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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":" X,\nRebel the .\nCLASSIFIED ADS\nPage8\n\u2022<0:\nVOL. 20,\nNELSON, B. C.>  SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 9, 1921.\nNO.   60.\nLABORS MAY BE LIGHTER\nBIG\nlequest for Disarmament\n\u25a0 Conference Not Conveyed\nThrough, Official Notes.\nteXT MOVE IS DUE\nFROM WASHINGTON\nVernier's Speech Conveys\nWronij Impression; Empire Desires Meeting.\nLONDON, . July 8.\u2014(By Orattun\n&'Leary,' Canadian Press staff corre-\n[pondenU,\u2014The Washington state do-\nrtment's denial that a formal com-\nSiinieatloii had been received from\ne British governmeni request In;;\ne holding- of a disarmament ct'n-\nr rence, Is explained by the fact that\n|he rennest was not mado through\n'n officia.1 note, but through an in-\nervlew between liord Curzon, tjie\nIrltlsb foreign secretary, and tne\nittierican and Japanese ambassadors\na  London.\nInterviews, Not Notes\nBriefly   what  took   place  is  ibis:\nA day  or  two after  the 'donim on\nr pliers    bad    strongly   urged    that\nJtei.rf  toward   the  calling  of  a  coh\">\nfcrence be taken, Lord Curzon  colled\npon Col. Geo. Harvey and also upon\n,ne Japanese ambassador, and asked\n\\ [hat   they   convey   to  their  respective\n;overnments tho desire  of  the  Brii-\n*ih government  for such a  gathering.\nn his speech in the. house of cpm-\n| ions yesterday, .Lloyd George had\nhis In mind, but, unfortunately, -unf}*]\nnnguage wiilch gave thc impress on\n'hat , the request for a conference\n*ind been forwarded In official notes\n(o both Washington and Tokio. Hence\nL [he   denial    from   Washington    today.\n[J *The confusion^ that arose while re-\njrettable, does not alter thc situation nnd the feeling in official tjon-\nerence  circles  here  is  that   tho  F.m-\ni lire's desire  for il disarmament  con-\n'j( 'erepce has been made perfectly\nilain.     Tlje, i!*e,^i,.ijii()\\'h   must   come\n:$ 'mm   Washington. \u2022   \u2022   .\n11 Consider   Indian   Question\nThe    prime     ministers'  confet ence\n,* loosed   Its   week's   labors   today   wilh\ndouble   sitting.     At   the   morning\n|session the delegate from Ind a made\ni statement In connection with Bi'Ji -\n!sh Indians , domiciled in the dominions and colonies and while not urg;\nng lhat the existing rules governing\njhe aifm saiop of bis countrymen into\nthe dominions be changed, he made:\n|jt \"strong plea for the heightening\nlif thc status of 'th-nso already ml-.\nmltte'd. In such n case thc matter\ns one which concerns Canada\niillghtly, although of considerable importance to a country like South\nAfrica. '\u2022     \u2022\nI A special committee of the edit-\n[erenee will take the (|uestion into\n\u25a0ons deration- The afternoon scs-\ni*iion wus devutud to a discussion ot\n|he league of nations. Right linn.\n\\. J. Balfour, Lord Curzon, Premier\nVJeighen and Premier. Smuts took\naart and there was strong appre-\ntension voiced- of the value of the\neague and its claims to tht; support\npf tlie whole Empire as a step forward in tho regit lilt ion of interua-\nional   affairs.\n' With less than 12 days left in\nfVhich to conclude Its work, the conference next wook is expected to\n\/\"lunge into such questions as \u2022 **val\nllefenso and resumption of the dis--\nbusslon on the Japanese alliance,\npreparatory to taking steps for ihe\n|naln constitutional conference.\nArmament Reduction Essential.\n\"Reduction of armaments Is re-\narded by the Dominion premiers'\n:onference as thc cornerstone of Em-\ndre policy and friendly understand-\nng with the United States is essential\nlo thnt policy.\"\nI The Australian premier, Will tain\nMorris Hughes, makes' this declara-\n;ion in a cablegram to the president\n'>f the electoral organization at Ren-\nllgo, according to a Melbourne dis-\n)ntch to the London Times, \u2022\nThe message says:\n, \"All is going very well. The conference at present is dealing witli the\nAnglo-Japanese policy. Despite (he\ni-omplrxity of the situation and tbe\nillfferent aspects dr the individual dominions. I have hopes tiiat we shall\n'ichleve what is best 'for the interests\n\u25a0if Australia. The suicidal policy of\nincreasing armaments, in, the circumstances can end only by an amicable\nArrangement between the United\nlUtatps, Japan nnd the British Empire.\" >.   -\n|| PRISONERS iiCAPE\nI'TORONTO, July 8.~rTwn iJrlsnnors\nSlowly rising on this coast and fine\nNorman Coulter, made tlYoir escap--\nflhis afternoon while' the jail farm\n~taff   were   fighting   a   fire   in   one\nf the barns, and have not been seen\njjnee. A number of farmers of tho\nflistrlct hart been drawn up in  front\nt tbe jail property to,help In lighting   the   flames.     One  of   them   left\nIs   car . standing   nearby   nnd    the\nirisnners coi.-imandeered this, ^tlng\n|wa.y unnoticed, *\nTIMBER SALE\nFOR PULP MILLS\nI PORTLAND,. Ore., July 8.\u2014The\nlargest sale of pulp timber yet made\nfrom forests of the northwest was\nclosed today when 100.000 cubl,; feet\nof spruce, hemlbck and cedar timber were sold to the Alaskan-American Paper corporation of.. New York\nat SO cants a hundred cuhlc feet for\nthe spruce and c^dtir and 30 cents n\nhundred for the hemlock- The timber is on Behm canal inlei nbout 00\nmiles north of ' Keichigan, Alaska.\nTh\u00ab* purchasers have applied for vtii-\ntejj power right? on Orchard lake\nand plan to erect' the pulp ami paper\nmill on  the site, t\nLORD LIEUTENANT OF  IRELAND\nViscount Fitzalan  (center)  and Sir^ Hamar ahd  Lady  Greonwood   (left.)   Much\nis hoped from the conference called  by the King  at  which tho  Ulster  premier  and\" the  Sinn   Fein   leader  will   attend.\n:=^-\n1\nDE VALERA'S\nIS\nLEAGUE PERSONALITIES\nbreaks i\nWarmest Weather in Sixty\nYears; Miniature Tornado\nfirings Relief.\n. \u2022\t\n' OTTAWA, July 8.\u2014Relief finally\ncame to the heat sufferers here this\nnfterpooh in tho form of a miniature\ntornado, which was unaccompanied\nby .rain, find-blew up ifrom the w-est\nand broke out. in a fury of heavy wind\nsqualls, each succeeding one heavier\nthan the first. The gale passed quickly, Inn not before ii hart cleared the\nair of the heaviness of the past 10\ndays and left the temperature around\nUNION RECOGNITION     \"\nBAR TO SETTLEMENT\nST. .KVlIN, N. H., July ft.-Hnpea\nof any settlement of lhe dispuie between lhe New Brunswick company\nand the street railway employees\nwent skyward again today, when\nMayor Schofield and* Dr. J. B. Baxter, city solicitor, reported before a\nmeeting of the men's' union lhat the\noffer to . return lo work on the\nbasis of -ISMi cents an hour wit;i iec-\nogn.tion of tlie nn'on, had been refused by Percy M.\u00ab Thompson, manager of the power company.\nThey   said   that   Mr.   Thompson   informed them that it was not a mat-\n' ter of wages now that mattered, out\nrecognition   of   the   union.    He   said\nthat   he   fiad    no    intention   of   dismissing the  men  who are now operating  ihe  power  and  gas  plants.\nI     Should   all   ,the,   strikers   decide   to\n'come  to  work again, out of;the Hi'O\nI men   but,..- there   would   bo   room  HA'\n; ahout   seventy..\nSlaughter Several Hundred\nEast of Constantinople;\nTurks Promise Security.\nCONSTANTINOPLE. July S \u2014 The\nallied commission af Inquiry Into re.\nCent development inlo tbe Isrnid district to the. east of this city, returned he-go todny and reported that\nGreek marines had slaughtered aVv-\ncral hundred Turks in the tsniirt\nirea. The Turks, the ennmii.-mlon\nreported, have promised seetirity to\norphanages nnd tlie Christian population generally.\nth.'\n74 mark.\nToronto Relieved.\nTORONTO, July 8.\u2014Half a million\npeople in Toronto who .have been\nthoroughly \"het up\" for 10 days and,\nnights are back to normal and are\nlooking forward to a good night's\nsleep, following today's downpour\nwith a drop in temperature of 20\npoints, A severe wind storm broke\nover tb<' city at 2 o'clock ibis afternoon and sent nearly everything movable a-kit 'ng. The wind storm subsided to a IS-nii'e pace in li few minutes.\nStarts Smoldering Kirc.\n\u25a0 OTTAWA. July \u00ab.\u2014Fanned by the\ntempestuous wind which swept\nthrough the Ottawa valley this afternoon, a hush '.'irt' wbcli bad been\nsmouldering in some bush and timber-\nland owned by the Rldeau Lumber\ncompany, aboni a mile and a half east\nof St. Andre's' college at Ironsides,\nflamed into activity. One of the fac-\nrilty at the college tonight expressed\ngrave anxiety for- the Safety of the\ncollege should another heavy wind\nstorm spring up, declaring that the\nco'legc grounds were directly in the\npath of fire. At present, however,\nthe fire is not   considered  dangerous.\n . \u25a0\nStorm Hjts Hamilton.\nHAMILTON, July 8.\u2014A bad electric storm hit Hamilton shortly after\nnoon today, causing considerable damage In this city. Lightning struck the\nVictoria avenue substation iln'J blew\nout a transformer, which, in addition\nto injuring an employee, started a\nfire which caused considerable damage to the south end of the buiUlilng.\nTbe damage, according to the superintendent, will bo in the neighborhood\nof SlOO.OOn, and mostly in the transformers which were destroyed.\nWarincs*Kiii Sixty Years.\nOTTAWA, July 8.\u2014The. warmest\nday in-00 years was' the statement\nmade today at tlie Qychec observatory\non the Plains of Abraham, where the\nthermometer registered f)61-2 degrees. Throughout the day the.humidity was lntensevaiul at some places\nal .1 o'clock this afternoon 100 degrees\nwere vegistered In the shade, while in\nplaces exposed to the sun tho mercury\nc'imhod as high as 106.\n,Heavy rain fell tonight, cooling the\natmosphere. \\\nALBERTA   NOMINATIONS\nCALGARY.   July. 8.\u2014George   Ifond-\niy, former Conservative member,for\nJlkotolts  riding,  and   at   Inst  session\nn.independent;, was given the nmn-\nInpus  nomination  of  the  j>pnv'-'*ntVoti\nt  t'he   United  Farmera   today.\nWINS   BY   SMALL   VOTE\nPARIS. July $.-premier, P.nand.\nafter n hot doliato today, was supported by the chamber of rtoput'esi\nby one of the smallest majorities he\nhas received when be demaiule 1 that\ndiscussion of the difficulties of -Uu*\nIndustrial bank of China  be deferred.\nThe * quest ion of confidence, however,   was   not   involved.\nBARS BEER SUPPLIES\nTO SOLDIERS' CLUBS\nVICTORIA, July 8\u2014Soldier clubs\nselling beer here to members . can\nno longer get. beer from the li i.U(tr\nboard, they reported  today.\nThe attitude of the liquor bon'-l\nis that it will not allow itsolf to\nbe placed hv the position of aiding\nsoldier. clubs to break the Hqtioi*\nlaws,'by servjng them with a.sup-ply\nin   large  quantities.\nDEMAND PREFERENCE\nFOR RETURNED MEN\nMONTREAL. July X\u2014The Canadian Workers' Federation of Returned Soldiers and Sailors has decided\nthat stepH he taken ai once t > m-\naiiguratu plans to secure' leg'slhtlpn\nin both, the Dominion parliaments\nand provincial legisla lures making\nit compulsory (\u00abr the governments\nto .employ returned men when there\nare vacancies, other things he.ng\nequal. It vvi.il he also asked that in\nall government contracts _for public works it be made compulsory that\npreference le given to returned men.\nThis law. it is declared, shoal I also\napply to ecrpu'ot ons currying on\nbusiness and protected by the gov-\nci-nment tariff, and that any corporation . *refli8ing employmen to a\nreturned man, when employing otli-\ners, should have to show that such\nreturned men were lisfltfed. I'm- the\nwork;\nCORN .ONLY IS\nABOVE AVERAGE\nWASHINGTON.   July   S.\u2014Pbri\nof   tlie   principal   farm   crops   oi\n['nlied   States   were   made   tod;\nthe   department   of   agriculture\ntheir    July     condition.       It     imt\nthere    will     tie    no    record    brc\nproduction 'in any crop, with thd\nslble   exception   of   corn.    Cond\nduring   Juno- caused   u   reduct'i\nthe    production    forecasts    of\ncrop.     There   will   lie   a   bumpe;'\nof   torn,   but   other   crops   are\nbelow    last    year's    production,\nbucco   production   will    \\n>   one\nless than  last   year. \u25a0\nWheat showed a decline of 21\n000 bushels during June, v\nwheat showing a reduction ot\nmillion bushels 'and spring *\nU.,000,000   bushels.\nKansas w'nter wheat, showe-1\npro'voment during the month i\nthat Of Nebraska and Oklabom.'\niii Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and\nsourl the forecasts show a i\nlion.\nCorn -this year was in the\ncondition it has been on July\nmore than a score of years, it\nii.fi points higher titan a yefU\nand 7,4 points higher than th\nyear average.\nists\nthe\n,V   by\nfrom\neates\nt kin'*,'\npjs-\ntions\nn   in\n\u25a0very\n'crop\nweil\nTo-\nthird\n.000.-\nintcr\nfive\ni-heat\ns   did\ni,.but\nMls-\nciliif.\nbest\n1    in\nbellis\nMOUNTAIN GOATS FOR\nVANCOUVER ISLAND\nVICTORIA, July S.\u2014Mountain\ngoats are to be \"placed in thn Go-\nwichan lake district. Vancouver Island, either In September or next\nMay, A. R. Paker, chairman of thu\nBritish Columbia Game Conservation\nboard, announced  today.\nDISCOVER OIL ON\nVANCOUVER ISLAND]\nVICTO^RTA, July 8.\u2014The existence\nof oil on Quats no sound, at the north\nend of Vancouver Island, is reported\nby B. W..-Leeson, customs officer at\nQuatsino, whp hns arrived here.\nSamples of oil, shale have been forwarded to Ottawa for government\nanalysis,  Mr, Leeson  states,\nPADEREWSKI HELPS\nTO PUT OUT FIRE\nPASO ROPLBS, Cab, July 8\u2014Ig-\nnac Jan Paderewski; pianist and tor\nmer premier of Poland, led a fir\nf ghtlng force today lu beating out\na. brllsh and grass fire which started\nnear his estate here. The firo burned over 26 ncres\" before it was checked liy Paderewski and his volunteer\nfiremen.\n\\COPYHMHT KllftTOm WHW, CO., HEW 1MH-\nSCHULTHE88   AND   ADOR\nThe  former  is president  of  thel Swiss  Republic  and  the   latter  presides  over\nthe  League of  Nations conference now in  progress.\nFLASHES BY WIRE\nATTEMPT TO SET\nIrish Rebels Attack.Passenger Train Carrying\nTroops.\nDUBLIN\", July 8.\u2014A passenger\ntrain, on board which were soldiers\ngoing from Dublin to Cork* was attacked today at Clnndalkin, outside\nDublin. Bombs were thrown and an\nattempt was made to set the train, on\nfire, petrol being poured on the roofs\nof the coaches as they passed under a\nbridge from which blazing material\nwas thrown. The military fired at\nltie attacking party as the train continued on its way. There were no\nmilitary casualties but several passengers were wounded, one of them\nseriously.\nMeteors Rain on Sun, Temporarily Increase Radiation\nSurface, Says Astronomer.\nVALLRJO, .Cal., July 8.\u2014The extraordinary hot summer being felt all\nover the world is due to an unusual\ndownpour ot meteors upon the sun,\nby which the radiation and effective\nsurface temperature of the sun is\ntemporarily increased, Professor T. J.\nJ, See, government astronomer at the\nMare Island navy yard, today said his\nresearches had !ed him to conclude.\nSince a mass of meteoric matter\ngreater than our moon is falling into\nthe sun every century, he said, \"it* is\nvery improbable that the .downpour\nproceeds at a uniform rate. If it\ncomes down in gusts under the action\nof the chief planets, Jupiter and Saturn, which are now near conjunction\nand are seen togeiher In our evening\nsky, then we should have sudden increases in sun's radiation Just such\nas we now witness all over the world.\n\"This is a sufficient explanation of\nIhe unpreecdently hot summer.\"\nWORDS FAIL BISHOP.\nLONDON, Out.. July. 8.\u2014Over h'a\nown signature, Bishop Fallon touii-'ht\nissued a\" refutation of charge* recently alleged to have been made\nby Rev. W. L Re!d, Hale street, that\nthe Roman Catholic church lias stood\nbehind bootlegging in' Essex county\n\"An Incomplete . description' of, the\nRev. W. L. Reld. pastor of the Hale\nstreet Methodist church, would by\nthat- he is a public, deliberate, apparently malicious and cowardlv 11 ir,'1\nsays   Bishop   Fallon.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS.\nCanadian Commander, at Liverpool\nfrom Montreal.\nOropliesia. at New York from Hath*\nburg...\nGothland, at Danzig from New\nYork.    .\nEmpress of Asia, at Kobe from Vancouver.\n\u25a0Lehigh, at New York frbin Vancouver, \u00bb\nNext Convention Winnipeg\nilAUKAX, July S.-Decision to\nHold its next convention at. Whim-\npeg was reaeln'd by the t'nnelii.lhu\nsession of the 62nd annual convert-,'\nlion of the Canadian Medlcftl association here today.\nNew Warden, of St. Johns\nWINN I PRO, July 8.\u2014Ueu'.-Col.\n(Rev.) G. A. Wells, D.S-O., O.M.G.,\nrector of Si. Alargarets parish, bas\nbeen selected for the new, post of\nwarden of St- John's college here.\nCol. Wells will commence hlfi new\nduties on   September   1.\nVtlGTOR-TA, July 8.\u2014W. II, Mac-\nInnes. civil service eommissione<- for\nBritish Columbia, will leave Victoila\ntonight on a tour of inspect.on of\noffices of tht,1. provincial government\nIn the north. He will go as far ns\nAtlln and the northern boundary el\nBritish  Columbia with  Alaska-\nV3ut Pipe nnil Nail Prices.\nNEW VO'KK. July 8.\u2122TM United\nStates Steel corporation today announced, a'cut in pipe and tube prices\nranging from ?-' to ?1^ a ton and a\nreduction of $f. a ton in wire and wire\nArrest Ijabor Leaders.\nWILLIAMSON, W\/V.'i., July 8.\u2014\nDavid H. Robb, international financial\nagent of the United Mine Workers of\nAmerica, and 11 other union leaders\nwere arrested here today.\nSubmit Waterways Report.\nDETROIT, July 8.\u2014Reporting favorably on the feasibility of the proposed Great Laltes-St. Lawrence waterways project and estimating the Initial cost cL' making the route navigable to deep sea vessels at ?25l',278,200,\nColonel W. P. Wootten, United States\narmy engineer for the Detroit district,\nand \\V. A, Bowden, chief engineer of\nthe Canadian railways, and egineers\nhave suhrntted.their reports to the international joint commission at Washington that is in charge of the project.\nGazetted Judge.\nOTTAWA. July 8.\u2014 Donald McLean,\nbarrister, of Saskatton, i.s officially\ngazetted this' week us judge of the\nconn of King's bench for SilskatCne-\nwan.\nHostilities Must Cease if Negotiations to Succeed, Says\nBritish Prime Minister;\nAnnouncement at Dublin\nConference Causes Dec*\nlaration f  Truce.\nDEVALE)Ti~MCIDES\nT| \u20ac0 TO LONDON\nEvents f ove Swiftly; King\nGeot i Keenly Interested;\nGeip al Smuts Has Big\nInfluence, Will Probably\nBe First Chairman at London Conference\nConsider Cheap Fares\nfor Prairie Harvesters\nVICTORIA. July ' S.\u2014 I'resident\nBeaty of the Canadian Pacific nil-\nway informed Premier; Oliver by\ntelegram from M on t red I this a ft ir -\nnoon that be is taking up the question of giving cheap rates tn the\nprairies so that the thousnndu nf\nunemployed in British ('olnmbVi, may\nbe\".able toget transportation to thfe\nprairie   harvest   fields.\nTh's action oh the part of the\nCanadian ' Pacific i.s the. result of\ntelegrams sent by Premier . Olivw\nto the president of the ('. P. It. in\nwhich he pointed out the serlPtianC'sj**!\nof the unemployment situation In\nBritish Columbia \"and., bow the .situation. could lie relieved to n great\nextent by sending men from here to\nwork'on fhe prairie wheal. fields, so\nthat they could make enough during the next few months- to help\nthom during the winter, which\nthreatens to  he serious.  ',\nTbe premier asked lbe C p; R.\nto assist lhe province in \u25a0 dealing\nwith the situation by granting reduced fares from British Columbia\nto tlie pra'ries, or making tho acilo\nat least as low as that in. force in\nformer  years   from   the  east,\nPRESIDENT ENCOURAGES\nCHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR\nNEW YORK. July r8\u2014Presl lent\nHarding and Vice-President Coolidgu\nsent messages today to the sixth\nworld's Christian Endeavor convention expressing tbe idea that., J lie\nworld needs moro rel'gion to- cure\nIts   ills.\nCommissioner of .Immigration F, A.\nWallis, in an address on the Immigration problem, urged the Christian ' Emteavor to' aid In caring: tor\nthe immigrant and seeing to it that\nhe- is properly educated. He als,-)\nurged that steps be taken to prOtOW\nthe newcomers from profitc'er*< nn.l\ngrafters. The next convention ..will\nbe held at Res Moines, Iow.i, in\n1323.\nIS LftlDTQ HEST\nImpressive Service With Full\nMilitary Honors at Funeral\nof Captain Round.\n\u25a0 VANCOUVER, July 8.-~Full military honors marked the funeral of\nihe late Captain -Henry R. Round,\nWhich took place on Sunday last at\nEdmonton. There was a large, assembly of friends and comrades nf\nall arms attending the funeral services, which wns led hy the 49t.h battalion band, members of which followed their comrade to his last resting   placo. \u2022\nThe scene at the cemetery was\nespecially impressive, the customary\nvolley-was fired ovor the grave, tho\n\"Last J'ost\" sounded and the pipers\nplayed  a lament.\nThe pallbearers were Inspector\nField, Captain Arthurs, Major Elliott, Major Gillespie and Super'n-\ntendent Ames. The funeral arn.'iige-\nments were made by Major Elliott\non   behalf of the  -t!Rh   battalion.\nHe was a pioneer of the northwest,\nhaving mushed from the Hiitlso:i '<av\nto Fort I Garry, .and on several occasions crossed the Rocky mountains\non foot with only Indian guide-*) He\nwas for many years a Hudson Bay\ntradei-, and built the first house at\nthe Peace Liver crossing. During\nthe war, although well on in years,\nhi' enlisted with the Bantam Imt-'j\ntalion at Victoria anil procee.u.-d .\noverseas with It. After that unit\nhail broken up he transferred to the\n\u2022Kith battalion, where he relieved the\npaymaster, Captain Alexander, for\nsome lime. He was best known to\n(be Canadian troops in his subsi-\nqiteni office of paymaster in London\". Here it was his dpty to nitJCft\nIncoming leave trains at \\-ic.ei' n.\nstation. He is survived by thlfe\nsons' and one daughter, Hatty, in\nL\"'is Angeles; Percy, at Fort Me-\nMurray; Lionel, tn 1 .Winnipeg, and\nMrs. A. M. Turner, at Edmonton A\nsister, M'ss F. Round, lives in Winnipeg, and a. cousin. It. ]\u2022'. firci n.\nlives   here.\nThe late Captain Round is highly\nrespected by tbe Indians of the\nnorthwest, many of whom during ins\ntravels he made bis staunch fnemls.\nIlls, more intimate friends knew him\nas   \"Hudson's   Bay   Round.\"\nPHARMACISTS CONCLUDE\nSUCCESSFUL CONVENTION\nVRINCE ALBERT, Sask., July 8.\u2014\nTbe most successful convention,\nwhether in point of numbers, business\nor social entertainments, in the. history of the Saskatchewan medical and\npharmaceutical associations, wus\nbrought to a close here today with\nthanks to all who had contributed to\nits success.\nThe medicos were occupied aM day\nin hearing technical addresses of outstanding ability from physicians from,\nevery part of the province.\nThe.meeting went on record as fa-\nvorliig the formation of a western\npharmacists' association. .It also supported a protest to the ministers of\nfinance and customs and inland revenue against the increase of the excise\nlax on alcohol, which, it claimed, deprived the retail pharmacist of an absolutely necessary requirement in\nmanufacturing pharmaceutical and\nmetrical preparations and prevented\nhim carrying, on his legitimate and\nproper functions.\nThe association bylaws were amended in conformity with changes in the\nPharmacy act. Professor . H. P.\nGoetx of Alberta appealed that commercialism be not allowed to destroy\nprofessional progress' in the art of\nhealing. Great developments In science were being made by the medical\nprofessiftn. lie said, and the pharmacists should keep apace both collectively and individually with these pro-\nfeflsions.\nThe lil^conventlon will be held in\nSaskatoon.\nOTTAWA, July 8.\u2014Thirty-seven\nnotices oT assignment to creditors by\nbusiness firms in Canada, under the\nBankruptcy act, are included in this\nweek's of\"   lal Gazette.\nLONDON, July 8.-^-A truce has\nheen declared between Britlan and\nIreland. It will take effect at noon\non   Monday   next.\nDevelopments leading to the truce\nwere divided between London and\nDublin. In Dublin, Eamonn dp Valera, Irifeh Republican leader, and his\nNationalist associates, renewed tholr\nconference with the southern Unionists. Earl Middleton, a Unionist who\nrecently conferred with the British\nprime minister, read a letter from\nMr.\u2014Lloyd- George lo the effect tha:\nhostilities must cease if negotiations\nlooking to peace were to succeed.\nGeneral Sir Neville McReady.\nBritish military commander in Ireland,, appeared at the de Valera conference and it was not for many\nhours later that the announcement\nwas made at the prime mini 'ter's\nofficial residence In London that,\nin accordance with the prime minister's offer and de Valera's reply,\narrangements were going forward\nfor a truce from. Monday noon.\nKing   Leads   Developments\nTho King has been a loading figure\nln the developments up to the present, while General Smuts, the South\nAfrican premier, has acted as the\npivot on which the peace movement\nhas turned. There is hope ln London and in Dublin, too, that pc?aee\nmust come out of the forces which\nare now engaged in seeking a settlement.\nEvents -moved swiftly today both\nin London and Dublin. Not only has\ndo Valera, contrary to the general\nexpectation, consented to come to\nLondon to discuss witli Lloyd George\nthe basis t on which a settlement of\nthe Irish question might be reached by the proposed London conr'er- -\nence, but, a truce has been arranged\nto  begin  at  noon   Monday.\nThis has given reasonable assurance lhat the original c on f1--\"ence\nto which tho prime minister invited\nthe Irish Republican leader and- Sir '\n.lames Craig, the Ulster premie, will\nbe  held-\nSmuts   Is   Potent  Factor\nThe day started hopefully with the\nKing summoning the Ulster premier\nto ii conference at Buckingham palace. This, following upon the King's\nconference yesterday with General\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nTHE WEATHER\nThe lake at Nelson now stands at 1-1\nfeet above the low water mark, the\nwater having receded four-tenths bf\na foot during the 24 hours preceding\n4 o'clock yesterday afternoon,\nVUCTORTA, July 8\u2014The banmetei*\nslowly slsing on this coast and fine\nwarm weather is becoming general.\nFhne, hot weather previals in the\nprairies.\nForecasts\u2014Nelson and vicinity, f'ne\nand warm, -\nMin.   Max.\nNELSON  .....-....:..., '49     .'86\nVictoria    '     R2       fi4\nVancouver    ..,     R2       70\nKamloops -      6i>.      Tli\nBarkerville            !>4\nPrince. TUipert            H4\nAtlin    ' '..    42       F>4\nCalgary         f\u00bb2       88\nWinnipeg -.     fi2        itt\nPortland     f'8       38\nSan Francisco        58       R^\nSeattle    .'     Rft       ft\nGrand  Forks        51    ' \u25a0 R2\nKaslo         48       79\nCranbrook        48       8(t\nNew  Hazelton   ,     it      &$\n_\n 1\nTHE NELSON DAILY' NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 9,-1921,\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhirl  tha  Travelling   Publlo   May   Obtain   6uperlar   Accomadatlan\nTHE\nPremier Hotel\nOf (he Interior\nSERVICE   UNEXCELLED\nA la Carta Table D'Hata\n8PECIAL   SUNDAY    DINNER   S1.W\nINCOMPARABLY  THE   FINES^  TEA   ROOM   IN   B.   C,\nOpan  Dally 10 a. m. te  Midnight Mutic and   Dancing\nTho Latest Sundaes, lea Cold Drlnka and leea\nAfternoon   Tea   (2   p.m.  to   5   p.m.),  25o,\nHesdqiiartera   fer   All   Travelling , Men, \u25a0 Mining   Men   and   Tourieta\nEUROPEAN   PLAN      -> \u2014      ROOMS,  J1.00   up\n' TUIME\u2014JumoR Rtoelp, V.inoouVrr; Mr.\nand Mrs. <:. W, ]..i.ii:.rd, Vancouver; W.\nlioilid, Toronto;' n.'lloilRHon. oily; S. ('.\nSHiiHOn, Vancouver; ftlss S. MrKnen,\nVaiK-ouvr-r; A. Ci. .NeHon, Knmloona;\n\u25a0 Osrar sti-oinhm-tf rind wtf\u00bb*. Orion, .-Mtui.;\n'M. nean, Hiidkalif-; M18S bj. M. Doherty,\ncily; Mr. and Mrs. .T.'K Ty\/oddle, Trail;\nVV. <l. Stenafion, Winnipeg; .lohn VV.\nRead, Winnipeg; R- B. I'owell, Loth-\nbrlrlgc; Robert Hr-wltl, KnlrtlObps; A. W.\n. Mcl.cod, New WestniiiiMtcr; H. \\V. Wool-\nfull, Seattlet Frod'R. Johnson; Soninc.:\nNorman I!. Abnims. Senetlei R. II. IIcw-\nor, Spok'nne; 11\/ II. Al.ram\n\u2022:.. limy, Snolmnr; tlcon\nWinning': MiRH ii. A. Turn\nMIsr  O.  T.  Turne\nVn\nt \\\nHa\n\u25a0Sea111..-;  E.\n-. wiiiiiWt:\nlicg;   W.   N.\nnon; II. .1.\nKfill, Vancouvir; I,. A. Palmer\ncouver; I'. J. Hlone. Wlnn:|lag:\nCode, Ottawa; .1. W. Bender'son\ncouv.-r; H H. Mar.slmll, VVInnll)\nMarahalli Vancouver; .1. Black. V\nver; v.. BrydbriMficlr, Winnipeg:\nWilson, '.Toronto; IC. SV. Cameron\nwa; II. Vntlglinii and v.lle i ran\n[roster Calgary,\nA.   i\nVet\nfWaaMieaiianiiiiiiattii[tfeTiiiTiiariiiiMigr.Tinriii) r ' \";r i fni\nI\nWell Lighted Sample Rooms) American 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\nMEETS\n(Continued from Page 1) ( \u25a0\nSmuts, la an Indiealion of tho intense Interest, the King\" is taking In\nthe Irish problem, nnd, although un.\nder the traditions of the British\ncon^finition lhe King- hns no real\nvoice in the direction of government\naffairs, lhat. dqes.not prevent hU ex-j\nercislng greav. influence in rhe policy!\nof the- country.\nGeneral Sinnis is going to Gii**>iV!o\"*ft\ncourt to spend the week-end, to\u00a3\ngetfrer wiih ihe other premiers W\nthe over\/teas dominions, with JJ^-y-fc\nGeorge. General Rr\/iuls eviden'.l:' :fy\nthe inriiH-neF in ihe negoHniionjsj\nperhaps \u25a0something .more, thnn ::i Itiy\nfluence, for lacking his active aid,\nir i.s hardly conceivable lllflt I'Veu\nthis eo,uld have prblri'essed so njUckty\nan'they did today, ami lhe fiei that\ntlie prime minister lias\"no| stood up-\non   dign'iiy of h's  office.\nMcReady Attends Conference\nThe \u25a0 principal e.yenlfi of this Import am daii, however, occurred, not\nin London, Inn in Dublin, and the\njaosr siriiiliig \" was ihe sensatlim\nof General SJ* N*. Mclteady, the mi'-\nitifry comma rider in Dublin, altnul-\ning the cpriference of Kamonn de\nValera and th*' _ Icadliiff ' houHhtu.\nUnionist, after his aid\" de camp\nhad Ivoen 'Sent in advanee, .p'ri'sum-\nably    !u   ascertain   whether. hTs    [tar.\n' ..General MrReady's appeflrflTico and\n\u25a0'(ing stay at lhe i-an Terence jlCOYiy\nhad   |u   do   whli   .Mr.   I.loyd   GC-prge^\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616   VERNON    ST.    EAST\nComfortable Rooma,  Hot and  Cold\nWater.   Dining    Room   in\nConnection\nRatea  $1   and   up.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean   and   American   Plan\nSteam Heat in Every Room\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nHoliday Resorts\nBelow are., announcements of hotels\nlocated at reoorta in Kuoteany-Eoun-\ndary where enjoyable vacations may\nbe   spent,\nIttfter\nthe    p,\n$oiild\ngotiaii\nsafisfa\nvioloiu\ntho   li\nintention\n\u2022w-iUis 'Iln\nto   order\nRai-I   Middleimi,   ii\n\u2022   uiinisier   declared\nimpoflHlhln   io   rondii'\nWilli -any   hope pf ael\nIISWFF BILL\nCriticizes Democrat Attacks;\nWill Stand Behind Measure to a Finish.\n.WASHINGTON, July 8.\u2014The ^lOUSfl\ngot under .way today in'its con.itd-\neraiion of ihe Fordney tariff hill,\nChairmtui Fordney of lhe ways and\nmeans committee, after reading tho\nKill having heen completed, in a\nspeech of nearly (wo hours, de-\n\\Vloptng i^ie firsi phase of thg Re-\npublifvan   argnmeni.\nGiiticfzing the position of the iu-m-\noerats, Mr, Fordney said rhev had\naccused . Repnhl'leans nf drafLiiiLj a\nmeasure which would cut nff, rather\nlhan encourage irade, when the cardinal policy of his committee had\nKeen in hulld a sei of sehoduieH\nwhich,' would rpslbre comm-Prei and\nindusti.-y to healili. The conimit:eeS\nworl; alwriyw was aciu'afed. \\v> declared, hy fhe' knowledge that business'now was in a slump and siioutd\nbe- -given protection uhMi y\/ouldi\nstive it from the inroads uf foreign\nI'fitnpeiiiinn. Compromises ivr-es-\nsarlly have been put in the hill, the\nspeaker , said, adding iliai all such\nco'nlemed ponits would he put before'\nthe   house, for   lis  approval   or   rejr i -\nihi\nalls\nela\n.5nt\n(ileal\nitlnited, and; nhn that\ng ivernmeni would gi\\e\nlo   He-   troops   an.I    \\\\o\nspenrl   riclU'e   operaiidiirt\nde,   Valera   .lf-elan*..i   his\ni  enter  iuio  a   6onferoiicfi\nBritish    governnie.nl,    and\nhe   cessation   of   all   aets\nhy   lho.se   i.nili-r   his   con-\nai. any rate, he informed ihe house,\nthe eummllle.e did the heal work of\nWhich    il     was   ca))alde   and    he    was\nwilling   to   stand    behind    it    to    ihe\nfinish.    \u25a0\n]        <ABiii.: nispiTi-: r:\\ns.\nI -   \u25a0\n.MIAMI, I'\"a., -Inly 8. The long\ncontroversy betweea ihe government.\nand' tin- Western Union Telegraph\ncompany over ihe landing of Its |MI-\nanii-Ilarbadnes cable here was\nbrought io an end inday with the\ngraining of federal permission for the\nlanding, according In wrffl' received\nbv ihe local, offices of ih'e: Western\nTJh ton.\nQUICEN'S\u2014Alex. Henderson, Vnneoii-\n' e'er- Mr. and Mr*   H. W. Palmer, NOrth-\nport; Mrs. tt. L; Knepland, Ymir; J. St.\n' ui'iiib,  Hail;  Mrs. a   B. Bennett: Mid-\nway;,Mr, antl Mrs, W. A. Spencer, Van-\neouver.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nNOW     UNDER     MANAGEMENT ]\nCF   D. A.  MACDONALD\ntvety   Consideration   Shown   tr\nGuests. _   *\nlor.  K^li\"' and Ward  Sts.,   Nelson\nt\nlijiiliilBN\u2014H. llrittle, Colvllle; *.T. P..\ni, ..in;; .1. tl. ilnri-isuii..(.'iil|j!iry: Alex,\nyoui'elteu, Crescent Valley; 11. Spir-.',\nm-ouv.r: Mr. and Mrs. K'orteulh,\n(SSlillicl; Mr. inul Mrs. .1. II. Vviati.\nncouver; .1   Henderson.  Revelstolie.\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF, NILSON, Proprietor.\n.    BAKER   STREET\nFurnished   Rooms   by    Day,   Week\nor Month,\nTRKMONT\u2014fi. Kelson, Tnghiim.\nI H.   W.   SHORE,   Prop.\nj H. E. SCANLAN,  Mgr.\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW    LAKES,    Q.   C.\nUnder   entirely    new    management\nRcnmvnetf throughout the west\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urinic Conditions,   Metallic  Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nin a most''beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools.\nAmerican    plan,    J3.50    and    up\nper   day.   ^24   per   week.\nFor  rates apply  Strathcona  Hotel,\nNelson,  or  Halcyon   Hotel\nlyiain Discussion on Truce\n', General McReady's presence at thc\nconference! has additional significance\nbecause it was, stated that the \"militarise party\" in I re la ml has been\nstrongly opposing peace negotiations,\n\u25a0md any idea of a truce. No i eport1\nof ih.- proceedings of de Valera's\nconference with ihe southern I 'jimmi-\nisla lias yet been Issued, but \\i is\nbelieved thai t.he principal tpiric\ndiscussed- was a truce, and trial\nEamonn Dnggah, a Sinn l-'eiu mem-\nof-; par] la me n I who was roieaScd\nfrom Mount ,loy prison only a few\nlays ago, acted as liitermediat*\\i' ii'e-\nwe'nri   ihe   conference   and   lhe   Sinn\nWHERE THE  FISHING  IS  GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishinq,     Boating,     Bathing,     Golf,\nTennis   Courts\nFishing   Tackle  Supplied.    Grocery\nStore, in   Cafuiection\nW.  A. WARD,   Prop.\nRatea   Reasonable       \u2014-%>od   Meals\n1 THE KOOTENAY HOTEL\n[         Mrt.   Mallette,   Proprietress\nA homo for the world at reasonable\nrates.\nOpen    night   and   day.    First-\nclass  dining-room.  Comfortable\nrooms.\n316 Vernon  St,      Near  Post  Office\nL\n'   Kootenay Falls\nSouth Slocan, B\nClose  to famous' Fi^hin\nrsonnhiBInn   Palls.     Afl\nfreshim-ms Tot' allio  pa\nStrawberries  nnd\nHotel\nc.\n;  Tnnl  and\n\u25a0ties' served\nlah.\n^ream\nle\ntiers\nARBITRATION ENDS.\nNET DEBT DURING\nIIIIMf\nFall in Customs Collections\nAccounts for Eight Millions; Excise Higher\nOTTAWA. July 8.\u2014During the\nmb'rtfh'6f Junethe net deht of Can-.-\nada Increased $32,375,408 over the\nfigures at the end of, May. It now\nstands 'at $^349,180,110 ' aa compared\nWith $2,316,804,702 ot the end of,\nMay. and $2,1100,119,030 nn .Tune 30,\n1920.        .\u25a0''\u2022\nThe total revenu on account of\nConsolidated flmd up to lhe end of\n.Trine nf (he present year, according\nto ''the monthly finahcial statement\nl^u-Hd through ' the finance department; wus '$lti8,f\u00bb2-7,r>4';>, as compared\nwith a revenue of $99,823,097 toy the:\nsame period last. year. For the mnnlh\nAf June' alone, i.li(j revenue was\n$2ri,107,350,'Which Is over seven mil-!\nHOhs' less than last year when tHo\nTune revenue totalled $32iR18,022. 'She,\ndecrease in the revenue fdr June, as.\ncbmpared Willi June, .1920, is partially accounted for by a dee'reas?' ofj\nmore 'than \"eight, millions In the.\ncustoms 'collections, iiasl month tho\ntotal'customs revenue wns $7,^12,341.\nDhring June, 1920, ihe sum of $H,-\nHT>;{l30 was collected. Rxcifis taxeft\nwhich totalled $3,372,024 for the past\nmonth, show an \"increase over the'\nsim'llar month of IIJ20, When tha\ntotal collected' was $2,708,024. 'Inland revenue colled lofts In Juno' oI>\nthe pre'senl' year totalled $r)'747,2Sfi, as'\ncompared wilh .$3,224,504 in Junc.s\n1920. The total amount, derlve.l tv'om\nincome tax during lhe past month\nwas $3i,'f22,l)fi41 as compared wjih $1]-\n707,731    In    June,    1020.\nThe business profits tax yielded\n$1,(181,437 during June of Ihe present\n'year, as cnmpiired with $1,753,S0:^ a\nyear ago. War expenditure on cap-,\nItal account has dropped from $1,-\n\u25a0124,499 for the 1920 fiscal year up\nin lhe .-lose of June m $2.r.4,2iil .for\nthe present year up to the e:n! of\nlast month.\nthai\nImp-\ni -till ineliiien in lbe Ide;\nlevnl Sinuis, owing n tin\ni   p'atii  he has talten.'-Ah  tlij\nliarliamerilary 'negotiations wl'l li\nllic r.vr.i chairman oT i1x> Lciidn\nctuiferenee, evell If l.tnyd O-'tsti\npresides 'rhirliu\/'t'lie later 'siage..|( ai\nu-oiiid be almost inevitable it Icon-\nsrilulinnal rptestions were under. d;s\nI'lisfiinn. '   .'\nLIGHTHOUSE  KEEPER. DIES\nVICTORIA, July 8.^p. O. Tinhs,\nemployed ip the federal light hnij.se\nservice,* has been found dead en lhe\nbench ai flnyprniof; Til-bn, it is\nthought,   lost   his   lit;-  \u25a0through   i>jc-\nposiire. >ln swam out tn reeni*e\" Ida\nboat which hacl'g.ine adrift anrl On\nregaining shore .\u25a0 cbtlajined nn th\u00b0\nbeach  aiid  expired.\nMONTREAL, -Inly 8.\u2014The Grand\nTruni( arbitration proceedings which\nare to decide the value to he allowed\nin the Rngiish holders of; first, second\nanil third preferred and the common\nstnclt of the (Irani Truuli railway,\nnow taken over by ib.' Dominion gov\nernment, together with actual owner\nship nnd control el ibe firniul Trunk\nsysicnj, ennie lo an end this afternoon\na 4:3tr o'clock with addresses in re-\nhulial hy F. IT, I'hippcn. thigene htl-\nflenr nnd A. W, At water for the\nGrand -Trunk. All thc counsel engaged In these long drawn out proceedings, without precedent, 1n Canada, expressed thanks and congratula-\nlinns io the -'arbitrators, to Which the\nhitler responded suitably.! The hoard\nhas'been hi''\"Hessinn, 'with1 One break nf\neight   w\u00ab eks, since February   I.\nFor summer days\nGraceful broad brims suggest; summer gaities. Cleaning at. Very small1'' prices.\nUNDER SILKS that you will enthuse over in sdft\nCrepe-de-Chine in clfarming selections,\n\u25a0V^ASH SKIRTS\u2014A fresh white: skirt on a hdt day\nadds to the joy of life. They are Wade up in good quality\nGabardine.   At present prices you can afford ^anUWber.\nGET '6VM, PRICES ON LADIES'\nSUITS, COATS, DRESSES, ETC.\n'\u25a0 !,LAmES''<XVEAR SPECIALISTS\nThn flr.sl'hyrdo-clonti'ln plant'for\nnommerrltnl \u25a0purposf.s w.ih built at\nPranMorl-nn-the-Mnln in 1894.\nGIRLS! BLEACH SKIN\nWHITE WITH LEMON\nThe\nflral\ni h'culating lihary !n\nr'an-\niidn  w\nif;  f.|\nonort In  H'allfaxi  N.\nS.,  In\n1824.\nTho\nfirst   puhllp   llbrarri\n^h   in\nOiilnri\n. vrc\n-\u25a0\u25a0 opoiiecl in Ivingsrn\ni nnd\nBrnrsl\niwn\nin    1811,\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nKOOTENAY\u2014-H. Hosusk, Vernon;\n.John Corfsetto, Ni\\v* Denver; W. Swon-\nston. W.'ui.sinirg; M. ronkoff. Hall: .1.\nf'he%ildiff, Casflegar; Mike Mills. Kal-\nmo; .lohn Smim, Salmo; .1. Mcintosh,\nr.'rand Forks.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned and run   by  Canadians,  No\nnlle.li  labor  employed..\nRoom and board, per month....$45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   GrandviUo   Street\nCosy,    bright   rootps.   Just   the\nplace    for4  your    vacation.    Rates\nmoderate.    \"Write    for    particulars.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate of   Royal   Hotel,  Granville  St.\niiShed   i\nsettleuu\n^.n din n\ni   lfi\ntil  r\nnut\nnv.\nid   h'fiti\nsine.-  l\nna\u00bb         \u2014\n1 ii  n   |ioha'l\nFRECKLES\nDon.'t'Mide   Them'With   a   Viol;   Remove Them  With  Othine\u2014Double\nStrength.\nThin preparalinn fer the removal\nof freckles is usually so succewsful\nin removing freckles and giving a\nclear, iheaitUful-complexion that it is\nspid under guaranlee in refund the\nmoney.-if   il   fails.\niion-t hide your fi'eckles ' under a\nveil; get an nnpce; of tithine 'ind remove them. Even the first few apr\nplicati-on.s should show a wonderful\nimprovement, some of the Hunter\nfreckles   vanishing   entirely.\nBe'sure to ask (he druggist for the\ndouble strength Othlne; ii i.s ibis\nlhat Is sold on the money-hack ignar-\nFiND   WRECKED   LAUNCH\nVICTORIA. .Inly, K.- A big -launch,\nUTeeked . and., submerge 1, has been\nfound_ nn lie- alu.re or ^;i|| Soring\ninland, near hen-, 'lhe boat im 'be\nproperty of nn Indian named .lini\nMi 1.end, who is ItnoWii lo have left\nMayne Island On .Inly I, in hi****** Ijoii-t\niVitli his wife. Rlnorl was found under; the fitr'erlhg wbe.\"-!; but no n\";ce\ndf'aiVy ^ccupaiilfl.\nPAYSTfllMTE TO\nVancouver and Toronto Soccer Men Strong Opponents*\nSays Scots' Manager,\nMONTRKAI ', ilnly R.\u2014Rf'portinc;\nmany casiialiioji as a 're>nit \"nf their\nmany games in ibe pfist few weeks,\nand; aiiparentjy due \\--> the exlieine\nlieat 'and heavy railway Irnvel nb'ch\nthii team bas experienced in the past\nfew -days, ihe riiemliecs of the all-\nJ-f'fiHIsb soccer team arrived in the\ncily today, having reached -Ihi last\nMop Of I'Heir ldn\/j[ iranscont.ineniai\nlour  aero;;:i  Canada   and   return,\nTomr.rrnw arternoon, they will nicet\nihe all-Canadian e:evn in the final\nmair-h io j-.p |ya.de on Canadian i*\u00bbi\\\nprior |o ,ihe depart nre of the rmm\ntor ihe I'n i,d States Saturday nU'u.\nSpeaking nf ihe teams met 'iv ihe\nSeals. '!'.\u00bb! Sloan, martagor, pays\nIt-: b\"ni.' m ihe ie*tims they mi'M at\nToronto .mm) in Vancouver. T!t>kc\ntiaffiH,- In' ennsiders, are ihe stnm^est\nof  any   they   look   the   field   a\u00bbc!nsi\nGalaxy of Dominion's Best\nTalent Gathers for Championship.',\nTORONTO, .Inly H.\u2014The Dominion\nlawn tennis championships, which\nstart on thc courts of the Toronto\nLawn Tennis club tomorrow, will\nbring together the greatest galaxy of\ntennis stars that has ever played on\nCanadian 'soil. Vancouver has sent,\ntwo of her best players . In B. V.\nRhodes, who won the army chatn-\nplonship oi\" 1919, and Milne. The\nAustralian Davis cup team, composed\nof Anderson, TTawkes, Peach and\nTodd, are all playing-through. Winnipeg bas sent over a dozen players,\nIncluding Paul Bennett, the present\nCanadian champion, and O. D,\nHolmes, winher of many tournaments:\"\nOther prominent entries are W. N.\nRice, champion of Nova. Scotia, and\nhis partner, Dr. MacDonald of Sydney; It. A. Goodman, champion of\nSaskatchewan, and his partner. Dr.\nWrecker of Regina', 1?,, H. Damfrom-\nboise, the champion of Quebec; Colonel Foulkes of Kingston, winner of\nthe Canadian championship three\ntimes, and Miss, Clare Cnasels, the\nbrilliant. American lady player.\nTn the men's open singles well over\n100 entries have been received. The\nelimination series for players in Canada's Davis cup team wfill he played\nimmediately after ihe Canadian\nchampionships are concluded. The\nchosen team will then play tire Australian Da'vis enp team.\nSnuepza j tho juice of two 'lemons\ninto a bottle containing th*ree ounces\nof Orchard White, which any drug\nstore will supply for a few cents,\nshake well, and yoit \"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 the beauty and wMteness of\nyour   sl^In.\nFamous stage beauties use this lemon tntlnn to bleach and bring that\nsoft, clear, rosy-white complexion,\nalso as a freckle, sunhurn, and tan\nbleach  because It doesn't  Irritate.\nSpecial Summer\nShoe Sale\nFor 'men, Women, girls,\nboys and children. We invite you to come in Md\nsee for yourself the'bfi>\ngains.\nC. Romano\nRepairs   Taken,,  Work\nGuaranteed.\nImrncnw   Fields   nf   Impel   coftl   v.ill\nlie npeneil   ill  Alaskn   npX.I   S|n'int,r with\n\u25a0lllie completion nf the Alnsltn nnilim-\n\u25a0   I'niiv.'.'iy    tills   yenr.\n! JHE STANDARD CAFE\n320    Baker   Stre\u00abt,    Nelson,    B.   C.\nI OPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n12   to   2:30,   Speoial    Lunch,   40c\nPhone 154\nTO ABOLISH INDIAN\nPENAL SETTLEMENT\nVICTORIA, July 8.\u2014The Indian\npenal settlement; of Andaman Islands,\nBay of 'Bengal, is to be abolished\nunder the policy of the new administration in India, states B. E\\ Lewis,\ndeputy commissioner for the Andaman group, who IshPre from' Hongkong   on   a.  visit..\n\/'The penal settlement in tn lie\nabolished and what native poiivicts\nare there, at least the more serious\noffenders, will bo transferred, to the\njails of India,\" said Mr.\u00ab Lewis-\nThe Andaman, colony  was  estab-\nA Bad Case\nEczema All Over His Body \u2014\nHis Legs\u2014His Arms Covered\nJohn Clark or DrookviHe   N. K    crowli a\n\u25a0rtoryotgrcatEiifteiiiiB into   'ew Words\n'I was tornifiiilPd beyond wordi. I\ncould not :.ic'-ji    You could not put a\npin on ray whole body. I tried sevtyy\ndo'.'torB.   Thoy said ft Was scroful\"\n*   Three dolhr bottles of D. D. D. in all\nused. 1 hav- uot lia\/1 ti aore for tive\nDinntllB.'\nEach week wo are selecting a letter from\nnoine Canadian sufferer to bhow -what can he\ndone to itcliing, burning skin disease by the\nclear, purifying1 liquid wash. 0. D D.\nSlop that itch today. -Vou are not aiked to\nose D. D. D.' for week*! before yon receite results. If yomion't get relief from the ve. ' first\nbottle we Imnd your money hack 81,00a bottle\nTry D, I). U. Soap too.\nML lotion for Shin Disease\nCnrinfla J>*dk &\"BnoK  Co.; '\nNelson, B.C.\nUnless you see the name \"Bayer\"'on package or on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at a)!.   Made in .Canada.\nBUGS   POISON    CHICkS       *\nMac.rndactylus Rubspinnsus is bad\nfor chickens. The hug is n.nt as \\^:,%\nas Us name hut it is equally hard\nto manage. Its common name ia\nrose chafer, rose bug or rose beetle,\nU feeds on grape vines, roses, dairies\nand many other flowers and shrubs.\nRose hugs are sprawly looking Insects a little more than one-half inch\nlong and of a greenish-huff iv-lor.\nThey come out of the ground usually\nduring the latter part of .Tune and\nthe first two weeks of July, but they\nseem to. rave appeared earlier Ibis\nyear than usual. Adult hens seem\nlo he Immune hut thn oodles of the\nrose hugs are poisonous to chicks\nand yet they will eat these insects\nravenously. Recently a six-weeka'-old\nchick was examined mid it was found\nthat.lt had eaten fifl df these hug****) In\none day. Ita funeral followed almost\n^mmrTliately. poultry men have nn\noption In this matter. They \\must\nkeep the chicks and the rose \"*Niigs\nseparate.\nChicks in mowed fields are fnlrly\nsafe but, they must lie kept awsiy\nfrom roses, daisies, grape vines and\ntho like, A more liberal lise of beef\nscraps tends to lessen the chicks'\ncraving  for  insects.\nSAFETY FIRST! Accept, only an \"unbroken package\" bf\ngenuine \"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,\" which contains directions'\nand dose worked out by physicians during 21 years and proved\nsafe by millions for'Headache, Earache, Tootha'che, Neuralgia,\nColds, Rheumatism*  Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain.generally.\nHandy tin boxes of 12 talilctf. cost but a (ew rent*i\u2014Larger packages.\nABplrln is the trade murk fre-glBC'i'M In t'atinrini of Uoyc-r Manufacture of \"Mono-\nacptlraetttester of SiiluyileucM. Whlh- It In w. li ttnnwn iliui Aenirln meanB flayer\n\u25a0manil.facinf.', to flssiet flip iiuLllr nBdlnftt naltntlon^, iho Tn!)l*\"ta hr Baycp CdmpaD'\/\nTrill bo \u00bbtampcj wltb then tp-neratua4^ marl*-, vliv \"D\u2014far Cro^.\",\nIIAUD TO I1RRA.K PllICKS.\nROME, July 7.\u2014(Associated Press.)\n\u2014The struggle hetween buyers and\nsellers still continues in Italy, as it\ngoes to the heart of the Itatlian shopkeeper to reduce those pripes which\nhave made his fortune since the war.\nA large rpinntity of wool has been\nsent to Italy from Australia, and consequently the Itatlian wdolen mer^\nohniits'find a. difficulty in disposing\nof their goods, and fine wooden stuff\ncan now he produced for $10 a. yard.\nThe shopkeepers; however, refuse to\nsell this cheaper material until they\nhave exhausted all the dearer hut Inferior quality cloth which they ha've\nin their shops,' and \u2022 continue calmly\nto charge f^-om $100 to $200 for a suit\nof clothes. o\nPayrolls\nGREEN\nFORESTS\nMEAN MORE\nEmployment\nBURNT\nrAprerc JAvCxC'tt'ElOIl\nMEAN LESS\n*,'V    '   -\nMORAL-Be Cartful With Fire.\n'. W       .-V \u25a0\u25a0 i -i\u00bb\nHat pins are In agiain, and pins\nmade lo resemble little bunches of\nflowers,'bars of roses and dangles in\nevery form and shape' Comprise Some\nM-the.neTWL'.otie^.'.        '     .;   .'\nRestoring Public\nConfidence\nThe only 'force that can mould public\nconfidence and so bring about better\nbusiness conditions is the daily newspaper.    .      \u2022 .'       ' ' .:-\"\nThe only force that is striving to restore public confidence in! business con-\n'ditions is the daily newspaper.\nThe.only,force that.can take the advertising of your goods right into the\nhomes of the people day after day,\nweek after week,; is \u2022 the\/daily newspaper. ; -.      \u2022:  ..     i \u2022 :     .-\u25a0\nIf'you can afford bat one form of advertising, THAT FORM SHOULD BE\nDAILY NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING,    i,        .:,\u25a0.''      \u2022\u25a0\u2022   \u25a0    \u25a0 : .    -  *\nIssued by The Canarl-itm Dmhi Newspapers Association,\nHead Office, Toronto.\n m\nTHE- NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 9; 192*1.\n-      *\n-TC\n*~\n| Twenty Years Ago Today\n'\/JBJrwftthe Tribune, July 9, 1901.) '\n, Thomas Jbries, - manager pf the\nOnondaga Mlnee, of Syracuse, NY Y.,\nurns' In\" Nelson yesterday' for the\npurpose of making arrangements for\n*he \u25a0 building of a short wagon road\narid 'terry over the Kootenay river,\njvhlch- WHl enable him to mako h'fa\nheadquarters in Nelson lnsteo.1 of\nR'oasland. T^te Onondaga-Mines are\nthe owners of etx mineral claims on\n\u25a0 the divide between the Kootenay\nand Columbia rivers, being situated\nabout an equal distance from Waterloo on the Columbia, and Robson.\non the Kooteriay.\n:\u2022'..'- \u25a0    \u2022       *       *\n\u25a0The most important business Ue-\nSfore Ftlio meeting of the city council\nlast night was the report of ihe\nfire, water and Hght committee upon\nthe offer of tho West Kootenay Power & Light company to purchase the\n\"city's light plant for $50,000- This\nclause, of the report set out that\nthe offer  made  by  tho power com-\n\u2014\u2022-^.pany was one-which in the opinion\nof the committee could not be entertained by the council, and was tulopt-\n.ed without debate.   .\nA communication was1 received\nfrom Ewart Brothers & Rlngroae offering to sell the city the 400 lamps\nat present Installed on Baker.-street,\ntogether  with  the .fixtures,  for  J3E0.\nThe Salvation Army wrote asking\nfor the store in front of Uie Phair\nhotel for new barracks they con-'\ntemplate erecting. Tho council, however, will require this for the, new\nhigh   school.\nMayor Fletcher announced the sale\nof $100,000 worth of city debentures\nfor $105,025.85, about $1200 better\nthan the previous offer.\nCity Engineer McCulIoch reported\nupon tho condition of tho opera\nhouse with respect to Its safety us\na place of public entertainment in\ncase of fire, stating that in view\nof the alterations made In the building he now regarded it as a safe\nplace for any audience which might\nbe assembled  in  it.\nBAPTIST CHURCH\nPASTOR, BUT. J. E. TYNER\nBeaidonco,   corner  Jonophtno   and\nX.atimor Street,\nSunday School and Bible\nClasses at 9:45.\n\"Morning service at 11.\nSubject: \"Great Days in tlie\nLife bf 'j\u00abjsus;-Tlitr Third Day\nof  The Passion   Week.\" .... J\t\nEvening   service  at   $7:U0.\nUsual services during the\nwefjk.\n\u25a0;\nThe Christian\nScience Society\nHold   Services   in   the\nKnights of\nPythias Hall\nOn Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7:30\n' p. m.\n\u20228unday-Sctiool.<at 9r45 a. m.\nSt Paul's\nPresbyterian\nChurch\nSUNDAY,   JULY   10.\nRev. Jas. Ban Stirling,\nMinister\nSunday Sc^ool,..^ a. nj.<\nAdult Bible Class, 10:15\n. a. m. Prayer l service for\nt'^'.rn'inlutes.:''*;\n11 a. m., M\u00abrning-Servr.;\nice.\n,    7:30   p.\nService.\nHi,,.. Evening\nProvincial Road Superintendent\nKllcun und District Road Suiicrm-\ntertdent McLean wero engaged In laying out the Nelson-Oranlte wagon\nroad yesterday. They located, about\nhalf a mile,* finding a good route\nthat practically follows the old 'government trail-\nMALES PREDOMINATE.\nWASHINGTON.\u2014There are' 2,090,132\nmore males than females in the United States, according to census figures\nfor 1920. The ratio Is 101 to 100, as\ncompared with loo to every 100 females ill the\/period of 1900-1910. the\ncensus   bureau   announcement   shows.\nLegal Notices\nWATER NOTICE\n(Diversion and Use)\nTAKE  NOTICE  that Tlie Deanshaven\nDevelopment Co., Ltd., whose address\nis\u25a0 Rlondel, 13. C.wlH apply for a 11-\ncenso to take and use one cubic foot\nper second of water out of Sherraden\nCreek, which flows in' a Westerly direction and drains Into Kootenay Lake\nabout one-third of a mile North of the\nDeunsliitven Wharf. The water will be\ndiverted from the stream at a point\nabout one hundred feet more or less\nbelow the eastern boundary of 3bb\nLot a, ant! will be used for irrigation purposes upon fhe land , described\nas Sub Lot a, 14a, 15, IB of Lot\" 4595.\nThis notice was posted on the ground\non the 20th day of June, 1921. A copy\nof this notice and an application pursuant thereto aiid to the \"Water Act,\n1914, will be filed in the office of the\nWater Kecarder at Kaslo, B. C- Objections to the application may be filed\nwith the said Water Recorder or with\nthe Comptroller of Water Rights, Parliament Buildings, Victoria. B.C., withr\nin thirty .days after the first appearance of this notice in a local newspaper.\nThe date of thc first publication of\nthis notico is Juno 24. 1921.\nDEANSHAVEN DEVELOPMENT CO.,\nLTD. Applicant.\nBy.J.. 1-1. Beley, Secretary, Agent.\n  (3801)\nWATER NOTICE\n(Diversion and Use.)\nTAKE NOTICE that Deanshaven De\nvelopnnmt Co., Ltd., whose address Is\nRiondelV B. C, will apply for a license\nto take and use two cubic feet per\nsecond of water out of .Sherraden Creek,\nwhich flows In a Wbst^Bili'' .direction\nand drains' into Kootenay' Lake about\none-third of a mile North of the Deanshaven Wharf. Tho water will be diverted from the stream at p. point\nabout twenty yards more or less below\nwhere the Bluebell, Kootenay Bay Trail\ncrosses the Creek, ahd will he used for\nPower purposes upon ' the \u25a0 land described as Sub Lot 3, 14a, 15, 1G, of\nLot 4595. This notice was posted on\nthe ground on the 20th day of June,\n19411. A copy of this \u2022notice and an-\n.-\u2022ipnjicatlon pursuant thereto and to the\n\"Water Act, 1914,\" will be filed in\nthe office of the Water Recorder at\nKaslo, B. C. Objections to the application may be filed with the said Water\nRecorder'or with the Comptroller of\nWater Rights, Parliament Buildings,\nVlctlria, B.C., within thirty days after\nthe first appearance of this notice In a\nlocal newspaper. Thu date of the first\npublication of this notice ls June 24,\n1921.\nDEANSHAVEN    DEVELOPMENT    CO.,\nLTD.,   Applicant.\nBy J. H. Beley, Secretary. Agent,\nrasoo)\nMil\nMethodist Church\nREV,  J,  P.  WESTMAN,  Pastor\nPhone   105.      ,\nThe Presbyterian and. Methodist congregations unite for the\nmun tli.\n11 ti. ih.\u2014\"Tackling a Hard\nJob.\"\n7:30 n. m.\u2014\"God's Glory in\nMan.\"\nA special meeting of ihe W.\nM. S. will be held on Tliur::duy\nat 3 p. m. Miss Jack, ii returned missionary, will speak.\nThe Presbyterian . auutlay\nschool will meet at usual at 10\na!, m.\n Forget not the assembling of\n'yourselves together.\"\n\"POUND DISTRICT ACT.\"\n'\u25a0Pursuant to'the provisions of Section\n11 of this Act,1 notice- is hereby given of\nthe appointment of A,\"W: Lymbery of\nGray  Creek,-B.' O, as'poundkeeper  of\nthe pound   established   at   Gray Creek\nwithin,the Kaslo Electoral division. The\nlocation   ofthe-pound   premises' is   on\nBJock G, Lot 14S9. Cray Creek,- B. C.\nE. -Q. BARROW.\nMinister of Agriculture.\nDepartment or. Agriculture, Victoria.. B.\nC. June 25th, 1921\/ .      (3895)\nGOVERNMENT HOUSE. VICTORIA,\n'. June 25th, 1921.\nPresent':-,\nHIS    HONOUR    THE r LIEUTENANT-\nGOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.\nWHEREAS, by \"An Act respecting\nPound Districts\" ft is enacted that the\nLieutenant-G&vernor In Council may, by\nOrder in Council made public by notice\nIn the British Columbia Gazette, constitute any part of the Province al British Columbia not within the limits of a\nmunicipality into a pound district.\nAND WHEREAS, under the provisions of this Act application has been\nmade by itroprletors of land in that\npari of the Kaslo Electoral district In\nth\u00a3 Province of British Columbia at\nGray Creek as comprised within thu following boundaries: .Al! that area in\nWest Kootenay included in Lot 1489.\nand lit Sublots l(;,.20, 2K, 32, 33, 42, 55.\nf!G, 7tt, 81. 83, 91, 98, 117, 114 In. Lot\n4595;\nAND WHEREAS, notice of Intention\nto- constitute such district a pound district was given In accordance with the\nrequirements of the Act, and no objection has been made by any proprietor\nwith In the-pro posed pound district.\nOn the reconimendatiou of the Honourable tho Minister of Agriculture, and\nunder the provisions of the \"Pound\nDistrict Act,\" His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor of. British Columbia, by'\nand with the advice of his Executive\nCouncil.'has been pleased to order, and\nit is h-irejty ordered, that the above district at Gray Cret'k, British Columbia,\nbe. oomitUutod a pound, district. .-.\nJ..D. MACLEAN,\nClerk Executive. Council.\nVictoria, B. C, June 27, 1921.     (3890)\nFIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST\nNfcLSON, B. C,\nCor, Kootenay arid Vlolorja 8*re\u00abti      A\"\nHnndo.y Bervlcoa 11 a. mi an* 7:80 p. m.\nTToduouaay evening, Testimonial  Meeting.' 8 9'cloolt. '\u25a0>>,'\n.   Sunday School, 9:45  a. in.\nReading Boom and Free Circulating Library In Church (wilding\nopen 8 to Ip. in. -daily except Sunilfiys   and   puhlle   holidays.\nW^J.JULJ^lIUUJ^LTi.4L.UU.-UiUl.J.lU.UJ.JJJr..1'\nimmwm\nManager Norman of Kootenay Fruit Growers Says\nManager King h Right.\n'I have beep prcaeiiing the grading\nup of our fruit' for tlie last seven\nyears, and It .gladdened by heart lo\nread the straight talk from Manager\nW. S. King pf the Hudson's Bay company ' here, on the way ' Kootenay\nranch products shou'd be put on the\nmarket. He did not say one word too\nmany. I could supply a hundred instances of the kind he gave of where\nthe producer ruined his chances-of a\ngood price by making an . Inferior\npack. Every dealer knows these\nfacts\u2014they are commonplace. It is\nonly the producers that will not comprehend  the standards,\"\nE. Norman, secretary and manager\nof the Kootenay Fruit Growers' union,\nmade this.statement yesterday afternoon when asked 'for comment on Mr.\nKing's interview, which has aroused\nkeen Interest and has evoked both\nangry comment and warm commendation from various sections of thf! West\nKootenay, the warm commendations\nImmensely predominating,\nProducers' Blind Side. .\n'The individual rancher Is sincere\nenough,\" continued Mr. Norman. \"He\nreally believes his fruit is top notch,\nand that he has turned out a very\ncreditable pack that can demand the\nbest price. Unless he actually sees\nhis pack ln comparison witli what\n1,1ns market calls first class there Is\ngreat difficulty in making him helievo\nhis output is below standard.   '\n\"Thc average rancher Insists, for\nInstance, that thc law allows him to\nhave 10 per cent of apples that are\nnot No. ls 1n a box of No. Is. But\nthe statute distinctly specifies that all\nthe fruit In a box marked 'No. 1* must!\nPIE LUXE\nCity Fathers Will Install Water, Gas and Current at\nHouston Park.\nbe weM grown and -well colored sped- i modatiou\nmens of their variety. The 10 'pet \"\ncent limit is designed to cqver hlem-\nishes that the packer did not discover\nwhile he was attempting to pack a\npeiCect box, II' a man deliberately\nputs in 10 per cent of blemished fruit\nthere will he a whole lot' more that\nhe will put in unknowingly, anuSthe\nintention of the statute will not be\"\nmet. Tliere is also variation In\" size'\nand in color, some boxes arc packed\nloose!y, and there are many other\nways \u25a0 of'offending against tlie standard.\n\"A well faced box of No. Is will\nbring a top price where another hox\nof possibly as good fruit but jumblo\npack will not move at all.\n\"To turn to cherries, you can see it\nlu the grocery windows every day.\nThe punnets of cherries that have the\nstems cut and turned under, and-the\nfruit nicely faced on top, will he\nsnapped up-by -the public at a higher\nprice than is asked for equally as good\nfruit that is tossed in anyway, while\nthe punnets witli tlie tossed Th fruit\nse'l with difficulty, even at the lower\nprice. *\nPublic; Indorses These Stiintliirds.\n\u25a0\"It is not the dealer who Is setting\nthese standards\u2014it is the public. The\nsooner the producers stop blaming the\ndealer for their troubles and accept\nthe fact that the market demands cer-,\ntain standards the sooner wilt they\nget the returns that they want.\n\"Of course there are individual producers who have learned their lesson,\n-and make it an absolute rule to turn\nou the hest output possible. These\nmen year after year get the top prices\nfor whatever products they are marketing ou tills system. I am not ma-,\nking these remarks for their benefit.\n-If every one'Would folluw their Jead\nKootenay -fruit, would stand higher\nthan it does, and our ranchers would\nbe bettor off.\n\"Take the man -who ships what he\nbelieves to he a car of No. 1 apples,\nbut has been lax in letting in a certain percentage of inferior fruit; Even\nIf the car as a whole is No. 1..K. the\nsample boxes that the prairie dealer\npicks at random and empties are a\nlittlo beloty standard In nine cases\nout of 10 the dealer will feel a prejudice against the Car and will, in\nmany cases, grade the car possibly below Its actual merits. If he should\nbe a dishonest dealer these poor, boxes\ngive him the excuse he wants for employing sharp practice on the shipper, f -\nWould Pay to Throw Away Inferior\nFnUt.\n\"IL would actually pay a. producer\nto thpbw away inferior fruit, even If it\nis just a little Inferior, rather than\nlet it go Into a box of good (fruit and\nlower the grade.\n\"The time will come here, as it has\ncome in every country or section\nwhere a general marketing organization is in charge of tlie crop disposal,\nwhen inspectors of the organization\nwill set tho standards iu the orchards\nand supervise the packing so- that\nthere will be iio'tniestlou of grade.\n\"J have said all this before, and*\nhave said it often. I have sent out\npleas for better grading in all our circulars L'or years.' Often as it has heen\nsaid, it will have to be said again hundreds of times in the future hefore\nthe, n\\Ulennlum ;\u00abf fruit mar|tetlng\ncomes.\"   t- '-\u2022\u2022 , .\nA camp de luxe Cor camping motor\ntourists will Immediately spring up\nin the lower section of Houston park,\nthe members of. the city council decided yesterday nfternoon, meeting in\ncommittee session. Acting Mayor\nJohn Hell presided over the session,\nat which 'Aldermen A. D. Emory, W.\nM. Curil'ffe and L. ll. Choquette \\vcro\nalso pre,sent.\nMotor parties enjoying the shade of\nthe steady conifers there will have the\nchoice of three means of cooking. Several camp fireplaces will be built of\nstone, mortar and boilerplate. About\n,100 feot of gas pipe will be laid, giving connection with the gas main on\nFront street. For the Htart the gas\nfixtures will be at only one point,\nthough later there wilt be'fixtures at\nfour or five points in the area. Electric stoves wilt also be Installed, with\none at a central point for a start.\nFree wood will he furnished the\ncampers fur the fireplaces.\nWater will of course be laid on,\nfrom tho main on Front street, and\nthe grove will be well lighted with\nfestoons of lights. The camp sanitation  will also be taken care of.\nMen wl'l tie put at work immediately clearing out the undt>rbrush, while\nW. li, Al'Ieck, city engineer, arid O. T.\nMacGulre* city electrician, will collaborate lu laying out. the grounds.\nIt Is claimed that 50 parties can be\naccommodated in this area. For a\nstart about a dozen camp sites will be\nprovided.\nThe   aldermen   had   just   come   up\ntown from the city hall when the first\n1' must! touring party requiring camp accom-\nBANNER FRUIT YEAR\nFOR THE OKANAGAN\nV1SKNON, July 7.\u2014Bumper yields\nof apples, pears and cherries throughout the Okanagan valley are In prospect. Ripe fruit Is now coming on\nthe market and the early forecasts of\na banner fruit crop are likely to be\nrealized. Thl*-** year the demand for\napples tu the prairie'provinces Is expected to be large.  ' \\  \u2022: *        r\nwas sigiited. Frank H\nLamb, head of the Lamb Machinery\ncompany, of Hoquiam, Wash., witli\nhis family, having driven in on Baker\nstreet with a big car and trailer, the\nlatter carrying camp outfit. Acting\nMayor John Bell guided'the party_ to\nHouston park, where camp was\npitched.\nRECEIVES RULING\nON MANUFACTURING\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS\nMEET ^CONVENTION\nWINNIPEG, July 8.\u2014C, W. Creen-\nwood, Stratford, Ont., was yesterday elected president of the National association of funeral directors.\nW- fc*. Yuill, mayor of Swift Corrent,\nSask., was elected secretary. The\nfirst session of the convention Will\nbe held tomorrow morning.    .   .\nAt the close of the convening cf\nthe association this morning, the delegates unanimously favored, a national association. Various'''delesjnteS\noutlined the good that might he \u25a0accomplished in the way pf education:\nand standardizing the profession\nthroughout the Dominion, as well as\nto work in closer cooperation with\nthe provincial board of health, whoa*\nwork was closely allied with that uf\nthe funeral directors.\nJ. F. Thompson, Winnipeg, wns\neleeted'presldent of the western Canada association. and A. B. Gardiner\nwas unanimously elected secretary,\nfor the eighth time-\nPLAN WAR AIRPLANES\nADAPTED TO COMMERCE\n.PARIS,  July 8;\u2014(Associated Press).\n-A fleet of 1000 airplanes, suitable for\nwar. Is proposed in a bill now before the Chamber of Deputies. It\nIs planned to establish and operate\nthese warcraft commercially so that\nthe cost to the government would be\nlittle if unV more than under its\npresent  policy.\nTlie author of the measure,  Deputy\nPaul     Benazet,    called    attention    t\nthe large and expensive aviation  per\nsonnel    of    the   government    \"which\nconsumes   but  does   not   produce.\"\nStrongly advocating the creation of\na great, protective aerial force, M\nBenazet, urged that the government\ncreate a corporation to operate com\nmercially. transporting passengers and\nfreight: establishing air postal routes,\nthus training aviators, developing aviation, cementing relations with the\ncolonics and meantime keeping the\nfleet ready*, for immedjate conversion   to war purposes.\nBritish Columbians are proud of*\ntheir province, and believe in its future- They believe In it for their\nchildren -'and their children's children; but only by building up British Columbia industries can >- they\nguarantee its future.\nOno of the principal .objects ot\nthc recently formed'economic'COTJtw\ncil for dealing with the problem*\nof unemployment in the provl-pctf\nwill be to irfduce the people to purchase   Made-ln,p.   C.  goods. '\u00bb\nEverybody Enjoys\na fine cup of Tea.\nIF YOU DRINK JAPANS\nTRY\n\"SALADA\" GREEN TEA\nInfinitely Superior to\nthe best ol Japans.\nis truly delicious at all\ntimes. 30 years' reputation for fine teas.\nSecretary FJ. F. Gigot <K the Nelson\nbranch Retail Merchants' Association\nof Canada lias received from Secretary George S. Hougham of the provincial board a copy of tjio ruling\nmade by 'tlie '.department of finance\ndistinguishing between businesses that\nare manufacturing, and therefore Mabel to manufacturers' license and,excise sales tax, and those businesses\nwhich, while occasionally making\ngoods to tlie order of an individual\ncustomer, are in al! essential details\nbelong in the retail mercantile classification. Mr. Hougham In turn r\nceived the ruling -from the associ\nlion's Dominion board.\nCHIEF RABBI LAUDS\nIMPERIAL SUCCESS\nVAXCOUVLT!, July 8.\u2014Speaking\nbefore the Canadian club here.\nVery Itev. Dr. Joseph H. Hertz, chief\nrabbi of the United Hebrew congregations of the British Empire, declared that the latitude and longitude\nof the spirit of British institutions\nwas the secret Of Britain's imperial\nsuccess. By lutitude, Dr. Hertz explained, he 'meant the broad spirit o!\ntolerance throughout'the Empire in\ngeneral and in Canada particularly;\nby longlitude, the, habit of taking an\nage-long view of things.\n\"Thc British empire,\" declared Dr.\nHertz, \"is not built upon machine\nguns.\" The effect of.the British system upon the races that make up the\nEmpire, he illustrated by the.loyalty\nof tjie Jewish race, which sent 50,000\n\"men to. fight for her lu the late war.\nCANADIAN, PACIFIC\nTO EUROPE\nMAKE   HEHUBVATIOKB   HOW.   I\nMONTREAL    TO    I.IVEKPOOI.\nAub. ti, Hcpt. ^ MlniiedoHa\nJuly i:>. Aim. 17, Kept, 20..Metagarna\nJuly 22. Aub. hi. .SupL It..'Victorian\nJuly  2S,  Aub.  26 Mcllta\nQUEBEC    TO    LIVERPOOL\nJuly 30   Aub- 20 tOinp. ol' Britain\nJuly  13, Aub. Hi Kept. 10\t\n  Emp. of Prance\nAug.   11, Sept.\n12, Oct.  11\t\n... .Emp.  of  Scotland\nMONTREAL   TO   GLASGOW\nJuly 21. Alls- HO Out. ,4. ...Pretoriuu\nAub. 0. Sept.  II) Tunisian\nMONTHEAL-HAVRE-LONDON\nAub.   19. Soept; 30... Sicilian\nJuly 30, Sept. 1, OM.-.6 Scotlan\nMOHTREAr.-SOUTHAHPTOH-\nAHTWERP,\nJuly 23. Aub- 27, Oct. 1. Scandinavian\nAub- t, Sept. 0  Coralcan\nMONTREAL-NAPLES-GENOA     ,\nJuly 27   .: \u00b1^,_. .Montreal\nFREIGHT   ONLY\nApproximate 8alUng; stato.\nMONTREAL-LONDON\nJuly 10, Aub- 31 . Boillnsurokc\nAub-  8    -Boswortli\nAub.   13    Dunbrldge\nMONTREAL-AVONMOBTK\nJUly   22    BbthWgll\nApply Local Agents or\nJ.  S.  CARTER,  21. P.  A.,\nUfilnon, B. C.\nCanadian rnolflo Railway\nTrnlflo Agouti.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co,\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOfflc,  Omoltina  and   Refinirig  DapirtmtM\nTRAIL, BRITI8H COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF   COLO,   SILVER,  pOPPER AMP, i.fyU)   OBM\nPftJuear.  .f  Q.IH,   fillv.r.   Copper,    Blu\u00abt\u00abn\u00bb,    Plf    Uarf,    I Iff*\nTADANAQ  TRAIt\n\u25a0Jjiiu.\u201e.i 1,11 1 uJjiJJL-UlJ     J 'J'ULLUJmilU\"JIJ\nA\nRENAME NEVSKY PROSPECT\nRIGA, Latvia, Julj\"; 8.\u2014The Nevsky\nPruspcct, the \"Broadway\" of Petrograd. has been rechristened by the\nBolshevik government \"25th of October\nI'ruspket,\" lhat being the date, by\ntbe Russian calendar, in 11)17, when\nthe Soviets overthrew the Kerensky\ngovernment. So it now becomes popularly known, in Russian, as \"Oktobrie\nPruspekt.\"\nUNEARTH   ANCIENT   VASE\nATHENS, July 8.\u2014Excavations being carried on at Delphi by the French\nSchool in Athens have resulted in\nthe -discovery in a tomb of a vase\nbelieved to be of great value because\nIt bears the signature of the noted\nceramist Pint sides, only two pieces\nof whose \"work have hitherto been\nextant.\nANARCHIST   IS   PRESIDENT\nERIVAN, July 8.~Mesnikian, an\nanarchist before the war, is the new\npresident of the Armenian Soviet,\nreplacing Oassian, a Menshevik. The\nchange was made under pressure of\nthe   Bolshevik   authorities.\nprotection against lho elements.\nApply this same thought tQ the protection of the\nhome and you see at once how important it is\nthat exterior surfaces should have adequate protection against natural decay. By saving the\nsurface you save all that lies beneath.\nThe Paint which has thc guarantee of durability and quality ia\n70%_iey*ului\n(t tj nitami Ct kirn 14 )\n3G\u00a3PanWnbZi\u00ab\nA formula that haa been pronounced correct for Canada's\nrigorous climate.\nInsist upon B-II,\"English\" Paint-\u2014it provides a coat of such\nbody, brilliance and toughness as to defy rain, \u00abAui; sleet,\nsnow or frost, where cheaper paints will Hake, crack aiid-peel.\nThroughout Canada B-H \"* English\" Paint has been giving\nstir fact-saving protection for years\u2014it will .protect your\nhome as bark protects the tree.\nTOR   r-AJ.E  BY\nMURPHY BROS.,\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nMOWTFWAL. MAUFAX JCT.tlOKN TMOMTO wiMNian\nHSOICINK MAT '    cu\\K<J*trt enwititnoM VAHCOUVEH\nMcClary's Protected\nElement\n\"McClary's Protected Element is the final\ntouch of perfection in the- Electric Range.\nKeeping the many wire coils in.the Elements\nfree from grease, dirt and damage is assured\nwith McClary's Protected Element. Dirt\nimpairs heat radiation.\nSalt in grease or water may fuse the coils\u2014\nburn them out, cause damage and repair bills.\nMcClary's Elements are encased   in   disks of tough, protecting\nporcelain made by a secret process.\nThe wire coils are embedded in the porcelain disk, snugly protected\nfrom damage of any kind.\nM'Clary's\nProtected\nElement\nordinary\nExposed\nElement*\nN Cld\nElectric R\nThe tough\", smooth disk heats\nquickly, retains the heat, will\nstand any amount of wear with\nheavy pots and pans \u2014 cannot\nget out of order like the exposed\nElements of ordinary ranges.\n\u2014In fact, it eliminates Electric Range worry.\n' McClary's Protected Element\nis only one of many advantages\nyou get in a McClary's Electric\nRange.\nNext to tHe Protecte'd Element, McClary's seamloes, joint-\nless oven is the most valuable\nfeature of McClary's Electric\nRange '\u2022*- sanitary, clean and\nefficient.\n161-\nWrite'the McCIary Mfg, Co,, Vancouver,\n- -  JST n*me \u25a0\u25a0 of ..-nearest agent\n TI\n1\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 9, 1921.\n_JHHEJ)AILYJ[EW^\nPublished every morning except 8un-\niflay by tbe News Publishing Company,\nlimited, Nelson, B. C, Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, tiimlted, and tn* no case to Individual members of ths statu\nAdvertising rate cards and A- B. C.\nStatements of circulation mailed on request or may be seen at me office of\nany advertising agency recognized by\ntnajCanadlan Press Association.\n\"\"Subscription* rates: By mall (country), 60 cents per month; $6 per year.\nOutside Canada, a month,  75c; a year,\nJ 160. Delivered, 73c per month; 14\nor six months; $7.50 jer yaar, payable\nIns advance.\nnb\u00ab   Audit   Bureau   of   ClxooUHon\nSATURDAY,   JULY   9,   1921\nNot a Very Favorable Policy\n|From Interior Viewpoint\nWidenf\nbuseke\nLnurfc. A. KipKmon\nMORE ANSWB   RED LETTERS.\n. fit is announced at Victoria\ntfi\u00bbat the government proposes\"to\nk&ep public works expenditures\nthis summer to a minimum\nwith the object of having in\nhftnd a fund for winter work. *\n\"The idea is that it will be\nb$ter to withhold road work\nuntil the winter, in case unemployment should then : be\nheavy.\n~?This policy may be all right\nfov the coast, but it will work\na^Tiardship on the interior. If\nrdadwprk is curtailed to a mim-\niffjum during the.summer and\nfill not very much work can\nbg done in the winter, on account of weather conditions.\nZXt would be sounder policy as\nfffi* as the interior is concerned\nto, go ahead with development.\nTtye .work would then be done\nwhile it is practicable to do it\neconomically and much the same\n\/result would be attained insofar\nas; preventing unemployment\nnext winter is concerned.\nCoiiHliitit Reader\u2014\"What caused the\nchili sauce, that 1 made last year, to\nsour? Was it some trouble with the\nparafflne? I put the parafflne on the\nsauce 'while it was \"still warm. I had\nthe eaihe trouble with  pears.\"\nAnswer\u2014Without a doubt, your incorrect .sealing caused the trouble. In\nthe flint place, never put on the paraf-\nfine till the contents of tho jar or glass\nis unite cold. And In the second place,\nit m belter to put chill sauce In a bottle, cork the bottle, and then dip the\nbottle-liead Into very hot melted parafflne, thus covering cork und half the\nbottle-neck; Or you could mako your\nchill sauce and put it Into hot, sterilized\nglass Jaffa (the kind that has a glass top\nheld on by a wire) at once, as soon as It\nhas finished cooking, then soul the Jars\ncompletely, not ,waiting for the sauce to\ncool. Do your pears this way, too. Use\nnew rubbers ou the Jars.\nF, Z. \"1 have lost the excellent recipe you published recently for walnut\ncake, Will you kindly repeat it? I tried\n:t and it was fine.\"\nAnswer\u2014Walnut cake (ibis is also a\nreply to Mrs. VV. J.): Cream \u00a3j cup of\nbutler, add 1 cup of granulated sugar\nslowly, then :i egg-yolks well beaten, Hi\n3Up of milk and 1% cups of flour which\nlave been mixed and sifted witli 2M;\nvcaspoons of baking powder. Fold in\n'he whiles of 'J eggs stiffly beaten, and\ntdd 94 of a cup of walnut meats bro-\nteil inlo fairly small pieces. Turn into\nl buttered loaf-cake pan which is about\nfour by eight Inches in size (measuring\nho bottom of the \u2022pan) and bake for-15\nminutes in a moderate ov.cn. This will\nmake a n,\\Th loaf. Frost with ordinary\nboiled icing, made with the left-over\n'gg-white, and press perfect half walnut\nmeats on top while warm, to decorate It.\nHousekeeper\u2014\"Can you suggest some\niliim\nole?'\ns   that   can   be   made   in\nForest Fires\nAnswer\u2014Next Monday, July 11, I shall\ndevote an entire article to casserole\ncookery.    Don't miss it,\nMrs. G,\u2014\"1 went to a guest dinner\nrecently and green peas Were served\ncooked with mint In some way. They\nwere .delicious. How is this done?\ni'lease give recipe.\"\nAnswer\u2014You refer to sauted mint\npeas: Boil 1 pint of shelled green peas\nuntil nearly tender, In Just enough water to cook them In. Then drain off\nHie water, and turn the peas Into a\nsaucepan In which two ounces of butter\nhave been melted; add ',*.\u25a0 teaspoon of\nfinely chopped mint nnd saute for five\nminutes.    Then serve at once.\nBrlde-Huuseskeeper\u2014\"How ,$ kohlrabi cooked? My husband Is planting\nsome   In our garden.\"\nAnswer\u2014Tliis vegetable must be\nwatched closely lest It get too old. if\nthis happens, do not try to use It. But\nIf cooked In its prime, it Is delicious,\ncombing the flavors of a mild turnip\nand the cauliflower. Pare, quarter, and\ncook it until very tender In as little\nwater as possible {the casserole offers\na good way of cooking It. with a cup\nor two of water) and serve It seasoned with salt, pepper and butter. Or\nyou can cut it into dice and serve it\nWith cream, plain, or escalloped with\na layer of crumbs on top.\naii inquineu uddresseo to Miss Kirk\nman In care of the \"Efficient House\nkeeping\" department will be answered\nin those columns in their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to tbe great number received\nSo If a persona) or quicker reply 1*\ndesired, a stamped and self-addresaed\nenvelope must be enclosed with tbf\nquestion.\u2014Ths Editor.\nBY LENORE\nNotwIthblandliiB the charming nov-\nallies ill sporl wiiltr, such as tlie Knitted one-niece, frock, tile knitted middy\nund skirt costume, tile variety ot sleeveless Jumiiers or dresses witli enps to\nmatcli,   either   in   knitted   styles   or   .n\nare a vital factor in the exchange situation.\nWith adequate, protection, and\n-scientific yet practical administration, these great industries\nmay be still further developed\nand maintained for all time to\ncome. Without, they must inevitably diminish, as are already the great timber industries of the* eastern and southern\nStates, for lack of-these vital\nelements.\nReally adequate protection\nfrom destruction by fire is the\nkey-stone  of  the   forest  arch.\nIDanger from forest fires is\nagain present. The question of\nforest fire losses is of direct\npersonal interest to every Canadian. Forest protective organizations, Dominion, provincial and private, are increasing\nin-, strength and efficiency, but\nstill the provision made is far\nfrom adequate in, every forest\nprovince of the Dominion. Our\naverage annual losses from for\nest'fires still run into the mil\nlions of dollares. Most of\nthese forest fires' are preventable.\nTo check this enormous drain\nupon our resources, it is necessary that the individual citizen\nshould interest himself and\nmake his interest felt in the\nmatters of improved administration, and increased appropriations for the better protection of our forests. Governments and legislative bodies\nare,- for the most part, alive to\ntriqf situation, but they are\nkeenly susceptible to enlightened public opinion, and, in fact,\nrequire its support when measures are under consideration\ninvolving large expenditures or\nmaterial changes in policy.\nExpenditures on forest protection must be regarded as- an\ninvestment not- only for the\nfuture but for the present a\nwell. If existing merchantable\ntimber is to be kept from .destruction, for immediate use,\nand if the vast areas of young\nf6rest growth are to lie preserved, to comprise the forests of\ntrie future, very substantial\nexpenditures must be incurred\nfor this purpose and to so administer them that non-agricultural lands will be kept in a\npermanently productive condition\".'\n>'-The forest is a crop, which\n--may- be perpetuated by wise\nuse, but which will inevitably\nbe destroyed by unwise use. Ir\nrefutable evidence of this may\nbe seen over thousands of\nsquare, miles . in both Canada\nand the United States.\nIn all of our forest provinces\nother than the Prairie Prov\ninces, adequate protection will\ninvolve the expenditure of only\na reasonable fraction of the\nCrown timber revenue. There\nhas in the past been too strong\na tendency to divert an unduly\nlarge proportion, of the forest\nrevenue to* purposes of general\" governmental administration,- leaving the forest to be\nregarded as a mine to be exploited, rather than as a crop\nto  be  reproduced.\nThe' great timber industries\nof the Dominion provide employment fpr 80,000 men and an\navenue for the investment of\nprobably more than $400,000,-\n000 of capital. Forest products\ncomprise one of the largest\nitems in our export trade and\nThe Lighter Side\nung green  doesn't remain with\n'en   long.\ny   nation , now\nuul   anxieties\nThe\ntroulil\ntion,\n'I'lie plane girl may\nlir, hut the plain girl\n-ihanee with  the heir.\nfree,  of   all\nis   imaginu-\nCOiiquer   tho\nhasn't   much\nIt w\nsquare\nuf   a\nfigure\nhelp some when each . public\noiitains   the   gigantic   figur\nrutch\nof   a\nInstead\ngeneral.\nprescription for\nnst human ills,\nsweat  before  meals'.\"\nthe   gigantic\nmankind wl\n\"Take a little\nTin.\ncork\nsen Is\nhome\none    advantage    a,bout\nFWheh   a   mosquito   prc-\nbill.   he   finds   nobody\nDaily Recipe\nRUSSIAN   SALAD\nTake -cold boiled or roast Ik if\nwell done, and chop to size of n\npea, five Or. six Hlices of bacon fried\ncrisp, two 'bunches lettuce, cut all\nup fine, add half a can of French\npeas, a' little vinegar, salt and pepper\nto taste, aud a cupful of salad dressing, Heap on dish, and put thin\nlayer of dressing on top. Garnish\nwith pickle chopped f ne, nnd watercress.\nFOSTER'S WEEKLY\nWEATHER BULLETIN I\nThis weather chart is ior this vicinity. Dates of month are at lop. Warm\nwaves are expected to reach tills vicinity near dates where crooked line goe*\nto tops; cooler than usual where they\ngo to low points. Htonn waves .follow\nwarm   waves.\nWashington] d. c July, \\-.~-About\nJuly 9 a large high wind cooler than\nusual will cover most of the contln-\niMit, particularly center,ng along meridian 90. This condition will slowly work\neastward ami behind it rising temperatures will slowly take lis place. Near\nJuly 15 a warm wavo will have come out\nof the extreme northwest and at that\ndate will be central along that base\nline which extends north and south and\n,s known as merldan 90. That high\ntemperature wa^i will extend from\nnortheast to southwest across Canda\nand America as the advance guard of the\nmost severe storms of lbe Hummer.\nOn account of the Important positions\nof Jupiter and Saturn, occupying the\nsame part of the solar system during the,\nnil this crop season, the storms are radical whenever any of the other1 planets\nJoin them In electro-magnetic relations.\nAbout middle of July Venus. lOarth,\nMars and Urans will be ,n contact with\nJupiter and Saturn and I warn all to\n-be on guard for great weather events.\nTornadoes ure probable; a tropical storm,\ntbe dread hurricane, is expected to be\nmoving northeastward off the Atlantic coast- Severe hail storms are ex-\nuected In the Interior of tbe continent\neast of Hbckies. The transcontinental\nstorms are expected ,to pass eastward\nof Alberta down through America and\nout onto the Atlantic from July Alberta\ndown through Arner.ea out onto the Atlantic from Jbly 14 to IS. Put all your\noutdoor affairs in condition for the\nstorms of those five days.\n. The heat wave, expected to crross meridian !)0 near July \u00a35, has been Selected\nus top of the July temperatures; its\npartner, tlie cool wave Is expected to\nfollow during the five days centering ou\nJuly'20. During the passage of these\nhigh and low temperature waves ra.n-\nfalt   Is expected to be   largely  extended\nand considerable damage from them la\nexpected  In northern harvests,\nIt is now full time for farmer.s to determine about sowing winter grain, prp-\ngress has been made m such forecasts\nduring past year and I will be able to\ngive better than guessing advice about\nsowing winter grain. Fall rains and\nthe 1922 crop season up to end of Sept.\n1922 will determine the advice about\nwinter grain for next year. Again 1\nhave tested tbe cause for varying r\u00bbins\nfor this continent and the results are\npositive that these, variations are controlled by the location of the place from\nwhence comes the moisture. I can\nnow say that above the 10-year average\nof winter grain will be produced on this\ncontinent for 1922 and that two-thlrde of\nthe winter grain sections will produce\nabove the average of wint*r grain crops.\nI have no doubt about this. I have\nthooughly tesed the foundation of these\nfoecasls and have uo doubt about them.\nCONVICTS ON  THEIR  HONOR.\nOHSIN1NO, N. \u25a0%\u25a0\u2014Three hundred j\nconvicts from prisons throughout the '\nstate have beon divided' Into \"honor',\ngangs\" and put to road building.\nSomo of these men aro employed as I\nfar as 150 miles away from their\nhome Institutions. \u25a0\nThe chief aids to' philosophy aro it\ncalm ami untroubled spirit ami a nice\n-.\u25a0o'lectioii   uf   lux-free   souHtles.\nWhen the family must choose between beef steak and silk stockings\nTor   daughter,   il.   lias   bean   soup   for\ncan, represented by residents of Three\nForks, Sandon, New Denver, Ftose-\nbery, and Silverton, ussetnbl.d ut\nSandon, have . fully considered U:e\nproposed rebuilding of thc Kaslo atid\nSlocan railway beyond the normal\ndistrict   tributary   to   Kaslo;   and,\n\"Whereas, we know that sucn ie-\nbuilding would be aguinst the Interests of our district in every way,\nshape und  form;   aoid,\n\"Whereas, the building of the projected spur by tho C. i\\ It. 1 \u25a0 \"in\nThree Forks to Bear Lake would lie\nfur hotter and more satisfactory und\neconomically conserve the Inteltrfts,\nmining and otherwise, of this district;   and, .',\n\"Whereas, it is' public knottli'il**.**\nthat the government 'of. Britlfcii C\u00abj-\nlumbiu have beon currying on negO;\ntlations with a Kaslo syndicate -regarding the rebuilding of the railroad from Kaslo into this eIucLor.il\ndistrict, and have proceeded to grcftt\nlengths in this mutter, even to promising to subsidize this very ij.uedt;on-\nablu  project;   and  therefore  bo   it,\n\"Kesolveil, that we most em'phui-\niually protest against the unfair .methods adopled by the Kaslo syndic ito\nin attempting to dissuade the C. P.\nK. from building tlio spur from Three\nForks to Beur Luke; aud be it further\n\"Resolved, that we urge upon '.he\nprovincial government the wisdom of\nrefraining from extending the fi-nds\nof the province to further the interests of any particular section,\nwhen such course, if adopted, will\ninevitably be detrimental to artoiher\nsection of e((uul importance, and entitled to just such consideration.\"\nbeautiful homespuns or other warm\nweight materials, the sweater retain*,\n.ilmom its old-lime puice ia the summer\noutfit. And whlle.lheru are few important developments in style that are new.\nmany of lhe s\\Vcatern show an elaboration of weave thai differentiates them\nfrom Ihe styles of previou seasons.\nl'urhaps the newest note in this season's sweater Is the strnight-eross neck\nIn some models this is modified by being somewhat rounded. Chiffon wool\nsweaters particularly nre shown with\nthis  new* neck.\nA maplu-colored camel's hair sweater\nwas featured with the straight-cross*\nneck finished with a bolder of Roman\nstripe, which was uluu .iiiitted inlo the\nbottom and on the sleeves. This model,-shown in the sketch, was about 23\ninches long. Coat models at-e usually\nubout 27 inches. The navy blue: swealei\n(u the sketch is this length. It is a\nfuxecio model of silk fiber interwoven\nw.lh a metal thread, 'and contributes ji\nvery good-looking accessory for an older woman.  -\nthe upper half or Inlet of the vapar-\nIzer or manifold Is partly filled with\nstaggtir plates, which retard the\nprogress of the heavy Incoming mixture and force itself against tlie walls\nconverting it Into a fine, dry gas\u2014on\nthe same principle aa particles of\nwater thrown on a red hot surface\n: turned into steam of high volatility, froe from carbon and other impurities, Cold weather does not af-\nthe Great Seott vaporizer, as tlio heal\nused is internal,\nFARM   IMPLEMENTS\nAnother Carload of Implements just to hand, Including Mowers, Rakes and\nCultivators.\nOpUllllHl    Is   line   -\n\u25a0ek   and   buys   $75\nA   pessisniist   is  tli\ns $SB\ni-ml-\nliuys\nGlttaeiii!\nquarreled\nbut they\nit ancient Tyre frequently\nit their nightly blow-outs,\nitched it up next niornint,'\nWhon.-a woman boasts-that she t\nu    resourceful    husband,    she    means\nthat    she    doesn't     bother    to    hus\nband   her   resources.\nWhen the girl tells hlrn he shouldn't\nspend   so   much   money   on   her,\nknows that she and her mother have\ndeckled   that   lie   will   do. '\nNews: Sumething out of the ordinary. Thus we find encouragement\nIn the fuel that man's meanness and\nnot  his  goodness   inspires   hcudllness.\nNEW   VAPORIZER\nV vaporizer\nuughly tested\natiiention of\nthroughout  th\nwhich has been thdr-\nis now attracting the\nautomobile engineers\ni  country.\nTliis invention, which ds known as\nthe Great Scott, vaporizer, is a device\nmade of cast aluminium.* It consists\nof two parts In oiie piece\u2014iin upper,\nor Inlet chamber, and a lower, or exhaust pipe. The hot gages or exhausts\nfrom the cylinders enter the lower\nparts of Lhe vaporizer, heating them\ntu a high temperature. The effect \"is\nto refine tiie mixture coming from the\ncarburetor and entering the upper\npart of thc manifold.    The interior of\nACCEPT PIUNTEIW\nMONTllttAL, July 6.\u2014Twenty-four\nprinting offices here, employing 100\nmen out of over 1000 on strike for a\n44-hour week, with a $36 weekly\nwage, have accepted the terms of the\nmen, It was announced ut union headquarters today. The remaining offices are holding out for last year's\nconditions.     \"\u25a0''\"\u25a0*\nOnly a\nTwentieth!\nOnly     one     twentieth     of     the\n\\yorkl's-output  of diamonds can ,\nshow   that   exceptional   fineness\nthat.  Qualifies  them for  a   place\nin   the  Birks'  stock.\nTJie   lower   grades   go\nferior jewellery or are  used  for\ncommercial purposes.  There are\nnone uf them on sale at Birks'.\nI\nHtnry Btrka IS &\nVANCOUVER,    B.C.\nTen Years Ago Today\n(Erom Tlie Daily News, July t), 1611.)\nA. II. Oracey returned Saturday\nfrom a. trip to the south.\nK. C. Traves, for some years manager of the West Kootenay Butcher\ncompany, and now of New \"Westminster, is at the Strathcona.\n* *    *\n\"Tliere is certainly a great change\nin the Kootenays since I first eaim;-\ntip the Kootenay r.ver In 1865. At\nthat time, of course, there was hardly a while man in tho country, with\nthe exception of one- lonely notti-ir\nut Gralid Forks, and some scorn,, t,f\nplacer miners at \"Wild Horse creel:,''\nsaid Hon. Edgar Dewdney, builder of\nthe great Dewdney trail, ex-member\nof the provincial house for Kootenay\nand lieutenant-governor of the province, at the Hume  last night.\n* *    *\nThe following resolution was iman*\nImotmly adopted at \"n.\"' public meeting held  at Sandon  on  July'3:\n\"Whereas,  the citizens of the Slo-\nAnnouncement\n. _. V Ye old firm of\nHeintzman & Co., Ltd.,\n(Est, 1850)\nAnnounces, that it Itas opened showrooms at 410\nBaker street, next to Hudson's Bay Comjiany,\nand will carry a stock of the genuine Heintzman\nPianos and the best makes of Gramophones and\nRecords.\nREDUCTION  IN   PRICE\nTaking Effect July First\nJOHN BURNS $ SON\nJust Soak the Clothes in\nRinso Suds\u2014then Rinse\nIt's not a cake soap\u2014not a chip soap\u2014not a\nwashing powder, but a wonderful new form of\nsoap\u2014in granuies-^which washes clothes immaculately clean\u2014gleaming white\u2014without either rubbing or boiling.\nThese pure granules arc so rich in cleansing value that\nthey loosen the hardest dirt while the clothes soak for\na few hours. Yet Rinso is so harmless that it doesn't\neven redden your hands.\nseems almost unbelievable\nRINSO\neans so easily.   Just soak the clothes for a (ew hours\nie pure, rich, cleansing Rinso suds\u2014then rinse a\ntimes in either warm or cold water and they are as\nin and white as though you had boiled and rubbed'\nm lor hours. \u2022 One trial will convince you.\nTry RINSO Next Monday\nFollow the easy directions on the Rinso package and see\nhow it soaks out the dirt that you used to get out by\nmain force.\nIf you have a washing machine\u2014\nSoak the clothes overnight in the usual Rinso\nway. The cleansing suds loosen every bit\nof dirt. In the morning operate the machine\nfor a few minutes and the clothes are per\nfectly clean\u2014even tbe most soiled spots.\nLEVBR BROTHERS UMITED, TORONTO   j8\n THE \\<mm BAILV| NgW9,rSAftft.\u00a3.',y tibMM, JULY ft; 1$fiT\nfcf?\n>i\nWhite Footwear for\n'', Children\nIn  our  big  Summer   Sale  of\nShoes  ive  have  not overlooked\nVhe   kiddies.     Today   we   draw\nspecial attention to white goods.\n' Misses'    White   Canvas    Bootn,\nleather    sole,    sizes\n11   to\" 2\n'Misses   White    Canvas     Boots,\nrubber   sole,  sizes\n11  to 2 ...,..:.;\t\nMisses'   White   Slippers,   leather\nor   rubber\nsoles\t\n.'Child's   White   Canvas     Boots,\nleather\n$2.85\nas     Boots,\n$2.45\n.\u25a0rs,   leather\n$2.35\nnvna     Boots,\nher  .sole,   sizes    tf&O   A W\nlo   llt'i     \u2022iBtii.'iu\nChild's   White   Canvas     Boots,\n,    rubber sole, sizes     (gft \"I \\T\n8 to 10%   ,..   Siii.LD\nMisses' -White Canvas high out\n(Fleet   Foot) \u00ae-t   QJT\nsizes 11   to  \u25a0>  iBltUO\nChild's Whito Canvas High cut\n\u25a0     (Fleet .\/Foot), \u2022 (g-J   \/\u00bbP\nsizes 6 to 10'i .UJJ-.IIU\nInfant's -White Can-   fr-i   QE\nvas Boots, 3 to 8.... <5i..OO\ninfants' White Canvas djl   Cff\n\u25a0>.   Slippers,  3  lo 8  OX \u25a0WW\n\u25a0R. ANDREW & CO.\ni-Leaders in Foot Fashion\nBOSWELL EMTEHS\nusnoRFi\nFarmers' Institute Appoints\nLive Committee to Arrange District Exhibits.\nBOSWELL. July \u00a3.\u2014At a recent meeting of th** Boswell Farmers' Institute,\nunder the chairman, Roland Ellis, it was\ndecided that Boswell should enter the\ndistrict exhibit at the Nelson fall fair.\nA subcommittee,' consisting of Miss-E.\nM. Oatts, J. Coupland, K. Wallace, A.\nHepher and G. H, Hartley, was appointed tu malnr all the necessary arrangements, also covering the local fair.\nAt a subsequent meeting G. H. Bart-\nley was appointed chairman nnd Miss\nOatts seerctnry-troasurer. The latter\nIs a well known and most successful exhibitor at thc Nelson fair.\nCaptain T- P. Hyatt was appointed official  auditor to the Institute.\nODD FELLOWS HOLD\nJOINT INSTALLATION\n. ROSSLAND,'.July 8.\u2014A joint installation of officers of Adlnah Kebekall\nlodge No.' 8, Trail; Deborah Rebekah\nlodge No. 13, Rossland; Enterprise lodge\nNo. 43. I. O. O.^F., Trail, and Rossland\nlodge No, 6, 1. O. O. .R, Rossland. took\nplace on Monday evening in the I. O. O.\nP. hall, which was attended by about\n200 members, being ono of the most\nlargely attended and successful installations held for a long time. Over eight\n\u2014 rs  conveyed the  Tr^ll  lodges  to  thu\nert'inony   was   performed   in\n%\n;-RlES   EGGS  ON  CAPITOL  STEPS.\nWASHINGTON\u2014\"Vou win, John,\"\ngasped '\u25a0 Representative Joseph, C.\n\u2022'ringey of Oklahoma, as he monped\nlis 'brow find lost. a. wager to Congressman John \\V. Langley of Ken-\nucky. Langley bet that it wns hot\nenough to fry eggs nn the steps of\nithe capitoi. Pringey said ll couldn't\nIpe c^onp. Langley secured a pair of\nijsggs from the house restaurant. Tim\n\u25a0frying was, slow, hut was finally accomplished    ^\nCrows    maintain    sentinels      when\n^feeding   on   earn   fields.\nAvoid Consignments\nIf You Have\nCHERRIES   TO   SELL\nWrite us. We are connected\nwilth the strongest and most\neffective selling force on the\nprairies.\"- Agents in every Important town see that shipments\nget .proper attention and prompt\npayment. \u2022\nKOOTENAY FRUIT GROWERS\nUNION,   LTD.\nPhone  180 Nelson\nCASTLEGAR NOTES.\nCASTLEGAR, July 8.\u2014William Waldie, manager.of the Edgewood Lumber\ncompany mil) here, went to Nelson on\nthis mornlnfes train.\nMrs. Davidson left on this morning's\ntrain   for Trail.\nMrs. Ganiltck ami M:ss Zenla GaniUck\nmotored from Trail to Castlegar. and\nSpent the1 afternoon enjoying themselves\nin the splendid pool down in the meadows and fhe evening in dancing. They\nmotored baqk to Trail lhe same day.\nW- J. Farmer, the Ckstlegar merchant,\nIs spending his holidnys on a pleasure\ntrip to- the Coast' clt:es. Leo Lommell\nhas charge of his store ln his absence.\nMr. Walmley Is working on the tennis'\ncourt and expects to have It ready in a\nday or two.\n' Miss Gertie Hanson left this morning\nfor Nelson.\nMlssos Orpba McGauley and Muriel\nHenaerson are spending the day in Nelson.   They will return this evening,\nMr. Black, the foVest ranger,; stopped\noff here for a day on his way to Birch-\nbank.\nCharles Murphy, general manager of\nC, P. R. Typf-ftqrn. llne.H, and C. A. Cot-\n\"terell, general' superintendent C.\\ P. R.,\nVancouver, arrived In the city this eve-'\nning on an inspection trip. They will\nvisit Kootenay river on a Bhort fishing\ntrip and then proceed north to Slocan\nCity and Nelson. ,\nJohn CHinlldoff of Komsack, Sask.,\nwho has been visiting relatives here,\nwill return to his home this evening.\nROSSLAND NOTES,    i\nChina, Crockery,\nGlassware and\nVariety Goods\nWo  mako * specialty of'open\nstock patterns.\nDRONSFIELD BROS.\n303   Baker   St.       -V   -       Nolson\nBranch  at  Penticton\n2Ity and back,\nThe ceremony was.pei\nmost creditable manner by the Installing\n\u2022officers, *s follows: H. Rankin, D. D,\nG. M,; p. D. a... Marshal Brother Andrews, Dis. D. G. Sec. Brother Douglas,\nD. D. G. Treasurer Sister Alice Martin,\nD. D. G. Warden Sister Minton, D. D.\nG. Guardian Brother R. D. Mitchell and\nD. D. Grand Chaplain Brother C, J.'M.n.\nton., '..',*\u25a0\nAfter the installation of offcers a\nbanquet was served, which was followed\nby a dance, Messrs. Ike Glover and E.\nJ; Leveque furnishing, thc music for\ndancing.\nThe following officers were installed:\nAdinah   Rebekah lodge No.  a,  Trail\u2014\nN.  G., Sister L.  Douglas; V.  (i., Sister\nM.  Barnes; R.. S., Sister F. Johnson;  F.\nS., Sister C. Saunders;  treasurer, Sister\nE, Spooner;. conductor. Sister B. Hector;\nWarden, Sister E. Woodbouse; chaplain.\nSister V. .Trevorrow; R. S. N. G., Sister\nM. Mintoh; L. S. N. G., Sister E. Kerr;\nR. S. V. G, Sister J. Murray; L.-S. V. G\u201e\nSister L. Davis; R. S. S., Sister N. Rel-\nman; L. S. S., Sister 'A. Cl^vilic; mside\nguard. Sister It. Robertson; outer guard.\nSister H. McKenzie; 1. P. O., A. Andrews.\n.Deborah Rebekah lodge No. 13. Rossland N.   <;.,   Sister  Ethel   Turner;   V.\nG., Sister Jessie Henderson; R. S\u201e.\nSister B. Henderson; F. S., Sister. .V.\nAnderson; treasurer. Sister L. Langdpn;\nconductor, Sister B. BlomfieUl; warden.\nSister A. Langill; R. S. N. G.. Sister\nAnnie Lee; L. 8. N. (!., Sister Hunt; R.\nS. V. G., Sister 1'earl Michaley; L. S.\nV.. G., Sister Mary Endersby; R. S S\u201e\nSister M. Vorke; L. S. S., Sister M.\nWright; inside guard. Sister J. Henderson; outer guard, Sister M, Marquart;\nT. V. G., Sister F. Allen; pianist, Miss\nKathleen   Hillett.\nEnterprise lodge No. 43. T. O. O. F.,\nTrail\u2014N. <;., VV. C. McKenzie; V. G\u201e\nRroUicr S. Johnson; R. S., Brother C. J.\n.Minton; F. S., Brother E. J. Fowlei';\ntreasurer, Brother J. Pond; conductor,\nWrotEer W, C. Ashdon; warden, Brother\nA. I!. Kerr; chaplain Brother Alex. Fraser; R. S. N, G\u201e Brother II. W. Hankm;\n\u25a0J;. S. .N, G,, Brother G. F. Relman; R. S.\nV. G., Brother J Hudsonf L. S. V. Ci.,\nBrother F. I-Idmonds; R. S. S., Brother\n,T. Cunningham; L. S. S.,' Brother A.. J.\nSlater; inside guard, J. Scv>t I; outer\ngflard, Brother E. Nelderman; I. P. G\u201e\nBrother <\"'. B. Jones.\nRossland lodge No. 3(1, I,- O. O. F.,\nRossland\u2014M. G, Brother John Berg{ V.\n<!., Brother Warren Crowe; It. S-, Brother George P: Davey; 'F. S., Brother\nfiforge .F, Davey; treasurer, Brother\nThomas Eiubloton; conductor, Brother\nW. C. Callin; warden, Brother J. E.\nCummings; ehaplaih. Brother \u25a0 W. J.\nWfli',; R. S. N. Tl., Brother R.\" Anderson;\nI,. S. N. (i,, Brother Emil Johnson; It. S.\nV \"I., Brother E. J. Leveque; L. S. V. G.,\nBrtoher M. Michaley; R. S. S., Brother\nIke Glover; Inside guard. Brother D. F,\nMolntyre; outer guard, Brother L. Wall;\nI. P. G\u201e S. Langill.\nRERUN\u2014I'liemployinBiit Is being\ngrndnnlly rpduced throughout Ger\nmany. The number ot persons sup\nported by the state fell off 40,000 In\nMay to IlflS.flOO, while partial support\nw.'is. being given tn 440,000, according\nto   official   figures.\nROSSLAND, July 8,-r-Mlss Beatrice\nWest of Willow Point was in. the city\nTuesday evening en route to Paterson to\nspend the summer'the gue*s(t of her\nbrother Ralph.\nMf. Poole of Trail was the week-end\nguest last week of Dr.:and Mrs. .C. S.\nWilliams.\n\u25a0Mesdames H. J. S, Reynolds nnd W.\nH, Fnllding are serving tea oik Saturday\nafternoon at the tenri(a chlb. '\n. .Mrs. F. S. Peters aiid.^laughter, Mlus\nEsther, accompanied . by Mlfls Alice\nArchibald, ,-ire leavlpg. tomorrow evening\nfor a few weeks* sthy at Deer Park.\nMrs. H. H. J.ohnstohe a\"lid ehfldren left\nlast 'evening to spend tbfr summer at\nDeer Park. ;\nA shower wns tendered Mrs. WilUnm\nTurner, formerly Miss Ethel Stephens,\nlast evening in the I. O. O. F. hall by\nMesdames1 Joseph Burqe.il and C. * J,\nMiles, over 17ft guests\" being present,\nand many beautiful and, useful gifts\nwere received by Mrs. .Tt'irner. who responded with a speech thanking qll hei\nfriends. Dancing followed by n supper\nbrought Ihe evening .'to a.clofce. '\u2022\nBOSWELL NOTES.\nDRINK FOWLER'S\nFruit Julep\nLooks   Good\u2014Taste's   Better\nIn  Bottles and at Fountains\nA White Soap\nwithout an equal\n' There is merit in \"White Wonder\"\nthat places it above any American\n\\yhite .soap on the market. Its- standard is very high and it does it work\n\u25a0:. verv. - efficiently. \u25a0 Try \"WHITE\nWONDER\"\u2014then you'll know..\nROYAL CROWN SOAPS, Ltd.\nVancouver\nBOSWELL, July 8.\u2014Miss L. McKay\nof Cranbrook Is staying at Aqua Vista\nranch, the- guest of Mr,i. A.'*Kennpdy.\n- 'Miss S. R Keatley of NelSbrt spent a\nfew days ln Boswell the guest of Mrs.\nHoliday Smith, returning home on\nThursday evening.\nMrs. R. Mitchell is thc guest of Mrs.\nfi. H. Bartley. \u2022 *\nE. Fe.rgUson of Nelson, the assessor,\nwas In RoSwell on official business on\nTuesday.       '     .,. '\nHAS BIKTKDAY PABTY.\nROSSLAND, July 8.\u2014Mrs. Horatio\nCherrlngton entertained twenty-five\nfriends yesterday at a picnic In honor\nof her son,, Bertram's, tenth birthday,\n(lames, races and a peanut'hunt were\nheld and at tl a delightful picnic supper\nwas servod. A photo was taken of the\ntable with nil the guests.' Those present\nwere Daphne, Woody, Badil and John\nRobertson, Gladys, Foy a*hd Kenneth\nMiles, Marjorie and Krank. Caunt, Dorothy and Jack Murray-tJre. Joy and\nNina Kemp, Betty Watson, Doreen Cher-\nriiiKton. Rev,. Mr. and Mrs. Robertson,\nMrs. Murray-tire, Mrs. Caunt, Mrs. R.\nE. Plewman, Mr, .Tease Kemp nnd Mr.\nand  Mrs.  jlorlitlo  Cherrington.\nAPPOINT LIQUOR VENDOU.\nROSSLAND. July 8.\u2014A. T. Collis of\nthis city has beeen appointed vendor of\ngovernment liquor herd. Tlie store is\nlocated .n -the basement of the cmirt\ntiouse,\nMr. Collis arrived here yestertiay from\nColville,- where he bas been for some\nfew wqpks, to take charge of his new\npositton and to prepare for the opening\nof the Store?\" also to confer with X P.\nHall of Kamloops, who arrived here\nTuesday to arrange for the loentlon and\nopening, of the:store.\nThe. new liquor vendor i* a Rossland\noldtiiner and for several vears has been\nengaged In \"the prlnUng busmess.\nMILK MAKES BESf DIET.\nA.striking exhibition of the value\nof milk in the diet has been given in\nn number of the states in educational\nmilk campafenfi. The exhibit consists of two stuffed aud mounted rats,\none .a iarge.-boned healthy specimen,\nthc other an undersized weakliwg with\nKklfi,\" plinging to its 'poorly developed\nbones., ,','. ,.^:'\nThe' \"nuiMtaitlon compares an adequate dlei '-containing nllthe food essentials with ati Inadequate, poorly\nchosen diet, lacking some df the food\nessentials. The large,- well-developed\nhealthy rat hnd Its'cereal diet supplemented with milk,.and the advantage\naccruing is shown by the well-developed tissues.-muscles, and bones, the\nsmooth hair, the bright eyes, and the\nhealthy color of the Hying rat. The\nprotein of milk is .capable of building\nmuscular tissue. The mineral of the\nmilk, especially lime, builds strong\nbones, and the food accessories (vitn-\nmines) of the milk Insure growth and\nhealth.\nThe small rat was deprived of milk\nand other adequate sources of those\nnecessary food constituents, hence the\nweak* golntlnous bones, thin muscles,1\nliicl*^ of growth and constant loss in\nweight and size. Both rats had wheat\nbiscuits, but only one had milk \\vith\nthe biscuits. .\nThese rats wero chosen from two\ncages, each containing six rats. On\nMarch 24 each group weighed 485\ngt-ums. All rats were young and the\nsame age. On May 4 both groups\nwere again weighed. The six rats receiving milk had gained.542.5 grams.\nThe others showed a loss of 17.1\ngrams each; or 102.G grams for the\nlot ot. fi. - ..\"    .\nRaises Barrier Against Can*\nada  to Which  Sentiment\nis Opposed. s   .-'\u25a0:\nWASHINGTON, July 8.^(By. Cana-;\ndlan Press).\u2014The struggle' in Congress^\nover th* permanent tariff hill Is now\nin full swing. Practically it was he-,\ngun in the \u25a0 House last week when\nChairman Fordney of. the ways and\nmeans committee introduced the new.\nbill, hut certain formalities \u2022 which\nhad to be gone through with delaped'\nactual consideration of the measure\nltll thib week,\nPor the next .three months, the\nUnited States Will have a daily -diet\nof tariff talk. Indications nrr* the\nmeasure cannot pass both houses and\nbe .signed by the President \u25a0 until\nlate September or early Octoher. The'\nnew bill is surcharged with, political\nposslhilltes, bpeause it will defeat\nthe pqrty In power, if it wor^s out\nbadly In practice and, as to Its ndm*;\nrfierclal and Industrial, possibilities it\nIs a good deal of a conjecture.1 as. tcj\nwhnt will resplt from it in vlewi\u00bbfc the\nUnsettled :aUuntion in \"Europe andt^e\nuncertainty what the competition (jf\nforelgrt countries will l*je able to e\u00a3-\ntect.     .\nStriking Stories Afloat\nSome .striding stories arc afloat\nthat German manufacturers are lay-i,\nIng down certain nf their products\nIn this ppvmtry at prices so low tha$\neven proposed high tariff nMeB wl)i\npot ba;- them o\\it. 11 Is not easy t#\nsay Just ho,w m,uch of truth there M\nIn such reports. vIt need not he .said\nthat th(i advocates of high tariff Jia^\nnot. beep slow to circulate them. fis\nBroad>y, speaking, the politlcnl. dnti-^\nger to tha; RepUljHenn party and Jhj^'\nHarding adtnlpjstratinn. in the* new\nbill Is thnt It will cans*\/ such nn increase in living costs in the citici1\nns to arouse a wave of feeling which\nwill be expressed in the elections,frtr\nCongress i\\e\u00abt yenr. bemneratif\nleaders, including former Governor\n\u25a0Cox, ,'detnorcatio' .eandidalo for president Inst fall, are planning lp make\nthe utmost of any false steps of the\nR\u00ab)uhlicans on tarlf?, as well\ntqXatloh. .\nSentiment Runs High\n. From the standpoint of the relations\nbetween   the  United  States  nnd   Canada,   the  pending  bill will  have  un-\nusual   interest.'     The  high   tariff  ele\nments in Congress would nt.ise a high\n.barrier against Gapadn. just as against\nother countries.     Qn the other hand,'\nthe feeling in Congress is morc pro\nnouneed th^n  ever  before  that   trade;\nbetween  the  two- countries  ought\nbe promoted nflmnl'h as possible and\nthnt  trade barriers should  be erected\njiist as Utile as possible.     This sentiment w(ll he much .heard In the de1--*\nbate and In the consideration  nf  par'\nticuiar schedules.\nIt looks now as if Cnnndian lumber\nwould be, udnutted free. It is doubt-\nE.ull if. plther hp\\ise on a test votji\n.would stand for a tariff on lum-\nber. The prnpos|T,lnn, of the House\nhill tn make it ttptinViaf with the President whether to impose a duty on\nliimber will pnopunter piipositinn but\neven If -it Is retained It is not expected that the. President will impose a  duty.\nThc wheat, duty of 25 cents per bushel In the new hill Is one of thc features so far as concerns importations\nfrom Canadft. The. present emergency\ntariff is 25 cents. This is lopk-\ned on by some Republicans and most\nDemocrats as being ton high. Efforts\nw^ll dpubtless * be made on the\nfloor to reduce the rate,' but,!it Is\ndoubtful If they succeed, fo.r the agricultural 'group will, not consent to\nany lowering of it.,\u25a0\nHigh Rates Not Considered\nThe present reign of high railroad, freight , rates in the . United\nStates has. a distinct bearing on the\ntariff and ..imporlntio.ns. In many\ncases, freight rates are. so high that\nimportations ciinnot he successful except in the case of Imports sold in\ncities close to the, border. United\nStates manufacturers and producers\nhave not only the protection nt' hirth\ntariffs, according to the new bill,\nbut the protection of extremely high\nrailroad rates. It does hot appear,\nhowever, the high railroad rates have\nbeen taken iato account liy t he\nways and means o.omraitt'ee*.\nDi.llln*. I\never, happen\nIs a wonderful relief\n-for Sunburnt Insect\nBites, etc.,\n't*l-'J'J Mklli  111 CAHnUA\n\u00bb1\nii\nClearance\nttt'i\n****,\u00ab -*\nS^^'3t\nNew offerings every day add interest to this July Sale.   The values are even\nbetter than *iriiig the first Jays^of the Sale! TOtiAY WE OFfER:\nWOMEN'S VOILE DUSSES\nHalf Price, $12.50 Each.\n$12.50\nThereto about a dozen in the lot..and they're all\nas smart ns any In ihe store. The come in light\ncolors only, ,wlth long or- short \"sleeves and\nwilh round necks. Sizes lfi to 36' nnly. Values\nto $2in.0O.\nJULY SAliE PPICE\t\nWHITE MAR<\nPINE SKIRTS\n$3.7&rfffcfti\n^hiaitty tailored; S.kirts\n'of gobd'qualitV cotton,\"\nGabardlpe. Will wash\nanfl Wear \\yiV-.\\.   .Sizes\n25 tO'30..waistt-JUI,Yi\n' SALE   RJJICE-r.    \u25a0 \u2022   \u2022\nCUBAN BANK CLAIMS\nCREDITORS COVERED\nHAVANA, JHly 8.. ,\u2014 (Associated\nPress).\u2014Creditors nf the Banco Na-\ncional de Cuba, which suspended payments April 11, last, are fully pro-\ntecled, according to statistics published by El Mundo and credited to Ed-\nuardo Durruthy, secretary of the Pe<l-\nsral Rnnlt Liquidation Commission.\nWhich  is  reorganizing Uie' bank.\nIt is\"' claimed that only a deficit\nof more than ?20.000.000 would bring\na loss to depositors as the bank which\nwhen it suspended operations April\n11, had cssets fixed at $68 OKO.OOO and\nllahliitles    of    $ 57,8-16.000.\nThe secretary stated that l*{ie commission had instituted economies\nwhich were resulting in a saving of\n$70,000 a month. l\\o added that-thc\nInstitution would return to normal\nju.*^t as soon as the nation itself solved \u2022 its problems ,aml adjusted itself\nto   new  conditions.\nYMIR NOTES\nYMIR, July '8.\u2014Mra. A., C. 0*Nelll\ncame in from Nelson and Is spending\na few days with  Mrs, Paly.   ,\nDr. and Mrs. Hose wire.visitor,* here\non Wednesday and motored to Salmo\nand Erie In the nftfirnoon, hJtufftthg\nfrom   Vialr   to  Nelson  on   the. eveh.ng\n. A meeting, of the Ladles' Guild was\nHeld at the home ot Mrs. E. Paly, on\nSecond avenue, on Thursday afternoon,\nat which about 15 of tne.. members were\npresent. The routine of the proceedings\nwas vnrli\/d with light refreshments being handVd\u201e around' and , which were\nmuch appreciated.\n.....,.,.\u2014-   .^c\u2014 i.  *\u25a0       .\nThe. nnly goat milk condensory in\nthe world is localed at Poseadrn, Cal.,\nwhere, one herd of 6000 niilch goats\nis   maintained.\nMary  hud a. little cklrt,\nfhe latest style, no doubt,\nBut  -ftVery time she got inside\n. She was more than halfway out\n: $3.75 I\nWHITE vMR-\nSKIRTS\n,'   $US Eitch\nMado   of   grind  r'r|unlily\ncambric, with dwn emhrnWwy flo\\lncc ffl   f7\u00a3.\nAll Slufel. JULY SALEPIUCB, car-h.. WM-.tO\nGIRLS' G1MHAM DRESSES\n$3.75 Each.\nSmart styles Mr girls to 14 years. Made n\u00a3 good\nquality Scotch Olhgham In plain c.dors or\nplaids.    Valnes'to \u00a5!.!,(!\u25a0 flJO T^K\n.It'LV  SA1.K  I'HICE     tDO.tO\nA Special in Corsets\n$USEach.\nThe best values wtrve shown for mnny years:\"\nThese are mado .of good quality coutil and\nhave splendid filling. Low bust styles. In\nSizes to 27.    JULY SALE\nPRICE    \" -\t\n$1.75\nWOMEN'S KNIT COMBINATIONS j\n$150 Each\nMade-'of  good   quality   cotton - yarns,   with  tooth \u2022\nstyle sleeves and  might   knees. d\u00bb-|   (?A '\u2022_\nSizes   in   44.JULY   HALE .PRICE:... 3)X\u00bbOU \\.\nCHILDREN'S COTTON VESTS    |\n3 for $1.00\nIn   sleeveless styles  In  sizes  L'U  to  .12,  made  of   V\nfine   soft   cotton   and   are   worth   nearly   double,   i\nHie -price.    JULY   SALE\nPP.ICE,  a fpr   .  C~.lz\n$1.00\nWomen's Silk Hose, 95c\nthe pair\nA' few dozen of these Hose left.    Colors are Navy\nT-llaek,   Brown,   Sand   and   Grey.\nAll sizes.    JULY SALE PRICE\t\n95c 1\nThe Store for Style\n611\nBaker St.\nQueer Conditions in Constantinople; No Market; None\nDares Demand Payment.\nCONSTANTINOPLE. July 8.\u2014 (Associated Press}.\u2014Business is at a\nstand'sMlf here owing m the uncertainties nf the Russian and Turkish political situations. Normally ihe* importing and exporting center for the\nNear and Middle East and partially\nfor the Balkans.-Ibis city is how a\ncommercial islei, its warehouses filled with merchandise of every description  for which'there  is  no  market.\nEverybody owes everybody else,\nwith nobody paying hills.- A financial crash would have come months\nago fun for the fact that tin firm\ncnn afford to- demand payments' of\n*its bills. To do' so would throw the\ndebtor Into bankruptcy, force more\nunsaleable poods on the market at\nsacrifice prices, ami the firrh forcing\npayment would in turn be called on\nlo pay hills, which, under, present\nconditions,  it  cannot meet.\nThere is an Increasing number of\ntrading ships going to South Russian,\nports, mostly Rritish,' Creek and Italian. To date, no American ship has\ngone,' partly because of the lack of\ntrade-anil, in the case of Shipping\nIlonrd vessels, the decision Of the\nmanagement not to permit any of\nits   ships   to   touch   Bolshevik   ports.\nThese vessels that do go li' the\nRl'acli Sea ports nf Russia claim the\nthe * ventures are failures, yet keep\ngoing apparently.finding enough bus*\ndess  to  pay  expenses;\nOilier  lhan Amerie;in   tobacco  buy\ners, many merchants find 'the. risks\nof inidlng so great, partly because n\u00a3\nfluctuating; exchanges, that they prefer to speculate^ ill i-xeimnge. They\n.claim the risk-Tare smaller. Banking business, for'the present consists\nin good part of such speculations on\nthe   pari   of  customers.\nIn the face of such a situation.\nConstant In o pi q remains . the deafest\nof world capitals, from the point of\nview of, living. Retailers of foods\nand clothing have formed practically\na trust to keep up prices. They claim\nthey bought Ihnr goods at hi^h prices\nand must sell them so. As there is\nnd, such thing as price controls nr\npublic opinion Iutc, retailers, are. per--\nmilted lo gouge I lie refugee, population ai   will.\nAmerican wholesnlers in many cases\nhave preferred tn take their losses on\nmerchandise sent here on consignment\nand reship tn the United States.\nOilier wholesalers attempted to get\nfid of stocks locally by organizing\nrefugee Russians into street vendors\nof articles'like tea anil chocolate and\nsmall drygoods. but. the pjail hasn't\nworked well because the vendors,\nin-many Instances, failed to-make return:',\nBusiness is expected to improve\nwhen such government is established\nin Russia lhat il can obtain longtime\ncredits,\nSEAL   ADOPTS   RESCUERS.\nFOR   FAMINE   STRICKEN    CHINA,\nNEW YORK\u2014Thomas W. Lamont,\nchairman of Uie American committee\nfor China famine fund, has announced that a total of $7,:!.r.0,000 was con-\nIribniPiI during the campaign which\nended June !(, The cost of raising thn\na mount was estimated at about '3\ncent. Relief organizations in China,\nMr. I.amont said, raised $6,000,000\ngold, exclusive of the. government\nloan.\nMore  than  50' species  of  white  dale\ntthifi  lhe size nf trees and about 25\nof these species are used for lumber.\nPRINCE RUPERT, P.. C, July 8\u2014\nA baby seal, following its rescue from\na vicious attack -by four eagles,\nadopted its rescuers. Captain .!. Mc-\nOregnr, V. ('., nnd'hls three companions. The seal was putting up a\nplucky but losing fight against Us assailants from the sky when the\nlaunch party  took   it aboard.\nOn (he way to Prince. Rupert lhe\nseal was put overboard, as ii was\nthought (hat was where, it, belonged.\nBut ibe little fellow thought otherwise and followed thc boat right into\nport.    It  is  now a  very   Indulged  net.\nANEW\nCUSTARD\nRECIPE\nMrs. R. B. O. bas given us a riew\nrecipe for custard to serve with\nfruits, that is ono of the most\ndelicious we have found.\nTwo of the pien and one of the\ngirls in the office have tried\nthis recipe out in their own\nhomes, and it really is more\nthan an ordinary one.\nWe shall lie glad to send It U*\nanyone  who asks for 11.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nj Factories  at Abbotsford  And' Lad-\nj ner,  B.  C.\n 1w*-m\ni THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 9.. 1921.\nCOL. BOB LOWERY LAST\nfi xt OF\n\u25a0^(itt-;j1|Hi\n\"\u2022(By   Correspondent   of   Winnipeg\nFree   Press)\nAfter   thirty1 years'   active   associ-\n-at'Ion with newspaper work In British\nColumbia, Col. Robert T. Lowery\ndied of Bright's disease In the Grand\nForks hospital, two weeka ago, at\nthe age of G5 years.\nA typical product, of the frontier\nand the mining camp, \"Bob\" Lowery\nhad   a   varied   and   rocky   career   In\n.journalism. Sometimes affluent,\noften broke, he had a philosophical\nview of life, that made him a picturesque    personality.        As    a.    wit,\n. Lowery was wllhotiL a peer on this\ncontinent; as a humorist, he slood in\nthe very front rank. As a) pungent\nparagrapher   he   was   in   a   class   by\n.himself.      For  many  years  his fame\n' has been built up chiefly on Lowery's\n\"Float\", a column of pinna nt personals and brazen facts that was\n\u2022widely copied ihroughout Canada and\nAmerica, frequently quoted from in\nAustralia, and occasionally used in\nEngland.     Even    '\"Punch\"     gleefully\ni lifted  ironic blt.i of humor from  tbe\nf \"Float\".\nAt no time did Bob Lowery try to\ncapitalize his ability. To him sufficient, unto the day waq tbe revenue\nthereof. He could have amassed a\nfortune, hut he died a comparatively\npoor map, though rich in friends. In-\n\u2022 tensely human, he was a lovable\ncharacter, a gentleman of the old\nschool, but he did not belong to this\nage; he really was born fifty years\ntoo late. He paid his dehts, he tried\nto collect what was dim to' him, but\nwhen legitimate business' return's\nwere ton slow, Lowery played poker,\nand he  played  It  well.\nIn the days when card games for\n'big stakes were played in the mining camps nf British Columbia, Lowery would frequently disappear from\nhis desk at the Greenwood Ledge a\ncouple of days before the printers'\nultimatum of no pay nn work, had\nexpired, returning with sufficient\nfunds to clear off his liabilities, and\nleave a little for the next ante. \u25a0\nAbout twenty years ago. Lowery\nedited a paper in Vancouver, called\nThe Ozonogram. - It lasted one month,\nand then the colonel decided that\nVancouver \"was too' big and too\nnoisy for him, and closed up the\nshop. Later he- founded the Sandon\nEagle and eight other weekly .newspaper before finally becoming identified with the Greenwood Ledge,\nwhich for many years carried his\n\"coat of arms,\" showing ye editor\nsurrounded by knives and antique\nblunderbusses, .surveying a hungry\nbulldog in the act of devouring a\ndelinquent subscriber. Those were\nthe happy days When it was a dull\n\u25a0week indeed when some one did not\ndrop in lo lick the. editor, and usually  got  lhe  worst   nf   tho   rough   and\n\u25a0 tumble .that followed. Lowery had\nmany a merry f hat tie over his wickedly witty notes when he was younger,\n\u25a0hut his opponents most ofton found\nhis   fisjt   just   as   mighty   as   his   pen.\n\" Whenever th-rodimr got the worst of\nthe arguments; he would report the\nfight impartially in  his next  issue.\nLowery's mission in. this world was\nto amuse rather than to elevate,\nthough his humor was never questionable. It was racy, but not raw.\nThe genial humorist was no mortalist;\nhe loved good whiskey; he played\npoker to the limit of his-purse and\nof his credit;   be  enjoyed  life as. he\nJ3mxims\nST.CHARLES\n-EVAPORATED\n* MILK\nX rest*\nmilk when..\nyou want   it-\nand as rich\nas yorx wa.nt\nit.\nWith\nthe\ncream left in.\nSmoke\nORINOCO\nCat Cotsrt., for Pip. Hi.\nCat Fina, for  Ciaarttt..\nCOTICDM\nHEALS\nPIMPLES\nIn terrible rash on face which made\nskfn sore and inflamed. Irritated\nfaceby scratching and was disfigured.\nCould not sleep well and made feel\nunpleasant. Trouble lasted 3 months\nbefore used Cuticura and after using\n2 cakes of Soap and 1 box of Ointment was completely healed.\nFrom signed statement of Miss\nGlu-lys Neabel, R,R.3. Biusuels.Ont.\nCuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum promote and maintain skin\npurity, skin comfort and skin health\noften when all else fails.\nSoap 25c, Ointm\u00ab\u00bbt 25 Mid SOc   Sold\nthroughout the Dominion. Canadian Depot;\nLymjns, Limited, St. Paul St., Montreal.\nj?V Cuticura Soap abtvtn without mug.\nsaw It, holding himself responsible\nto no man and to no woman, for a\n\u25a0bachelor he was horn and a bachelor\nhe died.\nDeaders of tho \u25a0 Greenwood Ledge\nwere at all times kept posted regarding the editor's financial condition.\nCol. Lowery considered It an interesting Item of news when he had been\nrefused an overdraft af the hank\nbecause the bank manager was losing faith in the Ledge as a business\nconcern. For a time Lowery printed\nbulletins of the distance that separated the Ledge from the pursuing\nsheriff.\nSometimes Col. Lowery wns fairly\nflush of money, and sometimes he\nwas riddled with debts. He went\nbroke several times, losing his all\nin ill-starred mining ventures or\nnewspaper enterprises. Much of his\nspare cash was used to grub-stake\nprospectors who had rosy dreams' of\nvast stores of natural wealth hidden\nIn the hills of the Kootonays, Sometimes the prospectors returned and.\npaid up, sometimes the grub-staking\nproved a profitable venture, but more\noften the transaction ended when\nminer staid good-bye to Lowery^\nHow much the colonel lost in this way\nwill never be known; he kept no\nbooks.\nThough often In financial straits,\nCol. Lowery affirmed that \"he had\nnever missed a meal In his life;\nthough he had indefinitely postponed\na, number of them.\" v\nAll the big men In any way connected with railway nr industrial, enterprises In tbe interior of British Columbia were intimately acquainted\nwith Col. Lowery, two particularly\nclose friends heing James ,1. Hill and\n,T. Augustus Heirize.\nFor the past few years Boh Lowery\nhad spent the winters in California-,\nwhere his geniality aitfd originality\nmade him a prime favorite with the\nmoving picture actors, he frequently\nheing the central figure at midnight\neetings.\nAlthough a 'bachelor, Col. Lowery\nmust have had more than a passing\nacquaintance with the tepder passion\nin the days of his youth, and -probably\nfor many years after hia hair had\nsilvered. The versatile journalist\nproved this a couple of years ago hy\nwinning a $500 prize In a California\ncompetition of \"Love,\" writing a\nshort article that deserves to rank as\n:i   classic.\nIn politics Bob Lowery didn't give\na d-7-\" for either party, voting ns his\nheart dictated. He had a warm affection for the late Sir RicharQ Mo\nBride during the many years he wns\npremier  of   this   province.\nMany of Col. Lowery\"'s apt expressions have become part of the current language of the Kootenays and\nsome have been given; national recognition. Probably tha most famous of\nthese Is the term \"cent belt\", which\nhe applied in derision to- Ontario in\nthe days when no British Columbian\nwould trouble looking at any coil\nsmaller than a quarter of a dollar.\n; True frontier mining camp non\nehalance towards things celestial\ncharacterized the \u2022 writings of the\nfamous editor. He discussed conditions in Heaven with the same fine\nsense of detachment as he would report the opening of a new mining\nclaim in ' the Greenwood district.\n\"God's in His Heaven, all's well with\nthe world,\" will bring no consolation\nlo delinquent subscribers when our\nbulldog gets after 'them,\" he once\nwrote when rebuking his readers for\nnot  paying   up^.\nSeldom- did an,, issue pf Ihe Ledge\nappear without reference to stow\npayers, as witness:\n; \"Fred E.- Cribbed came into town\nThursday, spent $24.dO for bum whiskey, lost ?10!) in \"a poker gamo, bought\na pair of overalls, thirty pounds of\nbeans and a side of' sow-belly, and\nleft, half-sober, still owing us two\nyear's subscription. This is the last\ncopy Fred gets until he paye pp.\"\nA few years ago anxious to buy a\ncountry paper, I wrote to Lowery\nasking if he would sell the Ledge. I\nreceived this characteristic reply,\nscribbled across my own letter: \"I'll\nsell tho Ledge when I have staked a\nlalm in the golden, streets of the\n;cw Jerusalem, and pounded my halo\ninto  shape.\"\nHere are a few more paragraphs\nfrom  Lowery's  sharp  quill.\n\"Phoenix is the. highest town it\nBritish Columbia. In the winter\nwhen the mines are closed, the. In\nhabitants spend their time showbal\nling  lhe  angels.\"\n\"Joe Burgoygne, the lown bum of\nB'rimley, died on Monday, .Top. much\nwhiskey.\"\n\"The Hope Review has heen resurrected again, with Mr. IVmny us editor. Tlie Review has Jiad many poppas in its time, tind is\u25a0 always interesting to its editor, hut frightfully\ndull to its readers. Penny is keeping\nright up to stondacd.\"\n\"Tom Brayne'.s mangy old dog has\nbeen missing#tbree days. Hash was\nserved at the Chink restaurant yesterday. VDraw your own conclusions.\"\n\"Things are so dull in Greenwood\nthese days some of the men have\ntaken to going to church on Sundays.\"\nIn appearance Col. Lowery was just\nas picturesque as in his writings,\nShort, .square-set, with quick nervous movements, .a face that was tanned by years of outdoor life, eyes that\ntwinkled rperrily under bushy eyebrows, hair, that most frequently\nneeded the attention of a Barber, a\nfull beard clipped short and running\nto a point at the chin\u2014sadly straggly\nnt times\u2014the colonel strongly suggested Cutliffe Hyne's famous car-\nacter, Captain Kettle, and rather liked, facetious comments made op the\nresemblance, though he declared he\nwould never go to the length of having one- leg cut off to make the similarity  absolute.\nyour employ?\" to the specific picking\nut of \"the girl wearing hat number\n\u2022\u2014on page 153 of your catalogue\"\n(a real tribute to the art department).\nM want you to help me get a\nwife,\" writes a. blacksmith. \"I'm 34\nyears old, and have inherited money.\nShe must be good looking ahd good\nnatured. I don't i care about her reputation^\" Another man states specifically the number of his pigs, cows\nand   chickens.\nThe writer of the following specifies size and style, as if he were ordering a suit of  clothes:\nPleas send me a good wife. She\nmust be a good housekeeper and able\nto do all household duty. She- must\nbe Ti feet (1 inches .in height. .Weight\n150 pounds. Black hair and brown\neyes,   either  fair   or   dark.\n\"I am 4,1 years old, 0 met, am con-\n|-sidered a good looking man. 1 havo\nblack Irair and blue eyes. I own\nquite a lot of stock and land. I am\ntlretl of living a bachelor life and\nwish to lead a belter life and more\nfavorable.    Please   write   me  and  let\nme know what you can do for me.\"\nThe Advice Given.\nThe reply of the house was as follows:\n\"Vfo have your fetter of March 29,\nIn which you asked us to send you a\ngood wife. Good wives are- scare,\nbut we do not believe that even if\nthere were\" a gpod selection nvailable\nyou Would b-*\\ wise in choosing one\nby mdll,\n\"The writer ot this lei ter was. In\nOregon about .two years ago nd believes that if you took a trip to either Spokane, \u2022 Seattle or Tacoma you\nwould probably he able lo pet some\nIntrodueJlons to suitable ladies and\ncobld .pick \u25a0 out your own wife. In\nfiu>t,-'we th^nk that about the only\n\u00abitlsfnc1fcbiry   method. '     *\n\"After you get .the wife and you\nfind that she needs some wearing apparel or household goods, we feel\nsuro we could, serve,both you and her\nto good advantage.,\n\"With best wishes.\"\nUsually the requests for a mate\nare from_ the men, hut occasionally\na  woman   Is  willing  to   risk  ordering\na husband by mall. Thus: \"This is-\nAngeline\u2014~- It you', white nr is you\ncolored arid send your pitcher.\" Sometimes an attempt Is .made to locate\nan old flame.    \"The girt .on, page 89\nlooks   like   Mamie  .    Does   she\nwork_for you, or do you know her address?\"\nOn the other hand, a' letter like\nthe following tells a gloomy tale:\n\"I want you to take back a ring,\nI ain't got no more use for it than\na rabbit, because I bought this here\n\u25a0ring tot an engagement ring and I\nwas drafted and went to France and\nwhen 1 come back my g\\A ehe had\nwent and married a no count \u25a0 guy\nand   that what  I 'get  for  flghten  for\nmy country.   To   with war is\nwhat  I  says.\"\nADMIT   BARRISTERS.\n1U3GINA, July fl.\u2014Arrangements\nhave been concluded with the British\ngovernment for the admission of\nSaskatchewan barristers to the\nstanding  of   solicMor  In   England\ncomplying\"\" with\u2014th*tP: same\u2014 wrpi ire -\nments as exist In Saskatchewan, according to an announcement made by\nthe Benchers \"association. In consequence'the rules of the Law Society\nof Saskatchewan  haye been  amended\nto-correspond with the order-in-eol\ncil which, it is expected,, will be j\nthrough   in   the   near .future.\nFor -certain\/offenses   the   Chlr |\nlaw   prescribes   death   by   stabbinj*\n'HE Lowlands of India and Ceylon\nuce the heaviest\nSanborn's\nCEYLON AND INDIA BLACK TEA\nis Upland tea with aU of its natural fragrance and flavor unimpaired.   In tha soft\nand gentle hillside sunshine, beneath moisture laden bt*-eez*s, ens\ntea  slowly  attains  its  growth  and  fullness  of  flavor\u2014that\ndelectable .individuality that makes this Blend a rapture of joy to\nthe true tea lover. \\\nCHASE & SANBORN, Montreal, Que\nWIVE8   BY   MAIL.\n, The demand sent by remote customers to mail order housed for assistance in matrimonial ventures is\nheavy\u2014several hundred letters, a year\none house reports, writes Viola I.\nPflr&rijse in n New York magazine.\nTJ-rfei. vary from such vague and\ngeneral requests as \"Can you recommend tne one of the young ladies ln\nUnparalleled Bargains\nDuring: Our July\nValues that could not be equalled for the past four years. Goods regardless of   >\ncost are going in this sale. People in this entire surrounding district should take\nadvantage of these great saving possibilities. Very large stock to select from.\nFurniture, Bedding, Carpets, Rugs, Mouse Fur-\nnishings, Linoleums, Floor Oif Cloths, Mattings\nand the Vert) Best in Draperies and Curtain Materials\nEverything Marked in Plain Figures\nCHESTERHELDS AND CHAIRS\nl\/JC Aft   Chesterfield flndc  grade'      (g-J QP AA\njOO.Uu   Tapestry;   Salo   PricK...  wlOU.UU\n$590.00\nDINING ROOM FURNITURE\n$750.00\nami  Six  Chair\n$600.00\nand Six  Chain\n$257.00\nExten-\n$558.50\n$480.00\nSix   Chairs.\n$560.00\n$410.00\n$125.00\n$195.00\n$82.00\nNine-piece   Solid   \"Walnut   Buffet,\nsion Table,.,China' Cabinet\nStile   Price '.\t\nNine-piece Solid Walnut Buffet. Extension\nTable.   China   Cabinet\n. Kale Price ..**.\t\nN\"ine-piece Chrome Walnut  Buffet, Exten-\nTahlo. China. Cabinet ami\nSale  Prlco '...:\t\nQuartered Oak. Fumed 9-\npieee  Suite.  Sale price\t\nQuartered   Oak   Fumed\n9-piece   Suite.  Sale  Price....\nOdd   Fumed   Oak   liuffet,:\nSale   Price\t\n8-Piec'e Fumed Oak Buffet,\nExtension Table, 0 Chairs...\"\nFumed  Oak Buffet.\nSale   Price ,\t\n$205.50\n$448.00\n$328.00\n$97.50\n$175.00\n$65.00\nODD CHAIRS AND ROCKERS\n$32.50\nnl   white\n$18.00\n$14.00\nWicker\nbrown\nle   Price    ...\nSea   Grass   Chain).\nSa|e    Price   ....\".\t\nSea Cras Chair.\nSale   Price   \t\nI   Rockers,\nenamel\nupholstered,\n$23.75\n$13.75\n$11.75\nBED ROOM SUITES AND ODD\nDRESSERS.\n$625.00\nand Chair.    S.->\n$274.00\nWalnut   Suite,     Dresser,   Dressing.\nChiffonette, Rocker\nSolid\nTable\nall! Price\t\nEmpire   Walnut   Suit\nitle   Dressing   Table.\n$235.00\n$90.00\n$65.00\n$45.00\n$48.00\n$40.00\nSolid Walnut' Dresser and\nDressing Tabic.  Sale I'rtec\nOdd   Old  Ivory   Chiffonier\nSUle   Price    \u201e\t\nOdd Old Ivory Dressing Table.\n\u25a0Bale  Price\t\nQuartere'd Oak Dressing Ta'ble.\nSale ' Price    L\t\nWhite' Enamel   Dresser.\nSale  Price i\t\nWhite   Enamel  Dresser.\nQale   Price   ...I...:--.\t\n$493.50\nDresser,   Chiffon-\n$219.00\n$188.00\n$77.50\n$48.00\n$30.00\n$36.50\n$28.50\n3-I'ieee   Chesterfield, and  2\nMarshall Cushions, fine .\n\u25a0pattern and graile Tapestry.  SaHe  Price\t\nChesterfield Divanette and\n2 Chairs.     Snle Price\t\nTapestry   Upholstered:. Chalh\nSale   Price    -.'. i.-..\u201e,.,.-.....,.,..-.-..\n$575.00\nj$45.00\nChairs,   Loose\n$435.00\n$422.50\n$32.50\nRUGS-WILTON, AXMINSTER,\nBRUSSELS AND TAPESTRY\nWilton Rugs\n$68.00\nS$95.00\n$125.00\n$55.00\n$100.00\n$42.50\n$60.00\n$85.00\n$25.00\n$45.00\n$50.00\n8-9x9   Wilton   Rug.\nSale   Price.    '.\t\n11x10-11\nWilton\nRug.\nSale'\nPrice\" '\u25a0\u25a0\n1  txi:\n:' Wilton\nRug.\n1  Sab\n!   Prlco\nAxminster Rugs\nli-!lx!l   Axminster\nSale   Price   .:\t\nRug.\n9x12 Axminster Rug.\nSale   Price    \u201e '.\t\nBrussels Rugs\n6-0x9  Brussels  Rug.\nSale Price  .v\n9x10-0   Brussels  Rug.\nSale  Price  \t\n0x12   Brussels  Rug.\nSale  Price\t\ntapestry Rugs\n0-0x9   Tapestry   Rug.\nSale  Trice\t\n9xlO\u00abC Tapestry Rug.\nSale  Price  .\u201e........: _..\n.9x12. Taiiesfry  Rug.\nSale .Price    '......\n$40.00\n$65.00\n$85.00\n$37.50\n$72,50\n$31.25\n$45.00\n$62.50\n$18.50\n$31.75\n...$38.25\n'BRASS AND IRON BEDS AND\nSPRINGS AND MATTRESSES.\n$9.50 irB\u2122!: : :  $6.90.\n$16.50^^...!!!':: .',\u201e,.., $12.75\n$20.00-FrBoi,:..ao,ib:::. $15.75\n$18.00\n$6.50\n$18.00\n$15.00\n$12.00\n$82.50\n$75.00\n$60.00\n$42.50\nIron  lied,   double.\nFor     _\u201e \u25a0\u201e\nWoven   Wire   Springs\nFor *\t\nAll Felt  Mattress\nMixed\nFell\nFor \t\nMixed\nFelt\nFor ...\nl\nr\u00bb\n1\n3-lncb\nBra\nPost.\nSale    1\nPrint\ni-lnch\nPost,\nSale P\nrice ...\n2-iuch\nPost,\nSale   1\n'rice\n2-inch\nPost\nSalo   1\nPrice,\n1-inch   Filler.\n1-Inch   Filler.\n: $5.oo\n$13.50\n$12.50\n$8.00\n$63.50\n$59.50\n$43.50\n$30.00\nBABY CARRIAGES GO-CARTS AND\n*      SULKIES\n$82.50\n$74.50\n$65.00\n$40.00\n$30.00\n$25.00\n$17.50\n$15.00\nWicker  Baby Carriage.\nSale   Price    - : -\t\nWh-ker, Baby Carriage, white\nenamel and blue. Sale Price..-\nWicker   Baby   Carriage.\nWicker   Ba\nSale  T'rlce\nStandard Furniture\nWicker Baby Carriage.\nSale   Price    - ; \t\nWicker  Baby1 Carriage'.   ,\nSnio   Price   ;... Lv...\nWicker  Sulky,   with   hood.\nSalo   Price .\".....- : ......\nWicker   Sulky,1 v\/lth\" hood.\nSale   P'r'lco    s,\t\nSulky.\nSa lo   Prlcef*C. i _.....\n$67.50\n$61.50\n$49.50\n$32.50\n$23.50,1\n$19.50\n$14.25\n$11.50\nComplete House Furnishers\nNELSON, B. C\n SSBHS\n^3 I\nTHE NELSON DAlJiY* NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1221.\nii\nUTO BUGS AND BUGGIES\nBy Wood Cowan\nAKD  5A.M THIS X\"\nM\/W ' SOUMO A, LITTLE     \\\nfishs BUT ivi'e Meyeu. |\nH*D. AMV Tlte TROUBLE \/\n'ER. THE SLI6UTEST        Jfc\nK-NOCK.   (W ALL THW\nInooDSU!\n[Doctor Who fractal!\n. Down Malaria Germ\n[frr~*\u2014 ; : *\nOne of the greatest living masters\nscience is undoubtedly Sir  Ronald\njjoss, M. p., K. C. _. G., nava! prizewinner, thc hearer of many international hot-tors\u2014the man who, at hia\nVn cost. In the teeth of ridicule and\n>ite\u2014first discovered the malaria of\n,ie mosquito, and helped to rid thc\njidJan. empire of one of its greatest\nprrors\u2014malaria,\nSir Ronald comet*; of fighting stock,\n\u00bbr he ia a son of General Sir-C. C. G.\nlosa, hut the younger man is a u'ight-\nY vt li new type.\nHe can hit careless and lazy \"man-\nl|tiring\"  as  hard  as  he  can  hit ml-\nirobes\u2014and he has done deadly work\n|i  the  microbe    world\u2014but ho can\n'frien  ait  down  and   write  poetry   of\nVie  most  intense  idealism,   the  moat\nbinder sentiment, or the jnost laugh-\nble'.iHid whimsical  hu trior,     lie  has\njftublished. three little volumes of very\n{pithy and pregnant verae, ono histor-\nha\\ romance, a few dramatic sketches\n|nd humorous ramblqes pf the Rud-\n|\u00a7;ard  Kipling kind.    Withal  he is  a\n;rlllialit    mathematician,    a    serious\nrh~  \u2022- --\nra\nPacket of    \\\nWILSONS\nFLY PADS\nWILL KILL MORE FLIES THAN.\n' $8\u00b0-WORTH OF ANY '\n\\STICKY FLY CATCHER'\/\n,'Iean lo handle.   Sold by aU\nDruggists, Grocers and\nGeneral Stores\nSELDOM SEE\na big knee like this, but your horae\nmay have a bunch or bruise on hi\u00bb\nankle, hock, stifle,   knee or throat.\nABSORBINE\n*^ TRADE MARK UG.U.S.PAT. OFF.\nwill clean it off without laying up\nthe horse.   No blister, no hair\n,_ gone. Concentrated\u2014only a few\nwops- required at an application.   52.50 per\nottlr. dtlli-cffd.   Describe your cite lor tpecltl Inttmciioni,\nnd Book 8 R free.  ABSORBINE. JR.. the md.\ncpiic liniment  tor tninklnd,  reduces painful  Swcllinit.\nalined Glindi. Wem, Bmlies, Varlcote Velnti alltyi\ntin ind inflimtrutlon.   Price JI.2*5 \u00bb bottle it druisiili Of\nrllveted    IJbcril trlil bottle poi-tpiId (or 10c.\n1. F. YOUNG. Inc.. 445 Lywui) Bid*.. Moolreil. Can.\nthinker on social and religious sub-:\njects, and one or the moat interesting\nand amusing df traveling companioa.\nIt _>vaa m\u00bbi881, hia 24th year, that\nRonald Ross went out to India as\nmedical officer. \"Being young, healthy,\nand full of fun, he for some ti,mc enjoyed the gaiety and sparkle of Indian\nofficial life. In a |few years he became moody and restless\u2014\u25a0Inclined to\nbe \"dour,\" as the Scots say.\nSomething was radically throng\nwith the medical service. No one can\npraise too highly the heroism that officers showed when plague or cholera\ncame along; hilt why were whole districts permanently foul -frith malaria?\nAnd, seeing that normally there was\nvery little work tq do, why was no one\nstudying the causes of it?\nOfficials snubbed him fyr aaklng\nsuch questions, but he kept his eyes\nopen.\nNew Theory of tho Disease.\nIn 1894 Dr. Ross visited England.\nFor five years ho had been making\na privato -study oX malaria, and he\npricked- up hla ears when he heard\nthat Sir Patrick Mnnsonr the grand\nold man of tropical medical science,\nhad a new theory of the disease.\nProperly speaking the theory was\nnearly UU00 years old. Italy is the\nchief seat of malaria in Europe, and\neven the ancient Roman writers had\nguessed that it had something; to do\nwith tlie swarms of midges or mos-\nquotoes. Sir Patrick Manson, by ono\npjf those vftmdei'ful forecasts which so\noften lead to discoveries in seionce,\nnow predicted definitely that a mosquito would prove lo be the offender.\nRoss then thought otherfwise, and argued the point with Sir Patrick; but\nhe kept the open mind of science, and\nwent back lo India to test the theory.'\nWe might say at once that he found\nthe criminal mosquito and the germs\nin it, but if you want to know the\ncharacter of Sir Ronald Roaa, the\ntype of man who does things in science, the story has to be told. Roaa\ngot\" a post in the delightfully rich\n(from a fever point of view} district\nof fc'ceunderabad. He captured, fed,\nbred antl closely studied all kinds of\nmosquitoes. .   '  '.\nCholera broke out in Bangalore,\nand he had to leave his work. Tho\nAfridl broke out on the hills, and\nthere was another long interruption.\nBack lie wont always to his \"akeet-\ners\"; but no insect would contract the\ndisease, and everybody laughod at\nlilm. At nights, worn out with work\nand sick front the callousness of his\nsuperiors\u2014\"men, without an idea or\nan ideal,\" he saya\u2014he used to sit\ndown alone nnd pen the little poems\nwhich appear In hla works. He Js no\nShelley, but   there   is   a   prodigious\nTO SOOUSffl\nCountry Was Defrauded of\nVery Small Sum in Changing of Soldiers' Money.\nGeoffrey T- Clarkson, accountant,\nof the firm of Clark'snn, On-dim,\nand Dllworth, Toronto, lias boon appointed hy the government In ruil.e\nan audit of the books of the (t-|uii-\nmont of m'lltia and tin; department\nof soldiers' civil reegtablishrncnt, iii\norder to determine to what extent\nthe arrangement made for conversion\nof English money brought to Canada by returning soldiers inlo Canadian' ciirreney al. the pat- value nf\nthe pound sterling was l'raifduiciitly\nexploited. The question was raised\nrecently by an unsuccessful i roan*\ncution of two government officials\nwho were charged with forgery and'\nfrail d.\ntt was theft alleged ilia! pai-yotja\nnot entitled to avail' themselves rf\nthe privilege bud found means uf doing so, and thai, hi jiousiiquonce, ihe\ncountry had ..lost a large stuii of\nmoney. An enquiry by rbya] rem\nmission was talked of. The Bpv.tJ'li*\nmerit bas, however, decided ilui the\nbest course lo pursue would by I \u25a0 >\nprovide for an independent audi! of\n'departmental accounts. An examma-\nLion by department officials, il ;h\nstaled, has disclosed lhat English\nmoney waa changed into Canadian\ncurrency to the amount of ftf.OGO.uOQ,\nand that all but $llLMum waff exchanged , through tlio hanks. This\nInside audit, it Is further slated, has\nshown that the' frauds did not ex-'wd\n$6000. Mr. Clarkson will determine\nthe prociso amount and will :us > be\nasked to suggest improvements In\ntho accounting and (inditing systems\nof the two departments.\nFOOD   ATTRACTS  ANTS\nSTRANGE ADOPTIONS.\nThree kiltehs wh'ch were deserted\nby tneir \"mother were adopted bv a\nhen, says a Nova Scotia report. The\nhen discovered Lhe kittens in a cow's\nmanger and after. watching them tor\nsome time sat on them. She wr.s\nchased away and the mother cat was\nput with Its young, but the old. hen\nwent back and chased the cat and\nclaimed the kittens. Jlow the ki.tcns\nWero\"' fed is not known.\nA eat. with three kittens hi NO\\a\nl-'cntia, adopted K rftothcrlesa chicken\ntwo weeks old. It would He down\nw'th lbe -kittens and cat aiid go to\nsleep. Jl would try to ejit like fhe\nkittens and lhe cat and kittens tried\nto play with her. She stayed with\nthe eat except nights until she was\nold enough to go wotli the other fowl.\nAnother account of a strange adep,\ntion comes from Alberta. He says\nthai a hen on his deceased brotnur's\nt';u in in Oh(tti';o ltd opted some young\npigs. The sow- had furrowed in one\nend-of a'log barn to which she. bad\naccesti, and dose lo a hen that was\nsilling oil Bo'lrie rotten eggs. After\nthe, little pigs eu.nie. some or them\nUsed lo crawl under the 'hen f\"r\nwarmth, so she''seemed to think the\nwhole hunch v.eiv as liiueh her's Us\ntho sow's. HUe would go itro.und\nwith them during the day and wti.ti'n\nnig ill came would sit. on as many ;*a\nshe could i uver. It waa amusi.ig lo\nwatdi her antics after thu pigs ;,\"\u25a0< w\nloo  big for her tnotheriijg  Instinct\nMedical and Surgical\nWonders Resulting From\nWar Shown at Convention\nHALIFAX, July 8\u2014Tho fifly-soc-\nond annual convention of tlie Canadian Medical association which bes\nhen In session here three days, concluded  today.\nwhat smaller numerically lhan usual,\nthe delegates are expressing ih'ent-\nflclyea as delighted with lhe gon-\noral excellence of the papers which\n.have been presented and the exhibits which are said to ho the most\nnumerous and remarkable ever seen\nin the history of the association.\nThey ai'e divided into two section!*,\ncommercial and pathological. The\ncommercial section presents \u00abvery\nconceivable contrivance which iicf-\nence lias boen able to discover for\ntho alleviation of human physical\nills. The . pathological presents,\namong other things, remarkable photographs of the results of tho wonders of medicine aud surgery that\ngrow out of the war,\nleriijg   ilisli\nMANY\" SUICIQES   OCCUR\n\u25a0Many mysterious Alpine, ae-iienl:\nhnve occurred lately,.^especially in Liu\nlower parts of the Alps, where.tjior<\nis no veal danger 16 anyone prope:-|\\\nequipped, I mil Lh,e Hiiap'.cion hai\narisen thai people are entuiuittint\nSiiicicle in u way which thoy -hopi\nWill not he \u2022;;) tleseribed. ' The i pin\nion   of   Alpine   giildOH    Is    Hint    Cl'iii\nsuspicion  is  not groundless*. \" \u25a0\nIt is known that many people iii-\ncently found dead at tho foot of\nprec'plces or Ju the mountain gorges\nwere mentally distressed or In Jlffl-\ntulttes       ,   ,\nTh'e mysterious dJ|&ppearant-o on\nMay 17 last of two ^rirls, one aged\n18 and the other 24, has Just been\naccounted, f$r by tho finding of their\nbodies wedged between rocks irt a\nmountai iigorgc Both girls were\nwearing ordinary clothes and light\nshoes with h'gh heels, such as no\nsensible tourist would evers think of\nwearing ln the. mouutains.' It was\nonly by chance that three tourists\nfound the bodies, although guides\nand volunteers search parties had\nheen looking for them for nearly a\nmonth.\nThe epidemic of suicides on 4.he\ncontinent continues and everyone. noinr\nknow3 what in most cases \"found\ndrowned in lake\" or \"found dead in\nroom\" really means. Many of these\nsuicides are commit ted by Russian\ncitizens', once possessors of great\nwealth and influence in their o.wn\nland, but now penniless and home*\nlois.\nSwordfisb of the Indian ocean -have\nhppii known to drive their andut\nthrough three inches of teak-wood\ncovered with a copper sheath,-\nAnother hale parallel   to   the origi-\nn.'il I'J-mile Sinipb ui tunnel through*\ntbe Alps is now being bored and will\nlie .ready for operation shortly.\nRheumatism\nStiffness\nand all\nPain\nMinanl's\nliniment\"\n(las given\nsatisfaction\nfor three\nfenerations.-,\nt quickly relieves\nthroat, bronchitis, neuralgia, sciatica and any\nkind of pain.\nAn Old Reliable Remedy\nMrs. S. Fawcett, Hamilton St., Colllngivood,\nOnt., writes,\u2014Minard's Liniment surely is an\nold reliable remedy. 1 always keep a bottle\nin the house ami have recommended it to\nquite .i number ol my friends, tu whom it gave\ntreat relief. In most cases it was used as a\ncure for rheumatism.\nMiivKPcTs\n\u2022 King, of Pain.\u00bb\nLiiumcitf\n1 Yarmouth    NowaScotia.\nCORNS\nLift Off with Fingfers\nDoesn't hurt a bit: Drop a little\n\"Freezone\". on an aching corn. Instantly that corn stops hurting, then\nshortly you lift It right oft with\nfingers.     Truly!\nYour druggist sells a tiny bottle ot\n\"Freezone\" for a few cents* sufficient to remove every bard corn, soft\ncorn, or corn between the toes, and\nthe calluses, without soreness or\n'Irritation.  B ^\t\nstrength, both of. intellect and emotion. In some of his pieces.\nThc Discovery,\nAt last, in July, 1897, he was able\nto call out \"Kureka!\" like Archimedes\nof old. His newest mosquito, a quite\npretty dapple-winged little creature,\nhad in the walls of Its stomach certain granules which were unmistakable.\nA scientific man of Ross' school\nonce showed the present writer how\nhe studied mosquitoes. He cut the\nbody, with a microtome, into hundreds of fihe, transparent, slices, and\nhe examined each slice, in every thousandth of an inch, under a powerful\nmicroscope. So Ross reported to the\nauthorities his great discovery, and\u2014\nthey sent him at once to a ttatipn\nwhere there waa plenty of polo and\npretty millinery, but not a single mosquito!\nThe poems that Dr. Ross wrote in\nthis charming place, due of the most\ncoveted of the Indian. stations, were\nstrong. Hia .\"fables\"''were'caustic. He\ncalled the place his \"Devil's Island\nHundreds of thousands of lives were\nlost every year by malaria, and mi!\nlions suffered from it. There were\nBritish Colonies where a third of tlie\ninhabitants were down with it every\nyear.\nAud ttosti knew that he had discovered the secret of its propagation, yel\nhe was expected to drop it and give\nhis time to tennis and flirting. But he\nsomehow got six months' leave to\ncomplete his discovery. He now found\nthat the spores of the germ were thick\nin the salivary glands of the Insect.\n\"Never brail our dreams,\" 'he says,\n\"liad we Imagined so wonderful a tale\nas this.\" These germs, \u25a0 of course,\npassed with the tainted saliva into a\nman's body when the insect bit hlin.\nSaving Hundreds of Thousands.\nMajor Ross, as he now was, retired\nfrom the Indian service In 1899, and\nbeeaine the first lecturer to the Liverpool School of Tropica! 'Medicine.\nThese men of Liverpool were not\nmandarins. They at once fitted out\nan expedition, with Ross at its head,\nfor Sierra Leone, aud the whole wop\nderful story off the malaria-germ was\nlaid bare. One regrets to say it, but\nil )u only the females of the particular [\nfamily; , of mosquitoes which suck!\nblood, and only at night. By day the\nbloated ladles' He upon the walls and\nceilings. They lay their eggs \"on the\nsurface of stagnant water, and here\nwas thc great opportunity to deal with\nthem., Ponds and marshes were\ndrained. Water surfaces were covered\nwith oil, and fired. There were new\nmany workers in the field, and the\nwar upon the microbe and its mosquito carrier proceeded briskly.\nIn 1902 Ross was summoned to deal\nwith Ismallla. In three years he reduced cases of malaria from 1551\n(which is a fourth of the population)\nIn a year to 37 in a year. ' Taking the\nworld over\u2014for the malaria mosquito\nis found In every continent\u2014hundreds\nof thousands of tives a year have been\nsaved, and hundreds of millions of\nmen have been spared the wasting\nspasms of the disease.'\n        -if\t\nA POOR LOSER.\nFrom Berlin conies tlie story of a\nlawsuit, caused by \u25a0 anti-Semitism,!\nwhich had an amusing termination, [\nstates the Jewish information Office\nof New York. . \u25a0\nDietrich Kckard, an anti-Semitic\neditor, recently offered a prize of\n1000 marks if anyone would name\nhim a Jewish family that had three\nsofts at the front during the war. A\nHanover rabbi, Dr. Fround, claimed\nthe prize, sending Eckard a list of\ntwenty such families from \"his own\ncongregation.\nEckard refused to pay thu promised prize-. The rabbi carried the\nmatter to court, meanwhile augmenting his list with Information from\nother congregation's, including families\nthat had as many as seven and eight\nsons at the front and some who lost\nthree  sons  in  action.\nThe court declared in favor of the\nra'bbl, ordering Eckard to turn over\nto him the prize he had promised.\nThe rabbi gave the money to Jewish welfare organizations.\nSeaweed or giant kelp Is said to be\nsuperior to willow or rattan as material for baskets and many other\nkind? of woven furniture.\nThe surest, way tq keep a tioiiso\nfree from ants is lo leave no food\nlying about on shelves or in QpYii\nplaces where they can roach  It,\nAnts go where they find food, and\nIf the food supplier of the li mr.e-'\nbold are kept in aut-proof metal\ncontainers or in Iceboxes, and n y.ll\nfood that may happen to be scattered\nby children or others Ik cleaned Up\npromptly lbe ant ntnsancu will bo\nilight. Cake, bread, sugar, meal i\/ml\nIke SUbstahcpS are specially aJ'\";;--\ntive to the ants and should ho kept\nfrom   them. ft '     \u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0_-.\nRoaches will no!\/* frequent lOuiht.\nunless they find some available K.od\nmaterial,- and if such qan be keja\nfrom the living rooms ;md offices _>r\nscrupulous care exercised tu see M.at\nno such material is placed in drawers where it will leave mi attractive\nodor, or fragment*? of i'i,od, the roach\nnuisance can be largely put an end\nto.\nTRADE  PACT IN   EFFECT i\nThe Canada-West Indies in.de'\na^reem'-ii! Is now in effect. C'an-\nndiuh prmlucts will go Into the jiil-\nft'il colonies of the West Indies, which \u25a0\nhavo . ratified the agreement ;u \u25a0 a1\npr-fffej-euce amounting hi some case*-\ni<j fifty per cunt aiid (heirs In titi-n\nwill  come into Canada a(   a  preier-\nMueh Is hoped fur under Ill's\nagreement by tho proponents 'of this\nplan. Seine hope lo' do away with\nCanada's dependence on tlie South'\u25a0\"n\nStates for fruits and certain havd\nwoods, and in turn to displace American articles of manufacture now sent\ninto i'ritish West Indies by many\nmlllldntf of dollars.\nIn lhe fiscal year JUIlO Canada exported nearly eleven million cloliars'\nworth uf merchandise, twice liie\nanionil .senl in llllii. Ciuler the impetus nf the new agreement it is\nhoped 'that   this, will   be  gi^atlv   \u25a0\u25a0>. -\ni d'ed-    Tbe   Imports   in   1920   freVe\nover    tWulve    million    dollars,    m iflj\ntwice ihese bf JlVifi, Barbados h'mil\nthe greater part nC these goods. Tiie-'\nid-id and Lobago proved tlio be>t\ncustomers, hut all purchased liom\nCanada,     Bermuda, refused   to   ratify\nMade\nmac\nrti-K\nlave you\n-led Halda'\nIConfectlons?1\nRedArrow\nNash      , f Cadillac\nChevrolet           1)0 TS Hudson\nDodge Bros. s Essex\nspontaneous  combustion.\nThere are  MO varieties of avocado\nThe   first   land   owner   In   what   Is\nSienr do Ui Salle, who, in \u25a0 May. ,\n1675\"; received fri-ni King Louis XIV. \\\na patent of nobility and a grant of',\nland comprising Fort Frontotiac ;ind'\nthe islands opposite. Thnl old grant \\\n\u25a0ii' land now form* part, of the city of!\nKingston.'\nNATIONAL AND REPUBLIC TRUCKS\nTRACTORS   AND   TRAILERS\nBegg Motor Company ,Ltd\nVancouver, B. C.\nDealers\nAppointed,\nDistributors |\n_y\n THE NELSON DAILY- SEWS, -6ATURDAY -MORNING, -JUL*?. 9T,192'f. V\nWITSi\nRubbers, Equipments, Steels\nand Oils Relapse; Bears\nAggressive; Weak Close.\n\u25a0 NJJW YORK, July 8.\u2014Further\nsubstantial forfeiture of the mid-\nwoiak'.s'' spirited , rally on tho exchange was witnessed in today's reactionary movement.\nSevere declines were registered at\nthe outset. United States Rubber\nleading, with a loss of 4% points on\novernight announcement that the\ndividend had been deferred. Similar\naction was taken during the (lay-\non. the preferred shares of the FIsI;\nRubber company.\nConspicuous weakness was shown\nby equipments, Independent Rteois.\nshippings, sugars and miscellaneous\nBnares* -\nChief among these was Harvester,\nPullman, United Fruit, -Mercantile\n\u2022Marine preferred, Famous Players,\nSoars-Roebuck and American  Sugar.\nForeign oils' lapsed to their recent\nheavy state, fresh offerings following showing a marked falling oft ot\nproduction in the Tamplco field.\nMexican Petroleum lost 6% and associated issues declinod. 2 to 346.   -\nLowest records were made in the\nlist hour, shorts becoming more \"B\"\ngressive as call money rose from\n>5& to 6 ^er cent. Seasoned rails\nand industrials -then gave wav, the\nlist closing with a weak tone.\nSales wero 700,000 'shares.\nFirmer tendencies prevailed in. the\nmarket for time funds, although no\nchange of recent Quotations were\nshown.-. Renewals of two and three\nmonth loans seemed to be freely\nmade and morc liberal purchases of\nmerchants'   paper   wero -reported.\nMost of tho international exchanges\nwere lower on nominal dealing. Demand sterling at $3.70, was -almost\n.6 jcents under its high of a few\nWeeks ago, and all continental rates,\nincluding eastern European rates,\nwere'more reactionary.\nMost bond issues, including the\nLiberty group, were inclined to ease,\nbut a few speculative rails held, or\nadded to recent gains.\nTotal sales,  $11,575,000.\nClosing   Quotations\nSILVER CLIMBS\nNEW;- YORK,   July   8.\u2014Silver,   do\nmestlc, 89%;  foreign, 60,\nLONDON, July  8.\u2014Silver,   iKVl.\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPEG. July 8.\u2014Bid prices for\nDominion war  issues today:\nWar loans\u20141925, 94.50; 1931, 93.58;\n1937, 97.10,\nVictory loans\u20141922. 99.10: 192.',\n98.05: 1927, 97.60; 1933, 97.15; 195T.\n99;   19*24, 97;  1934, 94.10.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNEW!     YORK,     July   8.\u2014Canadian\ndollars,   88.00.\n-  Francs\u2014Demand, 7.95; cables.  7.97.\nLire\u2014Demand, 4.77; cables, 4.71.  \"\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK, July 8.\u2014Sterlina ox-\nchange Irregular at $3.66 for 60-llaj\nbills and at $3.70% for demand.\nNELSON, July 8.\u2014Current countei\nexchange for sterling,  $4.18%.\n12*\nSENDS WHEAT UP\nCHflSAGO. July 8.\u2014Strength dd-\nvitlopiui in\\whyat uciuw* today lar\u00ab?ly\n'aa a result\\it_l>Mick rust in Ounali.\nMessages from Winnipeg said samples of \"heat showing hltu-k rust\nhail been received from many points\nfti Muni tuba nnd also from phuvs In\nSaskatchewan. ^ Vho market i\\lwwi\nfirm, % to -2 eanta net higher, w'th |\nSeptember $1.21*.. to 11.31*. nnd Do-\ncomber 4144H to I1.S4U.\nCorn finished 7* eent net lower, to j\n\\_ cent advance, and uatB imehnngtM 1\nto 'i cent higher. In provisions. im** j\nclose waa unchanged, to ii cents up.\nporting thin ., cume reportB - from\nwholesale grocery hmibea tliat' business is butter than evpectqd and\nabove that for the summer of 1920.\nLarge bout. and shoe houses report\nhaving had a. satisfactory \"niacins''\nseadoh with aorting orders qomlng\nalong., satisfactorily. Hardware liousss\nare fairly b,u\u00aby with larger goods,\nhut slack, oh household llnca, \u00ab?tR.\nGenerally speaking, huwever, these\noptimistic, reports are not getitirul\nand it would be unwise to believe\nthat- extremely quiet conditions existing of lato nre by any means over.\nBETAL MARKET\nNEW     YORK,      July     S.-f'\nsteady. ,\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot 'and nearby,\nto 13;  third quarter, 13 to lfjri\nTin\u2014Firm;   spot  and   nearby   ami\nfutures, 29.00.\nIron\u2014Easier;      No.     1     Northern,\n2J.00 to 26.00;  No. 2 Northern, 22.00\nto  23.00;   No.   2   Southern,   20.00   to (\n21.00.\nLead\u2014Quiet;   spot, 4.40.\nZinc\u2014Steady,  4.25  to  4.36.\nAntimony\u2014Spot, 4-75.\nAt London,\u2014Standard copper,\n\u00a372 10s;  futures,  \u00a372 10s.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot,    \u00a375    10s\ntures,   \u00a37T  10s.\nTin\u2014Spot,  \u00a3168 10s; futures,\n10s.\nLead\u2014Spot,    \u00a323   2s   6d;    full\n\u00a323.\nZinc\u2014Spot,    \u00a326   17s   6d;   futt\n\u00a327  7s 6d.' v\nTORONTO BOARD\nTi'ROXTO. July 8.\u2014Toronto and\nMontreal stock exchanges will i.*n\nclosed tomorrow. Canadian market*\nwere unable to make headway nil\nday. though prices were moderate v\nfirm.\nThe papers were active, and in\nnearly all eases, recessions were made.\nWayagamack dropped four points to\n40. Steel .Of Canada tlecllhed oyer\n3 points on tlie tfttumon and one\non the preferred, -steamships gained\na fraction on the common and lost\nnearly  a point   on   tbe  preferred,\nth-nzHinn and Toronto Railway\nVi*ore lower, while Twin city wen*\n\\ip. Canadian General Electric, $\\ N.\nBurt and Ontario Steel products advanced, and C. TS tl., Hell Telephone\nand Canners went down-\nVictory issues were Irregular and\nbank stocks wero active and strong.\nhe\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nC. P.  R\t\n.112\n110%\n110%\nC. M. & St. P.  ..\n\u2022 27%\n27\n26 >,i\nInt.  Marine   ....\n .1\n11\nMo. Pac., com...\n19\n19%\nMo.   Pac.   pfd...\n. 39%\n33%\n37%\nPierce  Arrow   ..\n.: 20\n19\n19\nStudebaker\n.. 81 'A\n78\n78%\nIT. S. Steel, com.\n. n%\n73%\n73%\nU. S. Steel, pfd.\n\t\n108%\nWillys-Overland\n,    7'i\n7\n7\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nspot,\nlu\n\u00a317\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 8.\u2014Flour unchanged to 26 cents higher, at S8.60\nto J8.G0 a barrel. Shipments, 60,311\nbarrels.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 Northern, $1.39'.; .lo\nti-49%.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 Yellow, 50 to 51 cents.\nOats\u2014No.   3.   White,   32%   to   33\ncents.\nFlax\u2014No.   1,   $1.85   to   $1.86.\nDOMINION .TRADE.\n'WIN.N ll'KG, July S.~ (Bv Ci\ndlan. Press)\u2014While It is not ad\n\\h\\r-. to be over sanguine as in\nprospective results, there can hv\ndoubt hut that Canadian business\nconditions are on the mend, wtates\nthe weekly trade report of fhe Canadian Creditmen's Trust association.\nIn this connection, while reports\nfrom various districts are -conflicting,\nthc more careful the scrutiny, the\nmore reassuring is the result, although, so fur as as the wus;\nconcerned; and this affects .the. whole\nDominion, a lot will depend on the\ncrop o,n which it is yet too'early to\nl>ass Judgment. .\nWholesale boot and shoe houses\nreport fairly satisfactory business,\nlikewise ladies' wear. Retail trade\nin the larger cities east Is satisfactory for the time of year, especially\nin Montreal, which is full of visitors.\nMaritime provinces advices show\nlittlo change, with a general summer\nquietness all around. Results, however*\" are reported to average up to\nthose  for  the  Sfime  season  in  1920.\nWinnipeg and the west, relying on\na satisfactory crop, generally'speaking,, are in an optimistic mood. Sup-\nWHOLESALE MARKET.\nThe following aro Kelson wholesale\nprices   ou   the   various   commodities\nnamed:\nButttirfttt.\nSweet     $ .34\nNo.   s*our 32\nNo.  2 sour 80\nBerries for jam:\nStrawbtrriod        M\nBlack currants    07\nBed   Currants    05\nSweet   Cherries     06\nDressed  carcasses:\nSteers    .....,.'\t\nCows\t\nCtil\\ es   .,\t\nMutton    \t\nI^imbs   \t\nHogs     \u2022\u2022\"\u2022':,\"\u2022\u2022\nFowls    \t\nNo. 1 creamery  butter\nIn cartons   \t\nI   parchment   \t\nf.6s,  solid   \t\n14s.  solid    34%\nNo.   1   dairy   butter,   lb.   ,30 to    .35\nI^K***).  her dozen 40\nTable  berricB:\nStrawberries',   fancy,   choice.,\n,  hand-picked    and    graded,\nper- crato    ._.  3.25   '\n.Strawberries, No. 1, crate ..    2.75\nRaspberries,    fancy,    choice,\nper crate     4.50\nRaspberries,   No-   1,   crate..    4.00\nI cherries:\nRoyal Anne, per box     .15 _\nBings and Lamberts     20\nGovernor   Woods   ,.., \u25a0  .05\n'otatoes,   new   crop:\nClean  and  of  good   size,  per\n100   pounds    ....   ..,.,., 5.00\nSmalls   -100\n\u2022\u2022\u2022y\n\u25a0ii y_\n.16\n.17.\n.23\n.19%\n.30\n.36\n,35\n.34\n40     Agents^ Wanted\n's 1 5\u00a31'5ktTJN1TY for men or women,\nstudents,.teachers and others, to earn\n$10 per day or more for hundred\ndays or longer guanvntoo covers necessary expenses; spiire time or full\ntime; experience unnecessary. Write\nfor particulars. Winston Co., Dept.\n(3883)\nWINNIPEG, July 8\u2014Recolpts In\nthe yards during the week ending\nyesterday were 2200 cattle, -497 calves,\n977 sl^eep, and 3135 hogs. Yesterday's offerings wero 556 cattle, S3\ncalves, 547 hogs and 142 sheep, while\nreceipts up to 9 a- m. today were\n260 cattle, 260 hogs and 100 sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice, $6.00 to $6.50; fair\nto good, $1-50 to $5.75; common.\n$2.50  to   $3.50.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, $6 00 to\n$6.50; fair to good. $4.00 to $5.50.\nL Butcher cows\u2014Choice, $5.00 to\nJEF.50; fair, to good, $3.25 to $4.75;\ncanners and cutters, $1.00 to $1.75.\nBulls\u2014Good, $2.75 to' $3.25; com-\n' Irion,   $1.50   to   $2.50-\nOxen\u2014Good,   $4.00   to   $1.50;    medium.   $3.00   to   $3.50;   common.   $2.00\nto   $2.50.'\n-    Feeder    steers\u2014Choice.        $3.75    to\n$4.25;  fair to good, $2.75 to $3.50.    .\nStocker steers\u2014Choice, $3-50 to\n$3.75;   fair lo good,  $2.50  to  $3.25.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $325 to\n$3.75;  fair to good, $2.50 to'$3.00.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $7.50 to $3.50; good.\n$6.00 to .$7.00; common, $3.00 to\n$5.00.\nSheep and lambs\u2014Good - sheep,\n$4.00 to $5.50; common, $2.00 to\n$3.00; good' lambs, $800 to $11.00;\ncommon, $5.00 to $7.00-\nHogs\u2014Selects, $11.25; heavies,\ni* $8.25 to $11.25; lights, $11.25 to $11.75;\nsows, $5.25 to $6.25; stags, $4.00 to\n$5.0.0.\nrowholo- Bc!Lay'(:4,\nPROTECT YOUR VALUABLES\nIf kept in your Home, fire or thieves\nmay rob you of them.\nOur Managers will be. pleased tixtell\nyou about the protectiou afforded by\na SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX.\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nNelson\u2014\nA.   D.   McLeod,  Manager.\nRossland\u2014\nE.  J.  VanderwJter,  Manager.\ni -\u25a0.\nCranbrook-\u2014\n<\"'\u00bb. !\u2022'. Marsh,  Manager.\nGrand   Forks\u2014\n(}.   A.   Spink,   Manager.\n\u25a0MONTREAL LIST\n- MONTREAL. July 8-\u2014National\nBrewery stock bought yesterday was\nevidently sold today with thc demand much less insistent and at tlie\nclose of trading % of yesterday's\nlarge fractional advance was lost at\n52%;\n'Steel of Canada preferred's two-\npoint gain was the highest of tho\nday.\nIn tho papers, Wayq,gamac!c lost\nthe advance of tho previous two\ndays, selling back 4% points to 39.\nIn tho general list, Steamships,\nwhich yesterday was strong, today\nwas steady to weak, the common\nunchanged,\" and the preferred down\n!\u25a0% points' to 47%. Iln the bonk\ngroup, Merchants regained the point\nloss of yesterday.\nBonds were less active and yrere\ngenerally steady. '\nTotal salos\u2014Listed, 4338; bonds,\n'.$233,700.    '      :   ''\u25a0 ;'!\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\n' \"MONTREAL, July 8.\u2014Eggs and\npotatoes quiet; butter and cheese\nstrong. \u2022**\nCheese\u2014Finest  easterns,   21   to  22\n-cents..\nButter\u2014Chojpest     creamery,     36%\nrrxenja. #\nEggs\u2014Selected, 40 tents.\n'\u25a0'-'   Potatoes\u2014Per     bag,     carlots,    45\n-. cents.\nForeign Exchange\nThrough the close connection of our British\nand Foreign Department with our agencies\nabroad, this Bank has particularly advantageous arrangements for the buying and selling\nof drafts, and is, able to give the closest possible rates on all Foreign Exchange.   '     ,\u201e\nIMPERIAL RANK\nMEN and women, not to canvass, but\n. to travel and appoint local' representatives, $21 a wouli antl expenses guaranteed, with good t'liailbo to make $50\na week and expenses. Slate age and\ni.[uallf.f cat ions. UxiicriGnen unnecessary.    Winston Co., Dept. Qt, Toronto.\n________ \u201e   (-1036)\nSALESMAN\" WANT 13D*-Wo ar<! placing\non the market n vacuum cleaner at\n$15.00, eonuilctt' with attachments.\nAddress Q. AI. .Sinclair, District Manager, The \u25a0 Reeves Company^ 914 Van-\ntiouvtT  Hlpck,  Vancouver,   B.  *TV (4045)\nUsed Articles1\nRed Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats anl\nAutomobiles\nHelp\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock    >\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant   and   Olasitflod   Advertising\u2014\nOne and a half cents per word per Insertion. Six 'cents per word per week,\nor 22^c per word per month, cash in\nadvance. If charged l'\/ic a word\nstraight. Transient ads accented only\non a cash-In-advahce basis, Each initial, figure, dollar sign, etc., counts as\none word. Minimum 25c; if charged\n50c. Display type double above rates.\nHooal Beading Kotloes\u20143c per word\neach insertion. In black face or machine capitals 4c per word. Blaok face\ncapitals Be a word. 25 per cent discount if run daily without change of\ncopy for ohe month or more. Where\nadvertisement Is set out in short lines\nthe charge is 12%c a line for Roman\ntype. 15c for black face, and 20c for\nblack face capitals, Minimum 35c, if\ncharged 50c.\n18~Maj7HeliTWwtel^^\nWANTED AT ONCE\u2014Capable shipper\nto take position as shlppBr and yard\nforeman. Reply, stating experience\nand wages   in   (ha first Inj^tancn to\n_Box 4009, Daily NeWB.         (4000)\nTOUT* opportunity is here. Train yourself for It. Get into the coming foremost industry in the world and place\nyourself In line for bigger mopey.\nQuit laboring and build a future for\nyourself in auto and gas engineering.\nWhat others have done so can you.\nLearn by the only system in tho\nworld that saves you time and\nmoney.. Call or write for free Information to the Hemphill Motor School,\nat 228  9th ave,, E., Calgary, Alta.\n (4038)\n23   .Property For SJ&\nSacrifice Sale.\ncres. over onu, mile [lake frontage, near Proctor. Price for Immediate\nsiitu ?4 per acre, ?1700.\n(1042)\nH. E. DILI\n508 Ward St., nest to Canada Dniff Store\n (3873)\nn^^atidnijWaji^-yBale.\nKX PER I ENCEl5^c1n7ir^furTtno^\nof window  trimming and show  card\nwriting  desires  position as assistant\nIn  grocery  or general store.    References   given   if   desired.     Apply   Box\n4021!, Diiily News.\n(-1022)\n12 Situations Wanted FemalcT\nLJOOD   stenographer  open .for   ermaKe-\nPient, either temporary or permanent.\nApply 1'. O. Box .1S2. Nelson. B.'C.\n  (4037)\n11 Female Help Wanted\nEXPERIENCED waitress,\nhotel.\nApply Graiid\n(4023)\nWANTED\u2014Teaener Baynes Lalte school\ndistrict. Apply stating qualifications.\nP. W..Adolph. secretary.   *       (3894)\n.LADIES\u2014Do your own hemstitching or\nfor others. Attachment fits any machine $2.50. Buttonhole attachment\n$S. No duty. General agents wanted.\nE. Steplnm^on,' Box 13G, Kansas City,\n\u2022 Mo.  ;        (4037)\n49      Farms For Sale\nrles of Alberta, Saskatchewan and\nManitoba arp. r,especialy,-. suited .for\nmixed fanning. Land 'tniit will produce big cropw of grain' and- fodder,\nand well adopted for dairying or livestock raising, .can Ktill be liad at\nprices averaging about $18.00 an acre;\nwith twenty years to pay if you w.sh.\nOnly 10 pel- cent down. No further\npayment on tlie principal until the end\nof tthe fourth year; then sixteen annual payments. Interest*6 per cent.\nWrite to H. B. J^oughran. Laud Agent,\nO. P. R. Station, Vancouver, or Allan\nCameron, General Superintendent of\nLands, 985 1st Street, East, Calgarv.\n-  ;.  \u2022.*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 (4034)\n48\nPersonal\nTHE groat object in life Is the Secret\nof Happiness. Send your birth date,\nmonth, year and one dollar to James\nDunstone, Frivate Box 100. Vancouver. B. 0, Answer sent by registered\nmail.       . ^        A   (3637)\nVOUR FUTURE FORETOLD\u2014Send\ndime, birth date for truthful, reliable,\nconvincing trial reading. Hazel Ifciuse,\nBox  215.  Los  Angeles. Cal. (3823)\n34    Teachers Wanted\naT^PliCa^ToT^T^^^\n\u25a0teacher for Kinsgate -schoul district.\nApply to H. R. Graham, Secretary,\n___________\u25a0 \u25a0___ \"     (4018)\n22      Miscellaneous\nSAFETY razor blades resharpened, hollow ground, velvet edge, 35c pcr dozen.    Enclose  fee    B. C. Razor Sharpening.Co., Box 97, Victoria, B C.    (3933)\nNELSON BRANCH,\nCRANBROOK BRANCH,\nfcRESTON BRANCH, \u00bb\nOF  CANADA.\nJ. II. D. BENSON, Manager,\nW. K, GRUBBE, M\u00abn*S\u00ab\nC. W. ALLEN, Acling Managei\nTO FRUIT GROWHRS-fWe handle direct, carlots or lc*ss, B:C. fruits of all\nkinds, on consignment and commission. Correspondence invited. Good\ncrops on prairies Will mean hundreds\nseeking to locato on B.C. Fruit Farms\nand Ranches. List your property\nnow. W. K. Fruit Distributors, 110\nSouth- Railway \u25a0-afreet, Medicine Hat,\nAlberta.   . . l, .      (3747)\nHAIR WORK\u2014Don't backcomb your\nhair. \"EAR PUFFS\" can be made\nfrom your combings, faahionablo and\nattractive. All classes of hair goods\nmade up In our shops. Hair dressing\nnnd Beauty Parlors. PERMANENT\nHAIR WAVING, guaranteed absolutely harmless to the hair and permanent. THE ACTON HAIR CO., 506%\nBaker St.    Phone 535, f 396C)\n$2750\u2014A   SACRIFICE\u20147-roomed    fully\nmodern  houso.    stone    foundation, one,\nlot, 6 large fruit trees.   TermB,   A. T.\nMcMillan,   624   Baker  street,    Phono\n601, (4024)\nFOR SALF^\u201413 M; acres ranch, good location; school, daily trains; 6 acres\ncleared; large chicken pens, cow\nsheds, 4-roomed house; cows, chickens, good growing crops; about 100\nfruit trees, small fruits. Particulars\nOwner, Box 3958. Dally News.\nFOR SALE\u20147-acre ranch, water piped-\nto bouse, with 2 cows, horse and\nwagon, chickens, etc. Close to Nelson\nschools. Apply owner,' Fred Hawes,\nSilver King road, Nelson. (3932)\nAT    SPEOIAL    PRICE    VOB    QUICK\nSALE\u2014Bearing orchards, dairy farm,\nland for mixed farming, dairying,\nfruit. Residential lots on lake shore\nabove high water. See them while\nthe water Is high. It will be to\nyour advantage to write, telephone,\nor see mo promptly. J. J. Campbell,\nR. R. No. 1,\"nelson. Telephone 462L3.\n(3974)\nSEVEN acres of land at Falrview,\nframe building 22x28, shed 16x16 and\none 12x40. Will be spld cheap. Apply to A. Lapointe, Queen's hotel.\n(3972)\n19PWJLTRyjL^^\nCOCKERELS FOR SALE\u2014Leghorn\ncockerels from that famous utility\ncock', \"Ben.\" W. J. Richards, Box 312,\nNelson, B. C.  (3944)\n29      Lo\u00abt and Found\nLOST OR STRAYED\u2014Upstanding gt\nnorso' clipped mane and fordo\nweight 1400 pounds. Last Been wei\nIft'K' small bell. Phono or \"Site A.\nChurches, Waneta, B. C. '     <39.\nBmtjiua md troteitioM\n'Dktctory\nn.  B. KITTO,       \\\nGun.   Lock,  Cycle and   General   Repi\nWork.    412 Ward Streot, Nolson.\n(981\nLodgei\nJNELSON LODGO No. 6, B. f. O. .\nMeets 410% Baker St., first and thl\nThursday. \u25a0        \u25a0       <3\u00bbi\nFurniture Repairing.\nFURNITURE repairs, upholstery,  p\nture frames,  wall  rftckSr -etc.    L.\nScanncll, 310 Kootepay street (861\nAccountants.\nt.  B.   LAWRENCE,\nAccountant-Auditor.\nBookkeeping,     Financial     Statsmu\neto.    Phone 21), McDonald 3b,jb BM\nBox 1030. (39i\nW.   HI.   FAKDINO,    i\nChartered Accountant.\nBank of Montreal Chamber?.\n.  Rossland. B. C. (391\nBoob & Shoes\n20   Livestock For Sale\nFOR SAMS\u2014Well-bred Jersey c. ow. (f\nyears old: 12 quarts of very rich milk\ndally. Price reasonable. Also 2-yoar-\nold Jorsey heifer. . Apply Lacey, Deer\n' Park,.Arrow Lakes. (40.20)\nP.KMIT by Dominion Express Money\nOrder.   If lost or stolen you get your\n' Tn&fl&y back.\nFOR KALIS\u2014Two ponies: drive, ride or\npack: double set of harness, express\nwagon, l.ght sleigh, pack saddle. H.\nJones,  Box  845,  Nelson. (4040)\nZEE  at OO.\nas Mads to\"0\n612  FRONT  ST.\nHEE   _..\nBoots and Shoes Mads to_'Order. _\nFlorists\nGHIZZELLE'S   QREENHOU8E,   N\u00abl\u00bbl\nCut flowers and floral designs.\n(J9J\nAssayers\nB. W. WIDDOWSON. Boi A1108, N\neon, B. C,   Standard western chart\nFOR SALE\u2014Thoroughbred   Black   and\nWhite Cockor Spaniel puppies; male J20\nand female $10.   Pedigree on application.    II. A. Smith. Moylo, B. C.\n(1025)\nFOR SALE\u2014Single horse and rig. good\nas now. $250: delivery team, harness,\nwagon nnd sleighs, $550. J.1 Roynon,\nNelson.   - (4005)\n54    Articles Wanted.\nWANTED\u2014OrpIi retrlBter ln good Condition, to rant or yiirckneo. Box 3993,\nDally  Nowb. (3993)\n*xi $$?4it .3 ~ i  \u2022 \"\"\"''\"c -;\nWANTED\u2014Tri    rent    small boathouse.\nV. O. Box 320, Nolson. .   (3930)\nWAVNTED\u2014Invalid's Wheel chair Immediately.    W. T. Choate.   Phone 308R.\n\u2022   V '     (3922)\nNOTICE\u2014Wantefl, airaWDerry crates\nand cups. Growers having surplus\nof strawberry crates and cups can\ndispose of'same at pood prices by\naddressing the Cooperative Fruit\nGrowers' Ass'n \u25a0 of Wynndel, - B. C.\n(3970)\n17       Houses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To buy small modern houso\nor cottage. State best price and termf.\nBox   4030,   Dally   News. ,' (4030)\nFOE SALE\u2014-Duroe Jersey sow and  10\nstrong pigs; sow bred again; lot J75.\n.   Creed, Kaslo. ,(3902)\nFOR SAl^E\u2014Young ranch horse, sound\nand quiet; work slnglo or double.\nWeight    about    1200    lbs.    Apply A.\nMaekie.   Boswell.   B.  C.\n-(3919)\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nFOR SALE\u20142S-Xoot launch In first-\nclass condition; also canoe laurfch. A.\nHelghton. Proctor. B. C. (4021)\n18 Miscellaneous ior Sale\nFOE^SATE^fto^ol)*^^\n\u25a0first-class    condition;    sacrifice  $40,\nApply 4019, Dally News. (4019)\nFOR SALEr-Plano.\nreponslblo party.\nNews.\ncauli  or  terms,   to\nBox    4000;    Dally\n(lor.o)\nFOR SALE\u2014Good camp, inckidlng stove\n. and furniture, chicken nouses, etc.\nfew minutes from car line ctist of\nshipyard; immediate occupation. Price\n$170. If sold this week. Will accept\nVictory bonds at par. Apply Bftx\n4028, Daily News (4028)\nFOR SALE\u2014Several 100 late branching\nstocks and asters. Apply Sharpe,\n1003  Carbonate  street.        \u00bb      (4010)\nWANTED\u2014Small    bouse    With garden,\noutskirts    preferred.    Full    particulars\nBox 3997, Daily  Nows. (3997)\nONE new 9-ft. McCormlck hay rake, soli\ndump. One second-hand lumber wag\non, 3-Inch skein. Four sections dia\nniond spike tooth harrow, 3 poctlona\nlever spike tooth ' harrow; 12-inch\nJohn Deere plough, only one loft; variety John Deere plough shares and\nvarious other pieces.\nMcLEAN & STEVENSON.\nM008-)\nWANTED\u2014To rent a s|x or seven\nroomed house, suitable locality. Ap-\nply to Post Office BqxUOjl        (3927)\nWhen  ordering \"goods  by  mail   send\na  Dominion   Express  Money  Order.\n\u25a0OPERATIONS\nUlIWCESSARY\nHIU'ATQLA romovoq Gall Stonoit,\nAppend\nwithout  pain.     Regis terod   wider\n \u201e.  \u00bb| Gal    .\ncorrects Appendicitis In 34 hours\n\"\u25a0--let-Bred  under\n$6,50.\nFore Food and Drug Aoti.\nHot Bold hy druggists.\nSOLB   MANUFACTURER\nMRS. .GEO. S. ALM\/yS\n830 4th Ave. S.  Saikatooit. Gaak,\nBOX 1073.\n(3918)\nLivestock   sells   quickly   when   It   ls\nadvertised In these columns.\n42        Matrimony\nWIDOW IJIi, worth $ri\"0.00<), want* husband. N, Uox 3S, Leugui'. Toledo,\nOhio.  (\u25a0'033)\nLADY. 25,\nmarry. I1\nUUK, Ohio.\nhaving   means,  wishes to\n,   Box 432,  League, Colum-\n(1033)\nMERCHANT,   36,   worth   $10,000,   would\nmarry.   P. Box 323. Oluh, Fort Wayne.\n_W_         ____^ (A.0i3>\nGENTLEMAN,   44,  with   S7S.OO0.  wants\nwife.   Q.   Box    1134.   League,    Detroit,\n(i Mich, :   (4033)\nCIVIL engineer, 27. worth $40,000,\nwants wife . W, Box 33. League, 1 o-\nleclo,  Ohio. ('tut)\nLADY   2ti, with means, will marry.\nBox  1134,  League,  Detroit, Mich.\n(4035)\nBACHELOlt, 38, has $35,000. would mar-\nrv.    Z,   Box  320,  Club,  Fort  Wayne\n_Tiid._J (4035)\nCALIF'OKNIA bachelor, wortli $40.00(1.\n-11), wants wile. E, Hox 432, League\nColumbus, Ohio. - (4035)\nSecond Hani Dealer!\nTHE ARK paya cash for nocond-hft\nfurniture, ntoven. 608 Vernon, Ph(\n651. (Ml\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOMJSAI\nGrocers and Provision Morchan\nImporters of Teas, Coffees, SplO\nDried Fruits Staple and Fancy Gr\ndories;    NELSON. B. C. (398\nArchitect*\nS.  EMStS BEAD, M. B. O. 8. A,\nARCHITECT.        _   _'\nBay Avenue. Trail, B.\nEngineera\nH. D. DAWBOH, B. O. Ie. U.\nOItU  and  Mining  Bngl\u00abM\u00bb\t\nKASKO, BOO.       ,    (398\narBi,nosj, a. o,\nCI Vir, . AND   MINING   ENGIKEBW\nB. C Alberta and Dominion\nX.AHD BUEVEYOBB\nCrown Grant Agents.       Bluo Prlntln\n(398\nA, I.. McODHlOOK\nHydraulio  Englaoor\nProvincial  Dand  Survoyoi\nBaker,St., Nelson, B. C.\nTHREE    strong    hives  bees with   S40\nworth   oquipmont   for   $C5.     Box   C.\nBjivorton, B^C. (3959)\nSALE\u2014Housobpat.     Apply > CM;\nernon street.     -      (3955)\nFOR\n\u2022 Ven\nFUKNITUIU3\u2014Household \"offects.     513\nLutlmor street. (3929)\nFOfi 'SALE\u2014Piano,     flrst-cliisa    condition, heautlfui tone.   COO Cedar streot.\n(3901)\nSI'IKEIjLA    corselH.\nPlione  3fi4R2.\nKennedy.\n(38C3)\nSHINGLES\u2014Buy them now from Na-\nkusn Shingle Mill, Box 1, Nakusp,\nB. C. (3969)\nDOMINION EXPRESS Money Orders\nare on sale in five thousand offices\nthrougliout   Canada.       \t\n35\nFor Rent\n-FOR RENT-\nroom .suite.\n\u25a06-room house and one 3-\nJ. |5. Annable.      .   (3971)\nA Displav Ad in the\n4)AILY NEWS\nEnters Many Homes\nCatches Many Eyes\nAuctioneer*\nW. CUX&EB\nAuctlouoor, Appraiser, Talutoff\nGoods   sold   privately   or   at   Auotlo\n2X9 Ward Street. .    pSSSt\n(397\nBarrister*\n\/ E. O. MAITHEW\nI Barrister. SoUoItor. Hotary, BhC\n'Pox 1078, Alan Block, Nelson. Ph. I\n \u25a0' (39,8\nFuneral Director*\nD. J. ROBERTSON, F.D.D. ft &, .\nVictoria Street. Phone 292: 'Nig\nPhono 107.1. ,(39'\nSTANDARD FURNITURE\nCOMPANY\nC. 1. Carlson, Undertaker, TJn4\u00ab\ntakers and Embaliners and Funer\nDirectors. Tho finest and moat up-t\ndate undertaking narlora and chapel\nInterior B. C. Lady attendant I\nwomen  and children.    Day plione 8\nNight phono 252 and-64. , v(397\nBRINGING UP FATHER\n\u2022;-\nBy George McJHui\nI E)OU<iHT YOU \/S NICE\n*&A.THIN< 501T ANO I\nWAMT ^OU TO <ORl<,HT\nTO THE BEACHV\n\u25a0^T \u00a3****'.\nDOV\/N\nThrough a. series of injections\ntaorses can he made immune to tho\nWte of certain species of snakes whie.bl\n(irdluarily kill thorn, (limpet instantly,|\nD\"f COLLx- t;hi.\"3 bUiT\n. MU'bT  i'A,-L  DEEM HADE\nIVY   \/MM   A-WNIts' COMPANY\n fe\u00abW\n_-\u25a0-\nI*   T\nTHE NEESON KOE? NEWS, 5ATOMTAY MoMINC\/fitt? xm_\n\"FHUIT,;A-TlV68\"   Made   H\u00abr\n, Strong  and  Vigorous.\nWell,\n'ARTHUR BEAUCHER\n\u25a0\u25a0-.   80S Cartier St., Montreal.\n\"I \u2022offered terribly from Cons-\ntiaoiion and Dyspepsia for many years.\nI felt paina after eating and had gas,\nionstant headache, and wax unable\nlit alee)) it night. I was getting so\nthin that I was frightened and saw\nseveral physicians who, however, did\nnot seem able to help me.\nAt lost a friend advised ma to take\n'Fmtua-tivcs'. I did so and soon I\nfelt some relief. I continued with\n.'Eiiiit-a-tives' and in a short time,\nthe Constipation was banished, I felt\nuo more pains or headache or the\ndisagreeable sensations that follow\ndyspepsia, Now I am well, strong and\nristWma.''\nMadame ARTHUR BEATJCHEU.\n' SOc.a box, fl for $2.50, trial size. 25o.\nAt'all dealers or from Fruit-a-tires\nLimited, Ot^wa, Ont.\nefe\nv,The ..Mftfle-'in-B.. ,C. movement ls\n.pirt-.-'of - the 'Made-in-Canada, and\n\u2022Trade-Within-the-EmpIre movements.\nBoosting British Columbia Industry\n; by' purchasing British Columbia\n; made goods . belps to build \u25a0 up a\nI gieater province, a greater_ Canada,\n' ahd , a greater - Empire,    r\n*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  ll\"l 1.1    i        l\u2014as\t\n1 H:\u00ab.D\u00bbARDS *;\nji                 , ., ,1,-n   V'    '         I\nTaxidermist\n'      Game Heads, Bear and all:\nJ        kinds of Animal- Rugs   j\nI                 Mounted              !\nt        Revolatoko, B.C;     P.O. Bex 304 !\nNewis of Sport\n[PACIFIC C0AS1 U5AGUE\nPortland '6-5, Sacramento 5-10,\nLos Angeles 2, Vernon 3.\nSeattle 5, Salt Lake 1.\nSan Francisco 8, Oakland 0.\nYanks, Tigers and Senators\non Losing Sides; Browns\nLash Horsehide.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE.\nWon. Lost. P. C.\nCleveland   ...' 48 27 .040\nNew York .......'..46 29 .613\nWashington    ,..42 28 .600\nDetroit    40 39 .606\nBoston  .34 89 .466\nSt. Louis   .33 44 .429\nPhiladelphia    '..31 44 .413\nChicago   -.31 44 i .413\nCHICAGO, July 8.\u2014-Kerr continued\nhis effectiveness todny and defeated\nNew Y6rk, 4 to 1.   Score:   R.   H.   E.\nNew York  1    10      0\nChicago    4      9      0\nBatteries\u2014Shawkey and Schflng;\nKerr and Schalk,\nDETROIT, July 8.\u2014Joe Bush held\nDetroit to\" four hits today and Boston\nwon, 6 to 3, Hellmann made the\nlongest home run of the season, bitting the ball a distance of 610 feet,\naccording to the groundkeeper. Score:\nR,   H.   E.\nBoston 6    10      2\nDetroit  3      4      6\nBatteries\u2014Bush and Rlielj Holllngs\nand Bassler.\nSt. LOUIS, July 8.\u2014St. Louis batted Zaohary for 16 hits and 12 runs\nbefore he wns*taken out flvith one out\n'in the sixth ond won from Washington, 12 to 2, today.   Score:\nR.   H.   E.\nWashington     2     7      0\nSt.  Louis 12    18      1\nBatteries\u2014Znchary, Schacht and\nCJharrity; Davis and Collins.\nPhiladelphia-Cleveland, rain.\nBISLEY RESULTS\nBISLEY CAMP, July 8.\u2014Sweepstake winners 'arming the Canadians\nto date are:\nMajor C. Tt. Crowe, \"Wellington Rifles, Guelph; Major George Mortimer,\nG. G. F. C, Ottawa, and Gunner W.\nTO. Tlngman, R. C. G\u201e Quehec. Major\nNorthbver of \"Winnipeg was a winner\nin the clay bird shooting. ,\nThe Ashhurton challenge shield was\nwon today hy {-Jedbergh. Charterhouse\nwas second and Lansing third. The\ncompetition is open to teams of eight\npupils under 20 years of age, from\neach of such schools ns have a con\ntlngent of the junior division of the\nofficers' training corps. The winning\nteam'Bets' silver medals'.\nT\nE\nReds Also Draw Blank; Pi.\nrates and Phillies in Winning Form.\nNATIONATj LEAGUE.\nWon. Lost. P.C.\nPittsburg   ;61        26 .671\nNew York... 45   '     28 .616\nBoston    i 30         32 .484\nSt. Louis 39         36 \u00ab620\nBrooklyn    39        37 .613\nChicago 33         38 .466\nCtnoinnall   27         47 .385\nPhiladelphia   22        60 .306\nBOSTQN, July 8.\u2014Boston defeated\nCincinnati, 5 to 0, today.    Score:\n'R.   H.   E.\nCincinnati    0      5    3\nBoston 5       7    '1\nBatteries\u2014Luque,' Coumbe and\nWingo: Scott and Gibson.\nPHILADELPHIA, July 8.\u2014Philadelphia bit Pfeffer hard today and\ndefeated St. Louis, 9-to 4.    Score:\nR.   H.  E.\nSt.  Louis 4      7      1\nPhiladelphia  ..: 9    12\nBatteries\u2014Pfeffer and demons;\nBing and Bruggy.\nBROOKLYN. July 8.\u2014Pittsburg\ndefeated Brooklyn today, 5 to 3.\nScore: R.  H.   E,\nPittsburg G     7     0\nBrooklyn     3    10      1\nB atterles\u2014Cooper and Schmidt;\nMltchelland Miller.\nNEW (FORK, July 8.\u2014In tho tight\nest game of the season New York de\nfeate'cl Chicago here today, 1 to 0.\nScore: .R.   H.   E.\nChicago 0      3      1-\nNew York .1      4     1\nBatteries\u2014Alexander and Killlfer\nNehf and Snyder.\nARRANGE SPORTS\nON DOMINION DAY\nBOSWELL, July 8.\u2014The first of July\ngeneral picnic was somewhat marred by\n\u25a0stormy weather, but there wns a splendid gathering. In Lewis Bay and the\nchildren's sporta. arranged by Mr. McCallum were carried out in full. The\nSocial club and the \"Women's auxiliary\nhad Ice cream, lemonade and home made\ncandy on sale, all of which was disposed of, and a nice sum will he available for the Memorial Hall building\nfund am a result.\nCertain species of ants kill their\nfellows If they refuse to share their\nfood supply in times of war with other   tribes. \u2022;\u25a0\u25a0'\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse tfii't blank on which to write your condensed ad.,, one word In each opaco. Enclose money\norder or check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelson, B. C.\nRate: Ono and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive Incerticom for price of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 26c, Each initial, figure, dollar sign, eto,, eounte ae ena\nword.   No charge less than 60 centa,\n...    . ^   ..\nt;.\n* - \u25a0\n.\n1\n*\n.(..    .\n\u2022\n:';'\"\u2022\u25a0.\",-;\n.\n1\n~\nPleats published the above advertisement times for which I enclose %...\n'Address \u201e.-... \u25a0*. \u00ab\u00bb....-\u00bb\nIf-desired, replies may be addressed to Box Numbers at The Daily Newa Officer,    If replies an\nto be mailed enclose 10c extra to cover cost of pottage and allow five words extra; for bex number,\n\u2014-\u2014\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nToledo 12, Kansas City 11.\nIndianapolis 7, Minneapolis 5.\nColumbus 7-10, Milwaukee' 1-8. ''\nLouisville 1-8. St. Paul 3-3.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNewark 6, Syracuse,;?.\nBaltimore 4, Rochester 9.\n(Others not scheduled.)\nPACIFIC INTERNATIONAL.\nTacoma 12, Victoria 1..\nVancouver 9, Yakima 10.\nTWILICHTHLEAGUE.\nWINNIPEG, July 8.\u2014Edmonton\nplayed listless ' ball and failed to\nproduce much opposition to the high\nstepping' Maroons here tonight, who\nwon 7 tb 2.        * R.  IT,  E.\nEdmonton  2     5     3\nWinnipeg 7, 10     0\nBatteries\u2014Fairbanks an.d demons;\nSlaughter and  Milligan. ,    .\nREGINA, July 8.\u2014Reglna defeated Saskatoon here tonight in the first\ngame of the final series between tho\nteams, 6 to 5.    Score: R.   H.  E.\nSaskatoon 5      6 ,   1\nReglna   , 6      8      2\nBatteries\u2014Roman, Bonner, Beer\nand Grabowskl; Henion and Snyder.\nMOOSE JAW, July 8.\u2014Calgary won\nthe opening game of the series here\ntonight, 8 to 0.   Score; R.  H.  E.\nCalgary 8    12      0\nMoose Jaw    0      7      4\nBatteries\u2014Schnell and Sullivan;\nSchultls and Leake.\nENGLISH CRICKET.\nRacquet Artists From Smelter\nCity Try Conclusions With\nNelson.\nThis afternoon Trail Smelter Tennis\nclub meets Nelson Tennis club in a\nleague encounter at Nelson courts,,\nand a strong contingent of players\nis  expected.\nHowever, it is confidently expected\nthe home team, will give a'good account of Itself * against ifk redoubtable opponents.\n\u2022 Trail Smelter club playing against,\nRossland last Saturday defeated the\nlatter seven events to two, and whoever beats them will have to go extended.\nNelson players put in some good\npractice yesterday and according to\nMajor Lukin Johnston of Vancouver\nwho was a guest of the chi;i\u2014 and\nspeaking to hip sorrow\u2014Mrs. .7, TT- D.\nBenson and C. W. Appleyard offer\nan almost impregnable defense coupled with a mighty attack.\nMayor Johnston is on mean exponent himself and put up nn interesting game against H. A. Lovo In a\ntryout, getting away with tho aoeds,\nthough frankly admitting another\nset would  probably  revise  the  order.\nToday will show whfit Nelson can\ndo against Trail quality and the\nweek following It is proposed to\nplay a return match at Trail and\nRossland.\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014Oxford -and\nCambridge' universities played at\nLords for the first three days of the\nweek. Cambridge, who this year have\nan abundance of talent, gained an unexpectedly fine victory by an innings\nand 24 runs. Cambridge declared-the\nfirst inning closed at 415 runs for\neight'wlokets; Oxford, who followed\non, made 162 and 229 in their two Innings.\nH. Ashton, one of the threo brothers ln ' Cambridge university, scored\n118 runs.\nOther results this week were as\nfollows:\nLeicestershire i; boat Warwickshire\nby 147 runs.\nBtlrrey beat Hampshire hy 140 runs.\nThe 'Kent-Essex match was drawn.\nNorthamptonshire beat Worcestershire by 356 runs.\nLancashire beat Gloucestershire hy\nthree wlokets.\nThe Australians beat Lancashire by\nan Innings and 8 runs.\nYorkshire beat Northamptonshire\nhy an innlngs.and 194 runs.\nHampshire beat Sussex hy an'Innings and 100 runs.\nKent beat Worcestershire by 8\nwickets.\nGloucestershire beat Derbyshire by\n97 runs,\n. Surrey beat Somerset by 229 runs.\nCLAIM BALL FLIES\nFASTER THAN BEFORE\nIn baseball, Ruth is doing better\nin the home run line than he did\nlast year, but they put ' him up\nagalnbt a pitching machine, which\nby tho way, is not a new thing, the\nother day and he only managed to\nmake one hit. This has also revived\nthe; discussion about baseball helps\nfaster this year than in the past,\nowtog to their construction.\nIt has been stated already In this\ncolumn that the Canadian manufacturers\/\" for theso balls aro said\nto be made by the same process, from\nthe same -material arid by the same\nmachinery both in the Dominion and\nthe United States, profess to know\nfor a fact that they are exactly the\nsame as they ever were, but It seems\nthe players of the big leagues cannot\nbe mado to believe that. They\nc,laim the ball is lighter, and tlie\ncover tighter. They also claim that\nwhilo they can bat thle ball farther,\nthey havo not so much control over\nit in pitching as they used to havo.\nIt looks as If the best explanation\nafter all, in view of the statements\nof the manufacturers who ought, to\nknow, is that the doing away with\nthe spit ball, the head-ball and similar abominations has a good deal\nto do with the imaginary speed increase,\nYet President William Veeck, of\nthe Chicago Cubs, when he decided\nto satisfy his curlosoty, claims that\nwhen he cut open a 1920 and a 19^1\nball, he found the rubber lit tnls\nyear's ball .thicker than that in tbe\nball used last year. He also found\nthat the cork cores of the rubber\nIn. the 1921 ball were not of the\nsame size.\nCleveland, Ohio, is to hold the\"\n125th celebration of the founding of\nthe city shortly, and a feature is to\nbe a celebration between two teims,\none of the old Cleveland stars helled\nby Nap Lajoie and one of All-American old stars, headed by that great\nChicago .veteran, Captain \"Pop\" Anson,\nDWJHUMOR\nKilties, Bucking Mokes and\nFancy Costumes Figure in\nCraig Benefit Affair.\nIn costumes that have surely never\nbefore graced exponents of the ancient game of footbalL 'i riotous medley of athletes apparently culled from\nmany branches of sport and various\nvocations, took part in the boistarcus-\nly funny \"comic\" match, the parade\nthrough thc city, and later in the\n\"real thing\" game yesterday afternoon, in the benefit match for J.\nCraig, the Trail City outside light\nwho was disabled on Dominion Day\nand is now nursing a broken log in\nKootenay   Laker- General   hospital;\nAround 6 o'clock, when a largo\ncrowd had gathered In the vicinity\nof the Y. M. C- A. and' along Baker\nstreet, in anticipation of the rumored surprise packet, tlie Kootenay\nKilties pipe bawd in full dress costume and in charge of. ripe Major\nW. McLeary, struck up a tuneful air\nas the signal for,the\"tyosturned soccer stars' to appear. There was\nconsiderable stir as half a dozen\nbare-kneed ladles,       some       with\nparasols, one with a curiously\nstout veil, two others wearing extraordinarily shaped gloves and all\nwearing boots runninginto the nines,\ncame down the steps of the Insti'-u-\ntion followed by about 10 other nondescript figures In fancy dross, swallow tailed coals, piorot rif-outs and\nother satoria) wonders.\nAs the crowd made way for 'he\nmotley procession, four Missouri\nthoroughbreds with ears a. foot long\nwere unhitched and placed nf the\ndisposal of the chief personages. The\nchief, one, Draper, was invited to\nmount tbe most spirited beast. Ho\nclayed to do so,, but after observing\nhow tho aninial could jock-knife he\nrefused. A more genteel animal\nwas found for bis eminence,\ntwo others of the party were given a\nleg up, and tho procession started\nwith- the Kilties band playing lively\nairs in advance, the main body of\ncostumed figures surrounding a\npeddler of toy balloons and his\nbarrow, and the mounted party accompanying (be processian according\nto the dictates of their piotints. The\ncrowds of spectators entered heartily\ninto the humorous adburdlty of Ihe\nsituation and laughed their fill.\nAt the Recreation grounds the ex\ncellent company of ladies (?'), gentlemen ( ) and ordinary folk, lino\nup\" on the field and gave an exhibition of soccer as she i.s played. One\nplayer thought he was a butterfly\nand sought to ensnare the ball wltii\na collector's not of huge dimensions,\nPugillstically Inclined soccer artists\nrough handled frequently. While\nbaseball, basketball and at times the\nspirit of lacrosse all appeared to figure under the rules of the new brand\nof soccer With one lady (?) ln imminent danger uf losing tbe lower\nhalf of her attire, Referee Boles\nblew  for  time.\nThe real thing match was played\nby the Whites and Hum Blues, and\nbut for the counter attractions of a\nmultitude of boys and a. bucking\ndonkey, would havo hold the center\nof interest for another hour and a\nhalf. The game ended in a \u2022 draw,\n1-i', and was an excellent exhibition\ngame. Barwood scored for the\nGreens In about five minutes of play.\nP. Colwell of Trail, who Is on a visit\nto tho injured Mr. Craig, evened the\nSale Prices\nThat Will.Fill the Store\nK~~,*t \u2022< \"i-wr\u2014\n!A\nYes, it is prices like those\nkept our staff busy during\nSale of Afternoon Silk\nDresses.\nA collection that includes the\nnewest models of the sea-\nflon, featuring tbe long-waist-\ned- effects wilh short sleeves,\ndeep girdles and overdress\nruffles in colors of navy, grey,\ntauqe, saxe, etc. Values up\nto   $-10.00.     Prices\n$19.50 to $27.50\nSale of Serge and Sport\nSkirts\nMade of smart all wool materials in plaids and navy\nserges in box anil . double-\npleated style, belts and pockets.    Sale   prices,\n$6.95 to $15.00\nStyles  too   numerous  to  mention  individually.'\nSomething Extra for Saturday, Pique Waists\nflood, strong and serv- QK\/\u00bb\niceable. Clearing at uDC\nVoilo Waists, some havo em-\nbi'ohtfM'eil fronts. Others trimmed Willi lace. .- (p\"| p*n\nAll one nriee   eM.DU\nA Few Children's Hats\nin  Straw   and   Muslin,\nHall Price.\nmentioned below that have\nthe week.\nBoys' Suits\nDark   eloth,   in    Norfolk   style; |\nsizes  20   to   34. (j\u00bbA   PA\nSale, 'each   i3)'*.DU .\nTwo-prace,   ('..at   anil   Bloomers.*^\nSee Our Big Table of '\"\nBoys' Better Suits,\nAll   greatly   reduced: 'i-,\n$5.95, $7.50,\n$8.85, $11.95\nVou   must   see   these.\nBoys, Oh, Boys\nMesh   Combination, Of***\/*\nBoys' Khaki Bib Overalls.\n95c\nThis is the thing for\nNeckwear\nPor  father  or  son.      All   $1.00\nearn.   Now  sell-\n69c\nWe   Have  a   Number  of   Broken\nLines   In\nMEN'S WEAR\nShirts,   Pants,   Underwear, etc.\nTho prices are .AWAY DOWN.\nIf your size is among llils-as-\nsoi'tment get hnsy. Look Hiem\nover ami save  money.    ;.'\n. Pure White Longcloth.\nStrong   weave,   35   inches   wide.\nSale  price,  per yard,\n20c, 27V2C, 35c\nUnbleached Ractory\nCotton\nRegular 20c yard.    Sale    -\u00ab r ^\nprice, per. yard IOC\nRegular   36c  yard.   Sale    ftr\nprice,  per yard     Ltl-eJK*\nAndjeron's Scotch\nGinghams\nA   large   assortment    lo   cljonse\nfrom.    Sale   price, CQ\/\u00bb\nper   yard D\u00bb\/C\n100   ONLY\nWhite Cotton Pillow\nCases\nSizes   42   and   \u25a0! l-lm-li;    regular,\n8!)c    each.      Special        Or\nsale price,  each uDL\nPure White English\nNainsook\n.10    Inches    wide:     regular.    r,:ic\nyard.    Sale   price. OQp\npor  yard    tl\u00ab\/*L\/\nWhite Flanette\nFleecy weave, regular fiflc ynrd.\n\u00b0Zv^:Sr 39c\nChildren's Cotton\nStockings\nLadies' Cotton Lisle Hose\nElnek,    brown   and   white;    all\nsizes;  regular 85c Pair. rQ\nSale price,  per pair 0\u00ab\/t\nScotch Plaid Dress\nFarbic\n\u2022\u25a010   inches   wide,   formerly   sold\na,   tl.76   yard. (tjl   OC\nSal., price, per yd.. \u2022iBL.iiO\nBlack and White Check\nSuitable   for   children's' drosses,\nrompers, etc.    'is inches -wide.\n\/       Sale   in-\np.t    ya\n49c, 69c\n.s liad es,\nmeriy   $:\nWhite, cream and black, in v;t\nrlous sizes; regular to Wh\npair. All one pr;\nper   pair\n:'::: 25c\nVse Butterick Paterns\nThey are ihe hesh\nWool Cheviot Serge\nCoating\npen      and     Emerald\nii   Inches   wide,   for-\n,r^:...$1.75'\nAH Wool Colored Serge\nsplendid wearing quality in\nshades ui' brown, grey, plum,\nPopen, I'psprla, nitvy, wine and\n'\u25a0anlinal; 42 Inches wide;\nregular .->*.',iif,  yard.  fl*\"l' Qff\nSale  pi-loo,  per yd .   ?M.*\/D\nToday Is Remnant Day\nRemnants nl' piece goods; -such\nas Flnnne'lettes, Nainsook, Dross\nCloodH. Towellings, Crepes,\nGinghams, Dpplin.S, Clubardlho,\nFlannels,. < 'urtahi Serinis, etc\nAll useful lengths and marked\nat clearing prices;    Don't fnrg-et\nNev-   Store,\nTAKE ME TO THE BAY TODAY\nThis coupon is good for your two-way fare on\nthe Nelson Street Railway after making vour pur-'\nchase at.THK BAY today.\nGefrthis Coupon exchanged for car tickets.\nHudson^ Umj (fsrapmiv\nscore for the Whites with a wonderful shot at,10 yords  in  the  last  half\nThe  lineup  waM;\nWhites\u2014L. Desireau; B. Campbell\nand .1. Wolvertun; ,1- Rothery, A.\nWallach and T. Wilson; T. Middle-\nton,-G. Morris, (h Talbot, C. Hernard\nand  V.   Colw.Jl-\nGreens\u2014K. BOstock; K, Metealf and\nC. Hartland; II. fiarwood, B. Brfid-\nloy and .1. Morris; J. Ball, Houston,\nA. Bartholomew, T- Atkinson and V:\nGraves.\nReferee\u2014J.   Draper,\nCARPF.NTIKK   AND   DFMFSITV  TO\nSWTM.\nNEW YORK, July 8.\u2014-.Jack Dempsey, world's heavyweight champion,\nand Georges Carpentier, his defeated\nchallenger, will meet again soon, but\nnot as fighters. Both Georges and\nJack, it was learned, consider themselves pretty fair swimmers and thoy\nhave accepted an Invitation to race in\na large swimming pooM here. There\nis no purse and it is not announced\nwhether the contest for aquatic supremacy would be -open to the public.\nAccording to A. B. Buck worth\ncrops along (be Pacific Great Eastern railway \"never looked better.\"\nThere were 24,000 assessed acres of\nfine agricultural land in the Bcm-\nberton district alone, and at Pem-\niberton, ho states, he saw timothy\nwaist-Wffhv\t\nSULLIVAN MINE\nTEAM VICTORIOUS\nKIMBERLEY,* July -V-At K;jnborley\non Wednesday opening a groat sam* of!\nfootball was played between a team\nfrom Sullivan mine ami ah aggregation\nfrom [lie town and tiiniu'l' etittibinod.\nThe game played on the hill hall\ngrounds was a \"n\u00abry strenuous affair\n.all round ami at-half thnO neither team\nhad scored. After ten minutes' play o\u00a3\nlhe second half Sullivan mine team was\na wa i-(ted a pena 11 y which Jack Bray\neonveri.'d into an easy goal. Later on\nSullivan's fast forward. Smith; J-found\nthe   net   for  the  seeomt   tally.\nThe final seore of 2\u20140 :n favor of tho\nSullivan team hy no moans justifies the\ngame, as In*tli Irani,- vrtere very, evenly '\nmatched. Along'with others Alty and\nMcTaVlsh shone fur the tunnel town\nteam. Rev. Evan Baker refereed the\ngame.\nThese 'earns are hoping lo make these\ngames a regular tnidwt-e);.affair.\nSmoke\nFor over sixty\nyear*  a faeoritta\n mmmmm\nPage 10;\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 9, 102*1.\nTHE ARK\nThe camping sea*sun haa arrived.\nWe have tent* tn all sizes at the\nright pnceri. Also nil kinds of utensils, cutlery, cots, dishes, bedding,\nmoBquito netting, staple dry goods, 7\n02 Duck, 35*\u00a3 yard. 8 oz. Duck,\n40\u00ab\u00a3 yntA. Bleached White Cotton,\nBfiM yard. Ladles' good tlose, 40*^\npair. Silk Hose, black, 75<\u00a3 pair.\nMen's Work Shirts, 81,75- Over-\nAlls, very h**avy, $2.75 Pnlr- Cur\"\nWin Scrim, 36-ineh bordered, 25\u00ab\u00a3\nyard.     Good    Towelling,    15\u00ab\u00a3   yard.\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u00a3hona\n608   Vernon   St\nKodaks\nand Films\n: To Kodak   as   you   go.\nLeave us your films for\ndeveloping on your way\n.  ;;\u2022-     back.\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nHail    Onlor.    Fillod    Promptly\n\"Stan. 11.                 P.O.  Bo.  1087\nPHONE 10\nSPECIALS\nOne bunch  Bananas, Just  right\nfor    eating,    lb _ 15\u00a3\nPlums, >Por  Ib 20\u00a3.  25<\u00a3\ni**\u00ab*\u00ab* 81.10. S1.25\nByng   Cherriles,   lh 30<*\nStrawberries,   Raspberries,\nWatermelons,   etc.\nHothouGe  Tomatoes, Cucumbers,\nGreen   Peas,  Cabbage.  Everything   in   season.\nLocal  New Potatoes.\nMilk\nBorden's Evaporated\nTall   size,\ndozen  \t\n4-Dozen   Oa.se\n20<\u00bb\n\u00ab2.'\u00bbe\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY    GRANITE    ANO\nMONUMENTAL     COMPANY.\nLIMITED\nPrtnt    St.,    Nelion\nOLD POTATOES\nKeeping    Fine.   Netted   Gems   and\nCold   Coin,   per   hundred,   $1.25\nFleming's Store\nGroceries, Drygoods, Etc.\nSt. Charles Milk\nThe    Old    Standby\nFamily   size,   6   for    $1.00\nSummer Glasses\nOo prepared. Carry an exira\npair. Accidents will happen.\nWhat gronttr Inrnnvonlome, annoyance (.-nl) it what yon will,)\nthan suddenly find yourself\nwith a broken lens and a bright,\nglowing sun to contend with.\nWhat would ynu\u2014what could\nyou do out there In the mountains; in the woods or on Ihe\nwater?\nConsult us today abotil n.,n extra pair nf Quality Glasses with\ntinted   lenses,   if   you   wish.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist    and   Optician.\nYour Watch  Repairs\nPromptly,     Perfectly    and    Accurately   Done.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nWatchmaker and  Jeweler.\nIT\nON TWELFTH TOUR\nProminent Business Man of\nGrays Harbor . Reaches\nNelson on Camping Trip.\nSeeing the continent'by aulo is the\nvacation hahit of Frank! H. Lamb,\none of the leading business men of\nHof|ti am, Wash., who arrived in\nNelson yesterday afternoon with his\nfamily, In. a big touring car, ae.eom-\npenled by trailer parrying camp outfit. This is the twelfth season that\nMr, l.anib has gone roaming for a\nfew weeks hehlnd a motor, ard bo\nhas covered every section of the, pacific coast and the territory eon\nliguous, This Is his first visit to\nthe interior of  this province,\n\"We have1 heen through the Pimll-\nluimeon,- we have been hi the Carl-\n:>oo as far north as the road bt -\n\/ond Ashcrol'f would take us, **l:id\nve have loon through the ,0'iiiljug-\nLn,\" said Mr- I^mb last evening.\nloser tyng bis trip. \"On lhe present\neg <-f our JotKney we ci-osse,l th.v\nine al Norihpon and came on by\nray of Trail. Ihe road in Ihl-J n--\non, while ra,ther hard on a mneh.ii-',\n:***; only had in ope spot, at t'hhn\n'reek, whi< h is now heing fl'iefl.\n\u2022iVhile wo would, like In Mpe*\u00bbi<l a\nonger tlmo In some of \\h \u2022\u25a0* * di*-\nightful places our system Is to iiiish\nn atid constantly open new territory. .\n\"In all our trip on this tfflp pf\nbe line, Vprnon si ruck tin as the\n\u2022pot with most scenic charm. An-\n' lhi-r v ew thai Impressed ns was\nhe remarkahlo panorama pf tli-\nDoiikhobnr est ales at Oraml Pprks, |\nI'he     falls    at     Bonnington    are,    of\n\u25a0ourse,   a   wonderful   reaiuro.'\nMr. Lamb-.and bis family are tho\nirst campers at Houston park, (Vhh'h\nwas set aRlile by iho oily fathers\n^esierday fop the use of motor tourists. Thoy will go aboard the Is'a-\n\u25a0fookln early this morning, and will\nturn south from the Crow. So far\nihoir  trip has consumed  17 days.\nSpeaking of business con l'. I inns,\nwith   which,   as   a   manufacturer,   he\nIs in close touch, Mr. Lamb stated\nthat conditions were not had in tha\nstate of Washington, though on the\nwhole business Is slow- In tho Grays\nHarbor district, which feertfl the\ngreatest lumber sh pping J\u00ab\u00bbri in tho\nUnited States, tlie manufacture of\nlumber i.s proceeding on a fair scale,\nthough the market does not give\nmuch of a return at present. \"The\noutlook, however, holh in lhat section and ln lhe state generally, la\ndistinctly   good.\nMr. Lamb Is head of the Lamb\nMaf%inery company of Hoo,ulam.\nwhich Is one of the cities on Graya\nHarbor, and which is full of big\nlumber mills, Aberdeen being tbe\nother. He was for five years president of the Horpiiam chamber of\ncommerce, and for many years he\nhas heen one .of flu- port commissioners. A great port project Is 'it present proceeding, which will result in\nmaking (irays Harbor\nwater port, capable ot a\nthe   largest   craft  aflo\nat   d.ep\nTwo    Hundred\nPounds    oi\nThousand\nStrawberry\ni    Conserve Already Pul Up.\nTwo hundred thousand pounds of\n'strawberry jam is ihe qiian'iiy nf\n1 thai delicious confeel on ihat the\nMi'Iionabl ,1am company has nl.'oa.dy\nput up ihls season, in its big plant\n! mi Vernon stmet, Manager ,1. A. Mc-\n| Donald stai.-d yeflterday'. Th's in a\n, ret nrrl   pfridiieflon,\n|     v bile  a   material  propnriloh'of  the\nI frnil    Hint    went    Into   this   jam   was\ngrown   mi  \/ibe \"wrawfierry    p-tii'lie*-\nof    ihe    West    Ktfotenay,    the    ninin\nsource,   of   supply   was   ihe   eoast.\nThe factory, of course, also put up\nlargo (|uantiries of oherrlps, vaijp-\nberr.es and' eurrains. lis gooseberry'\npack   is  over   for  ibi.'i sea;iou.\nThe Sarnia hatchery this season\nsent 12t82R,p00 whltefish eggs. ror\ndistribution in British Columbia waters, according to a. report from lho\nDominion    fisheries   branch.\nH1GH-CLASS FURS\n10   PEB   CENT   REDUCTION   TO\nTHE ENS OF AUGUST.\nAny article made\u25a0 to .order from\nbest selected skins. Customers' own\nfurs made Into any article desired,\nwith best work at moderalo price.\nOld furs repaired nnd remodeled\nInto newest shapes,    -j\nG. GLASER\nMANUTACTUIIING   FURRIER\nFHOHE 106. p. o. BOX 767\nNELSON, B. C.\nJust to  Let You  Know .\nA. D. Papazian\nExport   Watchmaker,   Jeweler   and\n' Graduate   Optometrist.\n**.  DYEING\nand\nCLEANING\nH. kTfOOT\n, High Class Dyer and Cleaner\nFairview, Nelson, B. C.\nmm\nMATINEE 2:30\nWilliam Russell\n--\u25a0\" \u2014IN\u2014\n\"The Challenge\nof the Law\"\nSunshine   Comedy,\n\"Her Naughty Wink\"\n\"King of the Circus\"\nNOTICE!\nLook for the 0. K. on\nBaker Street near Star-\nland Theater.   Quality's\nBest.\nami!  Macaroons, do-\/..\n15<J\nThe 0. K. Confectionery\nStore,\n604'\/2    Baker   Street.\n\"Our Best\" Flour\nEllison Milling and Elevator Co.,\nA, S Horswill & Co.\nP. 0. Box 64. Phone 121\nFine  Plump  llama,  lb 43(*'\nPicnic.  Hams,  lh 28\u00a3\nRacnn, sliced tn suit, lh...-50^\nFresh  Herrings,   1-lb.  tln....20<*>'\nSalad Pink Salmon.  1  lh 20\u00a3\nSockeye Salmon, 1-lb, tln..\u201e55^\nSockeye Salmon, Vj-lb. tln..30\u00a3\nlobby's   Dill   Pickles.   tln...-45<f\nBlack   Currants,   lb 10^\nWhite Swan  Snap,  lfi      ,\u25a0\nbars , 95c*\"\nHothouse  Tomatoes,  !h......-45#\nOranges,   Lemons,   Strawberries.\nSocial and Personal\nJack St. Denis, tha logging contractor,\n\u2022nine in from Hall yesterday.\n8, W. Fortenth, the nossland. mining\n\u25a0ne'lneer. and Mrs. Forteath are city\nvi.-n.tors.\nDr A B. O, Pandn left laS*t night for\nth-\u2022;'Coital to iiiii'iid-.th\u00ab Nonnwesi penf\ni:il   convention.\nDr. Knv Maiin-r Is In Vancouver for\nthe \u00abnn\\('.itIon of dentists, which opens\nits .sefsions  ncxl   Monday.\nTUlph Wotklns of the Nelson Busl-\nnpBa collegfl left yesterday tor a brief\nacatlan at  his home \\n  Marysvlllp.\nMrs Andrnw Sutherland ^^isB Fiona\nSutherland and Miss Helen .Sutherland\nwll leave lodav for ihe Toast to spend\nthe holiday.'..\nA mammoth rhnharh leaf from the\n-nnlen of Mrs. A Wallach Is displayed\nn ihe Canadn.Prug and Book company's\nw.ndov.'.\nAl flellnas, Pan Mcnonald, Alex.\nStewart and Ed C'mitn have returned\ni-.-iii     iheir    motor    trip to  the Ooenr\n\u25a0 I'Alehcs.\nAflss Allies Lawson will leave tonight\nfor the Coast, \"having accepted a position with the Remington Typewriter\ncompany as r.ale.slady for the city of,\nVancouver. \u25a0     *\nHoward PI If ford Irving was one of\nll! applicants called io the har of Rr.i-\nIsh Columbia n.s barrlslera and admlt-\nt.'d to .he roll oT solicitors at the supreme court i:i Victoria before Mr. Justice Gregory.\nBurt Buttle, the well known local\nrymnnst and wrestler, has returned\nconvafescent from Vancouver, where he\n.-.i-fprtiH n merlons attack of pneumonia\nthat kepi him confined to Rhntlghnessy\n.i.f.ipiiai for some weeks. He Is renewing acquaintances In athletic circles.\nDr. K. f\u00ab, Smyth will leave tonight for\nVancouver to attend the annual Join\nMentions in lhat city of the British Columbia Dental society, the Washington\nSlate Dental sociely and the Oregon\nState Dental society, from July 11 to\nis, held for the firm time on ihls side\nof lhe line.\nLIMITED\nii'\nA.G.Lambert Co.,Ltd.\nManufacturers of and  Dealers in\nAH kinds ol Lumber and Building Material, Shingles,\nLath, Mouldings, Windows and Doors and Beaver\nBoard.\nDRAWER   1W8\nNELSON,  B.C.\nKerr's Jitney\nNEW  NASH CAR.\nAt your service day and  night. Phone\n491.   Guaranteed   to   please   you.   Baggage and  Express.\nHow Well Do You See?\nIf you find yourself frowning or\nsquinting at your work, It Is an\nIndication that yon are straining\nyour eyis. Such a Btratn, If not\ncorrected, will swriously Impair your\nsight. Wouldn't It be wise and\nsensible to correct this error NOW.\nAn appointment with me will save\nyour ejes and give you proper vision and comfort.\nA. HIGGINBOTHAM\nExciuiiivo    Optometriifl,\nK.W.C.   Block,   Nelion,   B.C.\nttotforu     Balldlng,     Vuncouvor,     B ('..\nLawn Mowers\nIf you want the most satisfactory, moderate priced\nLawn Mower made in Canada buy a\n\"WOODYATT\" HIGH WHEEL\nWe carry this made in 14, 16 and 18-inch.\n- -\u25a0   We also carry the \"EMPRESS\" Ball Bearing and the\n\"GREAT AMERICAN\" in 17 inch.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.\n\u25a0AKEN STRUT\nNELtON,  \u2022.   O.\nFerndale Pavilion\n\u2022!\u2022     +\n\u2022I-     -I-\nOPEN JULY 9 UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF\nMrs. J. Stanley Wright\nPnncpa July llth, July  23rd,  August   6th. August 20lh,  Septflrilber .Irfl.\nSeplomber 17th.  Admission,  f.Or-.    r.uffel  Supper.\nMnrimliss   Orchesl'r'n.   DaiiclnB, 8:J0 to 12. Free ferry. 12:30.\nAfternoon Tea and Ice Cream Wednesdays and\nSaturdays\nPRIVATE   PARTIES   CY   ARRANGEMENT.\nDf y Kindling Wood For Sale\nWo are now tnlting orders for wood. Once ynu try it yon will use\nno other. v\nNo chopping, no dirt (as it ia nice, clean, white pine blocks two\ninches thick, two and one-half .Inches wide and from four to fourteen\ninches long.)\nBest supimer wood you can get for stove nr any small fir\". \"We\nguarantee  entire satlsfaollon.\nPltttf,  delivered nnd  In Woodshed,  north  of Latimer  street S-T.O1^\nl'ine, delivered nnd in   woodshed,  south  of Latimer street. 9_~ *>._\nLoad consists of aiipVnximatety one cfird.\nPrice for hnlf load's -\t\nW. W. POWELL COMPANY, Ltd.,\nphone orders to 176    Manufacturer of Match Blocks\n\u25a0\u25a0$7.fc;>\n$4,00\nNelson News ot the Day.\nPimiTDALE   DANCE.\nJuly     '.un.     Admission     IjUC.     Buffet\nsupper.     Five   l'erry   Uiflfl.     Fleming's\nrelH'Ntni. titUiW)\nMiss Margnref Arthur and lhe Mis,\u00abps\n.lelougli an- singing :'t   lh.-  Methodist\ninvli i-n .Sundiiy. (4061)\nKen- art' a IVw of Curusa's rt'i'.irdH\nthat you should hnve In your colletlion:\n\"Sen nata,\" \"Love Me or Not.\" ''A\nDream,\" \"Mesfle Snlennelle.\" Willis\nt'iano Store. \u25a0   , (10.12)\n-HI;\nkberries, MeBonald .lam\nl-)fit\u00ab)\nBlaek    eurrants. - McDonald\n(1017)\nWanted-\nCo.\nWanted-\n,1am Co.\nWanted\u2014Baspberrles.   McDonnld   Jam\n(41)10)\nCo.\nNOTICE OF PARTNERSHIP.\n. Wi', the .undersigned, hnve formed a\npariuersh,*p to carry on the huHlnesH\nof flu- Minnie Fu\u00abl and Transfer Company. Vaeilltles are being provided to\ninsure prompt attention to orders, and\nwe solicit your patronage. All accounts\ndue J. Minnis nre payable to \"lis..\nW. R. THOMPSON.\nilOH) J.  MINNIS.\nTh\nDaughters of Scdttfl will hold a\ndance in K. t: ball July llttli. Admission r.Oe.    Refreshments. (40-1.1.)\nf AZF.VXBW   PUEL  SUPPLY   Bl   TEAMING* COMPANY\nHave opened up n coal and wood yard\nin eairview, anil will he utile to supply\nthe public with the best grade of coal\nvind wood at reasonable prices. I'hone\ni7f)Ll. t 1011)\nTHE    TItAIL    AND    ROSSLAND    PIP-\nTEEN HUNDRED OLUB.\nA special general meeting of the mom*\n'Vers of the above club has been called\n.)V the hoard of directors to be held on\nWednesday, July llilth. 1921,'at S p.''in.,\nn ii.  W   V. A. hall, Trail,  B. C.\nNone but c'nrMPJcnte holders will be\nntitled  to attend.\nThis is tue .--. r.ind of the thres no-\nif-aq reouirde Tbe first notice was\npublished in ihis paper on 2nd July.\nSf.il. CAT  HANL13Y,\n14 o:s** > Secretnry.\nSix room fully modern house in Ai condition on Front\n.Street. Good cellar and washroom in basement. Sleeping\nporch.       \u2022\nA good buy at $2700.00\nCharles F. McHardy\nInsurance Phone 135 Real Eitate\nAuction Sale at 918 Edge-\n,vood Avenue continued this\nafternoon at 2 o'clock.\n. I 1(116)\nWl1. oii'iin or rlyo aoilcil or faded eaV-\nni'lils. hoil.^crnrnishlnfis, etc. Lot IIP\nnail you price liHi. i ermanent Dye\nVoriis, 1.milted, 10,41 Itli Ave., VV\u201e Van-\nOliver,  li   0. 1,192(1)\nALBERTA RIFLE\nSHOOT RESULTS\nCALOATtY, July 8.\u2014The .V.boriu\n'rovlncltil U fie association's ' annua1\nihoot terminated today with Lieut.-\n'.'61. Dowen of Kdnmnton winnin*? the\n4rand aggregate, and Captain V red\nMrti'tiii,': t'ltlgnry Rifle nssiel-itlon.\nwinning the Ottawa nggrpgato.\nThe Tenth baiialion, Calgary, ir-\nehiding Hergennt Korbt-M, Sergey-It P,\nliimn, fnpta'n R. Downle and I.leiit.\nAlex. Mart n( won the Reld agr-VRuio\nami Fifth regiment team maleh. Ctijt-\ntaln !\u2022 red Martin, Oalgni'y, won lhe\n(\"ity of Ca'gary match, and Her-j-^-nt\nO.  Mclnuem,  I^dmonlon,  was see.uid.\nCadet. K. Hell, Calgary, won the\nPayzant match, with Captain Fred\n\"Martm second. Lleiit. Alex. Martin.\nCalgary, won the MacDonald \"Hrlcr\"\nmatch, with I.lent.-Col. Bowen, Edmonton,   second.\nThe team to represent (he association at Ottawa will be selected Saturday   afternoon.\nZenoleum\n\"FLY SCOOT\nWill Keep files off cattle at milking,\n.time.\nYou should have a tin of\nPRATT'S   COW   REMEDY\nOn hand in case of-Milk Fever\nor Garget.\u00ab    .\nTHE   BRACKMAN-KER\nMILLING CO. LTD.\nBtiy\nMother's\nBread\n\u25a0 Don't work too hard -baking\nthese summer days when you\ncan get MOTHER'S BREAD,\nwholesome   and   nourishing.\nCHOQUETTE BROS\nCandies\u2014Mother's  Bread\u2014Cakes\nPRESERVING\nNECESSITIES\nSealers\nEconnm*;;  Perfect   Sent,    in   all\n\u2022^-tt-^izeH.\nPsUvCnVAX\u2014BINOS\nSugar\n\u25a0\"\">\u00ab    $11.75\n:\u00bb\u00ab\u2022: * 82.50\nii\" S1.30\nST. CHARLES CREAM\nFamily  Size\n=   Tins 35<*\nPor   ''\u00ab'\u25a0'\u2022\"    $1.05\nPer 4-ilozen ense  $7.65\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nMATINEE 2:20\nHOBART\nBOSWORTH\n\u2014in\u2014\n''His Own Law\"\nThe story of a mighty duel\u2014love\nagainst friendship.\nTwo  Reel  Comedy,\n\"Edgar Takes the Cake\"\nSpecial Today\nOur Own Make Cocoanut\nMacaroons, doz. 35c\nEccles Cakes, dozen   3SW\u00a3\nDoughnu ts.   dozen    .'. %_\u2022$\nCup   Cakes,    dozen _\\S}lt\nA variety nf other Small Cakes,\nall    nr.    per    dozen 20#\nO.K.Bakery ,\nStanley   Str\"rt.\nPhone   166. .'\u25a0''(\nFor the Summer Months\nSaturday Night\nSpecial\nBide    Diamond    Pavilion\nDance 8:30 Tonight\nMusii- hy the ffimous Blue Din-\nmnnd C-rehestrn.\nAdmissioji    (JOtf\nTn include cafeteria supper nnd\nride  home.\nfrc\nand  Classical -Music\nSund.jiy at   threo.\nli SALE\n918 Edgewood Ave., continued this afternoon at 2 p.m.\nBedroom Purnituree, Dining Room\nFu mil tire, \u201e Fumed Oak Dining Chairs\nmd -Tahlr, Leather Couch, Carpets,\nBi'Ie-a-Rrae,  plasswnre.   l.imoRes  Tea\nSet,    etc.,   Mc.     (limits    uu    view    this\nmorning. \t\n,. Terms:    Cash.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer.\nj\/\u00a3_jt__x_\\\nIt's the Comfort\nof the Home\nAn Electric Grill is not a\nluxury any more, it is a\npositive necessity. Scores\nof pleasant, tasty dishes\ncan be prepared with its\naid.\nHowe Electric Co.\nOpera House Block,      Nelson, B. C.\nThomas A. Lawson\nCarpenter and joiner.\nWe do your work prnmplly and well.\nFactory,   409    Hall   Street.\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nDrugs, Medicines, Baby Foods,\nHair Brushes,. Tooth Brushes,\nTooth -Paste and Powder, Face\nPowder, and Cream, Carnation\nCream, Mosquito Foe, Insect Powder. Poultry Hce Powder, Red'\nMite Killer, Rose Tree Sprays,\nCameras, Films, ;DeveloptnK, Ther-:\nmis Bottles, Ingersoll WatcheB^\nMail Orders Filled Promptly\nRUTHERFORD'S\nNELSON.\n_.\n'J-\nfc\nVANCOUVER, July ..-r-Colonel H.\nM. Cherry, an officer or the.liltli\nWinnipeg Rifles hefore the war, and\npresident of the regimenln! hoard\nfund of.the C. R F. during the war,\n!a dead at ShrfughliVafiy military hospital here. The 'funeral will take\nplace In Winnipeg, tn which olty he\nwas.head of the auditing firm of\nCherry, Davidson & Newton, Death\nwaa due to heart trouble.\nCOOL ,\nSUMMER\nSUITS\n$37.50\n'Made in plain shades of Greys and\nBrowns, in two and three-button models. Materials of pure wool homespuns. It pays to buy clothes like\nthese. They have the quality that\nlasts, the style that keeps its shape,\nthe fit that gives satisfaction and' comfort.\nEmory & Walley\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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_09","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\/1.0397044","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":"1921-07-09 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":"1921-07-09 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":""}]}