{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0389209":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"54f3ec99-c92d-42e9-a823-bffc718747cb","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":"2020-02-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1919-05-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0389209\/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":" M\n\" 'the Dally News is the only flallyl\npaper In the Interior of British*\nColumbia. Full leased wire service of J\nCanadian Press, Limited.\n11 \u2022\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u2666\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666+\u25a0\u00bb-\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0# -\u00bb\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\n,L. g No. 87\n^\nWEATHER\u2014Nelson and vlclnity:l\nGenerally fair and warm, followed byj\nlocal thunder storms.\n\u00bbl|f.lll H--* .*\u00bb..\u00a5.*\nNELSON, B: Co. MONDAY MORNING, MAY 26, 1919\n50c PER MONTH\nHAWKER AND GRIEVE SAFE\nOF SUM VALLEV BASIN\n-IES  IGNORE   RANTZAU'S  APP   EAL    FOR    ORAL    DISCUSSION \u2014\nONLY   ONE   MINOR   CONCESS   ION     MADE\u2014AGREEMENT     IS\nTHAT GERMANY MAY CRE   ATE PRIOR CHARGE UPON\nASSETS OR REVENUE F   OR PAYMENT OF MINES\nIF  PLEBISCITE GOE   S AGAINST FRANCE.\nARIS, May 25.\u2014With Lho excep-\ni of one minor concession an tho\ngestiona and counter proposals by\nmany for the deposition of the'\nir basin have been rejected by tho\nly of the allied and associated\n(.vers.\n,-ount Von Brockdorf Rantzau's ap-\nfor an brill discussion of the\nnU at issue, on this subject, was\nid,\nconcession agreed to is that\nI'many might create a prior charge\nan her assets, or revenues, for llie\nyment of mines ln tho Saar, If the\nbjscito gws again-st France, If,\nwevor, the sum agreed upon in not\nI within a year from the dato it Is\n, the reparation commission shall\nect pafyriifent under instructions\n\u25a0$rti the league of nations.\nhis change was mude In view of\n\u2022'German declaration that it was im-\n\u2022isible for her to accumulate a flu I'll'nt sum of gold with which to pay\nthe mines in the fifteen years be-\no the plebiscite is taken, since other\n\u25a0Mirations would constitute a count decline.\nWant Rhine Administration\n[COPENHAGEN, May 25.\u2014Accord-\n; to the Hamburg Eremdenblatt, the\ninter proposals of Germany will In-\nide a demand that the administra-\nn of the Rhine districts shall re-\niiu with Germany, -Germ-Any to de-\nir coal to France from the Ruhr\n[ Saar districts but will not ac-\n!iowledgc' the plebiscite proposed for\nfo. Poland shall he given tho dis-\njict to tho lino of demarkution fixed\ntthe armistice: Other German east-\nu districts will hold plebiscites ununited States and neutral dlrcc-\nDanzlg shall be a freo harbor\nthe disposal of Poland, which will\nallowed to have its own railway\n,nnection with that city lo Poland.\nProposals-Nearly Ready \u25a0\nERLIN, May 24. \u2014 A Semiofficial\nitement issued today says that the\nrman counter-proposals on the\nace treaty would be completed at\no beginning of the week, The docu-\nint is based on the principle of right\nntained in Secretary Lansing's note.\nIs added that the counter proposals\nII attempt to remove \"tho contraction of the allied proposals where-*\n\u25a0 Germany's progress is rendered\npossible,\" yet Germany (s expected\nbelir the hardest imposition. The\nitement will make positive proposals\nwhat Germany can and cannot do\nd declare the fulfillment of cer-\nn requirements will only be possible\nrough community of effort by Ger-\nmy and her enemies. The statement\npresses the opinion that the conn-\nproposals will be published in Ber-\nsimiiltaneonsly with their pVeseh-\ntion at Versailles.\nU. 8. Decision on Turkey\nPARIS, May 25.\u2014President Wilson\ns informed the council of four, it\nis reported in peace.conference elr-\n'8 today, Unit the other members of\n3 council should be prepared for\ne United Slates not to take a man-\nte for. Constantinople or any part\nTurkey.\nCabinet Approves\nBERLIN, May 24. (Associated Press)\nThe cabinet nnd Count von Brock-\nrf Ranlzuu ure in full accord with\nspect to the general outline of specie proposals and counter-proposals,\nliii'h will make up the German re-\ncourding to an official statement\nGUN-FIRING  IN\nBERLIN   STREETS\nCAUSES EXCITEMENT\nBERLIN, May 24 (Associated\nPress).\u2014Downtown Berlin was\nthrowrt into wild excitement at 4\no'clock this afternoon by machine\ngun firing in the Untcr Den Linden. Some persons in the neighborhood fled for safety, but others\nswarmed to the scene. The scooting was due to a large group of\nwounded men insisting on parading despite the order of Gustavo\nNoske, minister of national defence, prohibiting processions during the period oj7 martial law.\nGovernment troops broke up\ntheir procession by firing into the\nair,\nHONORED GUESTS OF CITY\n\"\u25a0\u25a0\"rr7.'^7\\!\n-\nE\n,-' J?'\nr\nBY DANISH STEAteK\nNEAR THE HEBRIDES, SAYS REPORT\n\u25a0    . . \/ \"e     - e    .\nE. W.  BEATTY\nD.  C.  COLEMAN\nPresident   of   tho    Canadian    Pacific Vice-president  of  the  C.P.R.  wos'.orn\nRailway, who was the guest of the lines, who formerly resided  in Ncl-\nAssociated   Boards   of   Trade   at   a son,   and    is   piloting    Mr.    Beatty\nbanquet Saturday night. Through tho west.\nCANADA'S PRIME MINISTER\nARRIVES HOME FROM THE\nPEACE CONGRESS AT PARIS\nWIFE   OF   HAWKER\nPOSTS   BULLETIN   OF\nNEWS  OUTSIDE   HOME\nLONDON, May 25 (Associa'ted\nPress).\u2014 Mrs. Hawker, wife of\nthe aviator, received the news\nfrom the Mary this morning at\nher home, near Surbiton, ond\nposted a notice outside her home,\nreadinn:\n\"Mr. Hawker has been found.\nHe is on the boat Mary, bound\nfor   Denmark.\"\nA crowd of villagers soon\ngathered and showered Mrs,\nHawker  wi'th  congratulations.\nREVOLT IS SAID\nTO BE IN CITY\nOF\nDonaldson    Line   Steamer   Cassandra\nReturning to St. Johns Under\nHer Own Steam.\nST JOHNS, Nfld., May 2B.-H1Tlia\nDonaldson liner Cussundru, which\nstruck an iceberg, 1UU miles off Ca,,e\nKace, arrived hero tonight. Her forefoot was stove in liy a low-lying berg.\nThe *IU0 passengers aboard are well.\nOu.the arrival heie of the Cnnsun-\ndru it was learned (bat at U a.m. today\nlu dense fog, east ot Cape Kace, sue\ngrazed an iceberg, slightly damaging\nner starboard siuo over her engine\nroom. Some water entered, biu the\ndamage was temporarily repaired and\ntho ship put hi here to complete repairs Willi tiie aid of a Miver. it is\nexpected that she will resume her voyage within is hours.\nThe passengers [\u2022omprlsod chiefly\nwomen and children.\nMessages from  Liner\nBOSTON, Mass., May 25.\u2014The naval\ndepartment tonight received messages\nfrom lho Donald.son liner Cassandra,\nwhich struck an Iceberg ICO miles oft\nCape Kace, Ihe last message indic.it-\nlng that toe .steamer was in no serious danger.   Tiie first message read:\n'\u2022S.O.S.. (Struck iceberg, latitude\n47.20; longitude 51.22 west, fear sinking. Canada, Scolia and other nearby\nships notified fur immediate assistance.''\nA little later the following message\nwas received: .\n\"Cassandra reports captain's'orders,\nNo, a hold to be pumped.\"\nA third message said:\n\"Cassandra reports now under control, reuuire no assistance. Ship\nstopped, effecting repairs.\nHALIFAX, N.S., May 25.\u2014Sir Robert Borden, returning to Ottawa from\nthe peace conference at Paris, gave\nout a statement after landing from the\nAqultanla this morning, in which he\nexpressed belief that the Germans\nwould eventually sign tho peace treaty,\nhis confidence that the returning soldiers would exert a steadying Influence In the trend of events in the Dominion, and his appreciation of the\nwork of tin? conducting staffs responsible for the comfort of Canada's returning army while at sea; lho work\nof Canadian nurses in England and In\nllie field; the overseas record of General .Morrison, as head of the artillery\nand nf Hon. A. L, Slfton, as chief British representative on the Inter-allied\ncommission on lho International regime of ports, rivers and waterways,\nboth of whom returned with him, and\nhis regret at having to decline the\npublic reception arranged for him hy\nthn citizens of Halifax, owing io tho\nnecessity of proceeding to Ottawa with\nthe   least   possible   delay.\n\u25a0file Aqultanla arrived in port during\nMONTREAL, May 25.\u2014The Donald\nson steamer Cassandra, reported to\nhave struck an iceberg iUU miles off\nCape U>.ce, Newfoundland, carried 12U\ncabin passengers and l2T steerage,\nade today, after the return oflwilh a large general cargo, when she\njheidemann.  Mathlas  Erv.berger and'sailed from this port last Wednesday.\nomit von Urockdorf-Rantzau from\npa. Dr. Dernherg remains In Spa.\nhe German answer will be ready on\nuesday, as the only work that Is in-\nmiplete' Is the co-ordination of the\n-xt and tho technical production of\nie documents, which probably, wilt he\npe written.\nThe Spa conference, it was especial-\nemphasized this morning, proceed-\nl.smoothly, rtnd consumed but a few\naura, with tho result that the under-\nnndlng between fount von Brock-\nu'f-Runtzuu and the delegates nc-\n>mpanying him, on ihe one hand, and\ncheldmann and his associates, on the\n:her, disposed deflni,t*ly of all rum's of serious friction inside the cub-\nict, and* among the peace delegates.\nComplains Aboult Delay\nCOPENHAGEN, May 25.\u2014Dr. Karl\n:enner, Austrian chancellor, and\ncad of the German-Austrian delation, has addressed a nole to\n'remler Clemenceau, complaining\nver the delay of the peace confer-\nnce ih- submitting the peace terms,\n\u25a0hich he say.s \"Is rousing grave\nnxlety regarding the maintenance of\neace find order in our fatherland.\"\nThe note also calls attention to the\nxpenso of keeping the delegation\nbroad and appeals to the peac\nonference to open negotiations a\npeedlly as possible.\nThe Thirteenth  Note\nBERLIN,   May   25.  \u2014  Count   von\nJroekdorff-Rantzau's   thirteenth   note\ntho   ailed   council   was   delivered\nhis morning.   This is a rejoinder ito\ni-go&Uoued oo Pak\u00ab Two.)\nthe night and at 5.45 o'clock a lighter\ncontaining Hon. .1. D. Ileid, minister of\nrailways, and Colonel W. E. Thompson, acting G.O.C. of Military District.\nXo. fi, went out to bring the premier\nashore. At the landing stage tho premier was welcomed by Lady Borden,\nand together they proceeded to tlie\nwaiting special at the ocean terminals,\nWhere breakfast was served. Tht? parly included lion. .1. A. Calder, minister of immigration, and F. B. MeCurdy,\nM.P.\nNotable among tho returning soldiers was Lieut.-Col. Barker, who has\na. wonderful record in the destruction\nof llun airplanes, and who has the\nV.C. D.S.O. with bar, and the M.C.\nwith bar. '.'\u25a0*.\nAnother noted officer on board was\nMajor-General B. \\V. Morrison, of Ottawa.\nBesides Sir Robert Borden's\" party\nthere woro on board nearly 500 civilian\npassengers, somewhat more than half\nof whom were for the  United Slates.\nThe Aqtiitunia will coal at Halifax\n(Continued  on   Pnirn  Two,)\nCLIMBS FROM   PLANE\nTO PLANE BY ROPE\nLADDER IN THE AIR\nATLANTIC CITY, May 25.\u2014\nLieut. Omer Locklear, formorly\nwith the air army, today gave a\ndemonstration which is said to be\none of tl\u00ab} greatest in the annals\nof flying, that of catching a dangling rope ladder from a second\nairplane and climbing into the\ncraft from which it hung. The\nfeat was done at a height of 2500\nfeet. He has leaped from one\nplane to another in the air, but\nnever made an agcert trom ono\nplane to another.\nMIAN LEAPS\nTO DEATH FROM\nBURNING PLANE\nLAYD0WNT00L8AT\n11\nEast\nntia)   Activities   Will   be   Carried\n1\u2014Nearly All Unions Connected\nWith Metal Trades Affected.\nShe was bound for Glasgow. The\nagents here report that later advices\nhave been received from Caniperdown\nwireless station to tlie effect that sin:\nis not seriously damaged and is returning to Si. John's tinder her own\nsteam, temporary repairs having been\neffected.\nSailed Wednesday\nNEW YOliK, May 25.\u2014The Cassandra sailed from Montreal lost Wednesday for Glasgow. She is a vessel of\n8,130 gross tons, with a length of 455\nfeet, and was built in Scotland by the\nS. B. and E. Scottcompany in 1906;\nLittle   Confusion\nST. JOHNS, Nfld., May 25.\u2014The\nvessel struck a submerged section\nof the berg. Immediately passengers\nand crew were called to quarters and\ntlie ship's boats swung out. I'us-\nsengers were escorted to the deck\nwith but slight confusion. There\nwns no excitement, according to the\nship's officers, who stated Ihe damage was limited lo tlie springing of\nseveral plates on the starboard side\nbelow the water line, aft of midships. After sending out calls for\nhelp she came here nl full .speed.\nThe Cassandra had been stopped\nall night in the heavy fog.\nMEGANTIC  ON   WAY   HOME\nLONDON, May 25 (Canadian Associated Press).\u2014The Megantie sailed\ntoday for Quebec, carrying 242 con\nvalescent Canadians from Liverpool,\n685 men from Epsom, 7o nurses, 13\nofficers nnd 21 Canadian officers repatriated  from   tlie  imperials.\nCALGARY, May 25.\u2014A general\nStHko has ben called In Calgary to\ntako effect, at 11 o'clock tomorrow\nmorning. Practically all unions affiliated with the trades council will be\naffected, the vote being -I to l In favor\nof strike. Essential activities, such as\npolice and fire protection, d^n-ry of\nmilk, bread and oilier necessities, will\nbo carried on. Hotel and restaurant\nemployees have also been requested lo\nstay at work. It is also expected that\nthe two local dailies will be allowed to\ncontinue to publish.\nEdmonton Strike.\nEDMONTON,   Alia.,   May   25.\u2014Edmonton unions vole 3 to l for sympathetic strike, lo go into effect Monday morning at 11  o'clock.\nACQUIT   ANOTHER   SOLDIER\nON   KIMNEL  RIOTS  CHARGE\nLONDON, May 25 (Renter's).\u2014\"He\nwas one of the first to volunteer to\ngo out and put a double apron\nfence 20 yards iu front of our first\nline,\"   said   Sergt.-Major   Lister,   de-\nFrank    McCuskct*    Makes    200    Feet\nPlunge to Earth When Machine Catches Fire.\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, May 25.\u2014Hundreds nl' persons saw Frank McCusker\nof \\ew York, pilot of a mail airplane,\nleap 2U0 leet to his death trom a\nburning machine hero today. Fifteen\nminutes before he had announced he\nidd attempt lo establish a now record oi. ins flight to Chicago. The\ncause of the accident is not known.\nWitnesses saw  puffy of black smoke\ncome from tho rear of the machine. .\nWhen the machine was at a height, seeing   il trench   Incident  early\nor between 30.) and 400 feet, McCusker  i1,u> '\" 8\u2122\"? evidence on Saturday\nWere Forced to Alight Owing to Stoppage\n' of Circulation in   Water Pipes of\nMachine\u2014Aviators Had Been\nMissing for Exactly a Week\nLoud    Explosions   and   Machine   Gun\nFire   Heard\u2014Esthonians  Still\nAdvance,\nLONDON, May 25.\u2014Great fires and\nloud explosions have occurred in and\naround Petrograd, according to reports\nforwarded by the Daily Mail correspondent at Helsingfors, under date of\nThursday. It i.s believed that llie Bolsheviki, pressed by tlie Esthouinn advance, aro destroying the munitions in\nPetrograd. Machine gun firing also\nhas been heard in Petrograd, and it is\nreported that the population lias risen\nagainst tlie Bolsheviki.\nA dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company, from Copenhagen,\nsays\/it .is., reported that tli p Estbon-\niahs have captured Pctorhoff, 19 miles\nwr.st of Petrograd.\nA Helsingfors newspaper prints a\nMoscow dispatch saying that Nikolai\nLenine, the Bolsheviki leader, lias offered an armistice to Admiral Kolchak, commanding the antt-Polshcviki\nforces, in order to consider peace\nterms.\nMay Plan Retreat\nPARIS, May 25.\u2014Interest In the\nRussian problem, which the council of\nfour la considering at every session,\ni.s intensified by tlie dispatches from\nFinland, announcing that explosions\nand fires have occurred in Petrograd.\nThis is inlcrpretod as meaning that\nthe Bolsheviki are destroying their\nsuperfluous ammunition supplies preparatory to retreating southward.\nHelsingfors dispatches declare that\nthe Bolsheviki demand for an armistice\nfrom Admiral Kolchak has been refused. \u2022 This, coupled with the repurls\nof unli-Bolsheviki advances upon Petrograd from tlie north and west as\nwell as General Kolchuk's success\nalong the trans-Siberian, and General\nDenekine's advances from the Don district toward the Volga, is regarded In\nconference circles as proof that the\nBolsheviki ministers, Lenine and Trot-\nBky. are facing tho worst crisis lho\nBolsheviki government has encountered.\nPoles Capture  Lutsk\nLONDON, May 25\u2014 Polish troops\nhave captured the important town of\nLutsk, in Volhyniu, northeast of Lt*m-\nberg, from the Ukrainians, according\nto a Central News dispatch from Berlin. The Poles also took 2,0u0 prisoners and a large number of guns.\nwas seen to climb from his seat to the\nframe. The airplane plunged and thc\npilot was seen to lenp. The machine\nflew . forward 200 yards before it\nplunged to the ground.\nMCwUSlier was alive when picked\nup, but died in a police patrol while\nbeing taken to a hospital.\nEDITOR OF 'THE FLANEUR\"\nON TORONTO PAPER, DIES\nTORONTO, May 25.\u2014Thomas Edward Moberly, who has conducted for\nseveral years \"The Flaneur\" in the\nMail and Empire, died suddenly at his\nhome here today. He was born in\nCheshire, England. Ho was for a timo\nprivate secretary to the lato Goldwin\nSmith and was subsequently editor of\nThe Week, established by Goldwin\nSmith.\nVOTES FOR TEXAS WOMEN\nDALLAS, Texas, May 25.\u2014Returns\nfrom '2SI towns in Texas, tonight.\nindicate prohibition and, suffrage for\nwomen has carried in tho general\nelection yesterday,\nbefore Ihe Kinmel court-inurtiuf\nbehalf of Private Battlstn Bertucco,\nof Victoria, B.C., who pleaded not\nguilty to charges of joining in the\nmutiny.\nThe case arose out of. the disturbance at Camp 20, when three men\nwere killed. Private Bertucco was\nidentified  as  among the  rioters.\nHe was arrested on the edge of\na trench where a man was lying\nfatally wounded. The defence was\nthat accused was drunk at the time\nand did not arrive on the scene until\nthe disturbance was over, when he\nwent to the trench out of drunken\ncuriosity. Ho described earlier adventures in the mess, where a sergeant was giving out  free beer.\n\"He was hilariously drunk and the\nwhole world was a joke,\" said the\nwitness, and said the accused even\ntried to persuade a major to have\na  drink.\nPrivate Bertucco was found not\nguilty.\nTORONTO, May 25.-J-W. D. Matthews, heiUPof the W. D. Matthews &\nCo., grain dealers of this city, died\nSaturday night, ^ bJUw-\u00a3\nN. C. 4 IS STILL\nUNDER THE WEATHER\nPONTA DEL GADA, May 25.\u2014\n[h -jciateii Kress.)\u2014 I hero is no\nimmediate sign of an impending\nlet-up in the unfavorable weather\nwhich has prevailed for several\nhours over the whole of the Lisbon\ncourse of the projected flight of\nthe American navy seaplane N, C.\n4, therefore it is considered impossible to start on this leg of tho\njourney to England beforo Tuesday, according to the weather experts.\nWHEELS  TURN   AGAIN   AT\nGLEN   FALLS PAPER  MILLS\nGLEN    FALLS,    N.Y..    May    25.\u2014\nMills of the International Paper company,   which   have   been   closed   since\nAlay    10    by   a   strike   of   the   5,000\nemployees,   affiliated   with   the  Inter\nnational   Brotherhood   of   Pulp,   Sul\nphile   and   Paper   mills,   will   resume\noperations    at    7    o'clock    tomorrow\nmorning.    < iffielals   of   the   company\nhave agreed  to meet  delegates  from\nihe   locals   Wednesday   in   New   Y'ork\nfor  a  conference  on   the  wage  ques\nlion.     The   union   has   reached   an\nagreement  wilh   the   St.  Regis   Paper\ncompany   of   Watertown.\nFIRE   DESTROYS   STEEL\nPLANT   AT   COLLINGWOOD\nCOLLINGWOOD, Out.. May 25\nEire totally destroyed the. works of\nthe Imperial Steel and Wire com\npnny hero early today. The plant\nhad been in operation throughout the\nwar. bul had recently been closed\ndown for overhauling. The loss is\nestimated  ut  $500,01)1).\nLONDON, May 25.\u2014Missing Tor six\ndays and given up for lost, Harry\nHawker and his navigator, Lleut.-\nCdmmnriqer McKenzle Grieve, tho\nBritish airmen who essayed a flight\nacross the Atlantic ocean, without\nprotection against disaster, save what\ntheir frail airplane afforded, are safo\ntonight aboard a British war ship off\nl be Orknej'H, Tomorrow they will\nreach the mainland and will proceed\nto London, where they will bo acclaimed us men returning to life.\nSome 1100 miles out from Newfoundland and SuO miles from the Irish\ncoast on Monday, May 10, the lone\naviators, making the best of an engine Which was falling to function\nproperly, were forced to alight on tho\nwater. The little Danish steamer\nMary, bound from New Orleans and\nun the way to Anrhuus, Denmark,\npicked the men up and continued on\nher \u2022 northward voyage. Lacking a\nwireless oultit the captain of the\nsteamer was obliged to withhold tho\ngood tidings of the rescue until he\nwas opposite Butt of Lewis, where the\nInformation was .signalled by means\nof flags, thai Hawker and Grieve wero\naboard his ship.\nImmediately word was sent to tho\nBritish admiralty, which sent out de\nstroyors to overtake the Danish vessel. One ol! the destroyers took thc\nairmen off and later transferred them\nto the flagship* Revenge. Prom this\nsafe haven Hawker sent a message to\niglu that his machine had stopped\nwing to the blocking of the water\ncirculation system.\nu lieu   she   got  away,   Hawker   let\nloose   his   wheels   and    undergearlng,\nthereby lightening  the weight of thc\nljichlne   by   a   considerable   amount,\nut making a possible lauding on thu\nspot   in  Ireland a dangerous venture,\nj ..is,  however,    probably    proved of\nmuch advantage when it became necessary lo alight on the surface of the\nwater.    The airplane remained afloat\nwithout difficulty during the hour and\nhalf it took the Danish steamer to\nome   up   and   effect   a   rescue     All\nEngland is stirred by the news of tho\nsafety    of    iheso   two   stout-hearted\niviators, but owing to the difficulties\nof communication,  some   time   must\npass before the full details of the most\nremarkable   voyage   ever ' undertaken\nare known.\nThe one person in England who had\nalways held hope wns Mrs. Hawker.\nShe always maintained that providence would protect her husband and\nthough she received condolences from\nall classes ot people, including the\nking, she said today that sho had nev-\nL-r ceased to believe thai some time\nmd in some way her husband would\ncome back.\nLONDON, May 25.\u2014The London\nDaily mail, which offered a purse\n*J5U,U0() for the first flight by a heav-\njer-thah-air craft across the Atlantic\nwilt give Hawker und Grieve a con\nsola lion prize of \u00a35UUU.\nLONDON, May 25.\u2014Harry G. Hawker and Lleut.-Commander McKensi!\nGrieve, the two airmen who started\nlast Sunday in an attempt to Ily\nacross- the Atlantic, from St. Johns,\nNfld., have been picked up ot\nf.nd landed in Scotland. Both men\nwere  iu  perfect\" health.\nIt is officially announced by th\nAdmiralty thai the a via tors ucr\npicked up in latitude 5U.20, longitude\n20.211, having alighted close to the\nllttlo Danish steamer Mary, owing\n[to a stoppage of circulation in\nwater pipes between the radiator and\nthe  water pump.\nThe airplane Sopwith was not sal\nvaged.\nThe first report of the aviators\nsince their famous jump-off last\nSunday came when the Mary, which\nwas bound from Norfolk to Anrhuus.\nrounded the Hutt of Lewis today\nami wigwagged the fact lhat she had\nHawker  and  Grieve  aboard.\n\"Saved    hands    off    Sopwith    ;\nplane,\"    was    the    signal.       \"Is    it\nHawker?\" was the question told  by\nthe flags from the Butt, whieh is the\nmost northwesterly point of the He\"!\nrides  group off Scotland.\n\"Yes,\" laconically replied tbe\nsteamer.\nThe Admiralty immediately t\nout a tasl torpedo boat destroyer,\nan endeavor to intercept the Mary\nand take off the aviators. There was\nun anxious wait for several hours\nwhen the word was flashed thai the\ndestroyer had come across the\nsteamer aad transferred Hawker and\nGrieve and was taking them\nThurso, on the northern coast of\nScotland, about 100 miles east of\nthe   Butt  of  Lewis.\nThe destroyer, the Revenge,\nports to the Admiralty this evening\nthat Hawker and Grieve would stop\non  board tonight.    The aviators will\nat\noVIo\nTuesday;\nreach   London\nevening.\nThe pews of the rescue has electrified ail Britain, Light destroyem\nfter a thorough search of ihe Atlantic for ;i'fu miles from the Irish coast\nhad given up the quest, and thero\nwas practically no hope that the alr-\nriien were alive.\nThis morning, however, ibe forlorn\nhope thai. Big aviators might bo\npicked up by some craft without\nwireless was realized, The Danish\nsteamer Maty, crawling along at nine\nknots was the lucky vossle, und hoi*\nbrief message to the .watchers at\nthe Butt of Lewis as she proceeded\nher way to Scotland left tho\npublic to speculate wouderlngly over\ndetails  of the  airmen's adventures.\nThe admiralty immediately dispatched destroyers from northern\npoints tu Intercept the Mary and\nthe Daily Mall instructed all signal\nstations in try tu communicate with\nthe captain, that it wus urgent to\nland the aviators at some Senttisli\nport,\nThe admiralty acceded and a message was sent to the destroyer Wool-\nsun late in the evening, that sho\nshould overtake the Mary and should\ntransfer  the  aviators.\nNothing except some great battlo\nhe- excited London more, than today's unexpected tidings. The publio\nwas disposed to furcation whether tho\nfirst report couhf be trusted, and\nthe admiralty statement that It 'wast\ntaking measures to verify the report\nindicated doubt which the Woolsun's\nmessage  dispelled.\n1 In Ll of Lewis is the ex t renin\nnorthern point of the Hebrides, ot'C\nthe west coast nf Scotland. Tha\nDanish si earner sailed Alay i from\nNorfolk for Aarhtius, Denmark. Sho\nis a vessel \u25a0 jt\" 1,10*1 tons. Thurso ia\na point in ilic extreme north of Scotland, nbo'tit too miles east of the Butt\nof Lfewis, where ihe news of Hawker\nand Grieve  was signalled.\n\u25a0'll Was no fault of tile Uoils-Uoyctt\nmotor, which ran absolutely perfect\nfrom start to finish, even when all\ntbe  water  hud  boiled  away.\n''We Itad no trouble in landing on\nthe sea, where We were locked up\nby the tramp steamer Mary, after\nbeing iu the water for DO. minutes.\nWe leave Thurso al 2 p.m. .Monday,\narriving in London Tuesday evening.\"\nHawker. Explains\nLONDON, May 25. \u2014 Hawker has\nsent the following message from tho\nRevenge to  the Daily  Mall:\n\"My machine stopped owing to tlio\nwater filter in the feed pipe from\nthe radiator to the watbr pmnp being\nblocked wiiii refuse, such as solder\nor the like shaking loose in tlio\nradiator.\"\nDestroyer Takes Off Airmen\nLONDON, May 25 (G.'SO p.m.). -Tito\nair ministry announces that the torpedo boat destroyer Woolsum has intercepted the Danish steamer Mary\nand taken'Uawlter and Grieve aboard\nand that the aviators will be landed\nai   Thurso.\nReach Mainland Today\nLONDON, May 25. \u2014 Hawker and\nGrieve are spending the nlghl aboard\nthe flagship Revenge, in the Orkneys.\nThey will reach ihe inn inland tomorrow and proceed, to London by\ntrain.\nSTKAMER   ARRIVALS.\nAmerica at New York, from Brest.\nMinnehaha sit New York, from London.\nAgememon at Now York, from Brest.\nSanta Teresa at New York, from St.\nN'azaiie.\nCorohta at \u00ab\\*cw York, from Liverpool.\nStockholm at Now York, from Gothenburg.\nOscar II. at Copenhagen, from New\nYork.\nt'lua, at New York, from Liverpool.\n\"tsego at New York, from Bordeaux.\nMercy at New York, from St. Nft-\nzaire.\nMontpelier at Philadelphia, from\nNew York,\nKroonland at Brest, from New York.\nNew Amsterdam at Plymouth, from\nNew York.\nGRANDSTAND   COLLAPSES;\nFEW   SERIOUSLY   HURT\nSYDNEY, N.S., .May 25.\u2014While the\nraces at the Sydney trotting park\nwere lu progress on Saturday, .the\ngrandstand collapsed, precipitating\nfully 1,000 persons to the ground.\nOnly a small number of persons wero\nhurt, while the seriously injured did\nnot  number more than a dozen.\nMargaret Gillis, who is in the hospital with a fractured skull, is the\nonly person whose case is considered,\ndangerous,\nL^tfM\n %S TV.*o\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY,  MAY 26,  1919.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhat* the, Travtling Publit May Obtain tuparlar Accommodation.\nA   LA  CARTE SERVICE UNEXCELLED        Te<BLE D'HOTE\nSpecial Sunday Dinnar  \u201e.\u201e.\u201e.\u201e._.\u201e .   . tl.00\n\u2014\"\"w**!\nTea Room Open Daily 10 a.m. to Midnight\nICES, ICE COLD DRINKS  LIGHT REFRESHMENT!\nMUSIC ANO DANCING\nAftarnoon Taa, I lo I ...\u201e.\u201e.\u201e..--\u201e.....\u201e....\u201e....\u201e ZSc\nHUME\u2014E. J. Walker, Vancouver ; C. S. Cradaoclt, Vancouver; J, .1.\nWalsh-, Vancouver; C<. E. Leader, Va nceettver; C. t. Arhlbald, Halmo; Mr.\nanel Mrs. G. Hamlin, Wilmington! M. Loiigheed, Trail; 3, R, Ci-alg, Trail;\nMr. and Mrs. C, A. Bederlck, Tmlll Mr. nnd Mrs. L, McLeod, Trail; J. J.\nWarren, Trail; T. W. Blngay, Trail; K. G, Blaylook, Trail; .\\'eeijl.< Blnnlns,\nTfail; R, ll. Anthony anel wife'. Trai 1; E. Hnzlewood anel wife, Trail;\n(I. VV. Weir, Trnil; Miss Weir, Trail; li. D. Newman, Trail; 1',. <-'. Crowe,\nTrail; O. Damm, Trail; .Miss S. ICo rr, Trail; Miss .1. Munro, Trail; Miss,\n(1. Rogers, Trail; .1. \\V. McKay, Tra 11; .1. 1*. Schotield, Trail; P. E.\nMorrison and wife, Trail; I). W. M cDonald, Trail; II. W. Power, Kaslo;\n.leilin Keen, Kaslo; .1. Dickson, Win nipeg; S. S. Fowler, Rlondel; .1.\nWhyte, Rlondel: E. 0. Montgomery, Klmborly; .1. Dorsoy, Spokane; II.\nA. Spiles, Calton; P. I,. Spiles, Calt on; E, Butterfleld, Wynndel; A. Far-\n1 epdiar, Vancouver; B, C. Lechler, Xew York; Miss J*. Lechler, New\nVork; Miss M. L. Holllstee, Ainswo rtli; Miss llaevps, Alnsworth; Miss\nMcLeod, Ainsworth; Miss King, Ain sworth; P. C. Townshend, Trail; ll.\nMaelelison, Forme-; A. 10, Walts. Watt ville; Mrs. Walts, Wattville; C. Mc-\nIsaae, Ymir; Mr. anel Mrs. li. W. W Iddowgon, city; W. A. Jowett, Edge-\nworth; Dr. iitiel Mrs. Borden, cily; Mrs. It. Uile'.v, Vancouver; T. R.\nWilson, city; Mr. anel Mrs. E. L. Buchanan and family, city; Mr. and\nMrs. E. W. Apployard, city; Mi>r'and .Mrs. Vanderwatcr, Victoria; Mr. McLeod, Ymir; Miss Isabel Stewarf, e-i ly; .las. McGregor, city; Miss Jordan,\ne'lty;   Miss  Laslett, city.    '\nft\nHotel Strathcona\nH. W. SHORE, PROPRIETOR.\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL FOR TRAVELERS ANO TOURISTS\n8. MPLE ROOM, ALL GROUND FLOOR, WITH NATURAL LIGHT\nM08T COMFORTABLY FURNISHED ROTUNDA IN THE INTERIOR.\nLARGE DRAWING ROOM FOR LADIES.\nEUROPEAN RATE, $1.00 UP.\nAMERICAN PLAN, \u00bbS.I0 UP.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014A. C. [iron, Phoenix; W. Ilrnwn anel wife, city; W.\nBrown, jr., city; It. It. Brown, city; B. I*. Steeves, city) .Mi*, and Jlrs.\nII. Smalley, Sprague; li. Harvey, Spokane; Ceil. Taylor nnel wife, England; Capt. Floyer and wife, England; W. .1. Cullum, Victoria; N. Jones,\nReglnai   (i.   McDonald,   Fernle.    __\nQueen's Hotel\nEuropean     and     Amiricin     Plan\nStiam Heat in Every Room\nA.  LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nQUEENS\u2014Pte. .1. Wells, France;\nPte. H. O. Mitchell, overseas; A. S.\nMeViear, Arnprior, Ont.; R. G. Mac-\nUeth, Rossland; Mr, and Mrs. A. La-\npointe, Spokan-e; J. .1. Audet, Regina;\nMrs. C. G. Johanson, K;tslo; M. K.\nSinclair, jLethbrldge; P. .1. Murray,\noverseas; Mr. and Mis. Morrison, Winnipeg; Mrs. Stark, Creston; Arthur\nStark, Creston; G. Darmentro, Kitchener; .1. Ska nova, Kitchenar; G.\nTruehnik, Kitchener; .1. C, Collins,\nC ran b rook.\nMadden House\nM. J. MADDEN, Proprietraaa\nSTEAM  HEATED\norner Bakor and Ward 3ti., Nalson\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Proa.\nOppoalta Poatolflo*\nRoom  and   Board, IK  par  Month\nEuropaan Plan, Roomi Ma up\nMsala lio\nGRAND CENTRA!, \u2014 (.'. Hutson.\nMills; J. Kangsa, Cranbrook; 13, Nar-\nris, Cranbrook; n. McLeod, Bellevuc;\np. McKenzle, Granite; E. Irving, Slocan; F. Bureau, Vancouver; ,T. Trust.\nVancouver; P. Collis, Vancouver; G.\nAnderson, Norway; H. McDonald.\nNorway; J. Nelson, Creston; M. Nelson, Creston.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS.  MALLETE, Proprlatraaa\nA Home tor tlie World at (1.11 a\nDay.  Flrat-class Dining Room,\nComfortable Roomi.\n$11 Vernon 8traat, Nair Poatoffloa\nThe Standard Cafe\n320 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n12 to 2:30, Special Lunch   -   \u25a0   SSo\nPhono 164\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nThe Warmest House in Town.\nRun by Canadians. All white help.\nMealff, 3Eo, served family style.\nBeds 35e and 50c. All you can eat\nand a good, clean bed to sleep ln.\nGive ui a trial. Auto meet-s all\ntrains and boats.\nED KERR, Proprietor.\n(Continued from Page One)\nthe council's reply to the German\nnote regarding: responsibilities. Count\nvon Brockdorffs note insists that\nGermany's only responsibility in for\ntlie violation of the neutrality which\nshe Ih ready to make reparation for,\nand declares that all the powers\nwere responsible for the war and\nthat material damage done was the\nwork of the allied armies as well\nas  the  Germans.\nMore Delegates Leave\nVERSAILLES, Mny 25 (Associated\nI'ress).\u2014General Count Max Mont-\ngrlas and Professor Weber, members\nof the German peace delegation, left,\nfor Berlin tonight. Before their departure they approved the reply to\n\u25a0ft he peace conference in tlie provisions nf the treaty dealing with\nthe demand Cor punishment of the\nformer emperor nnd financial arrangements. Herr Dietrlek, another\ndelegate, also left for Berlin.\nClemenceau's Reply\nPARIS, May 25 (Associated Press).\n\u2014Premier Clemenceau's reply tn the\ntwo German notes on the proposed\nwestern boundaries of Germany,\nwhich was mado public tonight, denies Count von Brockdorff-Uant'\/au's\nasserllon that the German territories\nare the subject of shifting: from one\nsovereignty  to  another.\nPremier Clemenceau points oat\nthat the desire is lhat the inhabitants of the territories in (piestinn\nshall be taken into consideration, the\nonly exception being that part of\nPrussian Moresnet, inhabited by only\n600 persons, which Is transferred lo\nBelgium as partial reparation for the\ndestruction of Belgian forests hy the\nGermans.\nAccept Austrian Treaty\nPARIS, May 24 (Associated Press).\n\u2014Tlie council of four has accepted\n'the Austrian treaty with the exception of financial clauses and the\nsouthern boundary, on which some\ndetails remain to be straightened out.\nChinese and Japanese . delegates\nwere before the council this afternoon In accordance with the Russian\nquestion, which continues to occupy\nmuch of the council's attention owing\nto tlie proposal to recognize Admiral\nKolchak, anti-Bolshevik In Russia.\nPARIS, May 25 (French Wireless).-\u2014\nTho Frankfort Gazette, speculating on\nthe calling of a conference at Spa, between tlie members of the Geiman\npeace delegation and representatives of\nthe Berlin government, suggested that\nGermany has found its hand forced to\nsome extent by the speed with which\nthe negotiations ut Versailles are progressing.   The newspaper says In part:\n\"The cabinet appears to have realized only at the last moment the necessity for such a conference. What\ncaused such a determination to be\nreached'.' Nobody knows. The government may have considered thit\neven this was taking a more precipitate course thon had been expected. Germany will perhaps be allowed\nonly a very brief delay after the week\ngiven her to make her final observations on the peace treaty* terms, and\nmay have lo hasten her reply of yes\nor no,\"\nCroatians Send Appeal\nPARIS, May 2r..\u2014The Croatian peasants' party, claiming to represent\n1,000,000 Croats, has sent an appeal to\nthe peace conference through Italian\ndelegates, demanding the creation of\nan Independent Croat lan-Slovanlan\nintl Dalmatian republic. The appeal\nalso asks tht Italy take clrirge of their\nInterests in Paris.\nE MINI\nI\nWhere to Spend a\nWHERE THT FISHING IS GOOD\nOutlet Hotel\nPROCTOR\nFishing, Boating Bathing, Golf,\nTennis Courts\nFishing  Tackle  Supplied.    Grocery\nStore in Connection\nW. A. WARD, Prop.\nRites Reasonable. Good ivieals\nENJOY A VACATION  AT THE\nHOTEL GRAND\nNAKUSP\nFrank Hughes, Prop.\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lakes.\nSplendid   fishing   and   boating\nNice rooms, good meals, pleasant surroundings\nKOOTENAY\u2014A. McQuarrie; A.\nLade, Creston; P. Flower, Creston;\nNap Mallette, Slocan.\nNew Grand Hotel\nJOHN BLOMBERG, Proprittor.\nUp-to-Data Brick Building, Stum\nHaatad.\nHot and Cold Walar in Evary Room\nAmarioan and Europaan Plan\nNEW GRAND \u2014 Arlhur Molsaao,\nYmir; Miss Elva McLeod, Ainsworth;\nMiss Louise Thompson, Ainsworth;\nWm. Qosnell, city; Pte. Norberg,\nBlnchbank; Fred Johnson, Rossland;\nKnut Peterson, Silverton; S. Stevenson, Taghum; Clarence Mclsaac,\nYmir; Ed Johnson, Yahk; S. Pearson,\nYahk; C. Johson, Yahk; Fred II.\nShoemaker, Salt Lake.\nThe Central Hote 1\nAINSWORTH, B. C.\nWith Its natural Hot Mineral\nSprings, situated on the beautiful shores ot the Kootenay lake;\nwith good trout fishing, hunting,\nind bathing. Under our attention\nyou have; a sure cure for rheumatism, metalic poisoning, etc. Come\nand spend a holiday with us, and\nfeel like a new man. Write and\nreserve rooms for yourself and\nfamily. The hotel ls newly renovated, and under entirely new\nmanagement.\nRobert  Thompson,   Prop.\nPRIVATE MAHONE,\n\"A   private,\"   they  said\nIn  the list  of   their dead.\nAnd llttlo the comfort they bring,\nHut did they not know,\nWhen   they   buried   him   low,\nThut Private Mahone was a king\nt\nTlie  world   never knew\nA  monarch   more   true,\nMore loyal  than lie at my side,\nThe   light   in   thc   skies\nTurned  back  in  my  eyes,\nWhen the king of my empire died.\nThen   muffle'   tiie   drum\nWhen in  triumph you come,\nYour warrior's  requiem sing,\nUncover   the'   head,\nAnd  bow   lei   the   deled.\nFor  Private  Mahone  was\nking\nSign in an uptown store;\n\"Temperance1 beer, 30 c.ints a gallon.\nGasoline, .18 cents.\"\nXo wonder a slump In brewery stock\nis talked about on 'Change.\n8PEND YOUR H0LIDAY8 AT\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nAND 8T0CK UP WITH HEALTH\nIf you suffer from muscular, Inflammatory, sciatica or any other\nform of rheumatism, or from\nmetalic poisoning of any aort, don't\ndelay. Come at once and get cvred.\nHost complete and best arranged\nbathing establishment on tbe continent. All departments under one\nroof, steam heated and electric\nlight.\nRates: %3 par day, or $17 par week.\nDAVI8 tt DAVI8, Propa.\nHalcyon   \u2022   -   Arrow Lakes, B.C.\nWindow\nEnvelopes\nAddress Themselves\nMado of hlghgrado white wove\nstock and with a window of\nclear transparent quality.\nTHEY SAVE HOURS OF\nVALUABLE TIME\nwhen sending out invoices, hills\nor letters,\nWrite for samples and quotations.\nthe  aily News Job\nDepartment\nThe Home of Good Printing\nNELSON, B. C.\n(\"Continued from Page One)\nand kjiII in ahout fmn- days for England.\nNotables on Board\nSeveral notable Canadians were\non board, among whom was\nMr. Lloyd Harris senior member of the Canadian trade\nmission to Great Britain and Europe.\nHe 1ms been abroad on the business\nof Canada since December und returns to report progress officially nnd\nto address a series uf public meetings\nthroughout Canada on trade possibilities   and   necessities.\nParticularly he wants to impress\nthe point that while the government\nhas done well in arranging credits\nwith certain countries, yet the\namount of business being offered is\ngreater than the government by Itself\ncan he expected to take care of. He\ndesires to get thc people of Canada\nto organize themselves by trades and\narrange the credits necessary to take\ncare of the further business being\noffered across the seas.\nHe declares that the shipping control board in Great Britain has met\ntbe representations of the Canadian\ntrade mission and made refrigerator\nspace on board the trans-Atlantic\nliners open to the trade. Tills for\nmany months after ihe armistice was\nsigned wns th*1 great obstacle in\nCanada's negotiating for a larger\nshare of European trade. Now that\n{this is removed and shipping is\neasier, tho prospects for trade botween Canada and Europe are greatly Increased.\nWhat Mr, Harris has been able to\naccomplish overseas affects the. industrial life of Canada beneficially.\nIn particular he has been a business\nscout surveying the chances for Canadian trade. He hwi visited the\ncountries of Europe, met the representatives of tho.se countries in Paris\nand London, and has advised the\nCanadian government as lo what\nsteps should be taken touching\ncredits and tbe development of trade.\nHe has been a real trade ambassador, the first one Canada has ever\nhad, and has won tbe confidence of\nthe trade ambassadors of other eoun-\n'tries to the lasting good of Canada\nand Canadian goods. In international\ntrade, as in other trades, confidence\nis the foundation stone.\nWhile Canadian troops have let\nEurope and all the world know what\nstuff Canadians are made of, yet It\nremained for Lloyd Harris to\nacquaint Europe in detail with what\nCanada ran produce, can sc-\u00ab. nnd\nship and what her industrial aims\nare. The whole industrial field of\nCanada has been laid before these\ncountries by Mr. Harris and bis associates, who know the facts. On\nthis foundation, bargain and sale\nhave been effected by Canada under\nthe terms of the credits extended to\nRumania and  other countries.\nHis work has been to organize the\nCanadian trade mission In London\nand Europe, to get information as to\ntrade opportunities, to furnish information as to Canada's capacity\nto supply foodstuffs, raw materials\nand manufactured goods, to arrange\nthe basis of credits and to institute\na policy of rigorous, independent\ninspection as a protection to both\nbuyer and seller.\nWith Great Britain and Europe In\na turmoil owing lo the unexpected\ncessation of hostilities, with every\ncountry suddenly faced with\ntoward problems, domestic and inter-\nnntiolal, it has been no easy (ask\nfor the Canadian trade mission in\nLondon to make progress; yet definite ami concrete progress has been\nmade and the outlook for continued\ntrade lu Canadian goods is excellent.\nMr. Lloyd Harris' mission has been\nto introduce Canadian products into\nforeign countries, and thus to aid tn\nkeeping the wheels of Canadian Industry going, in order that employment might be given to Canadian\nworkmen. He has had to protect the\nvalue of the credits given by Canada\nand also protect the buyer. It has\nbeen found necessary to sell by the\ngroup representation method in order\nto facilitate trade. This in a great\nmeasure has eliminated competition.\nIt has resulted in the insistence upon\nImpartial, independent expert selec\ntlon; price fixation and inspection of\ngoods, in order that the buyer might\nhe protected. At the same time.\nCanadian sellers have been counselled\nnot to expect unreasonable profits\nthrough tlie credits established and\ntlie trade arranged by the Canadian\ngovernment. All the circumstances\nwarrant   the  most moderate profit.\nAll these things have been done\n'on the principle that the future\nbusiness of Canada with European\ncountries depends upon the method\nCanada now uses and the real value\ngiven to tbe buyer. While the European buyer has to buy quickly, hit-:\nneeds must not lie taken advantage\nof by the seller. II is the business\nof the Cnnadlan trade mission to see\nto that, and they will be aided by\nthe sellers In the interests ot permanent Canadian foreign trade.\nThe Canadian trade mission has\nbeen greatly aided by th\u00ab services\nof H. B. Thomson, who arrived in\nLondon before Mr. Harris left, and\nwhose knowledge of thc distribution\nof goods in Canada\" is expected to\naid' In placing orders with greater\ndispatch aad arranging shipments\nwith more surety.\nMr. Harris is of the opinion that\nnot only must Canadian industry sell\ngoods to foreign countries, but at\nthe same time sell service. More\nthan anything else at the present\ntime countries like Rumania, Servla\nand Greece need leadership, even\nmothering, and the Canadian business man who sells goods to these\ncountries will be. well advised to\npersonally see that they are up to\nstandard, that they are delivered on\ntime and that they are devoted to\nthe purposes for which they were\nbrought. If he can employ an expert\nto accompany his goods ho will do\nmuch in satisfying his customers and\ncreating further orders. In this age\nof competition \"Service\" should be\njtbe watchword In Canadinn foreign\ntrade. >\nMr. Harris accentuates the idea\nthat every package of Canadian\ngpods bearing the trade mark of\nCanada   should   contain   only   goods\nAeroplane Linen\nBV CHANCE WE GOT 3 BOLTS OF LINEN STRAIGHT FROM  BELFAST\nREAL IRISH  UNBLEACHED LINEN\nWhen  the  Armistice  was  signed  the  British  Government cancelled  the  contracts  for Linen  for Aeroplanes.    From  tbe amount  left over at  the mills we   secured  3  Bolts at  a  price.\n S1.50\n38   inches   wide.\nTODAY'S   PRICrc\nThis great snap should last about one day\u2014Be early.\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nof the highest standard of quality.\n11 Is by quality and service that\nCanada can obtain and hope to maintain its foreign trade now opening\nup so well across the water. Canadian soldiers on the front line in\nthe recent war made an enviable\nname for themselves. It is now the\nprivilege of Canadian business men\nto emulate Ihe example by making\nCanadian goods the standard throughout the world.\nThe Canadian government, through\nthe Canadian trade mission In London and Europe, can do much to lay\nthe foundation for foreign Irade, but\nIn the final analysis the Canadian\ncommercial traveller and salesman\nshould be on the ground to tako\nadvantage of the work done by the\nCanadian trade mission. In business\nthere is nothing like personal con-1\ntact between buyer and seller. Other,\nthings being equal, the seller who.\nIs on the ground with tho buyer can;\ndo better than the seller who Is\nthree thousand miles away, although\nhe may be represented hy some of\nthe most capable business men of j\nCanada associated with the Canadian trado mission. The world has]\nbroadened since the war, and the\nlarge industry in Toronto or Montreal or Winnipeg will find it advisable to have Its representative in\nLondon or Paris or some other European capital to do business on the\nspot with countries that want to buy.\nThere is no limit to the market\nfor Canadian agricultural products in\nGreat Britain and Europe, and this\nis likely to continue for a year or so.\nSummer Day*\nbring summer needs in footwear,\ngirl or woman could possibly enjoy\nrest in a hammock unless she kne\nher feet were perfectly fitted. A paf\nof our newest Oxfords and pumps, I\nall shades, nre ideal for warm weathe\nand dress wear.\nPRICE     FROM   $3.50   TO   $12.00.\nC. Romano\nShoemaking and  Repairing.\nsmoke  \"Player's Navy Cut\"\nCigarettes    wrapped   |fl Till Foil.\nTROUBLE BREWING IN\nAFGHANISTAN;   MASS  FORCES\nSIMLA, May 25.\u2014The Afghanistan\ncommander-in-chief lias1 written the\nBritish political agent at Kybher, asking for an armistice.\nSerious Events\nLONDON, May 2ii (Renter's).\u2014-Serious events are brewing on the frontier of Afghanistan, neuter's learns.\nThe Afghanistans have concentrated\nlargo forces, including many well-firmed and equlpper regulars against the\nBritish forces.\nAttempts of emmissaries of the\nEmirs to induce the, frontier tribes to\nparticipate in the operations against\nthe British are meeting with only moderate success. Most of the trbes remain staunch, but .some are way: ring\nOffice Stationery\nORDER  YOUR   BILL   HEADS,  STATEMENTS,   SPECIAL   FORMS,\nLETTERHEADS,    ENVELOPES,    PAY    CHECKS,    CHECKS,\nRECEIPT   FORMS.   ORDER    BLANKS,    REQUISITION\nFORMS   AND   ALL   OTHER   FORMS   FROM\nThe Daily News Job Department\nNELSON,   B.C.\nWHAT MILK AS A FOOD\nMEANS TO THE PEOPLE\nIn the report of the New York Farmers' Institutes, the committee on milk\nas a food reports the following conclusions'.\n1. No food Is of greater importance\nto the welfare of tlie country\u2014both at\nthis lime and in the future\u2014than\nmilk, and alt possible st'-ps should be\ntaken to maintain the present milk\nsupply.\n2. Special effort should be made to\nacquaint the public with the high value\nof milk as a food and with its especial\nvalue to littl children as a source of\nprotein, lime, and two unknown substances which are necessary for health\nand growth.\n.1. That at prevailing prices milk is\ntlie cheapest animal food.\n4. The public must he educated to\nan understanding of the eonditi ns\nthat govern the cost of milk and to\nan appreciation of the iie cosily for\npaying a fair price fnt' It if the supply\nis to be maintained.\n5; Milk must be regarded as a solid\nfood and as a welcome substitute for\nmeat.\n6. The value of milk as a milk-\nproducing food should lie recognised\nin the dietary of the nursing mother.\n7. That mothers be trained to an\nappreciation of  making milk  an  im-\nBlyo milk in food to those persons ulu\ndon't drink milk.\n12. That milk Is a food l.ndlng i:\nself to conservation of time, labor aii(\nfuel, since it may bo eaten raw.\n13. That the making of t.read wltl\nmilk or whey should be. i ncouing.'d\nsince it improves tho value of lh<\nbread as a food.\n14. That infoimatlon on milk\nfood be distributed through as manj\nchannels as possible. Source materia\non milk' as a fond is now availabh\nand should be procured.\nand   will  probably  decide  to  support\nthe side which gains first success in [ portant feature in the diet of all grow\ntho   operations   which  are    about   to  ing children.\ncommence.\nThe British representative at Kandahar, who has reached Quetta, states\nthat a holy war is being vigorous'y\npreached and everybody in Kandahar\nis buying arms.\nONE DROWNS WHEN\nCOAST SCHOONER WRECKS\nVICTORIA, B.C., May 25.\u2014Albert\nCrane lost bis life by diowning and\ntwo others of the crew of the Vancouver fishing schooner Madelin -\u2022\nDyke had a narrow escape from death\nin tho wreck and total loss of the vessel off Triangle Island Saturday\nmorning. Tiie schooner last night anchored at Triangle but a gale springing up early in the morning the ve.-sel\nwas blown out to sea. Her plight became so perilous that tt was decided\nto abandon her, and two of the crew\nwere able to make their way ashore in\na small boat which wns eairi?d aboard.\nHow Crane lost his life Is not described in the wireless message received here. A thorough search of the\nbeach was made for tbe body but without success. Tho other m mhers of\nthe crew are being cared for at the\nTriangle wireless station.\n8. That since milk is so easily contaminated, there should be no relaxation in the effort to produce ckan\nmilk.\n0. Thc public should begin to make\nplans that would insure a supply of\nmilk to the children of the coun'ry.\n10. That practical efforts should be\nmade to overcome the prejudice many\npersons have against milk by showipg\nthem a variety of ways of using it.\n11. That greater effort be made to\nMAIL   STEAMER   AGROUND.\nST. JOHNS, Nfld., May 25.---A coast\nal mail steamer went aground loda;\nwhile entering Marystown harbor,\nthe west side of Placenthi bay. Then\nwere lio passengers on board. TIT*\nsteamer was refloated tonight, appar\nently undamaged.\nLINER   REGINA  COMING,\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014(Delayed. Canadian Associated Press,)\u2014The Regln:\nsailed for Halifax today with 41 offl\neers and lfiSi men from Kinmel camp\nand the Sth and 10th stationary hos\npilals from Hexhill, undor Colonel\n.Munro and Colonel Seaborn,\n\"No, sir. Xo bard stuff. Nothin-j\nbut sherry, port, sloe gin and cherrj\nbrandy,\" replied the cheerful baimai\nas b swept by with a trnyful\nCollinses.\n\"Gimme a match,\" said a returned\nsoldier in civilian clothes tho othe\nday. The civilian felt in his pockets\nbut finding none, preferred his owr\nlighted cigarette to tho returned man.\nThn latter waved It away scornfully\n\"I'm a returned .soldier,'* he said. '\nasked fo' a match, not for charity\nThere is no pleasing some per pi?.\nEMPLOYEES ON   SUEZ\nSTRIKE,  REPORTS  ALLENBY\nLONDON, May 25 (Reuter's).\u2014Rt\nHon. Cecil Harmsworth, the undersecretary for foreign affairs, stated\nln the house of commons on Saturday that General Allenby had reported a strike of employees on the\nSuez canal, which broke out May 13,\nand that subsequently all the workers at Fort Said had struck. The\nstrike  has  now  spread  to  Suez.\nIn view of its vital importance,\nMr. Harmsworth said the S-tez Canal\nservice must be maintained, and this\nis now being ensured by naval and\nmilitary  assistance.\nSALOONS CLOSE TO\nlVADE LICENSE PAYMENT\nCOLUMBUS, Ohio, May $5.\u2014Although constitutional prohibition does\nnot become effective until next Tuesday ail but 163 of the 5600 saloons in\nOhio quit business tonight at midnight rather than pay th\u00a9 $305 llcenstf\nin order to keep open next Monday fcr\nthe one day.\nMany a ballroom dress, in covering a\nwarm heart, reaches Its' limit.\nThe peak of excellence 0\ninborn foods\u2014        ffl\nPOST\nSTOASTIES\nNothing\nLike em\"\nLuscious flakes\u2014\nthe big feature of\nthe'besf breakfasts\nU    and lunches!\nlLsaiisss^iBss^lg-^I^Slll^Sll.^51\nI\nJ\n HV\nMONDAY, MAY 28, 1919.\nTHE D70CY NE\\VSV\n*\u25a0   MM Ml\n imiiiii in t***^\n\\ Mining and Markets \\\n*-\u00bb-\u00bb*\u00bb**-\u00bb**-\u00bb4-\u00bb*\u00bb \u00bb \u00bb*\u2022\u00bb*\u2666\u00bb\u2666 \u2666\u00bbt-\u00bb^MJH*4 *\nII PROBLEM OF Iii\nSULLIVAN ORES; KLffl 10\n*Thc proolem of the treatment of\nio complex silver-lead-zinc ores of\n\\c Sullivan mine at Kimberley has\nfen solved by S. G. Blaylock and his\nVetamirgtcai   staff  at   Trail   smelter,\ntt\ninounced J. J. Warren, general manner of  tlie Consolidated  Mining ,&\ninciting company, at the banquet Sat-\nE 'day to E. W, Beatty, president of\nle Canadian Pacific railway.\nIt \u201e Is understood lhat Vrcsident\n'arrcn's annouiicoment means that\nic experts at Trail have been auc-\nssful in evolving a method of treatment which results in the saving of\n)o silver, lead and zinc in the ord\nrom tho Sullivan, which has becomo\ntin\/ largest producer of tonnage on\nthe company's list. *\nMr. Warren stated that he believed\nthat the problem of the treatment of\nthc low-grade gold-copper ores of tho\nRossland mines had also been solved\nand mat within a short time thy\nRossland properties of the company\nwould be turning out between 2000 and\n5000 tons of ore dally.\nHigh costs of production and the\nfact that the price of gold has not\nrisen to meet it forced the company\nto reduce its operations at Rossland\nto a minimum. It has since been developing ore ready for shipment and\nworking steadily oil the problem of\nilLscoveriug a method by which the\nore can be profitably treated,\nflT PIES\nmall    Amount   of   Produce   on   Sale\nat City Market\u2014Eggs-Are\nScarce.\nOwing to market day being held on\nriday ' instead \u2014of Saturday, the\n.mount of produce for sale was small\nnd the customers wereafew.\nSince the mnrket report of three\nSeeks ago there has ,been an advance\nx nearly all produce displayed lor\n*ile on tbe market stalls.\n. The advance in meats has been\nlarked. Beef is now 25c to 40c per\nounii, pork jjJJc  to 40c,  veal 2uc to\nfo..\nfdj^gs arc now 55c and GOc per dozen\nnd scarce. There was no supply for\nreserving purposes on thc market.\nThe following is the list of prices:\n'urnips, per bunch      ;j,c\n.rtichukes,  A   bunches  for  2f>u\n.ceks, per bunch  \u2022..   iie\nvudishos,  2 bunches for     0c\n\u25a0elluce, per bunch    10c\n'ursley, per bunch      lie\n.feparagUs, tier bunch  20c\n'ursnips, per bunch      3c\nIpi'lng onions, 3 bunches for.\nIiu'scradish, per pound ....\nUuibarb, per bunch of Z lbs..\n!abhage plants, each   \t\nCauliflower plants; each  ....\nutter,  per 11).,  (iiic  aud   \t\n.heeso, per lb, o0c and \t\nfurd, per lb\t\nittbd beef, per lb\t\niscf, per lb., 25c t<\t\njfork, per \u25a0lb., iJOe to\t\n'cal, por lb., 25c to \t\nRaspberry vinegur, par bottle\nlarnmlailc,   4-lb.   tin   \t\nuarmala.de, l lb, jar \t\nMum jam, per 1 lb, jot-\t\n''berry jam, per 1 lh. jar\t\nfeach jam, per I lb. jar\t\nIonic cured ham, per lb. ...\nIonic cured bacon, per li)....\nJlomo made  bread and   in\nIsu for sale.\n.. 25u\n,. 10c\n.. lc\n,. 15c\n,. 70c\n.. 55c\n..   'iilO\n.. 20c\n.. -10c\n.. -J0c\n.. 40c\n.. 50o\n.?1.00\n.. 30u\n...35c\n.. 35c\n,. ar.c\n.. 55c\n.. 55c\nwere\nbstalilisbnicnt   of   Wow   Method   Wil\nIncrease Percentage of Recover-\n\u25a0 able Metal at Lower Cost.\nVANCOUVER, li. .(.;., May 25.\u2014A\nnew '\"method of treating copper ores-\nhas been established hero Which, it is\nbelieved, will increase the percentage\nof recoverable metal, at a lower cost\nthan by any other system.\nRecent tests Indicate that the process will extract values from ores formerly considered useless, The invention is konwn as the Lock wood-Dai-\nzeil copper recovery process.\n' By the new method tedious and expensive still leaching, requiring from\none to two weeks for a single cycle\nof operation, is replaced by a process\neffecting a high recovery from any\nkind of ore in 24 hours.\nTest runs havo returned ns high as\n:>0.i per cent from retractory ores,\nvarying from six-tenths'of 1 per cent\nto 2.71 per cent in copper.\nOno of thc greatest advantages seen\nin tho discovery Is tne economical\ncost of installation. A plant can be\nestablished at tbe mine, thereby elim\ninating the necessity of paying freight\non one shipments.\nSmall mine operators sec in the\nprocess an opportunity to cash In on*\nholding^ on which they were previously unable io break even, it is believed that the method will revolutionize tho metal industry in tbe\nprovince.\nFor the big concerns, handling thousands of tons of ore a day, and extracting copper to hundreds of tons,\nrecovery methods witli a maximum\nefficiency of 06 to 75 per cent of the\ncopper content will, it is believed, re-\ntiro before ihe method returning from\n!)0 per cent upward; ot a cost from 11}\nto 25 per cent lower than under tho\npresent order.\ndetOXS \u25a0\u25a03*jiHB||,    mi mm\nE \\V. Beatty. K.O., patient of[\nthe Canadian Pacific railway,wad the\nhonored guest of the Associated\nBoards of Trade of Eastern British\nColumbia and the Xelson Board of\ntrade at a banquet at the Hume\nhotel  on  Saturday  evening.\nThe banquet was marked by a desire on the part of Ihe citizens of\ntlie city and surrounding district and\nthe officials of the company to cooperate in every way possible toward\n'the deveh\u00bbimie'nt iif the resources of\nEastern  British Columbia,\n\"Vour interests are ouu\u00bb interests\nand your prosperity i-S oi\" prosperity,\" (Iceland Mr. .Realty toward the\nclosp of bis address, whieh was\nlistened lo attentively. Mr. Beatty\nie men of Eastern British\nfor  the  welcome   extended\nthanked\nColumbia\nto him.\nTo Work Together\n\"Nelson business men are not\nstingy, and they desire to co-operate\nwith (he business men of the nearby\ntowns in their development proposals,\" said Alexander Leith In the\ncourse of an address in reply to the\ntoast to \"Smelting, .Manufacturing\nand Commercial interests.\"\nMr. Leiih's statement was favorably commented upon by a number\nof out-of-town  speakers,  who  stated\nthey were glad to know that they\nmight look to Nelson Tor her assistance with lh \u25a0  plans In the future.\nTin- committed which had the banquet In charge ond the management\nof tlie Hume hot.-! Iihv \u2022 receiyed dozens oi compliments \u25a0\u2022 r the successful\nmanner in which i' wn-s conducted.\nThe committee consisted of .1. l:.\nHunter, P. A. Starkey, O*mm!nsioner\nCigo and Messrs. Blackwood and\nBowles.\nMr, Realty was accompanied ity D.\nC, Coleman, vice-president of the\nwestern lines, Winnipeg; E, S. Mc\"-\nI'herson, vice-president of the Spokane luU-rnational railway, Spokane;\nA. C, .Mackenzie, engineer, mainten-\nunce-of-way, Winnipeg; I'. \\V. 1'eters,\ngeneral superintendent, Britisli Columbia district,\nThe party arrived from the east by\nway el' Balfour and i'roctor on\nSaturday nfleruoon, und visited the\nWes! Kooteiiuy Power company's\nplant at Bonnington Kalis ,-inil the\nXelson golf course. While at Balfour, Mr. Beatty went through, the\nSanitarium. The party left by special train after the banquet for Trail,\nWhore they paid a visit to the Trail\nsmellers on Sunday. l-'rom these\nthey   n ill   proceed   to   the  coast.\nMr. I'.eatly's address was as follows:\nPresident Beattg's] Address\nMONTREAL  PRODUCE.\nMONTREAL; May 24.\u2014A stronger\nloling   has   prevailed   in   the   butter\nHiarkct all week and tha strength of\nic cliecsc market has been more pro-\nonnced all week..   Quotations:\nCheese, finest easterns, 30 Y>o to\n2 1-lOc.\nButter, choicest creamery, 55'^u to\nGc.\nEggs, freshi 52c to 53c; selected, 54c\n\u25a0 55c; No, 2 slock', 50c.\nPotatoes, per bag, car lots, $2 to\n2.10.\nJHICAGO CORN PRICES\nON THE DOWN GRADE\nCHICAGO, May 24.\u2014Prospects of a\nlatcrlul increase of the movement\next week did a good deal today to\nend the corn market down grade,\n'rices closed heavy, %c to 2%c net\nower, with July $1.02 and September\n1*66 to S1.66-&\n-EAD   SMELTING\nPROBE  NEAR  END\nThe report of the committee\nwmch 13 investigating lead and\nzinc smelting at Trail smelter is\nbeing completed and will be forwarded to the minister shortly, it\nis announced. The committeo is\ncomposed of S. S. Fowler, chairman; Ivan DeLashmutt,' and\nJames Anderson, secretary.\nsmok-s   \"Player's Navy Cut\"\nCigarettes    wrapped   lj| fitl Foil.\n,.ou     tu    v>i.uu \/a,\nOats lost lc to l%c.   Provisions un-\n'hanged to S5c off.\nLIVESTOCK  MARKETS.\nChicago.\nUjICAGO, May 24.\u2014Hog receipts,\n000. Bulk of sales, 5c to 10c higher,\nvilli most of the advance lost at the\nlose. Top, ifao.50. Bulk of, sales,\n20.40 to ?p0.65; heavy, $20.50 to\n20.75; medium weight, $20.35 to\n20.75; light weight, $20 to $20.25;\night lights, ?li).\u00bb5 to ?20.40; heavy\ntacking sows, smooth, $1.0.85 to $20.25;\nlacking sows, rough, $10.25 to ?lfl.75.\nCattle receipts, 1000. Good and\nhoice heavy steers, 75c ,to $1 lower;\nommon und medium grades and year-\nIngs, mostly 40c to 75c lower. Best\nows and heifers, 50c to 75c lower;\naimers and medium grades under\n100, steady to 25c lower. Yeal calves,\nt.75 lo ?2 lower; fleshy feeders, 50c\no 75c lower; stockers and light feeders, steady,\nSheep receipts, 1000. Market strong\n\u25a0ompared with a week ago. Spring\nambs and best shorn, strong, j25c\nilgher. Lambs, steady to 25c lower;\nheep and yearlings, mostly 25c to\nOc lower.\nMARRIAGE FAILS TO\nCONDONE OFFENSE\nANACONDA.- P, D, Rogers; found\nguilty of a statutory offense against\nMamie Lowney of Butte, was sentenced to serve from two to four years\nin tne state penitentiary by Judgo\nWinston Monday morning, Tho penalty had been previously fixed by the\njury which heard evidence in the case.\nRogers was married to Miss Lowney\nin the office of clerk of the Court\nJames \"White last Saturday. She will\nreturn to her home in Butte and Rogers will be taken to Deer Lodge to\nbegin his sentence just as soon as tho\ncommitment papers have been made\nout for him.\nMayor Griffin, of Hobokt.ii, N.J.,\nauscd the arrest of 00 men, whom he\nailed repeaters at a municipal elec-\nion. Judge Doherty released then]\nnd ordered the mayor* arrested for\nalse imprisonment.\n  tfm\t\nA movement has been started to\nermlnate the leaseholds of all except\n.'hite tenants in California lands and\no opn these lands to white settlers,\nlurtlcirtnrly- re-turned   soldier.'-,\n1 feel that 1 need no apology for\nspeaking very b.-ieily on a matter\nwhich is engrossing the attention of\nmojst serious thinking Canadians, and\nUiat-is what to be the ultimate end\nul our- railways and under what auspices or mothod of administration are\nenvy to bii managed. The possession\no.v the Canadian Pacific of a Si-stem\nmVblvIng 13,770 miles in Cunaoa, of\nwhich 8,750 miles ure west of the\nGreat Lukes, gives in itself a reason\nwhy its officers, should have some\nknowledge and some views on the subject, and If they are of any value,\nthose that have an cijual voice in the\nfinal determination of the ijucstion are\ncertainly entitled lo tho behelit of\nLh'-m.\n1 have an additional reason for mentioning Ibis subject in that a great\ndeal of misapprehension seems to exist\nin some quarters as to just what tjifi\nproblem. Is, We have private ownership\nof sonic railways and wc have public\nownership of others, both existing in\nthe con try now. Tho fact that the\ncountry has been compelled through\nthe financial failure of some systems\nto take them over In order to prevent\nthum. from falling into utter dismantle\nis one thing, bul that is quite a dil'fer-\n\u2022nt problem from tho question of u\nlermuneijt policy of government owned\nind government managed railways.. I\nlo not know that tlie government could\nhave done anything else than they did\ndo, but I do feel that neither the gov-\nernmcnl nor tin* people of this country\naro yet in a position to determine finally what tin- future of till these systems shall  bo.\nLack   of   Discussion\nI think ii bj unfortunate that fuller\ndiscussion of this subject has not obtained in Canada up Lu now. it is true\nit. occupies certain space iu the news?\npapers and bus been discussed in parliament, but always with thc unsatisfactory result that the advocates of\nthe dlfferpent methods of administration are eofisiilcreil prejudiced. If a\npublic man speaks we shrug our shoul-\ndern and say il is politics; if a rafl-\nway man speaks, he is said In lie proud iced 1-y hi:: railway association.\nNot all th- men who go tn Ottawa are\ngoverned absolutely and exclusively by\npolitical considerations and the railway\nman can aMUf.be a, railway man and be\na good citizen \u25a0 Qfi Canada with an\nhonest .<le:-ire to s*ee the transportation future of his country assured.\nGovernment ownership in theory has\nmuch to rccommtyid it. It has been\naid by a. very able membor of the gov-\nrnment that tli- advisability of it\nIncreases as you approach a, state of\ninonopply,'and that, is probably true,\nbut it lias not been determined in any\n\u25a0ilttlsfaotory   way   up   In   date,   whether\nsovcrnmenl management of our t-ya-\nterns i:- feasible nr even possible. Until i; is determined, I should conclude\nIt would lie well for Ihe government\nnd the people to withhold their final\njudgment. Amen,.; the advocates of\nthis system are many men who are\nsincerely and honestly convinced thnt\nin the last analysis It will be Cur Ihe\nbenefit nf tin- people of this country,\nand that is the only angle from whieh\nthe question can bo viewed.\nAmerican Experiments\nH ia unfortunate, hmvever, that mos\nof these men have nut intimate nar-\nsonal knowledge nf tlie adminlfctra-\ntinn ni' these large enterprises,; unci the\nwish  for success  is    fa titer    to    the\nmmmmmm\nawBMM\u2014ia\nThe   only   publication   of   Its I\nkind In the world and the only !\nexclusively mining periodical In\nthe Interior Northwest fields.-\nEdited by Sidney Norman, an\nold-timer in tbe Kootenays and I\na firm believer In the future of j\nBritish Columbia's mines.\nPublished twice a month. Sub-\nscript)ou price, ?3 per annum,\nMINING TRUTH\nSPOKANE,   WASH,\nthought that success will result, we\nhavo recently had the benoh'f cf the\nresults of similar experiments In Great\nBritain and the United States, and,\nand while 1 am quUe prepared to admit that the abnormal conditions under whicli tlie systems had to be operated during the war makes the les-,\nsons to be drawn from tills method of\nadministration not entirely conclusive, I am strongly of the view that\nthere is nothing in these results which\ngives confidence or justifies the hope\nthat we would avoid the disaster they\nhave experienced, and that the difficulties which at least, contributed to\ntheir failure would be absent from the\nadministration of Canadian railways\nunder like auspices.\nVou will recall that the American\nsystem broke down when put to the\nlest. They broke down physically and\nfinancially. Both could, 1 think, have\nbeen avoided, or at least minimised,\nhad a littl broader view of thc needs\nuf tlie American railways been taken\nby American tribunals In the last five\nyears prior to the entry of the United\nStates Into the war. What was subsequently done, was done in an attempt io meet a highly emergent situation and wllh an Intent that the cost\nwhatever IL might he, of mistake or\nfailure, should be. b'o.rno in the Inteicsf\nof Llie principles for which the Allied\nNations were contending iu this war.\nThe result is described as a debacle,\nthe deficits have been qnormutts and\nthe efficiency and character in tho\nservice lesseud to an alarming; di gre -.\nThe United Slates people wore, how\never, fortuna.c tr.ut their Lxpaience\nwas ciowded into a comparatively\n.--hort lime, nnd they were enanled to\nlearn the lesson It taught without protracted experiments.\nChanging Back Again\n\\S a result of this experience and\nthat which they had through the operation nf cables, telegraphy and telephones, 1 think it may Iiq safely said\nthat the la.A veslig-e of deshe for government pp< ration of these utiUU?s\nhns deia.'M. from the majority of the\nAmerican people, In fact, those actually entrusted by the government\nwith the administration of the properties have admitted the unwisdom of\ntho continuance of the system. Tho\npostmaster general has agreed to the\nreturn of the cables and the telegraph\nlines, the president uf tlie I'nitcd\nstates has directed the return of thc\nrailroads. The director general of\nrailroads, Mr. Walter D. Mines, who\nhas been connected with the railroad\nadministration from tlie beginning,\nfirst as assistant director general, and\nlatterly ns- director general, expresses\nbis views as follows:\n\"I want to tell you, that In my\nJudgment, based on a very careful\nstudy, of this subject since the federal\ncontrol began, the best interests of\ntho country will be promoted, not\nthrough permanent government control, hut through ihe return of the\nrailroads to private management. 1\nbelieve tlie American public wants\ncompetition In service, and private\nInitiative is, I think, of tin* utmost ini-\nportunre in order to get satisfactory\npublic service.\"\nMr. \\<1, N. Hurley, cha.r.man of thc\nUnited States shipping Jmrdi -st-Jtes\nthat it Is his belief .thut; combinations\nbetween government andohusiherti are\neighteen years' intimate association\nwith the workings of one railway company, and an appreciation from the\ninside of what factors contributed to\nIts efficiency and success. It is a lorn:\nand arduous work to hammer topcCi -r\nan efficient organization, which mu.-?t\nbe ho widespread in its activities and\nso widely HPpamted as to locality as\nthe organ-iuiion of a transcontinental\nrailway, it hys been In cxh-t_*nce almost\nthirty-eight years, nnd the organization has been built up painfully and\nslowly, it lias now reached an efficiency in all ranks which 1 should hope\nIt would be easier to maintain, but It\nrouhl not be doveloped, nor can it lie\nmainta-ired without tho enterprise, resourcefulness, loyalty, initiative and\nesprit of the officers and men of the\ncompany. There is something which\ngives rise lo this spirit which -\"Omes\nfrom within the organization Itself and\n1 would need he- assured not only that\nIndependent non-political administration Is possible,, but that it would provoke this spirit, before I would cast\na vote for a permanent policy of government ownership and operation.\nWhen I speak of government ownership and operation T do so because\ninterference la the latter is the necessary consequence of the establishment\nof the former. It is not possible, In\nmy opinion, to divorce the responsibility for operation from those upon\nwhom rests the responsibilities for the\nresults. In theory, it mny seem reasonable,   but  In  practice  I  am   quite\n(Continued on Page Five.)\niilTQGCTi\nOF\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" Point the Way\nto Quick Relief\nVbbun*, Out.\n\"1 snflWoel for a number of years\nmill Khruinahsm and severe Fains\nin ee,r s\u201e,v and Back, -eauMd-bye\nsuteJtTe. and heavy lifting.\nWhen I hnel giTen up hope of erer\nbeing well ugain, a friend recom- ,\nmended 'Fniit-a-tives' to me and\nafter using the first bor I felt so\nmuch lii'lter that I continued to\nLike the'ii.; and novr I am enjoying\n. Ihe best of health, thanks to your\nwoiederful fruit medicine\"e\nW. it'. I.AMPSON.\n\"fruit-a-tives\" ore' sold by all\nileiilcrs at 50c. a box, (1 for $2.M,\ntrial size *J0c\u2014or sent postpaid by\nl'niit-i-tires Limited, Ottawa.\nfi. B, Mleh-lelKe lost a \u00abolel ring while;\n.swimming In a cree-k at Platte, S.D.,\n25 years nKa Recently two little girls\npla.vinK ill the seeiiel found It.\nTHOUGHT IT WAS A BOIL\nalmost dangerous as combinations\nbetween church and stale. Tha results\nin the railed States will be available\nto this country and the ultimate solution adopled there will be nf ns<* to\nus In determining what our policy will\ntie,    because    the    evils    of   govenum lit\nadministration, if present in one country, will be difficult to avoid In Ihe\nothc,\nBuildinrj   an   Organization\nit may be said that my own. views\nare   prejudiced,   and   they   are   to   the\nextent   that   they   are   the   result   of\nSTOCKS, RENTAL*.\nVICTORY BONDS BOUGHT AND\nSOLD\nD. ST. DENIB\nDOCTOR   SAID   ABSCE'S.\nMr, Gleason H. Young, Klngscroft,\nN.B., under date of Feb. Dth, 11)13,\nwrites us as follows: ''j\\bout five\nmonths ago a lump came on'my jawbone. I thought it was a bull and after\nIt had been there quite a while it began\nto get larger. I went to a doctor und\nhe said It was an abscess and lanced\nit. Me gave mc a wash for it, so I I\nwent by bis directions until it healed i\nup, but It commenced cqming again\nand In ubout three weeks it broke itself. I thought it would got better\nbut it didn't. A neighbor advised me\nto get a bottle of Burdock Wood Bitters. I sent and got a bottle and by\nthe time It was all gone the abscess\nhad disappeared, and now it is ull\nbetter.\"\nBurdock Blood Bitters will heal and\ndry up sores, ulcers and abscesses, no\nmatter how large or of hoy* long standing. If you have never applied it to a\ncut, wound, sore or u'cer, just try it\nand see what soothing, healing, cleansing power it possesses. It takes out\nitching, stinging aud burning and promotes tho growth of healthy flesh. So, j\ntoo, when taken Internally by Its power\nof eliminating all impurities from the I\nblood and making that vital fluid rich,'\nrod and pure, It cuts off the origin and\nsource of the foul matter that goes to\nmake boils, pimples, sores, ulcers, abscesses and the like, and at the same\ntime the purified and enriched blocd\ncreates healthy tissue where there was\nformerly, perhaps, a sore full of pus\nBurdock Blond Bitters has been on\nthc market for '10 years. Manufactured\nonly.by the T. Milburn Co., Limited,\nToronto. Out.\nfM%mi^MM&mm\nAPPROXIMATE SAILINGS\nNEW YORK-LONDON\n(Saxonia  May 31\n(Calling at flymeeiith and Havre.)\nNEW YORK\u2014LIVERPOOL\nOnltiha   ...May 24 Caronia  . .May 29\nCarinnnla, May LMK'l George..Time 17\nCaronla ....luno 21 Orduna ....Tunc 21\nNEW YORK\u2014SOUTHAMPTON\nAqultFinia ...lune 2.\\l'tnnia    ..June II\nAqliltnnin .lune 2\u00bb\nNEW YORK\u2014GLASGOW\n(ilvnipin   luno 21\nMONTREAL-GLASGOW\nBnlurnla,   .Mny  30 Cassandra, Juno 20\nNiiturnl-i  tuly :\nDRAFTS AND MONEY ORDERS\nBritain, Ireland, Italy, Scandinavia,\nFor  all   Information  apply   to  our\nAgents,   or  to  Coinpany'a  office,   622\nHastings    Street,    \"West    Vancouvor\nI'l.ne.e. Snv   a|e|q\nSmeltermen and Miners\nWanted\nAT  ANYOX,  BRITISH   COLUMBIA,  CANADA\nA^PIef.\nThe Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting\nand Power Company Limited\n203 Carrall  Street,    ,\nVANCOUVER,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA, CANADA.\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Ltd.\nPARTIAL  LIST  OF  SECOND\n1 14x16   Phoenix   Horiz.o.ital   Engine.\nt 3d k 7 Vertical Boiler.\n80x8 Vertical Boiler.\n1 00 x 16     Horizontal     Ret.    Tub.\nBoiler.\n1 10x10x10   Steam   Driven   Com-\nIJieasor.\nI 12x12 Belt Driven Compressor.\n1 12x1!) Steam Driven Compreaaor.\n1 16x18 Steam Driven ComproHtor,\nSectional. *\n1 No. t Cameron Boiler Peeel Pump.\n1 No.   5   Cameron    Sinker.    PlBtceQ\nType\nLAND  MACHINERY  FOR 8ALE\n15x5 Hoist,' Steam.\n16x8 Hoist, Steam.\n1 2-h.p, D. C. Motor, 220 vottl.\nel-h.p. A. C. Motor, 220 VOltB.\nI 5-h.p. A. C. Motor, 220 volt*.\n1 5-li.w. D. C. Generator.\n17M;-I<.w. D. C. Generator.\n1 l'0-li.w. D. C. Generator.\nIK tona 12-11). Mining Balls.\n1000   feet   10-ine.h  Hydraulic   Pipe,\nRlvetted,\n2400 feet i -Inch Casing Pipo.\nI 12-l.lcll Telton Motor,\n1 24-Inch Pelton Motor.\n1 30-Inch Pelton Wheel.\nIk Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOKIom,   Bmelting   .nd   Refining    Departm.ret,\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\t\nfPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nProducer, of Gold, Silver, ejoppcr,  Bluoatone,  Pig  Lead  and  Sp.lt.r\n\"TADANAC\"   BRAND\nBfMHMNj ,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,. .,.,\nCommencing Sunday\nJune!lstuV>\nKootenay Districtfto\nVancouver-Victoria\nVia Kettle Valley Railway Short Line, through Coqulhalla   Pass b.v\nDaylight\nObservation Dining Cur, Drawing Room Sleepers, Standard Coaches\nI.v. NKf.SON 0.00 p.m., on arrival of Kootenay Landing steamer\nDetails and Berth Reservations from, any A:-e'i\", or write\nJ.  S  .CARTER,   D.P.A.,   Nelson.\nniiiupii.ii.  ..-.Uj'.l...l i   . mi         \"\nDOMINION\nTIRES\nArc GOOD Tires\nThey\nStand up\nto Every Boad\nTest and Every\nDriving Test\nEvery tiro that leaves the\nDOMINION TireFoctory is made\nas carefully and examined as mi*\nnutety as though the reputation\nof the Dominion Rubber System\ndepended on that individual tire.\nAnd in a sense, it does.\nEvery Dominion Tire carries tha\nreputation of this great organization with il.   Every Dominion\n'ire must uphold the name and fame of Canada's leading tire manufacturer.\nDOMINION TIRES are most popular with car owners because they have\nproved their practical economy. They have stood up to every road test\nand every driving test.\nWhen you choose DOMINION TIRES for your car, you hafre the assurance of proven quality, greater\nmileage, satisfactory service, easy riding, and freedom from ordinary tire troubles.\nThere are six distinct DOMINION TIRES to suit every type of car: >\n\"ROYAL CORD\" \"NOBBY\" \"CHAIN\"\n\"DOMINION\" \"GiROOVED\" \"PLAIN\"\nand DOMINION INNER TUBES of the same superior quality as DOMINION TIRES. So\nwhen you choose a DOMINION Tire with a DOMINION Inner Tube, you have n tire perfectly\nbalanced and a warranty for perfect satisfaction and service. DOMINION Inner Tubes cost\nno more than ordinary tubes.\nDOMINION TIRES and ACCESSOHIES arc distributed through DOMINION\nRUBBER SYSTEM BRANCHES and sold by the Best Dealers throughout Canada\n ' PAGE FOUR '\n' THE bAILY NEWS\nMONDAY, MAY It, 1111,\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n1'ubllshed every morning except\nSunday by The News Publishing Company. Limited, Nelson, B. C, Canada.\nBusiness 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 statement of circulation\nmailed on request or may be seen at\nthe office of any advertising agency\nrecognized by the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription Rates: By mall -SO\ncents per month; $2.50 for six months;\n|5 per year. Delivered 60c per month;\n$3 for six months; $6 per year, payable\nIn advance.\nThe News reserves the right to refuse any copy submitted for publication.\nMONDAY, MAY 26, 1919.\nTHE   BALFOUR CELEBRATION\nThe staff and patients at the Balfour sanitarium are to he heartily\ncongratulated upon the Victoria day\ncelebration  on   Saturday.\nThe organization of the day's\nsports was excellent, and the courtesies extended to the visitors by\nthose in charge increased the esteem\nin which the staff and patients at\nBalfour are held by the people of the\n\u25a0district.\nAltogether the occasion was a most\nsuccessful one, the competitions and\nother events maintaining the interest\nof the  crowds all  day.\nGOOD  OLD  KASLO\nIt was good to see Kaslo resume Its\nMay 24 celebration on Saturday. For\n20 years until 1918 Kaslo's \"Victoria\nday celebration was one of the big\nholiday events of the year in Kootenay and Boundary. It;*,-attracted\nvisitors from-tnnrty parts of the district.   Everyone looked forward to it.\nIn 1918, owing to war conditions,\nthe celebration did not tako place.\nBut this year it has been resumed\nand, while the celehrntlon on Satur*\nday wns on a smaller scale than in\nthe past, the people of Kaslo as hosts\ndisplayed tho same spirit of hearty\nwelcome to visitors as in the past\nand mode every effort to make their\nvisit enjoyable.\nThe people of the district will look\nforward to many another May\ncelebration at tho good old city\nKaslo.\nTHE BROAD GAUGE POLICY\nTHE SOUND ONE\nIS\nWhen President Beatty of the Canadian Pacific railway told those at\ntho banquet at the Hume hotel on\nSaturday that the prosperity and development of the Canadian Pacific\ndepended upon the prosperity and\ndevelopment of the country generally\nhe stated an axiom which applies to\nevery  solid business ln tho country.\nNo sound, permanent business can\nprosper unless the country prospers.\nAnd it is also true that tho country\nas a whole and its people cannot\nprosper unless the business of thc\ncountry as a whole prospers.\nThe day of narrow gauge \"going\nit alone\" without regard to thc wel-\nfale or prosperity of the other fellow\nand   It   is   to   be\nare   ciisup pea ring,\nhoped they are going tor all time,\nit is gratitylng to have a public expression along these lines trom the\nJieau ot a great and successful transportation company like the Cauauian\ni-aeiiic, which lias played a gigantic\npart in tbe development of Canada\nanu can piay an even more important\npart, in  tne  tutuiu\ntlon of tho alien allies and enemies in\nCanada.\nThe War Veterans nsked that the\nalien ally be asked to do his bit shoulder to shoulder with true Canadians,\nand that the alien enemy be interned\nor deported. Did they do this? No.\nIt lias been shown throughout the\nDominion that the capacity of production has been greatly hindered by tho\nrefusals of Germans and Austrians to\nwork full time. Also, ln many cases\nwheru they refused to contribute to\nany war patriotic funds or in any way\nhelp to carry on the great conflict\nother than to earn a fat wage, which\nImmediately was cached or spent among themselves in such low foreign\ndives as you will find in any of our\ngreat cities.\nThe Canadian Government pointed\nout the chief trouble In dealing with\nthe aliens was because of labor's attitude and the International law.\nThe bold and dangerous effort which\nis being made to establish Bolshevism\nin the Dominion of Canada Is nothing\nmore nor less than a movement by thc\nalien, who, of course, can look far\nenough ahead to realizo that if something is not done In his behalf, that he\nmust leave the country eventually.\nAided by a few pro-German and cold-\nfooted so-called citizens, they aro indeed making a good showing for the\ntriumph of the Bolshevist movement In\nCanada.\nIt appears that the greater part of\ntho Canadian propaganda Is conceived\nin Detroit and Seattle, and that a\nmajor part of the so-called Gallcians,\nUkrainians and other scum aro In\nreality Austrian or German citizens,\nand that the doctrines of Troesky and\nLenine are closo at heart. Who, indeed, oro tho aliens in our midst but\nthe cast-off of Europe who are endeavoring to make this fair Canada a\nkennel like such countries as RuHsia\nand Germany. When we have a state\nof government such as they were used\nto we will indeed have something over\nwhich to kick. In my estimation this\nis a much hotter country than Russia\ntoday, and aro free-minded and loyal\nCanadians going to allow the riff-raff\nand Ignorant to drag this country\nodown to the level of horror and blood\nshed which was so lately demonstrated\non the fields of France and which was\ncaused by the plutocrats,\nA great deal of bosh has been\npreached during tho last few years\nabout the ideals of true democracy\u2014\nnot by the men who died and shod\ntheir blood for the freedom of Canada,\nand al] by the absolute opponents of\ntrue demoevracy\u2014men who until now\u00bb|\nhavo had little trouble in making the\nbig bluff, but now find themselves\nface to face with the problem of real\ndemocracy.\nOf one thing I am certain; true democracy and Bolshevism will not mix.\nCould you expect a soldier to intermingle and associate wilh the same\nclass of men against whom they wero\nrecently carrying a rifle and sword-\nmen who carried the sword and torch\nagainst defenceless women and innocent children. Men who betrayed every humano law of Ood and man. Men\nwho were devoid of all sense of honor,\ndecency or respect for the old or defenceless.\nIt Is high timo the government of\nCanada would do something to curtail\nthis kind of thing and get a firm understanding as to what is to be done.\nDelay is dangerous and even now Bolshevism and revolution is rampant in\nour country. Better to carry a gun\nand fight than bo subject to thc demands of a few fanatics.\nThe loathsomeness of the Russian\nbrand of Bolshevism will make us foes\nto every thought of it. Well we know\nof Its origin, its slimy trail of blood\nand filth'. We also know of the clique\nwhich endorses tyid countenances the\nBolshevist in Canuda.; agents of\ntreachery and sedition, while we have\nbeen overseas fighting for God knows\nwhat If this state of thing is allowed\nto carry on.\nH. BRADBURV.\nNEW AND DIFFERENT\nWAR AT MURMANSK\nWhat worries Germany in the peac^\nterms is that Der i-auenand isn't sitting as tne juugu ami jury and tlut\nsue cunuut tax tne Costs.\nTne Canuuian who kicks at war\ntaxes may tnank the dead on a tnou-\nsancl bauiciieltis and thc tioya who\naro now returning for the fact that he\nisn't paying them lo Germany.\nReports of the discovery, alive and\nwell, of Hawker, the gallant Australian3 aviator, are unexpectedly good\nnews. There was every reason to believe that ho hud perished in his\nplucky attmpt tu cross the Atlantic by\nairplane.\nTOLD  IN  RHYME.\n\"The fellows who stocked up with\ncoal for next winter are wonuerlng\nwhen this winter will end,\" says the\nToronto Globe. Those unfortunate\neasterners if they came west Just now\nwould find that the winter of their\ndiscontent with the weather ended\njust as soon as they entered British\nColumbia.\nOf importance to the prosperity of\nKootenay and Boundary are the announcements tbat the problems of\ntreating the silver-lead-zinc ores of\nIhe Sullivan mine and the Rossland\ngold-copper ores on a profitable scale\nhave been solved. The whole district\nwill benefit through the resumption of\noperations on a large scalo which will\nshortly occur at Rossland and the increased savings which will be made\nfrom the Sullivan ores.\nWEYMOUTH   BLUEBELLS\nWith slill the sound of battle in our\nears,\nOur    great-coats    sodden    with    the\nChannel spray,\nAnd    bearing    of    the    stoke    hole\nnum'rous smears       '\nWo   halted   for  refreshments  on  the\nway;\nAnd  clear-eyed maidens gowned and\ncupped in blue,\nAnd crowned  with hair  the sunlight\nturned  to gold,\nAttendance   gave   with   smiles   that\nthrilled us through\nLlko love-lit glances did the knights\nof old;\nWe,  standing grouped about in twos\nand threes,\nBrought   back   to   mind   a   half-forgotten  scene\nOf Farbus Bush\u2014the mutilated trees,\nOr burkless trunks of what they once\nhad  been,\nAnd   near   their   roots   among   the\ngrasses green,\nThe clustered bluebells showing fresh\nund  clean,\n\u2014Rocke-Savage.\nCOLD STORAGE.\nAt a dinner given by the prime\nminister of a little kingdom which\nshall be nameless, a distinguished\ndiplomat complained to his host that\nthe minister of justice, who had been\nsitting on Jiis left, had stolen his\nwatch.\n\"Ah, he shouldn't have done that,\"\nsaid the prime minister, in tones of\nannoyance; \"1 will get It back for\nyou.\"\nSure enough toward the end of the\nevening thc watch was returned to\nits owner.\n\"And what did he say?\" asked the\ndiplomat.\n\"Sh-h,\" cautioned the host,  glanc\ning anxiously about him.  \"He doeBn't\nknow that I've got It back.\"\nCOMMUNICATION.\nTo The Editor,\n.    Nelson Daily News;\nSir;\u2014In the year 1918 the Canadian\ngovernment asked  members  of    the\nGreat War Veterans Association    to\n\u2022confer with them on the great ques-\nAmong a squad of policemen who\nwere being examined on ambulance\nwork was one -to whom the doctor\nput  the following  questions:\nDoctor\u2014What would you do to a\nman who had a cut on the forearm?\nPoliceman\u2014Sure, sorr, I'd bathe it\nWith warm soft water.\nDoctor\u2014What do you mean hy soft\nwater?\nPoliceman\u2014Oh! just soft water,\nsorr\u2014wet   water!\nDoctor\u2014And  what  Is   hard   water?\nPolIcem\u00bbn\u2014Ice, sorr,\n(Special Correspondence of Thc Lon-'\ndon Times.)\nFirst impressions nre supposed to be\nfalse, but experience is that they are\nalways interesting to those who conceive them. I arrived here only a few-\ndays ago, and write with the feeling\nthat I know all about the place, its\nhopes and Its despairs, its inspirations\nand its resoluteness; probably some\none who has been here more than a\nfew dnys will reply that I know nothing of the truth; but, then, that is human nature. Tlie spirit of contradiction is a human concomitant of vanity, and nothing gives the average man\ngreater pleasure than to impose his\nsuperior knowledge on another.\nBefore leaving England I shnred the\ngencrul belief In England that expeditions, military or otherwise, were\nsent to the Kola Peninsula to be forgotten, or for some unrecorded sin.\nMurmansk, if my history serves me\nwas once a penal settlement. I am not\ncertain. Anyway, It deserves to have\nbeen. What the future may have for\nit I cannot say, but at present it is a\ntown of wooden huts built by Russians,\ninsreased and improved on by the\nBritish and the Allied troops. It lies\nabout 30 miles due south from the\nGulf stream, is said to be a perfect\nharbor in that a battleship can moor\nalongside, and has the distinction of\nhaving been coveted by the Germans,\nwhen they were anxious to establish a\nsubmarine base from which they might\nreconnoitre tho North Sen.\nI was nsloep when we left thc open\nsea and entered tho inlet; 1 was\nawakened by a crunching, grinding\nnoise that hurried me to porthole. We\nwero scraping our way through the\nicefloes, and there was a bite in the\nmorning air that reminded us of what\nwo had left in the study at home.\nIt was always good to nose one's\nway into strange port nnd pick out,\nfirst of all the British flag. Here the\nharbor was alive with shipping, but\nnot thc shipping that one looks for on\nthe \"line.\" Nothing of your dainty\nIlmmcd yachts and stately liners; no\ncolor at all\u2014only dirty black and\ndirtier white, with the gloomy H.M.S.\nGlory and tho old RusBian battleship\nAskold to relieve thc monotony. Ugly\nbull-dog nosed tugs snapped viciously\nat the Ice; thc Josephine, once, 1 believe, the private yacht of Mr. Rockefeller, and said to be a floating draw-\nng room in the dear dead days, lay\nsullen and moody, wilh her boom snapped short and her sides grazed and\ndented. .From the decks of our ship\nwo could catch only a glimpse of her\none-lime pristine glory\u2014the upholstery of the bridge\u2014but the duchess\nhad become a slut, and a vicious, ill-\ntempered slut, with a foul-looking gun\nleering over her bows.\nA Frozen Harbor.\nThc Old Glory\u2014she must be .nearly\n20 years of age\u2014lay in the middle of\ntho harbor, apparently frozen in; the\nAskold, known to every sallorman as\nthe Woodbine, because of her fivo funnels, crouched like a hen on an ley\nnest a cable's tow behind her. Away to\nthe north the snow capped mountains\nshowed like clouds through the morning mist. Murmansk lies in a cup of\ntho hills, and if you would conjure up\nsomo impression of the place, iccall\nthe tales of Bret Harte with the rude\nshanties and thc polyglot crowd that\ninhabited them. The railway that\nsomse from.the Archangel-Petrograd\nline, 500 miles duo south, sweeps round\nthe edge of the water to tho quay sidbj\non the snow-covered slopes of the hills\nis the town, and in that town arc\nAmericans, Russians, Italians, French,\nSerbians, Karellans, Finns, Letts, Lithuanians and Chinese. And British.\nAlways British. \"For never an isle so\nlittle and never a sea so lone.\" You\nknow thc rest.\nLet me go buck to the ship that\nbrought us out, because, somehow I\nfancy that a few notes about her company will dispel tho prevailing idea at\nhomo that people are sent out hero so\nthat they may be forgotten. I find\nthat in my notes I havo written: \/\n\"Wo aro on our way to another war, j\na war, so different from    those that*\nhavo gone before during the last few\nyears that on this ship wc hear men\nwho havo brushed shoulders with the\ndeath in Franco and Flanders asking\nof subalterns returning    from    leave,\n\"Give      us      an      idea      of      the\nstunt.    How  about frostbite?    What\naro   theso   Bolshevists,   and   how   do\nthey  fight?    I scraped  my gear together  In  a  hurry   becuuse   I  didn't\nwant to miss  tho chance of another\nfight;   will  you  cust  your  eye  over\nIt and see if there's anything missing\nthat might bo worth whilo?\"\nThe Promise of Adventure\nOn  tho  ship   there  wasn't  a  man\nwho   hadn't   done   something.     One'\nmorning,  aftor  wc   had   cleared   thc\nmine   fields   that  make   of  the  grey\nNorth   Sea   a   bed   of   treachery,   I\nsaw   four  men   taking   walking   exercise   on   the   bridge   deck.     They\nwore men with laughter in their eyes\nand voices;   they wore as boys who\ncome   down  to   the  station,   arm-in-\narm,   when  the   term   is   ended   and\nall the promise of adventure lies in\ntho days of holiday ahead.   One bore\ntho decoration of the V.C. the others,\n\"out\"   In   the   sombre   days   of   '14,\nshowed the ribbons  of  the  Military\nCross and  Mons.\nMy companion drew my attention\nto them, saying, \"Good boys\u2014eh?'\nWhich is a compliment that they\nthemselves would have appreciated,\nsince It came from J. H. Mather,\nwho was with Scott on that fateful\nadventure in the Antartic. Mather\nis coming out to Murmansk as a\nmajor, in khaki; Just for a little\nwhile ho has forsaken tho blue of\nthe R.N.V.R. He ought to be able\nto calm the fears of the V.C.'s and\nM.C.'s who are not quite happy in\ntheir minds about the climate of\nthe Murman coast. And F. E. C.\nDavies (now a warrant officer) is\nwith us. He. too, was with Captain\nScott, and one of the memories that\nI shall always treasure of this trip\nIs the way in which these two sidle\nup to each other, out of the press\nof other men, and yarn about the\ndays when they looked at each other1\nthrough an atmosphere that was 60\nbelow zero iSir Ernest Shackleton,\nDr. Mucklln, Hussey Stcnhouse and\nBrocklehurst, of that other, exped!\nHon to the snows, have been out\nto give advice to the command).\nBrlg.-Goncrul'A.  .1.  Turner  was\npassenger;  he Is going to Archangel\nto take over a brigade. His record\nin Cameroon and France is known\nlo you, and the spirit that dominates\nhim in tlie cricket field will probably\nbe Interesting to the Bolshevists of\nNorthern' Russia. My impression of\nhim is that he would listen patiently\nto a disquisition on the art of peeling an orange during dinner and go\naway with the other man's secrets\nin his pocket,  so to speak.\nCaptain J. F. Warton, R.N., is going to the Glory, to join Admiral\nGreen. I fancy that the Glory is\ngoing to play a big part in the Archangel operations. Col, E. L. Moss,\nD.M.S., about whose work I hope to\nwrite you later, was on thu ship. He\ntold me thnt the men out here have\nenjoyed remarkable immunity from\ndisease. Lieut-Colonel It. B. Alnsworth. R.A.M.C., comes out\nspecial mission. Captain C. McVean\nGubhins. M.C., whose father I met\nat the British Embassy in Tokyo at\nthe end of the Russn-Japanesh War,\nis going out as aide-de-camp to Gen.1\nIronside, commanding the Archangel\nforces. Major H. Brian-Pearson, R.\nA.M.C., known to everyone who has\ntrekked the world, returns from leave.\nAnd his work on this peninsula has\nbeen worthy of him from all tbe\naccounts that I have gathered.\nAnd sc back to the day of landing.\nMajor-General C. M. Maynard, C.B.,\nC.M.G., D.S.O., who commands this\nMurman force. has completely\nchnnged the aspect of the town since\nhe took over the command, and controls an *area that runs for five or\nsix hundred miles down the peninsula,\nIt is not within my province here\nto express an\" opinion on the general\nmilitary situation, but I shall dare\nto say: '\"We have either too few or\ntoo many men in this jytrt of the\nworld,\"\nThe British at Work\nThe work that has been accoin\npllshed on the Murman Coast is\ngreater than any pen can describe.\nOfficers and men have toiled under\nconditions that France never offered.\nHospitals and stores havo been built\nby the light of flares, since there is\na season in this latitude when the\nsun goes to sleep for a long, long\nwhile. In subsequent articles I shall\nhope to tell you of what Englishmen,\nwith their allies, have done In this\nconnection: they havo done it without the hope of joying in the glamour\nthnt touched the wars In France.\nPerhaps, they have felt that they\nmight have had greater assistance,\nbut they are soldiers, and are entitled to a grumble. The engineers\nhave worked like trojans from the\nbeginning, and officers and men have\nshared  the labors  of building.\nStrange that on the first day !\nshould meet on old * friend of mine,\nMajor Stanley Monck, R.E., whom\" I\nhnd not seen for a long, long while,\nWe both of us were muffled up ln\nthe garb that Is fashionable, and Just\nfor a moment there was a doubt in\neach mind that things were as they\nwere. It is in these out-of-the-world\nplaces, in these outpoBts of Empire,\nIf I may use the term, that men\nunderstand the moanlpg of friendship,\nHow are the men? They are striving to believe that they are not forgotten.\nYesterday I went to Kola, eight\nmiles down the bleak country, and a\ncorporal there waited his chanco to\nwhisper:\n\"How's London looking, sir?\"\nAnd what do the Russians think of\nth\u00ab* situation? I mean the Russians\nin these parts who believe In the\npossibility rof ttlelr country recovering itself with the aid of the allies.\nThoy say, \"Don't strain our patience\ntoo much. Bolshevism may be\ncrushed, but it must be done energetically a-ud without loss of time.\"\nhe can accept invitations from; escorted to his boat by a distinguished company, bis rooms hooded with gifts, and\nnewspapers displaying almost ill-\ntemper that he Is leaving the United\nStates.\nReading's Bit Well Done.\nLord Reading has done his part in\nwinning thc war, and he has done it\nwell.   In the first two   years of the\nstruggle, besides being Lord Chief Justice of England, he was thc principal\nfinancial adviser   to   Lloyd   George,\nwho was then chancellor of   the   exchequer, ond is credited with having\ndevised those methods    of   financing\nthat havo resulted in the British Empire emerging from the war in a sounder economic position than any other-\nbelligerent or neutral, with tho exception of the United States, which bore\nonly a tithe of her burden. In 1916 he\nwas sent to the United States to negotiate loans for the British and French\ngovernments. This was a difficult task.\nThere was    pro-German    propaganda\nto  be   overcome,   and   the   military\nposition   of   Germany   at   that   time\nmade lenders chary, while the money\nmarket conditions were generally un\nfavorable.     Tet   Lord   Reading   sue\nceeded,   despite   Henry   Ford's  mem-\neroable suggestion that the borrowers\nought   to   be   tin-canned.    The   next\nyear   he   returned   again   as   British\nHigh Commissioner, and on tho dca-th\nof  Sir  Cecil  Spring Rice  was given\nthe  additional   honor  and   burden  of\nthe American ambassadorship.\nMay Try the  Kaiser\nBut so greatly was his counsel  in\ndemand  that last full  he was summoned   home   to   consult   with   tho\nBritish    government    on    the    peace\nterms, and for several weeks he was\nbusy  in   Paris  as  a  member uf the\ncommission   for   the   feeding   of   the\nEuropean neutral and enemy nations,\nA short time ago ho again returned\nto  tho United States,  but simply -to\nclose his desk and say good-bye.  He\nwas urged by the BrltlHh government\nto continue thc post, and thc American   government,   it  is  hinted,   made\nsimilnr     representations,    but    Lord\nReading's    henlth    cannot    face    the\ncontinued  strain,   and  he  returns   to\nresume    his    office   as   Lord    Chief\nJustice.    It may  be,  indeed,  that ho\nwill   be    one    of    the    interniitional\ncourt   thnt   will   try   the   ex-kaiser.\nThis would set  the crown upon ono\nof  the  most  remarkable  of contem-\nAnyway, he will be a hard man to\nfollow a-t Washington.\nREVEILLE.\nO hearts  that are weary of walling\nand weeping,\nO hearts that have labored In grief\nand in pain,\nWake from the gloom of your sorrowful sleeping,\nWake    and    be    joyful,   be   joyful\nagain..\nSec how  thc cast with His glory is\nglowing-\nJust   such  a    light   as   Jerusalem\nknew.\nBrothers,     my     brothers,     heaven's\nbugles nro blowing\nReveille, and calling and calling to\nyou.\nO hearts that are mourning,\nO hearts that arc aching, ^\nThe night it is ended, is ended at lust;\nRise, for tho day of His triumph is\nbreaking!\nRise, for the time of your sorrow is\npast!\nThe hills are aflame and the valley is\nringing\nWith  melody beautiful, joyous and\ntrue.\nBro.       .      my      brothers,     heaven's\nbugles arc singing\nReveille,  and  Jesus is waiting  for\nyou.\n\u2014Travel Stained,\nAt a church conference a speaker\nbegan a tirade against the universities and education, expressing\nthankfulness that he had never been\ncorrupted by contact with a college\nAfter proceeding for a few minutes\nthe bishop, who was in the chalrj\ninterrupted with the question:\n\"Do I understand that Mr. Dobsoi\nis  thankful for his ignorance?\"\n\"Well, yes,\" was the answer; \"yoi\ncan put it that way if you like.\"\n\"Well, ull I have to say,\" said tin\nprelate, in sweet and musical tones-\n\"all   I   have   to  say   is  that   he\nmuch to be thankful for.\"\nD. O. Van KhV cashier of,the Miil-j\neral City, O., bank, shot and killcdl\nhimself in his auto on a lonely road.f\nHe left a not saying he was short in|\nhis accounts.\n\"Is this Cheshire?\"\n\"Yes.   Anything I can show you?\"\n\"I want to see a Cheshire cat.   Do\nthey really grin as they are reputed\nlo do?\"\u2014Louisville Courier-Journal.\n\"I think I'll go and live In Venice.\"\n\"Why Venice?\"\n\"Because the motor cars can't run\nyou clown in tho streets there.\"\u2014\nBaltimore American.\nA married man never realizes that\nhe Is missing unless he counts the\nchange in his pocket night and morn\ning.\nEngagement\nRings\nThere's no better Engagement King anywhere than a\nElrlis*.\nWhether tho diamonds bo\nlargo or small, a Birks' En-\ngagemnt Iting is always a\ncredit'to the one who gives\nit and a Joy to the ono who\nreceives it.\nOur values are 'unsurpassed, because we buy for cash-\ndirect from the cutters In\nEurope.\nvVc reply promptly to mall\nenquiries.\nporary careers.\nA Master of Tact\nTact appears to lie al thc bottom\nof Lord Reading's success at Washington. This gift he dowered with\nto an extraordinary degree. It is\nespecially desirable in tho British\nrepresentative at Washing-ton, for\nwhile he ls on a slightly different\nfooting from all other ambussadors,\nhis privileged position makes it all\ntl)e more necessary that he shall live\nup to a higher standard than is demanded of others, A \"break\" on -the\npart of some ambassadors might be\nexcused on the ground that they\nwere unfamiliar with certain American prejudices or conditions. Jt\nwould not thus be forgiven in a\nBritish ambassador. Moreover, personal relations enter Into Washington diplomacy to a greater extent\nthan In any other great capital. It\nis ono of Lord Reading's gifts lhat\nhe has been able in a remarkably\nshort space of -time to get on terms\nof friendship and intimacy with tho\nleading men in American public life,\nMaybe the fact that he is a great\nlawyer, and thus has been able to\nmake use of the legal freemasonry\nin a country where, every lawyer Is\na politician,  has helped  him greatly\nREADING MADE J\nHil AS.\nSpray Pumps\nNow is the time to get ready for\nSpring  Spraying.    We  have tho\nnecessary outfits\nBm .Pow.,r.0ut $550.00\nSpramchor Hand  Pumps\nMeyers'  Hand  Pumps\nKnapsack Sprayers\nHand Sprayors\nLIME, SULPHUR AND 22 SPRAY\nSulphur,  Bluestone  and   Lime\nLOWEST PRICES\nNelson Hardware Co.\nNELSON, B.C.\nJohn Burns & Sons ^ffisr1\n8A8H AND DOOR FACTORY N-LSON PLANING MILLS\nVernon Street, Nelion, B. C,\nEVERY DESCRIPTION OF BUILDING MATERIAL KEPT IN STOCK\nEstimates Given on Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings.\nMAIL ORDER8 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nP. O. BOX 134. PHONE 171\nrtis Mission in the United States vyas\na Brilliant, Unqualified\nSuccess,\nViscount Bryce, probably, was tne\nmost popular ioreiiin ambassador w.eu\nover served at Washington, and wiion\neiio American pcopie imnk ot an iuee.1\numuabMiuur tney mink ot thu aumui'\nui tne \"American commonwealth.\" \u00bb-\n,.us a persistent and not ov\/or-SUtitie\nminora- ot tnej American pcoiile rawer man an internationalist at licait,\nono would think, than a staunch bru-\n1311 representative and cnampion ot\nins own country's Interests, However,\nirom thc American point of view he\nwas a great ambassador, and did h.s\npart in -improving thc relations between the two nations. But not even\nAmbassador Brycc's coming or going\nwas tho occasion ot such an outburst\nof respect and admiration as that\nwhich marked the dcpaiture ot Lord\nBeading. In tho genoral chorus of\npralso there is not a dissenting voice,\nindeed there ls not the slightest doubt\nthat if such methods wcro in vogue a\npetition praying for his speedy return\ncould bo circulated and signed by practically every leading American in tlie\ncountry. His mission has been a\n\"brilliant, unqaullfiod success,\" as one\npaper describes it, and this is a typical\ncomment.\nAn Unprecedented Triumph.\nThero ls hardly a modern paialkl\nfor it. Two disadvantages had to be\nmet and overcome by Lord Heading.\nIn tho first place, he was known lo\nbe ono of tho greatest lawyers ln Great\nBritain, tho greatest with tho exception of Sir Edward Carson. This fact\nmight well havo created tho impression\nthat he had been chosen tor his aDllity\nto \"put something over\" and would\nhave tho natural tendency of making\nthe Americans, with whom ho came ln\ncontact, rather wary and reserved. In\nthe next place he had had no diplomatic experience, surely a grave disability at a time when thc most delicate negotiations were on foot. The\nfact that Lord Beading is a Jew may\nalso have had some influence, for\nwhile this would aid him among the\nJews, and would he particularly valuable ln financial negotiations, it might\nnot prove an asset with other, not\nqulto free from ami-Jewish prejudices.\nYet here is Lord Reading In the last\ndays <if his departure bamiuettod by\ntlie l'ilgrlms, the American Bar association, aiid as many other bodies aa\nI\nThis is\nLook for the stores with the Ingersoll display. Among the 15 Ingersoll models\nthere is one for you. .\nThe display will help you select. So will\nthe dealer.\nPrices $2 to $9. Jeweled watches and\nRadiolite time-in-the-dark models\nincluded.\nROBT. H. INGERSOLL & BRO.\n128 Bleury Street, . \u25a0 .,.''\u2022 Montreal,\n \u25a0\"<\u25a0\u2022\/#\nMONOAY, MAY 26, 1\u00bb1\u00bb.    '    1\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPAoe mvi\nSummer\nCereals\n50c\n50c\n15c\n15c\nulnlon Corn Flakes...2 for 25c\nffed Bice  15c\nand K. Wheat Flakes,\n\u25a0nation Wheat Flakes.\nit Tostles \t\nlogg's Corn Flakes\t\nlllogg's Tousled Wheat\n(Jlscults 2 for 25c\nlreddcd Wheat Biscuits, 2 for 35c\nllnnach. Lettuce, Radishes, Bliu-\nmrb, Green Onions, Asparagus.\nJ\ni\t\nitar Grocery\nPHONE 10\nIff Of WALES\nIIS BOY SCOUTS\nerican  Doughboy's Opinion of Son\nof English Klng-^-NJ. Stuck up\ndoughboy oi ihe BO.th \"Division\ni. ifrmV writes homo ot seeing tiie\ni'ee   of   Wnlcs   at   a   review.   -Ho\nThe officers were starting to re-\nii n> their command when Per.-\nng signaled for attention and said:\nr 'We have witli us today a dis-\nKiiished guest who lias greatly\njoyed  this review, and  I want yon\n3-\nTHE\nKoo*. t n a>'- Col nmbia\nPreserving Works\nof brilliant; b. c.\nisties to Inform the Fruit Grow-\n's thai they are in a market for\nAll Kinds of\nfruits and Buries\n'Sulci be prepared to close con-\nHgtjn for.as many years ay.Growers\ni'ouUI like to at a very satisfactory\nrice. Also could supply berry\nlickera is acreage is sufficient.\nPEOPLE!!\nJVhy pay enormous prices for fruit?\n- direct from thn orchard. Beautiful.\njsli, tree-ripened fruit from the Sun-\ntikanagnn lo your table. Write to-\n!y for my 1019 price list.\nC. J. Duncan,\nSherwood Orchard,\n\u25a0mmorliuid, B.C. P. 0. Box 171\n[|AlWavs on (lie Job\"\nEFFBWEOT SALT\n[Drives Away Headache\nParish of Kokanee\nWar Memorial\nFund\nA public meeting will lie held\n\\ in Gallup's Hall, Proctor, on\n; .Monday, May 20, at 7;3\u00ab p. m.\nAll who arc In any way hilor-\n, ested   in   this   undertaking  aro\nparticularly requested to attend.\nFree Advice en\nYour Foot Troubles\nLet tbe foot expert at tills\nstore tell you bow to obtain instant relief and permanent comfort.\nHe has bail years of experience in treating foot ailim nte\u00ab\nusing the celebrated Dr. Wm.\nM, Seholl's successful methods.\nHe will be here to give his services free to all, MAY 27.\nW. Undrew & Co.\nLeaders   in   Foot   Fashions.\nto meet him. I have the honor and\npleasure of Introducing to you the\nPrince of Wales.'\n\"The prince who, with General\nnullard* and other officers of the\nreviewing party, had stood at one\nside during Pershing's talk, now\ncame forward, saluted with fhe\npeculiar British style, and said:\n\" 'The 85th Division first trained\nin Europe with the British troops,\nand we were awfully sorry when you\nleft us. You have fought well, and\n1 am glad to have been with you\ntoday.\"\n\"The prince looks nnd acts like a\nBoy Scout about 17 years old, though\ntoday's   papers   say   he   is   25,\n\"Evidently he wasn't looking.to bo\nasked for a speech, and be was very\nnervous and kept clawing at the belt\nof bis trench coat, lie talks with the\ntypical British brogue and a British\nchoice of words and manner. But\nho is not at all 'stuck on himself,5\nand his frank', open actions made a\nhit. He was smoking a cigarette\nwhen Pershing called on him, and\nas soon as? he had bowed to end his\ntalk lie lit another one with a\nmatch from a gold matchbox. Three\nrousing cheers were given for the\nprince.\"\nThe candidate was rather surprised\nwhen he faced the \"audience.\" to find\nit consisted of one solitary person.\nRealizing, however, that an election\nmay be won by one, so to speak, lie\nbraced himself up and delivered his\naddress as to \"a packed house.\"\n' After an hour aud a half of pledges\nand promises, lie wound up with;\u2014\n\"And now, mv dear \u00abJrt 1 will, not\nencroach upon jour valuable time\nany  longer \"\n\"'Oh,'it's all right, guv'nor,\" interrupted the \"audience.\" \"Fire away!\nDon't mind me; I'm only your taxi-\ndriver.\"\nHAD WEAK and\nFAINTING SPELLS\nThose toolings of falntness, those\nweak, \"al! gone,\" sinking sensations,\nwhicli como over some jicoiele from\ntime to time, are warnings tl.at must\nnot go unheeded.\nThey mean an extremely weakened\ncondition of the heart and a disordered\nnervous system.\nWhen tho system ls In this condl-\nlion thero Is no timo for delay. One\nfainting spell may bo recovered from\n\u2014will thc next? One dizzy sucli mav\nnnss off Iuit the next muy bo more\nserious.\nThose who are wise will start laklnir\nMilburns Heart and Nerve .l'ills ho\ntore their case becomes deep rootoe'\nand perhaps hopeless.\nThey will act directly\u00abon the disordered heart and weakened nervnu\u00bb\nsystem and restore them to full\nstrength and vigor. j\nMiss Mary McCoy; Algoma Mills,\nOnt, writes: \"I was awfully troubled\nwith fainting and weak spells and 1\ncould never get any doctor's medicines\nto help mc. One day a friend of mine\nwas at the house when I took ono or\nthoso spoils and she got me a box of\nMllburns Heart and Nerve l'ills. That\nwas six years ago and from that dav\nlo this I have never had any of those\nspells. I would not bo without you\npills for any money and can highly\nrecommend them to any one.\"\nMilburns Heart and Nerve Pills are\n50c a box at all dealers or mailed\ndirect on receipt of price by The T.\nMllburn Co.. Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nYou often wonder how your Q\nneighbor makes such\ndelicious bread\nThe reason   is:   She  uses\nTaylor Made Flour\nKootenay and Boundary\nCELEBRATION AT\nVisitors to  Main   Lake  City   Enjoyed\nHoliday\u2014Nelson Ball Team\nDefeated.\nKASLO. May 25.\u2014Although it was\nnot a celebration in tbe same sense\nas efforts put forth some years ugo.\nEmpire day was recognized in Kaslo,\nanything in the nature of a celebration having been arranged at the\neleventu hour. It was not until the\nmiii--. of last week that a special\nboat from Nelson bad been arranged\nso that the time lo arrange anything In the way of sports was neces-\nsirily short.\nNotwithstanding this, the day prov-\nd successful, for although it was no\nlarge crowd that went from Nelson\nmd neighboring points to tbe main\nlake city, each and ail expressed\nthemselves as having had a pleasant\niiillng and a holiday. The weather\nVUU delightful.\nKasiu's eiiort started with a war\nveterans' dance In the drill ball in the\nivtjnlng of the 23rd and this was well\nitended. llie morning o*, thc 24lh\nwas largely devoted lo children's\nsports, which took place on Front\nstret, The Kuskanook arrived about\nnoon with about one hundred visitors\nfrom Nelson, Ainsworth and lliondel.\nVisitors Who came ln the previous\nevening by boat and train made a\ntotal of about two hundred on hand\nfrom outside for tbe day.\nThe main event on the somewhat\nimpromptu program was the ball game\nbetween Kaslo .'ind Nelson In the afternoon. It proved very satisfactory\nto the must enthusiastic fans on both'\nsides and until near-the end nt least\ncould be classed as ''good ball.\" No\nruns were scored on either side until\nthe fifth inning. Kaslo about that\ntime got in one run, whicli was followed closely by two for Nelson. In\nthe seventh and eighth the Nelson\nboys somehow went to pieces and\nplayer after player of the Kaslo aggregation romped home amidst the\nenthusiastic cheers of tlie home teams'\nsupporters, Tlie score at tbe end o\u00a3\ntlie game stood 2-7 in favor of Kaslo.\nU. E. Desmond rcfereed,\nThe Kuskanook left at 6 in the afternoon on the return trip, the verdict of\nthose on board being that they hud\nenjoyed a splendid outing.\nROSSLAND PERSONALS\nROSSLAND, 13.C., May 25.\u2014H. W;\nAtkinson and son Stephen I6ft this\nevening on a month's visit to Alberta.\nE. II. S. Winn, chairman of the\ncompensation board, was in the city\nThursday, leaving in the afternoon for\nTrail.\nTbe Misses Hazel and Evelyn Wallace, and Mrs. C. H. Wallace, spent\nthe evening in Trail.\nMrs. c. H. Cornish has returned\nfrom a trip to Greenwood.\nMrs. W. ii. .-'aiding was at home\nThursday afternoon for the first time\nsince her marriage. Those assisting\nIn the tea room were: Mrs. fl. W.\nAtkinson. Mrs. .1. W. Coffin, .Mrs. W.\nN. Gunning, Mrs, T. li. Gilmour and\nMiss m. pltetson.\nH. G. Oliver and .1. M. Jordan spent\nthi- holiday at Slocan.\nCyril and Harold Evans spent May\n2-1 fishing at Violin Luke.\nMrs. W. Wadds was a visitor tu\nTrail this week, liic guest of Mrs. W.\nH. Haiinav.\nW. K. Kssling has returned from a\nbusnexs  trip  to  Boundary  points.\nAbout a hundred and fifty men were\nlaid off at the Centre Star and Le lb i\nmines this week,\nMrs, T. Stout entertained a number\nof friends Wednesday afternoon at tea\nin honor of Mrs. fleece, who has just\nreturned from England, where she has\nspent the past four years. Mrs. Stout\nalso entertained al a bridge party on\nThursday evening. Mrs. W. F, I,ingle\nand Mrs. Butler carried off the honors\nof tlu; evening.\nHALCYON NOTES\nHALCYON, Mny 23.\u2014Mr. and Mis,\n.1, W. McCallum, Armstrong; M.s.\nGreen, Vancouver; D. .1. Mcolllivray,\nNelson; .1. 13. Weber. Rossland; Go.\nHobden, Creston; John Uossio, and\nCosmo CrisnfiriOi Fernie; W. Slew; rt.\nfmfr'J and Steven llorkcs. Ti nil, arrived this week lo take the baths for\n\u25a0heumatism.\nAlexander Reid, Armstrong, left after a stay of three weeks gnatly improved in health,\nMrs. Gram Davis left this morning\nvisit her daughter in Spokane.\nLOOK OVER PROPERTY\nIN THE WANETA DISTRICT\nWANETA, I3.C.. May 22.\u2014W. .1. E.\nMiker, district engineer ol' the provincial water blanch aud Engineer\nSwan, of tlie Dominion service, were in\nthe valley on an inspection trip last\nweek.\nA party of Spokane mining men\nlooked over the iron deposits near\ntlie mouth of the Salmon river on Friday.\nSergt. II. I'. ICingwell brought in\nhis brother. Lieut, Eric Klngwtll, on\nMonday to look over some lands ill\nthc valley. Lieut. Kingwell has lately\nreturned from service In France with\ntlie railroad troops.\nA large number of ranchers arc\nshipping cream to the Nelson creamery.\nIn no recent year has grass and foliage in tlie valley been as luxuriant as\nnt present. Early potatoes are well\nabove the ground and tlie field corn is\nalready sprouting.\nDr. J. li, Thorn, liealth officer, inspected the Nine Mile Creek school on\nFriday.\nAlan Merry witli his family motored\nout from Trail on Tuesday.\n\"Now.\" :-'ald the lfiedltail officer to\nthc recruit,\" having taken your height\nand chest measurement, wc will next\ntry the scales.\"\n\"O, Lardy,\" yelled the astonished\nboy, \"I didn't know a fellow had to\nknow bow to sing in order to git into\nIbis  here  army.\"\nOptimistic Note Is Sounded at\nBanquet to President of C.P.R.\n(Continued from Page Three.)\nconvinced it will be found impossible\nto persuade those who vote the money\nfor these enterprises to exclude themselves entirely from Hie admin.stru-\ntion of tlie properties for which they\nsupply Hie. money.\nIs it Efficient?\nIn the determination of this question\nI know of no consideration less important .than that of political exp;'d-\nioncy'i; it is particularly a question of\nnational economics, and what system\nwill give the best and chcapokt sc.vic\nto tho people of this country. The\ncrux of the whole thing lies in this,\ni:e:, the ability of tin- government lo\ncarry on enterprises sucli as this with\nthe same competency and efficiency\nas private owners. I am not attempting to persuade you to my views; they\nare. not unalterable, but I have not yet\nfound unyone who could adduce evidence of the success of a government\noperated system in former days, or\nin other countries, where similar conditions prevail, and before we adopt\na similar policy whicli will saddle us\nwith tbe prinicples of public ownership and operation of our systems, we\nshould, 1 think, be very sure of our\nground. Tbe question cannot be determined in accordance with the\nwishes and views of financiers, stockholders, politicians, or any one set of\nmen; it must be determined on Hie one\nground by balancing its advantages\nwith ita disadvantages, which is in the\nbest interests of Canada.\nIn order to reach a decision, the most\ncareful consideration and analysis of\nresults here and in other countries is\nnecessary. With knowledge and experience, wc can. determine it, without\nit, we will add lo our railway mistakes. That we have made serious\nblunders is evident but we are all responsible. We built railways in wrong\nplaces, and at wrong times, but these\nmistakes, serious as their consequences\nhave been, would be minor compared\nto the. mistake if we-adopted a wrong\nprinciple for their administration, and\nadd the continuing aud pyramiding of\nlosses which would result from extending these wrong principles to a largely\nexLended system.\nBelieves in Canada\nI am a gnat believer lu tbis country,\nand I believe that our difficulties, economically and commercially speaking,\nwill be solved. Some of these dlfll-\ncultles appear serious, and they are,,\nand in expressing hope in confidence,\nI do not with the idea of minimising\nthe danger of the situation. I am convinced, however, that the difficulties\nare not Insuperable, nor should they\nbe entirely unexpected, it is the mbst\nnatural thing, and quite in accordance\nwith the precedent of history, that\nfollowing such a terrible four years'\nworld eruption, there should now arise,\nboth nationally and individually, coiir\ndltions which it will ttike extraordin\nary measures to meet. Last summer,\nthe railways of the country were\nthreatened with very serious labor\ntroubles; wage adjustments were made\nand rail's were raised, but toe Individual difficulties due lo tiniest d.d\nnot entirely disappear, The railways,\niu conjunction witii tlie government\nand the labor unions, adopted a course\nquite without precedent in the history\nof Canada, Their beads sal round a\ntable, discussed the best methods lo\nadopt, and in tlie end constitute what\nis known as \"Hallway iJoard of Adjustment ijto. 1,\" compo.sed of six representatives uf tbe labor unions and\nsix railway executives. The board\nwas empowered to adjust and make\nbinding upon the parties concerned all\ndisputes arising between railway employees and tbe railway companies. In\nthe event of failure lo agree, there was\nprovision lor calling in aa outside and\nIndependent referee, who would have\nHie casting vote Whether or not it\nwas because the number this gentleman would bear was No. 13, I cannot\nsay, but thirty-two main disputes, in\nsome eases involving half a dozen\nminor differences, each ono of which\nmight have precipitated a strike, have\nbeen determined by this board, and in\nno case has there ben an absence of\nagreement, and in no case have cither\nllie executives or the men complained\nthat substantial justice was not none.\nNow tbe reason for tlie extraordinary\nsuccess of this tribunal, which was\nformed to exist during the period of\ntlie war only, Iuit which I hope will\ncontinue long after peace has been declared, Is thin\u2014it was composed of\nmen determined to see that right was\ndone; men who respected their colleagues on the board and themselves;\nmen who were actuated by the spirit\nof adjustment, in no case has tha\nboard ever forgotten its judicial attitude, nor has there been any evidence\nof feeling on either side in the course\nof iis deliberations,\nCost of Living\nIt is not for me to suggest what\nmeasures would lie appropriate for Industries, but I can assure you that the\nWorkings of the Canadian Hoard of\nAdjustment No. I can be looked to\nwith great satisfaction, and I should\nthink, with some advantage by all\nthose who have to deal with the existing labor problems.\nYou are all aware of the high scale\nof wages now existing iu this country\nand of the prevailing unrest. As representing a company whose operating\nexpenses increased by $:14,IHI0,U0I) in\nthe short period of two years, t have\nsome experience of the manner in\nwhich these rapidly increasing coi-ts\naffect large enterprises. \"Wo are all\ndisposed to attribute, these things lo\ntlu; high cost of living, but few, If any,\nof us know what Is responsible for It,\nnr what the ingredients In It .are. Jt\nhas ree.ent.ly beep announced |>y the\nminister of labor that the government\nhave quietly made Investigations and\nwill be able shortly to make an announcement of the results of them,\nnnd undoubtedly that is the first step\nto be taken, because if these costs are\nImproper costs, we should know where\nthe unfairness rests, if they are otherwise, we must lake means to Insure\nur ability to meet these higher standards of living. Here again, it Is the\nactual facts, which will enable the\npeople to decide wh.it should be done\nand whether our highly increased\nwages are due to reasons which could\nbe avoided, or whether they are Inevitable.\nIt has been announced that conventions are to be held in the coming\nmmmer for the purpose of developing\ntlie natural resources of tho western\nprovinces, tbe establishment of Industries there in order that they may bo\nmore self-contained, this is as it\nshould be. We need immigrants,\nprincipally of the agricultural class,\nand   we   need   to  know  and   interest\nthers in llie local possibilities of western Canada. Most of us believe that\nthey are almost limitless, but we must\ninterest capital in order lhat these resources may ha developed and indrs-\ntries maintained in tiie development of\nthe whole country.\nOptimism and\nCooperation\nAfter proposing the toast to the king,\nI. It. Hunter, who served as chairman\nof the banquet, delivered a short address of welcome to Mr. Beatty, his\nparty anfl to the visitors from nearby\npoints,\nMr. Hunter stated that in becoming\npresident or the Canadian I'acific, Mr.\nI caty had risen to the highest commercial position which tlie world affords. He stated that he was parlicu-\nlaily pleased to be present at the banquet, as it was Mr. Beatty's first visit\nto the Kootenay. The speaker pointed\nout the industrial and commercial possibilities of the district, declaring thnt\nit was thc richest in tho province. He\nalso referred to the clmate. Tho\nspeaker read the names of many prominent citizens of eastern British Colombia who had written or wired their\n: egrets.\nStarkey Is Toastmaster.\n\"I will now turn the balance of the\nprogram over to Mr. Stnrkey,\" said\nthe speaker amid ringing cheers. \"With\na broad smile he added: \"1 warn you,\ngentlemen, I am not responsible for\nanything that may happen to you from\nnc w on.\"\nMr. Starkey said that, as the hour\nwas late and that a great many speakers were to be heard, he would permit\ntlie proposers of each toast to do most\ncf the talking with Regard to their\nsubjects and lo Introduce the gentlemen who were to respond. He requested the local speakers lo cut their re-\nnarks as short as possible, as the\nprincipal business of the evening was\nto hear from Mr. BetUty.\nWould Like Him Often.\n.1, .3, Deschamps, who proposed tho\ntoast to \"The Allied Nations,\" said\nthat he wished .Mr. Beatty would come\nto Nelson at least once a month so\nthat he might become acquainted with\nthe people and its needs. .Speaking to\nIhe toast, Mr. Deschamps pointed out\nthc fact lhat a united effort on the\npart of the allies bad led to the vie\ntory.\n.fudge .1. A. Forln in replying to the\ntoast said that he did not desire to\ntake up valuable time when tho pur\npose of the meeting was to hear the\nhonored visitors; Mr. Beatty, D. C.\nCoieman and .1, .1. Warren. Tho\nspeaker declared lhat be was proud\nto have watched the progress made\nby Mr. Heatty and Mr, Warren, more\nespecially as they were graduates of\nhis own alma mater, Osgoode Hall,\nToronto.\nUsed Good Judgment.\nMr. Heatty was complimented by\nJudge Forln for his good judgment in\nleaving the legal profession for one\nwith a greater remuneration. 'ihe\ns| eaker also referred to Sir. Beatty's\napparent youth and the fact lhat his\nhair was not gray.\nJudge Korln said be was sorry that\nMajor tlie Hon. F. E. Grosvenor w\nnet present, as had been expected, to\nspeak to the loast to the abies,\nlc was a man who had made a great\nreputation on the battlefield ;\nwould be in a better position to speak,\nlie said that a Canadian would not\nhave been lu Nelson as the president\nof the C. V. ll. if a million and a half\nFrenchmen, a million Uritish soldiers\nami the American thousands had not\nbeen willing to lay down their lives to\nwin thc war.\nBeatty Will Be Loved.\nW. E, Coleman, vice-president of\nihe C. I1. It. western lines, proposed\nIhe toast to Canada, lie said thai he\nhud lived a short iiut very enjoyable\npart of his life in Nelson, ami that\njust I., years ago he spoke to the same\ntoast al a banquet given here in honor\nof thc late Premier Richard McHrlde.\nThe speaker paid a tribute to the\nmemory of the \"great native son of\nUritish Columbia.\"\nReferring to Mr. Beatty, Mr. Cok\nman said that he found it a great\npleasure to bo able to pilot him on his\nfirst trip through this section of the\ncountry, The speaker was warm in\nbis praise of his chief, saying that\nthe man's temperament would make\nhim loved i y all.\nHe said thc Canadian Pacific had\nrealized tlie possibilities of the west\nand white it had often faced losses\nin tlie post, il bad continued Id forgo\nahead with a view to Us own development and the growth of the country\n\"Today is nothing to Mr. Beatty\nbut tlie evening of tomorrow,\" said\nMr. Coleman in referring to Mr. Beat\nty's youth, resourcefulness and determination to do tile best possible for\nthe future.\nBig Fight of Future.\nHon, John Keen, speaker of the\nBritish Columbia legislature, said that\nhe did not see why lie should be asked\nto speak at the banquet, since his\nduties did not allow him to when he\nwas in Victoria.\n\"Twenty-nine years ago,\" he said,\n\"this place was a row of stumps. Today it is a great cily.\"    (Cheers,)\n\"I feel thut all Canadians can well\nbe proud thai they are living in Canada.\"   (Here, hear.)\nThe speaker said that thc country\nbad been through a big fight, hut that\na bigger light was yet to come, lb\nsaid lhat the people are full of\nstrength and energy and will push\n(Continued  op  Page   Seven.1\nSummer\nUndermuslins\nNo Summer wardrobe la\ncomplete without plenty of\ncool sheer Muslin Undergarments. We have everything\na dainty woman, can want in\nthe \"Dove\" and oilier.makes\nof Underwear. Gowns. Combinations, Camisoles, etc., In\npure While or Flesh color.\nAlso separate Drawers in\nseveral styles, and there need\nlie no trouble to secure what\nyou wish to wear with your\nthin   Summer  dresses.\nLadies Gowns at $2.00 to $5.00 Each\nIn .Mull, Cambric or NnliiBook, made up in pulf-owr styles. Somo\nhand embroidered, tdiort slee've^s nnd neck trimmed with lace, embroidery or hemstitching.    SPECIAL VALUES AT   $2.00 to $5.00\nCorset Covers at 50c to $2.50\nMade eif seen Nainsook, with eer without short sleeves, und trimmed\nwith Valenciennes Lace or Embroidery.   All slze-.s.\nEXTRA VALUES AT, each   50c to $2.50\nLadies' Drawers at 75c to $2.75\nJlude! of good materials in n variety ot styles and nicely trimmed\nwitli either lace eer embroidery.\nMODERATELY PRICED AT. eacjl \t\n 75c to $2.75\nEnvelope Combinations at\n$2.00 to $4.50 Each\n.Made  of   Mull,   fine   Cambric  or   Nainsook,\nwith  trimmings of lace,  Swiss embroidery,\nhemstitching   nr   hand   embroidery.    White\nanil  Flesh.    Sines to 42.\nEXCELLENT VALUES AT each $2 to $4-50\nUnderskirts at $2 to $6,50 Each\nGood  White Cambric Underskirts, trimmed\nwith   lace   or   embroidery   flounces.     AU\nsizes.    SPECIALLY   PRICED AT,\neacli    $2.00 to $6.50\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE STORE FOR STYLE.\nTHE STORE FOR QUALITY.\nMV\nStenographer\nSaid:\nWomen do most of the buying and advertisers strive to interest\nour wives, mothers ami sisters.\nRemembering this, I asked her wluil she though! about various\nadvertisements.    She said:\n\"Ads in tlie newspapers always make me think of iptiek action.\nOther kinds of ads make me think of going  through a  museum\u2014I\nam  interested  in everything  I Nee.  but  I  don't   waul   in do anything\nbut look,\"\nStriking answer   wasn't if.'\nNewspaper advertisements ure used to    get action.\nAction  with  the consumer who  buys  across tlie counter.\nAction wiiii tlie retailer who knows tin- consumer will buy,\nThe whole atmosphere of the newspaper is action. The news\nof the hour, which it prints daily, radiates life and activity\u2014tilings\ndone and doing today,\nLocal merchants tell hi the newsputier's columns Interesting\ntilings lo bring customers to llie stores today aud tomorrow.\n\"Un  it   now\"   is   the   keynote.\nNational advertisers who use newspaper space benefit by this\natmosphere of Instant decision,\nThis is one of the many reasons for llie supremacy of the newspaper  as   a   national   advertising  medium.\nIF YOU WANT RESULTS TRY A  DAIUY NEWS WANT AO.\n^M\n\u25a0M\n PADS SIX      \\\nTHE DSILY NEWS\nE        MONDAY, MAY 26, 1919.\n[General News of the City\nHUNDREDS ENJOY\nOfficers,   Nurses and  Soldier-Inmates\nof Sanitarium Entertain Nelson   Visitors,\nHundreds of Nelson and district\npeople were the guests of the officers,\nnurses and soldier-inmates of the sanitarium at BftJfour on Empire day.\nThere was something doing at all\ntimes from early morning until the\nlast boat left at night t^j entertain tho\nvisitors, and everyone had a real en-\njoya-Jic outing.\nA program of track sports, in whicli\nwas the feature ot the afternoon,\nwhile trap and target shooting was\nparticipated in on the rifle runge.\nDuring the afternoon E. \\V. Beatly,\npresident of the Canadian Pacific railway, stopped at Balfour on his way\nto Nelson, lie was taken all through\nthe institution, and declared that he\nwas highly pleased with tlie way llie\nhotel had been converted to the use\nof the soldiers and hoped that the\ngovernment would see fit to keep tho\ninstitution running as long as there\nmight be a need for it. .Mr. Beatty\nwus invited to remain to see the program of sports Which was^held soon\nafter his arrival, but he was unable\nlu do so, as he planned to see some\nor iielson's sights during the afternoon.\nA small band of Indians who were\ncamped on the lake shore near Proctor crossed the lake to Balfour and\nproved to be oue of the main features\nof the celebration. Two of the Indian\nwomen had tiny babies with them,\ncurrying them In the regulation old-\ntime fashion with a lump line and\nboard. The kiddies were a, centre of\ninterest with the white ladies, while\nthe latter seemed to b equally interesting lo the Indians.\nThe Indians also had a young bear\ncub witli them. One of the women led\nit about at tlie end of a rope, Occasionally one of tbe whites would attempt to play with the cub, but it\nwould have nothing to do with anyone\nbut Its mistress. One or two children\ngot a. little too close to It and wero\nbitten slightly for their Oaring. An\nattempt was made.*to feed it with\nchocolate, but without success.\nAt about 4 p. m. afternoon tea was\nserved on the lawn in front of the\nsanitarium. Little groups were quickly formed on the grass, where they\nsat, without chairs.\nLater a horse race wus run off on\nthe golf course.\nTO BUILD  KASLO-NELSON\nROAD LINK THIS YEAR\nThe links in the road between\nQueen's Bay and Kaslo will bo\ncompleted this year, stated Hon.\nJohn Keen, of Kaslo, who was at\nthe Hume yesterday. There <*rs\ntwo stretches of road to be constructed before road communication between Nelson and Kaslo\ncan be provided. One is about\nfive miles in length and the other\nabout seven miles, stated Speaker\nKeen.\nSOLDIERS  RETURNING\nPte. D. .1. Murray and Pie. D. Morrison arrived in the city on the Crow\nBoat yesterday on their way to their\nhomes. The former lives at Gre n-\nwood and the latter at Thrums.\n?250 COLLECTED BY\nl.O.D.E.  ON  TAG   DAY\nThe Daughters of tlu- Empire collected $250 for the benefit of blind\noldicrs and refugees in war areas by\nselling tags on Friday,\nThe committo in charge of Hip tag\nday was composed of Mrs. W. 0. Itose.\nMrs. B. Thompson, Mrs. A. E. Pick-\nlord and Miss Marjorie McArthur,\nTbe taggers were> Mrs. I'otlieiing-\nbam. Mrs. B. Thompson. .Miss Jean\nHunter, Mrs. Borden, Mrs. Hawthorne.\nMiss J. Blackwood, Mrs. iv. A. B.\nDouglas, Miss Vlgneux, Miss I. Carter.\nMrs. 1'ickford, Mrs. O'Shea, Mrs. .1.\nCartmel, Mrs. McQuarrie, Misses\nFreda Hunter, Mary Moore. Helen\nWhitniore. Phoebe Cummins, Marjorie\nIngram. Vera Redpath, F. Gagnon, H.\nHodgson, K. Irving, and Master Cedric\nThomas.\nThe committee which had charge of\nthe Empire Day exercises at tho high\nschool consisted of: Mrs. Crease. Jlrs,\nT. Gibson, Mrs. Wm, Waldie, Mis. G.\nFerguson, Mrs. II. Robertson and Mrs.\n\\V. S. King.\nTONIGHT  WILL   DECIDE\nIF TORONTO WORKERS STRIKE\nToronto, May 25.\u2014Uncertainty as\nlo whether a general striue will be\ncalled in Toronto following tlie meeting of tlie various unions in tbe labor\ntemple .Monday was Ihe altitude of\nlocal labor leaders tonight,\n\".Monday night will decide,\" was as\nfar as they would go when asked as\nto the particulars, Jt seems to bo\ndefinitely understood that the whole\nHucstion will lunge on the stale ot\nthe negotiations between representatives of the striking metal workers\nand tiie employers' association, when\nthe unions meet tomorrow night.\nit was \u2014.ored here tonight that\nif a general strike is called in this city\ntheer will be a -\"Sympathetic striko\namong tho various unions in the steam\nrailways\u2014in snort, the railway systems of the whole community will lie\ntied up.\nThe Toronto Street Railwaymen's\nunion decided a lew nights ago to\njoint In a sympathetic strike in support of tile eight-hour demand from\ntlie metal workers if Ihe demand was\nnot acceded lo.\nWILL   PRbScNT   BILL   ASKING\nCIVIL SERVICE CLASSIFICATION\nOTTAWA, May 25.\u2014Hon, A. K. Mac-\nLean,; minister of trade and commerce,\nwho has had particular charge of all\nmatters relating to the civil service,\nhas given notice of the resolution providing for the classification of the\ncivil service. Under the terms of this\nbill 50 odd thousand members of the\ninside and outside civil service will\nbe reclassified. Tlie principle underlying the new classlflcatons will be\nthat members of thc service will be\nput into classes corresponding with\ntbe nature of the work they are doing.\nCivil servants doing engineering work,\nfor Instance, will be, classed as engineers, and other members uf the service doing work calling for special\nqualifications will be similarly treated.\nThe work of reclassification has occupied the attention of experts lor\nseveral months, and the new schedules\nwhich are now helng printed cover\nU00 or  700  printed  pages.\nih.it -MacLean promised a few days\nago that tiie new classification would\nbe brought down within a fortnight,\nand the legislation will be brought up\nin the house as expeditiously as possible.\n|    INTERNATIONAL SITUATION,\nNEW YORK, May 25.\u2014The Assoc\niated  Press issues tbe following:\nThursday of the present week l\nthe time limit set tor ibe Germans\nto make known lo the representa\nlives -if the allied and associated\npOwers at Versailles what Germany\npurposes to do with regard to accepting or rejecting the terms of\npeace  formulated  for her.\nBerlin reports still persist lhat the\nGerman cublnet and the peace delegates at Versailles are one in the\nintention to request modification on\nvarious cluusm of the treaty and the\nprovisions of which, it is declared,\nGermany will be unable to meet\nwithout enslaving herself for a lifetime.\nTuesday is spoken of In a Berlin\ndispatch today as tlie day on which\nGermany's answer will be ready. Tlie\nlatesl note of the Germans, the thir\nIcelith, brings up again the question\nof responsibility of Germany, and\nasserts that the only thing for whieh\nshe is responsible is Ihe violation\nof Belgian neutrality. For this she\nis ready to make reparation, ll is\nasserted tbat all the powers were\nresponsible for the war anil lhat the\nmaterial damage was done ity the\nallied armies us well as the Germans.\ndue concession  with  regard  to the\nSaar   Valley,   agreed   to   by   the  allies,\nprovides that Germany may create a\nprior charge on her revenue for the\npayment of the mines in the Saar\nregion if tho plebiscite, to be held\nin the region 15 years hence, should\nbe against the Germans. Tin- allies\nrefused to discuss the question\norally with   the Germans,\nA new commercial treaty witli\nSwitzerland, under which Germany\nwill give Switzerland coal in return\nfor produce,   is  being arranged.\nCEDRIC COMING WITH\nNbARLY   2UU0   SOLDIERS\nLONDON\", May 20.\u2014(Delayed. Canadian Associated I'ress.)\u2014The Cedric\nsailed yesterday for Halifax, carrying\n154 officers and L150 other ranks of\nthe second division from YVitley camp,\nincluding 33 officers and 493 men of\nthe 48th battalion for Kegina. IM officers and 500 men of the 31st battalion\nfor Calgary, also the Fifth artillery\nbrigade, consisting of thc l_8th,,20th\nanu !!3rU batteries, and second and\nthird sections of the divisional ammunition  column  brigade.\nAlexander Ross of tlie Sixth brigade\nwas among tiie passengers.\nFRENCH   AVIATOR  DESCENDS\nDURING   ATLANTIC   FLIGHT\nCASA HLANCA, Morocco, .May 2 .\n\u2014Lieut. Roget, ti French aviator, who\nleft Paris early yesterday on the first\nleg <>f the projected trans-At I an tic\nflight, by way of Dakar to Frazil,\nlanded at (I o'clock last night at\nKenitru,   30   kilometres   from   Rabat,\nIlls machine was damaged in landing aud the trans-Atlantic trip will\nhave   to  he abandoned,\nBogct came down on very difficult\nground. The machine left Villa\nConblay at 5.10 o'clock Saturday\nmorning,  carrying a passenger, Capt.\nOn!l, who had'previously crossed the\nMediterranean. Captain Coll was\nslightly bruised when the machine\ncame down. The entire trip was\ncovered without a stop. Lieut, Roget\nseems to have beaten tlie record of\nthe Culled Stales seaplane X.C. 4,\nwhicli in Its flight to lho Azores\ncovered 1,1)50 kilometres (1,211 miles),\nwhile Roget flew 2,170 kilometres\ntUbout   1,348   miles).\nCLASSIFIED1ADVERTISING\npw.''*^****:*\"'\n\u00ab*.\u00a3&caHitmiU&\nSTEAMERS   DOCK\nHALIFAX, .VS., May 25. \u2014 TW(\nsteamers with returning soldiers\ndocked at Halifax this morning.\nThey were the Leland liner Bohemian\nand the Cunard liner Aqultanla, the\nlatter bringing some 5,000 men and\n500 civilians. The Bohemian docked\na t (S.30 and liaif an hour later her\ntroops were coming ashore. It took\nloss than an hour to disembark her\nmen, and the Aqultanla steamed into\nihe dock and'began to discharge her\nthousands. Ly noon all were ashore\nand the trains had left for various\nparts of the country.\nMETAGAMA  SAILS.\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014(Canadian Associated Press.)\u2014The Metagama sailed for Quebec today, carrying mainly\nBuxton men's dependents and children, including 451 wives, 151 children\nand a number of Imperial forces and\nnurses. Colonels Bryce of the medical corps, Hertsberg of the engineers\nand Corporal Metcalfe, V. C, were\naboard.\nCONDENSED ADVERT^SmG^RATES\nOne Insertion, per word  -...,    lc\nMinimum charge   25c\nSix    consecutive   Insertions,    per\nword, paid In advance     4c\nTwenty-six consecutive insertions\n(one month) per word, paid In\nadvance    \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 1!5l'\nNelBon News of the Bay Column\nper word each insertion    2c\nMinimum charge per insertion.. 25c\nBlack face type, p.cr word, each insertion      8r\nId black face capitals, per worfl.\nper Insertion     <c\u201e\nSingle   line   black   face   capltala,\nused as heading   20c\nBirths, one insertion  50c\nMarriages, one insertion, up to five\nlines         50c\nAdditional lines, per line   10c\nDeaths,  one  fnsertlon.up  to  five\nlines    50c\nAdditional lines, per line   10c\nCard of thanks, one huertlon, up\nto  f've lines     K0c\nDeath and Funeral Notice  11.00\nAU condensed advertisements ire\nensh ln advance.\nAdditional lines, per line   10c\nEach subsequent Insertion 25c\nIn computing the number of words\nin a classified or Nelson N'ewa of th.\nDay advertisement count each word\ndollar niork, abbreviation, Initial lettor\nand figure as one word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that it is\ncontrary to the provisions of the postal laws to havo loiters addressed to\nInitials only; therefore any advertiser\n\u2022loslroiis of concealing hia or her identity may use a box at this office without any extra charge if replies are\ncalled for; if replies are to be mailed\nto advertisers, allow 10 cents extra in\naddition to price of advertisement to\npay postage.\nvW'ayduwn,\" a comedian in a colored\nregiment, was asked when he received\nhis discharge, if lie would enlist in\ncase of another war. His reply was;\n\"Boy, if this man's country gets into\nanother war, there is gonna be two\nmen missing\u2014this nigger and the man\nwhafs chasing him.\"\nBuy Good Building Lots\nCROWDS   SEE   BICYCLIST\nCRASH   INTO   HUGE  TANK\nNEW YORK, May 25.\u2014One of tho\nbiggest Sunday crowds Van Covt-\nlandt Park has ever known, which\nincluded the wife and baby of Daredevil Max Schreyer, saw the famous\ncyclist crash into tho side of a\nhuge lank there this afternoon, when\nhe missed his wild lean for life down\na steeply graded flO-foot incline, fracturing his skull, breaking an arm and\nreceiving serious internal injuries.\nHis condition i.s critical. Starting\nat the top of his narrow incline, 142\nfeet above the ground, Schreyer's\nbicycle darted forward for the leap\narid dive lo the water tank below,\nThe machine behaved beautifully and\nthe crowd sighed audibly as it \"took\nto'air\" for the sweep through space\nto the tank, only to fall short and\nsmashing the near side of it with\na  thud.\nM; E. Smith, Waukegon, Ills., slipped apd fell on the wet sidewalk. Just\nas his hand touched tlie walk his Imports clasjier a stray t~> bill,\n\"I SUFFER\nSEVEN YEAR0\"\nWas  Eventually  Cured by\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.\nPhiladelphia, Pa.-\"I suffered for\nseven long yeara with a lame back,\nirregularities and\npain. I had one\nphysician after another but they did\nme no good. I read\nabout Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound and\ngave it a trial and in\na short time I felt\nbenefited and am\nnow feeling fine,\nand without weakness orpain. Many\nof my friends have\nalso taken Lydia E.\nPinkham's vegetable Compound\nand been helped by\nit.\"-Mrs. Margaret Ness, 1846 li\nHazzard St, Philadelphia., Pa,\nWomen who suffer from displacements, irregularities, inflammation,\nulceration, backache, sideache, headaches or \"the blues\" should not rest\nuntil they have given this famous root\nand herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound, a trial. If\ncomplications exist, write Lydia E.\nPinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for\nspecial suggestions. The result of it!\nlong experience is at jfojir service\nIn Rosemont\nNow is the time to buy sonic good\nbuilding lots in Nelson's best addition.\nGood soil, olty water and electric\nlight; telephones and good roads. A\nportion of this subdivision has build-\nIns restriction on the lols, assuring n\ngood class of residence. A. splendid\nview, both up and down Lho west arm\nof Kootenay Lake, The lots have\ngood frontage, and prices range from\n\u2022JfiO.OO each to ?fi00.'00, depending on\nsize of ioi nnd location, Tiie terms\nare very easy, .'> per cent cash and\n\"j por cent pi r month, and for cash a\ndiscount of lo per cent will he allowed.\nSome of tho best locations already\nsold, it' you contemplate building, do\nnot overlook- Bosemont. Von will be\nsurprised and pleased when you see\nllie building sites. '\nSec the Exclusive Agent,\nHugh W. Robertson\nSuccessor to McQuarrie &. Robertson\nWard St.      Phone 68.      Nelson, B. C.\nIf you wish to store anything\nwe have the largest and best\nstorage facilities iu the city.\nCharges  Reasonable.\nWest Transfer\ntapany\nPhono 33. P. O. Box 116\nFor Sale\n910 Hoover St.\nLevel lots, 76x120; good garden, fruit trees, etc; 4 bedrooms,\nusual living mollis, cement foundation; full basement; hot water\nbeating plant. I'riee $1700.00 on\nterms.\nTerms can be arranged.\nThe house alone is worth more\nthan llie price asked for the\nwhole property.\nC. W. Appleyard\n20\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   SALE\ni-nll SALK\u2014Pedigreed Duroc Jersey\nswine, seven weeks old, both sex,\nstrong and healthy pigs, Si'i each, 3\nfor $-10; also pedigreed sow with litter\nof nine young, one week old, $100. \\V,\n\u25a0I. McKim, Nelson,  B. C. t-!S!)U)\n. \u201e  _ . ... 0\nFOR KALI-:\u2014Yorkshire pigs, sire from\nAlberta champion stock; dam exceptionally prolific Individ ind. Trice,\nwith papers, $16 cadi. A. \\i. Smltl^\nCranbrook,  I!. C. (2804)\nFOR SALK\u2014Thoroughbred Shetland\npony; good buggy, saddle and new\nharness. Must be sold as owner has\nno place to keep it. Apply Jlrs. Wliar-\ntou, 804 Carbonate. (2873)\n19J?WItry and Eggs r\nCANNOT  fin  any  Sort  pr3S5T7of\nbaby chiekfj this year.    Crown Hill\nPoultry Farm] Balfour.    . (2801)\nBAimED BOCKS and S. C. While\nLeghorn hatching eggs from heavy\nwinter laying strain $1.50 per 15. $8\nper 100. Wickham and Mitchell, Hole-\nnun, II. C. (2070)\nWHITF, WYANDOTTES. Regal strain\nHatching Eggs: $1.50 per fifteen;\n$1.50 per fifty; $S per hundred. Full\nSettings: From Pan I, $5; pen 2, J3.E0\nAlbert F. Atkinson, Rosemont, Nelaon.\nGM75')\n13 SITUATIONS WANTED\u2014MALE\nYOL'NO  MAN roepdros work of any\nt'ees,.iptieen; outdoor preferred: cn-\nfrltieer   by   trade.    Box   2852,   Dally\nV-vs. (2SD2)\n37   BOATS  AND  AUTOMOBILES\nFOK SALE\u2014Motor cruiser launch,\n36x8 ft.; tv.'e, cabins and lavatory,\nfully housed; oak frame and oak pnn-\nnellng; capacity 25 passengers e,r\nover; well engined; electric light.\nThis Ieo.it is practically new. Will\nsacrifice for cash, or trade for approved coast property. .1. W. Ford,\nPenticton, B, C. (2892)\nFOlt HALE\u2014Launch, 12 h.p. 3-cylin-\neier Forro engine; speed IS miles;\nseat li; condition as new. A snap at\n$350; worth double Gibbons, Box 120,\nPenticton, B. C, (2893)\n14 FURNISHED ROOMS TO RENT\nFOR DENT\u2014Rooms for men by day,\nweek or month.   Clean, comfortable.\nHot anel cold follower baths in connection.    V. M, ('. A. .(2902)\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms, $8\nper month, over I'oeele Drug.   (21187)\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS   for   rent.\nApply C. W. Appleyard, (2002)\nHIGH CLASS  FURNISHED\"SUITES\nTO KENT\u2014Kerr Apis. (2G0;l)\nFURNISHED    SUITE\u2014All    conveniences.    Campbell's Art   Studio,   71F\nBaker.\n(2504)\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable bleick, single,\nrooms, two-room suites. (2064)\n23\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE\nFOR SALE\u2014lO-ae-rc ranch al Queens\nBuy, B. C.   Apply Mrs. 3. 11. Ryley.\n(2883)\nFort SALE-20 acres, well fenced;\nsix acres In buy; on Granite road,\nnonr postofflce anel school. Apply .1.\nMalcolm, corner Vernon and Josephine streets. (2842)\n12 ACRES\u2014One mile from Nelson, 7-\nroomod houso, learn, root cellar, milk\nhouse', good chicken houses, about 5\nacres six lo twelve-year-old best variety fruit trees; ample water supply.\n$3000, Apply owner, Box 2S33, Daily\nNews. (2833)\n45\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nRETURNED SOLDIER wants preemption eir lo buy crown or railway\ncompany land. Reward pniel locator\nof suitable piece. Box 2911, Dully\n.News. (2911)\n33     FRUIT AND VEGETABLES\nTO.Mo'.ro   PLANTS^   35c   per   dozen,\n$2.50 per 100; cabbage plants, $1 per\n100; cauliflower, $1.50 per 100.   Bealby,\nPox  S97,  Nelson,  li. C. (2846)\nPEDIGREE strawberry plants\u2014Hardy,\nvigorous stocK-y-Parson's Beauty,\n$10 per thousand; Senator Dunlap,\n$;.r,o. Prompt shipment. Monrad\nWigen. Wynndel. B. O. (2822)\n18\nARTICLES  FOR   SALE\nTAXIDERMIST'S outfit for sale.   For\nparticulars apply \\Y. H. Price, Rossland, B. C. (2913)\nONION SETTS\u201430o lb.; early 0 weeks\nseed potatoes, 4c. Sodium arsenate\nfor onion and cabbage maggot; Hellebore, Paris Green, Lime and Sulphur\npowder, 50 and $2. Tobacco and Soap\nMixture lor roses, Bine Stone, Sulphur, Arsenate of Lead Powder. Rutherford Drug Co, (2917)\nFOR SALE\u2014Asters, slocks, petunias,\nwen' and trailing lobelia, salvia,\neternal ons, glndolias, dahlias, geran-\nums. fuchias, double and single marguerites. Cabbage, cauliflower, tomatoes a specially. W. S. Johnson,\nflorist.    I'heme 342. (2850)\nBEDDING PLANTS\u2014 Geraniums,\nlobelia, petunias, asters, verbenas,\ncarnations, etc. Bealby, Box 897, Nelson, B. (.'. (2S45)\nFOR .SALE\u2014Circular saw and 2 h.p.\nengine, in good shape; one heavy\nhorse; one 6-room house; also furniture, nearly now. Box 70, Silverton,\nB. C.                .                               '  '2828)\nWhere Do You Stand?\nThi> Probate Records of ono oi' the\nlargest districts on this Continent\n.show that the average number of\ndeaths of grownrUp persons for a period of five years was\n27,001\nOf these only ,900 left an estate.\nBE PREPARED\nThere is only one way of adding to\nan estate immediately and surely, and\nthat Is by a Life .Insurance Policy.\nThlay is yours. Tomorrow? Well,\n\"tomorrow\" was too late for these\n23,051\npersons who left no estate at all.\nWe handle Ktvo, Life, Accident and\nAuto Insuraiiqfe.\nRoberts & Christie!\nINSURANCE and FARM LANDS\n310 Baker St.\nBox 638. NELSON, B. C.\nFOB  SALE\u2014Heifer calf, month  eld,\ngood    milking   strain,     Apply    II.\nColobroolc, Fruitvalo. (2SC0)\nFoil SALE\u2014First-class ranch horse,\ngooet every way, about 1200 lbs,, 5\nyears old, $150. 1-Iandsomo black driver, -1 years old, well broken, $125.\nGood dairy Jersey eow, 5 years old, iu\ncalf. $100. Nine months heifer, from\npedigree Jersey eow and pedigree\nAyrshire bull, 510. \\V. II. Wills, Nelson. I!. C. (2871)\nSIX newly calved  heifers and cows.\nMarsdon, Taghum. (2S25)\nFoil SALE\u2014One mule, 5 years old, 650\nlbs.; work, saddle anel harness.   Apply Cutler, Auctioneer, Ward street.\n(2835)\nFOR SALE\u2014From pure brea registered Ohio Improved Cheater White\nstuck, Mnre.i and April farrowed strong\nand healthy pigs, $15 each, or 3 felr\n$40.   II. E. Church, Edgewood. (2012)\n21\nLIVESTOCK     WANTKU\nWANTED\u2014Good watch dog, thorough\nbred  preferred.    State   particulars.\nBox 181. Nolson. (2804)\nWANTED\u2014^t.  Bernard male puppy;\ngood stock.    Dr.  Hoyt,  Cranbrook,\nB. C. (2831)\n22   MISCELLANEOUS\u2014WANTED\nCASH for old false teeth (broken eir\nnot). We pay \u00a32 to $35 per set.\nAlso actual value lea- bridgework,\n.Towns, old gold,' silver anel platinum.\nSend at once and receive cash by return mail. Venn* geeeals returned If\nprie'e is unsatisfactory. Mazer Bros,,\nA 2007 S. 6th Street, Phlla,, l'a., U.S.A.\n(2S70)\nWANTED\u2014Light, strong spring wagon,  with  brake, feer one  horse.    A.\nNorth, Sirdar. (2805)\nWANTED\u2014To buy, crown neck beet\nbeettles, 40 cents per dozen quarts.\n20 cents per dozen pints f. o. b. Fernle,\nJoe and John Perry, bottle dealers.\nFernie, B. c. i (2304)\nAdvertising   in   those   columns   pays\nwell.   That is why so many people\nuso Classified Ads.\n10\nMALE   HELP   WANTED\nWANTED\u2014Reliable agent In Nelson\nelistrie-t lee handle? best article on tile\nmarket; fast seller; splendid profits.\nI'^e.-e'ptieenal opportunity for bustler.\nExclusive territory. Address, 70S Do-\nuiihion-Buileling, Vancouver, B. I*.\n(2020)\nWANTED\u2014To let contract ley thousand for taking lumber from mill\nand piling same- in yard. Capacity of\nmill 45,000. Jlill to start operation\n.hint; first. Canyon City Lumber Co.,\nI.oI.. Creston,  B. ('. (281)5)\nWANTED'for Slocan Valley Lumber\nmill, licenced log settlor, who must\nnot smoke and will luearel at vegetarian table. Apply to Slocan Valley\nLumber Company, Koch's, li. C (2S',I8)\nWANTED\u2014Mon, or man and wife, to\nrun  it  sawmill   boarding  camp   by\ncontract;   twenty  men,   .Apply   Geo.\nMnltlnson,  Deer Park. (2802)\nWeVNTED,  at once\u2014I men for sawmill  work,   wages  $4  for  0  hours.\nApply Geo. Mnkinson, Deer Park, B. C.\n(2803)\nWANTED\u2014Man   and   wife   to   farm\nranch, cater and act as groundsman\nfor Goif club.   Returned soldier preferred.   Apply C. W. Appleyard. (2S55)\n27        MACHINERY   WANTED\nWANTED 'fo PURCHASE\u2014Machinery tor small sawmill, no engine or\nboiler required] also somo shop machines; 1 single spindle shaper, 1\nplainer, 18-Inch or larger; 1 swing\ncut-oft saw; 1 boring machine; 1 mor-\nticer; 1 moulding machine; 1 band\nsaw, 34 or 36-inch, with frame, etc.\nState price and dimensions to Box\n2812. Daily News. (2S12)\n48\nPERSONAL.\nA MAN wishes tee meet bachelor (returned soldier preferred), with small\nincome, to. Share ranch rent free In\nexchange for company. For full par-\ntllulnrs write to II. C, Box 28S0, Dally\nNews. (2880)\nYOI'R FTJTURE foretold.   Send dime,\nage, bilthidace for truthful, reliable,\nConvincing trial reading. Hazel Hause,\nBox 215, Los Angeles, Cal. (2915)\nYOCNG i.,vm'72l\",~voi'th $00,000 cash,\ncity  property   also,   would   marry\nhonorable    gemtleman.      Mrs.    Warn,\n2216 ia Tample, l.os Angeles, Cal. (29W)\nteACHElTdlTgirl,   JO, 'W(\u00a3th   $20,000,\nWishes to marry.   M-Box 35, League,\nToledo, Ohio, I'-liU').\nWANTED- .\"Man   lo  leiok  alter  stock,\nmilk ceiws aud genoral work around\nMibles.   Wages $110 per month.  Tlie\ns Staples Lumber Co., Ltd., Wy-\neliffe, B.  C. (2818)\nBXl'ERIENaED hotel clerk and bell-\nhoy.   Apply Hotel Strathcona. (2837)\nWANTED, at once, man and wife to\nwork   on    ranch;    wages   $75    per\nmonth.    Lepage,  Park  Siding, Fruitvalo, 1!. C*. (283\u00ab)\nWANTED\u2014Two    fivst-ciass   house\ncarpenters.    J. Burns & Son, Nel-\n(2709)\nWANTED\u20143 graders for tailing ma\nchines in planing mill. Wages $4\nper day. One gooel shed grader,\nwages $4.50 per day. Thc Otis Staples\nLumber Co., Ltd., Wycllftc, B.C. (2671)\n11     FEMALE  HELP .WANTED\nWA'lTKESSr^ei^ired~rmmedlately'for\nBalfultr sanatorium; wages $40 per\nmonth, witlt board, quarters and laundry. Apply MedlCal Superintendent,\nBalfour Sanatorium. (2925)\nFLKoliD boat LIVERY\u2014Launches,\ncanoes, rowboats for hire;   bought,\nsold eir ropalred.'\nFOR SALE\u201426-ft. launch, with boat-\nhouse arid site; 12 to 15 miles per\nhour.    Apply New  Grand  Hotel.\n\"*\u2022\u2022       (2677)\n81    COMMISSION MERCHANTS\nRANCHERS' PRODUCE sold ou\ncommission. R. G. Joy, Hox ei37,\nelson, B. C. (2680)\nSECOND   HAND   DEALERS\nTHE ARK pays cash for seeoael ham'\nfurniture, utcves; 606 Vernon; Ph  651\n(21166)\nROOM   AND   BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM wanted 1*1\nquiet homo. W. N. R., care Thef\nNews.\n42\nMATRIMONY\nMARRY\u2014Many rich,   Particular\n\u2014F.   Morrison.   1,3052   W.\nSeattle. Wash.\nBusiness anil Professional\nOirectorf\nHOSPITALS\nPrivate   Hospitt\nLICENSED  BY  PROVINCIAL\nGOVERNMENT.\nWe give particular attention to\nemalo trouble\u2014home-like apartmenl\n'or ladles awaiting acou^hment.   Cel\ntlfled nurses Bent out on private casJ\nown or country.   Highest reference!\nreasonable   turms,  inspection   invlt\nMr*. Moore, Superintendent,\nTHE   HOME   PRIVATE   HOSPITA\nFalls \u00abrd Bakesr Ste\u201e Nelson, B,C.|\nPhone 872 for Appointrnant.\nP. O. Box 772.\n(2*341\nACCOUNTANTS\nw. h.'\"fXlding,\nPublic Accountant, Bank of Montre|\nChambers. Rossland. B.C.\n(2041\nJ. H. LAWRENCE,\nAccountant, Etc.\nRoy*! Bank Building, Nelson, B.C.]\nFUNERAL DlllSCTOR-\\\n0. J. ROBERTSON, F. D. D. ,1: E; 30]\nVictoria  struct.    Phone  292\nPhono 157- J. (204(1\nSTANDARD FURNITURE COM1\nPANV\u2014C. J. Carlson, Undertake!\nUndertakers nnd Fmbalmers an|\nFuneral Dlre'doff;. The finest a\nmost up-to-date ^-undertaking parie\nand chapel In Interior II. C. Lady r-.A\ntondant for women and children*. DaJ\nPhone S5.    Night Plieenee 252 ond \u00abJ\n(2041\nASSAYERS.\nIS, Wi *A^DOWs6n, Box A-llO'S; No!\nnon, B.C. .Standard western cliarg\n(201:\nFLORIST.').\nimy.\/.lil.l.K'S GRHEttolCiUSES,\nson.   Cut flowers and floral design*!\n(2G49f\n0?\nENGINEERS.\n^<f3ros.,8ur(ie\/3\nNelson, B.C.\n0\nO]\nFOR SALE\u2014One Akron picture framing machine, O.K. condition; just the\nthing for picture framing shop.   Apply II. Cuthbertson, Bossland.    (2S.W)\nFOR SALE\u2014Mine Cars, Steel Wheels\nand Axles, Wire Rope, Hoisting Engines, Rails, Machine Tools. Build's,\nCompressors, etc. National Machinery\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C. (2534)\n40 AGENT WANTED.\nAGENTS WANTE15--BeeT, wines, apple cidor without apple's, easily made\nin your own homo, over 250 recipes\nused by the leading rectifiers of\nEurope, Now on sale in book form.\nAgents wanted in evory otwn. Ke'-\ncelpls and. full instruction $1. it not\nsatisfied your money refundeil. Western Distributors, 515 McLean Blelg.,\nCalgary, Alberta, (2S08)\nCIVIL   AND   MINING   ENGINEERS!\n' B.C., Alberta and Dominion\nLAND SURVEYORS\nCrown Cent Agents,      Blues Printing\n(2051\nA. L. McCUl.LOCH,\nHydraulic Engineer,\nProvlnolnl  Land  Surveyor,\nBaker St., Nolson, B.C.\n(2651|\nA.   D.   NASH,\nMining  Engineer,\nConsultations,   lr,xnionitlono.  Develop]\nmem Reports,\nRoom   2,   Royal   Bank   lilelg.,   Nelw\n(265:\nA. R. HEYLAND,\nBritish Columbia Land Survoyor\nSurveys of  nil  descriptions  made\nanywhere in British Columbia.\nLands Reported on and Valued\nICASLO, B. C. P. O. BON 471\n(2653\n25              FOR   EXCHANGE\nWl LL  T*fiAbE'\"t'i7trgo'o'd'~la'u'nelCTwo\ndesirable lots in Melville, Sask.   Apply Box 2304. Dally News. (2904)\n49 FARMS FOR SALE\ncTv, R. FAHitfiXisfb^Cholce farms\nin well settled districts in Western\nCanada; low prices; twenty years to\npay; lrlgated kinds In Sunny Southern Alberta, with loan of $2000 in Improvements lo assist new setllera\nAct now\u2014they ure going fast. For\nfree booklets nnd full information\nwrite H. B. Loughran, 744 Hastings\nstreet, Vancouver, or Allan Cameron,\nGeneral Supodintendent of Lands, 0S5\n1st St. East, Calgary, (274S)\nHELP   feer   general   housework. .  No\nwashing.     No  children,     j-iox  795,\nTrail, B. C.   Telephone 3S9R1, Nelson.\n(2922)\nWAITED\u2014Capable girl or woman to\natlenil  store  afternoons  and  evenings. (Apply Box 333. (2905)\nEARN $25 weekly, spare time, writing\nfor  newspapers,   mngazlneB.     Exp.\nunnec; details free.   Press Syndicate,\n260, St. Louis, Mo. (2910)\nWANTED\u2014Permanent lady partner,\ntinder 46, to file on adjoining land\nand seep house for rancher, 55. Only\nsmall capita! reepilred by right party.\nE. IC, Box 2897, Daily News.      (2807)\nWANTED\u2014A*, girl for ice cream parlor.   Apply llntelStmthconn. (2885)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced-hotel girl for\ndining room and upstairs work. Outlet Hotel, Proctor. (2872)\nWANTED    AT.  ONCE\u2014Experienced\nwaitress. Apply Hume Jlntole    (?67il)\nDo You Sell\nService, Mr.\nSalesman?\nThe old style drummer used\nto tell some funny stories,\nget an order and let it go al\nthat.\nThc modern salesman sells\nservice ns well as goods.\nHe brings the dealers new\nsuggestions instead of antiquated jokes.\nThe best service he c.Tn give\na dealer is tho assurance that\nhis firm is advertising or\nplanning to advertise in tho\nnewspapers of the dealer's\ncity.\nThat means action at tho\ndealer's counter, more sales\nill! around aud a. storekeeper\nthat calls the salesman\n.\"Santa Clans.\"\nGF.ARY & JOHNSTONE,\nWining   ond   Metallurgical   Engiheefs\nConsultatibn,   Examinations,   Reports\nEBtlriifttes, Design of Mining and\nMetallurgical Plants.\nAberdeen Suilding, Nelson, B.C.\nTelephone 103 (2654\n^ARCHITECT\n\"\". GEORGE C. EGG7XR.A.I?C.\nARCHITECT\nBox 1151 Nelson, B. C\nBuilding   skotches,   plans   and\nspecifications. (2055\n___ -_______. .\n7T\"W.  Si  JOHNSON,' FLORIS'tT\nrut floW.ers, potted plants and flora;\ndesigns.   Phone 342. (2851\nLOCKSMITHS\nTOlTKirfoT\nGun, Lock and Bicycle Works.\nAgent  Columbia   Bicycle\nAll Makes Phonographs Repaired.\n412 Ward Street. (2656)\nPHYSICIANS  AND   tiURUeONS\nI Dr.A.T.Spankie\n11 M.D., C. M.\nEYE, NOSE, EAR and THROAT\nSPECIALIST\nOfllce:\nSuite   121-122,   New   p.   Burns\nBldg..  corner  8th  Avo.\nand 2nd St. E.\nCALGARY\nPhones;  Office) M2S1S\nHouso M207J\n.,   (2057)  \u2014\n eolejTei tTOA.e c\nWHOLESALE.\n\u25a0i. MACDONALD ft CO, WHOLE'\n\u00bbalo Grocers and Provision Mer<\nchants. Importers of Teas, Cotfeea\nSplcos, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nB'oncy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and Packing\nHouse Products. Offlco and warehouse,\ncorner of Front and Hall streets. P.O.\n,hox 1095; 'tcllcphouo 28 and 23.   (2658)\n\"auctioneers.\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO., Opera Blk\n(2059)\nWM.  CUTLER.  AUCTIONEER.    Hot\n474.    Phone 77. (2660)\nBUSINESS COLLEGES.\nNELSON     BUSINESS     COLLEGE-!\nDay and  night classes.    Complete1\nbusiness course.\u2014Apply P.O. Boy 741.\nmm\n ##\nMONDAY, MAY 26, 1319.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPAGE SEVEN\nI\nMD RENO W\nGftMED: 25 POUNDS\n\u00ab Tanlac Following Attack of In-\niluenza   and    Results   Are\nWonderful.\nu*   anyone   suffering   from   the\neffects of influenza and needing\n'thing to build them up,\" said Ed-\nW.  Reno,  a  well  known  em-\njp of the American Railway Ex-\nCompany, living at 1721 Broad-\nKansas City,  Missouri,  \"Tanlac\nie finest thing in the world, and\ntell you why.\nluring the recent epidemic I was\nn down with the 'Flu' myself and\n'wo weeks'was just about aB sick\nne gets to be.   I finally managed\null through, but my, I was as weak\nbaby afterwards.   I lost twenty-\npounds In weight or more, and\ny ounce of my strength seemed to\n;one.   Of course, I wasn't able to\nhit of work and it was just about\ncould do to walk around and my\nwould just  completely give  out\njtlmes.   I hnd no appetite, cither,\nnever cared for a thing 'to eat.\nknew I wouldn't be able to go\n; to work at all feeling like I was,\n1  had  heard so much about\nlac I decided to test it out.   Well,\n?emed to help me right from the\nfew doses  nnd  has put me  In\nie lo whore I have actually gained\nlty-flvo  pounds    In    thirty days\n( time.    I have just finished my\nittle, nnd It is nothing Bhort of\nnishing thc way it has increased\nStrength and built mc up in every\nSet.   I have not only gotten back\nny old strength, but I really be-\nI feel better than I did even be-\nI had tho 'Flu.'   My appetite was\nr better, all that tired feeling is\nand I am putting In ten hours\nnod, hard work every day, and it\nly doesn't bother.mo one bit.   To\nI'm strong for Tanlac Is making\ncry mild.   I am constantly telling\nfriend about   it,   and  I   think\n\u25a0body who Is In a run-down con-\non would do well to give it a trial.\"\nhas been stated, there Is not a\n;io portion of the body that Is not\nsfited   by   the   helpful action  of\nlac.   Tanlac contains certain med-\n. properties   which   enrich   the\nd and promote a healthy appetite\nnourishing food, thus helping to\nup health nnd strength in thc\niral way.   And, as in the case of\nReno, Tanlac will prove involute! all persons suffering from the\n\\ fleets   of   influenza,  lagrlppe,\nlold.   and    pneumonia,    bronchial\nibles,  etc.    Tanlac  is  a  powerful\ninstructive tonic and always pro-\n?s most gratifying results,\nenlac Is sold in Nelson by Canada\n? ,4 Book Store, in .Fernie by A.\nBleasdale.  in Rossland by W. H.\ninman,  in Kaslo  by Frank Abey,\nil by E. W. Hazelgood, in Revelry Walter Bros., in Nakusp by\nS. McLean, in Creston by Cres-\nDrng ,1 Book Co., in Cranbrook\nlleattie-Noblc, Ltd., and in Wllmer\nFler.o Mny Taylor.\u2014Advt.\nRAIN PUTS orr\nCoast City  Holiday  Makers Are  Disappointed\u2014Boxing Championship\nto be Fought Wednesday.\nVANC0UVE0 B.C., May 24.\u2014The\nelaborate program of sports which\nhad been prepared for the Victoria\nDay holiday in Vancouver and district hud to be abandoned today on\naccount of heavy rain.\nTho middleweight boxing championship of Canada, which was to have\nbeen decided at Minora Park here will\nbe fought for next Wednesday evening\nat 7.15 o'clock in the Urighouse arena.\nThe event could nut be held yesterday\nbecause Brighouse is an open-air\narena and thc drenching rain made It\nImpossible tn accommodate tbe crowd.\nTommy Burns, promoter of the bout,\nannounced that tickets taken for Saturday's event will be available for the\nfiglu Wednesday.\nBurns applied for $10,000 insurance\nagainst rain but made his ap pi lea ton\njust too late anil the Insurance could\nnot be put on. Burns snid today that\nhe expected that the bout would draw\nas big a crowd Wednesday evening as\nwas expected Saturday.\n[.\nVliere  is  Fiume?\"\ndon't know, 1 never knew there\nsuch a place until Italy insi.U-d\nlaving it,\"\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nSunday Games.\nR. H. E.\nWashington   5     8     0\nChicago     n   13     1\nBatteries\u2014Shaw. Ayers, Craft, Johnson and 1'lcinlch; Loudermllk, Kerr,\nDanforth and Schulk.\nR. II.\nNew Vork    5   lo\nSt.  Louis     C     7\nBatteries\u2014Mogridge,    Nelson,   Russell and Ruel; Shocker and Mayer.\nR. H, E,\nIloston     2   11    2\n..evelnnd     3     8     I\nBatteries\u2014Mays nnd Walters; Bag\nliy and O'Neill,\nDue\u2014.(JIT, Mich., May 25.\u2014Detroit\ntook Its fifth consecutive victory to\nday by defeating Philadelphia, 3 to 2.\nScore; R. II. E.\nPhiladelphia     2    6    2\nDetroit     3     7     3\nBatteries \u2014 Rogers   anel   McAver;\nDauss iinel Alnsmlth,\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSunday Games.\nFirst game\u2014 R. H. E.\nPortland   1    2     3\nSan Francisco   5     6     0\nBatteries\u2014Jones, Cooper and Baker;\nSeaton and McKee.\nSecond game\u2014\nR.\nII.\nE.\nPortland  \t\n5\n8\n2\nSan Francisco  \t\n3\n9\n6\nBatteries\u2014Chilian\nand\nKoehler;\nSmith and McKee.\n\u25a0\nFirst game\u2014\nR.\nH.\nE.\nSeattle   \t\n2\n10\n2\nil\nA\n?\nBatteries\u2014Molls and\nSchang,\nCook;\nAldrldge and Boles.\nSecond game-\nR.\nH.\nE.\nSeattle   \t\n. 1\n7\n1\nLos  Angeles   \t\n. 6\n11\n1\nBatteries\u2014Fiilkenberg,   Blgliee\nnd\nCook; Crandall and Li\npan.\nR.   H.   E.\nOakland     fi   11     2\nHalt Bake    8    14     2\nBatti-rles\u2014Hblllng, Bronlon and Elliott; Markle and Bylcr.\nVernon   \t\nSacramento  \t\nBatteries \u2014 Houck     and\n1'iercy, Vance and Murray.\nSaturday Games.\nPortland   \t\nSan Francisco  \t\nButteries \u2014 Benncr     and\nCouch and McKeo.\nR.   H.   E.\n2     6\n1     C\nBrooks;\nOPT MISTEC NOTE IS\nSO\nAT\nIT.  E.\n11     2\n11      3\nBaker;\nE.\nSeattle \t\nBos Angeles  \t\nBatteries \u2014 Vnlenciii,\nBowman and Schang;\nBoles.\nR.   IT.\n..180\n..11    20      1\nOleichmiin,\n'ortlca   and\nB.\nVernon  \t\nSacramento\nBatterics-\nBrnmley,\nray.\nFromme   and\n11.   13,\n5   10     2\n4      5      1\nDevormer;\nMcKenry,  Vance and  Mill'-\nQUAKERS BLANK ROBIN HOODS.\nSASKATOON', May 25.\u2014Saskatoon\nQuakers lowered tlie colors of Mooso\nJaw Rubin Hoods in both'games yes-\nterdfiy, the first game ending 3 to 0\nand the second fi  to 0.\nWhy is it that all tbe rogues manage to yet inlo tho other political\nparty.\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither With Your Name or\nWith the Words\nDairy Butter\nn. il, F.\nOakland    11   IB     3\nSalt Lake    15   18     1\nBatteries\u2014Kramer, A. Arlett anel Elliott; Leveronz, Gould, Dale und\nSpencer.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSunday Games.\nPittsburg   \t\nBrooklyn   \t\nBatteries\u2014Hamilton,     Eva\nSweeney; Smith and Kruegcr.\nIt. IT.\n0     3\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSunday Games.\nR. H.\nToronto     ii     5\nRochester    8   10\nBatteries \u2014 lirogan,     Acostll\nO'Neill; Herseh and Sandbcrg.\nBuffalo   \t\nBlnghampton   \t\nButteries\u2014Ryan   ar\ngins anel Smith.\n(11  innings).\nBaltimore \t\nJersey City \t\nBatteries\u2014Newlond\nrissetle anel Hyde.\nR.\n.... 2\n.... G\nCasey\nII. B\nfi\n7     I\nHlg.\nn. h, b,\n   5     7     2\n 2     \u00ab     3\nand Egan; Mor-\nCharley, lho rook, has a mania tor\n\"shooting craps.\" One tiny he missed\nhis dice, and having always worn\nsmile, It was at once noted that tin\nwas something wrong, because lie was\nall gloom and hal a solemn look like\none. who has come to great grief. We\nhad hash tor supper. The bugler, having a heaping mess kit full of hash,\nwas making great progress when nil\nof a sudden, be bit into something\nharder to eat than hash. Charley is\nonce more wearing bis smile of con-\ntontiner.**,, being snlisfied npw Witt\nhimself and the world.\nAccording to the Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers who sell butter\neither to stores or privately are required to have\nIt properply covered ln a\nwrapper on which MUST\nappear In prominent letters\nthe words\n\"DAIRV BUTTER\"\nThe fact is also emphasized\nthat all butter in sucli\npackages must be of the full\nnet weight of sixteen ounces\nand in default of same a fine\nof from $10 to $30 for each\noffense is Imposed. Whey\nbutter must be so labelled\neven when mixed with dairy\nbutter and dairy butter re-\ncalns Its label even though it\nbe mixed with the creamery\nproduot.\nIf you have your own name or\nbrand on your wrappers you gain\nvaluable advertising for your butter. It causes people to ask for\nthe same brand again.\nPrices\nPRINTED  WITH  NAME  OF\nFARMER OR BRAND NAME\n200 Paper and CO Cfl\n\u25a0    Printing    \u2022PefcidU\n500 Paper and 00 CO\nPrinting   >JOi*J\\)\n1000 Paper and\nPrinting  \t\n$5.0Q\nPRINTED    WITH    WORD8\n\"DAIRY BUTTER\"\n100\nfor\n250\nfor\n600\nfor\n1000\nfor\n...80c\n$1.25\n$2.00\n$3.50\nWE CAN SHIP IMMEDIATELY ON RECEIPT OF ORDER\nK.B.\nA homely  face prevents a woman\nfrom hearing a lot of blamed nonsense.\nDRINK\nNelson Brewing\nCompany's\nBeer and Porter\nHealthful and invigorating.\nMade with crystal clear mountain water from pure malt and\nhops.\nNelson  Brewing\nCompany, Limited\nNEL80N, B.C.\n(Continued from Page Five.)\nthrough to success no matter what the\ndifficulties may be.\nMr. Keen complimented Mr. Beatty\non his youth, saying lhat tho new\npresident was a \"young man like myself.\" The speaker said lie had been\nhere for about 30 years and that he\nwas good for another 30 years of work\nwith men liko Mr, Beatty for llie good\nof British Columbia, and especially for\nthe good of this section eif tlie province.\nHe Is a Man.\n\"We must get away from thc tomfooleries of life and get down tu facts,\nsaid Mr. Keen. \"The man who owns\nthe transportation of a country has\nbeen said to be the man who owns\nthe country, and he is tlie man who\ncan hold up the country.\n\"My best compliment lo Mr. Beatty\nis that he Is a man.\"\nGeorge Stevenson proposed the toast\nto \"Our Province,\" thc \"gem of thc\nDominion.\" ns the toastmaster put it.\nlie declared that it required more real\nmanhood tn stay behind this provinco\nthan any other.\nParallel Histories.\nBr. W. o. Rose, In reply to the toast,\ncongratulated Mr. Beatty nnd welcomed him to the Queen City of the\nKootenay. The speaker said that\nmany men of the name of Realty had\nbecome prominent during the past few\nyears, mentioning llie name of Admiral Sir David Beatty as an example.\nDr. Rose stateil that tho history of\nthe province and nf the Canadian Pacific havo been very closely related.\nThe carrying into effect of tlie act of\n1871, tinder which Britisli Col'imlilu\nbe'i'ume a part uf the Dominion, depended very largely upon the promise\nf direct railway connection with the\nprairies and the east. At that time it\nnecessary tn go around tiie Horn\nir through the United States In order\ngo from Victoria to Ottawa. Tho\nat! was connected up ln 1885.\nAvailable Resources.\nThe speaker said that today the\nprovince has the potentialities to become the premier manufacturing prov-\nvincc of the Dominion. He reviewed\nthe early history of the mineral development, pointing nut the possibilities had only been touched. He told\nof tlio possible futuro of lumbering,\nfisheries, agriculture and horticulture.\nAt present the province eloes not raise\nenough food for its own people, but\ntlie speaker said he believed the time\nwiis near when there would lie a small\nsurplus for export.\nThe toastmaster proposed a toast to\n\"Our Industries,\" to which S. S. Fowler, manager of the Bluebell mine,\nRlondel, was the first lo reply.\nThe Mining Industry.\nMr. Fowler said that mining was\ntoo large a subject to be properly reviewed in a brief speech. Speaking\nto .Mr. Beatty, he said that tlio province was credited with having produced about $350,000,000 worth of mln-\nerals other than gold, but the Important thing was the development\nai the mines ill tlie future. He declar-\neel that tie greatest duty of the mining\ncommunity today Is to encourage\nprospecting. Either thc old-timers\nmust be brought back or a new class\n.if prospectors developed. \"If new ore\nbodies are not located the district Is\niiound to go back,\" said .Mr. Fowler.\nContinuing, he said lhat the potentialities had only been scratched.\nLumbering Industry.\nW. A. Anstle said he was glad of\nthe opportunity tu tell .Mr. Beatty of\ntlie lumbering Industry in the Kuut-\nenay, He said that he has been connected witli tlie industry hero for about\n20 yeurs and that the business had\nhad somo good and some lean seasons, lie declared the industry was\nentitled to be placed first in importance In the province In that it distributed more money fur wages, transportation and supplies than any other.\n'J'he output was reduced during the\nwar, but last year, from the stand\npoint of returns, was ono of lho beat\nin the history of the industry.\nSpeaking of tlie future, which he\nsaid he believed would bo kind to the\nKootenay, -Mr. Anstle said that be was\nif the opinion that a pulp mill would\nbo established in the near future in\ntlie vicinity ot Xelson, and also on\nthe Arrow lakes, lie said that labor\nconditions were not tlie best, but that\nlie believed there would be an improvement ln the future. He wus of\nthe opinion that the 1. W. W., Bolslie\nand others of thc red element should\nbe let know that Canada has no place\nfir them.    (Cheers.)\nJ ID. Annable told of the possibilities of fruit growing and of tlio success of those who had started with it\nin Kootenay and Boundary. Ho told\nof the development of the fruit and\nvegetable production and of the possibilities for the future.\nGunner Graham sung \"There's a\nIjind\" and \"The Toreador\" from Carmen.\nWelcome From Kaslo.\nJames Anderson of Kaslo said that\nhe considered  it a pleasure to come\nto greet Mr. Beatty.   He invited the\ndistinguished guest to go to Kaslo If\nhe could In the future, assuring him\na welcome eejual to that extended by\nXelson.\nMr, Anderson pointed out the need\nfeir cooperation between all the towns,\ncities and industries of the Kootenay.\nHo then proposed a toast to the mining, smelting and commercial interest!..\n.1. J. Warren, general manager of\nthe Consolidated smelters at Trail,\nsaid that he had known Mr. Beatty for\nmany years. ,\n\"He is one of the most straight forward and manly men of Canada today.\"     (Cheers.)\n\"He Is absolutely trustworthy. He\nmay be a little slow in giving promises, but he will keep his word when\nlie does make a promise. He Is equally as interested ln tile development\nof Canada as are the people of the\nwest.\nMr. Warren said that he felt that\nlie wiis under suspended sentence\nwhen it came to speaking of the Trail\nsmelter. He salei that at best he was\n\"only an executive,\" lint he was blam-\ned when tho price of copper went up\nand when It came down, In fact, he\nseemeel to be blamed for a little of\neverything. I ..bsLHII\nFuture Development.\nSpeaking ot the future lie said he\nwould try to adopt a policy which\nwould make for the development of\nllie province. He said that the smelter endeavored lo make Its charges\nfair, but pot to give something for\nnothing, lie did not think that would\nlie good for tlie country, but ho would\ngive and do what he considered was\nright.\nReferring to schedule B, ho said\nthat it was Intended to be a basis for\nreasonable charges for the work done\nley the smelters. He said that lie was\nwaiting tlie decision of tho special\ncommittee whicli has the schedule un-\nler consideration, with a feeling that\nnil should get together witli a view to\ndeveloping the country\nMr. Warren said that he had never\nheard n kinei word in public for his\ncompany's development at the Sulli\nvan mine, until Mr. Fowler spoke just\na few minutes before him. He said\nthnt the smelters had been criticized\nfor treating the ore from the Sullivan\nem a lower schedule than that charged\nfor outside work. In reply lo theso\ncriticisms he said thai it would bo\nImpossible for the smelter to operato\nwithout the Sullivan ore.\nNeed for Cooperation.\nTlie speaker told of tiie special operations carried on liy the smelters\nwith a view ot assisting the allies\nwin the war. Ho said that the company had saved tho British government over six million dollars on the\ncost nf its zinc alone.\nMr. Warren said that he would liko\nto see more cooperation with regard\nthe> development of tho Canadian\nmarket. As an illustration of tho way\nthey work together, the speaker told\nof a trip whicli lie made to Washington after the States had entered the\nwar. lie offered lei sell lead at about\ntwti cents under tho prlco which tlio\nAmerican proeluccrs wero receiving,\nand as a result was nearly driven out\nnf the city. Recently In Canada tlie\nCanadian National railway sent to\nMexico to purchase lead when the\nsmelters hnd several thousand tons on\nbund. That sort of thing should bo\nstopped, he said. He slated that ho\nlooked In tlie future with optimism.\nPromising Developments.\n\"We will soon be ln a position to\ntreat from two to five thousand tons\ne.f Sullivan ores every day. S. G. Blay-\nlock nnd his staff of metalurgists havo\nsolved tlie problem ot treating the\nSullivan ores at a reasonable price.\nThey have also discovered a new,\nSpecial Offerings\nOF  INTEREST TO  BUSY  HOUSEWIVES\n250 Yards Colored Oxford Shirtings\nSuitable'foMioys' Summer Shirt Waists and Men's Shirty. Excellent\nfor washing and wear. 2H Inches wide. Regular 39c yard. OQa\nSpecial value, per yard Lvv\n^OOY^sJJghtGrqundJrints\t\nEnglish manufacture. Strong, eveij weave In Blue, Lilac anil Pink\nshades.   Worth 29c yard. 4| j  *JQ\nSpecial value, 6 yards for  <flit\u00abJ\n200 Yards Striped. Cotton Crepe\nWhite. ground with Pink, Sky, Navy\nmanufacture. A good, reliahle quality.\nSpecial  value   \t\nand   Black   stripes.     KniOish.\n27 inches wide. QQA\nSNOW WHITE   BRIDAL\nCLOTH\nA nice, fine, oven weave.   Freo\nfrom  dressing.    36  in.\nwide.    Special value, yd.\n\u00abt\nGREEN  STRIPED AWNING\n75i\nGood  weight.\n30 In. wide.\nfast  color.\nPer yard .\n25 ONLY, PURE IRISH  LINEN\nTABLE  CLOTHS\nBleached  snow  white,   good   effective   designs.     Worth   $l.no\neach.    Size 64x6-1.\nEach   \t\n$2.49\nLADIES' WHITE  COTTON\nHOSE\nFull fashioned. Si\/.es sv\u00bb,\nft, AH- and 10.   Per pair\nCROSS  BAR   MOSQUITO\nNETTING\nStrong and reliable grade. 40'\nInches wide, In White IE a\nonly.     Per   yard    I OO\nPURE  WHITE  VOILES\nPine even weave, strong and\ndurable. In three reliahle qualities,    Per yard\u2014\n45c     $1,59 69c  59c\nM (lb? Button's Baij (Tonpiijj\n, STIFF J\nDaily News Job Department\nI-^tfOBWS' THE\nIAKER 3TREET,\nHOME   OF  GOOD   PRINTING\nNEL80N, B. C.\ns\nSOREJUSCLES\nUaber Up Quickly Undw tht SMthlifc\nPenetrating Application if\nHamlin's Wizard Oil\nIn cases of rheumatism and lame\nback it penetrates quickly, drives out\nsoreness, and limbers up stiff, aching\njoints and muscles.\nWizard Oil is an absolutely reliable, antiseptic application for cufc.\nburns, bites, and stings. Sprains and\nbruises heal readily under its sooth*\ning, penetrating qualities.\nGet it from druggists for 30 cent*\nIf not satisfied return the bottle and\nget your money back.\nEver constipated or have sick\nheadache? Just try Wizard Liver\nWhips, pleasant little pink pills, 31\n\u25a0fCflta.   Guaranteed. -3\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 24)\nIN THE MATTER of Sublots 69 and\n70,   Township   14,  Lot  1237,  Group\nOne, Kootenay District, Map X70.\nProof having hoen filed in my office\nof the loss of Certificate of Titla No.\n2970-1 to the above mentioned lands,\nin the name of Aaron Kuhn and bearing date the 21st February, 1916. I\nhereby give notice of my Intention at\nthe expiration of one calendar month\nfrom the first publication hereof t\u00ab\nissue to the said Aaron Kuhn a fresh\nCertificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having ant\ninformation with reference to such lost\nCertificate of Title is requested to\ncommunicate with thc undersigned.\nDated at the Land Registry office,\nNelson, B. C, this 25th day of April\n1919. E. S. STOKES,\nDistrict Registrar o\u00a3 Titles.\nDate of first publication, April 28,\n1919. \t\nTENDERS.\nTenders wanted for pasturing privileges on Golf Club property.   Apply\nC. W. APPLEYARD.\nlow cost process for tlie treatment of\nthe low grade Hossland ores.\"\n(Cheers.)\n\"The research 'department at tho\nsmelter is worKlng hard attempting to\nfind ways to reduce the cost of treating metals. We will reduce Schedule\nIt as soon as possible.\"\nA Cheerful Address.\nIt. W. INnton delivered a cheerful\naddress regarding the possibilities nf\nmanufacturing in the Kootenay area,\nlie said that there are many resources\nis the district. \"It is a darned good\ncountry; business is good and is go\nIng to be a darned sight better.'\n(Cheers.)\nMr. H'inton told of tlie fight which\nthe Nelson pioneers had to make to\ndevelop their businesses, and of their\ndetermination to fight on to success\nin the future. Speaking of the ex\nports of the district, Mr. Kinton said\nthat the greatest ono was the soldi\nwho were sent away to thc war ond\nare now returning. Ho said' that ho\nlooked to tiiem ns a factor In future\ndevelopment here. He said that they\nwould not hack thc Calgnry O. 13. U.\nradicals.\n\"A man must he an awful coward\nwho does not believe that we have a\nexcellent  future   before  us,\"  snid   M\nHinton In closing.\nNelson  Not Stingy.\nAlexander   Leith   declared   that   i\nspite of its faults tho C. I'. It. is\nfactor   to  which   all   Canadians   look\nwitli pardonable pride.\nAddressing tlie visitors from the\nsurrounding country, the speaker said\nthat Nelson business men are not\nstingy and that thoy deslro to cooperate with the business men of the\nnearby towns in their efforts to develop the country.\nThe toastmaster proposed a toast\nto ''The Sister Cities,\" to which the\nmayor of Revelstoke replied In a brief\nspeech of greeting.\nEast  Kootenay.\nPresident Sprowl of thc Crnnhrook\nboard of trade spoke from lho standpoint of East Kootenay. Ho said that\nno part of Canada had been harder hit\nhy the war, but It had not failed lho\nnation. It went over the top both\nwith the loans and in response to the\ncall for soldiers.\nHe said the Cranbrook board of\ntrade Is in a flourishing condition.\nThe rod and gun club is stocking tho\nrivers and streams with fish. He extended an invitation to the Nelson\nmotor enthusiasts to visit Cranbrook,\nwhere they have an enthusiastic auto\nclub.\nMining and lumbering is being developed throughout the entire district.\nTheio i^ nf unemployment in the East\nKootenay, but there is a crying need\nfor men. The speaker suggested that\nmen he brought from the coast to fill\nthe many vacant positions.\nIn closing ho expressed a welcome\non hehalf;of his townsmen to Mr.\nBeatty.\nThe Greater Honor.\nNoble Jtmna of Trail, president of\n'. i \u25a0\nthe assoeiated hoards of trade of eastern British, Columbia, said he considered It an honor to be able to welcome\nand congratulate .Mr. Ueatty, moro\nparticularly as he is the first Canadian to lie elected president of* tho\nC. p. R. (Cheers.)\nMr. Hlnns stated that bo believed\nit was a greater honor to bo elected\npresident of the Canadian Pacific than\nto become premier of Canada, In thnt\na man might bocome premier by a\npolitical fluke, whereas to become\npresident of the C. P. R. he must possess tried executive ability of ilic\nhighest order. He prophesied that\nAir. Beatty would uphold the expectations of the directors of his company\nand of the Canadian people as well.\n(Cheers.)\nThe speaker said he trusted that\nthe new president of the C. V. R. would\ngive more time and attention to thc\ninterior of eastern British Columbia\nthat It had received In the past. Mr\nMinns told Mr. Beatty that if he would\nloojc up tho records ho would find\nthat -lis district had done more to\nwin the war than any other section.\nA toast to the ladies was proposed\nby C. A. Lafferty and replied to by\nFred W. Sterling.\nThe Press\nHarry Wright proposed 11. toast (0\n\"Tho Press,\"co,ipMng therewith the\nnames of C. !\u25a0'. Hayes, editor of Tlie\nCreston Review, ami II. YV. Power,\neditor of The  Kootennian,   Kaslo.\nMr. Hayes expn-ssicd the appreciation he felt at heing honored as one\nof tho respondents of that loast, and\not how hard it was lo do just lee\nto the merits of the press within Hie\nlimited time at ids disposal. Reference was made lo the great record\nachieved by the press of Canada\nthroughout. Ihe war crisis; of how it\nhad assisted materially in furthering\npatriotic effort and in steadying the\npublic during times of stress and of\nuncertainty. Nelson and the surrounding district was fortunate in\nhaving a publication of such merit\nas Tlie Daily Xews. The situation in\nlhat respect was unique, because\n'there was no other city of similar\nsize    in    llie    Dominon    possessing    a\ndaily paper; and he would go further\nand add lhat there were many cities\nfour or five limes as large Which did\nnot possess a paper us good as the\nNelson  Daily  News.\nAnd with regard to the weekly\npapers of West Kootenay, he could\ntruthfully say that they did not need\nto take off their hats to any others.\nHe hod heard something that evening about fruit, particularly big\napples and strawberries mentioned by\nMr. Annable. He was present at Hie\nbanquet as representing the famous\nCreston Valley, Ihe garden spot of\nBritish Columbia, and promised the\nguest of the evening that the next\ntime he visited this territory, if ho\nwould arrange to have his special\nstop at Creston in daylight, the\nspeaker would see to it that Mr.\nBeatty should have some real man-\nsize apples and strawberries.\nNothing Left to Say\n11. YV. Cower expressed himself as\nbeing at a disadvantage with regard\nto having anything to say. Other\nspeakers preceding him had been\ngiving utterance to what ho had in\nmind ever since earlier in the evening lie had been informed by the\ntoastmaster lhat lie would be expected to respond to a toast to Hie\npress, lie had in view some things\nto say about the Canadian Pacific\nrailway, hut Mr. Uinns had said\nthem. Then -Mr. Anstle and other\nspeakers had got away with a few\nof his ideas in regard to other matters, including Mr. Warren, who had\nvery ably put inlo words just what\nhe would have said about The Con-*\nsolidated. On lop of that, Mr. Hayes\nhad already stolen his thunder in\nregard to the press, so that under\nthe circumstances, oratorically speaking, he found himself without a leg\nto stand on. As a representative of\nan outside district at that gathering\nhe extended congratulations to Mr.\nBeatty. It was fitting that upon\nthis, the occasion o\u00a3 the first visit\nto this section of the new president\nof the Canadian Pacific, he should\nbe thus greeted, hut hoped that at\na later date Mr. Beatty might have\na little more time at his disposal in\nwhich to visit other parts in West\nKootenay.\nNelson's  Improvement\nHe desired also to congratulate the\nNelson hoard of trade on the manner In which this function had been\nhandled, reflecting as it did credit\non the entire district and showing\nhonor to the guest of the evening.\nIn conclusion, ho wi-died to point out\nhow Nelson seemed io bo Improving.\nAway back in the early days Kaslo\nand  Nelson  quarreled  a  good  deal;\ntoday, there wns a, cordial spirit of\nco-operation between the two. Attention was called lo Hie banquet\nmenus, uuon Ihe front of which was\na beautiful picture\u2014a view taken\nnear Kaslo\u2014labeled underneath, \"On\nKootenay Lake. Britisli Columbia.\"\nIf this affair had taken place ten\nyears ago it would not have been\ndesignated that way; It would have\nread, \"Scene on Kootenay Lake, near\nNelson,  B.C.\"\nsmoke   \"Player's  Navy Cut\"\nCigarettes    wrapped   ||] Till Foil.\n\u00ae-\nAT THE THEATRES\n<i>\u2014i \u00ae\nEileen Sedgewick, tho beautiful star\nof many hurricane pholodramas, has\nbeen selected lo support Kddie Polo\nIn \"The Lure of the Circus,\" a Universal serial, which comes to the Gem\ntheatre on Friday and Saturday.\nThis fearless girl won her reputation lor valor when she starred In\nmany of the earlier Universal animal\npictures. Her mastery over animals\nand her amazing lack of fear thrilled\nphotoplay spectators all over tho\nworld.\nAmong the talented actress* most\nfamous screen achievements mny bo\nmentioned \"Man and Beast,\" an nni-\nmal picture said to approach the current serial. \"Tlie Lion's Claws\" in\ngreatness. Following daring work in\nthis pacture she appeared in \"Quick\nTriggers,\" a picture directed by Harry\nharvey, and in Murdock MacQuur-\nrle's ihree-reeler, \"Naked Fists.\"\nonfirmed   Man,   isn't\nmctly.     Nobody   ha.\nanything  he's said.\"\nWhen You Buy\nEnvelopes You\nHave to Consider Quality\nand Price\nIt Is upon Hint basis that The\nDaily News Job Department purchases its stock ot envelopes\ntrom tbo manufacturers.\nIt carries thc largest and most\nvnriec] stock ot envelopes in tho\nInterior of British Columbia.\nThey range from the expensive to the cheaper grades.\nAll are exceptional value for\ntho money.\nThe cost per thousand In five\nor ten thousand lots is always\nvery much lower than the price\nfor a single thousand.\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nThe Home of Good Printing\nNELSON, B. C.\nNOW THAT THE WAR 18\nOVER\nCatling\nCards\nwill b\u00ab more generally used th\u00bbn\nfor five years.\nA calling card is a sool I emblem which tells its own story.\nTo tell it correctly, the calling\ncard must be well printed on tht\nhighest grade of card.\nSend in your order to\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nThe Home of Good Printing\nNelson, B. C.\n PAbE tIGHT m.\nIHE DAILY NEWS1\nSATURDAV, MAY 24, 1911.\nUNEQUALED FOR GENERAL U8E\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Salts Agent,\nNelson, B. C.\nCars supplied to all railway polnta,\nRIDE IN NEW CARS\nKerr's Jitney\nALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE\nNIGHT OR DAY\nPhone 491. Kerr Apts.\nTHE ARK\nPolice! Braces,- pr, 50c: Bungalow\nAprons, SI.00 Boy's Hercules\nHose, 814 tu 3!c. 60C pr.; Laelle'S*\nChamoisette Gloves, pr.. 55c:\nMen's-Overalls, SI.85 to S2.25\npr.; Men's Work Shirts, SI.00 to\n$1.75 Prints, light grounds, 25c\nyel.; Ladies' Panama Hats, 90c;\nCelt-Is' Dresden Hair Ribbon, 25C\nanel 35c yd.; Enamel Wash Boards,\n85c; Brooms, S1.10; Inlaid Lin-\neeleum, 31.90 square yd.; Chintz\nfeir Curtains, 45c lo 85c per yel.;\n26-lncp Su|t Cases, with two straps\naround, S3.75.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 65 L 606 Vernon 8b\nTheroz\nFuel Cubes\nFor Economical\nCooking and\nHeating\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nEDIQON PHONOGRAPHS\nMall orders filled promptly.\nPHONE II\nFISHERMAN'S SPECIAL\nTO TAGHUM\nRussell's Jitney\nWll leave corner Hudson's Hay, Run-\nday mornings, First trip 7.15. Special\nrates. (Phone ...17-111.)\nHome Sites\nCheap\nWo havo for sale eight small\nblocks oC Kind adjoining Nelson\ntown site, containing 1% to 3 acres\napiece, suitable for making homes\ncloso to the city.\nH. & M. BIRD\nPURE OLIVE OIL\nin Convenient Sizes\nFor Your Lettuce or Salad\nOLD PRICES\nSmall Boftle, French   30\nMedium Bottle, French  60\nLarge Bottle, Spanish   $1.15\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW\nGroceries and Dry Goods.\nAutomobiles\nFOR HIRE\nPhone 35\nAt Any Hour, Day or Night\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULT!\nBaby Harie Osborne\nAND THE\nLittle Black Kiddo\nIn a sure euro for Unit grouch.\nHANDS UP!\nDOLLY VACATION\nBRITISH  GAZETTE\nONE  REEL COMEDY.\nA GREAT DEAL\ndepends on the size and shape of\nyour lenses, liy using an edge-\ngrinding machine we are in a\nposition io make each little variation in tlio size and shape of\nthe lenses we make for you, lhat\nwill assure, you of lenses which\nare l-.XACTr.-Y what your eyes\n:tcods.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nSpecialist   in   Optics\nHides\nPELTS, AND FURS\nScrap Iron and Metals, Rubber\nJ. P. Morgan\nCorner Baker and  Stanley  Streets\nNELSON, B. C.\nWhen shipping fieiffl lull address.\nJohn Daly of Ymir\nWishes to announce to his friends\nthat he is now doing business in the\nold stand on Baker Street, Nelson,\nknown as tho\nCabinet Cigar Store\nMAIL  ORDERS  ATTENDED  TO\nPROMPTLY\nSmoking Tobacco, Snuff, Pipes and\nFull   stock   of   Cigars,   Cigarettes,\nOther Smokers' Supplies.\nJOHN   DALY\nSmall boys were teasing Rodger\nSchcrin, un old man ot Centralia, l'a.\nHe threw a stone which killed a III-\nyear-old boy playing baseball near hy.\nSee\n\"The Lure\nCircus\"\nof\nthe\nThe Greatest Film\nShow on Earth\nFeaturing\nRECKLESS, PASHING\nEDDIE\nPOLO\nSens;.tional Aerlallst and old-\nItinie Circus Star, supported by\nbeautiful Eileen Sedgwick and\nhuge circus cast of world-\nrenowned  Circus Stars.\n\u2014lho genuine circus acts\nhy celebrated Artists\u2014the\nthrilling events exactly as\nunder the hig tops\u2014lho fight\nbetween big business and honest\nmen\u2014llie biggest, most sensational film show on earth, at\u2014\nSee\nWISE FISH FEAR\nI\nLuck   is   With   Majority  of   Fishermen\non Empire Day\u2014Trouble Started\nat   Midnight.\nLuck Was with a majority of the\nfishermen who spent their Empire day\nholiday on the lake. Several excellent\nciitehes were brought into tin- city on\nthe Crow Boat last night, while\nlaunches arrived with other lucky nim-\nrodrf.\n\"Hut say,\" said one fisherman, when\nasked about his, \"do you know I had\nIhe best'luek on Satitiilay., Until\nnboiit midnight Saturday night everything wns lovely, hut from that time\non there was not a man in our party\nwho had any luck.\n\"We couldn't figure it out at first\nbut thought that the gathering clouds\nmight have something to'do with It,\nso. we changed bait and tried again.\nThings went from had to worse when\nwe got out on the lake Sunday morning. The fish refused to look at our\nlines.    Once ih a while we would sec\nfish jump clear of the water and\ncast a frightened look' in the direction\nof our boat, nnd then start off in tho\nopposite direction as fast ns possible.\n\"Wo tried to figure out those looks.\n1 couldn't get the idea for a time, but\ntill of a sudden it came to me. What\ndo think was wrong? Do you know,\nwo had a strange man'with us and\nthose fish knew it and were afraid\nthat he might be a spy for the \"drys\"\nout trying to get the goods on us so\nhe could have us pinched, and they\ndidn't want to be In any boat in whicli\na fu.SK like that would occur.\n\"Good  night.\"\nA seventeen and a half pound salmon and a number of char and trout\n'were caught by a party made up of\n15(1 Couture, E. Daucette, A. L. Choquette, Eugene Montreil and A. Gedon,\nDaucette caught the big salmon.\nK. Hudson und Howard Bush caught\nfour salmon and ;i number of char\nand trout between Proctor and Ainsworth.\nOdteM'P\nTHE  HOUSEKEEPER'S  FRIEND\nAlso use O'Ceflar Oil for polishing your\nfurniture.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co J Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL NELION, B. C,\nm\nand Personal j\nAmong tho guests at tho Strathcona\nlast night was H. Harvey, of Spokane.\nE. G. Montgomery, of Kimberley,\nwas registered at tho Nome last evening.\nO, McDonald, or Fernie, came into\nthe city last night and was a guest at\ntlio Strathcona.\nF. C. Towufihend, of Trail, came in\non the Crow IJoat last night and registered at tho Hume.\nD, C. AVilson brought home a bos-\nSell Your\n:    \u25a0-.- j  '\nRags\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment will pay\n5 cents a pound for\nclean cotton rags.\nTo the Citizens of Nelson:\nASK  YOUR   DEALER  FOR   McDONALD'S CANDY, JAMS AND\nJELLIES.\nARE YOU SATISFIED TO LET YOUR DEALER SEND YOUR\nMONEY OUT OF TOWN FOR GOODS WHICH SHOULD BE\nBOUGHT AT HOME?\nANY CITY  IS JUST  WHAT  ITS  CITIZENS  MAKE  IT.\n\"LET  WELL   ENOUGH   ALONE\"   BELONGS  TO   THE   HORSE\nCAR  DAYS.\nTHE  MAN   LOOKING  FOR  SOMETHING   BETTER  GAVE  US\nTHE  WIRELESS.\nTHE BUYER THAT INSISTS ON  McDONALD'S GOODS GETS\nTHE  BEST AND HELPS  NELSON.\nBOX  767.\nFURS\nPHONE 106.\nG. GLASER\nGerrard Lumber Company, Ltd.\nGERRARD,  B.C.\nLocal Office:  Annable Block, Nelson, B.C.\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nMountain Hardwood, Cedar\nand Pine Lumber\nPrompt attention to orders for Mining Timber.\nDo not forget there Is a discount of 10% allowed oft all work\nmaking Up, remodelling: nnd repairing\u2014during Summer months, excepting dressing und mounting o\u00a3 skins. Guarantee,? high class Furs\nkept in stock. Best prices paid feir Raw Nkins. Green Hear Skins\nfor mounting not accepted.\nManufacturing Furrier\nNELSON,  B.C.\nEye Trouble ?\nVery often its's the cause of indigestion and nervous ailments. Good\nGlasses, prescribed by an expert, is\nthe remedy.\nJ. J. WALKER\nJEWELER  AND  OPTICIAN\nWE HAVE OPENED OUR\nIce Cream\nPARLORS   FOR   THE   SUMMER\nICE CREAM OF\nPre-War Quality\nmade of pure cream and contains\n25 per cent butterfat.   \\\nChoquette Bros.\nBaker Street,\nNELSON,\nB.C.\n160 Acres Land  For Sale\nHalf mile from lake at Rlondel,\n5 acres cleared and planted, 135\ntrees five and seven years old;\nStrawberries nnd Raspberries; 7\nacres slashed. Log cabin on property.   Price, $15.00 per acre, cash.\nD. A. McFarland\nINSURANCE REAL ESTATE\nGREENHILL COAL\nRoom 6 K.W.S. Block.       Phone 49\nWILLOW POINT JITNEY\nCar leaves Dave Wade's daily at\n9:45 a. m..; Wednesdays, 12;45, Special\nfor fishermen, 3:*1G Saturday night.\nFare fiOc.\nP. HALLIWELL.\nkot of trout from Beaslcy,\" where he\nspent Saturday fishing.\nCorp. Douglas Nagle, nf tho 190th\nUniversity Battalion, will arrive Ih the\nfeity tonight on the Crow Boat.\nMr. and Myfl. R. V. Ramsden and\nfamily, with Mr. and Mrs. W. Holmes\nmd family, spent Saturday fishing at\nTaghum. They made a good catcli of\nfish.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nFernle draft beer at Club hotel. Big\nschooner 10c, (2683)\nHugh  W.  Robertson  buys  Victory\nbonds. (2684)\nNELSON LODGE No 23, A. F. & A. M.\nMeeting on Wednesday, May 28th,\nat 7:30 p. m. sharp. A cordial welcome extended to sojourning brethron.\n'   (291S)\nDry Lime-Su!phu|\nWe   have   sold out   of  Lime' _\nSulphur Solution, but have got 111\nshipment   of   the Dry   Lime-Sulpl\nin  10-lb.  tins.\nThis Is soluble In cold water,.\nthe ten pounds will make 135 gallej\nof Summer strength spray.\nAlso  have \"Black  Leaf 40,\"  BI\nstone and Arsenate of Lead.\nThe Braokman-Kerl\nMilling Co., Limited!\nKodaks arid Films\nWE HAVE A COMPLETE FRESH STOCK\nLeave us your Film for Development and get the best results.\nWe Can Now Supply\nDJERKISS PERFUME, FACE POWbER and TALCUM\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY DISPATCHED.\nGity Drug Ob.\nJ. H. ARGYLE, Manager.\nPHONES-Day 34, Night 116. P. O. BOX 10S3\nI have three\nImproved Farms\nin   Kootonay   district   which   will\nmake .\nComfortable  Homes\nFOR\nReturned Soldiers\nOnly 10% cash  required from\nqualified farmers\nWrite for particulars or call and\nsee\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNELSON, B. C.\nSALMO\nAUTO STAGE\nLeaves Great Northern Station\nat 9.30 a.m. for Sheep Creek, to\nQueen Mine, Nugget and Motherlode, or to any other point.\nInquire for \"Rosie.\"\nA. Higginbotham\n(Expert Optical Service.)\nGRADUATE\nOPTICIAN  AND OPTOMETRIST\nK. W. C. Block, Nelson.\nTho Xeelson Rowing club will hold\na flannel dance at thc Hume hotel on\nTuesday; June 3rd. Tickets 51.00 a\ncouple.   Johnson's orchestra.      (2919)\nTho monthly dance of the Get-\nTogether club will be held Friday,\nMay 30, in Eagle hall. Dancing 9\no'clock. Tickets 75c. Johnson's orchestra.   Refreshments. (2014)\nFresh Columbia dry batteries just\narrived. Howe Electric Co., Opera\nHouse block. (2778)\nFor Rent\nSMALL FURNISHED HOUSE ON CEDAR STREET  $17.50\nMODERN SEVEN-ROOMED HOUSE ON VICTORIA STREET $22,51)\nSIX-ROOMED COTTAGE ON WATER STREET  $12.00\nFIVE-ROOMED HOUSE ON YHE CORNER OF WATER AND\nWILLOW  STREETS *15*n\u00b0\ni  also have a purchaser for a  Five-roomed  House, but it must\nbe close in. >\nCharles P. JVlcHarcly\nINSURANCE        J       EUEt       ;    ;*\"' ItBkili feSTATB\ni\nu\nMrs. Ewarl's and Mrs. Peebles' circle will hold a joint bake sale -and\nafternoon tea Friday, May 30, in tho\nbasement o\u00a3 St. Paul's church, 3 to C.\nDon't tail to como. (2027)\nSKIG.-GENERAL   PLEADS\nFOR  RETUhNED   MAN\nTORONTO.\u2014\"This is a peculiarly\ns;ul case, and is one, I think, which\nshould be handed over to the soldiers'\ncivil repatriation league to lot them\nsoo what tlioy can do\/' saiu Brlg,-\nlien. Gunn when Sergt. Ernest W.\nKilt appeared before Judge ,Coats-\nwbi'th  for sentence for bigamy.\n\"Jf you give him a caance I will\nlook after him and report to you from\ntime .to time ns to his progress.\" He\nwas allowed to go on suspended sentence,\nFitt, a South African veteran, left\na wife and seven children in Wlug-\nham when he went to France, where\nlie was wounded at tho.Somme, and\nlost a leg at Vimy. On his return he\nmot a young woman in Toronto. The\ndoctors report him to be suffering\nfrom shock. A charge of non-support\nis waiting hearing at Wingham.\nSOME LATE STYLE HINTS.\nIt is saiti thc very latest New York\nfad is drosses of sateen. They bid fair\nto bo even more popular tfian were\ntlie calico ones of last summer.\nMonkey hair hats, though quite the\ntiling in Paris, are said to be unbecoming to many women, especially to\nthose with very light or gray hair.\nBrown, in a soft, dull tone, is a\nstrong rival of black for evening\nfrocks. Thero is hardly an evening\nfrock, however, but that shows at least\nu touch of black.\nA smart new stylo is the slip-on\nblouse with apron front, adorned with\ndarting little pockets and wrist-length\nbishop sleeves set into largo armlVoles.\nA narrow sash girdle holds the blouse\nin about thu waist.\nAbout the greatest drawback to a\nman's happiness is himself.\nWm. A. Price, wealthy coal operator, convicted at Baltimore of selling\nbituminous coal for $2.96 instead of\nt-lio fixed price of .$2 a ton, was sentenced to til) days and fined \u25a0$'--,*\">ou,\nTelling\nEverybody\nTlio wires of the world flash\na message. -      *\nEveryone who can read gels\nthat message\u2014 \\\nFrom the newspapers.\nThere is no other universal\nmedium for the news of the\nday,\nAn advertiser has a message\nabout his product.\nHo wants to tell all Ihe people\nin ono city, or in twenty cities\nor in ono thousand cities. In\nono stato or in all of them.\nThis ho does hi the newspapers\u2014the only universal\nmedium of advertising to the\nconsumer.\ntSEATRL\nTODAY  and  TOMORROW\nEvenings at 7.15 and 0.00\nBig\nRollicking\nComedy\nShow\nSHIRLEY  MASON\nand  ERNEST TRUEX |\nin\n\"come on in\" ,;_;\nA  Splendid   G-part  Comedy  of|\n' the Training Camp.\nFATTY\nARBUCKLE\nil\n\"THE SHERIFF\" I\n2-part Grouch Killer.\ni\nHAROLD LLOYD\nin\n\"THE BIG IDEA\"\nOne-part Mirth Producer,\nBRITISH OFFICIAL GAZETTE*\nSOME SHOW\"\nWEDNESDAY\nNorma Talmadqe in\n\"HER ONLY WAY\"\nand\nFIRST EPISODE OF\n\"THE LIGHTNING!\nRAIDER\"\nWith PEARL WHITE\nSave Stationery\nBy Using\nScratch Pads\nSuitable for notes, figuring and\nsimilar purposes.\n15c  Per POUND.\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nNELSON, B. C.\nHoleproof\nHosiery]\n\\\n50 Cents a Pair\"\nBUY THEM  BY THE 'BOX' OF HAIeF-DOZEN\nColors: White, Black, Navy, Brown, Tan, Grey.\nSpecial Value In a Cashmere finish Hose In Black only.   All sizes\n35c,\n3 pairs for\n$1.00\nSee our line of Wear-well Men's Hose In Black at 50 cents pair.\nJust the right weight for now.\nEmory ft Walley\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. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1919_05_26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0389209","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","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"}]}}