{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0386875":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"4fc3feb2-1674-4415-b298-3e75cb444c79","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":"2019-12-03","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1916-06-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0386875\/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":" \u2022\/-\n523\n1    Th\u00bb Daily Nawa has tha largest oir-\nfeulatlon  of  any  dally  newspaper  in\nCanada In proportion to the population\nof it* hem* town.   \t\n>Tha only paper in the interiar of\nBritish Columbia carrying tha full \u2022\nservice of the Western Associated Presa\nover its own leased wire. i\nVOL. 15   No. 45\nNELSON, B. 0., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 7, 1916\nSOc. PER MONTH\nKITCHENER AND STAFF ON BRITISH CRUISER SUNK OFF ORKNEYS\nMOM\n|New German Statement Is\nDenied by Admiralty\niaonificent\nOEWARSP\nGHT\nE TOLD\nfent to Rescue of Warrior\nand Beat Off Whole\nGerman Fleet\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nUONDON,   Juno  C\u2014The  admiralty\nEmade the following announcement tonight:\n\"A Berlin official statemont, signed\nI Fleet Commander, has been issued in\nwhich t'he loss of the \"Warsplte, Royal,\nBirmingham and the Acasta iu the action of May 31 is claimed on tho evidence of British sailors picked up by\n-erman ships. This is false. The\n(complete list of British losses has been\n(made public.\"\nGerman People Depressed.\nAccording  to telegrams\" from  Hol-\nIand, a spell of depression followed tho\nfirst enthusiasm in Germany over the\nnaval battle. The continued official\nsilence since the initial announcement,\nthe closing of Wilhelmshaven and Vice\nAdmiral Scheer's guarded reply to the\nDuke of Mecklenburg's congratulations\nare cited among' the causes of this\nIchange, while it is also suggested that\nTthe German public realizes that the\n(blockade is unbroken.\n[ The AmKt'nrd*v1** \/*\u2022'*\u2022 rm-ipondci kipt\u25a0\nChronicle says the battlo did not raise\nIthe spirits of tho people. Tho rejoicing\njof the newspapers, he says, do not re\n[fleet the popular feeling.\nHew the Warspite Fought,\n\u25a0PORTSMOUTH:, June fi,\u2014The man\nJner In which the Warsplte fought tho\nIwhole German 'battle fleet and beat\nIfthem when it went to the rescue of tho\nVarrlor, provides one of tho most\n[thrilling battle stories in the annals\npf sea warfare.\nQuite Qielpless lay the Warrior, en\nIjines disabled, its magazine -under wa\n|ter and its crew unable to get ammunition,\n.. Convinced that they would soon go\nI'.lie way of their companion ships which\nIliad been sunk, tho Warrior's men\nIpalmly awaited tho end.\nSuddenly on the horizon they saw a\nhuge ship coming along at a tremendous pace. It was tho fast and powerful Warspite, sister to the Queen\nElizabeth, which Admiral Jellicoe,\nearning of the Warrior's peril, had\ndent ahead of tho grand fleet to succor\nIt.\nOn came the great battleship, with\niihe muzzles of its 15-inch guns trained\nm the -Germans. At full speed it ar-\n\u25a0ogantly swept into the fray. The\nWarrior's men greeted the Warsplte\nwith ringing cheers. They, were ans\nivered from the battleship which threw\nitseie botween the helpless Warrior and\n.ho German vessels which wero battering Its silent hull.\ni Crash went a salvo from tho War-\niplte's 15-inch .'batteries. A German\n-mlp got the fuil force of It and sank,\nPutting its helm over tho Warsplte\nplrcled around the Warrior, drawing\nio itself all t'he fire of the ships and\nreplying with vigor and great effect.\nA shell -damaged its steering gear\n(ut still the Warsplte held on, fighting\ningle-handed the German battleships.\nFour times the Warsplte circled the\nVarrlor in this way, all tbe time punishing tho Germans terribly.\n\"Come. 'bade,  you    are   sacrificing\nYourself,1' signaled Admiral Beatty to\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nOutlines Lloyd George's Proposal for\nIrish Settlement With Parliament\nat   Dublin\u2014Objections  Heard\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBELFAST,    June    6.\u2014Sir   Edward\nCarson, the Unionist leader, addressed 5000 Ulstermen here today on tho\nproposed terms of the Irish settlement.\nMembers of the.press wero not admitted to the meeting.\nSir Edward outlined the main proposals contained In the plan of David\nLloyd George. The main proposal, he\nexplained, was for the establishment\nof a parliament in Dublin, with the\nexclusion from its authority of Antrim, Armagh, Down, Londonderry\nand Fermanagh, including the cities\nof Belfast and Londonderry.\nProtests from delegates from the\ncounties of Cavan, Donegal and Mon-\naghan were heard at the meeting.\nNo decision was reached, however,\nand lt was agreed that the Unionists\nin the three counties last named\nshould j be consulted during the next\nfew days.\nThe meeting then adjourned until\nMonday. According to those present\nan earnest desire was shown at the\nconference to act with moderation.\nThe opinion was expressed that if the\nthree counties accept the proposal an\nagreement Is certain.\nBULL MOOSEIIo WANT\nMl BUI ROOSEVELT\nEntire   L*ack  of  Cohesive   Leadership\nAmong  Republicans If? feature\nof Big Chicago'Convention\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, June 6.\u2014The Republican\nand \u25a0 the Progressive parties and the\nNational conventions all assemble tomorrow without any indication that\nthe leaders have found the common\nground on which they hoped to estab\nlish unity. A half-dozen names, any\none of which is acceptable to tho Republicans, have been rejected by tlie\nProgressives, who have proposed practically no name but Col. Roosevelt,\nEverything indicates that they arc far\napart.\nNot since the party was born has\nthere been such a lack of cohesive\nleadership among the Republicans and\ntbe oldest convention observers de\nclare they have never seen such i\ngeneral lack of enthusiasm.\nThe supporters of Hughes have been\ncounting noses. Speaking of thorn,\nFrank II. Hitchcock estimated the\njustice would receive about 300 votes\non the first ballot. He said reports\nhad been encouraging and predicted\nthat the Hughes vote would grow\nrapidly after the preliminary balloting.\nTeddy Silent\nNEW YORK, June C\u2014Theodore\nRoosevelt, when informed here today\nthat there were persistent reports current In Chicago that he liad telephoned there that he would head the\nProgressive ticket if Justice Hughes\nshould be named by tho Republicans,\nand also that he\" had declared against\nHughes, declined to make any comment.\nHe characterized the report as\n\"among 30,000 which would be silliness for me to attempt to answer.\"\nAUSTRIAN OFFENSIVE\nHAS COME TO HALT\nItalians  Have   Repulsed   Vicious  At-\ntaeks on Front Between Posina\nand Astico 'Rivers.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Juno C\u2014The Austrians\nare still being held by t\/he Italian's from\nfurther advances and with heavy losses\nsays Rome.\nIn the Vallarsa and Pasublo sectors\nand on the front between tho Posina\nand Astico rivers, vicious Austrian attacks have been put down, and tho Italians have even gained some ground\nagainst the Austrians on tho western\nslopes of Mount Ccglno,\nItalian Statement\nROME, June 6.\u2014The following official statement was Issued tonight:\n\"In the Adlge valley Sunday night\nwc repulsed a surprise attack, during\na snowstorm, on our positions In the\nupper Vallarsa and Pasublo sectors,\nYesterday, after intense artillery pro-\n\u25a0parations, enemy columns advanced to\nattack Conl Zugna, but were thrown\nback in disorder under our steady and\neffective fire.\n\"On the front of Posina-Astlco Sun\nday night during a storm, the enemy\nagain  launched  great  masses  of in\nfantry, supported by violent fire from\nbatteries of all  calibres, against our\npositions  between  Monti    Glove   and\nMonte Brazone.    The swift Intervention of our artillery and the steadiness\nof our infantry   succeeded   in   com\npletcly   repulsing   the   attack,   with\nheavy enemy losses.   The same night,\nby a fortunate counter-attack, we succeeded In gaining ground on the west-\nem slopes of Monte Conglo.\n\"On the Asiago plateau Sunday\nnight and Monday morning, the enemy\nmaintained its 'violent artillery and\nmachine gun fire on our positions\nalong the Campo Mulo valley, and in\nthe afternoon made persistent attacks\nagainst our positions, which were all\nvigorously repulsed.\n\"On the upper Cored vole an enemy\ncolumn on the march from Pralongla\ntoward Slef was dispersed by the ac-.\ncurate fire of one of our batteries.\n'in the Pusterla valley we bombarded with heavy guns the Toblach\nand Innlchen railway statlom.\n\"On the Isonzo our% detachments\ncontinue their raids on the enemy\nlines.\n\"Enemy airmen threw bombs on Ala\nand Herna. Threo persons were\nwounded and some material damage\nwas done.\"\nAT GOSDEN TRIAL\nMacDonald' Borrowed $50\nEaster Tuesday\nTES\nI\nMONY LINKS HIM\nH PLUGGING PLOT\nBOUND FOR RUSSIA\nRUSSIAN DRIVE IS\nMAJOR HAMILTON  GAULT\nSUCCUMBS TO  WOUNDS\n(By Dally News LraiBed Wire.)\nLONDON, June 6.\u2014Major Hamilton Gault, reported in Monday's\ncasualty list wounded, died today.\nHe waa shot in both legs,\nVSE INQUIRY NEAR END;\nCOL. MACKIE IS WITNESS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 6.\u2014With the possible exception that Miss Mabel Ed-\nllyards, private secretary to Col. J. W.\nflklllson, may toe recalled, the Meredith-\npuff inquiry into the fuse contracts\niplosed\" this afternoon, In so far as the\nixamination of the witnesses is con-\nitemed.\nThe summing of the counsel will\n'Lommence tomorrow morning and this\nJjrobably will occupy two days.\nCol. Mackie,   officer   commanding,\n^presenting   the   Canadian   Car   &\nUfoundry    company    at   tho   testing\nround, Petawawa, was a witness to-\nlay.\nCol, Mackie secured the Russian or-\n{lor for 5,000,000 shells complete. He\nmped to get a small commission. A\nimali fraction of l per cent would -be\nills reward.\nCol. Mackie's ovldence showed that\n.hero was a sharp difference of opin\non between Mr. Ohmer and the Can\n|i,da Car company as to responsibility\nlor the testing of tho fuses supplied\nfinder contract.\nMr. Ohmer said that all he was re-\nnuired to do was to build the compo\nijufift-i saftei Afifiorilng ia specification^\nand tho Canada Car company was responsible aftor that.\nCol. Mackie disagreed with that and\ntho Canada Car company disagreed\nwith that.\n\"The sub-contractors are responsible\nfor tho functioning of each part of the\nfuse, and the Canada Car company\nwill not accopt the fuse until they\npass both Russian and Canadian tests,\"\n\"Gon, Bertram said ho had never\nhad any conversation with Mr. Harris referring to Col. Allison as \"foxy\"\nas has been testified.\nAs to his refusal to give a contract\nto the Russell Motor Car company the\ngeneral said that ho was a particular\nfriend of Mr, Harris and was ahxldus\nto give him a contract, hut In view\nof the urgency of the matter ho could\nnot do so on tho plans he had submitted.\n\"Was the prcssuro from Con. Hughos\nto let these contracts to the American\nAmmunition company and the International company?\"\n\"No; he never mentioned It in any\nshape or form. We had no interference from ' the government. It knew\ni&rotfmwft fin \u00a3fl<fi XXttii\nReported   They   Have   Already   Made\nPrisoners of 480 Officers and\n'25,000 Men Besides Guns.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON. June 6.-\u2014From the Pripet\nriver southward to the Rumanian\nfrontier, the Russians, according to\nPetrograd, are continuing to develop\ntheir successes against the Germans\nand Austrians. In the fights along this\nfront of about 350 miles tbe Russians\nhave already made prisoners of -180 officers and more than 25,000 men and\ncaptured 27 guns and more than C00\nmachine guns.\nlu this offensive, which is -believed\nto be a carefully coordinated movement, the Russians are said to havo a\nplentiful supply of ammunition and\nmen and with tho roads now in good\ncondition their movemonts aro expeeted\nto develop shortly.\nThe number of troops facing tho\nRussians is reported to aggregate\nabout 000,000 men.\nDrive Progressing\nPETROGRAD, June 6.\u2014The Russians continue to develop the successes won by their newly organized\noffensive. It is reported that up to\ntiio present time they have captured\n25,000 men, 17 cannon and 16 machine\nguns.\nIt Is estimated that on their 350-\nmlle battle front, from tlie Pripet\nmarshes to the Rumanian frontier,\nthe Russians are opposed by forces\nnumbering between 600,000 and 600,000\nmen.\nOfficial Statement\nThe war office statoment Issuod to\nnight says:\n\"In the region of Dvinsk and north\nof the Ponleswesh railway a German\noffensive was repulsed by our fire.\nSouth of Smorgen Sunday night tho\nGermans attempted to capture ono of\nour advanced trenches but our ma\nchine gun fire and a counter-attack\ncompelled them to retire to their own\ntrenches.\nSouth of Krevo Monday, the Germans, after artillery, preparations, attempted an offensive against our advanced elements near the village of\nKotchansky, but were ropulsed by our\nreserves.\n\"On the front from tho Prlpot river\nto tho Rumanian frontier we continue\nto develop successes. Thus far wo\nhave taken as prisoners 480 officers\nand more than 25,000 men, and captured 27 guns and more than 50 machine guns.\"\nAsserted He Meant to Back\nCrooked Voting at\nNew Election\n(Bv Staff Correspondent.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, June 6.\u2014Not only\ndid M. A. Macdonald attempt to get\nan advance on his sessional allowance\nEaster Tuesday, but he actually borrowed $50 on that day, according -to\nevidence given at the Gosden perjury\ntrial today. Fifty dollars is the\namount Gosden says Macdonald paid\nhim Easter Tuesday night for political\nwork in the Vancouver byeleetion.\nToday's evidence regarding the\nfruitless attempt to raise money in\none quarter and the success in securing In another quarter tbe amount\nGosden says tbe \"Liberal member paid\nhim created a sensation in court.\nGosden wont on tbe stand and in addition to repeating bis story of the\npayment by Macdonald divulged the\ninteresting Information that Liberal\nSecretary Scott had kept him employed after the election in preparing for\nplugging operations on a provincial\nscale in the forthcoming general election and that Macdonald, as his share\nof the expense, had agreed to devote\nhis entire sessional allowance to tho\nundertaking.   - * \u25a0 \u25a0\nThe \"investigation trouble,\" he said,\nbrought these plans to an end.\nNew Details of Plugging\nGosden gave further details of tlie\namount of money he was paid by Scott\nto buy votes and secure piuggers for\nMacdonald. Tlie piuggers who received this money were not from Seattle,\nbut were strangers in Vancouver.\nThey belonged to an organization of\nwhicli Gosden is a member. Counsel\ndid not bring out the organization's\nname.\nIn all Gosden said he and Phil Rob\nertson received $1500 for this and\nother election work in addition to\ntheir salaries, whieh wero paid up to\nelection day. He personally had $900\non election, eve and spent all of it in\nbuying votes at tho Liberal secretary's\ndirection except about $40, which he\npocketed.\nThis was the first mention of tin\noperation of big gangs of piuggers\noutside of the Seattle crowds and\nPeter Annance's gang, but it Is taken\nas explaining bow somo more of the\n5000 pluggors cards prepared by\nScott's organization were used.\nW. K. Courtney, law clerk of tlie\nlegislature, said Macdonald came\nhim Easter Tuesday after the house\nrose and asked for an advance on liis\nsessional Indemnity. Witness could\nnot grant the request.\nMiss A, M. Allen, cashier at the Empress, said she loaned Macdonald $50\nEaster Tuesday. He gave an I.'O. U\nand repaid It with $100 tiio next day\nthe other $50 going to his general account. She showed the cash book to\nprove it. The payment was made, she\nsaid, about 2 o'clock Easter Tuesday.\nThe book showed, however, the entry\nwas the last of the day,\nGosden told of preparing lists of\nvoters and piuggers for Liberal Secretary Scott and explained that the $135\nhe and Phil Robertson claimed from\nM. A. Macdonald after Scott had not\nmade payment consisted of wages\noverdue and $100 bonus each hud beon\npromised if the Liberal candidate were\nelected. Macdonald, when Anderson\ncaused secret inquiry by some of the\nLiberals, told Gosden and Robertson\nthat the trouble was not his fault and\nthat be did not deslro any muckraking, Gosden stated.\nScott had told them R. W. Eyre,\nVancouver Liberal lawyer, would pay\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nURUGUAY SENDING 8HIP TO\nRESCUE SHACKLETON PARTY\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nMONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, June\n6.\u2014The Uruguay government will\ndispatch the small steamer In-\nstitutopesoa to the rescue of the\nShackleton party. The steamship\nwill leave Thursday.\nUi AT VERDUN\nMost Stunning Blow Great Britain Has Received Since\nWar Began is Contained in Brief Message\nSent by Admiral Jellicoe\nED WHILE HEAVY SEAS\n-WAS SEEN FROM SHORE\nVaux-Damloup   Sector   Is   Centre   of\nViolent Artillery Action\u2014Infantry\nStaying  in Trenches.\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\nLONDON, June 6.\u2014Since the repulse\nof two \u25a0 German Infantry attacks be\ntween Fort Vaux and Damloup Mon\nday night, tho fighting in the Verdun\nregion has again developed Into artillery duels, with th Vaux-Damloup\nsector the centre of the greatest violence. No material gains for either\nside are reported.\nParis Statement.\nPARIS, June 6.\u2014The official statement issued by the war office tonight\nreads:\nOn tlie front north of Verdun no\ninfantry action was reported during\nthe course of the day. The artillery\nstruggle, however, continued with undiminished violence in the region of\nVaux and Damloup. Major Raynal.\nwlii defended Fort Vaux with indefatigable energy, has been made commander of the Legion of Honor.\"\nBelgian Statement.\n\"No reciprocal bombardment occurred in tho region of Purvis and Rams-\ncap pell u.\"\nBerlin Statement.\nBERLIN, June fl.\u2014The following official statement was issued today:\n\"On the eastern bank of the Mouse a\nheavy and continued artillery preparation of our East Prussians on Fu-\nmln ridge wore four times attacked\nduring the night without the slightest\nsuccess,\n\"Tho enomy suffered especially\nheavy losses from our combined artillery curtain, machine gun and Infantry\nfire. Otherwise tho situation is unci urn ged.\nSearch of Scene Where Ship Went Down by Destroyers\nand Patrol Boats Proves inutile-Several\nBodies found on Beach\n83 TORNADO VICTIMS\nIN MIDDLE STATES\nHundreds Injured and Enormous Property  Loss Caused  Over Wide\nSection of Country.\n(By Daily Nows Leased Wire.)\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., June 0,\u2014Elgthy\nthree lives were lost, hundreds of persons injured and enormous property\ndamage was done through a large section of Arkansas, In Mississippi, Illinois\nand Missouri last night by a tor\nuado, according to Incomplete reports\nreceived today, with parts of the storm\nbelt, especially in Arkansas, still to\nbe heard from. In complete tabulations\nhave the following casualties:\nArkansas, 57 dead; Mississippi, 11\ndead; Illinois, 1 dead; Missouri, 14\ndead.\nTho casualties in Mississippi were\nreported from Vicksburg and Jackson;\nin Missouri from Dexter. Moore house\nand Stoddard; In Illinois from Mc-\nClure and iu Arkansas from many\nsmall towns,\nCANADIAN  DROWNED IN\nNORTH SEA BATTUE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 6.\u2014A former officer\nof the Canadian navy, Llout. do Quot-\ntcvllle, wont down in tho North sea\n'fight. He was a native of the Isie\nof Jersey, who came to Vanada with\nthe Niobe, but left when the war broke\nout, enlisting at Ottawa. Lieut, de\nQucttevlllo was on the Indefatigable.\n(By Daily News Lcasod Wire.)\nLONDON, .June 6\u2014Tlie news that\nEarl Kitchener, secretary of state for\nwar, and his staff, who were proceeding to Russia aboard the cruiser\nHampshire, were lost off the Orkney\nIslands last night, was the most stunning blow Great Britain has received\nsince the war began.\nThis is the second shock the country has suffered within -a week. The\nother was when the newspapers appeared Friday evening with the first\ninformation of the naval battle in tho\nNorth sea in the form of a list of ships\nlost, with virtually no intimation that\nthere was any compensation in tho\nway of enemy losses.\nTho bulletin telling of the death of\nEarl Kitchener gave the country an\neven greater shock. Kitchener was the\none outstanding personality whom the\npeople talked of and believed In as a\nman,-- notwithstanding the newspaper\nattacks, which at a former period of\nthe war threatened to undermine his\npopularity, and the public confidence\nin him.\nA telegram from Admiral Sir John\nJellicoe, commander of the fleet, giving the bare facts, was received at\nthe admiralty about li o'clock in the\nmorning.\nThe first official announcement was\nissued at about 1:30 in the afternoon. }\nSuch news, however, cannot be kept\nsecret even for an hour. Before noon\nrumors were spreading and tho telephones in the newspaper offices were\nbusy with inquiries as tu whether this\n\u2014one of the many reports circulated\nin these days of tension\u2014had any\nfoundation. They were lold there was\nnothing tn It. Admiral Jelllcoe's report to the admiralty was as follows:\nJelllcoe's Report.\n\"I have to report with deep regret\nthat his majesty's ship Hampshire,\nCapt. Herbert J. Savllle, R. N\u201e with\nLord Kitchener and his staff on board,\nwas sunk last night at about 8 p. m. to\nthe west of the Orkneys cither by a\nmine or a torpedo. Four boats were\nseen, toy observers on shore to leave\ntho ship. The wind was blowing north-\nwost and heavy seas were running. Pa.\ntrol vessels and destroyers at once\nproceeded to tiie spot and a party was\nsent along the coast to search. Several\nbodies and capsized boats have beon\nI'ound up to the present. As tho whole\nhas been searched from the seaward I\ngreatly fear that there is little hope of\nthere being any survivors. No report\nhas yet been received from tho search\nparty on shore. II. M. S. Hampshire\nwas on her way to Russia.\"\nWhen the official announcement finally was Issued the fact bad spread\nabout London some time before the\nnewspapers got on the street. There\nwas a large crowd about the stock exchange which required police reserves\nto deal with. The police told everyone\nto move on; that there was no truth in\ntho report.\nAt the samo time another  mass  of\nCREWE TO TAKE iRUNCIMAN'S\nPLACE AT CONFERENCE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Juno 7.\u2014It Is officially\nannounced that the Marquis of Crowe\nlord president of the council, will attend the coming economic conference\nin, Paris, In place of Walter Runclman,\npresident of tho board of trade, who is\nMa. .     __ _... \t\nKITCHENER\nof\nWeep,     waves\nNobler clay\nWas   ne'er   to   nobler grave\nconsigned;\nThe wild waves weep  with us\ntoday\nWho mourn a nation's master\nmind.\nWc hoped  an  honored ago for\nhim.\nAnd, ashes laid with England's\ngreat;\nAnd   rapturous   music   and  the\ndim\nDeop hush that veils our tomb\nof State.\nBut this is better. Let him sleep\n(By Robert J. C. Stead.)\nEngland'.\nWhere   sleep   the   mon   who\nmade us free.\nFor England's  heart is in  tho\ndeep\nAnd England's   glory   is   tho\nsea.\nOhe only vow above his bier;\nOne only oath beside his bed;\nWc swear our flag shall shield\nhim hero\nUntil the sea glvos us its dead.\nLeap, waves of England! Boastful be!\nAnd-   fling   defiance    in   the\nblast;\nFor Earth is envious of the Sea\nWhloh shelters England's dead\nat last.\npeople was assembling about tho government offices In Whitehall. All the\nwindows of the war office had the curtains lowered. That confirmed the rumor beyond doubt.\nOther crowds gathered around the\nnewspaper offices;; when the boys\ncamo out with an armful of extras\ntho peoplo fell on them and fought for\nthe papers. In the course of tho afternoon the flags on all buildings were\nhalf-masted.\nWhole Nation Mourns.\nThe English are undoubtedly a stoical people and have taken the good,\nand the bad tidings of the war as they\ncame with an absence of emotion surprising to outsiders. But no one could:\nhave walked the London streets today without perceiving that something\nwas wrong. The foreign office was\nsaddened .by the loss of one, of Its\nmost valued members. Hugh' James\nO'Beirrie, while Sir Frederick Donaldson and Brig.-Gen. Ellershaw of tho\nministry of munitions, wero known\nto be men whom tho nation could little afford to lose.\nTho fact that the cruiser Hampshire,\nwith between 200 and 300 men had\nsunk, was generally accepted as an\nunfortunate detail in these days when\na. thousand go under almost as an incident of warfare, and the battling of\nthe Canadians around Ypres and St.\nEloi had a scanty column in the newspapers. The King came from Windsor\nand sent for Premier Asquith when\nhe heard tiie nows, The war council\nheld a long session.\nNaturally speculation regarding\nKitchener's successor began immediately. Among those discussed were\nDavid Lloyd George, Lord Derby and\nthe chief of the imperial staff, Sir William Robertson. But whether 3. soldier or a civilian will 'take over the\nwar office has not yet been decided.\nHis Place in History.\nEarl Kitchener met his death at a\nmoment which will insure his position\nIn British history. Ho was almost the\nonly, member of the government who\nfrom the beginning confidently asserted that this would bo a long war\u2014his\nlowest estimate being threo years\u2014\nand he insisted that the government\nshould mako Its plans accordingly. Tho\norganlaztlon of the enormous now\nBritish army is well under way. Tho\ngeneral staff, under Gen. Sir William\nRobertson's direction, according lu tha\nbelief of the public, bus well in hand\ntho task of working ont the dotails\nwhieh Kitchener's brain was largely\ninstrumental in planning and launching.\nThere is no ovidenco to show whether the Hampshire wus sunk by a submarine or a mine.\nMany ships have been passing between Russia and England over tho\nsame route slnco the \"war began.\nThe  news  was  a  greater  surprise\nthai il would otherwise have been be-\nlOoutinned on Pace Two.)\nCANADIANS MADE VALIANT\nFIGHT IN STORM OF FIRE\n(By Dally News Leaded Wire.)\nLONDON, June 7.\u2014\"While only the\nbroadest outlines of Friday's contest\narc at present known, the devotion of\ntlie Canadians has never been more\nstrikingly attested,\" says the Murn-\ning Post's correspondent at British\nheadquarters in France, writing Monday evening.\n\"Friday morning,\" he says, \"Iho\nGermans, under cover of a fierce bombardment, advanced along two miles\nof front in the direction of Zillebekc.\nTwo hours before tho bombardmont\nopened, Major-Gen. Mercer, accompanied by lirlg.-Ocn. Williams, went\non a tour of inspection Into tho front\nline tronclie.H. Both were cut off In\nthe storm of fire and cooly remained\nto direct and encuurago tho men of\ntho 42nd and 46th battalions with\nwhom they found themselves trapped\nwhen the bumbardment began.\n\"Just before the Germans arrived a\nterrific explosion occurred followed by\ntwo others of equal magnitude. Tho\nenomy had successfully fired three\nmines tn the vicinity of our lines\nwhich sent many bravo soldiers to In\nstunt death.\n\"When  .the  Gcrmuub  unlvod   -Gon.\nMercer was observed leaning against\ntlie parapet, suffering from shell\nshock, and a subaltern later reported\nhim wounded. Subsequently Gen,\nWilliams was struck while repelling;\nan attack. In this state both generals, it is believed, fell into the hands\nof the enemy. Under the circumstances just described the mon of the\n3rd Canadian division fought vallently\nagallist heavy odds, and inflicted severe damage before they were overpowered, as Gorman bodies hy the\nscore were found In these trenches.\n\"At 7* a.m. the next day the Canadians counter-attacked, as planned\novernight, and carried it out brilliantly. A bombardment uf vigor equal to*\nthat of the Germans on the previous\nday was made and the enemy gunfire\nreplied. At one time tho spectacle\nwas witnessed of a double barrage of\nappalling intensity. Nevertheless, tho\nCanadians pushed on and succeeded In\nreaching their old front llhe trenches,\nwhich they found battered to pieces,\nwith hundreds of German dead lying\naround  unburled.    One  of these ad-.\nICoutluued on XiagQ Two,),     J\n PAGE TWO\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1916.\nLEADING HOTELS OF THE WEST\nWhore tho Traveling Publio May Find Superior Accommodation.*.\nTHE HUME\nA la Carta Table d'Hote\nGeorge Benwell, Prop.\nSpecial Daily Lunch, 35c.\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. W. McCune, Salt Lake City; G. A. Trevarrow,\nTrail; H. A. Richards, Silverton; M.\nForeman, J. English, Waneta; A. G.\nLarson ,S R. Gabel and wife, Spokane; W. H. Shcrrod, Seattle; F A.\nHanna, Vancouver; A. G. Rogers, Bonnlngton; H. R. Cramer. Vancouver;\nW. G. Hicks, Winnipeg; F. R. Patterson, A. E. Hay, Vancouver; J. B.\nSkelly, Calgary; W. M. Whltcford, W.\nKearney, Victoria; A. R. Trudeau,\nMontreal; W. F Sullivan, Mo%se Jaw;\nC. C. Johnson, W. B. Pool. Spokane;\nMr. and Mrs. B. Clifford. Notch Hill; S.\nF. Wallace, Fernie; J. A. Kinney, Pass\nereek; A. H.vGreen, City; E. Keivil,\nEdgewood; Mr. and Mrs. HI Bird, F.\n\u25a0Irvine, City; Mr. and Mrs. Brown, the\nMisses Brown. Miss E. White-broad,\nMrs. J. -Whitebread, C. W. Hale, J. P.\nVroow, Mr. and Mrs. Meunch, W. B.\nGirbratha.  Bonnlngton.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014Anthony Anderson.\nEureka mine; .1. J. Haas, J. Harkness,\nH. Wilmington, S. Darknell, P. Cliff.\nSpokane; R. Dearborn, ;Seattle;, F.\nMichell, Eric; W. Reeves, H. Scott, R.\nWatkins, ,T. R. Fox. L. Jenkins. R. F.\nKelly, Vancouver; <>. S. Bellington, T.\nRover. Winnipeg; L. Kirkpatrick, Revelstoke; H. T. Williams, N. F. Joel,\nS. Prltchard, T. Nanon, Victoria; H.\nWilson, Nanaimo; G. Patterson, Sher-\nhrooke; G. M. Pyne, Cranbrook; H.\nTweedie, Keremeos; T. Poling, Hedley;\nF.Nokcs, R. Smith, Grand Forks; H.\nJackson, R. Jones, Fernie;; N. Arthur,\nCreston.\nQueen's Hotel\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nAmerican and European Plan.\n8TEAM HEAT IN EVERY ROOM\nBUSINESS  LUNCH, 35c\nRATES: $1.50 AND $2.00 A  DAY\nQUEENS\u2014E. Norman, Mirror Lake;\nMiss Clemson. New Denver J. F. Price,\nYmir; Paul Peterson, Noonan, N.D.;\nW. Johnson, Stockholm; C. Franson,\nCity; D. Fraser, Rossland; A. J. Harris,\nZlncton; H. < Hiver, Proctor; II. L.\nLindsay, City; D. M. Fillmore, Curlew;\nF. Feryaccy, L. Alvan, P. iB, Findlin,\nL. Norest.\nNew Grand Hotel\nBait Place In Town\n11.00 A  DAY  UP\nMadden Hotel\nAmerican and European Plan.\nSteam Heated.      Centrally Located\nMR8. E. C. CLARKE, Proprietress.\nA. E. MORRIS, Manager.\nMADDEN\u2014J. Goodlad, W. O'-Fla-\ntherty, City; Mrs. Shaw and family,\nGranite; J F. Johnston, J. P. Mclnnis,\nSalmo; A. C. O'Neill, Ymir; Mrs D.\nMunro, Victoria; G. G. Carlson, Mr.\nand Mrs. G, Toombs, Salmon Arm; J.\nM. Fraser, Creston.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nIf you suffer from muscular, Inflammatory,  sciatic  or  any  other\nform of rheumatism, or from metallic poisoning of any sort don't de-\nlas     Come at once and get cured.\nMost completo and best arranged\nbathing establishment on the continent.    All    departments      under\none roof steam  heated  and electric lighted.\nRates: $12.00 to $15.00 Per Week.\nWILLIAM BOYD, Prop.,\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nTremont Hotel\nNelaon, B, C.\nSTEAM HEATED\nEuropian  and  American  Plan\nA. CAMPBELL,  Prop.\nTREMONT\u2014,T. H. Clarke, M. Tahan.\nsun ,G. MUHOlieneson, Ymir.\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nRecently  Refurnished.\nSMITH  &  BELTON,\nProprietors.\nTRAIL HOTELS\nPhone 9. Sample  Rooms.\nRooms Reserved by Wire or Phone.\nClown Point Hotel\nA. M'DERMOTT, Prop.,\nTRAIL, B. C.\nWe   Are   Crowded,   But   There   Is\nRoom for One Moro.\nLeland Hotel\nT. H. BOHART, Prop.\nTho hotel to patronize when in Nakusp. Arrangements mado for people going to the Hot Springs. Motor\nboats, rowboats and canoes for hire.\nNAKUSP, B. C.\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar, B. C.     W. H. Gage, Prop.\nNice place tw spehd the week end.\nExcellent accommodations for\ndrummers. Boundary to Coast train\nleaves here daily except Sunday at\n8:45 a. m. Evening train Rossland\nto Nelson stops 30 minutes for dinner Sunday, Monday, Wednesday\nand Friday.\nRates $2.00 and $2,50 Per Day.\nSpend your summer holidays where\nyou  will  enjoy   them  most,    The\nArrow Lakes Hotel\nEdgewood, is the ideal place. Bathing. The broad, sandy beaches at\nEdgewood are ideal for bathing and\nfor the children to romp. Special\nrates for family parties and week\nends.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch, 12 to 2.\nPhone 97. P. O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014J. Steel, Trail; J. Small-\nwood, Beasley; C. Watts, Ci-ow creek.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.\nAmerican and European Plana.\nJ, A. ERICKSON, Prop.\nONTARIO   FLOOD   DANGER\nIS  STILL SERIOUS\n< By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nKORT FRANCIS, Ont.. June 6.\u2014The\nsituation licre due to the flood is still\nserious IniL is not Immediately dangerous. The upper river and lake aljove'\nthe power liottses of the (.alter mills\nhas risen slightly, hut the lower river\nis at tile same level as the last few\ndays.\n\u25a0   I -\n. GRAND OHttJTRAl\/\u20143. N. Arbogast,\nKaslo; A, B. -Shannon, Willow Point;\nW. H. Holmes, Grand Forks; A. H.\nGover, G. A. Steeves, J. A. Warren, G.\n1. Carter, R. Jeflerd, J. Pmslie, Edge-\nwood. '\nlie more tjou.\nknow about\nCoffee \u2014\nTlie Letter you\nlike-\u00a73\u00a3At,\nBrand\nIn <4, 1 and 2 pound cans.\nWhole\u2014ground\u2014pulverized\u2014\nalso Fine Ground for Percolators. 171\nfuse mm\nBIN DID\n(Continued from Page One.)\nnothing of what we were doing except the cables to the war office which\nwent through the militia department.\"\nCarnegie Is Recalled..\nCol. Carnegie was next recalled and\nfurther examined by Mr. Hellmuth in\nregard' to additional documents and\ncorrespondence referring to fuse con.\ntracts put In. Col. Carnegie finished\na statement of the business done by\nthe shell committee from September,\n1914, to May 81, 1915.\nThe statement showed the value of\nthe orders from the war office to be\n1170,261,430. The value of orders received during April and May only was\n$102,001,430.\nMr. Hellmuth explained to the witness that Mr, Harris and Mr. Russell\nhad stated that they were left out\nwhen fresh orders camo from the war\noffice in September, 1915.\nCol. Carnegie said that a cable was\nreceived from the war office Sept. 7,\n1915, Inquiring about the facilities in\nCanada for the manufacture of time\nfuse. It was then a matter of orders.\nThe shell committee then knew the\nfacilities of the Russell Motor company, and did not inquire further.\nThey ascertained the facilities of other plants by calling for tenders. No\nadditional contract was received before\nOct. 22.\nAsked If he had ever stated to Lloyd\nHarris that he could only get a fuse\ncontract through Col. Allison, tho witness said he had never made such a\nstatement. Allison said his name might\nhave been used. The only pressure\nwas from Gen. Bertram, who was being pressed by the war office to close\nthe contracts. There had been no pressure from Sir Sam Hughes to give the\ncontracts to the two United States\neompanies. He was unable to say\nwhether or not he had used the words\n\"pressure from higher up,\" as stated\nby Mr. Harris.\nRefers to Webb Offer.\nAsked If he had ever heard of a\nCapt. Webb who had offered to supply\nfuses at $3.58 and commence delivery\nin 30 days, Col. Carnegie said that\nthe only man of that name he had\never heard of was the Webb who\nswam across the English channel.\nWebb's offer had not been received\nby him. He thought that it had in\nall probability never been sent to Ottawa. Col. Carnegie said that tho output of the International Fuse company\nis rapidly increasing and is now between 22,000 and 25,000 a day.\nJustice Duff asked if tlie American\nAmmunition company is still experiencing difficulty in connection with\nloading. Col. Carnegie said that they\nwere not, but that they are going better all the time.\nMr. Hellmuth said he had ibeen Informed by Mr. Henderson, counsel for\nMr. Allison, that Miss Edwards Is quite\nill and might not be able to attend\nthe commission again. Tbe bank record, however, would be sent to New\nYork..\nF. B. Carvell asked for a ruling on\nthe part of the commission on his request for an inquiry into all sub-contracts, which go to make up the contract for 5,000,000 fuses.\nCommissioner Duff, on behalf of\nhimself and Sir William, said that they\ndid not consider that the sub-contracts\nwere subject matters of investigation,\nChief Justice Meredith said it was\nundesirable when everyone understood\nthe evidence was all in to take up this\nadditional investigation.*\nMr. Ewart asked if Mr. Carvell had\ncommunicated with Mr. Kyte In re\ngard   to   statements   made   by   him\nagainst Sir Sam Hughes and Col, Al\nllson   in   connection   with   the   Nova\nScotia election.\nMr. Carvell said he had viewed Mr.\nEwart's remarks of yesterday as a little hot air and treated them as such.\nHowever, if Mr. Ewart wanted the\ncommission to order the summoning\nof Mr. Kyte he would be willing to\nproduce him,\nChief Justice Meredith said It was\nreported that Mr. Kyto had stated that\none witness had committed perjury\nand that another had lied. If he had\nany Information which would warrant\nhim In making such a statement it\nwould be imperative for the commission to know.\nF. H. Mackey, K. C, said that Mr\nKy.c had made similar statements In\nthe- house of commons,  hut they  re\nferred   to  evidence   given   by   Allison\nbefore the Davidson commission.\nMr. Carvell said  he had no knowl\nedge on which to express an opinion.\nHaa Letter From Kyte.\nSome days ago he had received a letter from Mr. Kyte in which he had\nstated that there was a plan on foot\nto take him away from Nova Scotia\nduring the holdlngtof tho general olec\ntion. He had shown this letter to other\ncounsel and they had agreed that\nwould not be necessary for Mr. Kyte\nto come to Ottawa.\nSir William Meredith asked Mr. Carvell if Mr. Kyto could throw any additional light on  the inquiry,\n\"Not within tho scope I have been\nallowed,\"  Mr. Carvell replied.\nMr. Hellmuth said that when arguments commence tomorrow he proposes to toe brief. His principal object will be to outline the scope of\nthe commission.\nMr. Johnson said he did not pro.\npose to speak. His proposal before\nthe commission was a peculiar one and\nhe could not go far afield.\nIt was agreed that Mr. Hellmuth\nwill lead off with the argument tomorrow and F. B. Carvell will follow. Then\nwill come counsel for Gen. Hughes and\nthe shell committee.\nNEW DISCLOSURES\nATM TRIAL\n(Continued from Page One.)\nthem, but he, although pressed, had\nsaid he had been unable to get the\nmoney.   '\nHo'spoke of the visit to Macdonald's\noffice with a note from Scott and of\nthe meeting he had with Macdonald\nnear the latter's house Easter Monday and at which Macdonald promised to pay hlni if he would come to\nVictoria the next day. , Macdonald,\nGosden related said he did not have\nthe money at that lime, but would\nraise a hundred In Victoria. This was\nto bo fifty for Gosden and fifty for\nRobertson.\nHit Trip to Victoria\nGosden agreed to go, and, as other\nwitnesses have testified, borrowed a\nsuit of clothes and money for his fare\nand on arrival at Victoria got Howland to pay for his lunch and Sllvene\nfor his dinner.\nThe first meeting with Macdonald\nIn Victoria was by agreement at the\npostoffice at 6 o'clock, he continued.\n^Macdonald said he did not have $100,\nbut if Gosden would wait until Wed.\nnesday he would give it to pirn. Gos\nden said he wanted to go back that\nnight if he could get some of the\nmoney. Macdonald said possibly he\ncould get it and asked Gosden to call\nhhn about 8:46.\nGosden, as other witnesses have\nstated, said he called Macdonald from\nSilvene's room and the Liberal mem.\nber told him to be at the postoffice at\nfl o'clock. He walked down with Matt\nFraser and told him to got out of Bight\nwhen Macdonald appeared. When\nMacdonald handed over the $50, he\nsaid, \"Here's fifty, that's the best I\ncan do now. 1 will givo you the bal\nance when I come over in two weeks.'\nHe then hurried away. Witness\ntook Fraser to a bar and loaned him\n$G.\nGosden told of buying new clothes,\nrepaying his fare and paying his land\nlady  immediately on arrival at Van\ncouver.\nUnder cross-examination Gosden\nadmitted he had been jailed in Prince\nRupert for strike trouble and deport\ned from the United States for soap\nbox oratory in violation of a San\nDiego ordinance. He said that once in\nVancouver he had said Bowser would\nbe wise to have some ono taste his\ncoffee if the government continued its\ntyrannical ways and smilingly told\ncounsel that he thought the action\nmentioned might under some circumstances be justified. He denied he\nhad tried to blackmail a Gordon Head\nresident who shot hen pheasants.\nHe' said he told Macdonald his work\nwas legitimate because Scott had said\nMacdonald in view of tlie investigation would otherwise be \"scared stiff.\"\nGeneral Election Plan\n\"Macdonald had definitely promised\nto devote the whole of his sessional\nIndemnity to building up the plugging\nmachine for t he general elections,'\nsaid Gosden. Macdonald had no reason to be scared of witness unless he\nknew of the crooked., work, Gosden\nsaid.\nGosden explained that the reason he\nhad not pressed Macdonald for the\nbalance owing him was that Scott had\nsaid Lawyer Eyre would pay if he,\nScott, had to \"duck hi**} nut.\"\nEyre spoke of \"they\" coming\nthrough with money, but never mentioned their name.\nGosden explained that at the parliamentary inquiry he had not volunteered any Information because he\nhad been taken there on a subpoena\nand had not gone oij his own intla-\ntive.\nWitness was still on the stand when\nthe court odjourned.\nVALIANT FIGHT\n(Continued from Page One.)\nvanced trenches was in such a state\nas to be untenable.\n\"The Canadian corps commander,\nSir Jullen Bryan, sends the following\nmessage:\n\" 'I am proud of the Canadians un\nder my command. Their behaviour\nhas been magnificent. I bave never\nknown a fiercer or more deadly barrage nor have I seen any troops fight\nwith more earnestness, courage and\ncheerfulness. The slight penetration\nof our line cost the Germans dear.'\nKITCHENER AND STAFF\nLOST OFF ORKNEYS\n(Continued from Page One.)\ncause no one knew that Kitchener had\nleft England.\nA memorial service will be held In\nSt. Paul's. The nation was depressed\nand grieved at the. news of Gen. Town\nabend's surrender, hut never before\nlias it been so saddened as today.\nHis Last Conference,\nEarl Kitchener's conference Friday\nwith members of the house of commons, when he explained confidentially\nthe military situation was a remarkable Incident. Two hundred members\ngathered to talk to him. Extraordinary precautions were taken to keep\nall persons outside of the precincts of\nWestminster palace.\nEarl Kitchener generally made rather a poor Impression as a speaker, since\nthc always read his statements from\nmanuscript and did not talk in an effective way. On this occasion, how-\neve5*, he conversed freely with the\nmembers, answering questions from\ncritics who showed considerable bias.\nAfter the conference some of tho\nmombers declared their judgment of\nEarl Kitchener's work had been enhanced by his explanation. The proceedings were closed with the unusual for-\nmallty of a vote of thanks.\nPress Comment,\nTho morning papers all give up their\neditorial space to black-bordered eulogies of Earl Kitchener. Chief Interest, perhaps, attaches to the tributes\nof tho papers of Lord Northcllffe,\nwhich, after hailing Earl Kitchener In\nthe early days of the war as the only\nman for tho war office, turned on him\na year ago with bitter denunciations as\nbeing an overrated man, who had had\nno experience except in little Asiatic\nborder campaigns.\nTho Times and Dally Mall were publicly burned on the stock exchange after their first attacks on Earl Kitchener and by resolution -barred from many\npublic reading-rooms. Today, however,\nboth thesB newspapers lay aside the\nold animus and sound no discordant\nnote In the universal sorrow.\nThe Mail says:\n\"So ends with distressing suddenness a career of romantic distinction,\nwhich had assumed extraordinary significance in the estimation of his countrymen.\"\nThe Express:\n\"Without Earl Kitchener it Is probable that we would have lost the \"war\nmonths ago,\"\nThe Morning Post, discussing    the\nsinking of the Hampshire, says: ;\n\"Clrctimstnndes point to  espionage.\nor treachery and the country will suspect this the more owing to the singular freedom still allowed enemy sub-\njectK.\" '\nTouching on the question of a successor to Earl Kitchener, the Post says\nIt would toe a mistake to choose Lloyd\nGeorge and urges that Lord Milner Is\nthe only suitable man on the horizon.\nIt was his doggedness In doing his\nwork that won him popular-trust because it was akin to the people's own\ntemperament,\" says the Times of Earj\nKitchener. \"Ho had none of the gifts\nby which politicians win favor. He was\nno orator, he did not court the multitude and he had few friends. It was\nin strange loneliness that he trod the\npath of duty with stern and unwavering purpose.\"\nThe Mall gives prominence to the\nfollowing statement;\n\"Earl Kitchener's Intention to go to\nRussia was known to a great many\npeoplo in London Thursday. Tt ought\nnot to have toeen so known. The news\nof It may have reached the enemy. The\npublic mind has been quick to associate his death with the work of spies.\nWe have every sympathy with the demand which comes to us from many\nparts of thc country that all alfen enemies who are still at large, especially\nthose in high places, bo interred at\nonce.\"\nPARIS, June 7.\u2014The tragic end of\nEarl Kitchener caused a deep and sorrowful impression throughout France,\nwhere he was better known and more\nadmired than any other British general. The fact that Kitchener fought for\nFrance in 1870 was ever present in the\nFrench mind and went far to obliterate\nany lingering resentment over the Fa-\nshoda incident. Quito recently Kitchener met Brig.-Gen. Marchand, with\nwhom he had clashed in 1898 In the village of Fashoda, Sudan, for the first\ntime since that incident. It was during one of these trips to the French\nfront nJn>d tho two men exchaniged\nhearty handclasps and the old 'bitternesses were sunk.\nThc disappearance of an organlz-\ngenlus of the first rank ts deplored\nIn military circles, where Earl Kitchener's qualities always were fully appreciated, tout It was pointed out that,\nhowever cruel his loss to the allied\ncause and to the British people, his\ngreat work, so soundly conceived and\ncarried out,  will  survive him.\nPremier Briand, in telegraphing the\nregrets of the French govermftent to\nPremier Asquith, said:\n\"All France regrets from the bottom\nof its heart the loss of the great chief\nwho caused a magnificent army to\nspring from British soli. My country\nwill never forget that the brave and\nefficient organizer, whose prematuro\nend is now mourned with the British\npeople, fought in thc ranks of the\nFrench army 46 years ago.\"\nLONDON, June 7.\u2014By tho King's\ncommand the following order has .been\nissued to the army:\n\"The King has learned with profound regret of thc disaster whereby\ntho secretary of state for war has lost\nhis life while proceeding on a' mission\nto the emperor of Russia.\n\"Lord kitchener gave 48 years of\ndevoted service to the state and it is\nlargely due to his administration and\nunwearying energy that tho country\nhas been able to, create and place in\nthe field the'armies whicli today arc\nupholding thc traditional glories of the\nEmpire. \u00bb\n\"Lord Kitchener will be mourned by\nthe army as a great soldier, who, under\nconditions of unexampled difficulty\nrendered supreme devotion both to the\narmy and the state.\n* \"The King commands that the officers of the army shall wear mourning\nwith their uniforms for the period of\none week. Officers are to wear crepe\non \"the left arm of their uniform and of\ntheir great coats.\"\nDoes Not Apply in Canada.    \\\nOTTAWA, June \u00ab,\u2014High military\nofficers hero state that while the\nKing's order that mourning toe worn a\nweek in connection with the death of\nEarl Kitchener applied to Canadian\nforces in France and England, it does\nnot apply to officers in training in\nCanada. It ia considered likely, however, that a similar order will be Issued immediately the King's order becomes officially known to the militia\ncouncil here, and will be made appli\ncable   to  officers   in  Canada,\nSRITSH NAVAL\nLOSSESJNCHANGED\n(Continued from Page One.)\nthe Warsplte, but owing to its damaged\nsteering gear, it could not obey the\norder. The Warsplte could only hang\non and fight and it,did this sturdily\nin spite of the heavy battering it received.\nBy the time Its consorts of the,drend-\nCOME  IN  AND SEE THE\nNew Summer Dresses\nTHESE  FRESH,ARRIVALS ARE ATTRACTIVELY   PRICED   FOB\nQUICK SALE\nAND REPRESENT THE VERY LATEST STYLES\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nThis Store Will Cloie Today, Wednesday, at Twelve O'Clock Neon\nnought division came up the battle\nfleet was In full flight.\n- The Warsplte had beaten them off\nslngle-toanded and had succored the\nWarrior, which the Germans had re-<\ngarded as a certain and easy victim\nfor their guns.\nLetter from   Beatty.\nLONDON, June 0.\u2014Rear Admiral\nSir H. Edworth Meux read at a public*\nmeeting today, ttoe followin gletter from\nVice Admiral Sir David'Beatty:\n\"We drove the enemy into tho jaws\nof our fleet. I have no regrets except\nfor tho gallant lives lost and for the\npals thut havo gone and who died\ngloriously. H would havo warmed\nyour heart to have been able to see the\ngallant Hood bring 'his squadron Into\naction.\n\"Would to God bo had been more\nsuccessful  In  the general  result.\n\"Wo will be ready for them next\ntime. Please God, it will be soon. The\nbattlo cruiser fleet Is alivo and has a\nbig kick in it.\"\nBERLIN, June 7\u2014The following official statement was issuod today regarding the British losses in the battle of tho North sea:\n\"English prisoners picked up by the\nfifth torpedo boat flotilla in the seal\nfight in the Skagerack, state that thf\nbattle cruisers Princess Royal wai\nheavily listing, when the Queen MarJ\nsank in the course of an encountei\nwith a German reconnaissance groupT\nalmost simultaneously with t'he Brltisl]\ncruiser Birmingham.\n\"It is also stated that five super!\ndreadnoughts of the Queen Elizatoetll\nclass are reported to have participate!\nIn this part of the engagement.\n\"Other prisoners, captured by th*|\nthird torpedo boat flotilla, stated Inl\ndopendently of eaoh other, in a wrUteif\ndeclaration, that they were certain thai\nWarspite, Princess Royal, the Turbuf\nlent, Nestor and Acasta were in a sink,\nIng condition. ,\n\"Ninety miles east of the Tyne, afte|\nthe battle in thc Skagerack a Gem\nsubmarine observed a vessel of the Iroi\nDuke class heavily listing, with apparl\nently much water in the forepart setT\nting Its course toward tlhe Engllsl\ncoast. Owing to Its unfavorable poelf\ntion toward the- enemy vessel and bel\ncause of the heavy sea, the submarinl\nwas unable to fire. I\n\"The British loss In lives in the bat|\ntie Is estimated at more than 7000.\"\nA Health-preserving\ndelight\nThe use of Lifebuoy Soap\nmakes thc bath a supremely\nsoothing pleasure as well as\na health-insuring delight.\nThe cream of pure oils gives\na velvety lather ' that is\ncleansing and healing. The\nvery mild carbolic solution\nmeans a perfectly healthy\nBkin. Theodorvanishesina\nfew seconds after use.\nALU OROCERC BILL-\nHEALTHY\nSOAP\nTHE CLEARING HOUSE\nOF COMMUNITY NEEDS\nHAVE   YOU   CONSIDERED\u2014\nThe wonderful reciprocal benefits which the Want\nColumns offer?\nThat what you lack and desire Is just what some one\n\u2022else In the community possesses and Is anxious to\ndispose of?\nThat whothor you wish to buy or sell,- rent or exchange,\nthere are always those eager and waiting to fulfill your\nwish In a satisfactory manner?\nHAVE  YOU   EVER  REALIZED\u2014\ni , s\nThat thero Is but ono medium through which you can\npromptly, Inexpensively and effectively fulfill your need?\nThat this medium ie naturally the one where all, the\nother members of tho community proclaim their needs?\nThat the Want Ads alone are this great clearing house\nof desire?\nBE   CONVINCED\u2014ADVERTISE   THROUGH\nThe Dailv News Want Ads\n 63K\nWEI>NE8D|A,Y, JUNE 7J ,191\u00ab*.   \"\"\nWSSBM&&tW&&mm '\u25a0.-.-  . '**^Mgaga^g!?gg'^aga!Bg*^Bf777^~\niy*Mi\u00ab<i*',M\u00bb-Miii--\u00bbi* < **i-\u00bbjji**\"'\u00bb\u00bb* i'\"\" \u25a0\" i\" m c.\u00bb\"\"i;;\nNews of Sport\nTHE DAILY NEWS1\nPAGE THR6I'\nNATIONAL LEAGUE.\nBraves Lose to St. .Louis. '\n\u2022BOSTON, Mass., June 6.\u2014A batting\nirally by- St. Louis netted two runs\nand a victory. The locals rallied In\n^thelr half of tho ninth, but could score\n,only ono run, the final score being\n2 to 1.\nR. H. E.\n5 St. Louis  2 C 0\nBoston  1     4     0\nBatteries\u2014Sallee and Snyder; Ru-\n[[dolph nnd Tragressor.\nChicago Defeats Phillies.\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa\u201e June C\u2014Chi.\nScago was In a batting mood and drove\ntwo Philadelphia pHehers.off the rubber in five Innings and won today's\ngame, 8 to 2.\nR. H. 15.\ntChicago  R 14 0\nPhiladelphia   2     0     1\nBatteries\u2014Vaughn and Archer, Fish-\nRer; Rlxey, Mnyei*. Oeschger and Killl-\n|fer, Burns.\nPirates Take First Game.\nNEW   YORK,   June     fi.\u2014PIttsbJirg\nttook the first game of the series with\n\u25a0 New STork today, 3 to 2.\nR.  IT.  13.\nJ Pittsburg .'  3 I) 0\nNew Tdrlt'.;     2     li     0\nBatteries\u2014Mamaux, Schnuer and\n| Gibson; Benton and Rarldon.\n\u25a0Vooklyri Wins From Reds.\nBROOKLYN, N. Y... Juno \u00ab.\u2014nrnnlt-\nIlyn took.tbo first game of the series\nwith Cincinnati In a free hitting\ngo*me today, 7 to 4.\nIt.  IT.  K.\n'Cincinnati      4   11     I\nI Brooklyn      7   12     0\nBatteries\u2014Mitchell, Mnseley, Schnpi-\nj der and Wingo; Pfcffer nnd Meyer.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE.\nTigers Win From Boston.\nDETROIT, Mich., June 0.\u2014Dauss\nheld. Boston In three hits today and\nDetroit wan, 3 to II. Until the ninth\nInning the. world's champions did not\ngjt a man to second base and only two\nached first safely.\nR. IT. 13.\nBoston  0     3     0\nDetroit  3     6     0\nBatteries \u2014Gregg nnd Thomas;\n'Dauss and Stanage.\nPhiladelphia. nt. Chicago, wet.\ngrounds.\nNew, York, at Clovelnnrt, rain.\nNORTHWESTERN LEAGUE.\n'   R.  IT.   13.\ni.Soattlo  3     8     3\nJ Spokane ....',...,...   5.    7     2\nBaftenos\u2014EastVe'y and' Cadman;\n;.Ct|hninghnm,   Wol>  hand   Murray.\nR H. B.\nI Great Falls   2     li     2\nS.Bntto  13    13    1\nfiatterles\u2014Rock, Files and Shea;\ni'MOiklc and Altman.\nR  II.   13.\nVancouver  4     7     2\n1 Ticoma   6     9     3\nfiattcrles\u2014Callahan ond Follman;\n;: Leonard and Roberts.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE.\nNewark, 2; Baltimore, 3.\nProvidence, 7; Richmond, 3.\nFirst game: Rochester, 1; Toronto,\n5. Second game: Rochester, 8; Toronto, 2.\nFirst game; Buffalo, 8; Montreal,\nC. Second game: Buffalo, 7; Montreal, 6..- , iv-\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nMinneapolis, 3; Kansas City, 4.\n' AT\nTHE\nTHEATRE8\n\u2022 \u00ab\u2022\u2666\u2666-\u2022 \u2666-\u00bb-\u2666 .....\n1\nStarland.    .\nLou Tellegen, the intemalonally fa-\nmoiiH rambntio star. Who for several\nyears was leading man for Mme. Sarah\nBernhardt, will make his second appearance n.t tho Starland tomorrow\nin an elaborate production. \"Thc Unknown.\" It is a plcturization Of I. AA.\nR. \u25a0Wylle's widely rend novel entitled\n\"Tho Red Mirage.\" \"The Unknown\" la\na fascinating story of thc desert, spectacular almost to Ibo extreme, 'but\nwith a splendid romance running\nthrough It. Included In (he cast nre\nTheodore Roberts, Dorothy Davenport\nand Tom Farman,\nOn Friday, the flth, the ninth chapter\nof \"Tho Girl and the Game.\" serial\nwill he shown. This is entitled \"A Close\n\u25a0Hall\" and as the title indicates is a\nthriller. A two-part Vogue comedy\nentitled \"Sammy's Scandalous\nSchemes.\" This features Sammy Burns,\nwho gives a very clever imitation of\nCharlie Chaplin.\nGreat Interest is being shown In the\nfirst Mutual Chaplin comedy, \"The\nFloorwalker,\" which comes to the\nStarland Monday, .Tune 12. This remedy Is simply crammed with new\nChaplin antics, tho funniest of which\nare his adventures en the escalator or\nmoving stairway.\n\"The Rnhle Lorch.*i,\" which is the offering at the Gem theatre Wednesday\nand Thursday is, according In nil\nreports, the most powerful screen drama which hns been released from the\nbig Triangle company since their Inception,\nTlie plot offers unusual opportunities;\nfnr tense and thrilling situations and\nthose opportunities nre taken advantage nf in sueli a. way as only the superlative genius nf D. W. Griffith\ncould.\nThe Interest never lessens for nn instant, but works in one steady crescendo tn such a breathless climax that\none's nerves are t.iiil as the cables\nof the famous Brooklyn bridge.\nSPORTING  EVENTS   IN\nWINNIPEG CANCELLED\nWINNIPEG, .Tune fi.\u2014Amateur snort,\nfeels the loss to tho \"TCmpirft of Earl\nKitchener and appropriate action hns\nbeen taken hy the football hnd bnse-\nbotl organizations, the largest amateur\nbodies In. the city. They have called off\nall games fnr the next, three days.\nJACK BRITTON WINS\nPROM  MIKE O'DOWD\nBOSTON, Mass., Juno fi.\u2014.lack Britton nf NeW York was given the decision over Mike O'Dowd of St. Paul in\na 12-rohnd botif here tonight.\nwkmWu^esm^:.'^ti^^^i^.z^fA*r-<--\n\"No more headache for you\u2014take these*'\nDon't jutt \"Btnothor\" th\u00ab lie-dacha without reoiovintr ths cauttc.\n'Cuke Chmaiinalmla'* Tablets. Tbey not only cura ths headache but\nfive you a bouyant, healthful fueling because they tone the liver,\nimtffl tha attaniach and cleanw the bowels. Try them.\nAll DrutiUb, 2Sc,, or by Ball\nCHAMBERLAIN MEDICINE CO.'\nTenet*, Vr-f 13\nCHAMBERIAIN'STABIETS\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nNew Timi\nEffective Si\ne\nin\nSchedule\niday, June 4\nArrive\nNELSON\nLeave\nEx. Sunday\n0:10 p.m.\nCascade,   .Grand    Forks,    Phoenix,\nGreenwood, Midway.\nEx. Sunday\n7:40  a.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\ni*  Saturday\n9:10 p.m.\nThrough   servico   to Pentlcton, via\nKettle Valley Railway.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday\n7 M0  a.m.\nEx. Sunday\n4:46 p.m.\nSlocan City, Slocan Lake and Inter-\nnwdlate points.\nEx. Sunday\nS:40  a.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n4:45 p.m.\nSandon,    Kaslo    and    intormediato\npoints, via Slocan City.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n8:10   a.m.\nEvery Day\n10:05 tun.\nCastlegar, Trail, Rossland and Intermediate points.\nEvery Day\n9; 10 a.m.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday,\nSunday\n9:35 p.m.\n8:00  p.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n10:00 p.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n10:00 p.m.\nColumbia   River,   Revelstoke,   main\nline to Vancouver.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n8:00 p.m.     >\n~Every Day\\\n0:00  n.m.\nEvery Day\n7:40  p.m.\nS.S. Nasookin,   Kootenay   Landing,\nCrow's Nest, Spokane and main lino.\nS.S. Kokanee, Kootenay Lake local\nservice,.   Monday   and   Friday,    via\nCrawford Bay; Tuesij'ay. and Thursday\nto Tiardo.   Service, Lardo ,lo Gerrard\nnnd-'-returcv Wednesday only, connecting with barge from and to Kaslo.\n^ Wednesday,\nSaturday\n9:110 a.m.\nEx. Sunday\n4:00  p.m,\nj   Monday,-.\nI   Tue'tfimy,\nf Thur'sTlttiC,~\nFriday\n11:00 a.m.  \u00bb\n,T, a CARTEIl, D. P. A., Nelson, B. C.\nED DEAD\n118 RtPOR\nON CASUALTY LISTS\nHeavy  Losses at Vpres Battle Swell\nTotal\u2014K. C. Corsan, With Kin at\nFernie, Given As Wounded\nOTTAWA, June 7.\u2014The department\nof militia gave out for publication tonight two casualty lists, containing\nboth officoi's ond men. Ono of these,\nwus issued in the afternoon nnd> contained 30 names, but the second, Is-\n'sucd. at midnight, contained 159\nnames. Fi'om the size of this later\niist-it Is safe to assume lliat the cas-\naialtles of tbo I'ank and file from tho\nsecond big Ypres battle have started\nto conic through.\n- The sftei-noon list consisted of four\nkilled In action, three dead of wounds,\nthree dangerously ill, ono previously\nunofflcinlly now officially reported\nprisoner of war, one previously reported missing, now unofficially imported prisoner of war, and 24\nwoiufderi,\nThe midnight list contained nine\nkilled in notion, nine dead of wounds,\nnine dangerously and eight seriously\n111, four missing and one prisoner;\none previously reported killed, now\nunofficially prisoner of war and 118\nwounded. The lists follow:\nKilled in Action.\nS. A. Cnntelon, Air,!, kin at Clinton,\nOnt.\nK. n'ostei', 73780, kin nt Areola, Sask.\nF. Hearty, 1-17380, kin at Washington.\nJMonoer (Murtlock McDonald, 4ira72S,\nkin at New Aberdeen, N. S.\nLieut, c. McGowan, kin at Flora,\nOnt.\nJ. Mowbray, 7427S, kin at Winnipeg.\nA. S. Stratton, 4J0800, klh at Rainy\nRiver, Ont.\nF. McRae, 4ir,20J, kin at St. aodfrcy,\nQuo.\nDied of Wounds.\nC.  Gordon,  430000, kin  at  Edmonton.\nI'l. Hughes, -l\",7IS(i. kin nt Montreal,\nfi. Reid, 153704, Itln at Winnipeg.\nG. TI. Russwprth, 45,7105, kin at Winnipeg\nCorp. A. I. Tandy, 408219, kin at\nNorth IJ:iy, Ont.\nTV. Tope, 4421.8, kin nt Campbollton,\nN. B\nSeriously III,\nW. A. Smith, kin at Porterville, Onl.\n\u25a01. Welsh. 25067, Itln nt Halifax.\nT*. Dare, 27878, kin at Colllngwood,\nOnt.\nDangerously   III.\nJ. Davidson, 410785, kin at Calgary.\nMajor A. Hamilton Gault, kin nt\nMontreal.\nF. C. Ilnggarl. 430203, kin at Peter-\nhorn.\nWounded.\nCapt. IT. S. Adam, kin at Markbnm,\nOnt..\nCapt. E. W. Blckle, kin nt Toronto.\nP. R. Brlault, 21109, kin In England.\nLieut. R. A. Bi'own, kin at Toronto.\nW. Braid, 4770119, Itln' nt Centrevllle,\n\u00a3n: 13.\nj W. Col-rolls', l77l\",s, kin ut Wil.lnn\nGrove, Ont.\nCapt. .]*. K. Cauchdn, kin at Winn\npeg.\ntt. Chapman,, 022789, kin at Greyslon,\nOhio.\nE. II. Cholcs, 27870. kin at Toronto.\n.T. F. Cody, AIIOHI, kin at Million,\nN. P..\nIT. Ball, 430332. Uin at Regina.\nLieut. Marshall Beck, kin at Vancouver.\nF. Buchanan, 458114, kin nt Montreal.\nG. A. Doty, 435057, kin nl Marker-\nvllle, Alta.\nH. IT. Jones, 452456, kin at Ilawke-\nstone, Out.\n,f. Lawson, 458308, kin nl Montreal.\n- C. Peter McArthur, 477027, kin at\nVancouver.\nR, Motion, 77885, kin at Victoria.\nIn Rogers, 488221, kin at Neils llnr-\n,hor,  C. B.\nLance-Corp. W. A. Skinner, 404153.\nkin at Toronto.\nN. Sproule, 9190, kin at Toronto.\nA. Sinclair, 432501, kin at Edmonton.\nJ. McLeon, 435292, kin ot Calgary.\nMajor S. Corcstlne, Itln at Montreal.\nE. Compagnt, 28200, kin at Megautlc,\nQue.\na. Couture, .117772,( kin at Quebec.\nK. C. Corsan, 442034, klh at Fernie.\nW. Crane, 140048, kin at Toronto.\nCnpt. W. W. Ross-Crolgliton, kin at\nBrantford, Ont.\nLieut. F. Fletcher Elliott, kin at\nVancouver.\nLance-Corp. A. A, Emmett, 418689,\nkin at Buckingham, Que.\nJ. England, 68268, kin at Glace Bay,\nN. S.\nTHURMAN'S\nJUST ARRIVED\nA Crosh shipment p\u00a3 Tburmnn's Special\nMixture. Try a tin todny.\n8'h.   25C.   4's,   40c.   1   lb.,   S1.50\nWHITE\nHORSE\nScotch\nQuality\nalways\nwins in the\nlong run,\nJoyner, 104670, kin at Moose\nA.  Badln, 448023, kin at Megantic,\nQue. \u2022     j\nH. Ette, 25020, kin at Montreal,\nL. Duprie, 489661, kin at Quebec.\nMajor J. W. Forbes, kin at Winnipeg.\nR. Goldie, 439041, kin at Schrleber,\nOnt.\nH. w. Gorham, 69353, kin at St. John.\nJ. Grant. 47354, kin at Fort William.\nJ. H. Good, 445120. kin at Bathurst,\nN. B.\nCapt. W. H. Hudson, kin at Belleville,\nOnt.\nLieut. M. S. Hunt, kin at Greenfield,\nN.  S.\n!\u2022-.   E.\nJaw.\nCnpt. N. P. Kelley, kin at Toronto.\nE. L. Kciincy, 43200J. kin at Winnipeg.\nLieut. P. N. McDougall, kin ol Montreal.\nCorp. T. Mlchaud, 22902, kin at Quebec.\nCapt. P. Molson, kin at Montreal.\nCapt. H. Nlven, kin nl. London, Ont.\nLieut. A. I*. Nonnnn, kin at Vancouver.\nD. w. Plggott, '23041, ktn at Quebec.\nCapt. IT. Price, kin o.t Kamloops.\nLieut. V. G. Rexford, kin at Montreal.\nR. Bunrnson, 457504, kin at Toronto.\nCapt. A. J. Sinclair, kin at Toronto.\nJ. Smith, 192099, win at Toronto,\nLieut. R. D. Torrence, Itln at Guelph.\n.1. P. Trimble, 477920, Itln at Mldtleld,\nOnt.\nO. Trotter.  61409, kin at  Montreal.\nMn.i. C. Y. Weaver, Itin in England.\nJ. Wilcox, 488732, kin nt Birch rirnve,\nCE.\nCorp. II. L. Wright, 70O60, kin at St\nJohn.\nMnj. A. T. Powell, kin at Ottawa.\nIT. il. Burnside, 453291, kin nt Ottawa,\nPrisoner of war at 'Friedrichsfeidt.\nJ. Newell, 70106, kin at Calgary.\nReported Killed in Action, Now Unofficially, Prisoner at Giessen.\nM, Cornsew, 70061, kin nl Vancouver.\nC. M. R.\nDied of Wounds.\nIT.  Mooney,  112095, kin nt Norwich,\nOnt.\nCapt. IT. J. Pitts, kin nt Montreal.\nDangerously III.\nO. J. Bnssotte, 1070S3, kill al Llimby.\nB.C.\nC. E. JlVipe, 117311, kin at Calgary.\nIt. II. .Tcssejnln, 110608, kin at Shcr-\nbrooke. Que.\nIT. J. Kelly. 110290, kin nt Norwood,\nOnl.\nWounded.\nMajor Merrll V. Allen, kin nl. Norwich, Ont.\nLieut. W. R, Lntlmer, Itln nt Itnttle-\nford, Snsk.\nLieut. W. R. Latimer. Itin nl Mortleii\nMan\nLieut. W. II. Pile, kin at Calgary.\nCnpt. Barry VV. RpRUoe, kin nl ICellt-\nvlllc, N.S.\nLieut. W. IT. Wnrinlngton, Itln nt Al\nsask, Sask.\nSeriously III.\n\u00ab. J. Marshall, 403321, itin nt Van\ncouver,\nLieut.  It.  A,  Shlith,  klu nt Mnplo\nCreek, Snsk.\nR. W. Sherlock, 14011, Itin nl Erin\nview. Man.\nARTILLERY.\nKilled in Action.\nGunner .I:Fnlrltitrsl,( 00, Kin nt Pert\nHope, Onl.\nWounded.\nLieut. E, D. Huyoits, kin nt Peterboro.\nLient. C. IT. J. James, kin at Toronto.\nMnj. P. C. Mngeo, kin at St. John,\nLieut. Ci. T. Lee, kin nt Kllllntlelphia.\nENGINEERS.\nMissing,\nLieut. A. J. Qdtllt, Itin at Edmonton.\nLieut..J. D. Wilson, kin nt Vancouver.\nLieut. W. E. .Mis8oy-*-ookc, kin nl\nPetorboro, Ont.\nDangerously III,\nA. Walters, 10210, kin at Vancouver.\nWounded.\nSapper D. Stocks, 201, kin nt Toronto\nCorp. J. Q. Cross, 47, England.\nF. M. Nelson, 117441, Itin ul. Sunny\nSlope. Alta.\nMEDICAL SERVICE.\nDangerously ill.\nA.  R. Murray. 230, kin  at  London,\nOnt.\nWounded.\nA.. W. Cpsgrove, 530107, kin at Calgary.\nCapt. J. J, Jamleson, kin at Calgary.\n13   Bellinger, (11797, kin at Monticul.\nVETERINARY CORPS.\nSeriously   III,\nD. P. Foster, 417999, kin at Calgary.\nTho following list was issued lu tiie\nevening:\nINFANTRY\nWounded\nO.   Matheson,  392310,  Scotland.\nII. W. T. Mathias, 81566, Englund.\nD. A. McDonald, 81031, Scotland.\nD. K. Mackenzie, 422795, Scotland.\nLieut. D. R. M. McLean, kin at Ottawa.\nPioneer A.  McLollan,  403793,  Scotland,\nC. Newdyck, 47916, England.\nLieut. A. G. Pearson, England.\nPioneer  P.   Robinson,   1.5488-1,   England.\nLieut. F. A. Rnynor, Scotland.\nW. K. Alauley-Power, 424281, England.\nG. H.J Brown. J 9367, England.\nS. Laycoqk, 23406, England.\nCapt. W. Lec-liyman, England.\nA. IT. March, 110134, England.\nR. Marshall, 410593, England.\nA. PetheiTck, 132009, England.\nD. W. Rosser, 430037, South Wales.\nLlout. L. Scott, England.\nS. Stownrt,  120468, England.\nA, Walker, A8421, Scotland.\nLieut. G. A. Watson, Scotland.\nLieut. S. Wharton, England.\nLieut. R. Worral, England,\nENGINEERS\nMissing\nLieut. R. B. l-oi'<l. England.\nWounded\nSapper F. S. Blnns, 500011, England.\nSapper  IT. .1.  Rylnnd,   106108,   Hog-\nland:\nC. M. R.\nDied\nF. V. Bnrncs, 443886, England.\nWounded\nLieut. A. V. Evans, England.\nLlout. L. W. i'lsli. England.\nG. Homer,  107278, England.\nLieut. W. A. Kenney, England.\nLieut. C. Lambert (on duty), England.\nLieut. C. ,1.  Lewis, England.\nP.. MoCOl'mlcH, 42031I6, Scotland.\nLieut. IT. G. Scott, Scotland.\nC. IT. Walker,  110658, England.\nLanee-Cnrp.   D. J.  Wilson,   107616,\nEngland.\nMEDICAL  SERVICES\nSeriously III\nJ. Campbell, 938, Scotland, '\nCHARGE OFHCER WITH\nKILLING SKEFf INGTON\nCourt-martial of Capt Bowen-Colthurst\nOpened in Dublin\u2014Insanity Plea\nExpected.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nDUBLIN, .Tune 7.\u2014Tho prosecution\ntoday began the presentiitlon of Its\ncase\/at the courtmartlal oC Capt.\nBowen-Colthurst, chnrKed with the\nshooting of F. Sheehy Skefflngton, editor of the Irish Citizen; Thomas Dickson and Fred Mclntyre, during thc\nrecent Irish rebellion. The defondiuit\nIs accused of murdor.\nThe prosecuting officer said the defendant took the men from the guardroom with the remark: \"1 am Koing to\nshoot them aa 1 think it i.s thfe light\nthing to do.\"\nOfficers testified they liad been on\nduty 72 hours at this time and that\nthu accused was extremely excited and\ndid not act in his usual manner.\nOno officer said that after the shooting he noticed a movement in Skef-\nfington's body and told tbe captain of\nit, tho latter then ordering the firing\nparty to shoot again.\nIt Is testified that thc accused told\nMajor Roxburgh who was in command\nof the Porto Bello liar racks, that he\nhad shot the men on his own responsibility and probably would bang for it.\nGen. Bird related how Uie accused\nhad  disobeyed  orders.\nBowen-Colthurst's company was ordered to retire, but Jiowen-Colthni'st\ngave tbe command to advance. This\nsaid the witness, .showed his incapacity. Medical testimony was then\ntaken for the purpose of indicating the\nunbalanced state of the accused's mind.\nSYRIANS APPEAL\nTO THE PRESIDENT\nWAHTIINOTON', .lime B.\u2014A committee of Syrians from New York appealed to President Wilson and Counsellor Polk of tbe state department to\nseek permission from Turkey nnd the\nentente allies to get, food to Mount\nLeboon, an autonomous Turkish state\nwhere tbey said X0,ti()0 persons already\nhad perished of starvation and many\nwere suffering.\nTho delegation toid tho president.\npractically ail tho Inhabitants of Mount:\nLebanon were Christians and for that\nreason tlie Turkish government had\ntreated  them with  unusual severity.\nSyrians In lEgypf are prepal'lng to\nsend  food is permission  is given.\nTURK OFFENSIVE IN ;\/\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-\nASIA MINOR (REPULSED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June G.\u2014The Turks in\nAsia Minor, near Baiburt and Erzingan\nhave again attempted an offensive\nagainst the Russians, but Petrograd\nsays their efforts failed. A successful\nraid has (been made by the Russians\nagainst the Turks in the vicinity of\nKbanikan, near tho Persian border,\nnoriheast of Bagdad.\nPetrograd Statement.\nPETROGRAD, June 6.\u2014The following statement was issued tonight:\n\"In lhe Caucasus region, in the dl-\nrestion of Baiburt and Erzingen, the\nTurks, supported by artillery, took the\noffensive on many sectors. All their\nattacks wero repulsed. Near Khanikin,\n130 versets northeast, of Bagdad, we\nhad a successful aotion against tho\nTurks  Sunday.'*\nGERMAN STATES MUST FEED\nPRUSSIA  AND THEY  OBJECT\nLONDON, June \u2022\u00ab.\u2014Referring to tho\nstatement of the food dictator, Von j\nBafocki, In the relchstag, as reported I\nby Renter's Amsterdam correspondent'\nthat \"great difficulties are arising out\nof tho relations of the federal states\"\nand that \"from Wurltemberg menacing\nletters reach me protesting against the\nSticking dry of Wurttemberg by Prussia,\" the Chronicle says:\n\"This complaint from Wurttemberg\nonly expressed In drastic fashion what\nall other German states feel with regard to Prussia. In tbe Bavarian diet\ntho other day the members complained\nof 'Prussian food egotism' and of tho\nattempts which the Berlin government\nmakes to induce tlie Bavarian fond\nowners lo send their stuff to Berlin.\nThe  Chief  Difficulty.\n\"In Saxony the same feeling prevails\nand it. is clear that. Von Batockl's\nmain difficulty will be tn** persuade tbo\nBavarian, the Hessian, the Badenser\nand others that their main duty now is\nto feed Prussia. In Blsenhach the town\ncouncil issued an order forbidding the\nexportation from the district of all\nkinds of meat, sausage, poultry, fish,\nfats and nils, groceries, soap and soap\npowder, cheese, eggs, baked wares,\ntarts, fruit cakes ami vegelable.s.\"\nTho Berlin Tageblatt, with some\npertinence, commented nn this as follows: \"The people speak of England's\nstarvation war against us, Amt this\nGerman starvation war against largo\ntowns is ut least, worthy of condemnation.\nKINGV1LLE TO  GET  HATCHERY\nLONDON,    Ortt.,   .lane    (l.\u2014William\nfamily mm\nGOOD ADVICE\nTo Go OnTaking'Truif-a-ttves\"\nBecause They Did Her Good\nRociio.v, P. Q., Jan. 14th, 1915,     ,\n\"I suffered for many years with terrible Indigestion and. Constipation.   I \u2022\nliad frequent diziy spells and became '\ngreatly run down.  A neighbor advised '\nme to try \"Fruit-a-tives\",   I did so and\nto the surprise of ray doctor, I began ,\nlo improve, and he advised me to go on\nwith \"Kruit-a-tives\".\nI consider that I owe my life to \"Fruit-\na-tives\" and I want to say to those who ,\nsufl'er from Indigestion,Constipation or\nHeadaches\u2014'try Frult-a-tives' and you\nwillgctwell\". COUIXI'H.AUDREAi;. \"\nGOc. a box, 6 for $*_>.53, trial size, 25c.\nAtull dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-\na-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nGray, M. P., received a message from\nlion. J. D. Hazen, minister of marine\najiil fisheries, announcing that Kings-\nville hail been selected for the. site or\nthe new Dominion government white- '\nfish hatchery. Tenders for the new,\nbuildings will be called for In a few\ndays.\nOFFICERS GAZETTED\nfBy Dally News leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June G.\u2014Lieut.-Col. Morrison, D. K. O., is gazetted a brigadier-\ngeneral and attached to headquarters.\nLieut.-Col. B, W. B. Morrison, formerly editor of the Ottawa Citizen, went\nto England and Prance with the first\ncontingent as commander of the first\nfield  artillery  brigade,\nPRESIDENT TO MARCH\nFOR PREPAREDNESS-\nWASIIINOTON, D. C\u201e June G.\u2014Just'\nabout tho time the Democratic national\nconvention is getting down to Its business of renominating him President I\nWilson will be marching down Pennsylvania avenuo carrying a flag. Manager of the big F'lag day preparedness\nparade obtained the promise from him\ntoday. '\nfj i Tlie Goody That's Good For Them\nThe best way in this world to spend\na nickel for wholesome, beneficial\nrefreshment   is   to   get\nI\ni\n\u00a7\nI\nMade clean and kept clean; wrapped in\nwaxed paper and sealed. Two delicious\nflavors, always fresh and full strength.\nIt aids appetite and digestion, quenches\nthirst, sweetens mouth and breath.\nWrite for free copy of \" Wrigley's Mother\nGoose,\" a quaint booklet in colors that will\namuse young and old and remind you\nof  this  Perfect   Gum.\nAddress Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co., Ltd.\n1 Wrigley Bldg., Toronto\nChew it after every meal\nl\ni\n **PAOE FOUR\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE-7,,1916.\n^Hg^PftlLT NEWS\nPublished evpry morning except\nSunday toy the .News Publishing Company, Limited, Nelson, B.C., Canaila.\nROBB SUpIBRLAND,\nSccy.-Treas. and Manager.\n;, Business letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to the News Publishing Company, Limited, and in no case, to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statements of circulation\nmailed on request, or may be seen at\nthe office of any advertising agency\nrecognized iby the Canadian Press\nAssociation.\nSubscription Rates\u2014By mail 50 cents\nper month, $2.50 for six months, $5.00\nper year Delivered: 60 cents per\nmonth, $3.00 for six months, $6.00\nper year, payable In advance.\n\u25a0WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1916.\nPLAY  POLITICS  AT  EXPENSE OF\n;   THE PROVINCE\nThe attempt by'It. C. Brewster to\ninvalidate the legislation passed during the session just closed may look\nlike good politics to thc Liberal leaders hut'no one can seriously contend*\nthat it is anything but the worst kind\nof bnsihesH for the country. The Liberals, if they succeeded In their action on the alleged constitutional\nquestion, would make inoperative thc\nmining, workmen's compensation:\nshipbuilding, nine smelter guarantee\nand other laws. They would defeat!\ntoy thlal. means legislation they dared\nnot opqhly oppose in the house. They\nwould *Jeave the province without\nmoney io carry on its business.\n,lt is.pot so muchv-ihat'there is any\nlikelihood of the Liberal writ being\nUpheld as the uneasiness and uncertainty the writ's issuance has caused\nthat Is to be feared. British Columbians know enough of the IJberal tactics- to place the latest effort at its\ntrue value but what are financiers in\nthe.east, from whom the province and\nprivate, companies under provincial\nlegislation desire to borrow money to\nthink o% It? Is not the Liberal action\ncertain to cause them to pull in their\npurse strings? Valuable time is likely\nto be lost in building up new industries in,the province as a result of the\nBrewster writ, a political document\nWhich #?annot be defended even as the\ndying kick.of.a political organization\nthat after a brief spell of seeming success Is again falling into the position\nof public disapprobation which its unfavorable record has earned for it.\nOF\nof truth, it should he said,'we believe,\nthat the $1.25 and $1.50 imitation dime\nnovel of the present day Is a very poor\nsubstitute for the $1.50 and $1.50 novel\nof a generation ago that sold for a\ndime.\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nCan't Satisfy Them.\nIf the president hoped to mollfy the\npro-German vote by accepting the German note, he is probably surprised to\nfind that about the only feature which\nthe German language newspapers are\nable to see in It is the notification that\nhe Is no going after Great Britain.\u2014\nBuffalo Express.\nCardinal Mercier,\nOno of the greatest heroes that the\nwar has produced carries neither\n.sword nor gun, nor has he held within his hand the portfolio of any minister of state. Yet his courage might\nbe the envy of any military commander and his -judgment the ideal of any\ngovernment. We speak of Cardinal\nMercier. Out of the wreckage of the\nBelgian nation he stands forth-\ncounselor of prudence without dishonor, of courtesy without compromise\nand of obedience without spiritual sub\nmission or fear.\u2014New York Outlook.\nOpened the World's Eyes.\nAlter all, It has been Germany who\nhas remodelled and reformed Europe\n\u25a0by sheer force of contrast. Until the\nfull measure of her iniquity was made\nknown, the kindlier peoples of the\nwestern world did not understand the\ndanger that threatened them; they\ncould not visualize tho^.-horrors that\nlurked in cold truth behind tho scarcely credited lessons of a Bernhardt or\na Treitschke. Once\" again, In the\nworld's history, it has been oppression that has given birth to liberty.\nGermany, and*no one else, has made\nplutn tho depths of savagery that\nGerman policy required if her leaders\nwee to attain their object.\u2014London\nTelegraph.\nALLIES    CERTAIN     OF\nVICTORY.\nBEGIN ' TO   ADMIT   FAILURE\nTPIRACY CAMPAIGN\nIt is beginning to leak out that the\nGerman government is admitting the\nfailure of its submarine campaign and\nthat tills is tlie chief reason for the\nconciliatory tone of the German press\ntoward the United States attitude\nrecently.\nBy way of Berne comes a summary\nof Chancellor von Beth mann-Hoi 1\nweg's speech at the secret sitting of\nthe general committee of the relchstag\non. May ii, when the submarine controversy was under discussion. According to this summary the German\nchancellor said in part:\n\"A great mistake has been committed in overstating the value of the\nsubmarine campaign against England.\nOur naval experts no longer believe in\nthe probability of reducing England\nto starvation and ruin by submarines,\neven if the war lasts another two\nyears. It is true that these instruments can inflict a frightful amount\nof. damage, but. this damage would bo\ninsufficient to outweigh thc danger to\nourselves of America's hostilities. It\nis folly to underestimate the consequences of a confliot with America,\nnor should we risk only America's enmity. Our information leads us to believe that other neutrals might follow\n* America's lead. The imperial government has weighed every factor and is\nconvinced of the necessity of avoiding a breach with America.\nJ'These are the hard facts of the\npresent situation. We have worded a\nreply such as may reserve future liberty of action. If the situation\nchanges we may cancel our concessions to America and resume unrestricted submarine operations, but for\nthe present wo must overcome our\nfeeling and pursue the policy most\nconducive to final victory over all our\nenemies,\" ,\nPeace talk is a dissembler. Germany\nskilful as she is cunning, puts forward\nfrom tinfc to time talk of peace. She\nwould turn the attention of tho allied\nworld to the subject of peace. Her\nhope is that in this frame of mind the\nallied effort will slacken. Tn this situ\nation the allied peoples everywhere\nshould harken to the words of the\nBritish premier, spoken to a delegation\nof members of the Russian duma vis\niting (London.   He said:\nThe allies know that victory is\ncertain. We will stand together, no\nmatter how long and severe the test of\nendurance, until we have beaten to the\nground the forces which have withstood us, und can begin in peace to\nrebuild the shaken fabric of European\ncivilization.\"\nThere must at all hazards be no pre.\nmature peace. Such an outcome of\nthe war would be as unfortunate now\nas it was regarded to be when the.\nwar began. Germany not only must\nnot win, but tihe must not prevent the\nallies from winning. It is not that the\nvengeance, upon her. Rather it is that\ntho world must bo saved from the possibility that Germany will revive and\nstrike again. It is that militarism and\njunkerism must be destroyed.\nBrute force was never so hard-\npressed as It,is now. The nation that\nstands for the subversion of right to\nmight was never so menaced as it is\nthis moment. Tlie menace increases\nas the days pass, it must continue to\nincrease, until its power shall place\nrlg'it once again upon a pedestal; until\nthe nations of the earth shall be free\nto work out their own destiny unhindered and unhindering; until autocracy\nshall never again decree the death and\nslaughter of millions.\u2014-London V\nrress.\n(MM () I\nWhere the world's ships\ncoal.\nThere are about one hundred and\nforty .coaling   ports    scattered   over\nthe  seven   seas,   from  Panama,  lying\nIn strategic position at tbe canal entrance, to the remote South Sea Island\nport of Apia, but there are none so essential to shipping, and none so celebrated on all the waterfronts of the\nworld as Gibraltar,\" Port Said Colombo,  Singapore,  and Nagasaki,  on  the\nmain trade roufo to thc Orient. For\nshins London bound on tho long elev-\non-thousand-mile   voyage   from    the\nl'*ar East, necessary stops ar*} regularly made at. these ports by both cross-\nsea liners and plodding cargo-carriers.\nPort Said was unheard of, and Nagasaki was unvisited toy the seafaring\nmen of the full-rigger age, for trade\nroutes and ships have changed since\nthe   ten-clipper   left   Whampoa   and\nmade London without calling at a port,\nThe present-day mail steamer, making\nIS knots an hour, is unable to carry\nsufficient coal for an eleven-thousand\nmile passage without   renewing    the\nsupply in way ports; and the modern\ntramp steamer, built to -carry as much\ncargo as can be stowed, and  barely\nenough coal to drive the engines from\none coaling port to the next, is in the\nsame predicament.   Huge supplies of\ncoal are kept In all these ports for the\nneeds of arriving shipping.   At Port\nSaid, for instance, a million tons of\ncoal are landed each year from colliers\nwhich arrive daily from England   to\nsupply tthe  shipping  -which     passes\nthrough the Suez canal.\nWherever there is a cooling port\nthere tlie trade routes gather. On the\n\"Track Chart for Full-powered Steam\nVessels,\" published by tho hydrogra-\nphic office, Washington, the trade\nroutes which cross tho great expanse\nof the Pacific radiate in all directions,\nlike tho spokes of a gigantic wheel,\nfrom each of tho island ports of Honolulu, of Apia, and of Tahiti. Shoreward they are directed to San Francisco, to Panama, and to Valparaiso;\nand on the Asiatic side of the Pacific\nall routes lead to Nagasaki in the\nnorth and Sydney in the south, Similarly in tho south Atlantic ocean there\naro established for the use of steamers\nplying the routes of those waters, coaling stations of large importance at\nthe otherwise remote [torts of Santa\nCruz de Teneriffe, at the Cape Verde\nIslands, at Ascension Island, and at\nSt. Helena, all of them island ports ly\ning well away from the African coast.\nTeneriffe is a regular coaling port on\nthe route to all African ports from the\nIvory Coast to Capetown; and the\nCape Islands\u2014where four thousand\nsteamers call for coal fn a single year\n\u2014aro on the main rente from the English Channel to the ports of South\nAmerica. These ports are on the cross-\nsea highways of the world's commerce;\nfrom them stretch the bypaths nnd to\nthem come the coastwise routes.\u2014\nGeorge Harding in Harper's Magazine\nfor June.\nTOIBE ELIMINATED\nColonial   Possesions   Which   Embody\nGerman Recollections to Be\nRechristened\nThe proposal, put forward by the\nAustralian Commonwealth, that Kaiser Whlhelm's Land, thc German portion of New Guinea now in our occupation, shall be renamed, is a reminder that other considerable portions\nof the welcome change when we win\nthe war.\nFor Instance, there is the Bismarck\nArchipelago, ceded by England to Germany in lg84. This Is now held by us,\nand it is very unlikely that the island\ngroup will retain its present name\nmuch longer. Probably it will be\nchanged to New Britain, which waB\nwhat it was called before we surrendered It,\nCuriously enough one of the largest.\nIslands in the Archipelago was christened New Hanover by ourselves, a\nname which it still retains, This, too,\nwill have to go. We want no names\nreminiscent of the Hun on our maps\nnowadays, nor hereafter.\nThen there is Kaiser Wilhelm II.\nLand, situate in the Antarctic Continent. This may well go the way of\nthe other German overseas possessions, for although it is of 'little use\nto anybody just at present, being covered all over with an Ice-cap a mile\nor so thick, one never knows what\nthe future may bring forth. Tlhose\nfrozen lands round the South Pole are-\nbelieved to abound In mineral wealth;\ngold and coal, for instance.\nAnd, by the way. there is yet another Kaiser Wilhelm Land; in Greenland. We shall havo to reehrislen this\nalso. And whllo we are about it we\nmay very possibly feci compelled to rename Franz Joseph Land; so called\nby Its discoverer, after tho present\nEmperor of Austria.\nSECRET DOCUMENTS\nCAPTURED  IN   PERSIA\nPETROGRAD, Russia, Juno 6.\u2014A\nTeheran message states the local authorities of Shiran, Persia, have captured two cases containing secret doc^\numents of great importance which had\nbeen dispatched by Dr. Pujen, a Ger\nman agitator, for concealment a\nShira'z. uUtlAl\nFOE MIXED BEES AND\nBULLETS   IN   ATTACK,\nLONDON\u2014The Central News quotes\nfrom the Natal Mercury accounts of\nthe difficulties confronting the British\nfighting forces in East Africa, furnished by an officer of tho East African\nmounted rifles, who formerly was a\ncoffee planter at (Nairobi. This officer\nsaid the principal difficulty was tho\ngreat density of tho bush, which rendered effective scouting almost Impossible and provisioning troops yery\ndifficult.\nOf the ingenuity of the Germans\nthere Is no doubt, as the following\nincident will prove: Round about\nTonga, where the Lancashires landed,\nis  a  considerable  bee country.   The\nnatives have a device which they place\nin the hollow -logs in trees to enable\nbees to construct their hives, and from\nthese the nntlves collected honey.\nIn ono place , the Germans tied up'\na lot of these logs together, and attached them to a wire in long grass.\nThey also invented a plan which\ncaused a white flag to jump up when\nanyone came in contact with the wire,\nthis being the signal for them to turn\nmachine guns on the spot.\nA party of Lancashires had the ill-\nluck to stumble over the wire',-'With the\nresult that dozens of bee hives fell and\nup sprang the white flag,, revealing\ntheir whereabouts. The Lancashires\nquickly had bees and bullets to contend with, and between the two*had a\nhot time.\n*.+*-****\nI HOW\n*******\nI        A  PLEA\nFOR   EDITORS.\nJoin your home battalion, the 225jh.\nThe sooner it is brought to strength\nthe earlier will it be of service h**-, the\nEmpire.\nWhile as a rule the giving of muni-\ncipal assistance to industries is not\nwise, tho city council would be justified in giving free power to the French\nZinc Smelting company, at least until\nthe business passes the experimental\n(Stage and can produce metal at a\nprofit. There should be no objections\nraised to this small assistance to an\nindustry which will materially increase the payroll of Nelson.\n* * *\u00bbT<>\u00bb^\nI WHAT THE PRE8S IS 8AYING 1\n*\u2022 \u25a0\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u2666'\u2666\u25a0>\u2666\u2666 \u2666 \u00bb \u2666-\u2666 \u2666 \u2666 \u00bb\u2666-\u00bb\u25a0\u2666 \u2666 *-*-*++ i\nJ Isn't IMhiJhith?\nis something* more than a\nsh of newspaper satire in the.\nreply of a western contemporary to\n.the question, \"What has became of the\nold-time dime novel?\" \"It is here,\"\ncomes the answer, \"but they are charg.\ning $1.25 and $1.50 for tt.\" Not with\nthe purpose of taking the edge off this\nJn the least degree, but In the interest\n\u00bb \u2666 *****\u25a0*-* \u2666 \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666>\u00bb\u00bb.\n. .._\u201e  LAUGHTER CAME TO\nI CANADA:\nAt a dinner given to Col. George\nHam, of the C. P. R., in Montreal a\nfew nights ago, there was read the'\nfollowing verses written by Neil Munro, an English novelist' and Journalist,\nafter touring the country witli Coi.\nHam;\nThe Lord one day, in.a happy mood\nMade Canada\u2014mount and plain and\nwood,\nTlie sounding cataract and the lake\nOn   whose   blue   borders   the   poplars\nshake,\n\"'Tie good,\" said the Lord, and took\nHis rest,\nBut soon in His wilderness felt op-\nprcst.\nBest lie thfe wood, then, with bird and\nbeast, -.*\n: With thunder of hooves He filled the\nwest,\nSet the Hetl Man forth on a generous\ntrail.\n\"Be   glad,\" He   commanded\u2014without\nawail,\nFor  the  Indian sulked ^n a, dread\nsurmiso,\nAnd something was wanting in God's\neyes.\nAt a breath the buffalo ceased to be,\nTho   fire   died  down   in   the   brave's\ntepee;\nWhite  men plowed  over.the prairie\nflowers,\nSmiling not even in leisure hours,\nFor their minds wero on foolish futilities set,\nAnd God saw something was wanting\nyet.\n. Long thought the Lord, unci one bright\nI day      \/\nHe made Him a man of His spit and\nclay\nAnd set him forth In the sun to dry\nIn a place where the waters went rippling by,\nSaid the Lord, \"Be laughter, wherever you are,\nStand  forth,   George  Ham,  of the\nC. P. R.\"\nSo wherever the C. P. Rv lines run,\nFrom Montreal to the setting sun,\nIf there be folk who are tired and sad\nThey will welcome George, the perennial lad,\nGeorglus Rex\u2014true King of Smiles,\nWho carries laughter ten thousand\nmiles.\nPublicity is all a'newspaper has to\nsell, -Since tho war began every local\npaper in Canada has given free, hundreds of dollars wortii of space, boosting all kinds 'of funds and organizations in connection with the war. In\nspite of this, many unthinking people\nentertain tho idea that editors should\nput up just as much cash as other citizens. If a grocer donated a large quantity of provisions to war funds, would\nany reasonable man expect him to put\nup cash? Then, why pester editors for\ncash, when they aro already giving\nmore to war projects than any other\nclass of citizens. The proper system\nIs to charge for all tills kind of publicity, nnd make cash donations to all\nfunds, just the same as other citizens,\nBy doing this some of the dull-witted\nmight gradually learn that the editors\nof Canada have given more towards\nwar funds than any other class of people In the entire Dominion.\u2014Col. R, T.\nLowory in The Greenwood Ledge.\nI RED  CROSS   NOTES\nTho Red Cross society has acknowledged the following donations: Mrs.\nRennie, $5.10, proceeds of raffle of\ncushion donated by Mrs. E. ,T. Bangs,\nEdgewood; old linen and* blankets,\nMrs. T. McDonald; 10-cent collections\nfrom Mrs. Astley, Mrs, Scott Thompson, Mrs. Whitehead, Mrs. J. Cooper;\nBennington Patriotic society, $7.50;\nMrs. MeCaveon, old linen; Mrs. Armstrong, one pair socks.\nCOLD   STORAGE\nw-w-4-w-*-**-* *>\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2022\u00bb\nA pupil in a school near Chatham\nSquare, New York City, thus defined\nthe word \"spine:\"\n\"A spine is a long, limber bone..Your\nhead sets on ono end and you set on\nthe other.\"\nGentleman of the Road\u2014Kindly 'elp\na pore lonely 'omeless man, guv'nor,\nwot's got nothlnk in the world but a\nloaded revolver and no conscientious\nobjection to usin' it.\n  *\nHe\u2014Shall you be engaged tomorrow\nevening?\nShe (coyly)\u2014That depends a good\ndeal on you.\nThe Merry One\u2014Cheer up, old man!\nWliy don't you drown your sorrow?\nThe Sad Ono\u2014Because she's stronger than I am; and, besides, it would\nbe murder.\nTHE   WEATHER\nStage of water: 10 ft. 8 in.\nShe\u2014If momma consents to our engagement Wu needn't bother about\nwhat papa says;\nHe\u2014I do hope the\/non-Importance\nof the male member of the family Is\nnot, an ingrained idea with you, :\nMln,\nMax.\n70\nBS\n64\n70\nBattleford   \t\n 40\n64\n66\n56.\n66\n56\n66*\n58\n74\nr.s\n64\n68\n68\n62\nSt., Jolm   ., ,.\n...... ... 48\n64\n68\n0\nSUGAR GROWING  IS\nDEVELOPING   IN   BRITAIN\nGLASGOW, Scotland.\u2014Tho British\nEmpire Producers Organization, which\nentertained the prime minister of\nAustralia on his recent visit to Glasgow, was one of the first organizations to get to work on the outbreak\nof the war to solve the problem of how\nthe production of sugar within the\nBritish Empire might be stimulated so\nas to avoid depen-lciK-e on Germany\nand Austria, which had been supplying Great Britain with about 2,000,000\ntons of beet sugar. These supplies, of\nCourse, ceased automatically when war\nwas declared.\nAt the entertainment given in honor\nof Dr, Hughes, Sir Edward Rosling,\nchairman of the organization, said\ntheir object, was to provide machinery\nfor linking up different industries,\nshould tbey so desire, with a view to\ndealing witli the position ia whieh the\nnation would find itself on the conclusion of peace, Though tlie organization bad started with the object of\nassisting tin* production of sugar\nwithin (he Empire,, it was found that\nthe sugar industry was bound up with\nso many othor trades that these had\nto be brought within the scope of it.\nWith regard to thc engineering\ntrade, with which Oiasgow is so intimately connected, it was pointed out\nthat for every acre of can sugar grown\nIn the British Empire -C10 worth of\nmachinery was required. To replace\nthe'qmuitity of sugar formerly imported from Germany and Austria, 1,000,\n000 acres would lie required, repre- i\nsenting ClO.OOO.OQO worth of sugar\nmachinery. As far as , shipbuilding*\nwas concerned, the freights' on suagr\nfrom the British Colonies were much\nhigher than the mere ferry passage\nfrom the continent.\nAt the commencement of the process\nof organization, they had cabled an\ninvitation to Australia, Natal, Canada,\nIndia and Mauritius to send representatives to a conference to be held in\nLondon immediately. They had also\ninvited the West Indies, represented\nby the West India committee in London, to send some of their members.\nAndrew Fisher, high commissioner\nfor Australia, said that if they wer\ngoing to do something worthy of their\nrace they would have to make sacrifices, thoy had cheered Mr. Hughes\nwhen he hud lold them what had been\ndone by State action\u2014the community\nfor ihe community. He (Mr. Fisher)\nhad often looked back from the distant Commonwealth of Australia to\nhis native land and wondered If it\nwould in this matter take the guiding\nhad and thc leading part, would take\nthat step which in Ills opintoiri would\nbe taken in the nc.ar future to organize human effort, human ethics and\nthe foundations of justico on lines\ndffferent from those existing at the\npresent time. He did not think they\nneeded wealth. They needed .more\nhard, solid thinking, and the spirit of\nbrotherhood which mado a people\ngreat.\nDr. Hughes said that Sir Edward\nRosilng's statement that tlie sugar\nsupply for thc British Empire could be\norganized was definite and hopeful.\nHe saw no reason why It should not\nlie done and done immediately. The\nfoundation of it must be such an assurance \\o and arrangement with tho\nsugar producers within the Empire\nthat the British nation was prepared\nto buy Its sugar at a fixed price from\nthem and from them only. Those who\nthought the British Empire incapable\nof supplying all the sugar required did\nnot know its immense possibilities.\nThis conference, if it got the support it deserved from the people and\nthe government of Great Britain,\nwould drive a wedge Into the \"do-\nnothing\" policy under which they lived today. One great central truth\nmust ever be kept in mind, that no\nedlfl.ee they eduld erect would be por-'\nmanent and satisfactory unless it rested upon the foundation of such a radical change In the condition of the\nmasses of tho people as would, by\ndriving out every mean and petty\nthought, inspire all classes to realize\nthat all are one great family and to\nt,ake pride in being citizens together\ndf the same great heritage.\nA Little Bit from Every Purse\nWill Provide for Belgium's\nHungry Millions\n\u25a0\"Oh, I'm sick and tired of hearing\nabout the poor, starving Belgians! Why\ndo the papers keep  harping away on\nthat same old subject?\"\n\"Because the Belgians are ttill\nhungry, I suppose. By the\nway, have you given much to *5^3g-\u00a3;\nthe Belgian Relief Fund?\"    \"*~=*\n\"Well, I can't say I have given\nanything yet.    But then there are so\nmany demands on one's purse these\nwar times.\"\nIsn't that usually the way ? Those\nwho have  followed   the impulses of\nhumanity and have given what- they\ncould to the Belgians are the ones who\nare always interested, who   sympathize with   their\nsufferings and are willing to keep on helping. *\nThose who profess to be \"fed up\" on  Belgian\nRelief talk are the ones who, at every appeal, have\nstifled their generous impulses, and are feeling more\nuncomfortable about it every time.\nBelgium's need is growing greater every day as\none family after another exhausts its little hoard of\nmoney and becomes entirely dependent on the Belgian\nRelief Fund for daily bread\u2014for life itself.   Already\nthese number nearly three millions.\nMore is needed than the continued help of those who have been\ngiving right along 1 The big gifts\nof the rich and, well-to-do by no\nmeans meet the demands! What\nthe Fund needs \u2014 what these\nBelgian women and children must\nhave or face star)c starvation\u2014is\nthe additional help of hundreds\nand thousands who have not yet\ncontributed!   \u2022\nIn the hands ofthe marvellously\nefficient Belgian Relief Commission,\nSeven Cents a Day, or even less,\nwill provide food for one needy\nwoman, child or old man.\nCan you afford to give that much F\n\u2022 Can you, knowing thc need, refuse it ?\nWhatever you feel you can give, send your subscription weekly,\nmonthly, or in one lump sum, to local or Provincial Committee,, or\nFine Presentation\nSilver\n- SANDWICH PLATES\nBREAD or CAKE TRAYS\ni  FRUIT or SALAD BOWLS\nFLOWER BOWLS,\nVASES,  ETC.\n\u2014hand pierced, hand chased and\nhand engraved\u2014the latest creations in silverware. Made in our\nown factory.\n,  Va\nA gift of this fine silver will rejoice the heart and beautify the\nhome' of any bride. Let us Bend\n-you our illustrated catalogue.\nHenry Birks & Sons Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nAt it .Again\nWe have opened up our lee\nCream Parlor and as in the past\nyears are making our own ice\ncream with.. '.'.  '..'\u25a0.'.'\t\nPURE FRESH CREAM,\nTry it and let   us   have   your\nopinion.\nChoquette Bros.\nTho High-Class Bakers and\nConfectioners.\nPhons 258. 516 Baker St\nBelgian Relief Fund\n51 St. Peter St., Montreal. '2\n$2.50 Feeds a Belgian Family One Month\nSendCheques\nPayable lo\nTreasurer\nFURS\nHave your fura made up, remodelled I\n\u2022r repaired at a discount during sum- I\nmer. Skins dressed and mounted, j\nOver forty years' experience in principal European cities. Best prices patdj\nfor raw furs. ?.\nG. GLASER,\nManufacturing Furrier,\ntie Ward St., Nelson, B, C. Phone 106. |\nJ.P.MORGAN\n8ECOND HAND DEALER.\nBuys for cash, Stoves, Furniture, Tools, I\netc. Good prices for Hides, Rubber, |\nCopper and.Brass, See us before\nsell.\n512 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C. I\n(Two doors from Postoffice.)\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\nSUBSCRIPTIONS  TO  THE\nBelgian Relief Fund\nARE   RECEIVED   AND   ACKNOWLEDGED   BV\nThe Daily News\nLAND  REGISTRY  ACT.\n. To William A. Arnold, assessed owner oC all minerals, precipus and baseI\n(save coal and petroleum) in or under I\nLot 4079, Group 1, known as the \"Arn-1\nold\" Mineral Claim, and to whom it|\nmay concern.\nTake notice that an application haa\nbeen made to register William Connolly as tho owner in fee simple of tho\nabove minerals under Tax Sale Deed\nfrom the Collector oC the Nelson Assessment District and your are required\nto contest the claim of tho Tax Purchaser within forty-flvo (45) days from\nthe first publication hereof.\nDated at the Land Registry Office\nat Nelson, B.C., this 27th day of December, 191-5.\nSAMUEL R. ROB,\nDistrict Registrar.]\nDate of first publication May 24th, I\n1916.        , \"\nJohn Burns & Sons-^SSS\"1*\nSA8H   AND   DOOR   FACTORY. NELSON   PLANING   MILL8.\nVERNON    STREET.   NELSON,   B.C.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept in Stoek.\nEstimates Given on Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings.\nMAIL   ORDERS   PROMPTLY   ATTENDED   TO.\nP.O.   BOX  134 PHONE  178\nDid You Ever Stop and Figure\nWHAT   YOU  ABB WASTING EACH DAT IN  ALLOWING YOUR\nVEGETABLES, BUTTER, MILK, ETC., TO SPOIL BY NOT HAVING\nA PROPER PLACE TO ,KEEP THEM.\u2014A NEW.\nREFRIGERATOR\ni will cost you a small'amount and it will save you dollars each month\nbesides  keeping things fresh and  clean.\nALL-CALL   AND   SEE\nPRICES   TO   SUIT\nUS\nStarting with Next Saturday, June 3, this store will.close at 1\nTwelve o'clock and eaoh Saturday afternoon during' the summer 1\nmonths. J\nNejson Hardware Co.\nNELSON,  B.  C.\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights nf the Dominion\ntn Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, tbe Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories, and in a portion at\nthe province ot British Columbia, may\nbe leased for a term ot twenty-ona\nyeara at an annual rental of tl pet\nacre. No more than 2,584 acre* will\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a leas* must btl\nmade by tlie applicant In person to the I\nAgent or Sub-agent ot the dlstrlot oil\nwhloh the rights applied tor kn *U-'\nuated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must I\nbe described by aections or legal sub- *\ndivisions of sections and In unsurveyed territory the tract applied tor shall I\nbe staked out by the apllcant himself.]\nEaoh application must be accom-l\npanted by a tee ot f 5 which will .he re-1\nfunded if the rights applied fur ar*l\nnot available, but not otherwise, Al\nroyalty shall be paid on tha mer-f\nohantable output of the mine at the!\nrate of live cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine \u25a0!\nfurnish the Agent with sworn return*!\naccounting for the full quantity otl\nmerchantable coal mines and pay thai\nrealty thereon, If the coal mlnlncl\nrlgbta are not being operated, suchl\nreturns shall be furnished at least |\nonce a year.\nThe lease will Include the coal mining rlghta only, but tha lessee may\nbe permitted to purchase whatever\navailable surface rlgbta may be considered necessary tor the working of\nthe mine at the rate of f 10 an acre.\nFor full Information application\nshould ho made to the Secretary of th*\nDepartment ot the Interior, Ottawa,\nor to any Agent or Sug-agent at Dominion land*,\n'  W. \"W. COOT,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior,\nN .B.\u2014Unauthorized publication Of]\nthis advertisement will not be paid tea J\nV\n ***\\\nM\nP\"* WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1916,\nTHE 'DAILY  NEWS\nPAGE Fiyi\nsssaesaesaaa**\nA Hi* CAR OF\nValencia\nOranges\n,25C 35C nnd 50c\nSUNK1ST LEMONS.\nDozen 30\u00b0\nLARGE\nEach'\nCALIFORNIA\nFRUIT.\nGRAPE\n10c\nThis store will close every Wedrtes-\n day. afternoon during the\n* summer months.\nMISS   FLOSSIE   JOHNSTONE\nheld the lucky number.last week\nIn our weekly drawing for a pair\nof ?r, shoes. ' Don't forget to ask\nfm- a ticket with your*purcliuHo,\n\/ J   .   ., 7\u2014 \"\nDuring the months of June,\n'July and August this ^tore\nwill be closed on Wednesday\nafternoons.\nV j\nR. Andrew & Co.\n\\ Kootenay and Boundary\n*\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u2666! '\"\"\nStar Grocery\n1\nPHONE 10.\nfry Us With Your\nMail Orders\nToilet Water, 7Bc, J1.00 and *1.25;\nto clear ..40C\nPoole Drug Co.\nP. 0. Box 505.\nUMITED.\nNelson, B. C.\nAlkali In Shampoos\nBad For Washing Hair\nDont use prepared 'shampoos or anything, else, that contains too much\nalkali, for this is very injurious, as it\ndries the sculp and makes the hair\nbrittle.;\nTho .best thing lo use is just plain\nmulsifled cocoanut oil, for this is pure\nand entirely greaseless. It's very cheap\nand -beats tho most expensive soaps or\nanything elso all to pieces. You can\nget this at any drug .store and a few\nounces will Inst tin* whole family for\nmonths, nrtt\nSimply moisten the hair with water\nand rub it in about a teasponnful is all\nthat is ronuired. It makes an abundance of rlc|ji, creamy lather, cleanses\nthor^Vi-My and rinses out easily. The\ni hfllr 'iMcs -nuickly and evenly, und is\nsoft, fresh looking, bright, I'luifj-, wavy\nand easy to handle. Besides it loosens\nand takes out every particle of dust,\ndirt aud dandruff.\nINDIGESTION\nDYSPEPSIA\nGASTRITIS\n,     STOMACH ULCERS\nWhy Magnesia Should be Taken After\nEvery Meal.\nA flushed face may be the first noticeable symptom .of indigestion, but\ndisregard this wornlng and soon there\nis a u n m 1st uk cable pain, -for indigestion\nis a progressive- ailment. At first the\nsymptoms may be relieved by pepsin,\nbismuth or soda but these things do\nnot overcome tho excessive acid In the'\nstomach which is usually the underlying eauso of tlie trouble and consequently the acid accumulates and the\noccasional attack of Indigestion becomes chronic dyspepsia. The dyspeptic, is always particularly liable to gastritis and gastric, ulcers in the stomach\nare only too often the forerunners of\nperitonitis, stomach cancers and death,\nFor this reason physicians place\nmuch Importance upon keeping the\nstomach free from harmful acid and\n'are continuously advising chronic dyspeptics as wejl as those who only suffer occasional attacks of indigestion\ntu keep a little pure bisurated magnesia handy, and to take a tcuspoonftil\nin a little water after every meal, Prac\ntically any druggist can supply yoi\n\u25a0with bisurated magnesia and all stom\na-ch sufferers are advised to get ai\nounce o\\ so and give it a trial; Care\nshould be taken to tell tho druggist to\ngive yo\\i magnesia in the bisurated\nform as other magnesia preparations\nwhile valuable as laxatives :Vnd mouth\nwashes nre not recommended for the\ncorrection of stomach acidity.\nGERMAN PEOPLE BEING\nPREPARED FOR PEACE MOVE\nBERLIN.\u2014-Gradually, unobtrusively\nand skilfully, German public opinion\nis being prepared for peace In general\nand mediation by President Wilson in\nparticular. This is toda>*; the only Important concrete fact emerging from\ntho peace talk, peace rumor and the\nspeculative combination of the two.\nlt Is not only possible for the imperial government, through the political -censorship, to mold and influence\npublic opinion to its way of thinking\nIn regard to peace but* what is more to\nthe point, \u00bbIt is doing so. And the political censorship never worked more\nadmirably* or sanely than at the present time in its manipulation of tho all-\nabsorbing peace theme.\nThe censorship has lifted the lid from\nthis topic, which has long been almost\ntaboo and has given a very free rein\nto peace discussion. And even though\nfor tho present the discussion of sped\nfie peace terms and war aims is still\nforbidden, the now comparative free\ndom of the press must mark a notable\nadvance.\nNot only havo the German people\nnow been thoroughly familiar with t!lie\nIdea that President -Wilson intends to\noffer his services as mediator at the\nearliest possible (moment* and with\nprospects of success, but they know,\ntoo, the pope is working for peace.\niThey are also informed that President\nWilson is likely to -have a competitor\nfor firs* place in tho contest to bring\nabout peaco in tbe person of tlie king\nof Spain.\nReports printed hero indicate that\nthe possibility of peace soon is being\nso seriously regarded in Madrid that\nKing Alfonso as soon as he has assured\nhimself as to the intentions of the scv\noral belligerent powers, plans lo send\ntwo highly jilaeod' persnhriges to' the\nkeverdl governments with Instructions\nto pave the way for pene negotiations.\nSignificance accordingly is attached\nhere to the fact uf the kaiser's return\nto Berlin from headquarters ut this\ntime. Also tile fact that the kaiser immediately received the Spanish ambassador In audience and that tlie latter,\nas well as the Argentine minister,\nsince then hns been in conference with\nAmbassador Gerrard.\nKASLO CONSERVATIVES TO   ,\nAID WOUNDED MEMBERS\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nKASLO, June C\u2014The Kaslo Conservative association stands pledged to aid\nIn' every possible way those of Its\nmembership who return from the\nfighting in France disabled by wounds.\nThis is in accordance with the resolution which was adopted at tho recent\nconvention on -May 24. The resolution\nIs as follows:\n\"Tho delegates to tlie convention,, of\nthe Conservative association at Kaslo,\nMay 24 desire to record their appreciation of the sacrifices that have been\nmade by many members of our association by the heroic manner in which\nthey have volunteered to uphold tho\nhonor and integrity of our Empire.\n-\"To the relative*-* and friends of\nthose who have [given1 their lives for\ntheir country, wo desire to express our\ndeepest sympathy.\n\"To those who return maimed ahd\nwounded, we pledge ourselves to help\nin every possible way.\n\"To the brave buys who are now facing the rigors of wa$ we extend our\nhearty good wishes for their health\nand safety and tho hope that they may\nspeedily return to (their homes amongst\nus, ennobled iby the sacrifice which\nthey voluntarily undertook on behalf\nof their King and country.\"\nOur Store Closes  Every  Wednesday\nWEAR T<3 HELP US DO IT.\nSLOCAN  CITY  NEWS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\n1 SLOCAN CITY, B. C, June O?\u2014\nKurtz Zimmerman was in town Saturday, from his claims joined the Ottawa and reports tho finding of a\nbody of rich ore which runs lOOlt\nounces lo tho ton. Mi*. Zimmerman\nhns worked these claims on and oft\nfor 12 years alone.\nWafer and Jameson have about six\ntons of ore sneked which tliey have\ntaken from their claims on Syringa\ncreek.\nMrs. W. A. Jackson went to Nelson\nMonday.\nMr. and Mrs. J, O. Covington and\nchildren went tn Nelson Monday.\nCharles E, Barber, William Hicks\nand Arthur Gould returned to the\nMeteor mine Monday.\nLONGBEACH  NEWS\n(Special to Thc Daily News.)\nLONGBEACH, B. C, -lunc 5.\u2014Mrs.\nJ-'alrbairn and Mrs. Ahearn of Sunshine Bay were visitors to Longbeach\nlast week.\nSeverul hear tracks have been seen\nby different people ih the vicinity and\na party of ladies going from here to\nBalfour saw a brown bear on tin\ngovernment road.\nAirs. Eskriggb, Mrs. J. D. Kerr and\nDale visited Nelson last Friday.\nMiss Hill and Miss Lesley Hill have\narrived here to take up their residence\nat the Cooke-Hurle ranch\nFishing has been excellent hero\nlately and record catches have been\nmade, -,lohn Anderson came in, one\nevening, with five char, tile (iffgregnte\nweight of which was dbout -1ft pounds.\nHoly Communion was celebrated in\nAll 'Saints church last Thursday by\ntbe Rev. .1. C. Mahood of Queen's Bay.\nHe was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nL. Homer Wednesday and Thursday.,\nNEW SUITS\nAND   THOSE    NOT   QUITE   SO    NEW    GO    INTO   THIS   SALE\nAT ONE-THIRD TO  ONE-HALF  OFF  REGULAR   PRICES\nMANY OF THESE CAME IN DUIiINO THE PAST WEEK, BUT\nWE WANT TO BMP-pr OUR RACKS AND CASKS POR. SUMMER\nAPrAREU WHICH IS ARRIVING DAILY. YOU HAVE DELAYED\nGETTING YOUR SUIT, YOU'LL SAVE MONEY I1Y COMING\nDOWN   NOW:\nLOT   NO.   1\u2014AT   $10.00\u2014\nConsisting nf about Fifty Suits, plain tailored ami fancy stylos.\nMaterials aro Serges and Gabardines. Colors Navy, Brown, Green and\nBlack. Coats silk lined. Skirts about two yards, wide. Values regularly up to 545.00. tm nn\nJune Sale Price   <f I Ullltl\nLOT   NO. 2\u2014AT   $16.00\u2014\nThirty-Five Plain Talioi'cd Suits in Navy, Grey, Tan and Black;\nSerge or Gabardine. Coats silk lined, skirts full width and flaring.\nValues to J35.00. 0<JC nfl\nJune Sale Price    if I UlUtl\nLOT   NO.  3\u2014AT  $25.00\u2014\nConsists of our very newest suits, mado Ih a variety of styles, all\nshowing high collars and belted effects. Some of the coats have plain\nsleeves, others have cuffs. Coats silk lined throughout. Skirts In a\nvariety of styles, all wide. Colors Navy, Copenhagen, Tan, Black, etc.\nSizes Hi to 38 only.   Prices regularly up to $42.00. \"COK (\\l\\\nJune Sale Pr*ce    JtOiUU\nLadies1 Skirts\nat $5.00\nAll-Wool Serge Skirts, Navy and\nBlack only; made full, flaring styles.\nSome plain, other trimmed with belts\nand fancy braid. A good range nt sizes.\nPrices regularly $7.ill). \"~  ~~\nJune Sale Price ....\n$5.00\nLadies' Silk and Serge\nDresses at $9.95\nOnly Twenty-Five of these. Dresses, made of Mcssnlino Silk,\nPongee Silk and All-Wool Serge, Navy, Black, Copenhagen\nnnd Butty Shades. Tliey have full flaring skirls, low cOllars-\nof  luce,  embroidery\/   etc.;    long   sleeves.     Values   regularly\n ,....$9,85\nInce,\ntn  $22.50.\nJune Sale Price\nWHITE   BLANKET COATS  AT $10.00  EACH\nAll-Wool Blanket Cloth, made In the popular sports styles,\nPlain White, Plaids or Stripes.   Sizes Hi to 3\u00ab only.   Values\nlo $14,50.\nJune Sale Price\t\n$10.00\nCHILDREN'S   COATS   AT   -$4.95\nFor girls of six to fifteen years, Twenty-Five only Coats,\nPlain and Fancy Models, made of All-Wool Serge, In Navy,\nRed, Copenhagen and Tan.   Regular values lo $12.50, <\nJune Sale Price  \t\n$4.95\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE   STORE   FOR   STYLE\nTHE   STORE   FOR   QUALITY\nNEW' HOWE TREATM-ENT * f\nf. zsjl y?i\".Yi \"Ai:?y > ? rowth s i\n(Boudoir Secrets.)\nHero is a simple, yet very effective\nmethod for removing hair and fuzz\nfrom the face, neck und arms: Cover\ntho objectionable hairs with a paste\nmade by mixing some water with a\nlittle powdered delatone. Leave this\non for 2 or 3 minutes, then rub off,\nwash tho shin and the hairs have vanished. No pain or Inconvenience attends this treatment* but results will\nbe certain if you are sure to get real\ndelatone.\nOLD   INDUSTRIES   REVIVED.\nOne curious result or tho war has\nheen to revive some of the ancient,\nhalf-forgotten English village industries.\nFllnt-knapping, for Instance, whieh\nlias been carried oil at Brandon in\nSuffolk, for many generations and\nwhieh almost received ils death -blow\n\u2014but not quite, when the old flintlock musket was superseded by the\npercussion-cap rifle, hns recently\nbeen given a tremendous fillip, owing to the demand for flints for tinder-\nboxes toy the men at the front.\nCharcoal burning again, which wus\na nourishing Industry in the Sussex\nweald hundreds of years ago before\ncoal was thought of, may now be seen\nin full swing again, the war office\nhaving recently ordered large supplies\nfor use In the trendies.\nTiho charcdp.il 'burner .pursues his\npalling in the open air and he works\non an accepted formula handed down\nfrom earliest times through many\ngenerations.' Green oak logs only must\nbe used, and these are all cut to the\nsame size and stacked together in\nsuch a way as to form a low, conl-\ncally-shaped heap,   \u25a0\nThis is then covered with freshly\ncut turf and set fire to, but it needs\nconstant watching aud attention, for,\nif combustion proceeds too quickly, the\nsomlderlng pile may burst Into flame.\nThe breeding of ferrets hns -been a\nvillage industry in England almost\ntime immemorial, but the demand for\ntho little creatures has greatly fallen\noff during recent years. Now, however, owing? to tho insistent call ;for\nferrets to will the rats which swarm in\ntlie trenches in France nnd Flanders,\nthe demand has jumped far In excess\nof supply.\nGREENWOOD NEWS\nGREENWOOD', B. C., .lune fi.\u2014\nJiinmie < diver, who has joined tho\nrecruits, left for Grand Forks Saturday.\nDr. Arnott left last week for Kelowna, where he intends to reside.\nR. N. Adams of Princeton came in\non Saturday.\nIT, McCtitcheon left Monday for a\ntrip lo Vancouver.\nSOUTH SLOCAN  NEWS\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C\u201e June 5.\u2014\nAt a meeting of the Women's auxiliary\nThursday afternoon it wns unanimously resolved to hold an outdoor fete\nund sale of work at Creel lodge, In\naid  of the vicarage fund, May 24.\nThe May report of Slocan .function\npublic school is ns follows: Pupils attending, 22. Perfect attendance: Leo\nGausner, Olga Melnzuk, Peter Me'in-\nziik, Mary Potosky, Julia Potosky*\nKathleen Gray, Lndonn. Ballan, Marion\nShannon, Jack Shannon, Kathleen\nShannon.\nconcert Saturday -evening in the bund\nstand.\nMrs. F. S. Peters will receive Friday.\nMiss Jennie Webb of Victoria, has arrived In the city on or visit to her\nmother, Mrs. 10. Webl>.uii\n' Mr.ja.nd Mrs. ,K. Morrison and son\nOgden have left for a visit to Portland\nand const cities.\nMrs. R. T. Evans will receive Wednesday afternoon.\nThe Misses .\\lnizio and Irene Harrison who 'have been visiting Mrs. J.\nRpwo for the past week returned to\ntheir homo nt Blueberry creek Monday.\nMrs. Howe accompanied thorn, returning on tho night train.   ,\nA meeting of the Woman's Guild of\ntho Presbyterian church* was held\nthe homo of Mrs. Robertson Monday\nafternoon. Plans were made for a lecture on Burns to be given by Rev. W.\nRobertson on June 27.\nThe executive of the Boys' Athletic\nassociation held a meeting when it was\ndecided that it was not advisable to\nstart, girls' classes until tho boys' work\nwas bettor established.\nINDC\nKEL!\nMENT AGAINST)\nY IS HELD VALID\nDon't Forget\nWHEN   YOU   WANT\nHay, Feed or Grain\nOF THE BEST QUALITY AND AT THE BEST PRICE\nWEDDING IN ROSSLAND.\nROSSLANt), B.C., Juno 5.\u2014A quiet\nwedding took placo Saturday afternoon\nnt the residence of Rev. W. Robertson\nwhen Victoria May Symonds of Waneta was united in marriage to Thomas\nCharles Percy Harris [Locks of Nelson, Rev. W. Robertson officiating. Af\nter the ceremony tho bride and groom\nreturned to Trail, where they will-\nreside, _f\nDonald McDonald of Tmil spent thc\nweekend in Rossland.\nThe wedding of Miss Olga Anderson\nand H. Joseph Vennatta of Trail took\nplaco Friday evening at St. George's\nchurch. Rov H. W. Simpson performed\nthe ceremony after which tlhe bride and\ngroom returned to Trail where they\nwill reside.       ,\nMessrs. Sprague, ..oble and eNwton\nmotored to Grand Forks Saturday.\nJ. Foran and J. Errington left Tuesday morning for Limn, Peru.\n. The Eagles' band gave an open air\nPHOENIX HAS 84 MEN\nON ACTIVE SERVICE LISTS\nBoundary City Flays Its Part in Supplying Sinews of War to the Canadian Forces.\nIn addition to supplying instruments\nfor tbo 225th battalion -brass band, the\ncity of -Phoenix bus sent a number of\nher boys overseas and to the ranks of\nthe Kootenay battalions.\nThe city's honor roll carries the\nnames of 84 men according to the.list\npublished in the Pioneer of Mny 27,\namong whom the following havo been\nkilled and wounded:\nKilled in action\u2014F. <B. Jennings, J.\n.Pitpladdy, and D. M. Pittemlrigh.\nWounded or sick\u2014Pte. P. Poulton,\nPte. ,1. Bennett, Pte. Butorworth, Pto.\nJ. Porter, Pte. Kenison, Pte. Mc-\nQuotti, Pte. H. Sewel nnd Pie. B. Kerr.\nIn addition to the above enviable\n\u25a0 record Of recruits to the service that\nhas been established, the Boundary\ncity Is contributing the sum of $200\nmonthly to tlie 225th Kootenay battalion   recruiting  and   company  fund.\nLIPSEIT18 NAMED\nTO\nCounsel's Motion to Quash Charges in\nCase at Winnipeg  Is  Denied\u2014\nArraigned   for  Trial.\nBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG-, .lone (l.\u2014The indictment\nagainst Thomas Kelly, parliament;\nbuilding con I rae tor, wns held to lie\nvalid by .Justice Arbignst today. In a\nlengthy judgment t'he judge dismissed\ntho motion made by Kelly's counsel to\nhave the indlclment nnushed, The\njudge held that the attorney general\nof Manitoba did not exceed liis authority In presenting tho indictment to\nthe grand jury In Kelly's absence and\nbeforo any preliminary bearing had\ntaken place. He also gave it as his\nopinion that the various counts of tilt)*\nindictment should stand. I\nII. If. Ewart, K.C., then asked for a,'\nreserve case from his lordship for the\ncourt of appeals, based on tbe arguments of the defense In the motion to\nquash. Tho judge granted the request\nand R. A. Bonnar, K.C., for the crown,\nasked that the trial proceed while the\ndecision of tbe court of -appeal was\npending. Kelly was then arraigned.\n\"Not guilty,\" he suid.\n\"On all points?\" asked the. clerk of\nLhe court,\n\"On all points,'' replied thc accused.1\nMr. Ewart then made a motion that\ntlie trial toe postponed for at least a\nmonth or six weeks and he read affidavits from the accused und Edward Anderson, K.C., his associate counsel, declaring that it wns impossible for a\nfair trial to be secured now because of\ntho state ot public opinion, the elaborate nature of the defense required and\ntho largo number of documents which\nbad to be examined. Kelly's committal to jail without, ball was also\ncited ns a difficulty in the way of a\nprompt trial. Expert witnesses had to\nlie secured from the United Slates and\ndelay said Mr. Ewart, was \"absolutely\nessential if justice is to be done.\"\n,T. B. -Coyne, K.C., was not ready to\nargue on tho motion consideration of\nwhicli was put over to Wednesday\nmorning. \"The crown feels,\" said Mr\nCoyne, \"that it is not in tho interests\nSalesman Wanted\n.TO COVER THB ARROW AND KOOTENAY IjAKES AND OTHER\n\u2022POINTS   CONVENIT'JN'J-   TO   NELSON\nSALE OF A FUMj LINE OF NURSERY STOCK \"\"**\"\"\nfull timo to the work.\nIN THE\nAttractive [imposition to :i m.'ui who will r'ivo his\n*v' Address for l**ull Particulars\nTHE    BRITISH    COLUMBIA    NURSERIES\n1493 Seventh Avenue West\nCO.\nVancouver,\nB.C.\nXL-ITE\nBLASTING   AND   STUMPING\nPOWDER.\n\u25a0Power considered,   tho   cheapest\npowder on thc market.\nMode in Kootenay by\nKootenay Explosives\nCo., Limited\nBox 116, Nelson, B. C.\nWrite for Quotations.\nMINERAL  ACT.\nCertificate  ai Improvement!,     *,'\nNOTICE. -1\nAlice S. nnd Pat'erson Mineral ClalmS,\nsituate in tbe Slocan Mining Division of Kootenay District. Where\nlocated: About a mile southeast of\nthe lAXy B. mine. \u25a0\u25a0>\nTako notice lhat J, W. M. Myers, act-\naetlng ns agent for (Chester W. Harper,\nFree Miners' Certificate No. S4715-B,\nintend sixty days from tho date hereof\nto apply to the Mining Recorder for a\nCertificate of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of\ntho  above  claims.\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder section 85, must bo commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements,\nDated this Ufith day of March, A.D,\n1310.\nW.  M.  MYERS.\nPrivate   Hospital\nLICENSED   BY   PROVINCIAL  GOVERNMENT.\nWo give particular attention to all\nfemale trouble\u2014homo-like apartments\nfor ladies awaiting accouchment.\nHighest references; reasonable\nterms; Inspection invited.\nMRS. MOORE, Superintendent.\nTHE   HOME   PRIVATE   HOSPITAL,\nFalls tnd Baker Sts., Nelson, B, C.\nP. O. Box 772.\nPhone 372 for Appointment.\nTO   COME   TO\nThe Taylor Milling and\nElevator Co., Ltd.\nTired, Aching Feet\nand Limbs\naro promptly relieved by applying Absorblne, Jr., the antiseptic liniment. It\nis soothing, healing and Invigorating\u2014\nputs vim and energy into jaded\nmuscles. Ono of tho many enthusiastic users writes:\n\"I received t'he trial bottle of Absorblne, Jr., all right and at that time\nwas unable to walk without a cane,\njust around tho house. I used it freely and inside of two days could waJk\nwithout limping,, something I hud not\n\u25a0done In two months. I went to tho\ndrug store nnd procured a $1.00 bottle\nand todny can walk as good as ever.\nI'll never toe without It. I tun recommending it to everyone I can, for I artt\na living witness.\nAbsorblne, Jr., should always be kept\nat hand for emergencies,\nAt druggists, fl.00 and $2.00 a bottlo\nor sent postpaid. Liberal trial bottle\nfoi'10c in stamps. W. P. Young, P.D.F.,|is tljp only->V\u00abrd so far Jieard\n44B,,Lyraans Bldg., Montreal, Can,       I thorn dt headquarters.    \t\n'*>'\ni\nBrother of Sir Sam Hughes to Fill His\nPlace in First 'Division\u2014Fate of\nOfficers Unknown.\nOTTAWA, Juno 6.\u2014Brig-Gen. Llpsett, formerly of the 8th Winnipeg\nbattalion, and now commanding one of\nthe brigades of the first division, will\nsucceed Maj.-Oen. Mercer as the commanding officer of tho third division.\nFor Gen. Upselt's place lu the first division Brig-Gen. W. St.. P. Hughes, a\nbrother of Sir Sam Hughes, has been\nrecommended iby Gen. Ryng. Gen.\nHughes is now commanding ono of the\nbrlgudes of tho 4111 division which is\nStill in process of final organization\nand has not yet reached tho front.\nBrig.-Gen. Hughes, who has already\nseen considerable service at the front\nIn command of tiio 21st battalion, will\nthus again get -into tlie firing lino\npromptly.\nTo tako his place In the -1th division\nCol. Embury of Regina, who has 'been\ncommanding tho 28th battalion, will\nbe promoted brigadier in command of\na brigade of the 4th division,\nNd* word has yet beon received by\nSir -Sam Hughes as to the fate of\neither Maj.-Gon. Mercer or Brig.-Gen.\nVictor Williams. Both wore officially\nreported wounded and missing,and that\nabout\nsuch\ndelay   should\nof  justice   Hi\n\u25a0be granted.\"\nA. J. Andrews, ICC, counsel for tho\nex-ministers, put in a plea, for tho immediate hearing of the charges against\nhis client. The crown made no answer,\nMINERAL ACT.\nCertificate of Improvement.        j\nNOTICE.\nLiberia Mineral Claim, situate in the\n\" Nelson   Mining  Division   of  West\nKootenay District.   Where located:\nAbout, one-half mile east of the City\n\u2022of   Nelson.\nTake notice thnt I, W. M. Myers, acting jis agent for Swan A. Swanson, of\nthe city of Calgary, l-'ree Miners' Certificate No. S012G-I3, Intend, sixty days\nfrom tho date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate of\nImprovements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the aboVft\nclaim.\nAnd further tako notice that action,\nunder section 85, must be commenced\nbefore tho issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this uuh day of March, A.D.\n1!UG.\nW.  M.  MYERS\nTo Keep Your Hair\nFrom Falling\nTouch spots of dandruff with Cuticura Ointment, next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap,   Trial free.\nSample Each Free by Mail\nWjth H2-p. Skin Book. Address poat-\nrnrd, \"Cuticura. Dept. 3M, Boston,\nU.S.A.\"   Hold throughout tho world;\nI\nA News Want Ad\nWill do the work for you in the\nmost expeditious and satisfactory way. The expense is very\nnominal and the work is done\nwhile you rest.   Try it.   They\nAlways Get Results\n PAGE SIX\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n. i **m* ti'ttit..-.. in, *\u25a0.-, in,, 11<><4-.\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab..^^^\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab>\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab-\u00ab.\n[Jilarfes - Mining - Finance\nt.\nSTOCK PRICES CAIN\nAND THEN EAEl\nWHEAT PRICES HINT;\nOFF MARKET CLOSE STRONG\nMarket Unaffected by British Disaster\n\u2014Declines Scored in  Face of Increased   Dividends.\nBy Dbily News Tjea-Be<i| Wire.)\nNEW YORK, June 6.\u2014Special stocks\nns well ns representative issues were\nelevated again today on an expansion\nof professional activity. The market's\ncourse was altogether inconsistent,\nhowever, in that it ignored the disaster to the British military adminlstra-\ntfon at tbe outset, but declined later\non the favorable angaries conveyed in\na  number of  Increased   dividends.\nAnnouncement of early settlement of\nlong-standing differences among interests in Mercantile Marine proved of\nvalue to shipping shares, which were\nespecially weak at the close.\n. The reversal of the later session was\nconcurrent with nn advance in cnll\nmoney to 4 per cent to the highest ([notation in months. Local banks recently\nexpressed their disapproval of _ the\nmovement in certain of the more volatile Issues and Lhe hardening of loan\nrates may not be without, significance\nin  that quarter.\nMotor stocks were less active and\nmore irregular than yesterday.\nSugars repeated their familiar performance of mounting to higher levels,\nSouth Porto Rico common and preferred touching 236 and 120 respectively,   with   S3'\/2   for  the  common   beet.\nSomo of the more active war issues.\nlike...Crucible Steel and Baldwin Locomotive had their narrow flights , and\nBethlehem Steel gained -ii points, bill\nUnited States Steel lagged in characteristic fashion, developing heaviness\no,t tlie close. t\nCoppers wero mildly responsive to\nhigher dividends while other special\nstocks, including Harvester, American\nWrillng Paper, nnd United Stales\nSpelling denoted the effect of pools\nand citrines.\nNorfolk and Western railway fastened Us claim to leadership of the rails\nhy an advance of 2% to the new high\nprice of 131*1%, with  vnvlali\nsomo of tho Pacifies. Reudin-\neotton enrriers. \/\nTotnl  snles of stocks  ami\n(125,000 shares.\nMarine   imparted   flrmnes\ngenernl  bond list on  Ihelr ai\nthe new 'high quotation of 1111%. Totnl\nsales   of  bonds,   par  val\nUnited Slates registers\n14  per cent   on  call.\nrains li\nand thi\ntiled   ti\ntu   thi\n$3,700,000.\nadvanced\nCHICAGO STOCKYARDS.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, ill.. June IS.\u2014 Hogs: Receipts, 141(100; -weak, 15 to 20c lower;\nbulk, (1,20 at 9.40; light,, 8.-05 nt 8.35;\nmixed. 9.05 at 9.50; heavy, 8.05 at 9.50;\nrough. S.flii at 9.10;  pigs, fi.75 nt S.30.\nCuttle; Receipts, 3000; steady; native beef cattle 8 ut 31.15; western\nsteers, 8.50 at 9.50; stockers and feeders, fi at 9; cows and heifers, 3.75 at\n9.00; calves, S.25 at 11.75.\nSheep: Receipts, 14,000; firm; wethers, 7 at 8.25; ewes, 4.75 nt 7.75; lambs,\n7.50 tit 10.20; springers, 8.25 at 11.25.\nAdvance Caused by Flurry in  Futures\nand   Bullish  Advices About   Domestic Crop Conditions.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n('\u25a0HIIOAGI', III., June 0\u2014Wheat prices\nrose to a material extent today, chiefly as a result of a flurry in futures\nhere and because of bullish advices\nabout domestic crop conditions. The\nmarket closed strong 2 to 2V1 net\nhigher, with July at $1.05% and September at $1.07%,\nOats gained % and provisions lost\n2\\U  to 20M...\nOpinions differed greatly as to the\nEuropean purchasing of wheat futures.\nThe disaster to Lord Kitchener had\nsome hearing or. the .subject but was\nnot backed up iby any substantial evidence nnd on tlie contrary wns met\nby suggestions 011 the part of several\ntrade authorities that his death. If it\nhas any effect on the wheat market,\nwas most likely to count on the side of\nthe bears. One plausible explanation\nof the foreign buying of future deliveries was thai stoclts in Great Britain\nhave not increased as fast as expected\nand lhat a lessening of freight rates\non tramp steamers to England bad\nbeen ordered with a view in stimulating export shipments from tlie United\nStates.\nOats, helped upward liy a, better call\nfrom the seaboard east of Chicago,\nwas said to be a. fortnight oi' three\nweeks later than last year.\nLower prices on hogs weakened provisions, A break in the Liverpool market was also a. 'bearish factor.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN CliOSE.\n(By Daily News Lapsed Wll'*1.)\nWINNIPEG; June O.\u2014Wheat:   July\n?U1%';  Oct., $1.08'\/,;  Sept.. $1,079-1.\nOats:   July, 44%;   O-ct., 40.\nI'lax:   July,   %l,m\\U-t   Oct.,  %IM%.\nSPOKANE MINING\nEXCHANGE QUOTATIONS\n(Reported by St. Denis & Lawrence.)\nHid Asked\nCaledonia    $ .70 $ .74\nLucky Jim 08% .08%\nRambler 28Vj .31\nSlocan Star      271, .28H\nStandard      J.50 1,00\nSuccess      77^ TS'^\nI Mb\n.0(1\nSTERLING  EXCHANGE 4.75.75.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.j\nNEW   VORK,   Juno ,0.\u2014liar   silver\nSterling  exi-hange,  steady;   demand,\nBUTTER   EASY.\nBy Daily  News Leased   Wire.)\nMONTREAL, June 0.\u2014Putter easy;\ncheese strong.\nCheese: Finest westerns, 18; easterns\nIfi'\/j.\nButter: choicest erenmery, 30*-\/**.; see-\nonds, 29 >-*\u2022.\nPork: Heavy Canada Short mess, 33\nnt. 34; short cut back, 31 nt 32.\nTRADING AT^MOWTREAL JS\n*L DULL AND UNEVENTFUL\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)' j\nMONTREAL, June 6\u2014After a steady\nto firm opening slocks sagged through\na dull and uneventful session today.\nLittle pressure of stock was in evidence during the day, but interest in\nmarket affairs was completely subordinated to news from the war zone.\nTbe heavy casualties among the Canadian forces and the early morning reports absorbed attention to the exclusion of everything else, and market-\nwise there was little heart for constructive effort, in the circumstances\nthe market acted well, a light volume\nof selling finding a good demand at\nsmall reactions and a quiet and steady\nclose left prices for the most part\nwithin fractions of the final close\nMonday.\nIn the firm opening Cement and\nSteamships, which were features of\nMonday's trading established new high\nrecords, the former at 72% and the latter at 2Uy4, fractional fluctuations over\ntbo high prices established the previous day. Lyall also rose 1 above\nMondays -high level, selling at 82%;\nEarly buying was in smaller volume\nthan usual, however, and when orders\nhad been filled the market proceeded\nto sag. Cement sold off at one time to\n70, but recovered to 72, closing with a\nnet loss of **,{. point. Steamships closed\nat lhe low. \"Lyall closed 2 off for the\nday at 79Vi. Total sales, 5(199 shares\nand  fHS.700 bonds.\nSILVER  AND  LEAD.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nNIOAV  YORK. June I!.\u2014Lead:  At St.\nLouis.   C..S5;   at   New   York,   fi.95;   al\nMontreal, 8.7*8; at   London,   \u00a332.\nSilver: At London, 31 15-16; at New\nYork, *60%,\nTORONTO MARKET DEPRESSED\nBY  GREAT BRITISH  DISASTER\nBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO. June fi.\u2014Tbe day's news\nhad a depressing influence on local\nstocks trading falling off nnd a. gen-\noraljy easier tone developing ns the\nmorning proceeded, without, however,\nnny notable declines being induced.\nEarly in the day Cement advanced to\n73, a new high record, foul it broke\nto below 71 and Its rally lo 7J% did not\ncarry it  hack lo last night's close.\nDominion Steel declined from 57% to\n5fi:fl in the morning. Directors of the\ncorporation are expected to pass on the\nannual statement of the year tomorrow, which ended March 31 last. The\nreport will then be banded to the\nshareholders.\nOf the less active stocks Duluth-\nSuperlor and Porto Rico railways were\nfirm, Duluth rising, 2'.*. to 48\"^ and\nPorto Ftico selling at 49i\/j to IS and\nclosing at 49.\nMODERN ARMY NEEDS\nMANY MOTOR TRUCKS\nOfficer  of   U.   S.  Commissariat   Emphasizes Importance of Vehicles in War\n. The necessity of motor trucks in the\ncommissariat department of an army\nIn t**rrie of war is being brought home\nto ibo -warring nations In Europe at the\npresent lime. While the British officers are too busy fighting to write on\nsubjects of this kind an American officer hns taken his pen in hand and\ndiscussed this question, la an address\n.before the Pennsylvania section of tho\nSociety of Automobile I'lnglneers recently Major Prnnrls Lawton, of the\ncommissariat department of the east,\nstated that few realised that transportation conditions had changed and for\nthis reason scant attention was being\npaid to the motor truck in the discussion of preparedness.\n\"Animals can always be secured,\" he\nsaid, \"but motor trucks are different.\nThe lessons of ICnrope show that rap-\nIdly moving troops must rely on motor\ntrucks. The American soldiers would\nnever ho aide to operate a line of communication from Columbus, N. M., to\nCasas Grandes Without the use of motor trucks, which they were obliged\nto 1 urchttse in order to maintain a\nline of communication.\nMillions Not Thousands\n\"The tactical unit of an army is tho\ndivision consisting of 22.000 men. This\nrequires 170,000 pounds of food per\nday. In the armies of today the mon\nare numbered by millions instead of\nthousands. Two methods of securing\nfood arc available to men on the march\nor fighting in hostile countries. First,\nforage, and second, liy carrying, Gus-\ntavus Adolphus and Napoleon, the two\ngreat tacliclnas, used both methods.\nModern armies rely on the country In\nBANKQFMONTREAL\nESTABLISHED 1017\nBOARD OF  DIRECTORS :\nH. V. MEREDITH, Esq.. Pmid.nt\nR. 8. Air ti, F.tq.\nSir WiJIii- MicdowlJ\nE.B.Gre<uMeldi,Ki\u00ab.\nHon. Robl. Miclur\nLm4 SkioituMir, K.C.V.O.    C. R. Homer, Eiq.\nA. hwivtCB, Eiq. C. B. Cardan, Eiq.\nH. R. Dram-mead, Em. D. Forbei Ad|b>, Eh.\nWm. McMiiter. Esq.\nSlfFridarickWiUuiBi-TiTler.L.LD.,General Muucr.\nCapital Paid up      -     $16,000,000.\nReit ...       16,000,000.\nUndivided Profits    - 1,293,952.\nTotal A.teU (Oct. 1915)302,980,554.\nA  SAVINGS   ACCOUNT\nmay he opened nt any branch of thc Bdnk\nof Montreal. Deposits of $1.00 and upwards\nreceived, ou which interest is allowed.\nNEW   ZINC-LEAD   PLANT  STARTS\nThe plant of the American Metals\nProducing company, at Black Hawk,\nColo., has commenced operations, hut it\nwill he a. few days yet until all ad\njustments are made and the mill In full\ncommission.\nThe company In handling zinc-lead\nconcentrates and ores of the- snme\ncharacter. A large tonnage is being\nlined up over the country in Gilpin,\nClear Creek and Summit Countries,\nand in a few weeks the available sup-\nlily should ite sufficient 10 increase\nlhe milling facilities of the plant to\ndouble its present capacity.\nWhile confirming their purchases to\nmaterial of a load-zinc character, tho\noperators of the plant intend to handle\ncopper-Iron sulphides soon. Ores containing low values in gold and silvor\nare tlie desirable material and are also\nthe kind which the miner is unable to\ndispose of elsewhere. I-,'. S. Moulton\nis the president, and G. Whitney\nAdams is secretary-treasurer of the\nconipany.\nwhich they are operating and also\ndraw on the country as If it were the\nonly source of supply, and the rear\nmust be drawn upon as if it were also-\nthe only source of supply. The amount-\ncarried on the mnrch amounts to about\n1,2.50,00?) pounds for a division, and the\nmethod Is to ship from tlie purchase\npoint or main base to the advance depot, from the advance depot to the refilling point, and from this point to\nthe various distributing points along\nthe firing line. The carrying is done\nbetween the refilling points hy supply\ntrains, sanitary trains and engineers'\ntrains.\n\"With animals, the average march\nper day is 18 miles, and with a total\ndistance of 75 miles from the base, 780\nwagons would be required. With motor\ntrucks of about two tons capacity the\nwork could .be done with 120 vehicles.\nWith 240 trucks a division could operate 1.50 miles from its base. A division operating 40 miles from its base,\nwould require 30 trucks. Lessons from\nthe present war teach us the following.\nCommercial Trucks  Best\n\"Ordinary commerical trucks nre\nbest, tbe special body types not necessary. Best all-round enr, one and\none half tons. Heavy armored cars\nhave proved satisfactory. Motorcycles\non a grand scale nre unsatisfactory.\nRadiators are .provhig to be weak\nspots. The steel plate wheel is satisfactory. Rlectrie headlights should be\nmounted on universal joints.\n\"The United States government favors the 1 1-2 ton truck on account of\nits ability to traverse the ordinary\nbridges without breaking them down.\nThis, of course, refers to the division\ntrains only, as larger trucks can be\nused satisfactorily in the main roads.\nTo attempt lo use two-ton and over\ntrucks on poor roads spells disaster.\nIt has boen found absolutely necessary\non stone highways, however, to use\nthe'ie  larger  trucks.\n\"A force of 500,000 men requires\nmoro than 8000 trucks of 1% ton\ncapacity and the problem is where and\nhow to get these trucks.   They must\nbe organized into units of the same\nmake if they are to be effective. \"The\nproblems are: Properly organized\ntruck units. Correct truck specification. Lists of where these trucks 'and\nsuitable chaffeurs can be found. Determination of the best foody for use.\nA list of the necessary repair parts for\neach make of truck and the equipment\nof the repair car. A field repair shop.\n\"A recommended organization of the\ncars Is into groups of 60 cars In squads\nof 20. For each squad there should be\nono repair car, three fuel cars, one\ncompany headquarters car, four officers' touring cars and eight motorcycles. At the head of each squad\nthere is one captain and under him\nthreo lieutenants, one first sergeant,\nnin- first sergeant repairmen, 58 sergeant drivers, eight corporal drivers\nand three corporal repairmen, 78 privates, and three corporals. The regulations adopted by the war department\nhave 27 cargo trucks, 3000-pound capacity, one repair truck, 3000-pound\ncapacity, under an organization of one\ntruck master, three assistants, two\nmachinists nnd 35 enlisted men.\"\nSTANDARD OIL\nSUIT CONTEMPLATED\nWASHINGTON, V. C, June 6.\u2014F0I-\nlowing a, conferonce between President\nWilson and Attorney-General Gregory\ntoday It was Intimated that contempt\nproceedings against Standard Oil directors for alleged violations of a supreme court decree ordering the dissolution of tho \"trust\" might be\nbrought.\nWILL BUY\n1000 Slocan Stnr    .28|\/2\nWILL SELL\n100 Standard $1.65\nStock   quotations   received   dfciily   by\nwire.\nC. W. APPLEYARD,\n505 Baker Street, Phone 444\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1A16>,^\n11   1',! \u25a0\u2022.;\u00bb\u25a0 \u25a0-\nHOUSES\nWE HAVE FOR RENT\nSmall  (furnished  icqttage,   vFair-\nview     \u25a0\u2022\u2022%%m\\\nfi-room house, Latimer street. .$16\n6-room house, Fairview..' S12\n5-room house, Fairview $14\nC-room house, Mill street \u00a712\nAll the above buildings are in\ngood condition. Water rates Included in rental asked.\nStDenis & Lawrence\nPhone 39    Nolson, B. C. . Box 1102\nImproved Quarter\nSection, Alberta\nGOOD   HOUSE   AND   BAItN   TO\nTRADE\nFOR  IMPROVED  FRUIT   FABM.\nAPPLY TO\nTaylor & Dubar\n1-02 RAKER ST.,      NELSON, B. C.\nTftY  A   DAILY   NEWS  WANT  AD\nFOR SALE OR  EXCHANGE\nHEAD OFFICE.MONTREAL.\nD. R. CLARKE,\nAct'ir Supt., British Columbia Branches,\nVANCOUVER.\nLeB. B. DeVEBER,\nM imager.\nNELSON BRANCH.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOf icoa, Smelting nnd Refining Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers ot Gold, Silver, Copper end Lead Ores\nTRAIL   BRAND   PIO   LEAD,   BLUESTONB   AND   SPELTER\nKusa Spelter Company\nPurchasers of All Classes of Zinc Ores and Concentrates\nNewton W. Emmons,  Representative\nCREDIT   FONCIER    BUILDING 9       VANCOUVER,   B.   C.\n'  Successors  to\nBett'snhen-Hlgffins, T^td,\nTHE   GREAT   SHOW   CASE   MANUFACTURERS  OF THE  GREAT WEST\nAll our show casps are made In the knockdown. They have ball-bearing doors, running on steel tracks and are dust-proof,\n6 ft. Cases from  $57.00 to $ 78.00\n8 ft. Cases from $76*00 to $104.00\nMarble Bases Are Extra.\nWrite for a copy of our catalogue.\nWn recently completed tho main floor fixtures of tbe HudsoU's Hay company's new\nstore in Vancouver; also the fixtures for tho\nCanadian-Bank of Commerce, East Vancouver ond Fertile.\nPROCESS FOR COMPLEX ORES\nlt will he of much interest to the\nowners of properties containing complex ores in lenrn that a iipw process\nhas been discovered and a plant now\nbelli;-; erected in I.hh Anseles which\nwill allow payment for practically\nall of the values in nn ore, and Which\nwill lake ore with lower percentages\nof metals than have heretofore been\naccepted. Heretofore, molybdenite had\nto he concentrated to a large percentage, and if copper was present, the\nmolybdenite was not an readily Hold.\nHut according to the reports' of tbe\npromoters of this new process, low\ngrade molybdenum ores may .be han\ndlej and Ihe eopper also paid for. Tbe\nsame applies In zinc and very particularly to vanadium, which is seldom\nsaleable on account of its impurities\nof olher metals.\nThe new process does not penalize\nfor Sulphur, arsenic, silica, barytes, or\nbismuth. It is claimed that the complex lead-coppef-zinc.antimony-silver\nores from Inyo and Mono counties,\nCalifornia, and the complex tin sulphides from Flolivia. which bnve heretofore been only valuable for the copper contained, hnve heen successfully\ntreated. Ores from Bolivia containing\ntin. tungsten, zinc, lead, and antimony\narc received, for nil of which metals\npayment Is tnnde.\nThe intense practical Importance nf\nthis work to thc owners of mines of\ncomplex ores can hardly be overestimated, and the success of the process,\nof which the inventors foel assured,\nwill mean much to the production of\nArizona, minerals. Further information\nrelative to this work may be obtained\nby writing Charles F. Willis, director,\nArizona State Bureau of Mines, Tucson,  Ariz.\u2014Mining  American,\nRIGGS BANK FINE\nIS   REMITTED\nWASHINCTON, D. C, .Tune fi.\u2014Justice McCoy of the District of Columbia\nsupremo court ordered the treasury to\nremit to the Biggs National Bonk a\n.\u2022KiOfti) fine assessed by Comptroller\nWilliams, whieh brought oh the Riggs-\nfreasury eonrtoversy, The money was\nduo the bank ns interest on government bonds and payment was refused\non the ground that the hnnk refused\nto comply wilh tbe demand for reports\non  business done.\nCOCOA  FROM  BRAZIL.\nAccording lo the New York Hernld,\nthe shipments of cocna. from the consular district of Rahia, Brazil, for the\nUnited States increased from 23.0H0.7D4\npounds, valued at \"f2,010,034. for W14,\nto 't'U'i.VHiO pounds, valued at 14,-,-\n886,016, for 1915,'\nSave Half the Cost of Erecting Your Irrigation Flumes\nDon't let the heavy cost of lumber prevent you from building your irrigation flumes\nthis Spring.  Like many others, you too cart easily save half the cost of erecting with\n^\"PERFECT\" bh ---    -\n-43M&-IM\nCome in sections of sheet metal from I ft. to 9 ft. in diameter. Easily placed in\nyour framework; the interlocking joints of each flection lock together watertight with semi-circular supporting rods. No rivets or solder to trouble you.\nWill not sag or leak, and allow for expansion and contraction in Summer and\nWinter. Easily set in cement headgates, giving watertight construction. You\nwill be surprised at the weeks of time and special labor Pedlar Flumes will save\nyou. Write now for the \"Perfect\" Flume Booklet ' containing valuable\nirrigation tables.   11 is free.\nTHE PEDLAR PEOPLE, LIMITED\n(Eat.MUhcol I860\n847 Beotty Street. Vancouver, B.C.\nExecutive Office, and Factories :   Oshawa, Ont.\nThe News Job Department\ncan supply all your office requirements in\nLoose Leaf Binders and Forms of All Kinds\nLedger Sheets - - - Cash Journal Sheets\nInvoices - - Receipts \u2022 - Special Cheques\nSpecial Forms Ruled and Printed to Order\n(Single, duplicate or triplicate, and   punched to lit  any  style  of binder)\nThere are no better machines made for the purpose\nthan those working in The News press room and\nbindery. No matter what kind of printed work ypu\nrequire, consult us before placing  your  next   order\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB\n 6lt*\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 7. 1\u00bb16.   'j\n(THE DAILY NEWS\npage seven.\n=T=\nLittle Ads that Bring Big Returns\nI CONDENSED ADVERTISING RATES\nOns Insertion, per word lo\nMinimum charge  >\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022 25c\nI Biz    consecutive    insertions,    per\nword   4o\nI Twenty-six consecutive insertions,\n(one month),-per word.* 16o\n[Births, one Insertion ..BOc\nI Marriages, one insertion SOc\nI Deaths, one insertion BOc\n| Card of Thanks SOc\nEach subsequent, insertion 25c\n|Death and Funeral Notice ,|1.00\nAll condensed advertisements are\nI cash In advance.\nIn computing the number of words\nSin a classified advertisement count\n| each word, dollar mark, abbreviation,\n| Initial letter and figure as one word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that it is\nI contrary to the provisions of the Postal\n| laws to have letters addressed to lnl-\nItlals only; therefore any advertiser\nI desirous of concealing his Or her lden-\n| tlty may use a box at this office with-\nKout any extra charge if replies are\nI called for; If replies are to be mailed\nI to advertiser allow 10 cents extra, in\nK addition to price of advertisement, to\n| pay postage.\nThe Newa reserves the right to ro-\nIject any copy submitted for publlca-\nI tion.       \\ \t\nSITUATIONS  VACANT\u2014MAUE^\nI NELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\u2014\nW. Parker, 309 Baker St, Phone 283.\n| \"tVANTED-^Dalryman; cookee 45; dogger;  good general servants, $20 to\nI (25; trimmer and grader, planer foed-\n; setter; waitress; shipper; firemen,\ndeckhands;. edgerman;   woman  cook,\nsmall hotel, $60.\nGOOD RELIABLE COOK, day shift.\nSingle man preferred; wages $90\nboard and room. Apply box 114, Phoenix, B.C. (8216)\nWANTED\u2014A setter  for  sawmill at\nTaghum, B.C.   A. O. Lambert Com\npany, Limited. (3226)\nWANTED\u2014Immediately smart boy for\nmessenger.    Apply E. W. ClaytonT\nagent, C.'P.R. Telegraphs. (3252)\nWHBltf REPLYING TO ADVERTISE\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you eaw it in The News\u2014lt\nI will help y>u.\nGRADUATE NURSE to take charge\ni and operate Cottage hospital. Stato\nsalary expected;-references. {Secretary,\nNakusp hospital. (3211)\nWANTED\u2014Good reliable general, $18.\nApply pjostoffice, Rock1 Creek. (3246)\nWANTED\u2014Good General' servant, two\n\u25a0 in family; good wages. Apply P.O.\nbox 447, Grand ForkB, B.C. (3257)\nGOOD STRONG GIRL for restaurant;\nGeneral work; wages $40, board and\nroom.    Apply box 114,  Phoenix, B.C.\n(3217)\nWHEN REPLTING TO ADVERTISE\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw lt In The News\u2014lt\nwill help you. '\n^^smjATjoji^i^Ajma^^\nA STEADY JOB wanted as compositor,\nanywhere In southern B.C.; job work\npreferred; stato wages, etc. J. Vre-\ndenburg, 313 Ave. D. So., Saskatoon,\nSask. (3210)\n^^^ARTJCLJS^FORJBALE^^\nFOR SALE\u2014Mentges newspaper folder; folds 4, 6, 8, 10 or 12 pages.  In\nfirst class condition.   Snap for cash.\nThe Dally News. Nolson. (678)\nFOR SALE\u2014Buffet, fruit Jars, kltchon\n'table and rugs.   Mrs. R. F. Langford,\nfirst house abovo exhibition buildings,\nVernon St. (3244)\nFOR SALE\u2014Boll Piano, slightly used,\nin handsome walnut case. It will\npay you to see this Instrument before\n'raying; easy terms. Mason-Risch,\nLtd., 513 Ward St., Nelson, B.C. (3248)\nFOR  SALE\u2014Oliver   typewriter   used\nonly a few months, cost $125, will sell\nfor $50.   Apply box 3107, Dally News.\nFOR SALE\u2014Edison Dictograph, complete; electric power   Apply to Dally\nNews Business office. (6541\nFOR SALE\u2014Shaving machine for Edison records. Box 685, Dally News,\nFOR SALE\u2014First clasa mlscroscope;\nalmost new; one of the best makes,\n110.   Box 511. Daily News. (511)\nIl   BELGIAN hares, all ages.   Rose, Bal-\n1 four. (3203)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\ngwnts in Condensed Columns, kindly\n11 mention you saw it in The News\u2014\n\u25a0 I will help you.\nH0R8ES ANO CATTLE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Milch cow; brood Berkshire sow.    J. J. Campbell, Nelson.\n(3234)\nFOR SALE\u2014Disc harrow with combl-\ni ' nation pole and shafts.   Helfor calf,\n| j grade Holsteln eight weeks old W. J.\nfV McKIm, Nelso~n, B.C. .     (3233)\nj WHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nI ments In Cendensed Columns, kindly\ni mention you saw lt in The News\u2014it\n\u2022 will help you.\nPIQ8  AND   LIVESTOCK.\nj    yfATPfED^So^r7oY^ive^sSoag~ymng\npigs, also 2 Flemish Giant doo rabbits.  W. H. Mawer, Nolson.        (3253)\nI | HIGH  CLASS   AIREDALE   for   sale,\npedigree registered;  sire Ch. ctlp-\n| J stonoj First Shot.    Tax paid.    Apply\ni W. H, Moore, 715 Mill St., Nelson.\ni (3254)\nBOATS.\nFOR SALE\u2014Astley's houseboat; partly\nfurnished.    Apply   Nlelans,   waterfront.      ' \u25a0 '\u25a0 -~   ,     ' -  (8220)\n! B. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER AND\nChemist,   Box A1108, Nelson, B. C.\ni Charges: Gold,' sliver, copper or\nlead, $1 each; gold-silver, $1.50; sll-\ni    ver-lead,   $1.50.    Other , metals   on\nI    application, v\nFOR RENT OR SALE.\nFOR SALE\u201410-roomed frame building; lath and plastered; stone basement; lot 50x100; near Dominic n hotel,\nTrail. Six-roomed frame cottage, near\nfire hall, lot 65 x 100. Three-roomed\nbrick cottage, Rossland avenue, lot\n88x94. This property will be sold cheap\nand on easy terms; it is clear of all incumbrance; title perfect. Apply to\nowner, G. A. While, TralL (2767)\nPOR SALE\u2014Modern 5-roomed house\nIn perfect condition, with clothes\nclosets, bath room, pantry, largo basement and large chicken house at end of\nlot. Terms arranged. C. Longhurst,\n807 Carbonate St., phone 473-R  (3214)\nFOR SALE\u2014Modern 12-room house, in\nperfect condition, furnished or unfurnished, at a sacrifice price; terms\narranged, 711 Silica street. Mrs. H. M.\nManhart, phone 91-L, (3238)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It in The News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nPOULTRY AND EGG8\nCHICKENS\u2014One   month   old,   White\nWyandottes and also mixed, 35c each.\nBox 1007, Nelson. (3109)\nFURNISHED ROOMS TO  RENT,\n{TOR RENT\u2014Suites of furnished house\nkeeping rooms   in Annable   block.\nEnquire room 32. (3225)\nFOR RENT\u2014Nicely furnished suite;\n\u2022 all conveniences. Campbell's Art\nGallery, 715 BuRer street. (3247)\nFOR- RENT\u2014Comfortably   furnished\nroome Apply 203 Silica St.       (3201)\nK.   W.   C,   BLOCK \u2014 Housekeeping\nsuites and rooms for rent.     Terms\nmoderate.   A. Macdonald & Co. (3223)\nFURNISHED SUITES for rent. Apply\nKerr apartments, (3224)\nJtoOMj*^ND BOARD.\n$1.25 A DAY 'for comfortable room and\nfull board;  good meals;  cannot lie\nbeateiH    Try  us;   613   Ward    street,\nNelson. . (3251)\nPROFESSIONAL   CARDS.\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil Engineers, pominlon and B. C.\nLand Surveyors.\nSurveys of Lands,  Mines, Townsltes,\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 616 Ward street, A. H. Green,\nMgr.;  Victoria,  114 Pemberton'Bldg.,\nF. C. Green; Fort Georgo, Hammond\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\nPROVES WOMEN LIVE\n\u2022 LONGER THAN MEN\nReason    Why    Nature    Gives   Them\nGreater Expectation of Lifo Is\nUnsolved Problem\nA. L. Mcculloch,\nHydraulic Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nDANCING CLASSES AND PRIVATE\nLessons\u2014MIes Gladys Attree at Nelaon every Saturday and Monday.\nP.O. Box 304, Nelson.\nWHEN REPLYING-.TO ADVERTISE-\nm.ents in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it In The News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nVACUUM  & CHIMNEY CLEANING.\nCarpets, windows and chimneys\ncleaned. Nelson Vacuum & Window\nCleaning Co., phone 13,' City Cab Co.\nVacuum machines for hire..       *\nLOST AND   FOUND.\nLOST\u2014Green  satin   and  crochet  brig\ncontaining crochet and purse with\nsmall change.   Apply 214 Vernon St.\n' {3243)\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nArticles up to the value of $2.50 aro\nincluded In 3. 3. Walker's -bargain win\ndow.   Look those over today.\nCourt Ellen A.O.F., meets tonight at.\n8 o'clock in K.P. hall; nomination of\nofficers  for ensuing year. (3256)\nClub hotel tor best draught beer and\nporter, always fresh; big schooner 10c.\nBottled beer and poricr 25c; meals 2,-5c.\n(3218)\nA garden party will he given by the\nChurch Helpers of St. Saviour's church\nIn Mrs. Harry Bird's garden? on June\n27th. *   (3255)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Modern   bungalow,   $141.\nopen fireplace.   Also 1%\u00bb story residence, 3 bedrooms, $18.   C. W. Apple-\nyard, 505 Baker St., phono 444. (3222)\nR. D. McDonald, general contractor,\nTrail\u2014I have the latest in moderate\npriced homes. Jobbing promptly attended to; estimates given; also shop\nwork of any description done.     (3235)\nWANTED.\nWANTED\u2014Wall tent, must be in good\ncondition.   Stato size and price. Box\n3205, Dally News. (3205)\naccountants.\nw7ThTfaldin<\u00a3\nPublic Accountant, Bank of Montreal\nChambers, Rossland, B.C.\nMrs. H. E. Dill will give a tea and\nmuslcule at her home, 418 Mill street,\nThursday, June 8th, from 3 to 6 o'clock,\nProceeds for St. Paul's Ladies' aid.\n-   (3249)\nMrs. W. J. Mohr will give a tea\nThursday, June 15 from 3 to (J o'clock\nat her residence, Oak street, Fairview,\nProceeds to bo divided between the\nRed Cross and patriotic work of thc\nWomen's Institute. (3240)\nP. H. DUBAR,   v\nAccountant, Auditor.\n603 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nMONEY TOJ-J3AN\nCITY AND FARM LANDS, Limited,\nNelson, B.C.\u2014Money to loan on lm-\/\nproved farm lands. (2443)\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS.\nD. J. ROBERSTON, F. D. D. & E., 303\nVictoria St., ptiorita, 292;- night phone,\n157-L.\nJ-C^EJ^O^CEa^\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO. 141, I.O.O.F\nMeets every Monday night in Oddfellows' hall at 8 o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH LODGE\nNo. 16, I.O.O.F.\u2014Meets first and\nthird Tuesdays in Oddfellows' hall\nat 8 o'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO. 7,\nI.O.O.F.\u2014Meets second and fourth\nThursdays in Oddfellows' hall at 8\no'clock. i\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7.\u2014MEETS\nevery second Tuesday in Oddfellows'\nhall at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\u2014MEETS\nTuesday nights In K. of P. hall,\nEagle block.\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 212\u2014MEETS IN\nI.O.O.F. hall first and third Fridays\nat 8 p.m. i\nS. O. E.~MEETS FIRST AND THIRD\nMondays in K. of P. hall at 8 p.m,\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLE-\nsale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and Packing\nHouse Products, Office and warehouse, corner of Front and Halt- Sts.\nP.O. Box 1095; telephone 28 and 23.\nNEL80N JOBBERS, LTD.,\n\"Wholesale Grocers.\nBox 1170 Phone 154,' Nelson.\nStrictly wholesale.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO., Opera, talk.\nWM. CUTLER,  AUCTIONEER, BOX\n474; phone 18. N-\nJflESSENGERS^\nNELSON MESSENGER CO\u2014Baggage\nand express, Prompt and reliable.\nDay and night   Phone 242.\nPATENTS.\nBABCOCK & SONS, Registered Attorneys. Estab.* 1877. Formerly\npatent office examiner. Master of\nPatent .Laws, Book, \"Patent Protec-\ntection\" free; 99 St. James St., Montreal. Branches: Ottawa and Washington, ....-: \/; ;<:.;; ;.. ,.->\u2022 .-.= -\u25a0\nLION FOND OF PERFUME\nA certain animal trainer of Chicago\nIs said to have discovered a simple and\nsafe way to tame a lion. He claims\nthat all one need do Is to permit the\nlion to have a smell of attar of roses\nperfume. This man, who has charge\nof ,i monagarie, recently gave a demonstration of what his new method\ncan accomplish. He entered thc cage\nof a sleeping Hon and, at once, ihc\nanimal woke much startled. Smith\ndangled the handkerchief sprinkled\nwith the perfume beforo the lion's nose\nand the lion began to sniff eagerly\nSoon the animal burled his nose in\nthe sweet-smelling handkprchlef and\nseemed as quiet and content as when\nwaa sleeping. He permitted his keeper\nto brush his head and mane and to\nstroke liis back. Smith Is convinced\nthat perfumes have a soothing effect\nupon wild beasts.\n\/     Packet of    \\\n\/   WILSONS    \\\nFLY PADS\ni WILL KIU MORE FLICS THAN\/\n\\M\u00b0-\u00b0 WORTH OF ANY .\/'\n\\STICKVrLY CATCHER\/\nClean to handle. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores.\nAbsorption Process\nMakes Faces Young\nSuccess has at last come to scientists\n\u25a0who for years have sought sonle\nmethod of removing the outer veil of\nfacial skin in cuses of unsightly complexions, which would be both painless\nand harmless. Tho new process Is so\n(simple, so inexpensive, the wonder Is\nno one had- discovered it long ago. It\nhas been amply demonstrated that\ncommon morcolized wax (sold by druggists In ounce packages) entirely removes by gentle absorption, the withered, lifeless surface skin, -showing the\nyouthful, roselike skin beneath. The\nwax is applied at night like cold cream\nand washed off m the morning. The\nabsorption also cleanses clogged pores,\nIncreasing the skin's breathing capacity and preserving tone, color and natural beauty of the new skin.\nA simple and harmless wrinkle remover which -has also proved quite successful can easily be made at home in\na jiffy. All ono need do is to dissolve\nan ounce of powdered saxolite In a\nhalf pint of witch hazel and bathe the\nface in the solution once a day for a\nwhile. After the very first application tho finer lines disappear and the\ndeeper  onert \u25a0 soon l follow, \"*\u25a0* '\u2022\nThe longevity tables given out by\nDirector Rogers of the United States\nCensus Bureau, and prepared by Professor Glbver, of the University of Michigan are interesting in several respects, but, in none more so than in the\nevidence which they supply of the superior tenacity of life on the part of\nwomen and girls, as compared with\nmen and .boys, says a writer in the\nBoston Transcript. A girl .baby's expectation of life at birth Is 53,2 years;\nthat of a boy-*baby is 4fl,9 years. At the\nago of ten years the average American\nnative white male's expectation of life\nIs 50.2 years; that ofthe average native\nwhite female is 52.6 years. Nor Is this\ndivergence due to the fact that men\nand boys above the age of ten are\nmore likely to perish <by accident on\n\u2022\"\"yccount of their more risky diversions\nand employments than'women; for not\nmerely in tho first ten years of their\nlife, 'but in the first year of their life,\nthe death rate of males is much higher\nthan that of females. The tales, which\nare based upon the vital statistics of\nall thc States which have statistics\nand.have had them base comparisons\nupon them establish clearly enough\nthe superior vitality of the female sex,\nand its sturdier resistance to disease\nFood the Explanation\nHowever, when we speak of a sturdier resistance to disease, we do not\nmean that, at least as regards female\nadults, the woman Has that resistance\nmerely by virtue of her sex. If Mcteh\nnlkoff Is right, longevity is dependent\nIn a considerable measure on the use\nand assimilation of food. A great pro\nportion of men are continually engaged\nIn the task tof slowly poisoning them\nselves with their food and drink. Not\nso groat a proportion of women are\nembarked in this form of suicide. The\naverage woman is much more temper\nate and much more sensible in the use\nof her food and drink than tlie average\nman. In a sense, she has to be. She\nIs not so free to indulge herself as the\nman. In the domestic interior, which\nIs still the habitat of the majority of\nwomen, there is little opportunity of\nor temptation to self-indulgence or\ndietlc eccentricity.\nTills much as to women adults. But\nwhat about the superior resistance to\ndisease shown by tho girl babies, who\nare nourished in the same manner as\nthe boy baby? Here another great\nscientist comes to our aid, at least\nwith a suggestion: Wetssman maintains that there is an adaption of\nthc phenomenon of death to the nee\nessity of the perpetuation of the species, and that nature's general tendency Is to eliminate those individuals who are no longer of use in\nthis regard. Under this suggestion,\nwe may suppose that if girl babies\nare more tenacious of life., than boys\nIs must be because they are more\nessential to nature's far-seeing scheme,\nHow she does it we do^riot know,\nbut nature looks out, after a long war\nwhich has killed off a great proportion\nof the men. that more boy babies shall\nbo born than In normal periods. Sh\nhas subtle ways of maintaining the\nbalance of lifo. and societyjj.and if sho\nfavors with a higher vitality female\nadults, who are more temperate than\nmale adi\/lts, slie also -bestoSvs this superior vitality, outright, upon the girl\nbabies, in order that the-* stock of\nmothers shall not run IOw.\nAn interesting mora] suggestion\nto be found in these statistics. The\nlife of women Is much more distinct\nly and directly a life of personal ser\nvice than that of men, Woman's life\nIs more thoroughly one of pure de\nvotion than man's. Just dogged\nuseful golng-on is her -watchword,\nDoes nature reward hpr with a more\nvalid expectation of life on account\nof this? It would seem so. We are\nfinding out that service is life\u2014and\nwoman Is apparently demonstrating\nthat It is strength.   \u25a0\nFRENCH WOMEN'S\nSTATUS AFTER WAR\nPARIS, France\u2014One of tho ,most\nimportant social questions which wilt\nhavo to be solved at the termination\nof the war is thc alteration in the so\nrial position of women, brought about\nby the manner in which they have\nrisen to the demand made on their\ncapacities since tho mobilization. This\nnew problem which will affect the\nnation's family as well as professional\nlife is being recognized, but up to the\npresent it had been relegated for solution to some vague period termed\n\"after the war.\" Senator Humbert,\nhowever, lias realized the need for its\nImmediate consideration nnd for\nclear seeing and deft handling of such\na question, he could not have turned\nto anyone more able than Eugene\nBrieux. Brieux has treated of sociology under, too many faces, in his remarkable problem plays1, not to have\ndiagnosed the situation which is (level\noping. In reply to Senator Humbert's\nrequest, he has stated his opinion on\nthe subject In an article which is to be\nthc first of many replies to the Journal's inquiry. Brieux straightway\nrecognizes the problem ns a serious\none, ibut one which, if wisely solved,\nwill lead to thc raising of the standard\nof life both for women and men. He\ntreats the subject, naturally, from thc\nFrench point of view, which differs In\nsome respects from tho English.\nWhat .has happened since the beginning of the war? he asks. Feminism\nhas made enormous strides. Tho women\nof Franco'havo been admirable. Thero\nhave -been exceptions, but the vast\nmajority has risen to the occasion\na manner which has proved surprising\nto many. It Is not that they have\nmerely shown capacities for self-sacrifice, which is generally held to bo\na feminine virtue, but they have given\noverwhelming proof of practical common sense, of business ability, of perseverance in effort, of prudence and of\ncourage, In the face of this, how will\nit bo possible to give womon the usual\nibsurd answers when they demand\ntheir rights as members of the com\nmunity? Even those persons who hold\nto the argument of Inferior physical\ncapacity can be answered on their\nown ground, by pointing to the muni\ntto.i factories. Women, says Brieux\nhave tasted of the fruit which has\nforbidden them, not by God, but by\nmen. They know now what they can\ndo. Still half astonished by the revel\natlon of their own capacities, they yet\nrealize* that they hnve wort' for them-\nHalf Holiday Today\nWe Close at Noon\nEXTRA PRESSURE MUST HELP TO MAKE BUSINESS GOOD TOR THREE AND. A HALF\nHOURS ONLY. GET DOWN EARLY ON WEDNESDAYS, WE WILL HELP YOU TO MAKE IT\nPROFITABLE.\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nA Selection of CHILDREN'S WASHING\nDRESSES\u2014All good serviceable styles. For girls\n6 to 14 years old. Only one to a customer. Cn \u2014\nA Snap   wUw\n25c\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nLADIES' WAISTS\u2014Size  34  only,\nthree-quarter   length   sleeves.     Can\nbelieve It, Only, Each \t\nSome with\ny:a. 35c\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nBUNGALOW APRONS\u2014In Ijoth light and dark\nshades, in an excellent quality of material. \/JKfa\nWednesday Morning   \"rU W\nPlease Shop Early, We Close at Noon\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nHOUSE DRESSES\u2014In  Prints and  Ginghams.\nSeveral different patterns. (fl  flfl\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nLADIES' CORSETS\u2014Assorted sizes In the lot.\nhut only two or three of each make.   Values up\nto J2.95 Jn tills lot wc guarantee. 7^\\f\nWednesday* Morning      I WW\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nOne  Piece  Only   of   GREEN   AND   WHITE\nAWNING STRIPE.    Regular 30c.\nWednesday Morning .:\t\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nLADIES'   BATISTE   COLLARS\u2014In  Self  ana\nalso trimmed White, Sky and Pink. ICp\nWednesday Morning Carnival, Each     I WW\nWe Are Closing At Noon, So Please Shop Early\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nOne Piece Only and wild horses won't drag\nanother from our fixtures at this price, of SATIN\nFINISH DAMASK, Irish manufacture; 64 Inches,\npure bleach; very handsome design. This Is new\ngoods and will be selling for considerably over a\ndollar this fall.   Regular SOc. 7Ilp\nWednesday Morning      I WW\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nCOLORED    STRIPE   TURKISH   TOWELS\u2014\nThese are wortii getting down early to see. Cttr.\nWednesday Morning\u2014Two Pairs for   UUw\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nWHITE   DAMASK   CLOTH\u2014Size   2   x   2%.\nHemmed ready for uso. a{0 OK\nWednesday Morning Only, Each   ip&i&W\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nReceived This Day\u2014PALM BEACH HOSIERY, the New Color of\nFashion. Made of super com'bed silk lustre. Made in Canada. Sizes 9\nand 9*4 only.   Regular price, 00c a jmir. ARp\nWednesday Morning    *Fww\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nM. S. S. GREY FLANNEL\u2014Ono Piece Only; 28 Inches wide. 1 Q\u00ab\nPer Yard        '3\u00bb\nEIGHT-THIRTY  SHARP-\nMEN'S  BALBRIGGAN  UNION  SUITS\u2014Medium  size only.    Regular\n$1.20 por suit.    Now, you men, wait on the doorstep for these. 7Kp\nWednesday Morning, Per Suit     I *\u00bbw\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP-\nMEN'S CHIP GARDEN HATS\u2014Fedora shape.\nWc cannot.buy them for this price again. OQ\u00ab\nWednesday Morning      WWW\nEIGHT-THIRTY  SHARP-\nBOYS'    COTTON    JERSEYS\u2014Ago    8    to    10\nyeai's.   Plain Navy and Navy trimmed Whlte_or\nScarlet.    Short sleeves.\nWednesday  Morning  \t\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\n' CORDED SILK FISHING OR BOATING\nHATS\u2014Very comfortable. It Is reported that the\nfish are attaracted by these hats and gi'eat OR A\nhauls aro made.   Wednesday Morning .... www\n35c\nHelp Us to Enjoy a Good  Half-Holiday\u2014Please\nShop Early\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nOne Table of UNTMMMED SHAPES. Values\nto <3.90 each. Wednesday Morning, OQ (111\nbefore 11 o'clock, Only, Each     ^atlUU\nEIGHT-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nOne Table TRIMMED HATS\u2014All Now Goods.\nValues   $7.00   and   $10.00   each.     Your\nChoice, 8.30 lo 11 o'clock only, Each\nNINE-THIRTY   SHARP\u2014\nA  Choice of TWO   PURE   NATURAL   SILK\nCOATS\u2014Full  length.    Values at $10.00\neach.   Wednesday Morning, Each\n$4.00\nAL   SILK\n$5,00\nARE YOU   GOING  FOR  \\ PICNIC TODAY\u2014COME   IN   AND  GET\nSOME   OF   THESE   SPECIALS\nOno\nline\nno \"Packet  CORN   FLAKES,  One  Packet MALTA   VITA,   9E.\nPacket PUFFED RICE for      OJO\nOne Tin VEAL LOAF, One Jar HEINZ PEANUT BUTTER, ACfi\nline McLAREN CHEESE for   *TOO\nOne 'l-fii* HORSESHOE SALMON, Ono Largo HERRING IN RH-\nTOMATO, One Tin KING OSCAR SARDINES for    \u00abJUW\nOne Found  CREAMERY BUTTER, One'PoumI  BUST ONTARIO CHEESE, One Tin TABLE PEARS for \t\n75g P I CNIC\nI Ob\nSpecial Notice\nIN ORDER TO GIVE. OUR OUT OK TOWN CUSTOMERS AN OPPORTUNITY OP SHARING IN\nTIUOSE*sTTECIAiroVM^ERlNGS*WE*WlLJrEXECU TE MAIL, ORDERS ONLY FOR THESE PROVIDED\nORDER REACHES US IN TWO DAYS. REMEMBER OUR \"MONEY BACK\" GUARANTEE IF YOU\nARE NOT  SATISFIED,.\nselves Ihc power to  decide their own\n.'futures.\nThe new consciousness of their own\npower which women have developed\nduring these months of war, Brieux\nasks his fellow countrymen to accept,\nit  is  further forced  upon  them.   He\noutlines thc reforms whicli the altered\nconditions must bring about to enable\nsays, will a higher social order to be\nevolved out of the present transition.\nMen, he says, will abandon Intempor-\nance hut they will have to be helped\nout       lt, and all justification for the\nconditions which have led to the public\nhou.*e being regarded as the only place\nwhere the poor man can meet his\nfriends, will havo to bo removed. Men\nwill hold a different idea of women,\nand the abominable institution of tho\ndowry will disappear.\nCondensed '\"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse this blank on which to write out your condensed ad., one word In eaoh space. Enclose monty\norder or cheok and mail direct to The Daily Newe,  Nelson, B, C, ,\nRate: One cent a word each insertion, eix conae cutive Insertions oharged at four. Each initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., count as one word.   No oh argo .less than 25 cents.\na.\nPlease publish the above advertisement times, for which I enclose I \u201e...\u201e.\nName\t\n|\nAddrata y...~.,i,,J'\nIf desired, replies may bo addressed to Box Numbers at Tha Dally Newa Office.   If repliea Art te ba\nmailed enolose 10o extra to cover oott of postage.\nA\n t\u00bbAQE EIGHT\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1916.\nUnequalled for General Uaa\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson, 3. C.\nCars supplied to all railway polntv\nTHE  WOMAN  WHO WRITES\non and with stationery procured\nhere is in no danger of having\nher letters criticised as to correct form anyway. We have just\nthe right shape, size and tint of\npaper, the ink thut doesn't splutter. Our stationery is approved\nby people who know.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nMail Orders Filled Promptly.\nREACHES MINIMUM\nHorace Fletcher Sees Starvation Ahead\nand Canada Must Do Her\nShare to Help.\nHorace Fletcher, the great authority\non diets\u2014so great an authority, in fact\nthat a word has been coined out of his\nname\u2014has returned to this side of\nthe Atlantic after having spent some\nmonths in Belgium studying food conditions.- Mr. Fletcher is one who believes that nourishment is not naturally commensurate with thc amount of\nfood consumed but with the manner\nIn which it is masticated. He believes\nthat the assimilation is due to the\ntreatment of the food.\nHe   investigated   the   rations   dealt\nCOUnTDSTT\nTODAY AND TOMORROW\nWe are offering the second\nTriangle Production, which is\nand we speak with absolute\ncertainty, the most Intensely\ndramatic picture ever shown\nin Nelson or we will go a\nstep farther and say anywhere.\n\"THE SABLE LORCHA\"\nDirected  by  the  monarch   of\nproducers, D. W. Griffith.\nAlso a 2-rccl Triangle Keystone comedy,\n.\"FOLLOWING   FATHER'S.\nFOOTSTEPS.\"\nOne long and prolonged avalanche of mirth.\nCOUHTEST\nSPECIAL NOTICE TO THE\nCHILDREN.\nOn the first Triangle Day,\nWednesday, wo will issue Bicycle Contest Coupons good\nfor 15 votes.\nREMEMBER\nTho special prize this week of\n$1.00 to the boy and girl turn-\nin the most votes during the\nweek.\nCOURTESY\nMainoes, 2:30 p. m. Nights, 7\nand 9 p. m.\nTHE ARK\nMen's Work Shirts, each SOc\nCurtain Scrim, 36 inches, per\nyard       15c\nPrints,    good   quality,    per\nmy?i\"V'V *\u00bb*\u00bb\nTent Duck, 8 oz., per yard... >25c\nAwning Duck, per yard 32'\/ic\nPrinted Linoleum, per yard... .75c\nPillow Ticking, per yard 25c\nWe buy for cash Second-hand Furniture, Stoves and Ranges.\n. Sign of the Red Rocker.\nTwo  doors east of Josephine St.,\nVernon St. 606.\nJ. W. HOLMES, Manager.\nPhone 65L.\nSolid Gold Crosses\nOUR OWN MANUFACTURE\nWe have just made up a neat selection of Gold Crosses\u2014pretty\nstyles and designs\u2014neat sizes, plain,\nengraved aud partially engraved;\npearl set and diamond set.\nSPECIALLY PRICED\nS1.50, 81.60. S1.80. S2.00.\nS2.50.S2.90. S3.15,\nS3.60. S5.40\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturer  of  Artistic   Jewelry,\nExpert Optician and Watchmaker.\nout to the Belgian people\u2014millions of\nthem\u2014who are under tlie care of the\nBelgian relief committee, and this ia\nwhat he says in concluding his summing up of conditions:\n\"There are three million cases, many\nof whom will die of starvation, if food\nis not sent them.\"\nMr. Fletcher believes in tho minimum ration and yet he sees that Belgium's ration has gone below tho lowest. Food must be sent. Canada of\nall of Belgium's allies has the food in\nplenty and the,money in .plenty wltn\nwhich to buy the necessary food, Thc\nwar's drain on Canada has been less\nthan on any other of the integral parts\nof the Emplro and it devolves upon\nthe Dominion to bear a share of this\nburdon proportionate to this.\nCapada cannot in justice sit back\nand see three millions of her allies\nstarve It is equivalent to shooting in\nthe back the men who are fighting for\nus. With the sense of fairness and\njustice which is the keynote of the\nlife of a British subject, Canada will\nhear the appeal of the Belgian relief\ncommittee and meet it with funds and\nfood to raise the rations dealt out to\nstarving Belium far above the minimum.\nThe only safe way to send this aid\nto Belgium is through the recognized\norganisation of tho Belgian relief committee, 59 St. Peter street, Montreal,\nor through one of its branches.\nHOW   TO   SAVE   MONEY\nWhen your wife asks you for 10\ncents, make such a fuss about it that\nshe will think you are thc injured\nparty and will beg your forgiveness\nwith tears in her eyes. Then put on\nyour hat and go down town and buy\nyourself four or five 10-cont drinks,\nasking the bartender to have one with\nyou every time and smoke several expensive cigars.\nWhen you buy an automobile get a\n$70 one and then spend $07 a week on\nit for repairs at the garage.\nAlways buy 37-cent shirts, two or\nthree of them every week, wear them\nonco and throw them away.\nRent a house on the outskirts of the\ncity, because lt is cheap, and then\nspend thc difference and some more\nin carfare for yourself and family.\nGo without overshoes In winter and\nsave $1 and then have pneumonia and\nspend $198 in doctors' bills.\nHire a $7 man to fill a $70 job and\nthen spend your time correcting the\nmistakes.\nWASN'T IN THE LINES\nIn her draped and darkened tent the\namateur palmist was reading hands\nfor a charity. Her present client was\na fair maid, who waited impatiently\nto hear her fate.\n\"Ah,\" said the palmist, with slow\nimprcssiveness, \"I see by your hand\nthat you arc going to be married.\"\n\"How wonderful,\" said the girl with\na blush.\n\"And,\" went on the wise one, *a note\nof acerbity in her voice, \"I see that\nyou are engaged to Mr. Binks.\"\n\"It's perfectly amazing,\" gasped the\ngirl.   \"How can you tell?\"\n\"By long study of the art,\" came\nthe evasive reply.\n\"But surely the lines in my hand\ncannot tell you thc namo of i \"\n\"Who said anything about lines?\"\nretorted the sibyl with cutting scorn,\n\"You arc wearing thc engagement ring\nwhich I returned to Mr. Binks three\nweeks ago.\"\nA meeting of tho Red Cross workers\nwill >be held Thursday at tho homo of\nMrs. G. A. Hunter, across tho lake.'\nUNTIL   FURTHER   NOTICE\nThis Store Will Close at\nNoon on Saturdays\nBUT  FOR  THB  CONVENIENCE  OF   THE  PUBLIC   WILL  REMAIN\nOPfcN FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9:30\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE  AND   RETAIL\nNEL80N,   B.  C.\n\u00ab*\u00bb\n8eeio\u00bb k\u00abst Condensed Advertisements\nNelson Newa of the Dag\nNEW ROYAL\nBANK\nR\nF. A. Hanna Comes from Vancouver to\nSucceed A. B. Netherby Who Goes\nto <Regina.\nF. A. ilranna of Vancouver arrived in\nthe clly Tuesday evening to a*ssumo\nthe duties ol' manager of the Nelson\nbranch of the Royal Bank of Canada\nas successor to A. U Netherby, who\nhas received the appointment of manager of the main branch of the ba*nk\nat Regina.\nMr. Hanna has toeen In the service\nof the bank for the past 11! years, hav.\ning entered its employ us a junior\nin Truro, N.S., shortly before tbe name\nof the bank was changed from the Merchants Bank or Halifax, to the Royal\nBank of Canada. Since then he lias\nserved the institution in varying capa\ncities at Truro, Montreal, Welland,\nOnt., and Winnipeg and has been in\ncharge of the Cordova street branch at\nVancouver for the past three years,\nMr. Hanna who made tho trip from\nthe coast by way of Spokane leaving\ntho train at the mountain station and\nwalking down town, expressed himself\nas delighted with what lie saw of tho\ncity during his walk. Ho expects to\nbring Mrs. Hanna and his baby boy\nto tho city short|y and will make his\nhome in the house at present occupied\nby Mr. Netherby.\nA. B. Netherby, who has been in\ncharge of the Nelson branch for tho\npast seven years and will leave for Regina at the end at the week, has \"been\nin tho service of the Royal bank for\n17 years, having entered tho banking\nbusiness as a junior clerk in his homo\ncity, Victoria. 'For 10 years, Mr. Netherby has hold the post of manager at\nvarious branches of the bank, coming\nto Nelson from Cumberland, Vancouver\nisland.\nDuring their stay in Nelson Mr. and\nMrs .Netherby have occupied a prominent placo in thc social life of the city.\nMr. Netherby Is a member of the Nelson club and has been a strong supporter of the city's winter sports, particularly that of curling, while Mrs.\nNetherby has taken an active interest\nin tho work of the various charitable\nbodies of the city. The departure of\nMr. and Mrs. Netherby for the prairies\nwill be regarded with much regret In\nNelson social circles.\nBROTHERS LEAVE\nTO)\nDouglas and  Hilton  Nagle  En  Route\nto  Coast to   Enlist With\nUniversity Unit\nDouglas and Hilton A. Nagle loft\nTuesday night to Join tlie xiniversity\nbattalion and George Elliot, Ralph\nCorey and Charles Mlddleton will\nleave Thursday night for the coast for\nthe same purpose.\nThe two Nagle boys, who arc the\nonly sons at A. W. Nagle of 804 Baker\nstreet, are well known In Nelson, having lived In thc city for the past 18\nyears and attended both the Central\nand high schools. Douglas has for\nsome time past been engaged in business in Kaslo and has given up his\nposition there to go to thc front.\nHilton Nagle, who was in his third\nterm at high school, is regarded as one\nof the most popular of Nelson's\nyounger set and will be much missed\nIn Y. M. C. A. sporting circles, as he\nhas always tuken an active part In\nthc athletic work of that institution.\nHo is an enthusiastic basketball\nplayer and iias on several occasions\npiloted tho \"Y\" team lo victory by\nhis brilliant playing.\nTuesday afternoon a gathering was\nheld at the high school at which\nHilton Nagle, George Elliot, Ralph\nCorey and Charles Mlddleton were\npresented with signet rings by the\npupils and teachers. Short addresses\nwere made by Rev. C. W. Corey, who\nwill follow his son Ralpii to the coast\nand enlist as a private In the same\nbattalion and Rev. Ered H. Graham.\nA large number of friends of the two\nboys gathered at tiie station on Tuesday night to wish them God speed and\n,a safe return.\nSocial and Personal\nNELSON FAVORED\nIN NANYMEASURES\nW. R. Maclean, M.P.P., Returns to City\nWell  Satisfied with  Work Ac-\ncompiished by Legislature.\n(By Daily News Leased*Wire.)\nW. ft. Maclean, M.P.P., arrived homo\nTuesday night looking none the worse\nfor tho long and busy session at Victoria.\nHo expressed great satisfaction with\nthe treatment accorded Nelson in the\nmatter of school and hospital grants.\nThe pressing of the claims of the\nhospital on Mr. Bowser and the ministers by President J. A. Irving, Secretary George Johnstone and I-Ir. Maclean resulted in a. definite promise of\nthe remaining $110,000 of the original\n$40,000 promised some years ago.\nDr. Robinson promised to check the\nschool plans and return them to the\nschool board at once, when tho \u00a520,000\ngrant will be available. The fall fail-\ngrant will be the same as last year. Mr.\nMaclean expects a start to :be made on\ntha Thrums roadwork shortly.\nMeasures Affecting  Nelson.\n\"Among the acts passed during the\nsession thero arc a number particularly interesting lo Nelson,'1 he said.\n\"In tho Municipal Amendment act an\nerror excluding railroad property from\nmunicipal tuxes, would have been inserted but for the activities of Mr.\nSohofield, president und Mr. Maclean,\nsecretary, of tho municipal committee.\nAmong other measures are tho provision ifor a minister of agriculture\nand the putting into effect at once of\ntho agricultural credit loans. Another\nmoasuro Is that providing for any person actually working a forfeited crown\ngranted mineral claim being able to\nIcaso it for two years at $25 per year\nand to get a title to It any time during\ntho two years by paying the arrears\nof taxes, thus preventing outsiders\nfrom buying it over his head should a\nvaluable discovery be made. Provision\nfor free stumpago to bona fide farmers\nup to 160 acres, if cut on their own\nfarm is also of local interest and tho\npassing of the act in aid of the French\nComplex Ore Reduction company is\nalso satisfactory to Nclsonltes, The.\nsetting aside of $200,000 for aid lo the\ndeveloping of prospects is a step in\na direction advocated toy Nelson men\nfor years. Most of thc longer acts are\not general Interest and were no doubt\nfollowed carefully by the readers of\nThe Daily Nows.\n\"I must confess,\" said tho returned\nmember, \"to having been very homesick at times, especially when tho session was dragging slowly, but I generally got Into the scrap deeply enough\nto keep ni\u00a9 from 'fading away on account of ennui.\"\nF. Mitchell of Erie is a guest at the\nStrathcona.\nC. Hood and family of the C.P.R. loft\nMonday for Saskatoon.\niF. M. Pyne of Cranbrook is registered at the Strathcona,\nL. Kirkpatrick of Revelstoke is registered at tlie Strathcona.\nS. F. Wallace of Fernie is visiting\nthe city and is staying at thc Hume.\nif. A. Richards of Silverton arrived\nin tho city Tuesday and is registered at\nthe Hume.\nW. B. Pool of Spokane arrived In\nthe city Tuesday night from Revelstoke\nand is a guest ut the Hume.\nSorgt, E. Keivil arrived in the city\nTuesday night with a detachment of\nmen In charge of a party of 20 alien\nenemy prisoners which Is being transferred from Edgewood internment\ncamp to tho camp at Morrissey.\nBOSTONIANS OPERA  COMPANY\nBOOKED  FOR JUNE 13\nFamous Art Girl Company to Appear\nat Opera House in \"Tipperary\nMary.\"\nThe hundreds of theatergoers who\nxemembejr  the    famous    Bostonlans\nopera company will be pleased to learn\nthat this internationally famous com\npany is to return to the opera house\non June 13, and all who havo not been,\nprivileged to enjoy this unique attraction may look forward to the appear\nance of tho Bostonlans with tho as\nsurance that perhaps    tho    smartest\ntreat of  the  season is in  store for\nthem.\n. Many of thc former -favorites will\nagain be seen with this company of\nglobe trotters, among whom will be the\nMisses Patsle Henry, Thorn Hellen,\nNell (Babe) Mason, Dixie White, Ina\nMitchell, Mabel Gardner, Made Hill,\nBlanche Ogden, Billio CNeil and other\nfamiliar and new faces . \"Tipperary\nMary,\" a rollicking Irish musical com\nedy will be presented.\nJames Johnstone succeeded In bagging a good sized clnnimon bear Monday.\nGEORGE  RUMPLE DEAD.\nBERLIN, Ont., June 5.\u2014Ex-Mayor\nGeorge Rumple, for tlie last 40 years\na resident of this municipality, died\nthis morning.\nThey were a very saving old couple\nand as a result they had a beautifully\nfurnished home.\nOne day the old woman missed her\nhusband. \"Joseph, where are you?\"\nsho called out.\n\"I'm resting In the parlor,\" came the\nreply.\n'What, on the sofy?\" cried the old\nwoman horrified.\n\"No, on the floor.\"\n\"Not on that grand carpet?\" came\nin tones of anguish.\n\"No; I've rolled it up. _______\nAFTER\n\u2014\nThe Chick Food Stage j\nWe Can Supply\nHUUaED OATS, CRACKED WHEAT,\n,      CRACKED   CORN,    FEED\nCORNMEAL, ETC.\nAlso Have a Full Line of\nCHICK    FOUNTS,  ' INSECTICIDES |\nAND REMEDIES.\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling\nCompany, Limited\nLadies\nWo had you in mind when we purchased our Toilet Articles. We carry\nthe best lines on tho market and our selections are particularly pleasing.\nCREAMS, POWDERS, TOILET WATERS, PERFUME8, SACHETS,\nPUFFS,   CHAMOI8,   TALCUMS,   NAIL    ENAMEL,   ROUGE,   ETC.\nWe will be pleased to supply your wants. Bring your Proscriptions to\nus and get them filled right.   Mail orders promptly filled.\nIMTV   HDIir   Pfl     For DRUGS, STATIONERY, Neilson's\nUl I  I   UllUll   UUi     Chocolates, Phonographs, Eft.\nNELSONS BUSY STORE PHONE 34 P. 0. BOX 1083\nWILL GIVE PROCEEDS\n10 BELGIAN RELIEF\nWillow Point Women to Donate Proceeds of Saturday Market Stall\nSales to Fund.\nIt was announced yesterday that the\nWillow Point women, who havo been\noperating a stall at the weekly market\nSaturday morning's at Nelson, would\ndonate the entire proceeds of tho sale\nof their wares at this week's market\nto The Daily News Belgian relief fuitd.\nSaturday will be the first anniversary of the establishment of the Willow\nPoint stall at the market, and it has\nbeen felt that no moro fitting way\ncould be found of celebrating the\nevent than by devoting tho entire\nday's proceeds to the assistance of tho\nBelgian sufferers. Through the medium\nof Tlie Dally Nevvs more than $1100 has\nbeen sent to the central committee in\ncharge of the work of sending supplies\noverseas, since the fund was inaugurated and it is expected that the announcement made by the Willow Point\nwomen will attract a large number of\nbuyers to the stall at the public market on Saturday morning.\nBATTALION   DANCE\nDRAWS LARGE CROWD\nMore limn 300 persons attended tho\ndance given by tho members of C\ncompany, 225th Kootenay battalion, in\nthe armory on Tuesday night.\nThose present were loud in their\npraise of tho splendid entertainment\nprovided by the soldiers and friends\nwho provided the substantial supper\nserved during the evening. While it\nwas nolicable that tho fair sex was in\ntho large majority and at times partners were at a premium, every one\nvoted the dance one of the most successful of the season.\nTHE MOUNTAINEER IS\nOR\nGl OF 225TB\nC. E. SWANELL AGAIN\nIN CASUALTY  LISTS\nFor the second time since he went\noverseas the name of C. E. Swanell,\n28680, formerly of Nelson, appeared\nIn the cusualty lists as wounded on\nMonday evening. Swanell, whose\nfamily lives on Mill street, Nelson,\nenlisted at Victoria early in the war.\nNo word lias yet been received regarding the extent of his injuries.\nThe board of trade will meet Thursday night at 8 o'clock in the board\nroom.\nThe regular monthly meeting of tho\nNelson and District Women's institute\nwill ibo held at tho residence of Mrs.\nA, Tregillus, Nelson avenue Saturday\nafternoon at 3 o'clock. A demonstration in canning fish and sweet and sour\nmustard pickles will be given.   -\nWord has been received in tho city\nthat Harry -HI Pitts, son of of Mr. and\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, has successfully\npassed his third year of medicine at\nMcGill, taking honors In five subjects\nand leading the class in the subject of\nmedicine.\nMaking Money\nI know one man who is going to make tome money. He eaw\nhie opportunity, took advantage of it and bought a property at\none-third of ite value. Not only will he make eome money but\nhe becomes an interested eitizen Instead of a transient. Why\nshould not YOU. I oan etill offer three homes at away less\nthan eost.   At least become interested enough to inquire,\n-r Charles F. McHardy\nHEAL ESTATE\nFUEL\n\u2022mm\nINSURANCE\nWUy..lMPPM..li\nFirst   Issue   of   Battalion   Newspaper\nContains Mueh News of General\ninterest,\nThe Mountaineer, the official organ\nof tho 225th battalion, mado Us bow\nto the public Monday and will be published at intervals from now on for\nthe purposo of keeping the public\nthroughout the district informed of\nthe battalion's lightest doings.\nTho Mountaineer is a four page\nsheet, printed on The Daily News\npresses and contain a vast quantity\nof interesting information, most of\nwhich has been contributed by the\nvarious members of tho battalion. Tho\neditor is Sergt, A. R. Giddings, who in\ntho following editorial, presents the\npaper to the public:\n\"In presenting this, tho first issue of\nthe 225th overseas battalion newspaper, to thc public, we ask your kind\nforbearance. Tho editor Is only able\nto devote a very small portion of his\ntimo to the preparation of this paper\nbeing on duty as staff seargeant from\n9 a.m. to 5 p.m., consequently has little\ntime to deliberate on tho niceties of\nexpression and smooth grammatical\nprecision that go to make up a really\nsuccessful and favored journal.\n\"Wo trust, however, as-tlmo goes by\nand tho work of organization becomes\na little lestf strenuous, that wo may\nbe able to greatly increase tho interest\nand zest of our paper. Meanwhile wc\ncrave your consideration and help.\"\nSpecialist\nR. L. DOUGLAS\nTho Graduate Optician and\nOptometrist.\nRegistered by a Provincial Board ot\nExaminers In Optometry.\nRoom 18, K, W. C. Block\n102ND\nTO LEAVE\nll\n1\nSHORTLY\nRecruiting   for   C.   M.   R.   to   Close\nJune 15\u2014 Both  Battalions Have\nMany District Men\nIt is believed that the llth battalion\nCanadian Mounted rifles and the 102nd\nbattalion, In whicli units are a number of Kootenay men, will leave for\nactive service at the front within a\nfew days.\nWord has been received from Vancouver which indicates that the 102nd\nis now up to strength and that the\nllth battalion only requires a few\nmore men to give it its. required number. It is said that word has been\nreceived from Ottawa instructing the\ncommanding officers of these battalions to hold their units in readiness\nto entrain for their shipping points as\nsoon as the necessary transportation\narrangements arc completed.\nSorgt. A. 13. Bennett, who has been\nIn Nelson and district for somo time\npast enlisting men for thc llth battalion, states that definite orders have\ntoeen received, to close recruiting\nJune 15, but states that he will he\nable to send a few more men to the\ncoast, if application Is made to him\nImmediately, as he is about to return\nto Victoria.\nIn addition to the 102nd and the llth\nbattalions, it is stated at tho coast\nthat the draft of 250 men, reinforcements to the pioneer battalion, and\nthe 13th field ambulance, which'has\nbeon mobilized at Victoria, have also\nreceived orders to hold themselves in\nreadiness for overseas service.\nSOCIALISTS DECLARE\nSTRIKE IN CHRISTIANA\nCHRISTIANA, June 6.\u2014As a\nprotest against tha passage of the\ncompulsory arbitration bill the Socialists have declared a general\nstrike including government and\nmunicipal employees, 45,000 men\nquit work tonight, while 42,000\nothers gave two weeks' notice of\ntheir intention to strike.\nTho,Ladles 'Aid of Trinity Methodist church will meet at 3 o'clock\nWednesday In tho church parlors.\nGREECE PROTESTS AGAINST\nACTION AT SALONIKI\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nATHENS, June 6.\u2014The government of Greece today protested to\nthe entente allied powers against\nthe proclamation of marltla law at\nSaloniki.\nMEMORABLE  DINNER.\n\u25a0\"Talking about good dinners,\" said\nthe Yankee travoler, slowly, \"i remember ono it, had in Chicago. I went into\na s]ap-.;up restaurant with some chums\nand ordered the finest tiling in dinners. Then when tho bill came round\nwe could not decide who was to pay.\nThoy all wanted to and so did I.\"\n\"Very awkward for you all,\" agreed\none of his listeners skeptically.\n''Well, yes,\" continued the man from\nthe states; ''as we couldn't settle the\nmatter I proposed that we should blind\nfold tho waiter and then which ever\none of us he cuug*ht was to be allowed\nto root' the bill;\"\n\"A very good idea\/' said another listener, stifling a yawn. \"Whom did he\ncatch ?'*\n\"I dunno.\" replied the Yankee briefly,\n\"iait ivi aia't -sav-gut m x$k\".\nttlEATRL\n\"Where Everybody Goes.\"\nTONISHT\nAnita Stewart and Earle\nWilliams in\n\"The Goddess\"\nThe Serial Beautiful.\nChapter 12.\n\"WHOSE WAS THE SHAME\"\nOne-reel Drama.\nHAM  AND BUD\n\"HAM AT THE FAIR.\"\nBlllie Reeves in\n\"        BILLIE'S REVENGE.\"\nI '\nTomorrow\u2014Lou    Tellegen    in\n\"The Unknown.\"\nOpera House\nONE NIGHT, TUESDAY,\nJUNE 13.\na\n(12th Successful Season)\nTHE FAMOUS\nBOSTONIANS\nSixteen Charming Colleens\n'     M        \u2014in\n\"TIPPERARY   MARY.\"\nPRICES:   81.   75c,   50c\nSeat Sale at City Drug Store.\nFRENCH   VIEWS  ON\nAMERICAN   OPINION\nPARIS, France.\u2014Tiie message sent\nby the SOO representatives of Amerl\ncan public opinion, in protest against\nwar as waged by thc Germans, and\nexpressive of tho hope of America\nthat the cause of civilization shall triumph, -will have a world-wide effect,\nsays the Temps in, an editorial on the\nsubject. President Wilson's last word\nto imperial Germany, and the solemn\nand unusual manner in which he declared his attitude in congress will not\nefface the impression caused by the\nintellectuals' manifesto, The two actions, on the contrary, are of a similar nature, and their coincidence but\nIncreases the effect produced. Tho 93\nGerman academists and savants prided themsolves on uttering the sentiments of the whole of Germany in\ntheir manifesto, which was nothing\nmore than an outrage upon truth, as\nwell as upon human knowledge and\nupon humanity itself. Tho message\nof. thc five hundred is without doubt,\nthe verdict of the American conscience.\nThe effectiveness of tho verdict uttered by the five hundred is enhanced\nby its dilatoriness, but its deliberate\ncalmness, by tho evident wish that the\nGerman aggressor shall reconsider his\nposition and Bhall turn from his\ncruelty. The manifesto expresses all\nthis and other considerations besides,\nwhich prove tho impartiality and reflective power of the men who aro\ndeclaring today on which side they\nstand. What Germany formerly contributed to the common treasure of\ncivilization, the fact that numbers of\nAmericans owe their mental outlook\nand in some cases their origin to Germany, are all recalled in tills document in fine words whloh are not\nwithout sadness. The repudiation of\nGerman warfare and of the modern\nGerman attitude, the unreserved expression of the hope that victory will\nbe on tho side of the allies assume, in\nthe light of these considerations, one\nmight almost say these regrets, *\nmarked importance and solemnity.\nThe representatives of the Amerl\ncan conscience dp not even recall their\nown losseb brought about by the crim\n\\m\\ flftifeijiff 9t,mm Xte rirdjfet fle\nrives its inspiration solely from the 1\nhighest motives; the violation of tho j\nrights of mankind, and the violation |\nof the independence of nations.\n\"The invasion of Belgium Is In our I\neyes a crime which nothing will ever J\nbe able to justify.   It will remain forever a blot on the history of Europe,\"\nNotice  this   last   word,   says   the j\nTemps, thc American elite does not I\nspeak ot a blot on Germany or on j\nAustria, hut on Europe.    There can I\nbe no mistake as to the meaning of |\nthis.    II is for each and all to consider what Is implied, to make. it the I\nsubject of their meditations, if not of\ntheir remorse.   It forms, at any rate, j\na peremptory reply to the German diplomatic effrontery which incriminat- j\ned Belgium in a plot for the abandonment of her neutrality in favor of j\nFranco and Great  Britain,   when   in j\nreality tiie mistake of the three nations   consisted   in   neglecting   their. |\nstrict obligations.\nA missionary writes from the Fiji I\nislands as follows: \"Our small forco of j\nbrethren seems absolutely unable to I\ncope with the distress which prevails I\nin this dark and benighted land, many ]\nof the natives are starving for food. |\nPleaso send a few more missionaries.\"\nWhatever is correct In choice\noutfitting finds place here.\nWe'vo fresh, exclusive novelties gathered from the products\nof makers with a reputation.\nNeckwear, bright with the\nhues of tho spring season!-\nNow Shirts, new Gloves, Hosiery, underwear, Pajamas, etc.,\netc., etc.\nIt is Impossible to mention all\nthe furnishing we have in stock\nfor the comfort and adornment\nof men who would he\nWELL AND COMFORTABLY\nDRESSED! *\u00bb\nSee our 50c and 76c Neckwear\nSee our $1.00 and $1,25 Shirts\nSee Our 25c and 35c Hoitery\nAc, do.. Ac, Ac\nEmory&Walley\nTHE    OUTFITTERS\nStore Clossd Every Wednesday\nafternoon during June, July\nand Auguat.\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"}]}}