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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" ;y\"-\":l_--____L\u00abg-_W-BB\u00bb\u00abraHMI^^^^^^^^^^\n. The. Dally News Is tke elly I\nipaper   In   the   Interior   ot   British]\n{Columbia. Full leased wire aervlaa elf\nI Canadian Press, Limited,\n;\u25a0..\". i.ri-.-.vii-i'iVi \u2022\u25a0\u2022raTm \u2022'--'\u2022 - - \t\nimiiiiinhihumh mm J t   \/\nWEATHER\u2014Nelson   snd    vicinity!!\n| Partly cloudy und cooler, with show-j\nera or thunder storms.\n\u2014 SM **.\u2022*. a tUm \u00bb M _\nVOL.^S No. 95\nXELSON, B. C, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 1, 1919\nTt1..   \u25a0  -j'':    .    .        , \/J_J.'...'.-.n\nTO\nOF\nBY\nTRIPLE ALUANCE\nLORD ASKWITH, WHO HAS HAD MUCH EXPERIENCE IN SETTLING\nLABOR DISPUTES, HAS DENOUNCED THE PREMIER BITTERLY\nAS BEING RESPONSIBLE FOR PRESENT SITUATION THROUGH\nHIS POLICY OF \"POLITICAL INTERFERENCE IN INDUSTRIAL\nBUSINESS\"; TAXPAYERS ARE FOOTING INDIRECT BILLS 'FROM\nTHE MINERS' STRIKE; WORKERS THROWN OUT OF EMPLOYMENT BY COAL SHORTAGE ARE RECEIVING THE \"UNEMPLOYMENT DOLE,\" WHICH IN THE CASE OF FAMILY MEN AMOUNTS\nTO MORE THAN $10 A WEEK\nLONDON. .Inly 31 (The Associated\nVress),\u2014The general Industrial unrest in Great Britain, which has been\nseel hi ng ever since. Iho armistice,\nseems at lhe present hour to have\nreached a point which menaces the\ncommerce of the country with at\nleant temporary disasler. It Is considered possible lhat It mny mean\nllie downfall of the. Lloyd fieorge\ngovernment. The strikes of tlie past\nmonth hiivo been serious enough, hut\nIhey are merely symptomatic of 'the\ndissatisfaction which appears io prevail throughout the ranks of organized   labor.\n4Half a. million Lancashire cotton\npperallves were idle for more than\nthree   weeks. r\nTwo hundred thousand Yorkshire\nminers have been ou strike since\n..lily   20.\nThe Liverpool dock workors havo\nparalyzed shipping I hen1 for two\nweeks, holding up hundreds of ships\nnf all si7.es.\nThe bakers have decided io strike\non Saturday and now the London\npolice are about to go on their\nsecond  strike.\n\"Direct Action\" Threat\nTlio worst movement, of nil from\nIhe government standpoint is the\nthreat of \"direct action\" hy the triple\nalliun'ce of rallwaymen, miners and\ntransport workers. These powerful\nunions are talcing a secret ballot to\ndecide whelh^. .hey shall use the\nweapon nf a. general strike to try\nIp enforce their political program of\nthe nationalisation of the mines and\nrailways and lo end Conscription and\nwithdrawal from all participation lu\nall Russian affairs.\nlu Ihesc circumslances words of\nrevolution ami bolshevisin crop up in\nllie newspapers and are used by\nrnnservn Live men 11 > describe the\npresent movement. Some of lhe\nnewspapers are asking where the\nmoney comes from to finance all the\npropaganda being put forth.\nThe government regards the police\nstrike us tbe most dangerous feature\nof the prevalent unrest, it may\nprove a critical test of the labor\ncampaign. The home secretary, K,\nShorlt, has declared lhat the government is firm and will consider no\ncompromise or yield to the policemen's demands to save the status of\nan ordinary labor union.\nLord Askwith, formerly Sir George\nTlniiken Askwith, who has had more\nexperience than any man in Kngland\nin settling labor disputes, has denounced tbe premier bitterly as being\nresponsible for the present condition\nby his policy of \"political interference in industrial business.\"\nLord Askwith, who has been chief\nIndustrial commissioner since 15)11,\nsays: \"The premier has impressed\nevery trade, sometimes the employers,\nmore often the employed, with the\nbelief that they only had to push\nhard enough to receive their demands\nfrom lhe bottomless purse of the\nnation,\"\nTho taxpayers are footing the indirect hills from the miners' strike,\nall tlie workers thrown out of employment through the coal shortage\nare getting the \"unemployed dole,\"\nwhich in lhe case of men with\nfamilies amounts to more than two\npounds a. week, and (the number of\nthese In the industrial centres oil the\nMidlands is steadily increasing.\nDirect action by the workers is\ndenounced hy many public men as\nan attempt to usurp the powers of\nparliament and govern the country\nby a dictatorship of labor unions.\nLabor's answer is thai lhe present\nparliament does not represent Ibe\ncountry and has gone hack on its\npledges io labor.\nElection in Sight?\nJohn Itndgo, former minister of\npensions,  said   in   parliament  tonight;\n\"It looks as if we are approaching\na general election.\"\nlYomier Lloyd flcnrge's famous\npolicy of compromise, so long successful, appears to have reached tho\nbreaking point and certainly is undergoing Its severest test, No sooner\nis one eruption cleared up than a\nnow one breaks out, Tho old leaders\nof labor men nf the typo of .1. H.\nThomas. William A damson, spokesman of the Labor parly in lhe house\nof commons, John Hodge and William Thorno ai'e preaching restraint\nand patience while reconstruction\nfrom the war is being arranged and\nare warning ihe worUingmen lhat\nGreat Britain's future is Imperilled\nunless she ean regain hor foreign\ntrade.\nMr. Thomas has held up the picture- of Unlled Stutos compel it ion\nand United States enterprise, But\nthe old leaders seem to have lost\ntheir influence. A new and younger\nset, a majority of them outspoken\nSocialist, some of them not even\nv.orkingmon but Socialist Iheorlsts,\nare in  tlie saddle.\nWILL BE COAL FAMINE\nSAYS RAILWAY BOARD\nMONTREAL. July 31.\u2014Immediate action is urged by the Canadian\nrailway war board in connection\nwith next winter's supply of coal\nfor Canada.\nThe impending shortage is real,\nits seriousness cannot be exaggerated.\" said an official of the Can*\ndian Railway war board this morning.\n\"We are satisfied on that point\nand the railways' of Canada1 are\nthemselves acting in accordance\nwith advance hero.\n\"Rumors tbat the coal famine in\nthe United States is a scheme of\nthe mine owners to bring about\nhigh prices arc not borne out by\nthe facts.\"\nAT\nATL\nCALLED OUT\nEARLY   THIS   MORNING   FEW   OF\nNIGHT SHIFT HAD RESPONDED  TO  ORDER.\nL\nTO PEACE TREATY\nLONDON, July 31.\u2014Royal assent was today given to the German peace treaty and to the Anglo-French treaty, which thus becomes law.\nNot End of Prohibition.\nOTTAWA, July 31.\u2014Although Great\nBritain's king has given royal assent\nto the pe|icu treaty with Germany\nthere will he no proclamation of peace.\n1 until three of the allied'powers have\nratified the pact. This the Canadian\ngovernment has asked Britain to delay until the Canadian puriyimenl has\ntaken action ;it lhe coming fall session. Therefore the orders in council\nunder the war measures act will not\nbe annulled utnil peace is officially\nproclaimed. These include prohibition\nracing, etc\nCHARTERS TAKEN FROM THE\nVANCOUVER TRADES COUNCIL\nVANCOUVER, July 81,\u2014Tho Vancouver trades and labor council charters from lhe American federation of\n]J(bor and lhe Dominion trades and\nlabor congress were revoked at tlie\ncourtctt  meeting   tonight  by A.   Knr-\n\\ lutloe, orgu\nI \u2022tJw.'Ciitlve   1.\nbodies of trades unionism\ntho continent. Tho council will\nfunction in future as an Integral part\nof the Ono Ulg Union, the principles\nof which It accepted some weeks ago.\nA new central body composed of\ndelegates rrnm organizations redlining ul'fllialion with Ihelr Inter nation -\n| ills will be formed in'operate under\n' cdmllar charters to those withdrawn\ntonight.\n'The first meeting of lhe new conn-\n| ell will be held on August 7.\nJ. Kavanagh, secretary of Iho coun-\n. ell, told Mr. Faruilloe tbat any allempt\n[ by tlle new body to use the name of\nIt (lip Vancouver Trades and Libor\n| MUneU will bo met by court action.\nLEATHER TO HE\nIN\nShoes Will   Be  Higher in  Price  Next\nSpring, Say Shoe Men, but Relief\nWill Come Later in Year.\nBOSTON\", July 81.\u2014Shoes next\nspring will bring even, higher prices\nthan those now prevailing, but relief\nmny be expected Into in 1320, according to a statement issued today by tho\nNational Boot and shoe Manufacturers' association, The cause of high\nprices are said to ho the depletion nf\nstocks under war-time conditions, tlle\nprosperity of the public and .European\nG\"R. petition.\nTbo statement said present price.*\nwero excessive and condemned \"buying of a speculative character.\"\nThe equilibrium of the market can\nbe restored, lhe statement said, \"If\nmanufacturers and merchants goner\nally follow the dictates of common\nsense, but all purchases far in ad\nvance of actual needs, or buying in\nquantities in excess of those needed\nfor reasonable goods, must stop,\"\nSAYS  SHOES  GOING  UP\nHAMILTON, July 31.\u2014That lhe\nprice of footwear within the uexl few\nmonths will advance four dollars a\npair, was the statement made today\nhy W. S. Duffield of the John Mcpherson Shoe company. I_a*ior Is nol\nto blame, for this, be said.* The fault\nrests with the Chicago packers, who\nhave a monopoly ou leather. A horse\nhide that could be bought for a dollar now commands over $17, while $!ir.\nIs asked for a cow hide, a sum thai\nwould ottqo have purchased a cow.\nLabor will get 20 cenls in which four\ndollars advance. Packers Will double\nup the balance.\nBELGIUM PLACES BAN ON COAL\niBHl'SSKLS, July Til.-The Belgian\ngovernment today prohibited temporarily ihe exportation of Belgian coal Lp\nany country.\nGOVERNMENT   MACHINERY   SET\nIN  MOTION TO FIND A\nSOLUTION\nDEMAND MADE FOR MORE\nPAY  OR  LOWER  PRICES\nPresident  Wilson   Said  to   Be   Giving\nVery Thoughtful Consideration;\nResolutions in Congress\nWASHINGTON, July 81.\u2014Governmental machinery was set in motion\ntoday in response to demands by the\npublic that some official action bo\ntaken to relieve the high cost of living.\nPrices as they affect the average citizen assumed first place iu interest\nin the capital. At the White Houso\nPresident Wilson was said to bo giving \"deep and very thoughtful consideration\" to problems presented lo him\nund the railroad udnilrf.strntion by\nmembers of the railroad brotherhoods,\nwho reported lhat prices would have\nlo conic down or wages go up, If social unrest was not to develop Into\nupheval. In the senate and house the\ndiscussion gave rise to several resolutions lo Investigate the cause of ex-\nIstiug price levels, und another to reduce ibe volume of currency In circulation as a means of deflating\nprices, one to request the attorney-\ngeneral to stop speculation in foods\nnn exchanges ami another to sell this\nyear's wheat crop at market prices\nInstead of at the government guaranteed price, the difference to be made\nup by lhe governmenl.\nFix Prices in 'France\nPARIS, July 111 (The Associated\nPress).\u2014A decree will appear iu tomorrow's Offtclnt Journal giving effect to the plan of Joseph I. li. E,\nNoulons, the new minister of provis\nions, fixing prices for different\narticles of food and drink.\nA commission Is lo be appointed\nIn each department to make a Hat\nof normal prices each week. Supplementary commissions for districts\nwhere populations are loo great for a\nsingle commission will lie named,\nThere will be several commissions in\nParis under the presidency of municipal councillors.\nThe commissions will establish the\ncost, price of goods and add a percentage up to 15 per cent, as a\nmaximum profit, These prices will\nbe given the utmost publicity und\nretailers aro to he compelled to affix\nthem to lhe goods and to conform to\nthem,\nRIOTER WAS KILLED BY\nAN  UNKNOWN  PERSON\nAYIXN1PF.G, July 81.\u2014That Stephen\nSehezerhumnwicz came to bis death by\ngas gangrene poisoning as the result\nol\" bullet wounds received on the day\nf the riots on June 21, 1910, said bullet or bullets being fired by some\nperson or persons unknown, wus tho\nverdict returned tonight at the final\nsitting of lhe longest Inquest on record here, There were seven sessions,\nwrt over 00 witnesses were examined.\nThe last flitting was made necessary\nby the refusal of Adolf Berrll to give\nevidence until he had preliminary\nhearing on a dlinrgo of rioting. Ho was\nsentenced to 30 days for contempt of\ncourt, hut was released after two days\non promising to testify.\nBRITAIN IS SPENDING HALF\nA MILLION POUNDS UAILY\nLONDON, July 81.\u2014A question asked iu lhe house of commons tonight\nbrought fortih a statement from J.\nAusten Chamberlain, chancellor of the\nexchequer, that the average expenditure of thd country In the period from\nApril 1 to July l_ii was nearly \u00a3600,-\n000 daily.\nSir Laming Worthington Kvans,\nminister of pensions, in giving tho\nhouse an explanation on the pension\nsituation, said that the present tho\npensions would amount to \u00a390,000,000\nsterling in a. full year. Sir Laming\nannounces ;i new scale of pensions for\ntotally disabled single men of 10\nshillings weekly, and for married men\nTill Bh 11 lings weekly, being an increase\nrespectively of seven and it shillings\non tbe previous scale.\nProportionate increases, Sir Laming\ndecl&red, were to be given for children, widows, and other dependents ot\nSoldiers.,\nTWO  KILLED  IN  COLLISION\nGREENWICH, Conn., July 31.\u2014Two\nmen were killed when two freight\nirafus over llie New Vork, New Haven\nami Hartford railroad were lu collision\nal. lOnst Port Chester, N.V., earlv loduy.\nTHRESHERS uACK COAL.\nHKGINA, July 31.\u2014lion. 0. A. Dunning lias telegraphed Hon. 0. D. Hoi\nel'tson lhat lhe coal strikes In Alberta\nhave caused a serious shortage of coal\nund that unless sienrn Cop,] is available\nipilekly many steam threshing outfits\nWill bo Idle.\nMOVE  DECIDED ON IN\nSECRET BY EXECUTIVE\nBill   Before  Parliament to   Reorganize\nDepartment Is Chief Grievance-\nLondon  City  Force  Not\nAffected,\nLondon, August 1.\u2014Earlyi this\nmorning very few policemen had. responded to tlte strike, call, The night\npatrolmen start their shut at io o'qlo.ok\nat. night and all but a small number\nof tlicin, which the authorities describe\naw negligible, went on duty to remain\nat. their posts throughout the night.\nIt seems that tho large majority of\nthe policemen wero not aware of the\nIntention of the union to call them out\nand many learned that the strike had\nbeen ordered only through being asked\nby newspaper reporters whether they\nintended to join the movement. Some\nol the men refused to believe that a\nslrlke had l.een ordered. Some of\nthese expressed disappointment at tho\naction.\nMade Secret Decision.\nIt.   appeared   evident  that  the   move\nwas decided upon secretly by tbe union\nxeoutl.v\n\u2022Some doubt hus been expressed that\ntho strike will not prove moro than\npartial.. The men got a substantial\nraise In pay ami other concessions\nrecently, ami it it* said lhat a large\npart of the force disapproved of the\nconduct of tbi' union's executives. The\nassertion is made that some, of the\npolice were piirlieulaVly offended at\nSecretary Hayes' publishing on behalf\nof the union an apology to the riotous\ncrowd, Which the police soma (hue ago\ndispersed outside the parliament buildings. Moreover, it is said that trouble\nwith tlle authorities was settled. The\npolico wore told that any member'-ol\ntho force who wen! on strike In the\nfuture would bo Instantly dismissed\nand not reinstated, and that he would\nlose his pension.\nOn lhe other hand, the union ap-\npnrenlly has a strong hold on a section of the force, some of whom support its action and others who hesitate to act  on account ol the union's\nrdi-i's, fearing pressure from Ihelr\ncomrades. The union's strongest influence is among Hie constables belonging to the Last End contingent,\nand tonight's strikers nre chiefly\nanion gtheso, ll remains to be seen\nwhat will develop today when the action of the executive of the union is\nfully canvassed.\nCity Police Not Affected.\nThe London Ci'y police, which is a\nseparate body controlled by tho city\ncouncil, and not by lhe government,\nlike the metropolitan police force, has\nnot been affected by the,strike up to\nthe present. A lale report said a\ngreat majority nf tlle police in the\nHast End district quit afler they\nlearned of the call of the union. These\nmen number several hundred,\nThe total strength of ibe metropolitan   force  is  about  1!0,000.\nGeneral   Call   Issued.\nLONDON, July lii.-An Immediate\nstrike of lhe London police was derided on tonight at mass meetings\nheld In various places. The grievance\nof tho police Is the bill before parliament reorganising ihe department,\nThis provides for the organization of\na polico union, but prohibits it from\naffiliating with labor unions and prohibits policemen from going out ou\njtrike under any circumstances with\nheavy penalties.\nSecretary Hayes of the National\nUnion of Police and Prison nffleers\nhas Issued an order in lhe name of the\nexecutive committee calling nut nil\nmembers in the kingdom at once, and\nalso an appeal to all organised workers \"m move to our support at your\nearliest convenience.\"    ,\nThe police and prison Officers union,\nwhich is lhe policemen's union, regards the bill as aa attack nol only\nupon the policemen themselves, but\nupon the whole labor Interests, hence\nIhelr appeal to the workers, which begins, \"The government, has dared to\npersist in its efforts lo utilize the political machinery to destroy your undoubted right io organise for the legal\nttlon of your own Interests.\"\nIt. proceedd lo explain tlmt the preservation of the union Is the only means\nWhereby (he men ean retain their\nhard   Won   freedom   as   cltlxens,   and\ncontinues!\n\"The passage of the police bill will\nmean the complete destruction nr your\nunion, tlie existence of which was fully\nagreed by the prime minister August\n81,  HtlS. nnd again by Lord Cave, on\nbehalf of the government! September\n\\2, mis.\nCommittee Ignored,\n\"Kvery possible constitutional and\npeaceful channel hns been traversed In\nsearch of a satisfactory solution. An\ninterview with a final explnmillmi was\nsoughl with the premier on the night\nof tbe 30th; nnd again oh lhe morning nf the Hist ,by a  deputation nf\n-.L'OliUmir*! OH I'ago TWO)\nE\nTHE\npn\nCAPTURES IMPORTANT TOWN OF\nKAMISSIN   ON   THE   RIVER\nVOLGA\nFIVE   THOUSAND   BOLSHEVIK\nAND  MUCH   MATERIAL TAKEN\nHoeing  Enemy  Pursued Twelve Miles\nBeyond Town, Which Was Entered\non July 30\nLONDON, July 31.\u2014Gen. Denikine, the Russian commander, has\ngained an important victory over\nIbe bolshevik and captured the\ntown of Kamissin, on tbo Volga.\nFive thousand bolshevik, nine\n\u2022ions and quantities of ammunition and  material were also taken.\nIn making this announcement,\nthe War office says that possession of Kamissin gives General\nDevikinc a firmer hold on the\nrifaer and bis main objective over\nthe advance on Saratov, threatening the bolshevik communications with  Astrakan.\nKamissin was entered by the\nanti-bolshevik troops on July 30\nand the fleeing enemy was pursued   12  miles   beyond   the   town.\nThousands of  Police and Soldiers  Patrol   Black   Belt;   Supplies  A'e\nDelivered\nCHICAGO, July 31.\u2014Race war and\nbloodshed had abated tonight after\nfour days and nights of rioting, but\nviolence continued to occur sporadically, notliw Ith stand Ing a force of\nthousands of policemen and soldiers\non duty around lhe south side negro\nquarters. Three negroes died today\nOf bullet wounds, making the official\nlist 31i, of which 18 were negroes, only\nOne of three was shot today, though\na dozen or more members of both\nraces were wounded in thu scattered\ndisturbances, most of them of n minor\ncharacter.\nTbe negro area was comparatively\npiiet tonight, The presence of troops\napparently had calmed the negroes'\nfears and had a salutary effect on\ndisturbing elements among the whites\nand blacks. The troops were well\ndistributed and the military machinery\nwus  running smoothly.\nPood supplies were rushed into the\nnegro sertions by cooperation of tho\nWholesale grocers' association, tbe police and the troops. The black belt\nremained a barred zone, where whiles\nmiKht not enter, and even the guarded trucks of groceries were driven\nonly in ibc deadline by while chauffeurs, who then were relieved by negro drivers  under police escort.\n.Many of the poorer negroes were\nreported lu dire need of food, and without funds. Today was pay day at the\nstock yards, but negroes feared to go\nthere to diaw Ihelr wjiges. Thousands of negroes have not attempted\nto go lo work at all,\nNegro babies were worse sufferers.\nThey were withoui milk mull today,\nwhen City Comptroller Harding sctii\n3000 bottles of milk iulo the district.\ni hie Colored woman told the police\ntonight she had subsided entirely on\noatmeal  nnd   butter  since  .Monday.\nHID IN WOODS WHEN CALLED\nUP; THOUGHT HE WAS SECURE\nWINNIPEG, July 31.\u2014John Hruult,\nnf St, Johns, yue., a military defaulter from thai province was arrested thin week In .Manitoba by\nofficers of the ti.N.w.M.P. Information was laid against him in the provincial police cou\/t today, and ho\nwill appear In one week pending the\narrival of a Hat from Ottawa suuc-\ntlotllng  liis  prosecution.\nThis case, officials State, is one\nof tho most glaring oases nf desertion yet known. Hrault hnd been\nordered tu report in QuobOO and\nhad mnde his getaway to the woods\nof Manitoba, with the conclusion of\nibe wiir he had considered himself\nni cure from arrest,\nDOCUMENTS PRODUCED IN CONNECTION WltH THE SEDhYION\nTRIALS AT WINNIPEG SHOW THAT THE \"REDS\" PLANNED TO\nORGANIZE RIOTS TO START IN EVERY CITY, VILLAGE AND\nTOWN IN THE DOMINION AT THE SAME TIME, WITH THE\nDEFINITE OBJECT OF TAKING OVER THE REINS OF GOVERNMENT; R. B. RUSSELL SAW IN THE COMING UNEMPLOYMENT\nSITUATION A \"GLORIOUS OPPORTUNITY TO SHOW THE 'PLUG'\nTHAT THE ONLY SOLUTION OF THE QUESTION (S THE SITUATION   IN   RUSSIA\"\nWINNIPEG, July 31.\u2014The Calgary\nLabor convention last March, at\nwhich the one Big Union was given\nform, was packed with \"Ueds,\" as\nthe members of ihe Socialist party\nof Canada are known in labor circles.\nThe plans of the \"Reds\" were to organize riots to start In every city,\ntown and village of Canada at one\ntime, with the definite object of\ntaking the reins of government.\nAimed  to  Seize Government\nAn official of the United Mine\n\u25a0.Yorkers of America in a letter sug\ngesled thai \"that the only way we\nwill ever gel anywhere is by the\nuse of force,\" and that \"the time is\ncoming when there will he riots and\npetty little revolutions here and\nthere all over lhe country.\" In men\ntlonlng the proposed demonstration in\nToronto of io,ooo unemployed, the\nwriter said he thought tbat if those\nthings could he organized to slart\nin every town, city and village at\none lime, with a definite object in\nview of taking over tbe reins of government \"we would arrive all right.'\nR. It. Russell saw in the coming\nunemployment situation a \"gtbrioui\nopportunity to show tho 'plug' that\ni in1 only solution to the question is\nthe situation in Russia.\" A. veritable\nflood of propaganda. Including deliberations of banned literature or\nSocialism und Bolshevism, was dla\ntrlbuted by it. ll. RfiSMi, hnd other\nmembers of ihe Socialist party of\nCanada. *\nStatements  in   Letters\nThis is the stibstanco of a lott\nseized by tho U.N. W..M.P. in \\'ai\ncouvcr, Edmonton, Calgary anil Wil\nnipeg, and read In court this uftei\nnoon at thu preliminary trial of olght\nLabor leaders for seditious conspiracy.\nCorporal James l-Vipps, B.N.W.M.P.,\nproduced  loiters  from   tl.   B.  Bussell,\nseized ou June 2 in I lie off ires of\nC. Stevenson, secretary of the Socialist parly of Canada, iu Vancouver\nwilh a quuntity  of literature,\nSergt. Ruben Rowell, ll.N.W.M.P.,\nproduced letters and literature taken\nin a raid on the homo of Joseph It.\nKnight and John l<\\ Muguiro, at Edmonton on July  1.\nCorporal Albert .Moss, U.N.W.M.P.,\ntold of searching tlie home of Carl\nBurgut at L'dtnuiiton, and produced\nletters and  literature  seized.\nAlt the men Implicated in tlie raids\nwere connected with the accused\neither by their presence at tin- Calgary convention or by the tact that\nthe letters found were from R. B.\nRussell,\n.). B. Coyne, for the crown, called\nthe attention of the court in lhe fan\nthat a large quuntity nf the literature\nseized was still under ban.\nAmong the books and papers produced   were   \"The   Red   1' lag, t'he\nSoviet,\" \"The Bolsheviks and the\nSoviets,\" \"Soviets at Work,\" \"Lessous\nnf the Russian Revolution\" by\nNicholas Leniuc, \"The llusslan\nSoviet,\"   \"tin   Whose   Side   Arc   Vou,\nWorker   or   Capitalist, l'hu   Bight\ntu Be Lazy,\" and many others,\n\"Horrors  of   Peace\"\n\"lie letter produced, duttfj ut Winnipeg, November 2'\\ BUS, signed by\nR. B. Russell, und addressed lu ,J. B.\nKnight, of Edrilonton, says in part;\n\"Well Joe, 1 expect wo will now\nlie confronted with the horrors of\npeace, and it is to be hoped that the\nBeds will wake up now and get in\nall ibe propaganda that can be expounded U hours iter day. Now Joe,\nthere lu another matter 1 would like\nto take up wilh you, and that is the\nwestern conference. Wc could pack\nit with Reds and no doubt start\nsomethings, Yours in revolt, B. H.\nBussell.\"\nAnother letter written  by  John  F.\nMagUlre, an  official  of  the   Socialist\nparty   of   Canada,   to   B.   p..   Bussell,\nJanuary  12, 1910, says, in  part::\nBoost  for  Bolshevism\n\"We have just returned from the\nAlberta Federation ut LaDoV convention. We gave the bolshevik the\nfinest boost that has been accomplished for some lime. Tile western\nConference came up for discussion\nand we curried that against Ihe\nwishes of the machine. They did all\npossible to show ttiat it waa a great\nmistake and tbat we were doing the\nworst thing lu the Interest of organized labor. With a big representation iii Calgary we ought to make\nthings hum. Wherever possible get\nReds lo be delegate.-. Wc inusl plan\nto huve a bumper meeting when we\nall are in Calgary and then surely\nhis Is one place (hat we can paint\ned.\"\n\"We Want Russian  Methods\"\nA letter addressed lo C. Stevenson,\neeretary   of   tbe   Socialist   party   of\nCanada   at   Vancouver,   from   Tom\nBeattie,   an   official   of   tlie   United\nMine   Workers   nf   America,   says,   in\npart:\n\"Via want io be using some moro\nRussian methods, resoluiions do not\nget ns anywhere, however things ore*!\nmoving rnpljlly, The unemployed aro'\nincreasing and the situation will be\ngetting acute when the farmers are\nunable io sell their grain this coming fall. Now that ihere are or will\nhe about halt a million more soldiers\nin provide work for they will bo up\nagainst it. The remedy we all know,\nto capture ibe reins of government,\ni ic, but  now, certainly not by bnllot,\n'The mily way we will ever got\nanywhere Is by the use of force. The\ntime is coming when there will be\nriots and petty revolutions here and\nu.eio all over the country. That proposed demonstration in Toronto of\nlo.i.i.'j unemployed is but a starter.\nthere is no telling what may come\nout of ii. but l think if these things\ncould be organized to start in every\ntown, city and village at one time,\nwith a det inite object, in view, we\nwould arrive all right. 1 am yours\nfor ihe revolution. (Signed), Tom\nBeattie.\"\nRussell  implicated\nProof thai B. P.. Bussell . was Intimate with Stevenson, to wmoih this\nletter was addressed, was introduced\nIn many letters passing between them\nrelating to the distribution of what\nthe letters termed \"Rod propaganda.\"\nA letter was rear! from it. B. Russell io .i. B. Knight, dnieii January \u00bb,\nIfllll. in which he said: \"I see arriving niii of the unemployment tlint is\nnow beginning to make Itself manifest Hie most glorious opportunity to\nslum- tiie plug' ihe onlj solution to\nibe rptcHtlon is by continually pointing lo bini ias yon sayi tbe situation\nin   Russln.\"\nA circular signed by John F. Ma-\nguire, and sent from ihe offices of\nihe Socialist party of Canada at\nKdnioiituii, afler idling of lhe arrest\nof ilie Lnbor leaders now on trial,\nand asking tor funds, has this state-\ntin nt:\n\"Our only means at Hie present.\nstage of the game is in obtain their\nfreedom through the masters courts,\ntomorrow [I will be different and\nseems not tn be too far distant, Vou\nunderstand,   comrades.\"\nA large pan of the correspondence\nIntroduced was between Bussell and\nStevenson, of ibe Socialist party at\nVancouver, ami related to the receipt\nand distribution of banned literature.\nKarly in the afternoon C. .1, l-'osler,\na baker, testified thai be was not\nallowed lo put his egtfs into- cold\nstorage until he got permission from\ntbe   strike  committee,\nCourt adjourned al .\". o'clock until\nI0.no  tomorrow morning.\nNO  DECISION   REACHED\nON  BULGARIAN  BOUNDARY\nPARIS, July IB.-The supreme council discussed the Bulgarian boundaries\nigain today, but reached no decision.\nThe discussion will be resumed tomorrow. The council received a report from the military committee at\nVersailles on lhe situation at Danzig\nand Mem el.\nIt was decided to send no iruops tu\nDanzig, and the Memel report was referred to the  Bailie commission.\nTlie council will grant ibe request\nof the Swedish government for a hearing concerning the disposition of the\nAland Islands.\nDEAN OF ST. PAUL'S ISSUES\nWARNING  TO   LABORITES\nLONDON, July 31.\u2014In a speech\ntonifjht at a meeting of tbe people's league, which was instituted\nfor the protection of the unorganized classes, tbe Very Rev. William\nRalph Inge, dean of St, Paul's,\nsaid:\n\"Wc arc making for national\nbankruptcy,, which will result in\nanarchy.\"\nHe declared he was not hostile\nto trade unions, but tbat they had\nbecome huge capitalistic concerns,\nwhich wero engaged in financinfl\nraids on  the  people.\n\"With them it is not a strugglo\nbetween rich and poor,\" he continued. \"It is open brigandago\nagainst the community. They are\na privileged class determined that\nthese privileges shall not go outside themselves. Thoy are shutting down employment not only\nagainst discharged soldiers, but\nwounded men.\"\nFrancis M. B. Fishor, diroctor\nof tho Imperial Association of\nCommerce, said that if the labor\nparty continued its present tactics\nit would ruin not only itself, but\nthe country,\ni lit I nl i   f |.l..--^i^ \u25a0\n fT PAGE TWO\nr-.  . .,   *t'\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1913\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhir* tha Traveling Pu.lle May  Obtain  luparlar Accommodation,\nTHE\nPremier Hotel\nOf the Interior\nV*,\nSERVICE UNEXCELLED\nA La Carte Table D'Hota\nSI'Kf'lAT, SUNDAY DINNER\n* l.n.l\nINCOMPARABLY THE 'FINEST TEA  ROOM IN  B.C.\nOpen Daily 10 a.m. to  Midnight Music and  Dancing\nThe latest Sundaes, lop Ci\nAfternoon Ten u p,m.\nId n.inlis nnd  lc\nin r. p.m.), 2fio.\nHeadquarters fur all Travelling Mon,  -lining Men nnd Tourists\nEuropean Plan       -        Rooms, $1,00 up\nHIWIB\u2014C. k. Wilson, Vancouvor! Mrs, it. l: Clienetee, Vnncouver; M.\nSpallerans. Vancouver; Q, V. Cathrao, Vancouver; .1. A. Walker, Vancouver;\nII. !\u2022\". J'lodlnRtun, Toronto; A. C. Archer, Toronto; C. A. McDonald,\nCalgary; Mrs. .1. A. MoAlplne, Vulcan; Cpl. G. M. Hampton, C. E. P.;\nC. M. llohr, city; .1. Anderson, Kaslo; Mrs. 1,. ].. Boomer, Trail; B. F. West-\nhy, Erie; W. T. McDowell, Ymir; K. .1. Johnson, Seattle: 11. Colobrook,\nFruitvale; ('. [.ussey, Spokane; II. Hull, Spokane; S. A. Jones, Norwich,\nN. Y.; .Miss E .Hawes, Silverton; H. MacKenzle, uosslaiul; Miss M. Poling, Reglna; P. 0. Ebhutt, Creston; Mrs. ,i. ll. Baxter, Spokane; A. \\V.\nOln_]e, Calgary; .1. 11. Nathan, Vnncouver; H. Hodge, Vancouver; A. .1.\nWoodburn,   Kamloops;   ti.   Makinson, Deer Tare.\nEuropean Plan\nAmerican Plan\nHOTEL  STRATHCONA\nTRAVELLING MEN\nWhen  in   Nelson  you  will  find  it to\nyour   advantage   to    investigate   our\nspecial   service.     Seven   ground   floor\nsample  rooms,  right  in  the  heart  of\nthi city, always available.\nTOURISTS\nSpecial rates by week or month.\nTW A        Wliy n0' hav\u00b0 Afternoon Tea in the T\/^\/T\nx EdX\\     coolest place in the city? lKjtLt\nROOM You wi\" en-'\u00b0y \u00b0ur sani,ary scrvice (jREAM\n.STRATHCONA\u2014Mr. ond Mrs. lie lhe. city; D, llrodic, city; J. S. Mahood,\nijueens liny; Miss W. 1,. Mcliougnlil. New Denver; Jlrs. II. J. McDougald,\n.New Denver; Mr. nnd Mrs. J. linker. Raymond; W. B, Wallace, Spokane;\nP. T. Park, ll'alfoiir; S. .1. Morrison, Spokane; n. S. Benson, Spokane; J. .1.\nKoran, Vancouver; II. McVlcnr, Vancouver; I!. Ellis, Boswell; E. Smith,\nToronto.\nQueen's Hotel\nEuropean   and   American   Plan\nSteam Heat in  Every  Room\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nQUENS- Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Ilnugil-\nlon. Mrs. Cross, Crawford Hay; A. 1'.\nDowdlng, Erie; \\V. Daws. I'orlo Rico;\nMrs. W. Whlkley, South Slocan; Mrs.\nW .E. Graham. Slocan City; Miss 11.\nMcLeod, Bolllngham; J. I'ring. Itus-\nsells Landing; Mr. and Mrs. (',. Wood-\nrow, Port William; 11. Anderson. Calgary; .1. Lawrence and party. Sarnia;\nM. Evered. Moose Jaw.\nMadden House\nM. J.  MADDEN, Proprietress\nSTEAM  HEATED\nCor.  Baker and Ward  Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN'\u2014 C. McLaughlin. Kaslo;\nMr. and Mrs. Hanklnj and family.\nSlocan Park: l>, J. McDonald, Vancouver; W. Broadbent, Marcus; Frank\nJenntngs, Maji (icnnt.ngs. Spokane:,\nJim Madden. Jack Madden. Ymir; D.\n.1. Mrl.eod. Sirdar; n. Miller, Hamilton, i un., M f. Wnterson, Cranbrook; G. Hurley, Reglna; D. B. Johnston, I'ernie; E. J. Cowley. Calgary;\n\\v. Knickerbocker, Thrums.\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A.  ERICKSON,  Prop.\nOpposite Post Office\nRoom   and   Board,  $35   per   Month\nEuropean Plan     Rooms 50c  up\nMeals 35c.\n, \u201e J\nGRAND CENTRAL   (I.   I.eerc.  Sal-\nroo;  A. McDonald, Siimnierskle.\nKOOTENAY   M. .larrlt, Salmo;   A.\nSnlre, Salmo;  M. Blatlck, Molly Olb-\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nHun hy Canadians. All White help.\nMeals 35c, served family style,\nlleils, 35c and 50c. All you can\nent and n good, clean bed tn sleep\nin. Give us u trial. Auto meets\nnil trains und boats.\nED. KERR, Proprietor,\nWhere to Spend a Holiday\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOutlet Hotel\nPROCTOR\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Golf\nTennis Courts\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied\nGrocery   Store   in   Connection\nW. A. WARD, Prop.\nRates   Reasonable. Good   Meals.\nENJOY A VACATION  AT THE\nHOTEL GRAND\nNAKUSP\nFrank Hughes & Son, Props.\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lakes.\nSplendid fishing and boating.\nNice rooms, good meals, pleasant surroundings. All White\nhelp.\nThe Central Hotel\nAINSWORTH, B.C,\nNiitural Hot SprlngB.    Sure cure\nfor Rheumatism, Metallic poisoning.   Ideal spot fnr holiday.   Hole!\nnewly   renovated,     Finest   Home\nCooking.\nJt:iten per week, ?ii.oo and  up.\nROBERT THOMPSON, Prop.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETE, Proprietress\nA  Hnme for the World nt fl.SE n\nDny.    I'.rst-c'lass IHnlnK Room,\nComfortable Rooms.\n313 Vernon St.      Near Post Office\nTremont Hotel\nNILSON & NILSON, Props.\nNicely Furnished linoms by day\nweek or month,\nBAKER ST.\nTREMONT- M. Suit; .1. Cliarinan.\n.1. Shwnner. II. Alir, Apex; A. Floe,\nN.  Unre, fcilocnn.\nKitchener Hotel\nKITCHENER, B.C.\nAn Ideal .pol for Tourists, Excellent limiting and fishliiK in season. We Klve the best of accommodation io ihe travelling public\nand health seekers. For scenery\nnnd fishing In the beautiful mmni.\nlalns Kitchener cannot he heut.\nB. JOHNSON, Prop.\nThe Standard Cafe\n320 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIGHT\nI- to 2.30, Special Lunch \u2022  - 35c.\nPhono 154\nMury niirns. attrrf 7.\". a spinster,\nwas round dead nt her hnme in Quebec.\nSPEND  YOUR   HOLIDAYS AT\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nAND STOCK UP WITH HEALTH\nIf you suffer from muscular, Inflammatory, sciatica, or any other\nfarm of rheumatism, or from\nmetallic poisoning of nny sort,\ndon't delay. Come at once and get\ncured. .Most complete and iiest. arranged bathing establishments on\nthe continent. All departments\nunder ane roof, slenm heated and\ncleclric light;\nRates, $3 per day, or $17 per week\nDAVIS &  DAVIS,  Props.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes, B.C.\nFire of Incetldlary origin destroyed\nthousands of dollars' worth of huckleberries on government marsh land\nnear Kalamazoo, Mich.\nCLASSIFIED ADS BRINK RESULTS\nEVERY TIME\nItMAND   $20   MINIMUM    FOR   44\nHOUR  WEEK  AND  ABOLITION OF NIGHT WORK.\nYORKSHIRE   MINERS   \"SIT\nTIGHT AND  SAY   NOTHING'\nMinister  of   Labor   Meets   With   Cabinet\u2014Arranged to Confer  Later\nWith the Strikers.\nLONDON. .Inly 81.\u2014Possibility or a\nnational bakers' strike, which the labor ministry was trying today to avert,\nilded to the anxiety newspapers displayed todny over fnilure so fnr to\nsettle the Yorkshire miners' strike.\nSir Robert Horn, minister of labor,\nmet with tho Hritish enhinet today\nind explained the miners' position. He\narranged to confer late today with n\ndeputation of mine workers.\nLeaders of both sides agreed that\nit wns difficult to determine what\nshould be the next step towards settlement, the newspapers say In their\neditorials today, commenting upon the\ndanger to industry.\n\"The best thing for us to do,\" says\nHerbert Smith, head of the Yorkshire\nMiners* federation, \"is to sit tight and\nsay nothing; then we will not be mis-\npresented or misunderstood.\"\nBakers' Demands.\nThe proposed bakers' strike is\nthreatened lo force Ihe demand of the\nmen for a. minimum wage nf $.0, a\n44-hour week, nnd the abolition of\nnight work.\nThe master bakers refused to consider these demands, they said, unless\nthe government should allow a sufficient Increase in bread prices to meet\ntlie incrensed expense of the proposed\nnew scale. One of the local cooperative societies called a meeting of its\nmembers todny to consider rescinding\na resolution that provided that only\nunion i.akers be employed by il.\nPOLICEMEN AT LONDON\nARE CALLED OUT\n(Continued from Page One.)\nyour executive committee elected for\nthat purpose, who waited for a reply.\nEven this procedure has ben ignored.\nTherefore, you are driven to tho final\nargument\u2014you must act or lose your\nfreedom for ever.\"\nThe appeal then announces thnt the\nmembers of the union are to withdraw\ntheir services immediately, such withdrawal to remain effective until the\n\"gross Injustice imposed by the provisions of the' police bill is remedied\nand a. full and frank recognition of the\nunion conceded.\"\nThe appeal concludes: \"The members oi your executive have already\nwithdrawn their services and nre prepared to sacrifice all for the cause.\"\nThis appeal is signed by J. IL Hayes,\ngeneral secretary.\nSOLDIER'S   BODY   FOUND\nWINNIPEG, .luly 31.\u2014The body ot\nAlexander Taylor, n returned soldier,\nwho was reported missing n week\nago. wus found floating in the Red\nItlvcr today. Ills relatives reside in\nScotland.\nBELIEVED TO BE SUICIDE\nWINNIPEG, .luly 31\u2014 The body of\nan unidentified man. a bullet through\nhis right temple and a revolver tightly clasped in his hand, was found\ntoday on llie bank of the Red River,\nPolice, who ure investigating, believe\nll lu be u case of suicide.\nMEN WANT $6 FOR SHORT DAY\nON   FARMS;   PRICE   NOT  PAID\nWINNIPEG, .luly 31. \u2014Too many\nunemployed men are hanging back\nIn the hope of gelling t\u00ab a day for\nharvest work, and having to work\nonly two-thirds of the time for their\nmoney, was the declaration of .1. lt.\nCowman, superintendent of the pro-\n\\ ince employment service of Canada,\ntoday when discussing the question\nof farm help. He expressed belief\nthut the ?ti mark would not be np-\nproacbed, and  added:\n\"If any relief assistance is offered\nnext winter the first question should\nbe, 'Bid you respond to the appeal\nfor  farm  help?'\"\nlie added that returned men were\nprominent among the workers being\nsent io farms hy the department.\nCrop failures In Saskatchewan have\nreleased men for work in Manitoba,\nsaid Mr. Bowman. Today he was\ncompleting arrangements for the distribution of H)d to BOO men for thnt\nprovince. Approximately 1,000 workers are required for the harvest\nfields of Manitoba and .Saskatchewan.\nPLANS FORCONFAB\nOTTAWA, July 31.\u2014Apart from the\nannouncement, of tlio personnel of a\nnumber of 'committees, nothing Was\ngiven the press following the morning: nnd nfternoon sittings of the advisory oommittee , today. They were\nUio first of a series of meetings\nwhich will be. continued Vintil the\nend of the week, to make plans for\nthe big gathering which opens on\nTuesday next, and to draft tentative\nresolutions to be submitted to the\nconvention for. its approval. Tbe\ncommittees wore named at lhe morning session and It is said tlmt the\nafternoon sitting' was, given over entirely to lhe .consideration of resolutions. Committees so fur named are\nas  follows:\nCommittees Appointed\nResolution on death of Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier, and monument\u2014Hon, Sydney\nFisher, chairman; Sir Allan Ayles-\nworth, Hon. Uodolphf l.emieux, lion.\nW. S. Fielding and D, 1>. McKcnzle.\nTrade and commerce\u2014A, R. Monaster, M.P., chairman; Hon. W. S.\nFielding. Hon. G, P. Graham, Hon.\nFrank .Oliver, Hon. S. Fisher, Ernest\nLapolnte, Hon. .John Oliver. W. II.\nWhite. ' <V Turgenn Sir Alan Ayles-\nworth, Hon. W. I.. MaeKensiie King.\n... h, ri.tuthie-,,\"'Artbiir Trahan, I. B.\nl'id-*low.\nHeturned soldiers problems \u2014 Hon.\nOr. H. Si Beland, chairman; Deucot\nKolston, T.ieut.-Col. By water, Mnjor\nEric Reid, Lieut.-Col. Grothe, Lteut.-\nCoJ. l'lnnto, H. R. Devlin, F. V. Pardee and 11, C. Ross.\nOrganization ~ Hon. J. R. Boyle,\nchairman', D. D. McKenzic, Hon. fi.\nII. Murray. ir.!H. Dewart, Hon. Clias.\nMurphy, Hon. Jacques Bureau, Hon.\nV. McoWe'eiiey, .Joseph Archmnhault.\nlion. H. ,1. Clornn, P. F. Cnsgrain.\nF. S, Cahlll, W. D. Ettler, Auguste\nLedger. S. W, Jacobs. .1. .1. Dennis.\nIT. II. Horsey nnd Hon, John Oliver.\nXew arrivals this afternoon to attend the meetings of the committee\nand the convention Included Premier\nMartin of Saskatchewan. H. H, Dewart, Liberal lender in Ontario; E. M.\nMacDonald, ex-member for Plcton.\nN.S.; Fred Pardee and Duncan Ross.\nTo Seat 4,000 People\nOut at the ..exhibition grounds the\npreparations for the convention are\nbeing rushed, Howlck Hall, which\nIn past years has been the scene\nof the fat stock shows, motor shows.\n;oldiers' barracks,' etc.. has been eon-\n\u2022erted into an auditorium accommodating 4,000 people.\nSuitable decorations have been\nprovided, the steel girders supporting\nthe roof of the building been concealed by. ono of the largest Union\n.lacks in tbe world. An annex to the\nbuilding has been improvised into a\nhotel, where hundreds of cots, equipped wiib new mattresses, army\nblankets and new sheets loaned by\nthe government, await the arrival of\ntravel-weary delegates.\nAmple accommodation has been\nprovided, for telegraphers and the\npress and a. telephone exchange is\nbeing Installed, with a private switch\nboard.\nEvery word spoken nt tbe convention   will   be  reported,  if  possible,  by\nshorthand writers in both French and\nEnglish, and subsequent to the con\nbenliou a Cull report of the proceed\nings   will   he   planted.\nf\nBE ONIEW BOARD\nVETERANS PEEVED\nA mail airplane from New York to\nCleveland was forced down and wrecked by a terrific windstorm near Albany] Pa.   The aviator was unhurt.\nIf you want\nthe entire\nnutriment of\nwheat and barley\nin most delicious\nform, eat\nGrapeNuts\n\"There's a Reason\" \\\nL J\nThreaten   to   Use   Force   to   Prevent\nPapers Containing Costello Articles\nfrom  Entering Canada\nWINDSOR, July 31.\u2014The entry into Canada today at the port of Windsor of the Detroit Free Press, carrying another Costello article, has so\nincensed the veterans thut the executive of the Walkervillc nnd Ford\ncommands got together In*a hurry\nand passed a resolution to use force\nif necessary to keep the papers from\nlanding ai  this  port.\nThe Border cities Liberty league,\nlearning tbat organized resistance no\nlonger is a possibility but a certainty,\ndispatched tt telegram to Sir Robert\nBorden, protesting the government's\ndelay In  taking action and slating:\n\"If publications containing further\nCoslello articles or editorials alleg\ning drunkenness, cowardice and im\nmorality he allowed to pass we, as\nreturned soldiers of His Majesty the\nKIpg, are determined to remove tbe\nsheet by force from this part of the\nDominion.\"\nAnti-British articles written over\nthe signature, \"Costello,\" have for\nsome lime been appearing regularly\nIn ihe Free Press, a Detroit morning\npaper.       '.\nCostello claims to be a veteran of\nthe A.T2.F, thut served in Blberln, and\nhiH_urlie.es teem with abuse of the\nBritish command, which, he alleges,\ncounselled leaving Ihe wounded to\ntheir fate. Further, he alleges had\nthe command of the forces been in\nthe hands of Americans there would\nhnve  been  a  different  story  to  tell.\nGreat War Veterans along the border are angry, ndt so much with the\ndisgruntled soldier as with a newspaper len*l!iig ils columns to bis\nrantlngs,\nCostello is connected with the\nBoman Catholic university In Detroit.\nREPARATION COMMISSION\nTO MEET AT PARIS TODAY\nYI'.RSAIJ.IJ'.S. July SI.\u2014The first\nfull session of tbe reparation commission provided for in the German\npeace treaty probably will be held tomorrow at the Trianol Palace lintel,\nl_ouls Lonelier, French minister of reconstruction, conferred today with\nB&roil Kurt Von [.ersener, head of the\nGerman delegailon, on matters pertaining to the commission's work.\nTho commissions at its first meeting\nwill bo formally organized and will\nelect officers.\nHas Too  Much  Other Work to Take\nChairmanship;   Winnipeg  Market\nLacks Information\nOTTAWA, July 31.\u2014According lo\nsemi-official information given out\nhere this ufternoon, tbe chairman\nof the new commerce board, recommended by the Industrial relations\ncommission, will not he H. A, Robson. K.C, of Winnipeg, ns has been\nslated heretofore. Who the appointment will be given to is not known.\nIt is understood that owing to the\ngreat amount of work which Mr.\nRobson' finds on Ills shoulders ut the\npresent time thnt it would be Impossible for him lo undertake nny\nadditional duties. His desire that\nbe should not be mnde the bend of\nthe new hoard has been known to the\ngovernment for some time, hut It\nwas thought until, todny that he\nwould be able to assume the new\nduties of chairman of the hoard.\nAt present he is commissioner for\ntaking evidence as (o the causes und\neffects of tlie recent strlko In Winnipeg. It is stated thut this commission will tnke some weeks In\niompletlng the task before it. Owing\nlo these circumstances the government, it is said, has abandoned lhe\nintention of appointing him tn the\ncommerce board.\nNew Policy Not Known\nWINNIPEG, July 31.\u2014At a meeting of the council of tbe Winnipeg\nGrain Exchange this morning, nothing of a definite nature was done,\nns tho exchnnge has received no detailed report from the government us\nto bow tt proposed to work out the\nnew policy of the government.\nTlio only information in the bunds\nof the council Is that which hus nl-\nrendy appeared iu the press. Believing it most important lhat there\nshould ho no delay in the announcement of these further necessary details, the president wired the minister\nof trade and commerce tbat wheat\nIs now offering in the country, thnt\nthis will he general In a few days\nnnd thnt the trnde is' anxiously\nawaiting full details as to the policy\nof tbe government.\nAugust Sale\nFor the first two weeks of August we will continue our CUT PRICE SALE OF READY TO WEAR.\n18 LADIES' CREPE DE CHENE WAISTS\nAssorted colors; sizes 31! lo i'i.    Regular $9.00 und $9.50\nTO  CLEAR,  oaoh   \t\n$6.95\nLADIES' BATHING SUITS\nIn sizes J1U to \u2022!\u201e!.   Regular price $4.!_5,\nFOR    \t\n$3.75\nTO\nE\nWill    Ask    Adequate   Protection    for\nFuture\u2014Want RiQhts on the\nScheldt River\nPARIS, .luly 31. \u2014 Next Mondny\nBelgium will present her case before\ntbe commission of H which Is discussing the question of revision of\nthe treaty of 1830, under which her\nneutrality was guaranteed by Great\nBritain, Austria, France, Prussia and\nRussia.\nThe commission Is composed of\ntwo delegates from each of the five\ngreat powers und two each from\nBelgium  and   Holland.\nllelgium in tlie statement to be\nsubmit led does not seek any territory, but asks to be placed In a\nposition that should there be u repetition of the wanton aggression of\n19H, she will be uble to defend herself on the Mouse and Scheldt rivers,\ninstead  of  on  the  Ysor,\nThe proposal of Belgium does not\ninsist upon the relinquishment of the\nl.emburg Key to l_iege and the left\nbank of the Scheldt Key to Antwerp,\nbut asks that guarantees be given,\nIn event of another invasion from the\nnorth, thai l.cmberg will bo properly\ndefended, thus protecting Idego and\npermitting the Belgian armies lo\nconcentrate   behind   the   Mouse.\nConcerning the Scheldt. Belgium\ndesires free passage on the river in\ntimes of peace or war (the lust four\nwords are underlined in the Belgian\nstatement).\nBelgium, the document continues,\nmust receive guarantee that hor defense of Antwerp and the Scheldt\nwould not lie made Impossible by\nthe fact that she does not own the\nleft  hank of tbe lower river.\nHOPE TO RESUME CHICAGO\nCAR  SERVICE TOMORROW\nCHICAGO, duly 31.\u2014Chicago loday\nis confidently hoping that the street\ncar strike may be settled in time for\nresumption of services Saturday.\nUnion officials were busy preparing\nfur a vote to be taken tomorrow by\nmembers of the union on the acceptance of the compromise offer of lhe\ntraction companies,\nSTANDARD  OIL COMPANY\nRELIEVED OF RESPONSIBILITY\nLONDON. .July 81.\u2014The Standard\ni >il  companyj  owners  of  the   I'nlted\ntales steamer C. ... Jennings, were\nrelieved today by an admiralty court\n\\t responsibility  Tor   \u00a31,000,000  dam-\nigen asked by owners of the British\ntank steamer War Knight, hist off the\nBritish coast on March IN, l\u00bb1G.   The\nnvners of the War Knight charged\nnegligence on the part of the C. B.\nJennings.\nVolunteers to help move cattle cargoes urgently needed in Frunce are\nculled for by the U.S. shipping board\nIn on effort in replace striking seamen.\nNo Raise\nIn Price\nCanada's own\ntable drink with\na flavor similar\nto coffee\u2014 \u00bb\nINSTANT\nPOSTUM\nCHILDREN'S PLAY  DRESSES-Slzes 2  lo 0,\nFOR.  ench   \t\n69c\nLADIES' CREPE KIMONOS\nColors Pink, Old Itose. Copen nnd Sky. t\\i\\ AC nn Qr\nRegular $4.00 nnd t\u00bb.00.    TO CLEAR  $Ull\u00abJ AND $0l3j\nWASH SKIRTS\nSmocks, Dress Skirts,  Dresses,  Sulla nnd Coats.    These anil  ninny\nother lines Included In this Snle.\nSmillie & Weir\nLADIES   WEAR SPECIALISTS.\nWINNIPEG  DEPORTATION\nAPPEAL TRANSFERRED\nWINNIPEG, -luly 31. \u2014 Owing to\nsome doubt as to his authority during\nthe vacation season In hearing tho\napplication for a writ of habeas\ncorpus and u writ of certiorari on\nbehalf of Oscar Kchoppelrel, whoso\ndeportation was ordered July 18, by\niho Immigration board, Chief Justice\nMathers reserved judgment todny. Ho\npointed out that the court of np\u00bb\npeals sits on August r>, nnd udvise*!\ncounsel to hnve tho henrlng trims*\nfevrod  lo thnt dute and court.\nAfter some discussion tho counsel\nagreed to this.   I\nOn behalf of S. Almazoff, also\nheld by tho immigration authorities,\nMarcus Hyman, counsel, made application for a writ of habeas corpus.\nDOCTOR\nAN OP\nURGED\nRATION\nInstead I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound\nand Was Cured.\nBaltimore, Md.\u2014\"Nearly four years\nI sutt'end (rom organic troubles, nervousness und headaches and every\nmonth would huve to\nstuy in bed most of\nthe  time.     Treatments would relieve\nme for a time but\nmy doctor was always urging mo lo\nWjiavo an operation.\nP'^x- My sister asked mo\n\u25a0iyk^to try Lydia E. Pink-\n\"C1     ham's   Vegetable\n\/Compound before\nconsenting to an\n\/operation. I took\nlive bottles*of it anil\n- it has completely\ncured me and my\nwork is a pleasure. I toll all my friends\nwho have any trouble of this kind what\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has dono for me. \u2014Nellie D.\nBiiittinuham, WJC-lv.rtonnd., Haiti-\nmore, Md,\nIt is only natural for any woman to\ndread the thought of an operation. So\nmany women have been restored to\nhealth by this famous remedy, Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound, after\nan operation has been advised thut it\nwill pay any woman who suffers from\nauch ailments to consider trying it before submitting to such u trying ordeal,\nI SPECIAL SALE\nOF\nAll White Footwear\nBargain Prices\nWHITE CANVAS MARY\nJANES\u2014Leather soles. Sizes\n11 lo\nTer pn\nto io \u00abpiil0| <pli3D\nLADIES'   PUMPS-A1I   smnll\nsizes.    White.  Ulnek\nand Chocolate Kid  .,\nLADIES'   $3.00   and   $3.50\nWHITE CANVAS PUMPS and\nOXFORDS-\nSpeolnl  I'rlce\n$1.25, $2.00\n$1.55\nAll   smnll\n$2.15\nand   $3.50\nIMPS and\n$2.65\nC. Romano\nHigh Class Boots and Shoes\nHearing of this was set over till\nnext Tuesday, Mr. Hyman also askeil\nthat his client bo allowed bail meantime, but this was refused,\nDRINK\nNelson Brewing\nCompany's\nBeer and Porter\nHealthful and invigorating.\nMade with eryatal elear mountain water from pure malt and\nheps.\nNelson Brewing\nCompany, Limited!\nNELSON, t.C.\nCorporation of the City of Nelson\nTbe following Uiiies uiul Regulations nf the Cnrporn-\n(Ion c.f tbe Clly of Nelson, govern.hr the une of wnter by\nthe Inhabitant-! the City nnd of the localities mljncent\nthereto, nre hereby brought Into force OS from this dute\nnnd to remain in force until further notice:\u2014\n1. The hours between which wnter mny he used\nfor nny of lhe purposes following shnll be nn follows;\nA. Kor tln> sprinkling of lawns and gardens between llie hours of Six \u00bbnrf Nine o'clock p.m.\nB, For the sprinkling of Streets, Alleys nnd\nSidewalks, botween thO hours of Seven und Nine\no'clock n.m.\n2. No person shall With n lawn sprinkler or otherwise wnter any adjoining or other premises to or than\nthat for Whioh he has paid the regular Burden or luwn\nrnt(_,\n3. All wnter used for any of the above purposes\nshall bo used by garden hose or lawn sprinkler only.\nit When nny alarm of fire hus sounded and during\nIhe continuance of any fire within the corporate limits\no( tho Clly of Nelson, or during tho progress of any fire\nIn any of the localities adjacent thereto, nny person using\nwater for any of tho purposes mentioned in Paragraph 1\nhereof shall nt once cease using'same until such tlmo us\nthe fire hns heen extinguished.\ntu   Any person guilty of an infraction or violation of\nany of the foregoing regulations shall In addition  to all\nolhor penalties  imposed  by  tho Water  llntos  Itylaw,  ho\nliable to have bis waler supply cut off .wilhoul notice,\nIty  order,\nJ     W.  E. WAS80N,\nNelson, B.C.,\nJuly  17th,  J0IH.\nClly Clerk.\niM\nt^mtmmmmm\n _\u25a0.:..... -^\u00ab.... -^-s^ft-w.;;:*^:-'^\nFRIDAY, AUGUST .1, 1S'9\nTHE* DAILY NEWS ^\nPAQI TMJIM IU\n|\u00abM>\u00bb j.tii't i,m Mh,mm\u00ab.\u00bbii,\u00bbiMIM '\u00bb__\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab.\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab*\u00ab >\u00bb I\n\u2022 '. \u2022\/\u00bb\u2022_\u201e_\"-S-a-_-E-N-u_   its .\"SHr\" * '\u25a0*~*__W.._.\u00abi\u00a3s_'_~-      \u00bb;\nl\/iMjf one\/ Markets |\nH.\u00bb\u00aba\u00bb4\u00bba\u00bb\u00bb\u00abeea.\u00ab\u00bb\u00abn\u00bb.\nPROSPECTORS DO\nASSESSMENT WORK\nLocations   Very   Widely   Distributed\nThrourJ'iioiit   District\u2014Claims   for\nWhich Certificates Issued\nI\n*\nWith the very, favorable conditions\nin tho hills, the prospectors In tho\nmain have their assessment work\ndone on their mineral claims, or are\ndoing It. The record ot certificates of\n\u2022work issued this year show the holdings very widely distributed.\nTho following list of claims on which\nthe year's assessment work has been\ndone groups the properties by localities:\nBelow Nelaon\nBird Creek\u2014Good Hope, W. H. Foster; Curio, King George V, Acme,,\nJolin-Smallwooil; Jericho, Excelda. I.,,\nBtheltine fraction, Richard Blundcll;\nGood Luck, G. H. Scott.\nEagle Creek \u2014 Gold Plate, L>. J.:\nSteele; Good Hopo fraction, Alex,\nLong.\nSandy Creek\u2014Cork fraction, Mike\nEgan. ,;\nBeasley \u2014 Abalonc Xo. 2, Eeasley,\nJohn Smallwood.\nSlocan Junction\u2014Monte Cristo, J. L.|\nPurdy.\nSouth of City\nMorning Mountain\u2014Nautilus, J.lm|\nMuii|;o. ,  '\u25a0' Solos amounted to 1,200,0(10 shavos.\nCottonwood Lake\u2014Rand, Robin, H.-:| *Ti\n10 20 PER HI\nPrice  Is Paid on  Industrial  Collateral\non Wall Street\u2014Prices  Decline\nTwo to Six Points.\nNBW YORK, July 31.\u2014Operation*\non tho stock exchange today wero\ngoverned almost wholly by the course\nof the mon,cy market, rates for cull\nloans of both classes rising to maximum quotations of many weeks. Call\nmoney opened at 6 to 8H per cent, tin,\nhlgh rate applying to the less desirable security, but just before the close\nIR per cent was paid for loans on\nmixed collateral and 20 per cent on nil\nindustrials.\nThe high rates of the date were\nprecipitated by the withdrawal of\nfunds to meet maturing obligations.\nThese include tho $100,000,000 Canadian loan and the American foreign\nsecurities loan, both . falling due to-;\nmorrow.\nWith tlie exception of leather, paper\nand food shnros, and a brief spurt iu\noils, the trend wns downward after tbe\nfirst hour.\nSelling was at its highest in the last\n30 minutes, tbo reversal beginning\nwith steels and motors, where declines were from 2 to 6 points; rails\nand   shippings   losing   2   to   3  points,\n\u25a0\nr\ngcndV John Swauson.\nHM11\u2014Gold Quart- No. 1, St. Elmo\nNo. 1, St. Anthony fraction, R. Bo-\nlitko; Leo No. 2, I.co No. 3 Jl H.\nMoron; Concave, Convex, A. E. l_alrd.\nToad Mountain\u2014Davenport, Davenport No. 1, Colin Smith.\nIlartlett Creek\u2014Monarch,-' Blg.Cop-\nlicr,   Co^poroppJIS,   Jamts ,'t'TOiei.\nYmir Area\nWild Horse Creek\u2014Black Diamond,\nLost and Pound, Golden .Horn, D.\nNccdhnm; Jennie Bell, Old Sport,\nWhistler, AX, Ymlr Mint, j: B. Brem-\nrlcr; Old Timer, R. It. Shrum.\nYmlr\u2014Commodore, I.X.U, Sunrise,\nBonanza, Idaho, D. E. Grobe; Washington, Virginia, H. L, Jackson; Elijah,\nZlon, D. T. Graney; Taft, A. J. Camii-\nbell. ^\nDundee Mountain\u2014Meal Ticket, R.\nR. Shrum.\nBoulder Creek\u2014 Moulder City No. 7,\nBoulder City. No. ti, Boulder Clly No.\n4,   little   Chiatico,   Sunshine,   .Golden\nBell, Golden Horn, I,. R. Clubine.\nSalmon River\nSalmo\u2014l.uchy (Boy,   Silver I Dollar,\n! Salmo, J, D. Anderson; Gold Mire,\nJohn Smllh; Copper Plate, silver\nPlate, Lucky Jim. Nlckle Plate, Gold\nI Zone, Lucky Boy, Butch Uangelo; Vir-\nt  dun, John Smith.\n1      Porcupine Creek\u2014Type, A. .1. Cnmp-\n1   hell; Edna, A. Burgess.'\n,      Salmon  Itiver\u2014Victoria, ,1.  Jl. llo-\n]   zeck; International Lend No. 1, lntcr-\n,   national Lead  No. 2, B.  M.   Beeves;\nDrumliinlin, IDtrndlU-UIIIU, Jlighlunld,\nllluo   Bell , Wild   Pigeon,   Sunbeam,\nDriimmond, A. .1. McDonoll.\nCheep Creek\nSheen Creek\u2014Faith No. I, Faith No.\n2, Contact No. 1, Contact, Black Tail,\n.1. P. Bell;  O. K., Jack Smith! Lucky\nt Boy   fraction,   O.   Schwinkl;   Wonder,\nRobert Reld.\nBear Creek\u2014Zulu King. Dolly Vir-\nden fraction, William Allen,\nFawn Creek\u2014Byanacn, Byanaca No.\n1, Michael Egan; Silver Bell, Robert\nQua; Red Rock, W. B. Pool.\nDeer Creek\u2014Boss fraction, J. A.\nBenson.\nYellowstone Mountain \u2014 Iveyslono\nfraction, W. H. Bhomberg; Joint, 11.\n'I'. Altken; Ethel fraction, Monarch,\nHoratio McDonald.\nErie District\nErie\u2014Hull   Dog.    John    L'.lomherg;\nWhile  Star,   lona  fraction,    Andrew\nBurgess. ,\nArlington Hill\u2014Comet, John Prit-\n.hurd.\nL Whiskey Creek\u2014Second Chance, Sun\nDun Chief, Sun Dun King, Juno,\nJoseph Bernard; Delaware, W. J.\nWJIson.\n,   Burnt  Creek\u2014Spokane,  John   Prlt-\n) charij.\nBeaver Creek\u2014Winney, Harold,\nJoseph Carson.\nKootenay Lake\nHight-Mllo   Creek\u2014Noonday,    Earned, Margaret, Pearl fraction, Jackson Badclltfe.\n, .Wilson Creek\u2014Melrose, Jessie, 'Unl-\ntod Vlrdc, J. M. Rozcck.\nLockhart Creek\u2014Nlta fraction, Robert Yuill.\nGray Creek\u2014Fortune, Swan, Lava,\nHenry, Oden, C. O. Swauson.\nLa France Creek\u2014Sunshine, Stranger, Thomas Wall.\nCultus Creek\u2014Gem, JeWl, Standard, Excelsior, Fern, Ivu, Black, Cap,\nJ. W. Mulholland.\nSummit Creek\u2014Josephine, Catherine, Big Jack Pol, Josie fraction, Jessie, Wycliffc, Wenlworth, .lames\nGrant; Summit Creek. Florrln A.\nSmith; Echo, Echo fraction, St. Elmo\nfraction, Idaho, Ontario, Portland,\nAlex. Thompson.\nNorth Star Mountain\u2014Big Chief, lt.\nW. Smith; Four Metal, Florrle A.\nSmllh.\nCrow Line\nMcConnell\u2014Ypres,   Ylrduni,    -Ions,\n; St. Jullen, Loo*, p. G. Ebbutt.\n,     Deer Creek\u2014Big Chief, C. D. Fors-\n| lund.\nGoat River\u2014Diamond St, Scott\nPrlco.\nFine Ridge Mountain\u2014Ella, Donnld\nDewarl.\n\/, Net Identified\nSt-oentlon not staled\u2014Royal Irish\nfraction, Michael Egan; Hummingbird,\nJ. D. Collins; Pink Diamond, Mny\nBlossom. May Day, Electric, .John\n(Herboltle; Redemption No. 2, P. C.\nSpatmenn; Black Hawk, William Alton; Bin Tlnlo, A. J. McDonell; Baby\nWendell fraction, B. R. Shrum; Stem-\nwinder, , Lucky Hoy, Prince Henry,\nMike Sedlah; lnlernailonnl, International No. 1. I.'.S., II.C, I..X.D., .Inmos\nFoulds; Wnverly, William Moore; Holland, .Good Hope, Gold Bug, Julius\nHoedecker; Lucky Hoy, tins Sehwlnke;\nPioneer, Climax, G. C. Schmidt; cliff,\nGold King, VV. 11. Turner; Copper\nChief, Gold Hill, Silver Crown, Alex.\nMcDonald; I'earl, Pearl fraction,\nHarry Bl.pln; Royal Standard, Jacob\nftreen;   Dodge.  Studebaker.   I iverliind,\nhe weakness of utilities issues was\nagain a- feature of the \"bond market,\nLiberty nnd foreign groups holding\nsteady. Total sales, par value, $.,8.8,-\n000. Old U. S. bonds unchanged on\ncall.\nClosing Quotations.\nHigh   Low   Close\nV. S. Steel com..\nU. S. Steel pfd. .\nClilno Copper ...\nUtah   Copper   ...\nInspiration   \t\nC. P. R\t\nWlllys-Oveiland\nGeneral Motors   .\nStudebaker   \t\n111'i\n117\n.18\n92%\n66%\n161'A\n36\n220',.\n110%\nTexas Oil   2G!i>_\n10S\u00bbi\n117\n\u25a06V.\n82\n01\n159%\n35%\n222%\n10.%\n263\n10S%\n117\n\u2022161.\n92\noil.\n160\n35%\n222'\/.\n107%\n263',.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN QUOTATIONS\nOpen   High   Low Cloae\nOat\u00bb\u2014\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nDoc\t\nBarley-\nJuly   \t\nOct.   ......\nDec\t\nPlai\u2014\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nUU .H\n87 Vi\nM7\n137\n129\n620\n581\n90',_\nS7'\/_\n147\n189 Vi\n133\n620\n587\n88\n85%\nM3V.\n136%\n131V.\n580\n575\n01%\n8S%\n85 Mi\n1.3 Vi\n137\n133\n580\nINCLINATION TO LIQUIDATE\nON THE MONTREAL EXCHANGE\nMONTREAL, July 31.\u2014Wllh slightly more active trading in stocks and\nin bunds, there appeared lo be a gen\noral inclination to liquidate holdings\non the Montreal stock exchange today.\nThe net losses at the close were nut\nparticularly large, only in two cases\nexceeding two points.\nGlass sold up a small fraction lo\n60V4 for the common; the preferred\nsold.again at 94. Breweries added '.;.\npoint at 181V.; closing bid was 178,\nwith 179 askod. Quebec Railway and\nSpanish Illver preferred sold unchanged at 190 and 197 respectively, with\nboth stocks V. point down, inclosing\nhid. Iron lost 2Vi points at 05, while\nSteel of Canada lost 2 points at Oil.\nCar common lost. 2 points at 39, and\nHie preferred lost 2V.  points ul 9-3%.\nElsewhere Maple Leaf, Spanish Itiver common, Textile, Cement, Asbestos.\nPower nnd Ogilvic scored (he largest\ndeclines.\nTola! business: Shares, 7953; bonds,\n$3-1,100.\nACUTE WEAKNESS DEVELOPS\nON   CHICAGO  GRAIN   MARKET\nCHICAGO, July 31.\u2014Acute weakness developed In the cereal and provision market's today (iwing largely to\nbearish crop reports and to new attempts at a reduction of the cost of\nliving. Alter a break of nearly Cc,\ncorn price, closed tinseltlcd at 5',_c\nnet decline lo  lc advance.\nOats lost l'.ijc to l%c. lu provisions\nthe outcome wus unchanged to $1.25\ndown.\nCHICAGO  LIVESTOCK.\nCHICAGO, July 81.\u2014Hogs\u2014Uo-\ncelpts, 9000. CnsoUlcd at yesterday's\naverage to 75c higher. Top, .23.60;\nheavy weight, $21.00 lo $28.25; medium weight, $21.60 lo $23.50; light\nweight, $21.40 to $23.40;' heavy packing sows, smooth, $20.75 to $21.50;\npacking sows, rough, $19.75 tu $20.50;\npigs, $19.50 to $21.\nCattle\u2014Receipts, 5000. Weak. Beet\nsteers, medium and heavy weight,\nchoice and prime, $16.50 to $18.50; medium ami heavy weight, choice and\nprime, $10.50 to $18.60; medium and\ngood, $12.25 to $16.50; common, $10\nto* $12.25; light weight, good and\nchoice, $14.25 to $17.50; common and\nmedium, $9.50 to $14.25; butcher cattle,\ncows, $7 lo $13.75; canners and cutters, $5.50 tu $7; veal calves, $15.75 to\n$-8.75; western rnngo steers, $11 to\n$16.25; cows and heifers, $7.25 to\n$.2.75.\nSheep\u2014Becclpts, 8000. Unsettled.\nLitmus, 84 pounds down, $13 to $16.75;\nculls and common, $8 lo $12.50; yearling wethers. $10 to $12.50; ewes, medium, good and choice, $7 to $9.\nMONTREAL  PRODUCE.\nMONTREAL,  July 31 Butter firm\nnnd steady, fheese active. Potatoes\nin heavy demand.   Quotations:\nCheese\u2014Finest  easterns,  26c,\nButter\u2014 Choicest creamery, 64140 to\n6l',_e; seconds, 02c to 64c.\nEggs\u2014Selected, 58c; No. 1 sleek.\n52c; No. 2 stock, 45c,\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag, cur lots, $2.50 to\n$3.00.\nI   fraction,\nSIl.lllMIX'k,\nAlmo   No.    2,     llonanza.\nM.   (I.    llnini|lHiin;    .Vllkn\n^nj( Jtwvp JJvi'iuii'!^, A1\"\"W| AIWl)fiV>.^lll!|U,,i Wji|W UllMVi Al'\">' bm\\i'\nOPERATIONS TO START AT ONCE\nTREATING WONDERFUL ORE\nDEVELOPMENTS DUE IN SLOC\nON    BLUEBIRD \u2014 ALAMO    MILL\n\u2014SIDNEY   NORMAN   SAYS   GREAT\nAN.\nllcturnlng to Nelson yestorday from\na trip of several days through the\nSlocan, Sidney Norman, editor of\nNorthwest Mining Truth, described an\nimportant new ore body In the Silversmith mine al Sandon,'i.iinounced that\noperations would be started on the\nBluebird, and referred to developments on the Ocean ami Sllverlte.\n\"On Monday night,\" said Mr. Norman, \"li visited tlie Silversmith at\nSandon, and there saw tho best oro\nbody found in the mine since the sensational developments on No.' 8 level\nover 12 years ago. At a point 30 feet\nwest of tho new raise from Xo. lo,\ntho drift on No. S level showed 12\nfeet of ore, of which tour feet was\nclean galena, and the balance the finest grade of milling ore. Since then.\nI understand, the supposed footwall\nhas been broken through, and five feet\nor oro exposed. If this ore shoot persists, us it gives promise of doing,\ntlie mine should be able to produce\nseveral carloads of erud oro during\nAubuBt, besides a generous quantity\nof concentrates.\nBluebird to Operate.\n\"Tuesday I visited the Bluebird\nproperty, adjoining the lteco on Been\nmountain, iu company with Eaiillyile,\nrepresenting Clarence Cunningham,\nfor whom 1 recently bonded the property, and In which 1 retain an Interest.\nAs a result ot this preliminary examination, operations will bo started\nat oncc.and'l hope that another pro-\ndticlng mine will be developed. Nothing of consequence has been done upon\ntho ground for 13 years, owing to a\nbadly Involved title.\n\"Tlio Alamo mill, recently erected\nby Mr. Cunningham, is doing splendid\nwork, running on Wonderful ore,Which\nSILVER 107\nAT\nNKW YORK, July 30.\u2014(Delayed.)\u2014\nSilver\u2014New York, $1107;' -London,\n55 5-16(1.\nMONTUKAl., July 81, -Load\u2014St.\nLouis, $6.65; New York, %i>M; Mou-\ntrctil, $7.0:.; London, \u00a384.\nNKW tfORK, July 31.- t'opp'.''--\nQufet. Electrolytic, spot SUVjc; August, 2314c; Septernber, 2-ic.\nIron\u2014Steady   and   unchanged.\nMetal exchange quotes lend weuk;\nSpot ottered at $7.50;  August, $7.55.\nAi London\u2014Spot copper, \u00a3102; futures, xio:. 12s nd; electrolytic, spot\n\u00a3110; futures, \u00a3126.\nTin\u2014Spot, .UL'71 5s; futures, \u00a3267\n5s.\nLoad1\u2014Spot,   \u00a32\\;  futures,  \u00a321 15a\nSpelter\u2014Spot;   \u00a311;  futures,  \u00a311 us\nTORONTO  LIVESTOCK.\nTORONTO, July 31.- Tin- livestock\nmarket wan dull today, wllh very little\nnt' desirable quality offering and the\naccumulated hold-overs from the\nweek's markets, consisting for the most\npart of thin common cattle, cleaning\nup in :l slow and druggy market at\nprices representing a decline of a\ncouple of dollars iu the. past two weeks.\nThree or I'uur good weighty steers of\nchoice quality sold firm ut $14.25, and\ngood butcher lots at from $11,115 to\n$12.50.   Choice luitcher, $13.\nCftlvoa a little steadier and firm for\njhoice quality. Receipts at the I'liloii\nHock yards were _!G cars, with ljjij\n,:attle, Ni! culves, !l!IU lions and 82shoep\nmd lambs.\nBANK   CLEARINGS.\nWINNIPKO, July 3l.~Kol.owing arn\nLlii' hunk clearings ol (he principal\ncities of the Dominion for lhe week\nand month ending today:\nWeek. Month.\n.Munireul\nSH4,!l(l|i.T,07\n1548,408,046\nToronto   ..\n.    77,!i!l2.ll.8\n302,801,420\nWinnipeg   ...\n..    .01818,480\n108,813,400\nVancouver    ,.\n..   ii,'.i:ii;.._.\n.'\u25a01,070.3111\nOttawa  .>..\n..      7.IU0.8.1\n38.52S.2S,-,\nCnlgnry   ....\n..     4,701,118\n88,063,'ioi\nHamilton  ..\n..    r.,so(i,uT:i\n28,158,831\nQuebec   \t\n..    .-i.sio.r,.!!\n.8,238,415\nI'Mlnoutnn    . .\n.      ..SS1.72I\n10,600,730\nIln Unix   ....\n..    i.ico,7r.j\n22,072,5S'J\n..     ..186,041\n1 (,,754,171\n,.    ,'i,r..ii,i7.\n10.050,8811\nSt.  Julin\n,.     .,880,51.\n13,879,101\n11,807,11111\n3u_\u201ea(6pn   ..\n..      2.238,015\n11,382.705\nMouse   Jaw\n1,1118,048\n0.050,073\n8,168,080\n4,081,480\nFort William\n7t'.o,ii5:i\n3,688,808\n.Medicine Hut\n..    '    410,028\nXew   VVostmi\nir       888,048\n2,578,031\nLothbcnje\n..     1.047,1411\n3,030,533\n.Advances in col fee prices reveals\nthere ate large stocks hnnnled In Xew\nVork.\ndodd's-\nfKIDNEY\nW PIUS\n..-^H-iltiNEYj'r-,,\n.MT'S   D^\n*BETES.D\nis delivering at the rate or 100 tons\npor day. 1 understand from tlie superintendent that the saving yesterday was 04 per cent of lead, 70 per\ncent of zinc and 7S per cent of silver.\nYesterday's zinc product assayed 17.9\nper oont zinc and 'Bl ounces of silver.\nThe leud product runs around 03 per\ncent lead mid 80 ounces of silver. As\nsoun as the Sovereign tramway Is\ncompleted, I understand that large reserves will he tmn a ported to the mill.\n\"There have heen Important developments upon the Ocean claim, adjoining the Payne, and the Silverlte\ngroup, recently taken over by Mr.\nI'uiniingham from George Petty, Jack\nThompson and W. A. North.\nProspects   Promising.\n\"The country Is looking better than\nat any time in my recollection. If the\nworld knew lhe extent of lhe riches\nnow shown within a short radius of\nSandon, I am sure a big boom would\nresult, It. seems to me, however, that\nmore is known of tlie d strict on tho\noutside than is known here in Nelaon.\nIn my opinion, it Is about time local\npeople awoke to the fact that they\npossess one of the richest and most\npromising high-grade silver-lead districts in the world.\n\"I am naturally an optimist, but in\nthis case 1 believe 1 am slnt:ii!_, nothing more than bare facts. 1 look fop\na continued high market in silver, and\na gradual improvement in die lead\nmarket to around 7 or S cents pel-\npound. The large surplus is about\nexhausted. It is worthy of note that\nlead In the only metnl that has not\nadvanced in the past few weeks, and 1\ndo not think it can properly be supposed that it will not share in the\nprosperity which has recently ov\ntaken  all  oilier  metals.\"\nTORONTO   EXCHANGE.\nTORONTO. July SI. -The steel\nstocks were wenk on a quiet market\nhere today. Dominion declined 2&\npoints to 05, and Steel of Canada losing 114. The exchange governors decided to dispense with the Saturday\nhalf session In view of Monday being\na holiday, and the extended recess did\nnot help prices. Brazilian opened\nlower and gained %, Canada Cement\nlost vi: Canada Steamships, '(.; Mapk\nLeaf held steady at -GO, and the pre-\nferred gained l1^.   Tucketts r;.'(  lower\nSTRAIGHT   WHEAT   FLOUR.\nNEW YoltK, July 31.- Tin- Ww\nVork Grain corporation announced t\nnight that beginning August 5 it will\nrebel vt\u00bb weekly offers on \"straight\nwheat flour,'' in accordance with the\nterms and conditions of its flour purchase plan of July 7.\nWINNIPEG LIVESTOCK.\nWINXIPKG. July 31.\u2014Cattle trading1 on tho Union stock yards today\nwas steady al firm prices on all\nclasses, llutchev steers, heifers and\ncows were a shade btronger for the\ntop, white the bulk of the stuff held\nat firm prices. Steers sold at $lo lo\n$V2.50, heifers $7.50 to $10; cows sold\nall the way from $1 to $10, with tie\nbulk al $7.50 to $0; bulls $5.50 In $$\noxen, $0.50 to $0; slackers -anged from\n50 l'i $8.26; feeders were in good\ndemand for the cholco kinds and sold\nall the way from $7.50 to $10; veil\ncalves weak; prices were a shade lower, going at $7 lo $10.\nSheep and lambs trade was a shade\nstronger,  sheep fetching  ?7   to $10\nwhile the host lambs Bdld ut $13.\nHog prices wen- stronger. Murkcl\nadvanced 50c per 10a over yeBtordiiy's\nmarket.\nEighteen cars of cattle, went south\nH total of li* cars fnr tin- wee!*; eight\ncars of cattle went cast.\nHeceipis today totalled  1800 catll\n,V.i calves, S\"l hugs ami  13-1 sheep.\nThe \"hunch\" or Lieut, itynn, ot ih-\nNewark, N.J., police department, Ihn\nhe would meet death came line when\nhe was killed l.y u man he sougllt to\narrest for a hold-up.\n *^\t\nA runaway horse al llreoklyit. X. Y.,\nclImbed the Htalrs lo n buRlness Office,\nsmashed desks ami chared ihe clerks\nTHE NAME\nAlvin E. Perkins\nwith the 30 years' valuable factory\nand other experience, Stands for positively   the  best  In the  profession of\nTUNING and REPAIRING\nOF PIANOS\nHonesty of purpose and conscientious\nWorkmanship, and strontJly endorsed\nhy the best authority In Canada,\npiano manufacturers who are positively particular where they put their\nsignature, Is proof of superior ability.\nAm follows; lleintzmun St Co., Morris A Karu Co.. t.niirlny Piano Co.,\nOutninlon Piano Co., Newcoinbe Piano\nCo., Pletcher Pros,, Gerhard llelntz-\nmiin House, Prof. .1, D, A, Tripp,\nVancouver, Mason & Ktseh Co., and\nsoliciting business on superior workmanship only,\nATTENTION-Mr,   Perkins   will   be\nIn   Nelson  and  di-drid   noon,  maklim\nkm mhuhJ w|i|,     ft^\t\nNEW ORE  BODY  IN  FAMOUS SLOCAN    MINE   TRACED    FOR    OVER\nTWO   HUNDRED  FEET  ALONG      STRIKE   AND   OVER   ONE   HUNDRED   IN   DEPTH\u2014EXTENDS   I   NTO   JENNIE   CLAIM\u2014FACTS   DE-\nSCRU:iID   BY   SIDNEY   NORMA   N.\nA new ore body in the famous\nRambler-Cariboo mine al. Three\nForks, with which the Jennie was\nrecently amalgamated, Is the big\nfeature in news coming in from tlie\nSlocan. Word of the big strike has\nbeen whispered around for several\ndays, but the first authentic statement was made yesterday by Sidney\nNorman, editor of tbe Nortli west\nMining Truth, who has paid a visit\nto the property, liming been tho representative of tlie Rambler interests\nin the negotiations that brought\nabout the amalgamation.\n\"On Monday, in company with .Tas.\nAnderson of Kaslo,\" said Mr. Norman, \"I visited the TCamblor-Carilion\nmine at Three Forks, and there\nfound one of the most interesting\ndevelopments at depth ever seen In\ntho   country.     On   No.   9   level,   just\nacross the end line of the Jennie\nClaim, which has just been \u2022 purchased\nfrom George Alexander of England\nthn -;h Mr. Anderson, a nine foot\nvein has been exposed with four feet\nof practically clean galena on tho\nhanging wall, a two inch streak on\nthe foot wall and several smaller\nslringers In between. No. 10 level lias\nbeen carried along the side-line of\ntho Jennie claim for ISO feet, showing an ore hotly from two to seven\nfeet wide. Sixty feet ahead of the face\nof No. 10 a raise has been carried\nup from No. 12 showing the same \"fre*\nhotly. Thus, lhe new ore body has\nalready been developed for a distance\nof 220 feet on its strike and 150 feet\nIn  depth.\nAs is well known, the clean ore\nbodies in tbe Slncrtn district are\n'usually   found   at   tho   higher   levels\nand I therefore have every confidence\ntbat Rambler-Cariboo will develop a\nsplendid ore body, by development\nwork, whioh will now be carried on\nin No. !t and No. 7 and levels above,\nI might add that the ore body, aa\nseen in the face of No. 12 and No,\n10. gives every promise of perBibt*:\nence,\"\nCUTTLEFISH   CAPABLE\nOF* DESTROYING SHIPS\nLONDON\u2014Concerning the mysterious disappearance of the American\nnaval ship Cyclops, which vanished a.\nyear ago in the Carribean Sea, with a\ncomplement of 205 men, the suggestion\nis put forward that it was pulled to\nthe boi Lorn of the sea by giant cut-\nloflsh.\nNeither can this be regarded as a\nwild story, Monster cuttlefish abound\nin tlie Southern seas. They rango\nfrom nine to eighteen feet in length,\nwith arms or tentacles twenty to\nthirty feet long, and one to two feet\nin circumference. The power of these\nmonsters when aroused\u2014for by nature they are timid and act on the defensive\u2014is extraordinary, and cases\nhitve been known of them rising out\nof tlie water, winding their tentacles\naround the hull and rigging of sailing\nvessels and crushing them to matchwood.\nIn ilie ease of Ibc Cyclops, it is\npotisiblo thai she may have been attacked by Several id' these mon-\nStera simultaneously and wrecked or\ndragged to her doom. Or the disaster may have occurred through\nthe fish, with their powerful tentacles,\npicking off the men, leaving tho vessel\nlo drhe on the nicks of disaster.\nWASTE FROM PAPER MILLS\nMAY   BE   USED   IN   TANNERY\nPHILADELPHIA.\u2014Heretofore thero\nhas been no use for the bark which\nis peeled from the logs preparatory\nto making them into pulp, and as a\nmatter of fact the disposition of this\nmaterial has been a trial to the paper\nmanufacturer. Stored about the plant\nit has been a fire menace, increasing\nhis insurance and consuming space\nwhich might otherwise he made good\nuse of. The problem was taken in\nhand by tbe officials of lh\" forest\nproducts laboratory, and, securing the\ncooperation of a paper mill, a tannery\nnnd the manufacturer of a drying machine, some elaborate experiments\nwere conducted witli ihe view of determining tlie tanning value of tills\nmaterial from 'he paper mill Which is\naccumulating constantly at these establishments in all parts of the cniin-\ntry. The result wus thai it was definitely concluded that no great technical\ndifficulties stand in the way of utilizing paper mill hark for such purposes.\nThe product is satisfactory from tbo\ntanners' standpoint, and it can be prepared at a cost which will allow il to\ncompete with leaf bark,\nThe use id paper mill bark for tanning means a source id' income for\ntbi' paper mill from a material which\nis now of little or no value. The tanner would be assured of a constant\nsupply of dried bark which would allow him to keep much less material\nIn stock, io reduce his firo hazard, and\nto wipe out tin- depreciation ami In-\nteresl charges which must be carried\nagainst a yurd full of leaf bark. Tho\nlumberman would avoid increasing\ndifficulties iu- obtaining satisfactory\nlabor foi Park peeling, and would do\naway with the fire hazard and expenso\nincidental lo lhe peeling and sisismi-\ning operations, all of *,vhlch combino\nto make the production of leaf hark\nan unsatisfactory business, even at\nthe present market price.\u25a0\u2022- i'lnladrl-\nphiu Inquirer.\nUnion cooks, waiters, bui1 tenders and\nbellboys at liutfalo hading hotels are\non  strike.\nFIRE INSURANCE\ni;   a protection lhal  you should\nnol    o v i' r 1 oo k.     In   this   dry\nweather ii  becomes an .Invosi-\nliienl.\nI    ui!)   Ik    glad   lo   quote   yutl\nrates   applicable   on   any   pro-\n|i ity In the city or district and\nin    write    your    Insurance    in\nstrong board companies.\nl want a number of l-'iirnlslied\nand     Infill niidied     HuMSCS     for\nP'Tinaiir'iit  tenants,\nI   Buy   Victory   Bonds   of   any\namount   at  their   market   value.\nD. ST. DENIS\nPHONE 39 509 WARD ST\nNELSON, D.C.\nTHE\nCanadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSir    Edmund    Walk..,    C.V.O.,\nLL.D., D.C.L., Preildent.\nSir John Aird, Gensral Mgr.\nH. V. F. Jon.., Ait't. Gon'l, Mgr.\nC-piUI Paid Up $15,000,0..\nResorvi) Fund   $15,000,000\nMining Development\nThe development of the mineral\ndeposith throughout Canada is\nof paramount importance to\nihe country.\nThere are many ways In which\nthis Hnnlt can assist miners,\n('all upon lis and let us explain whut a complete banking\nservh'e means to you,\nBranches tn Kootenay and\nBoundary at Nelson, Fernle,\nCmnbrook, Creston, Grand\nForks, Greenwood, Nakusp,\nPhoenix.\nNotion   Branch,   P.   B,   Fowler,\nManigor, I\n\\mmmmmmmmm\n\"His Masters Voice9Dealers\n513 WARD STREET\nNELSON.  B.C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffltttft,   timtlting   and   Rafining    D.partir.biti,\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nProducar.  of  Gold,  fi)lv\u00abi,  vop. er,   Blueitone,   Pig   Lsad   and   Spalta.\nI.\u00bb O AN AC\"    BRAND\n-.J-UBl.X\u00bb.J.'-.l.J-L'U'_.-iUli'-J-1\nI JIJIMTll\n______________________\u25a0\n ' PAGE FOUR\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nFRIDAY, AUQU8T 1, 191B\njmEJttAHLYJJEW^\nPublished every morning except\nSunday by Tbe New* Putillriilng Company, Limited, Neleon, B. C\u201e Canada.\nBbelnees letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and In no case to indl-\n\u25bcidual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed rtatement of circulation\nmailed on request or may be seen at\ntbe offloe of any advertising agency\nrecogrtzed by tbe Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription Bates; By mall 10\nbents per month; $2.50 for six months;\n15 per (M& Delivered 60c per month;\n13 foi. 'WflRonths; SI per year, payable\nIn diftSffce.\nThe1 News reserves the right to refuse any copy submitted for publication.\nBoost every movement for constructive progress. Leavo destructive efforts to those who aro incapable of\nanything better.\nMining activity In Koolenhy nt%L\nBoundary Is becoming more marked\nevery tiny. But that Is not the only\nIndustry wlileii Viictlve. So are lumbering and agriculture,\nAs far as Great. Britain Is concerned\ntho peace treaty is law. Prom an allied viewpoint it 'does not go Into\neffect, however, until three of tbe big\npowers have ratified It. This Is likely\nto be accomplished within a few days.\nas both France and Italy are nearing\nthe nitlfieation stage.\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1919\nPERMANENT   STREET   WORK    IS\nGOOD BUSINESS FOR NELSON\nMayor McDonald's announcement\nt,1lhl Baker street Is to be paved With\nasphalt will be received with gratification by the majority of the citizens.\nTt represents a big advance In the\ndevelopment of Nelson's streets which\nhave for long been a byword all\nthrough the country. They have been\nadmitted to be worse than many a\ncountry road.\nPermanent streets will prove to be\na good investment for Nelson. They\nwJfl reduce maintenance eo|ts, expense of hauling, reduce dust and tbe\ndestructive effects of dust and majje\ntbo main street of Nelson worthy, of\nthe name.\nIt Is pretty safe to predict that Nelson's first asphalt streets will jncot\nwith such favor oncft. they have bVcn\neHfablis]ied-:thntVtlicM\"*blic will not\nba satisfi^ tylttl\u00a3uti\u00a3' th\u00a3 main thoroughfares 6t Ih^ctl^ have been constructed in the same way. That is\nwhat has occurred In other cities.\n\u00ab>_\n8HOULD TAKE ADVANTAGE NOW\nOF FEDERAL HIGHWAY BILL\nfn spite of tho fact that it Is\ngetting late In the season for starting\nnow road construction, there is no\nsign that tbe provincial government\nproposes to tako advantage during\n1919 of the Dominion government grant\nfor tho construction of highways.\nThe Dominion has offered a big\ngrant to this province to assist in\nroad construction, Ottawa pulling up\ntho money on the basis of 40 per cent\nto the province's (10 per cent.\nConnecting links in the trans -provincial highway, roads to cornier t\nKaslo and tho Slocan wilh existing\nhighways, tbe Cascade road ann the\nYmlr road, could oil bo constructed\non this basis. A road costing JI0.00O,\nfor example, could be built with Dominion aid nt a cost to the province\nof only |2-l,000.\nTbe specinl blanket appropriation\npassed by the legislature last spring\nwould provide tho source for lhe funds.\nNo special road vote would he necessary so that there Is no excuse for\ndelaying the matter until next session, or any other time in the future.\nThe time to begin is now.\neven a Yield marshal should not bo\ncalled upon to face.\nA KOOTENAY TENDERFOOT\nIN THE CENT-BELTED EAST\n-<$>\nTHE  HORRORS OF  PEACE\nWhat the llocho couldn't do to Kield\nMttnthal Halg his own countrymen\nnnd countrywomen have done-made\nhim desert the colors and rice. Just\nalter tin. great victory parado In London, relates tho Montreal Star, the\ncommander of the British forces bad\nto bo taken to his home In a motor\ncar, presumably missing thereby tho\nlatter part uf tho celebration.\nTbo cause of Marshal lUlg's overthrow in given as \"fatigue from Iho\nrecent round ,ur social entertainments\nlu which be has participated.'' Tlio\nmun who stood up under the gruelling\nlost of the retreat from Mous, who\nhandled bis men with consummate\nskill ut the Mnrnc and who has borne\null tbo crushing weight uf responsibility which supreme command entails for tbe last three years uf the\nwar, has gone down lo overwhelming\ndefeat before the ranked baltubuns uf\npetico celebrants, male and female. For\nhim tbe serried ranks of menu cards\nwort moru formidable than thu battle\narray of Hindeuburg's divisions, social engagements mure upsetting than\nclashes with the Hun and teacups\nmore deadly than Mills grenades. J lu\nheld bis flag serenely erect in tbe\nface of tbo Germans, but has capitulated lo the Kngllsb,\nAfter all, it Isn't so much to be wondered ut. To a man accustomed tu\nthu comparative peace and order of a\nbattlefield there must bo something\npeculiarly appalling in the deadly on*\nHaught of thu diner out. Vou know,\napproximately, whut will happen when\nthu Germans start to mine, but who\nwin tell thu consequences wben the\nftcotch begin to confer the freedom of\ntheir oil.es or tbo Kngllsb to bestow\nhonorary degrees? At war one can get\nfcomo sleep most nights, but heaven\nhelp tlie social lion at tho ntorcy of\nLondon. A gas mask Is efficient protection against both Bocho and conversation at tho front; it Is nut available in a London drawing room.\nHo Sir Douglas Halg has struck his\ncolors and fled. Ho faced and over-\n\u2022nAmh tha horrors of war; before tho\nhorrors of peace he quailed and ran,\njtfherft are some l\u00absts of courage which\n(By W. B. Wilcox)\nVI.\nTo any one traveling from the western part of Cnilada to New York, for\ninstance, we would unhesitatingly\nrecommend the trip via Toronto and\nBuffalo by the line of the Canada\nSteamships, Ltd. The few hours' run\nacross Lnke Ontario makes a delightful change from rail travel, landing\none at Lowiston, New York\u2014where the\neagle eyes of Uncle Sam's customs\nofficials are safely passed, If no attempt at smuggling Is made.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nNiagara gorge and tho falls\u2014justly\nfar-famed as one of the sights of tbe\ncontinent\u2014ha-h been commercial ^.\"cltr'\nand capitalized to the fullest extent\nby both Canadians and Americans.\nThis is shown by tho cheap hydroelectric energy distributed all through\nthat part of Ontario and New Vork\nstate\u2014a blessing unmixed in Itself for\ndomestic, housewives, municipal and\nIndustrial purposes.\n\u2022 \u25a0 \u2022   .\u2022\nLeaving the utilatarlan aside, however, and returning to the harmonious, the majestic and the beautiful,\ntbo ride on the trolley, some 15 miles\nfrom Lewiston to Niagara. N. Y., Is\nto be long remembered. It was indeed\nnear to nature's heart. Tho double\ntrack electric line was built for the\npurpose of giving the sightseer the\nmost for his or her money, nnd tbe\nfare, unlike many things one encounters in the east. Is not entirely a holdup. Frequently the train stope at\nsomo strategic point, with a vista of\nthe Whirlpool Rapids, or the Horseshoe Falls, tho \"Mold of the Mist\" or\nor of the several great bridges spanning the swirling torrent.\nThey say that the trip Is a favorite one for bridal couples, and there\nappeared to be several such on our\nlong train of electric ears. If they\ndid nut overlook anything in their\nnewly blissful state, they were witnesses to one of the grandeurs of nature that many travel thousands of\nmiles to wonder at. Unlike our visit\nhere of 24 years ago, one can now see\nthe \"whole works\" on both side of the\nseething river from a comfortable electric car, tho lines having been built\nwith this purpose in view.\n\u2022 *   *\nBuffalo, tho largest city in the\nwestern part of New York state, Is\nquickly reached hy high-speed trolley\nfrom Niagara Falls, and like most\nAmerican cities was full of public\nhome-coming expressions to the thousands of boys tbat have been and arc\nyet pouring back from France. The\nrefrain of \"Put Me Off at Buffalo\" Is\none that many have been only too\nhappy recently to echo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nIn Buffalo we began to note more\nparticularly\u2014as we did to some extent\nin Toronto\u2014tbe Increasing use of the\none cent piece In merchandising establishments, showing that we had\nfairly arrived In tbe eastern cent belt.\nIn the wild and woolly west the nickel\nwas until about war time the minimum\nof financial exchange, even many\nchartered bank branches not handling\npontiles to any great extent. With Increased living costs, however, brought\non by the sanguinary struggle there,\nthe humble cent gradually came further west for more common use and\nthus Into Its own. Apparently it has\narrived to stay,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOn the daylight rail trip from Buf<\nfulo to Albany, through tho heart of\nthe stato of New York, over the great\nfour-track line of the New York Cen\ntrah WO passed through many orchards\nmd could not resist comparing them\nwith those of the Kootenays and other\nparls of British Columbia. Wo con\nsay, too. that the Kootenay apple orchards lost nothing hy the compar\nfson. To a largo extent the difference\nseems to be that in the west tlie nils\nlug of tipples has been reduced to an\nexact science, while in tho oust thi\npoinoluglcal output is more or less a\nby-product of tbe average farmer.\nMany farmers in Ontario and New\nYork have fell the competition of the\nextra fancy, high grade fruit shipped\nfrom the west and have taken more\ncare of their orchard.;, but they have\ntbe cross continent freight haul from\nthu Pacific orchards in their favor fa\nvor and Ihey hnve a long way to go\nyet to show as clean and tidy looking\norchards as one sees anywhere in the\nKootenai's, the Boundary or the Okanngan lake section. At the same lime\nBritish Columbia fruit growers will\nbo well advised to continue tbe high\ngrade of fruit which they aro producing and shipping eastward.\nMARK I ROUTE\nCAIRO TO CAPE\n| l-OREWAHNED IS FOREARMED |\nt _ *\nThp InfhipiiziL epidemic has cuu-.i]\nthe dentil uf 13(1,000 peruon. In England und Wales (luring the ulx mdntliH\nwhich ended In March last Dr. Addition, .resident of tho local government hourd iu furnlHliing these flgure-\nto tho Iiouho of commons, declared\nthat ovcry Influence would be utilized\nto discover acme means of combating this terrible scourge effectively.\nCanada has also sufforod severely.\nCan wc not follow the example of Iho\nmother country and do everything iu\nour power to prevent the return of\ntho plague among our peoplo? The\nrecent croation of a federal ministry\nof hygiene la a step in the right direction.\u2014La Preaae (Montreal.)\nTho first parly, under Major Long,\nleft Cairo In December. The second\nand third parties, owing to lhe dislocation of steamer traffic, bad to proceed via India, No. 2 party malting\nfor Mombasa and No. \u201e party for\nLourenco Marques (Captain Sbort-\nrldge) and Cape Town. Tbe bases\nwero reached about tho end ot December.\ni\\s far soulh as Khartum Major\nLong's party had no difficulties; beforo the New Year the line to Khartum wns ready for use, and about\nthree weeks later Br.'gadlcr-Gcnoral\nHerbert was flown thero In a Hand-\nley-Page machine. At Meroo an aerodrome was not cleared, that town being regarded merely as a flying boat,\nstage. Aeroplanes would naturally follow tho railway, which cuts off the\nloop of tho Nile, and proceed direct\nfrom Wadi Haifa to Atbara.\nSouth of Khartum, from nbout 13\ndegrees north lo Broken Hill, nbout\n13 degree- south, lhe whole lino of\nthe country presents enormous difficulties. It was decided to form largo\npermanent nerodromes at intervals of\nfrom 100 to 000 miles and leave the\nntermedinto emergency landing\ngrounds until later, and the first big\nstation In this difficult country was\nto bo, it possible, near Koiloli, 400\nmiles south ot Khartum. Kodok\n(Pnshoda) is a native village on tlio\nNile, unhealthy and surrounded by a\nhuge swampy area. However, Mala-\nkttl, somo 40 miles farther south, tbe\nheadquarters of the Upper Nile Provinces and a base ot the irrigation\ndepartment, offered facilities for nn\naerodrome on an open grassy plain\nsomo few miles to the east of tbe\nriver. This ispot tlle survey parly\nadopted instead of Kodok.\nHetween Malakal and Gondnkoro, a\ndistance of some 100 miles, the Nile\nruns through Sudd country and\nthrough the whole district, Rajaf-j\nGontlokora-Mongalla was thoroughly\nsearched on suitable landing spot\ncould be found. Suggestions ns to\nbuilding an elevated landing ground\nwore made, but abandoned on account\nof the cost. The only solution would\nappear to lie In the use of the flying\nboat, the river being of sufficient\nwidth to allow of landing whatever direction of the wind.\nBy the Great Lakes.\nTho results of the expedition exploring Ibc country of the great lakes\nis not yet to hand. About Zoka,\nroughly midway between Qondokoro\nand .liuja ,aro plains covered with\nlong elephant grass; lo the south it\nIs more undulating, and covered witli\nbushes, scrub and forest. In the rainy\nseason, from March to January, the\ncountry is practically a swamp. In\ntlio dry season if tlio grass were burnt,\nit would become possible to land machines. About Jlnja Itself tbe country\nIs swampy, broken nnd heavily wooded.\n.'lying boats ean enslly mako the\nJourney over Victoria Nyanza to\nMwanza. and Iher are plent of shot\ntered Inlets niong the .coast which\ncnnid be used as Intermediate sta\ntlons. The chief drawback is the frc\nquency und suddenness of severe\nthunder storms, wilh gales and rough\nwater. The annual rainfall Is nbout\nGO In. \"Waterspouts frequently occur\ndurir.g ruin storms, and masses of\nsmall lisccti sometimes rise out of\ntho lake, having Iho nppeuralicc of\ndense clouds.\nBetween Mwanza and L'jiji the country is good over a stretch of 300 miles,\nUJIJI Itself Is in a swampy neighborhood, but a short distance awuy Is\nopen und grassy country. Hero un\naerodrome site can probably be found\nwithout much dilflculty.\nThe country to the enst of Lake\nTanganyika is fairly suitable for aero\nplanes, but Kltuta, ut tho southern\nend of the lake, was found by Capt.\nshortridge's party to be unhealthy,\nlow-lying, swampy, and surrounded by\nhills. It Is not suited us u stopping\nplace for aeroplanes, but Abcrcorn,\nsome 14 miles uway, Is a much better\nlocality, from Abcrcorn onwards the\ncountry becomes impossible for fly\ning boats, and the host aeroplane\nroute is via Serenjc, across 410 miles\nof country to the railway at Broken\nHill. This concludes tbo difficult por\nticu of tbe route.\nIt remains to ho seen what Major\nKiunion's party decides Is tho best\ncourse, for all the alternatives arc to\nbe examined. A roundabout route,\neast from Kisuinu to Nairobi and\nthence over the rolling, open lands\nwest of lit. Kilimanjaro and south\nalong tho curt track to Dodoma is\nover a diBtrict suited to ocrupianes\nthroughout. Tho cart track continues\nthrough similar open country via lr-\nlllga to Ncu L'tcngulc, Ikomba and\nAl ercorn. This Involves a detour of\nat least 400 miles, but It may make\npossible tho uso of the aoroplano in\nsteud of tho flying bout.\nPossible Flight in October,\nMajor Court-Treatt's parly, examining tbe southern sector, hud a rclu-\ntively simple task allotted to them. It\nappears thut the chlor difficultiesworo\ntu chose aerodromes from the many\ngood sites which existed. In addition,\nmuny Smith African towns made requests that aerodromes Might be built\nIn their vicinity. This involved refer-\nonce to Cairo, and assent has generally\nicon given to the proposal., An aerodrome hua been prepared nacr Juhan-\nncaburg.\nA route in process of development\nIs thut from Atbara to Trinkitut, on\nthe Itcd sea, und thence via the Kuril und Kumarun Islands to Pcrim\nand Aden. This will probably be more\nused fur militury than civil purpuscs,\nbut muy become u section of un ultor-\nnativo route via Egypt and tho Arabian coast to India. Major Carr has\nbeen responsible for tho survey nnd\npreparation of Ibis route.\nUntil full reports of tho African\nsurvey parties have been received one\ncannot speak definitely about this\ngreat air routo. It is probable that a\ncombination of flying boats and nero-\nplunos will bo used at the start of tho\nservice. The rirst machine will probably be flown from Cairo to the Citpo\nIn October or November this year.\nThe first party, which bad the longest but ens'est stretch to cover, followed Iho courso of the Nile almost\nthroughout and were aided by that\nriver in tho transportation of men and\ntores. Tho second party had a short\nstretch over little known country! presenting Immense difficulties from\nevery point of view. The southern\nparty coverod a tremendous distance,\nbut followed the course of the railway nlmost throughout.\nIt\\ wns intended thai each officer\nshould at once proceed to one or more\nstations on tho route, and select an\naerodrome site. Ho was then to engage local native labor to elenr and\nprepare the spot, advising the lender\nof bis pnrty of the progress mudc.\nSupplles of petrol and oil were carried so that the nerodromes might be\n\u2022cady lo receive aeroplanes as soon\nas the sites1 were cleared. Each party\nconsisted of the leader, five lo eight i\nolher officers, nnd less Hum 20 oilier\nranks, all chosen from tbe royal air\nforco in the middle east.\nThe Route in Outline.\nIn tho orlglnnl Instructions tlie following were tho stations to bo Investigated. The route prepared [by\nheadquarters, middle east, has been\nfollowed out und found very satisfactory.\nNo. 1 pnrty (commanded by Major\nLong, D.S.O.)\u2014Cairo. Asslut, Assuan,\nWadi Haifa,' Meroe. Atbara, Khartum, Kodok (Fashoda), Oondokoro,\nJinga, Port Victoria.\nNo. 2 party (commanded by Major\nKmmett)\u2014Mwanza (south end ot Vic-1\ntorla Nynnzn), UJIJI, Kilnta. j\nNo. 3 party (commanded by Major\nCourt-Trcntt)\u2014 Abcrcorn (near Kit-1\nuta), Broken. Hill, Livingstone. Salisbury, Buluwnyo, Palnchwe\u2014 Mafeklng\n(or IClmborlcy-Prctorin), Bloemfon-\ntcln, Beaufort West, Cape Town.\nFor convenience the southern party\nwas subdivided, Captnin Shortrldgc\nbeing responsible for the route from\nAbcrcorn to Buluwayol\nThe threo lenders of llie expedition\nnre all acquainted with tbe work and\ntho nature required. Major Kmmett\nbeing a well known big game hunter\nand Major Court-Trealt having shortly before tho war journeyed through\ntlio Sahara to Timbuktu.\nAn alternative rout which was seriously contemplated, though for the\nuse of flying boats only, was the Nile\nvalley to Victoria Nyanza, nnd thence\nby Tan_an.lHa._nd Nyansa to the Zambesi river and Quclimune. In I'urtu-\ngucsc Unst Africa. Tbo voyage to\nCape Town would then have continued along the const. Kor various reasons this route wus abandoned. There\nwas nlso a suggested \"Abyssinian\"\nroute, already referred to In tbe Times,\nand various minor alterations In the\nmain route.\nValue  ef  the   Nile.\nThe reasons which led lu the adoption of the line so fur followed were;\n(1) Tho vullcy ot tho Nile running\nalmost duo north and south forms an\nexcellent guide for the aerial navigation. It also provides means of\ntransportation, and nllows either\naeroplanes or flying boats to be used\nas occasion may require. Also a rail\nWay follows the Nile fur a great part\nof 'the way. (2) The control portion\noffers several almost equally bad a\nternatlvcs. Thut via. Luke Vivu is\nthe most direct, but the country between the chain uf great lakes is bush\nand _wump, forming un Impossible\nsurface for either type of aircraft I\"\nuse. The line cost uf Victoria Nyanza Is almost as bad, hut flying boats\ncould proccd dlroc' from Jlnja to\n...wnnza. Thence ot UJIJI the country\nconsists of undulating grass-grown\nplateaux, cultivation, forest and\nswamp, hut a course over comparatively favorable country can probably\nbe drawn. (3) Tlie railway runs ulung\nthe greater part of tho southern section und the country is generally suitable for an aeroplane throughout.\n|      WHEN CARE WILL PAY.       |\n*\u2014 \u25a0 , \u00ab>\nt By a wlso arrangement tbo British\nguvrrnmout will In future submit all\napplications fur passports to Cannda\nto tho Canadian Immigration authorities and, presumably, bo governed by\ntheir decision on tho fltnesB ot tho\napplicant tu enmo to this country.\nThis is the sort of cooperation that\nis needed between Canada and tho\nmother country. Until 1014 Canada\nhnd exercised the same easy tolerance\nlhat Britain bad toward those seeking\nentrance to her shores. The war taught\nus the unwisdom uf sueh luxness. Just\nas it tnught the same thing to tho\nUnited States and to Great Britain\nhersolf. The \"melting pot\" Idea, In\nItself attractive enough, can be carried\ntoo fur even in n nation of one hundred\nmillions. Tbe United iSlates found\nthis out wben the coming of war\naroused' deep-seated racial prejudices\nwlilcb yield to \"Americanization\" hut\nslowly, and tn a lesser degree the sumo\nthing was true in Canada.\nWe are nniv expecting a great influx of immigration from across tho\nAtlantic. AVe nre prepared lo welcome\nthese newcomers In proportion tn their\nsuitability to the country's requirements. Recent experiences have\nshown the need of examining into this\n,morc closely than we hnvo done In\nthe past. A grent Immigration la not,\nIn Itself, a desirable thing unless the\nIndividuals tlmt make lt up nro prepared to become good Canadian citizens. Some of those who have come\nto Canada within Iho last (on yenrs\nquite obviously were prepared for no\nsuch Ihlng. A little more discretion\non lhe pari nf tbe immigration authorities, a little closer examination of Iho\ncredentials mentnl and physical, of tho\nwould-be Canadian will pay In tho\nlong run.\u2014Montreal Star.\nEXCHANGING VISITS\nThe greatest need of the Empire\ntodny Is something which will tnke\nlurge numbers of home-slaying people\nfrom hero across tbe seas to visit\nIhe Dominions, Canada is not su far\naway, nml there Is nothing In prevent such visits except the conventional habits which turn the minds\nof British visitors towards the continent. -Inch might be done by well-\nplanneil organization. Members of\nparliament should sel lhe example,\nand chambers nf commerce hero\nshould encourage visits to Cannda\nhy parties of their members. Cities\nnnd lowns in Canada, too. might well\nbegin to issue formal Invitations to\nrepresentative bodies In the United\nKingdom. T^ibor should have Its\nshare In the work. Before long, It\nwould be realized here lhat Canada\nhas unrivalled attractions! there\nWould be a regulnr and an Increasing\nflow of visitors from here; and the\nbenefit to bolh countries would be\nimmense. It Is too soon ufter the\nwar to begin now, and the summer is\nhalf gone: hut next summer much\ncould be done. Canadians, with\ntheir energy nnd their pride In their\ncountry, need nn urging lo undertake\nthe experiment. We hnve nn doubl\nof Its success.\u2014London Times,\nNO   RELAXING  YET\n-*\nTOLD  IN  RHYME\nPEACE\u2014A   MESSAGE\nNot  rrotn  the  fields,  that  we  sowed\nwith trenches\n(Blessed be God, that the grass may\ngrow),\nUut hero at  home,   where  soft  rain\ndrenches\nTbo little buds to bid them blow.\nNot from tbe songs of the mad guns\nroaring\n(Blessed be God, that their song is\ndone),.\nBut from Ihe songs of the young larks\nsoaring,\nJoyous and glad in the sweet Spring\nsun.\nA woman arrested at Newark. N. J.,\nfor healing her husband admitted giving him a. thrashing.\nIt takes a man of wisdom tu utilize\nhalt ho knows.\nNo other remedy will so\nsurely and quickly correct\nstomach ailments, regulate\nthe liver and improve tbe\ngeneral health as a dose of\nBeecbam's\nPills\nUrt-Ht Sale of ear Mtdlck. la the W\u00abU.\n3\u00abW fferywU.,  U fern,***\nNot from alar, need my message greet\nyou\n(Blessed l\u00bbi God, Unit tlie journey*!*\nspann'd),\nIjut in llie lane when; I used to meet\nyou,\nBy the gnarled tree, you understand.\n\u2014Ivan A dull- in The Sphere.\nThe battle between the old order\nand the new is not over. It has only\nreached its crucial phase. The treaty\nand the covenant have emerged from\nlhe war and the secrecies of l'aris\nntj the statement of the issue for the\nworld. They cannot hoth survive.\nOne must yield lo the other. This\nIs no time to loy down our arms and\nconfess ourselves beaten. This is tho\ntlmo to rejoice in the groat confession of faith that bus been wrung\nfrom European statesmanship, mid to\nmobilise all the liberal thought of\nthe world in the task of converting\nthat faith from an inspiration to an\nImpregnable rock on which humanity\nmay build iu seeurlly, fellowship and\npeuco.--London   Dally   Mall.\nAN  INCIDENT IN  LONDON.\nTho   following   letter   to   Iho   editor\nStirt\/niAfl\nof   \"Canada,\"   London,   tolls   Its   own\nstory:\n\"Some days ago, while on leave In\nLondon, f had an experience which\nprompted the following letter to tbo\nEditor of the Dally Hall:\nSir,\u2014In-view of the number of\ncomplaints mado regarding tbo\nIncivility of London toxical) drivers, permit me, a stranger, to relate an astonishing experience\nwhich befell me a few days ago.\nI picked up a tnxleab in Chelsea and drove to tho Albert hall.\nThe driver wot*, unable to change\nthe ponnd I tendered in payment,\nand I asked him to wait while I\ngot somo silver. To my amazement he lulled out, \"Ob, that's all\nright. Any time will do,' and,\nputting up his flag, droVO away,\nwaving his hand genially as ho\nwent around lhe corner. The man\nappeared lo be quite normal,\nCANADIAN OFFICER.\nQueen  Mary  Club  for  Officers,\nBaton  Square,   S.  W.   1.\nThe sequel occurred yesterday, when\nI received a letter of which the following is a copy:\nSir,\u2122] read your letter in tho\nPally Mail today. When you havo\nread this I think you will agree\ntlmt. I am perfectly normal and\nknow exactly what I was doing\nwhen I gav   you a free ride,\nI wan In the H.15.F. from\nMarch, 10l5, to September, 1918, j\nand I came into contact with thousands of Canadian and Australian\nofficers during that time. Several\ntimes they gavd mo cigars, cigarettes and\u2014oh, tho superb joy!\u2014 i\non two or three occasions a drop '\nof Scotch. Think of It, Sir, mo u\nprivate\u2014they were officers. I am\nan Englishman with a memory.\nI saw you were labelled \"Canada\";\nmy thoughts went back to tho \\w?\\\nfour years, and If you had wanted\nme to drive you to Cnnada I would\nhave done so If 1 could afford it.\nOn my part it Is only Cidrt payment ou account for services rendered to mo by Canuck sand Aussie officers. So far as thi'.t furo Ih\nconcerned\u2014welt,. \"any old time\nWill do\" for me,\u2014Yours respectfully,\nPERFECTLY     NORMAL    TAXI-\nDRIVER.\nBattersea, S.W.\nHow refreshing such a louch of appreciation  is  In this material  uge! \u2014\nYours, etc.,\nC.  J.   MacUILLIVRAY,   Lt,\n\u2022tilth Canadians,\nUramsbott Camp, Juno 28, ,1911).\nHave You\nSeen Birks?\nIf you should como to Vancouver at any time, call and\nsee us and give us u chance\nto \"get aoQUainted.\" Wo delight in meeting people from\nout of town, and in showing\nthem round our spacious\npremises. Let us help to\nmake your visit to Vancouver a pleasant one. Let\nus meet you.\nColumbia Dry Cells\nJust received a fresh stock In both the\nREGULAR AND IGNITION CELLS.    Can  supply  you  In dozen  or\nbarrel lots.\nWE CARRY A FULL LINE OF DOMINION AUTO TIRES, INNER\nTUBES,   PATCHES,   RADIATOR  CEMENT, RELINERS, ETC.\nALSO THE  OVERLAND  BICYCLE,   In  _21ll.  and  Mln.  frames.\nBicyclo Tires, Inner Tubes and Repairs.\n__ MOTOR OILS AND CUP GREASE.\nMail Orders rcccivo prompt attention.\nNelson Hardware Co.\ni.jsi\nNELSON, B.C.\n\u2022^\nJohn Burns S. Sons ^SSSF\nSASH AND DOOR FACTORY N .LSON PLANING MILLS\nVtrnon 8t'e\u00bbt, Nelaon, B. C.\nEVERY DESCRIPTION OF BUILDING MATERIAL KEPT IN STOCK\nEitlmatti Given on Stone, Brick, Con-ret. end Frame Bulldlnie.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nP. O. SOX 1I\u00ab. PHON* 171\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither With Your Name or\nWith the Words\nDairy Butter\ni . \u25a0 t\nam\n\u25a0Biikl\n& For the Week-End\nWE HAVE- LOCAL SPRING CHICKENS LOCAL 'FOWL\nPRIME YOUNG LAMB GRAIN  FED YOUNG PORK\nALSO 2-YEAR-OLD PRIME STEERS\nTRY OUR SHAMROCK BRAND HAMS AND BACON\nTHE QUALITY  18 JUST  RIGHT\nP.Burns & Co., Limited\nPHONE B0.\nNELSON, B.C.\nt%\nAccording to the Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers who sell butter\neither to stores or privately are required to have\nIt properply covered in a\nwrapper on which MUST\nappear In prominent letters\ntho words\n\"DAIRY BUTTER\"\nTho fact Is also empljaslzed\nthat all butter In such\npackages must be of the full\nnet weight of sixteen ounces\nand in default of samo a fine\nof from $10 to $30 for each\noffonso is Imposed. Whey\nbutter must bo so labollcd\neven when mixed with dairy\nbutter and dairy butter ro-\niain:- Its label even though It\nbe mixed with tbo creamery\nproduct,\nIf you havo your own name or\nbrand on your wrappers you gain\nvaluable advertising for your butter. It causes people to ask for\nthe same brand again.\nPrices\nPRINTED     WITH     NAME     OF\nFARMER OR  BRAND  NAME\n200 Paper and <JO CO\nPrinting  ^fciUU\n6oo Paper nnd M, R(l\nPrinting *\u00bbli\u00abIW\n1000 Paper and 0C ftA\nPrinting   ^OiUW\nPRINTEO    WITH    WORDS\n\"DAIRY BUTTER\"\nioo cnn\nfor   UOO\n260 \u00ab1   OC\nfor    \u00ab|> I i_u\nB\u00b0f\u00b0or  $2.00\nt $3.50\nWE CAN SHIP IMMEDIATELY ON RECEIPT OF ORDER\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE   HOME   OF   GOOD   PRINTING\n\u25a0AKER 8TREET, NEL80N, B. C.\nMMt_________________l____________\n *.i,-.\"iisf*:isi'\"i;!->^\nT^M^M~S^skis^.s^i2^i\niSS\n'\"$\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1919       ~~>\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMGE FIVI   '\"\u2022\nBONNIE\nTEA\nA fine grade of Indo-Ceylon Tea\nImported, blended and packed expressly for tho Star Grocery. An\nabsolutely pure tea from the leading estates of India and Ceylon.\nGuaranteed free from Java and\nother  teas of cheaper growths.\nIf this Tea suits you.  tell your\nfriends.   If not, tell us.\nPor pound   \t\n70c\nOur fresh  ground Coffee at 50c\nper pound cannot bo beaten.\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 18\nJELECTRICITY   IS   USED\nTO  MEASURE  FLOW OF GAS\nPHILADELPHIA.\u2014Not  many   eleo-\n(Jtric  central  station men  look on  tho\ncompeting gas company as a possible'\n,:prospective customer for electric heat-\nling service.    Nevertheless,  thoy  may\njwel) do so now that methods of nieus-^\n\"tiring filrg* quantities of gas olectr'i-\njoglly havo been developed and proved\n*\"    over    lOo    practical   installations.\n! These points waft* broughtout Recently by J. ('.'.''Wilsim, recently speaking\njofore a joints meeting of thu various\nlectrieal engineering societies In Chicago.\nThe   meter   which   is   used   in   this\nsuring is built to tako advantage\not  the   fact   that   the   heat-absorbing\napaclty of a standard unit of any industrial   gas   remains   essentially   the\nsame   throughout   all    the   variations\nwhich may occur in practice.   In other\nwords, a given quantity of heat ap-\nIpjled    electrically    to    gas    flowing\n(through a main will always raise the\n.temperature of that gas to tho same\ndegree if the quantity of gas flowing\n[la not varied.    The meter, however, i:\ntworked   out  on   the  converse  of  this\n^principle, so that the temperature rise\nis always  two  degrees, and  hence  it\n;Jis   only   necessary     to    measure   the\nimount   of   electric,   current   used\ncause this temperature riso to arrive\nBuy Your\nWhite Shoes\nNow!\nBargains for MEN,\nWOMEN, and\nCHILDREN\nat the BIG\nClean-Up Sale\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLoaders   in   Foot   Fashions.\nHMWKMMMM-I^t\nKootenay and Boundary\nC-E.T1 TO E-.CI\nFAIR BUILDING\nNCE\ntMPTY R..ID\nAT HARROPBURNS\nLEMON JUICE\nTAKES OFF TAN\nGUIs!    Make bleaching lotion i\nif  skin   is sunburned,       i\ntanned or freckled I\nSqueeze tlie Juice of two lemons into\nbottle containing three ounces of\nOrchard White, shake well, and you\n(have a quarter pint of the best freckle,\nsun mini and tan lotion, and com-\n(ploxlon boautlflor, ;it very, very small\n'St.\nYour grocer has the lemons and any\n(drug store or toilet counter will supply\nthree ounces of orchard White for a\njl'OW cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the. face, neck, arms\nland hands each day and sec how\ni freckles, 'sutil.ttrn,' win'dburri ' and tun\njdisappour and how clear, soft and\n(white tho skin becomes. Yes! It is\n(harmless.\nit a quantity which is measurable and\nproportional to the gas flowing.\nThe apparatus that has been developed to carry out this .method consists\nof the tfoljowing essential  parts:   (a)\nheaW through  which  electric  current flows to warm the gas just two\ndegrees as it flows through tho meter\n(b) thermometers on the entrance and\nexit sides of the heater to Indicate the\nrise  in  temperature;   (c)  a  regulator\nto vary the heater current in accord\nnice witli the variations in the rates\nof gas flow so thnt it will always he\njust enough to warm the gas two d.\ngrees, and (e) a meter lo measure tl\nelectrical  energy consumption   by  the\nheater  in  warming  the  gas   two   de\ngrees.\nThe heater unit consists of splrnl\ncolls of niehrome resistance wire. In\nstead of mercurial thermometers electrical resistance thermometers ar\nused because they are extremely sons!\nlive and aeeunile . Automatic control\nof the current which must continually\nheat the gas two degrees as It passes\nis accomplished through tho Use o\ngalvanometer connected in the thermometer circuit. This galvanometer\nactuates a motor-driven rheostat wh'ch\ncontrols the current. Tlie electrical\nenergy in the heater is measured continuously by a totalizing meter. This\nis a watt-hour meter of standard construction, having a gear-train and dial\nso arranged thnt the readings are direct in standard units uf gas.\u2014-Philadelphia Enquirer.\nBUSY  ALL  RIGHT\nAn officer on board a warship\nwas drilling Ids nun. \"1 want every\nman lo lie on his back, put his legs\nin the air and move thorn, as if he\nwere riding a bicycle,\" he explained.\n\"Now commence.\"\nAfter a short effort one of the men\nslopped.\n\"Why have you stopped, Murphy?\"\nasked the officer.\n\"If ye plaze, sir,\" Was tlio answer,\n\"Oi'm  coasting.\"\nToledo city council announce they\nwill stand pat on their order lhat the\nToledo street Railway company take\nits cars and tracks off the streets the\nend of this month.\n;:,,:--:v:A:-v:^^v.-.-.:^y\nA Refreshing\nSummer Drink\nA teaspoonful\nin a glass of\nwater.\nBe iure to takt a\nbottle of Abbey'\u00a7\nSalt with you on\nyour holiday\nouting.\nRECOMMENDED\nfey P_yiici-_i\nni Druigiiti.\nAM;\nAbbey's\nSalt makes\na sparkling, re*\nfreshing   summer\ndrink.    It quenches\nthirst \u2014 relieves   the\ndepressing effects of hot\nweather\u2014drives away Head*\nache\u2014purifies the blood \u2014\nclears the brain\u2014and promotes sound digestion.\n42\n>eys\nEFFBWE5CEHT SALT\nmi\nCRESTON, July 31.\u2014At n meeting\ntho -ti'QQtora of the agricultural \u00bbm-\nsoclatlon on Tuesday night It wns\nrinnlly decided to at once proceed with\nthe erection ol' n main building 30x100\nfeet on tho town park property, which\nhus been acquired for the fair grounds.\nYesterday ufternoon the grounds committee went carefully over tho kind\nand located the site for tho building,\nIt Is nlso proposed to hnvo n cpmrter\nmile track laid ont so ns to provide\nfor tho speed events in the horse nnd\npony classes, ns well ns allowing a\nlikely spot t.i see the athletic events\nwhich will he pa ft. nf this year's exhibition. The main building Is estimated to cost about 51500 complete, for\nthe erection of which the Canyon City\nLumber Company, Ltd,, have already\nmude a doantion of (100. lt Is pro-\nposed to utilize the building for a\nskating rink In the winter season.\nThe cbntraot for the erection of\nCroston's new one-storey high school\nhas been awarded to George Hondren,\nwho was the lowest of three tenderers,\nand whose figure for the building\ncomplete was $102.1. lt is stipulated\nthe room must be ready for occupation not later than September 10. As\nyet tbe board lias not filled the three\nvacancies in the teaching staff,\nMust Cut fhi.tle..\nThe magistrate's court has been\nquite busy of hit... Yesterday no less\nthan seven auto owners faced Capt,\nCrompton nml were mulcted in tin\nsum of $5 and costs each for running\ntheir ears without the required lai\nlight. Two other citizens were given\nthree days in which tn cut their crop\nof thistles nr stand a J.,\", line.\nJliss Alice Heath, teller at the Bank\nof Commerce, Is away nn a two weeks'\nholiday with her parents at Invermei'e\nnnd her place here Is taken hy !\u2022'. S\nStephens o* the Cranbrook brunch.\nRaspberry export still continues\nheavy, but tho continued dry weather\nwill bring the season to an end next\nweek. Local selling agency figures\nshow that well over 4000 crates have\nalready -en shipped, uiul there Is\nevery indication that the 1017 showing\nof Just over r.ooo crates will be equaled\nand most likely exceeded. Last year\ntimely rains the latter part of July\ngave a er p of rasps well over the\n7000 marl!.\nG. P. Hoi-spool one of the Creston\nsoldiers recently back from overseas,\nleft last week fnr Tramping Utke.\nSask., where he has heen appointed\nmanager of a branch ot the Hank of\nCommerce.\nIndians Cause Trouble.\nII. I.. T. (lalbrnlih. the Kootenuy\nIndian agent of Port Steele, accompanied by .Mrs. Gnlbrulth. are visiting\nhere this wcCiC. Tho Indians aro giving troublo In that they are pasturing\ntheir stock on the whiles' hay ureu\nIn contravention uf un ugreement entered into with the stockbreeders association. Mr. Qalb-altli is here to\nstraighten matters ont.\nC. 11. Robinson of Nelson. Ihe Kootenay fishery Inspector, is here this\nweek on an official visit, ami Is impressing upon anglers the need to observe the regulations us to tbe legal\ncatch ot fish, or be prepared for tin\nconsequences, us the regulations an\nto he vigorously enforced.\nThe list of contributors to tlie sol\ndlcrs' memorial fund has been published, and It shows a total contribution uf $1030 lo the cause. I if title\nthe Creston section put up about $MI0,\nwhile Wynndel leads tlle half dozen\noutlying points with a total of $160,\nThe committee in charge Is having\nsomo trouble deciding un a location.\nRev. T. JlcCnrd, accompanied by his\nwife and sun, Tom, left on Monday\nfor Kootenay liny, where they will be\nIn camp ror a couple of weeks with\nltev. t). T. McClintock and family of\nXelson.\nMrs. C. 11. Garland arrived from\nVancouver on Monday to join Mr.\nGarland, who recently opened a law\noffico In town.\nLieut. McLean, who wns th.nl In\ncommand uf the Major Mallandalno\nforestry draft which left here for overseas early In 1817, arrived buck\nTuesday, and Is spending a few days\nwith Creston friends.\nFirst Tomatoes.\nThe first of the tomato crop was\ntfored for sule locally on Mondny.\nrules being in evidence from both\nthe Kelsey and Leadbealer ranches.\nThe export of these will he under lasl\nar'B figures considerably, due I\"\n\u2022ymiullcr nrea| planted, and the dry\nweather producing smaller stuff and\nfewer ot them.\n\\V, Ll. Embree and S. il. Foreman,\nwho oponed In the garage business\nhere this spring under the firm name\not Embree & Foreman, have dissolved\npartnership, witli Mr. Embree continuing tlie business.\nThe second of the overseas veterans\nlo return with Ills bride Is Pte, John\nJohnson, who gut back a few days\nagu. after almost four and u half years\niu khaiil. They ure visiting the tor\nHire's patents at Wynndel.\nSacks  Drenched   in   Creek  Save   Surrounding Bush;  Origin of Blaze\nIs Not Known\nA vacant one-room house and sev-\neral beehives full of bees, the properly of Herbert and Noel Harrop, were\ndestroyed hy fire last evening at Harrop, according to a message received\nby telephone.\nTbe blaze, the origin of which was\nPlot known lust night, wus noticed\nuhout 7:30 by \\V. .1. MeCunnell und\nJohn Oadzitw, Harrop ranchers. They\nnotified llie Harrop brothers, who Immediately went to ;look after their\nproperty. When they arrived on the\nscene the roof nf the huitse had fallen\nIn and the house was beyond saving.\nThe lire fighters turned their efforts\nto keeping the flames from catching\nin llie dense bush all around lhe house.\nSacks, dripping with waler .from the\ncreek nearby, were tlle only means\navailable Tor fighting the lire, and they\nproved effecllve. fur by S:30 u'clock\nthe flames were well under control\nand danger of a serious bush fire\naverted. Several men remained all\nnight to patrol the ground and prevent any  fresh outbreak occurring,\nIt was not known last night what\nlhe fire loss would be. The house\nwas empty  of furniture,\nALL SUMMER GOODS\nMUST  GO\nTHEIR TIME HERE IS OUT AND WE MUST GET RID OF THEM, AS BEFORE LONG WE\nSHALL BE OBLIGED TO USE THE SPACE FOR FALL GOODS. IT WILL PAY YOU TO SORT\nUP YOUR WANTS IN WASH  GOODS,  ETC., AT  THESE   LOW   PRICES.\nFancy Plaid Poplins at $1.95 a Yard\nSplendid material for Skirts or Drosses, 26 Inches with'. 0*1  QC\nRegular value ^.50 a yard.   TO CLE-AB  y I lUU\nNovelty STRIPED SILKS at $1.39 a Yard\nesses, eto.\nid.   Width\n$1.33\nBeautiful striped Tussnh SilkH, suitable fnr Blouses. Dresses, etc.\nWe havo this In Blue, Green or Tan stripes on White ground. Width\n30 Inches. Regular value 31.7\"> a yard.\nTU  CLF'.AR AT   \t\nMOYIE  ITEMS\nMOYTIF, July 31.\u2014Mrs. Hi^chliffe\nand Mrs. I.ofthouse, from Philadelphia,\nl'. S. A., art\" spending a holiday here\nvisiting with their sister. Mrs. Puffer.\nMrs. M. .1. Bonner and children and\nMiss Sadie Whitehead are visiting\nrelatives at Scollurd, Alberta.\nJames Roberts, a former resident\nof Moyie. has returned from Eholt\nand is employed at the St. Eugene\nmine.\nMrs. .1. W. Fitch has gone to Go-\nderlch, \"nt.\nMr. and Mrs. Ward and family and\nMr. and Mrs. Harris of Cranbrook\nhave rented the building formerly\nused as a .Methodist church and are\nspending a holiday here.\nMrs, Borne and family left here on\nSaturday for Kaslo. Before leaving\nthey were entertained at farewell\nparties given fur them hy Mrs. Fran-\nsen, Mrs. Whitehead, Mrs. Garden and\n.Miss   McFarlane.\nSTRIPED POPLIN SUITINGS 39c Yard\nThree hundred  yards,  White  grounds  wilh   narrow  stripes   in  a\nvariety of colors. QQA\nTO CLEAR AT.  per yard    JJO\nOxford Shirtings at 39c Yard\nSplendid finality, excellent for Men's Shirts or Boys'\nWash Suits. Light grounds with colored stripes. Goods -!S\ninches wide. QQa\nTO CLEAR AT, per yard   JjC\nWomen's Pongee Silk Jiouses at $3.79\nSmartly tailored lllouses wllh convertible collars and\nfull length sleeves.    Good washing material. flQ 7Q\nTO  CLEAR  AT    ...$3il<J\nChildren's Dresses at 49c Each\nPrint and t'liainbray Lresses for children up to I years,\na barlety of styles and colors to choose from. Worth twice\ntin- money  we ask  for them, \/IQa\nTu  CLEAR   AT,\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE STORE FOR STYLE\nTHE STORE FOR QUALITY\n.{\nWINDERMERE   TO   HAVE\nPHONE TO THE OUTSIDE\nINVKBMHBK. July 31. -- Tenders\nare being called for the delivery of\ntelephone poles for the construction\nof the Dominion government tele-\nphone system from Wiridermere south\ntu Fairmont Hot Springs, n distance\nof some sixteen miles. This means\nthat barring unforeseen circumstances the further addition will he made\nto the system, thus helping to con*\nnect Golden and the Windermere\nmining division up wllh the outside\ntelephone world, an end long desired.\nIt is important for the accommodation of travelling tourists as well as\nlocal people as the line will parallel\nthe main trunk road from Cranbrootf\nto Golden,\nAmongst late outside visitors hy\nautomobile from Calgary are Mr, and\nMrs. Ernest Willis and family. They\nhove taken a cottage at Windermere\nand are thoroughly enjoying the outing. Mr, Uyan. scereiury of the Calgary Rotary club, is at present their\nguest.\nre-\nhave\ntime\nm\nDr. Williams Fly and Insect Destroyer\nSnray your Cattle and Horses wllh it and Flies\nwill pans thorn by.\nnd  Mosquitoes\nIt la perfectly harmless and easy of application,\nUso it on your Milk Cows and increase thu milk supply.\nPut up in 1-gal. cans.   Price, $1.75 por can.\nTaylor Ming & Elev. Co.\nROSSLAND   ITEMS.\nROSSLAND, July 31. It. ll. Stewart and Mrs. Stowa and two children\nwere  visitors  to  the city  Monday.\nJames C.  Patterson,  who  has  been\noverseas  fur  the   past   two   year\nturned home Saturday night.\nMr. and Mrs. II. Henderson\ngone to Seattle to spend some\nvisiting friends.\nMrs. James Leo returned yesterday\nfrom a trip to Vancouver,\nAndy Larson and son Bitty arrived\nin the city from Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Vnnhuskirk leave the\nclly fin- Vernon, whore Mr. Vanbus-\nkirk has been transferred as manager\nfor the  |'.  Burns company there.\nL, Seuey, who has lived in Kerslam!   I'm-  several  years,  left  yesterday\nfor Quebec to reside permanently.\nMrs. it. B. Shelledy entortajned a\nnumber of friends at tea Tuesday\nifternoon in honor id' Airs, Cox, who\nis visiting iu the city.\nFor The Best In\nCorn Flakes,\nsays (\u00aeo&6ga ask\nthe grocer for\nPost\nToasties\nOuLDEN ROD ACQUITTED\nON   HAY FEVER CHARGE\nI'MII.ADKI.I'MIA.    A      protest    Ims\nrecently been raised ugatn.t the time-\nhonored prqjoct nf adopting the _ul<l-\nen.od us tlw nutlonal flower of the\nI'niU'il tii;iicN on tin' minimi Unit lliln\nplant i:. ii cause of hay fever uml\nhence nuiliing might to ho done thut\nwuuhl encourage its prevalence. A\n.tatomont hae now been Issued by l_r\n\\V. Sohopporgrell, mi beh'ulf \"f Un\nAmerican ttoy-fever Prevention hush-\nelation, in defence \"f the golden-rod\nIt Ik nsselU'tl thut while the pollen\nor tht1 golden-rod muy cause trotthl\nwhen applied directly to tho nostrils\nin* used in large tiuanlltles for mom\ndecorations, as a causo nf hay-fever\nout nf doors It Is absolutely negligible.\n\"it is one nf mu' most beautiful Rowers\/' suys hr. Soheppcrftrpll; \"and well\nmerit- Its selection us thi' natloiml\n(lower of tlif United States'.\". I'hlln-\nil.iphln Inquirer.\nTHE  FINISHING TOUCH\n, Observer: Do you know you've lust\nyour collar button'.'\nI'rlendi I'm nol surprised.\nmy pet spaniel, my canary\nautomobile wus stolen, I lei\nsuranee drop Just  borotd m\nburned down, tin' >>uul< ) had ull\nmoney  In  busted, utul  I  just  li\nthnt my wife eloped\nCollar button?   ;\nOf A NEW Mil\nNEW   VOUK,\n\"Reductto\nof  <br\ngreatest   of  all  must  stand  her  new\nI influence   In   China,   crowned   by   the\ntemporary   heritage   of   the   German\nI concession   In  Shantung.\n\"It will have been noted that all\nthe countries of the world are laying\ngreat stress upon the development of\ntheir foreign trade as a means of\nregaining    their    financial    stability\nmany's\" mineral wealth and a cor-1 Whatever this may mean in future\nresponding increase in ibe wealth of t commercial rivalry, iu friction and\nFrance leave fJermuny in the post- jealousies, it cannot fail to extend\ntion of a new nation, attended by the markets of the world, to bring a\nthe    difficulties    naturally    find    lnj higher   degree   oE   civilization   to   the\nntries whose trade is the prlzi\nMoreover, there will exist. In lh\"\nLeague of Nations, an instrumentality\ntending to prevent economic rivalries\nfrom extending into the sphere of\nmilitary action.\"\nAUSTRALIAN   SOLDIERS\nBOMBARD   PREMIER\nestablishing a position in world trade\nfor ibe first time\" says a bulletin\nIssued by the Guaranty Trust company of New l'orlt.\n\"Germany loses much of her coal\nand iron iu the settlement. Although\nfreed of the cost of maintaining an\nImmense military aiid naval estab-\nlishmct,   she   must   nevertheless   pay\nnot    alone    her    debts    to    her    own l ' '\npeople, hut nlso the Indemnity im-j MKl.BOt'RNK. As tin- outcome of\nposed by the allies. She is stripped \u201e stormy |ntervIc\\V between IL S. \\V,\n\u00ab.f her colonies and merchant marineJLawson, premier of Victoria, and a\nand likewise uf much of the com-L|epultttlon 0f soldiers in the premier's\nmero.al and Industrial establishment omcCi recently, the premier was struck\nshe has built up in other countries DU tiu. \\lvlll\\ am] cut ||V im ink wc\\\\\nin  the  past  generation, thrown  by  one  of lhe soldiers  .The\n\"She must resume operations al-mon then proceoded to pitch the office\nmost at the beginning and carry on furniture into the streets and tore ii|i\nher trade under the double handicap important official documents. Tho\nof a tremendous external debt and ponce dispersed the rioters and arrest\na vast loss of prestige. Moreover, e(t rive of them. Later a crowd at\nher new government cannot be ex-j tempted to rush tho watch; house near\npected    to    countenance    the    trrtdVby and stoned the police, but was dls\npractices of lhe post, which, whatever\nthey offered In the way ef Immediate\nwealth to her business men, were a\nburden   upon   the  great  mass of her\npeople.\"\nFrance, according to tbe Bulletin,\nfaces a new regime, as different from\nthe  \"Id   as  a   bee   from  ..   butterfly.\npei'Sed with several casualtie;\nThe difficulty had Us origin when\na crowd, including returned soldiers\nand sailors, attempted to rush a miii\ntttry barracks. Shots were fired and\na passing soldiers was killed. There\nwere Several arrests made and afterwards   excited   meetings    of    soldiers\nafterwards Henry IV of France. Cof-\nIgny and from 110,000 to 30,000 otheis\nfell in the massacre of St. Bartholomew, August :M, 1672.\nIt is disputed in history whether thlfl\nwas suddenly caused by the discovery\nof Huguenot plots or had been pro-\nmedttated. In spite of all this, they\ncontinued numerous and powerful and\nthe Edict of Nantes, issued In lu'JS by\nHenry IV gave them full political and\ncivil rights.\nTheir power was broken after tbo\nsurrender of La Kochelle, and the revocation of the .'.diet of Nantes by\nLouis XIV in 1t.\u00bb.\">. and hundreds of\nthousands of Huguenots went into ex,-\nile. going Li Prussia, Holland, Switzerland, England, Scotland and America.\nMoniana copper miners were given\nin increase of $1 a day.\nA PRINTER\nMarried, x years' experience in\ncountry weeklies, seeks similar\nposition in W. Albcrtu or B.C.\nPractical all-round man. Would\nrent iiiinii ii desired or work\non sularj and commission,\nI'lease give particulars lo\nH. A. WARREN\nBOX 180 PROVOST, ALTA.\nods were denounced.\nRepresentatives of the soldiers went\nto Premier Uiwson's office and demanded the release of the men arrested. The premier promised u> make\nmi Inquiry into ihe affair, bin ibis\ndid not satisfy the men. ami ihe in),\nwidl throwing ami other disorders fob\nONE  IN   FIVE OF  MEN\nWOULD   CHANGE  JOBS\ni- Is noi surprising to see the French]were held, at which the police meth-\nptunnlng  to turn  om  an automobile\nalmost   ou  a   par  iu  first  cost  and  in\nopera tlo    expense    with    the    cheap\nAmerican  makes.    The restoration  ot*\nAlsace nnd  Lorraine and  lhe control\nof   the   COUl   o|*   Ibe   Snar   Valley   give\nher an  opportunity  for industrial expansion   in   the sense   iu   which   that,,,,,, ,\nterm Is usually used in this country.  |ow<'d\n\"Japan emerges from lhe conflict\nwith the greatest proportional increase of power and prestige ond the\nbest prospect for immediate material\ngain, llcr Industrial capacity has\nbeen doubled by ihe demands which\nthe Far Fast has made upon her during   the   war.\n\"She is established in markets Into\nwhich she had hardly entered at the\noutbreak of hostilities. Her expedition lo Siberia has given her a sort\nof prior right in that country when\nIt Is finally opened io free trading,\nand through tho Dutch Kasi Indies.\nAustralia, British India and other\neastern regions her goods are known\nand   accepted   as   never  before.    Hut\nI've lost\ndie\nmy in-\nhouse\nnl\nWhat's a lost\nSt, Catharines (1. W. V A. passed a\nresolution protesting against a war\nlax on cigarettes,\n'\u00bbTT.\\w.\\ in\" :T:;,4ll membcts of\nthe Canadian army who completed the\ndomobllliiation tiitestionartes issued by\nthe l'e-establishineui department. 8\",-\n771 desire to make agriculture or stock\nraising their future vocation.\nUf ihe number, 7-.-IS were previously engaged iu those pursuits.\nThere is. however, a nel gain ol 15.-\n.\"..Ml recruits foi' agriculture. While\n17BJ men previously employed on (lulu nd have expressed a wish nn demobilisation tu enter new. occupations.\nL'O.-IOO Intend to desert other callings\nlo become farmers.\ni If tic men wliu wisb to abandon\nfarming, ,'1100 have expressed a desire\nto enter ihe professional and general\ngroup of callings. 350 the mechanical\ntrades, and 530 tbe occupalins classed\nas domestic and personal services, Tin-\ntotal accessions to the professional\nand general occupations number L'0,-\nMill and the desertions from these occupations   total   12,708,\nThe questionnaires indicate thai one\noul   of   every   live   soldiers  desires   lo\nchange his occupation upon his return\nto civilian life.\nSTURDY  HUGUENOTS WERE\nPURITANS   OF   FRANCE\nPARIS The HtlgUOriOtS were lhe\nPuritans of France In the Sixteenth\nami Seventeenth centuries. Tht! name\nwas first used about 1500; Us origin i-4\nunknown.\nThe Huguenots suffered severely In\nthe reigns nf FranoIs l and bis Immediate successors, and after l\u00bbttl! were\nfrequently involved In war, under tbe\nleadership uf such men as Admiral\nColigny and  [{Ing  Henry of Navarre,\nTHIN, FRAIL\nFOLKS NEED\nPHOSPHATE\nNotlun(| Like Plain Bitro-Phosphate to\nPut  on   Firm,   Healthy   Flesh   and\nto   Increase  Strength,  Vigor\nand Nerve Force\nJudging from the countless preparations and treatments which aro cou-\ntlimit!ty being advertised for the purpose of making thin people fleshy, U\u00ab-\nveloplng arms, neck and bust, and replacing ugly hollows and angles by\nihe soft curved lines of health and\nbeauty, there are evidently thousands\nof men and women who keenly feel\niheir excessive  thinness.\nThinness and weakness are imuaily\ndue to starved nerves. Our bodies\nneed more phosphate than is contained\nin modern foods. Physicians claim\nthere Is nothing thai will supply this\ndeficiency so well as the organic phosphate known among druggists ns bitro-\nphosphate, which is inexpensive and\nIs soul by the Canada Drug & Book\nCo. iu Nelson, and most atl druggists\nunder a guarantee of satisfactlou,\/)r\nmoney back. By feeding the nerves\ndirectly and by supplying the body\ncells with the necessary phosphoi lu\ntood elements, hltro-phosphntc quickly produces a welcome transformation\nIn the appearance; tho Increase 'In\nweight   frequently   being   .istonlshliig.\nThis increase In weight also carries\nwith it a general Improvement in th-)\nhealth. Nervousness, sleeplessness\nand lack of energy, which nearly always accompany excessive thinness,\nsoon disappear, dull eyes hecorno\nbright, and pale cheeks glow with tlie\nbloom of perfect health.\nCAUTION;\u2014Although bitro-phos-\npliate is unsurpassed for relieving\nnervousness, sleeplessness and general\nweakness, it should not, owing to Its\nremarkable flesh-growing properties,\nbe used hy anyone who does not desire to put on flesh,\n^_^^_\n PAOf BIX\nitfb waanews\nGeneral News of the City\nGrand   Forks  Veterans  Ask   Approval\nof Scheme to Settle  Returned  Men\nin  Their  Vicinity\nA petition from the Great War\nVeterans' association of Grand Forks\nto the provincial and Dominion governments, asking them to acquire and\nmake available for* settlement by returned soldiers a tract of land some\nJl'),000 acres in extent, situated in the\nneighborhood of Grand Forks and\nCascade, hus been submitted by the\nGrand Forks association for the approval of the local association at Its\nnext monthly meeting.\nThe major portion of the properly\nreferred to, states the petition, is\ncultivable at as little cost as any\nland in the Interior of the province\nand \u25a0 unsurpassed in the province In\nrespect to climate and conditions for\ntho production of all kinds of local\nfruits and fond products, It further\nstates that the property is traversed\nby two railways and that it is so\nSituated as to make it easily irrigated.\nCopies of the petition have been\nsent   to   the   respective   government*!\nof mm HOADS\nEx-President   of   Vancouver   Board   of\nTrade  Snys  Government  Is  Ex-\nperimentiny; Advises Contin-\nj   uitig  Pressure\nF. C.. Sbulbvi-oss, adjuster of the\nMainland Hoard of Fire Underwriters,\narrived in Nelson yesterday afternoon\nfrom Slocan t'ily. whero ho adjusted\nthe fire loss of Deschamps & Linglo\nIn the recent forest fire on Gwillim\nor Goat creek.   He left last night for\nand to the heads of the various\npartmients or' the governments\nforested.\niho coast,\nDuring bis  flying\nMr. Shiillcrosj-^-who l'i\nas president M the \\\nOf trade last spring, de\nprovince should 'keep\nprovincial governmenl\n[iicstion, ftir_ there wti\n,'estinenl, in these day\ntravel, .'than good roads,\nver \"board  of trade, ,he\nvisit  to  Nelson,\nhushed his term\nVancouver hoard\n'dared the whole\npressing    the\nn    the    road\nno better In-\ntys of motor\nI'lie    Van-\nId,   sug\ngest e\nd lo ihe government tho hard\nsurfacing off through roads In country\nlistriot's, and when he last waited on\n'remier Oliver and Ministers Harrow\nmd King in that connection, he was\nnformed that ijie governmenl was\nmiking experiments In that direction,\nin the vicinity Of Victoria.\nYI.I1JI\nOvehr  Seven   Thousand   Five   Hundred\nPassengers  in  Past  Month\u2014Near-\u00bb\nly  Eight Hundred Autos.\nA\u00ab' an indicator of steady progress\nthe statement of passengers and vehicles carried by the Nelson ferry which\nconnects the city wilh the Balfour\nroad on the other .side of the lake,\nstands out excellently. During tho\nmonth of July, 1019, the ferry carried\n702 automobiles and TUliS passengers,\nwhich Is an increase of -111 automobiles and 1790 passengers over the\ncorresponding month of last year, and\nan Increase of nil automobiles and\nlir>_. passengers over June ot this year\nuccordlng to the statement compiled\nby George Clerihew, who js iu charge\nof the ferry.\nKver since the Inauguration of the\nferry service the traffic has been\nslendily on the increase, every month\nshoeing an increase over the corresponding month of the year previous,\nand each of the summer months in\nparticular showing a great increase\nThe cam-\npast four\nsame four\nsingle rigs,\npassengers,\nsingle rigs,\npassengers.\nPius. 0.\nsingle rigs,\npassengers,\nplus. 8.\nsingle rigs,\npni sengers,\npigs, 15.\nsingle rigs.\npassengers,\npigs, js.\nsingle rigs,\npassengers!\nsingle rigs,\npassenger*\nr.sys: horses. 96! entile. :,; pigs. 24,\nJuly, loll): Autos, Tit:.: single rigs,\n128* double rigs, \u25a0 \"!' passengers,\n7U2S;  horses. 21 \u25a0   pigs.  \\2.\nin addition to the above figures a\nconsiderable amount uf Height was\nhandled by the ferry, ami in nearly all\ninstances this shows a subslanl\ncrease also.\nSi\nildi\ncrs V\/ill  Also  Ec A\nsked to\nTake\nPart\nin  Fair;  Specii\nfor Apples\nil Prizes\nA l\ntracll\nins   for   tlio   f\nnil   fair\nlhat\nwill\nspell\nRupees- are wl\niat is souslht\nhj\n; V\nIU'   ll!\nrectors nt' the\nNelson\nAgrt-\nillu\nnil  j\nmd   Industrial\nsociety,\nund\n\\v\nhlli\n\u25a0 Hum\n\u2022 feel BUro tliej\n\u25a0  Will  1)1'\nable\nover the preceding month.\npuratlvo flgu\nres   tor   the\nmonths, with\nthoso nf tlu<\nmonths uf 101\n18, arc:\nApril, 1818:\nAulas, .90;\nl.-,_;    double\nrigs,    IIS;\n271,11; horses\n84; cattle, 12.\nApril. 1 !> 1 :\u2022:\nAutos, 171:\nisil;    double\nrigs,     137;\n4264: horses,\nIS;   rattle,   1:\n.May, hus:\nAliti.s, 1131;\n134;    double\nrigs,    03;\n-IU3; horses,\n\u25a0::,: cattle, 5;\nMay. UIO;\nAutos, 526;\nnil;    double\nrigs,    Ml;\n-,:;ls; horses,\n31; cattle, 7;\nJuno, 1018;\nAutos, 202;\nir,;,;   double\nrigs.   .Ill;\n44S6; horses,\n10; cuttle, s:\nJuno, IBM:\nAutos, 628;\n180;    double\nrigs,   7;,;\n(liTii; horses,\n\u202212;' pigs.  45.\n.luly. wis:\nAutos   3SI:\nis'.i;   double\nrigs,    117:\nto arrange displays by tho boys of\ntbe T.M.r.A. ;md the returned soldiers\nat Balfour sanitoriuni. in addition,\nstunt flying and passenger carrying\naeroplanes and rock drilling contests\nalso came iu for discussion at a meeting heldvlast evening.\nAt ihe request of the Soldiers' Civil\nKe-establishment committee returned\nsoldiers will lie given the privilege of\nmaknig ire,- entry of exhibits at the\nfair.\nAn immediate eampalgn is to be\ncuinmeiu'td by the.board for funds for\ntlie conduct at tfhe fair and a special\neffort will be made to greatly augment\nihe membership of ihe association,\n'in- best box of apples In the show\nwill hy rewarded by a special prize of\nand the second box a pri'\/.e of $3;\nwhile   a   special   prize   will   also     he\n,-arded for the best collection of oil\nIn tings on exhibition nol  necessarily the  work of ihe exhibitor.\nThe British Columbia Entomological\nsociety; iu view of ihe vast educa-\ntlonnl value it will he to the children\nif lhe city tiind district have donated\ni first prize of ?.\"i and ;i second prize\nof ,'J2.50 for .tbe best collection (of\nInsects i.'ti exhibition at the fair. A\nBidet-able number of other prizes\nfor various exhibits were also acknowledged  by the board.\n,\\ field day for school children Is being arranged for tlio Wednesday ttftcr-\nnopn of tic lair and a special grant\nis being laid aside to provide prizes\nfor the compciilors.\nil FIRES I\n11 on\nElectrical Storm Over Kootenay Lake\nStarts Four Forest Blazes; Good\nRcforts From Bear Creek\n.Resulting from the passage of an\nelectrical storm over the northern portion of Kootenay lake Wednesday,\nthree lightning l'ires in the Duncan\ncountry and one i the Lardeau, wore\nreported by the ranger in that district.\nPetails of their extent have not yet\ncome to hand.\nReports received yesterday from the\nSheep creek camp indicated that .he\nfire which broke oul. Wednesday afternoon on Hear creek was well ia hand\nlate that night. Tlie forestry pump\nwas sent out to the scono yesterday\nfrom Xelson, and doubtless any danger is now over.\nFRIDAY, AUGUST .1. 191?,,*, '*\u2022*\nTHE   WEATHER\nVICTORIA, .luly 31.- Nolson and\nvicinity: Partly cloudy and cooler,\nwith showers or thunder storms,\n.Min.\nNelson   \t\nVictoria   ...\nKamloops   .\nPrince   Rtlpc\nDawson\nWinnipeg   .\nPontlcton   .\n'Granid Forl\u00ab\nVancouver\nJ.urkervllic\n>tliu   \t\nfoilgary   ...\n(Port Arthur\nGrand Fork-\n52\nMax.\n76\nD8\n41\nRecord prices for Japanese s\n.pioled   in   New   Vork   market.\nMixed Farming and\nDairying Ranch\nA Going Concern\nWo consider tills an opportunity to\nget started right, This property consists of 150 ncres\u201428 acres in hay,\n2 acres in orchard and garden, bal-\nancb| splendid grazing land in best\ncattle raising valley in the district.\nTho orchard consists of about 1-10\nfruit trees, mostly apple and In full\nbearing, and an abundance of small\nfruits, raspberries, currants, grapes,\nelc. Plenty of water from well and\ncreek for irrigation and domestic uso.\nBuildings consist of 5-rooip house,\nmodern barn 40x40, .log |>arn 20xS0,\nchicken houses, implement shed, root\nhouse,  etc,\nWo can offer the Ranch as a going\nconcern, including all necessary farm\nmachinery, wagon, sleighs, mower,\nhorse, rake, cream separator, cream\ncans, sprayer, etc., etc. Also house\nfurniture\/ stoves, chairs, tables, beds,\ncooking utensils, etc. The live slock\nat present on the properly is also\nineludwd-M8 head cattle, fi horses and\ncolt, pigs, chickens, etc.; also 20\ntons of hay in barn and 2nd crop\ncoming fine. In fact, just as it\nstands today with the exception nf\nthe owner's personal effects, including his piano and sewing machine.\nWe havo had nothing more complete\nto offer in our business experience.\nThe price is $9000. which we\nconsider very low. figure it out\nfor yourself\u2014Total acreage, cleared\nland, buildings, implements, stock,\nfurniture, hay in barn, etc., nnd remember it ia a going concern and\na money maker.\nIf interested call and get full particulars.\nHugh W. Robertson\nSuccessor to McQuarrio & Robertson\nWard St.       Phono 68.      Nolson, B. C.\n.il In-\nMAURICE HAMPTON AND\nA. G.  BROWN  REACH CITY\nTwo c,r Nelson's 101. nun return\nfrom over-ens lust evening in the po\nsons of Maurice Hampton, formerly\nthe Hume hotel Btaff, and Corp. A.\nBrown, who was formerly employed nt\nthe Dominion Exprels c\nfloe here. Both nre si ill\nment for wound- reeelv\nand nro stopping over ii\nfor a few days en route\nnessy Military hospital\nwhore they will underg,\nfurther treatment.\nCorp. Hampton loft Kelson with the\nfirst contingent quota, being after*\nwards posted I,, tho lib battalion of\nthe 1st brigade, with which he Berved\nthroughout his experiences in Prance,\nlie passed through practically all the\nbig engagement* In which the Canadian corps took part, being wounded\nthree limes, ills first two Wounds\nwere slight, but at Amiens, on .luly X\notnpany's ot'-\nundcr treated in actioi\ni Un- dlstrlc\ntor Shaugh\nVancouver\ni six monthi\n\"^\nR.\u20ac^l.$^.10.C ;>\nm:   Packet of    \\\nrFLTMDS\n\\ witt'-Kiti More flics'tham,\/\nA$8o-6W0RTH.0F,'WIYv\/>\nKSTICK^ KLV UTC\u00abER^\nClean to handle.   Sold by all\nDruggist^ Grocers and\nGeneral Stores       \t\nDo You Remember\nThe Old Com Doctor?\nHe stood on llie street,\nin the olden days, and offered a \"magic corn cure.\"\nThe same ingredients,\nharsh and inefficient, are\nsold in countless (onus\ntoday.\nBut they did not end\ncorns, and they do not now.\nNordoespadding.nor does\nparing\u2014methods older still,\nThe One Right Way   \u2022\nModern scientists in the\nBauer & Black laboratories\nhave evolved a perfect\nmethod and embodied it\nin Blue-jay. . \u00ab\nIn 48 hours, while the\ncorn is forgotten, Blue-jay\ncompletely ends it, and\nforever. Hardly one corn\nin ten needs a second\napplication.\nThe way is sure. It is\neasy, pleasant, scientific.\nQuit old-fashionedj methods. Try Blue-jay on one\ncorn\u2014tonight.\nBlue=jay\nThe Scientific Corn Ender\nStops Pain Instantly       Ends Corns Completely\n25c\u2014At Druggists\nBAUER & BLACK, Limited    Chicago, Toronto, New York\nMakers of Sterile Surgical Dressings and Allied Products\n(10241\t\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nof\nrlvrtl\nUn- wound\nnecessitates  tho\nJH    Still    UUtll'IKU-\nthls morning for\nn In the\nbattallo\nlast yur. ha re\nin ins ankle whlcl\ntreatment which he\ning, He will leave\nJtussluiul. where he wil\nlives,\nCorp. Brown left Nelao\nof 11*14 to join  tho .loth\nVlelorln,   with   Which     h\noverseut*.      From    this*\nLranftferred t\" the 16th i\nwhleli he aervod until lie waa severe!\nwounded.   He wus then transferred t\nthe <Jumullun Army Medical con.\nwiiirh he is now attached, Corp\nIs   CXJMM'lhlK    to\nweeks In the city\nmilt\nultiil\nupend a c\nund vlclnltj\nhe\nwit I\n', to\nUrown\nnple\nLORDS  DELAY  GIVING  OF\nSEATS  TO   PEERESSES\nLONDON*.\npress.I -The I\"1\nelded   to   delay\n|\u201e.,\"t'l'!'SI'S   III   SU\nuntil thi- rei\nsettled.\nlullf\ni. I\"\ngiving\nlu  till\ntiKiitmiiii\nAssociate,\ntoday de\n\u25a0  right  i'\nis of lordi\n\u201ef iho house '\"\nIn\nA uimauivil AD, K\u00bbi fi'\u00bb\u00bb n\u00bbm\nUse this blank on whioh to write out your condensed ad., one word In eaoh .pace,\norder or check and mail direct ro The Daily News, Neleon, B.C.\nfour,\nBate:   Ono cent  a  word  each  insortion, six con Becutivo  insertions  charged\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., count as one word.   No ch ar.o less than 25 cents.\nae\nEnoloit money\nEaoh  initial.\nji-ij !\n\u2014*\u2014 \u2014__.   1\u2014| .\u2014\u00ab.\u2014_.\t\nPleaie publish the above adverti\n\u201em,nt  *  times, for which I enclose \u00bb\t\nName\nAddress\nIf desired, replies may be addressed to Box Number, at Th. Daily New. Office.   If \"!*\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\u2022\"*\u2022 \"\u2022\nmailedI .nclos, 10c extra to cover cost of post.,, and .How five word, extra for box number,\nClassified Advertising\n14 FURNI-HED 'ROOMS TO RENT\nfrTfNisTlRn Imusi'lio.pinir r.ums, $S\npor month. Over l'oolo Drug.   (3\u00bb7'l)\nKLUiVlSlIllt.     SUIT-\"\u2014All     -onvont-\nonces.   \/cumplii'irs Art  Studiu,  71 li\nDakar. (3453)\nFOR RENT\u2014Rooma for mon by day,\nwook or month.   Clean, comfortable.\nHot and cold showor baths In connection,   Y. M. C. A. (3100)\nlloi'Kl.KUf.l'ING   ROOMS   for   rent.\nApply C. W. Appleyard. (3107)\nl-I<JH CLMS.Fp^aflJi'P SUITES\nTO  UI.NT\u2014Kerr Apt?\n(..IPS)\n18 ROOM  AND BOARI\")\t\nvTu^G\"\\TAS~wuiu*s\"rouin uml bourd\nIn private house.' Stuto price.   Box\n3715. Dully New (3715)\n86     * FOR SA-E\nl\"t)l! SAI.K\u2014 1 Black mileil eow, 7\nyears old; 1 bay inure, ;u good eon-\ndltion\/M years old; 1 heavy load \\vn_-\nIn good condllli_ri; 1 set heavy\nsleights; leuin harness. Rood as now.\nApply to. \\V. 11. Alexander,' Omnlto\nid, Nelson. (3710)\n20\nLIVESTOCK   FOR  SALE\nFOR\nSAI.K -\n7    COWB,   3\nan\nd  4  years\nold\n, .Jersey\nand Hoist'\niln;\ntwo com-\ning\nfrosli  nc\n:;t   Seiitember,\nl.:M):ii?e,\nPark\nSiiliug,\nB. C.\n(3707)'\nSKVKN cows for sale.     Seo   Nelson\nTransfer ail on back page.        (35.2)\nFOR SALE\u2014J?uro bred Olilu Improved\nChester white pigs; a few fino\nhealthy hours nml sows left. Price\nfrom fir, .upwards. B. E. Church,\nKdgeworal, Ti. C.\u00bb (3137)\n21\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nWANTED\u2014A team of burses with\nharness, weight about lllOO pounds\neach und In good condition. Must bo\ngood and gentle. Oscar llellniiiu,\nWardner, 1!. (.'. if,   .A   ,\u2022      (3703)\n2 BungalowslFor Sale\nHoth    of\nlocation.!.\nthese\n1 rioe,\nin  .good   residential\n$2200 ei.d $2500.  '\nC\u00bb  W. Appleyard\n605 BAKER ST. PHONE 444\n44\nINSURANCE\n{TARMERS ami sto'cUmen, Insure your\ncows and  horses against death  by\nsickness or accident,    Write for particulars and rules.   II. 10. Dill, Nelson.\n(31171)\n10\nMALE   HELP  WANTED\nWANTUD\u2014Porter to meet trains and\nboats.    Apply  Hlriithcuiui Hotel.\n(30SS)\nWANTED\u2014House painters. Steady\nwork. Apply It. 0. Curr, Cranbrook,\n1!.   C. (3G80)\nWIIEM REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nmoiits In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It In The News\u2014It\nrill lieln you.\nWANTED\nWILD pay cash for Itelaylng Ralls 12\nto 5G pounds per yard.\nNATIONAL MACIHNERY CO.. LTD.,\nVancouver, B. ,c.\/      (8414)\n11\nFEMALE  HELP WANTED\nWANTED\u2014Pure   lircil \"llolsloln bull\ncall', three to six months old.   June,\nRock Island. 11. t\\ (3G00)\n23\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE\nFOR SALK\u2014First class !)-ruom luiusy\nslid furniture; well finished and\npainted Insld and out, with big verandah and full size Imseniem. Also\nstable, chicken bouse and wood shed;\n3S bearing fruit trees and amall fruits,\netc. Joining llosennuil. Price $2000.\nApply .1. K. Annable. 13723)\nYOU can run a 25-word ud. In Ibis\ncolumn ,for 25 cents, or six  times\nfor SI cash in advnnco.\nSIXTKKN-ACIll. fruit and poultry\nranch on main road, one mile from\nNelson. Good house and outbuildings;\namnio water supply. Thirty-five hundred, on terms. Reasonable cash offer\nconsidered,    llox 3710, Daily News.\n(3710)\nKOl.' SAI.K- Ton acres .ou Kontelmy\nriver, seventn'ii miles from Nelson;\ntwo miles .front station. Partly clour.\nI.   Dandy chicken ranch.   Apply Box\n1880, Dally .News. (8089)\nWANTED\u201401(1 to help look alter two\nsmall children and dp light housework.    Mrs. H. Morgan, Fairview.\n(3725)\n22   MISCELLANEOUS\u2014WANTED\nWANTED~To buy, crown neck bcejrl\nI bottles, 40 cents per dozen qu-rts;|l\n20 cents por dor.cn pints, f.o.b shipping!\npoint. Joe and John Perry, bottl\u00bbl\ndealers, Fernle,  U.  0. (3443M\nWANTED\u2014Two tents In good ordorJ\nCheap   for   cash,     Charles   MooreJ\nCreston. (8781)|\n39\nSCHOOLS\nTHE JAMES LYON\nI BOARDING SCHOOL FOR BOYS..\nSpokane, Wn.\nScud for literature.      (3561)|\n51    COMMISSION  MERCHANTS\njSptCJlEltS;     PRODUCE     sold\ncommission.    VI.   G.   Joy,   Box   .87,1\nNelson, II. C. (3-12)1\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nWANTKU \u2014 General     servant.      Nu\nWashing nml mi children.   Bo$ \u00ab\"-\u00b0.\nDally News. <3720)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced Pales lndy for\ndry  goods  store,    State  experience\nmul reference.   Box B71D. Dully Newt*.\n(37111)\nWANTED\u2014Dining  room girl  at once.\nCranbrook Hotel, Cranbrook, B. C.\n13713)\nWHEN REPLYING TO.ADVJ-CKT1SE-\nmenis In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It In The News\u2014It\nwill  help you.\nWANTED\u2014Dining\ngirl for tea room.\nHume Hotel.\nroom    girl;    also\nFirst class wages.\n(34r.!.)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced hotel girl for\ndining room and upstairs work. Outlet Hotel, Vroctor. (3-115)\nUSE these columns ii you have anything to sell or want to huy any*\nthing. A 25-WOtd nd. costs 2i\"ic Coi'\none insertion or $1 for a week, cash\nin advance,\nOU QUICK SALE (Owner in Nelson\nfor lo days)-\u2014li-aere ranch on Grun-\nS road, one mile from Nelson: good\nroom house ami harn:; about l acre\ncleared, with \"u fruit trees just com-\nng in hearing.   Apply L*ox 3tw,\">, Dally\nNewa. (3875)\nFOR SA LE A%A SAGI11 Fl(' E\u2014Mrs.\nWljoelor  has  placed  her fine resi-\n'iico  at  Alrtsworth   on   tho  market.\nThis Is a lovely home and is connected with hot Minora! Springs, having\nhot mineral waior hath the yeur round.\nLovely   grounds,   goqd   lawn   and   l'i\ngood fruit trees, fronting on Kootenay\n1(0. Tlie house Is lin ni:,h*xl throughout ami us it stands cost over $7onn.\nMrs. Wheeler Is not returning tu Can-\n13 SITUATIONS WANTED\u2014MALE\npi I81TION   WANTED as  bOokkoopeif\nr office manager, hy an uxpert\nhigher aecounlunl. Can furnish hest\nof references. Apply Box 370G, Dully\nNews. (3700.\npor-\nd io\nMARRIED MAN, young, doslrei\nmanont position on ranch. Ui\nhorses uml cattle; good milker. Fruit\nranch or otherwise. Stale wages, etc.\nApply llox 370.'., D-illy News.     (87l)5)\nproperly can he purrlms.\n.1. E. Annahle. (3D7\nada.   Thi;\nfor (too.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nmenta In Condensed Columns, Ulndlj\nnientlou you eaw It In Tho News\u2014P\nvlll  help you.\n4b PROPERTY   WANTED\nwTNTEI)\"''1jWl^Ntrs^Tu^mce, ol\ndairy, fruit, poultry and mixed\nfanning ranches, We have buyers\nWaiting. Send us the lull piirliciilars\nof your ranch. Don't delay. Tomlin-\nboj. Si Dunn- 2\\:\\ Iicoson -K Llnolmm\nBluCtf.    I'hiiue Mu,:i2, Talgary.     Ltr.Slt\n34 TEACHERS   WANTED\nWANTED \"a tciie'lier Tor Sascddb\nSchoiil; must have not less than 2nd\nclass certificate, Salary, which Includes janitor work, $1820 per annum,\nLady leaeher with mine musical talent\npreferred.     Apply   lo   K.   G.   RUchli\nCascade, n. <'. (37L:)\nAdv^-rtislng   in   these   columns   pays\nwell.   That Is why so many people\nuse Classified Ads.\nTEAOUEi.    wanted    tor\"  Kingsgnto\nSchool.   Apply Socretafy.      -(8704)\nHOSPITALS\nPrivate^ Hospital]\nLICENSED BY PROVINCIAL\nGOVERNMENT. ,\nWc give p-rt'.c-l-i' attontion to nlU\nfemiil. trauhlo\u2014horae-lllto apartmenw\nfor ladles awaiting acouchment.   Cer-I\ntifk'cl nui'Boa sent out on private enseal\ntown or oountry.   jHlghest references;\u25a0\nreasonable  terms;   Insiioetloii  Invited*\nMrs. Mooro, Suporintondent.        1\nTHE   HOME   PRIVATE   HOSPITAL,!\nFalls and Baker Sts., Nolson, B.C.\nPhone 372'for Appointment.\nP. O. Box 772.\n(3417)1\nACCOUNTANTS\nW. H. FALDING,\nPublic Aeeouiunnt. Hank of Montreal]\nI'lianiliels,   Itosslund,   U.C.\n(3418)|\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS\nD. .1. ROBERTSON, p, 1). D. & &, 303]\nVlctoHa   street.    I'hone   1192;\nphone ISi-.I. \u25a0    (34-Olj\nSTAN'I.AllD KCnNlTUniC COM-J\n1'ANY\u2014C. .1. Carlson. Undertaker.]\nI'lulertnkors und Kmbalmers\nFuneral Direetors. The finest ancB\nmost up-to-date undertuking parlors!\nand ('Impel in interior 11. c. Lady at-j\nteiHlant for women and children.. Jlayf\nI'hone 8_. Night l'lioue llj- and C4.\"\n(3421)|\nASSAYERS\nli. W   WIDDIiWSilN. llox A-1108. Ncl-|\nson, B.C,    Standard  western chare.\n(31-2\nFLORISTS\n6.rriwi'iiT.i..s ciiiii.Nrinrsios,\nsou. cut flower\nand floral design\n(3123)]\nENGINEERS\n^Bros., Burden\nNelson, B, C\nCo\n:V SIJwWORD advertisement wan he ri.n\nIn this column for a week for 51\ncash In advance.   It will pay you well.\nMAN Who thufotlgtlly understands nil\nranch vvnrk, good milker, wonts iier-\nmancnt plnco. Write. gmtiH run pnr-\nllcular- and wages, lo llox 300, Nelson,\nII. C. '30721\n18\nMl.I\nARTICLES  FOR  SALE\nCIVIL   AND   MINING    ENGINEERS|\nB.C.,  Albeila and   Dominion\nLAND  SURVEYORS\nCrown Grant Aijonts.      Bluo Printingl\n(342l|\na. l. Mcculloch,\nHydraulic Engineer,\nProvincial   Land   Surveyor.\nIi-.iker Wt., Nelson,  B.C.\nTIIK.M QUICK!   OuBliof poison,'\ns.'m unci $1.2:,; .ilosouitu (ill,'3r,e; fly\nill l\u201er Collie, 40e pi.; Izal Disinfect-'\nnir   I'nwiler,   30e;    lied   Hug\nA.  D,  NASH,\nMining   Engineer.\nI'olson,'Consunations.   Explorations,\nDevelop.)\npints   60c;   Insect   l'owder,    20e.     tin; I\nKeeling.   .Be  nn,I   :,0i-.      Mu 11  ordersiRoom\nfilled promplly.   Kiilherfoid Dnig Co.,|    '\nSNAI'I\u2014TW^liiy-lneh bicycle, new this\nspring, In good condition, MO. \"Apply Jteggie  McCorthy.    Phone   10.\n(3717)\nment .Reports.\n\"Royal   Ciink   lildg.,\nNelson!\n((11201\nL'81. these columns Ir you have anything lo sell or want to buy any-\nthing. A 2.-word ad. cosls $2_c for\nnrie Insertion or Jl for a week, cnaft\nIn ailvarton.\nfull HAI.M-Two-lioise potato digger,\ngnod  oh new.   .See or write R  1'.\nMills, Route No. 1, Nelson. (3I1SI)\nA. R. HEYLAND,    ,.\nBritisli Columbia Land Surveyor.\nSurveys    of    all    descriptions   'mudtf\nanywhere  in   Itritlsh  Columbia.\nLands- Rcporti-d   ou   and. Valued.\nKASl.li,  11. I,'. 1'! U.  BOX 47i\n(342\u00bb|\n42 MATRIMONY\njiAitifY^ifuiiyTiJfit rTr?Ticiiiiii'- ri-ee.\n\u2014V.   Morrison,   L3502.   W.   Holden,\nSeattle, Wash. (3411)\nwantku \u2014 Teacher     tor     Ciifibh\nSchool, Glenllly, ll. C.    Address ap-\npllcatlonfl   to  A.   I,,   llurnhuldl,  Sery..\nYiihk, 11. C. (301)11\nTEACHER WANTED for Wanklyn\n.School, near Cranbrook. Apply lo\nKenneth W. Greene, llux 3S4, Cran-\nbroo.v. Secretary Wanklyn School\nHoard. 13002)\n28 MISCELLANEOUS\nwTfmS^mzXu^ffrWliKriS.\n5 CENTS A POUND; SMALL\nPIECES NOT WANTED. DAILY\nNEWS. (3201\nA Classified Ad. will bring result*\nt__.._\n37    BOATS AND AUTOMOBILES\nuSnTHVPHfTtcTiirmiT^^\nfirst-class        conditio-, .Musters.\nWatertriint. (3727)\nKiiH   SALE\u2014Chc_l.   cash   or   terms,\nChevrolet   ear,   privately  used;   hnd\nbest of care.    Will ilemonstl'litr.    Ap-\nlilv ownei',  Ilex 374, lliissland,  II. C,\n13711)\nboat FOR SALE\u2014Mahogany hull, 20\nfeet long, nolo steering wheel, ond\ntup, wind shield nnd ventilators;\nsplendid condition; going cheap fur\nj'tSO.   Apply lu II, A. Slasters, Nelson.\nCtfiSOl\nA _G'-WOItD advertisement call he run\nIn  this column for a  week  fnr Jl\nami! lu -tl_iuiuv. il Kill \\>Ai- J\u2122 K'-U. J_,\nWHEN RKl'Li'lNQ TO ADVERTISE,\nmenta in Condensed Columns, klndlj\nmention you saw It In Tlie News\u2014II\nwill helo vnn.\n48 PERSONAL\nAiwiClT^uP1^\u00abPor*TmKh^    sTrni'\nt,0c   wdth   birth   date.    102   flrango:\nAve., Toronto, (3C.2S)'\n\u202219\nFARMS  FOR  SALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Several improved farms\nsuitable for dairying, stock raising,\nfruit and mixed fUrmlng. TrlCe re-S-\nonublc; terms to suit purchaser. John\nOrnham. l'crry SldliiB. (3398)\nSECOND HAND DEALERS^\n.THE AItlC pays cash for second band\n'furniture, stoves;\n000 Vernon; l'h. 861.\n(3410)\nAdvertising In these columns pays\nwell. That Is why so many pcoplu\nw Classified Ads.\n35~       ~\u00a3<fprR\u00a3NY\"^\nfor   liioNT\u2014During  Atbjiiit,  four\nroom cottage, across lake, opposllo\ncity; partly furnished; large verandah,\ngood view, spring water. Rent twenty\ndollais.    1.1. K Dili. (3730)\nTo RENT\u2014Offices on upper floor K.\nW. C. block. Apply A. McDonald\nCo.     (3440)\n33    FRUIT\" AND  VEGETABLES'\nSi:Tci?~cTfFTiTIffi^\nSupply your own plelters.   fl\nARCHITECT\nGEORGE C. EGgT All.A.I.C.\nARCHITECT\nBox 1151 Nelson, B. C|\nBuilding sketches,  plans and\nspecifications. (3420|\nPHYSICIANS'a'N.R SURGEpN-\nDr. A.T.Spa nklfe\nM. D., C. M.\nEYE, NOSE, EAJ? and THROAT j\nSPECIALIST\nOffice;\nSuite   121-122,   New   1'.   Burns\nBldg., corner 8th, Ave,\nand 2nd St. E.\nCALGARY\nPhones; Office M2S4S\n-.        .   . House M-0.77. .>\"H|*!\n(3431)\nWHOLESALE\n'DONALD   &   CO..   WHOgjgi\nProvision   ^FM\nof   Teas,  ICoffcoJI\nA.   MAC!\nsale   Grocers  am\nchants,   Importers\nSpices, Dried F'tuits, Staple nni\nFancy Oroeeiics, \u2022 Tobaccos, Clgarfl\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and Pscklnl\nHouse Products, office and warehousrfl\ncorner ol Front nnd Hall streets. V.<f\nllox 10!)\u00bb; telephone 28 nnd 23._  (3438|\nAUCTIONEERS\t\n^VATI'IRIIAN & CO., Opera\"Hill\n(343j|\nWM.   (TTI.I.It,\n471.    I'lliine 7\nArJCT'lONEER.    Bel\n(3431\nBUSINESS. COLLEGE?..\nN Rlson    I.USlNfflS& \" \"E6|xKffia\nllnv  and   night  clrthses.     Complcl\nurse.  -Apply l'.<>. Bn\" ''I\n , .li\u00bbffl|\nIf Cliih.  hunim'Hs\nA.litii!n^-._iM__\u00bb\n TfJui^.i^iii-'-.^--\n_4_jmnuw'aniiwiri\nfe^Czpy\n73?\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1919\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPAGE SEVEN\nn\n\u25a0my\nI   Wl\n!..\n- NEVER\nSAW ITS EQUAL\ns    Murray    After    Twelve    Years'\nProfessional Service, Praises\nTanlac.\nhnve   heen  a  trained  nurse   for\nIve  years,  and   huve  had a   great\nI to do with medicines, but when\nernes to building a person up from\nveak,   run-down   condition,  1  havo\nr seen anything to equal Tanlac,\"\nMiss A.   i\\l.   Murray,  who  lives\n02 Warwick Block, Winnipeg, while.\nIng to a Tanlac representative the\nIr day.\nIss  Murray   sucessfully   practiced\nprofession In New York for eight\n\u25a0s  before  coming  to  Canada  lour\n\u25a0s ago.   She has been eipially\nilul   bore,   and   hor   services   are\nlily In demand by lhe most wealthy\nInfluential people In tho city.\nm   nursed  thirty-five  cases  of  In-\nWnza  last  winter,'1   continued   Miss\nIrrny, \"and 1 had to work night and\nI almost, and  lhat  was too much\nj me, and  pulled  me down  some-\n^ig awful.   Finally 1 hud nn attack\n, the ifi'u' myself, and after pulling\nlough  tlmt, 1 was in an extremely\nIk, run-down condition.   1 was just\nI'rly exhausted all the time, 1 wus\nnervous, and  for the first lime\nlife, I was unable to sleep well,\nwould very often  lie in bed und\n1 for hours,  trying to get sleepy.\n1 was just so nervous and run-\nn that I was actually irritable, and\nmost  trivial   things   would  upset.\nMy appetite left me entirely, and\nwere  many  days  when a  cup\nl was all 1 could take at a meal\nJlno of my friends Induced me to\nTanlac, und ll certainly Is won-\nIJ'ul  t..o way  lt  has  built me  up.\nly,   I   have  actually  gained  fifteen\n'nds already, anil 1 have only taken\nbottles so fnr. All that noi'VOUS-\ni has left me and 1 sleep just like\nIhlld every night, and Hint tired,\nRusted reeling hus left me alto-\njler. In tact, 1 feel just line all the\nind 1 unhesitatingly recommend\nI lo everybody. 1 never lose an\njoilunily to advise people who ure\n|k and run-down, like 1 was, to\nTanlac, for 1 believe It Is the\nmedicine they can get to build\nIn up. I. am sure that anybody who\n'Tanlac a fair trial will feel Just\niht'nbout it\u2014that it is a real medl-\n| and can be relied upon to do Just\nJtt tlley say It will do.\"\ninitio is sold in Nelson by Canada\ng & Rook Store, In Rossland by\n|I1. Wulnman, In Creston by Cres-\nDrug & Hook Co., in Hull River\nJb. E. Markle, in Field by Field\n:g Co., in Pernio by A. W. Ulcus\n\u25a0\\, In Kaslo by Frank Abey, in Trail\nll_. IV. Ila-elgood. In Itevelsloke by\nIter Bros., in Nakusp by 15. 11. S.\n}.oan, in Cranbrook by Beattie-\nlie, Ltd., in Wiltner by Elena Muy\nllor, In lloldcn by .L A. Huckham, in\nL Denver by Chits. F. Nelson, and\n!.'mir by A. Dowllng.\u2014Advt\nllinrlis E. Ellis Hospital lor the EtV\nIf Ion or Fatherless llirls was open\nimniHMi\nNews of Sport\nTO BE ERECTED\nLaunch Club  Will   Huve   New  Homo\nSuitablo for Dances and Other\nSocial   Functions.\nA new fireproof club house will he\nerected ils soon nn possible by the\nKootenay Launch club of Nelson to re-\nplace the one which was destroyed\nrecently on lhe waterfront. Bu tiding\noperations will bo commenced as soon\nas plans havo been prepared for the\nnew structed, stated L. B. DeVebcr,\ncommodore of lhe chili, yesterday. The\nold float will be used for a founda\ntlon.\nThe new club house, which will bo\na one storey affair, 00x30 feet, the\nsame dimensions as the old one, but\nwill consist of only one large room,\nwhich will be available to the members for dances and other social functions. It is also intended to have\ndressing rooms, elc, in connect inn\nwith lhe new building.\nREGINA RACES\nItKGINA, July 31.\u2014favorites copped the money In the lasl day of the\nrace meeting here, when Calgary Earl\nwon the free-for-all In straight heats\nand Tom Carylo did likewise in the\n2:17 pace. Gomul and Hag won the\nrunning i venls, Once more there was\nan Immense crowd watching the\nces. The. hesi time was made by\nCulgary Karl, when, In the Second\nheat, he stepped the mile In 2:10,\nequalling the time he made on Monday. Summary:\n_!:1\" pace or trot, purse $800\u2014Tom\nirlyle, 11.11. (Huher), 1-1-1; Sir Archibald, ,1UI. iSt. Denis), 2-2-:!; Dean\nSwift, Il.tJ. (ltompler), 4-3-3; Dr. Mo-\nlughlin, B.G. (A. Mcdlrr), 3-4-4.\nGarland Mac, ll.G. (Vance), 5-0-5*\nBeauty Silk, B.M. (Guest), G-r.-T.; Main\nDirect, D.M. (Kcnnerh \"-lis- Time\n2:15, 2:18, 2:17 1-2. *\nl'*ree-for-all trot or pace, purse $800\n-Calgary Earl, S.S., by Karl .Junior\n(Keener), 1-1-1; Hal Victor, S,G.\n(Ruzlcka), 2-2-4; Mildred Direct, B.M,\n(R. McGIrr), 3-3-2; Armadilla, U.M.\n(lluber), 4-4-'>. Time 2:12 3-4, 2:10,\n2:12 1-2.\none mile running (Constitutional),\npurse $200\u2014Oomul, won; Bonnie\nBuck, second; Yorkist, third. Time,\n1:4!\".   1-2.\nI*'Ivo furlongs, running (Constitutional), purse $2f.O\u2014Bag, B.M,, won;\nKreda T. second; Chandlller, third;\nTime, 1:02 1-2.\n| ui  I'liiiadeiphid.\nago,   leaving\nI \"ge.\nMr. Ellis died ten\n$.\u25a0,,0110,1.00  for  the\nBECOMING ACTIVE\nMay Be Several Fours on Water Shortly\u2014May 'Hold Regatta Before\nSeason  Ends.\nThero is a movement on foot in\nrowing club circles, state officials of\ntho club, to get together as many\ncrews as possible among lhe younger\nclement of the city who nro beginning\nto show a keenness for that line\nsport.\nOwing to the lateness of tho season\nfor commencing active opcrutlons It\nIs now Impossible, for the local clul\nto accept the invitation of outside\nclubs to lake part In their regattas\nhut It is felt that here is somo ex\ncellent material lo work on locally\nif t,he boys will get out, and toward\nthe end of the season nn excellent\nlocal regatta could he arranged.\nT. D. Desbrisay, captain of the local\n(larsnu-n, is expected tn take some of\nthe boys under his wing during the\ncoming week.\nSeveral of the boys are practically\nliving down nt the club houso these\ndays and enjoying a run on the lake\nmorning and evening. Eddie Murphy\nnnd Fred Grant are practicing steadily, while It Is expected that Capt.\nGeorge Paterson will he on the water\nduring his stay In town with his old\nrunning mate, T. D. Desbrisay.\nThe local oarsmen had been invited\nto take part in the Vancouver regatta\non August IB next, but It was found\nimpracticable and all plans will now\nbe laid with a vlow to an active part\nIn all regattas possible next year.\nThe boats nre all in splendid shape,\nurordlng to those members of the club\nwho have been on the water this year.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nST.   LOUIS,   .luly   31.\u2014Phllnilelphlii\nilloctcd 1(1 hits for it total of lid buses\noff four St. bonis pitchers toduy anil\neasily  won  tbe  second   gumo  of the\nseries, 11  to J. lt. II. E,\nPhiladelphia  ....\" ll  10    l\nSt.  l.ouis     J   12     0\nBatteries\u2014Packard  nnd   Trngrcssor;\nlaeobs, Sherdell, Ames, May and Clo-\n-   ._.'*\nnions.\nI'lTTSBUltG, July 81.\u2014New York\ndefeated Pittsburg today in the closing- game of the series, 5 to 1.\nIt. Hi E.\nNew York           \"   10     1\nI'lttshurg     2     6     0\nHatteries\u2014Douglas and Gonzales;\nCarlson, Hamilton nnd Lee.\nBrooklyn-Chicago postponed; rain.\nCINCINNATI, July 31.\u2014The Beds\nshut out lioston twice today in the\nclosing games of tho series, 6 to 0\nond 2 to 0.   First game\u2014     It.  H,  E.\nBoston     0     3     0\nCincinnati     5     0     1\nBatteries\u2014Rudolph and Gowdy\nh'lsher and Wlngo.\nSecond game\u2014 R. H. E.\nBoston     0     i     1\nCincinnati     2     5     0\nUatlerles\u2014Ken I ing and Wilson; T.u\nQue and Uariden.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nToledo ...\nLouisville\nRACES POSTPONED.\nCOLUMBUS,     July     31.\u2014 Today\ngrand   circuit   races   were   postponed\nbecause of ruin.   Today's program will\nbe   raced   tomorrow   and    tomorrow's\nraces will be moved up to Suturdi\nun open date.\nA Classified Ad. will brlmr results\nTENNIS AT SEABR1GHT\n8EABRIGIIT, (int.. July 31.\u2014Leonard llcnkman accounted for a reversal in Ibe .setni-finiil round of the\nettp singles on the courts of tbe\nSe_br!ght Utwn Tennis and Cricket\nclub today. The Princeton star conquered p. ii. Alexandria 3-6, 6-3, o-i.\nHouUmun made remarknbte \"gets\"\nand tired the veteran by bis overhead driving. William Tilden, 2nd.\ndefeated Walter M .Hall lu tbe other\nsemi-final, 6-8, 5-7, 6-2.\nIn tbe doubles, seml-flnnl. Tilden\nand Vincent Richards, national champion, defeated Robert Klnsey und\nAxel Graves, California, G-2, 4-6, 0-4.\nmul Hall and He Ikinan outplayed\nAlexandria and Howard Voshel, tri-\nslule   winners,   (1-3,  0-1.\nlolumbus   \u25a0\nIndianiilopis\nMinneapolis    10\n[unsas   Clly    ,15\nst,   Paul-Milwaukee \u2014 Poslyoned;\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWASHINGTON, .luly 31.\u2014SI. Louis\nmade It two out of three from Wusb-\nnglon  by  taking the   final   game  of\nthe  series,  3  to  2.\nSt.  Louis  \t\nWashington   \t\nUatlerles\u2014Shocker\nJohnson and l'lcnieh.\nlt.  11.   E.\n  3     7     1\n  2     7     1\nand    Soverold:\nTENNIS AT VICTORIA.\nVICTORIA, July 31.\u2014In the men's\ndoubles today one of the finest\nmutches so far seen in the llrlish\nColumbia lawn tennis tournamont was\nplayed between Vdrley and MeQill of\nWinnipeg, against 1'ers nnd Richards\nof Vancouver, the latter pair winning,\n6-8,  6-4.  6-1.\nNEW    YORK,    July    81.\u2014Chicago\nmoke even on its fourth gome of the\nseries with New York here today, tak\ning tho last game, 7 lo 2.      11.  II. K\nChicago   .7   1.1     1\nNew York    2     6     1\nHatteries\u2014Kerr nnd Scbalk; Shore,\nSmnliwood and Hannah.\nBOSTON, July 31.\u2014Tbe 10-year-old\nWnite lloyt, pitching his first game\nlor Hoston today, gets credit for defeating Detroit, 2 lo 1, In 12 innings,\ntho winning run coming over with\ntwo out in the twelfth on a rilling by\nUmpire lllldeiirnnil, who said that\nAlnamlth hud Interferred witli McNal-\nly between third and home.    R, ll. E.\nDetroit     I   10     1\nBoston     2   12     0\nBatteries\u2014Avers und Aillsmlth;\nlloyt and  Schang.\nI\nHigh-Class Printing\nWork and Prompt\nDelivery\nWHEN YOU WANT PRINTING YOU WANT THE WORK WELL DONE AND YOU WANT THE\nJOB DELIVERED JUST AS QUICKLY AS GOOD WORK WILL PERMIT.\nYOU NATURALLY WANT YOUR OFFICE AND PERSONAL STATIONERY TO BE REPRESENTATIVE OF YOUR OWN EFFICIENCY IN BUSINESS. POOR PRINTED STATIONERY CREATES\nAN UNFORTUNATE IMPRESSION OF THE BUSINESS WHICH SENDS IT OUT. WELL PRINTED\nSTATIONERY CREATES A GOOD IMPRESSION.\nWell-Printed Stationery\nIs a Business Builder\nCleveland-Philadelphia\nrain.\npostponed;\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSeattle  1, Salt Lake'2.\nPortland 0, LoB Angeles 5.\nSan Francisco 4, Sacramento 5,\nVernon 6, Oakland -V\nAT THE  THEATRES.\nLETTERHEADS\nNOTEHEADS\nBILLHEADS '\nTAG\nGUMMED .LABELS\nLOOSE LEAF SHEETS OF ALL\nKINDS\nMEMORIAL CARDS\nDANCE PROGRAMS\nVISITING CARDS\nWEDDING INVITATIONS\nWEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS\nENVELOPE \"STUFFERS\"\nENVELOPES\nSTATEMENTS\nINVOICE FORMS\nTICKETS\nLEDGER SHEET!\nHOTEL MENUS\nCHRI8TMAS CARDS\nBUSINES8 CARD3\nWEDDING CAKE BOXES\nPAMPHLET8\nPOSTERS\nRU'\nD FORMS OF ALL KINDS MADE UP TO SUIT YOUR OWN\nPARTICULAR PURPOSES\nVOUCHER CHECKS\nVOUCHERS\nPAMPHLETS\nFOLDER8\nORDINARY  CHECKS\nBUTTER WRAPPERS\nBOOKLETS\nODGERS\nTHE DAILY NEW8 JOB DEPARTMENT WILL PRINT ANY OF THESE ARTICLES FOR YOU AND\nPRINT THEM WELL      ID QUICKLY.\nMAIL YOUR ORDERS TO THE\nDaily News Job Department\n\"THE HOME OF GOOD PRINTING\"\nNELSON, B. C.\nThe Gem\nHale Hamilton, Ol \"Ot-Rlch-Qlllek\nWallingford\" lame In \"$5000 An Hour,\"\nwill be seen at tlle Gem theatre tonight -_\u25a0.,! tomorrow, lt Is a screen\nadaptation of the famous story of the\nMtme mime by George Randolph Chester, noted dramatist anil writer. The\nstory Is of unusual vigor und strength\nami presents Mr. Hamilton In tlie\ndynamic leading role which is one\neminently suited to bis virile and\ncompelling style or comedy, and lis\n.lohni.y Gamble, he Is seen at his\nbest.\nThe slcrv deals with the problems\nof n young man wh ohas set himself\nthe seemingly Impossible task ot\nmaking a million dollars iu six weeks\n\u25a0 five thousand on hour. The reason\nfor this is :i girl\u2014It be does not have\ntlie money In the appointed time he\ncannot, In honor, ask her to marry\nhim, so obviously, the money must\nbe found, Ills methods ure so convincing and full of Ingenious stihtley\nthat he curries nil his business usso-\nI'lates with lihn through a series of\nbreathless adventures which will\nappeal to those who admire vigor uml\ndetermination In a man and love und\nloyalty In the girl who loves him.\nSt.irl.md Theatre\nA typical Marguerite Clark ploture Is\n\u2022Little Miss Hoover,\" which Is the\nhill ut tlle Starliiml theatre tonight\nnd tomorrow. The story Is based\nUpon the novel of \"The Golden Bird,\"\nwritten by Marin Thompson Daviess,\nmil deals with a patriotic young society woman who raises chickens In\nan effort to do Iter hit toward winning\ntho wnr. There it; an excellent love\nstory and many situations of exceptional human interest. The support\nis of the highest ilnss.\nLONDON.\u2014In England the sensation of tho hour is the so-called\nWalsh report, which is ono of tho\nmost damaglnb attacks upon Brltisli\nrulo in Ireland that ever saw tho\nlight English officials and army\noftlcor- nro accused of most ot tho\nserious crimes in the calendar from\nmurder >i, arson, the victims being\nin all coses Sinn Feiners, men,\nwomen e.i il children, Tho prisons\nIn which these unfortunates ure confined nre said to he unfit for caging\nwild hensts. Trim by jury has been\nabolished. Hundreds of men have\nbeen In Jail for months without\nknowing Ihe charges against them.\nThere Is an army of occupation\nestimated at 100.00(1, and it Is treating Ireland worse than the Germans\ntreated Belgium. Tbe charges are.\nns a rule, of a wholesale character,\nand lacking in details such as names\nund  dates.\nAmerican Friends of Sinn Fein\nThe report wns written by Frank\n1'. Walsh und Edward F. Dunne,\ntwo prominent Irish-Americans who\nwere sent to Europe by a number of\nIrish societies to further Irish Independence'. They tried to get tlie\ncause of Ireland beforo tbe peace\nconference, und sought in vain for\nan interview with Lloyd George. Then\nthey nsked for passports tbat would\nenable Ihem lo examine the Irish\nquestion ul close quarters. Provided\nwith these they seem lo havo spent\nmost of their time in going from one\njull to another. Without passing an\nopinion on the report, one might\nsuggest Hint if Ihe British government was willing lhat two such\navowed enemies us Dunne nnd Walsh\nshould inspect the Irish prisons il\ndid nol have u grent deal it was\nashamed to show.\nSeventeen Grave Charges\nThe seventeen grave charges of tbe\nreport are us follows;\nFirst\u2014Within the lust few months\nut least ten citizens hnve heen killed\nhy soldiers and constables under circumstances which, in a mnjorlty of\nthe cases, tbo coroner's juries found\nto he wilful murder under the laws\nof England. Ibe last tnan having been\nmurdered less than a month ago.\nIn nil these eases the perpetrators\nof the crimes havo gone unpunished.\nSecond \u2014 Hundreds of men and\nwomen have been confined for months\nin the vilest prisons without nny\ncharges being preferred against them.\nThird\u2014At least five men have died\nas n result of atrocities perpetrated\nagainst them while in prison. Post\nmortem examinations in some coses\ndisclosed marks of violence upon the\nbodies.\nFourth\u2014Prisoners were confined in\nnarrow cells with their hands handcuffed behind Ihem day and night.\nIn    Ibis    condition    Ihey    ore    fed    by\njull attendants, They ore permitted\nno opportunity for answering the\ncalls of nnttlre and (ire compelled In\nlie in their clothing, befouled by\nhuman excrement fnr duys at a lime.\nFifth\u2014Many persons aro confined\nIn cells which arc not large enough\nfur one mnn. They are not. provided\nwith beds or honks of uny kind, but\nare compelled lo sleep on hare floors.\nThere nre no toilet facilities, and\nreceptacles contain human offal which\nlias necessarily accumulated upon tb\nfloors, where men ore compelled to\nsleep  iii  filth  night ufter night.\nSixth\u2014The food Is insufficient und\nunwholesome, The prisoners, both\nmen and women, nre compelled to\nlive days upon waler and poorly\nlinked  sour,  stale   bread.\nSeventh \u2014Hundreds of men anil\nwomen havo been discharged from\njail with Impaired constitutions, in\nmany _oases incurable invalids, as u\nresult uf their treatment.\nEighth\u2014During part of the winter\nand siiring streams or ice cold water\nwere poured over the men confined\nIn lhe Jails, und Ihey were compelled\nlo lie all night on cold floors In unhealed cells In Ihelr wot clothing.\nMany of them were afterwards removed to outside hospitals suffering\nwiiii pneumonia.\nKidnapping  Children\nNinth \u2014 Policemen and soldiers\nhabitually are permitted to enter\ncells where political prisoners are\nconfined anil heat them with Ihelr\nclubs.\nTenth\u2014Solitary confinement in ils\nmost horrible form has generally\nbeen practised, Numbers of prisoners have been taken directly from\nJails to Insane asylums, rendered\nmaniacs  by  thoir treatment.\nEleventh\u2014Large bodies of political\nprisoners in certain Jails have been\nkept without any food whatever for\nduys nt a  time.\nTwelfth\u2014Tho right of privacy no\nlunger exists in Ireland. Homes constantly are being invaded bv armed\nmen nnd the occupants, including\ndelicate Wornon und young children,\nrnelly beaten and otherwise nml-\nTHERE ARE WONDERFUL\nVALUES IN\nSILK SUITS\nOffered to-day in our Ladies'  Wear Salon.\nSuperb New York Models in strictly up-to-\nthe-minute styles.\nBeautiful Late Summer Costumes\nBeautiful Navg Silk Suit\nWith Qrn\nsit back;\n\u25a0 Trlcotlno Vpn.p\ntrimmed   with  si\ni nml Cnll.-i\ni[  buttons.\nS mot* king\nSiK(!  18.\nSpecial $39.50        }\nAN  ELEGANT SILK SUIT\nIn shii-lp of ('oponlingpn with Kawn Trlcotlnr rollnr.\nBelt wilh pin tucks from waist; trimmed Grey poarl\nbuttons.   Size lis.\nSpecial $39.50       1\nVERY SMART\nBLACK SILK SUIT\nWhile Tricullnn Collnr with lllnck and Gold medallions. Smocked effect nt waist with 'accordion\npleuted insets,   drey pearl bullous,   size 40.\n\\     Special Price $37.50     |\nONE ONLY GIRL'S NAVY SERGE DRESS\nSize\nstyle\nyenrs.   Trimmed While Brnld,\nSPECIAL   'I'll   CLEAR   \t\nmade   in  low   helled\n55,00\n2 ONLY  INFANTS' WHITE  PIQUE COATS\nNorfolk style.    Extra\nSPECIAL VALUE, e\nquail ly,\nell    \t\n38\nWith   While\nSPECIAL, i\n2 ONLY SMALL BOYS'\nnelt, collar and cuffs.\nLINEN  SUITS\n.Ut\nWOMEN'S DIVIDED UNDERSKIRTS\ned flounce, lu colors nf Grey, S:,x,, a\nie  Silk.\n$3.85\n(fhr Button's flay cftmpuTM\nI reined.\nThlllei\nRepublic\nWESTERN CANADA  LEAGUE\nScore:\nSaskatoon   \t\nWinnipeg  \t\nHatteries --  Mllle:\nMurphy uiul Urown.\nK.  II.  E.\n. ii   10     .1\n.471\nBuyers!\nDorothy Wlllard, st. Catharines,\neight years old, wns drnwneil at l'orl\nDalhouslo hi li.\nEASTERN\nHATS  V CAPS\ninth \u2014 Children of suspected\nins, many of them of lender\nyears, are kidnapped nnd their parents kepi In Ignorance of their where\n.ihoiiis for weeks.\nFourteenth\u2014Women and children\nof refinement and respectability are\narrested   without   warrants,  and   in\ncompnny   with   rough,   brutal   soldiers\n   transported  to distant purls of\nEngland, whero they ure\nJull    wilh    the   lowest\nCHIHUAHUA  BRED  FROM\nRACE   OF  BIG  SQUIRRELS\nEL PASO.\u2014T\nKnitted breeds\nImn.     pronoun,\nwhich is nlso o\ncent uf ull  the\n-'- i\nOgS\nllcst of all\nis the Chilian -\n,1      \"Sho-wah-wnh,\"\n\u25a0 of lhe innsl inlelli-\nI'amily.    This\nH\t\nbreed is a product of Mexico, nnd is\nnamed  ufter  a  northern  province  of\nthai   e< try  where  there are thous-\nntls of those little dogs running wild\nml multiplying each year. It seems\nremarkable thing that, in spite of\nthe fact thai they have never hud nny\nlog sunws in Mexico, one only hus lu\n, is i thai country and try tu purchase\ni really good, typical little Chihuahua\nfrom a native to realize that the Mex-\nns know the worth of this dog of\nhis own country. How these dogs\nwere bred probably never will he\nItnown. Some authorities have Ittll-\nmiiled Hint tlley were prod some general ons hnck from large squlrrolB, und\nthis view is homo oul by the tact that\nnt une lime these dugs run wild\nthe woods und thut the Chihuahua\nnearly ns proficient in running up tie\nns tlie squirrel. ^Family Herald.\nloan,  etc\nmaking\n1,001,701,\nsavings\namounted to  \u00a36,386,-\nnet   sum   Invested   of\nTlte   total   number   of\ncertificates   sold   since\n280701,064, value\nDeduction   of   repny-\nnet sum invested of\nSMALL INVESTORS   MILLIONS\nIlu-   first   issue\n6217.648.817.\nmoms leaving\nC 207,883,145,\nIncluding lhe 1018 certificates, the\nmini contribution of ihe .mall in-\nvestur io government funds during\n1918 amounted t\" \u00a3170,676,000. Tho\nfigure Includes \u00a388,700,000 contributed io ilie I'osi Office issue nf National War Bonds, ns well us the\nIncrease of deposits over withdrawals\nIn the Post Office end Trustees Savings Hunk, which was \u00a338,813,000,\n\u2022\u25a0ompiiroii witli \u00a35.083,000 in 11117.\n1'he grand total of small Investments\nluring lhe wnr wns therefore 1143. -\n\u202241 (1110.\nDuring the yeur 221 new Incnl War\nSavings committees were established,\nund :!.nil additional Wnr Savings\nassociations affiliated, ihese figures\njjl excluding Scotland, Wnr savings car-\nJ tificutes arc now on sale al some\nJ 14.000 establishments. Lancashire bus\n\" j the largest number of associations\nwith 4,481, lhe West Hiding nf Vork-\nshire second willi 4.150, nnd London\ni third  with 4,078.\nIreland and\nconfined    In\nprostitutes.\nHfleenth-The right 10\nvale property no longer\nIreland,     The   pinecs   of   Ii\nby\nown pri-\nexists in\nislness  of\nnldier\nRepublicans are Invaded\nand constables, the fixtures destroyed\nand the property confiscated without\ncompensation. In many cuses the\nowners of such business propcrtj\nhave been utterly Impoverished.\n,S|S nih-Tho bends of hundreds\nnf families hnve been jailed or de-\nportetl, leaving their dependent women und children wltboiil means ul\nsubsistence, These dependents are\nbeing rendered objects ot\noharlty,\nSeventeenth-Men   nnd   women\nlhe mere suspicion  of being\nMenu  sympathisers,   nro   li\nfrom  their homes o\nstreets  or  highways\nEngland,   or   else   th,\nIn Jails In  remote places from  their\nhomes, while tlielr dlslrucled families\nsometimes aro kepi in ignorance of\nIhelr wherenhouls f,nr many months,\nT'he authors of lhe report demand\nHint the pence conference shall appoint a commission to Investigate\ntheir charges.\u2014Mall ami Empire,\nLONDON.\u2014The third annual report\nof llie Hritish wnr savings committee,\n\u25a0Issued ns u While Paper, is of especial Interest us showing ihe efficiency\nuf nn organization which is tn play\n11 considerable part In the new loan\ncampaign. The roporl covers the\nyeur ended December 31 Inst. The\ncost nf lb,, year's work, chiefly done\nby voluntary helpers, was \u00a3'136,357\nlis. sd.\nThe actual amount! nvested in wnr\nsavings certificates at 15s. lid. each\nwns 6108,348,782 compared with\n(\u00a307,010,817 lu 1017, und \u00a342,188.718\nfor Hie lu'.. months of 1916, during\n|which the certificates were on sule.\nRepayments, including exchanges for\npublic\nllepilb-\nelng taken\n\u25a0 arrested In (ho\nand deported to\nonflnod\nLAND REGIoTRY ACT.\n(Section 24.)\nIn the mutter of Lot S.5I1, tlrou.\nOne, Kootenay District, containing\n27(1.75 acres more or less.\nProof having been filed In my nfiico\nof the loss or Certificate ot Title N\n480-1, lo ihe above mentioned Lot, in\ntlie name uf Normnn T. McLeod, nnd\nbeing dated the _r,th day nf November,\nHill.\nI hereby give notice or my intention\nnt the expiration of one calendar month\nfrom the fli-Hi publication hereof to\nIssuo to the snld Normnn T. McLeod\n11, fresh Certificate or Title In lieu of\nsuch lost Certificate. Any porsnn Inning nny information With reference t\nsuch lost Certificate of Title Is re-\nquested to communicate with the undersigned.\nDated nt the Lond Registry Office,\nNelson, II. C, this _0lh dny ot .luly,\n1919.\nE. S. STOKES,\nDistrict Registrar or Tines.\nDatu of first publication July 30, 1911).\nLAND   REGISTRY  ACT\n(Section 24)\nIn the matter ot the North Eusi 1;\nt the South East 1; uf Sublet 149 uf\nLot 7159, droop I, Kootenay District.\nProof having been filed In my office\nof the loss ol Certificate of Title No.\n189S4A   lo the above mentioned  laiul\nIn the mime of Haul Donald Cameron\nnnd healing date the 6th April, 1914,\nI hereby give notice of my intention\nt   tbo  expiration   of   one   calendar\nmonth from the first publication hereof to  Issue  to the said  l'aul  Donal.l\nCameron a fresh  Certificate of Title\nin lieu of such lost certificate, Any\nperson having uny Information with\nreference to such lost Certificate oC\nTitle Is requested to communicate with\ntho undersigned.\nDated ut the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B. C\u201e this 30lh day of Juno,\n1919.\nE. S. STOKES,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nDate of first publication July 9,1919.\nLAND  ACT.\nForm No. 9.\nForm  of  Notice.\nKootenay   Land   District,   District  of\nSlocan.\nTake   notice   that   Leroy   Christian\n(lood of Applednle, occupation ranchor.\nintends   in   apply   for   permission   to\npurchase    the    following    described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnortheast corner of pre-emption record No. 310, llienco north 20 chains,\nthence west 20 chains, thence south\n.0 chains, thenco east 20 chains.\n1.10HOY   CHRISTIAN   ClOOD.\nDate, May 28, 1919. ^\n PAQC EIGHT!\nTHE B7ffl_Y NEWS^\nFRIDAY, AUGU8T 1, 191\u00bb#\"\n\u25a0AVE YOUR FOOD BY BUYING\nICE\nPhone 504.\nKOOTENAY ICE & FUEL CO.\n(W. Wilson)\nKerr's Jitney\nAlways at your service.\nPHONE 491 KERR BLOCK\nTHE ARK\nWall Paper, ceiling and walls,\n40c double roll; good chairs,\nSI.95; six-hole range, polished\ntop, high closet water front and\nthermometer, $57.50: men's work\nshirts, SI.00: drinking glasses,,\nsecond quality, 80c doz.. table oilcloth, 80c yard; ladies' hose, good\nquality, 40c pair; men's Merino\nunderwear, per garment, $1,00:\ni-fi-inch suitcase, two straps around,\nS4.00; rugs, furniture and cooking utensils cheapest in the city,\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 65 L 606 Vernon 8t\nHot\nWeather\nMakes   corns   very    dis-\n' pgreeable.\nOur Corn Cure properly\napplied will relieve such\nsuffering.\n25c worth of cure.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nEDISON PHONOGRAPHS\nMall ord.ri filled promptly.\nPHONE II\nWILLOW POINT\nREGATTA\nIn nlrt or Willow i'oint Church,\nSaturday,  Aug. 2, 2p.m.\nTEA AND ICE CREAM\n ON SALE\t\nWillow Point  Forr.   rims dally.\nLeave   Willow   Point,   8   n.m.;\nleave Nelson,   .j  p.m.\nSaturdays; leave Nelaon 1 p.m.\nnnd 5 p.m.\nLeave  Willow  Point   .1   n.m.,  2\np.m. nnd C p.m.\nH. A. MASTERS\nBOAT LIVERY\nWATCHES\nA complete line of Gents'\nTucket Watches always in\nstock\u2014Hamilton, Waltham and\nHigh-grade Swiss. Putenaude's\nSpecial is highly recommended\nand  fully  guaranteed.\nLadles' Wrist Watches in\n\u2022Oold-filled and Solid Gold\nCases, from $15.00 up,\nCome In and inspect our line\nbefore you decide on that new\nwatch. We will be pleased to\noffer suggestions to help you\nmake your choice.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nJeweler and  Watchmaker\n> > e >\u2022> a are e *. rnn *\u2666 i\n\\ Social and jP^j[ggg(J\nSirs. L. L. Bloomer of Trail Is n guest\nnt. the Hume.\nTake a Car to the Golf\nLinks,   Phone 35\nNelson Transfer\nFive physician- nml two druggists\nwere In-I.l in heavy hall I'or trial at\nJ>'ew Vork. ns lhe result ot the crusade against traffickers tn habit-forming drugs.\nWedding\nStationery\nThe Daily News Job Department\ncan supply the Highest grado of\nWedding Invitations, Wedding Announcements, Wedding Carda and\nother Wedding Stationery.\nPrompt Service and Efficient Work\nThe Daily News Job Department\nThe Home of Good  Printing\nNELSON, B.C.\nRecord Breakers\nJuly is already a decided record\nbreaker. Muy and Juno were also\nrecord breakers. We are gaining\ntrade  steadily\u2014\nTHERE'S A REASON\nWe have lhe goods, our Store is con\nVOnleht and our delivery prompt. Our\nprides arc  no  worse,\nGIVE US A TRIAL\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW\nGroceries and Dry Goodi.\nP. G. Ebhutt of Creston was registered at the Hume last* night.\nE. Colobrook, the b'rultvale rancher,\narrived In the city lust night.\nS. J. Farmer, the Cnstlegar merchant, was a visitor in tbe city yesterday,\nE. Ferguson, government agent,\nmado a trip to Proctor yesterday afternoon.\nA. J. Wonilhurr. of Kamloops came\nInto tho city last night, lie stayed at\nthe Hume.\nJ. S. Mahood of Queens Bay was a\nvisitor In the city yesterday and stayed\nat the Strathcona,\nAccording to passengers arriving on\nthe Slocan train there was *|iilte a\nrain at. Slocan City nt nhon yesterday.\nI'Yank Slnfldll motored over with a\nparly from Trail last, night to visit\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Sln-\ndeil.\nW. A. Jowett left Wednesday night\ni'or his homo in Rdgowop'd, after\nspending several days in Nelson on\n'nsiness.\nJohn Keen, M.P. for Kasln, nefom-\npanled by Mrs. Keen, left Monday for\nOttawa to attend the Luiirier Liberal\nconvention, .\nAndrew Sutherland, provincial boiler\nInspector, returned Wednesday from\na trip of some days covering Balfour,\nKaslo and Ainsworth.\nMr. and Mrs. .1. W. Klpp and ,rm-\nily have returned from a month'., nnl-\nIng in Kll.o and Nelson, B.C., says an\nHem iu (lie Lethbridge Herald.\nInspector King of the Royal Northwest Mounted 1'ollec, who was in Nelson on a trip of inspection, left last\nnighl fur his headquarters al Grand\nPorks.\nSidney Norman, editor of the Norlh-\nwi'st Mining Truth, who arrived iu\nNelson yesterday from a nip into Slocan, motored to Rossland yesterday,\nen route lo Spokane,\nThomas Avlson, of New Denver, who\narrived in Nelson yesterday on a business trip, stated that he bad never\nseen the Slocan valley looking better\nthan it looks at present.\nCharles Hussoy, secretary-treasurer\nof the Standard Silver-Lead Mining\ncompany, returned to Nelson yesterday from a trip o\" inspection lo the\nSliiiidnrd mihe at Silverton,   Ho loaves\nthis morning for Spokane.\nMrs. J. R, Millard and three little\nsons leave this morning for their home\nnt Reglna, after a stay of nine months\nIn and around Nelson, Mrs. Millard's\nhealth having been greatly improved\nby her contact with the incomparable\nKootenay.\nA. E. C. Martin, B. C, who has been\nbeen principal of a school in South\nVaneourer for eight years, and who is\nhighly recommended by different\nschool Inspectors, has nccepted the position of science teacher on the staff\nof the Nelson high school at a salary\nof $2000.\nA, M. Johnson, deputy attorney-\ngeneral, arrived .from Victoria at\nSouth Slocan Wednosda;' n ghf, for a\nfishing holiday. Mrs. Johnson and\nfamily, who have been guests ut the\nHume for a couple of days, left lost\nnight for South Slocan to Join Mr.\nJohnson.\nW. J. Hiker, district engineer of the\nprovincial water lua'nch, leaves today\nfor creston, accompanied by his assistant, J), w. Hodsdon, to mnJ-e a\nsurvey of the water In Arrow creek\nwith referV-nce In iho formation of a\nwater users' community and a local\nsystem of Irrigation.\nThe wedding took place at the Methodist parsonage yesterday afternoon\n,at -1:30 o'clock of (Veil Stuart Hall\n|of East. Arrow Park to Miss ICdnit Poster Jackson of Port Arthur, Ont., ltev.\n1'. Wcstman officiating. Mr. dJnd\nMrs, Hall will take up tluMr resldehoe\nat East Arrow Park,\nMajor Arthur Cherry, who has a 30-\nacre ranch ai Frultvalo, while spending a couple of duys in lhe city, arranged to take, out 10 rabbits to his\nranch, to form the nucleus of a rabbit\nwarren. The gallant major's friends\nclaim the rabbits are lo be used to\nbrowse down  the underbrush.\nMr. and Mrs. H. I.i'ngwldge, of\nTrail, spent yesterday in the oily as\nlhe guests of Mr. and Mrs. .1. T.\nSimloll. They left last night for\nVancouver. They were married in\nTrail yesterday morning and are on\ntlielr honeymoon, Mrs. LangWidge\nwas formerlv Mrs. A. Mel-eon of\nTrail.\nMrs. B. Olson will leave on this\nafternoon's boat for Gorrard to join\nher husband. Mr. and Mrs. Olson left\nGerrard ahout two and a half years\nago, to como to Nelson. Mr. Olson returned to Gerrard about three months\nago UKrosume his work there. Their\ndaughter, Miss liorghlld nlson\/will re-\nnmlu lit Nelson.\nHeavy winds blowing in the district\nyesterday and the day before caused\na Iree to fall on the telegraph wire between Proelor ami Kootenay (.anding,\nCLASSIFIED ADS  BRING RESULTS\nEVERY  TIME.\nHALE HAMILTON.\nIf you HAD to make \u00a55.000 an\nhour and keep It up \u2014 TIpw\nwould you start?\nSEE   WHAT   THIS   MAN   DID\nIN\n\"$5,000\n!AN\nHOUR\"\nAlso 10th Episode\n\"Lure of the Circus\"\nAnd CURRENT EVENTS\nMonday SURE\n\"OUR  MRS. M.CHESNEY\"\nStyle - value - variety\nthey are all here\nTO give you a little more style;\nmore value and more things to\nchoose from than anyone else\u2014that's\nwhat we're here for.\nWe are doing it with\nHigh Class Suit?\nWaist-seam Soils; single and\ndouble-breasted; ma ny variations.\nPusiness Suit s; new Worsteds, Tweeds, Cheviots; for\nevery figure.\nJ. A. GILKER\nBoys' and Men's Outfitter     Nelson, B.C.\nBOX  787.\nFURS\nPHONE 106.\nDo not forget thero In a discount ot 10% allowed oft all work\nmaking up, remodelling and repairing\u2014during Summer month-, excepting dressing and mounting of skins. Guaranteed high claSB Furg\nkept In stock. Best prlcea paid for Raw Skins. Green Bear Skini\nfor mounting not accepted. ,\nGfl    A C17D Manufacturing Furrier\n.   VjL.A-_>1__1\\ NELSON, B.C.\nAUGUST\nmmamaaawmwmmmmmmaammm\nThis will bo the ideal camping month. Our stock has been\npurchased with the Idea of\nproviding Canned Eatables In\nvariety and quality, In order\nthat there may he no disappointment, nnd a variety that\nwill Rive a constant change of\ndiet. \t\nOur Rural Route\nDelivery\niiloiiR the Lahe Shore Is proving to be n favorite and is\nmaking many now friends.\n\u25a0 Further un the Arm and\nmain Lake points\nWe Deliver Right to\nYour Landing\nAugust at The Ideal\nFor the Hot Weather\nPHONE 266\nTo-day's Arrivals\nOKANAGAN TOMATOES\n25c lb.\nCUCUMBERS, 10c, 15c each\nLOCAL HOT HOUSE\nTOMATOES\nSmooth,  red and  firm,  35c  lb.\nCANTELOPES, 16c and 20o\nB&K Wheat Flakes\nfor EVERYBODY\n%      Wheat flakes In ill their ooodneia, milled for\njE       porridge use.   You'll like B & K Wheat Rakes\nHI      \u2014they're delicious.   Ask your grocer.\nI    The Brackman-Ker Milling Co. Ltd.\nCanada Food Board License Nos,\n~-027* 82-45-40-47'SO\nOUR  MOORE  PARK\nAPRICOTS\nfor Preserving.    Duo to\narrive today.\nPRESERVING JARS\nKconomy, Perfect 'Seal, Wide\nMouth Mason, Crown. Rubber\nKings, In the heavy white rubber. Economy and Hehram Tops\nand Clamps. Mason Covers und\nPerfect Keai Glass Covers..\nVINEGAR\nNo disappointments with our\nVlnogfltr. Whlto, Spirit, Cider\nor Malt. Wfo ovorproof, Government standard.\nThe Ideal Cash Grocery\nLIMITED\nPHONE 26S\nTONIGHT \u00abnd TOMORROW 7.15 and 9\nADOLPH ZUKOR Presents\nMARGUERITE CLARK\n\"LITTLE MISS HOOVER'\nA delightful story based on the famous novel, \"The Golden Bird,'\nin whioh our beautiful Paramount Star has role of young girl who\nbravely does tier bit for her country as a Farmerette and Chicken\nRaiser. Sho is one little witch we all adore\u2014eyes like fairy pools\u2014\nlips like a new-born rose\u2014smiles like sunbeams. And you'll be\naround tonight to see this \"Golden Bird\" or miss a great screen treat.\nCome early as we havo a big program.\t\nTWO-PART MACK-SENNETT COMEDY\n\"Hide and Seek\"\nA  Real  Riot of Laughs and Giggles\nA CHRISTIE COMEDY\n\"Never Surprise Your Wife\"\nIts Just Full of Punch and Speed\nAlso a Chester Outing Picture\n\"8CALES AND ANTLERS\"\nA One-reel Subject and Very Interesting\nCONSTANCE TALMADGE, in\n\"SAUCE FOR THE GOOSE\"\nresulting In tlio lino Ileitis down severe! hours, Thf trouble did not have\n:iii|>- 'effect, lineally uml the,, s-rVWe\nwenl nn uninterrupted. 1-int night\ntrouble on the eastern wires was reported, caused hy high winds.\nNELSON NEWSOF THE DAY\nFertile and Lethbridge draft beer at\nCluh hotol.  Big schooner, 10c.   (3.36)\nlie up-to-datel\niriclly!\nCook   with   olec-\n(37.J)\nGeorge Taylor repair shop, .01\nBaker street. Repairs typewriters,\ngramophones and nil small machines,\nLawn mower- sharpened and all cutlery.   Keys fitted. (3C7B)\nHave   you   seen   tlle   new   electric\nwashing machines at tlte City Hall?\n(37.41\nNOTICE  TO  CONTRACTORS.\nTenders palled for repair of Thrums\nDistrict School. 8I_0 of school 30 ft.\nx 10 fl., with 0 fl. verandah In front.\nRepairs required: Hiiilding lifted nnd\nconcrete foundation putting in, new\nwood floor and the building to be\nshingled, wilh extras as finances will\nallow, I-nvost tender not necessarily\naccepted. Apply A. __ RICHARDS,\nSecretary,\nTarrys, B, C.\n(3080)\nPYREX\nTRANSPARENT  OVEN DISHES\nPYREX IS THE MOST LASTING BAKING WARE EVER MADE\n\u2014IT NEVER CHIPS FLAKES OR RUSTS AFTER YEARS OF USE.\nPYREX  SAVES  FUEL,  FOOD  AND  LABOR.\nTRY A PIECE OR TWO AND BE CONVINCED.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nNELSON, \u25a0\u25a0 C.\nGerrard Lumber Company, Ltd.\nGERRARD, B.C.\nLocal Office: Annable Blook, Nelaon, B.C\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nMountain Hardwood, Cedar\nand Pine Lumber\nPrompt attontion to orders for Mining Timber.\nIf you wiint information about cooking by electricity, call at the City Hall\nin   the afternoon.\" (3724)\nClan Johnstone Nn. _!1_! meets tonight in Eagle Kullat 8.0'oloCK,   (8728)\nYes!    We are  ntlll   wiling electric\ncooking equipment at the City Hall\n. (3724)\nAll members ot the Nelson Women's\nInstitute arc asketl to meet at tho City\nPark at 7:30 p.m. Friday, each member to bring a eitp nml spoon, nlso\nsandwiches nr cuke, Nursing Sister\nKay will be the guest of honor nl. the\nmpettng. (.1728)\nJohn Daly ot Ymir\nWishes te announce \u00ab\u2022 hit fri.nda\nthat ha la now doing buainaat in th.\nold atand on Baker Street, Nelaon,\nknown aatht\nCabinet Cigar Store\nMAIL ORDERS ATTENDED TO\nPROMPTLY\nSmoking Tobacco, Snuff, Pip.a and\nFull   atook   of   Cigars,   Cigarettaa,\nOther Smok.ra' Suppliei.\nJOHN  DALY\nImproved Ranch For Sale\nAS GOING CONCERN\u2014104 ACRES,\nall good land, 17 cleared ami planted, 100 fruit trees and -mail frail.;\ngood log house, good barn 40xr,i\nnever tailing spring, besides running waler through place. All\nkinds of outbuildings; in head of\ncuttle, mostly Jersey; good horse,\nwagons, sleighs; all agricultural\nimplements to work place, McLaughlin car, etc., etc.\nD. A. McFarland\nINSURANCE REAL ESTATE\nGREENHILL COAL\nRoom  6   K.W.C.  Block. Phone 49\nJ. P. Morgan\nHides, Furniture, Furs and Junlfl\nHIGHEST CASH PRlcl\nA. HigginbothaitJ\n(Expert Optical 8ervlce.)\nGRADUATE\nOPTICIAN  AND OPTOMETRIST!\nK. w. C. Blook, Nelaon.\nDuring these warm days you\nAvoid Bakin j\nBy using\nCHOQUETTE'S\nCAKES AND PASTRIEJ\nof the finest pre-war quality.'\nCandles and Chocolates in lar^\nvariety.\nChoquette Bros.]\nBaker Street,\nNELSON, 8. C.\ndischarge. Commenting tbat the first\nsentence imposed upon J_,ieiU. ''Hard-\nboiled\" Smith was a dishonorable discharge, Mr. Dalllnger sarcastically Inquired: \"Why didn't tho court have\nhim slapped on the wrist?\"\n(inly 77 hours were consumed by the\ncongressional committee in ascertaining thnt \"awful cruelties\" had been\npractised upon the prisoners, says' Mr.\nDalllnger, and adds that it would have\ntaken the war department 77 years to\naccomplish this disclosure. Regarding\nSmith, the statement snys:\n\"Hnrdbolled\" Smith arrived nt Fort\nJay the other day and was almost wi\nonce seen by somo of his victims there\nserving sentenco. He waa recognized\nby thorn and before the guards arrived\nhe was beaten to a pulp and I believe\nhe is now in the hospital recovering\nNOTICE.\nThe Dominion Dairy has ehnngert\nhands. All debts owing up to July 31,\n1919, uro to be paid to Hall & Wrny,\nthe former owners. (3731.)\nTho many recent ecrlous losses due to foreit fires\nemphasizes the FACT that tho firo huzard Is always with\nus. Nelson has been fortunate, hut no one can foresee\ntho future.\nThe cost of rebuilding has Increased a great deal\nduring the past four years.\nBe advised\u2014revalue your building and rontents and\nprotect  yourself fully by Insurance.\nCharles F. McHardy\nHighest Market Prices Paid for Victory Bonds\nINSURANCE\nPHONE 136\nHEAL SUAII\nPRISONERS BEAT UP LIEUT.\n\"HARDBOILED\" SMITH\nWASHINGTON.\u2014Lieut \"Ilordholl-\ned\" Smllh was beaten nearly to death\nwhen he arrived as a prisoner ot Kurt\n.lay a few clnys ngo, according lo a\nstatement made liy Ropresentotlvo\nDalllnger, chairman of lhe sub-corn\nmiltee which has heen Investigating\nIhe treatment of prisoners In Amor\nlean army camps in France. Other\nprlHoners nt (Port .lay who licensed\nSmith of mull reel lug Ihem, leaped\nupon the Former offleor before Iho\nguards could restrain Ihem, nnd he Is\nnow in a hospital,\nin the aUttemont Mr. Ilalllnger asserted thai oilier witnesses would bo\ncalled lo prove Ibal n l.leul. Mason,\nanother officer In charge of camps,\n\"clubbed prisoners, robbed lllrtn and\nStole their money.\" Vet his sentence\nwas nullilng more Ihuu a dishonorable\nEYE TROUBLE\nCAN   BE  REMEDIED\nBy\nGOOD GLASSES\nMy expert knowledge and exffl\nperience is always at your serjj\nvice.\nJ. J. WALKER\nJEWELER  AND  OPTICIAN\nfrom a punishment meted out to 1\nby thone very men whom he hnd Hj\nself tortured.  It is thus that mant\nlhe law Into his own hands when?]\ncourts fall.\"\nChan.   Gibson,   Aylmer,    died  fri\nIhe heal while working In a hayijl\nSTETSON\nHATS\nFALL 1919\nOur first, shipment of these well-known Hals have j\nbeen put In stock.   New Colors, new Blocks.\n.'RICE   \t\nEmory & Walley\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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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.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1919-08-01 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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