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Q* FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 7, 1920\n|      THE WEA1\nERMAN ECONOMIC\nCOMMISSION READY\nPARIS, May G.\u2014Dr. Mayer, tho\njttthan. charge d'affaires, called on\n&mler Billerand today and in-\n',|*med him that the .German ccon-\nTpc- commission, which is to con-\n; With a. similar body of French\nJ; Paris at an early date, will ar-\nwq in tbe French capital in 10 or\n\".days.V. -.\n[^int Committee Reports to\nHouse of Commons With\nmflm ,   ,w-'\nImterprise to cm\n1    MItLION AND HALF\nCompetition Will Be Held to\niecure   Designs   for   the\nJmTTAWA,       May       6.\u2014(Canadian\ni.)\u2014-Memorial?       to .\\    Canada's\n|3._ting dead will bo erected on eight\nKtoWc .battlefields\" in   Franco   and\nAnders, ,if  the\" ^commendations ,o\u00a3\nspecial,   committees     on   \u25a0 war\nImorials* is   adopted,   as   submitted\nJ parliament today.   Representatives\n' Canada's   returned     soldiers,   of\nRiadian   colleges,     and    architects'\nniisties,    and    government   officials,\n].e   completed   their   investigations\nsubmitted   their   proposals   for\n\u25a0^r memorials.\n\u25a0with  tho. proposals are the  report\njBrig. Gen. II. T. Hughc.% on mili-\nfib.,.. sites,   and- of   prof.   Percy   K,\nttbW professor   of   architecture ut\nJGilP university, .on' the   proposed\"\n..petition in which designs^ will bo,\nIted,. and   fi-ora   whtgh   the  prize\nign will be eixrr.ed out.   Tho total\nt of. the work is estimated roughfy\nEight Sitos Selected\nlie. 'conritnittee \u25a0 hits selected eight\nis for the memorials, in' Belgium\nis. at -.St- Julien; Crest Farm,\nischendaele, and at Hill 60, Ob-\nVatory Ridge, havo been accepted\ngifts from the Belgian govern-\ntit '\n_>;site a Botirlbn \"Wood bus been\nepted as' a gift' fro^i Cbmte 'De\n.ncqueville, mayor of Bourlon, ahd\nSmother sites at Hill 145, Vihiy\nje, and at the. Cross Roads at\ny; at Courcele'tte; -and Elospitai\n_d between Caix and LaQuesnel,\ne been.acquired by th^ committee\n\\ total cost of $1,500. '\nha,, committee x-ecommends that\n;.; Gem Hughes proceed ovi.r_.eH8\nonce to institute ' preparations\nconstruction, especially'''of tlie\nKfls; which will have'to bis built\njjfour of tho sites;which* are \u00abff\n1 highway. It1 js alfeii recbmmertdGd\n\u25a0;t $26p,000. be provided id tlvp\nRiiem^ntary estimates this session\nIjcover the cost: .of roads, and of\n^ competition fo\u00a3 .designs. ,.\n15 LEFTl\nI tson Pleads Guilty to\n_Mer Charge; Sentence\nHoliday c-\nIS ANQEIaBB, May 6.\u2014B.tu'rn-\nto tlio county .jai) lato tQflay,\n\u2022 pleading; guilty: to an\"'Indict.\n; chareln_'\".lm with tho'mm*-\n6E Nina Lrro Dcrlon.y, ono of\nWive..' ho la alleged to - have\n1, \"Walt'ov An'drbw Watson found\n(is1 cell a* large bunch of Rod,\n)\/ left by ir. woman who .'rode in\nMitt lirooM_(ne, but who deoiinod\nH'9 her nnme. ...\natfion id the subject of. ft, cojv\nice by.'.District. Attorney Thomas\n,\/TJVoIvln, \u25a0 rrtljpr county qfflcitils,\n';}. Mo.g.n Mjvrmadulsc,''Wat-\ni attorney, it .-wo.il announced,\nrc'ourt said goiUoncer?; would' he\n| s.cd Monday.\njp valueaugrSnteij\n\u00bb   Sot   on ^participation.   Certificates Ada's Twenty Million\nDollars   .., \u2022   \u25a0\nInNIPKG, !$iiy C\u2014-Tho value of\nStoba's   wljbat   ordp.   .has    beoh\nhonted roq'gHly ;ut ?2 0,000,000, \\)y\n[announcenjefit  of   the  Canadian\nIt   board  ith&t   the   participation\nfcjeatos.   certificates     wo^tld,.   be\nllf'at least 40  cents  per Ijushel.1\ntotal value of Manitoba's , whea^\nis estimated at $118,850,400, tak-\nja#)a.. basis ..t^e bvty&ib. ^u& \u00b0t\n'ppr buahei'to the; farmers, iri-\nrig tho, partldipiVtion, certificates.\n\u2022\/ear   M^Wtaba ,. had   \"2,11*8,000\n;j.  In .wheat,  and   the  latest  r*i-\nji.'. given' dnbw.  ah  average of 17\nLONDON,    May    (I.\u2014An   armistice\nhas been concluded between the Russians  and  Japanese  at  Vladivostok,\naccording    to   p.    wireless    mcssager|\nreceived  from Moscow.\nTOKIO, May G.-\u2014Tho 14th Japanese\ndivision on April 29 defeated 4000'\nbalsheviki in the vicinity of Khabarovsk, in Siberia, near the Man-\nchurlan frontier, it wAs seml'-offi-\ncially announced  today.\nA . dispatch received in London April\n27 said that a Russian firm in Tlen-\nTsin, China, had erceived a cablegram announcing the annihilation qf\na Japanese division in tho Khabarovsk district. Aggressive actions by\nthe Bolsheviki at Khabarovsk and\nVladivostok were given by Vthe\nJapanese command as the cause\"\nof tho scizprp of. \u25a0Vladivostok i\" April\n!>y   Japanese^ troops.    ; . .,-'.\u201e-.\nmill\nSpread. of Strike \u2022 Hastens\nGovernment's Scheme of\nJoint Control |\nALL INTERESTED\nPARTIES ON BOARD!\nCompanies Would Operate;\nBut Under Direction of\nCouncil\nWill Ask Government to.\nGuarantee Against Foreign\nManipulation       '\n, CHICAGO,, May fi.^lap.s for reestablishment of. an open market in\nwheat, following experation' of the\nWheat Guarantee act, on June 1,\n\\yiil be discussed Jiere tomorrow, at\na meeting of represent it Ives (of\nboard of trade, coiintry and terminal\nelevator associations, gtain buyers,\"\nexporters, am} bankers, called by\nJnlliis P.  Barnes,  wheat director\nThe open market, including trading in futures, was suspended early\nin the war, at tho request .of Hereof t Hooyer, and has never been\nrestored,, as the government guaranteed price for wheat remains in\neffect   until   June   1, \u25a0\nThe Chicago board of trade and\nother \u25a0\u25a0 exchanges - tIjroughout> th\u00a3\ncountry desire to, reiaume trading in-\nfutures, \"U is said, but wane assurance from the government to safe-\njruard- their market. They particularly wish, they state, governmental\nprotection \u25a0 agaiijst the pool of foreign governments, which has been\nbuying grain for export. Present\nexchange rules, forbid a corner in\ngrain In the United States, but unless tho government will give its\nsupport, the exchange men say,\nthere is .nothing to prevent foreign governments, through their\npool, manipulating the market, and\nunduly depressing prices, at tho\nexpense   .of  Iho   farmers.',\nThe only way this can he prevented the board of trade will toll\nMr.-Barnes, is for the United. States to notify^ the foreign governments that the embargo..section of\ntbe Lever .net will- be invoked, if\nnecessary, and that contracts executed in violation. of American laws\nwill he :m\\H\u00abea.        y '     \"\nPA\"RIS,'   May    6.\u2014The.   strike    of!,\nrallwaymon, which has bow extend-*]\ned  to  the  miners and. dockers,  and.\nto   the   metal  worlcers  in.the  Paris,,\ndistrict,   has caused   the  government;!\nlb  hasten  its  promised  plan   to  re-'\norganisation    of    tl\u00bbc    railways,    as\nCo recast in \u2022 th^. chamber .on Feb.  i'4\nlast.'   It i,s considered  that this plan,!\ngiving  Oflnli-Vl _;9f. tho  transport*Hon.;\nsystems * to   a   committee   rppresont-\niug   all   .interests,   will ...furnish    the\nprobable   basis   for  a . settlements of\ntlie   strike,    which    is   a   continuation of tho May Day  demonstration,\nwith   nationalization  of   the  railways\nas its chief objective.\n, Council's Composition J\nUnofficial details of* i\\ya govern-^\nment's project showt tho\u00b1; it provides\ntop a controlling covMicil,. composed\nuf delegates representing tha .technical, .ajid administrative perstennel ,of\ntlio railways, tho'l workmen, l^e\nchan^bcrs of commerce, parliament,\n4tid  tho  government.\nj Under the plan, this council would\nhave ai.thorlty to order improve-,\nipents, and, If necessary, havo the\nwork done at the expense of tho\ncompanies. The council's control\nwould cover operation of the rOads,\nqod unification of oporatlng inoth-\nqtls, such as timotables- and stand-\nard^atlon of rolling stock am* signals, and in general Its authority\nwould be absolute.\n\u201e The companies would retain and\noperate their properties, but they\nwould merely be managers.\nintiffs.\n..u\nrati\nis st\nm$ ijjtt my...\nis Mrkl Mmwk He\n|y^^ l^ioiis ?bard\nMeeting on Soldiers1 Wives\n' MONTREAIj, May 6.\u2014Under a St.\nJohn, ,N_B.,-itotc., the Montreal * star\ntonight, carrjes the, fpllowing statement from Ge* Hy'.'ia. McLoan,; requesting .the. resignation pf Col.\nPeek froni' the pensions committee,\nfipd the causes ,whiqii ;|ed m>j;o it:\n'X im very s,0!-*ry t^.ajt Col. Peck\nhas seen fife to resign from the\npensions board, \u25a0 and thtit ho has\n\u25a0*mismiderstop4 whO-l JMsifiicr before\nthat; pomm|tiee. , The .oflicial ,^tono-\ngrapher's' report, siiows what I said,\nIt wn> that 'Most of the privato soldiers who married servant girls were\nin that clays who were earning their\nown living before.'\nEmployed   Women\n\"I am sorry that I did not make\nmy meaning clearer, bu.t \u25a0 my J^nten\ntion ih. .'referring to *sorvanti girls\nwas merely to* mention'''them as\nillustrative of.the ejasi-f..independent,\nipdustrious 'youp^ wbmeQ \u25a0whQ.,Jiad\nbeen; accustomed'; to.. oarn|ng tpeir\nOWT,.iiv(it8;>.. and who;,, Jt ''not burdened by pbildren, should still. bo* >ble\nto contribute to. their o\\y'n subRort.\nTn saying that, 'it, is my opinion that\n\\t wo]4ld bo -bolter 'for many' women\ntq \"have sbipo occupation'or Objective\nin \"life. I do. not |hink I am disparaging any individual, or suggesting  class  distinctions,...\n''When the, statement' referred to;\nv\/aa. mjide, J. wais oppbsjng, tho.'giving . of inc):e4sed . pensions, or full\n\u25a0pulsions, to'^ widows lless than 40\nyears, of age who . T^ere In good\ntyeijlth', able to work,j and: -without\nchlidrcn. My remarks have heen\nrrtisubder^tood, and |; have ' been\ncharged .Tiyith' stating that th*a majority of private^ soldiers' widows\nhad been gervan$,, girls., J, did not\nmake. that ^tjiigme^t,. and 'fcer-\ntainly never entertain^.SW-h an 'lljiea.\nit #is easy, for hearers.' to, mlsuftacr-\ns^apd, a\" statement', but fcbe \u25a0 official\nstenographer's report. ' is ' absolutely\n1 correct,\"\nf    .     ,   _   IX-.. \u2014 . ,-,\u2022\"_. \u25a0\u25a0i-!. 1*^ ..... pt\u2014^-_~\nAdmiral Tells Senate Com\nmittee He Advised Beware\nof British\nWASHINGTON, May 6.\u2014Admiral\nWilliam. S. Benson, war; time .chief\nqf transportation, told tho senate,\nnavaj Investigation comoiitteo today\nthat, both before and during the war,\nho had warned .Rear JVdm*r\u00a3- Sims\nnot to let his friendsbjii for the\nBritish uno*uly influence his official\nacts.\nAdmiral Benson said he could not\ndony that he had told Admiral Sims\nin. March, 1017, \"not to let the\nBritish .pull. ,the wool over, your\neyes;, we would as soon fight thorn\nas. the Germans,\" as* he could not\nreca.ll all tho details of ,the interview.' \u2022* \u25a0   \\\nThe witness did say, bowevcr, tha,t\nwrong interpretation had been\nplacod on the statement attributed\nto him by Admiral Sims, and he\nadded, as a result, be .v^l' been dono\n0} grave injustice. He' |d*inied that\nho wa\u00bb |n any. way, unfriendly to tho\nBritish. .' ,,   .      r\ni \"Ijow could you say that wo would\nas soon fight the' British .as the\nGermans?',' asked Cliairtnan Hale. \"1*^\n\"ikerely as a figure'of speech^;.^.\nimpress on him \\ the seriousnessr1 of\nl|is tt^sk,^ Was tho reply,1   _       \\\nLUIS ALL 10\n\u25a0 ', ,,    ...... .       \u25a0'   \u2022   .\nSeventy Thousand Acres\nPractically All Disposed\nof to Soldiers\nOTTAWAj, May 6.----Practically the\nwhole of tho .'...,(>(!(- acres of Indian\nreserve laiicfs acqyirod by the soldier\nsettlement board h^ve been \u25a0 sold to\nsoldier settlors. Thiere are, however,\nIp some of the resqryes,, a few farms\nto' bo disposed of. The government\npatd' the Indians from .llQ.-to, 920\nH,n acre for the land, and the soldlor\nsettlement board i disposed of it at\n(jost. ^\ni In the case ot tp^j Bobtail., reserve,\n0930 acres,'; the purchase price was\n$83,594. The board biooM.H off\ninfo farm units,, and \u25a0Appraised . each\nunit according .to-.its; comparative\nvalue, Tho \u2022 aggregate i solilhy price\nWas $83,696.64, being $11.64 in excess\nof the amount paid, the Indians for\ntho whole re'seryevj '*'\nCOAST SAW.QRS\nTO STRIKE TODAY\n;, VANCOUVER, May, 6,\u2014Sailors and\ndockhaiKls of British Columbia\ncoast and deep, ami ships will gu on\nstrike. Friday, .morning, to onforco\nhotter conditions, and . recognition of\ntheir uniqn negotiation^. -The waller\nout affeels -such, deep. >sea > vessels .as\nthe Canadian .government merchant\nmarine freighters'. The men. declare\nthe government marine has. been un\nfair for some time, because. it has\nrefused to pay. the wages demanded,\n, Jas. McGowau, superlnfondont \u25a0 engineer . for. the .Canadian -Pacific\nrailway,, stated .that the oil burning:\n^hips.. ^Yould- continue at* woritt the\noilers heipg-'.well, satisfied, with'their\nQ-psmsatf..._. .-2^__t___W^^\nLeague of Nations Refuses\nto Ask Small Nation to\nAssume Burden\nGREAT POWERS SHOULD\nPROVIDE THE FUJIDS\nThis Decision Taken Before\nSupreme  Council  Asked\n\u25a0_ United States to Act\n! WASHINGTON,. May 6.\u2014(Associated Press,)\u2014The- council of the,.\nLeague of. Nations has refused to\n^ffer a nfandate for Armenia to\niny power, unless certain requosted\nstipulations aro, embodied by the*\nsupreme council In the Turkish.\nSettlement. According to. official information, received hero today, the*\nil'eaguo council, in a.note to the-\nsupreme council, has Insisted that\nthe boundaries of Armenia bo fixed\n80 that . ;a free, port, preferably\nBatum. be accorded her; and that\nprotection ( for the defense of the.\nljew stafet be provided, before tho\nleague council will be free to ask\nah*, independent pqwer to assume\nmandatory, powers over the country.\nThe council of tlie league declares\nthat no state should be asked to'\nassume tho burdfen of finanfclng\"\nArmenia,' but suggests assumption\nqf joint financial responsibility by\ntjhe powers. If tho mandate should\ntyo offered to a small power, as\nhas^beon suggested, it was stated,\nprovision for an International mill- \u25a0\ntary forco should bo made, in\norder not to. Inflict an impossible\nburden upon a country incapable of\nbearing It. At the same time, such\nan international force, It was pointed out, would give to all the powers Hn .interest in tho Arm.mlan\nnation.\nI Tlie action in tho council of the\nleague, it was stated, was taken\nprevious to the decision of the\nsupreme council at San Remo, to\noffer the Armenian mandate to the\nUnited States. In be'auesting President Wilson to fix the Armenian\nboundaries, the supreme council is\nbelieved by officials to have shown a\ndisposition to comply with that part\nof the leaguo's suggestion concerning Armenia. The direct proffer of\na, mandate.-contwiiy to the. league's\nadvice, is taken as indicating, not\nso much a spirit qf antagonism to\nthe league 'by tho supreme council,\nas a desire to fill a political obligation to the United States, which the\nleague has felt incumbent upon it\nlp tho Turkish settlement,\nNATURAUZED\nWIVES AND\nCommons Debates Franchise\nBill But Fails to Pass Any\nClauses\nMARINE ESTIMATES\nUNDER CONSIDERATION\nMinister Announces Increase\nto Light Keepers and\nSailors\nOTTAWA, May 6.\u2014The house\nspent a douple \/ of hours on the\nFranchise \u25a0 bill this afternoon, but.\npo further plauscs were passed. .Debate turned on enfranchisement of\nwomen of alien enemy birth, naturalized by marriage to\\Britlsh wub-\nJocts. Under, the original bill subh\nWomen ->vere nol| given tho vote.\n^'ho government brought doyn an\namendment to meet their case, but\nit was criticized this afternoon as\nbeing 1 insufficient.\nW. D. Euler North Waterloo, who\nfirst raised the question in \u2022 tho\nhouse, declared that the government\nwas trying to reconcile two irreconcilable things, and moved that\nthe whole subsection ln question be\nstruck from the bill.\nThero was protest from the opposition members against the wife\nof. a British subject being required\nto go beforo a judgo to get certificates. Naturalization of the British\nsubject carries Iwth it naturalization of his wife, declared lucien\nCannon, Dorchester. \"You cannot\nhave the husband of one nationality,\ntho wife of another, and the children\nof a third nationality,\" he added.\nHWJiy should British subjepts,\"\nasked F. .,!. Johnston, Last Mountain,'1 * be required to travel many\nmiles to secure a certificate from\na judge?\"\nTo this Hon. Hugh Guthrio replied that the.government was willing to consider suggested changes\nIn  the   language  of  tho  amendment.\nTho   amendment   was   still   under\ndiscussion when the committee rose.\nHouse in Supply\nIn the evening.the house was in\nsupply   on   ^he   marine   estimates.\nThere was discussion of the sale\nof the ice breaker, J. I>. Hazen,. to\nRus\u00a7ia. * William, Duff, . fcunenberg\ndeclared ho understood from a-re\nliable source that Vlckers, Ltd., who\ncontracted to fuftply the vessel to\nthe Canadian government for $1000,-\n000, sold it to Russia for $^,600,000,\nthis being gross negligence on the\npart of tho present minister's pre\ndecessor.\nBut   Hon.   C.    C.   Ballantyne    ro\npiled   that   the     vessel     was     sole\nthrough the ijrftlsh government.    Hq\nfailed    to   see    where    tho    Vickers\ncompany  came  into  the   transaction.\nLater Mr. Ballantyne intimated\nthat substantial increases in salary\nwould be granted to lighthouse\nkeepers under the reclassification\nschedule. Increases under the reclassification would likewise be\ngranted to men employed on government  Bteamers.\nThe seamen, commented Mr. Duff,\nwere the poorest paid in Canada.\nThe house adjourned at 11 o'clock.\nFive Thousand Dollar Creation From United States\nMilliners Not Acceptable\nNEW YORK, May 6,\u2014President Dost\nchanel, of France, has refused' to\npermit Madame Deschanel tp accept\nthe' $5,000 hat offered her by 3,000\n^merlcan . milliners, The hat was\nrilade from material supplied '' by\neaph .of the 48 state.*?, and decorated\nwith nine paradise plumes, each\ncosting   $500.\nFourteen point* explaining why\nthe wife of tbe French, president\ncould not accept .the\" gift, were\ncabled by the secretary for the improvement of mliUnery . art In\nFrqnce, to the Millinery Jobersb association in session here- today. '    -\nSome of tho points aro: Bad precedent\u2014Paris only style center. The'\nUnited States took advantage of\nl?ar.ts during the war. Americans\ndangerously resourceful. Paris never\nproduced so expensive , a hat as\n$5,000. As big a .novelty as Eiffel\ntoWer. Such gift' is like carrying\ndoal to, Newoqatie. America shpuld\nhot give,away what it will not buy\u2014\nParadise. America has not a'rti,stic\na,thiosphore, nothing but.' colossal\nwealth. Rate of exchange gives\nAmerlbo, unfair advantage over Paris\ncreators.\nSTEAMER  ARRIVALS\nMetagama at Liverpool j from St.\nJohn.'\nCassandra at Glasgow from Portland, \"   .\nCorslcan at Montreal from London.\nST. LAWRENCE DEEPENING\n? NO#T BAY, Ont., May . 6.\u2014Strong\narguments in favor of the deepening\nof f the international, waterways to\n(he- sea, will be' presented here tomorrow, when the international waterways' commission resumes. ,\nCARRANZA ROtf ^\nDUE YESTERDAY\nt=EL PAZA, M^y 6,-i-Presi-\ndent Carranaa was scheduled\ntio * leave Mexicp. City for\nYera Cruz;soipe tiftifc'today,\naccording to a telegram received ', from Nogales, Ariz,,\ntonight by La Patriav a Spanish lahguage newspaper\npublished hete.\nWpPgW^lU^UWIfJI.Mi iri lll.ll. ,.111111,1)1^'\nLONDON, May 6.\u2014In a debate in\nthe -house of lords today concerning conditions in Ireland, Baron\nBirkonhead, lord high chancellor, on\nbehalf of the government, said it\nwas Intended to continue the policy\n(of giving to the Irish executive all\nI possible assistance and support. He\n' added that in no conceivable circumstances would the government\nconcede the demands of the Sinn\nFein, and that the proposal to invite Sinn Fein to another Irish convention was a proposal wholly out\nof contact with any living reality.\n\"Tho country will be well advised,\" Baron Birkenhead said, \"that\nwe are faced by a body of desperate, well organised and able men,\nbanded together to challenge British\nmight, and to shrink from no means\ncalculated to secure what they call\nself-determination and Independence.\"\nIrish   Republic  and  States\nLONDON,   May   6.\u2014Thu  subject   of\nlie    support    given    to    \"tho    Irish\nRepublic\"   by   some   persons   in   the\nUnited States came up in the house\ntoday. !\nHoratio Bottomley asked whether the government was aware that\nappeals for aid in tho sale of bonds\naddressod by Do Valera as \"President of the Irish Republic,\" were\n'still appearing in Americun news-\npapers, and were supported by the\ngovernors of various states and\nwhether Great Britalp proposed to\nmake representations to President\nWilson.\nMr, Bonar Law, replying ih behalf of the go'vornment, said it was\nunderstood that such appeals were\nstill appearing in certain American\npapers, but he was not in a posl-,\ntion to say whether they weto aup-\nported by any government. Great\nBritain, he added, was not prepared   to   make   any   representations.\nMr. Bottomley asked whethor Mr.\nLaw had seen the announcement\nthat already \u00a32,000,000 had heen\nsubscribed to this fund, and that\ntriumphant processions had gone\nthrough the principal streets of\nsome of tho cities* of tho United\nStates   In   celebratiori   of   tho   event,\n, ii|(iiin\nHopes to Be Able to Plunge\nDirectly Into Work; Now\nen Route\nOTTAWA, MVy 6.\u2014A special to\nlhe Citizens from Ashcvlile, N.C.,\ndated today says:\nAccompanied -by a number of\nofficials of the Canadian . Pacific\nrailway, and travelling in private\ncar Canadian Pacific No. 100, Sir\nRobert Laird Borden, premier of\nCanada, and Lady Borden, left hero\nthis afternoon at 4.50 o'clock, eastern time, for. Ottawa. They have\nbeen spending three weeks at Grove\nPark inn, coming here after arriving in this country from England, where Sir Robert had gone\nwith Admiral Jellicoc.'\nWhen seen .at the station 'here\nthis afternoon, Sir Robert stated\nthat he is lu iho very - best of\nhealth, and hopes to be able to\nplunge directly into the work as\nsoon as he arrives at tlie Canadian\ncapital.- Ho will pass through\nWashington and New York, and\nprobubly arrive in Ottawa on Sunday, although this of course will\nhe govornod by the, connections made\non the various reads over which ho\ntravels.\n|, Seyeral Aahevlllo officials wero at\nthe station to bid the Canadian\npremier farewell, and urged'him to\ncome hack to AsUevilie again.\nTHE WEATHER\nVICTORIA,    May    6.-\n\u25a0Nelson\nand\nvicinlty:  Contlrmod fair\nand warm\n' Station-.\nMln.\nMax.\n33\n74\nYi.to,i.,a \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- \t\n42\n07\nKamloopH \u2014 \u2014 \u2014\n38\n78\nKolowna    \t\n37\n74\nGrand Porka .....  \t\n37\n75\nKaslo  - ...\n37\n73\nPrince .Buport\t\n42\n48\n!-awson, \u2014       \t\n.8\n36\nWinnipeg ..... .\u2014 ._._\n38\n74\nVancpuyar  _ \t\n40\n06\nPenUetorr ' \t\n38\n78\nCranbrook  \u2014  \t\n20\n71\n-   I-arUcrville     \t\n28  '\nM -\nAtltn _\n2?\n42\nCalvary'..,.,. ..... ...,^_\n30\n06\nTREAT   ,\nmm MiSBS ^\nIdea of Another Irish Convention Scouted; Is United\nStates Committing Unfriendly Act in Countenancing\nWelcomes to De Valera?; Questions in British Commons\u2014Loyal Coalition of Boston Wires Lloyd George\nand that De Valera had been enter-\ntainod by state governors. He asked if Bonar Law did not consider\nthat, in international law, this amounted to an unfriendly act, and\nwhether new instructions Would he\ngiven  to  the  British  ambassador.\nThe government leader said*he had\nnot seen a statement of the speci'fib\nfacts named, but it did not alter\nhis view regarding Great Britain's\nright course, namely, that It was\nnot always wise to take action to\nwhich a country had the legal right.\nCapt. William Benn wanted to\nknow whether the government would\ntake steps to halt the malicious\ncampaign which he declared was\ndestroying the friendly relations be-\ntweon this country and the. United\nStates. To this Mr. Bonar Law did\nnot  reply. .    .\nMr. Chadwick asked whether\nBonar Law was uwarO that \"this\noutlaw\" was recently honored with\nthe freedom of New Orleans, and\nwhether any representations had(\nbeen made to the United States in\nthe face of this \"deliberate insult by\nan   ostensibly    friendly   power.\"\nMr. Bonar Law answered that ho\nwas quite satisfied the good feeling of the United States was not\nrepresented at all by such demonstrations, and he did not believe\nthat, any action the British government could take against them would\nhave any other effect than to make\nthe  relhtion   worse.\nLONDON, -May 0.\u2014The Loudon\nTimes publishes a cablegram received hy Lord NnrlhcUffe from the\nLoyal coalition of , Boston, quoting\na ca blegram sen t by that organisation to premier Lloyd George, 'in\nwhich the message of the American\ncongressmen on the Irish question\nsent- to the. premier is termed \"impertinent,\" and declaring: \"These\ncongressment will pay at the polls\nfor   this   middlcsome   Interference-\"\nIt is further asserted in the cablegram that the procedure of these\ncongressmen does not represent In\nthe slightest degree, the'.attitude\nand sentiment of the overwhelming\nmajority  of  Americun   people.\nCARRANZA SHIFTING\nCAPITAL TO VERA CRUZ\nFOR A FINISH FIGHT\nMEXICO CITY, May 6.\u2014\nRefusal to abandon the presidency in face of the menace\nof rebellion, featured a manifesto issued yesterday on the\noccasion of the national\nholiday, by President Carranza. The president announced that he would fight\nto a finish to put down the\nrebellion, and that he would\nnot turn over the presidency\nto anyone except a legally\nelected successor.\nWASHINGTON, May 6.\u2014\nConcentration by Carranza\nof troops at Mexico City is\ntaken to indicate the president's determination to\ngather about him a force\nsufficiently strong to enable\nhim to transfer his seat of\ngovernment. The' abvious\npurpose of such concentration, it was explained, would\nbe the defense of the capital, but, according to military\nexperts, Mexico City is so\ndifficult 'to defend that Carranza might be expected to\nemploy the same tactics he\ndid when Villa gained the\nascendancy, in 1914, and_\nagain set up his' capital at'\nVera Cruz.\nMISSISSIPPI\nGovernor Denies Assuring\nWelcome; German Tongue\nNot Popular\nCongressman Asks That\nPresident Be Advised to\nLimit Geddes\nWASHINGTON, May 6.\u2014A resolution proposing that congress suggest to President Wilson that he refuse to receive Sir Auckland Geddes,\nthe British ambassador, as Ireland's\ndiplomatic representative, but recolve\ninstead Dr. Patrick McCarton, as\nminister of the provisional Irish republic, was introduced today by Representative Hamlll, Democrat, Now\nJersey.\nOTTAWA, May 6.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014It is said that Sir Henry\nDrayton, minister of finance, will\nbring down his budget on Wednes-\nday. The definite date, however, has\nHOt yet been decided. upon. Announcement in the house will probably  bf made ^W-TOIfo ^_\nWI.VNIPEG, May 6.\u2014The Manitoba Free Press will tomorrow pub-\nll'sh the flowing special from\nJackson,   Miss.\n\u25a0Governor Russell slates that he\nhits given no assurance, either verbally or iu writing, that Mississippi\nwill extend a welcome -to tho colony of 8.000 Mennonites in Canada,\nwho desire to\" move to this stale;\nthat he had not had the matter\nunder consideration, and is therefor., not prepared to say what he\nwill  do in   the matter\nSince the announcement- Irom\nWinnipeg that the Mennonites intend to move to this state, tho matter has been rather freely discussed\nin the slate press, and the opinion.\nseems to be somewhat general that\nthe .Mennonitet- will not receive, a\ncordial welcome, especially if they\ninsist on having their own public\nschools, with German as the only\nlanguage taught. The teaching of\nGerman' In the p.ubllc schools of\nthe state was abolished during the\nwar period. At that time tho\nlanguage was being taught in a\nfew of the high schools, and sentiment demanded that 'it be discontinued. There has been no reversal\nsince that time, and the speaking\nof German, oven in ordinary con- ,\nvernation, is quite sufficient in some\ncommunities to get a person into\nserious trouble.\nTHE DAY IN\nPARLIAMENT\nHOUBB\nA bill lo provide for thu standard-\niz:iiinn oi interchangeable parts of\n\u25a0jgrlcultunii   machinery,   introduced.\nFurther, dtscusstoii in committee\non  Franchise  act,   progress reported.\nA number of estimates of the\nmarine ftcpurtment were.passed.\nSpeaker rules out statement of\nHume Cronyn. Loudon, chairman oi.\ntho parliamentary pensions committee, on Col.' Peck's, resignation from\nthe committee and the eireum-\nstauces   surrounding   tho  incident.\nSenate\n; Bill   to   confirm   tho   government's\nugreemcut   for   the   purchase   of  the\nGrand   Trunk      railways,      reported\nfrom committee.\nSpecial committee reports* recommending the investigation of the\nwhole question of steamship service\nto the Magdalene Islands.\nSenator    Hob.ertsdb    announces    a\npensions   scheme   for   the   employees.'\nof   the   new   national   railway   \u00bbya'-\ntema   t\\%  soon  as   tj-ie   vario.nt)   Uoetj\nar# cy.WK.Uaa tefl, . _j\n 'Page 2\nTp. DA^LY NEWS, FRIDAY, MORNING, MAY 7, 19pp\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere th* Tr.volling Publio May Obtain Superior Accommodation\nTHE\nPremier Hotel\nOf the Interior\nX\n%,\nSERVICE   UNEXCELLED\nA La Carta Table D'Hota\n8PECIAL 8UNDAY DINNER (1.00\n\\\nINCOMPARABLY THE FINEST TEA ROOM IN B.C.\nOpen   Daily 10 a.m. to  Midnight Musio and   Dancing\nTha Latest Sundaes, Ice Cold  Drinki ont!  Icea\nAfternoon Tea (3 p.m. to  5  p.m.), 25o\nHeadquartors  Fbr All Travelling  Men, Mining  Men and Touriati\nEUROPEAN   PLAN \u2014 \u2014 ROOMS, $1.00  UP\nHUME\u2014J. Hastings; Mrs. .1. B.\nConway, Kdgcwood; G. K. Burrlngioi.(\naouttle; V. Harrington, Eclgewootl; 8.\n,1. Cohen, J. Taaffe, N. I). McPliall, V.\nM. Lewl.s, G. It. Mutrle, Viuieouvor;\nGeorge Wright, Kinnairtl; Kred H.\nSlioeinakur, Ymir; Mrs. .1. H. Gray and\ndaughter. Trail; Chas. While, Spokane; F. Marquis, Kaslo; H. G. KtagE\nand family, Balfour; C. A. Pool, \\V. B.\nPool, Reno Mine; Joe B. White, Ben\nCohen,   Spokane;   Curl   Linden,   Salmo;\nR I*. Churchill, Manic in Spur; Chas.\nWhite; .1. Sammons, K. S. Prances,\nProctor; 1). M. Alaokuy, Calgary; E. J,\nHarvey, Toronlo; A. Thompson, Vancouver; Joseph C. ItobertH, S. Bolo-\nman, Portland; Kobt; Gunning, Spokane; Chas. H. Stuart, Portland; .7.\nPrlt.e, Toronto; J. O. Kendall, Grand\nKorku; Mrs. Best, Montreal; J. H,\nCowan, C. ]\u2022_. Hair, T. A. Allan, Vancouver; T. A. Pearson, wife and children; M. *J. Harrow and wife, Pentic-\nton;   Capt,   Frank   Paddon,  Victoria.\nH.\nw-sh\nNelson's Leading Hotel\nFor Traveller* and Tourist*\n'fop.\nOre\nSample  Rooms all  ground floor with   natural   light..   Mest comfortably furnished rotunda in tlm interior.\nLarge   Drawing   Room   for   Ladiea\nEuropean   Rate $1.50 American   Plan $3.50\nSTUATHCONA-\nver;   C.   H.   King.   C\nWinnipeg\nSpokane.\nIt.\nK.    Mi.Keh_.lQ,\nand   Forks;   AV.\nBrown;    N.    Brown\nNewport, Wash.; H. J. Iderscb, Vancou*-\niJ. WshilQlt, Toronto; Mrs. A. W. Riedle,\nmd wife,   N.    Brown,   Jr.,   city;   F.   Hardy,\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean and American Plan\nSteam Heat In Every Boom\nA. IiAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nQUEENS\u2014K. H. Miry and wife. A.\n!-{rrrcir, .'a_t.leK,.r, Louis Clougtr, Boulder Creek; w, Otoutrrlr, Slocrtn city;\nM. Johnson, .ark SirliuR; .ialrres Ar-\nIrucU.ts: 'Mr.. .1. Klrklmtrh'U, Arrr.rU'-\nilale;   -.irorfie  \"Wright,   Klnnliiltt.\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERICKSON,  Prop.\nOpposite Post Office\nRoom and Board, $40 per Month\nEuropean and American plan.\nBOOMS   500   UP\nBRAND Cr.NTl.Al-\u2014 A. M. Mother,\nson, IC, Kllrror, Krrslo; Geo. Christib,\nSlocan; Brrrry A* Soirrrrrer.. Boulder:\nP. Matt. ... Bear, Jan I.iblerr anil\nfamily,   John   Jlolt,   Mike   Mick.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nM.   J. MADDEN, Proprletresl\nSTEAM   HEATED\nCor. linker and Ward SU., Nelson\nOccidental Hotel\nRun by Canadians. All White help.\nRoom and board, per month $40;\nneck $10; day SI.50. Mem. SOc,\nserved family style. Beds SOc. All\nyou can eat and a good, clean bed\nto sleep ln. Give ns a trial. Auto\nmeets all trains and boats.\nHI).   KERB.   Proprietor.\nRULE .FUR GOVERHMENT IS\nE\nNelson Member Reviews Work of Past Legislative Session;\nSeveral Good Measures Enacted; Social Welfare Legislation; Civil Service Annex of Liberal Party\nAt a meeting of the executive of\ntho Conservative as-.ocia.tlon held\nhint night at the board of trade\nrooms, Dr. W. O. Rose, AI.P.P. for\nNelson riding, gave an interesting\naddress on the work of the legislature during the past session. Ho\ndealt with the prohibition ivfoi'-.n-\ndum to i be taken in the summer,\nmother's pensions, and provision for\nsub-normal children. The new Motor\nRegulation act was discussed, and\nenactment to raise the status\nof real estate agents. Civil jioj-vfa.\ncontrol, electoral changes and Investing ' villages with local control\nre also dealt with. Dr. Rose criticised the government for extravagance nnd the doubtful benefits of\nmunicipal   aid   measures   passed.\nPresident C. D. Blackwood was\nin the chair, and the audience, about\nthirty-five strong, included several\nladles\nDr. Rose paid a tribute to the\nmemory of the Hon. F. H. Moberley,\nENJOY   A   VACATION   AT   THE\nHOTEL GRAND\n,   NAVCUSP .\nFrank Hughes! & Son, Props.\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lakes.\nSplendid fishing and boating. Nice\nrooms, good meals, pleasant surroundings. Splendid sample room\nfor travellers.\nSHORT 0FBREAJH\nCould Hardly Walk\nWithout Resting\nWhen you go to a physician to be\nexamined for any heart trouble one\nof the first questions he asks Is:\n\"Are  you   short of breath?\"\nNow, when* the heart becomes affected there ensues ,ji feeling of a\nchoking sensation, a shortness of\nbreath, palpitation, throbbing, Irregular beating, smothering sensation,\ndizziness and a weak, sinking, all-\ngone feeling uf oppression and anx-\nI'ty.\nOn the first sign of the heart becoming weakened or the nervea unstrung Milburn's Heart and Nerve\nPills are just the remedy you require. They regulate and stimulate\n+l:e heart, and strengthen and restore the whole nerve system.,\nMr Stephen Grouse, East Clifford,\nN.S., writes:\u2014-\"I suffered for five\nyi_a.__ with heart trouble, I could\nhardly walk from the house to the\nbarn without resting as I used to\nget so short of breath. Doctors\ncould not help me. My wife told me\ntu get a box of Milburn's Heart\nand Nerve Pills and I felt better\nafter U-king them; three boxes made\nme quite well. I am now helping\nmy son to work the farm, and can\ntruthfully say 1 feel like a different\nn-dn'\nPrice SOc. a box at all dealers or\nmailed direct on refieiflt of price by\nThe T. Mllburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nWhere to Spend a\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET  HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Golf,\nTennis   Courts\nFishing   Tackle  Supplied;   Grocery\nStore in  Connection\nW. A. WARD, Prop.\nRates Reasonable        '  Good Meals\nMADDEN\u2014T. H. Riley, Htlverlon; It.\nSmith and daughter, city; H. Crane,\nSiilino; Clias. Aslilon, Calgary; E. A.\nLarabee, p. Miller, city; .lolin Ram-\nson, Shut Harbor: Sam Stewart,\nThrums; Thomas J.I. Riley; ,t. Murrs;\nH. Cody, Rossland: .1. .Mures, Vmi-\neouvor; J. McDonald, Alne worth; J.\nVolncy,  Sllverton.\nTREMONT HOTEL\nBAKER   STREET\nF.  NIL-SON,  Prop.\nFurnished   Rooms   by\nWeek or Month\nDay,\nTKB.MU_.T--A. lillchlllH, D. B. Krrlr-\nl.arr, A. I.rrircrlr, Alex Johnson, la. A.\n.Johnson, VV. S.err.lrulk, 1\\ Krytr, O.\nAnderson.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS.    MA.IeL__l._I_,    Proprietress.\nA Home (or the World at $1.60 %\nDay,    First-class Dining Room.\nComfortable Rooms.\nSIS Vernon Bt.   Near Post Office\nHalcyon Dot Springs Hotel\nARROW LAKES, B. O.\nCinder entirely new management.\nRenowned throughout the weat\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatlam, Sciatica, Urlnlc. Conditions, Metallic Poisoning.\nSpecial  MaR-iage Given.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nIn a most beautiful climate.\nLargo hot water swimming pools\nEnglish chef and staff,\nAmerican plan, $3 and up per\nday,   $21,  por   week,\nn. A. HEFFER, Manager.\n\u25a0 \"DANDERINE\"\nStops  Hair  Coming Out;\nDoubles Its Beauty.\n6\nA few cents huj'a \"Dande-'J-ciq.\"\nAfter an aijpUcuUon of \"Danderinfo'''\ni mi can not find a fallen hair '.of\nany dandruff -besides every hair\nshown new life, vigqrt\", brightness,\nmore color and Uiickne.....\nmember for Atliti. and Thornton Fell\nICC, clerk of the house, both of\nwhom had died during the session.\n\"I want tonight.\" said Dr. Rose,\no say. a few words about some\nof the acts that are of interest to\ntho citizens of Nelson, Many of the\nacts passed are of little Interest\nto you, but some of them are of considerable   importance.\nSub-Normal Children\n\"First, chapter 5 of 1920 statutes\u2014\nin act providing for the establishment -of.schools for sub-normal boys\nand girls. There are ,a number of\nsimple minded and mentally deficient children In tho province, and\nan appropriation of J40.00G has been\nmade to establish schools in the\nvicinity uf the boys industrial school\nat PoIut'Grey. The act also covers deaf and dumb and blind children. Formerly, the blind children\nwere sent to Halifax and ihe deaf\nand dumb . to Winnipeg, obviousLv\nat great 'expense to the province j\nbut now we are preparing to deal\nwith these poor unfortunate children at a home in Vancouver.\nReal Estate Agent Licenses\n\"An act has been passed to license real estate., agents. JSDhls is\none of those blue sky laws for the\npurpose; of preventing fraud. A\nlicense.;fee of $10 is chared to\nagents and ?2 for salesmen, and\nin cases of fraud or misrepresentation their, licenses will be revoked.\nElectoral System Changes\n\"Chapter 24 of 1A20 statutes is the\nElectoral < act, and I think it is a\nvery good' one. At the present moment everyone is disfranchised, no\none, in the \u25a0\u2022 province has a vote.\nThe new act allows voting: by an\nabwentee \u25a0 in any part of (he province, and the vote Is checked' by\ncomparing, signatures on envelopes\ncontaining* .Ujie '.ballot paper with\nsignatures registered at the time of\nadmission to the polls. Thus frauds\nsuch' as. existed iu the ease of 191*3\nbyelectlon at Vancouver will be pre-\nented, I. think the act is as gcod\n.s we can possibly make it. anji I he\nopposition was successful in getting a number of amendments made.\nAnother feature of the lOlectoral\nact, is tha,t anyone who dess not\nvote at' an election has his name\nremoved from the voters list, Und\nwill have io make fresh application\nto be\" restored. This may s^em a\nlittle drastic, but it was thought\nthat If a person did not take enough\ninterest In the affairs of the province, to cast a vote he might \"Just\nas well be removed from the voters\nlist. ,\n\"A lot of. opposition was made\non thi. .Japanese question, but the\nact excludes them' from voting, as\nit . was considered it might be a\ndangerous precedent to allow Orientals under'* any ^ eircumstances to\nhuvq. .the franchise,, and that to\ngrant votes to Returned Japanese\nsuldiers might prove the thin edge ot\nwedge to let in all < Orientals-\nincluding Hindus, who aro British\nsubjects.\nVillage   Councils\n\"An   acl   for   the   incorporation   of\niilages     was     passed     which   'gave\nvillages   a  -voice 'iu   their   internal\nmanagement  but  avoided   the  danger\nof    small    places    such    as   Sandon\n:uid  Sllverton   being   incorporated   as\ncities   leading   to   finai.clul   disaster\nnd   their   being   taken   over   by   a\nreceiver.\nMotor Regulation\n\"The Motor Traffic Regulations\nact, No, 85 of 1920 provided for\nlicensing of chauffeurs and the exclusion of minors under 17 With\nexceptions for lads between 15 and\n17 specially approved by the chief\nof police. It also includes an increase of fees on a rather curious\nbasis, namely the weight of the\ncar in i*unds Is added to the cost\nof th\u00ab car in dollars. A $15 fee is\ncharged on 2500 units thus arrived\nat and an additional 60 cents tin\neach additional 100 units above that\nfigure. Tlie income from this source\nis to be dovotcd to upkeep of highways, and tho, scale would double\nthe income from fees. On the\nstrength of this measure five million\ndollars had been borrowed fo.- road\nconstruction and repair to be re-\n; paid\u2014interest and sinking fund\u2014\n'   t ot such motor feus.\n....       ,..,      ..!\u2022\u00bb   1 ..'.fi      a.,111\nResults\nYOU get results from your ;inves tment when you select a suit or\na dress .from our stock. They ar e most attractively priced and we\nfeel sure you will say they are t he best values you have seen.\nThe styles are smart and. youth ful. .\nTHE SUMMER HAT is the next Millinery problem\u2014but we have\nsolved it for you most effectively.   Come in and see the result.\nPANAMAS, MILANS, MALINEB, etc. Our Hats command ap-\nproval.\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLadies'   Wear Specialists\nKOOTENAY\u2014James Coleman, 11.\nBlackmail, Revelstoke; Stephen Den-\nchamps,   Birch   Bank.\nNew Grand Hotel\n\u00ab10 VERNON ST. EAST  ..\nCnifoiiiiNe Booms, Hot and Cold\nWater,    Dining   Room In\nConnection.\nRates   91' and   Up        -'\nDEALIING   WITH    NATIVES     >\nThe right man and the right.manner can achieve wonders of conclla-\ntlon, where the brusque, unsympathetic ruler will find nothing but\nhostility. By sauvily wo do not moan\nInsincerity or wcakkness, which is\neasily recognized. The ''sauviter in\nmode\" does not imply absence of the\n\"fortiticr in res\" For each one that\nis repelled by firmness and strictness, a hundred are driven into the\nenemy camp by a haughty and unsympathetic demeanor. To pverlobk\nthe elementary fact that,' when\" you\nrule nn alien people whom you cannot assimilate through deep racial\nnnd cu tural differences, the bridge\nof tolerance may be built by perfect, courtesy and fairness, is a\nfatal   error.\u2014Singapore  Free  1'ress,\nThe Standard Cafe\nMO Baker Street, Nelson, B. O.\nOPEN DAT AND NIGHT\nII   to   _:S0,   Special   Imnch,   15c\nPhone IM\nNOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS\nSubscrlticrs no Drying tho circulation\ndoD_.r_m.nt oC Tbe Dally News ol\nchance of address, must Rive old a.\nwall aa new address to ensure prompt\nattention. (Ml.)\nU-II-Jk\nNelson Brewing\nCompany's\nBeer and Porter\nHealthful and Invigorating.\nMade with crystal clear mountain water from pure malt ami\nnop..\nNelson Brewing\nCompany, Limited\nNELSON, RO.    '\nGAS IN THE STOMACH\nIS DANGEROUS     \u2022\nRecommends Dally Use of Magnosla to\nOvercome   Trouble.     Canned   by\nFermenting rood and Acid\nIndigent ion.\nQns and wind In tbe stomach, ac-\n!0mpaiited by that full; bloated feeling\nafter eating are utmost- certain \u25a0 evidence of the preHcnce of. excessive\nhydrochloric acid in the stomach, ere-*\nutlng   so-called   \"acid   indigestion.\"\nAcid stomachs are dangerous because too much acid Irritates the delicate lining of the .stomach, often lead-\nInn* to' gastritis accompanied by serious stomach ulcers. Food ferment\/,\nand sours, creating the distressing\ngas which distends the stomach and\nhampers the normal functions of the\nvital internal Organs, often affecting\nthe heart.\nIt Is the worst of folly to neglect\nsuch a serious condition or to treat\nwith ordinary digestive aids which\nhave no' neutralising effect on tbe\nstonine.. acids. Instead get from* any\ndruggist a few ounces pf Blsurated\nMagnesia and take a teaspOonful in a\nquarter glans of water right after\neating. This will drive the gas, wind\nand bloat right out of the body, sweeten tbe stomach,, neutralize tbe excess\nacid and prevent Its .formation and\nthere Is no sourness or pain. Blsurated' Magnesia (In powder or tablet\nform\u2122never liquid or milk) Is harmless to the stomach, Inexpensive''to\ntake and the beat form of magnesia\nfor stomaoh purposes. It Is used by\nthousands of people who enjoy their\nmeals with no more fear of Indigestion.\nAct '.Iii of 11*20, appointed a civil\nservice commissioner to be a permanent head, absolutely above policies,\nlike a supremo court judge; but an\namendments Introduced this session\nmakes his office a political one so\nthat he can be removed If necessary\nby  the  lieutenant-governor In  cot\ncil.\nProhibition\n\"Ntn HIS of 1(120 may interest you\nsomewhat. It provides for a vote\non the. prohibition question during\nthe surosier,\u25a0;' probably in August or\nSeptemBgr. ;.\"i,Tho ballot Is not on\nwhether \u25a0 wo: shall ,1)0 .\"wet\" or \"dry,\"\nbut \u00abn a* vhQlce qf continuing as at\npresent .br having )Uqu#r sold in sealed bottles at government stores on\na controlled scale of permljs,\n, j \"Another act which has caused\na certain alrpount of discussion ia\nan act to sedure adequate provision\nfoi\u00a3 the; \\ylves u.and children of a\ntoHtfifo.*,'an'ff .'under this a judge may\nincrease   the   amount   allowed   to   a\n\u25a07\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nJosephine Street, Near Baker\ntfe   buy  all  kinds   of   SECONDHAND FURNITURE and 8toves and\nClothe.,   Rags,-  Brass,   Copper   and\nRubber.   We pay highest prices.\nJ. Radcliffe & Depatie\nP. O. Box 7M Ph.n. 114\n\\,\nEach and Every\nSpoonful of\nGrapfcNuts\nisaspoonful\nof health, food\nTry GmpeNuts\nfar breakfast\neach morning.\nfigure commensurate with the increased cost of living. I think myself that It is a wise provision.\n\"I may say for the benefit of th j\nladies that you do ndt' get a dower\n&ct this year, but it IS promised fo.\nnext year, and this1 Will give you\nthe proper legal position to which\nyou are entitled In regard to prop-j\ntarty. ' . ,   i   -I\nMothers'   Pensions ,.]\n. \"One of tiie mose useful acts passed is that to\" provide pensions \"tdr:\nmothers. 'TtlCollows closely the acts\nin force in AOTie of the other provinces and-in Washington. It provides1\nfor Indigent widows and for the!\nwives and children of men incarcerated in jails. The scale is $42.50\na month plus $7.50 for each child\nunder IC. The beneficiaries must,\nof course be British and mothers\nmust havo resided eighteen mohths\nin the province .uid be fit and\nproper, persons In tlie estimation of\nthe superintendent of neglected chil-\n(l,.en___M;r. South of Vancouver, I\nbelieve\u2014to receive assistande. It\nwill co|f the province about $300,000\na year, but 1 think it is a wise\nmeasure. '\n\"An 'act to amend tho supremo\ncourt act is nf interest to, Nelson.\nFormerly an order, of the court\ncould only be granted by a supreme\ncourt judge, who only visits this\npart twice a year, although strictly\nspeaking you were always entitled\nby law to have a supreme court\njudge in ' residence at Nelson. By\nthe amending act a county court\njudge can now Issue such orders.\"\nLiberal Promises\nDr. Rose then reviewed the\npromises of the Liberal party as\ncompared with . performances.\n\"Proportional representation granted to municipalities has proved a\nfiasco In the two cities that had\ntried It, Nelson and New Westminster,\" said Dr. Rose. \"You know\nwhat happened in Nelson, he said.\n\"After the second year that It was\nin force 14 per cent of the electors\nlost thoir vote ip the election of\nJanuary, 1!)10, and the council of\n101!) repected proportional representation In the same way in which they\nhad adopted It, by means of an\namending act which I was successful Iri having inserted, In the legislature of that year. New Westminster has done the same thing. This\nlast year ih tlie city of Vancouver\nthey have decided to adopt it and\nI am watching with considerable interest to see how It works out. ' So\nfar as adopting the principle for\nthis provinee^tHe present governm6nt\nhas done Vi'-itlilng.\nCivil M-TVlce Liberal Annex\nAs to a no-partisan civil service It\nwould be found that a host of fat\ncivil servico appointments had been\nannexed by defeated Liberal\/ candl-\ncUit-eiC The speaker. Instanced Archt-\nWffd 'Johnson, deploy attorney gen-\noraV; 13. S.. II. Wynn, chairman of\ntho workers compensation board at\n$(-,000; Parker Williams and Hugh\nt.ilmi-re In similar positions at $5000\nand many others.\nMr. Brewster, In his first budget\nspeech said tho government intended\nto keep revenue and expenditure\nequal, but this year Instead of keeping within revenue there was a deficit of nearly three and a half million dollars, and there were great\nincreases all along. New departments alone had cost $474,000 such\nas the office of censor of moving\nPictures, $10,372; public utilities commissioner,' with no public utilities to\ncare for, $24,360, and so on.\nGold Brick to Municipalities\nGovernment aid to mhnlcipalitles\nwas something of a gold brick.\nMunicipalities were empowered to\ndouble amusement taxes and the Increases taxes ' would revert to the\nmunicipalities for building schools\nand hospitals, it was giving them\na. present of money they had to tax\niVrid then collect in such a way as to\ndamage if not kill amusement Industries. '\nDr. Rose disapproved of absolutely\nfree higher education, though ho\napproved expenditure on primary\neducation. He considered university\nstudents, of whom there wore 1500,\nshould puy $100 a,year, which would\nfurnish considerable revenue. Tho\namount spent of agricultural higher\n'education was altogether disproportionate. When conditions had improved and the mqney market was\neasier it would be time enough to\nincur   this   heavy   expenditure.\nReplying to* a question, Dr. Hose\nsaid he had repeatedly urged on tlio'\nminister of public works the subject of the Ymir road, ani was assured that this was Included iu the\nhtghwdy estimates to ' participates\nin. the federal grant oft$40 for.each\n$60 put- up by the province. Rfnd\nconstruction, on the ostiuict^es totalled $8,000,000, and the federal government was contributing .*<l,-.'iij,i)00.\nW. R;,. Maclean proposed r-nd\nJohn A.\/.Irving seconded a voce of\nthanks Ao Dr. .Rose for his able\nand complete resume of the legislative . operations . during the past session. The n>otidn was carried -by\nacclamation,\nSHE BUYS LESS\nSINGE SI BltS\nI. !u:;ioml   Dyes\"'   Turn  All  Her  Old,\nI'ndcd,   Sliubhy   Apparel\nInto New.\nDon't worry about perfect results.\nUse \"Diamond Dyes,\" guaranteed to\ngive a new, rich, fadeless color to\nany fabric, whether it be wool, silk,\nlinen, cotton or mixed goods,\u2014\ndresses, blouses, stockings, skirts,\nchildren's .coats, feathers, draperies,\ncoverings. \u2022\nThe Direction ' Book with each\npackage teHs so plainly how to diamond dye over any color that you\ncan not make a mistake.\nTo match any material, have\ndruggist show you \"Diamond Dye\"\nColor Card.\nDEFENCE COMMITTEE\nAPPEALS OVERSEAS\nWINNIPEG, May G,~W. IT. True-\nman, K.C., counsel for tho convicted\nstrike leaders of Winnipeg, will\nleave for London next week to make\npersonal application to tho Judicial\ncommittee of the privy council for\nleave to appeal the decisions upon\nWhich the labor leaders were convicted. Por ' some time, representatives of the defense committee have\nbeen working in Britain to place tho\ncase of the men before the laoor\ninterests in the old country, and aro\ntold In letters that \"the outlook is\npromising.\"\nOXFORDS AND PUMPS,\nWo  just   received   a   new   shlpmen\nBlack Kid Oxford,  mill- (P i A Aj\nBlack Calf Oxford, mill- (p-J A f\\(_\ntary heel U. 1U.U*\nPatent     Leather,     mill- (g-| A A|\ntary    heel -_._LV-.U1\nMahogany    Calf,    military.(PQ f__\nheel    'U>O.U*\nBlack Calf,  threo .eyolct fl\u00bb1 A A|\ntie,   low   Heel   .  ......f_.lU.UH\nC. ROMANd\nTHE SHOE MAN\nItaly   was   never  a   political   unity\nuntil tire 19th  cenutvy.\nClear Baby's SkuiJ\nWith Cuticura\nSoap and Talcum]\nSonp.Oitilment,Talcum,26-:. each. Soldefi-Twhsr*.!\nCm. Depot: Lym\u00bbni, LlulUd, it. Fiftl \u25a0t..U\u00abttrM_J\nMACDONAtDS\nPRINCE OF WALES\nCHEWING TOBACCO\nfYtOWT* t^n^ t*lat because your\nIfXfllf i stomach can digest food\nyou are proof against indigestion. The most\nimportant digestive work is done by the\nbowels, liver and kidneys. Unless these are\nactive and work ih harmony, you are in danger\nof self-poisoning.\nBEECjJAM'S\nSold \u2022\"*ery-\nwhereia\nCanada.\nIn boxei,\n25c, 50c\nPILLS\nhelp the bowels to  functionate!\nproperly, and influence  the liver\nand kidneys to act very efficiently.\n \u2022\u2022\u25a0\n<*\u2014\u2014\nTftB BinCT,ltt#8,,FRIDAY-.MORKWa MAY 7, 1920\nMining and Markets\n! - \u25a0 \u25a0  \u2022\u25a0 r\nwe SLUE\nriliifii\nNEW YORK, May 6\u2014Silver today, *1.05V4.\nLONDON, May 6\u2014Silver today,\n1)2 Vad. '\n1 STERLING EXCHANGE\n;JfEW   YORK,   May   6.\u2014Sterling   exchange  steady  nt  390%   for  no day\nbills and 834%  for demand.\n-   Canadian dollars, 90.(10.\nBelgian  francs,  7.30.\nFrench  franca. 7.30.\nItalian lire, 5.35.\nCANADIAN BONDS\n, -MONTREAL., May 6.\u2014Closing bond\njuices: War loans\u20141925, 9494; 1932,\n92%;   1937,  9414.\nVictory: 1922, 98; 1927. 98'\/_; -937,\nJ00; 192j; 98; 1933, 98%; 1924, 90;\nID...,   !)5.\n  gi    \t\nWINNIPEG    GRAIN     QUOTATIONS\nOI?en   High   Low   Close\n.118% ,121%    1181*    120\n107        108%    106%    107%\n0_rt_\u2014\nMay'\t\n.TUly^rV..,.\nsoct; \u25a0:\u25a0%,...\n'    Barloy-\nMay   ....:.\n\u2022Tulw   ......\nFlax-^-\n>M4y.    ..'...\nIJuIyi.......\nRye\u2014\n:a.y,v...:.\n87%.    85%     87%\n.179\n108\n.517\n.503\n171'\/$.   109\n101) %    108\n170%\nlos-y,\n517\n..09\n508?!    609\n500       501 %\nLegal Notices\nNOTICE    TO    CRXHDZTOBB    I\n[Zn the Matter of the  Estate  of  Marguerite  Bono   Arnald   Estate.\nNotlco Ih hereby given that nil per-\n(-n.., having uny claims or demftnds\ngainst the lute. Marguerite Rose Ar-\nliild, who died on or a bout the 27th\nlay of June, A.D., 1919, at Nelson, in\nlie Province of British Columbia, are\n'eqiiired to send by post prepaid or\n[deliver, to the Toronto General Trust\n~-orp6ratiton - at Vancouver, B.C., the\n-xeeutor ixnd Trustee under the will of\n:he said Marguerite Rose Arnald, their\ndame's, and addresses, and full par-\nticuldrg in writing of their claims and\nitatements of their accounts and the,\nlature of tho'-securities, if any, held\n>y- them.. \u2022''\u25a0\",\nAnd take notice that titter the 15th\nflay of May, A.D., 1920, the said executor will proceed to distribute the assets of the said deceased*, among the pet\"-\n.ons entitled thereto, Having regard\nmly. for the claims of which It shall\nthen have had notice, and the said\nthe Executor will not be liable for the\nmid, assets or any part thereof to any\ni.erson of whose claim It shnll not\nhen  have'received   notice.\nDated at Nelson, British Columbia,\nthis  14th  day of April, A.D.,   1920.\nE. A. CREASE,\n\u25a0lolicitor   for   the   Toronto   General\nTrusts   Corporation.\nNEW YORK, May 6.\u2014St6cks were\nirregulnrly higher at the opening of\ntoday's market, when realizing for-\nprofit caused general cancellation' of\n.gains In all hut a few of the.more\n'speculative Issues. Sales amounted\nto 1100,000 shnrl&s.  '\nPools again essayed to elevate! the\nmore popular issues of the Industrial! division, especially steels, equipments and oils, later taking up shippings and fflfi&rf sp^cialtfe**. Comprising the chemical and ferriHxpr\ngroups, but their operation failed to\nenlist outside support.\nTho money market was easier In\nthat the supply'of call monev fit 7\nper cent at all times exceeded requirements, but further contractions\nof time funds and merchants paner\nwas reported, in a survey .of general conditions for the ' first four\nmonths of the year, the1 local ' federal reserve bank expressed ihe opinion that \"very little progress to-\nwjirds a rediictiori nf either commodity prices or credit volume\" has\nheen laid. On the other hand there\nwas much discussion amon\u00ab* hankers\nwith mercantile oon noetic ns, oc- the\n\"deflation\"' now under way at leading\nbusiness centers of the .joimtry. This\nmovement is finding expression! they\n.say, in wholesale1 ami retail offerings of merchandise particularly high\npriced textiles and (leathers'.\nThe bond markOt giivt a better\naccount of Itself limn tivj stock list\nrepresentative industrials' nnd rails\ntending higher,' witl^ a further recovery in liberty i.-.ft.u.s, notably the.\nIHji's which rose io 91.170 oj* a 3-fT\nper cent over their recent lo\\v records. Total siiles, par'value ?I3p:.\u00bb(),-\n000. Old IT. H. Bonds 'unchanged on\nrail.\nClosing Quotations\n\u00a3lgh Low Closo\nU. S. Steel Com. $6% 94% fl\u00ab%\nU. B. Steel 1'fd. 108 '\"10746 *|07'\/j\nChlno  Copper   ..      32%     31. 3'Z>\/_\nInspiration           r.3% *' 52%      53\nUtah  Copper   ...     70%.   C8fe     6fl%\nMiami   Copper   .      22%      22%     21%\nC.   P.   R     II?1\/*    116%    117%\nWillys   Overland       t'9 19        isya\nStudebaker    ....      82%     78^     32%\nTexas  Oil         SOVj     4fl%'     50%\nGeneral   Motors      312       2*33       310\nTHE SUPREME COUBT OF BRITISH   COLUMBIA\n(1873-1919)\nT. C. Roberts. Plaintiff, versus Gihpon\n1 Mining Company, Limited (non-personal liability), Defendants. \/\nUnder and by virtue of a writ- of\n'ieri facias issued out of the above\n-.ourt, dated the 27th day of April,\nA.D., 1920, and to'me* directed; I have\n\u25a0.his day seized the following goods\nind chattels and will offer the same\n!or sale on Saturday, May 8th, 1H20,\nit my office In the Court House, Nel-\n.on, B.C., at the hour of noon, all\n\u2022Ight, title and Interest of the Gibson\n.lining Company, Limited, in the fol-\nOWfng unpatented Mineral Clairps\nilbuate - in the Province of British\n..olymbia, Dominion of Canada, to wit:\n. \"Wlntrop\" Mineral Claim, located\nSeptember 8th, 1905, and recorded\nSeptember llth, 1905;\n. \"Butte\" Mineral Claim, located\nSeptember 8th, 190R, and recorded\nSeptember llth, 1905; \". .\nB.   \"Jennie\"    Mineral    Claim,    located\nOctober   jfith,    1915,    and    recorded\nOctober   13th,   1015;\n.   \"Ida''  Mineral  Claim,   located  Feb-\nary  19th,  1916,  and   i-ecorded  February 26th, 1816;       v\n.    \"Oxide\"     Mlperal     Claim,     located\nFebruary   iflth,   1916,   and   recorded\nFebruary 25th, 11*16; -     \u25a0   \u25a0. .       \u25a0 -i\n.   \"Frances\"    Mineral   Claim, Uocnted\n\u2022October    8th,    1915,.  and    recorded\nOctober   13th,   1915;\n,   \"Spokane\"   Mineral   Claim,.. located\nAugust    20th,    1916,    and    recorded\nAugust   20th, . 1916;\nA tramway stored at the railroad\nitation  at  Zwicky,   B.C.\nOne boiler on the Government Road\netween  Zwicky and  the  Mine.\nFive head of horses with J. Mc-\niillum for pasturage  at Lardo, B-C.\nWat$r right.} on Cariboo Creek be-\nmging to  the defendants.\nOne automobile and other chattel\nroperty in the building at Kaslo.\n,C.\nTerms of sale:\u2014Cash.\n(Signed) JAMES H: DOYLE,\nSheriff  for South  Kootenay.\nDated this 28th day of April, 1920.\nt Kaslo. B.C. (7774)\nDULLNESS UPON\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, May 6.\u2014With the exception of hank stocks and a limited number of industrials, dullness\novertook the market here today.\nNearly all the lifted bank slocks figured ln the day's turnover, with Commerce leading in volume, part'of the\nclay's sales being at the unchanged\nprice of, 91, but the close at 190\nmarked one point \" loss. There are\nno announcements of further new\nissues of bank stocks,, except that\nof the Provincial of $1,000,000, nja'k-\nIng $3,000,000, In all. Such paper\nstocks as were^active,- were- inclined\nto be strong Spanish River gained\n2 points and Brompton gainod half,\nclosing at 97%. The*.new- stock of\nAbitlbl sold for; the, first time on\nthe Toronto exchange, closing at 64J4.\nThere was *d slight lessening of interest in the merger stocks, Canada\nSteamships being \u25a0 the , most , active,\nadvancing half to 76^. National\nStc61 Car had a revival, gaining -3\npoints to 34. Atlantic Sugar wns\nstronger. In the war bonds, tho\n1925 and 1937 had fractional gains.\nMONTREAL LIST\nMONTREAL, May . 6.\u2014Trading in\nlisted stocks on the Montreal stock\noxchango today amounted to _0,57S\nshares. Abitlbl made a substantial\ngain, Breweries and Brompton. added\na. fraction, and Iron held unchanged.\nAmong the Stock to score large gains,\nForglngs lead with a gain of _Jve\npoints, followed by Penman's with a\ngain of 2H, Including the dlyidend,\nand Abitlbl and Spanish Ktvor Willi\ngains of . 114 points each. Abitibl\nsold at 6414, leaving a net gain of\n-114 points. Spanish River common\nrose _?i points to 87% ' Irom, which\npoint there was a. reaction to S614,\nwhich' reduced 'the-' net gain .to 114\npoints.., TheVBank stocks were irregular with Commerce jind Horhe-\nlaga, up a fraction ' each, Montreal\n'and Molsons unchangett, 'and Union\noff two pofhts and Royal one.\nDealings ln Commerce rah Win 300.\nln the bond list, thfj 1925' old war\nloans held firm at 95, white the Jtr.l\nlost a fraction at 92 and lhe )ll?7\nn. fraction at 9_'i.\nFI\nAT .EMLS\nMINNEAPOLIS, May 6.\u2014Floi*\nmade a new high record.today with\nan advance of 50 \"cents a barret\nAn advance yesterday In .wheat wWH\na good steady demand is the reason\nascribed for the increase. Todav'^i\nquotations $16.00 a barrel when _,oW\nin 98 pound sacks In Carload. lots, represents an advance of $2,00 a barrel\nfor standard flour in a month, shipments',   54,082   barrels.\nWheat, No, 1 Northern, dark, !l25\ntp 3,40; No. 1 Northern, 315 to 'A\nNo. 2 White Oats 105% to 107%;\nNtf. S White 104% t9 lffp%. Bran,\n52.06\/   Flax, Nt?,  1, 4-JtT to  474.\nChicago Also Up\nCHCIAGO, May 6.\u2014Corn jumped\ntoday to tho topftio'\u00abrt pfite's yet this\nseason. The supply here was .so\nscanty and the demand so active that\nNo. .2 Yellow .commanded ns nuieh\n;is $2.00 a bushel. Quotations closed\nstrong 2 to '5'^ net higher with\nJulj* 171% to 171% nnd September\n162% to 162%. Oats gained 14 to\n1% cents and provisions five to\n8fi centi [_,\nMETAL MARKETS\n\u00b1\nNEW YORKT May * 6.\u2014Copper\nsteady, electrolytic, spot and' nearby\n18% to 19; June and .July 19',4.\nTin, spot 56.50; May and June 56.37.\nAntirnony 10.25. Iron firm and unchanged.\nMetal exchange duoteg lead steady,\nspot and May 900. Zinc, quiet, Kast\nSt. Louis,  spot 775 to 790.\nLONDON, May .8.\u2014Standard copper,\n.\u00a3100 lis -8d.; .futures, \u25a0\u25a0e'103 12s. Cd.\nElectrolytic,.. spqt \u00a3'111: futures,\n\u00a3114. ...Thr,. flpot \u00a3307 10tf.; futures\n\u00a3309 Us. lyead, spot \u00a337 Vir.,-*;\"\nfutures \u00a339 5s. Silnc, spot. \u00a34(1 10s.;'1\nfutures   \u00a348.\nSenator Nichblls Says Proposals Will Consolidate\nResources\nOTTAWA,- Mky 6 (Canadian Press)\nHouse of commons criticisms of the\nBritish Empire steel corporation's\nproposed merger of Canadian steel\nand shipping interests were warmly\nreplied to in the senate yesterday by\nSenator Nleholls. Speaking as one of\nthe vice-presidents of one of the con':.\nstitutent companies In the merger,\nthe Dominion Iron and Steel company, Senator Nleholls said his only\ndesire in bringing the. question to the\nattention of the senate was to dissipate false Impressions, which might\nbe created by statements made in\nanother  place  in  tho  parliament.\nSome months; ago when the question\nof the merger was first brought to\nbis attention ho had strongly opposed but .Investigation of all the\nfacts, convinced him. He had como\nto the conclusion that the project\nwas- a thoroughly good one, of- the\ngreatest possible advantage \u25a0 to Canada. To-day as every Canadian bus.\nnesa. man will realize Canada was\nalmost entirely dependent upon tho\nUnited States for supplies of raw\nmaterial. This made \u00bbfor the greatest difficulty. While the Dominion\nIron and Steel company occupied a\nstrong position in respect of world\ntrade. It was for the purposo of this\nadverse condition for the deyelo-\nment of Canadian resources and for\nthe development of Canadian export\ntrade that the British Empire Steel\nCorporation was promoting this merger.\nNEW EMPRESS LINER\nTO BE LAUNCHED\nVANCOUVE-t,' Jtay 9,\u2014tt . is j of.\nficlally announced that the great\nnew passenffer liner Empress of\nCanada, will be launched . on Aug.\nVt at the Fairfield yards on fhe\nClyde. The ship will, lie of 22,000\ntons displacement, Hi.feet in length;\n77 feet beam ahd 64 feet deep, with\na speed of 20 knots. The Empress\nof Canada will come to Vancouver\nvia the . long round-the-world rou.ifl.\nTho big liner .will go on a regular,\nrun to Hong Kong, Yokohama arid\nShanghai. Passages' are now being\nbooked foi\" the!' first cruise from\nLiverpool through the Mediterranean\nSuez canal, Rerd Sea, Indian dceali.\nto the Orient; thence across to Can-\nida, arriving here in June, 1021.\n-\u25a0r      \u25a0 ' . i'\nWoUens have Increased 50 per\ncent., silks 100 per cent,, 4nd cotton\n75 per cent., says Paris.\nTwenty-Five Parties Wili Be\nGrubstaked; Are Allotted\nAntong Districts\nVICTORIA, May f,^An outline\" of\nproposals formulated jointly by the\nprovincial departments of Jnlnes and\nof industries for the general encouragement of prospecting for minerals In British Columbia, and in\nparticular for . fhe extension of aid\nto return'ed; __oldie_.s wishing to en-,\ngage in that line of work, was made\npublic' today by the Hon. Wm.\nSloan; minister of mines.\nIt is Intended that 25 parties\nshall be put In the field each of\nwhich will consist of two men, one\na practical prospector of experience,\nand the other a returned soldier.\nT'he partes #J11 be grubstaked, and\nthe total number for which provision is being made will he divided\namong the six mineral survey districts of the' province, In proportion to the population of e'a'ch of the\nsaid   districts.\nMINE   INSPECTOR   RETIRES\nVICTORIA, May '8.\u2014George .. Wilkinson has resigned the posi tion of\nchief inspector of mines, and will be\nsucceeded by .Ifis. McGregor, senior\ninspector, who formerly was a member of tho legislature. Mr. Wilkinson goes Into, private employment\nas general manager of tho Pacific\nCoast coal  mines.\nsix cWTIares\n|FQR iplNA CARS\nItEGlN^i .;Maj*K>6^Supt. D. W.\nHoueton, of the stroeL railway department, hns written tbe city commissioners recommending the adoption of a slx-eent faro on the street\ncars unless the people nre prepared\nto endorse the operntlon of one-man\ncars as n mnnsurfl to meet the increasing cosi of running tbe system.\nIt was announced by Commissioner\nThornton.\nALBERTA RANCHERS\nTO DIP CATTLE\nLETHBRIDGE. Altn., May Gv \u2014\nRanchers and farmers In Southern\nAlberta are enthusiastically entering\ninto tho Scherbo for dipping cattle\nthis summer in order that the ban\non the animals in the mange area,\nwhich covers n? large portion of the\nsouth, will be'lifted by the United\nStates.\nMACHINISTS WALK OUT\n' PETERBORO, May G.\u2014Machinists,\ntool makers and other employees of\nthe local plant of the Canadian General Electric company walked out at\n10 o'clock this .morning on a strike\ninvolving wage demands. Several\nhundred Vien are affected.\nPrepayment in United States\nCurrency for Entire Haul\nUnfair\nOTTAWA, May 6.\u2014United States\nrailroads may shortly rescind their\norder demanding prepayment of\nfreight charges on shipments from\nthe United States to Canadian points,\nfollowing: Representations of Canadian importers to the Canadian railway commission that an addition of,\nabout 10 per cent *as thereby belng|\nrtinHe to' rates on the Canadian haul,;\nthrough the adverse e:>\u00a3chn.rige.\nIt is generally recoghized in Canada that the United States roads\narte entitled to their full proportion\nof earnings oh traffic in the United\nStates, in other words, that they are\nentitled to payment in Upited States\ncurrency for the -haul up to (tie\nCJariadlan border. The effect' of the\nenforced prepayment on exports to\nCanada is that importers here nr6\npaying ip United States currency\nfor the Canadian part of t$e haul\nas . well, and United States roads\nhave agreed to modify thetr order so\nthat payment can be made' iii Uri-\nItCd States currency \u00a36r' the firflt\npart of the haul, and in Canadian\ncurrency for the haul in. Canada.\nIt Is understoffd that the . Canadian railway commission In negotiating' \"frith the interstate commerce\ncoirimlssion in the matter.\nT S\nEleven   Thousand   Dollars\n_  Lost   Through   Changing\nClock Last Year\nSASKATOON, May 6.\u2014Rejection of\nthe daylight saving measure will\nmean a difference In revenue.for the\nseason of approximately' $16,000 to\nthe Saskatoon power house, stated\ncity officials, l>a.lr.g their calculations on the result last year, when Its\nadoption caused a drop in revenue,\nof nearly Jl 1,000.\nBrown was the predominating\nshade In the sport fashion show\nof a well known Fifth Avenue firm\nthis  week.\nCHEAPER COAL IN\nCANADA\n.-; WINNIPEG; ^ia^ i!^Prl^e(Tftf coa I\nWill be lowered throughout western\nCanada as the result of the extensive developments io be carried out\non lhe Alberta eofll branch .where\nsteam shovels will be useil instead\nof tho more costly mining process\nto open a 'SO foot seam of bituminous\ncoal. This claim was made' by Geo.\nF, Macdonald, of Vaneouver, who was\na recent visitor here.\nMrs. Mary Roberts-It in chart is\nrunning as a delegate at large for\nthe doming', presidential elections.\nTHE PLAGUE\nOF PIMPLES\nBODV COVE-USD WITH THEJt\nThe primary .cause .of . pimples\narises from the blood not-bejng In a\ngood condition. When the blood becomes impure you will flnc( that\npimples will break out all over the\nbody, but more particularly on the\nforehead,' nose and chin, and al-\nthough they are not a dangerous\ntrouble they are very unsightly.\nWhat you need when pimples or\nboils break out is a real good blood\npurifying medicine such as Burdock\nBlood Bitters.      .\nThis preparation has been on the\nmarket for over 40 years and is the\nmost reliable remedy for all troubles\narising from a. bad conditio, of t)ie\nblood. It removes all the Impurities\nfrom the system, and will leave a\nclear, healthy skin.\nMr. Emerson Q. Ooodwln, Cats-\nbridge, N.J-.,. writes:\u2014\"Por nearly two\nyears I suffered from boils and pimples on my face and neck, and\nnearly all. of my body was covered\nwith the pimples. I tried most evef'y-\nthing, but got no relief. One day a\nfriend advised me to,try Burdock\nBlood Bitters,' and ntit\/p using three\nbottles the pimples and bolls had ail\nleft me and there Is no.sigh of them\nreturning. I can strongly recorrtlinend\nB. B B. tq anyone who Is troubled\nWith skin disease.'',\nManufactured1 only by. The T. Mil-\nburn Co.. Limited, Toronto. Ont.\nLegal Notices\n(Sections 3ti arrit 1,14.)\nBe Application No. 7274-1.\nTake notice that application has\npeen made to register Carl Anton.rton-\nniark as owner in fee of All and Singular that certain parcel or tract of\nland and premises situate, lying arrrl\nbeing in the Assessment District of\nNelson, more particularly known and\ndescribed as Part 6 acres of the West\n,% of Lot E of .Lot SIS. Group 1,\nMap 744 s delineated on Sketch Map\n_1730A under a conveyance dated I'I. t\nFebruary, 1920, from Joim __dwrml\nHamson, tire registererl owrrer of the\nsaid binds by virtue: of. a conveyance\ndated !)th April inn. from Edward Albert.. Crease, whose title was derived\nunder a Tax Sale deed from the assessor of the District of Nelson lien\nlug date SOtli- December, 1915.\nYou    are, required,   to    contest    the\nclaim of the  tax purchaser within -in\ndays  from the date of the service of\nthis notice (which may be effected by\npublication    thereof. as   hereunder'   directed),  and   your  attention   is   called\nto- section  36  of  the   \"Land  Registry\nAct' ' with   amendments, . and   to   tire\nfollowing extract therefrom;\u2014\n\"and-.in default of a caveat or certificate of ,i!s pendens being filed\nbefore   the   registration   as   owner-\nol  the person entitled  umicr such\ntax   sale, \u25a0 all   persons,   so   served\nwith   notice, ...       .       nnd   those\nclaiming   through   or   under,   them,\nand   all   persons, claiming  any   interest In .the larrd by virtue of any\nunregistered ' -instrument,    and    all\npersons .claiming   nny- Interest   In\nthe   land   by   descent  -whose   title\nls^ not-, registered under the provisions of this Act, shnll be for ever\nestopped   and   debarred   from   setting up any claim, to or in respect\nof the iand so sold for taxes, arrrl\nthe   Registrar   shall    register    the\nperson   entitled    under   such    tux\nsale as owner bf the laud so sold\n\u2022for taxes.\"\nAhd whereas application has been\nmade for a Certificate of Indefeasible\nTitle to the above-mentioned lands,\nIn the name ..of Carl Anton Ronmark;\nAnd whereas orr Investigating the\ntitle.It appears that prior to tire llth\nday of October, 11)13 (the oatc on which\nthe said lands were sold for overdue\ntaxes), you were,the registered owner\nthereof;\nFurther take notice that at the\nsame time I Bhali effect registration\n\u25a0in pursuance of such application ami\nIssue a Certificate of Indefensible\nTitle to the salrl lands In the name of\nCarl Anton Ronmnrk unless you take\nand prosecute the proper proceedings\nto establish your claim, If any, to the\nsaid lands, or to prevent such proposed   action   on  mv   part.\nDated at the land Registry Office,\nNelson,   R.C.,   this  2tst  day  of  April,\nE. S. STOKES,\n,\u201e    .,  \u2022I?_\"rif;t   Registrar   of   Titles.\nTo Horatio Ross;\nI direct service of this notice to he\nmade by publication thereof twice a\nweek for two weeks in a newspaper\nCirculating   in   Nelson,   RC.\nIlia   S.   STOKES,, j\nDistrict Registrar, of Titles.\n(7795)\nDODOS \\\nS>, PILLS\n#M'h .' \u25a0-\u2022\u25a0 -*c\n,. \u25a0 '^lKlDNI_Y>.\n'8ETES\nINSURANCE\nSTOCKS RENTALS\nREAL   ESTATE\nD.ST. DENIS\nPhONE   39 508   WARD   ST.\nNEL80N, B.C.\nFARM AREA GROWS\nBoth' drains  and   Fodder Acreage  Ilf\nProvince  Show Btg Expansion\nVrCTOKIA, \"May 6.\u2014The annual.\nreport of the provincial department\nof agriculture sho*a that last. year's\narea sown jto (grains waa 2f\u00bb,021\nacres iri' excess of the year before.\nThe area sown to fodder in the\nyear 1.019 similarly showed an increase over the pi-weeding1' year io\nth'6 extent of 48,654 acres! There are\n2?,(ll0,000 acivs oi, land in British\nColumbia suitable rot .agriculture.\nOut of thi.; quantity 2,800,000 acres\n\u25a0only nvo occupied, and - approximately 500.000 acres only are tinder\ncultivation? '\nw\nCanadian Bank\nof Gommerce\nSir    Edmund   Walker,   C.V.O.,\nLL.D.,   D.C.L.,   President\nSir  John  Aird, General  Mgr,\nH. V. F. Jones, Ass't. Gen'f. Mgr:\nCapital   Paid   Up $15,000,000\nReserve Fund $15,000,000\n>i\u2014,..-.i.^*_i .-\u25a0     i*'uiI,   v    \",W\nMining Development\nThe development of the minors.! deposits throughout Canada is nf paramount importance\nto the country.\nThere arc many ways in which\nthis Bank nan assist miners.\nCall .upon us and let ua explain what a complete banking\nservice means to you.\nBranches fn Kootenay antf\nBoundary at Nelson, Pernio\nCranbrook, Creston, Grand\nForks, Greenwood, Nakusp,\nTrail,\nNELSON   BRANCH:\nP.  B. Fowler, Manager.\nce oF miners\nMiner's Friend\/a GIANT Permitted\nCoal Explosive, is the choice of miners\u2014\nthe choice of mine owners too.\nTestshaveprovedtheefficiencybf Miner's\nFriend and have shown it to be dependable under all conditions to be met in\nCanadian coal mining.\nThe extra care and skill employed* in\nmanufacturing GIANT Explosives are\nyour guarantee of their strength, stability\nand uniformity.\nAnd, as the GIANT line includes every type and\ngrade of blasting agent, you will have no difficulty in\nsecuring exactly the right kind to do your work wel.\nand at the least cost.\nFor your protection the GIANT trade mark is displayed on every case of genuine GIANT Explosives.\nAlways look for it\nGiant Powder Co. of Canada, Ltd.\n\"Everything for Blasting''\nDivision 103,  Vancouver, B. C.\nBru.chOM.err: Nelwo, B.C.: P. IriceRupee. t, tl. C.j Edmonton, Alberta\n\"A PERFECT Shave in 3 Minutes\" is\n* \u2022*\u25a0 AutoStrop razor service. Stroppii.\u00bb\nantjl cleaning without taking anything\napart, without even removing the blade\nfrom the frame is an exclusive AutoStron\nRazor feature.\nAnd the qtt-tlity of the shave is the kind\nyou are craving for!\nYour dealer Will,gladly demdnstrate the\nAutoStrop Razor to you. He will guarantee\ny to Refund your money, if the razor does not\n8 prove to your entire satisfaction.'\n\u2022 Only $5.00\u2014complete with strop and\ntwelve blades in an attractive assortment of\ncases.\nAutoStrop Safety Razor Co., Limited\nAutoStrop Building, Toronto, Canada\n__=\n-\n f Page*\nTHE DAILY NEWS, FRJBAY MORNINC, MAY 7, 1920;J\n________ Audit Bnro.n of Olronlatlon\n\u2022FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 7, 1920\nWhen Hungary Balks\nHungary has been given a few days in which to accept\nor reject the peace treaty. To most people it will come as a\nsurprise that the ,Magyars are still among the \"hold-outs\"\nas far as*the conclusion of peace is concerned.\nHungary's hesitation has arisen through the fact that while\nunder the treaty it has gained the independence from Austria\nfor which in pre-war days it contended, it now objects to the\nterms because they do not permit the Magyars to domineer\nover the Transylvanians, Jugo-Slavs and Czecho-Slovaks. Hungary's ideal of a peace treaty would be one which gave complete, freedom to tyrannize over three or four other nationalities.\n^.:>.1\"fc.     %\u25a0   '\"**\nEarly Work Makes Successful Fairs\nPublication of the list of dates for the annual fall fairs in\nKootenay and Boundary calls attention to the important fact\nthat the time to make the arrangements which will result in\nsuccessful fairs is during the spring and early summer.\nIt is then that plans must be made for the exhibitions\nand it is during the spring and early summer that the farmer\nmust prepare for many of the different classes of exhibits with\nwhich he hopes to win prizes.\n\u00bb \u00bb \u00bb \u00bb\nIn Mexico\n\u25a0She Bails 3feta\u00ab.\nPublished every morning except Sunday by Tha Neva Publishing Company,\nLimit.d,  Nelson,  B.C..  Canada.\nBusiness-letters ahould be addreaaed and checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and In no case to Individual\nmembers of the staff.\nAdvertising rata cards and aworn detailed statements ot circulation mailed\n. on request or may be seen at the office of any advertising agency recognized\nby the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription ratea: By mall (country), CO cents per month; ?_.60 for \u00ablx\nmonths, IE per year. By mall (olty), 60 cents per month, (8.26 for six months,\n11.00 per year. Delivered, 760 per month: ?4 for six months: \u00bb7.80 per year,\npayable in advance.\t\nTO BE E\nGovernment Expedition to\nExamine Mining Possibilities of Hinterland\nWINNIPEG, May C\u2014F. H. Kltlo,\nof tho natural resources department\nof tho department of tho Interior,\nOttawa, and a government expedition, left here recently on a 40.00\nmile trip into the hinterlands of\nCanada for a purposo of making\na report on the buffalo country and\nthe mining possibilities ot the farthest north.\nThe. party will go from peace\nRiver Crossing down the river hy\nboat to Port Chlppewyan and on. to\nPort 1-lUgerald. Overland for 10\nmiles to Port Smith, and by boat\ndown tho McKcnzio river to Rat\nftiver, and thence to Fort Mcpherson, tip the Rat River to the lieight\nof land between the waters of the\nMcKenzlc basin and the Yukon,\nreaching Porcupine river at Palerre\nHouse.     Down   the   Porcupine   river\nto pawsnn City and thence to Vancouver.\nA side trip into the Stewart Lake\nmining district will' be -made and\ngovernment reports will be. made on\nthe road Ije.tween Fort Fitzgerald and\nFort Smith,- which is being graded\nas a yehlcle. road, and will also make\na report on .the buffalo country. The\nparty expect to return to Winnipeg\nabout September,   r\nMINERS'PRESIDENT\nNOW IN CUSTODY\nINDIANAPOLIS, May (i\u2014John L.\nLowis, president of the United Mine\nWorkers of America surrendered to\na, United States marshal here today oil a federal indictment charging\nconspiracy to.!! violate the Lever act,\nand . was released on |10,000 bond.\nHe wil] be arraigned beforo United\nStates district Judge A. B. Anderson in court 'here to-morrow morning. l-\nAlways  the  Same   Pleasing   Taste\nIprOl\nTha   Sweotost   Oil   from   Apricots\nMECHANICS' TOOLS\nWe have a splendid assortment of.\nSTANLEY'S TOOLS\nIo Select From, Including\nPlanes, Squares, Screw Drivers, Try Squares,\nChisels, Etc.\nSee the New Dowel Machine!\nPRICES IUGHT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nBAKEB STREET\nNEMON, B. O.\nA CATALOGUE WITH)\nCHARACTER\nThere Is something about Blrka'\nyearly  Catalogue  which  might\nbe     termed     \"character\"\u2014the \u2022\nbook is so dignified, solid, and!\nreliable.   True, it is that prices [\nsometimes  change,  hut this la\nunavoidable  because  its  pages\nhave   to   be   compiled   several\nmonths before the book is ready\nfor   issue,   and   manufacturing\nand   other,   conditions   undergo |\nchange's In the meantime.\nYet :thc book stands as a full\nand  complete  guide  to household and  gift shopping.\nJohn Burns & Sons *\"S SK-\"!\nBASH AND  DOOR  FACTORY NELSON  PLANING MIIJ-S\nVernon Street, Nelson, B. O.\nKVICRY  DESCRIPTION  OF BUILDING  MATERIAL  KEPT IN  STOCK\nEstimates Given on Stone, Brick', Concrete and Frame Building.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLT ATTENDED TO\nP. O. BOX J-W PTHMnD \u00bb1-1\n\u25a0\nDelaware   was   the   first   state   ft\nadopt the United States rnnslliitinn\nIt is eight or nine years since the deposition of Porfirio\nDiaz, the benevolent despot who nearly succeeded in making\nMexico a nation. During that time the country to the south\nof the Rio Grande has suffered from almost incessant civil\nwar and in the brief intervals of comparative peace brigandage\nhas been.as common as moonshining in Kentucky.\nRecently' it had seemed that something approaching an\nera of peaceful industry was at hand. There were* signs of\nreestablishment of mining and other industries; foreign interests engaged in development enterprises were again receiving\nsome protection; even the Mexicans themselves were doing some\nwork. Perhaps the resulting improvement in general conditions\ncreated enough visible wealth in the form of supplies and\nmoijey to reawaken the predacious instinct in the various\nrevolutionary leaders who have been comparatively quiet for the\npast year or so. In any event Villa and Obregon and the\nrest of the pack of rascals are again'in fully cry, nominally\nafter the head of Carranza, but really after a chance to loot.\nCarranza is probably as big a rascal as any of them,\nbut he did his country no service when he gave up the\npursuit of the bandit leaders. If he had kept after them until\nhe captured them, if he had followed, the policy of Diaz, he\nmight have saved the country the new period of bloodshed\nand destruction which it now appears to be embarking upon.\nThe Mexicans as a whole would be peaceful enough if the\nbandit leaders were brought to justice and a decent respect\nfor law and order inculcated in the public mind. But you can't\nreform a bandit by taking afternoon tea with him.\n0FPERGER1VER\nExtension of Pacific Great\nEastern to the Eastward\nPlanned\nVANCOUVER, May 6.\u2014The provincial government has arranged to\nsend out two parties of engineers\nthis summer to conduct a survey\nnorth from Prince George for the\nproposed extension of the Pacific\nGreat Eastern railway into the Peace\nRiver country. Premier Oliver formerly, announced while in the city\nrecently; The extension will tap\norfe Of the richest territories in the\nprovince, and provide an outlet to tho\ncoast for the fertile area north of\nEdmonton, ifyhlch ia fed now simply\nby the Edmonton & Dunvcgan railway. ,   .\nDEAD CANADIAN\nIN OIL TANK\n| TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY |\n?iEHRE, S. D. May 6\u2014When a\nspeciul train, of empty oil tanks cars\narrived here yesterday on their return to the Wyoming oil fields, one\nof the cars which came from Have-\nrley, Sask, Canada was seen to be\nopen. As it was being closed the\nbady-t-I a man was seen in the tank\nartd temoved. Papers tvore found on\ntho body, a small amount of money\nand a. railway switch key. The papers indicate his name to be' Frank\nKushurs, but give no'aue to his\ntown, county or state.\nFARMER LABOR\n, ALLIANCE TALK\n(Prom The Daily Miner, May 7, 1900.)\nA new factor liaB been presented In\nthe politlcul problem before the electors of Nelson Riding by the advent of\nDr. C. A. B. Hall as an Independent\nLiberal   candidate.\n\u2022_\u25a0_*-\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\nGeorge   Alexander   of   Kaslo   was\nvisitor   in   town   yesterday.\nI      TEN   YEARS AGO TODAY       I\n(Prom The Daily News, May 7, 1910.)\nWord of the death of King Edward\nwas received at 4.45 o'clock yesterday\nafternoon. \"Well, it is all over, but 1\nthink I have done my duty,\" were the\nking's  last  words,\n\u2022 *    \u00bb\nThe bandstand has been placed In\nposition on Vernon street, opposite the\nHume hotel, and is now undergoing\nrepairs.\n* *   *\nA deal has Just been put through\nwhereby the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting Co. become,the owners of the\nMolly   Gibson  mine.\n%;\nWINNIPEG, May 0.\u2014At the provincial executive of the Dominion\nLabor party meeting held last night\nreports were received from 15 constituencies on the general work of\norganization In connection with ! .the\ncoming provincial election. The opinion was expressed triat ln many\ncases of these constituencies there\nvjould be \u2022 combined farmer Labor\ncandidate*--  nominated.\nThe audited statement of Canadian\nY. M. C^jA. finances shows that\nduring 191*3 ?868,765. was spent on\nfree. gifts \"and services to returning\nand  returned  soldiers.\nSaved\nm Tor*\nfingew\nThe Angers wete ttose*1* of lir.\nJ. W. Bosnard, 61 539 Craig St.\nE., Montreal. He says, \u2014\"A {ailing beam badly smashed my hand.\nTwo fingers were so severely\ncrushed that the doctors said they\nwould have to be amputated. Naturally I didn't want this, so decided to try Zam-Buk first.' I applied Zam-Buk dally, and by the\ntime I had used J4 worth, the In-\nJury was completely healed. My\nfingers were saved!\"\nJust another Illustration of the\nhealing power of Zam-Buk. Accidents will happen. It may be your\nturn next. Better get a box and,\nkeep It handy. Accidents are leu\nfrequent than skin diseases, and\nremember this\u2014\nZam-Buk Is Just as good ' tor\neczema, ulcers, skin diseases, and\npiles, as for cuts, burns, bruises.\nAll druggists and stores SOc. Box,\nor i for % 1.25.   Refuse substitutes.\nNAVY CUT\nWherever you go \u2014 Canada,\nEngland, India, any part of the\ns      Empire \u2014 leaders  in   the business\ns      world, in the social world, in the athletic\nworld all smoke Player's Navy Cut\nCigarettes!\nThey prefer'Player's, because in no\nother Virginia cigarette at aiiy price\ncan they find such perfed cigarette\nsatisfaction.\n\u25a0j     Among smokers, a cigarette is judged\n3    by its smoothness, its fragrance, its\nmildness and its CONSISTENT high\nquality.\nThat is why men prefer Player's!\nrrWW?nPT\/mnm^^\n '        \u25a0'.\u25a0'! \u25a0.-'J..'\n_\/.__:\n#5\/\nTHE DAILY NEWS,  KUIDAY MOUNINO, MAY 7, 1020\ni'age 8\n; Cfiristie's Reception\nWafers\nTin,......... ..-.55c\n\u2022    FRESH ASPARAGUS\n* FRESH SPINACH\nGREEN ONIONS\nFRESH LOCAL\nRHUBARB\nSom-Mor   Biscuits,   Salted   So'das,\n\u00ab<*\u25a0 on\u00ab\npackage!  .-.  \u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\nGarden and Vegetable\nSeeds of all kinds\nWE CLOSE  AT 6  P.  M.\n\"i ' ' '_     .  -\n[Star Grocery\n-PHONE IQ-\nLaboratory Supplies\n,. \u00a7)        - -^Forv-  .-\nA8SAYER3   AND   CHEMIST8\nScientific Apparatus for Schools\n.''r and Universities\nGraphite  Crucibles for  Brass\nFoundries\nAelds   and   Chemicals\nChemically Pure Sulphuric Acid\nfor Storage Batteries\nTHE  B.C.  ASSAY   &   CHEMICAL SUPPLY CO, LTD.\n5S7 Hornby St.. Vancouver, B.C.\nWhite Goods\nWe now have a splendid supply\nof White Shoes\nHigh Shoes\nOxfords\nPumps\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeadors   in   Foot   Fashieni\nBALI PRACTICE\nSenior baseball players will . hold\nanother practice game this afternoon\nat 5 o'clock on the recreation grounds,\nat which a large turnout of players is\nanticipated. An effort is being made\nto put the players in as good shape\nas possible tor the coming contest\nbetween the local seniors and Kaslo,\nwhich will be played in- this city as\na part of the sports program of the\nHudson's Bay celebration day on May\n12.\nDr. C. M, McCloy, national secretary for physical education, Chinese\nT. M. C. A., visited western Canada\npoints oh his way back to China\nafter spending a furlough in America. ,\nSome   dignified  men  are   hustlers.\nThe ,largest   stock   of   Paint,   Oils,\nVarnishes,  Plumbing  Supplies In  the\nSlocan.    Prices  right at\nTHE G. T, STORE\nV       NEW   DENVER,   B.C.\nMail   orders   promptly   shipped.\nP.O. Box 4 Phone 22\nIf you want results try a Class Ad\nOur Curtain\nMaterials\nare arriving every few days\nnow and can show a very\ncomplete  line.\nChintz,\nCretonnes\nVoiles\nMarquisettes\nScrims >\nNets\nCall and lot us show\/you our\nline.    Prices to suit.JKjj*'\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nBAKER  ST.        NELSON,   B.C.\nW^TCH YOUR BOY EAT\nDon't curb his appetite4tis growing lxxify\nrequires plenty of tissue-buildind.bone-makind\nfcodLetluineaifiveorsix Shredded\nWheatBlSCUlts atone sittind-they are\neas%dide-^andsi#lyJ'thelK)a^ljinto\nhourishinent iK^ded for work or play. Eatind\nShredded Wheat puts you m harmony with\nNature's law and Keeps you fortified against\ndisease.Two Biscirits.withmilk or cream make\na nourishing meal at a cost of a few cents.\nMADE IM\nCANADA\ni\n\u2014Guests for tea?\nServe Lanka\nLanka is British grown tea from Ceylon's hill\ngardens.\nThe choicest grades are blended, making an\nexquisite flavor, a tempting aroma, a color that\ncharms.   The price is moderate,      ,\nLook for this package.\n[\\ported and packed by WILLIAM BRAID & COMPANY\n\u00ab\nI\n'- '     VANCAUVER,  B. C.\nPackers of'the famous \"Braid's Best\" Tea and Coffee\n_________\nIt Is Easily Explained\nWhy* so many'women-.prefer .bur Flour. ' It( 1b ' because of its\nfind and certain, baking qualities, its. ,use means, light and tooth.-,\nsomo bread.    No need  to worry about how your baking will .turn\nout   ii'  you  use\nTAYLOR MADE FLOUR\nTaylor Milling & Elev. Co.\nNecessary\nAs Salt\n\u25a0   for seasonings.\n; \u2014Asfew. drops\nwiK#fcring out\nthe' true flavor\nof foods.\nThe\nORIGINAL and\nGenuine WorMatershlrr\nAFTERSHAVING\nHeal the Skin and Prevent Infection with \"ABSORBINE JR.\"\nThe most healing, most soothing*\nmost, effective skin lotion you can use\nafter shaving is.one you can make\nup at home by adding one ounce of\n\"ABSORBINE JR.? to a quart of\nwater or witch hazel. ,\nTo rub this lotion over the face\nafter shaving is a luxury indeed. It\ntakes away all soreness\u2014prevents\nchapping and irritation\u2014heals the\nskin\u2014and prevents .nfection. \u25a0\nt A solution of \"ABSORBINE JR.\"\nin. water makes an excellent mouth'\nwash; it thoroughly cleans the mouth;\ndestroys germs, nnd prevents decay;\nfine for the teeth and gums.\n$1.25 a bpttle\u2014at most, druggists\nor sent postpaid bv W. F. Young, inc.,\nLyman Building, Montreal. at\nJunior Rod and Gun Club\nAdopts Constitution and\nElects Officers\n; At a public meeting of young\nsportsmen in this city, held last night\nIn the Y.M.C.A.. a draft of. the proposed constitution of the Nelson Junior Rod and Gun club was read and\nadopted,   and   officers   elected. .\nProvision is made in the constitution for an entrance fee of GO cents\nand an annual subscription of $1 per\nmember. Seven members wore to\nmake a quorum and meetings will be\nheld every third Thursday ln the\nmonth. The age limit was set at 15\nyears and over.\nIt was decided that the annual subscription to the Nelson District Rod\nand Gun club for the executive members of the junior club, who by the\nconstitution are required to be members of the senior club also, would\nbe paid for out of the general funds\nof the Junior club; It was also decided to issue buttons to members of\nthe club, and a committee was appointed to ascertain the cost of buttons. The annual subscription fee\nentitles members to one button free\nof other cost.\nPermission to trap and shoot crows\non the flats fronting Kootenay Lake is\nto be sought of Chief Constable Em-\neat Gammon, the members of the\nclub having decided to exterminate all\ncrows. Three members, Stanley Mqr-\naro, Georgo Walker, and James Gagnon, were delegated to wait on the\nchief.\nThose elected Ad office were: President, Reg. Dill; vice-president, Jack\nBoyce: corresponding secretary, Ted\nGrlzzelle; recording secretary, Lawrence Simpson; treasurer, Jack Ink.\nThe button committee consisted of\nJack Hume, Tom Gibson, Ted Clriz__elle.\nAbout 20 members of the club vere\npresent  at.'the  meeting.\nII PULL SWING\nSpeakers at Outdoor Meeting Endorse Work of\nLocal Institution\n\"With the big Y.M.C.A. financial campaign now in full swing and with\ncanvassers meeting with a generous\nresponse from business men and private citizens, convincing evidence of\nthe support the campaign will receive\nand an endorsation of the value of\nthe institution was given yesterday,\non which subject three prominent\nspeakers addressed the large public\nmeeting on  Baker  street  last  evening.\nWhile the Kilties band played popular airs, H. M. Baskin, chairman of\nthe campaign committee, drove up to\nthe headquarters, and after clearing\nthe ground with the statement that\nthe effort is to clean up the financial\nindebtedness of the Institution once\nand for all,1 introduced the first\nspeaker,  Rev.  J, IB.  Tyner.\nMr. Tyner, who recently arrived in\nthe city to take over* the pastorate\nof the Baptist church, stated that\nthough he was not familiar with the\nwork of tin. local iiiMtiiuiion, he was\nfamiliar -wj'th the work of the association in Flanders, where his three\nsons fought in tbe trenches. He said\nthat work was beyond praise.\nAn institution should be judged by\nthe product it turned out, and there\ncan be no question that the Y.M.C.A.\nwas a benefit physically, mentally and\nmorally, Mr, Tyner concluded.\n\u25a0 John Notman -next- addressed the\nmeeting, stating he had no hesitation\nin supporting the institution because\nif anything at aU were \"worth supporting, it was a movement having for\nIts object social advancement, and\nparticularly advancement of the young.\nNo profits wero derived from the institution, which was non-sectarian and\nopen   to  all,\nA brief address was also given by\nPresident R. Smillie, who answered the\nquestion as to \"why the Y.M.C.A.\nneeded money.\" He explained that the\ngreat majority of the me\/nbers of. the\ninstitution were boys under 16 years.\nIn other words, the youths used the\nbuilding about four times as much\nas did the senior members. The\nprice of a Junior subscription was $5\nand he estimated that it would cost\nabout 125 to furnish them with all\nthey enjoyed through their Iii subscription.\nHe also emphasized tho pressing\nneed of more people to assist ln the\ncanvassing. He knew that nearly\neverybody was busy at this time of\nthe year, but he urged that more get\nin and give their services for a day\nIn  the campaign,\nAhather public meeting will bo held\n,thls evening nt headquarters, at which\nMe Veterans' blind will play selections\nand a troup of young gymnasts give\na>.display Illustrating the training they\n*<M       \u25a0\u25a0\"* - '\nreaaWe   in   the' Y.M.C.A.\nCHOOSE TEAM TODAY\nAt the senior football practice game,\nwhich is to be played this afternoon\nat, 5.30 o'clock, players will be chosen\nto represent the city on the team\nwhich will1 meet Trail seniors here on\nMay , 12. The team will be chosen\nby non-playing spectators, and the\nnames will be submitted to the executive of the Nelson Athletic association\nby the football  executive  officer.\nMRS. GOMPERS DIES\nWASHINGTON May -6. \u2014 Mrs.\nSamuel Gompers, wife of te preside! of the American Federation of\nLabor, died at her home here tonight, after a long illness. She was\n69 years of age, and had been married for more than half a century.\nFuneral services will be held here,\nand the body will be taken to New\nYork for burial Sunday.    .\nThe Store for Style\nThe Store for Quality\nMag Sales\n\u2122Important Sale of Womens' Suits\nHUNDREDS OF FINELY TAILORED SUITS in Misses' and Women's sizes put\non sale at remarkably low -prices. Every garments is up-to-the-minute in style,\nand up to our usual standard in quality. If you have not already purchased your\nSpring Suit, this Sale offers a golden opportunity in money-saving. GET HERE\nEARLY THIS MORNING, as many, of these SUITS are Individual Styles, and the\nModel you want is likely to be sold early.\nLadies9 Suits\nat $24.%.\n\"f Only . 25 of those All-Wool] Serge Suits\nmade in a variety of good styles, some\n\u25a0 plain tailored, others trimmed with {\nbraid. Coats aro lined with plain Satin,\nor figured goods. Sizes 30 to 38. Values\nto $45.00. rt>tt J  QF\nMay Salo Price  fDAJ^X^VD\nLadies' Suits\nat $49.00\nAll-Wool mannish Serge and Gabardine\nSUITS, many plain tailored, and others\nmore dressy styles. Coats lined with\nSilk. Skirts smartly tailored, and finished with belts and pockets. Navy\nand black only. Sizes lfi to 42. Values\n,to $67.50.\nMay Salo Price\t\n$49.00\nLadies9 Suits\nat $39.00\nA splendid collection of plain tailored or\nnovelty Suits, made of All-Wool Serge.\nCoats lined with Satin or fancy Silk.\nSkirts made with straight lines and\nfinished with belts. Sizes 16 to\nValues to 550.00.\nMay  Sale  Price,  each...\n$39.00\nLadies* Suits\nat $69.00\nThe best tailored SUITS we have ever\nshown at this money. Coats are all\nlined with guaranteed Silk, and made\nwith notched collars, some having narrow belts, Skirts have belts and silt\npockets. We have these in sand, grey,\nnavy and Belgian blue. Sizes 16 to 44,\nValues to $85.00.\nMay  Sale. Price\t\n$69.00\nLadies' Suits\nat $79.00\nA splendid collection of Model  Suits.\nCoats mado in loose or belted styles,\nsomo plain tailored, others trimmed\nwith novelty embroidery or stitching\nLinings of guaranteed Silk.    Skirts\ntiro   bolted   and  have  slit   pockets.\nColors  are' navy and  grey.    Sizes\n14    to    44,      Values      to      $100.00.'\nMay   Strife   Price\neach    \t\nWomen' Separate\nSkirts\nat $9.95\nMade of good Tweeds in brown or grey mixtures, nnd of All-Wool Serges In navy and\nblack. All smartly made In belted styles,\nand with pockets. Many have braid trimmings.      Sizes    to    30-inch    waist     measure.\n$79.00\nValues to $12.75.\nMay   Sale   Price\n611 BAKER ST.\n$9.95\nPHONE 200 <\nIN\n[\nFirst Time in History of\nCanada; Asks for Murder\nVerdicts\nWINNIPEG, May 6,\u2014Extension of\nthe evidence taken In the DeForgc\nmurder case has been ordered by\ntho department of the attorney-\ngeneral, according to a statement\nmade by Deputy Attorney General\nJohn Allen, today, with the intention of appealing the case. This\nwilt bo the first instance of its\nkind in Canada. Tho threo men\nconvicted, of manslaughter for the\nmurder of Henry DeForge, arc Wil\nliam Elneck, Harold Hurdle and\nHarold   Clements.\nThe first was . sentenced to 2ii\nyears imprisonment, and the other\ntwo to 15 years each. The grounds\nupon which the case will be appealed\nby the department, it is stated,\nwill be that all should have been\nconvicted of murder, because the\ndeed was committed whilo the convicted parties wero ln tbe act of\n.felony. Tbe appeal, it is stated, will\nnot affect, the present sentence passed by tiie court, but will rather, be\nin order that It can servo us a\nprecedent for future cases.\nIt Is said that the extension\nof the evidence will bo completed\nin such time as to allow the appeal\nto  come  up  for  hearing next  week.\nPROMINENT   WINNIPEGGER   DIES\nWINNIPEG, May 6.\u2014C. W. Kennedy one of tbe Best known real\nestate men and financial men of\nWinnipeg, died at his home near\nLooUport today. He was a sun of\nCol. W. T. Kennedy, who was registrar    for    Winnipeg    district    for\nmany years. He was one of the\nassistant commissioners of the Workmen's Compensation act\nPORT ARTHUR WILL\nMAKE STEAM SHOVELS\nPORT ARTHUR, May 6.\u2014The Lake\nSuperior Leader company, of Duluth,\nlias awarded a contract for the\nmanufacture of 20 Armstrong shovels,\nto the Port Arthur Shipbuilding company. It is the intention of tbe\nAmerican company to organize a subsidiary company In Port Arthur to\nhandle the company's product for\nCanada   and   the   British   dominions.\nOrgandie, so fashionable for dresses, has also tempted Paris modistes,\nand in nearly all the houses are to\nbe seen big organdie capellnes of\nlight colors, or dark straw shapes'\nveiled in rather bright toned organdie.\nFour   thousands   pounds   of   ginger\ncan be grown on one acre in Jamaicn.\nMETHODISTS LOSE\nMANY MINISTERS\nI  -EMBARRASSING   HAIRS I\nVAN  BE QUICKLY REMOVED |\n*-   \\m\n(Beauty Culture)\nHairs can be easily banished from\nt,ho skin by this quick, painless method:, Mix into a stlff^poMe some\npowdered .delatone and water, Spread\non hairy surface and In 2 or 3 minutes'rub off; wash the skin ahd it\nwill be.'fr&i from hair or; blemish.\nExcepting In very stubborn growths,\none application is sufficient. To\navoid disappointment, buy the dela-\ntoi.0  in  an   rirtain.il   *._>\u00bbira_>a\nTORONTO, May . 6.\u2014During the\nInst church year, Canadian Methodism lost a total of 81 preachers\nfrom the active ministry, 31 by resignation, and 50 by superannuation.\nIn the same year there were only\n24 young men received as candidates\nfor the ministry. That means a not\nloss  to  the  church  of  57   ministers.\nSUGAR REFINER  DIES\nVANCOUVER, May 6.\u2014Blythe D.\nRogers, president of the British Columbia Sugar refinery, died at his\nhome here this morning, after an ill-\nnoss df two weeks. Heart trouble\nwas  the  cause  of death.\nHe wns born in this city on May\n28, i803. He became president of\nthe 'refinery on tho death of his\nfather, B. T. Rogers,, in June, 191S,\nThe deceased yas a lieutenant in the\nRoyal   Engineers  at   Ottawa.\nEdith Wynne Muitheson appeared\nas Prince Ferdn this week in Boston Ih her husband's latest production,   \"The Fool tfroin the  Hilts.\"'\nThe' copper and pheasant shades\nand navy aro very If pod in, Paris,\nand  for evening bright  rod or jade\n...     \u25a0fttttflMf.\nBEWARE OF DECEPTION\nStatistics show that when egg albumen is used as a. constituent of\nbaking powder, the amount so used\nis too small (usually 15\/100 of 1%) to\naffect the quality or effectiveness of\nthe baking powder containing it,\nand when so used, is plainly for the\npurpose of fraud. Intelligent buyers\nwill not permit themselves to be\ndeceived by the water glass test.\nMAGIC BAKING POWDER\ncontains ho alum  or egg albumen and is\nguaranteed to be composed of the ingredients\nprinted on the label\u2014and none other.\nMade in Canada        By Canadians\nFor Canadians\n \u2022\nRPage 6\nTHI DXILT NEWS, FfiiDAY MORNING, MAY 1. 1920\nArlington Hotel\nT__ C.m_r-r.i\u00abUI_n's fforra.\n.Hot and Cold Runnttng Water In the Majority of the Rooms\u2014First-\nclass Sample Rooms\u2014Long  Distance Telephone Service\nEUROPEAN   AND   AMERICAN   PLANS\u2014RATES    MODERATE\nThe landlords have opened,^helr hearts and have  already  expended   nearly   six   thousand   dollars;   ($6,000)   during   the   hist   Six\nmonths oft the dining room and enlarged a portion of this hotel as .\nwell as the main building and are ready to expend more.. The object\n'Is to give Trail a; firstclass hotel for the traveling public, which,\nhas been needed very badly.    There have been six newly furnished\n. bedrooms added to the hotel for the commercial trade which Is a\ngreat asset in assisting the management to give the commercial!\nman comforts;   and the newly  finished  and furnished dining room\n'Is certainly a credit to the town of Trail. The hotel will run in\nthe future first class both in service and quality of food at moderate\nprices that will satisfy the traveling public and make,the Arlington\nHotel popular.\nDining   Room Open 'Day  and   Night\nG.  H. GREEN -      \u00bb -      -      Proprietor\nS. |\u00bb MIGHTON &, CO.\n' Wholesale and Retail Tobacconists\nTHE LARGEST  STOCK OF   HIGH   CLASS\n.  SMOKERS'   GOODS   IN   THE   KOOTENAYS\nTRAIL, B. C.\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nDaily   autci   aervice   meats   (III\nGreat  Northern  Trains  at\nCOLUMBIA GARDENS\nTraveller*. 'Wishing    to    save\ntime   Phone   136.   Trail\n.   Cars for  hire  at all  hours\nPhone 116L. Office Cedar Ave.\nPlumbing. Heating.\nSheet Metal Work'\nJ. BALFOUR\nEstimates  Froe\nWork    Guaranteed.\naae a '\n-SEE\nWILLIAM Sa HART\n\u2014IN-i-  ;\n\"JOHN PETTICOATS\"\ntoday';\nSTAR THEATRE\nTRAIL SECOND HAND\nSTORE\nWe buy and sell house furnishings in and out bf town.\nCrockery, Carpets, Ranges, Sewing   Machines.\nSee me and get honest Treatment.\n*  J.  IfcPHAIL\nBAY AVENUE\nSavoy Cafe\nBay Ave.\n' Trail, B. C.\nMeals at all hours Day or Night\n'Specialty   of, Sunday   Dinner  j\nPrivate     Boxes     for     Parties I\nCentral Feed and\nFuel Company\nHay,  Grain  and   Poultry \u00ab 8i|p-\nplies.\nCOAL and WOOD\nSpecial   Shipment   just   arrived\nTimothy Seei\nRed Clover\nMam.   Ited   Clover     V\nAlsyko V\nAlfalfa Seed I\nBrolno   Grass \\\nLawn   Grass\nWhite Clover ' ''\u25a0\nField   Peas\nSpring Vetch J!.. .\nSpring Bye\n-long Yellow Corn\nChick Pop.tl\nLinseed  Meal      ,'. ,\nCalf; M<W. i-.'.j\nSpring Vheat       -\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\nSeed Oats\nUnion Garage Co.\nRossland Ave. Trail\nWe* have a first class Machine\nShop fully equipped for Repairs\nto all Classes o fMachinery.\nNew Ford, Maxwell Cars and\nTrucks, .Chalmers .Cars .and\nTrucks for sale.:\nSee us about anything in the\nmechanical   line.\nFARM    ENGINES\nMOTOR    BOATS \u2022\nTRACTORS\nSAW   OUTFITS\nCYLINDER    REBOR1NG\nPISTON   WORK\nAUTOMOBILE    REPAIRS\nACCESSORIES\nCar   and   Truck  for   Hire\nPhone   No.   1\nNews of Trail ati4 |l$lriet\nBy Special Correspondents to the Daily News\n\u2022\u25a0*   -u * *. \u25a0 -\nBetween Six and Seven\nThousand Dollars Raised\nin Present Campaign\nTRAIL,\" \u25a0 May\nforward mbv6me*\nform of n new (.'\ncongregation >i of\nfull  \u00abwing, and\nfactory   progress.\nUp   till   last\nsubscriptions    ha\nof W5U5*, many '\nof   over    ?100\nwhile   one   of   ?\nwere    amongst\nrecorded   up  to\nft.\u2014The Presbyterian\nnt which is taking the\n.hureh in Trail  for tlie\nKnox church, 1b in\nis making very satis-\nSaturday evening the,\nid readied tne sum\nncTivithisil suli.S-.ript ions\nhaving; been received\nr.00, and two -of $000,\nthe li .g-1.es t amounts,\nthat   time.\nTRAIL FIRST AID\nLECTURES POPULAR\nTRAIL; May B.\u2014The fourth lecture\nof the $t'. J'oint's ambulance first aid\nCohrsfe was given by Dr. Thorn at the\ncity hall at 10.00 a.m. and 7.00 p.m.\non Wednesday, This lecture covered\nfirst aid treatment iu cases of bruises,\nburns nnd scalds, bites of snaltes and\nrabid animals and wounds by poisoned\nweapons, frost Bite, needle or fish\nbook in the skin, foreign body in the\niye or ear or nose, and injury to the\nabdomen. These cover most of the\nmost' frequently occurring classes ot!\naccidents, and are among the most\nuseful treatments of the first aid .series.\nTlie attendance for both lectures\nwas 3i>. The evening lecture was followed by the customary one hour's\nb-illflliginE practice, in which practically all the class tooli ffcU't, -\n. The next lecture wil), bc given on\nWednesday next, tho 'mil instant, at\nthe ciltv ball, at thd -usiial bonis, and\na bandaging practice under the senior\ncertificated members' supervision, will\nbe held on Monday next at the zinc\nplant dilihitf room- from .'.  to  4.\nTbe final lecture or the series will\nprobably lie given by Dr. Coghlin, who\nhas   lust   recently   returned   from   Win-\nMONTREAL BUILDING SCALE\n.MONTREAL, May 6.\u2014At a meeting\nlast night of the General Builders &\nContrn(.tors association here, it was\ndecided that wages of bricklayers\nduring the current building season\nin this elty,- should be $1 an hour,\nand for carpenters 76 cents.\nMANITOBA   SEEDING   GENERAL\nWlNNrVr.G. May 0.\u2014Seeding will\nhe pretty general by Monday in the\nDauphin district as the land is\nrapidlv drying. Barley seeding has\nheen started, and about 10 per cent\nis now  in.\nSPORT\nTRAIL PERSONALS\nTRAIL; May 6.\u2014Mrs. J. ,T., New-\nmen went to Castlegar yesterday morning to meet Mr. Newman's sister, who\nwith her husband and child are paying\na visit  with   relatives  in  this  city.\nBilsOn Merry has sold his fcar to A.\nSaunders, and ^intends leaving in a\nfew, .days,;for   Alice   Ann.\nC.' C,, Wilbur, , of the new concentrator drafting office, fs severing his\nconnection v^lth the Consolidated and\nfs. leaving shortly for Anaconda,>Mont.,\nwhere he .has*- been offered , a very\ngood position. Mr. Wilbur .Is consldr\nere'd to be one > of the mo.st valued\nengineers fn the mec|.aM6aI department. He has' been employed at the\nConsolidated i'O'r two and one half\nyears, having come here from Minneapolis.\nMaster I. Tyson has recently resigned -his position at the. Liberty theatre,\nGeo.. Green returned Sunday evening\nfrom   G'reejivCity.\nP, C. Chapman is confined to his\nhome with , illness. He expects to\nresume his duties in the course of a\nweek or ten days.\nt Dr. and Mrs; Nay, atod Mr. K. A.\n'Marseson are visiting In Pruitvale today..\nMrs. O. Wheeler ,of Rock Creek, is\nvisiting  her. sister,   Mrs.   B.   Johnston.\nWalter E. Newton, nephew of R.\nF. Green, M.P., manager of the Silver\nBell mine, KaslO, was a Trail visitor\nWednesday,, and was the guest of T.\nA. Mills while here. Mi'. Newton was\nvery much impressed by the magnitude\nof the smfclter, plant, and particularly\nby the new construction which fs\ngoing on here-, \u25a0\nMrs. .f. Craig, accompanied hy her\ndaughter, Miss Vera CnMg, and Mrs.\nJ, White, motored to ROssland Wednesday   -jfteni-jon. *\nThe following guests are registered\nat the Arlington hotel: H. T. Reid,\n'C. S. Clark, Vancouver; Colin T.\nMolr, Nelson; C. G. L. Reid, Vancouver; H.. Watson, Calgary; -P. K. Mariner, Kart Francisco, Cal.; R. E. Maine,\nMi. Thomas,; Qnt.' i     ...\nH, E. Pueorfimun, provincial-inspector for the * Burroughs adding ton chine,\nis paying his half-yearly visit to\n.Trail, having-come over from Nelson,\ncaking in'. Bttlliant. .on  tho  way.\nPRESENTATION TO\nI       MRS, TREVORROW\nTRAIL, tiaf li.\u2014Mr.*.* Geo. A. Trevorrow was the recipient of a very\nhandsome 45-plece stiver Bet, made in\nithe Patrician pattern, in a rosewood\ncase with a .silver presentation plate\nmounted thereon, presented to her on\n-..turday evening by the members of\niio office staff of the Canadian Min-\n,.Ug & Smelting company, with whom\nshe has hep'n employed for several\nyears prior to her marriage, as an expression and token of the very high\nesteem In which she has been held\nby the staff. Mrs. Trevorrow, formerly Miss- Vlvienne Constance Campbell, has lived all her life in Trail,\n'and has always been a general favorite with tho\u00bb(*} who have had the pleasure of knowing her. The presentation was. accompanied with the best\nwishes of the staff members for the\nfuture happiness of both Jlr. and Mrs.\nT\u00abvorrow*s   wedded   life.*\nvisitors   put   the   winning   run   across\nWilkinson     weakened     in     the\nr:  H.  E.\n.3.9\n^V-*^* \u2666\u25a0*\u00bb\u00bb\u2666\u00bb \u2666\u25a0\u2666 \u2022\u00a5\u00a5*\nt++if\n\u00a3   Our   Cooling   Equipment   Means   I\n. Free Insurance for our\nCustomers\nagainst imperfect meats\nStool*   ir.   always   fresh   and\nComplete\ncomplete, i\nB. C. MEAT. MARKET\n* ' i\n*        Next   tn   -f-.nk\" of'Montreal J\nJ 'Prop!   '\"    i.   OWErl     ' (.\n\u00bb Pl-.r.e 37 |\nt \u25a0 _ \u25bc\nSnap Hand Cleaner, 00\/\u00bb\nper tin   .... ...Y..':'...  -Wis\nDelmonte Pork & Beans, OAa\nlargo   tin      _\u00a3Ul.\nSt. Charles Mllli, tall &_   AA\nsize, 6 for   tDJL.lHJ\nSt. Charles Milk, (am- (p\"|   AA\nlly  size, '.   for.... d. JL.UU\nBt. Charles Milk, baby    OKn\nsize,  3, tor    Aula\nMaple Leaf Milk,        0_i   A A\nCrlseo, 3-lb. tin fl\u00bb-|   OA\nFcls Naptha Soap, _0 gl   <il\\\nbar carton    -BJL.AIV\nMazola Oil, e_-t n*\\\n'A tin  \u00abDX.a_i*l\nT. LAURlENTE & SON\nPHOJIE U9\nW___Mi\nThi\nis'On sale in trail\nBy J. A. McKinnon, Margesim's 'ir'tu% Stoe, Arthur Nollie\nand Htint Bros. & Kennedy.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWASHINOTQN,      May      fi.\u2014Hunched\nhits  enable   Washington  to defeat   New\nYork 1 to 1 to'day. , Sohacbt was steady\nthroughout   and   was   never   in   trouble.\nR.   H.   K.\nNew    Yorlc          1      8      2\nWashington         4      S      1\nBatteries\u2014Collins, Mogrldge nnd\nIt.iol;    Scliaebt   and   Gharrlty.\nBOSTON, May 5.\u2014Two doubles by\nHendrtx and two errors by Galloway\naided Boston to defeat Philadelphia\ntoday :i to 1.\nR.   H.   13.\n     1      4      2\n     3      5      1\nl-.cl.ert   and   Myalt;\nI'hiladelphia     \t\nBOStOn a    ,\"T.    a    a   .    -   .   .   .\nBatteries\u2014Keefc,\n.tones   and   Schmidt.\nDETROIT, May 5.\u2014Bunched hits\nin three innings of the second grtme\nof the St. Louis series \\von for Detroit today by the score of ...to 4. The\nfeature of the game was a remarkable\ncatch by Veach of a drive oft* Tobin.s\nbat  In  the  ninth.\nR.   H.   E.\n10\n6..-.   7      2\nBeverOld;\nSt.    Louis     \t\nDetroit     \t\nBatteries\u2014Vangildcr\nOldham and sanage,\nCHICAGO, May fi.\u2014Cleveland made\nft two straight from Chicago today,\nwinning   3   to   2   in   10   innings.     The\nTO WOMEN\nOF ''M|DDIE AGE\nThis Woman'* Letter Tells\nYou How To Pass The\nCrisis Safely.\nLa.celles,-P.;Q. -'' Daring the Chang.\nl| of Life I felt so weak and run down I\ncould hardly do my .irork. The.pfsf-,,\n8pi-atit>h,Wou((_ poUr.oyer my face.jwi\nthat\"! couldn't see wlMft I was dbito.\nWe live Oil a f arm, a. thtre is lots to l_5, \\\nbut many who felt as I did would haVe\nbeeW in bed. 1 took LyjBi E. 'Pinkhsmfi\nvegetable Compound and it did me. a.\nworld of tfood; I trffid pother remedl|t!-lj\nbufl put vegetable Compound ahead of\nthe., all, and I tell every one I kniaw\nho\\<r much good it has done me,,~.\nMrs. Dmeat Bi-OWN, liascelles, Prby,\n(jtebec:    \u2022.-\"'\" ' \u25a0;!'\u25a0\nSuch warning symptoms as sente of\nsuffocation, ' hot flashes, headaches,\nbackaches, dread of impending _iyij,\ntimidity, sounds in thi ear, palpitttiM-\nof the heart, sparks before the ey<__,\nirregularities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and' dizziness sH'owd\nbe heidetl by middle-aged womenj._h_\nlet Iwdii E;Pinkhdti.^ Vegetable Oak-\nporfliS caHy -hem safely through tHW\ncrfti. is itdia UH'. B**tfn. *$$.\nYou a.e invited to write for free advitt\n, No other feedlcine _ia5 been so sne-\ncessful in relieving woman's sulferiqc.\nas has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vcgefable\nCompound. Women may receive friSi\nand helpful advice by writing the. IijrdUj1\nE. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynnt||(Mla, '\nCleveland   '.... .ii....;...\nChlunsro     .....\/ft\t\nButteries\u2014Bsigby   ntnl\nItinson nnd Scl|alU.\nO'Neill;    wil-\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAt  Toronto\u2014.  .   \/>   , R.   H.-E.\nReading    ..'..*     3     ii\nToronto          8    11      0\nBatteries\u2014Brown, Baress ami Kon\nnick; .Peterson and *Sandherg.\nAt  Buffalo\u2014 R.   H.   B\nBuffalo      10    11      i\nBaltimore         9    18      3\nBatterles\u2014Carruthcrs, MeCahe and\nBruKRy;   Kullivan,   Knelsch   and   IGgan.\nAT   Akron\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nJersey  City     11    12     0\nAkron          4      7      2\nBatteries \u2014 Ferguson and-Freitage;\nMoselfey,  Donovan and Smith.\nR.   Hr E,\nAt   Rochester\u2014\nRochester      ,     6     i)\n.Syracuse     0 '    4\nBatteries\u2014Acosta   and   Beyers;   Mur\nphy and Madden.*\nwripL-iif\n\"\u25a0' SOLDIER\nHad Rheumatism So Bad He\nCouldn't Get, Shoes On;\nTanlac Ends Trouble\n\"I count myself lucky that. I got'\nTanlac, for If ever a rhan felt like\nhew I'm that man,\" said Henry G.\nLang('of 743 Dudley Avenue, Winnipeg, Man., recently. Mr.' Lang spent\ntwo years and seven months ih the\nCanadian army in France. He returned last April and since that time\nhas been employed hy the Arctic\nIce Company. .\n\"During the past seven years,\" he\ncontinued, \"I suffered a 'great deal\nIwitli biliousness and rheumatism, but\nhist summer I commenced to- have\nthese attacks- more often' and much\nmore severe. I alSo lost my appetite\nentirely and' got to where nothing\npasted right or looked good to me.\nI would have dizzy Bpolls, when\neverything seemed dark; and spinning around, and.'I \\yoyld have\nto stop whatever I was doing and\nI(ean up against something to keep\nfrom falling. I suffered with, terrific\nheadaches and it was hard for me\nip pull myself through a day's work.,\nWhen I did get through I was completely played out and simply had\nto drag myself home. My legs and\nfeet .would swell up with rheumatism\nand get so stiff and painful that I\ncould hardly move around.' My feet\ng^ot so bud It was agony for me to\nwalk at all, then I got lo whero\nI couldn't get my shoes on. At\neltist I had to glve.piip and go to n\n(hospital) where I ' stayed for ten\n[weeks barely abl\u00a3*;.to movo; . I got\n\u00a7o, nervous and ached so I-eouldiVl\n;*lepp.a wink many a night.\nI', \"I finally got Tanlac, after rcatl-\nfjpg and-hearing .so much about it,\niitid It certainly has iriade a new\ninan of.r me. At. least J- feei thai\n\\yay, for\"-T haven't an ache or a\nNpIn of. any kind. My stomach'is in\nfine condition, my appetite is __frlo_i-\ndid, and everything tastes atiod nnd\nagrees wilh me perfectly. My headaches are gone and I hellove the\nrheumatism has loft me for good,\nfor 1 never feel a sign of It anymore. My nerves are iu fine shape,\ntoo, and I now sleep like a rock\novery night. I have gained several\npounds In weight and feel good all\nthe time. I am so thankful to get\nnjy health hack that I just want to\ntell  everybody nbout Tanlac.\"\nTanlac is sold in Nelson by Canada\nDrug & Book Store, and by the\nleading druggist in every town.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\n_*\t\nPortland   9,   Seattle   '.1.     ) '   >\n\u25a0 Batteries\u2014Scbroeder and Koliler;\nSchorr and  Tohin.\nOakland 0,  Vernon  1.\nBatteries   \u2014   Winn   and   SpelKnan;\nShellenbach  and  Devermor.\nj Los Angeles 1, San Francisco, 3. '\n\u2022 Thomas and Nelboff, Bassler; Lewis\nand Agnew.\nSacramento -, Salt Lake 3.\nBatteries\u2014Malls and Cady; Stroud\nand Jenkins.\nREINSTATE WRESTLER\nAS OLYMPIC PROSPECT\nPORT ARTHUR, MaV fi.\u2014J. I?. Odder, president of the Thunder Bay\nbranch ol' the Amateur Athletic union\nof Canada, tbreatens to break off relations with the par-Hit body, for refusing cards to Harvey Penfold, a\nball player, and Wesley Wellington,\na hockey plnyer, after giving one to\nJack Belanger, a. long-time professional\n\\yrestler. Belanger is regarded as a\ntine Olympic prospect.\n\"SCOTTISH   POOTEb\"\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNEW YORft; May 6.J-A single by\nKaaff Iri the first Inning that Scored\nFletcher, .gave the Giants the, margin\ntbey required to defeat the Dodgers hy\na score of 2 tb 1 this afternoon. Flet-\ncher'3 play, at short was the feature\nof   the  ganie. , .\nR.   H.  E.\nBrooklyn'         1      7      1\nNew   York         2      5      2\nBatteries \u2014 Mjimmaux nnd Miller;\nDouglas  and  Smith.\nWILSON   WHIPS   O'DOWD\nROSTONuJM.g.y 6.\u2014Johnny Wilson\nof Boston wrfrf^thte middleweight boxing clmmolpffphlp of the world when\nhe was awarded a referee's decision\nover Mikke' O'Dowd, of St. Paul,.here\ntonight.    The fight  went  12  rounds.\nPITTSBURCJ, May \u00ab.\u2014Pittsburg defeated Chicago for th6 second time at\nhome, 3 to 1. Cooper held the Cubs\nto four hits.\nAt Auteuil the wlnjj-y fur;, mantiles\n#ia,ye,been laid aside f-orsi^krt qapt-\n;m|i^> of fine serg^T or Kashav, and\ntp_\\_% nre often pleated, yet they are\nworn In such a manner that thet\nprinted silken lining, in the brightest oE colors, is displayed to the\nbest possible advantage.\nR.  H.   B.\n1' '4 0\n3 8 0\nO'Fnrrell;\nChicago\t\nPittsburg     \t\nBatteries\u2014Hendrfx     and\nCooper and  Schmidt,\nST. LOUIS, May 6,\u2014St. Louis defeated Cniclnnatl 6 to 0 in tho second\ngame of the neri6s here  today.\nR.   H.   E.\nCincinnati     0     3     4\nSt.    Louis     8     9     3\nBatteries\u2014J511er, Luque, Bressler,and\nWJngo;  Haines  and demons.\nPHlLADELPHlirvMay \u00ab.\u2014The Ineffective pitching by Smith, and errors behind him gave Boston a lead\nthat Philadelphia could not overcome\ntoday, Bojjtop winning Its second\nstraight In'the series, 8 to fi.\nR.   H.   E.\nBoston       8    16      2\nPhiladelphia    ....,     6    12     4,\nBatteries\u2014Ccottf Rudolph and Gow-\ndy; Smith, Weiner and And. Tra-\ngressor.'\nPACIFIC INTERNATIONAL\nYakima 3, Spokane fj-\nBatteries  \u2014  Valencia  and   Cadrnan;\nSmith   nnd   Armsteger.\nVictoria 4, Tacoma 1.\nBatteries\u2014I.awBoh  and   Cunningham:\nTalley And  Stevenson.\nSeattle   1,   Vancouver   fi.\nBatteries   \u2014  .Fltchnetr   and   Boelzle\nHoffman,  Highland  and  Patterson.\nTWILIGHT LEAGUE\nAt Regina\u2014 t    '_        i .      \u25a0 R-* H.   E.\nMoose Jaw  ;  0     fi1    6\nRoginii \u25a0. 7   13     1\nBatteries\u2014Machold and Marshall;\nEvans and Whaling.\nAt  Saskatoon-^ R.  H.   E.\nSaskatoon  3     5     1\nWinnipeg '.,  1     2     3\n\u25a0Batteries \u2014 Watson and Bachant\nSchaak and Dixon.,.\nAt  Edmonton\u2014                       R. H.  13.\nCalgary  11 12     2\nEdmohton      \". \u25a0.    4 7     f>\nBatteries\u2014Mack a'nd Kclhuleu; Brant]\nValentino and Ritchie,\nLONDON, .May C (Canadian Associated lJress).\u2014A Scottish league association game played today resulted\nin a win for Albion over Lanark, by\na  score of 3  to\" 2.\nBob Long says:\n\"liy^iralisand Sliirts lire the\nIftsf rnidi, Tjecauie-i-tlity'ate tooiiy\nand com\/'prtabfe. I d\u00ablgned tlient\nwith tin; idea that you might tfont\ntp Htrclcli your arms and legt oc-\ncagioun'ny.*'.\nA winner in the Boh Long line of\nshirts is the Hickory Dick Jr. Ask\nyour deafer for this big shirt; it\nwears like \u25a0 true friend.\nAsk your dealer for liig 59\u2014 the\nbi\u00a3 Blue Overall \u2014 the cloth .that\nstands the test* *\n'Intitt e\u00bb '' Rob long'' Brands\nBOB LONG\n.     .    .   UNION   MADE        .     '\nOveralls and Shirts\nR. G. LONG & CO.. Limited\nWlulp.i       TORONTO       MMtra.1\nM hint Brandt\nKmwtt from Caatt to Coast\n50 Silk Dresses\nAt a Cash Discount of\n20 pet cent\nThis lot comprises Silk Taffcrfas, Messalin. s, Poplin, etc., in a\nlarge variety ot different shades. Many come in comtrinallons of\nGeorgette and -silks in ail sizes from  IC years  to  42.\nThey are wonderful values at, the regular, price, and with this\nSAVING OF 20c on the  DOLLAR should move out,- In 'prick  time.\nI   Come and Investigate!\nBETfjS $ ODDY\n\"TRAIL'S LEADING DRV GOODS EMPbRIUM'''    P\n'   '.       ... \u25a0    '   \\     \u25a0\nThe Rex Billiard Hall\nGentleWieii, spend a pleasant hour in playing pool\nor billiards.\nNothing but the best cigars and -tobaccos sold, also\nsoft drinks, chocolates, etc.\nBARBER SHOP IN CONNECTION\nA. SHERMAN, Proprietor\nJ. D. ANDERSON\nReal Estate nnd  Insurance, Trail, B. C.  Notary Public.\nEast Trail  Lots, Easy  Payments.\nSix  Room  Modern   Houso for  S_i1-_\u2014 Nenrly  now, nice grounds, good\nlocation.    Reasonable  price and. terms.\nTen   Room   Boarding,   House   Down   Town.    Immediate   possession.\nNew  Four  Room   House  at  less  than   cost.\nTwo   Largo,   Level   Lots,  close   in.\nSeveral   Ten-Acre   Tracts   of   Unimproved   Land.\nTHE MUTUAL LIFE\n0E Cr IDA ,;\nWATERLOO       INTARIO\nESTABLIShuJ  1869\nA   company   owned   and   controlled  by Policy Holders.\nTho, Most   Democratic   System\nJOHN   BLACK\nDlsffclCT  AGENT TRAIL\nP.   O.   Box   28 Phono   65R\nC. Dodimead\nOPTICIAN JEWELER\nTRAIL, B. C.\nExpert   Watch,   Clock,   Jowelery   Repairing.    Hand   Engraving.\nWatches for repairs sent us will\nreceive our prompt service will ox-\npert work.\nTRY   U8       '\nR, d. Mcdonald\nTHE CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nNothing  too  small  or too  large\nPrompt attention to Jobtolng of, every\nkind.    Estimates   Free\nShop  and Office\nBay  Ave. Trail,  B.  O..\nHotel Menus\nWe. print Hotel Menu\/., cither\nwith 'complete menua or with;\nthe different -headings and blank\nspacer for typing In the bill ol\nfftrft,      ,.'..*,..\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment ffj\nTho Homo of Good Printing\nN.l-on, B. C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOf Ciihadav Iihntte\u00ab\nOff Ice.,  Sn-.ltintj  and Refining  Dopa.tn.Mi-_\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF  GOLD,  8ILVER,  COPPER  AND   LEAD  ORE*\nProducoro of Gold, Silver,. Coppor. %iuostono. Pig Load, aend Zlno\n\u2022\"\"\u25a0\u2022 '    TADANAC BRAND\nSore t^af, Colds\nQuickly U-)ll<. ved By Hamlin's\nWizard Oil\nHamlin's Wizard Oil is a simple ana\neffective treatment for sore throat and\nchest colds. Used as a gargle for sore\nthroat it brings quick relief. Rubbed\non the chest it will often loosen up a\nhard, deep seated cold in one night   .\nHow often sprains, bruises, cuts\nand burns occur in every family, as\nwell as little troubles like earache,\ntoothache, cold sores,. canker sor\/ss,\nstiff neck, an4 tired aching feet;\nSoothing, healing Wizard Oil will always bring quick relief.    . \u25a0\nGet it from druggists fpr 30 cents.\nIf not satisfied return the tibttlc and\nget your money back.\n-- Ever, constipated or have sick head>\nache? Just try Wizard Liver Whips,\npleasant little, pink pills, 30 cents.\nGuaranteed i.\nYUKON  OPENING   LATE\nDAWSON, May 6 \u2014 .Canadian\nPress,)\u2014With., the ice still 'solid,\nindications are that navigation on\ntho Yukon river will not open-.beforo the middle of May at tho' earliest,\" the latest date in 10 years. It\nis not .expected that. I_a_te -.charge\n.at the head of Navigation will ho\nclear of Ice beforo June 10. , '\nMANCHESTER COTTON\nWORKERS WIN POINT\nMANCHESTER, England, May fl.\u2014\nThe wago tliHputo In tho Cotton\ntrade, which Involved . .400,000 \u25a0 operatives, -has been . settled* Tho operatives hftvo boon. granted an increase of 2%% per cent \"on the cur,:\nrent wages, with, additional 10 per\n'cent. to male card room workers,\nThe agreement is to last 12 months*\nRhndians  had  the -first  navigation\nlawsi 916. B, C,\nA   SPLENDID   OPENING   FOR\nRanch\n1% Miles From Cily\n. ;       ot^Trail\n80 ACRES ,o\u00a3 ground, 30 acres:\ncleared, remainder all slashed\naj*l bui-nt \u201e Good house, com-.\nplpte with furniture;.largo new'\nbarn, and chicken house; implements; good outside range.-\nVery suitable for dairy purposes, .,..,-\u25a0'\nPRICE   $4700.\nTerms   to   suit. .\nApply  N.  EM MS  READ,  Bay-\nAvoruio,  Trail,   B.C.\n.   READ\nThe Daily News\nThe Daily paper of the\ninterior of British Colum-,\nbia.\n i  \u25a0avium     111,1\nX)av^aa\u20acd\nusa\nTHE DAILY NET^S,      FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 7, 1920\nPage j \"1\nSmall Ads That Bring Quick Returns\nClassified Advertising Rates\nPer insertion, one cent per word.\nMinimum 25 cents.\nSix consecutive insertions, four cents\nper word when cash is paid in advance.    Minimum   25   cents.\nPer month,   .tally,  18 cents a word.\n|  Ho accounts opened for oi_.nai-._o-l\nftdvortiainff.\nBach initial, figure, dollar sign, etc,,\ncounts as one  word.\nSegal Advertising (includes Calls for\nTenders, Water Notices, Certificates of\nImprovement and other Satutory Notices, etc, and Municipal and Government Notices)\u201412c per line for the\nfirst Insertion and So ' per line for\neach  subsequent  insertion.\nHotlcM\u2014Birth or Marriage Notloes,\nDeath Notices, Funeral Notices, Cards\nof Thanks, In Memorlum Notices, 2%c\na word, minimum r.Oe. List of Wedding Presents or Floral Offerings, 10c\na line.\nBlack face capitals three tlmea the\nrate for ordinary type.\nBlack face type, double rates for\nordinary type.\nBlack  face  capital   headlines,  26o.\nLocal Reading Notices -\u2014 2W.c per\nivord each Insertion. In black face or\nnachine capitals, 3o per word. Black\nface capitals 4o per word, 25 per cent\nilscount if run for one month or\nnore. Where advertisement Is set out\nn short lines the charge 1b 12%o pei\nlhe for Roman type, 16 c for black\nlace, and 20c for black face capitals.\nMinimum charge   35c. -\n10   Male Help Wanted\nWANT-ED at 6nce, \\ ono planer foeder,\none engineer, one setter and three\npole cutters. The highest prices\npaid and steady Job. J. S. Des-\nchamps,  Rossland. (7817)\nWANTED\u2014First class painter,   .Apply\n1   E.  Schoficld,   608 _\u2022   Baker Street.\n (7816)\nWANTED\u2014Party to contract building\n2 miles wagon road. Northern Cedar\nCo., Erie, B.C. (7788)\nANTED\u2014Two planer feeders, one\n.edgerman, $6.50 for 1) hours. Forest\nMills  of  B.C.,  Cascade.. (7711)\nWANTED\u2014Night   clerk.    Apply  Hume\nHotel.  \u25a0 _ (7707)\n';\nANTED\u2014-Organist and choirmaster\nfor St. Savioi.r'8 (Anglican) Church.\nNolson, Apply by letter, stating experience and qualifications; to C.\nW. Busk, P.O. Box 331, Nelson, B.C.\n (7091)\nVANTED\u2014By May 15, man to file\narid keep mill up, Capacity 15 to\n20 thousand. Solid tootli saws. E.\nJ   Schagel, Fernie, B.C. (7608)\n*WTED \u2014 At once, one edgerman,\nwages $8.50, 9 hours. J. S. Des-\n\u25a0\u25a0thamps,   Birch bank,   B.C. (7726)\n. VNTED\u2014Setter, millwright, dogger,\n'dgerman, trimmer man, planer man,\nnglneer, sawmill men; practical men\nsquired. Good wages paid. Apply\n. B. Winlaw, Duck Creek, B.C. (7727)\nNTED\u2014Two gangs ol log cutters,\n., *ying $1.75 per thousand feet; good\nUnber, under ton logs to thousand\n.et, level ground. Salmo Cedar Co.,\n.. irks   Siding,   B.C. (7729)\n\u2022ITED\u2014Dishwasher,    male   or   fe-\n\u2022c.    Apply Tho  QrlU. (7730)\nmale Help Wanted\n-Stenographer      for  \u2022 about\n\u25a0iths;  position  niigl-fbe  pcr-\nsalary $90 per month. Write\nDaily News. (7811)\n<CftD legal stenographer rest once. Apply to Lawe ft\nFernie,   B.C. (7720)\n\u2014A   head    waitress.     Apply\n\u25a0totel.  (7787)\n\u2022\"AGES .for home won*.    We\nju to make sooks on the fast,\nlearned Auto Knitter.   Bxper-\nunnecessary.    Distance  lroma-\nPositively    no    canvassing.\nsupplied.       Particulars       3o\n.p.    Dept.  82o Auto Knitter Co.,\n'i4into.. .. (77.ii)\n'Ayr)\nstfnu*\nwAyr)D-^*E_xp6rienced  bookkeeper and\n1 Htfiiugraphcr.     State  salary and  references..   Reliable  firm.    Apply Box\n1200.     (7722)\n\/ANTED\u2014-At once1, a dInlng 'room\ngirl. \u25a0 Apply Outlook Hotel, Proctor.\n- (7733)\nVANTED\u2014Experienced    girl    for    tea\nI room.    Apply   Strathcona  Hotel.\n.    '    (7734)\n^ANTED-t-A  good  general.    Apply  C.\nP. R. Boarding -House, Sirdar,  B.C.\n\u25a0 '(7565)\nTANTBD\u2014Waitress.\nHotel.\nGrand   Central\n(773!-,)\nSB these columns if you have anything to sell or want to buy anything. .A 25-word ad. costs 25o for\none Insertion* or $1 for a weok, cash\nin advance.\n8    Articles for Ssle\nRUNSWICK Phonograph and twenty\nrecords, $150; cash or terms. Willis\npianos,  Ltd.,   30-1   Baker St.       (7809)\nDR SALE\u2014Timber, torn- thousand\nacres along Lardo river, poles,\nposts, tics and sow logs. Will sell\non Htumpage or iu one block. H.\nPark,   Kaslo,   B.C. ,      (7808)\nANTED\u2014Second band boom chains.\nState quantity and price. Wynndel,\npox Factory,  Wynndel, B.C.      (7723)\nFor Rent\n) RENT\u2014For summer months, a\nsmall furnished restaurant with every\nconvenience, close to station. Apply\nfor particulars to Box 7801 Daily\nNews. (7801)\n) JtENT-\u2014Offices on upper floor K.\nW. C. block. Apply A. Macdonald\nCo.* (7737)\ntUIT RANCH to rent. Apply Strathcona. (7738)\n1 Boats and Automobiles\nANTED to buy\u2014Rowboat, in good\ncondition. State particulars and\nprice.    Box 7825   Dally News.   (7825)\n_.RGAIN \u2014 For sale, launch, steel\nhull, 21 feet, beam 5 feet, 10 h.p.\nMagneto headlight and all fittings.\nBulkhead control. Newly ovorhaui-\nqcI. With truck, winch and tools.\n[300.    Oatts,  Boswell. (7786)\nISOLINE Launch, 18 ft. long, 3 h.p.\nengine, in perfectly good running\ncondition, cheap. Owner Toaving\ntown. Apply Box- 7775 Daily News.\n(7775)\n)R SALE\u20141917 Mitchell Roadster\n_Ix-cylinder car; can bo seen at\n3rand Forks Garage, Grand Fork's.\nDeportOr,   Grant!   Forks.       (7724)\niR SALE\u2014Larrce, well built two-\nberth launch houso; 30-foot launch,\n10-12 h.p. Fairbanks-Morse . engine,\nKOtid condition.    Bourke, Harrop.\n (7602)\ncLAUGHLIN Five Passenger, six\ncylinder, light touring car for sale\neticiip. Almost new. Bought last\nyear and ln fine shape. Extra tires.\n)wner leaving country. Apply Box\n7548 Dally News. (7548)\n,UNCH for sale.    Apply New Grand.\n(7739)\ni Fruits and Vegetables\n.R SALE\u2014Strawberry plants. Mon-\nrad W'g-3\"' \"Wynndel, B.C. (7630)\n'tt'AWBERRY Plants\u2014I have a sur-\nilus in ray private propagating bed\nif   a   few   thousand   Superb   EJver-\nBearing   strawberry    plants.       16,00\ndr thousand.    Hundred plants $4.00\nby mall.   No sale less than hundred,\nplants.    A. .1. Wigen, Wynndel, B.C.\n23   Property.for Sale\nNEAT COTTAGE FOR SALE\nNo. 624 ' Carbonate. Two bedrooms, all newly papered; living\nroom and dining room, kitchen and\nbathroom. Furniture consists of\nrange, stove, dining room table and\nchairs, 2 Morris chairs, somo kitchen\nfurniture and utensils, bed and several other articles.\nAll the above to be sold at $1100\u2014\nTerms arranged.\nC. W. Appleyard\nBox 626 NELSON, B.C.\nTelephone 269 (7.40)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two good fruit farms and\ntwo good fruit and stock farms.\nBearing orchards and good buildings\non all of them. Prices }3000 to\n$4000. J. E. Annable, Nelson.\n  \u201e (.824)\nMILL Laborers \u2014 Grader, tallyman,\nboom man, loggers; steady work.\nApply Gerrard-Lardo Lumber Mills,\nLtd.,   Annable  Block,   Nelson,  B.C.\n .     (.054)\nFOR SALE\u2014Lots 18 and 19, Block\n_4. on Delbruck street; cheap for\ncash. Apply Box 434, or Phone 489L.\n(7814)\n22      Miscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014To borrow 5000.00; firs!\nclass security, short or long term;\n12 per cent interest. Apply Bos\n7773  Daily  News. (7773)\n27   Machinery Wanted\nWANTED\u2014One     horsepower     electric\nmotor in good condition.   Write giving   full   particulars   and   price   to\nNews    Publishing    Company,    Ltd.,\n. Nelson, B.C.  (7733)\n42 Matrimony\nMAURY: Many rich. Particulars free.\nF. Morrison, L-3053 W. Holden St.,\nSeattle,   Wash.         (7746)\nUse these columns if you have anything to sell or want to buy anything. A 20-word ad. costs 20c for\none Insertion or $1 for a week, cash\nin advance.\nCommission Merchants\nRANCHERS' PRODUCE sold ou coin-\nmission. G. W. Bartlott, Williams\nSiding. (7748*\nFOR SALE\u2014Flvfc-room house, two\nlevel lots, near car line. Chevrolet,\nfirst class condition. Both bargains. Owner, Box X401 Daily\nNews. (X401)\nFOR SALE\u2014517 Latimer St., desirable\nsix room house, three bedrooms and\nall modern conveniences. Full size\nstone and cement baj_einent. Fine\nchicken house. Nice garden. On\ncar line. Eight bearing fruit trees.\n$!K-00.. Terms reasonable. Apply\nRobert Reid, above address. Also\nchickens and pens  for sale.      (7799)\nFOR SALE\u20147% acres land, partly\ncleared; good house and barns. Box\n781   Nelson. (7770)\nNEW DENVER\u2014One of two newly\nbuilt houses for sale. Plumbing,\nelectric light, hot and cold water;\nmodern In every way. Further particulars apply The G. T. Store, New\nDenver. (-7867)\nFOR SALE\u20147 acre ranch, mile from\nNolson Post Office. Good spring\npiped to the house. F. W. Hawes,\nSilver   King   Road,   Nelson.       (7725)\n35 ACRES arable land, twenty cultivated, ten bearing orchard, running\nwater, buildings, last year's sales\ntwenty-six hundred dollars. Price\neleven, thousand. H. E. Dill, Nelson.\n(7717)\nFOR SALE\u2014Lake frontage, acre lots\nfor sale. Idoal for summer homes.\nGood beach, five miles from Nelson\non West Arm. Apply Box 7633\nDally  News. (7633)\nFOR   SALE\u2014120   egg   Chatham   Incubator,   good   working   order,   bargain,\n$9.00..     Christian,    Westbridge,    B.C.\n(7790)\nANCONA hatching eggs for salo, from\nstock prize winners at Vancouver,\nWestminster and Nelson. Price per\nsetting $3.50 and $5.00. C. H. Wallace,   Rossland,   B.C. (7780)\nFOR SALE\u2014Solley strain, White Leghorns, good layers; 21 pullets, $2.75\neach;    30    two-year-old    hens,    $2.25.\n\u25a0   VV.   E.   McKim,   Nolson. (7721)\nPALMER'S winter laying White Leghorns. Wlnnors of Silver Medal for\nhighest winter egg yield at last\nVictoria contest. Big hatches on\nJune 3rd, llth, 19th, 27th, and July\n5th. Can supply up to 2000 on one\norder If ordered now. The finest\nchicks you ever saw\u2014ask a Palmor\ncustomer, there's one near you.\nWrite *for let-live prices to T. W.\nPalmer, R.M.D. No. 4, Victoria, B.C.\n(7712)\nPURE  bred  Barred  Rock eggs,  $2   for\n15.    Nelson Dairy.        (7645)\nWHITE Leghorn hatcning eggs for\nsale. Heavy laying strain. $2 per\n15; $12 per 100. Wlckham & Mitchell,  Robson, B.C. (7550)\nHATCHING Eggs, White Wyandottes,\nRegal strain, two-fifty per fifteen,\nfour-fifty per thirty, $7 per fifty,\ntwelve dollars per hundred. White\nLeghorns and 8. C. Reds, $2 per\nfifteen, five-fifty, per fifty. Atkinson,   Nolson,   Phone   188L3.       (7561)\n54    Articles Wanted\nWANTED\u2014High   grade   baby   carriage,\nmust   be    In   first   class    condition.\nPhone   585.     Write   P.O.   Box   324.\n(7075)\nA 25-word advertisement can bo run\nin this column for -a week for $1\ncash in advance. It will pay you\nwell.\nSecond Hand  Dealers\nTHE ARK pays cash  for second  ham\nfurniture, stoves; 606 Vernon, Phom\n. 651. (7711)\n20     Livestock ior Sale\nLIVESTOCK for sale: Ayrshire, Jersey heifer 16 .months, beef calf 9\nmonths; $90.00 the pair for quick\nsale. Registered Duroc-Jerscy glet\nto farrow end June, $50.00. A. P.\nAIlBCbrook,   Kaslo,   B.C. (7828)\nFOR SALE\u2014Horse, 9 years old, goot'\nworker, quiet, 900 weight; cheap.\nJcnson,   Box   17,   Sllverton,   B.C.\n(7822)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Good   work   team;   heifer\ncalf   two   months   old;   also   nanny\n. goat.    S.  P.  Pond,  Nelson. (7JJ12.)\nFOR SALE\u2014Cows, 3 yr. old Jers\u00ab\nand half Jersey heifers, registered:\ngrade and half Jersey, some freshened,  othevs to freshen  soon.    Eight\n, fine Chester White pigs, eight dollars. Delivery May 7th, Kuskanook\nJersey Herd, Sirdar, B.C. ,  (7802)\nFOR SALE\u2014A large purebred Hoi\nstein bull; three years old, very\ngentle. A large 3-year-old purebred Holsteln cow, second calf, bred\nto above; due to freshen on 12th\nMay.    A. Cameron, Balfour.      (7789)\nFOR SALE\u2014Young pigs, ready middle\nMay. ' Duroc Jersey. Fine stock.\nW.   Rixen,  P.O.  Box  808,  Nelson.\n \u25a0    (7771)\nFOR Sale\u2014Six head of horses. .Prices\nfrom $50 up. One' Klrkston Stumping Machine, new, $100, cost $131).\nA. Jones, Williams Siding. (7713)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two cows, one to freshen\nin May, one in June. , Also one\nGaloway cream separator\u2014No. 9\u2014\njust as good as new. J. Wiebe,\nRenata,  B.C.  (7665)\nFOR SALE\u2014Ono grade Ayrshire heifer, aged 3 months. Apply Mrs. H.\nC.   Waterfield,   Nakusp. (7661)\nFOR   SALE\u2014One   Jersey   heifer,   just\nfreshened.    One four year old  registered   Jersey   cow,   freshen   last   of\nApril.    Jones & Janson,  Sirdar,   B.C.\n(7710)\nFOR SALE\u2014Registered Black Aberdeen Angus bull, 3 years old; seven\n10 weeks old pigs.* Wm. Schad, Bull\nRiver,   B.C. (7395)\nUSE these columns it you have anything to-sell or want to buy any\ntiling. A 26-word ad. costs 25c for\none Insertion or $1 for a week, cash\nin   advance.\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nFOR    RENT\u2014Furnished    house-keeping\nrooms.     Annable   Block. (7768)\nFURNISHED suite to rent\u2014Kerr Block.\n(7741)\nFURNISHED ROOMS\u2014Clean, comfortable, steam heat, shower baths, $2.25\nper week, $9.00 and $10.00 per month.\ny.M.C.A. (7742)\n26   Machinery for Sale\nFoI^I-JaTe^Two^ eyiTmiei-\nmarine engines in Al condition. Apply W. O. Devitt, Box 225, (-Trail,\nB.C. ' (7804)\nFOR SALE\u20145 stamp mill and eon\ncentrator, boiler und hoist cable. No.\nfive Cameron Sinking Pumps. Pipe\u2014\nShafting\u2014Pulleys\u2014Ore Cars, Etc.\nOnly in use two weeks; will sell\nat bargain. Apply to W, E. Mo-\nArthur, Box 565 Greenwood, B.C.\n          (7803)\n29     Lost md Found\nLOST \u2014 Black traveling bag, marked\n\"Paddon,\" removed from Kettle Valley train by mistake. Please return\nto   Hume. (7828)\nMerchants Take Notice\nDo you want to retire from business and\nsell your entire stock or any\npart for spot cash?\n$100,000 Worth of\nMerchandise Wanted\nThe buyer of the Consolidated Merchandise\nBrokers is now in Nelson to buy YOUR stock\nor any stock in this district ior spot cash.\nIf interested, write, wire or phone care\nHume hotel.\nWe pay invoice cost for merchandise that\nmay be slow selling with you.\nN.B.\u2014Will be in this district for ten\ndays. If you want to get full value for your\nmerchandise get in touch today\u2014NOW.\nThis week-end our 250th Anniversary Celebration reaches its climax.   Day after day we have kept our faith by producing our finest stocks at Sale Prices.\nSO GENEROUS WITH MONEY\nSAVING OPPORTUNITIES\nWe are still offering greater values than ever, making it   a wonderful thrift event of economical importance.\nSPECIAL VALUE IN FINGER-\nSPECIAL!\nANNIVERSARY OFFERINGS IN THE NEW\nSEASONS\nDresses and Suits\nEach model a charming example of the very newest New\nYork style. The dresses of choice Silks and Taffetas;\nthe suit's of Serges and Tricotine.\n$29.50\nOne  only   French   blue\nAnniversary   Special  ..\nTflfCeta  dross.    Size  28.\nOne* only Spark blue Georgette dress.    Size 38.\n$30.00\nOne only navy Taffeta drcsn.   .Size -JO.\n$22.50\nOne only navy Serge suit.   Size 38..\n$36.50\nOne only navy Tricotine milti    Size   to.\n$75.00\nOne only Kami Serge suit.    Size 38.\ni Anniversary   Special\t\n$45.00\nING   YARN\nIn white and dark grey. Worth\n$(i,00 lb.    Our price whilo it\nper'lb _ Jd4:\u00abOU\nNew   Store\nPalmolivo  Soap, 1 A\u2014\nper   cako     . Ivv\nPalmollve Shampoo, *lV_i*\nper bottle    I U-L\nToilet   Soap,   assorted,     \"| ff ^\nper  cake  -  Xt\/l\/\nNew Store\nLADIES'   FINE   LISLE   HOSE\nFull fashioned, in black, white,\ndark brown, flesh, sand. AH\nsizes.         i (T\u00bb -|   -| A\nper pair  _  vlilv\nNew Store\nCHILDREN'S   COTTON\nSTOCKINGS\nFine rib\u2014a splendid wearing\nhoso in black, white and tan.\nTrices according to size, per\npair\n35c to 69c\nNew Storo\nBOYS'   and   GIRLS'   BLACK\nRIBBED   STOCKINGS\nDouble knee, a very strong and\ndurablo hose. Sizes 9 and\nH_\\ only. \"Worth 95c pair.\nSpecial, per fiQ#\u00bb\nNew Storo\npair\nFriday Specials\nIn Our Men's Own Store\nBOY'S   FLANNELETTE\nSHIRTS\nLay down' collar. An- (TJ-f   -| A\nnlversary    Special. \u00ab\u00a3. JL.JLU\nBOYS'    CHAMBRAY    SCHOOL\nSHIRTS\nLay   down   irollrrr.     Anniversary\nSpecial\n\u25a0 75c and 85c\nMEN'S   CORDUROY   SOFT\nSHAPE   HATS\nAnniversary rt\u00bb-|    l(_\nSpocial   d. LAV\nMEN'S   WHITE   BALBRIGGAN '\nSHIRTS   AND   DRAWERS\nA snap at, per QQ_\u00bb\ngarment     0t\/C\nMEN'S    LARGE   SIZE    DRESS\nSHIRTS\nSizes   1.   to   l...    Double  cuffs\nAnniversary\nSpecial   \t\n$1.15\nMEN'S   MULE   GAUNTLETS\nArinlYOi'sary   Specials\nPer    pair    \t\n85c\nMEN'S    MULE    GLOVES\nWonderful   value.    Anniversary\nSpeeial,\nper    pair\n98c\nBOYS'    WHITE    MESH\nCOMBINATIONS\nLong     alcoves,     airltlo     length.\nVery   special   value,     QQ_\u00bb\nper  suit  O i\/C\nOur-  Men's   Owrr   Store\nTo Out-of-Town\nCustomers\nWe especially invito your attention to the many attractive\nofferings presented during, this our 250th Anniversary Celebration,\nRemembering that your, money will be refunded ' winliinsly If not'\nsuited with the merchandise ordered. Our Mai. Order Department\nis so equipped that your order is shipped by the next outgoing\nmail  or  express,   thereby  reducing  deluy   trr   a   minimum.\nWrite us a letter and save money.\n$8.50\nExceptionally   inviting   are   the\nSTYLES OF THE NEW\nFOOTWEAR\nand   the   prices   aro   pleasing\nMEN'S   HAVANA   BROWN\nCALF OXFORDS\nEnglish   last,   recede   toe,   wide\nAnniversary Sale... 3-0.UU\nMEN'S    DUCHESS    CALF\nBLUCHER  CUT SHOE\nWide   ntting,  medium  too,  slip\nsole,   good   walking   shoo.\n*rv:__._! $8.50\nMEN'S GUNMETAL BLUCHER\nCUT SHOES\nCushion insole; eminently termed a mattress for the feot.\nBE width. Anniversary Special\t\nMEN'S GUNMETAL CALF\nIn the straight lase .style. Some\nwith  medium  too,  others  aro\nthe  English  last.       (j*rj r\/\\\nAnniversary Special tD I \u2022OU\nLADIES'    MATTING    SUIT\nCASE\nPrettily    lined,    brassed     locks\nand        clasps,        comfortable\nhandle, metal corhoi's.    Anniversary\nSpecial \t\nFIBRE    STEAMER    TRUNK\nFibre covered trunk, strong box,\nbrassed    excelsior    luck    and\nheavy    bolts,   heavy    brassed\ncorners.   Anniversary    Special..\nSPECIAL   VALUES   IN   FIBRE\nTRUNKS\nVulcanized fibre cover, three\nply veneer construction, heavy\nbrassed corners, brassed lock\nand heavy bolts. Anniversary\nSpecial,\nprice   \t\n$3.25\n$18.00\n$25.00\nCHILDREN'S FANCY TOP\nCOTTON SOCKS\nAll   sizes,\nper   pair    \u201e\t\nNew  Storo\n35c\nLADIES'    WHITE    COTTON\nHOSE\nper pair...       Ot\/Cj iuC\nNew Store\nWOMEN'S  BLACK  KID\nPUMPS\nHigh  front,     leather    Louis\nheel.      \"Classic\"\nmake \t\n$8.50\nWOMEN'S  PATENT PUMPS\nLow    cut    front,   pointed    toe,\nmilitary heel.\nPrice\t\n$7.50\nWOMEN'S    BLACK   KID\nPUMPS\nLow   cut   front,   pointed   too,\nmilitary heel.\nPrice \t\n$7.50\nMISSES' BLACK  KID PUMPS\nTurned  sole,  low heel,  with  an\neasy fitting toe.\nSizes 11  to 2\t\n$4.00\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nT.  A.   WALSH  trr  CO.,  LIMITED\nSaw and Shingle Mill and Minln.\nMachinery, Yellow Strand Wire Rope\nLeather and Rubber Belting and Pack\ning; Acme Shingle Bands and lio_\nStrapping. B. C. Agents Monogratr.\nOils and Greases. Buy and Sell Steel\nRalls and Machinery.\n050-00 Cnmlrlu St., Vancouver B. O\n(7743)\nH.   B.   DILL\nFARM   ANU   CITY   PROPERTY\nAll   Branches   of   Inanrairco   Written\nSOS  Wnrtl  St. Telephone  180\n(77.6)\nLEE  KEE  Jt  COMPANY\nBoots fc Shoe. Made to Order, Bopalred\n613H    TBONT   ST.        (77.7)\nBusiness Colleges\nDay and night classes. Complete\nbusiness course. Apply P. O. Boi\n745. (7702)\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLB'S GREBNHOUSB, Net\nson. Cut flowers and floral de\nsigns. (7750)\nAssayers\nB. 'Vf, WIDDOWSON; Bra'..Jl-UM\nNolson, B. C. Standard westert\nChargos. (7761)\nCLASSIFIED   ADS.    BRING    BR-\n81H_TS JiVI-RY WME.\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLISSALl\nGrocers and Provision Merchants, Im\nporters of Teas, Coffees, Splees, Drier\nFruits, Staple and Panoy Groceries\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Chest\nand Packing House Products. Offic\nand Warehouse, corner of Front ant\nHall streets. P.O. Box 10.95; Telta\nphones _8 artd  __\u25a0      (7743)\nCommission Merchants\nRANCHERS' PRODUCE sold on com\nmission. G. W. partlott. Wllllam-\nSiflillg. f774_t\nArchitects\nN.    EMMS    BEAD,    M.B.O.S.A.\nARCHITECT\nBay  Avenue, Trail,   B.   O\n(7753)\nPainters\nS. SOHOFIELD\nPainter,   Papporhangor    and    Dooorato)\nTenders given  for all  kinds  of work\nPhone  504 eoaH  Baker Bt\nHELSOH, B. O.\n(7754)\nAccountants\nW. H. PABBELL\n- PnbUo   Account nut  and  Andltoi\nNELSON,   aC.\nP.O. Bra  1191 -    V-tona Q77B)\nW. H.  PALD-NO,\nPubllo Accountant,   Bank  of  Montroa'\n(.liainlicr.., Rossland, B. C.\nEnginee\nTi\n* KASLO,  B.  O.\nB. D. DAWSOB\nB.    C.    LAND   SURVEYOR\nCIVIL   AND   MINING   ENGINEER\n(7766\nNelson, B. O.\nCIVIL    AHD    MINING    EBOIHSSBS\nB.   O.,   Alborta   and   Dominion\nLAND   BUBVEYOBS\nCrown   Grant   Agents.   Slue   Printing\nA. la-  KoO-TLLOOH,\nHyranlio Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nBaker St. Nelson B. __.\n(7767)\nA.  D. NASH,\nMining Engineer\nConsultations,    Explorations    Develop\nment Reports\nKoom   2,   Royal   Bank   Bldg.,   Nelson\n(7708)\nAuctioneers\nG.    HORSTEAD,    Opera\nHouse    Blk\n(7769)\nW.  Ot-TIeEB\n.. Auctioneer,     Appraiser,     Valuator\nGoods   sold   privately   or   at   Auotloi\n319 Ward Street WoM Tl\n(7760)\nW. MATTHEWS  ft 00.\nAuotlonerrs\nOffice 508 Ward St- Tel. 180 ft s_9H\n(17(11)\nBarristers\nB,  a.  MATTHEW\nBarrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.\nBox 38.     Alan Block, Nelson.     Ph. 644\n(7752)\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERTSON^ F.D.D..& D., 101\nVlcortia Street, Phone 292; night\nPhone   157-J. (7766)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE COMPANY\u2014\nC. J. Carlson, Undertaker. Undertaken\nand Embalmers and Funeral Directors,\nThe Finest and most up-to-date undertaking parlors and ohapel ln Interior\nB. C. Lady attendant for women and\nchildren. Day Phone 86, Night Phone\n252  and   64. (7766)\nA Display Ad jn the\nDAILY^NEWS\nEnter8 Manjfhomes\nCatches Many Eges\n'   :-:\n __S^aaaaa-\u00ab|a\u00bbmr-\naji__.^_il^4^<|j_.a'  \u25a0*^^\u2014\nUI1EQUALEB FOR GENERAL USE\n_)amoaQxi\nTHE DAILY KEWS, \"FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 7, 1920-\nMl\"..'' '\u25a0\"\nW. P. TIERNEV, General Sales Agent\nNolson,   B.C.\nCars  supplied  to  all   railway  points\nI\n\"Safety    First\"\u2014Guaranteed   to\nPlease You.\n,      ,,  ,,-  BHONI ^>1\nAgents for Nash Caw, Kerr Block\nTHE ARK\nA few travellers' samples Ol\nLadies' Wear at bargain prices.\nWall Paper Is still our \u25a0 leader \"at\nthft present time, and low prices\nWith a sood range of patterns to\nchoostt' from. Linoleum, $1,20 to\n$1.40 Por square yard. Still some\nattractive prices in Staple Dry\nGoads. See our stock of Hugs, Furniture,  Ranges,  etc.       ,.    .\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPHONE 66L\n606 VERNON ST.\n\u2014?\nions\nCarefully compounded by GRADUATES\nonly. VW 8?t what\nthe DOCTOR orders.\nCanada DrugS Book Co.\nPRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY\nCOMPOUNDED\nPhpne 81 P.  O.  Box 1067\nMPROPER LIGHTING\nis   the   cause   of   some\nheadaches,     but     more\noften   they   are   caused\n*5^v      by the need of glasses.\nTfhls is especially true ln thfc case\nof bookkeepers, clerks, etc., who use\nthoy eyes constantly.\nSuch people should havo their eyes\nexamined at  least  every  two  years.\nBy so doing they will bo reasonably\nsure of always : having good eyesight, which will enable them ti\ndo  better work.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist   and   Optician\nIf It's NELSON BRAND\nMARMALADE It's Right\nRight for your customers because\nthe  quality  never  varioa.   -\u25a0'\nRight   for   you   because    Nolson\nBrand  pleases  every  taste.\nAuction Sale\nJXl Victoria   Street\nSATURDAY, MAY 8TH\n2    o'clock\n\"Having 'received instructions from\ntho Otllcial 'Administrator, I will offer the contents of the above, consisting \" of: Itotrlgerator, kitchen\nclhalrs, Singer sewing machine, Victor jrra.'rtiaphone . and records, floor\n..loth, McGlary four-hole kitchen\n\u00a3tove, Belle oak heater, child's cot,\nfolding cots, white enamel beds, some\ncrockery and kitchen utensils.\nTERMS-CASH\nW. CUTLER, Auctioneer\nButtennakers, Attention!\nSee the Churn at\nB. C, Plumbing & Heating\nCompany\nUSED CARS FOR SALE\n2 Chevrolet   Cars.\n1 Overland\n;1 Chevrolet   Truck.\nvSee    tho -.now    1920    Chevrolets.\nNElSO.TKAIIS-ERCo.Ltd.\nGOPHER\nDEATH\nWe havo the famous Port\nDodge Tablets. Easy to use.\nSure ..eriilr to Gophers.\nSmall tins 90^\nUrge tins (1000 tablotB) $2.00\nRutherford Drug Co.\nBAKER   AND   WARD   STS.\nNEItSPX, B. ,0.\nTO  RETURNED  MEN\nAND DEPENDENTS\nThe  undersigned Trustees  of\ntho\n30TH    RESERVE   (Shornoliffe)\nBATTALION,\nRegimental Funds will bo glad\nto receive applications from\nOverseas men (or their dependents) who were registered\non tho books of the above Battalion with a view to tho distribution o\u00a3 tho money placed\nin the hands of tho said Trustees to the most necessitous\ncases. Applications should be\nmade to Mr. A. S. Barton, 111\npemborton Bldg., , Victoria,\nB.C.\nLt.-Col. W. Ridgway Wilson\nMr. A. 8. Barto.i\nMajor  Harold  Nation\nTrustees\nBIO\nTo be Represented at Boards\nof Trade Meet; Manufacturers Pass by\nNelson will ho represented at tho\ncoming wester., boards of trade conference at Calgary, the three-day\nsessions of which will open on May\n18, the council of lhe hoard of trade\ndecided yesterday. One or more\ndelegate^ will be sent, as circumstances .may determine, and word to\nthat effect is .being transmitted to\nthe  Calgary  committee.\n\"When tlio Canadian jUamifactUrors'\nassociation comes to the .Pacific\ncoast to held its, annua' convert-\"\ntion, it will return .east- without\nvisiting the Kootenay. Replying to\nthe invitation sent to that body,\nfrom tho Nelson board, tho secretory\nwrote that the time involved in a\nvisit to this district would be too\ngreat a tax on the eastern members-.\nSeveral members of the council\nstaled that the closing of tbe C.RR.\nTelegraph off ice, at 9 o'clock at night\nWas a hardship, and unreasonably\nearly. It was decided to hare this\nmatter reported on at the meeting\nof the board  next week.\n!\nGREAT GROWTH IN\nSUNDAY SCHOOLS\nMethodist    District    Meeting    Reports\n\u25a0Show  This  tg  be  General\nFeature\n\u25a0 Substantial increases ovnr hint .year\nin church, rneml.en.hl]), Sunday school\nattendance, young people's societies\nand iu finances, were shown in the\nreports of the delegates attending the\nannual Methodist district meeting held\nIn Trail on \"Wednesday, was the statement of Rev. J. P. Westman, pastor of\nTrinity church, who returned to the\ncity 'yesterday.\nIn particular, M&K Westman stated\nthat Sundity .-school attendance had\nrisen enormously during the year, and\ninstanced the growth of the local\nlyietbodif-t Sunday school, the increase\nin which had been njoro than equal\nto tho Increase > in all the Sunday\nschools in the city the year previous.\nSimilar growth had been experienced\nat other cl;urpl\\e^, he averred,\nSURPRISE PARTY\nSeveral of tbe local young people\ngave a surprise party In honor of\nJames Spencer, who lias recently been\ndischarged from the Balfour sanatorium, at his home at 1114 Victoria\nstreet, Wednesday evening. Tbe evening was spent iu dancing, music and\ncards, booby prizes being won by\nMiss Bella Lamout and .lack Morris,\nwho were made to wash the dishes, as\ntheir   reward. . ,    .\nDuring the evening \",Timmy\" displayed many samples of clever woodwork, 'basketry and bcadwork, made\nduring bis sojourn at the sanatorium,\nunder the supervision of the instructors of that institution. Towards midnight a buffet lunch  was 'served.\nGRAND JURY CALLED\nThe gfniid Jury lias been summoned\nfor the Nelson assizes, which open\nnext   Tuesday.'    Mr.   Justice   Morrison\nill preside and Mr. O'Shea will be\ncfown   prosecutor.\nIF1B TD ffl!\nAmerican State Department\nTurns Down Request for\nFacilities Here\n\u25a0 A flat refusal to establish a consular agency in Nelson, Is the reply\nof the United States department of\nstate to representations made by the\nNelson board of trade on that subject.\nVolumlous evidence, showing the necessity of having a consular office\nhere, to avoid holding up lumber and\nother shipments billed to the American side, was forwarded to the\nUnited State's authorities by Secretary\nE. F. Glgot, almost every important\nIndustrial coiictirn in tho district supporting   tho   application.  \" '   \u25a0' '(\nTho reply of the department ot\nstate is that1 It regrets', its inability\nto' establish the agency asked for, but\nijuggosts that shippers accompany their\nInvoices with stamped envelopes addressed to tile consignees, by means\nof which, the Ferine agency can mail\nthe. invoices direct, without them cmn-\ni\\\\_  Hack  to Nelson  for- mailing.\nIt was decided by tho council of the\nboard of trado yesterday, that the\nmatter should not rest here, and Secretary frigot was instructed to write\nfa tins' chambers of commerce of SpO-\nlatoe and Kellog, .Idaho, and other Ih'\nterested points, to urge on the department of state the granting of\nreasonable consular facilities for the\nWest  Koolenqy.\nCATHOLIC SOCIAL\nA card social was held in tho Ci|th\nolic parish hall last Wednesday by\nthe Ladies* Altar Society. During the\nevening a beautiful cushion was raffled  and   won  by   Mrs.   C.   Thorpe,   of\nFalrview.\nIWlNGS\nWAJ.DI7J-ASSELTINE\nj\\t Fra0k.'fort, Ont.,' on April 28, the\nmarriage.took place of Andrew Waldie,.\nof Nelson\/aiid Amy May, daughter of\nCharles A. Asseltiue, Rev. R. M. Pat.,\ntcrsop   officiating. '; v\nHAS ANYOfll? HERE ,\nSEEN THOMPSON\nJ. W. Vahiier.'-of Victoria, has\nten to the Nelson police, asking\nto try to 'locate W. Thompson,\nwas a partner of his in a mining\nerty kno-vyn as the \"hast Chance;'\nKootenay \"Landing, on the Idaho\ndary. and' has not been seen\nlast' November.\nThorni1\"0'!.   belongs    to    North\ncouvcr,'   is  -about   <>0   yours   old,\nfeet  eigb't'niches   lu  height;   has\nsiindy    whiskers,   ipul   walks   wi\n.slight   stoop.' *\nwrit-\nthem\nwho\nprop-\nnear\nbouiv\nsince\nVail\nfive\nlong\nth\nCONFERENCE UPON\nFRUIT PRICES\nCALdAHY, Alta,, May 5.\u2014If fruit\nprices to tiw trade hold to the same\nlevels as 1919. the consumer In Air\nbcrta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba\nwill pay an increased price; express\nrates are going to be advanced, and\na conference between W. H. I. urry,\nof Toronto, representing the Dominion Express company, and members\nof the fruit trade association, is in\nprogress, and .a decision as to the\namount, of the increase will he dc\ncided piw.n.\n\u25a0\u2014B\u2014\u2014  \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0 Ill \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 I\nPARISH HALL QF\nSt Saviour's Church\nFRIDAY, MAY 7th, at 8:30 p.m.\nThe Fourth of August      iiiiuirsoio^^.^.^iiss m; j-arvis\nCAST Hong Arthur    Stringer\nMaharajah Roy L. Bradshaw Whistling   Solo.   ..............\n1 , ....Little  Miss   Mary  Jarvis\nParon   Von   Hemestein ,. i*>Hino   Solo\t\n George   Wagstaf f Little Miss' isiibela' Benson\nBaroness Miss C.  Horstead Comic   Sketch    \t\nSir Harvey Moore..Harold Thelin .. .Messr.4.   Calvert   &   Thelin\nw *-\u00bb ;\u25a0\u00bb <*\">\u00bb    SSI\". .Sl\"0:.v.v.8ta.nT \u2122!'S\n_8ae.il-  Ij.   McCaii_ll.li I'lurro Solo. .Muster Jamc. Benson\nQuant Ben    Morley Orchestra Selection\nTickets- 5.0j_,. c^tikjkt #_..    Proceetkr foriClui-Ch irur.posos.\nmmFa3mmm\nmmmmmmm\n\u25a0IIUBJ!\nmmm\nFreshGreehs\nFOR.   8PRINQ    APPETITES\u2014\nDIRECT   FROM    THE    GARDENS OF THE SOUTH\nASPARAGUS\nTender, green, crisp tips\n30c lb,\nSPINACH\nLarge   leaf,  fresh   and  tender\nl-kto,\nRHUBARB\nFine  large stalks.    Cheaper this\nweek. ...\n15c lb.\nGREEN ONIONS\n2 bunches 25c\nLETTUCE\n50c lb.\nBACON AND\nPICNIC HAMS\nOwing, to tho biq demand we\nhavo had for this. Special\nQuality Ham and Bacon our\nstock vyas exhausted before wo\ncould procure more.\nTHEY ARE NOW IN AND\nARE  ON   SALE  TODAY\nWe advise ordering early as\nsomo of the Hams and Bacon\nare   already   spoken   for\nPicnic Hams, lb., 35c\nRack Bacon, lb., 55c\nStreaked Bacon, lb., 55o\nExtra quality select sugar cured bacon, 70c\nCash Grocery\nLIMITED\nPHONE 2(85,\nitfmww \u25a0hum hi urn\nWE CARRY  IN  STOCK\nAutomobile Ignition\nParts\nMagneto and Generator Brushes\nHowe Electric Co.\nOPERA  HOUSE  BLOCK\nP. O.  Box 928 Phono 630\nSocial and Personal\n.1. .Summons of Proctor wits in tho\nity yesterday.\nC. H. King, of Grand Forlts was'a\ncity    visitor    yesterday.\nJ. O. Kendall of Grand Forks, arrived  in  the city last evening. \/\nMr. and Mrs. R. G. Stagg of Bal*\nfour, v were  in  tlie  city  yesterday.\nCarl W. Llndon, tlie Salmo pest\nmuster, was a city arrival lust\" even\ning.\nF. *U Churchill, the Mankin Spur\nlumhcrmun, arrived in tho city last\nnight.\nJ. B. Whito, ex-district attorney of\nSpokane county, Is registered at the\nHume.\nW. B. Pool, manager of the Tteno\nmine at Sheep creek, ly registered at\nthe Hume,,   j\nThe KUin netted for the Vigueujc\nfund Ify.dtlie, (l\u00bbnco at Kaglo Hall YVo(i-\nneHday'ntglit   was   $\u00ab_..75.\nOTChickFoot\nWe   now   have   a   good   stock   id\n100'e,   EO'a,   25'a  and 10's.    You   wllf\nfind it the purest and most wholt.\nsome Chick Food on the market.\nGives  tho little ones a safe  st.\nla life.\nThe BRACKMAN-KER1\nmium co., ltd:\nMATINEE  SATURDAY  AT 2:i\nELSIE FERGUSON\n\u2014IN\u2014\n\"A SOCIETY EXILE\"\nArtcraft   Picture\nDriven from, hor country as. q-'jporal. leper! Yet she wqs a|l\nthat a woman should be! . The charm of English country sides, tha\nrich color of Venice\u2014a picture you won't forget\u2014once you have\nseen   it.    Come!\nChester Outing Picture and Christie Comedy\nEvening  at 7:15 and  9\nYOUR EYES WEAK?\nAre you nervous, irritable,\nrun down? Perhaps your eyes\nare responsible. An. examination will tell i\u00a3 you require\nglasses or- if your present\nglasses are no longer . suitable.\nCary Safe \u2014 Measures 6Sx4fl.\nWill sell cheap.   As good as new.\nJ. J. WALKER,\nJeweler, and Optician\nNelson, B. C.\nJOHN DALY\nCABINET CTCAR STORE\nMAIL   ORDER     ATTENDED  TO\nPROMPTiy\n8rooki.g Vobacoo, Snuff, Pipm and\nFull   .tack   of   Cigar*,   Cigarette.,\nOther Smokers' Supplies.\nOHSAYUa-H!\nFletnins.  has   got   gome  dandy\nIrish Cobbler Seed\nPotatoes\nAnd    they    (ire   beanthr..     Go. rlgrf\naw^x   to     , , I\nFleming's Stor\u00ab\nFAIRVIEW II\nDRY   60OD8   GROCERIE8,   ET |\nWe Close at 6 p.m. except Wedi#\nday and Saturday\nBeflevtie an|\nW\nCLASSIFIED   ADS.   BRING   BE.\nSULTS   EVERY  TIME.\nAre now shipping CO\nPlace   your   ord.ers   ear.\nD. A. McFARL\nInsurance, Greenhill Coal, h\nRoom 6 K.W.C. Blk-\u2014Pi\nu\\r\u00bb\nthe Great Six-Part We.4*\"-0  Drama\nThe Ace of The Saddle\nThe  earne olc. h^rd-ridina, doable-fisted,  two-gun  Harry.\nCattle rustlers, a creokod -Heriff as the villain, a beautiful (\nheroine, and the threo Carey cowboys. The kind of a picture you\nlove. .\n%tery ,of \"13'\nUSE \"BAPC0\" PAINT\nFOR SPRING PAINTING\nThis In the best ready-mixed MM we can buy and we carry\na wide ntirRtr ot colors to choosfe from.\nFor Floore   U8E   IRONiTE   Floon Paint.    It is noted  for. Its\nhardness (ind durability. '\nWood-Vallance Bat-warc :0k, W.\nPURS\nHigh class Furs from\nselected skins kept in\nstock qr made to order. Customers's Furs\nmade up, remodeled and repaired.\nSKINS DRESSED AND MOUNTED\nHIGHEST PRICE PAID FOB\nRAW PURS\nG. GLASER    .\n416 WARD ST. PHONE 100\nmmmmm\nI\nFresh Fish for Friday\nFraser River Spring Salmon, Chicken Halibut,\nSoles, Manitoba White Fish\nALSO A FULL LINE QF KIPPERED, SMOKED AND\nSALT. FISH\nYour Satisfaction Our Aim\nP. Burns & Co.. Ltd.\n,QUALITY PHO^E 50,\n, service\nCai.it. I*1. L. I'iicitloTi, lately from\noversells, arrived last night from Victoria, and will rejoin the depot staff\no\\f the C.P.R.\najiJoo Hopwood, who wan operated on\ntror appendicitis- at Kootenay Lake\n<$$neral honpltal ^'estei'day, is pro'\ntjref-sing favoFalily.\n' Mrs. Hugh Itoss led. yc-stcrday ii\nlidr capacity os district visitor for\nth* W. C. T.U., for Crawford Bay and\nQueen!!. Bay,' 'where it is her Inten\ntlo'n to organise branches of that\nsociety.\nNelson News of the Day\nS For messenger Phone ID\u2014The Bun-\nga,Iow. (7320)\n;   Taylor the Tinker has n. specUtV machine for sharpening lawn mowers.\n(7784)\nY\" Work\nin front pi Campaign Headquarters at 7:30\nVeteran's Band in Attendance\nCAMPAIQN NOW IN FULL SWING\nT_>e v^luepf ]the Y.M.C.A.;as a Boy Builder' is reflected\nresponse with which canyassejrs are meetjiig, Business co\ncerns recognize value anil are) coming through strong, .fl\npublic must do its share, What have you done? You will nevi\nhave a better chance tp. a^st in, the building up of Canada\nmanhood.   Have subscription ready when canvasser calls.\n..  .     ~ \";J\"      \"iaT\n\u00ab; Mr. A. l'or..larr, with  ticlict No.  22(1.\nwon irlg\u201eUlrc__ rrrl'ncrl by Court Ellen,\n.(7820)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nNice fefammer Cottage oiiposltc City Wharf; fivo room, large\nveranda, partly furnished, beaver board interior, . lako frontage,\n\u25a0yvatev at back door, good flo.at.\nPrice for Quick Sale, $1600\nRental for period of-two months or less $25.00 per month;\nlonger period {20.00. ,\nHighest Market Prices Paid for Victory Bonds\nCharles F. Mafi&r&y\nLo, Hear t^e C_e(itVe Lark,\" by\n(..i-.li-.'.in'.i. an astonishing record Iri\nwhich Merry England combines with\nBunny Italy. Willis Pianos, Ltd., 304\nBaker St. , '    (7821).\n'   Clan   .lohhstohe   No,   212   will   ineejt\ntonight iu  I!_agle  Hall at 8 o'clock.\n(7818)\n-'\u2022The Ladies of Court Ellen's sowing\ncli'cle ;n*v having a sale of work on\nWednesday afternoon, May 19th, in\nK:?P. Hall. Wh'Bt drive in the avowing. '- 7,5\n,;Tho Mothers' Club will h<fylr thoi^\nannual sale of work in the Parish\nH(tll  on  the   18tb. (7706).\n)!''r3. J. Camiihell will glvo iUuHtmUd\nlecture oi) bees to 0.0.1.T. and Trail\nUiingcrs at St. Paul's tonight.      (7826)\n\"Cakes   as   usual   now   at   the   O.K.\nBakery, (7831),\n\" The Kebekab Specjtvl Degyee Tcuim\nwill meet tonight at 8 o'clock for prac**-\ntlce. (7830)\n\"The directors wish to thank all the\nartists who holpod to make such a\nsUCceBs of the- Y\" annual ontertain-\niiiunt, l.iizzlo Dazzle. Also Miss Maud':\nBlihons and'her orchestra, . and Mr.\nIftlth Kettle-well \"tor lighting' efftftt&t\nnnd anyone \u00abise who helped niake the\nshow the success  it  was. (7820)\nStore Closes at 5 to.wt.\nat 9 p.m.\n: Bale of Home Cooking Saturday,\nPbole Drug Stdre, by Mrs. Perrler's\nCircle. ,,. (7827),\n\u25a0..finely   divided   sold   colors   glass\nLIGHT WMGHT\nUNDERWEAR\nEmory\n-DON'T TriBSI-. FINE DAYS. MARE\nYQU FEEt- LIKE GETTING INTO\nSOME THINNER UNDERWEAR?\nWc  havo the athletic  combiitatlons  from  $i,7S\n'.MP'\nBalbriggan8 from S&2.Q0 Pef Wit ...\nMna white mercerized' ootton up tq S4.50\nNatural wools torn $2.5(J .'\u00bb\u25a0. $6.00'\n pii bp ipwipwwwiiiiijiii*^^\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_1920_05_07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0396219","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"}]}}