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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" V\nwmm\u2014\u2014*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0* ,. \"s\nI  ' M-%l'm\nFor Latest\nNEWS OF DISTRICT\nSee Page 5\nShoot First\nSTAGE KING'S PRIZE\nSee Page 7\n0\n\u00aboh. _0.\nNELSON, B.C., TUESDAY MORNING*\/ JULY 19, 1921.\nN0..68|\n1G STANDS\nReturns to Ulster With Matters Still in Doubt; Firm\non Constitution.\nDEi VALERA DEMANDS\nSTATUS OF DOMINION\nDeadlock Evolves Fears\nqf Continued Hostilities;\nSmuts Active Mediator.\nLONDON. July 18.\u2014Just' before\ntaking the train tonight with bis\ncuUeagues lor Belfast, Sir James\nCraig,  the  Ulster premier, said:\n\"I return home well satisfied with\nthe efforts being made toward peao^.\niMr.' de Valera has broken his silence\nand cleared the ground by his statement to the press that he proposes\nto found his claim on recognition\n1   of tbe right\" of self-determination.\"\nThe Ulster premier contended that\nlhe people of northern Ireland, In\nthe recent elections, \"determined\"\ntheir   own   parliament   by  an   over*\nrwhelming majority and that Mr, de\nValera and his friends admitted '.be\ni right of such self-determination on\n\u25a0 the part of .northern Ireland by tho\nfact that they themselves stood as\n-candidates for the northern parliament arid submitted their policy of\n\"no partition.\" This, ln fact, was\nthe only isaut placed Jjeforo the electorate, said Sir James, tmd \"no partition\" was rejected by the largest\nmajority ever secured In any general\nelection. \"\nUp to British' and de Valera\n\"Such bgjng the- true facts',\" be\ncontinued,' \"it now; only remains for\nMr*, de Valera and the British people to come to terms regarding thfe\narea: outside of that of which \u25a0 L\u00abm\nprime minister; Tlie people of north*\nprn>Ireland, make no-claim whatever\nto determine the terms of settlement\nwnf(*h Great1 Britain shall make wltn\neonthern - Ireland|\\\n\"When tnis -ib accomplished I can\npromise cordial cooperation on equal\nterms with southern Ireland In ,my\nmatters affectirig our ^common interest. .;\n\"Having, redehed the present sta'.Ve,\nI return tb Ireland lo carry on the\npractical Work of the government.\nI feel that our interests arc ably\nrepresented iu t'he Imperial parliament' and; of course, our services are\navailable, at any moment.\",\nThe official announcement issued\nat tlie ciose of a long conference between Lloyc) George and Mr. Do Valera today, says:\n\"Thc conversations between -Lloyd\nGeorgo and M.r. de Valera will be\nresumed Thursday.\"\nPuts Damper on Hopes\nThis .ordinarily would permit the\nBritish public and Iroland stfll. to\nindulge, in confident hope that a satisfactory sotlement would ultimately be reached, But Sir James Craig's\nstatement which was given- out in\nthe form of an interview, has out\nrather a damper on the hop2fi.1l\nspirit. \u25a0\nNothing is. allowed to leak 'but as\nlo what takes place behind tho closed\ndoors of the- cabinet room and the\nsecrecy even extends to * a tacit\nagreement to put no questions on\nthe subject hi parliament. The negotiations, in fact, havo ail the characteristics of diplomatic exchanges\nbetween two foreign diplomats.\nThough  it  had  been  thought pos-\nf slble from tho first that Ulster might\nj adopt  such an  attitude,  this sudden\n1 dashing of hopes that a peace con-\n] lerencb   would   be   assembled   as  an\nI outcome of tho separate negotiations\n[ of  the  prime  minister  with   Mr.  de\n!- Valera and  Sir .James Craig,  comes\nsomewhat as a shock  to the publl:.\nIt   was   supposed   that   Sir* James\nCraig  and  his  colleagues  were  going\nto Belfast in accordance wlthia prior\nengagement and that while there they\nOIL STOVE OVERTURNING\nDESTROYS FRESNO HOTEL\n.FRESNO, Cal., July 18.\u2014Fire believed-to have originated in the Raymond hotel,, at Raymod, Mariposa\ncounty, when an; oil stove overturned\ndestroyed the hotel, . two adjacent\nresidences and- a warehouse .today,\naccording to advices received here.\nDamage was estimated at $50,000.'\n- The flames, threatened for a time\nto wipe out the entire' town .and\nspread to dry grass surrounding the\nbuildings. The grass fire was extinguished by men, women and - children, .who circled the firo with\" wet\nsacks.\nBOUND FOR BAFFIN LAND\nwould   have   consultations   respecting\n(Cohtlnued on  Page] Two.):\nAt Death's Door.\n\u25a0  ' WR \u25a0 SAW   HUGHES,\nXVho  is  reported  to* be  sinking,  but\n1 whose wunderful constitution may still\nBreak All Bounds of Discipline in Concerted Plan to\nEscape.\nPITTSBURG, July 18^\u2014Prisoners in\nthe \u25a0 Western Penitentiary today\nbroke all bounds of discipline, fired\nfour buildings ,and for a time kept\nthe institution In an uproar, while\nprison guards, deputy sheriffs and\npolicemen, reinforced by armed clt-\niaens, battled to put down the disorder, . She convicts ^ere shot and\ntwo others Were cut in the battle.\nPrison officials said that three or\nfour of the \u201e wounded would likely\ndie.\nFire Gbnp ils Signal     '  V..\nThe outbreak, timed to start with\nthe ringing of the first fire gong,\nbegan in the dining room, where the\nconvicts sought to detract the at*'\ntentlou of guards irom the fires,\nprison officials said. Alarms sounded from four places in the institution almost simultaneously when\nguards discovered the prisoners had\nfired the buildings with any material\navailable. Some six hundred prisoners had just taken their-seats in\nthe big dining room when one of\nthem sent a soup howl careening\ndown One. of tho . long tables. Instantly the room was in an uproar,\nfor at the same moment the fire gong\nsounded an alarm from the construction Shop, the \"linen shop, the kitchen\nand. the. chapel. \u2022-\"\nPelt  Guards With Tableware *\nThe guards in the dining, room\n-tried to quell the outbreak, but tho\nthoroughly maddeno^ prisoners pelted,\nthem with tableware and cutlery, all\ntlie time shrieking and howling. The\nfire department, finding the blaze\nwas beyond its control, called tiie\ncity \"lire department, while riot calls\nwero  sent   in  for   tho   police.\niCleantime, the' guards in the dining\nroom \u25a0 had regained, in part, their\ncontrol and forced some of the men\n)&ck to their cells, but 200 or more\ndashed for the prison yards and\nwhen faced by other guards backed\ninto the' blinding and ran for the\n,top of their cells. From this vantage\npoint they pelted tho guards' now\nreinforced by every available man hi\nthe prison, With bricks torn from the\ntop. of the wall; Police from every\ni precinct in thc city soon added to\nithe fighting forum. within the en-\nj closure ami It was not long until\nthe prisoner's had been chased from\ntlie wall to their cells. They signalled their reincarceration by breaking the glass in the windows and\nshrieking and howling to the thousands of persons gathered in the\nstreets and filling the house tops\nnearby.\nWithin   two   hours   the   firo   was\nunder control, but not until a; number of buildings had been destroyed\nwith* an estimated loss of $50,000.\nResult of Discontent\nJohn Egan, parole officer, after\nquiet had been restored, safd that\nthe outbreak was the result of a\nperiod of discontent among tho ,11.85\nprisoners confined in the institution.\nFirst tangible evidence of unrest\nappeared two weeks ago, when two\nprisoners and a guard were hurt\nduring a fight in the dining room.\nYesterday one prisoner sandbaggod\nanother while the prisoners (were at\ndrill in tho onclosure, in the hope,\nhe said, that the guards would be\nconfused and a break for liberty\nwould be a successful. The guards,\nhowever,  kept  their  heads.\nSo many coll locks were broken\nthat tonight, picked men from the\nPittsburg police, are on guard in the\ncorridors while outside, tho streets\nand   heavily  patrolled.\neomi _*ht. MWQ*1ILY!\u00ab-!.WN.J'!,W V0*r _\nTHE  SCHOONER   BOWDOIN |\nStarts On voyage of discovery under command of Dr. Donald B. McMillan.\nThe vetefnn Canadian Arctic explorer Stefasson has protested at tho Dominion . government allowing this expedition, and is himself heading a rival\nexploring party shortly.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS.\nPretorlan, at Montreal from Glasgow.\nVictorian, at Montreal from Liverpool.\nScandinavian, at Montreal from\nAntW,erp.\nSCALDED ENGINEER DIES\nREVELSTOKE, July 18.\u2014James\nMilne, stationary engineer, of the\nCanadian .Pacific shops for the last\n14 years, who, was terribly scalded\noh Saturday by the b'owing out of\nthe blowoff pipe, died in tho hospital\nSaturday evening: afHer intense suffering. He leaves a widow and step-\n1 slaughter,         _   ,  : _,-._\u25a0 _^\nDuke of Devonshire Responds\n,   to Good Wishes in French\nand English.\nQUEBEC, July 18.\u2014The banquet\ntendered this evening to his excellency, the governor general, the Duke\nof Devonshire, prior to his return to\nEngland on the expiry of his term\nof office, by the prime minister and\nltfembers of the executive council of\nthe province of Quebec proved to ho\none of the moat brilliant public func\ntlons.that have been staged in this\ncity Tor some time. Over 250 invitations had been Issued and nearly 200\nguests sat down in thc spacious banquet hall of the parliamentary restaurant.   :\u25a0* t\nThe health of his excellency was\nproposed by Lieutenant Governor\nHon.. L. A. Taschereau in an appreciative address of farewell.\nTho governor general, responding\nfirst in French and then in English,\nbetrayed an' evident emotion, but his\nremarks were pregnant with wise\ncounsel and common sense. After\nhe resumed his seat Hon. Walter\n.Mitchell, provincial treasurer, voiced\nthe sentiments of thc. province of\nQuebec Iri; English, and Sir Georgo\nFoster, acting prime minister of the\nDominion, wished the guest of honor\nGodspeed in the name of tho whole\nof the Canadian people.\nBefore the banqueters broke up a\nreception was held in the executive\ncouncil chamber when his excollency,\nsupported by the lieutenant governor,.\nHon. L. A. Teschereau, and Sir\nGeorge Foster, shook hands in farewell with all ttyoso who had come\ntogether at the bidding of tho provincial  government.\nrapnii\nFamily Struggle for Control\noi La Presse; Attempt to\nStarve Each Other Out\nADJOURNS BEER\nAwait Supreme Court Ruling\non Jurisdiction in Veterans' Case.\nVICTORIA, July 18.\u2014The beer\nselling 'charge against the Army and\nNavy Veterans was again before Magistrate Jay in police court this\nmorning and was remanded until\nJuly 25 hi order to allow H. D-\nTwigg, who is appearing for tho Veterans, to obtain a ruling from a supreme court judge on his contention\nthat the matter is without the Jurisdiction of tho courts; that the whole\nact Is ' ultra vlrfes of the provincial\nlegislature, as- It ls unconstitutional\nand Interfering, he claims, with trade\nand commerce, lho subject being reserved by the British North America\nact to the Dominion parliament.\nCOAST STEAMER RUNS\nDOWN   FISHING   BOAT\nVANCOUVER, July 18.\u2014Two white\nfishermen were' drowned at Schooner\nPassage, RlverB Inlet, Friday evening, after their boat had been in\ncollision with the Vancouver steamer\nCeltic of the Coast Steamship company. Identity of the two men has\nnot yet been established. When the\naccident occurred the Celtic' was\nbound hi,, and the fishing boat, jt. is\nsaid, swung across her bows and\nwas run down. The men were In the\nact' Ot hauMug in their iret at the\ntime. They disappeared ahnost 1m-\nHtte&ft&l\u00a3 _, -*\u2014\nMONTREAL, July 18.\u2014(Canadian\nAssociated Press.)\u2014It was declared\nby Judge Lorenger, of the superior\ncourt, this afternoon that tho situation at La. Presse \u25a0bulldirfg had become so desperate that unless the\ncourt Intervened thero might- be an\nopen breach of the peace, \"which\nmight result in somebody being murdered.\" \u25a0    1 \u25a0\nThis declaration was made .in connection .with applications by thy\nBerthiaume brothers, through counsel,\nfor the issue of cross writs of injunction directed to tho same end,\nviz.:\nEach party wants the other party\nbarred from the control of La Presse\n\u25a0newspaper, together with a court\ndeclaration that,they, And not the\nothers, are rightfully directors. \u25a0 This\nIs the latest upshot of the -family\nstruggle between Arthur 'Berthiaume,\npresident and general manager of La\nPresse, and his brothers, Eugene and\nEdouard, to obtain control of this,\none of the most important French-\nCanadian newspapers In the Dominion.\nDetectives  Hold  Floors.\nThe latter two are at present out\non bail, under 11 charge of theft of\n$80,000 and $40,000, \u2022 respectively, laid\nby Arthur Berthiaume, each side to\nquarrel ^as engaged the services of\ndetectives who uro now in considerable numbers holding various floors\ndfof La Presse building, while attempts nre being made by one \"army\"\nto   starve  out   the  other. *\nJustice Lorenger put an ond tu this\nshate of affairs by giving orders that\nhostilities must bo suspended at once\nand that each side must call off the\ntwo -staffs of disputing detectives.\nThe counsel for each side agreed to\nthis   course   this   afternoon.\nHis lordship then agreed to hv.v\nboth sides tomorrow, morning oh the\nmerits of their applications for writs\nof injunction.\nMessrs. Eugene and Edouard Berth-?\niaumq have, Hi addition to taking out\nwrits-of injunction, also entered suit\nfor $50,000 damages for, as thoy\nclaim, being illegally prevented from\nentering their offices in La Presse\nbuilding.\nEXPLORERS START\nFOR BAFFIN LAND\nEAST BOOTH BAT, Maine, July 18,\n\u2014The schooner Bowdoin, which left\nWlscasset yesterday ,on the first leg\nof a voyage to Baffin Land, with\nDr. Donald B. McMillan's exploring\nparty, anchored in the harbor here\nlast .night. She will, leave early tomorrow;, for Sydney, N. S.\nLondon Press Credits Dominion Premier With Inspiring Harding Invitation.\nLONDON, July 18\u2014(By Orattah\nO'Leary, Canadian Press staff correspondent )\u2014>Wlth Premier Meighen\nof Canada In Edinburgh to receive\nthe freedmp of that eify and Premiers Lloyd George and Smuts of\nSouth Africa immersed in the Irish\nproblem the conference of Emp ho\nprime ministers contented itself today with cleaning up odds and ends\non ils agenda. As on Saturday, there\nwore meetings of sub-committees on\nsuch matters as imperial communications, shipping and the status of\nIndians, but nothing- definite will be\ndone with respect to any of these\nquestions until the Canadian premier's return on Wednesday,\nJn regard to the naval question,\nthe only action to be taken will be\nln the form of a resolution expressing the opinion that the oil resources\nof the Empire, should, if possible, be\nconserved   for   naval   fuel.\nPremier Meighen, for his part, has\nalways favored*, Washington not alone\nbecause of it's proximity to OttaW.t,\nbut because, in his opinion, the pl+jie\nto discuss and settle Pacific problems\nshould be as near as possible to lh\n' Pacific.\nAs the truth regarding what took\nplace within the conference respecting fhe Anglo-Jnpanese alliance filters out, the British press gives\ncredit to Premier Meighen for his\npart in securing the step proposed\nby President Harding of the Unilod\nStates. Thus, the eulogistic editorials In the London Times and th 1\nDaily Telegraph last week are followed today by the following editorial\nin the Evening News, which has t'ic\nlargest circulation of all London daily\nnewspapers:\n\"It is now an open secret that hilt\nfor the Canadian premier's eounige-.\n011s stand oil Canada's behalf, * afl.'-v\na heated discussion concerning the\nrenewal of tho Japanese treaty, the\nWashington conference might - never\nhave been called under such propitious stars as now.\" v\nSASKATCHEWANCROP\nOUTLOOK FAVORABLE\nICE WAREHOUSE BURNS.\nHAMILTON, Out., July 18.\u2014Eighteen hundred tons of lco were destroyed . and damage estimated at\n$100,000 \u201ewas caused by a stubborn\nfire that broke out on tho waterfront at noon today and completely\nrazed the Ice house of the Dwyer &\nO'Helr company. Only the heroic\nwork of the firemen prevented the\nRoyal Hamilton Yacht club from falling a prey to the flames., -The blaze\nwas finally extinguished at 5 o'clock\nthis afternoon.\nAlready faced with a possible) Ice\nfamine by reason of the mild winter\nand the recent heat wave, an acute\nsituation was aggravated by the fire.\nRobert Cunimer advised tonight that\nthe\" 1800 tons of ice destroyed in the\nwarehouse of h'ls company was the\nnatural produce and the last * It had\navailable.\nCustoms Inspector Retires.\nVICTORIA, July .18.\u2014William\nMarchant, Inspector of customs and\nassociated with the department since\n1897, has been superannuated effective. July 1. He has- been for 30\nyears a leading citizen,: as alderman,\nschool trustee and library commls-\nei.9B\u00a7i_        \u2014\n\u2014\nm--m--(\nREGINA, July 18.\u2014From present\nconditions it is probable that grain\ncutting will commence about August\n10 hnd crop conditions continue very\nassuring, according to reports received by the Saskatchewan department of agriculture for tho period\nending July 16.\nSome anxiety has'been felt as to\nconditions favorable to rust, and its\nappearance, but from the reports received from all parts of the province\nat present there is no damage from\nthis cause. Some red rust has appeared ou the leaves of tho wheat\nin several places, principally In the\nsoutheastern Jind east central district,\nbut as this js not uusual under the\nclimatic conditions existing at the\npresent tlmo no alarm is felt. Reports that black rust has beon seen\nin tho Maryfleld and Lampman dis-\ntrcs are unconfirmed.\nGenerally speaking, there is sufficient moisture with the exception oT\ntho west and southwestern part of\nthe province, where rain is badly\nneeded aiid tho crop situation is serious. *\njMany districts report .hail storms\nof varying, intensity and resulting\ndamage.\nPractically no damage has been\ndone by insects and very little, by\ngrasshoppers,\nRUST MENAGE HALTS\nIN PRAIRIE PROVINCES\nWINNIPEG, July 18.\u2014Rust menace throughout the prairie provinces\nis temporarily halted, according to\nthe weekly crop report of the Canadian Pacific railway, issued today.\nWhile both red and black rust is,reported in odd areas, it is neither serious   nor  extensive.\nIn Manitoba during the past week\ntho raln'fall has been Blight and\nscattered, but the general opinion ls\nhat the crop is In good condition\nand considerably advanced over last\nseason. Hail has done some damage\nin the Carberry district and to a\nlimited extent between Winnipeg and\nEmerson.' Barley harvest is now\ngeneral in this province and ample\nfood for stock and an extraordinary\nhay crop is reported.\nThe weather In Alberta has modified from the previous week, but not\nmuch rain has fallen, ahd that mostly in northern districts. No rust\ndamage is  reported,  but some  from\n*au.. _*_* u, i ,_\u00a3\u00a3\t\nBob Edwards Secures Seat for Calgary\/\nGeneral Stewart, Independent Cons^ I jitive, Wins at\nLethbridge; Three Ministers Go DowiAo Defeat; Gto-\nernment and Farmers Each Return Woman Membeer;\nEdmonton Solid for Liberals; Calgary Divides its Favors\nCALGARY,.July 18.\u2014(By, Canadian\nPress)\u2014The Farmers have^ swept\nAlberta. At, 10 o'clock tonight\/,it\nwas apparent that nominees endorsed\nofficially by the United Farmers of\nAlberta had -been elected to at least\n36 seals out oE 61 hi the legislature\nof the province. This demonstration\nof their strength involved the defeat\nof the \u25a0 Liberal government headed\nby Hon. Chas. Stewart. The Liberal\ngroup in the next house will number\nnot more than 14 or 15, and perhaps\nless. Labor elected four and these\ncan bo .added safely to the voting\nstrength of the forthcoming Farmer\nadministration. Four Independents\nalso made their'way to the legislature, ' Including \"Boh\" Edwards, editor of the Calgary Eye Opener, who\nran second in Calgary. No straight\nConservative   was   elected.\nGeneral J. S, Stewart, the winner\nIn , Lethbridge, is described as an\nIndependent-Conservative.\nThree Ministers Defoated\nPremier Stewart has six colleagues\nIn his cabinet. Three of them wore\ndefoated by U. ,F, A. candidates and\nthree wero elected. Hon. Duncan\nMarshall went down in Olds, Hon,\nA. MacLean in Taber, and Hon. Geo.\nSmith.iu Camrose. Hon. J. R. Boyle.\nattorney-geheral, was elected ln Edmonton, tut defeated by a Farmm*\nIn Sturgeon. Hon. J. L. Cote won\nhis fight in Grouard and Hon, C^ R.\nMitchell iu Bow Valley.\n' H. \"W. Wood', president of tile United Farmers of Alberta, was not a\ncandidate, but he worked actively\nduring the campaign on -behalf of\nFarmer nominees. Geo. Iioadley, a\nformer Conservative provincial leader, who accepted a Farmer nomination at Okotoks, Was elected.\nHon. C. S. Plngle, speaker In tlie\nlast legislature, was defeated in Red\nCUffe.\nTwo Women ]Win\nTwo women were elected out of\neight nominee's. Mrs. Nellie Mc-'.\nCllmg, the well known writer, went\nIn with the Government ticket in\nEdmonton, aud Mrs. Walter Parlby,\nII. F. A., was returned for Lanombe.\nEdmonton j'cturned five Liberals\ncandidates in a field of 20 caiidi-\nlates. Calgary split the vote, sending back two Labor men, two Independents arid one Liberal. Medicine\nHat elected a TJ. Ft A. man and it\nLabor candidate who ran on a joint\nticket  against  two  Liberals.\nWith 36 members tho Farmers will\nhave two more members in the next\nlegislature than the Liberals had in\nthe last house. It is a fact of note\nthat only 12 members-elect held office in the old legislature, and only\nseven Liberal members out of 34\nformer members are returned, though\nof course not all of them were candidates.\nThe seven are Premier Stewart,\nMinisters Boyje,. Mitchell and Coto\nand Messrs. Walker, Tobin and Mills.\nThe U. I1'. A. men . Moore and Iioadley. sal in th.! last house, . though\nHoadley was there as a Conservative.\nGeneral Stewart and Pearson and\nRoss of Calgary completed the\ntwelve.\nit: W. Wood, the Vi F. .\\. oJijef,\ndeclined tonight to make any statement concerning his attitude to the\ntfuestion of the premiership, it is\nexpected that a conference of Farmer\nmembers.-elect will he called, at an\nearly date tn settle the political\nleadtTship so that the seals- of gov-\nrnment may he transferred and the\nexpressed will of the people put into\neffect  without delay.\nThe following of those elected,\nwith majorities where available, is.\nsubject to correction as fuller returns\nire received:\nUnited   Farmers   of   Alberta,   37.\nAcadia\u2014L i'roudfoot.\nAlexandra\u2014P.   Enzenatir.\nCamrose\u2014V.  W.  Smith.\nCardstoh\u2014G. h. Stringham, .700.\nCoronation\u2014G.  N. Johnston,   024.\nCochraue\u2014A.  Moore,   200.\nDklsbury\u2014A.   E.  Claypool,   550.\nGleichen\u2014J. C. Buckley,  C7.\nHigh River\u2014S. Brown.\nHand  Hills\u2014George Forrester.\nInnisfail\u2014D,  Cameron,   873.\nLacombe\u2014Mrs.   Walter   Parlby.\nLac Ste.. Anne\u2014X).  M.   McKenn. .\nLittlo Bow\u2014O. McPherson.\n,   MacLeod\u2014H.  W.  Shields,   267.\nMedicine  Hat\u2014P.   Baker.\nNanton\u2014D. II. Galbralth.\nOlds\u2014N.  S.  Smith.\nOkotoks\u2014George\" Hoadley,   785.\nPeace River\u2014D. M. Kennedy.\nPembina\u2014George McLaughlin.\nPonoka\u2014P. Baker,  200.\nPlncher Creek\u2014E. G.  Cook.\nRed Deer\u2014G. W. Smith,  347.\nRed Cliffe\u2014W, C.  Smith,   133.\nRibstone\u2014C. F. Wright, 552.\nStettler\u2014A. L, Saunders,   HOH.\nSt.  Albert\u2014F,  St.  Arnault.\nSt.   Paul\u2014L.  Joly,-305.\n\u25a0Sturgeon\u2014S. A. Carson\nStony i'.laina\u2014iV_ M. TA_asliburfi_\nTaber\u2014L.  Peterson:\nVegreville\u2014A.   M.   Matheson.\nVermillion\u2014H. G. Reid.\nWainwright\u2014J.   R.   Love.\nWarner\u2014M. J. Connor,  Z.29.\nWotasklwln\u2014E. E. Sparks.\nliberals. Hi.\nCalgary\u2014R. C. Marshall.\nEdmonton, 5\u2014Hon.' J. R. Boyle.\nA. R. McLellan, J. C Bowen, J. W.\nHeffernan  and ,Mrs.   Nellie McClung.\nAthabasca\u2014George Mills, 112,\nBeaver River\u2014Joseph Dechene.\nBow Valley\u2014Hon, C. R. Mitchell,\n1028.\nClearwater\u2014O. M. Lee.\nGrouard\u2014Hon. J. L. Cote, 120.\nVictoria\u2014Frank   Walker. - \u25a0\nWhitford\u2014A. S. Shandre, acclamation.\nSedgwick\u2014Hon. Charles Stewart,\nacclamation.\nEdson\u2014C.  W. Cross.\nLeduc\u2014 S. C. Tobin.\nLabor, S'.\nCalgary\u2014Alex. Ross and Fred\nWhite.\nMedicine Hat\u2014W. G. Johnston.\nRocky Mountain\u2014P. M. Christo*\npher, 140.\nIndependent:--', 4.\nLethbridge\u2014General J- S. Stewart,\nIndependent-Conservative.\nCalgary\u2014R. C. (Bob) Edwards and\nRobert Pearson. .\nClaresholm*-T. C. Milner, 36.\nMissing\u2014Edson, Leduc and Stony\nPlains.\nStewart* Withholds   Statament     -\nEDMONTON, July 18.\u2014Pretnief\nStewart when seen tonight by a ret-\nresenfattve of the Canadian Pfress\nwas very tired after the 'Strenuous\ncampaign and was not prepared-.to\nmake a formal statement.\nThe premier said it was doubtful\nir the Liberals would have m'ore\nthan lfi seats In the next house. \"It\nis my intention to continue in office\nuntil such time as the United Farmers are ready to take office,\" he\nstaled.\n.U the present time the premier\nsaid he could not recommend anyone,\nlor there was no recognized leader.\nHe presumed tin- same course would\nbe followed as in Ontario two years\nago, when the Hearst government\ncontinued in office until the Farmers\nhad chosen a leader and he was\nrecommended to the lieutenant-governor. *    \u2022\nIt was his purposes Premier Stew-\nrt said, to turn over the government\ns soon as it waa known who the\nleader would be and the Crown had\nIndicated readiness to act. He\nwould then make a formal statement.\nWho Will  Be Premier?\nCALGARY, July 18.\u2014\"Until a .conference of the elected U . F. A. members has been held, no one will bo\nin a position to accept or reject a call\nto tho premiership,\" said H. W. Wood,\npresident of tlie V. F. A. tonight, ih\nreply to llie question, \"\"VVho.wfll be\nthe new premier'.'\"    \u2022,\nMr. Wood continued:\n\"1 have received no instructions\nfrom (he elected members as to any\naction Lhey wish to take regarding\ncalling\"'41 '\u25a0 eonfereiiqo, but I havo no\ndoubt they will very soon take'tho\n(Continued on Page Two)\nTHE WEATHER.\nThe water in lhe lake at,Nelson'\nhas now receded to 11.7 feef alfova\nlow water murk. \u25a0\n:_____\n__a___.\n ip-pUf-pVL\nTHE NELSON DAILY.NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 19, 1921.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhin   tha  Travailing   Publlo   May   Obtain   Suparlar   A\u00aboomadatlaq\nECURE\nTHE      c\nPremier Hotel\nOf the Interior\n\\%\nSERVICE   UNEXCELLED\nA la Carta Table D'Hata\nSPECIAL   SUNDAY    DINNER   $1.00\nINCOMPARABLY  THE   FINE8T  TEA   ROOM; IN   B.  C.\nOpan   Dally 10 a. m. to Midnight Mualo and  Dancing\nThe Latest Sundaet, Ice Cold Drlnka and tcie\nAfternoon   Tea   (2   p.m.  ta   6   p.m.),  25o,\nHeadquarters   far   All   Travelling   Mon,   Mining   Men   and   Tourleta\nEUROPEAN   PLAN      \u2014 -      ROOMS,   $1.00   up\n. HUME\u2014Miss Carrie Allen, North-\nport; W. J. Bui-hut and wife, Calgary;\nS. McCone, city, Harry Hawos, Vancouver; \u25a0 C. L. Harcourt, Revelstoke!\nAlice Einstein, New York city; Mrs. ]\u2022'.\nL. Field, New York city; H. W. Ent-\nmeraon and wife, Toronto; Alfred\nWard, London, Eng.;, A. Herrchbey.\nGrand Forks; Mrs. Hamilton, Edg*.1-\nwood;   R.   A.   Yeld,   Edgewood;   A,   li.\nFinglund, Silverton; O. A. Eriies, Vancouver; Captain James N. Hatner, <!>\"\nrard: II. Uakes, Sainio;' Thonuw Brew\ner, Hamilton; M. MfeLein, New Denver\nErwin O. While, Sandon; ll. Gray, Van\ncouver; F. Graham, Valllcan; U !\u2022'\nSheWa and wife, Spokane: it. Gillette\nSlocan; A. Innes, Grand Forks; \"T. Kit\nPatrick, Victoria; Mrs. H. Abor and son\nKitchener; W. L. Condy; Calgary; Mrs\nh. E. Crltchett, Northport.\nWell Lighted Sample Rooma\nAmerican Plan\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTEL '\nA Home for Those Away From Home\nSpecial attention to Traveling Public.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner, $1.00\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n618   VERNON   ST.   EAST\nComfortable Rooms, Hot and Cold\nWater.   Dining   Room   in\nConnection\nRatea $1   and  up.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean   and   American   Plan\nSteam  Heat in'Every  Room\nA, LAPOINTE, Proprietar\nHoliday Resorts\nBelow are announcements of hotels\nIdeated at resorts in Kootenay-Boundary where enjoyable vacations may\nbe  spent.\nQUEEN'S\u2014 H. E. Weymouth, Villi-\ncouver; Mrs. Mead, fiittfary; R Mom\ncrop, Fruitvale; It. Sims, Boswell; .1\nRemedial I ,* Tunnel 1: F. ft. Sargent, Tun-\nnell; Mr. anud \u25a0 Mrs. F. h. Cook. Cat-\ngury;; A. Shennan, Nakusp; It. II. Patterson, Nakusp; K. \\V. I'aton, Damp\nLister.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nNOW     UNDER     MANAGEMENT\nOF  D. A.  MACDONALD\nEvery   Consideration   Shown   ta\nGuests.\nCor.  Baker  and  Ward   8ts.,  Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014John -Kennedy. Trail; 11\nC. Coebltt, ingeraoil; A. Scgll, Inger-\nnoil; A. Kills, Ingersoll; Bill Pulovnex-\n' off, Meadows; Bill Hukoreff. Meadows:\nJ. P. Bell, Parks; Chris Weltk. Salmo;\nGeorge A. Hird, AVInlaw; P. W. Orecii,\nAVInlaw; F. B. Werner. Hilgewood; S.\nYosal, Cranbrook; C. M. Rowell,  Ferule,\nH.   W.   8HORE,   Prop.\nH.  E. SCANLAN,  Mgr.\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\n.ARROW    LAKES,    B.   C.\nUnder   entirely    now    management\nRenowned throughout tho west\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urlnlc Conditions,   Metallic   Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nin a most beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swMmning pools.\nAmerican    plan,    J.'t.fiO   and    up\nper   day.   \\2-i   per   week,\nFor rates apply  Strathcona  Hotel.\nNelson,  or   Halcyon   Hotel\n(Continued   from  f'age   1)\nnecessary   steps   to   meet   the   situation.\"\nDiscussing tho result uf Hie 'Icutlon\nhe  said:\n\"This result has been inevitable\never since the calling of the snap\nelections. However, the fanners have\nassumed a very gntvc responsibility,\nhut there Is no reason why they cannot meet that responsibility and make\ngood, and 1 b&lleve they will.\nWood  Gives  Views.\n\"We have long had representative\ngovernment, but it has been government of the people, by their own representatives, Jiust as autocratic, although not so tyrannical, as lhe lypi-\n\u2022al absolute monarchy. What the *peo-\u00bb]\npie want now is self government\nthrough their representatives, This\nwill be impossible so long as the\nelected representatives operate the\npolitical machinery by which they\nihemselv'eK are elected. The people of\nAlberta havo spoken in no uncertain\n'ei-ms against political representation,\nThis does not apply alone In the\nFanners, lt applies with equal force\nla labor and perhaps \\vith still gi'cai-\n.'r force to the elected independents\nAsk   Cooperation.\n\"Political -partisan statesmanship in\nVlberta is a complete wreck with\nhardly enough debris 'left to show\nvvhero the wreck occurred. All elements of the-people of - Alberta eer-\n'.ainly have great reason t<( congratulate . themselves. May they never\nturn backward. The Farmers, per\nhups unfortunately, will have the bur\n.ten of responsibility in conducting\nLhe affairs of the province, but they\nwant the government of Alberta administered iu the most economical\nand efficient way possible and to this\nand they ask the slncerest cooper)\ntion and assistance from every elcct-\n\"d member who has thc best Interest'\nof the province at heart.\n, Calflary   Figures\nCALGARY, July IS.\u2014The complete\nvpto iu Calgary stands:\nRoss,' Labor. G842; Edwards, Independent, -6141; White, Labor, 5813:\nMarshall, Liberal, 5248; Pearson, Independent. 4936. These five ai-i\nulected. The next five in order are:\nWebster, Liberal. 4401; Kurd. Liberal, 4328; Costello. ' Conservative,\n1008; Parkin. Labor. HS-JH and A'dams,\n! Chisel'vat I ve,   3501.     Ten   others   also\nSuggests   Wool   for   Premier\n\\\\!NMI'KtJ,. .Inly    18.\u2014Comment ins\non   the result   of tin; Alberta election,\nllie, Mnn'toba   Free   Piv.ss   tomorrow\nmorning   will   say;\n\"The responsibility of tin- U. F, A.\ninvited is Ibis: The right man for\nlbe premiership is plainly Mr, Wood.\nHe i.s lhe president of. tin; [1. F. A.\nlb- is lbe man who planned the In-\nlervent'ou iu provincial politics of\nFarmers as im- economic class. The\nprogram is his ami leadership which\ngave. the. movement victory is his.\nThe responsibility of taking hold and\npu'tling this program into effect iii\nhis;  he can   hardly  escape il.\"\n| WHERE THE  FISHING  IS GOOdI\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFinliinq,     Boating,    Bathing,    Golf,\nTennia  Courts\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied.    Gi'oory\nStore   in   Connection\nW.  A.  WARD,  Prop,\nRates   Reasonable.' Good   Meals\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF, NILSON, Proprietor.\nBAKER   STREET\nFurnished   Room,   by   Day,   Week\nor Month.\nTREMONT- 'Bill     Bl'i\nSuur:   Jack   Mlckclsoii.\nl.imlbcrg.   Mankln  Spur\nMa\nKootenay Falls Hotel\nSoutli Slocan, B. C.\nClose.to famous Fishing Pool a\nBonnlngLon   Palis,     Afternoon   i\nfresnnienls for auto parties serv\non    cool    verandah.\nStrawberries  and   Cream\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMra.   M\nA ho ma for\nOpen\nclaaa din\nallette,   Proprietress\nthe world at reasonable\nrates,\nnight   and    day.    Pint*\nng-room,  ConifortabU\n31*8 Vernon\nrooma.\nSt.      Near  Post  Office\nKOOTENAY-\u2014A.   Terodho.   NorLhport,\nH.,ltoulcan.   Calgary.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned and  run  by  Canadians.  No\nalieh labor employed.\n.Room and board, per month....{g45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\nJHE STANDARD \u00a3AFE\n320   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n12   to   2:30,   Special    Lunch,   40o\nPhone 154\nI\nHotel Menus\nWa print Hotel Menu*, either\n\u2022Htb onoaplete menus or with\nthe different *headln*fi and hUnk\napacet (or typing In tha Mil af\nfar*\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nT\u00bb.  Heme of Good  Prln\u00abl\u00ab|\nNelaan, B. *.\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176    GrandviMe   Street\nCosy,    bright    rooma.    Just    the\nplace    Tor    your    vacation.    Rates\ntnoder.'ite.    Write   'for    particulars.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate  of  Royal   Hotel,  Granville  St.\n.Scientific societies In America !\u00abdj\ntheir beginning in (he \"The \u25a0 Ant.\"-!-\n\u25a0mi I'll losophionl Soelely for IVo-\nmotlhg Useful Knowlodge\" which .vas\nnqorpbrated   in   IT.Sii.\nWIDOW'S   WIT\nMrs Bangs -So that pretty widow\nIs   really   married   so   si mil   again;   eh?\nOld  Bangs- Ves,\nMrSi liangs\u2014Uut her bite Ir^sbaud's\nwill expressly stipulated that, if she\nlouli a' second husband 'her legacy\nwas in reyert to. his most distant\nrelative.\nOld   Bangs\u2014Thai's   where   she   waa\nsmai-1        She    hunted    Up    Mi\"    relative\n.ind   married, him.\nStock\nCertificates\nNeatly printed share certificates for companies or\ni cooperative   associations. \u25a0\nWith printing in black\nor with two or more colors.\nWe can fill orders promptly and satisfactorily.\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS  JOB\nDEPARTMENT\nNF.LsoN; a c,\nThere's   No   Guesswork .|\nAbout Long Distance\nTelephoning\nWhen you finish your,,\nconversation you know\nyour message has been received. In addition, you\nhave your answer.\nRemember, also, you do\nnot pay for messages not\ndelivered^\u2014no talk, no pay.\nAll the company's telephones are available for\nservice day and night. Special rates between 7 p. m.\nand 8 a. m.\nHow Kansas Man Views the\nNeeds and Problems to Be\nMet.    .\nUnder -the sub-title of '.'No' City\nCan Afford to. Sacrifice Us Reputation and Hospitality by Neglecting\nthe til ranger Within Us Gates,\" W.\nti. Koehriiig. who describes himstlf^\nas a farmer of Uiwreuct!, Kansas, In\nthe following- article in Kansas Municipalities, urge's the setting aside of\ncertain open spaces as auto cam^s\nfor  tourists:\n. \"Without question Ihe first and original tourist traveled afoot. Il ;s\nalso equally certain that be camped\nout. lte' did both from necessity.\nHe OTiiyvHave liked walking but the\nikiu^. for i.t did not pers st In his\nsuceuysors .to the extent nf causing\nthem to. reject other modes of travel\nwhen offor<fd;^ But llial camping act\nsatisfied' fj---t^al. longing of his nature ..stfenjs jfilenr from lhe persist;,\nence with, which one type of successor, tho -auto toiirpst, clings to that\npractice. It is: this camping out Idea\nthat rtialios the 'auto tourist something of a problem to the community\nthrough whlth he passes The filing; station,- thV service station, :ind\nthe auto accessories shop amply, provide for all his needs In motive\npower, lubr'cation, inflation and all\nother' pos0M>le and impossible needs\nand facilitate In -every way his journey, ap well as the spending \"oTTils\nmoney,' And'the sign, 'Oxy-acetylene\nwelding done here.' appears in the\nmost unexpected, surprisingly vo-\nmote, and, with present conditions of\nroads,- welcome places.\nTravelers Like Company\n\"If you are out yourself day at'UT\nday, you will .meet the tourist vary-\n.ng greatly iri the completeness of\nhis equipment, reflecting the neatness of his appearance, the condition of the roads and the state of\nthe weather and nlso, strikingly, h s\nlove of order or slovenliness. Blithely\nndividual stlc through the day, sufficient unto himself, tbe iiycm^o\nraveler will Jlnil himself, as tho\nday draws to a close, seeking sonic\ncommon point at which to gather\nand spend the night with others.\nThis natural social Inst'net is fos:-\nered by'.'a variety of causes. A certain timidity and dread about camping $lone ;in, the open in u strand*\ncoin muni ty Is felt by many. Another\nfactor is the desire to discuss Uie\ncondition !of' the road and mules of\ntravel with those who have Jui-t\nbeen *over them, and to learn of Hie\nbest camp'ng.places on ahead. Th *\nfact tliat If Is more satisfactory 'o\nbuy food,-supplies in small quantlU&s\nas needed rather than carry largy\nsupplies, and the 1'nrlhet' fact that\nan abundant supply of water of do-*\nslrable quality' can usually be found\niu town or city and not always else-\n\\vhere, determine*' tbe point of gathering;\n\"Most towns' and cities that ar\nso situated as to have any cons 1.1 - ,\nei-able number of aula torn* sis passing through aro recognizing a vsry\nobvious s.ltttution and are making\n:in effort to meet it by providi.iT\nsome sort of place for llleni to camp.\nIn some places Ihls has been don-;\nin a spirit of true hospitality, with\na studied attempt lo provide for the\nheeds and comfort of these truvele s.\n\\Vlh others, the response has beon\nvery reluctant, wilh no ihoughl even\nfor the absolute need of the situation. The ' question for each com \u25a0\ninunity i\u00bb whether 11 can afford to\nallow Ibis .ever-,!noreasbig host lu\npass on' to the next town, From a\nbusiness point of view it Is well :\u25a0>\nconsider that the aggregate uf money\nspent along the way I y (be tourist\nis very great. Also, tbe purely human Har'an aspect of, tbe situation\ncannot well be disregarded. There\nIs UIso an .ethical side, for there are\nspnni from every community excepting Ibis tjurt uf hospitality elsewhere arid as a community we should\ndo unto others as we would ijavo\nthem dot unto us.\nEquipping the Ca-np\n\"Hut, aside Irom all e'se, it must be\nrecognized that there ai'e certain\nthings that ihe tourist must have;\nthings which from the standpoint nf\nsanitation and public heath the community eaunol afford to neglect\nAdequate toilet facilit es that insure\nnrivavy and decency are, of course,\nthe first requisite and every effort\nshould be made that cleanliness p\"e-\nvails.  The most satisfactory arraiig^-\nI merit that we found In visiting many \\f\n' tourist camps last summer was build-\n(Ings    constructed    entirely    of    concrete,   built  $o   that   they   could   be\nthorough ly     flushed    and   scrubbed.. '\nSewer eunneet'on Is of course hlghty\ndesirable! f\nThe water supply is next in Importance, In the larger camps that .\nwe visited tills was supplied by conveniently placed- hydrants, hut m *\nmost cases no provision' v\/ne made\nto take care of the wastage in draw- I\ning waier aud, thus the surroundings '\nwere made very sloppy and d sagree-\nable. rrii I in nt illumination is not j\ndesirable, but wherever it is possible\nsome lighting ot the camp is a g^jod\nfiling*, because of the feeling of\nsufety 'It gives the tourist und th j\nbetter chance of observation' It affords the community. Rough tables\nand benches were provided in some\nof the camps, and ovens of rtiusonry\nbad been built for cooking purposes.\nIn some cases firewood was furnished\nfree. This may have ben partly a\nmatter of self-protection, for loose\nlumber and anything that burns\nreadily ia liable to be gathered up\npretty closely when the need of fire\nfor cooking or warmth becomes urgent.\nShower baths were provided In']\nsome places and we noticed lhat\nthese were much palrun'zed by the\nchildren. One of the things found\noccasionally and much appreciated\nwas a place to wash the car. Sometimes this was simply a hydrant with\nsufficient hose to T-each around the\ncar, but at Ogden. Utah, where, in\naddition, a concrete slab had be-a\nlaid on which to work, the arrangement seemed complete. In Black-\nioot. t'daho, the park was divided, one\nhalf being use'd for camping wh ie\nthe other was being irrigated. This\narrangement Insured the life of the\ntrees and grass without discomfort\nto the campers.\nArrange ments   for   Caretaking\n\"A . well drained location Is best\nfor any camp ground and trees will\ncontribute much to the comfort of\nthe campers. Some regular caretaking Is necessary to keep the place In\na hab.table .condition The tourist\nshould be encouraged *to be tidy\nabout his surroundings, and this is\nb-est accomplished by providing receptacles for refuse and requesting\ntheir use by conspicuous signs, and\nby daily cleaning of the grounds, allowing no accumulation of waste.\n\"Conspicuous signs giv ng clear directions as to how to find tlie auio\npark at the points where the principal roads enter thc town are ol\ngreat assistance to the tourist. In\nsumo cases the interest in this subject by some public official mani-\nested itself by his daily visits to\ntbe park and his mingling wilh the\ntourists to learn bf their ways, and\nto get new ideas as to their needd.\nThis Interest does not need to be\nconfined to an official, but any public spirited elt'zen might well take\nIt upon himself to study the needs\nof his city's auto .park. Needless to\nsay, It was in places that such in-\nterest was manifest lhat wc foun.l\nthe. most attractive camp surroundings, and it would be fortunate for\nthe touris. and the town, oo, if thel-\"\nwere more public offic'als and citizens who would take a personal interest In this subject,\"\nSUNOS .\nBN RIGHTS OF\nHOT DAYS\nLose their dread when\nyou are clothed in\nLight, Cool Garments\nWe feMure this comfort-giving apparel\u2014in latest styles\nat the best low level of prices.\nSummer  Dresses,  Hats,   Blouses,  Skirts, . Underwear,\nHosiery, Gloves, etc., in nice assortment.\nAll Hot,Weather Dress Accessories and Notions\nSmillie & Weir\nLADIES1 WEAR. SPECIALISTS\nThe\nHealthyLife\nI is thd only one that\ncounts. Good health is\nthe foundation of success. Most everyone\nneeds a little medicine\nfrom time to time. To\ncorrect digestive dis-\nI order use Beecham's Pills.\nSweeten the stomach,\nstimulate the liver, regu- -\nlate the bowels, help the\nkidneys and thus aid the\nentire system to health and\nharmony by taking\nSold everywhere In Ctnada.\nIn boxes, 25c, SOc.\nLargest Sale of any Medicine in the World.\no_mmmmmmm$mmmmm^mmmm\n(Continued from Page 1)\nfuture movements uu their return to\nLondon; The long adjournment of\nthe Lloyd Cleorge-IJe Valera conference, until Thursday, was believed to\nIndicate, that the Ib-publlcan leader\nbad a similar intention of going, lo\nfjublin on a consultative mission. But\nIn reply lu a tjuestlon after tbe conference, he said that It' was not his\nintention lo return to Ireland. He declined to discuss the day's events, but\n\u25a0emed   cheerful.\nSmuts in Forefront,\nGeneral timuls, tbe Suutb African\npremier; lias again appeared In tbe\nforefront of lhe settlement. That he\nis continuing his mediation in the\nu'gotiations is considered a favurahle\nsign.\n'nun a reliable authority it is\ni-ned thnt ;i deadlock has develop\ned between Mr. Lloyd George and\nyir Jamvs Craig, and it is Inferred\nthat this concerns Mr. De Valera's insistence that, under any possible settlement, any. powers given to the Ulster govortiriient must be derived, not\nfrom the Imperial parliament, but\nrom an Irish parliament represent\nlng the whole country, The unity of\nIreland is, . from Mr. De Valera's\nstandpoint, absolutely essential lo\niny possible negotiations.\nThe U'ster premier now declares\nbluntly that the British government'\nmust reach its own agreement with\nDe. Valera and that Ulster is determined to maintain its present status,\nthus repudiating the whole Sinn Fein\nirgument that Ulster is in the minority and must bow to\" the majority\nn Ireland.\nNen'oLintinu.i   at    Deadlock.\n, There Is some hope, however, that\nwhen Mr. Lloyd George meets Mr.\"\nDe Valera Thursday'he may bo able\nby some means to rescue the negotiations .from  the apparent deadlock.\n\"While the premier was in conference with Mr, De Valera he sent a\ntelephone message ifor the Ulster\nleader, who arrived with the Marquis\nof Londonderry ahnost ot the moment that the premier was taking\nleave of Mr. De Valera; in fact, the\nlatter was not aware until afterward\nthat Sir James had heen summoned.\nThe official announcement shows that\nMr. Lloyd George received the Ulster premier and his colleagues after\nMr. De Valera liad departed.\nMr. Lloyd George conferred with\nthe Ulster premier alone. The members of the respective 'cabinets accompanied both Irish representatives,\nhut so far as ls known did not participate in the conference with the\npremier.\nRemove   Restrictirma\n\u25a0\"DUBlfN\".    July    18.\u2014Commandant\nBerry,   chief   Republican   Uason   officer  in  the martial  law  area,  an\nnounced tonight that Sir General Ne- !\nville AlucReady, British mil tary com- ,\nmander in Ireland, had agreed to re- !\nmove all restrictions on fairs and !\nmarkets and permit closed creameries\nto  reopen,   \u2022\nCommandant      Berry     said      thdt, '\ntherefore,   he   desired   all  citizens \u25a0 to\nassist   in   the   \\york   0f   removal   of\nroad  obstructions,   f Hlng in trenches\nand the repairing of bridges to such j\nan extent as it urgently required,       j\nIn company with 13. J. Duggan, ]\nSinn Keln member of parliament, .\nCommandant Berry visited Sir Ne- j\nville MacReady today and complain- j\ned of non-observance of the truce !\nin the martial law area.-- Restrict ons, I\nhe said, were still being maintained\non fairs and markets and crown\nforces   were   still  carrying  arms. ;\nGuarantees as for Quebec .. I\nLONDON, July IS.\u2014(By Grattan\nO'Leary, Canadian Press staff correspondent)\u2014From an authoritative\nIrish source the Dublin press learns\nthat Eamonn de Valera, is practically\nlemanding domin on home rule on\nCanadian lines with Ulster given\nseparate legislative guarantees sucn\nas .were given Quebec at the confederation.\nTills, of course, involves the Irish\nright to a separate army and navy,\nfull fiscal autonomy and the power\nlo withhold a contribution of any\nkind to the Imperial exchequer.. It\nIs a very long step over the present\nHume Rule act, restricted as it is\nin financial clauses and in the measure of autonomy, but lt must be re--\nmembered that de Valera, according\nto reliable reports, Is showing skill\nas a negotiator, will stretch h a du- |\nmands as far as possible In the hope\nof a compromise leaving him some- t\nthing substantial, and that he will\nprobably hv. satisfied, to return tJ\nIreland with propusals whittled down.\nPublic Optimistic\nNevertheless, the s.tuation is far\nIrom being as promising as might be\nand while the press and public here\nare showing wonderful optimism,\nliter*: are 'difficulties in tho way of\nsettlement, having regard to the almost hopelessly antagonistic program of the Sinn Fein and Ulster\ncauses. Those best informed of the\nfacts seem to'be fearful of still another addition to the lengthy chapter\nof Irish tragedies!\n\u2014fS\nOur Special Value Shoe\nSale Still On.\n* -\n75  Pairs. Buys'  Shoes,  in   Uu't-\nton and lace, brown or black,\n\u2022at,   per   pair    S3.95\nDon't   forget   our   32.95  and\n82.45  L\"dles'   Bargain   T_-\nbles.\nChildren's   Table   of   Shoes\nat    81.15\nC. Romano\nRepairs   Taken,   Work\nGuaranteed.\nSTRONG DEFENSE      .\nOF VIVISECTION\nnature and quulily of the med'cti\nauthorities on whose support th\nanti-viviaeclionlsts rest one side \u25a0'\u25a0\ntheir case, Mr. Baynes looked Int\ntheir contentions that vivisection' I\ncruel and that It is useless. He wen\nthrough real med cal literature an\nho visited the .laboratories wher\nanimal experimentation  is carried oi\nHe found that there had been\nfew experimenters whose indlffer]\nence to the vain they had Inflietei\nhad deserved\u2014and received\u2014the con'\ndemnatlon of their colleagues. _\\\nfound that tin; vast majority of th*j\nexperimenters, from the rcqu'rement\nof their work as well as from In\nclinatlon, take effective precaution\nand cause no pain at all, usually\nand little of It.ever. He found'tha\nthe animals in the laboratories invarl\niubly were well treated.\u2014World Wide,\nOne of the beat defences of vivisection, and perhaps the very best\nattack ou the antl-vlvlauctionlflt, that\never was written appears In the July\nissue ol lhe Woman's Home Companion. The author of it, Ernest Harold Baynes, says -of himself that \"all\nmy life have been a lover of animals and my work has -been chiefly\nalong the line of caring for our\ndumb brothers and safeguarding\ntheir interests.\" For that reason,\nwhen the \"I teratcre\" issued in such\ngreat quantities and circulated so\nwidely by th? anti-vivlsectionists\ncame to his attention, lie felt compelled carefully to Investigate the\ntvhole subject; for if even a small\npart of what the opponents of vivisection said was true, he was w th\nthem  heart  and  soul. t '\nHe began, properly, by looking up\nthe medical . authorities they quote\nas condemning animal experimentation as cruel..and useless. At once\nhe made startling discoveries. Many\nof the men cited as doctors had le-\n\u25a0grees In somotliing else than medicine;- .many, \u25a0 ihjihy more of them,\nthough real doctors in their day,\nlived and' died .before anesthetics'\nwere known ,and knew) -nothing of\nmodern surgery as applied to either\nhuman being or animals. These are\n.acts the anti-vlvlsectioniSts never'\nmention  In   their appeals.\nTwo distinguished and modern\nnames Mr. Baynes did find in the\nantl-vivisection ''list\u2014those of It.\nLawson Tait and Sir Frederick Trev-\nera. Dr. Tait did write for a While\nagainst vivisection;- later he changed\nhis mind and commended lt. His\nrecantation , Is ignored in antl-viv-\nsection- literature. Sir , Frederick\nTrovers never condemned vivisection;\nhe acknowledged that it had not\nhelped him ln the education of one\nmedical problem, and protested in\nprint when this acknowledgment waa\nused to prove him against tho whole\npractice, which he emphatically never was.\nFrom this part of his investigation\nMr. Baynes reached Urn e\"nclusi\"ii\nthat nothing written by the antl-\nvivisectionists was trustworthy, that\nmuch of it was vitiated by the suppression of truth, and that not a\nlittle was deliberate, conscious and\nIntentional misapprehension of known\nfacts.\nAfter convincing- himself as to the\nERGOT IN  Ult-UN.\nErgot Is widely known because c\nits injurious effects upon animal\nthat are fed with grain cohta'nin\nergot or that graze upon badly lr\nfected grass. The ergot ls a bluis\nblack thornlike body with a whit\ninterior, and is produced on infeete\nplants of tho grass family in th\nplace where the seed would normall\nbe found. Thoy are found easily o\nthe head of the growing plant because they are twice or three time\nthe size of the seed.\nErgot Is found principally on rye\nalso on many other grasses such a!\nrye grass, blue point, Kentucky blul\ngrass, Canada blue grass, red toj\ntimothy, wild rice and others,\noccurs occasionally On wheat. TK|\nergot is produced as the result of\nfungus disease attacking the plan!\nWhen rye or other grasses are i\nflower the very small spores or seet\nof the fungus are blown on to tli\nflowers, penetrating into them, ap\ncausing the production of the erg(\nin place of seed.\nTo complete tho lifo history of til\nfungus, it lives over the winle\nthe ground, or In storage' b*iis in tl]\nform of black, hornlike h'-dy pr\ngot; in the spring the ergot in tlj\nground, either left there all wlntd\nor sown with the grain that sprini\nsends up one or several outgrowtlj\nwith* a knobllke end; these produq\nan , -ibi'mlan-M' of smaller hodlef\nwhich 'n turn bear the spores, wpt]\nken of above, whieh are blown\nlhe wind and Infect the flowejj\nopening that summer.\nThe actual loss to the grain cro]\nhy this disease Is slight, but the st]\nrious effect on cattle eating the e\ngotlaed grain, the losses from ha\nhaving to be destroyed because (\nthe-, presence of ergot in the gras\nmake the disease a serious one, an\nevery one should know the precai\ntio.nary measures to adopt In ordf\nto get r.d of lt. The effect on an\nmals Is that they become thin an|\nrough^ haired. Fdrther symptorrj\nare slow \u25a0 circulation in, the oxtred\ntties, gangrenous sores on the tean\nor mouth, and sloughing ol'f of pari\nof the tall, ears or hoofs. Abortio]\nmay also follow as an additional e\nfeet.\nThe following are the best precatj\nticmi'ry   measures   to  adopt: ,\n1. Fields, should bo examined o<\ncusional'y for the presence of ergol\nand if large quantities, are foUnd tlf\ngrass should not be used for hay'\npasture. \u25a0\n2. Ergot may be lessened by cut\nting susceptible grasses about flowej\nlng time, so,chucking the spread\nthe fungus.\n3. Badly infested hay lan>\nshould be burned over.\n4. If seed is found to contain ej\ngot, It should be immersed in a\nper  .cent    salt    solution;   the   ergl\n\u25a0i'loats up to the surface of the Uquf\nand can be skimmed off.\nTHe first theolcg^al school, in til\nUnited States was established In J.7T\nin New York City by the Dutch r_\nformed church,\n I   LOST 29 POUNDS\nDYSENTERY\nWas the Cause\nDysentary Is one of the worst forms\nbf bowel complaint, and'hardly any\nOther disease bo quickly iifi tier mines\nthe strength and brings'about a com-\ndit ion of prostration and utter, collapse   that   often . terminates   fatally.\nTo cheek the unnatural discharge\nwithout bringing on constipation you\nshould use that grand old remedy\n\u25a0#ith a reputation 'extending of 7B\nyears,\nDR; FOWLERS\nWBd Strawberry\n' Mr. G. H. McVagh, Jlawer, Sasjc.,\nwrites:\u2014\"About eight years ago I had\no. severe dttaok of dysentery. I was\nsick for three wfcfeks. I weighed 154\nlbs. when I took sick and 125 when\n\"I got it stopped. 1 think I tried\nevery medicioe on the market, btit\ndid not find relief until I dsed t?r.\nFowler's Extract Of Wild Strawberry,\nand one bottle did it. :I think there 11?\nnothing' like it for diarrhoea Or dysentery. I always keep some on hand\nafif a persoh does hot know wh\u00a3n he\n\u2022Will nefcd lh\"\nPrice\" 50c. a bottle; pill up o'niy b^\nThe T. Milbtirh Co, Limited, Toronto,\nOnt. \"   '\nSEEK DATA DN.\n\u2014\nTHE NECSOW *D5ICY;NEWS, .TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 19, 1921..\na:..:    .    .        *i\"\nUS\n.-1 \u25a0-*\u25a0*\u2022'-   vr'*'\n-\"\u25a0i r-viiii\nWMe Waiting in Gloaming\nThose Present Moralize\nUpon Fraility of Voters.\nAcniig Mayor John Bell, Aid. Oeo.\nTurner audi City Clerk W. E, Was*\nson, and city Engineer W. L. Afflick,\nwith various intending deputations,\nornamented the city hall steps last\nevening ih tho gloaming, Waiting\nvainly' for a ouorum of the city\nfathers to show up in order ^hat the\nregular meeting of the council might\n\u25a0j be Jjeldj Among the private citizens present were R. G. .Toy, I. A.\nAustin, C. H. Sewell, and A. Slither*\nland.*    -\nWhile waiting the combined intellect of the si-pun soltied !a Htfmb^r\nof. pressing clvlo problems, .,includ-\nIhg that of safety for tlie fclilldren\nbathing at' thn park, and learning the\nresult of. the Alberta elections, moralized upon the instability of office,\n3n these times.\nAfter thO halt-hour h'ad passed,\nMr. Wasson declared there was \"no\nquorum\" and the gathering dispersed.\nWILL DEMONSTRATE\nPLAY ORGANIZING\nRealizing that with; a splendid opportunity at hand, and with many\nvolunteer workers anxious to assist\nin the capacity of play organizers\nand instructors, the recreation committee, a sub-committee of the civic\nsports nnd recreations committee,\nlast, night, decided to hold a demonstration of play organizing at the\nT, M. C. , A. gymnasium at 7;30\no'clock tonight, for the volunteers,\nwho aro assisting to give the youngsters high times at Lakeside park\nthese days. '\nThose present at the meeting .were*\nMrs, Dolphin, Mrs., Myers, Secretary\nMiss Mary Pickford, Mrs. H. Sewell,\nMra. D. Brindle, -Mrs. _\\V. T. Tait,\nMrs'. Caudwell, Griffith Morris atid\n(W. T. Tait.\nThe general' Idea was thatsiace the\nchildren are leaving the green for\nthe beach and the water, the play\nprogram must be made to insure the\nyoungsters lots of fun while taking\naderiuate 'safeguard for their health\narid care. '...'-''.'\nvs\nICAND  REGISTRY  At)T.\n(Section ISO.)\n; IN THE MATTER of Part 35.40 acres\nmore or less of Section 1, Township 16\nof Lot 1237, Group 1, Kootenay District. ,    .\nProof having been filed in my office\nof the loss of Certificate of Title No.\n11895A, to the above mentioned lands\n; in the name of H. M. Billings, and\nbearing date the Slst December, 1909, I\nHEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my intention at the expiration of one calendar\nmonth from the first publication hereof\nto Issue in the name of H. M. Billings\na provisional Certifiinte of Title In\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any person having any information with reference to such lost Certificate of Title\nis requested to communicate with the\nundersigned.\nDated at the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B. C, this 21st day of June;\nA. D. 1921.\nE. S. STOKES,\nRegistrar.\nDate of' first publication June 28,\n1921,  : . qftBl)\n\"FOUND DlStfBl6T~AOT.\"\nSECOND   NOTICE\u2014REVISION   07\nBOUNDARIES.\nWHEREAS,  under the provisions of\ni this Act application has been  made to\ntho  Lieutenant-Governor  in  Council  to\nconstitute the following described dls-\n; trlct in the vicinity of castlegar, in the\n: County of Kootenay, in the Province of\n* British Columbia, a pound district:\n' Commencing at the southeast corner\n! of Lot, 7719, Kootenay District, thence\n( west and north along the south and\n[ west boundaries of saii lot 7719 to the\nsouth boundary of Lot 7180, thence\n\\ west along the south boundaries of\n| Lots, 7480 and 7200 to the southwest\nI corner of Lot 7200, thence north along\n| the west boundary of said lot to tho\n, northwest corner of -same, and cqntin-\n-ufig! north to the south bank of the\n^Cmumhia river, thence easterly along\n-j the -paid southerly bank of thc Columbia river to the northeasterly cor-\nJner of Lot 181, Kootenay District,\nI thence westerly and southerly along the\n1 northerly and Westerly boundaries of\n(said Lot 181 to the southwest corner.of\n(same, and continuing southerly to thc\nI point pf commencement. \u25a0 .. < \u25a0 - ,\n| Notltie Is hereby given that thirty\nI days after the publication of this ,no-\nItice the Lieutenant-Governor In Coun-\nicll *ill proceed to comply with the\nI application, unless within the said time\nJ! objectidn is. made by eight proprietors\nwithin such'proposed pouijd district, In\nI Form  A  of  the   Schedule  to  the  said\nAct, to the undersigned.\n.   E. D..BARROW,\nMinister of Agrioulture.\n,    Department  of Agriculture,  Victoria,\n}fe ss im _m ljsi. ___ * wm*>\nASPIRANTS-FOR DAVIS CUP.\nDraft of Attorney General's\nProposed Application fot\nAdjustment Received Here\nA draft of the \u25a0 proposal application\nof the attorney-general df: British Columbia to the board of rjtllwfly commissioners of Canada 'tot iin' adjustment of railway rates In the Pacific\nterritory, has been received by Fred\nA. \"Starkey, commissioner of thfe As-\nsbdlated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nBritish Columbia. A number of tjuea-\ntionaires have also been received by\nMr. Starkey for distribution with a\nrequest that they be- filled in and\nrethrned to give as much information\nas possible as to the extent, if iiny,\nlocal businessmen could extend their\nbusiness if rail rates froin this prov\nince were on an equality with those\nof the prairies.   ,\nThe whole matter of the applica\ntion and the questionnaires will, be\nlaid before the transportation committee of the Nelson board' of trade\nby Mr. Starkey and the question ot\nsecuring a sitting of the railway commission in Nelson will be taken up.\nMine owners, smeltertnen, lumbermen and all large * shippers will b&\nasked to submit data as to any .cur\ntailment of business attributable to\nthe   inequality   of 'rates.\nThe drafted application, \"Thb Attorney General of British Columbia\nvs. the C. P. R. and others,'\nlyhich was prepared by G. G. McGeet\nof Vancouver, counsel for this prov\n'Inen, comprises 25 pages of foolscap\ndealing with the general questiott oE\n\u2022railway rates, and drawing humernufl\nspecific comparisons tending to- show\nion a mileage basis _,that there exists\na discrimination in toils in favor of\n,shipments westward from eastern\nCanada, over shipments from'the Pa\nrific  territory 'eastward'.\nA few of J he comparisons quoted\nare: Prom Vaheouver fo Morley,'Alberta, a distance of C01 miles, the\nfirst class rate is ?2.94%. Prom Wih\nnipeg, to Leader,- Sask., a distance Of\nG04 miles, the first cla'fes rate is $1.95;\nor a difference in favor of the .eastern shijiper of 99% cents.\nFrom Vanco-yver to Bowell, Alta;i\na distance of,883 miles, the first class\nrate it* ,$3.46%.' Prom Fort William to\nBfclle 'Plaintf, SaRk., & distance of 801\nmiles, the rate is $2.43. In.this case\nthe 'difference in favor of the eastern\nshipper is \u00a51.02%.\nFrom Vancouver to Morley, Alberta,\nMl miles, the commodity rate is\nSl.27%. From Fort Willlapi to' Verdun, Sask.; tlie clriss rate' js 68 cents\na difference In favor of the eastern\nshipper at class rates of 39% ceiits\nover the western shipper's commodity\nrate. ,   ' ,\nThe communication from Mr. McGeer to Mr. Starkey states that: a\nrequest for a sitting of the railway\nboard Is to be met, .and the sitting\nprobably will take place In October\nBETTER\nIII!\nInfants Will Be Given Marks\nAccording to Chart; Special ior Red Rose.\nFlowers ' ami babies tmying rmi.cjv\nIn common, it was decided yesterda'y\nto have a Better Battles .'contest In\nconnect ion with tie Jit Tuesday's flower show, and tlie executive of the\nNelson nnd District HortlculUtral society asked Mra. Hugh Ross to undertake the preliminary work of organization ncceskicj'. Dr. Isabel Arthur, who has been the most prominent figure in, the past.In cone:-\ntion with this subject, Is now IU\nKaslo, btit it Is hoped she will be\nabie to. participate, tt. Is expected\na committee consisting bf Mrs Ross,\nMrs. W. tiarlami l'bster and Mrs. T.\nDolphin, will supervise' the arrangements.\n; An area will be provided In thb\nfair building for the exclusive use of\nthe Better Babies, who will be examined according to an official chart,\nby nurses and doctors, and marked\nfor points. It Is proposed to award\nribbons to tbe babies most nearly\n\u25a0perfect from a physical standpoint.\nTills' will * lie a great educational\nfeature.\nGreat progress is being made hy\nthe ,shbw committee In fitting up the\nfair building for the big floral carnival.\nAll the sweet pea fanciers are on\ntheir toes to have this year's dlspto\nequal to tbe record one of last year.\nComing earlier tHau last year's date,\nthe roses are expected vto be strongly\nIn evidence, and good quality Is looked for In spite of the difficulties tho\nfanciers are laboring under with\ninsects. . \u00bb\nIn connection with the rose sec-\nt'on' j ire Sons of England Benefit socio! \u25a0 haa donated\/ a special prize of\n$5 tor the best red rose ln the show,\nthe red rose being tho society's emblem.\nPresident F. J. Boles, who, has\ncharge of the concert program 4n\ntho evening,\" states 'that It, will be\nsr.tertor even to last year's splendid\neffort,\nMOTOR CAMP IS\nNOW POPULOUS\nLACROSSE MEN PLAY\nAT TRAIL TOMORROW\nAUSTRALIAN. TENNIS  CRACKS ,-]\nAustralian team who will compete for the Davis Clip   in Toronto,    beginning    July       2fc      Lefl     to    right\n.f.   O.   Anderson,   New   South   Wales;    Norman   Poach, Victoria: J. Ti. Hawkes, VlfctnHk; ('. V. Turtrl, Isfew South\nWales.-  They have just \u25a0put up some wonderful tennis in the Dominion tournament now proceeding at Toronto.\nTomorrow v. morning 14 I Seal lacrosse players' with as many supporters . as: th*e big transfer '4nis * will,\ncarry will leave from the. Nelson\nTransfer - office at 8:30 o'clock for,\nTrail, where 10 of them will \"go into\naction against the -Rossland-Trall\nteam in, the second return, game of\nUie season. While, over,'at ihf?\nsmelter city the boys blSnfo' arrange a short serlefi of rtiatchPS with\na view to playing one or .Jwo-feames\na week.. \"\u2022\nThe Nolson players are:\nSid Disereau, goal; A. i Fhimerfelf,\np.; A.' Williamson, ep,; Gfcprge Benwell; lh;; S. Barker, 2h; Ey)dy Mftr-\npliy, center; Leo McKinnon, 2d; Waldo tf**prijuSon,ld.; D. ftlch^rdsori, oh.;\nHarry .. Ferguson, ih. Spares,- B.\nThbmpson, Joe Armstrong, Joe Rin\u00ab-\nrrmo.\nVermiiiMii  Is ah important food of\nChina.\n. ASPIRIN. *\n'Bayer\" is ionlj* Gehiiifte\nWarning! Unless you see \"th*\nname \"Bayer\" on , packages or oh.\ntablets you are not getting; genuine\nAspirin ut all. In every _ajUf\npackage are directions .for , CBlds,\nKeadaohe, Neuralgia, Rheumatism,\nEarache, Toothache. Lumbago and\nfor Pairi. Handy tin hoxes. of twelve iahietH cost few cents; Druggists\nalso sell larger packages. Made in\nCanada. Aspirin is the trade n*trk\n(registered lh Canada), of Bayer\nManufacture bf Monoaceticaeidestet\nof Sallcvllcacld. ...\nWith the completion of the installation at Houston park for the benefit -.ot camping motor touristy the\nlatter have set up their tents on the\nspeciaus grounds, and yesterday the\ncamp was fairly populous, eight or\nnine parties established therein.\nThe neat and roomy shed built by\nthe city has both water and electric\nplates for cooking, and the grounds\nare **ell lighted at night. Tho campers are thoroughly at home, having\nlines of clothes hung out and making\nother domestic arrangements in perfect comfort. ._ :\nVendor Hume Does Thriving\nBusiness Trade With Visitors; Books Audited.\nTen cases of whiskey is all that\none man wanted to buy at *tlio government .liquor store yesterday, under it, non-resident's permit,.. Vendor\nJ. Fred Hiuhe. agreed to let the ap-\npIIeaht.fha,y*B two cases, hit I. that was\nnot Satisfactory, and the deal was\noff. A large number of non-residents nre making use of their priv-\nliegb of temporary permits, Incliirtfng\nmembers of touring parties.\nIf orders frotn outside points continue In the present volume, the\nservices of a stenographei- will soon\nbe required, Tilr. Hume states* Tlie\nliquor control hoard hits (has far\nallowed only one cleric, word of ,the\nappointment of A, C. Dee as \"first\nassistant to the vendor\": heing received yesterday,' Mr., Dee was oije\nof the temporary staff ; engaged hy\nMr. Hume In lhe almence ol specific\ninstructions.\nThe accounts nf the Nelson store,\nfrom lho date of its opening last\nThursday morning up tu yesterday\nmorning were audited yesterday liy\n,R. M. M.atlpr> of Victoria, \"auditor\nand inspector\" ot the liquor control.\nMr. Matjer left on the noon, train\nfor Trail, where a warehouse' Is lie-\ning built.\nOLD-TIMERS LEAVE\nFOR CODY FUNERAL\nTen or a'dozOn residents'of Nelson\nleft yesterday afternoon hy the Kuskanook for Ka^io to attend the\nfuneral there of the. Inle Henry Cody,\nwhich will he. held this morning at\n9 o'clock. The number included T, J.\n.Seanliiri, Dan McDonald, Phil Rahal,\n:Dr. Gilbert Hftrtln, L. H. Choquette,\nJ. O. 1'atenaude, A, A. Perrler, j. E.\nHughes nnd A, Mel*. Fletcher. \u25a0\nOld-timers yesterday were exchanging stories bf the' fearless\ncharacter of lhe powerful pioneer,\n>who always had -himself under splendid self-control, being from choice\nmoderate  in   all   things.\nIt in related that, in n nine-foot\nshaft at Ainswoirth, which he and a\nsmall man named Barns had stink,\nthey lighted fuses, for a, series' of\nshots, only to'discover that someone\npassing by on the surface had pulled tip-their*ladder\/ Cody grnsped his\nsmall companion and tossed him up\nto the surface, and .then, . Knowing the order in which Uie shots\n'\u25a0would explode, crouched among the\nbroken, rock in Kiieh a way as'.to he\nprotected from each in turn. HJe lost\nall he wore, bnt was uninjured.\nAnother story told of him is that\nin a saloon iri the Coeur d'Alehes a\nminer got into an argument with\nhim, and drawing d revolver, shot at\nhis head, the bullet \/passing through\nboth cheeks, and marking him for\nlife. Hhe grasped' his assailant, disarmed him, apd lifting him of a\ncouplo^of times, threw him oh the\n-floor. With his great strength he\ncould havfe killed fhe man with! ease,\nbut exercised the same seif-cbntrol,\nthat was characteristic of i him\nthrough life.\n _\u00bb\u25a0     \u25a0\nCAMERAMEN FILM\nBONNINGTON FALLS\n\u2022 *   . '   *\nA. D. Kean' and\"t\\.\"\"\u00a3>!\" Jaiikson,\nthe proVinciai government's camera\nmen, continued their filming of Nelson and district yesterday. They tbok\n*a film, of the city frbm'the Bluff,\n'about noon, and later took a vleW of\nBnker street, .   .     '.      ' \\\\\nThey also filmed ] the two J great\ncataracts at 'Bonnington. J. E. Annable driving them down.\nM^:; ll#se'; jGliildreh's\nSwimming Pond at Lakeside Park;  Diving Stage\nA number of innovations planned\nto make the.ijiquatie attraction**', of\nLakeside park, more popular, than\never were the,subject of a heart .tb\nheart talk between Alderman C. Turner, City Clerk W. E. Wasson and\nGriffiths Morris, \u00bbthe civic sports and\nrecreations suprevisor, last night,, anil\nWill iii all probability matefiali2o as\nconcrete additional attractions fo the\npark  wllhiii a few days.\nThe first proposal. made was that\nthe'clty secure a log'boom to be anchored in such - a position on the\nbeach at the park as. to provide ay\nabsolutely accident proof, enclosed\nswimming pond, ln which the yoilhgf\nsters can he taught, to swim - and\nenjoy themselves to theh hearts' content without danger of'getting out of\ntheir depth. Mr, Morris.proposed '6\nteach* the youngsters swimming exercises on the bench instead of the\nlahd Pxel'ciHps they have, been taking\non the\/gneon. At' a ceHMn.hour and\nfor a certain period of time the\nyouugfttqrs would thtm' be g'iven\nswimming lessons, Jn the pond.\nA second\" suggestion wain that ;i\nspringboard and a diving stag**\nshould be erected on the'float Unit is\nanchored near the park. For the\ndiving sfage the plan Is to have a\n5, 10, IR and 20 foot tnkeoff, on\ntfhich the beginners can screw up\ntheir courage 'for the first header,\nand the experienced and fhney diver;;\ncan enjoy themselves up to the 20-\nfooth height.\nTwo other suggestions were mado\nfor thd ehjbyment of the youngsters.\nOne was.that the two giant strides!\non which the central, school youngsters enjoy themsMven ;wirling rounl\nIn uhduhrting elre'es during the\nschool term, should he'removed nnd\nsetup nt the park for thc remainder\nof the holldnys. The other was lhat\nfhe sliding chute at- lhe central\nsohool should nlso lie set-up at the\npark until the fall school terin opens.\nIt was also suggested that an\nemergency life saying windlass should\nbe , permanently erected- ; near the\nbeach at the park to reduce as far\nas possible the chances ^of accidents\nin the water. ' 1*he apparatus proposed' Is a substantial; windlass on\nwhich is wound a gbod length of\nrope having an easily adjusted harness at the end. In tlie event of a\nsWimfner being in difficiVlliea, a very\nordinary swimmer cdtild slip into\nthe harness, swim, out to the''\"person\nIii. need of help, and then.-'be' drawn\nin, by hnnd hy ^tthe'r pfersons on the\nshore.\nWillie\u2014Pii, what do you do nt the\noffice all  day?\nPa (who had answered' fifty other\nquestions)\u2014Oh,   nothing.\nWillie\u2014Then how do you know\nwhen  you're  finished?\nFather, I am not sure whether 1\nshall bo a specialist for the ears'or\nthe  teeth.'*\n\"Choose' lhe teeth, my'boy; everyone has thirly-two of them, hut only\ntwo  ears.\"\nDaily News Phon6 Busy fbk-\nHours Affording Information on Subject. \\\nfireat Interest was .manifested in\nthe'Alberta provincial1 elections laist\nnight by the public, of Nelson and\nby -individuals at d\\Cfbrtht points\nover the district, and The Dally News\neditorial phone w'as- kept busy for\nsome hours,.affording information on\nthis subject. The striking victory\nof the Termers' party came in for\nuniversal  comriient.\nRev. J. P. Westman, .returning\nfrom a trip to Trad, exprpfjsed surprise at the defeat of Mrs; McKIn-\nney, organizer, of the women's side\nof ihe ParfnoVs.' 'movement, by an\nindependent, as did Mrs. %. E. Mur-\nIiliy.. Slu1 was .minpiiosed to he Unbeatable.\" Mr. Westman, who has a\nclose acquaintanceship with Alberta\npoliiicM ii;om his long residence thero,\nslates he bad glVen the government\nonly a db'zeh seats.'agaInst the Farmers.\npavid, l'roiiflfnot -was particularly\nInterested In the resuil Iri Aciidla,\nwhere his brother, Lorfte Proudfodt,\na Purnier, beaded lhe 'poll. He ind\nno official word that his brother was\na i'liitdidate, and learned of the fact\nonly through liny lng a newspaper\nreference called  to  his attention.\nr. J I. Kewell interpreted lhe result\nas ihe begin ing of the end of the\nold   parties.\nEgbert\u2014This  ymir dog,  Willie?\nLittle Willie (attached to- St. Bernard)\u2014Yes.\n'\u25a0f)o you lead it round, nr does it\nlead you  round?\"\nfANADIAI^PACIFIC\nTO EUROPE. .,.\u25a0;\u25a0\u201e-\n| MAKE BESEBVATIOKB MOW. I\nMONTBEAI, TO MVEBPOOL\nJuly 22. Aub. 19, Sept. 16. .V.ctorlan\nJuly 29,  Aub.  26 ....Melltii\nAug. f\u00bb   S\u00ablit. 2 Minnedosa\nAug. 17. Supt. 110 ;. .MetaEama.\nQUEBEC    TO    I.IVEBJPOOI.\nAub. 13, S.'pl. '.'. Mmp. of France\n  Emp. of France\nJiilv :i0   Aub- 29 Emp. of Britain\nMONTBEAL   TO   GLASGOW\nJuly 21. Aub. .'10 Oct. 1 Metorlon\nAug. 9. Sept. 19 Tunisian\nIIOHTBEA--HAVBE-ZOKDON\nSept.   t   Oct.  il '.scotlan\nAUB:   19i-Hept.   39  .. .Hlclllan\nMONTEIlAt..SOUT:tAMPTOH-\nANTWEBP\nJuly 23, Aus- 27, Oct. 1, Scandinavian\nAug.. :<<. Sept. 9 iCorslcln\nMONTBEAL-NAI-I.E_-aEISrOA\nJuly 27  '.. .Montreal\n'Aug.  24 .Caserta\nraEiGHT ott%r\nApproxlmat* SoUlstf Bates\nMOHTKEAI.-I.OHDOH\nAug. 31  .Bolinghroltc\nAug.  8    Bbfiworth\nAug.  13   ._____\u25a0  Duntirldge\nJuly  22   \u25a0\u25a0...- Botliwell\nApply to agents .eYerywliel-e  or\n3. a. caeteh, a. *. A,\nNelson, B. 0.\nOuuXUan PaclflorftoU**\/\nTraffic AjrWtt.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Ci.\nDF CANADA, LIMITED      ;\nOfflti,  Smeltina   and   Refining   Dep\u00abrtm\u00bbn\u00ab\n\u2022 THAIL, BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPUR-HA8ER8  Of  OOLP,.8ILVER.  COPP6B   AND   LEAD  OHM\n\u2022f Q*ld, Sllvtr, Copper,   BliiMtirt*.   PI.   Lena.    H-.\nPr.diie.ra i\nTADANAC TRAIL\nTi\nRed Arrow\nGraham Wafers\n=*Hli_\nQuality maintains \u2022economy.\nNo matter how much you pay\n'fter, gallon\" for other lubricating- oils, you get more lubrication \"per dollar\" when you buy\nImperial   Polarine   Motor  Oils.\nExpense\nTHE cost of properly lubricating your car with\nImperial Polarine Motor Oils is your smallest\noperating expense and, yet, tho exclusive use\nof Imperial Polarine Motor 'Oils will just about cut\nin half your greatest expense, depreciation, as Well\nas most of your other operating expenses.\nPoor lubricants are not cheap at any price. The very best\nlubricant you can buy for your car is really the only one\nyou can afford to use. Good lubricants give you the most\nlubrication for your dollar.\nImperial Polarine Motor Oils are recognized everywhere as\nstandards of uniform high quality. There is a grade scientifically formulated to meet the lubrication needs of every\nmoving part in every motor vehicle. For economy sake,\nstandardize oh Imperial Polarine Motor Oils.   \u25a0\nSee' our Chart, of Recommendations for the correct grade of\nImperial Polarine Motor Oils for your car, at your, dealers.\nOr write to 56 Church Street, Toronto, for our interesting\nbook, \"Automotive Lubrication.\" \u2022\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED     \u00bb\nBranchc* in all Cities\nWE       GIVE\niiarine\n____& __*_ItTtKBj\nr,RANKi!ASE\nFor a Clean\nEfficient Motor\nYou cannot lubricate your car\nproperly unless your crank-case is\nthoroughly cleaned every thousand\nmiles or less. The sign on the left\ndistinguishes dealers who are prepared to give prompt and expert\ncrank-case cleaning service. These\ndealers will Rush out your crank-\ncase with Imperial Flushing Oil, a\ncleansing agent especially made for-\nthis work. Turn in at the Blu*\nCrank-Case Service sign\u2014to-day.  :'\n\u25a05\n'_   __\u25a0___.__\n-v\"\"--\n ijiwinwumjipi.   \"\n\u00ab*\n'THE NEESOfl USTEY NEWS, TUESESY MORNING, JULY 19,1921.\nPublished every morning except Sun-\nflay by the News Publishing: Company.\nLimited, Nelson, 8. C, Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and ta no case to Individual members of the statu\nr Advertising: rate cards and A. B. C.\nStatements of circulation mailed on re-\nque^t or may be seen at tne offioe of\nany advertising agency recognised by\ntbe Canadian Press Association.     ^\nSubscription rates: By mail (efftra-\ntry), CO cents per month; J6 per year.\nOutside Canada, a month, 75c; a year,\n17.50. Delivered, 7Sc per month; $4\nfor six months; $7,60 per year, payable\nIn advance.\n\u25a0\u2022mbn   Anlli\nBortaa\nat\nOllo-latloa\n<B^^^)>\nTUESDAY,   JULY   19,   1921,\nThe Poor Little Rich Child.\nfficienf\nbu$ek<\nm*   Laura' A. Kipkman\nSERVING  THE   SEAgSON'S   VEGETABLES\n\"New York papers are commenting on a child-welfare\nsurvey in Chicago which reports a weight deficiency in 50\nper cent of the pupils of an exclusive private school. Back of\nthe stockyards only 18 per cent\nbf children' were under weight.\nIn tenements of the Lower\nNorth Side one child in six was\nfound to be subnormal. In these\nfindings is further strengthening of the case lately presented\nto the American Medical' association by specialists in children's diseases. According to\ntheir testimony, it is mainly\nfrom malnutrition. A St. Louis\nphysician said that he found\nthe condition mora common\namong the children of the\nwealthy than in the homes of\nthe, poor, and other members of\nthe'convention agreed with his\nconclusions. The practice of a\nGrand Rapids physician disclosed 40 per cent of cases' of undernourishment among well-to-\ndo children, as against 20 per\nCent among poor children.\nIn Chicago an expert of the\nsurvey attributes the weakening of the children of wealth to\nbottle-feeding in infancy and\ntoo much rich food later on. Before the association, blame was\ncast upon what was termed the\ncomplexity of modern life. Too\nmuch excitement, too frequent\ndances and parties and not\nenough rest\u2014these are the\ncauses that retard proper nourishment.\nAside from their vital import\nto the country these revelations\nare humanly interesting in\nshowing where the poor little\nrich child has cause to envy his\nrugged if poorer brother.\nWest Indian  Trade  Possibilities.\n\"Please, tell me how ' to \u25a0 serve the\nfresh vegetables from my garden in\nthe 'moif dellcjous ways,\" writes a\nrende^-of this column. \"We grow almost every kind of vegetable in our\ngarden.\" >\nOf course the whole world knows\nthat tender, young vegetables served\nofily by themselves without sauces, garnishes or \"frills\" of any kind, are about\nas delicious as they can possibly be.\nFrequently the fla\\or of a young and\ntender vegetable Is completely spoiled\nby being combined with other foods\nor with strong seasonings. Yet there\nare many dfthclous and more or less\nfancy ways of serving fresh vegetables\nwhich are very popular, some of which\nare   the   following:\nSpinach Hotel Style: Wash and boll\nthe spinach, as usual, in salted water,\nthen drain It and save the water. Chop\nIt and add the following sauce: Fry\n\u25a0% pound of thinly-sliced bacon and\nwhen done'remove it from the' frying\npan. not removing Its hot'fat. To this\nhot fat add 2 tablespoons of grated\nor finely-chopped onion, then 4 tablespoons of flour and 2 tablespoons of\nsalt. Stir until well mixed, then add 1\ncup of the water In which the spinach\nwas boiled, and let all boil for 5\nminutes, then add the yolks of 3 hard-\nboiled eggs rubbed through a se|ve\nand 1 teaspoon of either lemon juice\nor vinegar. .. Pour this over the hot,\nchopped spinach at once, .and serve.\nYoung Cabbage, with Bechamel Sauce:\nCut the cabbage into quarters, removing the core, and plnce it in cold water\nfor 30 minutes. Then drain, cover\nwith boiling water, nnd let boll uncovered for one-half hour\u2014or until\ntender. Drain and put into a vegetable\ndish covered, with the following sauce:\nPut Into a saucepan 2 tablespoons of\nbutter and when melted add 2 tablespoons, of flour mix until smooth,\"and\nadd slowly 1 cup of cold sweet milk;\nlet heat again to boiling point, stirring\nconstantly, then add salt, pepper and\ngrated   nutmeg'  to   suit   taste,   and   1\nBY LENORE\nV__\/\nhard-boiled egg the kolk of which has\nbeen rubbed through a sieve and the\nwhite finely chopped. Turn this over\ntho hot cabbage in the tureen and\nserve at  once. \u2022\nTomatoes Supreme: Slice 6 medium-\nsized onions and shred 2 green peppers;\ncook these gently in 3 tablespoons of\nbutter or drippings until the onions are\nsoft and almost done, then ndd 1 pint\nmeasure of fresh, sliced tomatoes, sen-\nson with anit and pepper io taste, and\nlet simmer for 20 minutes. Serve very\nhot.\nBaconed Tomatoes: Select large ripe\ntomatoes, and dip them for a moment\nIn boiling water by means of a cheese-\nbloth bajr, then take out and pluifee\ninto cold water; this will enable you\nto take off their skins. Place the\nskinned whole tomatoes on a baking\ntin ench with a thin slice of bacon Iain'\non top of It. Slip Into a hot oven and\nlet baWe for 20 minutes, thon serve nt\nonce  on  buttered  toast. \u201e *\nBaconed String Beans: Cook tender\nyoung string beans |n only Just enough\nwnter to cover; when tender, serve\nmixed with the . following sauce: Cut\ntwo slices of uncooked bacon into tiny.\nsquares and place them over the fire\nin n hot saucepan with 1 small mlnoed\nonion; let fry until the hacoti jblts are\ncrisp and the onion a light yellow, then\nst.r iii \"t cun of sweet cold milk and\nwhen at boiling point add 1 tablespoon\nof cornstarch which has h*in mixed\nto a paste with a little cold milk; stir\nuntil thick, season to taste with salt\nand pepper, and serve at once with tbe\nbeans. ,\nTomorrow\u2014Answered    Let ters\nAll Inquiries addressed to Ml*\u00abs Kirk-\nman in care of the \"Efficient Housekeeping department will be answered\nin-these columns in their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received.\nSo if a personal or quicker reply is\ndesired, a stamped and self-addressed\nenvelope must be enclosed with the\nquestion.\u2014The   Editor.\nMany brilliant colors gather on a\nfrock of cretonne ror thb summer\ngirl who wishes to contribute a\npleasant spot to the landscape. It\nis the kind of frock wh.ch has hem\nvery   popular  this  summer   for  sports,\nDaily Recipe\nPICKLKD WALNUTS.\n(By Mrs. M. A. Sturgeon.)\nThe walnuts should be young and\nnot woody. They should be picked\nduring the month of July before they\nharden. Prick them well with a fork\nand put them into a strong brine\u20144\npounds of salt to each gallon o-t water, letting them remain nine days.\nChange the brine every third day,\nand drain off. Put them on a dish\nand place it in the sun until they\nbecome perfectly black, which will\nbe in two or three days. Put the\nwalnuts into dry jars, which should\nnot be quite filled.\nBoil sufficient vinegar for 10 minutes, allowing two ounces of whole\nblack peppers, one ounce allspice and\none ounce bruised ginger to each\nquart of vinegar. \"While hot pour\nover .the walnuts, which must De\nquite covered witti the pickle. Seal\nin perfectly air tight bottles. They\nwill be fit for use in a month and\nwill keep good for two or three\nyears.   . \"\n-*p sane as, international war though less\nI murderous. It Is an outrage on hu-\nI man reason\u2014the slower suicide of wel-\n'   fare  as the other is the more violent.,\n~~$> destruction of life and prosperity alike\n\u2014London Observer.\nCrux of the  Trouble\nThe time is not. one for widening\nthe gap between the employers and employed by frothy appeals to class-war,\nbut for drawing them together on a\nbasis of greater mutual frankness, in\norder to save the industries In which\nthey have a common interest. We are\nstill of opinion that the crux lies in\noutput rather than in wages. The\nbest way for the workers to avoid\nwage reductions is for them to study\nthe ways of improving their output\nup to the level of the wages now\npaid.\u2014London   Daily   Chronicle.\n<?-\n\u25a0 The British government has\nannounced its intention to develop trade and communication\nwith the West Indies. The\nquestion of West Indian trade\nis,'in fact, very largely one of\nimproved communications.\nThere is at present no direct\nmail or passenger service between the United Kingdom and\nthe West Indian islands. Passengers from the old country\nhave to travel by way of Canada or the United States, unless\nthey take one of the fortnightly\nDutch mail steamers. Steamship connection between Jamai\nca and the various West Indian\nislands'themselves is also lacking. Last year the question of\ncable communication was considered at a conference in which\nCanada took part, when the\nneed for an extension of the\nHalifax-Bermuda cable to Bar-\nbadoes, Trinidad and British\nGuiana was emphasized, and it\nis probable that that1 will be one\nbf the first things to be done.\nMr. Algernon Aspinall, C, M.\nG., secretary of the West Indian\ncommittee, writes in the Empire Mail about the present condition of the island. He declares that the war brought\n\"almost unparalleled prosperity'' to the colonies, which led,\nlas' in other countries, to enhanced prices for the staple\nproducts, especially sugar, rum\nand cocoa. At the present time\nthe islands are suffering, like\nother places, from the swing of\nthe pendulum and the slump in\nprices, but Mr. Aspinall regards\nthis as merely a passing phase,\nand confidently anticipates a\nrecovery \"which is bound to\ncome.\" Trinidad has important\n'oil fields, and a great development of this industry is looked\nfor..; Jamaica is suffering a\ntemporary setback, but \"she' has\nP0 many strings to her bow\n'jfchat her prosperity will not be\njnuch diminished.\" The banana\nindustry has shown a rapid re-\ndpvery from a succession of hurricanes', and the sugar, industry\nis being developed on businesslike lines.\n. Mr, Aspinall refers to the advantages open to British traders in the West Indian markets,\nowing to the incidence of Amer-\nFAMILY TREE  HUNTERS\nThe Lighter Siie\nBore: One who doesn't give you a\nchance to talk much.\nOnly mortals and blackberries are.\ngreen   when   they   are   rod.\nBeing blind is a greater affliction\nthan   it   was   a   few   years   ago.\nFairy tnte No. 4,673: Tou can keep\na flock of hens on the scraps from\nthe   kitchen   table.\nand it' niay be worn those sportless\nmoments when one wlhos merely to\nbe   languid   and    picturesque.\nAt ,auch times onu may complete\nthe picture, with a wide brimmed\nhat a parasol made ut' the same\nmaterial. They sell them that way\nIH'-it smart little shop In New York.\nTheir newest model is cut with the\nlong waistline and slightly flared skirt\nlike the one in the sketch. Jn thjs\nfrock ecru batiste i.s pleated for the\nvest, and light greun soutache braid\ntrims the neck, sleeves, patch-pockets\nand waist.\nSleeveless jumper dresses, skirt and\nmiddy frocks, and separate skirts, intended for sports, are also shown in\ncolorful oro tonnes, as well as chintz\nand English prints.\nPATTERN   HO.   213\nA pattern for the above model (No.\n212) can be obtained in sizes 34, 30,\n38, or 40, by sending to The Dally\nNows your name, address, the number\nof this pattern and the size required\nand 25 cents In postage stamps. Be\nsure io keep this newspaper clipping of\nthe sketch and description of the garment to use as a working model when\nthethe pattern reaches you\u2014which\nwill be within two weeks time.\u2014The\nEditor.      '        >\nican exchange and also to the\npreferential tariffs, universally\nadopted'throughout the empire\nin favor of the motherland. In\nsome cases, a reduction of 50\nper cent is enjoyed; but, adds\nMr. Aspinall, \"British shippers\njv*ill have to follow the example\nof their Canadian and American\nconfreres, who are perpetually\nrunning up and down the islands and booking orders, and\nalso \"delivering the _ goods,\"\nwhich, it is complained, the\nBritish trader is not always in\na position to do,, owing to labor and other difficulties.\"\nCanada is in an exceptionally\nfavorable position to benefit\nfrom a revival of West Indian\ntrading and merchants should\nbe quick to note the advice\nwhich Mr. Aspinall gives. It\nshows how other Canadians are\ngetting the business.   ,\nWhat the Press Is Saying\n\u2666-\nr$*\nOld Timer: One Who can remember the sign that read: \u25a0\"Five dollars\nfine for driving over this bridge fast\ner than a walk.\"\nWe might estabhsh permanent peace\nby using tho armanetit. appropriations\nfor   permanent   roads. '\nDriving a car Is good exercise, but\nnothing compared with the pedestrian's\ndally prnctlcft of tlie standing hroad\njump. *\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'','\u25a0\ntors Who were invited, through the\nefforts of the publicly bureau, to extend their tour of the prairies into\nthe mountains, are extremely anxious\nto make their trip on the lines we\nsuggested,\" stated the publicity secretary last night.\ni *    *    *\nBorn\/on July 12, to Mr. and Mrs.\nPurtey  Ward,   Fairview,   a  daughter.\n* *    *\nAlderman George Ferguson is in.\nthe Boundary country mi a horse\npurchasing trip.\n\u2022 *    *\nThe Salvation Army picnic will be\nheld in the city park today.\nSince the war produced the profiteer, the business of the genealogist\nhas Increased immensely, says nn\nEnglish writer, for the new riph dp-\nsire ancestors, and are--willing to pay\nlarge Bums for proof that they have7\nnoble blood  in   tfaelr  veinH. '\nThis has produced a large army of\nsearchers, who work assiduously tn\nthe British Museum and the recorda.\noffice In London.\nThere wits one case recently reported in which a searcher sued a\nnew millionaire for a sum of nearly\n$15,000 for services in finding for the\nrich man a fan-ftly tree. The agreement made was, far $80 a week, and\nanother $20 a week for expenses.\nThe rich man seems to have found\nthe tree not up to sample, so after\npaying $1500, he df-scharged tlio\nBearchor. The',c^so *was compromised, but the .figures given show1\nthe sort of money made by searchers. - \u25a0\nThese searchers havo a second\nstring to their bow. In the course\nof their researches tree hunters occasionally strike a gold mine In the\nshape of an unclaimed fortune.\n, In order to do this, the searcher\nkeeps In touch with notaries and\nwith Somerset House, so as to discover when anyone dies Intestate., Jri\nthe course of a year there are always wealthy people who die without\nmaking wills, and' sometimes without\nleaving direct  heirs.\nWith tho knowledge at his disposal, the searcher at onco turns lo\nhis records, and, working backwards,\nis usually able to discover some collateral branch of the family, the\ndescendants of which are the nearest\nrelativos of the \"deceased,     .    .\nThen he sets to work to trace theso\npeople,\nThis is sometimes a difficult fob,\nfor they may either, havo sunk in\nthe social scale, or they may havo\nemigrated. Jn some oases they may\neven have changed their name.\nPatience  Usually   Rewarded\nBut patience Is usually rewarded,\nnnd sooner or later the . patient\nsearcher gets on their track. They,\nof course, have.no notion nt all of\nthe luck in store for thorn or any\nmeans of finding out except through\nthe searcher. Tho latter, therefore,\nif he is smart, can drive a pretty\nhard bargain.\nThere was a case, not long n?o,\nin which the amount of money was\nonly about $2500 a year, and tne\ntrue heir, a very distant cousin, had\nbecome a farm laborer in Stafford\nshire.\nj lie paid the searcher a sum equivalent to ?500 a year for hia share of\nthe work.\nSometimes a man who is not himself a searcher will go into this business on a big scale. One such was\nformerly a solicitor, but either voluntarily or compulsoriiy he gave up\nhis practice.\nHe has in his employ two or three\ntamsT genealogists to whom he pays\na small but \"regular salary, and when\nhe does get on the track of an heir,\nhe makes him pay through the nos'.\u00bb.\nIn one case, where the property.in\nquestion was worth $200,000, he extorted ;no less than $CO,000 from lhe\ninheritor.\nIn another where the property waa\nestimated to be worth over '$5,000,000\nand there \u25a0 were two heirs, he demanded  twenty  per cent.\nMARKETS AND FINANCE\n^Continued   from   Page   Six)\nTwenty Years Ago Today\nNational Defence\nNational defence costs Canada today\n$1.89 per head of her population. In\ntlreat Britain people pay $23.35 pet-\nhead for the defence of their homes,\ncountry and the Empire at large, Including Canada. And Canada's Minister of Militia complacently remarks\nthat \"Canada's figures for defence\nwere flo low as to make other countries\nlook rather ridiculous.\" Has Mr. Guthrie forgotten all the lessons the un-\npreparedness of 1914 taught us? Are\nwe to go hack to the Pool's Paradise\nwe occupied in pre-war days? Are\nthe young men in the country to lose\nthn benefit of the training the Canadian\nmilitia wa,s designed to afford>r-Mon-\ntroal   Stt^r,\nArmament BiUidinff and Peace\nBoth the United States and Japan\nare building warships rapidly, and if\nthe ol'fl standards of sea-power are\nstill to he taken as valid, the Empire\nmust be reconciled to the loss of any\nclaim to ..unchallenged superiority ,n\nthe chief of the oceans. But lt may\nbe' that the' old standards of- sea-\npower hold no longer. Most Important\nare the friendly relations in which\nthe States of the Empire stand both\nwith-the United States and with Japan.\nAs for America, the nature of this\ncountry and of the Dominions would\nhave to suffer an almost demoniac\nchange before the thought of war at\nsea between thc nnvies of English-\nspeaking peoples ftould emerge from tht!\nregion of fantastic incredibility.\u2014London   Times. ,\nPi-ofitoor Tanners of Japan\nIn Japan tho price of rice has fallen through the Influence of good crops\nand large imports and the farmer.*\nclaim that with the high price of labor they can no longer grow it at a\nprofit. This statement must be taken for what lt Is worth. One thing\ncertain\u2014the farmers arc no longer\nable- to #reap the profits which they\nmade during and after tho war, and\nthey feel a natural disinclination to\nreturn to their former narrow margins, A ring was formed by the -agricultural societies for the maintenance\nof prices by-'refusal to sell under a\nfixed price, but Is doubtful If such an\nagreement can be adherred to. Practically it means starving the population\ninto submission.\u2014-Hong Kong Times,\nCompulsory Conciliation.\nNeither Capital nor Labor can be\nallowed indefinitely to dislocate at will\ntho Interests of the whole community\nand to throw down > its wclfa*re. We\nmust have alike, full j publicity and\njudical settlement. Economic war,\nlike this, without arbitration beforehand\nby a tribunal Including relatively d).sin\nterested elements representing the su\npreme, interest of the country, is ai ln\nVery  likely  the   ProGical   Son began\nto  hunger again   for  the  bright lights\nsoon after he had consumed the fatied\ncalf.  \u25a0         ,  \u25a0\nAnother fine lliing about going to\nchurch on Sunday is that you are not\nforced to swallow tho dust kicked up\nby a road hog.\nAnl if. those who funrish. our. styles\nshould decree \u25a0 short pants for men,\nthose with skinny legs would be too\nmodest to wear 'em***\nThe war period taught us. a new respect for a. number of humble th.ngs,\naccording     to     a     magazine     writer.\n?ast,   for   instance. :-.*\u25a0;    ;    *'\nIt is easier, for a camel tp go,\nthrough the eye of tt n.eedle than for\na man to travel the road back to\nnormalcy -without discarding wopie of\nhis   \"rights.\"\nTen Yeats Ago Toddy\nm\nFrom tho Bally News, July 10, 1911.\nThat T. Walter Beam of Denver,\nCol., who represents a syndicate of\ncapitalists who  hold the  controlling\nterests in the Hedley Gold Mining\ncompany, which operates the famous\nNickel Plate mine, is in negotiations\nfor the purchase of the Nugget mine\nat Sheep Creek was the! announcement mado last night.\n....    t    |\nDefinite announcement that the\nconstruction. of -the C. P. It. spur\n'.\"rom Threo F^rks to the Lucky Jim\nmine at Beat' Lake would be proceeded with at once was received\nyesterday in a telegram from Sir\nWilliam Whyte \u25a0 to W. B. Lanlgan,\nassistanti'freight traffic manager for\nwestern lines, who has just returned\nfrom--a visit to the territory concerned.  .\n\u2022    * \u25a0  *\n\"It will interest tho public of the\nKootenay to know that the Ohio ,edi-\nFrom the Tribune, July 19, f 901.\nNelson's ball team proved easy victims yesterday afternoon, for the\nboys from Northport, It wns a game\nin-which the whole work for Nelson\nwas done by little McAstocker\nthe slab and Harry Houston behind\nthe bat, nnd resulted irt a score of\n12\u20140  in  favor of Northport,\n* *    \u2022\nThe Nelson smelter is now treating\nabout 140 tons (ti Silver King ore per\nday in the small furnace. The big\nfurnace, which has been out of blast\nfor a few days, is now running on\ncustom lead ores and about 100 tons\nare   being   run   through   each   day.\n* \u00bb    \u2022\nHorn, at Kelson on Sunday,, July\n14, to Mr. and Mrs. .1. Ti. Fox, a\ndaughter.\n* *    *\nThe first drill of the local company of It. M. H. will, be hetd at the\nrifle ranges this evening. A streot\ncar has been engaged to take the\nmembers to the ranges1 and will leave\nthe, armory nt  0:45 o'clock sharp.\nWHOLESALE MARKET.\nThe following are *Nelson wholesale\nprices   pn   the   vaWous   commodities\nnamed: a\nButterfat:                  i\n?weet f. % .38\n.   No.  l  sour     36\nNo. 2 sour  . 34\nBerries for jam;\n. Strawberries    '.    *0S\nRaspberries    t...   .08*\nBlack  currants    .'.   .07\nRed   Currants    -.05\nSweet   Cherries       -06\nDressed carcasses:\nSteers    11%\nCows    -10ft\nCalves ,.    .13\nMutton     , ,..'.   *.n\nLambs    20\nHogs n%\nFowls     - 2S\nNo. 1 creamery butter:\n. In   cartons   .... i    .40\nIn   parchment    39\n56s,   solid 38\n14s, solid    38%'\nNo.   1   dairy   butter,   lb.   .30 to    .35\nEggs, per dozen  ...\/    .40\nTable berries:\nStrawberries,   ftincy,   choice,,\nhand-picked    and    graded,\nper   crate   :.  8.25\nStrawberries, No, 1, crate ..   2.73*\nRaspberries,    fancy,    choice,\nper crate ...,'  3.50\nRaspberries,   No.   ],   crate.. 3.50\nCherries:\nRoyal   Anno,   fancy   choice,\nper crate    2.50,\nRoyal   Anne,  No.   1,   crate.. 2.25\nRing, fancy choice, crate  2.50\nBing, No. 1; per crate  2.50\nPotatoes,   new   crop: \/\nClean and of good size,  per\n100   pounds  0.00\nSmalls    4.00\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN.\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 18.\u2014Flour.\n$9,35 to $9.96 a barrel. Shipments,\n46,709  barrels.\nBran\u2014115.00.  .   '\nWheat\u2014No l Northern, fl.44% trt\nfU7%.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 Yellow, 53 to 54 cents.\nOats\u2014No. 3 White, 36 to 36%\ncents. i i.\nFlax\u2014No.  1, fl.93V6  to $1.94%.\nA commercial  traveler walked Into\na shop with his bag of samples.\n\"Don't   open, your   bag,\"   said   tht\nshopman;  \"there's nothing doing.\"\n\"All right,\" said the, traveler.  ,,Tl\nhave a look at the. samples, myself,\nhaven't  seen   the   thngs   for  a  fort;\nnight.\"\nThe East India company Introduced\ntea into England In 1678.\nONCE IN A\nLIFETIME\nThe average man buys an Engagement Ring but once, and\nhe gives painstaking care to\nIts selection.\nA ring that will please the most\ncritical taste is our simple and\ndainty $150 solitaire, with a\nplatinum head and plain* 18-kt,\ngold  shank.\nIt is set with a Birks' Diamond j\n\u2014the standard of perfection,\nIWyBiil.-.f.-'W\nVANCOUVER,    B.C.\nENGliAND'S  DEMOCRATIC  KING.\n\u2022 The chief rulers of the different\nnations become more simple every\nday, and fewer titles are used than\nbefore the great war. For instance,\nthe King of Portugal used to call\nhimself King of Portugal and Al-\ngarVe, Seigneur .o\u00bbj! Guinea,, and bf the\nnavigation and commerce of Ethiopia, Arabia, Persia; ahd the Indies.\nNor is it-very long since, three different European royalties claimed to\nbe sovereigns of Jerusalem. The\noriginal titles of the 'ruler' of Muscovy, which nfterwtrd; became ihe\nRussian empire, were great lords,\ngrand duke,' autocrat and czar, It\nwas Peter the Great who in 1728 hit\nupon the title of . \"Czar, of all the\nRussians.'* The title grand duke was\nstarted at Keif in Russia, proceeding\nfrom there to Germany. \"Bey\" was\nonce a greater title than \"Sultan.\"\nIt has now disappeared. \"Sultan\"\nmeans merely \"mighty man.\" The\ntitle of \"Majesty,\" by which the ex-\nKaiser was known'to his court and\nsubjects, was first adopted by the\nRoman emperor, Diocletian. ,Louls\nXI. of Frince was the first European\nking to use it, and Henry VIII. was\nthe .earliest English ruler to be addressed as \"Your majesty.\" For the\npresent King of England the titlo of\n\"Sir\" is sufficient. \u25a0'\nMR. L. NOTICES\nCOOKING\nQuite by accident, one of our\nmen heard a friend compliment his wife on a cake she\nbrought to a picnic. Revoked- her about having bought\nit because they never get\ncakes like that at home, he\nsaid.\n\u2022The wife said she had made\nthis one with Pacific Milk\nond it surprised her what a\ndifference it had  made.\nPAanCMILKCO.\nLIMITED\nI Factorio. at  Abbotsford  and  Lad-\nt        nor,  B.  C,\nJust a Reminder\n$e have still on hand a\nfair assortment of Plows,\nHarrows and Wagons.\nAlso Wheeled Cultivators, Mowers, Rakes,\nScythes, Snaths, Forks,\nScythe Stones, etc.\nGET PRICES BEFORE BUYING.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBOX 1050 NELSON, B. C.\nPlant B. C. Grown\nTrees Only\n\u2022r     +     *\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA NURSERIES CO., LIMITED, have by careful and efficient management built up\na large business during the1 p.ast ten years, and are now\nthe largest growers of nursery stock in Western Canada.\nA large assortment of very fine fruit trees and small\nfruit plants are now growing in our nurseries at Sardis,\nwhich are being offered to planters at very reasonable\nprices. \u2022    ' r~\nThe quality of these trees and plants are of high order,\nbeing propagated from specially selected trees of known\nproductiveness.\n\"We are growing a veryfine lot ot roses of leading varieties which\nhave bloomed this' season in the nurseries and will give, good re-,\nsuits when 'transplanted into your gardeji or lawn. \u25a0\nWe invite correspondence from Intending planters and urge the\nplacing of orders early In the season.\nWIlItE TODAT     Address,\nDept. C,\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA NURSERIES CO., LTD.,\nSardis, B. C.\nSALESMEN  WANTED.    TERMS  LIBERAL.   \u2022\nMention The Nelson    Daily News when writing.\nTho first law school in tho United\nStates was established at Litchfield,\nConn., in 17,84..\nREDUCTION  IN   PRICE\nTaking Effect July First\nJohn Burns k Son\nA Summer Life-Saver\u2014\nCut out greasy meats and starchy vegetables and eat\nShredded Wheat Biscuit\nwith Strawberries\nA deliriously nourishing and wholesome combination, supplying all the\nnutriment needed- for work or play. A real whole wheat strawberry\nshortcake that can be prepared in a jiffy\u2014requires no baking, no cooking.\n feTfc\/\nTHJ! NELSON DATLT NEWS, TUESCXY MORNTNG, JULY W-VSSI.\nM B N!\nAre you studying foot\ncomfort tliese hot days?\nQur entire stock,of Oxford\nShoes is now on sale at\nvery muck reduced prices.\nMen's Black Kid and Calf\nOxfords. Men's Tan and\nMahogany, Calf Oxfords.\nMen's White Canvas Ox-?\nfords with leather or rubber soles. '-.\nfia.50   Values,\ntor    \t\n$10,011   Values,\nfor   \t\nJ10.EO   Values,\nfop     .....\n$8 SO Values,\nIV   \t\nWhite  Giitvaa\nor rubber\nsofes    \t\n $9.85\n $6.85\n $6.85\n 5bO\u00bbOu\nOxfords, .leather\nS3.35\nll ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nKootenayrand^Boundary\nGRESTQN AFTER\nAnxious United States, Dominion and ' Provincial\nGovernments Get Busy.\nCRESTON, July 17.\u2014Since the return of the Board of Trade dclegu-\ntton who attended the Commerlcal f'lub\ndrainage meeting at Bonner's Kerry last\nweek Chairman Constable of tlie local\nreclamation .committee has heen very\nactive, particularly tn any antl every\ndirection ttiat looked likely to get quick\naction with the authorities at Ottawa\nwho nre interested in the Kootenay\nFlats drainage proposition. Now that\ndefinite assurance Is, Riven that work\nis to he almost immediately resumed\nhy the B. C. and Idaho governments\nto determine the feasibility or other*\nwise of the project, what Is next most\ndesired Is that the Dominion officials\nshould nlso participate in thin flnish-\nup effort on the project. AJj move\nalong the pattie line is being mad'- by\nthe BannefS Ferry people, as al present tio arrangements has heen made to\nhave the United States federal engineers collaborate with the B. 0. anil\nIdaho    reclamation    officials.\nThe Information Creston lias is to\nthe effect that any delay 111 getting\nunited action by Ottawa and Wnshing-\nlon at Mils Juncture has bean due to\ntho refusal Of Washington to co-operate ns. desired, though according \\o\na telegram on Julv nth from secretary of State Hughes of Washington\nto Governor Dayls of Idaho (imme-\ndiatelv preceding the hitter's \u25a0 departure for Victoria fur the conference\nheld on the filbl, Washington had,\napparently; decided to fully co-operate.\nand. on the strength of this change of\nheart Ottawa is being urged lo again\napproach Washington lo tbe end thai\nall four governments interested may\nactively participate In the further In-\nMstibatlna! work that is about to he\nundertaken, with the object iu view of\nhaving all four of them, shaping Up\nihe police that must be pursued lo\nget all the information necessary to\nsubmit to the drainage experts who\nwill lie called upon to make a ilnnl\ndecision    as    to    whether    drainage    can\nbe accomplished or not\nMrs. A. Crawford\nTells How Cuticura\nHealed Little Girl\"\n\"My  little girl's trouble started\nwith small pimples on the back of\n'A8t~>Z     ber head and they spread\nw\\\\v^   downherback. Thrpim-\nft\u00a9l)l  ples'were  hard  and red\n'\"       ''' and- they   itched  and\nburned terribly.    She\nscratched  and   irritated\nthem and  they later developed into sore eruptions.   Her hair fell out and became\nthin and dry, and scales fell off on\nher clothing.\n\"I used a free sample of Cuticura\nand the pimples commenced to dry\nup. I bought more and when I had\nused one cake of Cuticura Soap and\none box of Cuticura Ointment she\nwas healed.\" (Signed)Mrs, Alonzo\nCrawford, 83 Parker St., Bangor,\nMaine, Jan. 22, 1920.\n\u25a0. For every purpose ofthe toilet and\nbath Cuticura Soap, Ointment and\nTalc-tym are wonderfully good.\nSoipZSc. Oiiilm.nl25-ntlSll.. T>lcnm2Sc. Sold\nthroughout tneDominion. Canadian Depot;\nLymiini, Limited, 3.4 St. Pid) St., W., Montrul.\njfMF\"\"~Cutieur\u00bb Soap \u00abhmei without mu\u00ab.\nChina, Crockery,\nGlassware and\nVariety Goods\nWe  make  \u2022  specialty ef  open\nstock patterns.\nDRONSFIELD BROS.\n303   Baker   8t.       -       -       Nelson\nBranch   at   Penticton\nWe   are   Distributors   for\nthe\nPREST-0-LITE\nBATTERIES\nWhen ynu buy one of these butteries .from us Ot* our agents you\nget. a written guarantee and we\nare' always here to givo you\nprompt service if adjustments are\nto be made.\nCanadian Auto and  Electrical  Supply   Co.,   Reid   Block\nWindermere Board of Trade\nInvites Corrections and\nAdditions;   District  List.\n'INVERMERE, July 17.\u2014The Victoria\nboard of trade Is working oh a. plan\nfor the establishment- In the capital\ncity of the province of a memorial\navenue to Bill Ish Columbia men who\nfell during the Inst great war. It .s\nlhe hope to plant' a tree along each\nside of the proponed 'avenue one to\nrepresent each who was killed or rtlad\non active service. On every tree a\nsuitable name plate wilt be placed to\ncommemorate the name of the- fallen\nhere\nThe City of Nelson is also working\nout a plan covering the men from the\nHas! Koolenav, and the list as given\nbelow has been made up in an effort\nto g.ve as much accurate information\nas   may Jie   obtainable.\nIn making out the list of those\nWho-fell in tbe Great War Of persons\nwhom it was known bad resided In the\nWindermere district, it is possible thai\nmistakes may creep In, and the secre.\ntarv of lho board of trade for thb district, who has supplied th*' information\nwould be deeply in debted lo any person reading it if lie would correel\nany mistakes which may he shown.\nThe names, dale and places of enlistment and last known- whereabouts\nWhere    obtainable     is     given. They\nwere:\u2014\nWindermere    Roll\nNets Brown, Killed  September,   HUH.\nPhillip Butt.-rfield, enlisted 11)11,\nkilled   In   Tune,   1,916:\nM. day enlisted In England, first reported missing aud later reported as\nkilled,  at   Kui-el   Amara.\nAndrew (\"'arson, joined 48th Battalion   In   lflir.,   reporled   lulled. _.- \u25a0\np II. fl. Capon ter, reported lulled\non the monili nf September,  111.7.\nHugh Dougherty, joined 173 HfiltaU\nIon - in January, 19111, reported as having died   nf   pneumonia.\nlWr Fnrnuhnrsoii. Joined 54111 Bat-\ntit linn, in March. 1310. reported as\nkilled.\nJohn Gallagher, mined 2.1rifc Battalion; Mav, 1S1M. transferred tn 10th\nBattal-.on   and   reported   as   killed,\nW, or J. Hart ma n, enlisted in the\nOld Country, in 1914, reported lulled\nin   November,  1915.\nlieoffrev Higgius, enlisted In Liverpool Scottish, in the OH1 Country. In\n1914, reported as missing -.n Anril. 1017.\nFrank Hume, joined the 17:! Hattnl-\nif.n   hi  18HI,  reported   killed   in   October,\n'August Johnston, a native of Sweden,\nmiiied lho 172 Battalion in HUB, reporter!  killed  Ootober,   1917. .\nA. Douglas Kennedy, joined tbe 17-\nBattaltoh \"A\" Company, In May. HUfi,\ndied   from   wounds.   May.   1917.\nE. H. Limn. 101b Battalion, enlisted in Calgary, Alberta,  reported killed\nAugust   191 fi.\nDuncan MacLeod, joined thft 1<2 Battalion   in   April,   1916,   klllediNpv.   1917.\nHarrv Matthews, enlisted in 172 Hai-\nfalloh,-.\"A\" .Company. In 1910, lulled In\nOctober.   1917.\nHerbert. Matthews, a brother of\nYUivrv MattheWfi, jo mod 4'Sth Battalion\nlDlfi,   killed   1D16.\n33. B. Richardson, brother of Douglas\nRichardson, died on hospital ship in\nthe  Dardanelles   ln   October,   1915.\nWalter Shibley, of First Norfolks,\nre-jolnod his regiment in August, IHi,\nkilled  in  May, 1915.\nJohn Strath joined 172 Bnttntlon\nIn February, 1916, died from wounds\nin  May,- 1917.    '\nBert Spence, joined 64 tli Battalion\nIn 1916.  reported missing.\nHarold S. Taylor, jolnod \"A\" Company, 172 Battalion, January. lfftU,\nkilled   1917.\nMichael Welsh, joined \"A\" Company\n172 Battalion March. 1916, killed March\n1917.\nWilliam R. Wilkes, enlisted in 172\nBattal.on, March, 1916, killed 1st March,\n1917.\nW. W. Wllberforce, held commission\nIn King's Roval Rifles, killed Wilt at\nthe ' battle   of   Somme.\nHarry Younger, enlisted Sept., 1914,\nkilled   early   in    1915.\nSPECIAL PRIZES '\n' FOR PJIISHIP\nWomen's Institute Encourages Useful Art; Settlers\nFrom Ontario;   Personal\n. CRESTON, July 17.\u2014At their July.\nMeeting Friday night Creston valley\nWomen's Institute decided to give two\nspecial prizes of $5 at tills year's fall\nfair\u2014for junior and senior penmanship,\nwith 12 years established as the line\nof demarcation between juniors and\nseniors. The Indies aro also busy\non the preparation of a book of guarantee recipes Which Will In due course.\nhe issued for sale. Mesdames Ben\nliott, Staples and Hamilton are ii.\ncharge and are only aecopting recipes\nfrom thoso who will be willing to\nhave their names attached as assuring\nof Hs excellence. Mrs. Kdinonson\npresented an llfctcuctive paper on \"The\nRelation of Birds to Crops,-' and tho\nrefreshment features were In chargi\nof Mesdames Hayes, .Bennett am\nSpeers,\nWhile there has been some cutting\ndown of the vrews engaged at govern'\nment   rondwork,   activity   In   that   dir\nHon has not slopped by any means\nThe exceptionally high water on the\nHals dislocated whal are known as the.\ntwin bridges as well us badly wrecking Nick's bridge, and as all three of\nthose are on the road navel led to the\nhay  lands   across   tbe   Kooienny   River\nconsiderable amount will havo lo be\npent   iu  putting them  back  In shape.\nWork of quarrying the granite slab\nor Cr'eston's Soldier's memorial is now\nunder way nt, the Sirdar quarry, and\nthat there is definite assurance that\nthe. monument is to bo erected there\nis a grntifymg response from those.\nwho had guarantied funds for the\nmemorial but who had withheld payment pending the actual erection of the\ngranite shaft, while every effort is being made, t ohave the work complete\nand unveiling exercises lake place hy\ntlie end of August. If this is found impossible it is likely the unveiling ceremonies may be* postponed until Ores-\nton's fall fair date, the early pari of\nOctober.\nVital statistics for June show five\nJi.rihs, one death and one marriage.\nOf the now. arrivals three were girls,\nSome real summer weather was encountered. Hie bottlest day of the month\nshowing 89 In the shade. The .Tune\nrainfall was just over one and a Quarter    inches. i-\nCreston's atiraetlveiieHK as a residential centre has already been efficaciously noted\" ns far east as Ontario\nLast week J. Lelllott disposed of Ins\ntwo-acre residential properly on Fourth\nstreet to Mr. Hently of St. Mary's, Ont.,\nwho gets immediate possession. Mr.\nScliade   Is    reported    lo   have   sold   his\n  ten-acre,   half   of   the   Griffin   ranch   lo\nJohn   McCrinimon,   Joined   211th   Bal-I Mr. Klelst of Rosthern, Sask, who also\nlalion, reported killed,   Sept..   191ft. takes   Immediate   possession.\nClearance\nfii*T\nI\nr;\ns\\\nThe quality has not been sacrificed in order to offer you these goods at the\nmoney. Every article has been taken from our regular stock and carries with\nit our guarantee of satisfaction.\nTODAY WE OFFER:\n~im_*'i^K-Y,k-t'm*,-.\nCOTTON   SVIT-\nINGS and VOILES\nClearing at 75c\nAbont 25 pieces plan\nCotton Suiting and\nFigured Voiles, in a\nrange of patterns and\nprices. These .'come\n;i8 inches wide and\nsold, in many cases,\nup to $1.50 tho yard.\nThey aro remarkable\nvalues uf Sale\nP RIO R\n75c\n20 PIECES ROMPER CLOTH\nTo Clear at 49c\nthe Yard.\nA wonoVrful clolh for Boys' Wnsh Suits, Women's Dresses or for Children's wear generally.\nTt comes In light or dark colors and will wash\nahd wear well. It's 28 Inches wldo.ahd sold\nregularly at 75c per yard 11 goes in A_\u201e\nIhls sale at, the yard...... JtuC\nREADY MADE PILLOW CASES\n69c the Pair.\nlood finality Cotton\ndeep hemmed ends,\nregularly for f 1.00.\nJL'r.Y    SAJ.B   PfllC\nPillow   Cases,   rfkicle   with\nSizes 40 In U  Inches. Sold\n I.,.. 69c\nBLEACHED COTTON SHEETS\nAt $3.95 the Pair.\nado\nfull\nfor\nof\nIji'f\ngood\ninches\nll.    .11\nweight;   full   hleached   sheeting,\nwide.    Sold regularly  (_Q rjtf\nI.Y   SALE   PRIC13  (DO.llD\nTile Store for Style\nWOMEN'S SUMMER SKIRTS\nSale Price, $3.75\nFine GABARDINE or TRICOTINE Skirts, In\nplain white or with colored borders. Finished\nWilli bells and pockets. Sizes zO to, d*Q r?JT\n30 waist.'   JULY SALE PRICE  tBO.tU\nFINE WOOL SKIRTS\nValues to $30.00, Clearing at $12.50\nIn moat cases the material alone is worth MORE\nthan we asked for tlie Skirt ready to wear.\nThey come in light plaids or stripes, in plain\nor box pleated styles, All Novelty SklrtH.\nSizes up to 2!) waist Values tu (gin p\/\\\n?:t0.lM>.    JULY SALE PRICE u)A<HtDU\nBOYS'HEAVY RIBBED HOSE,\n.    50c the Pair.\nExtra heavy ribbed cotton Hqfce made wilh stintless feet and Ipgs, Sizes 6% to 10. Hog-    FA\niitar price\n.liri.V   SALE   PRICK...\nBOYS' COTTON JERSEYS, 69c Each\nNavy nnd Khaki  Cotton  Jerseys,  made  pullover\nstyle,  with short or long  sleeves.   Sizes  22\n32,    Regular price, SCO,\n.JULY   SALE   PRICE   \t\nBOYS' BATHING SUITS\nTo Clear at 95c.\nMade of good weight cotton yarn in colors Navy\nand Grey.   Sizes lo 34. Regular values\nto   |1.60.    JULY  SALE   PRICE  \t\nBABY'S BONNETS\nSale Price, 50c Each\n69c\n95c\nSilk or Muslin Bonnets iu a\nstyle*. All sizes. Values Lo\nJULY   SALE   PRICE;   each\nrange\nfi r.o.\npretty\n50c\nAngus MaePoimld, first reported as\nmissing in Sept., lit 17 and later reported   as   killed.     \u25a0    *\nPatrick D'Shea; joined- V.tDl, killed\nOctober.   191*8. .it .\nChristopher Pope, son oi' Thomas\nArehdule Pope, now of Penticton, Jo.n-\ned 10 th Kattallon In Calgary 1914,\nwounded    in    both    legs    and    taken    to\nfield hospital whieh Germans bombed, not been beard of tslnee April, IMS.\nCaptftltl .John Noel Phillips, rejoined liis recinienl in 1915, died in hos-\nnliiil at BolpUGrno from wounds received\nin ba'ttb- of. SI.   Kloi on -ttb   Anrll.   1915,\nDouglas ItiHiardson. enlisted in (Sn'g-\nland    died  of* sickness  in   1!U4.\nPersonal Newa\nWoltor taveoua and young daughter\nMedicine   Hat,   Alta..   are   here   at\nesenl    on    n    tflSlt    to    his    brother,\n>oard    Leveque.\nSirs. Kiocks is away on a month's\nholiday trip with friends al Vancouver\nnnd  other coast   peluts.\nEdgar Repney is home from f!rnn-\nlirook, where he has spent a couple of\nmonths Undergoing and recovering from\noperation for appendleitus. he,ng\n... fourth of Creston citizens to undergo an epperat Ion. In that hospital,\nin   tKc   Inst   two   months.\nMr. antl -Mrs. Geo. Hobden left on\nThursday) where they will spend a\nShort   holiday   with    trends.\nMiss Jennie itolangor of Kitchener\nwas a v.sitor witli Creston friends a\nfew days tbe latter part of the waek.\nManager Lovedav of Creston fruit\n(Jrowers Union is home from Vernonr,\nwhere ho attended \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 meeting of the\nTraffic & Credit Men's Association.\nThe information lie gathered was that\nthe R. C. apple- crop will be consldor-\nbly lighter tlilu the early June estimates nnd tho marketing of U nt\nreasonably gogd prices is confidently\nexnecled.\nMrs.   Knox   got   away but\ni     for    fi     three     week's    vacation.\nwhich thev will spend on n motpr enmn-\ntrin.  'which   will   lake  them  as. far\n\u25a0Sinclair   Springs    Iu    the   Columbia\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nMTV, July IK.\u2014A\nveriinieni tax colli\ncoritly on business.\n(irabam aud liltle\nvisitors   to.  Nelsi\nof   Nelson   is\nMcMahoh,   w\nof   Mr.   and   Mrs\nPort      Arthur.\nfrom   Rl\nand   Mrs.\nforeman\nha\ncLroO\nfo\nof  BdUliiitii*\ni    Saturday\naunt liud   uncle. *\nRae,   and   other   ri\n\u25a0nt  to  Now   Pi'tiv*;!'\n<mith, wife oi  the prin\ncston  public school,  w\ni\"dav,   the   guest   of   V\nr.     Mrs.  Slhlth   was  on   I\nerton   to  visit-', relatives.\nGIRLS! BLEACH SKIN\nWHITE WITH LEMON\n611\nBaker St.\nPhone\n200\nThe Store tor Quality\nNO GRUMBLING OVER\nSCHOOL ASSESSMENTS\nCRESTON-, July 17. \u2014Sa t urdn y was\nannual meeting night for nil of the\nvalley rural schools, and tlie feature\nto most of thpm was ihe good attendance o'f ratepayers and the entire absence of grumbling as to the increased\nrates some of the districts will have to\npay tli it* year. A notable example of\nthis is ar Krlckson, where, due to having io erect a one-room addition nnd\npay another teacher, school taxes this\nyear wilt, he three times as heavy ns\nlast term. At (.'anyon C.ty some redress would seem to be required,\nAbout two years ngo a considerable\nblock of land In that school district\n\u25a0> nctiuired for soldier settlement\n\u25a0!Aet< and Is now  included   in   the   i,is-\nol\nlet,    Willi\nago\nntepi'\nhoc\n1    ivting   additional    quarters    ns\nis  engaging another teacher,    fee-\nhaving'added expense and nt the\nhie 'area of lurid Canyon City\niyers are finding school taxation\nvery heavy. Of the six rural schools\nhere, at least five of them will lie\nlooking for new teaching staff;;, |he\nvacancies beting at Sirdnr, Alice Siding,\nErickson, Canyon and  Lister.    Creston\ntrustees    are    quite , fort IS h ft 16'   in    thill\nhut one of last, year's stuff has turned\nIn her reslgnnilon.       1\nHEAVY FRUIT SHIPPING\nDELAYS THE EASTBOUND\nCRESTON,   July\nk  nl   |\nk   lhe\nThe\nI   h.nvl\ntake\n\u00bbtht\n:iml\nmil\n,ki\n<ii>1ny.\nK to r\n.nil   b.\nn'luri1\nWliiml\nIr.\noliwl-\ni Hi,,\nilong\nion anil Erlcksoi\nUio C. P. IX. Ih\nvotilllntiifl 1-xnlv\nof   till-   shipping\nES\nElect Price Trustee; Nelson\nAutos Reach Ymir by Circuitous Route.\nYMIK. ,Iuly 18.\u2014The gnnual nici\nfor the appointment of school in\nand auditor was held 'on the Dili\n.1. II. Clark \\va.s elected as truate.\nthree years, taking the place of .\nPrice, who' retires. Q.\"'Lcece Jr.\nntfan'1 elected as auditor for oile\ntailing\nbrother nnd\nii.  Leece Jr.\nSeveral   of\nJlhe\nor   lac\nfilling in their\nng hiRikb'hrrries a\nDOS quite a numb\nanvihg the depot;\nMr,  and   Mrs.\ndied men and\nr employmeni\n\u25a0 time gather-\nitch morning\ncotisignnienis\nAPPLEDALE NOTES.\n-Proros.ior II\ni   Reditu   for\nspent\nall\"\nnst\n$t:l\nillent   shapii\na rt\nut\nTill\n(tutor\ntin\nschool\nlia\nliala\ne   school\nvutlorsritl  wits \u25a0\u2022\nBrooks,  retiring\nBtithursl   Hall\ntho  hall-\nirk-\not  Vi.\nIl   is a  mill.\ndecitletl to tender her ri'Slgntitlon us\nU'lir.hor, after havlhs rilleil iii\" position\nWilli niiirki-il nhility tor moro thnn .1\nyeiir. '    .\nAutOB   Go  Lnli'l   Way   ltaaad.\nYum-, was greatly iiondreil during Hi.\npast week by the 1'acl that tin- ilrlv.-ti\not: Iwo autos had made 111-- reinarkalilt\ndiscovery' that it was possible to'.reiieh\nI point  l'roin N.li\nlo llr.\nloud.   P.\nand   Mi's.   (\nlijjra   I'civ  we\nll\"  t'lslite\nBlalciv\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nIS    lir.lv\na wa\nli.\\\n01' I'asili'Bi.\ngoing\nand   Trail.\niliSli\nI     Sl.ll'TH\nWorn'.\nSI.I\ntill'   ,l0U\nilles l.y tin\n.ho\n(III., in part\nke i-xtra calls\ny shipping of\nh al Wvnndel, Cres-\nSlarl.ng last week\nfurnishing an extra\near 10 lake care\nWplethlilg Hint was\nipcossary a year ago. This week j possi\ni sees the Fraser ranch at' Rrlck- dlcat\nstarting 111 move its summer call- liy t.\ne crop. With just the right sort 1 Nalr'\nso,I and with overhead Irrigation Sunn\n. ranch is producing a 'cron that I 'Tli\nh real summer weather should rut. j of N\nt   least   fifteen   Ions   In   tlie   acre   of   with\nri'invsenls\ngallons  ol\nwould   lie\nroad   was\nthere   is   I\ntea  of  tlr\nInto  account;    (\nAlta.,   was   till,\nears,   and   hail   1\nway    of    Spokai\nlogic\nunion\npi\nlhe hall\nof\nle.\n.lac I Mrs. Chalmers 1\nThis I llie advisory lion\n-\u2022 new rules 111\n,U llie minithli\n'3 auxiliary II\nutiniic tli,- in,-,\nmt hi. and resi\nlolier.\nI' Tt\nI'll, g\nid   n\nView\nother\nred if lhe Nelson-Vlnir\nIn addition to litis\nihricanls and wear and\n.1 niacliin.' to he Ink,-n\nO. McN'air of Bnshaw,\nowner of one nf lhe I ice in St. Mi\n.ecu making a tour by 1 evening. At\ni.e.   Seattle. .Vancouver   Murray   gav\n1 fill.ling llliil ll was! In llic Atlgll\nVinir hy lhe route in- I Mrs. T. J\naround   with   liis   faill- I Wvcliffc   ar,\n\u25a0w days wilh Mrs. Mc- I (he Koolena\nMrs.   Mel\nJuly IS\u2014The\n.1 a special mei'l-\nilay. July s. wheii\nivi' ail address on\ngilliifions.\nling of the Wom>\n1 ili'.'iile.l In nls-\n1 ror llic sum ner\nlie   first   week   In\nIficialed    ill    1,11.\nI la\nid\nhe\nelal.le\nnil,11\nSillieeze lho juice of two lemons\nInto a bottle containing three ounces\n,of Orchard White, which any drug\nstore will supply- for a . few' cents,\nshake tvell, ami you have a quarter\npint of harmless and delightful lemon\nbleach. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms\nand hands each day, \"then shortly\nnote flic beauty aud whiteness of\nyour  skin.\nFamous stage beauties use this lerti-\non lotion to bteaeh ana bring that\nsoft, clear, rosy-white complexion,\nalso' as  a   freckle,  sunburn,  and  tall\neach  because it doesn't  irritate\nAvoid Consignments\nIf Yoo  Havo\nCHERRIES   TO   SELL\nWrite ua. We are connected\nwith the strongest ami most\neffective selling force on the\nprairies.. Agents In every lih-\njlortant town see that shipments\nget proper attention and prompt\npayment.\nKOOTENAY FRUIT GROWERS\n-    UNION,   LTD.\nPhono   180 Nelson\nage. AbhUt Ih\n\u2022^0 rar in field crops\nliile -here and Iheiv are\nelds' or spuds on the\nv Crop is not honlthv\nntehv n spots., though\nV Frank riitnam 1ms\nfield    that    shows    up\nRf'Vel\nOBITUARY\nlu\nf Mrs.   13.   D.\nThe     iri ton\noutlined    aho'\nwhatever froi\nthose   in   null\nfeasible   exr.u\nseeing  thnl   for several   years   \\-\ngovernment   has  hern  deriving\nfrom   forest    products   alone   ah\nroute   that   would, nt.sotb   '\ni fit\nnv point of view,\nan not offer\ntheir   conliiiu.i\nt hewer     tlie     anr'vlce\nhis   report    as   i\nTndnnd   nnd    fai\nvisitors   hero;   gu\nh'alls   holel;\ni-   and   iliiiu-'liter   o|\nquests   of   Mrs.   II\ns.   ;l    luu'kna  an,'\nI RED    TAPE    STOPS   FIBE    BRIGADE\nI      Vin.WA,   July    IV- Krontier   reslrh*-\nthe\n\u25a0ossin-F \u25a0 t!\nblaze.\nbuildliigs\nirliau- horde\nlo\neruge   reve\nat   period.\nMrs.  C.   R.\nTo\ntwo\nMrs. Duli>hine Prnnoour Stario\nINV12liMl\u00a3ftt'., July 17.\u2014Telegraphic l\nadvice Ijas just been received from\nMontreal of the passing nway in that |\ncity of Delphine Kraucour, relict of\nlhe late O'eorge A. Stnrke an old time,\nresident ol\". this district. After the\ndeath of Mr. Starke, site had gone to\nreside iu Vancouver later moved hack\nto her old home in the province of\nQuebec.\nThe late Mrs. Stnrke was born in I\nthe City of Quebec, and married lu-r\nhusband at Nelson In 1X911. Until\nthe denth of Mr. .Starke they resided j\ncoinmuously in. In this part. Mrs.\nStnrke was a true pioneer woman and\naccompanied her hushand on many\nhazardous trips through the mountains\nin connection with his .mining interests.\nThe Pelphltle mine. Mount Pelphlne\nand the huge Delphine glnder of the\nSelkirk range were all named in her\nhonoh.\non ihe Italian side of\nIrond station caught\nilrian town's firemPi\nn . gendarmes dejinnd-\nud hav'ng non.'' they\nV-iiOh   the   warehouse^\n-^\nWELCOME   HEW   MINISTER\nINVEHRMK July, 17.\u2014A public reception wns tendered on Wednesday of\nthis week by the ounnbern oT the\nfhurch of England to the Uevcrend R\nBertram Atkinson, who as deacon has\ncome to minister lo the needs of the\ndistrict of Lake Windermere. Trior\nto tho reception the new vicarage was\nmost comfortably furn.shed for the\nuse of the incumbent.\nllSlf \u00bb&<* that there is more\nMmm MAGIC BAKING POWDER\nm. usedthanallthe otheibrands\nt combined shows why Magic\n&. Bating Powder is known \u25a0'\n\u00ae*-\u25a0'\u25a0   as Canada's hest     A\n..    baking powder.    ,^fe\nCONTAINS NO ALUM.\nLi\n_____\n n* \u00a3\u25a0\u00bb\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 19,1921.\nMarkets and Finance\n'(\nOils Decline; Steels Resist\nPressure; Loan Prospects\nSustain Sugars.\n: NEW *ORK, July 18.\u2014business\non the stock exch&n&e today totalled\nscarcely , 335,000 shares. Irregular\nprice, movements- revealed weakinoKS\nIn certain specialties ahd comparative steadiness in seasoned issue:;.\nAtlahtic Gulf, under constant, pressure !lrj connection with litigation, i.n.\n\u25a0 volvih'g the company's finances, made\n\u25a0 an extreme detfllne of 3% points.\nMexican Petroleum gained 3 points\nat arte time, but. reacted sharply\non heavy offerings; finishing at a\nloss \u25a0 pf  3\\4   points.\nRepresentative steels, equipments\nand tftotors resisted pressure, as well\nas specialties' Jn the leather, textile\n' and sugar groups. Sugkrs *fcere sustained; by prospects of a loan to\nCuban growers. Ralls moved within\n; contracted   limits.\nNews over thn week-tmd offered\nJlttle Incentive to the long accouat.\n, Foreign exchanges were rnqre unsot-\nxled. Demand sterling -registered a\nnew low quotiitlon for tho. year nt\n\u25a03.59%, French, Italian, Dutch and\nGerman rates fell 4 to 5 points with\nlosses of 17 to,50 points in remit*\n' tances to Dehtnark, Norway and\n[Sweden. * \u2022\nLast week's loss of cash reserves\n\u2022by clearing bouse hanks fallefl to\ndisturb local money rates. On the\nexchange all call loans were m:Ule\nat 6. per cent and the little time\nmoney available .was offered at 'he\nsame; figure. Some outside lo.i is\n\u2022were mode at 5% per cent, both\non call, and time-\nLiberty issues showed mi*xed gains\non small dealings.\nTotal   sales,  $7,400,000.\nClosing   Quotations \\>\nHigh   Low   Close\nChino      22\nC.   P.  II ...100'\/.    108&    109\nC. M. & St. P.  ...  26 25i\u00a3      2514\nInt.  Marine     IIVi     10%     10%\nMo.    Pas.,    com... 19 18%    ,18-5.1\nMo.   Pac,   pfd     .       HG-Vt-\nPierce   Arcow     18%      18 18\nStudebaker-     80%     79%     \u00a30\nU.' S.. Steel, com... 72% 71% 72-'%\nV. S. Steel, pfd. ..'109% 109 lOS'fc\nWillys-Overland   ..    71\/.       7 7\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK.\n\"WINNIPEG, July 18.\u2014Offerings in\nthe yards over the week-end eotallei\n311 cattle, 180 hogs, and 27s sheep.\nRecfil^is up tb'9 a.;m:;*W^re 666 c&ttl'*,\n100 hbgs and 120 sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice, $5 75 to $8.50; fi!r\ni.oBgoo6, H00 to $5.50; common, $2.00\nto  $2.60.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, $5.50 to\n?6.06;!foir to good,  $4.00   to  $5.25.\nButcher eoivs\u2014Choice, $4.50 to\n$5.00; fair to good, $3.00 to $4.'25;\nrunners and cutters, $1.00 to $1.50\nBulls\u2014Good, $2.50 to $3.00; common, $1.50 to $2,00.\nOxen\u2014Good, $4.00 to $4.50; medium, $3.00 to $3.50; common, $2.00\nto $2.50.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice, $3.00 4n\n$3.50;   fair to good,  $2.00  to  $2 75.\nStockfr steers\u2014Choice, $3.00 to\n$3.25;  fair to good, $2.00 to $2.50,\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3.00 to\n$8.25;  fair to good,  $2.00, to $2.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $7.00 to $8.00; good,\n$5.00 lo $0.00;  rommnn, $3.00 to $4 00.\nSheep and lambs\u2014Good sheep,\n$4.50 to $6.50; common, $2.00 to $1.00;\ngood lambs, $9.00 to. $12.50; common,\n$5.00 -to  ?7.qo,   . **\nHogs\u2014SeNrtits,'\" \u2022\u25a0 $12.00';* heavies,\n$9.00 to $11.00; lights, $12.00 ttf\n$12.50; sows, $7 00 to $8.00; stags,\n$5.00 to-*$6.00.       ' \"\u25a0 \u25a0 \"\u25a0'   \u25a0\nTORONTO, July 18.\u2014Cattle receipts, 2755; heavies as high as $7.75.\nCalfe receipts, 423; market strong\nwith choice calves selling nt 10\ncents.\nSheep receipts, 1201. Lamhs strong\nat.  13  eents  for  choiee*\nHog receipts, 690. Packers refuse\nto raise their bids'of 11 cents. Tho\nhulk of the hogs went to outside\nbuyers nt from 11 cents to 11% cents.\nCANADA BONDS.\nWINNIPEG, \"\"July IS.\u2014Bid prices\nfor Dominion war Issues:\nWar loans\u20141925, 94.60; 1931, 92.E0;\n1937. 97.    '\nVictory loans\u20141922. 99; 1923, 98.0c:\n1927, 97.76; 1988, 97.40; 1937, 99;\n1924, 99.50;  134, 94.30.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE.\nNEW  YOrfK,   Jply   18.\u2014Bar  silver,\ndomestic, 99%;  foreign, 59%.\nCanadian dollars\u201487,87.\nFrancs\u2014Demand, \u25a0 7.75;  cables, 7-76.\nLire\u2014Demand,    4.45;    cahles,    4.4fl.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YdRK, July 18.\u2014Sterling exchange weak at $8.54% for .UO-clay\nbills and }3.69% for- de'mand.\nNELSON, July 18.\u2014Current counter exchange for sterling $4.07%.\nMETAL MARKET.\nNEW YORK, July 18.\u2014Copper,\nsteady.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot and nearby, 12 vi\nto 13;  third quarter, is to 13%.\nTin\u2014Easy; spot and nearby, 27.60;\nfutures,   27.60.\nIron\u2014Nominal; No. l Northern,\n22.60 tb 23.00; No. 2 Northern, 21.00\nto 22.00; No. 2 Southern, 20.00 to\n21.00.\nLend\u2014Quiet; spot, 4.40.\nZlne\u2014Steady;*' East St. Louis, spot,\n4.26  to 4.36.\nAntimony\u2014Spot. 4.65.\nAt London\u2014Standard copper, spot,\n..70 12s 6d;  futures,  \u00a371.'\nElectrolytl<\u00ab-Spot, \u00a374 10s; futures,   \u00a375  10s.\nTill\u2014Spot, \u00a3164 12s lid; futures,\n\u00a3166   17s  6d.\nLead\u2014 \u00a323 7s <Ja;  futures,   \u00a323 5s.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a326 5s fld; futures,\n\u00a327.\nTORONTO BOARD.\nTORONTO, July 18.\u2014A spurt lu\nToronto Railway nt the afternoon\nsession gave life to an otherwise\ndull, market, today. The close was at\n74, with a net gain of 4%.\nBrazilian had a rally in the afternoon, closing a( 20 %, a gain df 1\npoint. The tractions had much of\nthe,day to themselves.\nNearly all the Victbry and war\nbonds advanced and there wero no\nrecessions..\nRAILWAY EARNINGS\nCanadian Pacific\n\u2022   MONTREAL,     July     18.\u2014Canadian\nPacific railway earnings tor the week\nending   July   14,   1921,   are   $3,39,7,0)9,\na decrease of $4*57,000.\nCanadian   National\nTORONTO, July IS.\u2014Canadian National railway earnings for the week\nending' July  14,   1921,  are  $1,943,10),\na decrease of $57,829.\nCustomer\u2014How much for the suit\nof .clothes if I pay cosh?\nTflilor\u2014Forty   dollars.\nCustomer\u2014How much on  credit?\nTailor\u2014Eighty dollars, half of it\ndown.\"\nVELVET SHIP\nOld Familiar Names Added\nto Trail Smelter's List of\nShipping Alines.   '\nTwo old familiar names have been\nadd6d to this year's list of mines\nshipping to the 'trail smelter, the\npast week, tHe old Highland at Ainsworth, owned by the Consolidated\ncompany, and .the Velvet; of The\nRossland camp, being credited witft\nshipments. The Highland shipped\n38 tons of ore for the week ending\nJuiy 14, No? 1, of Ainsworth, also\nshipped 38 tons, the velvet is credited with 53, tons, and the Surprfs\",\nof the Republic camp, with 63. The\nproperties *of \\ho Consolidated Mining\n& Smelitng company contributed *G170\ntons.\nThe   receipts   at   the   smelter   for\n1921 to date are 221,977 tons,\n,   The receipts In  detail are. as follows:\nCompany  mines  213,416\nNelson-Arrow  Lakes\nGold   Hill,   Taghum .,       83\nMillie Mack, Burton          .12\nRossland\nVelvet, Velvet    ;       ii3\nBoundary -Similkaroeen\nBell, Beaverdell *. *     83\nHorn Silver, Ctyopaka        260\nProvidence,   Greenwood   ......        30\nSally,  Beaverdell .,        33\nSutherland &  Thompson, Beaverdell    '...   7\nSlocan'Ainsworth-Lardeau\nBlack prince,  Slocan  City,...      .67\nBlue Bell, Riondel       1,114\nFlorence,   Princess   Creek    ...      195\nGem, Sandon   ....,         11\nHighland,  Ainsworth   ;         S3\nKrao, Ainsworth  3\nLast Chance,  Sandon    '     47\nL.   T.,   Slocan   City            11\nNeltie h.,  Gerrard            18\nNip and  Tuck,   Sandon         5\nNo.   1,  Ainsworth   (leasers)...      150\nRuth,   Sandon   , ,..;...       \u00a31\nEast   Kootenay\nNorth  Star,  Kimberley    j      111\nParadise,   Lake   Windermere..      317\nWashington\nChatterboy,  Danville    ,       53\nKnob   HHI,   Republic \u2022        395\nSan Poll,  Republic    .'.       47\nSurprise,   Republic       461\n'__ _\u00ab_.\t\nBacon\u2014There's   one   thing   I   can't\nunderstand.\nI Egbert\u2014Tell it to me.\nBacon\u2014\"When a couple get married\nit Is said they become one. But,\nagain, they say it takes two to make\na quarrel.\n>\u2014 \"   \u201e !\t\nWHEAT FALLING\nCHIGAGfe, :july 1$.\u2014Big receipts\nand prosjject^, of cooler weather hnd\na decided bearish effect today on'the\nwheat market. Prices closed heavy,\n3 to 4 cents net lower, with Sent,\n1*91,2? to.$1.27'4, and December $1.31\nto  $1.3114.\nCorn lost,.l% to 'A-M cents and oats\n% to 1. to.1% (o $1.% cents.\nQ.n provisions the outcome varied\nfrom 32& cents decline to 10 cents\nadvanced \u25a0 \u25a0 .      \\\nMONTREAL LIST.\nMONTREAT-.,' July 18.\u2014In a Very\ndull market tpi^ay, about the only\nissue id irt'fus^ sorpe interest 'into\ndealings waft Toronto Railway, which,\ntoward, thfe end of the session, jU'-\nveloped an activity that advanced\nthe issue ttom the opening price og\n70 to ,72%, n gain of 3% pointp.\n\u2022 Such of the pulp and paper companies as were, dealt with displayed\na fractionally easier tone.\nWeaker issues took In Canadian\nGeneral Electric, down 1% points;\"\nCanada Steamships preferred,.which\nsold off 2 points, and Merchant's\nBank, down a point.\n: Bonds were slightly active and\nsteady.\nTotal   sales\u2014Listed,    265G;    bonds,\n$183,000.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE.\nMONTREAL, July 18,\u2014Butter una\ncheese steady.\nCheese^-PIriest easterns, 23 to 24\ncents.\nButter\u2014Choicest i*reamery, 41-\\_ to\n42 cents.\nEggs\u2014Selected, 42 to 43 cents.\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag, carlots. 45 cents,\n(Additional   Markets  on   Page  Four)\nCity Cab Co.\nS. J. TOWGOOD, Proprietor.\nCar 'Meets  all   Trains  arid\nBoats.\nHeavy  and  Light  Transfer\nBusiness.\nContracts, taken  for\nMine Hauling and Packing\nIn any Part of District.\nPiano and Furniture Moving\nPhone 18\nWard Street. P. O. Box 944\nNelson, b. c.\nBurying a Talent of Silver\nFROM earliest days, to bury money has\nteen considered a stupid and blameworthy act; but to put it out at interest\nhat been praised.\nDeposit your money in our Savings Department where it will bear interest at\n..   the best current rates. im\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce.\nHtrnriiinTrrr \u25a0\u25a0\u2022?\nBranches In Kootenay and Boundary at Nelson, Pernio,\nbrook, Creston, Grand Porks, Greenwood, NakuBp, Trail.\nNELSON  BRANCH,  F, C. WHITEHOUSE,  Manager,\nCrari-\nEGG MARKET.\nOTTAWA, July 18:\u2014Thc egg market is inclined to be easier! for low>;r\ngrades.\nToronto\u2014Extras jobbing 4l cents,\nfirsts,   37  to  38 cents.\nMont'real-*,Spec!alSi 44 cents.\nWinnipeg\u2014Straight receipts, 23 to\n24 cents, country points.\nSaskatchewan\u2014Markets   unchanged,\nEdmonton\u2014Easier under heavier\nreceipts\nVancouver\u2014'First;, current receipts,\n40 cents.\nChicago\u2014Easy; current firsts, 28 to\n28% %ents.\nNew York\u2014Extra firsts, 35 ,to 37\ncents.\nBritlslj. cables, prices  shillings por\nv 10    dozen\u2014London!   market    slightly\nfirmer, English, 25 'to 27; Irish, 23 to\n2i%;   Danish, 23 to 26;  Dutch, 26  to\nWINNIPEG GRAIN QUOTATIONS\nOpen   High Low Close\nWheat-\nJuly 185(4    18551 183% 183'4\nOct..    ;:...; 155    : 165 151 150vi\nOats-\nJuly    ...... 53 53%     52% 52<i\nOot.       M%      50%      49% \u25a0\u25a0,!%\n\u25a0   Barley\u2014\nJuly       82%     83 82 82\nOct:,   :  77%     77%      77 7.7\nFlax-\nJuly '    189%    193 188 193'\nOct.*   ..'....19314    197 19114 19\"\nFtye\u2014\nJuly      146       146 145 110\nOct.     .-,;  :..... 12$   ,\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order form\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed nd., one word In each space. Enclose money\norder or check and mail direct to Tho Daily News, Nelson, B. C,\nRate: One and a .half cent a word each insertion, six consocutive insertiooni for price of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c, Each initial, figure, dollar sign, eto,, oounts as ens\nword,   No charge teas than 50 cants, x\ns\n\u2014. fc\nT ^\nPlease published ths above \u2022dvertissment.'...m.......\u201e..\u201e.times for which I enclose S.._\u201e....,_..-,\n*\nName    \u2022*% ., ,'\u25a0,\u00ab,,\u00ab, ,. r,*_\u00bbin.:,wt t-\u00abv.ii. ._mW\u00ab \u2022b\u2014m'. s h>v>t. M.T*si7M'i af-, v \u25a0 \u2022nrsTs-t-r*-*. .it\u00ab a >\u2022\u25a0_\u25a0\u2022\u00abm\u00bb\n\u25a0^      Addreai    \u2022,,,,, ,-,\u25a0\u25a0_\u00bb.vrv.imiM,;.,\u00ab\u00ab.-..._n~..-tfM,.BT\u00bbr.Trr.v\u00abs \u25a0+,; iiir...Th. .v.i..itnrriTW. VT7.-t-t^wm, ,ttm\nIf desiredr replies may be addroasod to Box Numberi at Tha Daily  News Officer,    If replies in\nto be mailed enclose 10o axtra to cover cost af past ago and allow five worda extra far box number,\nUsed Articles            ,g\\\n_+*s~~_J-_ar_api\nHelp Wanted\nRed Estate               \u25a0 .\nirICQITIPn\nPositions Wanted\nRooms .                    \\M\nlUaJajlllvU\nLost and Found\nBoard                    -     ,\n1 ;                 '  _\u25a0_        \u2014\nLivestock\nTo Rent                 \/lil\nXWtOfT tQ.tt_*\nfj    Machinery\nBoats ana               r\\W\nvuriioi\n|C    Farm Produce\nAutomobiles\n_\n^r    Timber and Mines\nII- Iftde Help WanteJ^\nWANTED\u2014A s'\"\u00a5i\u2122r^n\u00bbHS^^]ackamitii\naiid fiorHeshoer. O. Opsahl, Trail,\n-B^C.  (4083)\nWANTED AT ONCE-nCapable shipper\nto take position a*s Ahtppei- and yard\nforeman, Heply titatlng experience\nand wages in the first Instance to\nBox 4009, Daily News. (400D)\n11 Female .Help Wanted\nWAN'TED^^ounK^-i^^\nby . letter    or    jierson   to  proprJetoi'\nCommercial   hotel,  Creston,   B.  C.\n_______ WW\nWANTED\u2014Capnble woman or girl to\nhelp housework and care ol child.\n-HlBs\/Crobsdklle,   Kaslo.        __$}\nEXPERIENCED waitress.  Apply Grand\nhotel.  (4023)\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nPOSITION wanted by woman with\nsmalt child, housekeeping town or\nCountry. Apply Box 4150 Dully\nNews.      ^ (tlfil))\n\"WANTED\u2014By    young:    woman,  house-\nwork.    Apply Box \u00ab5h (4128]\nEXPERIENCED lady cook and son 17\ndesire work. Apply Box 4115, Dally\nNews. (llljr)\n34    Teachers Wanted\ninvited for principal, male, and ii\njunior grade tenctier. Copies of credentials, with age, class, etc, musi\naccompany application to Neil Tat-\ntne.  Secretary,  Sandon,  B.  C.   (415,1)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced senior teacher\nfor Canyon ;City school; salary $1000,\nannualy conditional'bonus $100, Apply tb E. Van Acknreh, Secretary, P.\nO. Erickson, B- C.  \u25a0 * (4123)\nWANTED\u2014Teacher for Alice Siding\nschool, near Creston. Apply W.\nMathery, Ci-eston, B,. C. (.4122)\n33 Fruits and Vegetables\nLUSCIOUS Royal Anne cherries can he\nshipped you or direct to your prairie\nfriends for $2 per 20-pound crate, cash\nwith order. Express charges extra.\nMiddlemass Bros., Rock Island, Ar-\nrow Lalccs, B- C. (4082)\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished cottage on\nlalffi shore below ship yard. AJso 1\nfurnlshod housekeeping rooth. J. 10.\nAnnable.  ' (4131)\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nFOR  KALl'J\u2014Motor   canoe,   $200;   18-ft.\n. launch, reversed Bear, ?17r>; \u201e_-ft.\nlaunch, S200. All In good order. Bargain. Masters, Waterfront, Plione\n19GL. '    \u25a0     \u25a0 '._________ (tlliU)\n22      Miscellaneous\nACCOMMODATION lu , private house\nrequired by married couple with little girl for two weeks during August. Cooking conven.enee if possible. Apply E. E. Dutton, 047 7th\nStreet,' South, Lethbridge, Alberta.\n (4153)\n\u202223 Property For Sale^\n'^O^Acres\u201475 per cent plougliable, 20\nacres-black soil, one acre_ cultivated;\nlog hoiiSe and stable; wagon road.\nPrice $27.50 per acre, including team,\nharness, wagon, cow, poultry and some\nfurniture.-\nv   M.E.DILL\n608 Ward Bt.i next to Canada Drug Store\n\u25a0      .    \u25a0         (4128)\nFOR SALE\u2014Bargain, 3 acres, 12-year-\nold orchard, lake frontage, north\nshore, two jnil\u00abH from post toff.ee.\nWill build hpuso to suit buyer. Ab-\nply P. O. Box 1147. (4130)\nIMPROVED RANCH\u201440 acres, \u2022$\u25a0%\nacres cleared. Good bottom land, no\nrock; good timber; 3-roomed house;\ngood district, close to railway, school,\netc. \/Price $2500, on terms. R. 430.\nIMPROVED. FRUIT RANCH\u20145\nacres, close to town; 108 fruit trees,\nnearly 2000 sets raspberries, 500\nstrawberry plants, water piped, . [i-\nripmod house plastered, stone foUn-\n(Ritioii, chicken house, etc. Price\n$4000, on terms.    R. 283.     .\nHUGH   W.   ROBERTSON.\nWard Street. Phono 08. Nelson, B. C.\n(410fi)\nFOR SADE-\u2014iSeven-roomed houSe, best\nview and situation Kaslo; e.ght lots,\ncity light and water. Particulars ap-\nply Miss Ihtmilton, Knslo. (408O)\nSlSVEN acres of lane. \u00abU Falrview,\nframe building 22x28, ahed lGxl6 and\nono 12x40. Will be flold cheap. Apply   to   A.   Lapointe,   Queen's   hotel.\n .*    .*-.. 'JMli)\n45    Property Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To rent or take carefof for\nthe winter months, small, lakes.de\nproperty iu the Kootenays, feW-acres\nand small bouse, with possible view\nto purchase later. ;P. H. Gentleman,-\nGleiehen,   Altn. ,. \u25a0 .ll*1*0'0\n17   ^j!|o^i\u00abes^aJTrted\nW^Tli.O^To^eiT^^ mhTr    1,\nsmall   fUfhlshed   house,   close   In.     Box\n4101,  .Dally  News. '.__ \\__+ ___:{1011\n18 Miscellaneous lot Sale\nCH KAV,     FOR^XA^T^NlitThn^    Cash\nregister, new.    Box 4139, Daily News.\n- (4130)\nGOOD piano for sale, $200 cash. Call\nat 315 Victoria or phone Mr. F.\nWheeler. 285L. (4110)\nFOR KAI.E\u2014Cows, hellers, refrigerator,\ndump cart, road scraper,- brush\nplough, rods for silo, two telephones,\none wagon brake, new. J. J. Cam poll,\nR. H.  No. 1, Tel. 402I-.3. 10$T)\nFOR SALE\u2014HouaeboCu Apply 513\nVernon street. (3955)\nRriRELLA    corsets.\nPhone  3C4R2.\nMrs, T. Kennedy,\n(38S3)\nSHINGLES\u2014Buy  them  now  from  Na-\nkusr>   Shingle   Mill,   Box   1,   Nakusp,\n__B. C. i_     (31)68)\nLADY with -two children would tiki-\nboard and room at home or ranch\non lake shore. Apply Box 111!). Dnlly\nNews. (414!!)\nLivestock   sells   quickly   when   lt   is\nadvertised ln these columns.\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED    and    light\nrooms.    ,507   Carbonate.\nt4 ir.ii)\nAdvertising In theso columns Is inexpensive and result getting. iy_' cents\na word per insertion ot* six inikertions\nfor the price of four when cash ls paid\nin advance. ,\nlSPOULTjRYANDEGGS^\nl-'Olt SAI.K\u2014\"Twenty-six\" Leghorn pullets, 9 White Wyandotte pullet.s,\nboth lots April batched. Your choice\nfor SI each, $30 for both lots. J. D.\nMackay, Thrums.  B, 0., .        (ll>\u00ab)\nl'Olt HATiT5'---Hi\" H.: fl. -White Legh'orns\"'\n16 White W.VaiulotleS. Ml yotfnB\neliieltetis I'l-oin Ti to til weeks old,\nAV'ill sell cheap, leaving f,or iirairle.\nNeis   lialversoii.  Shoreacres, ll.  c.\n (41111)\n20   Livestock For Sale\niAi,T3\u2014Thoroughbred eoeker siian-\niippies, darlt reds, li week's old.\ness Hox r.,'i.'i, Greenwood, B. c\nFOR KAI.10\u2014Kir.\nral.bils, PlenilRll\nMaWer, Nelson,\nUK,    healthy\nGiants, ii\u201e- ei\nynuiiK\nFOR   KAf.H\u2014Three   young   .lersey-Ayr-\nsliiro cows to choose from,  price $sr.\n. eaeh.    V. O. Box 111114. 11117)\nSELL\nYOUR\n\u25a0i\u2014imni\nRAGS\nThe Daily News\nJob Department\nWill pay 5 cents\na pound {or clean\ncotton rags.\n48\nPersonal\nTHE great object in llie ta me Sec\nof Happiness. Send your birth d,\nmonth, year and one dollar, to Jat\n. .\u25a0 Dunstone, Private Box lllo, -Vane]\nver, B. C. Answer sent by registe\nmail, (30\n28 Miscellaneous Wanted\nWOtlLD   Invest   one   thousand   doiiiL\nwith   services'   in   some   paying  bill\nnoss. i Address Box 4151, Da.ly Neil\n\u2022 (411\nFOR adoption, a healthy baby boy al\ngirl seven months old. Box 411\nDaily News.  (__f\n29      Lost and Found\n1.0ST OR STRAYED\u2014Upstanding dal\ndapple, gray horse, clipped mane al\nforeloqk; weight 14001 last seen wear\nIng small bell. Phone or write A. I\nChurches.  Waneta, B. C. (4081\nBusiness and ProtessiouM\nDirectory\nir. B. XITXO, -\nGun,  Lock, Cycle and  General  Reiial\nWork.    412 Ward Street, Nolson. I\n  .    (38l|\nLodge*\nNELSOM  LODGE  No.   6,  B.  P. O.  ]|\nMeets 410M, Baker St., first and thll\n^Thursday. (3991\nAccountants.\n3.  IT.   JuAWBHNCE,\nAccountant-Auditor. _\nBookkeeping,      Financjal      Ktatomentl\neto.   Phone 29, McDonald Jam Bldul\nBox 1030. (398if\nW.   H.   PAIDIKO,\nChartered Accountant.\nBank of Montreal'Chamber*.\nRossland. B. C. (30SJ\nBoots & Shoes\nttUI   KEE   (t   OO.\nBoots and Shoes Made to Order.   Bl\npairing,    012  FRONT ST.    \u25a0    (3981\nFlorists\nGHTZZELLE'S  GREENHOUSE, Nel\u00aboJ\nCut flowers and floral designs.      f\n(3984\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Box AHOi, Nel\nson, B. C.   Standard westorn charges\n^_^^__V (39911\nSecond Hand Dealers\nTHE A^RK pays cash for seeond-hanJ\nfurniture, stoves. '60S Vernon. FHonl\nWl. '   \u25a0     '   \u25a0'    \u25a0     \u2022   -'(39881\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHO___A__|\nGrocers and . Provision Merchant*!\nImporters of Tens, Coffees, Splceer\nDried Fruits Staple and Fancy Grol\nceries.    NELSON. B, C.      . \u25a0   (3984'\nArchitects\nV. EMMS  BEAD,  M. B. O. \u25a0\u2022 A,\nARCHITECT. \u25a0        ,\nBay Avenue. Trail,,B. Ol\n(3983)|\nEngineers\nB. D. bawson, a. O. te, a.\ncivil and Mining Englneir\nKASliO, B. O. (398.)|\n&tefctlBros.jBliP(\/ej|^\nHEUSOR, *B. O.\nOIVII,   AHD   MIHIIIO   ENOIHEEM\nll. C, Alberta, aha Dominion   \t\nHAND SUEVEYOBS\nCrown Grant Agents.       Slue Printing,\n(3981)\nA. t. McCDXLOCH\nHydranllo Engineer\nProvincial sand Survoyor\nBaker St., Nelson, B. C.\n(3978)1\nAuctioneers\n.   \u25a0      w. oiiz_,sb\nAnotioneer, Appraiser, Valuator i\n?i.\u00b0 w \"Sll. \"T'TO'8'y or at TuotloaJ\n219 Ward Street, Phonl ffl\n(3977)|\nBarristers\n-\u2014i ~*\nE. G. MATTHEW\n-   Barrister, Solloltor. Notary. Eto.     i\nBox 1078. Alan Block? NelSS p\". Ml.\n*\" \u25a0' i (398Q)]\n.      Funeral Directors\nD. J.  ROBERTSON,  P.DJ3. & E., 101!\nVictoria   Street.     Phono   2931   Night\nPhono 167J. 9     ,   .     (3979)\nBRINGING UP, FATHER\n\u25a0>     *;:\u25a0 *, Aj|ir*.   \u2022.%*     *;:<\n\u00bb!\"       *t*\nBy George McMavu\n___^\n4*'*\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 19, 1921.\nt~\\ \u25a0\nNews of Sport\nWHITE 1 WIN\nI\nfanks Punish Tigers; Babe\nHits-Record Homer; Indians Win Pitchers' Duel.\nAMERICAN    LEAGUE\nWon Lost Pot.\nCleveland     55 31 ,M0\nNew   York    53 31 b31\nWashington      47 44 .516\nDetroit     .41 48 4'U\nBoston        ,  39 *46 459\nSt.   Louis      39 48 .448\nChicago 38 .48 .442\nPhiladelphia     33 50 .333\nDETROIT, July 18.\u2014Babe Ruth hit\nhis longest home run of the season.\nhere today, sending thc ball over\nthe. corner of thc center field .fence\nin thefeighth inning of a game that\nNew York won eas ly lo to 1. Tho\nball hit the ground 560 feet from\nthe home plate. It wus Ruth's Wth\ncircuit   drive  this  year.       Tl.   11.  K.\nNew York    10    13      \".\nDetroit'  t     6     4\nBatteries\u2014Mays and S ehan j;\nEhmke. Cole and Manion,\nST. LOUIS. July 18.\u2014An error by\nCallaway, a hit batsman, two passes\nand three hits in the eighth today\ngave St- Louis four runs and a 4 to\n2  victory  over  Philadelphia.\nR.   H.   E.\nPhiladelphia      '  2    U      1\nSt.   Louis    \u00ab.. 4     5     1\nButter'es\u2014Harris, Keefe and per-\nkins; Vangilder, Shocker and S.v-\neroid.\nCHICAGO, July li\u2014Chicago 'onti\n[both games of a double-header from\nBoston today, winning the first ii to\n4 in 10 innings and the second 4 to 3.\nFirst   game\u2014 R.   H,   ;-].\n'Boston       4    ly     0\nChicago   5    13      3\nBatteries\u2014Bones and Ruel; Kerr\nami  Schalk.\nSecold game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nBoston   3      7      \u25a0'\u25a0\nChicago        I    Vi      0\nButteries\u2014Russell, Kerr and Waiters;   Hodge and  Yaryan. *>\nCLEVELAND,   July   18.\u2014Cleveland\ndefeated Washington 3 to 2 today hi\na. pitchers' battle between Sotheron\nund. Mogridge, R.  H, E.\nWashington  2     6     2\nCleveland  3     8     1\nBatteries\u2014Mogridge   and   Plcinich;\nSotherqn and Nunamaker.\nT:\nBraves Slug Better Than\nCardinals; Reds Win\nTwice; Cubs Beat Dodgers\nNATIONAL LEAOUK\nWon.\nLost.\nP.C.\nPittsburg   f.55\n29\n.003\nNew York' ,. 52\n3D\n.035\nBoston    47\n33  \u2022\n.538\nBrooklyn    .43\n43\n.500\nSt. Loula   41\n42\n.454\nChicago 3G\n45\n.414\nCincinnati    32\n60\n.390\nPhiladelphia    23\n57\n.238\nNEW YORK, July 18.\u2014Tho New\nYork Giants scored their second victory over Pittsburg in tlie pn-sent\nseries,  12 to  1.    Score: R.   H.'  E.\nPittsburg       1      8      2\nNew  York    12     12       1\nButteries\u2014Morrison, Glazncr, Ra-\ndin and Schmidt, Warwick; Nehf a:i.J\nSmith.\nBROOKLYN,     July     18.\u2014Chlcugo\nmade   It   three   out     of    four     from\nBrooklyn by winning, 8 to 1.    Score:\nR.   H.   I_\\\nWingo;   Hurgrave,  Ring and  Bruggy.\nSecond  game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nCincinnati    9    11      1\nPhllude'phia    5      9      3\nBatteries\u2014Eller, Coumbe and Hurgrave;' Baumgartner, Sedgwick and\nPeters.\nChicago   . . .\n 8\n12      3\nBrooklyn  ..\n 1\n11      0\nBatteries\u2014\nPonder\nand   Da\n'y;  rtu-\ntile, Mitchell\nBOSTON.\nand M\nHer.\n\u2014Boston\nlily 18\ndefeat-\nnl  St.  Louis,\n14   to\n8,   in  a\nslugging\nnatch   today\nScor\n,:     '     R\nII.   13.\nSt.  Lou's   . .\n    8\n13       1\nBoston   \t\n 14\nIS      1\nBatteries-\nWalker\nDaily,\nPeriled,\nNorth,   RlVjo\ne  and\nDllhoofei\n;  Scott,\nt'lllinglm ond\nGibson.\nPHILADELPHIA, July IS.\u2014Cincinnati took both ends of a double\nheader from hihtdelphia today by\nth\" same scores, 9 to 5.    Score:\nFii*st game\u2014 R;   il.   B.\nCincinnati    9*   11       1\nPhiladelphia    5      8      2\nButteries\u2014Marquard,  Donohue and\nFERNIE SUPREME\nIts Beer Has No Equal\nIt has been in evidence the past few weeks us\nthe most popular appetizer of the day.\nWhy swelter in the hot sun, with your throat\nparched from thirst?\n\u2022We are in a position to supply you, THROUGH\nYOUR VENDOR this decidedly cooling, wholesome, and palatable drink in any quantity.\nWe have just bottled a brew of ESPECIALLY\nHOPPED BEER, which has had our attention\nfor. the past three months. We can guarantee\nthis brew to satisfy the palates of those who\ndesire a medium hop flavored beverage. It has\nall the superior qualities of our other bievvs,\nwhich have stood the tests fur so long.\nWhen ordering, do not overlook our PORTER\nIN PINT BOTTLES.\n#\nYou need this in your home. 11 has all the\nnutritious qualities of the greatest body-builder\nknown. We recommend this 'as an invigorator\nand tissue builder.\nPHONE   96.\nDRAWER    1175\nTHE FERNIE-FORT STEELE BREWING CO., LTD.\n'Also Manufacturers of AERATED WATERS.\nFDR m PRIZE\nCanadian Second . in First\nStage; Private Rae Wins\nBronze Medal.\nBISLEY, July 18\u2014(Canadian Associated Press)\u2014Major Crowe, of\nCJtielph. came second today In thu\nfirst stage of the King's prize competition, the blue ribbon bisley feature, with an aggregate score of\n100 out. ol a' possible 105. He\nscored 34 on the 600 yard range and\n33 each on the 200 and 500 yard\nranges. Thc spec'al prize of a\nbronze medal awarded to the competitor having the highest aggregate\nscore in the f rst stage, went to\nPrivate J. P. Rae. formerly Of the\nSeutCsh lilfk's, who registered 10L\nPrivate Rae has been coming to\nUisley for 30 years, but only' reached\nthe final stage of the Kina's competition last year. . His score was\n33 at 200, 33 at 500, and 33 at 1i00\nyards. Two Others besides Major\nCrowe scored 100: Capt. Miller, Notts\nDerby, aud Corporal Douglas of the\nSherwood Foresters, hut Major Crowe\nscored h gher than either of them\nat tlie longest range, He made aU\nhulls eye at 000 yards 'except tlie'\nfifth shot which was an Inner.\nSergeant G. M. Enislie^ Toronto, also\nscored'31 ut 600 yard* dropping to\nan inner on . tbe third shot. His\nsou of victoria, was given, a miss\nfor his third shot al GOO yards, but\n\u25a0he scored 30 witli sis hulls eyes, his\naggregate   U'illg   94.\nThe second stage of the K'ng'a\nprize competition will be shot on\nWednesday and the filial stage on\nThursday, The second stage will be\nopen only to the highest 300 competitors in  the first stage.\nTWILIGHT LEAGUE.\nSASKATOON, July 18.\u2014 Whinipog\ndrew levol for tlio leadership oC tho\nleague with Suskutooii tonight; win-\nning the t'ii-Mt game of the series in\n10 innings. 7 to \u00bb. Score':    R.   H.   li.\nWinnipeg 7       0      5\nSaskatoon         5    14      5\nbatteries\u2014Slaughter and Mi'ligan;\ndoer  and   (Jrabowski.\nt.'.M.OAItV,\nJuly.\nIS.\u2014Calya-y\nBrunks defeated  Regitlti hurr  tonis'it\n\u25a0i_ to   3. R.   1-1    IS.\nrtpgiiTn  s   ii    i\nCnlagry       6    11      3\nBatteries\u2014Nofziger and ynyUe;.\nTh'jllandor   and   Kllhullen.\nKUMONTON, July lS.~iKskim.is\nwont on a batting spree and overcame a li-run load held by tho Moose\nJaw Millers, winning the gamu 8 to 7.\nIt.   11.   K\nMoose Jaw *. .  7      X      1\nEdmonton     .'   S    11      il\nliatterles.--Huser and Shandling!\nI oak,.',   DOttgllis  and   Gleasou.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBaltimore   5.  Toronto   I.\nNewark  (i, Buffalo. 7.\n' Reading 11-9. Syracuse  10-t.\nJersey  Cily-Ftochester,   mm.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nIndianapolis 2t Milwaukee 9.\n.Columbus L Minneapolis 5.\nLouisville 6.  Kims-is City  D.\nToledo  (i.  St,   Paul   5.\nHigh Rifle Scot-ex.\nREGINA. July IH.\u2014High\" scoring\nfeatured the first day of the provincial rifle compel!tion, which opened\nUs three-day meet here  today.\nThe winners today of tho principal\nevents were:\nCity of Moose Jaw prize, H. Shil-\nlingford; Saskatoon prize, R. Hearii,\nwho also won the city of Prince Albert prize.'\nKILLARNEY BELLE\nOutstanding Feature at Brighouse Park Races; Pays\n$52.90 on Pari-Mutuel.\nVANCOUVER. July 18.\u2014KUarney\nBtjlte romped home first in the Alberta four-furlong event at Brfg-\nhuuse park th's afterpoon and paid\n$52.90 for $2, Her victory was the\nfeature df tho day's races hero. Mrs.\nVern Cloud's Emma Williams won\nthe Edmonton purse of $350.\nSummary\nFirst ruco, Edmonton purse, $350,\ntwo-year-olds, four furlongs\u2014Emma\nWilliams, won; Little Florence, second; Captain Clover, third. Time,\n:49   1-5.\nSecond race, Alberta purse $350,\nWestern Canada bred horses, all\nages, four furlongs\u2014Klllarney' Belle,\nfirst; Bee's Wing, second; Listal,\nthird.    Time,   :45  1-5.\nThird race, Hastings claiming\npurse $'100, 3-year-olds and up, 5%\nfurlongs\u2014John' Jr., won; El Sahio,\n*-*e-onu\\; ,Carl Roberts,, third. Tlmo,\n1:07 3-5.\nFourth race, Vancouver claiming\npurse* $500, 3-year-olds and up, one\nmile\u2014.lake Senas, won; Neg, second;\nLouis Lachman,  third.    Time.r_-.4l.\nFifth race, Nanaimo claiming purse\n$350, 3-year-olds and up 0 furlongs\u2014Review, won; Kitty Cheatham,\nsecond Thrills, th'rd.    Time, 1:14 2-5,\nSixth' race, Victoria claiming purse\n$350. 3-year-olds and up, 5 furlongs\n\u2014Elmer K., won; Helen Hayes, second: Royal Irish, third. Time,\n1:01   3-5.      '\nSeventh race, Westminster claiming\npurse $100. 3-year-olds and up, c'ght\npounds below the scak\\ npn-winners\nof two races since June. 1 allowed\nthree pounds, non-winners of a race\nsince that date allowed five pounds,\none mile\u2014M'ss Wells, won;' Prlnoo\nDirect, second; Mannikin II, third,\nTime,  1:41   3-5.\nProposals Submitted to Government ; Three Annual\nFishing Contests.\nVANCOUVER, July 18.\u2014A new\nset 'of angling regulations^ has Just\nbeen drawn up by the.B. C. Angler.-)'\nussoelat'on and submitted to the provincial and Dominion fisheries authorities   for  approval.\nThe U00 members of the association\nhave endorsed the new regulations,\nunder which it is proposed to hold\nthree fishing contests this year, th.1\nclujj shield go ng to the man with\nthe heaviest aygregato of fish i*i\nthe three days.\nThe Serpentine will he fished ou\nAugust 4, the Nleomekel hi September and the Salmon In October.\nBadges find prizes -will be given fur\nlhe best catches in each day's CiOii-\nlesl.\nIt is expected that approximate'v\nlei) tuiglers will compete, Steps are\nbeing taken to have a competit o:i\nnext year open  to all comers.\nSAINTS WILL TACKLE\nLEAGUE LEADERS TODAY\nDesireau;\nC. pCam|i-\nI. ' Spears\n.Today's senior city soccer league\ngame will see -St. Saviour's eleven\nti<- Into the McLearies in a desperat-'\nattempt to break through tlie Macs'\nwinning streak and restore the league\nleadership to th\" Saints. It should\nbe a worth whilei battle, for lhe\nMacs are putting on the'r strongest\nlineup aud intyud to go all out to\nkeep their grip on the premier position. Play Will commence at six\no'clock.\nThe teams will be:\nMcLearies\u2014Coal, L.\nhacks, J. Wolverton and\nhell; halves, \"J. Rothery,\nand A. Wallach; forwards, J. McDonald, O. Talbot, K Bowkett, C.\nBernard  and   G.  Keatley. ,\nSt. Saviour's\u2014Goal, S. .Bostpek;.\nbacks, G, Atkinson and C. Hartland;\nhalves, H. Wheeler, A. Bartholomew\nand M. Bath; forwards, A. Bolton,\nW. Cartright, H. Vaughan, J. Fraser\nnnd V.. Graves.\n^ Referee\u2014J.   Draper.\nGOLFERS ROLL UP?0R\nOPEN CHAMPIONSHIPS\nWASHINGTON, July. IS.\u2014Practically all of the 260 golfers entered\nfor the United States open golf\nehamp'onshlps to be played over the\ncourse of the Columbia Country club\nhere tomorrow had reported at tho\nclub today.   \u25a0'\u25a0\nThe first hulf of the qualifying\nround will be played with the opening of the tournament tomorrow and\ntlie second half Wednesday. Tho Tl\nbest scores and ties will play 72\n.holes Thursday and Friday, the player with the lowest 72 holes card total  winning  the championship.\nPRE INVENTORY\nCLEAN-UP\n***. __\nBeing the accumulation of oddments during our July Sale. Former price\nforgotten. These are now marked so low that they will sell on sight before\nour inventoury is taken. '\nYes, You Men Have a\nChance, Too.      <\nOUT-OF-TOWN^\nTOMERS: '\nWe aro anxious to give you a\nchance to share in this Carnival\nof Barnains. We will return you\nyour money in full if either of\nthese garments fail to please\nyou.\nOne   only   Green   Poplin\nsize     30;'     regular\nClean-up\nprice  '..\nOne only Taupe Tricotine, hand\nembroidered Dress, with satin\nunderskirt in same shade. Size\n36, Regular $55\nCleanup   for   ..\nNavy  Srt'ge   Dress,  embroidered\nskirt.    Size 36. Regular. $47X0.\nClean-up\nfor    \t\nOne only Plaid Silk Skirt, regular  $10.00.\nClean-up for\nOno only Accordion Pleated\nSkirt, in navy serge. Regular $\u00bb,50.\nClean-up \t\nRemember,    this    is   not   old\nstock.     Every   garment   Is   new\n-this  year.    It   is  only   following\n\u25a0 up   our   policy   of   cleaning   up\nleach   season.\nT1 All Wool Serge Dresses, only\ntwo of those left:\n38.\nDress,\n$23.00.\n$12.00\n$32.50\nembroidered\negular. $47.50.\n$25.00\nSkirt, reg-\n$4.95\nn    Pleated\ngo.    Regu-\n$5.95\n$15.0(\\\nBlue    Serge\ni.       Regular,\n$22.00,\nicotiuc  Dress.\nm?up\"'. $18.50\nOne   only   Black   Serge,   size\nRegular   $30.00.\nClean-up ...J\t\nOne    only    Navy    Blue    Serge\nDress.     size     3U.       Regular,\n* 12.00.\nClean-un   \t\nOne only  Sand  Tricotine Dr\nSize' 30.    It\n$15 00.\n.This ii a very handsome\n\u25a0 dress. Don't let the low price\nscare you. Come mid see it.\nRight up lo date.\nOne only Navy Serge Dress.\nSize lfi. Trimmed beads and\nsand      embroidery.      Regular,\n$3y.5o.\nClean-up\nThis  is a  real -beauty.\nWomen\"*!,   and-  Misses'   Wbi\nGabardine   Wash  Skirts:\n$3.50   Skirts\n$19.50\nfor\n$2.50\n$3.00\n$3.25\n. J I.Oil   .Skirts\nfur    \t\n$.1.50   Skirts\ntor   .'\t\nEvery   Skirt   liew   and   goutl\nsty!....\nGet   another   Mitklv\nwant  il.    A table\nor with colored\nIars.   Clean-iiji\nTl\\,r .\u25a0inter .of eeonpaiy is our\nRemnant Table,' It has lowered\nlhe rust of living for hundreds\nnf pontile.. Has it helped you'.'\nIf .not, come down today.\nVol\nlull iu.\n'^$1.95\n$30.00\nAll the balance of our Suits at\na fraction of their former\nprice.     AJ1    our   Navy   Blue\n[ Serges and. Fancy Tweed\nMen's Suits, formerly selling\nup to $45.0.0 each, Your\nchoice, anywhere  ...\nMen's Suits formerly selling for\nr*.::!*\u2122:.. $20.00\nNo more or no less. Former\ncost is completely forgotten.\nPick where you like. All new\n1921 models.\nAll Suits arc well made and are\nour regular stock. Perhaps\nyou have Just been looking\nat once selling for $45 00.\nWell, sir, today you can\nbuy It\nfor   \t\n$30.00\nTavy  Serge\nA   clean-\n$7.50\nAn   extra   pair\nPants.     Yes,\nup  at,\npair \t\nWill make your old suit look\nlike new.\nDo you wear Overalls in your\ngarden or at your work? Your\nchoice of anything in the\nstore, Peabody's, Monarch,\nBulldog or Twin\nButte    _ \u2014,..\nMen's Khaki Pants, some big,\nroomy fellows, have waists up\nto 40 und 42. Some have\ndouble knees  and\nA few Men's Combination Overalls,  khaki  or\" blue,\nA   suit   \t\n$2.25\nsome big,\n\u2022 waists up\nSome   have\n$2.95\nLtion Over-\n$4.00\nSee the Window Display\nof 98c Bargains.\nAll  goods sold  from  the  windows.       New    bargains    added\ndaily.      Today's    bargains    include:\n5  Yards Curtain Scrim\nfor\t\nmnel-\n3   Yards Striped Pi\n\u2022   ette   for    ...\niu Colored  Dress\n-   fur   \t\nI   Ijftrge size  Writing\nPads for ....'\t\nEnglish Wash Voiles, ex-\n.quislle   designs,   yard..\nij   Yards   White  Turkish\nTowelling,   15  in.   wide\n3   Yards   Heavy   White\nTowelling, IS inches\nwide,   for  \t\nChildren's  White  Cotton   Stockings;  sizes up  to   O'\/ii-    Regular   3!le   pair.\nSale price,  3  pairs for..\n98c\n98c\n98c\n98c\n98c\n98c\nTurkish\n98c\n50c\nCarpets at Pre-War\nPrices.\nIn order to make our-stocktaking as easy as possible we\nhave repriced our entire stock\nof Rugs and Carpets . at price\nthat prevailed before the Great\nWar.\nPRINTED HEMP CARPETS\nSize DxO.    Regular $25.00. Clearance\nprice    ....\nSize     9xl0V_.     Regular     $32.50.\nClearance\nprice   \t\nSize      9x12.,     Regular      $37.50.\nClearance\nprice   \t\nKlearflax Linen Rugs, tho carpet that will stand the hardest wear:\nSize 6x9, plain colors, green,\nrose or brown; regular $45.00.\nClearance\nprice \t\nSize 9x9, brown only; regular\n$59.50. Clearance i\nprlco ....\nSize 9xl0!\u00a3, green or brown;\nregular $85.00. QAH Kf\\\nClearance price.... \u00abDtc i \u2022Oji\nOne only Brussels Rug, in rose\npink colorings; ideal for bedroom, size 9x9; regular $45.00.\nClea ranee\nprice\t\nEnglish       Axminster      Carpets,\nseamed and seamless, all good\ncolors and   designs:\nSize 6-9x9 feet.    Regular $85.00.\nClearing\nat  \t\nSize   6x9   feet.\nClearing\nat  -\t\nSize    6-9xlOV_-\nClearing\nat\t\nSize   7-6x9   ft.\nClearing,\n$17.50\nfular    $32.50.\n$20.00\nular      $37.50.\n$25.00\njgs, tho car-\nnd thc hard-\nolors, green,\negular $45.00.\n$27.50\ninly;   regular\n$39.50\nl   or   brown;\n$47.50\nRug, in rose\ndeal for bed-\n\u25a0egular $45.00.\n$32.50\nut\nSize    9x1)'   Ct.\nClearing\nat .\nSine   9x9   feel.\nClearing\nat  -..\nSize   9x9   feet.\nClearing\nat\t\nSize 9X10M.-.. ft.\nClearing\nat .\nSize   9xloyi\nClearing\nat   :\t\nSize   9x12   ft.\nClearing\nat .\nSize   9x12   fi\nClearing\nat \t\nSlzo   9x12   ft\nClearing\nnt :.:\t\nRemember,\nmoney   back\n$49.50\nRegular  $49.70.\n $40.00\nRegular   $59.75.\n$47.50\nRegular  $69.50.\n$45.00\nRegular     $65.00.\n$47.50\nRegular    $95.00.\n$67.50\nRegular   $75.00..\n$47.50\nRegular  $85.00.\n$57.50\nRegular  $110.00.\n   75,50\nRegular   $95.00.\n$65.50\nRegular   $75.00.\n$47.50\nRegular   $,125.00.\n $87.50\nsatisfaction   or  your\nevery   time.\nft.\nHudson* Baa (fomjjattu.\nINCORPORATED        fB70\nL\nColumn-glit Clip Contvstaiits Leave.\nREGINA, July 18.\u2014The Post football club, winners oK Saskatchewan\nhi the Connaught cup playoff, leave\ntomorrow night for Winnipeg, where\non Wednesday and Saturday they\nmeet the Fort Rogue team in the\nelimination series,\nGeneral Sherman's troops can't *i\noff more than 10,000 horses -ind\nanules on the march \"from Atlar.t i\nto the sea\/' ,\nWorld Champions to Battle\nat Chevy Chase, Md.; Canadians Competing.\nWASHINGTON, July .18\u2014International interest, in golf, which was at\nfever heat during the recent British^\nchampionships on English- and Scottish, links, will ho renewed tomorrow\nwhen several prominent professionals\nentered from' Great Britain and all\nof the leading American \"pros,\" as\nwell as a few of the best United]\nStates amateur players, begin the\nqualifying round, in this year's open\nchampionship Um'nlament on the links\nof the Columbia Country club, Chevy j\nChase, Md. Lust year this even was\ndecided over the course of the Inverness club, Toledo, O., and Edward Ray,\nrepresenting the Oxley club of England, was the winner with a score of\naP5 for 72 holes. There were 265 entries last year, but this record mark\nwill not be touched no far as entrants go in numbers for the 19211\ntitle,-as thu field may not exceed 200\nplayers.\nWhile Itay has not cunie to defend\nhis title, George Duncan and Abe\nMitchell, the British professionals, will\neudeavdr to , duplicate his victory,\nwhile- Joe Klrkwood and his side\npartner, Victor J. East, the Austral-\nIan professionals^ also will try to an-\n;nex the American championship and\npossibly Thomas D. Armour, the\nSeotlish amateur, will arrive in time\nto make a similar effort, Several\nCanadian players -are on lhe list and\nfrom every a*igle the United States i\nQolf association's \"open\" of. 1921\n(lives promise of furnishing some of\nthe best golf ever witnessed on an I\nAmerican  links. I\nSensational 'play  is  expected  from]\nsiu'h* a representative gathering of\nexperts but it might be asking too\nmuch to even hope for a repetition\nof the thrills whieh attended the tump lis triple tie that occurred In 1*913\nat the Country club's links, Brdokline,\nMasw., when Francis Outmet defeated Harry Vardo'u and Edward Uay\niu   the  play  off.\nHalf of Lhe big field will play In\nthe quMlfying round of 18 holes tomorrow and the other half will make\n;i .similar round next day. The leading iii and all ties will continue on\nThursday and Friday, playing 36 holes\neach   day   to   decide   the   winner.\nFollowing isa list of the winners of\nthe event since the initial contest in\n181)5:\n1895\u2014Newport, R. T . if. Rawlins,\nNewport club. 173 strokes,  36 holes'.\n18!I6\u2014Shlnnecock Hills, James I*'ou-\nMh,  Chlcugo,  152  strokes,  36  holes.\n1897\u2014Chicago, G. I. I., Joo Lloyd,\nfclssex,   162   strokes,   36   holes.\n1898\u2014Myopia II. C, F. Herd,\nWashington Park, 328 strokes, 72\nhales. , \u25a0\n1899\u2014Ualtimore C. C, Wi Smith,\nMidlothian,   315   strokes,  72  holes,\n1900\u2014Chicago G. C, H. Vardon,\nGanton England, 313 strokes, 72\nholes.\n1901\u2014Myopia II C, W. Anderson,\nRittsfield,   331   strokes,   72   holes.\n190.2\u2014Garden City G. C, L. Auch-\ntklonle, Chicago, 307 strokes, 72\nholes.\n1903\u2014Baltusrol G- C, W. Anderson,\nApawamis,   307   strokes,.  72   holes.\n1904\u2014Glen View club, W. Anderson,\nApawamis,   303  strokes,   72   holes.\n1905\u2014Myopia H. C, W. Anderson,\nApawamis,   314   strokes,   72   holes.\n1906\u2014Onwentsia club, Alex Smith,\nNassau   295   strokes,   72   holes.\n1907\u2014Philadelphia C. C, Alex Ross,\nBrae  Burn,  302  strokes,  72  holes.\n1908\u2014Myopia H. C , Fred McLeod,\nMidlothian,   322   strokes,   72   holes.\n1909\u2014 Englewood G. C, George Sar-\ngoanut, Hyde Manor, 290 strokes, 72\nholes.\n1910\u2014Phila C. C, Alex Smith, Ky-\nkagyl,   298   strokes,' 72   holes.\n1911\u2014Chicago G.  C.   J_ J. McDer-\nmott, Atlantic .City. 807 strokes, 72\nholes.\n1912\u2014C. C. of Buffalo. J. J; McDer-\nmott, Atlantic City, 294 strokes, 72\nholes.\n1913\u2014C. C. of Brooklltle, Francis\nOulmet*. Woodland, 304 strokes, 72\nholes\nifll-1\u2014Midlothian. C. C W. C. Ha-\ngn,  Rochester   290 strokes, 72 holes.\n1915\u2014Baltusrol G. C, J. 1). Travers,\nUp. Montclair. 297 strokes, 72 holes.\n1916\u2014Minikahda... Minn., Charles\nEvans, Jr., tJdge water, 286 strokes,\n72 hole.s.\n1917-ISI8\u2014Not played.   .\n1919\u2014Brae Burn, Walter Hagen,\nOakland Hl!s,  301   strokes,  72 holes.  -\n1920\u2014Toledo G. C, Edward Ray,\nOakland   Hills,   301   strokes,   72   holes.\n\u2666Play off triple tie, Oulmet, 72;\nVardon,   77;   Ray   78.\nTENNIS ENLIVENS\nBONNIGTON\nFALLS\nBONNINGTON FALLH. July 18.\u2014\nSineti Us opening on June 1 the tenuis\neourt has beun the favorite rtMitl'JZvous\nof tht restiU-nts. Wudne.-iday is tlie\nclub diiy, when afternoon te-i is werved,\ntli ree of the nnjinbern taking a turn\neach week. Ou Wednesday IiiSt the\nthree bachelors, it. Greyrton, G. Iiel-\nbecque und J. Jerome, toon a turn as\nhosts   and   served   an   excellent   tea.\nSome splendid sets of tennis were\nplayed and In the evening a uusiness\nmeeting Was held, when It was decided\nto keep Mondays for doubles ond Fridays for children's sets. It was arranged to have a dance ln aid of the\nfunds on Friday next. A committer of\nmanagement was chosen.\nOne of the novelists, referring to\nthe hero cf his book, says:\nHis   countenance   fell.\nHis  heart sank.\nHis hair rose.\nHis eyes  blazed.\nHis words burned.\nHis blood  froze.\nIt appears, however, that lie was\nable to pull himself together and\nmarry the girl in the last chapter.\nNinety per cent of the coats and\nwraps being shown for fall are fur\ntrimmed, says a buyer.\n (K^t^wSB\n\u2022THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MOENING\/'JULY 19, 1921.\nTHE ARK\nTbe camping season has arrived.\nWe have tents In all sizes at the\nright prices. Also all kinds ot utensils, cutte'ry,- cots, dishes, bedding,\nmosquito inetting, staple dry goods. 7\noz Duck, 35\u00a3 yard. 8 oz. Duck,\n40d y<inl\" Bleached White Cotton,\n25^ yard.. Ladies' good Hose, 40tb\npair. Silk Ho.se, black, 75_* V.uv.\nMen's Work Shirts, $1.75- Over\u2014'\nails, very _eavy, 82.75 WMr, Curtain Scrim, 36-lnch bordered, 25d\nyard,    Good   Towelling,   _$tt   yard.\nJ. W.HOLMES\nPhone 634 606 Verntn  St\nInsecit\nChaserfc\nDo not let the little pest-\nbother you. Just use our\nPly Bopulsor  - 25<J\nMosquito Oil  35<J\nKakaKIUor   Smudge -25\u00abi\nTHEY, ARE GOOD.\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nMail Orders Filled Promptly\nPhono 81 P. O, Box 1087\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY   GRANITE   AND\nMONUMENTAL     COMPANY,\nLIMITED\n'  Print   8t,   Noised\nBUY AT HOME\n8urely -these hot days should induce you to Trade at Your Neighborhood storo where you can secure better and quicker servico\nand avaid \"Dressing Dpi\"\nGIVE   US  A  TRIAL.\nFleming's Store\nGroceries, Drygoods, Eto,\nSt. Charles Milk\nThe   Old   8tandby\nFamily  size,  6  for    S1.00\n1913 Prices\nYou men who want\nGOOD Shoes and yet don't\nfeel justified in paying\npresent day prices\u2014you're\nthe men we want to talk\nto\u2014just come in and see\nus.\n'Our prices and shoes will\nconvince you that you\ndon't need to go further.\nPAGE'S SHOE STORE\nTONIGHT\nOtis\nSkinner\nKISMET\nLet nothing interfere with\nyour seeing this truly wonderful picture.\nPHONB 10\n. et~\t\nFrAh Plums, basket SI.00\nBynR   Cherries,   lb.    25$\nFresh Tomatoes, lb t__Q$\nStrawberries,     Raspberrios,   \u2022\nCanteloupes.\nCucumbers  20\u00abt anil 30$\nCauliflower, Cabbage, Green\nPeas,   etc.\nFresh Peaches, lb 25_l\nOranges, do_en,i'4'0_   'o 80$\n' MILK-\nBorden's Evaporated\nTall  sl_e,  each  _  -\u2014,20$\n4-Doxen Case __  <g{) (fQ\nDozen $2.30\nELIEF FltOM:\nEyestrain, pain and\nheadaches can be secured by the wearing of proper glass-\n1 es. And proper\nglasses are ascertained positively wilh\ntho objective method of introspection, by the expert examiner. We aro fortunately fitted\nup for such special examination.\nMake your appointment. liours:\n9:00   to   11:30.    1:00   to   4:30.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician,\nfoar Watch -Repairs\nPromptly,    Perfectly    snd    Ac\n'   curatoly   Done.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nWatchmaker and Joweler.\nThomas A. Lawson\nCarpenter and Joiner.\nWe do your work promptly and well.\nFactory,   409   Hall   Street.\nKerr's Jitney\nNEW NASH CAR.\nAt your servico day and night. Phone\n491.  Guaranteed to  please you.   Baggage and Express*\nHIGH-CLASS FURS\n10 PES CENT REDUCTION TO\nTHE ENS OF AUGUST.\nAny article made to order from\nbest selected siting. Customers' own\nfurs made into any article desired,\n.with best work at moderate price.\nOld furs repaired and remodeled\nInto newest shapes.\nG. GLASER\nMANUrACTURING TUBBXEB\nPHONE 10G. P. O. BOX 767\nNELSON, B. O.\nCRIMINAL   FLOWERS.\nLike human beings, flowers have\ntbelr likes and dislike, trtid vent their\ndispleasure in nn uncertain manner\nupon their unfortunate victims.\nPoppies, for instance, have ;t very\nInjurious offept upon other flowers\nplaced In tho same vase, which seems\nto react upon themselves, as they\nsoon fade and oft under such conditions. Tho same remark applies tb\nSweet peas, which should always he\nplaced by themselves.\nIf other blooms are mixed with mignonette, there aro few which' will\nsurvive such intimate contact. A\nyellow tea rose faded away in two\nhours when placed next a pink one,\nyet in the ordinary way it,would have\nlasted   several   days.        ,\nThis explains why, after arrairg-\ning perfectly fresh flowers, one comes\nhack, In the course of an hour of two\nto find that some of them have wilted badly. In nearly every case, il\nis wilful murder on the part of the\nother flowers which could not bear\ntheir company.\nEVERY   EVE\nItOMK, July 18.\u2014Associated Press).\n\u2014Most Italian women If. they pad\ntheir choice to Ite anything they wisti-\n\u2022tl in their sex, would rattier be Kvo,\naccording to results of ii vote r^ot'tit-\nly taken by one of ihe  Roman papers\nThe aWinmMit, advanced for being\nJ-.V0 was that she, of all women had\nno compel It ion. Her husband was\nnever away from home aud there lfliifl\nno other women on whom he i\n,ast aii  alluring fflahcc,\nThose that did not choose to he Eve,\nchose for the most \u2022j.art to be Mary\nMagdalen, because, slip was forgiven\nmd afterward,' became i saint, liioro-\n*\u00bby enjoying ail   lhe   pleasures  of  heav-\nilght\nQUEEN'S   MONSTER   EGG\n' A. monster Easter egg of cUocoIorei\nweighing over half a hundredweight,\nwas presented by Queen Mary, at\nEaster, to the slaff and patients Kt\nthe King Edward VII hoapital, at\nWindsor, it was conveyed from the\ncastle in tme of the royal carriages,\nWilli a loiter which stated that Vthe\negg was given to her majesty, and\nsho believes It has nothing insfde it.\"\nIn a letter 'of than'ks tbe matron assured the Queen lhat the gift would\ngive great pleasure to both patients\nand staff xvhep it was broken up m\na few days' time. \"It has already\nbeen operated upon by ono of the\nsurgeons,\" she added, \"and found id\ncontain nothing inside.\" The egg;\nhas worked upon it a wonderful design representing a basket of roses,\nand In the center there is tho*. royal\nmonogram, \"CI. Ii-.'' surmounted by\nthe crown; ,It Is about li feet high.\nOBITUARY\nWILLIAM  MARTIN   WOOD.\nUUSSI.AND, July 18.\u2014William Martin Wood, recently customs officer at\nPaterson, who has held this post at\neither Paterson or Itossland for 2ii\nyears, died yesterday morning In the\nItossland hospital; having been laken\nill Friday night. After being removed\nto the Hospital Mr. Wood suffered a\ngastric  hemorrhage,   with   fatal   result\n~'ll,. ,1 \u00bb[.,.,! ..\u00ab.,.. ,.1,,.,,, i!fl \u201e,,\u201e-n\n ii.    i!'-ni!u i ii.ir,' .    ivivti    iiiitu    iun\nThe   deceased   was   about   (10   years   o\n\" theBffa\ni ui'    uuuunouu     wti\u00bb    iinuuL     ou     yvu\nage and was a life member of th, ^.,,,\ntfonie order. He ;s survived by his\nwife, and two'sisters, who live respectively at Victoria and New Weslminsler.\naud two brothers, one nn New York.\nnnd tiie other. iSdward Wood, at Salmon Arm. The funeral, which will be\nMasonic in character, will be held tomorrow  afternoon  at   -:'.Ul  o'clock.\n\"HOW DOTH THE\nBUSY SILKWOHM\"\nIn   an   address   before   lhe   Jobbers'\nAssociation   of   Dress    Fabric    ISuyei-.j\nnf New  York,  John  l!vTayIor of tbe\nPhoenix    Silk    Manufacturing    company,  said  that-- labor  was   tin-  chfei'\nfactor In tho manufacture and distribution    of   silks.      He    first   pointed\nnut that ninety-nine yards of taffeta\nmight be made from raw silk (\u2022((suiting   I'rorti   $4JiO   wortli   nf   silk-worm\neggs,  and   the   fabric   sold   for  $175.\nHe  said   that   tlie   same   --nantily  of\nraw   silk   if   differently   used   would\nI clothe    ten    women    with      stocking!;,\nUng\"i\"io,   gown   ami   cloak,   which   at\n$200   apiece    would   bring. the   final\n! value    (o    $2000;      He    went'   further\n1 and   pointed   Out   thai   if   Ihe   $4.1-0\ni worth uf eggs  were  raised  and   hre.l\n1 ior   one   season    lhe    resulUng    silk\nj would   clothe '2500   women   or   would\nj result   in   materials   worth   about   a\nI half   million   dollars.     He ytook   fur,\n1 further   illustration   a.   pure   dye   titf-\n! fela with  eight  thousand  threads  in\nj the warp.    Multiplying these hy  the\nmechanical\" processes   wiilch   work on\nthem and   by  the  threads   in   the  filling,   lie   siiowed   thnt   there   were   61*0\nmillion Hazards in every yards of the\ngoods woven. ,\nPatient\u2014What shall 1 take tu remove  the redness  from  my  nose'.'\nDoctor\u2014Take nothing \u2014 ('.specially\nbetween   meals.\n' .  *''\nCity of Nelson\nTaxes and Sewer rentals due the municipality for 1921 are payable on or before August 1st. If not paid A PENALTY of 10 per\ncent must be added after above date.\nA. S Horswill & Co.\nP. O.  Box 54.\nPhone 121\n100    Dozen    Kerr    Self   Sealing\n(lunrl   jars,   per  doz.gl.gO\n100   Dozen   Perfect   Heal,   pints,\nuer dozen $1.50\nSelf-Sealing,   >,\u00a3   gallon jars,  per\ndozen   .: $2.00\nEconomy,    J,_   gallon   jars,   per\ndozen     $2.45\nPlenty  of  Sugar.\nHorswlll's Special Tea. Ib... GOt**\nHorswlll's   Special   Tea,   V\/is   lb.\nPacket  .,. ..., $1.40\nHorswlll's Tea,  50-lb. chest.\nPer   '\u00bb 50tf\nFresh .Ground   Coffee,   at,   per\nlb-  -\u25a0, 60**- flitf 50\u00ab*\nNew    Potatoes,    Carrots,   Green\nPeas,  etc.\nRaspberries Coming  In.\nMontserrat   Lime   Juice   and\n.   Summer Drinks.\nA. G. Lambert Co., Ltd.\n-   Manufacturers of and  Dealers in\nAH kinds of Lumber and Building Material, Shingles,\nLath, Mouldings, Windows and Doors and Beaver\nBoard.\nDRAWER 1069 NELSON,  B.C.\nHow Well Do You See?\nIf you find yoursolf frowning or\nsquinting at your work, it ie an\nindication that you are a training\nyoar eyes. Such a strain, if not\ncorrected, will seriously Impair your\nsight. Wouldn't it be wise and\nsensible to correct this error NOW.\nArt appointment with me will save\nyour eyes and give you proper vision and comfort.\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\nEzclunivo    Optomotriso,\nK.W.C,   Block,   Nolson,   B.C.\nSogers   Blinding,    Vancouver,    B.C.\nOffice,    Madden    Block,    Ward    St.\nP. 0. Box 1099.\nHINNIS FUEL AND\nTRANSFER CO.\nGALT   COAL,       DRY   WOOD.\nGENERAL   TEAMING\nPrompt   Attention    to   Ordors.\nPhone 39\n^SPOKTITE\"\n!A 'few squirts of SpoktRe into the cracks at the hubs and\nfelloes\nTHE WOOD SWELLS\nThe squeakB stop and the wheels are as safe as ever and\nthe repair is permanent,\n\u00abLarge size can ,.,.,..-.,.............<.r.....(.:.;.j.;.-.:..-.$Z.Z5\nl\nWood-Valance Hardware Company, Ltd.\n\u25a0AKER STRUT\neSSSSBSSBB\nniLton, m, o,\n\u25a0tr\u2014\nD*y Kindling Wood Fo* Sale\n. We aro now taking orders for wood. Onco you try it you will use\nno other.\nNo chopping, no. dirt (as it is nice, clean, white pine blocks two\ninches thick, two and one-hall! inches wide and from four to fourteen\ninches long.)  ;\nBest summer wood you can get for stove or any small fire. We\nguarantee  entire satisfaction.\nPino, delivered and in woodshed, north nf LaHtner streot SR7.00\nPine, delivered and In woodshed, south of Latimer street  ...$7-25\nLoad consists of approximately oho cord.\nPrice for half loads - ;..... , \u2122 ,. ,...54 QO\nW.W.POWELL COMPANY, Ltd.,\nphone orders to 176.   Manufacturer of Match Blocks\n\"Our Best\" Flour\nEllison Milling and Elevator Co.,\nLIMITED\n\\\nSix room fully modern house in Al condition on Front\nStreet. Good cellar and washroom in basement. Sleeping\nporch.\nA good bug at $2700.00\nCharles F. McHardy\nInsurance Phone 135 Real Estate\n\u2022m\u2014\u2014-\u2014sB.i<.,'j!._.\\.,   .      1,1     1.  ,','.,,..\u201e\u201e\u201e....,.,....    , ...\nSocial and Personal\nDr. R. A. Veld of Edgewood is registered at the Hume.\n(iiiorge C. Palethorpe, assistant fire\nranger, wus nt Castlegar yesterday.\nHarold Lakes, superintendent of tin:\nNugge,t mine, came in from Salmo yesterday.\nRev. J. P, Westman paid n visit to\nTrail yesterday, returning on the night\ntrain.\nMrs- 'j. Andrew of Kaslo is thegucsf\nof   Mrs.    a.    M.     Palethorpe;   Vernon\nStlt'Ct.\nw.  C  Snndorctick,   principal  of the\njfbhobl at. \"Mtlfort, Sask., arrived  homo\niast   niRht   for   the   holidays.\nt \u2014\t\nMrs, Wl. C. Elliott mid two daughters,\nfii-aco and Marlon,.of Bolssevaln. Man..\nare thn guests of Mrs. A. Carrie, Silica\nstreet.\nt. H. I'oole, .secretary of the Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' association, spent the week-end with his family at Edgewoba;\nW, O, Ryiett, C. P. R, fire ranger,\nwas at Trail yesterday, looking over\nthe site of tiie late hush fire a few\nmiles   this .sltlo  of  that  city.\n.1. ll. Hamer, who retired some time\nago from the post of .superintendent of\nthe Garttrd fish hntfcHtiry, hut Ih still\nissoeiated with the service Is u visitor\nlu Nelson.\nH. Rouleau pf Calgary, who drove his\near in over the ('row last week and is\nnow milking liis headquarters at the.\nKootenay, has runted a house sit Pair-\nv:\u00ab\\v for five months and' will he a\nresident   for   that  length   of  time.\nT. Kllputrlclc, provincial government\nbl'idge luspiH'tor. t\u00ab now inahh'g aii examination, of the hridges In tlio Kootenay. yesterday lie went over tlie\nhridges iu the Creston area, ami those\nou lhe Sli'dar-Kusk;in(JoI. link, in coin-\np;uiv with William flnnisuy. district\niiugliicEl* of the provincial public works\ndepartment.\nDv. Harry H. Pitts, sou of Mr. .and\nMrs. H. H. Pitts of this city, who has\nheen doiiif; post-graduate work al the\nRoyal Victoria hospital at. Montreal Tor\nthe past 18 months, lias accepted a\nposition as resident pathologist in Ml.\nV.neent's hospitiil ;it Cleveland, one of\ntljo largest hospitals in Ohio. He will\nalso lecture in the Western Reserve\nuniversity at  Cleveland.\nNelson News ol the Day.\nHave picnics nt I'Vrndale Wednesdays and .Saturdays, Where j you can\nget fee cream dishes and lint water for\n(lir.L')\nWanted\u201410.000 pounds cherries without stalks.   McDonald Jam Co.     (4068)\nOwing to the nonarrfval of friends\nthe funeral of the late Mrs. Harry\nHouston ts postponed till Wednesday\nat   two-thirty. Mir\u00bbH)\nWanted\u2014Black    currants.     McDonald\nJam Cq. . f.0.7)\n'\"Dearest One\", and \"Dou'l You \"Remember'.'\" Two popular numbers in\nduct form on one record by Vivian\nHull and Milan Rosedale. Willis PlH.no\nStore. (1)5(1)\nWanted\u2014Blackberries. McDonald Jam\nCo. V (4048)\nCalgary Salvation Army hand (3;i\npieces) Tuesday, 8:30 p. in., Trinity\nMethodist  church. (4157)\nPythian Sisters and families will\n;old a'basket picnic at the old park\nmi Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock.\nSports  for children. (4140)\nWanted\u2014l.asfpbcrrios.   McDonald  Jam\nCo. (4049)\nDANCE    WUPNESDAY\nHlue   Diamond   Pavilion   nt   nine.     \"Km 11\norchestra. (4103)\nQueen   City. Rebekah    lodge    No.    Id,\nI. O. O. F;,  meets  tonight al.  8 o'clock.\n(1163)\nEARTH   GROWING  BIGGER\nAccording to calculations, made\nby tho experts, no fewer than \u25a0hil!\nmillion meteors drop upon the earlu\nevery. day. Most people will conclude that all this solid matter must\nadd to the bulk of the earth, An.I\nso it does, but it takes il surprisingly\nlong time to make any appreciable\ndifference.. No less a period than\n185 million years is required for this\nrain of dust, rock and motal to Ir-.\ncrease the size of the earth by half\nan  inch.\nPurity Oats\nIn Blue Tubes.\nA handy 'package for summer use.   Tj\n.   finest package oats  Milted.\nAsk any grocer.\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd;\njiiiui;\n\"RUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nDrugs, .Medicines, Haby Foods.\nHair Brushes, Tooth Bruwhcs,\nTooth Paste and Powder, Pace\nPowder and Cream, Carnation\nCream, Mosquito Foe, Insect Powder, ^Poultry Lice Powdery Red\nMite Killer, Rose Tree Sprays,\nCameras, Films, Developing, Ther-\nmo-ji Bottles, Ingcrsoll \"Watches,\nMall Orders Filled Promptly\nRUTHERFORD'S\nNELSON:\nIron\nm\nComfort\nHot (lays have no 'terrors\nfor the woman who uses an\nElectric Iron\nTelephone us to send one\nup  to  your  home.  Phone\n530.\nHowe Electric Co.\nOpera    House   Block.\nDealers   tn    Electrical   Supplies.\nFor DYEING\nand\nCLEANING\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh Class Dyer and Cloanor\nFairview, Nelson, B. C*\n.Claire Adama\n\u2014IN\u2014\nW SPENDERS'\nFrom the  famous   Novel  by\nHarry t-eon  Wilson\nTwo  Reel  Corned*\/,\n\"Shuffle the Queens\"\nSTARTING TOMORROW\n'THE SON OF TARZAN1\nfay -     ,   J\nEdgar  Rice   Burroughs\nThe    World's- Wonder   Jungfc\nSerial.\nA   New   Shipment   to   Hand   o:\nNESNAH\nJUNKET POWDER\nFor Desserts and Ice Cream\nNesimh is now and different\nIrom all other preparations of\ntlie market Contlans no gelatine\nIt has heen prepared with scieft'\ntiflc. care to meet the needs *%\npeoplo who aro looking for ffood,\nnutritions things to eat.\nNESNAH is an attractive (Iuk-\nsent whoUmr served plain or with\nfruit, nuts or wlii-pped cream.' j\nFOUR EXQUISITE FLAVORS]\nVanilla, Lemon, Raspberry ane\nChocolate.\n15c Per Package\nST. CHARLES CREAM\nFamily Sizo\n2   Tins ~...354\nPer   dozen    $1.95\nPer 4-dozen case \u25a0-$7.65\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nTlie boy rug woavei'K of Cliimi\nwork witbout pay, recoiviiiK only\ntheir board.\nJust to  Let- You Know\nA. D. Papazian\nExpert' Watchmaker,. Jeweler  and\nGraduate Optamatrlat,\nIce Cream\nIt\nIcre Cream\nand of\nGreat Food Value' *\nTake home some of oui'\nSpecial lee Cream. It\nmakes an ideal dessert.\nCHOQUETTE BROS\nCANDIES\nCAKES\niu .J ,\u25a0_..'..\n.Hot Weather.\nSuggestions\nAt The\nIdea! Grocery\nPHONE 265.\nK00L DRINKS\nWelsh's Grape Jult;e.:45tf,. 85tf,\nNagaM Grape .rulce..40^1   75#\nMontserrat Lime Juice, tho pure\njuice   nf   Spanish   limes,   hot-\ntied   right  on   the  spot  where\nthe   fruit.      is     grown,     liot-\ntle    60<fr   and   $1.10\nLoriibnado and Quench* Your\nThirst and Orange Crush,\nready for- use, bottle.......-35*^\nKwench Your Thirst and Orange\nCrush Powders, each hottle\nmakes a gallon   25^\nQuick Desserts   .\n.lunkel \u2022\u25a0 PowtlerH  , In    Vanilla,\n\u25a0   Raspberry and Lemon flavors,\n2 'for..... 35<fr\nCustard Powders\nIn Almond Custard nnd-Vanillu,\npacket ....: ,!.: 35\u00abj\nQuick Tapioca, 2  packets....35*^\nTasty Sandwish Tidbits\nMeat Pastes In Ifain, Veal antl\nTongue,   2   tins    25$\nUnderwood's Devilled Ham,\n'in   *\u00ab;25^ <\u00bb\"-J 50\u00ab^\nPotted Tongue, Ham or Veal, in\nglass,   each    :......_. 35^\nHam, Tongue and Veal Paste,\ndelicious for sandwiches, per\ntin'. \u201e...30^\nWatermelon,. Cautelou-pes and\nrtaapberrles arilvo  today.\nWide Mouth Mason Jars\nFor preserving or canning. In\npints, quarts1 and V6 gallons,\nThis jar Is the last word for\nsatisfaction for the housewife.\nEasy lo operate. Sure sealing.\nEconomical to use.    Per. doz-\n\"\" $1.75. $3.00. 82.50\nYour faVoritu Jar Rings. Wo\nhave   them.    Ask  us  re enn-\nniuK*   supplies,\nQuality\nBread\nSaves    Home    Baking.\nSweet and  Wholesome.\nTry It.\nTAKE   CURLEW   ICE   CREAM\nAND  ICE COLD DRINKS\nO.K.Bakery |\nStanley   and   Baker   Streets\nLook for the 0. K.\nPhone 165\nHot Weather\nUnion Suits\nThere am BtlU a great many\n.days to \"come when you will\nwant tho comfort and coolness\nof union suits lilto theso'.\nTheir corret fit\" puts you at\n, ease; .they avoid excessive\nsweating and won't dlsconifoi:tj\nyou hy sticking to the body. .\n$2.00 and $3.00 Suit\nFair Balbriggan Union Suite,\nlong legs and\/ short legSr-long\nsleeves  and   short   sleeves.\n$2.00 Suit and Up,\nEMORY&WAUEY\n1\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_1921_07_19","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\/1.0397035","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":"1921-07-19 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":"1921-07-19 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":""}]}