt. Louis\nwon a close game from the home team\ntoday 3 to 2. Both teams secured the\nsame number of hits, -but Chicago played ragged ball in the field. R.   H.   E.\nChicago  2     8     5\nSt. Louis  3     g     2\nBatteries: Brown, Blaok and Wilson; Davenport and Hartley.\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., June 3.\u2014Pittsburg defeated the locals in a close\ngame here today. Pittsburg played\nerrorless ball. \"R,   h.   E.\nKansas Olty  .,...., i     (j     2\nPittsburg 1,., 3     7     0\nBatteries: Packard and Brown;\nKnetzcr and Berry.\nS>    AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.     <\u2022>\nR. H.  B.\nMilwaukee   9 43    0\nColumbus   4 -4     2\nR. H.  B.\nLouisville    4 8     1\nKansas  City     3 7   4\nSt. Paul-Cleveland game, postponed,\nruin.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE.\n\u00ab\nFor Rent\u2014Ono of Nelson's most\nbeautiful homes; 3 -bedi-ossim ono having open fire placo and sleeping porch;\nexceptionally Issrgo bathroom, porcelain tub; dlnintg room, beamed celling;\ndrawing room, open t'lre -place and\nFrench doors to veranda; furnace and\ngas laid on; $30 a month. Have several other first class houses ssnd bungalows alro summer homes at very low\nrentals. C. W. Appleyard, 505 Baiter\nStreet. (876)\nthere Is no habit more easily formed than the habit ol\nsaiinc. If you have not already acquired the habit do\n\u25a0o now br opening a savings\nacoount\nOne dollar opens an aooount\nIn our Savings Department,\nEstablished 1B7B.\nHead Offloe, Toronto, Ont\nCapital (paid up) ..\u26667,000,001\nReserve Fund  17,000,000\nPelei Howland, President\nBllu Rogers,  Vice-President\nEdward Bay, Gen. Manacar.\nNelson Branoh\nI. \u25a0. D. Benson, Manager.\ninP[RI*LBANK\u00b0rttNM\u00ab\nLeague standing.\nWon Lost Pet.\nChicago    27 15 .643\nDetroit  21! 17 .605\nBoston  20 14 .588\nNew York   19 17 .528\nWaslngton  lfi 19 .457\nCleveland  17 21 .457\nSt. Louis   17 23 .435\nPhiladelphia    13 29 .310\nBoston-New York postponed; cold\nweather.\nWashington-Philadelphia, postponed,\nwet grounds.\n\u00bb \u00ab\n\u00bb    NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE     \u00ab\n* <8s\nLeague Standing.\nWon Lost Pet.\nSpokane     24 16 .600\nVictoria   22 18 .550\nTacoma 23 19 .548\nVancouver 20 21 .488\nA'berdoen 17 24 .416\nSeattle     17 25 .405\nR.   H.  E.\nSpokane   4     9'    0\nAberdeen    3     8     4\nWicker and  Altman;   Mcikle    and\nVance.\nR.   H. E.\nVancouver  5   11     4\nTacoma     6     7     1\nKramer  and  slrotrOem;   Peet    and\nStevens.\nR.   H. *E.\nSeattle  6   13     4\nVictoria  1     3     0\nHastier and Cadman;  Hanson and\nHoffman.\n\u00bb INTERNATIONAL\n\u00bb\nR. H. E.\nBuffalo   5 11 1\nRochester  .3     9 4\nR. H. E.\nMontreal  0     4 0\nToronto   1     3 2\nProvidence-Newark, cold.\nJersey City-Richmond, wet grounds,\n\u2022  \u2666\n*\u00a3> COAST LEAGUE, <3>\n\u2022 \u00ab\n*+t***M*Q*&M*****i4*M'*\u00ab\nR. H. E.\nSalt  Lake    0 6 1\nVenice     1 3 1\nR. H. E.\nLos Angeles     2 3 1\nSan Francisco    4 9 2\nR. H. E.\nOakland     1 8 2\nPortland    5 8 1\nPISHING GOOD AT MIRROR LAKE.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMIRROR LAKE, B. C, June 3.\u2014\nSeveral good catches of fish have been\nmade lately. A. T. Davis brought in\na Impound salmon yesterday and Robert Thompson and' A. Ling got two\nchar and a salmon Sunday.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE.\nGITS DEFEAT\nBOSTON BRAVES\nNew York Wins by Heavy Hitting\u2014\nPhillies  Beat  Brooklyn\u2014Cardinals Lose to Reds.\nLeague Standing.\nWon Lost Pet.\nChicago    23 16 .590\nPhiladelphia  21 18 .538\nBoston   20 19 .513\nBrooklyn  20 19 .513\nSt. Louis   20 21 .488\nPittsburg   18 20 .474\nCincinnati   16 20 .444\nNew York 15 20 .4\"9\n(By Dally News Leasod Wire.)\nBOSTON, Mass., June 3.\u2014New York\nhit the ball hard today and the Giants\ndefeated the locals, 10 to 3.\nR.   H. B.\nNew York  10   16     5\nBoston   3   12     4\nMarquard and McLean; James, Tyler, Crutchor and Whaling.\nBROOKLYN, N. Y. .June 3.\u2014Philadelphia defeated Brooklyn today in a\nhard fought game, 2 to 1.\nR.   H.  E.\nPhiladelphia     2     6     0\nBrooklyn    1     5     2\nMayer and Kllllfer; Appleton and\nMiller.\nST.  LOUIS,  Mo., June  3.\u2014Cincinnati hit the ball hard today, gathering\n11 hits, and defeated St. Louis, 5 to 2.\nR.   H. E.\nCincinnati   5   11     2\nSt. Louis   2     B     2\nSchneider, RObinson and Wingo;\nPerdue and Nlehaus, Synder.\nMAKE   FINE   CATCHES.\n(Special to The . ally News.)\nHARROP, B. C., June 3.\u2014Mrs. Ogilvie caught a ntne-pound char Saturday\nand Mrs. B. Harrop caught two fine\nrainbow trout Sunday morning.\nFrek Merklo is surely ono unlucky\nball -player. To add to all the ill-deserved notoriety of the past this year\nbe dislocates ills elbow and is out of\nthe game for three weeks. He recovers and plays in an exhibition game.\nIn which he has his nose broken and\nwill now be out of the game for another month.\nBIG LEAGUE BALI\nTAKES HER\nWise Ones Are Being Puzzled by the\nDally Performance of Teams\nThis Year.\nThe major league baseball season Is\na long time getting settled, writes a\n-well known eastern scribe. The dope\nis turning flip flops, batters who never\ncould hit are way up, teams that are\nnotoriously weak at bat are near the\ntop, strong hose -running teams are\nfar down the list, weak fielding teams\nare among the leaders In fielding.\nThere is Pat Moran's Phillies, who\nhave beeu leading practically all year,\nlast In fielding and next to last in\nbatting and base running, whioh\nshows pretty conclusively that pitching alone has kept them up In the\nrace.\nThe Chicago White Sox, the alleged\n\"hitless wonders,\" second in hatting\nand Washington, which we Feared\nlacked the fielding steadiness to win,\nleading the American league in fielding and the Yankees, who looked good\nin -fielding, |base running andi in\npitching, hitting within a few points\nof the alleged slugging clubbs, and the\nAthletics, supposed to be crippled in\nbatting strength, ranking third.\nImagine Pittsburg's Federals leading their league ln fielding! Add tho\nOrioles, down in last place and still\nthird in batting strength.\nFrom the dope of the first month\nand a half of the season It Is evident\nthere are going to be some startling\nchanges in the standing of the clubs\nIf the weather ever settles down to\nbusiness. The clubs are not going on\nform. Chicago's Cubs have surprised\nthemselves. The team Is hitting some\n15 points above Its real gait, and the\npitchers are going stronger than they\nwill later.\nNew York Is just starting, and is\nshowing a lot of Improvement which\nought to continue when the cripples\nget back into the lineup.\nThe Boston Braves have suffered a\nlot through the absence of Evers. With\nEvers thero the team probably would\neven now be out In front.\nIn the American league Detroit's hid\nseems real. The steam Is playing a lot\nof baseball, and getting fair pitching.\nWhilo the White Sox now are regarded as the Boston Red Sox most dangerous competitor the Chicago bunch\nhas been winning on wonderful pitching rather than on good hall playing\nand If this continues, Detroit's hitting power will tell.\nThe Red Sox are awakening to the\nfact that they will have to hustle to\nget hy with the pennant. The team\nhas heen very slow getting going and\nall has not been harmonious. Gardner's illness has been a heavy handicap.\nThe Yankees have kept   hustling,\nMarkets - Mining - Finance\nSTEEL LEADS STOCK\nWar Specialties Not Conspicuous but\nSome   Make  Good Gains\u2014Steel\nWins Case.\nNEW YORK, .June 3.\u2014In its constant\nstrength and Increasing breadth today's stock market .served as a striking reminder of the daily sessions\nwhich accompanied the memorable advance of lust March and April, Trading did not attain the largo proportions of that period but was of sufficient extent to make the movement\nnoteworthy.\nUnited States Steel led the advance,\ndealings in that stock aggregating-190,-\n000 shares or 25 per -cent of the whole.\nCoppers were next In favor with average grains of li to 3 points on a largo\njoint 'turnover. War specialties were\ncomparatively inconspicuous uithough\nadvances in that group were of a substantial dharalcter, the same being\ntruo of the automobile shares und\nother Issues having no speciul classification. General motors mnde the\n\u25a0greatest gain of any specialty, advancing 10:Ji points. Half a score of\ntho railroad stocks, mainly those In\nthe 'International! list,, 'Host* 1 'Ho 3\npoints, but tho demand for these Issues wore  relatively light.\nThe advance in Steel to 59-^, Its\nbest quotation since the 'beginning of\nthe strained relations between* this\n\u25a0country and Germany was mado the\noccasion of much gossip und -conjec-\nture. It is known that tho corporation's output has increasod during the\nipasttwo weeks und this favorablo condition Is expected to show in the May\ntonnage figures to bo Issued a week\nfrom today. Not until tho close of the\nmarket was It learned that tho Steel\n-corporation had won its suit brought\nagainst It by the federal government.\nTho further rise in the -copper group\nwas 'traceable to a number of specific\ncauses, Including the greater demand\nfor the metal at high prices. Moreover It is argued tliat tho new turn in\nthe Mexican situation is calculated\n'to work to tho -advantage of tlie many\nlargo producing and .smelting companies which huve large property interests In  the southerni republic.\nMany of tho day's hlgh\"st quotations\nwero made in tiio final .hour, closing\nprices showing no material recessions\n\u25a0from tho level despite considerable profit taking.\nAnother feature oi* tho day was the\ndecline ln time loans to the lowest\nrates since April.  11*11.\nSixty and ninety day loans were reduced to 2MtPer cent for six months,\nto 3 per -cent for over and to 3*\/j per\ncent for year loans.\nBonds wero strong, with a more\ngeneral demand. Total sales, par\nvalue, $3,122,000. United States COUpon\n\u25a0is declined -J& tier cent on call.\nIii AGAIN RISES\n6.22 AT MONTREAL\nLondon Price Also Goes Higher\u2014Now\nYork Quotation Is 5 Flat\u2014Copper at 19.\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, June 3.\u2014Lead again\nsoared today, selling at 0.22 at Montreal, a rlso of 12 sinco since Wednesday. The London price reached \u00a323\n8s 3d, against \u00a322 15s 'Wednesday.\nTho quotations:\nLead: At St. Louis, 4.9246; at New\nYork, 5; at Montreal, 11.22; at London,   \u00a323  8s  ltd.\n\u25a0Silver: At London, 23 5-10; at New\nYork,   49%.\nSpelter not quoted; at London, \u00a375.\nCopper, flWm; el-eatrulytit'l *19;( at\nLondon: Spot -copper, \u00a380 12s 6d;\nfutures,   \u00a381   12s tid.\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH  COLUMBIA.\nSHELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nTRAIL  BRAND   PIO   LEAD   AND   BLUESTONB.\nSullivan Drills Are Better\nthan ether drills beoauie they drill  fatter  and  cost  leas  to  operate\nand keep up.\nWRITE  FOR  BULLETINS 66-H   AND  66-L\nAGENTS.\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Limited\nWE CAST THE SPELL OF\nBARGAINS FOR FRIDAY\nThe Wpist Question Solved at $1.39\nThis big sale haa caused quite a flurry and little wonder. The shipment\nIs half sold but thero are dozens yet to choose from, in the latest stylos and\nprettiest embroidery. All low necks, pleated, trimmed and embroidered aa the\nstyle permits. \"\u2022\u25a0*, ^^nM\\W *******]\nREGULAR $2.25 AND $2.50\u2014TODAY $1.39\nFrench Kid Gloves at $1.00\nHard lo get, but our big stock on contract before the war still serves us out.\nReal French Kid,   Tans only. In all sizes.\nREGULAR   $1.26-TODAY $1*00\n45c Wash Goods for 19c\nSome of tho lovely Crepes and Mercerized Printed Muslins, In colors that\nar\u00a9 beyond reproach. Specially adapted for summer frocks and children's\ndresses.\nREGULAR   45c\u2014FOR |9(J\nKimona Crepes go at 33c\nThe  delightfully cool   Crepes   that   wash   so\nnicely.    The designs and colors are also beyond\nreproach.    Big   Oriental   designs,   yet   decidedly\ngood taste.\nREGULAR 40c AND 45c\u2014FOR 33C\nParasols Sell Much Lower\nSomo of our Imported oises with overchecl. body\nssisd msisslve borders to match, gold colored frames\nund cane handles.\nREGULAR $1.25 AND $1.35\u2014FOR 89C\nMen's Flannel Suits at $12.50\nThese arc priced away below regular values.\nPure Wool, in medium greys only. Half lined\ncoats and two-piece, with cuff on pants. No\nbetter suit for all summer wear, so cool and\ncomfy.\nWORTH  $18.00\u2014FOR\t\n$12.50\nSpecial in Men's Straw Hats\nBought direct from Luton In England, with tho\nnew high crown and smart black velvet band.\nOur famous special, sold in every ono of our\nbig stores,\nYOURS FOR .-$1.00\nheBudsotfs Bau Complin\nIMCeittlATlB    !\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\n\u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25bc \u2022\u2022 \u25a0VN\u00abl\u00bbOt.tTO\u00abM    COHHttKOftt*\nbut have revealed weak spots ln fielding and evidently still lack the hitting punch to carry them to the top.\nWANTS   MATCH   WITH\nDURNAN FOR TITLE\nAll hope of a match for the American professional sculling championship between Eddie Durnan of Toronto, the title holder, and Prank Hagey\nof Australia, has been abandoned, says\na Tarkmto excluuiige. Jimmy >Rice,\nthe former Toronto oarsman, who is\nnow coaching the Columbia crews, advises Durnan from New York that\nHagney does not mean business.\nOn the same mail that brought the\nforegoing information there came to\nDurnan a communication from Pay-\nson Davidson, formerly of Toronto,\nnow of St. Paul, Minn. Davidson is\na brother of Harley Davidson, the\nformer ibkycle rider and skater. He\nwants to know whether Durnan will\nconsider an offer to row an unnamed\noarsman for the American title. No\nparticulars are given but Durnan\nstated last night that he was ready to\nconsiderable any reasonable kind of\noffer. He had been training daily in\nIhe hope of a match with Hagney.\nlie will go to St. Paul or elsewhere\nif  the  terms  are satisfactory.\nWith no county cricket being played this summer and all athletic events\nabandoned during the war, English\nsport has reached the lowest ebb on\nrecord.\nJ. A. MacKinnon\nWholesale and Retail Tobaccos,\nProprietor   Trail's    Popular   Billiard\nand Pool Hall.\nTRAIL, B. C.\n8PORTING   NOTES.\nBilly Fitzgerald, famous St. Catharines home player, has arrived in Vancouver and will immediately turn out\nwith Con Jones' outfit.\nTho New Westminster Professional\n.Lacrosse club is getting anxious over\nthe result of the last game 'played at\nVancouver and is endeavoring to get\nLen Turnhull, a former member of\nthe world's champions, back into the\nfold.\nAll previous records of the Tacoma\n.speedway have been smashed by Dave\nLewis, who drove a Stutz at over !.R\nmiles an hour on one lap and for 10\nlaps broke the previous record In each\nwhirl.   Tetzlaff had tlie fastest time\non tho old track with* 83.7 miles an\nhour.\nFrank Barrleau, Vancouver boxer,\nadministered a severe defeat to Harry\nBishop of Tacoma. In a scheduled 20-\nround bout. Barrleau had his man\nstopped in tho third round when the\nreferee stepped in and put an end to\nthe fight.\nBenefit games for Hap Hogan's widow will be played throughout the Pacific Coast league on a date yet to ibo\nset, when the total receipts of all the\ngames will be turned over to the lato\nVeui'ce manager's wife.\n\"What kind of a fellow is he?\"\n\"Oh, he's tho kind of a fellow who\ngoes out for a walk with you and then\ntells  you   how  democratic   ho   is;   not\nafraid of being seen with anybody.\"\nAsk for\nNBC Beer\nXXX Porter\nNelson Brewing Co., Ltd.\nPhone 24\nEstablished 1893\nBox 732\nDaily News  Want   Ads.\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED AD.\nRATES.\nOne cent a word per insertion, four\ncents a word per week, fifteen cents a\nword per month when cash accompanies the order. Otherwise one cent\nper word per insertion straight. No\naccounts opened for want ads. Minimum charge 25 cents. Notices of births,\nmarriages, deaths and cards of thanks.\n50c for first insertion, 25c for each\nsubsequent insertion.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\u2014\nW. Parker, 809 Baker St.\n2 setters, samo mill, postmakers, woman cook, small camp.\t\nPOULTRY ANDJ^jfJ\u2122**^.\nPEDIGREE Berl' aire plgsT^f^aScs!\nHarry Anderson, Blrchbank.    (79l!)\nBABY CHICKS, duckltnga and hatching eggs; poultry and fruit form paying combination. Catalogue forwarded\non application. Charles Provan, Langley Fort, near Vancouver.\nPEDIGREE AYRSHIRE BULL, 2\nyear; shorthorn bull, 10 month flth\nfor service; Jersey bull, 4 months from\nbest dairy stock; Yorshlro \"boar, 10\nmonths, weight 300 lbs. To 'bo sold\ncheap or exchange for cows. Kennedy,\nHarrop. (865)\nFOR  SALE\u2014\"Well   bred' Fox  Terrier\npuppies.      Joo    Dcmi-chel,    Granite\nroad. (884)\nFOR SALE\u2014Onio team gray  horses;\nweight about 1400 lbs    Apply L Ott,\nLardo, B.C.     (877)\n\u2022LOJ\nLOST\u2014At Businessmen's picnic, pair\nof eyeglasses in case Finder please\nleave at Dally (News office.      , (ill)\nMESSENGER  SERVICE\nNELSl>NltfESST^\nand express.   Prompt and reliable.\nDay and night,   phono 242,\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS.\nRIDERS WANTED as agents for our\nhigh grade bicycles.   Write for particulars to Thos. Pllmley's Cycle Works\nVictoria, B.C. (630)\nTO EXCHANGE BY OWNER\u201480\nacres of .good self Irrigated land; has\nhouse and barn and partly improved.\nSprings and creek runs tlirough property; 4 miles from town; % mile\nfrom school; 26 miles east of Spokane,\nWash. Wanted in exchange a good\ntimber limit or other good land. Address H. P. Nobaeh, Fern wood,\nIdaho. (878)\nWOMAN for housework on ranch. Apply Mrs, W. A .Pease, Creston. (880)\nSITUATION WANTED\u2014Housekeeper,\ncook or otherwise; experienced; references.   Box 870, Dally News.     (879)\nEXPERIENCED MAN WANTS steady\nwork on ranch anywher      P.O. box\n300, Nelson. (887)\nTREES, PLANTS, ETC,\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS, 100, 70c.;\n1000, $5; currants, 10c; gooseberries\n15c; rhubarb, 10c; fruit trees, perennial\nflowers, poses, dahlias, pansles, etc.,\ncarriage prepaid. Catalog free. Charles\nProvan, Langley Fort, near Vancouver.\nPLUMBNG AND HEATING.\nE. K. STRACHAN, 120 Baker street,\nplumbers'  supplies,  estimates fr. ;\nwork guaranteed.    Phone 262.\nJFURS^\nG. GLASER, Expert Furrier, 811 Mill\nSt., Nelson, B.C., can tan your skins\nand fix your heads. Also undertakes\nthe making up of any skins Into muff\nand stoles, or any other garments. The\nrepairing and remodelling of furs to\nnewest shapes. Summer prices.     (217)\nFORSALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Ten  acre^'TruTf  ranch,\nfour acres cleared and planted;  185\nseven-year  old   trees,  water   for  all\npurposes. P.O. box 1G6, Nelsoa      (719)\nFOR   SALE\u201429   fino   young   pigs,   5\nweeks old, M each.   Apply Charles\nSlpo, Slocan City. (855)\nFOR SALE\u2014Boarding Iioiikc, 27 rooms,\nall full;   good  location near depots,\n$2500    cash,    $3000 terms.    Box   4fi5,\nRossland, B.C. (842)\nFOR SALE\u2014A few 10 acre blocks of\nfruit lands on tho banks of Kootenay lake and some larger tracts suitable for mixed farming. Will exchange\nfor clearing land. Special inducements\nto people who will immediately improve land. Opply Lardo postoffleo or\nseo mo personally at my ranch at\nJohnston's Landing, H. L. Lindsay.\n(868)\nFOR RENT.\nK.   W.   C.   BLOCK \u2014 Housekeepi-g\nsuites and rooms for rent.    Terms\nmoderate.   A. Macdonald & Co. (692)\nFURNISHED SUITES tor r-snt.    Apply Kerr Apartments. (686)\nFOR RENT  \u2014  Suites  of  furnished\nhousekeeping    rooms    la    Annable\nblock.   Enquire room 32 (690)\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished housekeeping\nrooms; coal and gas ranges. Enquire\nQueen Cigar store. (691)\nFOR RENT\u2014Cheap, furnished house,\nfine location.   Apply H. & M. Bird,\nBaker St., Nelson. (860)\nFURNISHED housekeeping suites with\n\u25a0bath.   Gordon rooms, (869)\nFOR    RENT  \u2014 Light    housekeeping\nrooms;   very re-ns-nnaMe;   fi]4 Josephine St, (890);\n PAGE SIX\n*m. iait? ii?\nPHIDAY, JUNE 4, 1918\nUnequalled for General U\u00bb.\nW, P. TIERNEY, General Salet Agent,\nNelson, B.C.\nCara suppliod to all railway points.\nFLAGS\nFor\nDecorating\nYour store, borne, summer cottage,\ntent or launch.\nALL SIZES AND PRICES.\nCanada Drug and\nBook Company\nTha Drug Store That ll. Different\nF. J. BOLES, Mgr.\nHall orderi filled promptly.\nPhona 81,\nShirts, Men's, Large\nand Roomy\nFor Exchange\nWo take socond.hand goods of all\nkindB and wo give crockery and\nchina plate, jugs, bowls, platters,\nvegetaulo dishes, etc., etc., also\nglassware of all descriptions.\nSeo our water aud lemonade sots.\nChina Hall\nA. W. MUNRO\nPhone L261 Box 583\nFor Sale\nA few ten acre tracts near Trail,\nB. C, the pay roll city. Government\nwagon roud leading into town, only\ntwo to three miles away. Exceedingly low prices, $15 to $35 per\nacre. Small cash payments\u2014$10\nmonthly, uo Interest. Write or call\nfor particulars.\nH. E. Dill\n17 K. W. C. Block.\nLORD SHGLTO DOUGLAS\nLOSES SON IN WAR\nIn lho London Times of April 23\nWe notice tho following, among others,\nin tko roll or honor of officers killed\nat tho front:\n\"Lieut. Bnrco F. S, Douglas of the\nSouth Stafford regiment, oldest son of\nLord Sholto Douglas, and nephew of\nthe Marquis of Queensbury, killed in\nPrance on April 15, aged is years, lie\njoined the speeiui reserve April 14, 11H4\nand w;ih given a commission) in tho\nWoutli StofCoril regiment, 'being pru-\naiKiled to'lieutenant un Feb. -1 lust.\"\nBuico spent his childhood days at\nCreston, when his parents lived hero\nand many of our citizens will remein-\nOu-r tho fine, bright littlo manly chap,\nand iearu with 'keen regret of his untimely end. Lord and Lady Douglas\naro In England and have the full sym\npathy of Creston in their loss,\u2014Creston Roviow,\nUNEMPLOYED  QUESTION   IS\nSTILL UNDER CONSIDERATION\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 3.\u2014It is understood\nthat no decision has been arrived at\n>ot hy the government hi regard to\nthe request of western mayors for the\nappointment of a commission to co-\noporalo with 'tlm provincial and municipal authorities in regard to unemployed conditions in Canada. It is said\ntliat the matter has i,een considered at\na couple of sittings uf the 'cabinet but\nno definite dcclsio has heen reached.\nAs has already been intimated, cooperation between tho departments\nmost vitally corjeernej wilh tho problem of unemployment mid the provln-\n\u25a0eial and municipal authorities is likely even if a commission is not appointed, lt is stated that In so far us\nthe present year is concerned ut least\ntho proposal to put unemployed on 40-\nacre farms did not meet with much\nfavor in official circles. They point\nout that, they could not be placed on\nprairie lauds this year in time to\ndo any breaking and they would have\nto bo maintained for practically two\nyears before they could raise a crop.\nEach\nALL   SIZES\n.50c\nTHE ARK\nDry Goods  *<nd   Complete  House\nFurnishings\u2014Cheapest In the City.\nJ. W. HOLMES, Mgr.\nPhone L395. 606 Vernon St\nNelson, B. C.\n[   Nelson News of the Day\nWALTHAM\nMilitary\nWrist Watch\nServiceable,   Strong,   Reliable.\nSpecial Dial.\nSilver Case.\n$10.00\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturing    Jeweler,     Watchmaker and Optician,\nOBJECT TO NEW SERVICE\nOF CANADIAN  PACIFIC\nKaslo People Accuse Company of Bad\nFaith\u2014Say Connections Aro\nNot Mado\nObjections lo the new schedule of\ntho Canadian Pacific railway are\nvoiced In the following article in tho\nKaslo Koolcnulan:\n\"Tho Canadian Pacific railway's\nsummer schedule went into effect on\nSunday and as far as the Kootenay\nlake service works out, there appears\nto be good ground for some of tho\nkicking that is being indulged In here.\n\"Some of the people who were most\nemphatically tn favor of seeing tho\nchange made arc tho biggest kicker.1\nnow that it has been effected.\n\"Tliey aro kicking chiefly because of\nalleged bad faith on the part of the\nCanadian Pacific railway in promising\nconnections by tho Kokanee with tin\nCrow bout east and west, said connec\ntions not having so far materialized to\nany great extent.\n\"On Monday morning the Kokanee\ncould have connected with the Kuska-\nnnuk had there been passengers ti\ntransfer, but there being none no con\nuectlon' was made. Connection, was\nmade at Proctor on Monday night,\nOn Tuesday morning the Kuskanook\nwas low down on tlie southern horizon when the Kokanee reached beyond\nPilot bay, and the latter boat had\npassengers who wished to catch the\nCrnw boat. On Tuesday night the\nKokanee passed Proctor north bound\nsome little time before the arrival of\nthe Kuskanook at that point.\n\"As it looks at present tho only\ndays one can be sure of malting the\nCrow line connection is on Monday\nand Friday, when, on account of tho\nKokanee making the Crawford bay\nrun, the two boats cannot very well\nhelp coming together, if they happen\ntp be reasonably within schedule\ntime.\nThis state uf affairs, if continued.\nlikely to prove must unsatisfactory, as not only were verbal ossur-\nnices given by the railway people\nthat through connections would be\nmade, but a written assurance was\ngiven as well, and it was upon such\nassurances that many here were led\nlo vote favorably upon the proposed\nchange, notwithstanding the fact that\notherwise it presents many incouvcnl\nences and disadvantages as compared\nto the schedule ln effect prior to thc\n30th.\n\"IL i.s evident that wo have been\nworked for !t sucker again,' stormed\none man on Tuesday night. 'Wo got\nuur eastern mail eight to 1- hours\nlater than before and we do not got\nwhat wo want iu tliis Crow line connection, wliich was promised.'\n'\"Yes,\" said another, 'when I desire\ntu go to Ainswortli or any point south\n1 must get. UP at G o'clock. I could\nforgive that if this connection was\nmade and could be depended on, but\nnow when I want to go to Spokane or\ncast, I must not only get up at C\no'clock but most likely will have to\nstay nearly ill hours in Proctor or\nNelson, and I would Just as soon stop\nin Gehenna.   It's a pretty raw deal.'\n\"Most of those hero who voted in\nfavor of thc change now wished that\nthey hadn't but regrets in this case\nare useless and any way 1C it affords\nthem such, there may perhaps be a\nlittle satisfaction in thc reflection that\nthe railway would most likely have\nmade the change any way, no mattor\nwhat the majority verdict bad been\/\nJ. Ames Stewart, Ex-Employee of City\npower Plant, at Front, Was\nSafe on May 14.\n..Although it-was reporied Unit ho\nhad been killed in action early in May,\na letter received by H. P. Thomas,\ncity electrical engineer, goes to show\nthat, James Stewart, au electrician,\nwho was employed in the city power\nplant at illonninglon falls, who went\nto Quehec ami Micro jointed Ilic rein-\nforcemeats of the Princess Pats, was\nwell, and uiiWOluided on May 14, on\nwhich day ho'wrote as follows:\n\"No doubt you have heard of tho\nstand our regiment* made, although\nthere aro only a few of us left to tell\nthe tale. We were holding a trench\nor about 100 yards frontage\/. The\nGermans began shelling us with all\nkinds of guns; in fact it fairly rained steel and lead. It is estimated by\nour artillery thai thoy must have fired\n70,000 shells oi our trenches. The explosions fairly lifted our trenehes out\nof the ground. Our poor regiment\nsuffered terribly as our roll call afterward showed, but thank God, they did\nnot get. our trench. The enemy figured that after they had finished shelling us1, wo were all gone, and got a big\nsurprise when they found a few alive\n\u2014enough to hold the trench.\n\"The Germans must, have suffered heavy losses, as we were firing at\nclose range, and they could not press\ntheir attack home. While the shelling lasted, a matter of a few hours,\nit was worse than all hell lot loose.\nI saw trees two fact in thickness cut\ndown like grass by the shells. I had\nmy rifle smashed, but there were plenty of dead's men's guns about. It was\nan awful experience. When a big\nshell buret near, one felt as though ho\nwere stunned1.\n\"We also had a taste of their gas,\nbut the wind favored us and it did not\ndo any damn ye. except to make our\neyes smart a little. The commander in\nchief sent a message or praise to tho\nregiment for the great stand we made.\nAt present we are a couple or miles\nfrom the firing'line. We* will have\nto reorganize I suppose, as we are\nnow not a company strong, and wo\nwill want, a Tew days to get our nerves\nback again.\n\"By.eryonc thought we were wiped\nout to a man, and It is a wonder we\nwero not. But, thank God, we kept tlie\nold flag flying and put another crimp\nin old 'Fritz.'\"\nThe writer is a soldier of much\nexperience. His record shows that he\nserved at Chiitral, India, in 181*5, with\ntho expedition Which was sent to relieve the British residents who were\nbesolgbd bv the natives in that city;\nand in l8f)9-92 with the King's Royal\nrlrios in the Poor war.\nNO TRACE FOUND\nOF MISSING\nCity and  Provincial  Pol'ce  Unable to\nLocals* Frank Curtis of  Nolson\n-Regiment.\nXo trace tea been .fosma of Frank\nCurtis, a member ut tho GUIs battalion\nwho disappeared from Xelson May 28.\nCurtis wlso tt-asia, veteran of tho Boer\nwar, was a brldgeman by li-side, In\nappearance bo was 10 years of ago,\nabout u feet 10 inebs-s iu height-, with\nbrown hair unci mustache. When hsst\nseen ho was -walking westward on the\nCanadian Pacific railway tracks Just\noutside Nelson. He was wearing a\nbi-own suit of clothes and a soft felt\nhat. It was feared that sos-io accident\nhas bofnilim him ;ss both the (provincial ansl city issslice have boon in touch\nwitli ovory ipolrit ln the district and\nhavo not succeeded in locating him.\nAny jiiiformatissii sss to his whereabouts should too forwarded to tiio po-\nUeo department in Kelson.\nFrank Crosby, a., old tinier of Nelson, but has for tbo ;past tour years\nbeen an employee of tbo Wlocan hospital, Now Denver, arrived In the city\nyesterday to enlist in lho 04th battalion.\n. fi. H. PLAYLE\n10 BE MED TODAY\nWife of Secretary of Nelson Board of\nTrade Lived in Nelson Fourtoen\nYears.\nAirs. G. IT. Playlo, wife ot the secretary ot tho N'elson board of trade, who\ndied on Wednesday had been a resident ot this city for the p:is*J 14 years,\nhaving icomo to Nelson with her husband from Kossland where they resided for three years.   Thoro are three\nhildron, Blaine, Hubert and Ruth, the\nIdcst 'being 12 years and the youngest\nfour years.\n'Tho Xuncral will tako jiluco- at 8\no'elock this mornimr from the residence\nin Falrvlow. Itev. R. Van Munster Will\n\u25a0preach the service.\n~    Beautiful Floors\nIf you have a hard wood floor in your house,\nby all means bring out tliat rich, subdued\nlustre, which is given only by\n\"The Wax with a Guarantee\"\nIvasy to apply, requires little cere, und economical.\nWill not show scratches or heel marks. Equally good\nas a finish ior iuruiturc and interior woodwork, '\nI OR SALE HY\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail Nelson. B. O.\n\"I don't seem to be able to raiso a\nmustache.\"\n\"What's the trouble?\"\n\"Ditnno, guess the plot is too much\nshaded by my nose.\"\nESS MEN HOLD\nwsapcNic\nOver 900 Go to Proctor from Nelson-\nResult of Morning and Afternoon\nSport  Events\nNelson was almost a deserted city\nyesterday. Over 900 N els unites journeyed, to Proctor for the business\nmen's picnic, wbich was a success from\nevery point of view and was tho largest outing ever held in the history of\ntho city. The pleasure seekers had\nkiwi I weather for such an outing. The\ncommittee in charge of the ti-ansporta\nHon, sports and oilier features kept\nthings well in hand throughput tho\nday and carried tin.' program through\nwithout a hitch. Tiie grounds at Proctor were in excellent condition and\nmaterially helped in making tho outing a success.\nTbe steamer Nasookin made two\nspecial trips up tho lake to accommodate the pi cU nickers and was taxed\nto capacity both times. On tho morning trip thc younger element was much\nIn evidence and in the afternoon tho\ncrowd was mainly composed of the\nNelson and Grand Forks companies of\nthe filth battalion, who were the guests\nof the merchants for the day.\nThe sport program for tho children\nwas carried out in tbe morning and\ntho main races and field events were\nrun off in the afternoon after the arrival of the boat. Many Nelson peoplo\nstayed over In the evening to attend\nthc dance, whicli was also arranged\nby the business men.\nThe results of the sports follow:\nGiHs under five\u2014Mary Keeler, first;\nnosle  Severn, second.\nBoys under five\u2014.lohn Slark, first;\nHarold llrown, second.\nOii-ls, 6 to 7\u2014Nancy Severu, first;\nKathleen Dack, second.\nBoys, 5 to 7\u2014Alex Smith, first;\nKenny  Chandler,  second.\nGirls, 7 to 10\u2014Ada Spencer, first;\nNelly Keir, second.\nBoys. 7 to JO\u2014Jack Chapman, first;\nBoh  Thompson,  second.\nGirls uuder 13\u2014Ethel Walton, first;\nIsabelle Keir, second.\nBoys under 13\u2014Wilfrid Marquis,\nfii'st: Jack Chapman, second.\nGirls under 10\u2014Frances Wolverton,\nfirst; Roberta Corlngton\", second.\nGirls Throe-I.eBgod race, under Ifi\u2014\nMinnie Sowell and'Stella Chandler,\nfirst; Bertha Swedburg and Jeanotte\nHannah, sccoiul.\nBoys' three-legged race, under 15\u2014\n\u25a0lack Chapman and Wilfrid Marquis,\nrirst; Dan Jones and A. T. Davis,\nsecond.\nBoys' pick-a-back race, under 12-\n(Vlldn Dill and .Tlmmy Notman, first.\nDavid Douglas and Fred Steel, second.\nBoys' wheelbarrow race, under 12\u2014\n.Tack Chapman nnd Wilfrid Marquis,\nfirst; Wilfrid Ogilvie and li. Boyce,\nsecond.\nBoys' crab race, under 15\u2014R, Boyce,\nfirst;   Allan Dill, second.\nGirls' sack race, under 12\u2014Stella\nChandler, first; Marjorie Severn, second.\nBall throwing, girls under 15\u2014Jean*\nettc Hannah.\nBall throwing, boys under 15\u2014Clifford McKinnon.\nSack race, boys under 11\u2014Bud\nThompson, first; Wilfrid Ogilvie,\nsecond.\nAfternoon  Events\nCommitteemen's sack raco\u2014T. P.\nStark, first; C. Appleyard, second\nMarried men's backward race\u2014C. H.\nStark, first; D. O. Thomas, second,\nFat women's race\u2014Mrs. i.. Rusk,\nfirst;  Mrs. A. McGlmmln, second.\nSingle men's backward race\u2014H.\nGibbs, first; I'. Bennett, second.\nSingle women's raco\u2014Miss B. Wade,\nfirst;  Miss F. Wood, second.\nRunning broad jump\u2014H. Gibbs,\nfirst; A. C. Speirs, second.\nMarried   womon's   race\u2014Mrs. T.\nBarber, first; Mrs. F. Goucher, second.\nMarried men's crab race\u20141. Speirs,\nfirst;   D. Dale, second.\nSoldiers' suck nice\u2014A. Oliver, first;\nT. K. McLeod, second.\nWomen's nail driving contest\u2014Mrs.\nC. \u00a3. Ogllvle, first; Mrs. A. McGinnis,\nsecond.\nPutting the shot\u2014F. ,1.' Sammoua,\nfirst; R. Harrison, second.\nMen's wheelbarrow race\u2014C. Stark\nand A. Spiers, first; W. McClary and\nI. Spiers, second.\nDriving race\u2014Miss F. Wood and A,\nSpencer, first; Miss B. Wade and H,\nFerguson, second.\nMen ranchers' race\u2014T. McLachlan,\nfirst;  1. Spiers, second.\nBandsmon's raco\u2014M. Nicholson,\nfirst; H. Mlddlelon, second.\nMarried men's lope race\u2014H. Bishop,\nfirst; I. Spiers, second.\nWomen's thread and needle race\u2014\nMiss Gladys Foole and H. Gibbs, first;\n\"Mrs. V. Chapman and V. Chapman,\nsecond.\nOfficers' race^-Uout. Smith, first;\nCapt. William Neilson, second.\nSpoon race\u2014Mrs. Gauche, first; Miss\nJ. Morrison, second.\nTug-of-war\u2014Won by businessmen's\nteam.\nHop, skip and jump\u2014J. A. Ferguson,\nfirst; C. Bennett, second.\nMarried men's race\u2014A. Bishop, first;\nR. Halllday, second.'\nBoy Scouts' race\u2014 VV. Milburn, first;\nC. Horswlll, second.\nBall throwing\u2014Mlsa Gladys Moore,\nfirst; Miss Gertie Amiable, second.\nC. E. Cairnes of Threo Forks is at\ntho Hume,\nCharles A. Waterman has roturned\nfrom a business visit to Cranbrook.\nM. MeLean, road superintendent for\nSlocan riding, arrived In Welson last\nnight and is at tho Hume.\nCharlea W. Busk returned from an\nextended trip through Africa and\nEgypt yesterday.   He Is at the Hume.\nA G Larson of Spokane arrived in\nNelson last night on miming business.\nHo is at the Strathcona.\nBruco White, who expects to recom-\nnionco operations shortly, at tho Noonday mine in tho Slocan, is in Nelson on\n\u25a0hia way to Spokane.  _.__\nVAPORITE\nWHO HEAPED THE CROP FROM YOUR GARDEN PATCH LAST\nYEAR, YOU OR THE CUT-WORMS?\nA SMALL SUM SPENT TOR VAPORITE WILL SAVE THIS\nYEAR'S CROP FOR YOU  j\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd.\nDaily News Want Ads Get Results!\nCream of\nWitch Hazel\nOsii* Cream of Witch Hazel is tho very fsssost preparation for Tan,\nSunburn, Freckles, etc. As a dainty Toilet Cream it is Up finost you ever\nused.   All kinds of Face Creams and Toilet Waters always in stock.\nWo have a specially good line of Tooth Brushes very cheap, also tho\nbest Tooth Pastes, Powders, etc.\nBE   SURE  YOU   GET  YOUR  SILVERWARE  COUPONS\nCity Drug & Stationery Co.\nSingle moss's race\u2014A.1 Spencer, first;\nT. McEac'slsais, second.\nA special race for a five-pound box\nuf chocolates, donated by Knowlor &\nMcCaulay, was won by Miss Ueulah\nWade. \u25a0   I\nTho smelting contest wilt bo compelled In Nelson.\nPrize winners may obtain their\nprizes by calling at Charles F. Mo-\nHardy's office.\nKOOTENAY AND BOUNDARY\nGROWS NEAR CRESTON\nLocal    Demand   Now   Being   Filled\u2014\nStrawberries   Marketed\u2014W.   B.\nMurdoch Killed, at Front\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nCRESTON, B, C, Jilne 3.\u2014For tho\nfirst time In the history of the valley\nlocal ranchers are now into dairying\nou a sufficiently large scale to supply\nthe locnl ilemand and leave a surplus\nfor export. This week S. A. Speers\nfilled an order for 200 pounds for a\nWyeliffe, It. C\u201e firm.\nThe local Indians arc \"at home\" today to several hundred visiting red\nmen from Windermere, Fort Steele,\nCranbrook and Bpnhera Ferry. Tho\nfestivities in connection with Corpus\nt'liiisti are thc drawing curd.\nS. 12. Bradley, who recently resigned\nus manager of the fruit growers union,\nleft on Sunday for Regina. accompanied by Mrs. Bradley. He wilt be on\nthe selling force of tho Okunugan\ngrowers in Saskatchewan.\nTho first shipment of 1015 strawberries went out on Wednesday tu\nPincher Creek, Alta. .T<jhn Spra.tt was\ntbe exporter. Tbe same day 10 crates\nof gooseberries were forwarded, a considerably larger quantity than was\nmoving a year ago.\nPr. i fendevson returned on Tuesday\nfrom Rochester, Minn.\nA. Furr this week disposed of liis\n10-aero ranch north ur town to A. .).\nColl is.\nBurn, in Creston, May U0, to Mr. and\nMrs, Samuel Scott, a sun.\nTbe Rod Cross women will hold n\ntag month during Juno and citizens\ngenerally are parting wilh a dime for\na strip of red, white and blue ribbon.\nTiio next tea Is al Mrs. M. Young's on\nJuno 8.\nMiss Williams of Cranbrook spent\nthe curly purt of Ihe week hero with\nMr. and airs. Bennett.\nTbo decision was against John\nBalnes, who sued .Tames Museroft for\n$L',500 dumages owing to a hay press\n-iccldciit last fall, in tbe high court at\nCranbrook last fall. Among those at\ntending as witnesses were T. Ross,\nCharles Bliss, T. Harris and F. Hurry\nR. M. Reid, .1. D. Spiers, l'crcy Trus-\ncult und A. Bindley were at Cranbrook.un Tuesday giving evidence in\nMr. Bindley's suit against the Canadian Pacific railway for $125 for tho\nloss of a pony killed uu the track here\nlust fall.\nMrs. Shorthouse and family arrived\nfrom Rossland ou Wednesday to Join\nMr. Shorthouse, who hus leased the\nHooper ranch.\nRev, F. L. Carpenter returned on\nSunday from attending- Methodist conference at Now Westminster. He will\nremain on the Creston circuit for another year*\nMr. and Mrs. l-'rank Hayes havo\nmoved Into Birch cottage.\nDr. Davis, who bus been looking\nafler Dr. Henderson's practise for the\npast two months, left on Wednesday\ntor Brockville, Out., for a short hull-\nduy beforo gulng overseas for military service.\nA cable was received the early part\nof the week from his parents in Edinburgh staling that tho news of the\ndeath uf William Burn Murdoch, killed\nIn action with the Princess Patricias\nou May 8, was correct. Tho authorities\nut Ottawa had previously advlsod they\nhad no word of his death. Tiie late\nMr. Murdoch hud resided here for five\nyears, being a partner in the Griffin\nranch with F. B. Callander.\nA SUIT SALE\nWe have some regard for the man who \"takes salt\"\nwith a good many things he reads in the papers.\nIn fact, we use quite a bit of that saving commodity\nin our own reading. Many things one reads in the\npapers, these days.cannot be swallowed whole without it\nOn the other hand, here's a plain out and out, fair\nand square offer:\u2014\nTWO-PIECE\n.    SUITS\nRegular   Values\n$10.00 to $12.50\nTHREE-PIECE\nSUITS\nRegular   Values\n$15.00  to $18.00\n$14.50\nTHREE-PIECE\nSUITS\nRegular   Values\n$20.00  to $25.00\n$9.75\nTWO-PIECE\nSUITS\nRegular  Values\n$13.00 to $15.00\n$12.50\nTHREE-PIECE\nSUITS\nRegular   Values\n$18.00 and $20.00\n$18.50\nTHREE-PIECE\nSUITS\nRegular  Values\n$25.00 to $32.50\nGET   IN   TODAY\nt   \t\nEmory & Walley\nKOOTENAY AND BOUNDARY.\nTOT FOID AW\nCoal Creek Boy Lo6t for Hours\u2014Fer.\nnie   Corps  Overstrcngth,   But\nEnlistment  Continues.\nStarland Theatre\nPerformances 7 to 10:15 p.m. every\nevening.   Saturday evening\n7 -to 10:30 p.m.\nBig Three*Reel Feature,\n\"THE  DAUGHTER   OF   THE\nTRIBE.\"\n\"SLOW  BUT SURE.*'\nFOR SALE\nBLOCK OF LAND, comprising about 21 City Lots, on car line,\nbounded by Gore and Innes\u2014Hall and Hendryx Streets. Recently\ncleared, plowed, fenced and is ready fer seeding. Soil fine, rich\nloam,   Beautiful site for suburban home,   Terms easy.\nCharles F. McHardy\nPHONE    136 NELSON,   B.C. '    GREEN   BLOCK\nGATHER STRAWBERRIES IN\nPEND D'OREILLE VALLEY\n(Special to Tho Dally Newa.)\nWANETA, 1). C.s June 3.\u2014Hluo\nstrawberries are being gathered In the\nl'elld d'Orolllo valley. Sp early Is the\nseason and so good the crop that already haymaking has commonced.\nThe average.temperatures for May\nwere: Maximum, 62* degrees: minimum,\n*1 degrees; the warmest day was May\nS, with 78 degrees, and tho coldest\nnight was May lrwlth 32 degrees: 1%\nisschos of rain fell: there was a. slight\nhts-ihtturm .of 15 minuti-s duration, un\ntoy .US,   '\n(Special lu The Dally News.)\nFERNIE, II. C, Juno 3.\u2014The recruits fo tin.' filth battalion were called upon to perform some active servico work on Wednesday imornins.\nwhen they were detailed as a search\nparty -lo locate the L'-ycur-old son ot\nWilliam Corlott ef Coal (ircck, who\nhad si rayed from Ills homo on Tuesday afternoon about. 3 o'clock, and\nalthough search paries had worked dll-\n[gently all Tuesday uigb.t the tot iiad\nnut boen |loc:i.-as*d ealrly WodncEday\nmorning when tlie battalion turned\n-out. It was immediately despatched\nlu Coal crock and commencing at a\npoint about one mile from the cily\nlho rirst detachment was detailed lo\nsearch the woods along -the bank of\nCoal creek. This method was follow\ncd all tho wuy up to tho town, squads\nbeing dispatched at regular Intervals.\nUpon arrival ut Coal creek the announcement tv\/as Iroceiived; that the\nlittlo fellow bad been found peacefully\nsleeping at the mouth of No. 0 mine,\nwhich Is ono of the mines at that\ncamp that has not been in operation\nfor -some considerable time, and apparently was nono -the worse for his\nnight's exposure.\nTho battalion hero now has its full\ncomplement of men, and- in fact Is\nover strength, but It has -been decided by -tho authorities that all those\nwho havo enlisted since tho 100 originally called for, shall be kept on a\nseparate list and not finally accepted\nuntil authorised to continue recruiting,\nand to this end -t telegram was despatched to beadnuarlcrs rcciuostlng\nInstructions with regard to the additional recruits. In the meantime, however, every ono coming forward desiring to enlist is being received and\nexamined and tho recruiting office\nstaff continues to work as energetically as thoy have ever since the\noffico opened here, ns It is expected\nthat thore will still bo room in the\nranks for all who are desirous of entering them.\nTho following am particulars of the\nlast eight men wbo make up the original complement of 100:.\nJohn Albert Qulnlan, St. John, N.\nB.; railroad engineer, Fornle; Mrs.\nM. A. Qulnlan, wife, Wentworth, Cumberland; private Kootenay rifles and\nsergeant 107th East Kootenay regiment.\nAlexander Thompson, Mlddlesbors\nough, Scotland, -conl miner, Beaver\nmines, Alta.; David Muir, brother-in-\nlaw, Beaver mines.\nAnthony Kwiatkowski, Kursay, Kiib-\n\u25a0dan Poins-i, wsmm, Fsratei. misj\n\"TWO PALS AND A GAL.\"\nTOO LATE TO CLA88IPY.\nW\/VXTED\u2014Second haJid modern Underwood  typewriter.    Apply today, |\ni-ooisi iS Hume.  (802) j\nliOKN\u2014Corner ssf (Stanley and Hob-\nson streets', tu the wlfo uf E. O. Mc-.l\nNoll'ly, n son, Juno 3. _<j>2-\u00bbT\n.Maria Kwiatkowski, mother, Karsay.j\naarflold Raymond Mitchell, Neepa-\nwa, Man.;  bank clerk, Ferule; Pcterl\nMitchell, Nocpawa, Man., father; 107th J\nEast Kootenay regiment.\nHenry Mundny, Halifax, Nova Seo-1\ntia: woodsman; Fernie, B. C. I\nThomas Andrew Ingram, Hamilton, j\nOut., farmer;  William Alexander ln-(\nam, futher, Fernie. .\nNapoleon Csugnon, Edmonton; fnrml\nlaborer. Mrs. Nancy Gagnon, nioth-l\nor, Edmonton. Four yours Alberta, |\ndragoons, Edmonton.\nAlexander     Gardner,     Favershani, I\nKent, England; bookseller and station-f\nor, Calgary, Alta.;  Mrs. Sarah Gard.\nncr, mother,  Irvlnvllle  P. 0., Islay.j\nAlta.\nDOUBLE WEDDING TAKES\nPLACE AT NAKUSP 1\n(Special to Tho Daily Nows.)\nNAKUSP, 11. C, Juno 3i\u2014Tho inar-*l\nrlages took placo Wednesday at thel\nProsbyterlan church of Harry Leslie I\nsMIIIer and Miss Hcrmlno F. FuncKel\nund John Kerr and Miss Margarotl\nWallace, F.cv. W. G. DIttke officiating.!\nTho ohurch was prottily decorated fori\nthe occasion, tho two brides looked!\ncharming in becoming dresBes. Thel\nchoir was In attendance. Tho church!\nwas crowded with an overflow of close!\nfriends of tho parties extending to thel\nsidewalk. The grooms aro employees!\non the Dominion government dredge!\nSheldrake. Miss Funckc, a nativo ofl\nHolland, has resided at Nakusp fori\nsoven years, Miss Wallace, a nativo of!\nScotland, having also resided horo fori\nsomo time. Miss Wallace Is a slster|\nof Mrs. J. Ions of Graham's lauding,\nT. H. and Mrs. Thompson of Newl\nYork, .who havo been visiting W. J.l\nund Mrs. Wagstaff, loft town onl\nThursday. Mr. Thompson Is a brother!\nof Mrs. Wagstaff and is a broker in]\nNow York.\nMrs. Culnan of Vancouver Is vlsitlng|\nher brother, Hov. W. Tt. Bridge.\n3. Uoupoll of Fernio In'visiting hls|\nntottjei fteic,  ____________\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"}]}}