{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2021-03-18","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1920-07-15","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0396286\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" \u25a0^.-\u25a0p--\u2014\nmmmmmamm\n\u25a0\u2014-\n***\n_Tm_Oe!i? Vnr* la Um wit iati--\nCMnmbla.   Full   waaad   win   aarrlo*\no\u00ab Canadian Pre-a,  molted.\nITOL. 19\n*mw\u00a3.\ni \u25a0\u00bb\nNELSON, B. C, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 15, 1920\nRUM S1A1N\nif-\nReporting ior Duty Spirited Away in Autos; Minor\nlockades Over Ulster Border; Irish Secretary Replies\nTrade Union Demand for Troops' Withdrawal; Quiet\nfol\u00bb Orange Day Due to Troops' Presence\nF\nI.\nVBLIN,    .Tuly    14.\u2014The    railway\n,tJon   In   Ireland   was   never   so\nfrom   the  government   service\ndpolnt as today, when the work-\nrefused   to   move   freight Iralns\nrylng   any  sort  of   war   material,\nSinn  Feinera kidnapped  a flre-\nwho   offered  to  move   a   train\nother  had   declined.\nhe   policy   of   dismissing   recalcl-\nnt -employees,    which    the    Sinn\nners say is directed  by \"the  gov-\nment,    Is   rapidly   depleting   the\nEs  of  the  railway   workers,   and\niting  in   traffic  stoppage,\n'ourteen   men   were   dismissed   at\nKing's bridge terminus ln Dublin\nng the past 24 hours.    At Clones,\niinty Monoghan, five men who re-\nrted for work on a munitions train\n>re  spirited  away  to  an   unknown\n'.-\u25a0itinatlon in an automobile.    Trains\nthe   north  of  Ireland   have  been\nnning   on   time   during   the   past\nree  days, but even on  these lines\ntere    have   been   minor    blockades\n\\st south of the Ulster border.\nStop  .Railroading   Care\nThe   practice   of   dropping   off   at\nsiding    cafrs    conta,1nlnar    armed\n3llce   and   soldiers   on    me   Oreat\northern   railway    has     temporarily\n>ased owing to the report that any\nillroader    attempting    such    tactics\nould   be   shot   on   the   spot.     The\nuurce of thlB report cannot be trac-\nbut it Is having its effect, never-\naeless.\nWomen to Serve\non Juries on the Same\nConditions as Men\nLONDON, July 14.\u2014In accordance\nwith an act of parliament already\npassed, the lord chancellor announced that after July 15, women are\nliable to servo on Juries under the\nsame conditions as men. Husband\nand. wife will not he permitted to\nserve on the same occasion.\nEMPRESS OF FRANCE\nHAS   DISTINGUISHED\nUST OF PASSENGERS\nMONTBEATj, .luly 14.\u2014Sailing\nfor Liverpool on the Empress of\nPrance today from Quebec are\nHon. N. \\v. Rowell and Mrs.\nRowell, tlie Right Hon. The Earl\n\u00bbr t'liinwlllluiii. Sir Richard Whirry, M.P.s R. B. Wlnfry, Sir\nHerbert S. Holt and Lady Holt,\nSir Wm. Priestly, Commissioner\nE. Perry, of Ottawa; Capt. W.\nS, Maine (who was In command\nof the Hesperian when she was\ntorpedoetl), Walter Ijcfroy, the\nfounder tnid editor of \"Canada,\"\nLondon; Sir Robert Kindersley,\ngovernor of the Hudson's Bay\ncompany, returning to England\nafter attending the celehrauons\nln connection with the 250t)t anniversary of its foundation, and\nLndy   Kindersley.\nmm\nMARITIME\nTroops There t\u00bb fteserve Peace\nLONDON,  July  14.\u2014The   Irish   se\n,retary'a  office  today  issued  a  for-\n,nal reply to the Trades  union congress     resolutions   demanding     the\nllvlthdrawal   of  troops  from   Ireland.\ntThe reply says that the resolution\nrobably is the result of a misconception of the actual functions' of\n5-he troops, which are not that of\npcpupatlon, but to assist the civil\npower and the police in providing\n{order. '\nIt points out that military law has\nnot been proclaimed, and asserts\njtbat the marked absence of disorders\non the occasion of the July 12 celebration was undoubtedly due to ihe\npresence of extra troops, and de \u25a0\nClares that It Is impossible to withdraw these troops, which would\nleave the law-abiding people at the\n[mercy of the forces of disorder.\nFighting In Tairgau\nj BELFAST, July 14.\u2014Two thous\nand Sinn Feiners Und Unionists to\niday had a fight ln Lurgan over the\nIcapture of a man who is alleged to\nJha^e participated in a recent raid on\na  mansion  near  Lurgan.\nMany persons were wounded in the\nfighting.\nA party of troops from .Belfast\narrived in the town and removed th>\nman from Lurgan. The trouble had\nIts origin in a demand by the Sinn\nFelners for the Velease of the in\nwhich\" the   Unionists   opposed.\nVoters May Now Be Admit\nted to Poll Up to End of\nPresent Month\nVICTORIA, July 14.\u2014On account\nof representations from many\nsources, and by reason of .the fact\nthat It 1b Its desire to obtain as full\na registration as possible, the government has decided to extend the\nperiod ln which all eligible voters\nmay gain admission to the new provincial lists until the end of the\npresent month.\nThis decision applies to all districts\nalike, and In making the announcement this morning, Hon. J. D.\u00bb McLean, minister of education and provincial secretary, urges upon every\nqualified elector the desirability of\nhis or her name appearing on the\nvoters Ust now being compiled.\nReports reaching the parliament\nbuildings indicate that registration\nin the outlying districts has been\nstow, and unless there is consider\nably more Interest taken during the\nextended period It Is feared that not\nmore than half of the rural electorate\nwill have been Included in the new\nroll.\nGOMPERS PREFERS THE\nDEMOCRATIC PLATFORM\nWASHINGTON, July l'4.\u2014Weighed\nagainst the specific demands of organized labor, the Democratis plat-\nform\u00bbadoptcd at San Francisco more\nclearly^approxlmates the desired declarations of human rights than both\nthe planks found in the Republican\nplatform, Samuel Gompers, chairman\nof the special committee appointed\nby the American Federation of Labor\nto present labor's demands to both\nparties' conventions, said today, in\nreporting the results of the committee's   work.\nSHAMROCK CONCEDES SEVEN MINUTES\nAND ONE SECOND TO RESOLUTE IN THE .\nFAMOUS RACE TODAY FOR AMERICA'S CUP\nAUSTRIANS DESTROY\nJUGOSLAV PROPERTY\nIN'TRIESTE RIOTS\nElectoral Staff Busy on Machinery Under New Franchise Act\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014(Canadian\npress.)\u2014There is still'*'no announce\nment as to when the necessary two\nbyelectlons in the Maritime provinces\nwill be held, but the forms' necessary\nunder the new Franchise act are\nbeing got into shape for whenever\nthe  contests do take  place.\nCo). O. M. Biggar, chief electoral\nofficer, and his staff, are practically\ninundated with work in placing the\nelectoral machinery in working order.\nIt is is said it will take some time\nyet before everything Is in readiness for taking the vote in any of\nthe ridings open.\nRegina    Comments\nREOINA, July 14.\u2014Commenting on\nthe cabinet, the Regina Post says:\n\"The new ministers chosen by the\nnew premier will have to go to the\nconstituencies for elections. The number of new men chosen at this time\nis very small, and they were chosen\nnot only for their fitness, for the\npositions given them, but with some\nregard to the political possibilities\nof the ridings.\nThe government will want to start\noff well, and any ctefeats for its\nministers in the byelectlons would\nhave a serious effect upon Us fortunes.\"\nAll Sworn But Tolmte\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014\"With the formal swearing in\nof Hon. P. B. Blondin as postmaster\ngeneral, the portfolio he held In the\ncabinet of Sir Robert Borden, the\nministry of Hon. Arthur Meighen in\nnow completed with the exception of\nHon. S. F. Tolmie.. minister of agriculture, who will be sworn in by the\nclerk of the privy council on his\nturn  to the city.\nHon.   Dr.   Tolmie   Is   nt   present\nthe  west.\nIn\nboat   for   boat   com-\nKEW YORK, July 14.\u2014Time allowance, a vital factor to any yachtsman, assumed added importance on\nthe eve of the .first America's cup\nrace of 1920, when it was learned\nthat in the event of a cltfse finish\ntomorrow the winner might not be\nknown   before  Friday.\nAnnouncement hy the race committee that Shamrock IV., Sir Thomas\nUpton's \"mystery sloop,\" must give\nResolute, the defender, a handicap\nof geven minutes and one second because of tjie challenger's greater\nspread of ctyivas, waa coupled with\nanother announcement that the committee had granted a request by the\nIrish yachtman's forces for re\nmeasurement of certain of the Sham\nrock's sails.\nResult May Not Be Known Till Friday\nAs It was impossible to put her\ncanvas under the'tape today, and the\nyachts will be racing off Sandy\nHook tomorrow, the work may not\nbe done before Friday, a day of rest\nfor the yachting tars. Therefore\nshould the result of tomorrow's con\ntest hang on seconds, the rival\ncrews must remain in suspense until\nFriday at least, for any change' in\npail figures ^ould be reflected ln\ntime allowances.     '\nThis change, however, would be\nonly a few seconds, according to H-\nD. B, Parsons, chairman of the race\ncommittee, who added that the possibility of a reversal in the judges'\ndecision   was   almost   negligible.\nTonight's announcement of the\ntime allowance was made as soon as\nfinal figures on the measurements of\nthe yachts were reported to the committee' by officials.\nThe tentative handicap was an up-\naet to' experts, who had predicted that\nmix   rillnutea   or   six   minutes   and   a  ^\nhalf  would  be about  the  figure.\nThe'   reason   for: the   handicap   in\ntaw of the Resolute Is that 8ham-  to   modification ^t   the   request\nrook  tV.  carries   approximately   1600 .either   skippers   who   will   have   the\naquar*   t>et   more   canvas   than' her privilege of requiring a day of rest\nrival, which gives her a decided ad- between races.\nvantage\npari son.\nOfficial   Measurement\nThe official measurements of the\ntwo   vessels  are:\nShamrock: Sail area, 10,459 sq. ft.;\nlength over all, 110.3!) ft.; length on\nwater, 75 ft.; quarter beam, length\npenalty, 3.97 ft.; racing length, 78.97\nft.; displacement, 3879 cubic ft.;\nrating measurements, 94.4 ft.\nResolute: Sail area, 877& sq. ft.;\nlength over all, 106.34 ft.: length on\nwater, 74.97 ft.; quarter beam, length\npenalty, 1.23 ft.; racing length, 76.20\nft.; displacement, 3650 cubic ft.; rating measurements, 83.5 ft.\n. Both challenger and defender rode\nnt anchor in the horseshoe at jjSandy\nHook, very light winds causing the\nrival skippers to abandon plans for\na final test spin,'\nStrange  Sails   Tried\nThe Shamrock's crew were kept\nbusy by Captain Wm, P. Burton\nbending on her original main sail.\nThis Is the cut ol] canvas that will\nbe used In tomorrow's race, according to Charles Nlchqlson, designer\nof the Challenger, who haij Recently\nbeen experimenting with sails strange\nto  nautical  lore.\nThe Resolute's crew, under the direction of Capt. Charles Francis\nAdams, were equally busy putting\nthe finishing touches to the sloop\nthat will defend the 100 guinea cup,\nfor which the races will be resumed\nafter a lapse of 17 years.\nMr. Parsons today took occasion\nto deny \"erroneous reports\" that\nthere was something wrong with the\nResolute's plating. With three out\nof five races heeded to win; the cup,\nthe race committee announced tonight that tomorrow's and Tuesday's\nraces would be held as scheduled,\nwould\nrace every day^\nThis rule, however, will be subject\nof\nCalamity to Precipitate Elec\ntion With Acknowledged\nUnrest in Country\nTORONTO, July 14.\u2014\"I believe\nthe old political parties to be dead.\nI may be wrohg, but I think so. It\nwould be impossible for any party\nto accept a mandate from the people\nat the present time to carry on a\ngovernment with the acknowledged\nstate of unrest In the country. 1 do\nnot think there could be a stable\ngovernment  at the present  time.\"\nThis statement was made by Hon.\nE. K. Spinney, minister without portfolio in the new Meighen government in an Interview here today. In\nhis opinion it would be a calamity\nto precipitate the country Into a\ngeneral election within the next\ncouple  of years.\nrupu\nUnder No Circumstances Will\nAccept Policy Adopted by\nThird Party\nCONVENTION HISS\nWOMAN NOMINEE\nPlanks Want to Abolish Militarism and Withdraw Die\ntatorships\nCHICAGO, July 14.- Robert La-\nFollette, Jr., notified new party leaders tonight that his father would not\nrun for president under any circumstances on the platform adopted.\n\"The Farmer-Labor party\" was the\nname chosen by the convention for\nthe new political group.\nNominees Presented\nAt 11 o'clock with all other work\nout of the way, .the^ convention proceeded to nominating speeches for\npresidential candidates. The first\nname brought before the convention\nwas that* of DuBley Field Malone.\nThen a New York woman named\nHenry Ford, her speech being halted\nseveral times while delegates booed\nand hissed. Eugene V. Debs was\nnominated by a man from New Jersey, another nominee was Harley L\nChristensen   of   Utah.\nGovernor Lynn J. Frazler of North\n.Dakota, of non-partisan league fame,\nwas nominated by a delegate from\nArkansas, hut the name was later\nwithdrawn. t\nA woman nominee was Jane Adams\nof Illinois. Herbert Dimilow of Ohio\nwas placed In by Christensen of Utah,\nbut' withdrew from the contest.\nOtto Branstatter, secretary of the\nSocialist party, said it was doubtful\nwhether Debs would accent the candidacy under the 'Farmer-Labor ban\nner. However, his name was al\nlowed  to   stand.\nPlatform Adopted\nThe Labor group was dominant\nwhen the new fusion party adopted\na platform late today in preparation\nfor nomination of candidates at' tonight's session. A minority report\nfrom the platform committee was\nsponsored by three j)f the five representatives of the\" committee of 48,\nbuf was defeated by a vote of slightly\nless than  three to one.\nThe majority report was signed by\nthe five Labor members of the committee on resolutions, and two of the\nparty of 48 representatives. It was\nadopted by a big majority, which\non  motion,  was made unanimous.\nDefections from the ranks of the\nnew party began when it was shown\nthat the minority report, would be\noverwhelmingly defeated. James Fer\ngttson, former governor of Texas, was\nthe first openly to pull out of the\nmeeting.\nHe was followed by delegates from\nseveral states, none of whom was\nIdentified\" with the Labor party.\n'Plank to Repeal Laws\nOne plank of the platform\nadopted called for repeal of the law\nagainst espionage, criminal syndicalism and sedition, and demanded \"re\n, s,toration of civil liberties and Am\nerican right; election of federal judges\nand establishment of the initiative\nreferendum and recall, the referendum\nespecially applying to war issues,\nexcept ln cases of actual military invasion.\"\nA second plank headed \"Abolish\nmilitarism at home and abroad,\" demanded withdrawal of the United\nStates from further participation in\nthe treaty of Versailles, offers recognition to elected governments in Russia and refusal to go to\" war with\nMexico at the behest of Wall Street.\nIt asks also for withdrawal from the\ndictatorship over the Philippines,\n\"Hawaii, Hayti, Dominican Republic,\nPorto  Rico, Cuba, Samoa and  Ouana.\nTRIESTE, July 14-\u2014Unbrtdlrd\nvandalism rHgne-d \\s\\ Tries*** today and this evening during\nanti-Slav demons! rations. Three\npersons were killed and scores\nWire wounded, while da-mag*.-*\nestimated at more than 91,000,-\n000 resulted from the burning\nor wrecking of buildings, including banks, stores and office property,   belonging   to   Jtigo-Slavs.\nEverything \"with a, semblance\nof Jingo-Slav ownership was\nruined. Bombs \u25a0 and Inflammables wero used hy the mobs.\nThe pex>ii4e were terror-stricken by the explosion of bombs, the\nreport* of rifle-firing, and tlie\nlong tongues of flames which\nrose from tho burning huHdlngK.\nALLIES WILL 0C(\nTOMORROW IF GERMANS STILL\nOBDURATE ON COAL\nTense Emotion at Spa Conference; Choice Between Cnrl\nWar or Invasion Says Dr. Simons; British, French, and\nBelgian Divisions Ready to March; United States to Be\nAsked to Join in Occupation\nBonar Law States Terms on\nWhich Britain Prepared\nto Meet Russians\nWILL BREAK GROUND FOR\nTORONTO ART GALLERY\nTORONTO, July 14.\u2014Ground will\nbe broken this week for the Ontario\ncollege of art, which Is to be built\non \u25a0\u2022the grounds of the art gallery\nof Toronto at a cost of  $125,000.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nVICTORIA,\nJuly  14.\u2014Arrived\nFu-\nshl'ml   Maru;\nYokohama.\nPresident\nWilson    at    New\nYork\nfrom Trieste.\nLapland  at\nNew   York  from\nAnt-\nwerp.\nAlexandria\nat  Montreal  from\nLiv-\nerpool.\n-    THE WEATHER\nVICTORIA;\nJuly   14,\u2014Nelson\nand\nVicinity-\u2014Generally fair and  wa\nm.\nMln.\nMax.\nNELSON\n    54..\n.90\nVictoria   ..\n     51\n72\nKamloops\n     60\n04\nPrince   Rupert        60\nt%\n     62\n76\nWinnipeg\n      62\n       62\n79\nBarkerville\n74-\nAitllh         44\nCalgary    60\nMANY ATTEND FUNERAL\nOF SENATOR DENNIS\nHALIFAX, July 14.\u2014The funeral\nof lhe lafe Senator William Dennis\nwhich took place this afternoon\nwas largely attended by cllinens in\nall  walks of  life. .\nAmong those in the corteg-3 wore\nGen. Thacker, members of the sen\nate and the house, members of the\nlocal legislature. Mayor Parker and\nmembers of the city council. The\nbody was interred at Camphill cemetery.\nTRAFFIC RULES\nCHANGE TODAY\nCommencing today, the\nnew rules of the road as\ndefined in the Highway\nAct Amendment act, go into force throughout this\ndistrict and all the territory embraced in district\nNo. 2 of the act.'Frdm now\non all vehicles of every\nclass must keep to the\nright, pass approaching\nvehicles on the right hand\nside, pass overtaken vehicles on the left, and give\nthe right of way to vehicles\napproaching from a right\nhand intersection road.\nWill Apply Under\nNew Act to Declare\nHusband Absentee\nTORONTO, July 14.~Mrs. John\nDoherty, wife of the missing private\nsecretary of A. J. Small, the millionaire theatre owner who disappeared from this city in December.\n1919, will apply at Osgoode Hall to\nhave her husband declared an absentee under the new; absentee act\nwhich was passed at, the last session\nof the Ontario legislature, in order\nthat Mr. Small's'estate could be administered.\nMr.   Doherty   disappeared\n28 last.\nDec\nLONDON, July 14.\u2014The note of the\nBritish government to Soviet Russia --agreeing to continue negotiations for a resumption of trade relations, and proposing an armistice\nbetween Soviet Russia and Poland\nand also between the Soviet Forces\nand Gen. Wrangel, the anti-Bolshevik commander In tho Crimea, was\nread in the house of commons today by .Andrew Bonar Law, the\ngovern men t   spokesman.\nThe note takes cognizance of the\nacceptance by the Russian Soviet\ni government of the principles laid\ndown In the British memorandum of\nJuly 1. and of the basis of agreement for resumpt ion of trade relations, and the cessation of hos\nMllties, and agrees to a resumption of negotiations for deflnii.. trade\nas soon as the Russian delegates\nreturn to England.\nEmissary Deported\nSante-ri Nuorteva, who recently arrived In England from Canada as\nthe emissary of Q. A. K. Martens,\nRussian Bolshevik representative in\nthe States, has been run to earth'\nby the authorities and will be deported. Neuorteva was admitted to\nEngland by mistake, It Is stated. He\nwas carrying ft diplomatic passuort\nsigned by .Martens, and the alien officers at Liverpool failed to notice\nthe true nature of the dpcument.\nEvacuation  of   Batum\nCONSTANTINOPLE, July 14. 'Associated Press).\u2014The British troips\nwhich evacuated Batum, arrived In\nConstantinople today. Great Britain's evacuation of the port Is regarded by persons of other nationalities in Constantinople as the Initial\nstep toward trading with the Bol-\nshevfk, which It is declared the government, could not do consistently\nwhile   the   British   controlled   Batum.\nTl STEPS FOE\nRailway Board Makes Plans\nto Conserve Coal lor Next\nWinter\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014It Is under\nstood that, as a first step towards\nconservation of the fuel supply in\nview of nn almost sure shortage of\ncoal next winter, the railway board\nwill in ^the near future, issue an\norder prohibit ling the export of\nCanadian coak excepting Into the\nUnited  States and  Newfoundland.\nIt is also understood that an'order\nwill prohibit the bunkering of ocean\ngoing vessels at Montreal, with\nAmerican   coal.\nThis practice, it is stated, ha*\nresulted in the serious depletion of\nstocks of American coal brought to\nCanada.\nAfter   the   Issuance   of   the   order\nit   will   be   necessary   for   vessels\nbunker  with   coal   whl-'h   is  the   p\nduct of Canadian  mines.\nAt a conference of the members\nof the railway board, the coal situation was given preliminary consideration. It Is said that the measures other than those outlined above\nwill be taken to conserve the fuel\nsupply.\nSeen   after   the   conference.   Chairman Carvell said he had nothing\nficial to announce ;it present.\nTO\nLeague of Nations Not Saddled on Him as Chief Issue\nof Campaign\nCOLUMBUS 0\u201e July 14.\u2014 Charg-\nIng that Senator Harding, the presidential nominee had made his front\nporch a listening post, Governor\nCox the Democratic nominee today\nissued a statement replying to-Senator Harding's statement of yesterday that the Wilson administration\nhad saddled the league of nations\nupon him as the thief campaign Issue.\nGov. \u00a3ox's statement said his campaign will be dedicated to the task\nof \"bridging peace with* honor; of\nreadjusting the affairs of civilization, and of creating a new day out\nof which w.e will make the best of\nthe lessons  of  the past.\"\nHe declared the things Senator\nHarding believes \"vital and pertinent, form his Isolated perspective,\nwill not In all probability be so regarded by me.\"\nSIR LOMER G0UIN\nTO JOIN LA PRESSE\nMONTREAL, Jly' 14.\u2014Sir Lomer\nGouln, late premier nf Quebec, will\nshortly be associated with the management of La Fresse of Montreal,\naccording to information today which\nstated that an arrangement has been\nmade whereby Sir Lomer will occupy\nan important position in directing\nthe policy of the big French afier-\nnoon paper.\nPRAIRIE NEWSBOYS\nVISIT THE COAST\nGOLDEN, B. C, July IS.\u2014After\nvisiting the recently opened Lake\nWindermere Camp, a party of Manitoba Free Press newsboys left here\ntoday .for    Vancouver   and    Victoria\nThere are 32 newsies, and they\ntravelled from Winnipeg in a special\ncar.\nCoal Director Denies That\nMiners Forced Into Foreign Organization      .\nVANCOUVER, July 14.- YV. H\nArmstrong, for three years direct ol\nof coal operations for Alberta and,\nsoutheastern British Columbia, tod;\ngave a categorftal denial to the\ncharge frequently made by leaders\nof the One Big Union movement\nthat, the Dominion government wa\nforcing coal miners to enter a foreig\norganization.\nSPA, July 14 (Associated Press).\u2014\nThe government of the United States '\nwill be asked hy the supreme council to Join In the occupation of tke\nRhur district unless the -Hermans\naccede to the demand for Z.OflO.Gu\u00a9\ntons nf coal  monthly.\nAll details hnve been arranged for\nthe  movement of  troops.\nThe German delegates will be requested In meet the allies at noon\ntomorrow. The t.ermaiis will then\nbe atriced if ihey will give 2,\u00abU0,0<W\ntons. If they reply in the negativf*\nthey will be informed that the-\nRhur ilisirici will be irrcupied Friday.\nGermans stain!  Out\nThis whs :i day of tense emotions\namong 'he delegates to the conference, though outwardly h!1 was\ncalm. The day passed withoat official communication hetween tho\nGermans and allies except for an\ninformal meeting between Lloyd\nGflorg.e and   Or.   Simons.\nThe under-aecretary bad an hour'H\nplain talk wilh Lloyd George, who\nagain told him frankly that th\u00bb\nallies could go no further than they\nhad already done in reducing\" the\nterms of coal delivery. namely\nJ,000,000   ions   monthly.\nDr. Himons repeated his contention\nthat   it   was   impossible   for  Germany\nto   deliver   the   amount   demanded.\nCivil   War  or  Invasion\nAfter conferring wlthiLloyd George\nhe said thar what the allies were\nInsisting upon 'means for my country   either   eivil   war   or   invasion.\"\nAt in o'clock tonight the German\ncabinet was holding its third meeting   of   the   day.\nDr. Simons, who was to have received the German press representatives, sent word that he had nothing\nto announce. One of the most influential of the German experts said\nihe situation was grave, and it- looked as though the allies would occupy\nthe   Ruhr  d1st\u00a3t(*.\n\u2022iJSt the- ,occupation of the Ruhr\ndistrict takes place it will be carried out by six divisions. three\nFrench, two British and one Belgian.\nEvery military preparation has\nbeen made. Field Marshal Wilson,\nchief of the British staff, arrived\nhare tonight. Marshal Foch. of\nFrance,  is also on the ground.\nFLiBHT\"\nKm READY\nStart Today (or Nine Thousand Mile Journey Mineola\nto Nome\nMINEOLA,\nnr-itiunH for\nthis point to\nurn    -'anada.\nX. V, July 14\u2014Prep-\nhe 9.0IM1 mile flight from\nNome, Alaska, via weat-\nwhlch    United    States\nCM EGGS\nLeaking Case Consigned to\nCalgary Accidentally Gives\nClue to Drug Traffic\nOTTAWA. .Inly 14. -The accrdenl-\nal discovery at i'npineal.ville, Que.,\na few days ago by the Canadian Express authorities' of it quantity of\nopium, whirtli was consigned to\nCalgary, has furnished the Canadian Mounted police with a elite\nto the avenue by which, they \"believe, quantities of this drug have\nbeen making their way to the west\nduring  the   past   few   months.\nFor some time past a Chinese restaurant keeper at Papineauville has\nbeen in the habit of consigning one,\ntwo or three rases of eggs at a time\nto a fellow celestial at Calgary,\nwhich were shipped via the Canadian ESxpraai company at the Monte-\nbe Uo   railway   station.,\nThere has been no suspicion attached to the shiwnents until one\nday last week, wherrone of tl% cases\nof eggs forming part of a shipment.'\nwas found to be leaking. The express company officials opened the\ncase to examine it, and ascertain\nhow many eggs were broken, when\nthey found a Uirge number of cakes\nof opium.\nIn the meantime, the consignor apparently got wind that the jig was\nup,   for  he   has  disappeared.\nInspector Ramsay is conducting\nan Investigation in conjunction with\nthe Calgary authorities to see if the\nconsignee there  can  be   located.\narmy pilots will begin at 10 o'clock\ntomorrow, were practically complete\ntonight,\nSelection of an observer for one\nmachine enly  remains.\nFour planes will take part. The\nplanes were ,Mmed up and inspected\nlate today, and now are ready for\nthe   gun.\n(Mlieial reasons, given for the\nflight are establishment of a direct air\nroute from UtS United States to\nAsia   und   the   photographing  of  un-\nnappe\n1    ami    iiine.-esslhle    areas    of\n\u25a0\\hiska\nTh-\nifineiarx    aiul   eonseeutive   dis-\nin   miles   iu   be   travelled   are\nMilled\nua Field i,, Erie, Pa. 350 miles;\nIrand\nHjipids.   :'..-.a   miles;   Kargo  320\nmiles;\nSaskatoon tM miles;   Edmon-\nton,   .1\nlil   miles;    Jasiier   300;    Prince\n\u25a0in,'.   Ila\/.ellon.   L'2l);   Wrangel\nMusk;,\nSlOi   WhitelWse   Yukon,  300;\nJ >M WHO\ni   Hd;    I'airhanks   il&fl;    Ruby\nJruf an\nd   Num.-  300.\nHURLS INVECTIVE\n'S\nTORONTO. .Tuly 14,\u2014At a meet-^\nIng held tonight to protest against\nthe provincial government holding\nup the hydro radical scheme thereof by a royal commission, John R.\npobmson editor of the Toronto Evening Telegram hurled Invectives at\nthe bead of Pre-mier Drury, Attorney general Kaney itnd Hon. Maiming\nDoherty.\nThey are :. irio of Tory squi.*os,\"\nMr. Rot. in .-a-n laid, ''For If ever there\n\\\\fw three hopeless, .Incurable Tones\nunlade    the     hone     yards,    th'Jy    \u00a31*\ntin\nihn\nIpeahing of the eommission thaf\nis nt Investigate the hydro radicalu,\n-Mr Robinson said: \"We lu a,\u00bbt know\nIf it is a commission of 'n'lffittfci\nlion or if it is a ..-a tn mis si on of\nundertakers.''\nThe meet tug passed a resolution\nexpressing eonl'tdence n\\ S:r Adam\nBeck and condemning tae government for delaying the ralial rail-*\nway under takingSt ^\n.__\n_\n ^~\n\"\u25a0\u2014\n(ran %\nTHE ittXSON 1UILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 15, 1920\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhwa Mm Travailing Futile May ObUIn \u2022 upariar Aco.mm.dallea\n.cifsil^'htmrM*   V\n'{%\u00a3$' Oftkehterks ^V\njtyr \u2022IRVICi    UNEXCELLED ^*\n*S_      _ * \u2022* Carta Tabla D*M\u00abt\u00bb\n\u2022 PECUL SUNDAY  DINNER  %,M\nINCOMPARABLY THt FINMT TBA ROOM IN B.C.\nOpen  Daily It a.m. ta Midnight Muale and  Danelna\nTHe Leteat (undaea, lee Celd Drink, and leea\nAftarneen Tea  (S p.m. ta I p.m.), He\nH.adquertar. Far All Tr.v.lling  Men, Minim  Man and Taurlata\nEUROPEAN   FLAN - - ROOMS, |1.0*   UF\nHUME\u2014R. Palmer. Vancouver; Mr..\nPolkard. Mr. Ftadlay. Calgorr; D. P.\nColea and wife, Sandon; J. C. Ryan.\nSpokane; W. A. Mills, Silverton: Mrs.\nC. I. Archibald, Salmo; F. C. Hanne-\nman, Spokane; M. S. Sanders, Calgary;\n3 8. Bencher, Medicine Hat; H. w.\nMarohlnnav. Montreal; Oeo. F. Ellis,\nCalgary; Mr. and Mrs. Holmes a Court,\nProctor;   Jno.   J.   Blnns,   Vancouver;   D.\nC. Howell Trocher; D. J, Rogerson,\nToronto; w H. Dobson, Calgary; A. J.\nJack. S. E. Johnson L M. Livingstone,\nVancouver; J. M. Humphrey, Melakwa;\nM. K. Burrows, W. F Burrows, England; C. E. French, Chicago; A. Hamilton and wife. Arrowhead; F. W. Clark,\nCalgary; A. C. Mesker. Midway; J. H.\nDudley-Roberts, Winnipeg; Marlon\nWeston Cuttle. New York; George\nDawson.  Edmonton; J. A. Carriere.\nWall   Lighted   Sample   Raama\nAmerican    Plan\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNelson's Leading Hotel\nW. H. SHORE, Proprlatar\nA Horn, far Thaaa Away Fram Horn.\nMost\" Comfortably  Furnished  Rotunda  in the  Interior\nOUR   COZY   TEA   ROOM   NOW\nOPEN FROM 10 A.M. TO\u00bb12 P.M.\t\nMusic  and  Dancing  Saturday   Night  9  to  12\nEverybody Welcome I\ni\nTO THE VANCOUVER EXCURSIONISTS\nBoard ol Trade Party Views Falls and Power Development\nat Bonnington; Tour Over Great Mineral District Is\nEducation; Felicitations Showered on Delegation at\nSlocan City, New Denver, Silverton and Sandon;\nBanquet at Kaslo\nJ-\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nCaropeaa and American Plaa\n\u25a0taaa Heat In Every SLoom\nA. LAaPOINTK,  Proprietor.\nQUEENS \u2014 B. M. Smee, Spokane;\nJohn Flnlay, W. McOMIis. Greenwood;\nG. R. Boylan, Spokane; R C. Green-\nstreet. Michel Miss Y. Lapointe, Proctor A. Lapolnte, Proctor Miss K. McPhall. Miss F, McPhall, J. McPhall. F.\nMcLean, Trail R. Capeling, Tugaske.\nSask.; R. Barron, Kaslo; Mr. and Mrs.\nP. F. Tarry and family, Tarrys; Gub\nRwanson. Wlnlaw; Mrs. J. Smith, Miss\nA. Smith, Rosebery; Mr. and Mrs. W.\nH. Cawley, Salmo; Roy Burkett, Boulder Mill; G. W. Bell, Salmo; J. Doh\u00bb\nson, Salmo; V. Campbell, Slocan City\"\nC,  W.   Mawer,   Kaslo.\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   Granville   Street\nrosy,   bright   rooms.     Just   the\nplace   for   your   vacation.     Rates\nmoderate.     Write   for   particulars.\nMRS.  A.  PATERSON\nLate of Royal Hotel, Granville St\nNew Grand Hotel\nUS VERNON  ST. EAST   ..\nOaaforUable Rooma, Hot and Colli\nWater.     Dfnlnf   Room   la\nConnection.\nSI   and   Up\nGrand Central Hotel\nj. _ EBICKBON, Prop.\nOppoalte Poat Office\nEaropeaa and American plan.\nBOOKS  Me Tn>\nGRAND CENTRAL \u2014 D. Sorwak.\nFred Smith, Boulder: .1. Karpek, f-lo-\nran;   P.   A.   Jacko.   Medli'ine  Hal.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nM.  J.  MADDEN,  Proprietress\n\u2022TEAM   HEATED\nOor. Baker and Ward Sta., Nelsoa\nMADDEN\u2014J. Doorosoff. Tamarac;\n8. Langill. Creston; Tommy Madden,\ncity; Miss I. Layfor, Pentlcton; L,\nDevine, Porto Rico; Mrs, A. Boutry,\nBellevue, Alta.; D. Dooley, Ymfr; C\nA. Ladeleer, Boulder Creek; Miss C. T.\nMadden, D. A. McDonald; M. Perejrov-\ndoff.   Brilliant;   Fred   Walters,   Trail.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS.    MAXLETTE.   Proprietress.\nA Home for tbe World at $1.60 a\nDay.    First-class  Dining Room.\nComfortable Rooma.\nSit Vetra St,    Near Poet Office\nKOOTENAY\u2014Paul Sylvester. Trail;\nH. Holden; J. Zoltsoff, A, Posnoff,\nBlueberry Creek.\nOccidental Hotel\nRun hi Canadian!. All White help.\nRoom and board, per month $40;\nweek $10; (lay $1.60. Meala BOO,\n\u25a0erred family atjrle. Bode SOo. AU\nroo ou eat and a food, clean bed\nto aleep in. Give oe a trial. Auto\n11 frame and boata.\nED.  KERB,   Proprietor.\nTREMONT HOTEL\nP.  NILSON,  Prep.\nBAKER   STREET\nFurnished   Rooms   by   Day,\nWeek er Month\nTREMONT\u2014J. M. Medoz; 8. Manyk,\nCalfary; F. E. M. Gerrick, New Denver,\nJ. Johnson, Sam Koatlnlclf, S. Jarrow,\nBlueberry;   Fred   Johnson,   Porto   Rloo.\nThe Standard Oafs\n\u25a0M Baker Street. Nelaon, B. O.\nDAT AND NIGHT\nMS\nsis\nWhere to Spend a Holiday\nENJOY   A   VACATION   AT  THE\nHOTEL GRAND\nNAKUSP\nFrank Hughes A Sen, Preps.\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lake*.\nSplendid fishing and boating. Nice\nrooms, good meals, pleasant surroundings. Splendid sample room\nfor travellers.\nKootenay Falls Hotel\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.\nNear famous trout Ashing\npool and Bonnington Falls.\nWithin easy reach by automobile or train from Nelson, Trail\nand Rossland via Brilliant Cutoff. Stop-over from coast train\nto Slocan points.\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Q*lf,\nTennis   Courts\nFishing   Tackls  Supplied.   Qreoery\nStore in Connectlen\nW. A. WARD, Prep.\nRates Reasonable Geed  Meal*\nKASLO. July 14.\u2014Leaving Trail by\ntrain at 8 o'clock this morning, with\nLome A* CamtJbell, general manager\nof the West Kootenay Light & Power\ncompany on board, the party of Vancouver board of trade delegates\" made\na brief visit to the company's power\ndevelopment at Bonnington, where\nthey were escorted over the plant by\nMr, Campbell and a number of the\nBtaff. They were joined there by\nFred A. Starkey. commissioner of the\nAssociated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nBritish   Columbia, from  Nelson.\nConnecting at South Slocan with\nthe Slocan train, they travelled\nto  Slocan   City.\nAt Slocan City they were escorted\nto the steamer by Mayor Peter Swan\nand a large delegation of citizens,\nincluding Thomas McNeish, H. L.\nHythe, and W. E. Graham. George\nGordon and L. H. Bfg>gar of the\nStandard mine, and A. L. McPhee,\nlessor of the Ottawa mine, at Slocan\nCity.\nProceeding to New Denver by boat\ntheir approach was heralded by the\nBoy Scouts band at the dock, and\nleaving the steamer they were escort\ned to a shady spot nearby, by the\nlarge turnout of residents, and piled\nwith refreshments by ladies of the\ncity. Among the welcoming delegation were C. F. Nelson, M.P.P. for\nSlocan. N. *A. McKlnnon, government\nagent. D. H. C. Hoben, J. B. Smith,\nH. Clever and E. E. L. Dewdney,\nmanager of the Bank of Montreal\nthere.\n. Called on for a speech Mr. NelTson\ngave a brief address on local matters such as transportation and roads,\nand urged the necessity of better\nservice in that regard.\nW. J. Blake Wilson, president of the\nVancouver board, and Aid Joseph\nPatrick of Victoria replied, stating\nthe object of the visit, and urging cooperation   throughout  the province.\nEntranced with the scenic beauty\nof the Slocan basin, as seen from\nsteamer, the party arrived at Silverton. where A. S. MacAuley, president of the Slocan District board, and\nRussell Hone, the secretary, Joined\nthem. Among the crowd of citizens\nwaiting to welcome them to the dis\ntrict was .William  Hunter. ex-M.P.P.\nfor Slocan.\nSome of the visitors elected to\nwalk. Instead of taking to the automobiles supplied by residents for\nNew Denver siding. They struggled\nup the Incline to the train, with their\nhatS) coats, vests and collars under\ntheir arms, mopping perspiration.\nWelcome at Sandon\nAfter admiring New Denver canyon, the party proceeded on a mountain climbing stage of the tour, comfortably nested in the train. On this\npart of the trip a wonderful panorama of mountain scenery was disclosed as the train climbed to fean-\ndon, where a few minutes' halt was\nmade. There also a large crowd of\ncitizens welcomed the visitors, among\nits members being Clarence Cunningham .the big Slocan mining operator; J. P. McFadden; manager,\nand F. J. Murphy, superintendent of\nthe Rosebery-Surprise Mining company; Oscar White, manager of the\nSilversmith   mine,   and  J.   M.   Harris.\nAfter making the quick descent,\nthe party arrived at Kaslo at about\n8 o'clock, and were escorted by a\nlarge crowd of citizens to the King\nGeorge hotel, where a banquet was\nwatting for them at which the hoard\nof trade acted as' host.\nLi* CASE\nDAIE IS FIXED\nLIBERAL\nE\nI\nCarrie's Not Invited; His\nStand Against Leader Is\nDeprecated\nTORONTO, July 14.\u2014A resolution\nof confidence in H. H. Dewart, K.C.,\nM.P.P., Liberal leader In 'Ontario,\nwas passed at a caucus of Liberal\nmembers of the legislature at the\nparliament building on  Tuesday.\nIn a report of the caucus, authorized by Mr. Dewart, and given to\nthe preps tonight, it is stated that\nneither J. W. Currie, K.C. M.P.P.,\nfor South Toronto, nor Major J. C.\nTolmie, M.P.P. for Windsor, were\nInvited to the meeting. Mr. Currie\nopenly declared that he would no\nlonger follow the leadership of Dewart ln the legislative, and he and\nMajor Tolmle were credited with\nhaving inspired a movement, the\nultimate object of which was to oust\nDewart from  the Liberal  leadership,\nIn the resolution of confidence in\nDewart passed at yesterday's meet\ning of Liberal M.P.P.'s a clause was\nadded deprecating Currle's stand,\nthough not mentioning his name.\nDewart's stand on hydro matters,\naccording to the official report of\nyesterday's caucus, was unanimously\nendorsed, special reference being\nmade to Dewart's demand that the\nhydro electric ! power commission\nshould consist of five members instead of three, as at present, an.?\nthat Hon. I. B. Lucas, former a:\ntorney general, should no longer h<\na member of the committee.\nALL MJalNERY\nHair Price!\nIncluding a good selection\nof Children's Hats.\nLadies' Dress Hats, Ready- I\nto-wear, and untrimmed |\nShapes.\nThis is your opportunity.!\nTOLMIE OPENS\nSAY \"DIAMOND DYES\"\nDon't .freak or ruin your material In a\npoor dye. Inaiat on \"Diamond Drat.\"\nfcaH-, direction, in package.\n\"FREEZONE\"\nLift Off Corns!    No Pain!\nApplication for Increased\nFreight Rates to Be Heard\non August 10\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014The board of\nrailway commissioners has today apt-\ned upon the application of the railway association of Canada, filed on\nthe 10th instant, asking for a general increase in freight tariffs of\n30 per cent over those charged at\nthe present time.\nThe board has decided to hear the\napplications at Ottawa on Tuesday,\nAug. 10, at which time and place\nall interested parties both for and\nagainst the application, will be expected to be present, and ready to\nproceed.\nIn view of the fact that the appll\ncation is a request^ for a straight per\ncentage based upon increased costs of\nwages and material, which are of\ngeneral application, the board has\ndecided that the case can best be\nheard at nne sitting, rather than at\ndifferent pliices throughout the country.\nThe railways in their statement s6y\n\"During the year 1919 the increase\nln wages granted under the McAdoo\naward, amounted on Canadian railways to more than $80,000,000, while\nthe increase In revenue derived from\nthe advance intended aB aforesaid\nto provide therefor, amounted to only\napproximately $43,000,000, a shortage\nof at least  $37,000,000.\nApart from the Increase in wages,\nthe prices of the principal supplies\nand materials in use on the railways\nhave increased more than 100 per cent\nsince the beginning of the war\nperiod.''\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW   LAKES,   B.   C.\nUnder   entirety   n\u00abf   management\nRenowned throughout the west\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urinlc Conditions,   Metallic   PoiBoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nIn  a  most beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools\nEnglish   chef   and   staff\nAmerican plan, $3.50 and up per\nday,  $24  per week.\nH.  A.  HEFFER,  Manager\nThe Transvaal has enormous but\npractically undeveloped coal deposits. \u2022\nDante believed literary words\nshould be those used by the beBt\nsociety  only.   (\nNinard':\nLiniment\nfor\nSpanish\nFlu\nColds\nCroup\nAsthma\nPneumonia\nDoesn't hurt a hit! Drop a little\n\"Freezone\" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then\nshortly you lift tt right off with\nfingers.   Truly!\nYour druggist sells a tiny bottle of\n\"Freezone\" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft\ncorn, or corn between the toes, and\nthe calluses, without soreness or\nirritation.\nTO  KEEP  STHAIGHTEST\nUNRULIEST HAIR IN  CURL\n\u00a7  k\u00bb\nThe stralghtest, contrariest hair can\nbe kept in curl, even In the hottest or\ndampest weather, by such simple and\nharmless means, that the use of the\ndrying, singeing, blistering curling Iron\nIs altogether inexcusable. One need\nonly get a few ounces of plain liquid\nsllmerine from the druggist and apply\na little to the hair before doing it up.\nThe result is quite remarkable. The\nhair is delightfully wavy and beautifully glossy, without being in the\nleast greasy, gummy or streaked. The\neffect lasts very much longer than\nwhen curlers alone, or waving irons\nare   used.\nThe Bilmerlne la best put on with a\nclean tooth brush, drawing this through\nthe hair from crown to tip, preferably\nafter dividing it into strands. The\napplication seems to gradually improve the texture and health of the\nhair.\nCocoanut Oil Makes\nA Splendid Shampoo\nIf you want to keep your hair In\ngood condition, be careful what you\nwash  it  with.\nDon't use prepared shampoos or any\nthing else, that contains too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the\nhair brittle, and Is very harmful. Just\nplain mulslfled cocoanut oil (which is\npure and greaseless), is much better\nthan anything else you can use for\nshampooing, as this can't possibly injure the hair.\nSimply moisten your hair with\nwater and rub tt in. One or two\nteaspoonfuls will make an abundance\nof rich, creamy lather, and cleanses\nthe hair and scalp thoroughly. The\nlather rinses out easily, and removes\nevery particle of dust, dirt, dandruff\nand excessive oil. The half- dries\nquickly and evenly, and It leaves It fine\naid silky, bright, fluffy and easy to\nmanage.\nTou can get mulslfled cocoanut all\nat most any drug store. It is very\ncheap, and a few ounces Is enough to\nlast everyone in ths family for months.\nPoints to Great Britain as\nModel for Mixed Farming\nMethods\nSummer Frocks\nNew designs in Voile and Muslin\u2014dainty models, cool\nand light for the hot days. The color combinations\nare perfect.\nSmillie&Weir\nLadies' Wear Specialist*\nSASKATOON, July 14.\u2014\"It 1b the\nduty of the Dominion and provincial\ndepartments of agriculture to aid\nthe developement of mixed farming In all parts of Canada,\" was a\nStatement made by Hon. S. F.\nTolmie, minister of agriculture, when\nformally opening the Saskatoon exhibition  today.\n\"It behooves us to develop our\nfarming on the mixed standard rather\nthan on that of the particular line,\nGreat Britain is an example of what\ncan be done by a nation when it\n(s determined to develop Its agriculture in more than one single\nway.\"       t\nThe minister then referred to\nthe growth in stock breeding within\nthe British Isles, and showed what\ngreat benefits resulted to the people.\n\"Our government takes a great\ninterest in the development of agricultural exhibitions, believing they\nrender an equal benefit to rural\nand urban districts alike. They\nnot only stir the ambitions of the\nfarmers and create competition between them, but _ they also bind together farm and'city. This is the\nImportant   factor.\"\nReferring to the western province,\nDr. Tolmie said he had a great belief\nin their future, and he thought that\nthere was room enough and opportunities for all industries. Western\nfarmers must not overlook the fact\nthat the greater percentage of their\nproduction was consumed within the\nboundaries of the Dominion, so that\nall industry development is simply\nanother market for the product of\nthe   farm.\ncompleting arrangements of a form\nof commercial life that involves\ntransactions dally aggregating many\nmillions of dollars.\nUnder government control dealings\nin wheat were confined solely to immediate delivery transactions oa a\nvirtual  spot  cash   basis.\nThese dealings were conducted\n\u25a0chiefly near the edge of thei former\nwheat pit at a series of marble top\ntables, covered with little paper\nsample bags. Each bag full of wheat\nrepresented a carload of wheat actually at hand. By this plan, speculation in wheat as ordinarily conducted,  was out of question.\nThe speculators professed that the\nfunction a world market might be\nsubject, was elminated, and Instead\nthe risk laid really on the United\nStates government through the federal price guarantee, and the United\nStates' rain corporation marketing\noperations. Such responsibility on the\npart of the government recently waB brought to an end by congress.\nSPECIAL!\nWhite Canvas Pumps and  Oxfords-\njust   what   you   need   for   this   hot|\nweather.\n$3.00^7.50\nO. ROMAJNOl\nTHE  SHOE  MAN\nCOUNCIL MEETS\nRequest Continuance of\nWheat Board to Handle\nSeason's Crop\nWINNIPEG. July 14.\u2014The Canadian council of agriculture concluded the business of its annual\nmeeting tonight -by deciding, after\nlong discussion to take no further\naction towards political organization\nthan that provided for last January,\nby which organization is carried out\non a provincial'\"plan.\nThe principal subject of debate was\nwhether there should he a central\ncoordinating committee to take\ncharge of political activity, but the\ndiscussion ended without any decision in this direction.\nAt the morning session a resolution\nwas passed requesting the federal\ngovernment \"to Immediately re-appoint the existing Canadian wheat\nboard for the purpose of markoting\nthe wheat crop of 1920.\"\nAt tonight's meeting J.- R. Howard,\npresident of the American farm\nbureau, addressed the aouncil on the\nobject of the cooperative marketing\nprogram of this organization. He\nsaid the arrangement was to eliminate\nthe broker.\nHe invited the council to send\nrepresentatives to a conference to be\nheld in Chicago on July 23 and 24, the\nobject of which, he said, was to make\nthe mid-west states independent of\nthe Chicago grain 'board.\nNorman Lambert, secretary of the\ncouncil, said that the present meeting\nof the council was the biggest ever\nheld.\nAn application-had been received\nfrom the United Farmers of Nova\nScotia for membership, so ,now the\ncouncil Is composed of representatives\nof the farming organisations In .Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick and frftva\nScotia.\nThe Krupp works a year before\nthe war had 70,000 employees.\nArabians, who have always been\nheavy buyers of condensed milk,\nrefuse  to use powdered milk.\nTwelve Opponents in Cycle\nEvents Include Perks the\nFamous Dutchman\nANTWERP, July 14.\u2014Canada will\nhave 12 opponents in the bicycle\nroad race and 10 In the velodrome\ntrack events  in  the  Olympic games.\nAmong the contestants will be\nsome of the best amateur cyclists on\nthis side, Including Perks, the famous Dutchman, who has been winning all  over  Europe.\nThe Olympic committee yesterday\nannounced that the following countries had entered the velodrome\nevents, to be held August. 9 and 10:\nCanada, Great Britain. South Africa,\nFrance, Italy, United States, Holland, Denmark, Luxemburg, Switzerland  and  Poland.\nAll of these except Switzerland\nwill compete in the 170 kilometer\nroad race on August 12.\nIt has been finally announced that\nthe polo matches aj, Ostend will be\nplayed from July 24 to 31, instead\nof the dates ln August, which were\nannounced last week. Teams in this\ncompetition will be British, American,  Spanish  and  French.\nPITJORESUME\nWar Time Measures Cease\nToday; Open Trading\nAgain at Grain Centres\nCHICAGO, July 14.\u2014Restriction on\nfurther delivery business in wheat\nhave been in existence aa a war rule\nsince August 27, 1917, will expire\ntomorrow. The big gong of the\nChicago board of trade will clang\nat 9:30, and the war rule will cease\nto operate here and at other grain\ntrading centres In the United States.\nTonight commission houses in the)\nChicago board of trade district Were\nDRURY WON'T fit\nAddresses Farmers Picnic at\nMarkham on Hydro-Rail\nSubject\nTORONTO, July 14. \u2014 Premier\nDrury dealt with the hydro electric\nradial railway question at some\nlength this afternoon at a joint picnic of the East York and S-luth\nOntario United Farmers of Ontario\ntoday at the village of Markham,\nand he declared that the present\nOntario government's policy with reference to hydro matters was the\nsame as the policy of the Ontat'lo\ngovernment 10 years ago.\nPremier Drury declared that he\nwould not be a rubber stamp, but\nwould exercise his own judgment ond\ntook the ground that the government was responsible for f\/uuran-\nteeing the bonds tln the hydro enterprises and the government must\nbe sure, that the proposed hydro\nelectric radial railway scheme was\nin the public Interest. Taking this\nstand, he justified the government's\nproposed inquiry of radial railway\nmatters by a special commission.\nPremier Drury dec.ared that the\nCJ.P.R., nor any other corporation\nhad   influenced   the   government.\nMOOSE JAW DISCUSSES\nTHE HOUSING PROBLEM\nMOOSE JAWt July 14.\u2014Following\nan interesting discussion of the housing problem in the urbanj centers of\nthe province, 70 delegates attending\nthe 15th annual convention of the\nUnion of Municipalities, which opened here today, declined to take\nany action by way of resolution\nvoting down one which called on the\nprovincial government to institute\na system of loaning! money to municipalities for housing pruposes\nalong the lines of the farm loans\nboard.\nPresident    Peaker,     ex-Mayor     of\nYorkton, took a leading part in\nthe discussion, and favored a system of co-operation similar to that\nextended hy the government to. the\nfarmers in the matter of co-operative elevators, creameries and cold\nstorage   plants. \\\nWhile to some this Ide'a appealed,\nthe vote on a motion along this\nline was decidedly adverse and the\nconvention has not placed itself on\nrecord one way or another in the\nmatter.\nMACKINNONS PURCHASE\nST. JOHN STANDARD\nST. JOHN, July 14.\u2014Mr. Hadley,\nV. MacKinnon, for many years business manager of the St. John Standard, today purchased the entire interest of that paper.\nMr. MacKinnon has occupied every\nposition on the paper having start-,\ned in as a printer's devil.\nSHIPPING CHERRIES\nTO NEW YORK STATE\nST.  CATHARINES, July 14\u2014 Cherries,   literally   by   the   ton, *are   be- '\nIng shipped from this district, to the\ncanning factories of New York State.\nREMEDY  FOR  DIVORCE  ILL\nFor every ill which the world irf-\nfllcts; there is somewhere a remedy,\nand the apparent one to check the\nInundation of martial infidelity is a\nreturn to the simple life. Much of\n\u25a0the restlessness In married life Is due\nto the artificial conditions that have\noverwhelmed society. Natural laws\nand Institutions are forgotten., Vanity\nhas been placed on the pedestal where\nvirtue should rest. Vanity is a great\ndemoralizing force, and we are prone\nto forget that \"demoral\" and \"Immoral\" are sisters. Society must return to simpler ways of living and\ncease the worship of the golden\ncalf, or be submerged In worse horrors than those of the *world war.\n\"Be not deceived\u2014God Is not mocked,\nneither will He abide His anger forever.\"\u2014Los Angeles Times.\nThe   Persian   government  Is   planning and  aerial  mail and passenger\nservice. \u00bb .\nm\n. If fellows' mothers\nwould give em what they\nwant to eat\u2014\nThey'd all ask for\nPostToasties\n(jSbperiorcom flalces)\n 1\nw\nwa velwoe isxtot wtos, thussday morning! tuly m, im\nr fiw.i'i\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, July 14.\u2014Em, PO-\n; tatoea, butter and cheeae were quiet\n| today.\nCheeae\u2014Flaeat easterns  38.\nButter\u2014Cholceat creamery 60 te\n|tl.\nEgg***\u2014Freeh   H.\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag car  lots  15.50  .\n1\nj\n^ NOISY   GKEETINU\nflTDB PARK, N.I., July 14.-^\nFranklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic\nvice-presidential candidate, was given\na noisy and affectionate greeting by\nhis townspeople here today upon hie\narrival from t?an Frapcleco.\t\nJLa*EGAI^tojCES_\nMri.\u00aboir   iCHOOi-   dmtbxct\nPublic notice Is hereby liven to the\nelectors of the Nelson School District that 1 require the presence of the\nsaid   electors   In  the  Council  Chamber\n?t the City Hall, on Tuesday, trre\nOth day of July, 1920, at 12 o'clock,\nnoon, for the purpose of electing a\nperson to represent them on the public\n(\u25a0school board as a trustee fn the place\nof John Notman, resigned, for the\nresidue of the term for which the said\nJohn Notman was elected ln January,\n1919. '\nThe candidate shall be nominated\nin writing, the writing shall be sub-\nHorttwHl by two voters ot the Nelson\nSchool District as proposer and seconder, and shall be delivered to the\nreturning officer any time between\nthe date of this notice and 2 p.m. of\nths day of nomination. And In 'the\nevent of a poll being necessary such\npoll will be opened on Friday, the\n23rd 6k_ ot July, 1920, between the\nhours of 9 o'clock a.m., and 7 o'clock\np.m., at the City Hall, of which every\nperson In hereby required to take\nnotice and .govern themselves aooord-\nIngly.\nThe persons eligible to be nominated for, and elected as School Trustees of the Nelson Schorl District,\nhhall be any person being a Britten\nsubject, of the full age of twenty-one\nyears, and having been, for the six\nmonths next preceding the da]M of\nnomination, the registered owner > m\nthe Lane Registry Office of land\n.or real property In the Nelson School\nDistrict, of the assessed value en the\nlast Municipal Assessment Roll of\nFive Hundred Dollars Or more, over\nand above any registered Judgment\nor charge, and being otherwise qualified to vote at an election of School\nTrustees in the said SohoqT District.\nGiven under my naPd at the City of\nNelson,   this   12th   day   of   July.   1920.\nW. B. WASSON,\n(HUM) Returning   Officer.\nWATER    HOTI01.\nDiversion   and   Use\nTake notice that O. C. Poulln, whose\naddress Is P, t>. Box 2\u00ab4, Nelson, B.C,.\nwill apply for a license to take and\nuse 10 cf.s. of water out of Evans\nCreek, and 5 c.f.8. from the North\nFork of Evans Creek, which flows\nsoutheasterly and drains Into Slooan\nLake about four miles above Slocan\nCity.\nThe water will be diverted from the\nstream at a point about (see sketch),\nand will be used for fltiming and\npower purpose upon the land described as appurtenant to lumbering operation of the applicant.\nThis notice was posted on the ground\non the  22nd  day of  June,   1920.\nA copy of this notice, and an application pursuant thereto and to the\n''Water Act, 1914,\" will be filed in\nthe office of th\u00bb Water Recorder at\nNelson,   B.C.\nObjections to. the application may\nbe filed with tlie said Water Recorder\nor with the Comptroller of Water\nRights, Parliament Buildiiigs, Victoria;\nB.C., within thirty days after the first\nappearance of this notice ln a local\nnewspaper.\nGUTZa-LAUM CHARLES POULIN,\nApplicant.\nThe date of the first publication of\nthis   notice  is  June   24. ($599)\ni>   mi-he    \u25a0*\nMining and Markets\nNBW YORK. July 14,\u2014Almost Uie\nonly material difference between today's desultory operations on the\nstock ekchange and those of the\npreceding sessions of the week were\nthe smaller volume dealings and the\nmore erratic movement of prices.\nApart from the weakness of exchange on London which found sym-\npatetlc expression In lower rates to\ncontinental European capitals, there\nappeared to be no* developments of\nsufficient importance to deflect the\nactive list from its course.\nDealers In exchange ascribed the\nbreak in British bills to heavy offerings by exporters of foodstuffs\nwho were forced- to meet domestic\nobligations. Today's low rates - for\ncables and demand sterling, were\nabout elx cents under high quotations of the early days of the\nmonth.\nWithdrawal tomorrow of some of\n$20,000,000 of local treasury deposits In connection with payments \u00abn\ncertificates of indebtedness and other\nobligations, caused no disturbance of\ncall money rates, wMeh remained\nfirm at eight per- cent, although interior banks continued to reduce\ntheir reserves. The supply of t-l\/ne\nmoney was again at the vanishing\npoint.\nSeveral of the hpfh grade coalers\nmade substantial gains on revlv.il\nof the time worn rumor of an early distribution of \"hidden assets\"\nbut final prices for steels, equipments, oils, motors, and kindred issues showed slight gain or looses,\nthe  lalfcer predominating.\nSales amounted to' 25,000, shares.\nThe one. encouraging newa item\nwas the report of the Lackawanna\nSteel company for the year's second quarters, showing profits of\nabout 11,882,00, against a deficit of\n$233,000 in the same quarter of\n1919.\nLiberty bonds again wavered but\notner -domestic as well as foreign issues,  were steady,\nTotal sales par value aggregated\n$10.6:76,000. ,   .\nOld U, S. Bonds were unchanged\non call.\nClosing   Quotations\nHigh   Low   Close\nMETAL MARKET\nNEW YORK, July 14.\u2014C\u00abpper.\nsteady, electrolytic, spot aud UUrd\nquarter 19. Iron steady, price* unchanged. Tin eaaler, apot and July\n50.60;    August   SO.aO.   Antimony,   7.76.\nMetal exchange quotes lead spot,\nHtm, Juluy offered at g.JO '\/Kite,\nfirm, eaet Bt. Lola, delivery spot, 7 75\n\u25a0bid.\nAt London\u2014Spot copper \u00a390 2a\nM; futures \u00a392' 12s M. Electrolytlq\nspot, \u00a3106; futures, \u00a3110. Tin, apot,\n\u00a32${, 17s 6; futures \u00a3'271 lfia. Lead\nspot, \u00a334 10s; futures, \u00a336. Zinc,\napot   \u00a341  16s;futures  \u00a343.\nUSD    REGISTRY    ACT\n(Section  134)\nla the Matter of Application Ho. 7707-1\n-Hatter    '\n-    A,   \u00bb__\nvine, of British Columbia, Map  349\nOf   lot .5,   Blqck\n\u2022nd  la  th. Mi\n56.   Addition  A., Jfalsoa  OUT,\nTake notice that the above \"appll-\ncation has been made to register Theodore Wolfe as owner In fee of tie\nabove lands (Inter alia) and for the\nissue to the said Theodore Wolfe of\na Certificate of Indefeasible Title\nthereto, and that in support of such\napplication there has been produced\na conveyance dated 18th March, 1913,\nfrom The Corporation of the City of\nNelson, the said Corporation having;\nacquired title to' the said lands as\npurchaser at a tax sale held by the\nsaid Corporation on the 7th September,  1910.\nAnd on Investigating the title It\nappears that prior to the 7th Beptem-\ni her, 1910, (the date on which tha said\nlands were sold for overdue taxes),\nyou ' were the registered and assessed\nowner thereof.\nAnd further take notice that registration will be effected in pursuance\npf the above application and a Certificate of Indefeasible Title to the said\nlands (Inter alia) Issued to the said\nTheodore Wolfe after the lapse of 45\ndays from the service upon you of\nthis notice (which may he effected b>*\npublication hereof twice a week for\n.two weeks in a newspaper circulating\nin Nelson, B.C., unless you shall tiike\nnnd prosecute tlie proper proceedings\nto establish your Claim, If any. to the\nsaid lands, or to prevent such proposed . action on  my  part.\nDated at the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B.C., this 2nd day of July,\nAD.   1920.\nB. S. ETOKBS,\nDistrict  Registrar   of   Titles.\nTo   Frederick   C.   Innes.\nDAKS   A01\narelsott   Land   District,   District   of\nKoot.nay.\nj Take Notice that Alexander Lelth\nund Herman Ernest Dill, of Nelson,\nB.C., occtipatlon, accountants, intend\nto apply for permission to lease the\nfollowing described land;\n. Commencing at a post planted on\nlhe north shore of the West Arm of\nKootenay Lnke, 350 feet south of the\nWW. comer Of sub-lot 4, \u00bb.L. *?80,\nO.l. West Kootenay District, B.C.\u2014\nthence south two hundred feet, Into\nthe West Arm of Kootenay Lake;\nthence east five hundred and seventy\nfeet; thence N. 27 feet 10 Inches; W.\ntwo hundred and sixty feet, to the\nsouth corner of said sub*lot 4; thence\nfollowing the shore line of the said\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake in a\n.westerly direction to ths point of\ncommencement, and containing two\nand eighty-seven hundredths aores, more\nor less.\nHCTMAN   ERNEST   DtLL.\nPer H. E.  Dill.\nDate.   May   8th.   1920. (3260)\nU.  S.  Steel Com. 93 91% 92\nU.   S.   Steel   Pfd. 108   108\nUtah   Copper    ... \u00abS14 67% 67%\nChlno  Cop>er   ...    30V4 29% 29%\nC. P. R  122% M2 1M\nWillys Overland  .    19 18% 18%\nSWaobflker        72% -70%. 71%\nOen. Motors     26% ,   24% 25%\nPierce  Arrow   ...   68% 57% 52%\nM.   Marino   ....    31% 30% 30%\nWinnipeg  grain   quotation*\nOaU~-\nJuly\n' Oot.\nDec.\nBarley-\nJuly\nOct.\nFlax-\nJuly\nOct.\nOpen   High   Low   Close\n115%\n.  92%\n36\n144\n136%\n374\n375\n115%\n93\n146\n136%\n375\n112%\n90%\n84\n112%\n91%\n84%\n144       14*\n134%    185%\n374\n374\n373\nThe lobster canning* Industry ou\nthe coast of South Afrioa is becoming Important.\nSeven' years ago thero were no\nmotor vehicles ln Western  Samoa.\nLegal Notices\nLAUDS    DBPIKITION    ACT.\nWhereas In pursuance of the Nelson\n& Fort Sheppard Hallway Subsidy Aot,\n1892, being Chapter 38 of the Statutes\nof 1802, a Crown. Grant numbered\n745\/86, dated \u00bbe 28rd July. 1897, and\na Crown Gsatit numbered 746\/85, dated\nthe 23rd July. 11897, were issued to the\nNelson & Fort Sheppard Railway\nCompany, covering Lot 1236, Group 1\nKootenay District, and Lot 1237, Group\nI\n1, Kootenay DlatrloW roapwliveUr. and\ntoth e 23rd March, 1893. wete alienated\nby the Crown or held by pre-emption,\nuncompleted sale or lease, or as lnin-\nerttl  claims. \u201e .\nAnd   whereat*,   owing   to  the general\n' doubt   ejtlats   as    to   what\nlands   pawed   to   the   \"\nSheppard Railway  Con\nCANADA BONDS '\nMONTREAL, JUly 14.\u2014The following were the bid prices tor bonds\nat   the  dose   of  the  market   today:\nVictory\u2014-5%'b due 1922, 91; 1927,\n98%; 1937. 100; 19JJ, 98; 1982. 98%;\n1924,   97;   1934,  95.\nEGG MARKET\nOTTAWA, July It.\u2014The agg aaar-\nket is very firm aad advancing in\nOntario and Quebec. Ontario track\nshippers paying store. (0 to ei, and\nmaking aales of straight gathered\nat It to 54 fob cases returnable:\nand graded firsts at 69 to 6at f.o.b.\ncases free. One shipper reported\nasking 55 f.o.b. for straight gathered.\nRegina offered candled current receipts 61% f.o.b.\nToronto firm, specials jobbing 63;\nextras   59  to  60;   firsts 57;   seconds\nM<-ntrea.l fivni and active, specials\nJobbing 62; extras 57 to 58; firsts\n64; second 48 to 49.\nWestern markets firm and unchanged. Car .of seconds rolling\nMontreal costing 49 f.o.b. Regina.\nChicago current firsts 41% to 42%;\nstorage July firsts 43 to 43%; extras  44.\nNew Pork current extra firsts 49\nto 61;, firsts 45 to 48. Poultry firmer, live.fowl 37  to 38.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\n*i\nNEW'YORK, July 14,-Sterling exchange lreav*? at 13.85% for 60 day\nbills and at 23.89% (or demand.\nBar silver, domestic \u00ab\u2666%; foreign\n9\u00bb.\nCanadian   dollars   88.70.\nBelgian Train-*-  10.19\nFrench   francs   9.48.\nItalian   Urea   6.90\nSet-maw. marlw. 2,70.\nCHICAGO CORN\n;   \/ |\nCHJCACrO July if,\u2014tfeavy \u00ab\u00abu-\nIng associated with weather conditions likely to minimize black\nrust damage, brought about sharp\ndeclines today m, the. corn market. The close was nervous, % cei*U\nto 3% cents lower with September\n152% to 153, and December 140%\nto J4f%, oats tfinjehed % cents -to\ni% cents down and provisions off\n35  cents  to  $1.35.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nexception.    \u201e\n'---   Nelson   &   Fort\nimpany under the\naforesaid  Crown 'Grants.\nNow, therefore, -public notice is;\nhereby given Uiat by the \"Nelson &\nFort Sheppard Railway LAnds Definition Act,\" being Chapter 62, Ktatut.s\nof British Columbia, 1918, provision Is\nmade for tlu* conflripa'io\" of plan;* ol\ntownships, district lots or portions or\nland whereof Crowa (iranls have beeu\nissued to the Nelson jfe Fort Sheppard\n.Railway .Company, purporting to have\nbeen issued in pursuance of the said\nNelson & JFort Sheppard Railway Subsidy Act, 1J892, fot the purpose qf defining the said lands.\nAnd further take notice that in pursuance of Section 10 of the said Nelson\n& Fort Sheppard Railway Lands Defln\nTORONTO, July 14.\u2014Cattle\nceipts 1161), market in good cattle\nstrong; with prices holding steady\nto strong with the continuance of\nshipping unfinished cattle. Bulk of\ngood butchers sold at 11% to lfi\ncants.\nCalves\u2014Receipts 428; market good.\nVeal 50 cents stronger, making, .an\nadvance of 21.50 for tlie week.\n. Sheep\u2014Receipts 1152. Sheep market If holding steady, ewes 46.00 to\n18.00;   lambs   215.66  to   118.00.\nHog\u2014Receipts 2161. Hear market\nstrong with prices holding steady.\nWINNIPEG, July 14.\u2014Yesterday's\nsales in the yards, were made up of\n998 cattle, 295 hogs, and 12 sheep.\nDisposition of stock was as) follows:\n30 calves, 161 cattle and 229 hogs,\nwere loaded for loqal plants, while\n16 calves, 46 cattle, 44 hogs and 68\nsheep were delivered to local butchers.\nEastern points absorbed 41 batchers and 46 feeders, whilo 15 butchers\n.17 feeders and 59 stokers left for\npoints west.\nReceipts up to 9 a, m. were 267\ncattle 300 hogs and 68 sheep.\nTrading today was fairly aotlve\nfor the limited offerings on hand,\nand qotations on ajl classes and\ngrades of cattle iwere generally\nsteady to strong.\nSteers\u2014Choice 211.50 to 21250;\nfair  to good,   39.00 to   211.00.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, 210*50 to\n211.50;   fair  to .good, 27.50  to- $10.00.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice, $9-50 to\n$10.00; fair to good, 27.00 to |9.00;\nmedium, 25.50 to 26.50; canners and\ncutters,   \u00bb8,25   to  24.50.\nBylls\u2014Good, $6.00 to 27.00; common,   25.00  to  25.50.\nOxen\u2014Medium, 26.^0 to $7.60.\nFeeders\u2014Choice, $9.00 to $10.00;\nfair to good, $6.50 to 38.50.\nStockers (steers and hetfers)\u2014\nChoice $7.00 to $8.00; fair to good,\n\u26665.50   to   $6.50.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $12.00 to 21600;\ngood, 29.00 to 212.09; common ,$6.00\nto \u00bb7J\u00bb '. \u2022\nSheep and lambs\u2014Good lambs,\n312.00; good sheep, 29.00; coinmou,\nshcop.  $6.00  to -$7.06.\nHofrs\u2014Selects, $18.60; heavies,\n$16.50; Mgths, $16.25 to $17.50; Sows,\n$14.50; \/stags    $.12.50. ')\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO Joly 14\u2014Atlantic Sugar Issues furnished the chief sen-\nration of a day of strong prices\non th\u00ab Canadian exohange today. The\ntone of the market was stronger\nthan on the previous day, and there\nwere few stocks to close with a low.\nNearly1 all the active issues on\nthe Toronto exchange doted at the\nday's high, and advanced ran all\n(he way from a fraction to 10 points.\nThe behavior of the sugar issues\nwas -somewhat erratic, and> large\nJumps sometimes occurred between\ntrades. Sugar opened here at 145, and\n-moved up to 153 without -any Bet-\nbacks, closing with a seven point\n\u25a0net gain., I\nSugar preferred closed at 175, with\na gain of -four  points\nThere was almost uniform strength\nIn the papers, with Riordan leading\nthe local market with a 10\npoint advance to .223 for one day.\nSpanish River gained two points,\nBrdmptofi one point and Laurentide\n1%-\nAbitibi eased off| In the afternoon,\nafter selling -to 8-3-uj. ant^ closed with\na fractional loss.\nDominion -Textile which is seldom\nactive here showed a gain of over\neight points, since the last sale of\na week or so ago.\nCement was prominent abong the\nstocks to lose ground, going down\n.two points to 60.\n1 BRITISH COLUMBIA Ml,\nWIN LEAOERSHjPJNENEUSH MARKET\nCommitsioner Forsyth Smith Give* Splendid Address at\nCity Hall; Consistent Shipping to Big Auction Markets\nAdvisable; Secrets of Improved Pack and Frost Protection; Preferred Varieties and Sizes; Willow Point\nShipment Creaks Furore\nThat    eight\nsold\nufoditte to\niMtlPOrt\nItlon Act, there have been deposited lu,\nthe   haw}  Begtetry   Office,   at   Nelr~\"\ntwo   maps-  hutnbercd   1389   and   1\nXOTXCB\nNotice la hereby given that ln ac\ncordance with an amendment to the\n\u25a0\u2022Townslte Proportionate Allotment\nArt,\" passed at the last session of 'the\nLegislature, any person holding\n-agreement for sale -from the Crown\nIn reepect to the nurchase at Auction\nt[>f Town or -City lots or lands within\nthe site or suburb of a town, payment\ntor which has not. been made In full\nfind who wishes to obtain a proportion-\nsite allotment of suoh land In consideration of the monies already paid,\nknust file application In that respect\non or before the 1st day of September,\n1930, on which date the privilege of\nobtaining a proportionate allotment\nTrill cease and any person in arrears\n\u00ab>r payment under an agreement of\n-pale as aforesaid falling to make\napplication as. stimulated will there-\nutter be debarred rtom taking advnn-\njtage ot such privileges and will be\nsubject to the fulfilment of the terms\ntot the rale and the provisions of the\n*Land Act\" governing overdue purchase money In Connection with whte-h\nspecial attention le drawn to *m\nnotice appearing In the current issues\n\u2022f thi. pap.r.   oW)  R NAMN\nDeputy  Minister of  Lamia.\nthat   Any\ni    founded\nyiotoria, 8.*..,\n\\mi>\nwhich purportJto define L.ots 123G and\n1237, Clroup IT Kootenay District, respectively, and copies of the same:\nimvc heen lodged with the Surveyor\nGeneral at Victoria, with whom there\nhave also been lodged the field notes\nand plans and other data, from whloh\nsaid  maps .were *rt-apare*l*\nAnd further take notl;\nperson nlleging any claim --,---k\nupon the e*c-*tidtis api>ear!iii* In \u00abhe\nsaid Crown Orants In the lands, or\nany part thereof, shown on the said\nmaps as hauiiiK passed to -tlie .Nelson\n& Fort -Slwppiii-d Hallway Company, or\nwho claims that such lands are not\nshown correctly in their true location\non the said fthps, may, tvlthln three\nmonths from the publleatlou of this\nnotice, file his claim ln writing wlth\nthe Attorney General at Victoria; and\naU parties allwliv* ..aw. .islaims \u00bbs\naforesaid are hereby called upon to\nfile  their claims accordingly. .   ,\nAnd further take notice.thnt tl. *e,\nexpiration of the said period of three\nmonths, If uny claims are flled^ the\n'undersigned will appblnl a aurnmrs-\nsloner to Investigate and adjudicate\naaah claims, of which aii-iolntaaaot, and\ntr* time ahd place -a* sitting or,\"\"'-1!\nCoromlsslohef, nottes will he ptflSllshed\nln -the Brlflsh Columbia UaMMe and\nIn Wie NeMon pally t*e#<*.        .. \u201e\nAid luAht-r take notice *hat all\ncUHM*> rounds* upon the \u2666J-ceotiQMl\naJrTpMJ-ini in tha said Crown Grants\nwhich hav. not been so filed, will be\nbarred. \u201e'.    , \u2022\nDated at Victoria, B.C., this Oth day\nof July, A.D. 1\u00bb20.\nMONTREAL UST\nUtl*6-)\n\"JT'W.  E>E FAJMM9. ,\nAttorney   Qwiefftl,\nMONTREAL, July 14.\u2014Except for\n\u2022m (;asing off in the closing prices,\ntoday saw another day of advancing prices ln trading in. listed ee- ,\ncurlties t>n the local; exchange.\nSpanish River common led in activity with a turnover, of 7685 shares,\non which tho price roee to a new\nhigh of 124H from which profit tak-\nl^^g\" reduced the advantage by a full\npoint to the close . 123^, where a\nnet   gain   of   2V\u00a3   points   was   made.\nThe preferred atoek made a. spectacular rise of nearly 13 points to\na new high at 158 closing at 153'4, a\nnet gain of 8-4. points\nThe preferred was also, strong, advancing ifour points to 17$, atod\nholding the galh at the \u00bblose.\nThe r.e.ison fpr, tlie rise Is ntt.ril.\nult'd to the rumors emanating from\nwell informed circles that arrears\nof dividend oh preferred will \u00bbhort-\nly be paid off and a large dividend  be declared on the common.\nBreweries and Quebec railway were\nstrong and active, with the close\nat (15 and  64%  veapectlvely.\nAbltrttl and Brompton Were both\nup a_ ,lMg? fcftcUaa, ajjd 1% points\nrespectively, and Wayagamack was\nlna.ttU.ve   and   steady.\nCotton nnd allied atocks were\nstrong with TettUe *he mont promHv\ne.rit. mining up i% points to 1*6\\4.\nElsewhere stronger stodts . wete\nilcthmald. up. 2)4 poWie aA ttH\nand Merchants Bank up three points\nIto  184.\nTotal   tracing\u2014listed  .34,201,   bontyi\ntart-tW, VDlichW ^,\nThird Party Convention Ad\njourned ior Platform Alterations\nCHICAGO,  July   14.\u2014The  adjourn-\nftierit of the third party convention\nlast night was due, tt Is declared, to\nnecessity of re-tailorlng the platform\nto meet the views of Senator la-\nFollette, Wisconsin, who Is to lead\nthe new party.\nIjaFollette's objections, his representatives stated, are based principally on .a foreign relations, plank,\nwhich endorsed a league of nations\nand favored recognition of the Irish\nRepublic and Soviet Russia, and on\nAnother plank calling for nationalization of all essential industries and\nraw materials.\nCHICAGO, July  14.\u2014Unable to got\nreport from its platform committee the new party convention adjourned at 10:30 o'clock tonight until   10.30  tomorrow..\nPlatform and selection' of . candi-\ndatee will be the order of .business\ntomqiTow.\nWhile the convention argued over\nthe\" recognition extended to its various .elements under the amalgamation, ,tfie .platform completed a dral*t\nof nine planks. According to members of the platform committee, the\nplatform desires of several groups\nhave  been Ignored ln  the, draft.\n\"The recognition of Irelaiyl and\nSoviet Russia, and a league of nations to the end that all kings and\nwar should be abolished,\" were in-\noluded in the piatfonji.\nOther planKs covered a soldiers'\nbonus, and a steeply graduated Inr\ncome tax. Democratic control of\nindustry by the workers and public\nownership and operation of public\nutilities aud   natural  resources.\nThe -r-emaiHing planks were .devoted\nto reduction of tbe coat of living,\nincreased production, promotion of\nagricultural property, and a bill of\nrights for labor.\nSouth Africa turns out nearly 40\nper cent of the world's total annual\noutput of gold- .\nCertain tribes of India prepare an\nIntoxicant   from   the   hemp .plant\nen i-H of Willow Point\n'apples, sold on the (Jlawgow market\nlast year, made something of a furore\nby th\u00abir quality, and strengthened the\nood name of BriiiBh Columbia apples\n.n tfcat market, was Hinted by J.\nForsyth Smith, Canadian fruit trade\ncoinmlHHioner In England, representing the department of trade and commerce In the course of a splendid address given at the city hall yesterday\nafternoon. Theae eight cars were\npart of the province's contribution\nof apples to the Englishman's table\nlast year, which ran to about 250,660\nboxes. Prior to hint year the annual\nshipments of British Columbia apples\nto England ranged from 15,0110 to\n55,000   boxes.\nMr. Bmith's fine exposition of the\nboxed apple trade In England was\ndelivered before an audience of seven\nleading growers of tliis locality.\nShortage ln England\nMr. Smith estimated the English\napple crop now growing at not over\n50 per cent of normal, and this, coupled\nwith the United States exchange,\nwhich would limit the participation of\nthe large barrel crop of this continent in the Englldh market to the Nova\nScotia crop, which was below normal,\nwould create a condition of shortage.\nAgainst this advantage, it was almost\ncertain that the controlled price set\nlaMt year by the British ministry of\nfood would be continued over the\nmarketing of this crop. That the controlled price would be retained, Mr.\n' Smith Judged from the fact that it\nwas retained last year when MupnNea\nwere ample, and there was small\ncause for it, whereas this year, with\nshort supplies, there would be the\ncolorable excuse of protecting the ifiass\nof the English people from high\nprices.\nThe London apple market was very\nbadly organized, the speaker said, and\nfor this reason he expected the establishment of a market -at Southampton,\nnow being carried out, to be highly\nsuccessful. The really well organized market was that of Bristol.\nHe   stated   his   representatives   were\nEireseut at all the primary apple mar-\n.ets of Great Britain every day they\nwere In session, and that every package\nof Canadian fruit sold was recorded\nin his office, with the facts as to its\ncondition, quality, price, and other\nattendant circumstances of the sale.\n\u25a0alee.Methods\nFive ways of handling British Columbia apples on the British market\nwere outlined by the commissioner, the\nsystem of cash against bill of lading,\nconsignment to a firm selling by\nprivate treaty, consignment to a commission house for sole by auction, the\nlast named plan mollified by having a\nrepresentative authorized to hold the\nshipment from a glutted market; and\nconsignment to a personal sales representative.\nOf these various plans, Mr. Smith\nconsidered the direct representative\nthe ideal one, J>ut it was only possible\nfor large shippers or groups of shippers. Next to that, he believed the\nbest results would be obtained, over\na period of years, by consigning to a\ncommission bouse lor sale by auction,\nwhich method would establish in the\nmind of the1 British buyers the individual excellence of the fruit and\nt\u00bback. ',',.\nI Commissioner- Smith stated the pros-\n\"pects for British Columbia apples ln\nthe British market were on the whole\nexcellent, there being a growing tendency in the trade tn favor of the\nbox frutt as against the barrel. It\nwas necessary to meet the competition\nof Washington and Oregon, and In\norder to secure adequate commercial\nreturns no effort should be spared to\nraise both pack and grade to the\nhighest possible level.\nPack    Improvement\nAlong this line, tbe commissioner\nurged the use of corrugated paper\nlining as a protection against frost,\nand stated that apples so protected\nbrought over %\\ a box Increase in\nprice over the unprotected ones. The\nwirehound box, he stated, had the\nlow breakage record of ,H to 1,6 per\ncent, against 10 to 23 per cent for\nthe ordinary box. As long as the\nBritish price control lasted, boxes on\nthe English market must contain 40\npounds of apples, net, and if. through\nshrinkage, the net weight watt less,\na smaller price than the maximum\nwould have to be accepted. This year,\nowing to the shortage, the maximum\nwould probably be the general price\naa   well.\nThe English market demanded a\nsmaller apple than the Canadian prairie, for instance, the speaker pointed\nout.      The    best    sizes    for    England\nwere 150 to It5 to the box, but-after\n175 there was a drop In price as\nthen the apple would be too small.\nApples larger than 112 were difficult\nto sell. On the other hand, from 112\nto 138 wa\u00bb the preferred size for the\nprairie   market.\nOf the preferred varieties. Cox's\nOrange was the leader, a size from\n175 to 225 being preferred, this being\nsmaller than the perference for other\nvarieties. _\nTho Yellow Newtown was the second\nfavorite, both In consumption and\no-rice. ., ..\nOther established favorites were the\nJonathan, Wtnesap, Hpitzenberg, and\nRome Beauty. The Mcintosh, he said,\nhad not yet made its way to favor, and\nthe  Delicious  was not   yet  appreciated.\nCommissioner Smith ;\u00ablso referred to\na continental tour of his, giving an\naccount of the possibilities of the\nDutch and Scandinavian markets.\nFrance was self-sufficient at present,\nand Belgium could not do business on\naccount    ef    the    depressed    exchange\nIn addition to his special activities\nas fruit trade commissioner, Mr. Smith\nla Canadian trade commissioner for\nLiverpool   and   the   north   fo   England\nto \u00abM\u00bb the sit^tifO by flghOnr\nspeculative u*WlBfien -and profiteere.\n-r-Jobannesbuiig Time*.\nEngland had only one wa* \u00abttb.*>\nEuropean power \u2014Rum!*\u2014 ^.-itween\n1816 and 1914.\nIMURAN Cat\nVTOCKt *    RtlfTAU\nREAL   E\u00bbTAT\u00ab\nD. ST. DENIS\nPhONI   t\u00bb \u00ab\u2022   WARD  sTT.\nNELSON, B.C.\neppios\nTOU,,'\n\u00a3VROpE\nFrom Quebec To\nPr. Fred. Wm. July 28 Liverpool!\nVictorian  Aug. i Liverpool\nEmp France   Aug. 11   Liverpool\nFrom  Montreal To\nScandinavian    July 23    Soutb-\nampton-Antwere-\nMelita  July 24 Liverpool\nGrampian    July 30    Southampton-Antwerp\nSicilian  July 31 Glasgow\nMinnedosa Aug. 7..., Liverpool\nPretorian Aug 11...'. .Glasgow\nFor narttnira apply J. J.fBRSTE*.\nGDtFRAl RGFNT. C. P. R. Station\nVANCOUVER, I. C.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nOCEAN SERVICES,\nTHE   COST   OF   LIVING\nEverybody wants to reduce the cost\nof living, or at least to prevent it\nrising any higher. But whilst we are\nus anxious as anybody to bring about\na desirable end. we trust that the\npublic will think very carefully over\ntho remedies proposed and not embark hurriedly upon drastic measures\nthe ultimate effects of which  nrc un-\ncertalh In  the case of foodstuffs\nthere Is a genuine world shortage,\nand prices will remain high until\ngood seasons give a*surpltt.s. Until\nthen the most one can  hope  to do Is\nShow Cases\nBANK, STORE and\nOFFICE FIXTURES\nARCHITECTURAL    WOODWORK\nChalmers Cabinet Works\n1424-1434 Charl.a Street,\nVANCOUVER,  B.C.\nWrite  For  Estimates\npoultry Supplies\nBEST\nFounts, Feeders, Dry\nHoppers,   Shell   and   Grit\nBoxes, Feed Troughs and\nOat Sprouters.    Anything\n4tetal made to order.\nMADE\nlowst\nTIL - '\"\"\nSTRAWBERRIES, GOOSEBERRIES and CHERRIES\nWANTED\nOUR HOBBY AND HABIT IS TOPPING\nTHE MARKET\n* Send your shipments to ue and see the difference; our heavy\noutside shipments assure higher prices. We will advise shippers\ncondition of goods on arrival, market conditions, and prices likely\nto rule; returns forwarded soon as shipments are sold and remittances made on returns Immediately following the first and sixteenth of each mouth. Shippers will do well advising a few days\nahead what shipments they purpose sending us, Our cotnmi s-\nslon charge is fifteen per cent\nPlunkett I Savage\nEdmonton\nCalgary\nLethbridge\nSlocan Mines Declared\nFair\nNOTICE\nTha muttntgaad Mining Companies propose resuming work on thai*\nrespective properties on Kay 16th\nunder a wag* soala agreed upon\nbetween themselves and the Slocan\nbranches of tbe International Unlbn\nof Miuo, Hill ft Smelter Workers,\nwhich wag* scale provides for an\nincrease of 75 cents par day la\nwages and an Increased deduction\nof 35 cents par day for hoard at\nthe boarding houses of the companies.\nFor particulars respecting schedule of wages and conditions of employment, apply to representative a\nof the International Union of Mine,\nMill ft Smelter Workers, or to the\nrepresentatives of tha said Mining\nCompanies,\nVUe Xosebery Surprise Mining\nCompany.\nThe BVambler-Cariboo Mining Company.\nTbe  Noble  Five Mining   Company.\nTha   Cunning.lain   Properties.\nThe   McAllister   Mining   Company.\nThe   Carnation   Mine.\nThe   Lincoln   Mine.\nThe Standard Silver-Lead Mining\nCompany.\n(Signed)   A.   SHILLAND.\nOn  behalf of  the   International\nUnion of Mine, Mill ft Smelter Workers.\nMine\nOperators!\nTake  Advantage  of Snaps\nOffered at Greenwood, B. C.\nThere is still available\nPUMPS, CRUSHERS,\nCOMPRESSORS, HOISTS,\nCARS, LOCOMOTIVES,\nMOTORS, CONVEYORS,\nELEVATORS,\nMiscellaneous Equipment.\nRepresentatives at Greenwood authorized to transact\nbusiness.\nGet our list. We may have\njust what you need and the\nprice will be right. Call\nGreenwood on the phone (or\ninformation or price.\nCanada Copper\nCorporation\nSales Dept\nLocal Office\nlimited   \u2022\n-   Allenby, B.C.\nGreenwood, B.C.\n. The NELSON IRON WORKS, Ltd.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nMining, Sawmill and General\nMachinery, New and\nSecond Hand\nSEND US YOUR INQUIRIES\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOf Canada, Limited\nOfflMa,   \u00bbrr..lting   an J . R.f inlng   D.partm\u00bbnt.\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS  Of   GOLO,  SILVER,  COPPER  AND   LEAP  ORES\nProduoan- of Gold, 8llv*r, Coppor, BluMton-h Pl| L.ail and ZliM\nTADANAC BRAND\nTHIRD\nInternational Mining Convention\nAT NELSON, JULY 20-24, 1920\n\u2022 est   opportunity\nill jive ftddrsMfci *)t\nMl\nProspectors alul Mine Owners, don't   mliss   thi\never offered tn display  your samples.\nDuring the convention  the foremost awtbnrltU'!\ntthsorbing. Interest.\nAll   tfce  most  up-to-date  niacliinmy   and   appl\nbe on view.\nA splendid tour of th** Sloein, Silverton, New Denver, Han-Sol, Kaslo, Ainsworth, ete., inlnin-j country or Trail smeltor is beiiR arranged.\nLadles are partie.ul..rly inviU-d, and a bis prograni of -uUeilaitunent\nla planned for their  benefit.\nkicl\\ mine investors and Uinkers {rum all parts will;attend.,\nTHE GREAT MINING EVENT OF THE YEAR\nNever before in hlstjry has there been'such a phauce to < omblno\n profit,   pleasure  aril   instruction.     You  c;m't  afford  to miss it.\nProspectors are \"specially request ed \"\"To shnd*\"in*\"s 1 >ccimen's~ for~\"dis^\n_ play,   particularly    those   from  vet-en I  finds. _______\nfred\"aTstahk.ey~~-    -    *   -     -     secWetary-man~ager\nEveryone  Come\u2014Everybody Welcome\n \u2014\u2014\na\u00bbi\nTEE OT5LS0N DipLY NBWS, \u25a0 THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1920\n\u00a9be Jtollji Sfctro\n>^\u00bb--*^a**^-\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb-\u00bb~----.-*-*'a*-.-.\u00bb\u00bba\u00bb-*^~^~*r\n-_ oetpt SmidtaT br Ths N.ws Pabllshint Cow\n_ I.tt.rs should b. addre. *na and checks snd raonsy ord.ra mad.\npajrabl. te Th. News PublUhint Com pan)-. Limited, and In no oats to lndl*\n\u2022Maal BMrnbers of the staft\nAdrsrtlslng rate cards and A.B. C stat.rc.nta of circulation maltod\naa> nouat or may be aeaa at the of floe of any advertising ageoor recog-\n\u25a0M W tbe Canadian Press AaaoelaM on.\n\u25a0nbaorlptlon   rates:     By   mail   (cons try). 60 centa par month;  I\u00ab per year.\nOutside Canada, a month. 75c; a year,   J7.S0.    Delivered,   75c  per  month;   M\nfor sfax months;  17.60 per year, pay- able ln advance.      *\t\nAaalt  Bareau   of  Olnalatiaa.\nTHURSDAY MORNING, JULY 15, 1920\nWelcome to the Vancouver Businessmen\nNelson this afternoon will welcome the representatives of\nfhe Vancouver board of trade who will spend this evening and\ntomorrow in the city.\nFraternal visits of this sort are good business, both for the\ninterior and Vancouver. They enable Vancouver to appreciate\nsomething of the immense natural resources of the interior of\nthe province, the resources which are the backbone of British\nColumbia, and they enable the interior to get into closer touch\nwith the coast, the biggest centre of capital and manufacturing\nin.the province.\nVancouver is the largest city on the Canadian Pacific coast.\nIt is destined to be one of the biggest cities on the whole Pacific\nseaboard of this continent. It is the logical door through which\npractically all commerce from the east must enter the Dominion,\nthe door through which Canada's exports to the countries across\nthe Pacific must pass. It stands to Canada as does San Francisco to the United States and the time is not far distant when\nit will rival the California-metropolis in population and importance. ,\nJust as Vancouver has benefitted and today is benefitting\nfrom the great natural resources of the interior of the province,\nso will the interior benefit from the growth of Vancouver as\na centre of commerce and capital. Of the wealth which the\ncoast city gathers from the four corners of the earth through\nher commerce the interior will get its share for development\nof industry.\nNeither interior nor coast can stand alone. In the broad\nview the interests of both run parallel. It is in the interest\nof each to give the other as fair deal. It is in the interest of\nthe coast to see that the interior gets justice in public expenditures and all other matters, and it is in the interests of the\ninterior to cooperate with the coast for their mutual benefit.\nK  \u00ab  \u00ab  \u00ab\nWatch Out, They Turn to the Right, Now\nPedestrians as well as,drivers of vehicles need to take note\nof the change in traffic regulations. The pedestrian who is\naccustomed to dodging vehicles which are turning to the left\nneeds to keep in mind the fact that from today all vehicles will\nturn to the right.\nDrivers of all kinds of vehicles have been warned of the\nchange in the rule of the road and they owe it to themselves\nand to the public at large to observe the rule strictly and\nwithout exception.   Carelessness may easily cause loss of life.\n.Violations of the rule of the road should be followed by\nprompt prosecution.\nUSED   NLEDLE   TO   E8CAPE\nWith a needle obtained ln the prison shirt factory as his only tool,\nBer^ Loften naa escaped from the\nstate prison at Rawllna, Wyo. William Smith, his companion, was captured while trying to scale the\nprison wall. Lofton and Smith were\nconfined to the death house cell because of their known desperate\ncharacter. Lofton found that a soft\npiece' of ateel covered a drain. With\ngreat   patience   and   skill,   he   slowly\ncut a hole through the steel with the\nneedle. After removing a pipe and\na plate, they crawled through the\nhole, picked the, lock of a steel door\nconnecting with the main corridor of\nthe prison, scaled the tiers of cells,\ncut holes through the slate roof and\ndropped to the ground, ln the prison yard they found a steel bar,\nwhich the prisoners bent into a hook\nto fasten an improvised rope on the\nprison wall.\nThe  ascent of sap In  trees  is not\ndue to capillary force, but to osmosis.\nI       TEN  YEARS  AGO TODAY       I\nFrom The Dally News, July 16, 1010\nDefinite steps were taken at the\nboard of trade meeting last night towards enlisting the co-operation of\nthe entire Kootenay and Boundary\ndistricts in a comprehensive scheme\nfor advertising the district and attracting settlers and capital.\n*>   .    .\nAn extensive bush fire is now raging and half Kaslo is excluded by\nflames.\nThe third serious fire In Nelson\nIn ten days startled In the citizens\nat noon yesterday, when the residence of Mrs. Margaret Rason, 710\nHall street, was almost completely\ndestroyed.\n...\nWilliam Walker, professor of mining fcn Toronto nlverslty, arrived In\nNelson on Wednesday night ln tha\ncourse Of a tour of the mineral regions  of  Canada.\nTWINTY VIARB AGO TODAY  I\n(From   the   Tribune,   July   15,   1900)\nThe  Stanford baseball team proved\ncomparatively   easy   victims   for   the\nNelson nine Saturday.\n...\nGeorge   Bell   of   the   Imperial   bank\nstaff iueaves  today for Winnipeg  on\nhis vacation.\n...\nMademoiselle Trehelll-Dolores and\nM. Eugene Berns arrived in Nelson,\nyesterday and are, registered at the\nPhalr.\nDAUGHTERS DENY\nCREED CHARGES\nmembers of the order here have\ndenied the charges.\nOne member said to-day: \"The\nquestion of creed has never been\nraised in the order.\" It waa pointed out that, in an executive of B0\nmembere there were four Roman\nCatholics, and these had been elect-\ned for their patriotic work, not be-\nuauae-bOf their creed.\nMrs. A. W. McDouffall of Montreal,\nand Mrs: Philip Kieley of this city,\nwere quoted ln Interviews ln local\npapers as having denied the charge\nthat they had \"attacked\" Mrs. Oood-\nerham of Toronto, former president\nof the I. O. D. E.\nPOSTMASTERS WANT\nDEFINITE ANSWER\nWINNIPEG, July 14\u2014The Canadian postmasters association convention opened here to-day with an\nattendance of 76 delegates from all\nparts of Canada, being presided\nover by president W. A. Hamilton, of\nBridge,   Ont.\n; At (he morning session, the convention approved a resolution asking that the government give a\ndefinite answer to their petition for\nIncreased salaries which was made\nlast May.\nThe afternoon session was occupied\nTORONTO, July 14\u2014No formal\nreply has been made by tho executive of the Imperial Order Daughters\nof the Empire to the charges in\ncongress made by T. Ferguson, K.C.\nof this city, at the Orange demonstration here on July 12, that a plot\nwas on foot by Roman Catholics to\ngain  control  of  the  I.  O.  D.  E.   but\nTHE  CHOICE    OF    CRITICAL\nPEOPLE\n\"Ca-\\NADA'S BEST\"\nTHERE'S A REASON\nCom* In and have   us   demonstrate  these   superb  initru-   (\nments to you.\nYOUR OLD PIANO\nTAKEN IN TRADE,\nPAYMENTS OF\nTHE BALANCE ARRANGED TO SUIT.\nWillis   P\nlanos\nLIMITED\n304  BAKER  8TREET\nTOLD   IN    RHYMI\n\"ANOTHER CHANCE\"\nWe  have  seen  some  great  successes\nSeen  some  mighty failures,  too\nWe   have   seen   the   loser   fall   with\nmerry   glance. ffL\nBut the saddest slgnt we know of\u2014\nFar the saddest sight In life\nIs the man who said he didn't have\na chance.\nWe have seen them In the gutter\u2014\nBeen them down and nearly ' but,\nWe  have  seen  them  try  again with\nchastened   glance\nAnd we've seen  them  come successful\nFrom  the mire\u2014the victory won,\nFor their faith was strong and  so\u2014\nthey took a chance.\nAh,  this  thing  of   being successful\u2014\n'Tls  living\u2014not  ln  wealth,\n'Tls   in   taking   all   the   blows   with\nmerry  glances,\nli Ideals are what we stive for\u2014\nIf we're earnest\u2014then we'll win\nFor,   you   see,   we've   always   got\u2014\nanother chance.\n\u2014W. C. Motley.\nONTARIO CROPS\nLOOK PROMISING\nTORONTO, July 14\u2014Spring sown\ngrains, according to the weekly report of the Ontario department of\nagriculture have been making considerable growth in the past few\nweeks. Barley and oats are heading\nvery promisingly and the prospects\nfor big crops, especially of oats,\nare excellent.\nFall wheat harvesting will commence this week or early next week,\nespecially in the southwest. Owing\nto the cool nights during the past\n10 days the wheat heads have filled\nout remarkably, and thousands of\ndollars have been saved to the farmers of the province by the favor-\njpMe  weather.\nBILL POSTERS TO\nGET HIGHER PAY\nNBW TORK, July 14 v~ Contracts\nproviding a 20 per cent wage increase for bill posters during the\nseason of 192L were signed' to-day\ntqr officials of two large circuses at\nthe  annual  convention  of  the  Inter-\nf\" nal alliance of  bill  posters  and\n\u25a0   of   tha   United   States   and\nda.\ns new scale calls for $10' a month\naHow-wces ft* axpsnsea.\nHAYINGJ00LS\nWe  have just received  another  carload  of  Farm\nMachinery, including ,_..._\nMOWERS and RAKES\n3-A-foot one-horse Mowers, each 890.00\n4-foot one-horse Mowers, each $90.00\n\u2022\u2022-\u20224-foot two-horse Mowers, each $91.00\n5-foot two-horse Mowers, each $92.00\n8-foo* Hay Rake, each $56.00\n9-foot Hay Bake   857.00\n10-foot Hay Bake  86O.00\nHay Tedders, each  $75.00\n'All manufactured by the Cockshutt Plow Co.\nWe also have a full stock of hand Hay Rakes, Forks,\netc   Order early.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nBOX 1050 ' \" NELSON, B. C.\nwith the president's report, which\ncovered the growth of the association\nfrom  IU inception in 1902.\nThe report of the secretary, H. B.\nProctor, of Aurora, Ont., showed an\nIncrease In membership during the\nyear, especially In the east.' Provincial executives have been established\nIn Saskatchewan, Alberta and British\nColumbia.\nAt to-morrow's session the question\nof salaries, shorter hours, and the\nhandling of customs parcels will bs\nconsidered.\nFISH    WAS    DROWNED\nThe yarn of the frozen fish which\ncame to life when placed in the cooking pot by the V.A.D. was told to a\nNaval officer, who promptly capped\nthe tale with the following: \"An interesting experiment was tried some\ntime ago,\" he said, \" with an ordinary\nherring.   The    fish    was    put    in    a\nlarge bowl of salt water, and every\nday a small quantity or, the water\nwas removed, and an eqfial quantity\nof fresh water was substituted, until eventually the fish lived and thrived In purely fresh water. The owner\nwas so pleased with the success of\nhis experiment that he then tried\nremoving a very small quantity of\nwater daily until the bowl was empty\nand found that the herring did excellently entirely without water, and\nas he was so lively ln the empty\nbowl, he had to put him In a cage.\nHere he lived happily, hopping from\nperch to perch, just like a bird, until one day some sludden noise startled him, and he fell into his water\ntrough   and\u2014was - drowned\"\nSalmon   are   found  almost   entirely\nIn  the  northern   hemisphere.\nGolf   was   popular   ln   Scotland   aa\nearly as  the  fifteenth century.\nJohn Burns & Sons ^^SSST\"\n\u2022ASH  AMD DOOB FAOTOBT NELSON  PLANING   MII.I*\nTenon street, Nelsoa-, B. C.\nCVXBT   DESCRIPTION  OF BUILDING   MATERIAL  KEPT  IN   STOCK\nTtlaaites oi.en on'Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame BulMlncs\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO\nP. Oi BOX 1M PIOW tn\nAlexandre  Dumas   rave  away\neral   fortunes and  died   poor.\nSTAUNCHLY\nCANADIAN\nHarking back a mere trifle of\nfifty-five years we find ourselves an infant In a tiny store\nin Montreal. Growing lustily,\nwe have become so big that\nwe now stretch from Halifax to\nVancouver, and can reach to\nany  point where  the  malls go.\nIt Is a matter of pride to us\nand to our patrons that our\nwhole organization \u2014 stores,\nworkshops, factories\u2014Is staunchly Canadian.\nVANCOUVER.   B.   C.\nMaking Your Dollars\nDO DOUBLE DUTY\nYOU men who've fallen into the idea that a 1920 Dollar was\nlike a dime of the pre-war days when it came to buying clothes\nwill increase your respect for that Dollar when you see what\nEmory & Walley are making it do. Its knocking our profits\n\"Galley West\" but its accomplishing our purpose of STOCK\nCLEARANCE--That's the big idea with us.\nRegular $60 to $65 Suits\nIL -^^^ ^7 *^\\ Finest Custom Tailored Suits, fancy . worsteds, Scotch Mk --\"^\/l \/ i*^\n\u2022J\/ %_WM.* \u00a3 %J   tweeds and cheviots,   July Clearing Sale Price    ipC-rJL* \/ w\nPenman's Wool Socks\n25 Dozen PENMAN'S GREY WOOL\nSOCKS, excellent value at 65c.\nThree Pairs for\n$1.15\nArrow Collars\nOdd Lines of Arrow COLLARS\u2014\nTwo for\n25c\nSilk Neckwear\n10 Dozen SILK NECKWEAR, $2.08\nand $2.50 values\n' $1.35\n$4475\nRegular $50 to $55 Suits\n97 Fine Hand-tailored Suits, Fit-Reform and Society Brand\nmakes mostly. ' Fine worsteds and tweeds. July Clothing\nSale Price\t\n$44.75\nArrow Shirts\nW. G. & R. and ARROW SHIRTS,\nstiff cuffs, 14 and YtV-t sizes\n\u2022only.   Values up to $3.00.   Each\n$1.15\nSilks Socks\nSILK SOCKS, white and colors, odd\nlines.   Per pair ,        \u2022\n90c\nA Good Buy\nW. G. & R., Arrow and Welsh Mar-\ngetson SHIRTS. 10 dozen, all\nsizes, at \"\n$1.00\nOFF REGULAR PRICES\n$34.75\nRegular $40 tO$45 Suits\n\u2022105-Hand-Tailored Suits in great variety of smart patterns,\nFit-Reform, Society and Bengard makes. July Clearance\nSale Price\t\n$34.75\nHeavy Cotton Socks\n10 Dozen Heavy Cotton SOCKS\u2014A\ngood working sock.   Three Pairs\n$1.00\nAthletic Underwear\nTWO-PIECE ATHLETIC UNDERWEAR.   Pre-war price 75c each\n45c\n25 Dozen\nHOSE,\nfor\nBlack Hose\nBlack  Cashmere   Finish\nregular 50c.   Three pairs\n$100\n* a*.- \u201e- Regular $32 to $35Suits\n_ \/    I      \/    J  We only had 20 of these and they are getting -picked up\n*T * \u2022\u25a0*-\u00bb*\u2022   11 y\u00b0u wan-- > \u00bb\u25a0'* -t this price, act quick\t\n$27.75\n120 Pairs of Men's Trousers at Sale Prices, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50, $6.00 to $7.50\nJ\nEMORY & WALLEY\n \u2014\u00ab--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\nfcfll\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEW* THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 15, 1920\n*\u2022*\u2022\u00bb 3\nHow\nAbout\nThose\nGolfing\nBrogues?\nThree Styles to Select From\nR. Andrew   &  Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FA8HION\nKootenay and Boundary\nYMIR LADIES' GUILD\nENTERTAIN TO PICNIC\nFISHERMAN GETS TWO\nTROUT ON ONE HOOK\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHONE  10\nExpected Today >\nPLUMS,   PEACHES\nTOMATOES,   CANTALOUPES\nCHERRIES,   STRAWBERRIES\nNsw Potatoes, Local Green Psas,\nBeets, Carrots, Green Onions, etc.\n9\nCuticura Soap*\nThe Velvet Touch\nFor the Skin\nfPRING   and   SUMMER   It the  time\nto    get    your\nPlumbing and Painting\ndone.   Wo stock the goods.\n\u2022 Call  or write\nTHE G. T. STORE\nNEW   DENVER,   B.C.\nP.O. Box 4 Phone 22\nKOREANS' DAY OF MOURNING\nKing's Quality Flour\nGUARANTEED    ABSOLUTELY\nManufactured by the Hedley-Shaw\nMilling-  Co.,  Ltd.,  Medicine\nHat, Alberta.\nWrite   us   for  prices   on   car   lots.\nFLOUR  AND   FEED\nT.   R.   CLARK,   Rep.\nP. O.  Box 660 Nelson,  B. C.\nThe following description of the\nirtanner In which the Koreans ob\nserved\u2014or tried to observe\u2014their\nday of mourning, was sent by a\nspecial correspondent at Seoul, Korea,\nto the Bureau of Information of the\nRepublic of Korea at Shanghai, China\nIn Seol the students of all the\nprivate schools struck work in ordef\nto Observe the first anniversary of\nthe death of tho late Emperor of\nKorea.\nAll the stores were closed, and\nKorean flags tied with black ribbons\nwere seen everywhere from early\nmorning.        *\nA group of girl students, with\nmournmg crape on their breasts,\nwept before the Dal Hun Gate ln\nfront of the Duck Soo Palace where\nthe   late   Emperor   lived.\nMany Koreans Joined the girls in\ntheir mourning. The Japanese rapidly   dispersed   the  gathering.     t\nAll the girls of the West Gate Industrial training station built by the\nJapanese government struck work\nand wept ln the compound of the\nstation.\nThere were several collisions between Koreans and Japanese, and aH\na result many Koreans were arrested\nshopkeepers also being arrested for\nclosing  their stores.\nSeoul was In a high state of excitement and tension for many days,\nthe stores  being closed  until  Jan  22\nIn \u25a0 Pengyang early in the morning Korean flags draped with mourning were, seen on the Manaoo Hill,\nFlags were also seen on the top of\nmany telephone poles. The streets\nwere vaeent, and the stores were all\nclosed. The Japanese began to take\ndown the flags and forced the shops\nto open.\nThere were like occurrences in tall\nthe leading cities and towns. It may\nbe added that Koreans did not weep\nso much for the Emperor us for their\ncountry, now in the possession of\nJapan.\nYMIR July 14.\u2014A moat enjoyable\npicnic, organised by the Ymlr ladles\nguild, was held on Tuesday afternoon\nand evening ln the grounds of the\nPresbyterian   church.\nA large number of people were present. Games of various kinds \u2022 were\nprovided and were participated ln by\nthe chtldrens of all ages and sexes.\nIce eream of excellent quality and ln\nliberal quantities was served at frequent Intervals, the prevailing weather\nconditions tending to Increase its\nenjoyment, Towards evening a lavish\nsupply of tea, coffee and refrjuliments\nwere served and greatly enjoyed, the\nparty reluctantly breaking up at the\napproach    of   darkness.\nThe following ladles of the guild,\nand others, who furnished the Ice\ncream and refreshments, and otherwise Contributed to a most enjoyable\nafternoon and evening, are: Mrs.\nPeters, Mrs. Ross, Mrs. Price, Mrs.\nWm. Clark, Mrs. E. Daly, Mrs. Mc-\niBaac, Mrs. Gllle. Mrs. Mosscrop, Mrs.\nPeterson, Miss Nicholson. Miss Orr,\nMrs. O. Leece, Jr., Mrs. Emllson, Mfb.\nA Baskin, Mrs. Burgess, Mrs. A.\nClark,   Mrs.   S.   Springer,\nTRAIL.,   July   18.\u2014Fishing   Is   pretty\nfrood in the Columbia river these days,\nn spite of the high water, many\nof our local \"Isaacs'r finding the results   of   their   fishing   quite   encour-\nOne angler this evening, fishing\nfrom the verandah of his dwelling,\nlanded two falr-slsed trout at one\nhaul, he probably being quite as much\nsurprised as the fish  were.-\nNEW RESIDENTS\nCOME TO TRAIL\nMAN'S\nBEST AGE\nA man is as old as his organs; he\ncan be as vigorous and healthy at\n70 as at 3 5 if he aids his organs in\nperforming their functions. Keep\nyour vital organs healthy with\nCOLD MEDAL\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOCAN CITY, July 14.\u2014K. Zimmerman has returned home from\nVancouver after an absence of about\na month.\nMr. and Mrs. Ralph Gillette, of\nVancouver, have taken up their residence here for the summer ' months.\nThey are old residents of Slocan;' City.\nAngus S. MacAuly, of SUverton, Is\na visitor in town ln the Interests of\nthe   board   of   trade.\nMiss Rosle Graham, of New Denver,\nis here, the guest of the Misses Grace\nand    Bertha   Armstrong.\nMr. and Mrs. G. W. Long, who had\nbeen here as the guests of their\nuncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.\nLong, left on Monday for their home\nIn   Portland,   Ore,     -\nR. If Reynolds had the misfortune\nto cut the wrist of his left hand on\nMonday morning, while in the act of\nmaking kindling. Four stitches were\nnecessary. The injured man was attended  by Dr.  Gomm  of  New  Denver.\nTRAIL, July 13.\u2014Mrs. Annie Rel-\nmann, daughters Selma and Nora, and\nson Max, arrived from England by\n8 8 Metagama. and reached Trail on\nSaturday, where they will live with\nher elder son, George F. Relmann,\nwho has been a resident for a number\nof years. They had a pleasant enough\nvoyage In spite of, varied weather,\nand are delighted wilh the local surroundings, and that their lot has fallen! In such  pleasant  places.\ntuneDp sawmill-\nat porcupine creek\nTRAIL NOTES\nThe Store for Quality\nYMIR, July 14.\u2014The newly erected\nsawmill belonging to Baskin and Sted-\nman, on their recently acquired llmltB\non Porcupine Creek near Ymlr, Is now\nalmost completed. Fires are being\nstarted under the boilers today for the\npurpose of warming them up. After\na few days of light running and tuning up of the machinery, the plant\nwill settle down to working at Its\nmaximum  capacity.\n\"YMIR NOTES\nYMIR,   July   14.-\n-   et, Aid\nMr. F. Barker, of\nPincher'Creek, Alts., is In town for a\nfew days lookim ujt Ule possibilities\nfor  opening  up  a  general   store   here.\nMrs. S. Springer, of Nelson, is\nspending a few days In town and is the\nguest of Mrs. Mclsaac.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Clark, of Trail, are\nspending their vacation In Ymir with\nMr. Clark's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nWm. CUrk.\nJuly! Clearance Sale\nSwings merrily along gaining new patrons with its additional extraordinary values.\nThe thrifty coming to this store today will findjauying just^as sati8factory_as^on the\nfirst day of the Sale. The merchandise offered ih'this July Sale is scarce and in\nmany caSes^ing*sold\" below'market cost. These facta should urge you to come\nquickly. *aw.\nWomen's Suits at $24.95\nThomas J. Belsley has been visiting with bis daughter at the coast\nfor the past two weeks, and is* expected   to  return   home  on  Wednesday.\n\"Pat\" Teefey, foreman at the copper melting plant, returned to the city\non Saturday from points tu Michigan,\nwhere he has been on business tn the\ninterests   of   the   smelter   company.\nG. F. Prltchard, manager of the\nBank of Montreal here, returned to\nthe city from Prince Rupert, where he\nhas been relieving the manager of\nthat branch for* the past three months.\nW. M. Archibald, manager nf mines\nfor the' Consolidated, was a business\nvisitor . to   the   city   today. \u2022\nM. D. Cosgrlff, of the Consolidated\nstaff, spent the weekend In Rossland\nwith his family.\nt3___J3L_l\nThe world's standard remedy for kidney,\nllvar, bladder and uric add troubles\nwince 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates\nvital organs. All druggists, 50c. a boa.\nLook for thf. nemo Gold Medal on \u00abv\u00abry\nWa end accept no uniution\t\nHoloplanc Non-Glare\nHeadlight\nLENSES\nConform to the New Law\nFor all cars, a set $4.00\nMail orders receive prompt\nattention.\nCanadian Auto &\nElectrical Supply Co.\n306 BAKER 8T.\nROSSLAND NOTES\n-ROSSLAND, July 13.\u2014Myles Tysim\nleaves this even Ing for Victoria,\nwhere he  will  visit  for a fortnight.\nThe wedding of Miss Phylis Hor-\nwell, youngest daughter of Mr, and\nMrs. G. Horwell, of this city, to Roy\nHancock, took place Monday morning,\nthe Rev, E. A. Chester performing\nthe ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Hancock\nleft on the Great Northern train for\nSpokane.\nMrs. B,Morgan , of Seattle, is visiting  her mother,   Mrs.   Brown.\nMr. and Mrs, H. H. Johnstone and\nchildren leave Wednesday for Deer\nPark.\nH. Valentine returned last evening\nfrom    a    fortnight's    trip    to    Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. H. RUmmell, of Electric\nPoint,    arrived    this   afternoon.\nF. C. Hammerman, of Spokane, is In\nthe   city   today.\nF, (1. Clarke, of Calgary, arrived\nthis afternoon.\nD. M. McClung of Spokane, Is a visitor   to   the  city   today.\nE. J. Lee, of Spokane, Is spending\na   few   days  here.\nHIGH WATER BRINGS\nDRIFTWOOD DOWN\nTRAIL, July 13.\u2014The heavy rains\nnf last night have brought the river\nup quite a bit today, and It was pretty\nwell covered with logs during the early\npart  of   the  day.\nHOSE REEL ARRIVES FOR\nSLOCAN FIRE BRIGADE\n'8LOCAN CITY. July 14.\u2014Slocan City\nhas secured a hose reel, which waB a\nmuch needed article, and Is now organizing a fire brigade and expects\nto   hold   practices   three  times   a   week.\nC\n\"As Good As It Looks\"\nThe first glance you give a Leckie Work Boot tells you that quality _\nis \"sticking out\" all over It. Your eyes tell you at once lhat here is a\nwork boot that is built for comfort and heavy duty\u2014and your eyes\ntell you the truth, for if I every bit as good as it looks.\nThe good, honest oak-tanned sole of a Leckie Work Boot gives many\na day of extra wear. The solid, tough yet pliable uppers (tanngd in\nour own tannery), not only gives service, but also gives that \"restful\"\nfeeling to your foot You'll never go wrongon a work boot if \"Leckie\"\nis stamped on the sole.\nJ. LECKIE CO. LIMITED\n\u2022   Vancouver, B. C.\nBritish Labor Member Attacks Nationalization for\nOld Country\n\u2014 \u25a0-' ,\u2014 ' *\nDescribing the position of British\nseaman under the proposed nationalization of'shipping, as virtual slavery, J. Havelock Wilson, C.U.B.. M.P*.\nfounder and president of the national\nSailor's and Fireman's union of Great\nBritain and Ireland, strongly attacks\nthis political policy as a return to the\ndays of forced latter,\u00ab \"Writing in the\nNorthern. Whip and, Belfast Poat, the\nLabor parliamentarian Hays:\n\"After having been fighting the\npolitical battles of the merchant seamen for more than forty years I\nfind myself face to face with what I\nregard as the most momentous struggle of my career. In this fight I am\ndetermined to stand and fall in the\nlast ditch, for I cannot contemplate\nthe possibility uf the nationalization\nof the ships without feeling horror.\nI will not stand aside and see the\nsailors manacled by the State, for\nwhich nationalization  means..\n\"Some people may say that t am\nInspired by selfish motives or by\nvanity. It is a lie! Naturally I\n\u25a0would be grieved to see my, life's\nwork undone, but It Is because I am\nconvinced that the .go-called reform\nwould be disastrous. To- morrow, If\nI felt that It would Improve the position of the seamen, I would vote\nfor nationalization without a momenta\nhesitation; but while I am convinced\nthat It will harm them I will fight\nagainst It with all my strenght and\naa long as I live. And I will denounce the principle and its advocates with my dying breath.\n\"It makes mo tremble to think\nwhat the future of the seamen will\nbe if the ballot .which Is now being\ntaken should support this pernicious\ndoctrine or nationalization. I am not\na blindly prejudiced opponent of\nnationalization, for my \u25a0 Ineradicable\nhatred of the whole principle is rooted  in  experience.\nA  Door for Worse Abuses\n\"Even us long ago as 1820 there\nwas a Seamen's union. This old organization was not strong in numbers,\nand It hud no funds to speak of, but\nby 1850 the sailors had begun to organize themselves, although the union\nof even that time was too poor and\ntoo weak to be able to stand against\nthe oppression of the owners and\ntheir agents,\n\"It was at this , time that, the\nunpleasant individual who was commonly called the \"crimp\" flourished,\nand grew fat and rich on his ill-\ngotten gains. In official circles he\nwas called the shipping master, but\nin reality he was nothing but a bloodsucker, who extorted money from the\nunderpaid and defenceless men by\nthe dirtiest of methods. He exercised\na species of terrorisation over the\nmen. No man who omitted to bribe\nthe \"crimp\" handsomely when he was\npaid off from  the ship had the least\nWomen's Tailored\nSuit* at $59.95\nShowing some of this season'-, best models. Made of\nthe best Navy Serge, with\ncoats loose, or belted,\nlined with guaranteed silk.\nSkirts shirred at waist and\nfinished With belts. Sl*ses\n14 to 40.    Values to J100.\nJuly   Sale\nPrice   \t\n$59.95\nWhen Folks\nQuit Coffee\nbecause of cost to\nhealth or purse.they\nnaturally drink\nInstant\nPostum\nThere's a Reason\nSilk and Crepe-de-Chene Blouses\nClearing at One-Quarter Off\nAll lines of the better quality Crepe-de-Chene\nSilk and Georgette Blouses are offered in this\nsale at one-quarter off regular prices. More\nthan 200 models in the lot. We have them\nin white, flesh, maize, pearl, sancj, navy and\nblack, showing long or short sleeves, and\nround,   square   or   V-necks.     Sizes   34   to   44.\nRegular\u2014\n(15.00  Blouses for 811.25\nJ20.00  Blouses for $15.00\n$26.00  Blouses for 818.75\n$35.00   Blouses for 826.25\n611 Baker Street\nEighteen only tailored Suits, made of mannish\nSerge ln navy, black, sand or Copenhagen.\nSizes 16 to 38. Values to |50. fl-O\/f Qf?\nJuly Sale Price   \u00abW*.\u00ab7\u00abJ\nNatural Pongets at $1.00 Yard\nOne hundred and fifty yards ot good weight\nNatural Pongee. A splendid washing atlk,\nfull 34 Inches wide. fljl   AA\nPer yard  wl.UU\nWhite Sheets at $2.50 Each\nFull   size   sheets,   made  of   extra   heavy   cotton.\nWorth $3.50 today. \u00bb\u00ab Cf|\nJuly   Sale   Pi-Ice.  each  JB.V.OU\nWomen's Sweater\nCoats Clearing at\n$9.95\nFifteen only all-wool\nSweaters In a nice\nweight for summer\nweather. A variety of\nstyles and colors.\nValues to $15.00,\nJuly  Sale Price\nPhone 200\nichance of getting another berth, and\nwholesale robbery was not at all\nuncommon.\nOfficials\n\"Under the so-called reforms which\nwere Introduced by the Merchant\nShipping act the seamen became the\nprey of the two packs of wolves. The\ncrimp was not suppressed, but he still\nmade the sailor pay dearly for his\nvaluable help, and added on to him\nwas the board of trade officer, who\nwas protected by his official position.\nComplaints were frequently made, but\nthe higher officials would not listen\nto any of the charges which were\nbrought against their subordinates.\nDuring all my long fight for the\nseamen' well-being the Government\nofficial has been my most relentless\nand most obdurate opponent. It was\nnot the private owners of the ships\nwho blocked the road to progress. It\nwas the Government official! He has\nneither a soul to damn nor a body\nto kick; for as long as he can satisfy\nhis chief, who is anxious to be satis-\nfled, his position Is unassailable. It\nis the chief's job to cajole parliament,\nIn order that the system which he\nrepresents may continue.\nBack to  Slavery\n\"I think that the life of the workers\nin any  Industry would be drab  and\nbard under any system of state control,   and   I   am   convinced   that   It\nwould  mean  hell  for  the  sailor.   We'\nmust   not   forget,   when   considering\nthis precious question  of  nationalization,    that    some    of    the    so-called\nleaders of  the  Labor  movement,  following the example of  their Russian \u25a0\ncomrades,   have   openly   avowed   ap- I\np'roval   of   the   principal   of   forced J\nlabor.   Forced labor\u2014  or  the control\nof labor!    What Is that but a pretty- '\nsounding    name    for    slavery?   How\niloes slavery strike upon the ears of\nthe seamen?\n\"If the State should become the\nowners of the ships the enterprise\nmust be put upon a sound business\nbasis. If the ships did not pay for\ntheir running expenses and maintenance, the state, as the owner, would\nbe heading straight for the rocks\nof national bankruptcy.\n\"Cjuite possibly that would be the\nresult of the adoption of nationalization, and it is not necessary to explain what the position of the seamen would be when the disaster\ncame. But suppose:\u2014wild as the supposition may be\u2014that the state made\nthe venture pay! Under such circumstances could tho seamen hope\nfor higher wages and for better conditions from the state than they get\nto-day from the private owners? The\nanswer to this question Is supplied\nby a study of the current rates of\npay ln Government employment and\nin private employment respectively.\nThe state always pays badly, and\nthere Is no reason to suppose that\nan exception would or could be made\nin favor of  the seafarers.\nliberty of action\u2014he may even  forfeit his freedom.\n\"Nothing seems to me to be more\ncompletely out of sympathy with the\nnational character than any system of\nstate interference. Our ancestors\nhave fought and died In the cause of\nliberty, and yet we talk a'bout taking\nupon ourselves the yoke of state\nserfdom. It amazes me that the advocates of the nationalization of Industry can find a single supporter;\nand I hope most earnestly that the\nBritish seamen, who are the very Incarnation of the spirit of freedom,\nwill not be misled by their lying\nplatitudes.\"\nPIGMIES   DEVASTATE\nqiSTHICTS    IN    AFRICA\nAn   Evil   Employer\n\"It is impossible to rebel with sue\ncesa   against   the    slavery    which    i\nprivate   individual   may   attempt   to\nImpose\u2014public  opinion  and even   the\nstate itself, will support a just cause\nbut it Is vain to struggle against the\ntyranny of the state whan once It Is\nJn  the ,poeitlon  of  the employer,  as\nIt muat be on a gigantic scale under\nany   system   of   nationalisation.   The\n,1 loses his ladsaUty. and Ma\n-   - -a*. ,.\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab.., in    . \u25a0\u25a0 -., \u2014  --\nLONDON,\u2014The Mackle Ethnological Expedition to Central Africa,\nwhich is conducted by the Rev.\nJohn Itoscoe, under the auspices of\nthe Royal Society, has completed Its\nInvestigation of the pastoral tribe of\nthe Bahima in Ankoie, a district in\nthe west of the Uganda Protectorate, says \"The Times.\" With the help\nof the native king and the chiefs, a\nlarge body uf Information has been\ncullected ilustrative of the customs\nand beliefs uf the people. The subjects investigated Include the totemlc\nclans, system of government, pastoral life, hunting war, religion and\ncustoms practiced at birth, marriage\nand death. The time devoted to the\nexamination of the tribe was about\nthree   months.\nFrom Ankoie the expedition passed\nintu Kigezl, and spent a short time\ninvestigating the natives, is large\n\u25a0tribe of fierce mountaineers belonging to tho Bantu stock, who in their\nmountain fastnesses have never been\nconquered by the Hamitis Bahima.\nThey are believed to number over u\nmillion, divided into many clans, but\nthe relations between the clans are\nso hostile that travelling Is difficult. No man ia safe more than half\na mile from his home, and the men\ntill the fields in groups of four or\nfive for safely, keeping their wea\nlions always within reach while they\nwork.\nThe expedition found that large\ndistricts of the territory of these un-\neonquered savages had been devastated by the pygmies, who had emerged from and retreated into the great\nluteals of  te  Congo  region.\nFrom Kigezl the expedition struck\nwestward through a little known\ncountry, which proved to be a sort\nof Africa Arcadia of indescribable\nbeauty, the scenery including crater\nlakes embowered tn tropical vegetation of the most wonderful luxuriance,\nand the simple natives living in\npeaceful seclusion, cut off from the\nworld and igorant even of thelf fellows a few miles distant. In these\nremote highlands, before descending\nthe escapment to the ferry or strait\nbetween Lakes Edward and George,\nthe expedition discovered the descendants of some Bagauda, who,\nhaving slain a prince ln battle, had\nfled from their country many years\nago to escape the avengers of blood.\nThence the expedition proceeded\nnorthward along the line of the lakes\nuntil It descended some 2,500 feet\nInto the hot plain of Lake Albert\nThere a paddle steamer conveyed It\nabout 100 miles along the lake to\n.Nlotjjlw,. tbe, .pod., of  Ma-4fldk\u201eT.a,i\\d\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -\u2022\u25a0        .llll.    .1^.-, .j.'    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-a^. W\u201e.. .  .. \u201e.\nfrom the port a Belgian motor lorry\nbrought the expedition to Masindi, the\ncapital  of  Bunyoro.\nThe distance covered by the expedition from Ankoie was roughly\n400 miles; the difficulties at various\nplaces arising from the great heat\nand the scarcity of food and water\nwere very considerable; but the results more than compensated the\nhardships encounted, for new peoples\ncame under observation and a general\nsurvey of the route has been made\nfor   future   use.\nMasindi was reached on February\n26, and will be the headquarters ot\nthe   expedition   to   allow   ft   to   make\nfull Investigation of the large and\nImportant tribe of the Banyoro, tlie\nold rivals of the Baganda. There ll\nevery prospect of useful work being\ndone, for the nataVe King is looking\nout men who knew the old regime,\nand he promises to help In person\nwith information.\nDESCENDANT OF ANNIE\nLAURIE TO WED SOON\nThe origin of a famous song iii\nrecalled by the announcement of the\nengagement to Major V.. W- Eyre\nto Miss Esine Fergusson of Craig-\ndarrock. Scotland, a descendant of\nBonnie Annie Laurie. Annie was the\ndaughter ot Sir Robert Laurie of\nMaxwelllown, and the luver who\nwrote so fervently of her beauty\nand his devotion was one William\nDouglass of Finland, who composed\nthe song, according to tradition, short\nly before he was killed in active\nservice in Flanders two centuries\nago. The original song, however was\nvery different from the familiar\nversion, which we owe to Lady John\nScott, who not only revised it, but\nadded a third and most beautiful\nverse.\nNewfoundland is the smallest self-\ngoverning dominion of the British\nEmpire.\nCattle   and   sheep   were    used   as\nmoney by early Greeks and Romans,\nTIZ FIXES ACHING,\nlOLLEPJEFEEI\nHOW      \"TIZ\"      DOES      COM.HO.Rft\nTIRED.   BURNING,   CALLOUSED\nFEET  AND  CORNS.\nGood-bye, sore feet, burning feet,\nswollen feet, tender feet, tired feet.\nGood-bye corns, callouses, bunions\nand raw spots. No more shoe tightness, no more limping with pain or.\ndrawing up your face in agony. \"Tig*\nIs magical, acts right oft. \"Tls\"\ndraws out all the poisonous exudations\nwhich puff up the feet. Use *ThT\nand wear smaller shoes. Use \"Tig\"\nand forget your foot misery. Ah\\\\\nhow  comfortable   your  feet  feel.\nGet  a box  ot   \"Tia\"'   now  at  any\ndruggist or department store.    Don*4\nsuffer.    Have   good  feet,   gla-i fettj\nfeet   that   never   swell,   never   ha\nnever get tired.    A year's toot con\nfort guaranteed  or money refund*\n JHi NELSON DAO.T NttTO, TKORBDAY MOENING, JULY U, 1928\nGeneral News of the dtp\nCONCERIfATTWOIIUnTB\nir,.       ..,,.t . 1 < '\nChairman Annable of Industrial Committee States Canvass\nfor Stock Subscriptions Will Start at Once; Twenty-\nFive Thousand Dollars Already Provisionally Subscribed; Want Cost of Plant to Be Covered Before\nStarting Undertaking\nAnnouncing the immediate start ot\na canvass ot the business community\nto place B-tock in the proposed local\npulp mill. J. E. Annable, chalrbian\nof,the Industrial committee of the\nNelson board of trade, stated last\nnight that It was proposed to capitalise a  local company at $200,000.\nOf this amount $125,000 will install\nft mill that will turn out 20 tons\nof pulp fn the ti hours. The balance of the capital will be ample\nfor operating, it Is estimated.\nIt Is considered desirable that at\nleast baW \u00bbf the ISOO.eoo be,subscribed locally, Mr. Annable states,\nin order that the control may be\nlocal. If it Is found Impracticable\nto raise the whole amount tn the\ndistrict, tho balance remaining tu be\nraised can then be sought outside.\nIt   Is   proposed   to   sell   the   stock\non the monthly installment plan,\ncovering a period of seven months,\nwhich, It is figured, will be the time\nrequired, for the completion ot the\nplant The aim will be to dispose\nof enough stock to ensure the completion of the mill before starting\nwork,\nThe necessary expert mechanics to\nerect, install and operate the plant\nar\u00ab available in the east, Mr. Annable states.\nAlready J 1,0,1) 0o has been provisionally subscribed, It Is understood\nby local business men and other clt-\nia+na. it Is considered that 10 days\nshould see the capital substantially\nsubscribed. *\nIt Is Intended to call another public meeting at   the end  ot the  week\nthr the  placing of  the ,facts before ,\nthe citizens. ,\nDOUBLE FUNERAL\nLate Altai Whittet and William Dunstan Buried With\nUnique Evening Service\nAttended by over 60 members of\nthe local lodge of the Knights of\nPythias, the joint funeral ot Allan\n\u25a0John Cameron Whittet. -and William\nLangdon Dunstan, took place last\nevening from th* uu-dertaking -parlors\nof the Standard Furniture company.\nRev. J. P. Westman officiated at\nthe service in the parlors, and in\npart at the graveside, where the\nlast rkes,, according to the ritual of\nthe Knights \u00abf Pythias, were performed by Prelate Joseph Lord,\nChancellor Commander M. lv Mc-\nCandlish, and Vice-chancellor David\nLaugh ton. v\nWearing oi*ly the Jewels uinong\nthe insignia of their order, the\nKnights headed the foneral procession\nto the cemetery.\nThe pail-bearers were James Kay-\nton, Charles Burnett, Thomas Cay-\nley, George Joy, Albert Brown and\nGerald  8.   Rees.\nAmong the many beautiful floral\ntributes to the late Mr. Whittet\nwere those from the Knights -of\nPythias; Charlie, Kate, Mary. Nate\nGreen; Dr. Osborne, Joe Bernard\nand Harry Chapman, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. G. Neelands. Mr. and Mrs. Addison, Let McKee and Mr. and Mrs.\nA.  Lessard.\nSHOWPflOLTRY\nAssociation Decide* to Grant\nThem Whole Section;\nPrize List Revised\nOLD TIMER DIES\nAT ADVANCED AGE\nA comprehensive Juvenile section\nwith nominal entry fees, was decided on last night by the West\nKootenay Poultry & Pet Stock*asso-\nciation as a new feature of the poultry show, to be held as a part of the\nNelson   fall   fair.\nThis is an enlargement of the\nIdea adopted at an earlier meeting.\nof giving special prizes for the best\nbirds shown by juvenile exhibitors\nin   the   regular   classes.\nUnder the new plan, the young\nfolks will have a department ot their\nown. Entry fees will be 10 cents\nper bird. The association will* add\nsome money to the entry fees In.\neach section, and the prizes will be\nthe totat emry fees plus this extra\nmoney. In addition, there will .*e\nthree special prizes, donated by the\nmembers  of   the association.\nThomas Wright was named superintendent , of the show, and the\nshow committee will consist of Walter Davies, R. H. Maber and S. H.'\nSmythe.\nAn offer from George H&rstend,\nsecretary of the fair board, to re-:\ncelve the entries fees at his office,\nwas accepted.\nThe prize list was revised and a1\nnumber of specials donated by members of the association, wet;e accepted  for insertion in  it.\nWilliam Henry Jeffs, _&.\u2022\u201e 79\nyears and a resident of this cily\ntor the last 20 yeVs, died at KWM-\nn*y La-k'e General hospital Mondty\nat 2 o'clock, after being In failing\nhealth for a long period of time.\nBorn in Warwick, England. Mr.\nJeffs spout his early yuan* in iungr-\nland. where he married Miss Emma\nJohnson. Mrs. Jeffs died ln Nelson\nin the summer of 1908. Com in* to\nCanada early in his married Hie,\nhe lived for many years in Paris.\nOnt., and came to Nelson froiin :hat\ncity. Of a* family of six children\nborn to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffs, fo\u00bb;r\nsurvive: William Henry Jeffs and\nAlfred Jeffs, of Nelson; Mrs. F.\nkitcher. of 'Woodstock, Out., and\nMrs. William Barraclougfc. of Victoria. B.C. Tbe funeral will take\nplace from St. Saviour's church today.\nGARDEN PARTY AMID\nROSES AND LANTERNS\nMasses and garlands of roses and\nJapanese lanterns were used in profusion in tbe decoration scheme used for the gureen party given by\nThe Mothers club of St. Saviours\nchurch at the Summer home of Mrs.\n; O.  A. Hunter yesterday afternoon.\nTea and cakes and Ice cream were\nsold during the early part of the\nafternoon, and supper was served\nlater on.\nThose -serving were Misses Lillian\nand Jean Hunter. Miss Crena Hor-\n#tead, Mrs. H. Moss and .Mrs. E.\nWools. On the organizing and receiving committees wore Mesdames\nO. A. Hunter, J. C. Tbelln.*a. A.\nFletcher, J. R. Joy and Gilbert An-\nderson\nGEORGE BARKER IS\nINJURED BY AUTO\n*   George  Barker,  the  il-year-old son\not Mr. and  Mrs. W.  Barker of Ver-\n\u25a0 son  street   was   struck   and   thrown\nto  lhe  ground   by  the   city's  motor\n, truck,    employed    for     transporting\ncrushed rock, yesterday afternoon as\n\u25a0I wm playing near the crusher t\u00bb.t\n\u25a0w oust .ond ot Vernon street.\nK He was taken to bis t|ome, where\n[fits- Gilbert and David Hartin set\n\\ {several   broken   ribs.\nThe Association of British Chambers of Commerce has 45,000 wealthy\nmember**.\nCanada's greatest wheat crop was\nin 1815, when the yield was 383,-\n5-12,600 bushels.\nArabians   practice 'agriculture   only\nin a small and primitive way.\nS GUESTS,\nAflEJJE TOOflY\nVancouver Tourists WHI Be\nTaken on Scenic Trips;\nBanquet Tonight\nOn the an-ivaJ of the Kaslo boat\nthis morning, the Vancouver board\nof trade tourists will become the\nguests of Nelson. It is the lnten- ,\ntlon to meet them with} automobiles,\nand drive  them  to  their hotels.\nThis afternoon (he visitors will\nhare the choice of a launch run\nup the West Arm, or of a motor\ntrip  down   the   Kootenay   river  road.\nAt 8 o'clock tonight a banquet,\nunder the auspices of the Nelsoa j\nboard of trade, will be tendered! the j\nvisitors, in Eagle hall. Preparations are being made Tor seating 101). \\\nTomorrow morning the coast delegation will resume -its tour, leaving\nfor Cranbrook, with a stop at\nCreston en route.     \\_\nBRIDE-TO-BE IS\nGUEST OF HONOR\nMies Violet Ross was the guest of\nhonor at a miscellaneous shower\ngiven by Miss Lillian McDonald at\nher home at 809 Mill street last\nevening. About 45 guests were present. *\nGarlands of red, white and blue\nribbons, caught up by honeysuckle\nand roses, and vases filled with\nscarlet peonies were used for decoration.\nThe   numerous   gifts   were   brought\nip   a    large    beribboned    basket   by\nMaster   Jimmy    Proudfoot   who   was\nassisted by little Carol Proudfoot who\nheld a pair of ribbons reins.\nDuring tjie course of the evening,\nwhich was spent ib contests and\ngames. Misses Eva irvin and Nellie\nand Margaret Colclough rendered\nmusical selections.\nFor Skins That Itch,\nBurn and Scale\nBathe the affected\npert with Cuticura Soap and hot\nwater. Drygently\nand rub on Cuticura Ointment.\nThis treatment is\nusually best on rising and retiring.\n^For every purpose\nof the toilet, Bath\nand nursery the\nCuticura Soap\nand Ointment are\nideal. The Soap\nto cleanse and\npurify, the Ointment to soothe\nand heal.\nSo.p 25c, Ointawt 25 and 60c. Sold\nthrouBhotjttheDonilnlpn Canadian Depot:\n\u25a0Umsrn. Unfeod, .St. Paul St., MoatrML\n\u25a0FXWfcwe So*p ofe-rei without MS.\nThe Italian language has more dialects than any other European tongue.\nCanada used an average of 94.95\npounds of sugar per person last\nyear,\nToMakeaTartSaladJell\njiffy-Jell is for salads as well as \u2022\ndesserts. Get the lime-fruit flavor\nand it will make you a tart, green\nsalad jell. Mint \\ flavor nukes a\nmint jell.\nThe fruit flavors in J iffy-Jell are\nfruit-juice essences in vials\u2014a bottle in each package They are real\nfruit, and the flavor is abundant.\nNo artificial flavors\u2014no saccharine.\nTry loganberry or pineapple flavor for a dessert, and learn whit\ndelicious dainties Jiffy-Jell brings\nto your table. A package will serve\nsix people.\nJiffy-Jell with its natural frith\nflavor costs much less than jam or\nmarmalade.\n21    Livestock Wanted\nr. years, harness, one horse plough\nund second-hand chicken wire. F.\nHamblln, Deer Park. B.C.' (8869)\nWANTED\u2014 Airedale      puppy,\nshend.   Willow   Point.\nTown-\n(8900)\nWhite Sauce\nby\nMrs. Charles\nMrs. Charles lias given ' this\nreo. pe fcedause, As she says,\nright noW'iS when fresh vegetable taste the best,\ntleat two tatik-Hpoont'uls of\nbutter unttl It is bubbling; add\n1 % tablespoonfula of flour and\n54 teaspooj-ful of salt and a\nlittle pepper*;- stir until thoroughly -blended. .Mix % cupful ot Paeifi-i: Milk and % cup-\n,ful of water together, and pour\ngradually into the melted butter\nand flour. Bring it to the bqil-\ning point and cook two minutes.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\n, Limited\nVancouver,  B.C.\nFactory   at   L.dn.r,   B.C.\n24 Business Opportunities\nFOIt   SALE\u2014 Uutel   or.\nB.C.\n19\nKoKslai.tl,\n(8876)\nEGGS\nSmall Ads That Bring Quick Returns\nWJWjJl^-a*.)^\nWANTJ!a>\u2014Flunkey, $T5 per month\nand board. Writ*), -phone or call\nYankee  Girl  Offtoa,   Emir,' B.C.\nWANTED Immediately, experienced\nsawmill men,. Including sawyers, setters, eetaermen, trimra-Srmen, lumber handlers, engineers and firemen.\nTop wages, first class accommodation. Nine hoar day. Write or wire\nstating experience, Adams River\nLumber Co., Ltd., Chase, B.C.    (8BB2)\nWANTKD\u2014Nignt scaler for sawmill;\none who can pass, the government\nexaminations. $135 and board.'\nO'Neil, Irvine & Mann Lumper Co.,\nBoulder Creek. _    (8855)\nWANTED\u2014Bull    oook,    experienced    In\nfish  cleaning;   $80   per   month,   Apply\nHandy    Sonierville,    Caithness,   B.C.\n(8840)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced diahwaaher at\nonce. Wages $90.00 and board. If\nnot first- class.at the business do\nnot waste your time and mine. Write,\ncall or phone Riggs & Wilder, Boul-\nder Mill, B.C. (8689)\nWANTED\u2014Mill hands, graders, telly-\nman. Apply Clerrard-Lardo Lumber\nMills,   Annable   Block,   Nelson.   (8877)\nWANTED  \u2014  Strong boy.    Apply  Mc\nDonald   Jajn  Co.,   Nelson, B-C.   (8762)\n13 Situations Wanted Male\nWANTED\u2014J0b as truck driver. Ca%\ndo running repairs. Write H. Bell,\n378   8th   Avenue   East,   Vancouver.\n , (8892)\nEXPERIENCED lumber man wants\nposition aa accountant, shipper.\nsalesman, tallyman, grader or yard\nforeman. Can come at once. Good\nrafereni-eK.' Rosh Anthony, 72-4 Burn-\nside  Road, Victoria, B.C. (8873)\nTWO young fully ojuallfled electrical\nand mechanical fitters and machinists require position. Conversant\nwith A.C.. D.C., maintenance, repair\nand construction; credentials, etc.\nState   wage.     Box   8851,   Dally   News.\n____^__ (88B1)\nWANTED by ex-soldier, situation as\ntimekeeper, bookkeeper or position of\ntrust, has wide experience* in mining and logging camps. Apply Box\n88?3  Daily News. (8823)\nWANTED \u2014 Position by experienced\nand competent stenographer. Apply\nStrathcona   Hotel,   City. (8874)\nWANTED\u2014Chambermaid.    King George\nHotel,   Kaslo,   B.C. (8880)\nWANTED\u2014Girl    for    light    housework.\nApply 605 Cedar Street. (8883)\nWANTED\u2014Stenographer, beginner preferred. Apply by letter, giving references to Bank of Montreal, Nelson.\n  (8719)\n23   Property fer Sal*\nGeneral Insurance, Loans\nand Rentals\nC. W. 'Appleyard\n410 Baker Street\nBox  \u00ab2\u00ab NELSON,   B.C.\n*ol.phon.   MS (87M)\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON\nWard St., Nelson, B.C.\nR 194\u201411 aetes\u2014Improved Fruit Ranch\n\u2014all cleared\u201410 acres planted In\nclover; good frame house; hay barn\nand stable, frost-proof root house;\nchicken house and hog pens. Very\nlevel lot; buildings cost more than\nthe price asked. A snap at the price.\n$3,500.00.\nR 199\u201411 aotee \u2014 Highly Improved\nFruit Ranch\u2014all cleared; 250 fruit\ntrees; variety of small fruits; good\ncreek; house, stable, barn, chicken\nhouse; 2 miles from school; a highly\nproductive place, free from rock;\nsoil heavy loam with clay subsoil.\nOwner producing honey and fruit.\n$4,500.00.\nR 205\u2014\u00ab7W acres\u2014 Improved Fruit\nRanch and timber proposition; small\ndealing; 60 fruit trees; adjoins river; log shack; timber can be handled\neasily and quickly; official cruise\nallows 1,000,000 feet ot log timber\nand   6000   ties.     $1750.\nR 222\u201419 acrss \u2014 Improved Fruit\nRanch\u20148'acres cleared and planted;\n6 acres slashed and 6 acres partly\nslashed; 260 fruit treee bearing,\nsmall fruits, spring, sub-irrigated;\n7-roomed house, bathroom, hot and\ncold water piped; \u2022S-K-mfle from\nwharf, poat office, school, etc.)* also\nranch implements a*nd house furniture Included.    $8,000.00.    T\nK 212\u20149S4 acres Highly Improved\nFruit Ranch\u201413 acres cleared; 10\nacres planted to trees; 600 fruit\ntrees; large variety small fruits;\nwater piped underground; 6-roomed,\nhouse, hath', and pantry; stone basement; furnace, etc. Sold over $2000\nstrawberries In one season. Property\nproducing several thousand dollars\nyearly; close to city, school and\ntransportation.      $17,000.00.\nR 207\u2014OT sores\u2014Improved Fruit or\nDairy Farm\u2014IS acres cleared; 170\nbearing fruit trees. Variety, small\nfruits, creek, good log house, barn,\nhay shed, chicken house, et\u00ab.; y_-\nraile from school. Pretty location on\nriver front; good soil and firee from\nrock; very productive; would make\nan  Ideal  dairy farm.    $7,500.00.\nI make a specialty of Fruit and\nFarm Larfds and have a large list of\nproperties for sale. Call or write for\na copy of my Midsummer Price List\njust  issued. ,(8885)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced     chambermaid.\nApply  Strathcona Hotel. (8714)\n18     Articles lor Ssle\nTKNVfor sale, 12xf4,^\"-fooT^waTls')\nwath fly. In good shape. Phone\n247R. (8903)\nFOR SALE\u2014$1800 portable sawmill, tn\ngood order. Phone Morphy, Deer\nPark,  today. (8901)\nFOR SALE\u2014One tent, 10x13, 2-foot\nwall; In good condition. J. P. Morgan, city.         (8883)\nFOR \"SALE\u2014dood second hand timbers and planking, from $8.00 to\n$20.00 per thousand; **olts from, it,\nby 10 inches up to % by 4ft 1W in.\nRods up to 12 ft. long, steer x>re\nchutes,   gates   :ir,d . corrugated   roof-\n. Ing. Apply Box 423 Greenwood, B.C.\n'      ' \u25a0   '(8859)\nFOR SALE\u2014Gourlay Piano, rfiahogany\ncase, first condition, for quick sale,\ncheap. 421 Carbonate St., or P.O.\nBox  32. * (8829)\nFOR SALE\u2014About 50 chickens, ll)\nyoung ducks, one pair White Fan-\ntail pigeons and one pair Magpie\nPigeons.    Box .\"\u25a0!*\u00ab  clt>. (8884)\n34    teachers Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Experienced teacher for\nKitchener Public School. Apply Secretary. ' , (8877)\nTEACHER wanted for the Gilpin\n' rural public school, duties, to commence lylth fall term. Apply stating Qualifications and experience to\n<T. A. Harris, secretary, Grand Forks,\nB.C. \u2022 (8875)\n35\nFor Rent\nT-T> RF-NT\u2014orncen on upper floor K.\nW. C. block. Apply A. Iffecdonald\nCo.       (8765)\nFOR RENT\u2014 Dinlngroom and kitchen,\nall furnished, central located,- 45\nboardery at present \u25a0 For uarticu-\nlars apply  to  Box 444  Trail, B.C.\n(8850)\nQUAKER BRAND\nYour\nGrocer\nHas\nTkem\nEASY TO SERVE\nBaked Beans are very easy to serve these hot\ndays.   They are delicious served cold.   The zeet\nof tomato sauce gives them a delightful satisfac- '\ntion.\nOLD FASHIONED IN\nFLAVOR\nWe bake them in the old-fashioned way, using\nthe recipe our mothers and grandmothers followed. The old home baked taste is as'familiar\nas it is good. \u2022 \u25a0.,.\nDOMINION CANNERS B. C. LIMITED)\nHead Office, Vancouver, B.C.\nPORK\nand\nBEANS\nFOR SALE \u2014 Tailor's Singer Sewing\nMachine, good as new, price $35.00.\nBox 1021 Nelson. B.C. (8821)\nFLY SCOOT for cattle. Gopher, Death\nTablets, Currie Gopher Cartridges,\nRed Mite Killer for house. Poultry\nLice Powder, Water Glass, Poison\nFly Paper, Tanglefoot, Rose Tree\nSpray, Ansco Cameras, Films, Developing, Columbia Grafonotas and\nRecords. Mail orders filled prnnoptly.\nRutherford   Drug   Co.,   Nelson,   B.C.\n  (8771)\n0-TON slip, ensilage cutter and ele-,\nvator, 40 h.p. tractor, mowing machine, horse rake, hay \"tedder, automatic loader and rake, sulky plow,\nhand plows cultivators, seeders,\ngraders, etc., for sate on easy terms.\nApply Box  8396 Nelaon News.   (8756)\n54    Articles Wanted\nVv^A^frllT-----^^ Xnswer^Post\nOffice Box  1094,   Nelson.  , (8804)\n29    Urtandfouo\u00bbV_\nLOHT^U^w^\nhum   bridge - and   Beastey   on   wagon\nroad.    PlcaHe   return   to  W.  B.   Mel-\nneruk,   South   Slocan,   B.C.\n(8879)\nANYONE haying found, or seen, or\npurchased, since Nov. 8th, 1912,\neither a signed portrait of Mrs.\nEmmellne Parikhnist, or a Malacca\nHunting Crop with \"Bruno\" on silver\njmount, is ' earnestly asked to communicate with  the Newton Advertls-\n,  ing   Agency,   Victoria,  B.C.     \u25a0    (8863)\n42 Matrimony\n^fOc^rj^ivSe^^\nlonely. Many wealthy ladies wish\nto marry. Free to ladles. Enclose\nstamped addressed envelope to C.\nIsherwood,   Isherwood   P.O.,   Ont.\n(8505)\nMARRY: Many rich, funiculars free.\nF. Morrison. L-3061 W. Holden St.,\n\u25a0Seattle, Wash,   (8757)\n16    Room and Board\n\u25a0',-W>*-''^'-**J\"V-'-''^'*'-^-'V'-'*a-*-V**\u00ab-*^^\nROOM    and    board   Tn    private   house.\n423   Carbonate   St.\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nFO R^SALliC3T''Nf^^\nwith reversible propeller: junt been\npainted 3 coats. In excellent condition.     Box   8878   Daily  News.   (8878)\nFOR SALF.\u2014Bargain, 1920 Maxwell\nTouring Car. Run 11 hundred miles\nfor demonstration. This car ' Is in\nNo. 1 condition. Phone A91, Nelson\nP.O.   Box   1090. (8826)\nFOR SALE\u2014Ford ton truck, in flrat\nclass running order, complete \"with\nbox and top. Apply Crescent Valley\nstore. (8764)\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON\nWard St., Nelson, B.C.\nFOR Sale cheap\u201420 acre* land, partly cleared, 6-room house, and big\nbarn included. Appry Daniel Rowe,\nRossland,   B.C. \u25a0 (8893)\n<;i:k,\\T snap in lana roi quick sale.\nTen acres No., 1 fruit or alfalfa\nland, situated In thriving settlement\nof Frultvale; all conveniences, %\nmile from town. Place presently\nproducing -enough to pay for itself\nin four years. Each year produces\none-quarter of sum askea for place-\nEnough fruit for one,, family, rest,\nof place in hay and grass. Would\nsuit returned man. W. Burke, Fruit-\nvale. B.C. '    (89U4)\nIN Kootenay Valleyi 1 mproved raftch\nof 10 acres. Good bottom land, C\nacres under cultivation; (food 3 roomed house and barn. Excellent soil\nand plenty of water. Price with\ncrop, $1500. Apply J. Wottom.\nWaldo,  B.C. . (8811)\nFOR SALE\u2014Twenty-eight 4 acres on\nLower Arrow Lakes, nine Di\"es t\\%m\nWest Robson, on Government Rohd.\nOver five hundred trees * ten years\nold\u2014apples, peaches, plums. Lake\nfrontage, school and post office.\nSix-room log house, stables. Immediate possession with crop of\nfruit if desired. Thirty-two hundred and fifty on terms, or three\nthousand cash. Apply Hirst, Syrlnga\nCreek. B.C. \/ (8868)\n14 Forauhed Room to\niS&VtTTa_iTiai-n:\t\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnished    hoUM-kMp*,\nroom..    Annable Block. (1711\nrUBNISMOD ROOMS\u2014Clean, cot\nable, ateam heat, ihow.r batha,\npar weak, ft.\u00ab\u00ab and \u00bb1\u00bb.\u00ab0 !\nT.M.C.A.\nADVERTlalNQ in tbea. oolumna\n'well.    That la whr .o manr v*\nSecond Hand  Dealers\nTHE ARK para oaao for aaoond\nfurniture. atovM; 106  V.i-aon, ~\n\u202251. {\nUJ\u00abiM\u00abJ^n^\nWANTED\u2014Sm*m   aummer  .cottag*e   0!\ncamp   on   Kootenay    Lake    for\nmonth.   Box 8857, Dally News. (I\nBusiness and Professional\nJWrodoiy^\nLodge Notice\nO.   E.   Meets   ln   lU\u00bbUo   Sleek*.\nlit ,& 3rd Thump-**.\/.   , (8742)\nMachinery, Etc.\nT.   A.   WAIBH   fe   OO.,  UXHn\nSaw and Shingle Mill and Mining\nMachine-**-, yellow strand Wire KoMi\nLeather and Rubber Belting and Peek-\nIng; Acme Shingle Band, and Boa\nStrapping. B. CT Agent* Monograa*\nOlla and dreasea. Buy and Bell Steal'\nRails  and  Machinery. y  *\nBSD-SO   Oambt.   it,   VenoonT-n.   W.   O,\nBoots & Shoe\n(8750\nL\u00bb XBM & OOtBAatT\nBoota ft Shoo Made to Order, Be\n tiSH   no**   \u00abT.        ?S7\u00ab>\nFlorists\n[\u25a0S-S QRa-lWIHon\u00ab . Nel.\nao\u00bb \u25a0fiat flowers and floral de-\nHlgrm.\u00a37- (8748)\nAssayers\nE.     W.    WIDDOWSON,    Boa    A-llOi,\nNelson,    B.    C.    Standard     western\nCimrgen..    .  ;, (8763)\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD * CO., WHOLBBAaJi\nGrocers and Provision Merchants, Importers of Teas, Coffees, BploesTbliei\nFrults, Staple and Fancy Groceries,\nTobaccos, cigars, Butter, Egga, Chees\nand Packing House Products. Offlo*\nand Warehouse, corner of Front anal\nRail streets. P.O. Boa IMI: Tele-\nPhones 28 and  23.       (8747)\nCommission Merchants\nRANCHERS' PRODUCE sold on commission, a. W. Bartlett, W-ltllams\nBiding. (87<\u00ab)\nArchitects\nBay    Arena..\naa-.au-,    a\nRCH1TBCT\n\u2022Mil,   B.   OL\n(1744)\nAccountants\nJ.   H.   X.AWBE*rc*Q\nAooonntant\u2014Auditor\nBookkeeping, Financial Statements, eto.\nPhone 119. McDonald lam Bldg. Boa 1030\n '  (8741)\nw. tt. TXLmua,\nPublic Accountant. Bank of Montreal\nChambers, Rossland. B. C.\n  (8742)\n52     Farms Wanted\nWANTED-\u2014Small ranch to purchase Or\nrent with option of p\nBox* 8871   Dally  pew\nrent with option of purchase.   Apply\n\u25a0   (88fl>\n20     Livestock for Sale\nirsT'T   Ayrshire  Cow  for safe.  Apply\n'Poal   Office   Box   1094, ' Nelson,   B.C.\n(8804)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two good cogs, to calve\nDecember and January. *TWq helfets,\nsixteen and eight months old, at very\nreasonable \"prices. L. M. Watson,\nWlnlaw.      : (8872)\nVOIl SALE\u2014Light bay horse; four\nyears, 1100 pounds, also two-home\nfive-foot cut Deering mower. 'Prices\nreasonable. H. A. McCi-flTOy, Proctor,\nB.C. ,    \u201e, \u25a0_   (8870)\nFOR SALE-Cheap, 2 good iplUt cows,\nand a 'ten .hundred pound horse, good\nfor g'ttBe-H^'USfl:. W. NipkOW,. Frult-\n(8854)\nPEDIGREED CocKe* apaniel bitch\ntipples for sale, $2C each. L, Clarke,\nray-Creek, B.C. (8860)\nfir\nFOR SALE\u2014One sow, duo to farrow\nIn Sept.. 25 lbs., Jf'0; 15 young pigs,\n6 weeks old, $7.50 each; Duroc Jersey\n' pigs, 6 weeks, imported stock last\nyear, $110 each. Pigs all ages for\nsate.    Tom Taylor. Kftslo, B.C. (8841)\nFOR SALE \u2014\u25a0- 3-yeai*-old cow, fresh,\nLarge yearling heifer calf, Ayrshire,\ngood milk stock. Power, Thrums,\nB.C. (8813)\nPUR*, brojfc Chaster Whites, 10 weeks,\n$12.00. Can be registered. Also\nhorse,* 800 pounds, democrat, set\ndriving and Work harness. A. Dever-\nson, Harrop, B.C.  WW)\nA few pure bred O.I.C. pigs left for\nsale, both sexes, two months old.\nSIB each, three for $42. Dr. Church,\nEdgewood,   B.C. (878S)\nFOR SALE\u201419 head of cattle. Nine\ncows fi yearlings, one 7 month calf,\n3 calves and one Ayrshire bull, thoroughbred, not registered, two years\nold. $1400 for the hard. ' df. B.\nMatthew,  Rlondel,  B.C. (8701)\nSEVERAL grade Shorthorn and Ayrshire cows. Just freshened, for sale,\nat Beaver Meadows Farm P. O., Erie,\nB.C. (8676)\nEngiaeers\nH.  D.  DAW80JT\n0.   C.   LAND   8UHVHYOR\nCIVIL AND   MINING   ENG.\"\"\nftteeuBroi.,BUMflirCb\nNelson, B. a\notto, abd awurara ntxa:\nB.   O.,   Alh.rta   and   BOB\n, lahp iVB-rsToaa\nCrown   Brant   atfsnts.   Bins\nA.   D.   HAM,\nmnlnjt BnfUaex     __.\nConsultation.,     Explorations     DST.Iop-\nment Reports   J;'*_\nRoom   1,   Royal   Bank   Bld-r\u201e, Nelson,\n(8736)\nAuctioneers\n\u2014. tnmaa\n.Auctioneer,     Appraiser,\nrlvately   or\nYsUtetoi\nGoods   sold   privately   or   at   Auction\n319 Ward Itr-hrt\nVkone **\n(8736)\n\u2014. HATTaTXWS * OO.\nAnotlon.rrs\nOfflo.  MM Ward  m. T.l.  ISO *\n(8738)\nBarristers\nBarrister, Solicitor, Ifot.ry. Bto.\nBox  1078. Alan Blook, B.laon. -Ph. 544.\n(8737)\nFuneral Directors\nSTANDARD FURN1TURB COMPANT-i\nC J. Carlson, Undertaker. Undertaken\nand Kmbnltners and Funeral Directors.\nThe Finest and most up-to-date under-\ntaking parlors and chapel Ih Interior\nB. C. Lady attendant for women an<\nchildren. Day Phone Ii, Night Phone\n252 and 61. '   (8734)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\nue .H6CV1-M thinkinc\nMSOUT <Xltt*t. TO WORK\n\u2022mO I TMOCWHT IO \u00abSWE\nHOU   THg_ri^^*r CHANCE\nTO HtRE- MF*\nrput    of    Auatralian    wool    has\n^^H| n steady decrease In the last\nBBBBBBnV**r*\nANO WE WANT\nSOME ONE THAT\nKNOWb >00 THF\nOTHE.,**. \u2022,\u2022*\u00bb\u25a0 o^j\nOF THfc WER-r\n \u25a0\u25a0L-\"J\"\nmmw'\n\u2014\nTHE TTEtSCTT CATLT TTW75, THURSDAY HORttlNS, JULY 15, 1520\nWINDSOR TRACK\nWINDSOR, Ont, July H.^Today's\nracing at Windsor resulted aa follows.\nFirst race, $1000, two-year-olds,\nfive furlongs\u2014Jimmy won; Last Rose\n\u2022\u2022cond; Regina third. Time 1:05 3-5.\nSecond race, $1200, three-year-olds\nand up, six furlongs\u2014Lancelot, won;\nGuaranteed, second; Larascan, third.\nTime 1:221-5.\nThird   race,   $1400,   three-year-olds\nand   up,   one   mile\u2014Primeo,     won;\nStatlm.     second;     Salvatelle,     third.\ntlflu 1:491-6.\nFourth   race,     Fron tl er     hand leap,\n11,000, three-year-olds, mile and one\n'u*lon\u00bb\u2014Slippery Elro won; The Por-\ner second; Exterminator third.   Time\ntU 1-5.\nFifth   race,    $1400,    three-year-olds\nid   up,   six     furlong\u2014St.     Quentin\nwpn;    Uncle's   Lassie   second;    Who\n^ares third.   Time 1:19 1-5.\nSixth   race,   $1500,   three-year-olds\nand  up,  one mile and  a  sixteenth\u2014\nouglas S won; Gain Decause second;\nMy Dear third.   Time 1:64.\nSeventh race, $1200, three-year-olds\nand up, one mile and a sixteenth\u2014\nBlazonry won; Short Change second;\nBond third.    Time 1:66   8-5.\nRAIN POSTPONES\nTOLEDO RACING\nTOLEDO, July 14.\u2014A heavy rain\nearly today caused the postponement\nof the Grand Circuit races, and today's program went over until to (\nmorrow, necessitating racing on Saturday to finish the week's program.\nA heavy rain late today makes It\ndoubtful If the track will he In any\nshape for Mhe third day's racing\ntomorrow, although Secretary John\nJackman was confident that If there\nwas no more rainfall, the track\nwould be ready.\nFour races were on the program,\nthe 2:05 pace with seven staters;\n'the Fort Miami, $3,000 trotting stake;\n2:08 class with nine starters; the\n2:13 trot with six starters and the\nfree for all pace with only .three\nstarters.\nNews of Sport\nBASEBALL\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBaltimore         \u2022\nBuffalo      \u00ab\nReading         6\nToronto      '     1\nA memorial service was held in\n[ St. James Cathedral. Toronto, for the\nPrincess Patrica Light Infantry who\nfell ln the war. Rev. Canon Plump-\ntfa, the rector of St. James, preached.\nThe service was in commemoration of\nthe #amous stand of the Princess\nPats at Polygon Wood oa May 8,\nWhea the regiment went Into action\n885 strong and came out with only\nISO survivors. The veterans paraded\nto the church, carrying their colors,\nthe only emblem borne through the\nwar In the British armies, and laid\nthem on the alter before the service\nbegan.\nCANADIAN CURLERS\nTO VISIT SCOTLAND\nTORONTO, July 14.\u2014Thirty-two\ncurlers from Canada will visit Scotland next January at the Invitation\nof the Royal Canadian Carllng club\nof Scot ii.uid. Ten from Manitoba\nand the west, 10 from Ontario, six\nfrom Montreal and six from the\nMaritime provinces will constitute\nthe team.\nWOMAN CREATES NEW\nSWIMMING RECORD\nNEW YORK, July 14.\u2014Miss Ethel\nBlelbtray of New York today made\na new world's swimming record of\nfour minutes 84 1-5 seconds in the\n300-metre swimming race for women\nat the finals of the Olympic tryouts\nday's   program   went   over   until   to-\nLife's Little Triali\nI\nU7HEN the   Doctor, who gave   you\n' the \"Prescription\" for the bot\ntle of Scotch the week before, stops you\nin. the street and,:before your wife, asks\nyou if you are feeling better. . . .\nWell! aint it disconcertin'?\nThafs When A FeUow\nNeeds A Smoke\nCgiyl__&wdL--tL _s_.\nPHUP MCKPJS\nNAVY CUT aGARETTES\nJersey    City\t\nAkron    ..,     0\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nAt   Sacramento\nFirst Game\u2014 R.\nSeattle         4\nSacramento          1\n(12   innings).\nBatteries \u2014 Schorr and Gladwin;\nCopp and Cook.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nCleveland   \t\nNew Tork  \u25a0\u25a0'  H\nChleato      41\nWashington    M\nSt.   Louis     II\nBoston         17\nDetroit  14\nPhiladelphia     II\nWin  Lost   Pot,\n51      It     .171\nII\n30\nN\n40\n19\n\u00ab1\nAt Los Angeles\u2014 R\nOakland   \t\nLos   Angeles         !\nBatteries\u2014R.   Arlett   and   Dorman\nTrembe and Bassler.\nAt   San   Francisco\u2014 R.\nVernon    .'      4\nSan   Francisco          1\nBatteries\u2014Plercy and Devermor;\nPordan, Love, McQuald and Agnew.\nAt Sacramento\u2014(Second game)    R.\nSeattle         1\nSacramento        t\nBatteries\u2014fielbold iiml Adams;\nBails and Cady.\nAt Salt Lake\u2014 R.\nPortland      t\nSalt Lake       9\n(14   Innings,   called  darkness.)\nBatteries: Glacier, Kalllo, Poison.\nSutherland, Tobin, Cullop. Thurston\nand Byler.\nBOSTON, July 14.\u2014Everett Scott\nran his scoring of consecutive games\nup to (01 today and Boston celebrated by winning both ends of a double\nheader from Detrlot I to S and 4 to\n0. '\nCobb again Injured his leg and was\ncarried off the field.    ,\nFirst games R.  H   E\nDetrlot    ,     i     . J.\nBoston    \u2022<<<\u25a0   5     I   t\nBatteries\u2014Ayers, Okrle, Ehmke\nand Alnsmlth; Manlon, Snage, Bush,\nPennock and Schang.\nSecond game\u2014 R H B\nDetroit       0    *   l\nBoston        *   ll   1\nBatteries \u2014 Oldham, Okrle and\nStannage;   Pennock and Walters.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nWon\nBrooklyn      48\nCincinnati      44\nPittsburg  31-\nSt.   Louis     40\nChicago      40\nNow   York     17\nBoston      SI\nPhiladelphia      80\nLost   P.C.\n88      .593\ntl\nH\n41\n42\n41\n3\u00ab\n46\n.587\n.614\n.494\n.488\n.474\n.449\n.895\nPrULADELPHtA, July 14.\u2014Philadelphia batted Covelskie for three\nruns In the first inning today but\nafter that could do nothing with him\nand    Cleveland    cajna   from    behind\nCleveland        \u25a0   \u00bb   '\nPhiladelphia        \u00ab   \u00bb   1\nBatteries\u2014Coveleskle and Onell\nMoore and Perkins.\nWASHINGTON, July 14.\u2014Washington defeated Chicago today 6 to\n4. Rice hit for a home run In the\nfifth with two onj bases and in the\neighth a walk and three triples\nin succession, netted three more runs\nfor Washington.\nChicago        4   11   0\nWashington       \u00ab   10   1\nBatteries\u2014Williams and Schalk;\nCourtney, Shaw and Ghartty.\nTremendous Values Feature\nThe Last Three Days Of Our\ndmY CiEAliMINfaES\nTake advantage of the doling offerings of this tale.   We know the savings are worth while and demonstrate to yon the money that can be saved.\n$1.98 Silks and Satins $1.98\nCHICAGO, July 14.\u2014Brooklyn won\nboth games of a double header from\nChicago today 3 to 9 and 4 to 1. A\nhome cun by Olson, whose drive\nwent under the fence In right field,\ngave victory to the visitors ln the\nfirst contest, while they Won the second  game  by  bunching hits.\nFirst Game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nBrooklyn        8      9      0\nChicago     2      6      1\nBatteries\u2014Mammaux, Grimes and\nKrueger;    ;Tyler   and  KUllfer,   Daily.\nSecond   Game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nBrooklyn        4    11      1\nChicago     ..,     1      5      1\nBatteries \u2014 Pfelffer and Elliott;\nCarter,' Bailey  and  Daley.\nNEW YORK. July 14.\u2014St. Louis\ndefeated New Tork 7 to J. In the\nfirst pitched ball In the second\ninning Ruth hit his 28th home run\nof the season and was passed on\nhis next three trips to the plate.\nHe needs one more home run to\nequal his record of last season.\nSt   Louis        7   9   1\nNew York     8   6   1\nQulnn, Shore and Riiel.\nBatteries  \u2014  Davis  and  Severold;\nST. LOUIS, July 14.\u2014New York\nhit opportunely today, and aided by\nragged fielding on the part of the\nlocals, defeated St. Louis 7 to 1,\nNehf was invincible. R.   H.   E.\nNew York        7    12      0\nSt.   Louts         1      5      1\nBatteries\u2014Nehf and King, Snyder;\nMay, Goodwin. North and  Dllhoefer.\nCINCINNATI, July 14.\u2014Cincinnati\nwon a hard fought 10 Inning game\nfrom Philadelphia today 3 to 2.\nFletcher was put out of the game ln\nthe seventh Inning for disputing a\ndecision  by Umpire  Harrison.\nR.   H.   E.\nPhiladelphia          2    11      1\nCincinnati          3    11      1\nBatteries \u2014 Rlxey and Wlthrow;\nLuqiie and  Allan.\nPITTSBURG, July 14.\u2014Pittsburg\nwon Its third straight game from\nBoston today 4 to 3. In the sixth,\nMann hit over the left field fence\nfor a home run, the first hit out of\nthe   park   this   season. R.   H.   E.\nBoston         8      9      2\nPittsburg        4    10      2\nBatteries\u2014Oeschger, and O'Neill;\nCooper   and   Haeffner.\n~D0DDS 'I\nKIDNEY'\n(,, PILLS*\nELECTORS WARNED\nIn order to vote on the forthcoming Prohibition Plebiscite and in\nProvincial or Dominion General Elections\nYOU MUST REGISTER\nAll previous lists of voters have been cancelled. The fact that\nyour name was on the list last year does not count. Neither can\nyou vote as a property owner without registering.\nMAKE YOUR DECLARATION NOW\nbefore the' Registrar or an Election Commissioner, Postmaster, Justice\nof the Peace, Magistrate, Constable or before Officials at any Government Office. ...\nREGISTRATION CLOSES ON JULY FIFTEENTH NEXT\nREGISTER TODAY\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nFirst game\u2014 B-\nSt, Paul   \u2022    *J\nColumbus         '\nSecond game\u2014 R-\nSt.   Paul    \u25a0...,\u25a0>....... 13\nColumbus     8\nFirst game\u2014 R-\nMinneapolis \u2022  \u00b0\nToledo    \u2022  &\nSecond game\u2014                    \u2022 R<\nMinneapolis  8\nToledo   \u00bbT*w  *\nKansas  City     12\nLouisville \u2022 \u2022\"\u2022 1\nMilwaukee     i  4\nIndianapolis     13\nPACIFIC INTERNATIONAL\nWon\nYaklmji     40\nVictoria      40\nTacoma   tt\nVancouver      34\nSpokane      32\nSeattle      12\nLost    P.C.\n25      .615\n27 .697\n29 .664\n31 .523\nIt .503\n61 .190\nAt Yakima\u2014 R-\nSpokane         6\nYakima        4\nBatteries\u2014Easter and Fisher; Valencia and Cadman.\nAt Vancouver\u2014\nVictoria   \t\nVancouver\t\nBatteries\u2014Young  and  Land;\nJohnson and Patterson.\nAt  Tacoma\u2014\nSeattle   \t\nTacoma\t\nBatteries\u2014Held   and   Boelzle;\nleen and Stevens.\nRepp,\nTWILIGHTtfAGUE\nWINNIPEO, July 14.\u2014Calgary\nmade tt three straight when they\nshut out the locals here tonight 5 to\n0. Hawks hit a home ruh with\ntwo men on In the first Inning,\nSweeney held the locals to four\nhits  and  was  never  In  trouble.\n'R.   H.   E.\nCalgary          6       6       1\nWinnipeg     0      4      S\nBatteries\u2014Sweeney and WIrts;\nSchaak and  Madura.\nSILK SKIRTS\nSuch big reductions in lovely stylish\nmodels that will make then clear quickly.\ntwo Only Satin Accordion Pleated\nSkirts\nOne blue and brown, one gold and black, round\nand round wide stripe effect. Wide belt. Regular 316.60. <|\u00bb1 O QC\nClearing at, each  *D 1.0,00\nTwo Only Tricolette Skirts\nOne navy with fancy pockets and toelt, one black\nwoven ln check design with fancy pockets.\nRegular $28.50. OJOI   IU\\\nClearing   at    tD^l.UV\nA Charming Skirt of Black Silk Moire\nWith faricy pockets, lined Paddy green.   Regular\n318.50. o\u00bbi o qc\nClearing at  \u00abDAO.\u00ab7lF\nA Pretty Black Taffeta Skirt\nWith lattice panel effect, trimmed self buttons.\nRegular 318.50. <j\u00bb1 9 QE\nClearing at  \u00abDXliWO\nSave 10 P.C. on the price of that\nTRUNK, SUITCASE or CLUB BAG\nDaring the last three days ol the\nsale we are featuring a redaction of\n10 Per Cent\non all Trunks, Snitscases, Cluh Bags\nin the Store\nGOING FAST!\nBut We  Still   Have a   Few   Left\nMen's Blue Chambray Work Shirts\nWith   stripe,   lay   down   collar.     A   good   roomy\nshirt   and   excellent   value (PI   OK\nOur   Men's  Own   Store\nColored Georgette Crepes, Wash Satins, Crepe-\nde-chene, Colored Shantung. Regular values to\n33.76 yard. fl>1   QQ\nSale price, per yard   WX.J\/O\nBuy Your Towels Now\u2014Every Towel\nReduced\nWhite and colored bath towels, wMte huckaback-\ntowels.   Exceptional values at regular prices.\nNow on Sala at Less 10  Per Cent  Discount.\nWHITE   AND   BLACK\nMILLINERY  BUCK-\nWHITE CROCHET\nBED8PREAD8\nHemmed ready for use.\nSize 78x88 Inches.\nWholesale price today is 36.50. Our\nprice,   each\n$4.95\nRUM\n27   inches   wide,\nyard\n50c\nMen's Handkerchiejs\nExceptional offerings of white cotton hemstitched\n25c\n50c\n55c\n20c\n40c\nMen's Black Fur Felt Hats Selling at\nExceptionally Low Prices\nFedora  Hats   of  fine   black  fur  felt  In   stylish\n$3.50\n$3.00\nhandkerchiefs.\nTwo for \t\n* \u2014Or  three\nfor  \t\nWhite with wide color border,     i\nThree  for   r'jr.\t\nMen's   bandana   handkerchiefs,   rtd   and\nblue, eactf  T.J.;.\t\n\u2014Blue, large size,\neach \t\nshape.\nGreat value at \t\nSame In Columbia shape.\nAn exceptional price..\nSUGAR\nWe have just placed into stock a shipment\nof Sugar for Preserving. We can supply\n38 sacks of 100 lbs. each for Immediate delivery.\nGet your order In now or you may be left\nwhen the canning season Is in full swing.\nPhono 13\u2014Mkin Floor\nPROPORTIONAL REPRESENTftTION\nWinnipeg Election Results Analysed; Candidates Lose\nDeposits Unless Support Reasonable; Percentage Elected\nFairly Balances Percentage oi Votes to Each Party\nWINNIPEG,    July    15.\u2014There    are  whom he wishes to see elected.   That\nBy Or    der\nPROVINCIAL SECRETARY.\nREGINA, July 14.\u2014Regina defeated Moosejaw for the third time tonight 5 to 1. Nick Williams went\nin as a pinch hitter In the ninth and\ndelivered the hit which made the\nonly run of his team. Ptllette\noutpltched Gibson. Tom Turner,\nScout for the Athletics and Russ\nHall, Ivory Hunter for the Cincinnati Reds, were in the stand.\n' R.   H.   E.\nMoosejaw         1      5      6\nRerlna        6      8      0\nBatteries\u2014Gibson    and    Marshall\nPillette  and   Fuhrman.\nSASKATOON, July 14.\u2014Playing\nsensational baseball behind Sammy\nBeer here today the Quakers defeated\nEdmonton 4 to 1. Two brilliant\ndouble plays by the locals featured\nthe   contest. R.   H.   B\nEdmonton        1      4      4\nSaskatoon      4      8      0\nBatteries\u2014Valentine and Ritchie;\nBeer  anil  Bachant.\nthree lessons to be drawn from Win\nnlpeg's decent test of proportional\nrepresentation, in the opinion of A.\nE. Parker, editor of Canadian Finance,\nand himself an authority on \"P.R.\" '\nThey are: (1) Candidates now know\nthat it is dangerous to risk an election deposit under the P. R. system\nIf they are not sure of reasonable\nsupport Jrom the electors. (2) Voters\nknow tnat the figure 1 is not sufficient on a ballot and realize that\ntheir choices should be equal under\nordinary conditions to at least the\nnumber of the candidates to be elected. ' (3) Voters know that P. R. is\npracticable and produces equitable results.\nMr. Parker, In his journal, analyzes\ncarefully the features of the election, and declares that it was \"an\nabsolute triumph for the advocates of\nproportional representation.\" He proceeds to set out ln detail the method\nof counting the ballots and draws\nconclusions.\nWinnipeg Plan  Detailed\nP. R. was used in Winnipeg only\nIn the provincial election, the contests in the remainder of the province being conducted under the old\nsystem. The whole of the Winnipeg\narea was grouped into one constituency and ten seats ln the legislature were allotted to it. Forty-one\ncandidates were nominated, consisting of 10 Liberals, 10 Conservatives,\n10 Labor nominees and 11 independents. This superabundance of candidates was the cause of considerable\ntrouble to the election offocials and\nXhc, counting. staff, and turned out\nto be somewhat costly to those candidates who lost their deposits. The\nManitoba Elections act provides that\nany defeated candidate who received\nfirst choices less in  number than  26\nNOBLE BEATS PAPIN\nMONTREAL, July 14. \u2014 Tommy\nNoble, of New York, shaded Georges\nPapin, the French ^featherweight\nchampion, In a fast 10-round bout\nhere tonight at tho, Mount Royal\narena.\nfigure 1 Is called his first choice. He\ncontinues to place numbers opposite\nthe names of candidates he favors,\nthe figure 2 against one, the figure 3\nagainst another, and so on. The\nfigure 2 denotes his second choice,\nthe  figure   3  his third  choice,  etc.\nThe first task of the counting officer was to tabulate the number of\nfirst choices given to the respective\ncandidates, and to segregate the ballot papers in separate bundles, ac\ncording to the candidates for whom\nthey were given.\nTo  Determine Quota\nWhen the first count was completed It was found that 47,427 good\nballots had been cast. The quota was\nthen ascertained by dividing this\nnumber by one' more than the number of seats to be filled, adding one\nto the result. This \"meant that to\nsecure election at this stage of the\nproceedings, a candidate had to have\nat least 4312 votes. Two candidates\nwere elected on the first count and\na third candidate was elected on the\nsecond count. The fourth candidate\n\/was not elected until the 31st count,\nthe fifth was elected on the 32nd\ncount, the sixth and seventh on the\n33rd count and the remaining three\non the 37th count.\nThe Independent candidates were\nentirely eliminated from the contest before it ended, plainly demonstrating that a. candidate must be\nsupported by a fairly strong group\nof votes before his election can be\nsecured. There were 6382 votes cast\nfor the 11 independent candidates on\nthe first count, but not one of these\ncandidates benefitted sufficiently from\nthe subsequent counts to secure election. In the ordinary form of election those who voted for these independents   would   have   wasted   their\nper cent of the quota shall lost his votes, but under P. R. the votes\nor her deposit of $200. Under this'. were s,mpiy transferred to the next\nregulation   25   candidates   lost   their   Ch0.ce  marked thereon.    As a result\ndeposits, and the government profited\nto the extent of $5000. The candl-\njdates affected consisted of the following: Independents, 8; Liberals, 6;\nLabor nominees, 5; Conservatives, 7.\nOn* Vote But Transferable\nUnder the P. R. system the voter\nhas only one vote, but that vote is\ntransferable. When marking the ballot the voter places the figure 1 opposite   the   name   ot   the   candidate\nof the various transfers the Liberal\ncandidates received approximately\n2600 votes and the Conservatives\ngained approximately 1400 votes and\nlobar received over 500 votes more\nthan was shown in the original count.\nIt will be noted that the Independent vote went principally to the\nLiberal and Conservative candidates\nwhen it was distributed.\nThe  final result demonstrates the\nfairness of proportional representation as a method of elections, saya\nMr. Parker. The labor vote represented a little more than 40 per cent\nof the total vote and labor elected\n40 per cent of the members. The\nLiberal vote represented nearly 40\nper cent ot the total vote and tha\nLiberals elected 40 per cent of the\nmembers. The Conservatives were\nsupported by voters representing a\nlittle less than ^0 per cent of tho\ntotal vote and they elected 20 per\ncent of   the members.\nAdvocates of proportional representation declare that P. R. gives\nabsolute freedom ot choice to the\nvoter; that it encourages independence on the part of the voter. An\noutstanding instance of this waa\ngiven In the transfer of the surplus\nof Dixon, the labor candidate. Dixon\nreceived 11,586 votes, being 7274 mora\nthan he needed. As a result, Dixon's\nballots were re-examined to ascertain the second choices marked\nthereon. The result was as follows:\nSecond choices for Laibor candidates,\n10,075; second choices for Liberal\ncandidates, 368; second choices for\nConservative candidates, 310; second\nchoices for Independent candidates,\n766; non-transferable, 67. This clearly\nshows that over 1400 voters who originally voted Labor marked their\nsecond choices for non-labor .candidates.\nExamples Given\nAnother instance is found ln the\nresult of the elimination of Jacob,\na Liberal candidate. Jacob's votea\ntotalled 2347, and they were distributed as follows: 91 votes went to\nLabor candidates; 147 votes to Conservative candidates; 1770 went to\nLiberal candidates; 188 votes to Independent candidates and 51 votea\nwere non-transferable.\nThe foregoing shows that over 18\nper cent of Jacob's votes went to\ncandidates other than Liberal candidates.\n' The transfer of votes credited to\nChristie, Conservative candidate, at\nthe time of his elimination, resulted\nas follows: 33 votes went to Labor\ncandidates; 145 to Liberal candidates;\n1354 to Conservative candidates; 157\nto Independent and 37 were nontransferable.\nFrom the foregoing It will be seen\nthat nearly 20 per cent of the Conservative votes left the party when\nthe   transfer   was   made.\nIn the last count 186f ballots were.\nnot transferable, or ln other words,\nexhausted. This means that 186?\nvoters lost their votes because they\ndid not mark sufficient choices on\ntheir ballots. Many o\u00a3 them were.\ncontent -with just marking the tlgura\n1. With 41 candidates it was necessary to mark at least 10 choices on\nthe ballot, and those who did not\ndo so ran the risk of having their\nballots used up\u2014each of the candidates marked thereon having possibly;\nbeen sither elected or defeated.\n  '\t\nf-i^S\nthi inasoR mffiT sews, Thursday morning, july is, 1920\n\u2022UQUALSD FOR aENIRAU UM\nV, P. TIERNEY, Q.n.r.1 t.l-\u00bb Af.nl\nN.l.on,   B.C.\nOar.   .uppli.d   t.   all   rallw\u00aby   p.InU\nKiU the Lice\nThis is the first rule of\nthe Poultryman, and if you\nfollow it you will get the\nresults you want.\nFor this purpose Pratt's\nLice Killer is unsurpassed.\nFree booklet \"Poultry\nWrinkles\" sent on request.\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nPrweripllons    Car.fi.My    Compounded\nPhon.  81.\nP.O.   Box   1067\nNEW   1920   MOQEL\nCHEVROLET CARS\n* Three only left at the old price.\nNelson Transfer\nPHONE   35\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany\nExpert   Repair.\nHeating    and    Plumbing    Contractors\nTHE ARK'\n1 '\nHas several good Singer Sewing\nMachines, also a few large steel cooking Ranges, large stock of Wall\nPaper. Rugs, linoleum and Cbn-\ngoleum, Tapestry, Wilton, Brussels\nand Axmlnster, two good Organs,\nseveral Dining Room Suites, Trunks\nand Suit Onsen, Cooking Utensils,\nStaple Dry Goods, Tents snd Cots foe.\ncamping.\nI W. HOLMES\nPHONE ML Me VERNON ST.\nATTENTION TO\nYOUR EYES\nIT We are prepared to give you\nthe best of services in* matters\nconcerning eyes, and can fill your\nprescription in:\nFlat  Lenses\nToric  Lenses\nPunktal Lenses\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician\nFRUIT WANTED\nStrawberries, Raspberries,\nBlack Currants, Red Currants,\nLoganberries,  Blackberries,\nPlums, Cherries (Pings, white)\nGreengages, Crabapples,\nPeaches, Apricots,\nApples\nMcdonald jam co.\nNelson,  B.C,\nFURS\nCLASS TUBS made from selected ' skins, kept In stock and mad*\nto order. Customers' furs made up\nremodelled and repaired. 10 per cent\ndlscnun*.   during-   summer.\nG. GLASER\nnop. 106.    410 Ward St., JC.l.ou, B.O.\nOne Beauty of Curlew Ice\nCream ,\nIs that it never puIIm on the taste. No\nmatter how often It is eaten it tastes\njust as good the next time it is served.\nIf vou have I Wed just ordinary ice\ncream try Crm.BW, and you'll like it\nbetter than ever, and keep on liking It.\nBetter   begin   today.\nSold by dealers.\nCURLEW CREAMERY CO.,\nLIMITED\nN.l.on,   B.C. Grand   Fork.,   B.C\n<kin\nHale\nHamilton\nIn tha Metro Comedy\nThe Four Flasher\nBOUND AND GAGGED\nPATHE COMEDY\nThroughout Hot Weather\nLet  Us Suggest\nWALLACE'S HERRING\nYou do not enjoy cooking over\nii hot .move during the hot\nweatb.fr.\nOn Wallace's Herring the\nrooking, cleaning, etc., has already been done, and all you\nhave to do is to empty from\nthe can. This ready for serving, delicately flavored herring\nIs cooked to perfection.\nMore   Healthful   Than   Meat\nPHONE   161   FOR   YOUR\nREQUIREMENTS\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nGiva   Ul  Your  Order  Far\nDry Wood, Lump\nand Nut Gait Coal\nAlio for Your\nFURNITURE and PIANO MOVING\nOrder.   Promptly   Attended   ta\nMacDonald Cartage &\nFuel Co.\nWHEN NELSON HAD A BOARD OF TRADE\nEA\n. As the Kuskanook staidly bears\nthe Vancouver board of trade adventurers over the gleaming surface\nof Kootenay lake and the West Arm\nto Nelson, on an entirely friendly\nmission, old-timers will recall another\ntrip between Kaslo and Nelson, also\nmade by a board of trade party,\nproperly to be dubbed adventurers,\non a trilssion that had theft for its\nobject.\nThe attempt of 'Kaslo to steal\nNelson's board of trade in the early\ndays is now historic, and can be discussed in any company without arousing animosities.\nNelson  Dared to  Form  Board\nIn the days when Kaslo was the\nleading community of this then virgin territory, being the gateway\nthrough -which the hordes of prospectors overran the Slocan, Nelaon had\nthe effrontery to take the leading\npart ln the organization of a board\nof trade. The, board was n#med the\nSouth Kootenay board of trade and\nhad its headquarters in Nelson.\nNaturally it galled Kaslo, the capital of the district at Unit time.\nKaslo's citizenry boasted , many bold\nspirits, Including several noted figures\nof Coeur d'Alene days, including John\nM. Burke, ex-governor of Idaho, Jim\nWardner, one of the best known of\nthe old-timers; O, D. Garrison, \"W.\nH. Taylor, and others>of their stamp.\nThe former Idaho statesman, no\ndoubt prompted by incidents of an\nactive past, figured out that a raid\non Nelson was both within the p03sfv\nbfllties, tm.il was eminently In order.\"\nAccordingly be broached the subject\nto his associates, and found them\nentirely agreeable to the enterprise.\nWith great enthusiasm, and In absolute secrecy, the conspirators^ unlisted a total of 41 willing adventurers In the laudable enterprice designed to add new dignity to Kaslo.\nAh Nelson could muster about 30\nmembers, success seemed assured.\n.Argonauts  Embark\nOn the date Bet for the next meeting of the South Kootenay board of\ntrade, the Ka.slo argonauts embarked\non the old Nelson\u2014which was burned\nhere a few years ago as a part of\nthe Chahka Micha celebration\u20144,1\nstrong, Intending to be on hand ln\ntime for the board session in the\nevening. As it happened, the boat\nwas delayed, and when the raiding\nparty reached Nelson, It was 3\no'clock in the morning. The virtuous\nNelson residents had retired, leaving\na quorum of board members on duty\nin the hail over the store now occupied by the Poole Drug company, the\nbuilding having been owned by the,\nlate John Houston, for the purpose\nof welcoming the Kasloites, and ini-\ntlating'them into fellowship.\nBob Lemon wielded the gavel, and\nGeorge Blgelow performed the duties\nof secretary. The 41 visitors from\nthe senior 'city were welcomed, received' Into membership, paid their\nJit) apiece, apd signed the roll. The\nNelson members were unsuspicious,\nand were highly gratified with the\nproceedings  thus   far.\nWhen the lapt Kaslo man was a\nfull member, and there was no\nlonger any doubt of the right of the\nnew members from the north to participate in the business of the board,\nBurke rose to his feet, and calmly\nmoved that , the South Kootenay\nboard of trade move its books, funds,\nand headquarters to Kaslo. Some\nfellow Kaalolte seconded this fateful  motion.\nDouses Glim\n\"Bob Lei^pn gave a shrewd glance\naround the room, as If sizing up the\nsituation,\" said D. P. Kane, the\nKaslo postmaster, in going over the\nfamiliar ground yesterday, in Nelson.\n\"Then George Gigelow, the secretary, picked up the book nearest to\nhis hand, and smashed the Rochester\nlamp, 1 plunging us into darkness,\nUnder cover of the darkness and\ntumult, he escaped, with the books\nand money.    Lemon also decamped.\n\"Burke rustled his crowd together,\niflnd we went up to the Phair hotel\u2014\nthe Strathfona is there now\u2014and\nheld an indigatlon meeting, protesting,\nat the high handed actions of the\nofficers of the board. We also unanimously carried a resolution that the\nheadquarters of the board he moved\nto  Ka.slo.\n\"As we could not get possession\nof lhe books, that did not get us\nvery   far.\nLeave  Money   Behind\n\"Later in the day the old Nelson\n1 took ub back to Kaslo, but Nelson\nhad the $4X0 we had paid in for our\nmembership.\n\"Before we could get another vote,\nNelson had enrolled enough new\nmembers to have the voting power,\nand our amicable ambitions had to be\nabandoned.\n\"The Nelson miner of course rubbed it in, getting out an extra, which\nhad \/a headline something like this:\n'Kaslo swoops down in dead of night\nto   steal  board  of   trade.' '*        ,\nAaS.riorswill&Co.\nPHONE   121\nHothouse Tomatoes,  lb 50-01*\nNew Cabbage, lb 10^\nLettuce.  lb 35^\nBermuda OInlons, 3 lbs 25^\nNew Turnips, lb \\\\&\nDromedary   DHtes,   pkt 30<\u00a3\nApples,  3  lbs 25^.\nQranges' from,. doz 60jt\u00a3\nNorwegian   Sardines,  tin 25?\nWater Glass,  tin..354 and  35\u00a3\nPhone  121\nCoast and Interior Business\nMen Fraternize at Site of\nGreat Industry\nTRAIL, July 14.\u2014Last night's banquet to the Vancouver board of trade\ntouring party, tendered by the Trail\nhoard of trade mid Trail citizens, will\nbe long remembered here. The splendid\nfunction   was  held   in   the skating   rink.\nNoble Binns, presidwnt of the Trail\nboard of trade, and also president of\nthe Associated Hoards 01 \/Trade of\nEastern    British    Columbia,    presided.\nAfter proiwsing the toast to \"The\nKing,\" Mr. Binns welcomed the visitors\nto the -,'lty and the Kootenay on behalf\nrepresented,\ntoast,    to   \"The\nI\nShow Staged in Crystal Hall\nDraws Visitors From the\nWhole West Arm\nLADIES' SUITS\nAND COATS\nCleaned or Dyed\nH.K.Foot\nHigh-Class   Dyer  *  Cleaner\nFAIRVIEW   \u2014   NELSON,   B.O.\nBUTTONS!\nWHO   WANTS   BUTTONS?\nWe have a very  good assortment  at\nreasonable prices,\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW\nDRY   GOODS   GROCERIES,    ETC.\nWillow Point was a. mecca for all\npoints on the West Arm last night?,\nwhen the Willow Point Community\nflower   show   held   in   Crystal    hall\nThe hall ^was *a scene of delicate\nbeauty. The large center tables were\ncovered with the numerous flower\nexhibits Including, a large variety\nof roses, sweet peas, honeysuckle and\npeonies\nBesides the flower section were\nsections devoted to cookery, both\nplain and fancy; butter and canned\nfruits,; children work and a well\ndisplayed exhibit of vegetables Including green peas, carrots potatoes and turnips. Among the exhibits was a, very interesting collection\nof needlework, which was not in for\ncompetition   by  Mrs.   Burgess.\nDuring the evening, ice cream,\ncakes and coffee were served and an\ninteresting program was staged by\nMesdames. J. T. Andrews, Evans and\nE. Edwards and Rev Fred H. Graham, C. Burgess, Mr. Thompson\nand P. dt. Morey, _\nThe  judges  were  as   follows:\nVegetables, flowers, roses. E. C.\nHunt; Machine and hand made garment, crochet work ;i:ul embroidery,\nMrs. C Sh.'inno.i; Iced mite, canned\ngoods, bread, cakes, M ra, G. Clark\nand Mrs A. J. QUI, Nelson; butter\nand carpentry, Mr. Masters.\nThe various committee were made\nup   as    follows:    Receiving   commit\ntee. Mrs- Applewhiiitc Mrs. Town-\nshend; ice. ci'eam and\" refreshments,\nMrs, J I. Mlddleton; program. Mrs.\nBurgess,   Mrs.   Applewjiaite.\nThe prizes, were ns follows:\nBeat collection of flowers, Mrs,\nMohr.*\nCollection of roses. Mrs. B Town-\nshend.\nBest piece of crochet work, Mrs.\nLock wood. 0\nBest piece of embroidery, Mrs.\nLock wood.\nBest pound fof butter, Mrs. Mlddleton.\nCollection of vegetables, Mrs. Alrey.\nBest loaf of hread, Mrs. Shannon.\nMachine made garment, Mrs. T.\nApplewhaite. -^ .\nHand made, garment, * Mrs. Metcalfe.\nCanned goods,  Mrs. Cornell.\nBest Iced cake, Mrs.  Mohr.\nBest pound of candy, Dorothy\n\u25a0Airey.\nXhe chlldrens prizes were won as\nfollows:\nBeat- drawing from nature. Miss\nGael Taylor.\nBest piece of carpentry, Talbot\nAiery.\nGARDEN PARTY IS\nSUCCESSFUL AFFAIR\nA garden party, featured by\nChinese lanterns, dreamy music,\ngames and fortune telling, was held\nlast evening ot the residence of\nMrs. Benjamin Lawson, on Latimer\nstreet, by the Baptist Young People';\nunion. Ire cree m, tea and cake\nwere servt-d, realizing ,1 good sun.\nfor   the   church   fund.\nMakes more\n|)      bread\nand better bread\"\nPURIty FLOUR\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd!\n\u2014Patronize Kerr's Jitney\u2014\nThe   finest   and most   expensive\ncars  ln  the  city at  your  service\nday   or   night. Guaranteed     to\npltjase .y.ou.\nPHONE 491 KERR  BLOCK\nFor the Bangor & Aroostook r*y*\nway a loan of $200,000 was provided.\nThe commission pointed out that\n^'the road handles a very large\ntonnage of wood pulp, which Is\nmanufactured in newsprint paper for\nwhich there Is universal consumption.\" ,\nSocial and Personal\nMrs.   M.   Phillips\nleod   this   morning.\nMil   leave  for  Ma\nLess   than   two   ounces   of   musk   Is\nobta ined  from  one  musk  deer.\nAlthough lizards bite severely only\none   species   has   poison   glands.\nMISS HELEN BADGLEY\nDramatic Header, of Vancouver, B.C.\nWishes bookings for a limited number\nof entertainment engagements, en route\nwest, via Cranbrook and Kootenay\nLalres, between Aug. 30th and Sept\n12th.\nFor    particulars   address*   her.    Suite\n23-709   Dunamuir   St.,   Vancouver,   B.C.\nDustbane Carbon Remover\n\t\nFor Automobiles and Launches\nWill clJkn a Motor in 30 minutes at a cost of 25 cents.\nGuaranteed or money* refunded.\nLarge Can, $2.00\nWoodValknceHafdwafeCo.\nBAKER STREET\nH ELSON, B. C.\nJuly Sale oi Men's Boots\nThis Is our first  sale in four years  and  we have  a  number  of\npairs of -broken lines which we are clearing out at Bargain Prices.\nMen's Work Boots, values to $8.60. & A   Qff\nSale Price    ,     fnnUO\nMen's   Everyday   Shoes,   values   to   $7.50. (pff   A J?\nSale  Price     -tpOerlU\nMWs Dress Shoes, values to $8.50. (Dp? QC\nSale Price     wUtVD\nPage's Shoe Store\n513 Baker Street\nFOR  SALE\n-+*+-\nof   the   organizations\nand    then   proposed\nCity  of Trail,\"\nResponding lo the toast. Mayor\nDockerlll referred to the progresslve-\nnesH of the city, and advised the visitors to watch Its further development.\nJ. H. Schofield, M.PP for Trail, in\nresponse to the (oaat, \"Tlie Province,\"\npredicted a great future for it, which,\nwith the cooperation of the people,\ncould become the leading province in\nCanada. He was firmly convinced\nVancouver would live up to the expectation! and hopes of the province and\nbecome the leading city and port in\nCanada.\nLome A. Campbell, general manager\nof the West Kootenay Power & Light\ncompany, In :. supplementary address,\nspoke of the Tfail smelter, classifying\nit aa the most wonderful plant of Its\nkind in the country, and stating itw\nsuccessful operation was largely made\npossible by the enormous water-power\nof the district. He gave a brief sur-\nvey of the conditions thai ted to the\nintroduction of the huge zinc smelting and refining plants at Tadanac as\na   war emergence-   measure\nfoiter Cordial Relations\nW. J. Blake Wilson, president of the\nVancouver board of trade, thanked\nthe gathering f<jr the warmth of Its\nwelcome, and stated thul the object of\nthe visitors was to foster \u2022 cordial\nrelatione between business men nnd\nto stimulate the common interest of\nbettering conditions in ihls province.\nHe spoke briefly in eulogistic terms of\nthe smelter und of its industrial value\nto the d 1st riot and to tlie whole country.\nAid. Joseph Patrick of Victoria, gave\nassurance of Victoria's timdlal feelings\ntowards the Interior.\n, Nlcholj Thompson jnive a history\nof the endeavor to form an Associated\nBoards of Trade of British Columbia,\nand stated there was no ulterior object In wishing for tlie Kooteiiay's\nafriliation with It. He was Impressed\nwith the magnitude and multiplicity\nof difficulties encountered in the\nmining   industry.\nAid. B\\ Crone conveyed greetings\nfrom Vancouver. He was impressed\nwith the evident solution of the good\nroads problem in tlie district, and with\nthe magnitude of Trail's Industry. He\nstated the party would return to the\ncoast    boosters    for    the    Kootenay.\n,1. P. D. Malkln,-vice-president of the\nVancouver World, believed fraternizing\namong business men would do much to\nproduce an absolutely united province.\nJ. 8. Desehamps spoke of the lumber industry iu his well-known humorous  style.\nA Vital-Plant\nJ. .1. Warren, president of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company,\n\u25a0replied to the toast, \"The Consolidated company,\" on behalf of the\ndirectorate, the executive and the\nworkmen. He stated that the output\nof the plant was sufficient to supply\ntwice the Canadian demand .for pig\nlead and the entire demand for zinc,\nand would in the near future be in a\nposition to supply the demand for\ncopper, With the conipletion of the\npower line of the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company from Anaconda to the American Copper corporations at Copper Mountain in August\nor September, 12(1,000 pounds of copper\nconcentrates would be 'shipped to the\nsmelter at Trtjil daily. He told of\nthe zinc plant, tn which the company\nhad invested $3,000,000, and which\nhad supplied 20,000 tons of zinc to the\nBritish government during tbe war\nwhen zinc was Imperatively needed.\nHe also praised the efforts of the\nsmelter's technical staff, and said he\nwas desirous of meeting an Associated\nBoards of Trade of British Columbia\nto get action on some pressing problems.\nW. M. Archibald, manager of mines\nfor the Consolidated company, spoke\nof the mining industry, and urged the\nVancouver board of trade to do all it\ncould to help tbe pioneers of the industry,   the   prospectors.\nT. W. Bfngay, comptroller of the\nConsolidated company, and George\nMurray, superintendent of the smelter,\nadded a few remarks In a light vein.\nJ. S. Carter, dlstrici passenger agent\nof the C.P.R., at Nelson, replied to the\ntoast, \"Transportation, and told of\nsome of the difficulties encountered\nIn transportation, and added a boost\nfor the Queen City of the Kootenay.\nTbe final toast, that to \"The Press,\"\nwas responded to by B. A. AtcKelvie,\nof the Vancouver Province; T. J. Me-\nLay, of the Vancouver World; and A\nShaw, of the Vancouver Hun.\n* At intervals during the banquet the\nTrail G.W.V.A. orchestra rendered\nmusical    selections.\nExclusive of the guests there were\npresent Fred N. Noyer, J. D. Anderson, John A. Wadsworth, (J. T. Prlt-\nchard, J. W. N. King, J. P. Schoneld;\nP. W. Warren, J. E. Carter, H. B.\nWade, J. 3. Fingtand, B. M. Diamond, V. R. Beasley, W. J.. Wag-\nstaff, J, J. Warren, Noble Blnns, j.\nH. Schofield, F. B. Dockerlll. T. A\nKobley, Robert Gordon, Charles B\nOliver, F. S. Williams, B. A. Stim\nmel, t)r. J. Bain Thorn, N. Emms\nRead, A. M. Q'Donnel J, Bal four,\nK. A. Margfleson, W. M, Blackstock,\nJ. A*. McKlnnon, W. P. Bennets, E.\nBaron, Duncan M. Macdonald. George\nMurray, D. F. Gorrle, W. H. Tours,\nF. J. Glover, T. Hopkins, H. ClarkL\nj. H. Woodburn, W. C. Murray, John\nB. Gray, George H. Morlett, G. Ross,\nA. B. Ritchie, G. Cruickshank, Wm.\ngeinss, D. MacDonalil C. E. Tyson,\nJ. T. Newman, J. R. Craig, Aimer\nD. Hop, Trail; W. K. Esling. W. M.\nArchibald, Lome A. Campbell, J. 8.\nDesehamps, S. Turnan, G. A. Laf-\nilerty, H. G. Oliver, Percy B. Hunt,\nand William Baker, of Rossland; R.\nA. Bulmer, Sackvllle, N.B,: Robert\nBinns,   Londonderry,   Ireland.\narrivals    last    riight.\nT.   J.   Moore,  of Calgary ,1s   spending\nten-days   holidny    In   Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. D. P. Coles, of Sandon,\nare    registered   at    tlie   Hume.\nC. I. Archibald, of Salmo, has bought\nMrs. J. C. Gore's residence on Stanley\nstreet.\nMr. ami Mrs. Holmes a Court, of\nProctor, were visitors in the city yesterday.\nC. Oihoff, who spent lhe last few\ndays tn the city, will return to Mac-\nleod   this  morning.\nJ. C. Ryan, of Spokane, manage? of\nthe Soho mine at Sandon, returned\nyesterday   from   theSluc:in.\nMr. and Mrs\nlhe birth ol B\nthe    Kootetiav\nJuly  U, lfiaD.\nRom Fleming afinounca\nsii\\   Uoliert   I'almiui,   ;il\ni.nke   General   hospital)\nMrs. IE. HcGautay. Of Castlegar, WSJ\ntaken to the KooteYiuy Lake General\nhospital yesterday, suffering from a\ncase of pleurisy.        s\nAUTO BORROWERS\nINCUR PENALTIES\nWhen some unknown joyrider stole\nCharles F. Mcllurdy's car frqm the\nfront of the Nelson club on Wednesday night, run past the gas works\nalong the Granite road, and deserted\nIt just below the railway bridge, it\nis possible that' he was not awarc\nthnt from the first of the month\nextremely heavy penalties are provided for jtiBt such conduct by the\nMotor  Vehicles act._   This act states;\n\"Every person who takes or uses\nwithout authority, a motor vehicle,\nwithout Intent to steal the same, or\nwho Is a party to such unauthorized\ntaking or using, shall be liable upon\nsummary conviction, to imprisonment, with or without hard labor, or\nu fine of not more than $300, or\nboth.\" The provisions of the act\nwill also be construed to apply to\nemployees lining the motor vehicles\nf   their   employers   without   consent.\nEight Eoomed House on Carbonate Street, in excelled conditjon. Fully modern, stone foundation, good\ncellar, two level lots.\nPrice $3500\nCharles F. McHajctfy\nEEAL estatj\nPHONE 185\nK3UBAHCS\nUNITED STATES\nRAILWAY GRANTS\n\u2666 QIEATRE\nMat!net   Saturday   at   2:30\nWill Rogers\n-IN- \/\nJubilo\nA story of a \"hobo\" and a girl.\nThe romance of a \"No-Good\nGuy.\" A picture with a wealth\nof amiln.\nLloyd Comedy\nChristie Comedy\nOuting Picture\nKouth Africa  362,  total  nil; moth-\ner   country   364,   total   1093;   Canada  i\n345  and   1086;   India   336   and   100\u00bb;\nciuernBey 828 and 928.\nIndividual Canadian scores and 1\naggregratea \u00bb#,ero: Hlchurdson 46\n.mil 142; .Utton 45 and 141; North-\nover 46'and 136; Crowe 42 an* 134;\nVincent 36 and 132; Nix 46 and 186;\nHawkins 38 and 13*2; Cfowe 42 and\n132:    Kdmund   44   and   134.\nAt 660 yards the South African\n(earn maintained their remarkablo\nscoring;, the blackboard being a spectacle of centrals,-and when four had\nfired they were nine points ahead of\nthe mother country team.\nSt. Georgo's Va.e\nThe scores In the St. tjeorges\nChallenge vase* competition, shot for\ntoday were 723, against 1047 last\nyear. The shooting in the first stage,\n300 yards, was generally of a high\nlevel.\nRiflemen Ashworth of the Rifle\nBrigade, scored 60 which Included\neight centrals, Five competitors made\n49, fourteen 48, thirteen 47 lnclud-*\ning Lieut. Nix, MaJ\u201e Northover, Maj.,\nRichardson, and Capt. Sangster, thlr-_\nty-two   made   46 ,nnd   sixty   46.\nOther Canadlun scores In the first\nstage of the St. Georges were\u2014Srgt.\nBoa, Montreal, 44; Lieut. Col. P. E.\nBowei?, Edmonton; Srgt. Coles, Regina; Lieut. John Chandler, Wood-\nstock.N. B., Srgt. C. A. Hawley, Winnipeg\/ Gunner Tingman, Quebec 41;\nSrgt. Hawkins, Srgt. Maj., Reafl,\nVictoria, 40; Srgt. McCabe, Char-\nlotetown; Srgt. Itooke, Toronto, 38:\nPrivate Weir, Toronto, 37; Trooper\n\u25a0I. Saidler, Edmonton, and Corporal\nYoung, Toronto 35.'\nNelson News oi the Day\nCanada Ties the Second\nRange But Falls to Third\nPlace in Final\nBISLEY CAMP, July 14 (Can,\nAssociated Press).\u2014The South African team today won the historic\nKolupore Cup. the mother country\nwas second nnd Canada third. The\nSout-h African team established, u\nlead at the first range\u20142ul) yards,\nand though the Canadian team did\nthe aecond range in the same number of shots, the South .Africans increased their lead at the third\nrange\u2014600 yards\u2014 and finally won\nby 15 points from the mother country team. The Canadian team did\nnot shoot so well as the mother\ncountry at  the  last range.-\nThe South African team consisted\nentirely of veteran shots, all of\nwhoim have frequently been visitors\nto Bisley. Its victory was, however,\nthoroughly   well   deserved.\nThis is the first time South  Africa\nhas won the Kolapore Cup.\nItomarkablc Scoring\nThe scores of the teams for the\nr>00 yard range were: South Africa\n372; Canada, 372; mother country.\n374;   India,   355;   Guernsey,   336.\nScores of individual Canadians at\nthe 500 yard range were Sgt. Hawkins, 48; including eight centrals and\ntwo Inners;, Maj. Hatton, 48; Maj.\nRichardaotij 47; Capt. Crowe, 47;\nLieut, flix, 47; Major NorthOver. 46;\nCapt.  Vincent,  46;  Pte^ Edmund,  43.\nThe team scores at the third\nrange,   600   yards,   and   totals,   were:\ni Julv\ncount\n^nt quarter,\n10  per cent\n(8897)\n*S\n\u25a0ting of the Library Board will\nnt tho City Hull tonight. (8891}\nFUNERAL    NOTICE\nfuneral of the Ipte William\nHenry Jeffs will he held at fit.\nSaviour's Church this afleruoon at 2.30\no'clock\". (8902)\nMaccabees   will\n(8S98)\nThi*\nThe   Ladles   of   ihe\nmeet  tonight.\nCARD   OF   THANKS\n.Mrs!-Wittet and Mr. and Mrs. H. O.\nNeelands desire to th(*nk the Knights\nof Pythias and Nelson citl*ens for their\nkindness and consideration during tbeJr\nrecent   bereavement.      # (8899)\nLadies' Altar Society of Catholic\nChinch will give an afternoon and\n\u2022\u2022veiling (Jarden Party on Bird lawn,\non Baker street, Tuesday, July 20th.\nIce cream, cake, tea, rolls, soft drinks,\ncandy and home cooking for sale.\nMusic In evening.- Come and bring\nyour   friends. (8858)\nTERNDAI.E   DANCES\nJulv 17 nnd 31; August 14 and 28;\nS.3U   p.m.     Tickets- 75c. (8888)\nNo more gooseberries acceptable unless notified first. MacDonald Jam\nCom (8849)\nA. Smith, tailor, begs to announce\nthat owing to falling health he is\nclosing his store July 15, on Stanley\nSt., but will continue to do a limited\namount of work at his residence, 823\nMill   St. (8825)\nWorking   men,   keep   away   from   all\nmines in Silverton and Sandon district\nexcept Silversmith, Cinderella and Hope\nmines.\n(8780) T. B. ROBERTS.\nSTRIKE   ONI\nLindsay's Camp, Meadows. \u00bb Working men are requested to keep away.\nR.   Barrow,   Secretary,  O.B.U.       (8768)\nWASHINGTON, July ' 14>-K\u00abW\nloans for railroads amounting to\nf 17,022,275 were approved yesterday\nfiy the Interstate commerce commission, making an aggregate uf .$22,-\n086,875 so far, certified to the' sec-\nTetary of state for payment out of\nthe $300,000,000 revolving fund provided  by the transportation account.\nJULY\nCLOTHING  SALE\n-*+\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0-\n, MAKE YOUR DOLLARS DO DOUBLE DUTY\n\u00bb\nSee Page 4\nEmory & Walley\n\u00bb\u25a0\"\u25a0 *\" -\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. 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."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1920_07_15","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0396286","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","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. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1920-07-15 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/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]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1920-07-15 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. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}