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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":" Trail Wins\nCLOSE BALL GAME\nSee Page 7\n??*\/\nGlaciers Gouge\nORE FOR PROSPECTORS\nSee Page 2\nVOL. 21.\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 7, 1922.\nNO. 92.\nSTATESMEN\nGATHER FOR\nCONFERENCE\nInterallied Indebtedness Cannot Be Excluded From\nDiscussions\n0\nPOINCARE'S PLANS MEET\nVERY LITTLE SYMPATHY\nBelieved to Include Cancelling French Debt to\nGreat Britain\nLONDON, Aug. 6.\u2014Allied statesmen gather in London tonight for the\nopening tomorrow of what seems to\nbe universally regarded as the most\nmomentous conference since peace\nwas concludued.\nThe Immediate concern of the conference Is the question of reparations\nnnd Germany's request for a moratorium, but since the delivery last\nweek of the note of lhe Karl of Hal-\nfour, lt is assured that the question\nol Interallied indebtedness cannot be\nexcluded from the discussions, especially as Itoymond Poincare, the\nFrench prime minister, Is credited\nwith bringing to London n plan for\nthe extinction of the German reparation bonds In exchange for a cancellation of the French debt to Croat\nBritain.\nBritain    Would    Lose    Lut    Weapon.\nThis   plan   meets   with   little   Bym\npathy  in  Kngland,   because it  Is con\ntended these German bonds being ad\nmlttedly    worthless,      Great       \"Britain\nwould   gain   nothing,   but   by   forego\ning  the  French   debt   would   lose   the\nlast  weapon  she  possesses for  bring\nIng pressure lo hear  upon  France on\nthe   question   of   armamenta   or   any\npolicy   In   which   France     might     run\ncounter  to  British  ideas.\nThe situation is further complicated by the ultimatum France delivered to Germany concerning Germany's payments on account of clearing house debts and the measures\nwhich Krnnee already rns ordered\ntaken ln this connection.\nLittle hope seems to be entertained\nhere that the conference will be\nsuccessful one, although It Is fully\nrcognlwd that In view of the swift\nfall In the value of the mark, which\nthreatens to bring Germany in the\nwake of Austria and Russia financially, *, situation has been reached\nIn which half way measures no long\ner will  be of avail.\nWants   Wider   Supervision,\nThe corresiwndent of the Associated\nI'ress who accompanied tbe French\ndelegation from Pnris to London says\nhe learned that M. Poincare comes to\nthe conference with a definite program calling for a far wider financial\nsupervision over Germany than that\nrecently negotiated by the committee\non guarantees and approved by the\nreparations commission and the Wirth\ncabinet.\nUnder this program, German ous-\ntoms would be placed under the Inspection of representatives of thc allies without theso representatives being receiving officers or din Uy\nhandling w\\\\y mony. The plan would\nprovide that new Issues of paper\nmoney must be authorized by the allies, who also would have the final\nwo.d of approval on the round sum\nof Germany's appropriations.\nWould   Agree   to    Moratorium.\nM. Polncare's plan, the correspondent learned, Is the arrest of Inflation,\na check on expenditures and to have\nU certain lien on traffic receipts. resides thP French propossls will Include participation in Germany Industry and especially on state-own.'d\nproperties. If M r. Lloyd George,\nSlgnor Hchanzer, Italy, nnd M. Jas-\npar, Belgium, accept the plan, or one\nequally radical. In establishing efficient guidance for Germany's finances,\nand enforcing it resolutely, then M-\nPolncare, It is understood, will be\nprepared to agree upon a rather short\nmoratorium to give time to put the\nmeasure into opera''on and to 8-*\u00ab\nhow Germany receives and executes\nthe  allied  plan.\nM. Potncnre comes to London, It Is\nnalJ. prepared, If a strong united effort is Impossible, to irslst upon oach\nn lly having liberty of action under\nthe French lnterpr*tnt'.rii of the Ver-\nasll.es treaty\nCHANGE IN WEATHER\nHELPS FIRE FIGHTERS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 6.\u2014While last\nreports from northern and central\nBritish Columbia Indleat*- a ?ontlnua-\ntlon of serious forest fire conditions,\na change of weather In the lower\nmainland, which Is believed to he\nextending pretty far north, has\nbrought a distinct note of relief to\nharassed fire fighters all over the\nprovince. Rain fell ln Vancouver todny\nfor the first time ln 75 days. Indications tonight are that there will he\nmore than tonight. Today's shower\nlasted  half an  hour.\nWELCOME   RAINS   FALL\nRBGINA, Aug. 6\u2014Reglna and district were well snaked hy a heiv:*\nrain at an early hour Saurdny when\nnlmost two inches of rain fell within\na few hours. Reports Indicate *he\n\u2022storm was gone-il over* .-wtrai Sas-\nl^'.chewnn and e.;tends roll tc tbe\nhi rth. Late crops that were shov\/-\n|rg the effects of the prolonged\nd'L'V.ght were bemllted. T.ie mil. was\n-io. *\u00bbmpan1et* by t*n elec'.ilrni display,\nerne electric .ight stnn I.i'd In th**\nfly v as struct, but no .lanugo re*\n\/\u2022*\u00bb\u2022<!\u00bb    v      __       .\nSTEAMER IN PERIL\nRAPIDS   PRINCE   ON   ROCKS\nThe steamer Rapids Prince, which struck on the rocks in the Lachine\nRapids, with over 400 passengers on board. Officials say the steamer is in\nno  danger.    All  lives  were  rescued  and   thc   steamer   salvaged.\nWHOEVER LEADS\u00abTO\nBOWSER STANDS\nTRUETOPARTY\nConservative Chief Accepts\nRenomination for Leadership at Convention\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 6.\u2014W. .1.\nBowser, leader of the provlncinl Conservative opposition, left Vancouver\non the Kettle Valiey train Saturday\nevening for Cranbrook, where he will\ntake part in the byelection, and as\nhe wilt not be back to the coast\nmuch before the proposed convention\nhe was asked If be had anv statement\nto make as regards the leadership of\nthe   Liberal-Conservative   party.\nMr. Bowser, In reply, said: \"I have\nnot much to add to the letter, which\nI forwarded to tho Conservative association at Kamloops lu April lust,\nand which wus given due publicity at\nthat time tn Ihe press of the province.\nWhen I took the position that as soon\nas the convention Is called together\nthe old Conservative party will disappear and will be amalgamated with\nthe National Libera 1-ConservativeH\nand with this amalgamation my term\nas leader expires and il will then be\nfor the convention to select a loader\nfor the new party.\n\"At the request ol a large number\nof my friends I have consented lo\nallow my name to be put In nomination for the position of lender of\ntbis new party should they In their\n\u25a0 wisdom, tiding into'\u2022\u25a0onsidei-ui inn my\niwst service und experience, think I\nam the most likely person to lead\nthem ln the future. If on tbe other\nhand they choose someone else I\nwill give to my successor the same\nloyal support as I would expect from\nevery member of the party should I\nbe  chosen.\n\"Conslderslng the Incompetent gov-\nerment which w? are now suffering\nunder and whose mad career will soon\nbankrupt this province. I feel that It\nla the duty of every good citizen to\njoin ln the efforts of the new party\nto do everything in his or ber power\nto obtain a change of government as\nsoon as the opportunity offers anil\nfurther, the public can be assured\nwhether elected leader or not there\nwill be no one more unstinted than\nmyself In my efforts to remove from\noffice  thc  present  administration.\"\nMunicipal Land\nValues Decrease\nDuring Past Year\nVICTORIA, Aug. 6.\u2014Land value\nassessment-, in British Columbia\nmunicipalities nhow a decrease of\nmore than $16,000,000 during the\nlast year, but assessed values of\nimprovements show an increase of\nnearly $25,000,000, according to the\nannual report of Robert Baird,\nBritish Columbia inspector of\nmunicipalities.\nTax levies ln municipalities durin\nthe last year have not chnnged ma'T-\nluUy. There has been a decrease of about\n$1,500,000 in tax arrears but nn Increase of nearly the Bame amount\nin the value of lands held by municipalities which were taken over at a\ntax sale.\nGreenwood with 64 mills line thr.\nhighest tax rate In the province, while\nPort Moody with 25 mills has the lowest. Other rates are\nVancouver. 31.66*6; Victor: I, *\\%m\\\\\\\nAlbernl, 55; Courtney, 15; Puncm.\n29; Kamloops, 40; Lud> smith, '\u25a0>',;\nNanaimo, 47; Nelson. 41.S75; New\nWestminster, 45; North Vnneouver,\n82; Port Albernl, SO; Prince Rupert,\nS7.31;  Vernon.  40.\nOf the municipal districts Fraser\nMills has the lowest rate of nine mills,\nSouth Vancouver the highest with 65.\nOther mill rates are:\nWest Vancouver, 36; Surrey, 24;\nSaanlch, 20; Esquimau, 23; Mission,\n27;   North   Oowichan,   13.r>.\nINDICATE\" SUBSTANTIAL\nREDUCTION IN UQU0RS\nVICTORIA, Aug. 6.\u2014New British\nColumbia liquor prices will be announced by Attorney-General Man-son\nnext week. Reduction In whisky prices\nare to be greater than forecasted some\ntime ago. The roductlon on some\nof the popular brands of whisky will\nllhely run to 75 cents or fl a bottle.\nA number of the prices In the new\nschedule will be Icsb thnn the Quebec   scale   of   prices.\nPresent Indications are that In making the reduction the government will\nbe sacrificing $60,000 to $75,000 a\nmonth or around three quarters of a\nmillion dollars a  year.\nOOSTALL\nORIENTALS\nNo Change in Position\nof New Railway Board;\nResume Sittings Today\nOTTAWA, Aug. 6.\u2014The situation in regarci to the appoir.t.nent\nof tho new board of management\nof the Canadian National railways\nremains unchanged, though it is\nthought likely that cabinet action\nin the matter of appointments will\ncome within the week. The cabinet resumes its sittinn tomorrow\nwhen the prime minister snd\nother ministers will be back fro^n\ntheir week-end jaunt1- out of\ntown.\nSLEEPING CAR\nFROM SEATTLE\nCAMS FIRE\nActor Seriously Hurt; Thirty\nOthers Sustain Injuries;\nCheck Spread\nProposes Only White Men\nShould Be Employed in\nPulp Mills\nSRATTLE. Aug. 6.\u2014Fire destroyed\nthe rear-end sleeper of a Chicago,\nMihvniikce #- Hi. Paul express train\nat an early hour this morning, 130\nmiles east of Seattle. 1\\ W. Welch,\nnn actor, was seriously hurt and 30\nOther people In the car were hurned.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 6.\u2014Steps tn havejeut and bruised in their frantic ef-\nall orientals ousted from the pulp andj forts to get out of the car. William\npaper mills of Pritish Columbia were Wilson, colored potter in charfa of\ntaken today by Hon. A. M. Man-1 the car signalled the engineer and\nson, attorney-general and minister ofjas soon ns the train slowed down\nlabor. started  to  uncouple his car from  the\nNearly 1000 orientals, fl large pro-1 train, with the result that the spread\nportion icf them Japanese, are em- [ of flames was avoided,\nployed in the industry. Mr. Mansonj Kelch kicked a window out nnd\nproposes that their places be taken'carried his wife out of the oar !\"\u2022-\nby white men, many of whom have fore he collapsed. He was the most\nlarge fnmllics and are either out seriously hint of all. The cause of\nof work altogether or are employed (the fire is unknown,\non  less   profitable   Jobs.\nThc pulp and paper mills nt Powell\nriver already have displaced all orientals and nre operating on white\nUhor only. Mr. Munaon has taken\nup direct wtth the other pulp and\npaper mill owners the question of\nreplacing  orientals.\n\"I am satisfied they can be elimn-\nated,\" said Mr. Maiison in his message to the managers.\nHARD TO FIND\nOFFICERS FOR\nWHEAT BOARD\nMeets Tragic End\nStewart   and . Riddel!   Definitely Decline in Spite\nof All Pressure\nWOOD WILL PROBABLY\nRECEIVE NOMINATION\nCrerar Second Choice; Mus-\nselman Third, Then Bur-\nnell and Murray\nOTTAWA. Aug. ii\u2014 Illy Canadian\nPreaal.\u2014The definite refus'iil of ..Lnnea\n\u25a0MM an.l F. \\V. Kiilil.ll to accept thc chairmanship unil vlcc-chalr-\nmanxhlp of tba wheat huanl, in Iks\nface of strong persuasion which was-\nhrought to hear on ih.*m to pawaaaa\nthem to accept, has created a situation whose development Is heing' pillowed in official circles here wilh\nmuch   Interest.   Thc  demand  of  west-\nIRREGULARS\nMUST FIRST\nDROPARMS\nHostilities Will Only Cease\nWhen Rebels Surrender\nArms and Ston Raids\nTRADE UNION -.INGRESS\nCONDEMNS  B'-H  SIDES\nCOUNTESS OF  ESSEX\nWho    was    round    dead    In    a\n.She   was  one Of  thc   BlOat   popula\nhandsome hoataaaas in  London.\nlo\nIh\nwheat board has\nl.manil thut Stuw-\n\u25a0houM   be   at   ita\nCOMMISSION\nTl\nListen in on the\nProgram Tonight\nWith Your Radio\ntheir  refusal,  on  reconsideration, I monthly    on    her\nHare's tonight's progr-am to bs broad-\noa-ated from Tim Dally Haws atatlon,\noperated by ths Canadian Anto $s Elic*\ntrio company i\nSTATION   C. J.  O.  B.\n400  U*t*r*.\nProgram sharp at 8:30 p. m\u201e Nelson\nUrns, oloaee 9:30 o'clock.\na-.or.ii   lofttitd   by   conrtcsy   of\nRtlnitman fl Co.\n1. \"Carman  Suite,\"  Victor Harbart'a\norchestra.\n2. \"fifth     Symphony\"    (BsathOTsn),\nVictor Concert orchastre.\n8.    \"Tht    Walts    VT*    Lots,\"    Victor\nDanes  ore ho tra.\n4.    \"Underneath     tha    Itarfl,\"   Victor\nDane*   orchestra.\n\"All for Ton\u2014Kapplaesa,\" Paul\nWhlteman and his orchastra.\ngt*W*   itenia.\n\"Xoonbaams Pining\" aCadlay, All\n\u25a0tar Trio and thalr orchartT*.\n\"\u25a0ha Is Par From tha Isand,\" by\nJohn VcCormack.\n\"Malodia\" (Tachalkowskr), by\nMlacha Elman.\n\"Andanta Cantablla.\" Elman\nBt ring  quartet.\n\"Pralada tn O Minor,\" Borgia\nS-ach manlnof f,\n\"Elgoletto\" paraphrase da concert, I'lay.\/i  by Alfrad Cortot.\nKiwi  Item*.\n\"A Young Maii\"a Pancy.\" Waldorf-Astoria   Dance   orchaatr*.\n\"Salome's Dance\" part* 1 and 3,\nPhiladelphia Symphony orchestra.\nBAD CONDITION\nDUE TO STRIKE\nNEW GRIEVANCE\nRolling Stock Suffers From\nNeglect; Other Railway\nMen May \u2022 Refuse Service\nWASHINGTON.     Aug.     U.-Nothing\nwas    forthcoming    from    tba    White\nHouse   tonight   concerning   the   possl -\nblllty     of     new     negotiations     tvhieh\nmight result between the railroad\n[executives nnd President Harding in'cll erf agriculture. Their St\nj furtherance of the strike settlement! tt i* stated, is 11. -n. T.\nI attempts. In spite of the refusal of leader of the National\nI the roada management!! tn accept party nnd president of\n| President Harding's request that slit Grain Qrowbra, limited;\n, strikers be reinstated with full senior-  the   list   is   .1.   It.   Musselman.   secre-\nlty In consideration of | callinR off tary of tho Saskalchewan drain\n! of the utrike. It Is known that paths' (Jrowern: fourth is t\\ H. lturnell, pres-'\nj of communication between the ndmin-l blent nf the I'tilted FanH*t1 of Mnn-\nj Istratlon and the more prominent I It obn; fifth, possibly. .1. It. Murray.:\nI railroad heads remain completely open Winnipeg, fMNMl MUHfM \"f tha\n[     1'nlon representatives remained firmj I'nited    Grain   Grower*.\nern   farm\nbeen link.\nart    and    Hiddell\nbead.\nIt Is considered here that unless the\nboard takes definite form during this\npresent wick, there is Utile chance\nthat It can handle the IMI crop. H\nanother few days will see wheat cutting in profircss in many districts.\nThe situatlun in. therefore, th it with\nthe favorites refusing to take office.\nthere is tin immediate necessity for\nselecting a chairman who will be s;it.\nisfuctory to the fidei'al government\nand tu the governments of Alberta\nand Saskatchewan an.l wfaoM chairmanship will command the eunfldence\nof tbe farmer.'- ..f ihese provinces and\nthe   farmers'   associa lions.\nPremier    Cannot    Prevail\nMessrs.    Stewart    and    Kiddell    t-le-\ngnipned   Hon.  W, C.  Kennedy on   Ki i\nday\nto accept the chairmanship ami\nchairmanship and at the same time j\nthey advised I'rcmlers Dunning audi\nGreenfield tfl U,,. same effect. Ol|\nSaturday, II.m. W. H. Ma. k-n\/.i-\nKIiir wired them associating himself\nwith the provincial premiers in aaklng\ntheir reconsideration, but without\nI effect, tn the meantime, 1'remlers\nDunning and Greenfield had arrani:-'.l\nI a conference today a J l^algwy to\ni consider tne Hit nation and tn mated\nI further reciiminendatii.ns to Ottawa.\n{ Il is understood that on the recom-\nmendatfon ot the Alberta und Saskatchewan     premiers,    the    chairman\n! win now ba ntr.-red to n. w. Woai\n! president ol the I'nit.d Farmers o\nAlberta   and    of    ihe   t'anadlan   coun\nI'nild   Cll'd'\nA.\nPiufiaailva\nthe    Pulled\nthird     on\nBy Three to One British Del-\ngate's Reparation Scheme\nIs Rejected\nPAItlS. Auk. I.\u2014Th\u00ab rcpirations\ncommissi.>n by a vole of ,t to 1 lis:\nThursday rejected g reaolutloo which\nwould have accorded g moratorium\nto Germany for the remain.Lt of thtol ,j;i\ncalendar year on re pa rat ions. It.\nalso -icjcr-il Germany's offer of:\npayments of EMMH monthly tmi\nthe   I,'lance  of   lur   pi*.-war  dabta.\nA coiiiniuni. ;it ion tn this effect Will\nIssued tnnii-lit by lhe raparatlOQS\ncommissi, n. The resolution, which'\nwould have accorded a moratorium to\nG.nnaliy and acceptance of Germany's\noffer    of    the    payment    of     ftMMOOJ\nprewar\nJohn   Br\nffered\nBrltlah  dataa-mta.\nAn announcement <\nmi>si..n has decided tl\ntber action uniil all\nconference.\ndebt.\ndluiry.\npi.Sl'.l\n\u25a0   the\nhip\nPAY UNCHANGED\nUNTIL DISPUTE\nIS ADJUDICATED\nGovernment   f< _  Weakness,\nRepublican \u2022\u25a0 or Warfare P    hods\nDUBLIN, Aug J-It it officially\nannounced t \u00bb, tha National\ntroop* have bYcupiad Gal baity,\nLimerick Junction, Kilfinny and\nKiimagow. They also occupiad\nLi-tnwel Saturday. The troopa\neverywhere were greeted with ra-\nmarkabli enthusiasm, according\nto the statement.\nThe reply of Michael Collins as\nhead of the provisional government,\nto representations by the Cork association urging the* nee-i of a com-\nI promise between the Republicans\nand the government, given out by tha\nprovisional government last night,\ndeclares that hostilities will cease\nonly when the Irregulars give up their\narms and a cessation of raids by tho\nIrreyulars   is   ordered.\nThe   rattle   of   machine   guns,   rifle\nfiring   and   tba   explosion   of   bombs\nwas    board    in    various   parts   of    the\ncity   from   midnight   lust   night   until\nnn this morning, while Republicans\nwere     unsuccessfully     attacking     the\nposition   of   the   N'ltionaliat   troopa.\nTake   30   Prisonars\nThe     Republican ti     suffered     losses,\nbut   the   victims   were   removed    be-\n(ora ambulances arrived. The Nationalists   took    ,10    prisoners.\nHoih the government and tha Ra-\npubUcaJU are scored for present conditions in Ireland in the annual report of tha Irish Trade Union congress.\nThe r- port declares that the policy of the government in many respects is dangerous to democracy\nand freedom and condemns the government for allowing the Irrcgulara\nto commit Illegalities. On the other\nband, it says:\n\u2022 \"The political claims of the ttepub-\n| lie ure irrational; their* methods of\n: warfare ar-* cW'-erving' of stt^ng t\\t*\nj nuneiaiion. while their street an>-\n', bushes, destr.n*tion of bridges, rail-\n. road tracks and buildings are tanta-\n1 mount to war on tb.* people and certain lo hurt the civilian population\nmore   than   military   opponent\u2022*.\"\nHEAVY RAINS SAVE\nr!:;;; Justice Department Supports FEED SITUATION\nRailway Employees' Contention\nA tig\n5.\n7.\n10.\n, Chicago Railwaymen\nAccept Reduction to\nPut End to Strike\nCHICAGO. ,Aug. fi\u2014Surface and el\"-\nvated railways tonight. voted 9022 to\n5086 to aeeept a 10-cent an hour reduction. In Wages nnd return to work, thus\nending a strike which has paralysed the\ncity electric transpotratlon system for\nthe past six days,\nHhortly after the result of the vote\nwas announced the first elevated train\nwas pounding toward the loop.\nMeanwhile, howe#er, city officials\nwere planning to continue the operation\nof municipal owned busts, charging\nli-cwit fares, against the 7 and 10 cents\ncharged by the  surface and elevated.\nThe sixth and last day of the street\noar strike was marked by. six deaths\nand jrereS of Injured in traffic accidents attributed to .the congestion\ncaused by the paralysis of electric\ntransportation.\nMention Gouin as\nLikely to Succeed\nAuckland Geddess\nQvr.nr.c, Aug. e.\u2014A spacUl Ottawa dlap\u00abtch to I.'Art ton Catho-\nHi-na on Saturday stated that rumor* war* currant in Ottawa that\nBlr X.om*T Qoutn, minister of Jna-\ntioa, will go to Washington shortly\nto rspian* Sir Auckland Oeddas,\ntha Brltlah  ambassador.\nNIAGARA rALlAa.tt. Y., Aug. I.\u2014\nCapt. John Ross, ag'd 7.1. who piloted ths Mald'nf the Mist steamer hr-Iow\nthc falls for 33 yeara, died her* yoster-\n<*y.               .\nIn the opinion that President Mardlt.c\nwould not ask them to comp'omi-e\nfurther on seniority points and ht id\nout the Impression that they hail\ngone to their limit In accepting his\noriginal ofter.\nHazards From Inefficient Shopwork\nThe union leiders expect other\nralroad unions not on strike to follow\ntomorrow lhe program of making'\nrepresentations to the president con-|\ncerning the l\u00abul condition into which\nthey claim the strike has put rolling\nstock. This was begun Sat unlay by\nlegislative agents' of three of the\ntrain service brotherhoods' organizations, the engineers, trainmen and\nfiremen and engine men, and the Intimation left was that while not\ncontemplating an actual strike, em-\nployerts tn transportation services\noutside of the shop crafts might\nadopt a policy of refusing service, In\na Benii-official organized fashion, on\ntrains or st line points where difficulty and danger In working trains or\nfacilities Is claimed to exist because\nof Improper or insufficient shop work.\nSouthern Radw\u00aby Independent\nThe seperate conference hetween\nthe shnperaft spokesmen on the southern railway and the management will\nbegin tomorrow after a two-day postponement. The southern railway, acting apart from all the other large\nrailroads, has offered to settle with\nIts men exactly on the basis of\nPresident Harding's, proposals. The\nunion policy has been hitherto emphatically against single line settlements.\nOTTAWA.\nPrsaa). -Subatai\nthe department\nwhich   obtained\nrailway   employ\norganisation   to\nditions   as   to   wai\nwhich   (ba   ampl\nL\u2014(By    Canadian\ntlal   confirmation   by\n.1*   JUStlce   Of   tile   view\ngenerally anions Uu\nas in the shopman's\ntha efdit  that  eon-\ntg\u00abfl   -Hid   hours,\nIng    railways\nSASKATOON, Aug. \u00ab.\u2014The recent\nheavy rains which have fallen over\nall lhe northern territory and appear\nto be over HOST, arrived in time to\nsave   the   feed   situation,   which   was\nWare Against Undertaking\nIt Is assumed here that Mr. Slew-\nart nnd Mr. Kiddell declined to accept responsibility for the board because of their conviclion lhat only\nIf It possessed all the scope and Hi*'\nauthority of the old board could it\noperate to the satisfaction of tlv\ngrain growers. It is said that I\nconference in Regina with Mr. tin\nfield and Mr. Dunning before the leg- way companies. The Caaa is \u25a0\u25a0,.\nIslntures were called together, Messrs. W is s.i.l. by Section 11 Of I\nStewart    and     Riddell    did    not    en-* dusirial   Dispute*   Investigation\n(l,    The premier's telegram readi\nrapidly   becoming   serious.    The  rains\nwill   result   io   \u25a0   limited   increase   In\nwheat   yi'JilH as late  sown  fields  will\np.'ti   fill    belter    and    tln-i e    should    be    a\nand  marked  Increase In  the crop of Uto\nmen disagree, must remain unchanged1 oats. There was a heavy rain fall.\nuntil the dispute involved h.is bOOft oommciuinj; with fg-ehnwrr on Friday\ndealt with by a board of corn-Hint ion, night and tailing almost steadily un-\nts convey* d in a telegram sent by til Sunday nmrnlng.\nPremier King to Charles Mokle, sac- with an Increased acreage of fall\nrotary of division \\o. I, Montreal ,Ve going In. planting of which win\na'This opinion lias be.-a oommunlcatad i commence now and continue for the\nthe government to the various rail-  nexl two weeka, tha present moisture\nv. rii-'d,   supply   will   In\nhe   ln*   the   i>l:i\n\u25a0 un\na   pood   start   for\nact.\nproceci\nArrest Farmers\nfor Complicity\nEx-Reeve's Death\nNEETAWA. Man., Aug. 6.\u2014Arthur\nCurtis, farmer, of filendnle, and Oeorge\nHraoken, farmer, of K*icn, were arrested last night on warrants charging\nthem with the responsibility for the\ndeath of James A, McCollom ex-reeve\nof Rosedale, Man., on the night of August t. Thpy were released on $4000\nball  each.\nWhen a Trrdlct of accidental death\nwas returned at the coroner's Inquest\nlast Thursday the pollen and the whole\ncommunity were so dts^ntlsfled at the\nverdict that Investigations werr started\nby the attorney -gen sral's department.\nCurils, llracken and McCollom had been\ndrinking, according to thf police, and It\nla stated that McCollom's death was th**\noutcome of a dispute between McCollom and Bracken on a lonely rosd fire\nmllos from town.\ncourage     the    premiers\nwith    the    undertaking.    They\ntuken the position that anything\nof a national board with full aiuh\nUy   would   be   unsatisfactory.\nhavej       (,n\nihort  IIiniM\nbehalf I\n-1* of r;i\ntaincd from tb'\nlegal opinion l\nraised    In\nf   th.\nIwej\nn'lini.\nid\nthe\ncanals ob*-\nlepartnwnt ol Justice\npeeting the nuostion\n\u25a0gram   to   dm   of\nThe Weather\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nNleuw Amsterdam, at New* Vork\nfrom   Rotterdam.\nZeeland, at New York, from Ant\nwerp.\nCredrlc, ut New York, from Liver\npool.\nOarnonia, at Plyniuuth, from Nov\nYork.\nAciiuitani.i. Southampton, from Nev\nYork.\nir   t\n.August 1, and 00 August 3 cominun-\n* b ate.i same to the several railway\ncompanies, i understand you have\nbeen intoriind l.y the deputy minister\ni of   labor   nf   the   cootents   of   those I\nci.inmonlcalions,    whb h    I    Iru.-t    may'\nj suffice  to assort  you  thai   the  gov-;\neminent is doiBSj all in Its power fully\nI to    pTOtOCl    tbe 'right*   Of   all   parties j\nconcerned in the dispute tthteh baaj\n[arisen respecting the proposed chants\n[tn the M'lieduii\" oi wages of ths shop]\n.III-:\nmen,\nUnemployment insurance\nVery Costly to Britain\nLONDON, Aug. 6.\u2014 (Hy dnudian\nPress Cable.)\u2014I'neiu ploy men t benefit\ndisbursed In Great Britain In tho last\ntwo yeara amounts to \u00a377.000,000, It\nwns announced by T. J. McNamara.\nminister of labor. This sum does not\nInclude relief granted by local boards\nof guardians or other relief bodies, but\nrelates to government unemployment\nInsurance.\nThe administration costs of the distribution of this relief for the same period amounted to \u00a37,COO,000.\nTb.. feature\nmentioned is ct\nthat     condition:\nchanged   pendl\nboard.\nif the communlca\nnfirmatlon ot the\nore   to   remain\nic  a   decision   by\ntions i\nTablet in House\nCommemorates\nNewspapermen\nSecures National\nDivisional Point\nfor the Province\nill ver\nVICTORIA, Aug. 6.-Preml.\ntoday wOn his fight to have Lucerne,\nwhich Ik In tills province, established\nas the divisional point of the i'anidian\nNational railway Instead of Jasper,\nwhich Is Just over Ihe Alberta boundary.\nOriginal plans of llie Canadian\nNational when tin* two lines were\nconsolidated resulted In part of the\ntracks, which paralleled each mini-\nIn   ths   northern   part   of  the   province\nt^A memorial tab* I b\u00ab*nf abandoned  so both  the  Oraad\nlumbla newspaper men    Trunk ,\u201e\u201e, , .;ili;llii:ul  National  use   the\nla   serving   their    0(m(,   .^ \u201e   ow   ,v   (.tT,:iitl   )|is(lli.t\nln   connection   with   the   chain,\".*,    ll\nVICTORIA\nlet to Brltlsl*\nwho   gave   Iheir   live\ncountry during the Oreat War was unveiled   l.y  his honor.  Lieut.-Oov.  W. C.\nNichol. at the parliament buildings hero i ,    , ,   . .\nthis   afternoon.     The   Impressive   SSrs-   ,ional >M'inls ;I,M  *\u2022 n\"\"\"1  h\"U!\"'f' at\nmonv,   h-id   under  the  auspices  of   the I J\u00abSper.     British     Columbians    In\nBritish   Columbia   Institute of Journal- ! <\".rth     protested     against     thia\nwired    Premier   Oliver,   who   started\nwas   propQS\nolidale   the   dlvl-\nthe\nnnd\noo^. im The world\nuke thkt or rvma\nA DouBUE R\\M&EfV\n\"Zimmie\"\nlata. wa. atttMiiliMl by repreaantHtlvoa\nof newapapcra from all sections of tlio\nprovtnes.\ntin*   fitiM   I*'  i\nIsh  Columl-iu.\nD|W\nMr  thrill  iii  Hrit-\nVICTuniA. Aint. \u00ab\u2014 Nelson and\nvi.inlty: C.'iici.illy fair; not much\ncliuiiKo in ti.|ii|i'*ratur-?.\nMln. Max.\nN.l.on        M 86\nVlctorl:i         Sll n\nVancouver        at) 78\nKtiriiUi|iM        r.6 H\nll.it korvlllo      \u00bb*\nPrlncu   Hii|iort        4\u00bb \u2022\u00ab\nr.ilnaiy        M 74\nWinnipeg       r.: SO\nrants art     .'.\u00ab 78\nSun  Knini'laoo        r>2 \u00ab2\nSeattle          SI 70\nrwlliliin      '\u25a0! 70\nCSiunil Forks       *.\u00bb 12\nK:ial     !>7 77\nCrankroek     64 76\n Pap T\u00ab7i\nTHE NELSON BAILY NEWS, *MON15AY MORNING, AUGUST 7, \"1022.\n***--\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhat Superior Accommodation May Bt Obtained\nAMERICAN PLAN\nRates $3.50 to $5.00\n\u00a3j%eS?uk___%\n i\u2014'\nGEORGE P.ENWELL, Proprietor.\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\n_ \u25a0\u00bb\n\u2022PECIAL SUNDAY DINNER\nSl.OO\nTEAROOM   OPE\nTO   MIDN\nN   10   A.   M,  I\nIGHT\nH.sdqusrt.r.   I.r   nil   Tr.v.linfl   M.n,   Mining    M.n   snd   Tourists.\nGLACIERS GOUGED U-SHAPED\nVALLEYS OF THE KOOTENAY\nOPENING ORE TO PROSPECTOR\nVan<\nW.MII'I  I\nVancouver: W. T\n!\u25a0:.  Johi\nMnrlce,\nhi'mc\u2014rr    k   a\nG.  O.  Fremay,   RosMttiil:   ST.   II.   . \u25a0\n: P, r: It Jones. Montreal, J. P. Harlow, i\nVancouver; Dan Wilson, Qlelchtn, Basil ; Toronto: i\\ Q, Tnmer, Mrs snd Master '\nJ. J. Marahall, Fred a. Bagtey, Calaary; Ootl Turner.\" Trail; George Hani\/, '\nMr. and  Mrs.  K.   H,   E-awa,  Northport; ' Boulder; <;   o. Skinner, M. Hodge, Van-*\nMontreal;   John    A.   VcM.o*t:o>im i.,,.i .-n    roii\\. i ;      A       H.      K;i]i\".   Dublin;   H.   A..\nTt. J. ste\u00abart, Vanoouver; Mary I. I rtoodwla, Vaneoirver: W K. PWInn.\nPry. Montreal; John A. Mc Malum, Rowland; F. Malcolm Knnpp. Vancou-\nspokane; H. Unwell. Vancouver; .'. var; ':. .) Co-aan, Victoria; *. W, j-*ck-\nd *;\u2022\u00ab.>< nnid, Roaal fl; P. K. Aroh'r, all, Vancouver; R W Chal ma ra, Van-\nKasl-*>; L. a   Williamson, Vancouver; T.   couver.\nHotel Strathcona\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTEL\nUnder New Management\nQ. T. QUINCEY,   Proprietor.    (Lata   of   Melfort,   5a\u00abk.)\nIdeally   eituated,   commanding   a delightful   view the  laka.     Special\nSunday  Dinner, 75c.     Nina first-class  sample  roome.\nAMERICAN     AND     EUROPEAN      PLAN\n(Written hy htllnor Roberta, Aeon of\ntha Wt hlngton Schaol of Mines, Baattla, for ihe fourth International Mining\nconvention,  nt   Nelson >\nWhen u man Im traveling owf Iht\nrange nnd finds n glacier blocking his\nroute, he dlaaaaaaa tha situation wiih\nhid  paeklmr*-e and  WOIlderf  what   11^ _**\"\u00ab11\npqfpoaa a glacier lerees iii tha ichanta\nof natural tffalra as a hlftbway it li\nn fallura; anally the edges nr-   steep\nWalls of glare lOf, difficult lo climli ,e\ndescend, and separated from the udja-\ncent niountalnslde hy a th ep chasm.\nIts surface Is hummocky and pilled, nr\nelse littered wiih hroki*n roei. of nil\nsizes lying so loosely ns to ttbtt Ot\nloll at the lightest touch. Ban and\n(hero are crevasses Just too wide til\nJump and long SOOhffb to cattpe much\ndelay if repeated detours are neeeaaary.\nOnly in winter does n glacier offer an\neasy route; at that season the snow\nhas filled ID tha guleh along the atdfl\nand huilt up an nptu'oacli. and thfl\ndrifts have arched over the fImuran,\nleaving a glossy aurfnee that nakOS\nfine going  Tor the ski Is and  WOb-ahoea.\n\u25a0MORRISBWWORRlSi\n\u2022*l  WAS n.lil In i.'in*' h.n*\nBY  my v. If,-.\"\nSAID ill.\" niiin from tli.* UrfaM\n\u25a0THEY Slid tn liny li.-n*.\nTHEY all lui.ivv too,\"\nSAID   Hi.'-   laily   fi.iin   CssllSflr\nTHAT rt*|iulatlmi cost  ns\nTEN years til our life.\nIT'S mo 1.-.1.1.1 10 rts\u00bb losing,\nTHAT'S why \u00ab,* Hy In smi*\nRELIABLE wtSU *M ttSB R *\u2022*\"\nI:\nI'rll\nSTRATHCONA\u2014f\nVancouver; Mr. snd Mrs. P. I*. I'm \u2022\ncity: Mra II. .1. Bslton, Rossland\nCharles Chai'inan. London, t'm.: W\nShaw,  I.Pthliri.lKi*;  H.   F.   B.   Rsld,   H.  A\nVpper,   yaakatoon;   II.   W.   Miiriin.   fa'.\near\\;   F,   \\Y    Bawt.lt,  Ton    Mis.  .M.\nA'slksr Armstrong, ll c. Wiggins, c.il-\nisry: Mi^s ii.. 1.01 Robertson, Iiuluih-\nMiss Kill) Rswms, Duluth: J. II. K.nr.\n!\u25a0-.  A   Raundsra,  I'anrouv.r:  Wali.-r 0.\nK.nn.ily.   .'ilv\nAT popular prices.\nCm\nMGwpt\ntteuCujP^s\nMen Suited\ntr   -\nQUEENS HOTEL\nCAFE IN CONNECTION.\nEXCELLENT MEALS.\nEuropean  and American Plan.\nYou   will   P.*   delighted   w.th   tha\nftral-class  aervlce  here.\nModern ly   furnished   room*.\nA.  LAJ'OINTK.  Proprietor.\nQt'nKNS\u2014Mrs. T.  Dumas.  Ainsworth; ;\nW.  Rloor. Craaton;  P.  Lalonde,  Birch* j\nhunk; Mr. and Mrs J. W. MaHhews. I\nWinnipeg; Mr. and Mrs .1. M. K.arn-j.j\nEdmonton; A. Hill, Kelowna; I'. M.m-\n\u2022 on, Katowna; R. W. Mcfberson, Van-[\nOOQTar; T. Oley Oordon, Swamp t-ake; ,\nK, a Bailey. Cranbrook; Mlaa I Pay-\nant, Salmo; Mr and lira ll a. Walker,]\nF.-rnie: Miss Kate B. Reuter, Calgary;)\nMrs. v.. H. CraUtahaak and children, I\n\u25a0t.'algary; A. Hackenaon, Caacade.\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE  FISHING  IS  GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nPithing,     Boating,     Batliin**.,     Qalf,\nTennis   Courta\nFiahing   Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nStore   in   Connection.\nW, A.  WARD,  Proprietor\nRetee   Reasonable. Good   Meala\nA WOMAN'S WORK\nIS NEVER DONE\nIt Seems So in M?ny Cases\nand Good Health is Always\nNecessary\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS,  MADDEN.  Pr.p.\nFirrt   CI...    Room,    by    th.    Day,\nW.ak   or   Month\ntvry   Con..deration   Shown   la\nGu.at..\nCar.   B.k.r   .nd   Ward   ft,   N.l.on\nMAIHiKN\u2014It. .1. Mil.oan. Nakusp T\nnnkl^y. J. I'. Unify. Trail: V. Ft 11,1\n,-ms, Spokane; Oaorfa Crnwrtrr, Sli\nAlow. J. M.Thail. Ml. ami Mrs. Bt\"V n\nr*>n anil dauchi'-rs. Mi-i N 'Jalh i.n.\nrlililrrii, .1 IV. Tiirjk. F.r nil-; Klnu\nAla.I.I.n. ilocSS Cily; JanMB A. Cr I\nSaii.toii; t:.  Hrown.\nf\u2014\nStop   Arguing*  end   Com*   to   the\nLELAND HOTEL\nlit\n1 1\nNakusp,    w here    j ou    can    make\nuraalf feel at dome and eoiay the\net limit   flahlnf.   boating,   Im thing,\n!.     '\"Servlci \"   our  motto\nWM.   J.   PHATT,  Pi-oiirUtor.\n. ._                 . \t\nNelson's Best Cafes\nTHE  STANDARD  CAFE\n320    Baker    Street,    Nelson,    B.    C\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 t.  2:30 Specisl   Lunch.   :{.1t>\n1:30   to   8:00   p.  m\u201e   Supp.r..35\u00abi\nPhon.   154\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMra. Mallette *\\ Son, Proprietors.\nNice, warm, comfortable rooma at\nra*s-eonabl\u00ab   ratea.    Open    da\/   and\nnight\nCorner   Hall   and   Vernon   Btreete,\nLAKEVIEW\u2014flui Johnson. Chrl*\n.Tohnson, city; TI. Bprlng, H. Mclntyr-.\na Oreaer, P, Jermer, a Haul. Baewall;\nr.. M Da-rtaon, Three Valley: .1. Camp*\nWll. Saskatoon: J. Bchulte, CMoada.\nt \" \"\\\nHIGH   CLASS   RESTAURANT\nROYAL CAFE\nOpen day and nlRht. Quick service. Dinner, 11:30 a. m. to 2:00\np.    a),   36c.     Kppclal   S i ji>' r,    I; 50\np.   in.   to  8:00   p.   m.,   35o.\nPhena 182 604 Baker  Street\n-\nViscount,   fttrtllihnrrt.\u2014\"T   toolt\nI.ydla   K.   linkharn's  VcgalAbla  Ooo*\nI'Oiitid for I*'flknes.* of tho fi tun||\norp:rn-.    I had pains iu tht bark and\nImi 111 Iiii n p;. ins in thp ibdotnao\nand was in n ftaarel run dOWB enn-\ndltioD. I totilii mi itatp, ri'.-t or\nVOrk and was quite nnlll te do r*\\ui\nsllphf liou.'cholil taaks. A Tilond u id\nme about your VtfetabU COBpOOnd\np.nd I In tny turn ttuh' rcconmo'iid\nit, ns my bP\\ero s,yui]donis van.s>i'd\nand 1 am better iu every trgy, I\ndo -ry own VOT^, look aftijr my thll-\ndiflu and fcrc to rhickens. cow jii.I\nniy panli'n. 1 also retonun'-nd ii\nfor jgs_Ws% |Wi tthg in week ard\nrim clown, u __y Ll yc.iixrhl tettgk*\nter lif.fi taken It and Im qutie hot own\ngay fiflf afiain.\"\u2014Mijs. Pnt.ii. Wsu.y,\nVt?cour.t, WHstaUcbtVUs\nI Live On A Farm\nFpper New ITortnn. K, P.\u2014\"I have\ntaken Lydia ___ Pinkham's DedtclDea\nand tbey have done pie a world of\nRood. 6lnce then I have been able\nto do my housework and I hav.1 a\n, lot of aork to do as 1 live on a faint.\nSeeing your advertisement In Um\npapers was what made me think of\nwriting to you. I hope this will help\narvmeone else.\"\u2014^Iia. \\V\u00ab, li. Knwii.\nUpper New Hortou. New llruui;*ii k.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616 VERNON ST, EAST\nCemfortabla   Rooma.   Hot  and   Cold\nWater.     Dining   Room   in\nConnectien,\nRatea  $1-00  and   Up.\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nOpen   from   fi   a.   m.   tr,   9   p.   m.\nl.nnih  from   11:30 lo 2:30 tlTtC\n1:30  la  8:00  ;*5<*\nVi-rniiil    Street,   near    l'ost    Office.\nPAUL   DR07DA,  Propri.tor,\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nIf locking for a modern and\n{lean room or apartment it will be\nte your Intereat to call at tha Stirling Hotel before renting aleewbera\nP.   H,   BUSH,  Preprietor\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nThe Most Fxnhifllve He.\u00abtaurant ln\nthe City. (j|M>n l)ay and Night,\nflervlca unexcelled. Furnace heated\nRoom a  with   Mot  and   Cold   Water\nIn   connection.\nBakar Street Phona 134\nHOTEL CASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR\nQ.n.rsl    Stora    In    Connacti.n-\nSp.cl.1   Sunday   Dinner.\nA..ori.d   Soft    Drink,   on   ic\nC.     F,     DOUBLEDAY,     Pi.pnator.\nA Display Ad in thc\nDAILY NEWS\nEnters Mora Htrres\nCatches Mans E,es\nMimeograph\nPaper\nWe sell all kinds\nof t.vpewritintr papers, including\nSpecial Mimeograph\nPROMPT   SERVICE\nThe Daily News\nQiial.ty  Printer.\nRadiophone\nf>t a r.Mdlophor.p and enjoy\nrmjrerts Hnd d:in>-e muni*!\nhroadcaated hy The Ntlaon\nDaily Ktwi hraa-ioMttsg aat,\nor the iiifnt iu'wh from Van-\noouvar, iaattla or Partlan-d.\nLoKplnp Minpa, mines nnd\nraaehea are lonely ptaooi In the\nvbttar.    a    RadiophoAfl     will\nhrliiK Lh* ninsit* of lhe cities\nto jour door** \u00abnd maki* ihe\nloa\u00abT, Aork evetiitifrt* plaaaanl and\nprotltaMo.\nSets from ||| to j;ir.n with\nra4tm  Of  from   IO   tS   IN   mile.*-.\nBttl   Inul,iiii d   by   government\nei rtifii-ali'il   wireless   operator,\nFor    full    ptltlMlHI    write\nD. B. Crowther\nNeedle,.  D.  C.\n'. When using n\nWILSON'S\nFLY PADS\nIn Moments of Leisure\nREAD   DIRECTIONS      \/\nCAREFULLY AND\/\n' .   I01L0W THEn\/;\nTRY      A     CLASSIFIED     ADVT.\n\/\nBest of all Fly Killers 1-jc\nper Packet at all Dru^KistH,\n(jJrocers and General Stores\nHut In winter lh** prospector usually I*\nhOtod up ns >nnK M \u2022 Sbbtti\nMm-k Twain, in \",\\ Tramp Abroad,*\nnarratai how ba proaad tha wttrthleaa*\nneaa of a **r)n.ripr n\u00bb n maatia of rnpirt\ntransport. Balafl awi n thai ftaolata\nnctimiiy ilo movi*. h<* \"reeolved to take\npaasafa for Eermatl on the \u25a0jrreat Gor-\nner  (-hu'icr.\"    Thereupon,  he  say a,  \"I\ntook   Up  M  priful   :t   pOBltlOD  as   1  eouhl\nvijjoii the mliliilt> of the glacier\u2014beoausa\nl!ai'ih'Ui*r   sinil   the   middle   part   travels\ntha fastoat   As a meaaure or economy^\nhowever, I put sfune of thl heavier Iuik-\n(0(1 on lhe shorewnnl parts, to ko na\nBlow   freight.*'     After   watcliine;   to  IM\ntha aflooary go by and camping with\nIiIh expedition for a night on the lee,\nhe lotrtlOd Unit the Corner moves a\nlittle less than nu Inch ;i iluy, or say, M\nfeet | year, 'lhe distance to Zermatl\nIn-ing three miles, a little over COO\n>i sto, would have been CMUlrad for the\n.inurney. Mark Tw:iin OOOOlodOl thnt\n\"lhe passf-n-ter-part of (his Rlncler\u2014ihe\ncentral part- the lightning express\npart, so to apeak\u2014wns not line in Met*\nmatt till the summer of L*rtS7, nod that\ntho bagfiage, OOBllnfl a lor.if the slow\nedge, would not inrive until some gen-\n< rations later.\"\nFrom a mining viewpoint, thf* most\nust ful labor that the glaei.-rs have ac-\ncompllakad has boon ttie deep scoriti'*-\nOf the earth's snrfae. , with a resultiiiK\nclran exposure of or-r uodlaa, lllustra-\ntlOM of this Operation are common In\nmany Naoea especially in Alaska nml\nal tha higlu-r altltUdU in Hie western\nmounlaiil ranges of Canada nnd the\nDoited States. To the eastward, where\nlha topography and the ghu-lal conditions are different, comparnhle If not\nunite similar action look place, hut the\ntllual rations nre less numerous there\nbeoaoaO drift now covers a great pro-\npOTtlOa  of tho  land  urea.\nUncovered  Isake  Iron.\nIlcgnriliii-'   n   pari   Of   tlMU   territory,\nCapt.   ll. C.  Doiloy, \u00bb   mining i-ngl r.\nof Inilath, who for tha past ?fl y.ars\nlias heen exploring am) operating Iron\nmines In the lake region, writes fne Informally on,  this r-uhject  hn  follows;\n\"As >o-i probably know. Ih- remnants of what must have heen several\ngood Iron ranges are left m Canada,\nhaving In. n so deeply eroded hy glaeial\naction that only a few pockets raiMln.\nalthough the Indications nre quite remarkable, rial the trail of ore leading\nup to tho deposits sometimes covers\nseveral niih-s, thrown thickly wilh\ntinuhi. is of Iron ore. The iron ninge.-\nof Minnesota nml Michigan have also\nhi en greatly eroded, hut In less tSoffM.\nThe pyrrhotlte deposits; carrying cop-\nper nnd nickel. In Sudbury, have be. n\nexposed hy glacial Ion. nnd probably ore\nbodies   quite  M   large  iih   those  of   the\nOreUrhton   mine   ha-e   baan   entirely\ntmOgt away In the process which e\\-\npooad the praoonl hills of sulphhle In\nthe  inorite.\nHere   In   tho   western   moiinlslns \"nr'e\nMunerom anamplea of ore dopodui that\nwere formed nr. Msn.iijeratfi or great\ndepilH. and that have nine-* been laid\nbar. throunh the agencies of erosion,\nllu- lai.-sl of which was glarlailon. IVr-\nhaiM  erosion   had   been going on   for n\nvary  lonf  Una,  om a  Uirontb  several\nof the great geologic periods, and thousands of f, ,i \u00ab,r rook bad thus heen re-\nmoved before the ieo began Its shift\nwiih pick and scraper. Without comparing Ihe r<*hifive degrees of strength\nof the several ngiiicles that eau.-e the\nbreaking down of rocks, stich as frost,\nmeieorlc waters, and stream erosion, it\nwas Ihe *-lai 1- r lhal performed lh** taat\ngreat singe ntid put on the final polish\nhi   the  region  described*\nXce Csrvlug- Hai B*tn Xeceut.\nHtrlklng leatur-s of Ice cnr-lug are\nIts mn-iotliness. sharpness and speed. So\nswifilv dl-i the cutting proceed that It\nii*l>: ahead of weathering proo SSOS,\nind ptffOMiad its work in ore and\ncountry rock little chnnged by. surficlal\nagrncles. Since the retr\u00abat of the Ice\nso little time has elapsed that no great\nn mount   of   a Herat ion   hns   taken   place.\nand in oonaoquanoa mt (lad sulphides\nand other ore minerals that originated\nnt depths of hundreds or even thousands of fast, appearing today at the\nimmediate surface, and yet not showing\nthr* effects that usually accompany\nsuch a position In many other regions,\n9_t exHtnple, the ore bodies of Ibe\nKenuecott mine in the Copper Uiver region of Alaska occur In a ridge carved\nbv giaclcrs willed still exist, although\nshrunken hi size; In fact, the mine\nbuildings at ihe Jumbo flnnd on dead\nglacial Ice. Solid masse* of chnleoclte,\nforming the highest grnde copper ore\nbodies of Has ih.it have ever heen\nknown, outcrop nt the nctu.il surface.\n\"xid.nb.n has ntlncked only the loosened material of the lode, The mines\n, or Hrltish Columbia offer many in-\n, sinriccs of ores formed at depth, but\nI now rppenrlng unweathered nt the surface, their relative change nf paatttaa\nhaving hem hrought about through the\nagencies of erosion. Including a flna\nsweep   hy   ||ie   ice,\nXootenay'B U-Shaped Talleye.\nit is hardly oeceenary ta point out n\nnvmhers of this convention the numerous aaaaa 0( prominent ore bodies\nposed In places where the results\nlea ncllon nre evident. One has only\nto glance nl the symmetrical. I'-shape.]\nValleys of this reclon to recognize the\ntrail of Ihe Ice. nnd the local members\nmay be depended ii|Kin the describe or\nshow  us their  famous  mines.\nThe characteristic of Ice carving thnt\nis of s\/roataat value to the miner Is thi\ncleanness with which the cuttings have\nbeen removed. Except ' for debris\ncaught In pockets In Ihe rock and In\nhollows protected by projecting rlhs\nand bOOaaa. the bedrock has been swepl\ncbnn. The cuttings hnve been carried\neither to the n**nrby valleys, or through\nthem nnd on to the distant lowlands,\nwhere they have accumulated ns glacial drift or nerhaps In mixed form as\nalluvium, Since the drift masks the\nrocks beneath It, what has heen the\nmountain's gain In the way of exposing\nIts mineral wealth has been the valley's\nloss through a corresponding concealment of Its valBe.\nLast week while standing on a rock-\nrih Jutting up through the snow thnt\nstill covers the ridges north of Mount\nlinker I was gnrlnj across n valley-\nhead to (he glaciers two miles dl-stnnt,\nperched on the shouders and crown of\nlhe great cone. The Ice, massive as It\nIs. and nhowlng a tremendous depth\nwhere even a pnrt of It nppenra on the\ncliffs, Is but n small 'remnant of the\nsieely river that some thousands of\nyears ngo trnllel down the valley. To\ngo back a little farther in time, when\na great sheet of Ice covered nearly nil\npnrls of the rango (excepting a few\nsharp pinks), makes the comparison of\ntnday still sharper, for then tbe valleyH\nwere filled from wall to wall nnd\nthroughout their length from the eum-\nmit of the range to the lowlands.    As\nA Final Clearance\nOF  DRESSES\u2014Organdie-Gingham  combination;  very\ndainty and itylilb, at  $7.GO\nORGANDIE   1>RKF*SKS\u2014Tastfully tvimmed;   clearing\nat -*!9.00\nBLOUSES\u2014Voile    of     better     quality;     beautifully\ntrimmed,   at $3.35\nBLOUSES\u2014Volto ill plainer models; clearing at ...$1.40\nTkAtt are great bargains.\nSKIRTS\u2014All wool plaids, clearing at $8.00\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nC0R0NETTED TRADER\nGRANT   HALL\ne-presi.bnt     of     th\"     I\nI or the Ice ha:\nHi lias shrunk,\ned.    When  It  si.\nfeel   deep   In\nalleys\ndiminished and\nhas   Its   power I\nd thousands of[\nits movement .\nmust have e\\.Tied tremendous force, j\nThe harder blocks of ston.: Imbedded hi\nlhe bottom Of UM Ice, backed by the i\ngrei'.t Weight jibove them, must have\ngouged Into the bedrock as sharply as;\nthe  steel  tool  in  ;i  hiihe  chisels a cast-\nctor whi\nwall tot\nand p\nha;;   known   th\u00bb>\nI\nA   pros pi\noumains   wall   for   many   years   stood I\nto  \u25a0   bad   outcropping on  the  far  wall   of  lhe  valley (\nIMI f\" t or mon lower tin oonr position, and again al points farlh-r up tb* j\nslope and Just bl low the melting ends |\nof the glaciers. On Ihe mar wall below \\\nus he has found a similar showing, tin :\nIhe other \u00bbMs of tba ridge ou which j\nwe stand are other showings of llkt\nnature. The ore is zinc blende, of a j\nreddish brown hue; it occurs directly at \u25a0\nlhe   mm face,   and   When   touched   with   g\npick, or even scratched by tbe nail in \u25a0\ngeek,   It   shows   tba   usual   luster  of  the\nfresh mineral   On   Aa    ste.*p slopes\nmosses and lichens alone have covered\ntbe had, white In the hangirg msadoWl\na tOW  feet of d.trlm-s and peaty murk\nconceal h. hut in all aaaaa when solid\nrock Is exposed some eulphMe particles\nglint brightly. all hough others In\npatches nre oxidized.\nNumerous other deposits in the same\nregion present slmllae eanoitloan LmAo\nattending through vertical ranges of\nmany hundreds of feet show Hltle vu-\nrialion In ihe gen. ral mode of their oro\noccurrence. The ore shoots may he\nwidely scattered through Ihe b-nds, hut\ntheir  general  appearance  is tba same,\ntlt-hOUgh detailed study brings out differences.     Again,   separate   leads   found\nat eleratlons varying widely- bat 'nil lying   within  a'glaclal   valley,   show   mil-\nform oharaetartattoa.\nTHE   COUNTES3   OF   CLONMELL\nWho  Is  mnklnu money  with  a  laundry  In  London.\nThe  facts  In these situations  se.*m. to ,\nbe   char  and   to   fit   togi Ilor   logically. |\nThe   sarth   has   been   dissected   and   nn ;\non*  shoot   laid  bare.  Just as <o\\c might '\ncut   awav   half of  an  apple  and   expose ;\nits seeds to \\i.w.    Whether lhe cutting!\nlefi    the   greater   parr   of   a   particular\nseed in lhe apple or removed most of it\nwould  he  purely  a   matter of accident.\nThO  proportion    Of    nn    ore  shoot  tba'\nmay   yet   he   remaining   when   found   in '\nthe   wall  of  a  riet-ply  cut   glacial   v.tII-.-\nIs equally a  matter nf chance,  yet the\nprevalent   Idea   Is   tliat   at   earh  outcrop\nIt   will   be   necessary   to  obtain   \"deplh\" '\nbefore  tba   true  eba racier   of   lhe   body\ncan    be    determined.       My    pros [lector ;\nfriends explains to his backer, n prosperous   physician,   lhat    these   showings\nan*  \"merely  the surface,\"  leavlm: much |\nto the imagination,    li   is a pity not m\nieco|-niz\"   the   I rue     yitual ion     und   be\nthankful   lhat   tbS  glaciers have OfTVOd\nlhe   gtrgM   so   deeply   and    left    the   Ore\nso clearly snpoaod.     May   It   prove thnt\nthe   Ice  us.d  that   rare  Judgment  so en- ,\nsentlal   to  a  prospector  and   ipilt   work\nwhen  the ore  shot was widening!\nIt    will    be    notlcd    Ihit    the   useful ;\nwork nseribed to glaciers Is tliat which I\nwas   done   some   time   ngo   rather   than\nfinite   recently.     Cinder*   |M   the   north\nto-day are probably as vast nnd ns active as  they  were here   In  glacial   lime,\nbut   in     gay     ease     unles*   lhe   Ice   has i\nshrunk   hack   and   ggpoood   the   carve.) '\nnrens   the   results   of   its   work   remain '\nunknown   to  man.\nUnreliable Trlende.\nIf   nny   case   has   been   made   out   ns!\nlending to show thai   the glacier hy its,\npast   Operations   has   been   the   prospector's   fiind,   It   must   nt   Ibe   tOtOt   lime;\nhe   admitted   that   the \u25a0 surviving   members of tiie order- If such cold blooded, '\nsluggish  monsters  hare  enough   frater- j\nnal ties lo form en order \u2014have nuiner- !\nous nets to their discredit as well. Some !\nyears ago the WOOtOTn edgo of  tho ftus- i\nsell   glacier   on   the   nonherly   shoulder\nof Mount  llainhr rod-* up over a gran-\n|t0 knob  where a  windless stood  oyer :i\nshaft sunk    on   a   oopper-molybdealta\nlead, and moved the sills, posts and all\nto one side    In    a    gentle way thnt r.o :\nsnowslide could have accomplished.    If\nthe ice has to support an aerial tram- |\nway.   Ita   restless  habit   Is  a   source  of ;\ntrouble to the operators, who fi-eqn. nl-\nly   have   to   straighten   up   loose-legged\nlowers   and   adjust   the   tension   ou   ihe\nropes.     Hallway   tracks   that   have  been |\nlaid   on   Ice   assumed   to  be   dead   have\nCreqoently    rearranged    their    OlOOpOFO\nwithout orders.    As tailings dams, glaciers   are   not    trustworlhy.     Tiny    gra\nliable ot any time to OWgUgV the whole\nheap,  cyanide  included.\nA miner on the Sui.illlo river com-1\nplains lhat the high grade ore ho piles\neach summer at lho mouth of his drift |\nhas been badly scattered In the Course\nof its transport down the valley by the\nIce route. A prospector near Doubtful\nlake used to drive through glacial ice\nfor some distance before reaching his\nvein in the solid rock, Hy the next\nseason his adit through the Ice would\nhave moved down the valley a little\ndistance and he would be obliged to\ndrive another one. Being attentive to\nhis assessment work he soon had several of these cool tunnels linerT up in a\nnow   nnd    would   doubtless   nnve   heen |\nglad lo dispose of them even at a loss.\nHe  might   even have promised  shipment |\nin   [he   bargain,   to   lower  valley   points,\nwith   date   of  delivery   not   specified.\nGunmen Hold Up\nProprietor oi\nSaskatoon Cafe I\nSASKATOON, Aug. 6.\u2014Police are I\nstill looking for the armed bandit a ]\nwho held up J. Gordon, proprietor of J\nthe Tuxedo cafe here on Kri.idy night I\nnnd escaped with Ji!10 cash. The holdup was staged shortly after midnight nt tho garage of the victim. \u25a0\nwho had Just left his car when he j\nwaa confronted with a gun and I\nordered to put up his hands. He put 1\nthem tip. his pockets were searched and I\nhis roll taken. The gunmen escaped I\nbut a rough description has been 1\ngiven   to   the   police. \"\nAccomplished Masician\nFRANK 8. WEL8MAN\nIhslinguisheil i 'anadlan musician,!\nwho has Just been gppotlttod director\nof tho Canadian Academy of Music,\nis an at i omphshed violinist and pianist, lie spent Bevenil years studying in Kuropo nnd has given piano\nrecitals In nvst of Hie Important cities  of Canada, *\u2014-\n- - Fair - -\nPrize Lists\niiii\nCWell printed with\nclear type and attractive colored\ncover.\n\u20ac1\nflPrompt service and\nat reasonable prices\nWrile (or information to\nThe Daily News\nbaker street       Quality'Printers nelson, b. c.\n 7?5\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 7, 1922.\nftgt TKreiT\nHAS NEVER FELT\nthe mm\nSince Taking \"Fruit-a-tives\"\nThe Famous Fruit Medicine\nP.O. Hoi 123, Tabhsbobo, N.S.\n\"I suffered with Rheumatism for\nfive yeara, baring; it so badly at times\nI  was  unable  to get  up.\nI tried medicines I saw advertised,\nand waa treated by doctors but the\nRheumatism always came back.\nIn 1916,1 saw in an advertisement\nthat \"Fruit-a-tives\" would stop Rhcuma-\n-ism and took a box, and got relief;\nthen took \"Fruit-a-tives\" right along\nfor about six months and I have\nnever felt my Rheumatism since\".\nJOHN E. GUILDERSON.\nfiOc a box, 6 for $2.50, trial she 25o.\nAt dealers or sent postpaid by\nFruit-a-tives Limited. Ottawa.\nFLOWER SHOW\nLISTS READY THROUGH LOCAL\nSTANDING TRAIN\nConcert Scheduled (or Even-\nin; of Exhibition by Local\nArtists\nArrangements for what Is considered\nto be the best and biggest flower show\nover held In the city are rapidly near-\nIns completion for the Nelson * District Horticultural Society flower show,\nto.be hebl in the armory, on Victoria\nstreet, August  12.\nThe prise Huts, covering practically\nevery flower and plant grown In this\ndistrict, are out, and may be had at UM\nCanada I>rug and Hook company. Ituth-\n\u25a0vrford Drug company, or any member\nof the society. In the long category . f\nexhibits listed besides flowers, frultn\nund vegetables form a large section of\nthe lists.\nIn the evening of tbe show a concert\nwill be given by local artists that, lt Is\nbelieved, will be one of the best local\nproductions ever witnessed In the city,\nsupplying humor, satire and pathos In\ngreat variety.\nOrangemen Visit\nSloean City Lodge\nA degree team of the local Chapter\nof the Orange lodge made a visit to\nSloean City on Saturday evening,\nwhere the Royal Arch degree wus conferred on several Sloean City candidates.\nThc party, from the local lodge,\nleft the city at 6:30 o'clock on\nSaturday evening. maKIng the trip to\nthe mining town at the head of Sloean lake, ln the uulo operated by\nCharles Simpson. Tho trip out was\nuneventful, the party arrived ut Sloean City at 10:30 o'clock. The return\ntrip had a little more excitement,\nus when approaching Tughutn, a huge\ntree which measured |MN 18 Inches\nthrough was found stretched across\nthe road. The occupants of the car\ncrawled out, and bodily lifted the\ntree from the road, shoving It over\nthe bank end ways. The degree team\nreached the city on return at 7:30 on\nSunday  morning.\nA rousing good time was accorded\ntho local lodge representatives, who\nstated that the Sloean Orangemen\nprovided elaborate refreshments. \"A\nvery pros|n-rous lodge In Sloean.\nwhich Is well versed In degree work,\"\nwas tho statement made by one of\nthe    Nelsonites   yesterday.\nFollowing is a list of those who\nmade the trip to Sloean City.\nJ. J. Boyd, 0- Denny. ft. S.\nBlanchurd. R. P. Cooke. T. Anderson, T. Roynon. II Coottdge, C. H.\nChoice, W. Craggy, \\V. Calbook, William Cutler, T. A. Wright, W. A.\nJones. W. C. Motley, S. J. Macdon-\nald\nLegal Notices\nlaud Mora-rmY acr.\nBsctloa 182.\nIN THE MATTEIt OF APPLICATION No. MHO,\nnnd\nIN THE MATTEK of Lot 413. Gr. 1.\nR D Y I)., known aa Morning Star\nMinaral Claim, and Lot 571 Or. I. H_ I>.\nY D. known aa Blat-k Piarnond M.ln-\n.ral Claim, Similkarneen Division, Yalo\nDistrict.\nTAKE NOTICE Hint the above application haa been made to camel asree-\ntnent for \u00ab\u00able dated :\u00abth November,\n1902 from Stephen Mawrott and Pan\nMcEachern to Ernest L, Hlnipaon Jef-\nfsrson Hokbii and Turner A. Heal], Slid\nwhich agreement for sals was reala-\ntered In C. B.. Vol. 3. foU III, Ha,\n28IOB. on tba 3rd January, 1903, and\nthat In support of such application\nthere haa been lodscd evidence of\nbreach of covenants and of reentry snd\nrecovery of possession.      .\u201e\u201e,,_,. ..   .\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that\ncancellation will be effected la pursu-\nnnce of thc above application after the\nlapse of 30 day. from the service apsn\nyou of this nolle* (which may tie effected ns hereunder directed), uulcaa\nyou shall take and prosecute the proper\nproceedings to prevent such proposed\naction on my part.\nDATBP nt the Land Registry Office,\nKamloops, B. C\u201e thla Uth day of July,\n~  K W'' B ft STOKE.,.\nTo \"Registrar of TlUee.\nErnest L. Simpson., Kaq,\nJefTeraon  Hogan,   Esq.,\nTurner A.  Ileal!, Esq.,\nI direct service of above notice by\npublication, two a week, for five consecutive weeks, In a newspaper circulating nearest the lands. \t\nB. H- RTOKrCfl.\nTIMBLa  SALE   X4193.\nSealed tenders will bo received by\ntbe Minister of Lands at Victoria nut\nlater th\u00bbn noon ou the 24th day of August lt*2R, for the purchase of Licence\nX4192, to cut 120,000 leet of pine, and\n80,000 lineal feet of pc--*e, on an aren\non the West side of Hlocen Lake, about\n6 miles North of llocafl City, Kootenay\nLnnd District.\nThree (3) years will be allowed for\nremoval   of   timber.\nI'urther particulars of tbe Chief For-\n*lter, Victoria, B. C, or District For\n-\u00abler   Nelson, R C (\/7MI\nDARKIES VISIT PARIS\nNative   black   chiefs   of   Wanes   41 rican  colonies   visit   I'aris.\nEXPRESS PLOWS\nThirty-eight Killed, Many Injured; Engineer Neglects .\nBlock Signal\nHURLS COACHES DOWN\nEMBANKMENT OF CREEK\nwhile I few wen' reported either\nkilled or missing. Their coach was\nscattered and dumped partly Into\nthe creek, but most of the boys escaped.\nScalding statin from llie engine of\ntin* express, which was dlUhed, es-\ncaped into the wonden coaches It\nhad splintered and cooked victims\nIn the wrecked coaches. Axes and\npicks from emergency kits carried\nin UU steel pars were put. to heroic\nuse by paxsengers who were not too\ngreatly injured or shocked to aid\nln  rescue  work.\nBOWSER GOES\nTO CRANBROOK\nWill Support Conservative\nNominee; Other Members\nand Ministers Visit\nw.\nStriking Union Shopmen Man\nWrecking   and   Relief\nTrain; Ghastly Scenes\nSULPHUR SPRINGS. Mo-.\nAug. 6\u2014Failure of an engineer\nto heed a block signal cauaed\nthe rear-end collision on the Mia*\nsouri Pacific here tait night in\nwhich 38 peraona were killed and\nabout 137 injured, 25 seriously,\naccording to John Cannon, aa*\naistant general manager of the\nroad. The identified dead are\nfrom towns in Missouri and Illinois.\nTrain No. 4. a fast passenger vestl-\nbuled steel train, running at full\nspeed, crashed Into No. 32 a local\ncomjMised of five wooden day coaches,\na baggage and an express care as\nthe engine was taking on water,\nwith the coaches stretching back on\na trestle over (liaise creek.\nTbe impact hurled two of the local\ncoaches down a 50-foot embankment\nedging tbe Mississippi and telescoped\nfour other coaches, crushing a number of passengers to death ln their\nseats. Both trains were behind time,\ntbe f\u00abnt passenger, running from Fort\nWorth, Texas, to St. Louis, Mo.\ncarrying 180 passengers nnd the local\n100   persons.\nFailed to Heed Warning,\nAccording to Mr. Cannon, Matt\nfllenn of 8t. I-cmls, engineer of the\nfast train, failed to heed a block\nsignal warning him the track was\nnot clear ahead. (Henri, 67 years\nold, and nn engineer for 35 years\nwithout n black mark ugalnst his\nrecord. SH killed when ho Jumped\nfrom his cab just before the crash.\nEdward TlnsTey, Hlso oi Ht. Louis*,\nfireman of No. 4, remained at his\npost and was injured seriously. Engineer (llemi, shortly before arriving\nlu Sulphur Springs, received orders\n\"on the run\" to pull Into a aiding\nat Cliff Cave, 10 miles north of\nhere, to allow \"Sunshine Special No.\n1.\" en route from St. Lmtfl to Texas\npoints to pass aud Mr. Cannon explained the engineer failed to heed\nthe signal because he was apparently\nreading these orders when he passed\nthe block. The orders were found\nnear his   body.\nGhouls   Rob   Dead\nUliouH appeared on the scene shortly   after   the   crash   und   robbed   dead\nand    dying.      Only     ono      was      arrested.\nThe dcud and Injured were spread\nover an area of several city blocks,\nand chicken crates, automobile cushions, baggage, and the railroad tracks\nconstituted their couches. Tho little\nvillage of 150 Inhabitants was billable to care for the injured and\nthey, along with lho dead, Mere taken\nto St. Louis and Desota. I>r, W. W.\nHull was the only physician administering to the injured for several\nhours   until   relict  trains  arrived.\n\"Had I had some assist a ne4> we\nmight bars saved some of the dying,\" T>r. Hull said. \"At one time\nI Mas trying to treat 25 persons\nsimultaneously.\"\nOne of tho saddest scenes reported\nwas that of th\u00ab Deganla family , of\nHt. Louis. Four of the family of six\nwere killed ]U*d the father is dying\nIn a St. Louis hospital. Three of th\nI'pguiiiu children. Itaiph, 6; Mel vine,\n6, and Robert, 14 months, lay dead\nto the right of their lather before\nhe could be removed, and Mrs. De\ngunla lay dead to his left.\nReaemblee Battlefield.\nSI liking union -\u25a0li-'Om. n manned i\nwrecking ami relief train when the;\nlearned of the accident and rushed\nto the scene, which was said to ro\nsernlrte n battlefield. Steel roaches\nof tho express, splintered wooden\nroaches of the local as It plowed\nIts way through from the rear,\ndumping passengers and debris over\na quarter of a mile area and tearing up the roadbed, twisting rails\nInto a tangled mnss llko a knotted\nbunch   of   huge   ropes.\nCoaches rolled down an embankment Into n creek, which flood*! the\ncouches ami. according to retKirts,\ndrowned passengers who wore pinned\nbet-tenth    broken   seata.\nBoy scouts en route here from a\nsummer camp, who wero pMfBBfSn\n\u25a0\"H   1-Ilc    lo-nl,   :r>li d   lu   rssciip   work.\nMr. Deschamps Still\nIs Seriously 111 at\nCranbrook Hospital'\nIt   Is   reported   that   the   Ci.ndltio.l   ot\nJ. s. Deechaenpe, the veil known Ress*\nbind lumberman, who wns opi rut id\nupon for appendicitis at St. Ivigene\nhospital, Cranbrook, l*ist Week, \"ho*.1\nIlllle improvement.\nMr, iHsehninps, who wns ial tn III on\nthe train returning bom.', was rut-dud\nto the hospital. Yesterday he sSSSMBSSd\na wish to see his children, and they are\nnow en route from Hossland to Mi tlielr\nfather.\nJ. Bowser, M. I'. 1\\ leader ot\nthe opposition, accompanied by J,\nW. Jones, M. P. P. for South Okanagan. and \\Y. K. Ksling. It P. I*.\nBe Hossland. passed through the\ncity last night on their way to Cran-\nk, to support the Conservative\ncandidate. In the Cranbrook byelection\nwhich   takes   pla^e   on   August   IT..\n(tlhers who tw nt through last\nnight to the Cranbrook field of action w<re Premier Oliver, along with\nEton. l'r. Metisnil and Him.\nItarriiw. minister of SgrtcnltUT\noralde John Hart, minister\nnance, passed through Nelson\nut day   night.\nft    1 >.\nc.   Hon\nof    lion  Sat-\nBIRTH RATE GIVES\nBOYS BIG MAJORITY\nFor the past month the mi ruber of\nbirths registered for Nelson and ills*\ntrlct number 1-8, of which lhe boys bold\na majority of six, there being 11 boys\nto fi\\e girls.\nBight inarrhiffrs are recorded and\nfour deaths for the month.\nNakusp and Bayonne\nMining Properties\nReceiving Attention\nWILL CLEAR TRAIL\nL. H. Rowlings of Nakusp returned on Friday last, and will at\nonce start work on thc completion\n; of the Monarch Big Ledge syndicate, a huqe zinc property actuated directly opposite the Halcyon\nhot   springs   on   thc   Arrow   lakes.\nPlane Propellor\nKills Editor of\nthe Bruno Leader\n.\t\nSASKATOON,     Aug.     6.~-No   Inquest\nwill be held on the death of Joseph  A.\nTepe, editor and proprietor of the Bruno\nLeader, who was killed OS Friday night;\nSt Bruno, Sa.sk., by the propellor of an\nairplane.     Mr.   Tepe   was   watching   tho\ntesting of   the   englnii   of   the   machine, '\nwhich   heloiiRi'd   to   H.   1'loai'wiitcr,   Sas-!\nfeStoOn, when he walked too cloSS to the ,\ntlying blades and was struok down, his ;\nskull being fractured. He Hv.-d five'\nhours without regaining consciousness.\nJust before the acclih-nl occiirnd the\ndeceased had wurm-d his little daughter\nto keep away from the deadly blades.\nPrairie Premiers\nWill Say Nothing\non Wheat Board\nit is eipectud that the day will be\nObserved as a civic holiday.       I\nTbe local C. T R. officials state\nthat the Sunday school picnic of St.\nSaviour's on August f>, was the largest exciirsinn ever curied OQ4 ol\" Nelson.   Among   the   special   features   of\nthe day was singing by the choir on\nthe steamer, which added much to the\npleasure    of    the    occasion.\nEmploy Convicts on\nOperations\nat Prince Albert\nOrder German Ships to\nAvoid any French Port\nfor tear of Seizure\nLIHHON, Aug. ti.\u2014 Herman ships In\ntin- service to and from liraz.il have\nheen ordered by their coinp.iiil.s to return lo thalr home ports and not to\nlunch anv Fr.nclr port for f>ur of seizure which France may threaten for\n(lermany's fallun- to pay reparations.\nOTTAWA. Auk. ti.\u2014Head slum I\narc to bs ereitdl to the memory of\nall   ex-soldiers    u Im   have   died    since\nSeptember, IMli or who Ms prist to\nSeptember, 1928, according io so\norder  In   council   just,   passed.\nKINGSTON. Out.. Aug. 6.\u2014A convict,\ntrain with JiS prisoners rrom Forts-\nmouth penitentiary oa lioar.; is now on\nIts way to PHnoa Aiuert. Hask., where\nrhe men are to be largely employed In\nbuilding operation* Toe convicts, who\nare either good conduct men or trusties.\ngnrt no trouble on their departure, the\nentraining helng carried out without a\nhitch,  according  to  details   published  In\nSaturday's standard.\nThe train eoaalsts   of   two   colonist\noars wiih heavily barred windows and\nlACfafe ears. The convicts are con-\nflii.-d In the first two care. There Is a\nformidable contingent of officers and\narmed guards In charge of them, while\nat slat Inns along the route Dominion\nand mounted police will meet the train\nto make sure all  Is well.\nI'roni the size of bones found It\nis tlnuit-iit sharks I'O feet in length\nhaze  existed.\nCALGARY,   Aut-\n.      K.i\n\u25a0Iv   this\ne ve\nling   neither   Chai\nle.*\nInn\nllngi   P\"*'\nrnier\n>f   Saskatchewan,\n11\n.1'    II.\nih.rt   O\nreen\nHeld,   premier   ot\"\nAlbert)\nwould\ntry\ni   word   eoneeriihi\nr\nhair\naeetlng\nhere\ntoday over the wh\na\nboar\nqasstk\n\"We  conslihred\ntl\ns paraonnsl n\n'  tl^\nboard,\"  said   Mr.\nil\n.snfls\nll,   \"but\nuntil\nwe agtiln hear fro\n11\nIttHW\nWith regard\no asdwls lions a\nItl\nMr.\nSt. wart\nand\nMr. Ithldell. t um\ntl<\n1   1*1*1\nII- -1   to\nnana\nl statement.\"\nMr.  Dunning  w,\nno im\nre  comi\ncattve  concerning\nth\n\u25a0   nu\nting.\nMr.  Greenfield\nw\nts    px\npeotlng\nwind\n:'rom Ottawa at a\niy\nInjur,\nh.' said\nObi\ntl\niary\nf\nM'OHEE.\nThe   funeral   of   Mrs.   Fkgrltla   .Mini Fulrvlew waa hclil from .St. lasll\nchurch on  Saturday at 1 o'cluck.\nN. Larmonth officiated.\nTwenty Years Ago\nMining convention moving pictures have\narrived and will be shown at Starland\nWednesday and Thursday, together with our\n\"East Lynne\" program.\nBest and clearest pictures ever tahen in\nNelson.\nI\n(Tim Daily News. Allfc-ust 7. llio:).\nKred Sturkey haVraa tomorrow ava-\niiinR for Winnipeg to attend lhe session uf the Kl'il'l'l ludi*,.' oi lhe Sona\nof England, which is to in- held inj\nthat   city.\n*   *    '\nA petition was cii'culnte.l y.slerdnyj\namong the merchants of tho city I\nasking that they close their places'\nof business from II p. ni. on l-'rUliy 1\nnight, till Monday morning. This wns\nagreed to  by  all  that  were seen,  and\nProminent Albertan\nStates Crop Situation;\nd     b,\nThat the whole of Alberta will aver\nage a good big half crop this year wai\na Mateineiit made t n Saturday by Itol\nert C. Thoninl. president Mini managing\ndirector of tho Alberta Ice cc-Tipmiy\nCalgary, who was In tht city SVSf\nweek-end on his way back to Cal.,'.iry\naflcr a short round Irip through Mat*\ncrn Iirltis.1 Columbia.\nAn Interesting review of the crop nit-\nnation In the neighbor life province was\ngiven by Mr Thomas, who Is well post-\ned in this connection and whn has\nfarmed for a considerable period SVSf\n10 years In the early days, He static\nlhat from Calvary to the I'lnil'.er Oasek\ndistrict Crops will be exci-p'ionally\ngood. Calgary tu Carslalrs, on account\nof light rainfall, will only prodiuv \u25a0\nhalf crop on farmed land, while tggmbg\nplowing and crops drilled in on stubble\nwill  be  a failure.\nBetween Pidsbury and Red Peer,\nnorth of Kdmont >u. ho States, it Is \u00bbc-\nported thut shortage of moisture in\ndistricts that previously proilucd good\ncrops will not come up to the standard.\nTeaco ltlver districts, are reported dry\nand crops will not come up to average,\nLelhbridge Is hummlnn. all the hotels\nare full at all times, due to the contingent oil boonl Just across thc border, in\nthe  Sweet Grass djstrlct, be said.\nMr. Thumas first' came to Calgary .t:r\nyenrs ago, when It was a small construction town of less than Ti00 people,\naud was eiiKiigxd In ranching In th.>\nearly 'COs before golnx Into the !e,\nbusiness. He Is now president of what\nis considered the fiiiist Ice plant In Ike\nDominion, .turning out three tons of leper minute, and with a capacity of\n411.000 tons.\nVISITING  BAYONNE\nJohn     11.    White,    president\nSllvi rsutlth    mines,    nccompan\nRoy   Uililtncrs.   secretary   of   the   salili\nroperty, both of Spokane, left or\nBatnfday   morning   on   the   Great   Nor-\nhern fur Salmo IfOm where the>\nwill go (o look over mining proportte*.\nin the Hayonio' district, before returning   to   Spokane.\nCuticura Talcum\n\u2022 F\u00bbtci*-;!**n-ly Fragi\nAlways Healthful\ntwo r\u00ab\u00bb-*\u00ab\nl\u00bbh   anlif \u2022\u00bbT\u00ab*T\"'h|\nS Fires Numerous\nAround Rossland\nForest file.-, according \"to latest reports from Hossland, are now (pnte\nTiurot'tous in that locality, (lu Friday\nlast two new MagSS were reported; one\nat Annable, which Is situated about five\nmiles from Rssalaad. and a particularly\nlarge one on Whet summit, Jusl out of\nthe mining town. A large amount of\nsmoke has been earning from the Sheep\ner.ek blaze, which hag lately broken\nout again This fire was practically\nout and was only smoulibiing In a few\nplaces last WSet Fighters are being\nrecruited In and around Kossland In\norder  to quell  ftS blaae.\nGAS OVERCOMES TWO\nMEN BORING WELL\nKILl.AltNKY Man., Aug. 6.\u2014Hob-\nert Deacon and Dotmlil floss lost\ntheir lives here Saturd.iy when overcome by gas In boring a well on a\nfarm near here. Deacon was overcome when eight feet down and fell\n60 feet to the bottom. Koss met a\nsimilar fate when attempting to rescue   Deacon.\nRegina and Moose\nJaw Fall Before\nO'Days Stalwarts\nWINNirF.G. Aug. 6.-Hank O'Dny\n;ind his combination Kcj-ina, and Moose\n.law baJ-ebullers got o\u00abay to u brilliant start tu their five-game BSTlefl\nwilh the Winnipeg amateurs, when\nthey cupped both ends of the double\nbill here Knlurdi>. In the afternoon\nthe visitors defeated the Trunsconas\n6 to 4 In ;>, snappy contest which was\nfeatured by t|ie sensational fielding\nuf  the   Moose  Jaw   tribe.\nIii lhe evening O'Days crowd te*\nfeiiteil Ibe alcanas 9 to \\\\ by vlrtuo of\npounding the ball for nine runs tn\nthe first two rounds. The visitor*\nwent through the two games without\nthe semblance of an error nnd played\nmappf hall all Um way. They are\nbilled to Dby three game here Mon\nday, civic ahollday.\n\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\nExcursion Fares\nTo Vancouver and Return\nVancouver Exhibition\nFARE AND ONE-THIRD RETURN\nTickets on sale, August 17th to August 25th. Hcturn\nlimit, AonS 29th. Through train Nelson-Vancouver via\nK. V. Railway. Tickets and sleeper berth reservations\nfrom any agent, or write\nJ. S. CARTER,\nDi.trlct  Pssssng.r An.nt.  N.l.on,\nB. C.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nSTORAGE,      CARTAGE      AND\nDISTRIBUTION\nWe make e specialty\nof moving Furniture,\nP iinoi      and       Safes.\nP.  O.  Bo*  116. Telephone  33\nCAMPERS\nThe woods are yours\nto enjoy, but only if\nyou keep them green\nPUT YOUR\nFIRES OUT\n-**-\u2014\n\"resaMSm\n' \u25a0\u00bb wf\nRADIO PHONES\nArc Revolutionizing Life in\nthe Country and the City\nCan't you just picture a group of sportsmen arouml\nthe camp fire at night listening in on a concert anil\nnews bulletins many miles away.\nThen picture the thousands of folks right in their\nown homes all over the country getting the same\namusement.    Truly marvelous!\nA Radio Receiving Set will enable you to lie one of\nthese\u2014wherever you may be. They're compact and\neasily installed at reasonable cost.\nCanadian Auto and Electrical Supply Co.\nOperating Daily News Broidcasting Station C. J. C. B.\nNELSON, B. C.\na-\n Page Foil?\nTfTE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST t, Vtt,\n \u25a0-     \u25a0    \u2014 I \u25a0      **t***M-*J-\u00bb-M- \u25a0\u25a0H>l\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished avery morning except Sun\nday by The News I'uhlishlng Company,\nlimited.   Nelson, H   C,  Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand check a and money orders made\nparable to The Newa l'ubllshlng Company, limited, and In no ens* to lndl\nvidua!   members   of   the   staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and ABC\nstatements of circulation mailed on request or may be seen at the office of\nany advertising agency recognliad by\nthe Canadian   Press Association.\nSubscription rates: By mail (country) 60 cents per month; >fi per year.\nOutside Canada, a month, 15c; a year.\n17.60. Delivered, ?5c per month; M for\neta months; |7.&0 per year, payable In\nadvance. _____\nMember   Audit   Bureau   of   Olrculatloa\nRESULT-OF RAILWAY STRIKE\n*$\u00a3>>&\nMONDAY,  AUGUST  7.  1922.\nThe Day of Rest\nCable dispatches say the institution of a weekly day of rest\nfor its clerks by an Osaka department store has suggested to\nthe Tokio Chamber of Commerce that the scheme might\nbe followed in that city and the\nmovement may spread throughout Japan. Most of the large\nstores in Japan now remain open\nseven days a week in the year\nround. It is about time that Japan joined the procession of\nprogress in this respect, since\nshe takes so much pride in keeping step with modern civilization in others.\nVisitors to thc Orient, who\nhave read much concerning the\nlethargy and leisureliness of the\nSentinel,    Now    Westminster    N*ws,\nI'rlnee Hlipert Journal. Roasland Miner I\n\u20144. '\nAmalgsmations (Eliminstlng On.)\nOntario\u2014Brantfor-4 Bfcpoaltor and J\nCourier, ltrockvUlo Recorder anilj\nTimes, Niagara Palls Review and|\nRecord, Fetorboro Examiner und Review, Port Arthur News and Chron-\nIclo, St. Thomas Times and Journal,!\nKitchener Itcooril and Telegraph--?.\nSaskatchewan\u2014Moose Jaw Times!\nami News, Reflna province und|\nStandard   (later   Post)\u2014I.\nBritish Columbia\u2014Vancouver Sun|\nand  News-AdvcrtlHcr\u20141.\nHundreds of cars ln need  of  repi\nfrom  Heddle Ill-others' ranch at Willow I'olnt. to the tiumljer of 78 boxes\nTo Prevaot Srourtnf Powder llox From\nNipping Tlinmtli Wet Hands\nA Toledo housewife wishes ms to\npass along this idea. While washing\ndishes or doing olher work the hands\nbecome wet snd the hox ol scouring\npowder slips easily through them. Ton\ncan prevent this by placing lour strips\nof stlhealve tape .round the box, esch\natrip one-quarter ol the way down.\nThis little help mny esve yon many\ns box of powder.\nA  tax   culled   chimney   money   was!\nlevied on  each   henrth  In  a  house  in|\nthe rolfn of Chariea 11.\nDO  VOU   KNOW   HOW  I.1NKN  IM   MA UK?\n\"flense write some uiliiles ulH.ut Is tin* process iu which tlio seeds\nmaking linen, woolen ami cotton fa!.- \"'\"' ,lr>' <-~** '\"'\" i'\"\"*\"*'l from the\n\u201e ,\u201e . end of 'he ll.ix stalk, lu some culin-\nrlcs. Just us you did about silk, not ^ ,hj9 ,\u201e ||om, by lnn(, ,\u201e Uv0\nIons ago,\" writes u reader of this sol. ,\u201e,.\u201e \u201e.|,0 \u201eu \u201et either end of a bench;\nlimn. I am glad Ui do us Ihls letter In the centre of the bench is a conili\nfriend asks, and shall Leg!!,, Inday. wi\"' '\"'',h ,s J\"** '\"\"K* thri\"l,!h\n          -   .   ...   concerning   ,vl,i'1' llu' flax stalks are drawn to re\nIngenious hat\nular.  Tl   .\nson  days,   with  si\nof    the    name   wiis    Miss    Lottie    A\nts are pop-L,olU       teacher at the Hume school,\nthese   ml.l-sea-|\n,r   travel   suits. |\nicuiaiKJ*   Buu\u00abi\u00bb\u00bbitiiiirao\u00bb. ....|\u00bb||h    the   following    facts\neast,   have   been   surprised   at*the making of Umbi\n-       '     \u25a0      '    -i     Linen fibre comes front the  stem of\nthe   pertinacity  and    industry,\nwith which a large part of the|\u00ab*,*\u25a0_*%* \u00a3\u00a3. %\u00a3*?\u00bb \u00ab    \u25a0******\u2022  \u00bb now  -\u00bb*\npopulation Stick to their OCCUpa-   inches high aad  has slcms  branching  Proces\ntions.    The mass of the people j \u25a0\n ,ls and   leaves.   In  more  U|)\nto-dats   ci.iinlries.    however,    rippling\nis  iloiio l.y  machinery.\nIn   this\nllie outside, woody portions of\n1   the stem are decomposed  so that the\nirjapaV'lit^rally-eanrtheiriuny  \"\"^T^S?-^ W^T^^^^Jir\nbread by the sweat of their J\u2122 \u00a3\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb ,\u201e.,\u201e\/ ,\u201e\u201e.\u25a0. \u25a0,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e....-. (1), tt ^* __*%,_?\u00a3\nbrows. Wherever Christian mis- lm.,u,iing Ireland. Belgium, u\u201e\u00ab*ia. t*>. *'\";\"'\" \".'*' ',\",\u201e,, lauVs of\nsionaries have gone they have;France, ituiy. Holland, OsssA s*A \u25a0\u00bb* rah. oeeay^i ^ ^^ ^\nsought to introduce the prind- \u00ab*\u2022 ;'*\"'\"' S1:,l,,|'\"- 5.\" ^um. alchemloals lo remove lhe out-r ltjrw.\npie of one day's rest in seven. fe^ _W_ rtLJE m 5-* (\u00bb. %J^sr^J_\\ t \" St\nOf all countries Japan has been: \u201e\u201e. ,\u201e\u201e.\u201e ci,.ii, umAs from it u;\u2022**\u2022)\u25a0 w*\u00ab~ *\"*,\"\u00a3 tar**.\nthe hardest field for missionar- heavy and coarse \"t^Mmr and \"Bcrutcliliir to-*.\nics, who have met with little \u25a0 \u00bb \",'\"\"\"\"<\u201e,,\":,.r\u201e ',.,\",,' .. Th-. \u00ab.\u25a0,\u00ab .,.\u00bb>\u25a0*. tr. \u25a0*-\u00ab*\u00bb*\u00ab- *>;\"\nencouragement from the gov- ^r_TZ^tZ,TV^ d\u00aba\u00bbed .\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab S**\u00a3cd \u00a3 -g\neminent.    But there are signs,.,,.    ,,,, \u201e,.\u201e\u201e .talks straight \u201e\u201e.i ,,\u201e- f,o,\u201e    he   iibre J-*jJ\u00a3\" ,.\u201e\u201e,,\nof which one has just Wen K3U -1 m_mm ..r\u00ab\u201e;;h.\u201eB \u25a0 - ,-;- ,:\" !,^' ^,1 ^\u201e.i \u2022*,,,w*\nmentioned, that Japan before _^^^^__t,K\u00abE2* \"hurt *-m \u00ab*<* \u00ab*\u00bb '\"' T\\\\r\nlong will adopt the weekly Mt \u00ab\u00a3\u00a3 \"r_ o\u00a3,o\u2122 \u2122 p~- *T\\ fFSmmml p2\u00a3 c25\nday, although years may be re-] ]inf,,_ ,,,\u201e\u201e _ used aa ts_ l\u00ab mutt \u2122*?*\u2122*\u00a3JISt comWn,\nquired before the majority of Uatu-a. Ftaaeed Ir. \u2022_\u00bb\"* \u00ab_.\u00a3 ^\u201emi\u00abtl<.Ott\u00ab\u00bbrS\u00ab-a tonos.\nthe people conform to the new Hon \u00ab* I. a >*\u25a0.* \u00bb,... to. modlel*** n*\u00ab^M , \u201e\u201e,,,,\u201e ,,\u201e. \u201e\u201e.. ,\u201e.,\u25a0,*.\norder of things. TIM Oa\u00ab i';\"\"' reqatwa \"\"\"\u25a0'\u25a0 \"*t mnii at  ht**  h\nThe   French  are  the  classic ,,urill>.   'u  ,rowth.   In   Europe   this and waving.\nexample of a people whn triad |t.al.\u00bb i. given >** worn\u2122 nnd rtrt'.dre-.    Tomorrow-a,,\t\nto abolish the Sabbath Alii trto *\u00bb_<__ _?2z?t\u00a3 .Zm ah m,uirt.. .ndress.? t.. mi\u00ab^ki*\nfound the scheme WOUldnt Sf^1^ \\V\u00a3 ^^^tt ffiSSS\nwork. However orientals may*,,.,^, \u201e\u201e\u201e. 0m\u00abent European ,\u201e ,,\u201e.\u201e. jr.iumn\u00bb ij^ n;^ *\"\u25a0*;\"\u2022\u201e\u201e.\u201e\nbe constituied, occidentals have w,.,k.\u201e psail the p\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbu '\"\"\u25a0 ,\"',. ';;, J^'in \u00ab>- *'\u25a0\u25a0>'<\u25a0 \"\"\"''\u2022;\" '^y*\u00a3\nfound they must have this reg-g=:n,j;ir-:''::-r;-;;*^\nular rest period m order to.do,  \u00bb\"'\u2022\"_\u2122 \u201e,,.  ,\u201e,\u201e  \u201e\u201e\u201eg  up  ... ^\u00a3<~_&iiF?om& rim.\ntheir best work antl keep their Stmtjm r. \u00bbd ;';- \u2122-r\u00ab \u00b0< \u2014>\nhealth and vigor. The tendency:   nattt-f H *\u2022 '\"'st *\u00bb   *\",B city ^ provi,,ce.-T.,. Editor.\t\nin America during the last two\ndecades  has   been   to   increase:\nular.    Iliey   are   \u00ab\u25a0\u2022.'\u2022\u2022     ,.        SS\t\nson  days,   with  sport  or  travel  suitsj\nu';\u201e,w^ SS r.\u00ab\"^d\u00ab Canada Loses Thirty-\nwith the season.         ,  |        n>   . ,   n   >l       rj\nEight Daily Papers\nDuring Eight Years\nuly\n,*.!    L.'tM*\nIjurtrrio    &    Hohoi'tson   tur   tne   dosi   \\h******o  upun  -juuhu wo.a3, __\u201ey>  ,.l^ll-\naad  most npproprlate  name  for their i writing <if this sort  may be  matlo  to\nHuhdivlsliin nn amejler hill. The author  MTV* a particularly ust-lul purpose In\n\"   \" \" the one daily cities.\n\"But with . newspaper leadership\nweakened (ami that ut a stni-i- when\nthe political ismies of the country\nare very much in the melting pot)\nthe Voter nuKst ut times be ut a loss.\nIf, us a result, lp* barns to think for\nhimself and to discard traditional\nshlbliileths, good, rather than evil, U\nlikely   lu  ensue.\"\nThe   Star's- list  uf  suspensions  und\nuniat|-uniations   is as  fellow's:\nSuspcnuion\u00bb   (Entirely   or   as   Dailies)\nMaritime     provinces\u2014L'hurluttetown\nKxatniner\u20141.\nQuebec\u2014Montreal    Mull    find    NeW's,\nTORONTO,   Ont,   Aug.   I.\u2014With   Ital\nisPtif. of Sittirilay, July __, the*Kltcb-|\naaar    (tint.)    Daily    Telegraph,    which\nhas been  publlahad  rimtlnuously ainee   M-mtreal   Witness-1\nMay,     Ittt,     ecasetl     publication.* Its'      \u00ab'nta.lo-Fort WUIiam Ibr.1.1, lbitn\nimme.     nibKripttoa     lists    and    good   \"t,,n  Times, Itmersol] Chronicle, land\nwill    have    heen    taken    over    bv    the\\ *W   Warder.   Ottawa   Kite   Press.   Ot\nXews-Uecnrd,  limited, and  thn  News^I tiiwa    ]*    T('m\"s'    ^etevhot-    Times,\nKecord   will   now   he   the   only   daily   St*  Cnthurines Journal. Toronto News\nPaper In Klt.h.ner.   It   Is not expected! <laU'r     Times),     Woodstock     Kxpress,\nthat the NaWi-Racord will Incorporate! Toronto  Woiid-U.\nthe word Telegraph in its name. Manitoba -Brandon   News,   I'.raml.m\n  I Times,    I'ortnge    la    l'ralrio    Review.\naUwpUua  of tho  Kii.hener Tala-| V\u00bbw\u00bb*PNi Wurta   1\ngraph by  the Kitchener  News-Record       yuskateht-.van - I'dnee  Albert  Times\n.Jkdi the Toronto -st ir to point out     *\u2022\nin Its nlltt.rlal colunma that alncel Alberta-t.algary Ca.m.llnn, B\u00ab|MO.\n1114, 38 Canadian dalli,s have disup-l*\"\" Capital, Letobrldfa Seme, 1MI-\npeared tkrooflb suspension and io] cine Hut Cull, Medicine llut Times-\ntiirough   abaorptlon.   Surviving   dalllesi 5*        ...,,,-\u25a0 ,  i     ,\nat the Dominion no* number nnly llfil     \"Htlah   Columl.ia-hamloopa   Inland\nand   sume   nf   VbOOO   are   ninriiing   nnd\nevening editions of tin*  same  paper\nPurity does it\nTike half a cake or Sunlight,\npare it into hot water ia your\nv*a\u00bbher and atir Into a rich\n\u25a0uds. Put in tha clothei aad\noperate the wa*her. Later,\nrinse them thorouihly, tuJ your\nclothes will be beautifully cleaa\nand mowy white, *\nThe rich cocoanut and palat I\noils hlend ii the itecret of tha 1\nSunlight cleensin-{ power. '\n19sji   Sunlight\u2014its  purity   tarts\nyour clothes.\nTRY      A     CLASSIFIED      ADVT-\n47  uiii'itis' ban! shuw   any   in-ill-   f.uin   siiperiicul  ue-\n      . i ei ;ti   th.-   mod*   tivity   in   putting   their   ova   bouse   In\nifhd pi'ipenals uf thf * mplo.vei.--. and ntdt'r or Duke any oi-ganly.ed attempt\nthe imn hope tn return tu Worit tu- to in-tt tha d. uia.itls which they\ninntrow. Thev will piehahly fltul there have prOUiatd to neeipt'lf a loan is\nIs much less WOril to do than then- forthcoming. They still imint ou dis-\nwould htve been had th'> Rpprawafl MnalWU among tht allies to aid\nthe tmisance ot UM shop stewards, them iu thalr policy of delay and\nwho represent Bulshevlsm, Jtnd pent' evasion; they ittll ratUM to consider\non with tbetr job.\u2014London Morning seriously tb-ir eapaeiiy to piy or to\ntmstf give    rt parations    an    honest    t\nFond    parents    who    stand! u\\v\u00abw island journal,\naghast at their flapper dauffh-1 Rural Educ,tion ,.    fc    _T_7Z  _, T.\n^   ; l _'\u25a0   *\u25a0 *   '--   -I     The    American    farm    pradOOM    the The Pinch of   Hard T,m\u00ab\nwriter in a woman'g\" magazine |SL.^%Ji\u2122Si ySi past ^    ^^ \u00ab\"*? \u2014 -,->\u25a0\nwho tells them the young worn-,sons uf prominence in tha profaaaiona\nan who so astonishes them by.und in place* or gnat raapcnafbUtty\na__i.   .were largely rt\nuc\u00abMto   \u00ab.\u00ab-*   -w^..    ^    !pio>\u00ab*d. tr. out  \u00ab-r t*.i\nholidays  and  to  establish   tht dacMad i*> ballot t\nsummer vacation as a fixed in-   \" ' \"\nstitution,  and   it   is   one   that\nshould make for national pros\nperity and well being.\nAn Evolution, That's All\nFond    parents    who    star\naghast at their flapper daugh-i \"\"'\"' \u25a0 \"\nter have been enlightened by Jj?-*-?^\u00a3*\u00a3?\u00a3:\n.^o-rt'a     in Q Cf Q TI n ft .     __       \u201e....1,.      l,,     vmr.1    IlUst\nere\n\u2022ful   nntei-ials,--a   vivid   hit   of\ntonne, or maybe chintz.;   like the mo\ntailoreil   model   shown   at   the   top   of\nihe iketch; or of colored linen, which\nlike the aecond model  illustrated, may\nhe   tilmmeil   with   cretonne.   Some\nthe   nmiv   expensive   models are   ma\nof silk  crepe, wiih hand-painted floral   bonier\".\nlliind-paintlng, by the way, is about\nthe newest form of trimming this MA-\n\"The   disappear!\nless  than  nine  ye\nthought,\"  Nfl lb'\n*The    increasing\nii i\nof   38   dailies   in\n.iffords  food  for\nSlur.\nexcellence    of    the\nThe Lighter Side\n; There Is an old s:i> i\nI when the d.\\ 11 drlv*\n1 where in tht' world\nhard times following\nI heen   driving   honest   folk   tt\n\u2022*is muat\noct   this   sentence:    \"The   man\nsplitting bead and n nilserahl\nUM    **   \"iUi  a.. \t\nUu.    war   W   tast(,  in hla mtmih  ncxt morning,   but\nu'',vV   >1C  mil,ie  i,\u201e  t\u201euA  raaofotioM.\"\nshort   of   eilnic   0*1 - 0\nmetrupolUan new spa pern, the great tr\nfacilities for Iheir dtstrihutlon.\nthe \u25a0 centralization of population ln\ntho larger cities might bo offered\nas \u25a0 partial explanation of the situation. Hut the large cities :ir\u00ab themselves among tha 'grnrayardaV\n\"Two out of six Toronto dailies have\ngone under.\n\"Hamilton, Ottawa and Winnipeg\nhave   cai h   lost   one.\n\"Duly two KngliHi dailies nre left\nin Montreal anil both controlled by j\nthe   same   proprietor.\n\"In the smaller eilles, It is no\nlonger unusual lo see a single dally\nMWOpapar In possession o( the field.\nAnd where two ure still hit It Is not\nuncommon  to  Und  that  only one  it*\nproiituUe.\n\"In some cities, audi as Woodstock and landsuy, former dallies\nstill issue as weeklies* or seini-weekles\n\u25a0tlln others, however, the one piper has\nnow entire monopoly of Us local\nfield. This involves u curious and ut\ntimes difficult situation. It tends to\n\u25a0llmlintle two-sided discussion of public affairs and to dlscourago local\naetWn    n0rW0pO9mJ    participation    In\nFISHING TACKLE\nWhen Koins; on your vacation, why not go prepared to\ndo some fishing?   We have a new stock of\nRODS, REELS, LINES, CASTS, ETC.\nALSO\nTHERMOS GOODS\nWc have all sizes Bottles, Kits and parts.   See our Automobile Kits.   Prices right.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBsx 1050\nN.l.on, B. C.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet   us   figure   your   bills   of\nBuilding Material.   Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\nher self-assurance and her start-1;;^''\/,^^;-^'';,,'\",,,',. u\u201e. tramu\u00abraa JJ^^^n'orttrV\"\u2022\u00ab\u2022\u00ab* 4 \u25a0js-t-j    Kv,.rvi>0,,v \u201e\u201e,,\u201e\u201e ,\u201e il;,vo \u201e\u201e. _.\nling words and actions is the di-'BjvanL\u201e \u00bb\u201es ma,!., in iin.* iiii'.'i\"\"''\".^    oI \u201eR. u\u201eu um .mo may j\"-\" \u201e\u201e,nB,,la riRht ,\u201e quit work wvi\nrect and  inevitable  result    of | ruu\u00abi*-.n   ta   ^J^r^Z,  *\u00bb\u00ab __f '\"\" h\"'\"\"s' \"\"'\"     '     \t\nshowing off their little children J^Hi^uS^-~^ '\"   \t\n-   \u25a0\u25a0 *   ~-   *   ~~ i litill.il   tu   ill\nWlll    I.i.    lilile    l\u00ab|\nninlli'T.\nlu  aPPb  I\"   *\u2022\"*      Vnralloiis   WOUhl   be   rnlhor   nice   U\n,,.,.,.,,1,-ic st*h..olni.is.<ri  ^ ^ ^^ (.\u201e\u201eugh to stay at Hume\n\u201e\u201e,i Hianea t>**\"'**\"-r \"' \u00b0\"*?w__ .\u2022*\"\"' ~*~ *\"\nImrtioM n  \"\"\"is  \"\"t*\"01\nTin*   n-awin   so   mnny  yoiuiK  pr-oiilv\nthe   Imrdi\nW..W.....O \u2014 \u2014- ,,iui   \u00bbm*iiiK   in**   \"**JD   -  ,-':\" ,.     muve any  tstt\nby fathers and mothers. |tlH. ,.\u201e.\u201e,. t,,,.,  \u201e,\u201e entiiie* to m. \"^\"^ ^ \u201e\u201e\u201e\nNothing but a return to the ,.,,\u201e,,,ti.,niii op\u00bbort\u00bbnit\u00bb \"\u00bb\u00bb* \"\"\"\"\nguidance of the good old adage.ai'o tMM. \u00ab^r\u00b0'',ru^^|\u00ab \"S^'^i^iSCi al M.\nthat a child should be seen arid J\u00bbJ\u2122_ Zit u. \u25a0\u00bb. - \u00abeth\u00ab J^*\u00a3f\u00a3l_*\u00a3_m \u201e, ,,,\u00ab.\u25a0\u25a0,., nr;\"\u201ek,;pU,;sls \u201ewallB0'(ill:h j, \u201e\n\u2022not heard can now nd the world ,hciB\u201e   \u2122\u00abt\u00bbul\u00ab\u00ab.   ar.   \"\"'\u2022*;' ln [h,.,r .ws potato __*\u2022_*** \u201e 0\u201e\u201e,tZ UMtht     .\nof the flippancy and the for-;,,\u201ev. s,.<i Ki.*is n. n..' -\".; n\"*'\u25a0-\u25a0\"\"\"\"> ,\u201e,\u201e hP ,ul\u201e\u201e,i u tnawsa. \u00bb\u00ab \"-J*\nwardness of the flapper, so this^iiKe.-ciev^n,\u2122 Oml-t. \"!SJT5S'   -< \"' their i\nwriter declares, and parents are; Th, German Loan I\"''\"\"'*'1 \" M\"1\"'     '\nwarned  never  to  talk  of  the |   niirinB the nan U\u00bb**s bobU*\nsmartness   of   little    daughter doubt, every tttart win m *\u00bb*A \u201en\u201e ,..\u201e.  --,\u201e,\u201e\nnor to repeat any of her cute -**-*-*-* ^U\u00abSf to'a ^\"wiS'   \u2014  \"\"\" ',;'v\" ^\"\" '\n,.,1   ;ia   truali*\n\u25a0cm.,imlil\nI   Hint   I\n1 tru\u00bbt.-Sl.   U\u00bbll\u00ab   fllolioJHinueiat.\nOne.   Mors  ths  Slogan\nsayings. More than this, she\nis not to be allowed to take par\nin entertainments or appear in ]\npublic in any way, not even to\"\nsay her little piece on children's\nday. Neither is she to be allowed to help in securing funds\nfor any enterprise, no matter\nhow good it is, if such help1\nmeans she is to go out and ask\npe-sons for contributions.\nAll these things are prohibited if the world is to be delivered from the thraldom of the\nflapper. It is hard to discipline\nand it is not likely many fond\nparents will attempt it, cspe-l\ndaily since reports are abroad\nthat the flapper is going out of\nstyle and is to be succeeded by\nthe demure damsel. So why\nshould parents enforce such a\ndrastic cure on the advice of\none woman, when a cure, which\nnone can doubt will be effective, seems already at hand?\nanil\nver  the  examination\ni  th,. Immortal siu-\nTheao   are   11*\nin tlon' of tho reparations total P\u00bb***\"\"*i to*\nl.y   boUlaf   out   for   er.ilit   to, l'\"'\"-''\"  \"\u25a0\"\"', \"'*   ._ .   \u201e      \t\n.... ,,    , ,, ,    L-an of Venliili. \"They ahull not   ilia*.\nmany   without   nny   uld   front   the   **rt''1u   t   ( ( ___\nrs'   commltlee.   Thla   liersunalun\n j    succeed,   .hut   the   chatues   are\nthat it will not. Meantime there la lit.   | \u00bb\u00abI.Ui1 It at lho poll\ntie   l.osalbllity  .hot   the  (ji rnuuis  wUllraaf1, 1\n\u2014Ckveliinil    Pt\u00abl\u00ab    l>cn>'i-.\nnilnsJs\n,.,i  pmhtWUon\n*r ii\nr!>'7~\n.-^_>5\nJF^-JS4\nt\\l'^xY(.7k~ ><\u2022 7*i\n\\^^v__f__S4\u00a3.\n-JC*^\n\u2022urtTiTunmntnmrrlQi;!!]\nI th-\nSUBJECT OF CONTROVERSY\nNumber one on the Hflt of hMar401M\noccupitlons for the summer Is that\n\u25a0 of trying to kiss a girl In t canoe.\ni I'oor old Wilhelm. If be hul hnd\nhis former authority, h*- lould make\n1 every  tjerman  buy  his  book.\nj     The-three gentlemen  who now boss\n| Hussia   may   learn   from, history   that\ntriumvirates   gn   before   a   full.\nIViW the Press Is Saying\nTh\u00bb Aftermath of th\u00bb 8trtk\u00ab\nIn M.ty, 47 oiler unions were\ndragged by their leaders Into the\nipiiiiei, much against their will. After\nen SS ilehste*, arid conferences, nil\nOf which costly operations wen* con-\nthe trade\" dnibn 'lenders\nat   tht   txpense   of   the   men   unem-\nf^U\nWe can (orKlvo Nnah for Kcltlim\ndrunk, but we inn never fnrBlvo hn\nfailure   tu  tain   o   fly   awnllir  ubi'iail\nJOE   DUGAN\nBlur third baacnian  ot Ihe Rod Hox, acquired  by  llu-  New   York  Amiil-\ncana..   Tbe   tiild-aeason   dial ..has fouimk]  stroni,- ^lipoaltKin   in-tnujor   league\nhaacdiall   cli   Ics.\nTen Years Ago\n(The Dally Nona, Auguat 7. I912).\nT. O, rriiclcr'a hoiiae on Iaitlmcr\naire. t. one .if llie t\u2014t*t lsrfl)MM I\"\nNcla.m. Ins been purchuaed by i.\nK.  lairaon uf  the Standard  Furniture\ncompMIX,\t\n*    *    * .^^^.av\n1-enche. vt .iilendld color and Havor\nP-\nThe Natural Wealth of Canada\nForests\nm\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014.\u2014\u2014\u20140\nIN the past three yeari \"Canada exported forest\nproducts to the amount et {(660,000,000, and\nthere are still left great forests of Douglas fir, pine\nand spruce pulp wood\u2014enough, if carefully preserved, to supply a great tf*d<*. throughout an indefinite future. For more than a century the Bank of\nMontreal has been cooperating in the development\nof Canada's trade in forest products.\nBANKOFMONTREAL\nEstablished over IOO yeara\nA Complete Banking Service\n, Branches Throughout Canada\n mb\nTTTE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 7, 1922,\nPage Five\n\u00a3# White\nShoes\nFor the\n: Kiddies\nAbout 75 pairs of Boots with rubber sole and leather\nsole. Prices 75*f, 95<*, $1.15, $1.15\nSlippers $1.15,   $1.55,  $1.95\nSizes\u2014Infanta' size 5 to Misses' size 2.   Just the thing\nfor the holidays.\nI.\nR.  ANDREW  &   CO.\nLEADERS      IN       FOOTFASHION\nMr\". M. J. VIONKUX 1* Social\nEdilor of The Dully Now a and conducts thll department. All newa\nof a uncial nature, including rt-\nOsptlonSs private enierla.inmenl\u00ab,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMra.   VHSSUs\nKootenay and Boundary\nBishop Holds\nConfirmation\nat Edgewood\n\u25a0DOSWOOD, Aug. 6.\u2014 The Bishop of\n\"Kooteriny. accompanied by 11<\u25a0 v. Manrlc\nWest as h!s chaplain, arrived from Mt>\nkusp  oir   Monday aflernocn  snd   stayed\nat   the   Arrow   LftltS   hotel.     In   ths  evening    a    large congrtgatlon.  Including\nmany friends from Burton, NrenU-s ami\nFauquier,    ssssmblsd    tn    Bt    Afnss'\nchurch.     The   blahop'a   proceaalon,   lad\nbv   Oeorge   Croft   of   Needles,   who  bore !\ntho   bi adit*'***   mace   lately   pna-jtiled   by ,\nThomas Coleman of  Peer  Park, entered\nthe church   from  tho vicarage,  the  MO* '\npie singing  the  hymn 'I'nnif Thou   Hnly\nSpirit.   Come.\"     The   processional   crown\npreceded   the  lay  reader and  tha  priest*\nin-'hnrge; the blahop, waarlni hla sosr*\nlet robes, was conduct, d by ths church ,\nwardens with iheir staves of office. !\nand attended by the boys who were\nConfirmed last year, his chaplain carrv-\nliiK  thf*  cmjiter.\nAfter nn Impre.-fvlve address hy the\nbishop, who amphsslssd the responsibility and the Importance for Canada of\nmi active membershtp In the church of\nChrist, nil knelt In id lent prayer, nnd j\nthen was sung the confirmation hymn. '\n\"t.'nnic   Holy  Ohost   Our Bsttls   Inspire\" J\nTen   CandidatM   from   Edge wood   und\nBurton  City,  presented  by   the  parish\npriest, received  the    laying on of hands.\nThs bishop left the church in praoas-\nnlni. to the singing of the hymn ''The |\nChurch's uno Foundation.\"\nAt 8:30 a. m. Tuesday morning the\nblahop celeliratrd the holy communion, i\nBBVaral of th.* newly conrirmed bstng\npresent, and afterward, accompanied by\nthe priest In charge and the lay render,\nacting as parish clerk, left on the tug\nAcme, whieh was piloted by George and\nWilliam Hrlj-gi rman, for the conflrma- ,\ntion ul  pass Park.\nEDGEWOOD NOTES\nEDGEWOOD, Aug. ti,\u20141\\ B. Freeuind\nnrrlved Thursday on the steamer Hon-\nnington.    He   Is a  mining engineer und\nwill inspect ths Lightning Pea* mines.\nwhere SSVSral   good   strikes have lately\nbc-n   reported.\nMayor C. F. McHardy of Nelson Is\nspending   u   few   days   lu   Kdgewood   on\nbuslnsss,\nI. li. Pools and Mrs. Poole of Nelson\npre   hero   on   a   visit   to   Mrs.   Hangs   of\nFir- Valley.\n(Irani Davis and Mrs. Davis arrived\nFriday from California, where Ihey\nhave resided for n considerilde time\nThey are old-timers of this district and\ntire having a busy time among their old\nfriends. They broke their Journey at\nHalfour, where n daughter, Mrs. Conway, Manas,\nB. C. Traces and Mrs. Travcs came\nlu from Vancouver on Friday's boat tO\nspend a short time In fire Vailev at\nthe dairy ranch. Th.y brought In their\nmotor car\nIbv. K. A. L.\n.lowett returned\nThursday.\nMrs Osyfar of Hurton paid a visit to\nUTS.  Lit lie wood   thin   Week.\nMr. nnd Mrs. Hubert H-ddle, Fulrvlew. entertained at a picnic parly at\nthalr gnat' ranch SOOTS Mounlain Hta-\ntIon yesterday. ROSaSl goat and olln r\nrare and elaboralo refreshment.' were\nserved. Among the gussts were Mr. and\nMrs. H. Maundrell. Mr. und Mrs, W.\nRoma In, Mr. and Mra. J. J. Hoyd ,ini!\ndaughter, Patay, Mr. nnd Mrs. George\nMiller, J. Hindi 11, It. Itlancbard. George\nPeters of Princi* George, Miss Borghtld\nOlson. Miss Thelma Heddle. Miss Thelma Need In, tho SftsSSS Margaret ifnd\nJess McLeod of Brandon. Out., the\nMisses Edna, Florence and Hazel Maundrell. Howard Maundrell, Italph Olson\nand Victor Bourne.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. E. H. SniH'i bf Victoria, who\nhas been vlsillug ft-r the past six weeks\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. N.\nGilchrist of Fairview, leaves this morning    on     lhe    Crow   boat   for  Toronto,\nI where she and Mr. Smith will nsks\ntheir  home In  future.    Mrs.  Smith  will\nI bo accompanied (,n her Journey by h-r\nmother and sister,  Mrs.  G.  N. QUchrlat\nj and Miss Bertha Gilchrist, who will\nmake an extended visit  In  the east.\nMiss J. Green and Miss Mary Olsen\nof Lethbridge are visiting ln the city\nfor a couple of weeks, the guesls of\nMrs. W. Taylor, 114 Carbonato street.\nFred James Howell of Ferry Siding,\nwho la secretary of the Sloean Fruil\nGrowers' exchange, was a city visitor\non  Saturdny.\ns   a * s\nDr,   Annie  Q   Smith   sails   from   Montreal   OB   the   Montcalm   August   IIj   for\ni lho old country.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 .\nI     Mrs. W,  Donaldson  of  Procter was u\ni visitor  In  town  on   Friday.\n\u25a0    \u2022    \u2022\nMr. nnd Mrs. Arthur Lakes and son,\n| Arrtiur George, wtio have been in Spo-\nj kano spending the past few dayfl, ale\n' expected home the first part of the\nj we\"k. They are returning in their\n; motor.\nDonaldson   and   W.   D\nfrom     Deer   Park   on\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN. Aug. 4 \u2014Mr. Justice Hlgelow of Ragtna urnved yesterday to spend a couple of WSSkS at Cr.- I\nlodg, .     Mr.   Justir.-   BiM'low,   who   is   I\nkeen  flahsrrean.   has  been  n   frsqassfl\nvisitor to the I'ool for the past eight\nyears, having bSSfl a gVSSl at O.-cl\nlodge when war was declared in ml.\nMisses Marjorie and Wynnls RllSSSl\nnre   Vlaltora   to   ivlondel,   the   guesls   of\nlira f. wntts.\nW. S. King, accompanied by his son.\nCeeil, BOSS! Wednesday aflerniion fishing at tha POOl and canyon, and had excellent sport, aa SOrinS SSVSB large\ntrout, the largest weighing two nnd\none-half pounds.\n\u25a0   Hev. \\V. BsnWfflT WSJ a visitor to Nelson on Thursday.\n\u2014\"ICED\"\u2014\n\"SALADA\"\nTea will prove a revelation\nin summer beverages.        K2<\"\nSold cvirywhcrc in scaled metal packets only.\nRoyal Export Beer\nFull  Standard  Strength.    Order  through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nFraa   Delivery\nDIRECT   FROM   BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\nV 70 HAVE YOU TRIED IT'\nFtOB C0MPIETT.T\nurKurnnu   ......\n\u2022SAnSMc-noN\nuse\nCREAM-WEST\nThs   completa   aatiafactiont\nTh*   abaoluta   guarantaal\nTha firm behind tha gaodal\nYou'll     ba     agreeably     eurprind.       Ordar     a\naack  today  from  your   grocer.\nManufactured  by  tha\nHedley Shaw Milling Co., Limited\nf Affiliatad with tha\nMAPLE LEAF MILLING CO., LIMITED\nLocal       Wholeeatt       Representative       Clarke\nBrokerage.\nUSE\nOur No. 1 and No. 2\nAPPLE-PICKING BAGS\nAsk Your Merchant\u2014He Can Supply You\nCanada's Largest Manufacturers of Canvas Goods\nof Every Description.\nGRANT-HOLDEN-GRAHAM, LIMITED\n12G0  HAMILTON  STREET\nVANCOUVER,  B. C.\nI    Miss l. A. Williamson of Vanoovrar,\nwho   has   been   visiting   In JCaalO,   tba\n| guest   of   Mr.   and    Mrs.    F.   K.   Archer,!\nI was a visitor in town on Saturdav,\n.    .    .\n| Mfs. O. McLean and son, Donald, cf i\nI I'rocter, were visitors In town on Satur- \\\n<iay.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nWI H. Leonard left for the coast on\nthe   Kettle   Vailev   Saturday  evening\nlas\n1      l>r.   Lninb.ieh   nf   Spokane,   who   has\n| been attending the maatlng of the sil-1\ni versniith   Mines,   which   took   place   in i\nSandon the latter part of the week, loft \\\non   the   Crow   boat   yesterday   morning ,\nfor  bis home.\n. . .\n] Alexander Maedonald of Vancouver '\nj left Saturday evening via tbe Kettle :\n! Valley fur the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nj Mr, and Mra. U L. floea 1013 Front ]\nI street,  Bpant  yesterday at Creston.\nMrs A. Adamsnn nnd son, Arthur, of\n! Winnipeg, who have been thc KUtatS of\n\u25a0 Miss M. Menzies for tbe past few days, !\ni leave on the Sloean train tlitu morning\nfor Applednle, where they will visit for\nI a few Weeks with  Mrs,  Mt-mtes.\nSOS\nt      A.    HsQttSSa,    luovlnclal    nss.ssur   of j\nKaalO,   passed   thrOUCt   the   city   on   Sat- I\nartsy, aft. r spemiin-f ITrlday In Ross-\nland on official bualnaas,\nSOS\nr'.llbert   C   Arneson   was   a   meek-end |\n! visitor at the Outlet   hot.l, I'rocter.\nass\nMr. and Mrs. S.-M. Thurston of Mons-\nI Jaw are spending a  few  weeks camplnp i\nI at   Procter.\n\u2022 .     .\n.Mrs.  Mabel Hlllam  was n ftnest at the !\nOutlet   hotel,   I'rocter.  Msterday.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u00bb\nI Mrs j. ,\\. McLean of the north ahore\n! and .Miss F. Toons of Moose Jaw Mpeal\nI Saturday  In  town.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\n[     Mr  and Mrs. i'lyde A. Kmory went by I\nlaunch  to  Procter ycslerday.\ntot\nIt. (!. Holmes, the Vancouver in In In 9\nman. bft on the Kettle Valley for thc\ncoast   Saturday   evening.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n(i. II, Hurden of Tort Crawford was a\nweek-end visitor In town.\na *a   a\nI Miss Kstelln Hutler of Kaslo, who\n| has been \\Njtlnic friend-* in Orand\nI Forks, passed throuich lhe city on Saturday on  lur wn\\   home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 -\nF.     Ferguson,     provincial     assessor\n| was n  visitor  In  Trail  and   Hossland or\nFriday.\n\u2022 i    \u2022\n! Mr and Mrs. H. McLean, (-on Allan\n, and Miss Sybil .McLean apent the week-\n1 end at   Kaslo.\n> A. 0. Gellnns. Rccnmpanted by J N.\ni Mnntvftle. laft for lhe coast last e*-e-\nI nine via the Kettle Valley on a busl-\nUfttA trip. They txpect to be away\n< about a week.\n\u2022 a     \u2022\nt j     Sheriff   Doyle   returned   laftt   evening\nfrom Coopsr Creek.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\nK. Simpson apent yesterday at Procter.\ns   a   a\nMrs. 1) O. Thomas- and children, who\nare spending a vacation at E-onsbMA,\nf-Miehi Sal ui day in town, rel urn ing on\nthe nflernoon boat wilh Mr. Thomas,\nwho  remained over   the   week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr   nnd   Mrs.   A.   D.   Fmorv  and   Mr.\nand   Mrs    Vincent   of   the   Nnrth   Ann\nwere visitors at  Procter yesterday.\n\u25a0     \u2022     \u2022\nMl.-s Mary Scanlan and her niece,\nMiss Helen Scanlan. left last night on\nthe Ksttle Valley for a two weeks' vacation at the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022      a\nL, E de Veber. C. W. Applevard, Mrs\nF. I*. Armstrong, Miss Charlotte Armstrong and Miss Ituth Armstrong went\nby launch Laugh-a-Lot to Procter yesterday mornlni*-.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nC, F. Jarvis was a weuk-end RiicMt at\nI'rocter.\nSOS\nDr. and atra. Them of Trail, accompanied by Miss Wlnnlfred Smith of\nWinnipctr, motored to Halfour Saturday\nand were week-end fruest.H at the Odtltt\nhotel, Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs L. M. Livingstone of San Frnn-\ncNco is spend Inn a week at th* Outlet\nhotel,   Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R A. Fade nnd family\nwere week-end visitors at Crescent Hav\nthe guests of Mrs. J. Paterson and T\nDronsfleld,\n\u2022 \u00ab    |\nMr, and Mrs. D. Coons and Miss F\nConns of MoOSS Jaw nre rampint; at\nProcter for tho  next   few  weeks.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nPostmaster J. A Olbson was a Weekend guest at Ihe Outlet hole). Procter,\nwhere his family nre spending a vacation.\nSOS\nMiss Dorothy Whltmore left on the\nKettle Vnlley Sntunlsy night for thp\ncoast, where she will visit with her\nmother.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n! The Cubs of No. 1 troop, Nelson Hoy\nScouts, under the clinrge of the assistant   seeiilinaster,   hnd  an  enjoyable  OQt-\nj lug at Lakeside pnrk on Saturday after-\nnoon and evening, the time being spent\nwith games and swlmmlr g, the psrty\n\"letiirnhig home at ft o'clock, Those\npresent were Oeorge Ont ham, Fred\nScott, Hill Currle. Jnck Carrie, Jake\nltothcry, UUI Uennott, Ueorio Kadwlck,\nThe Store for Quality\nTERMS\nSTRICTLY\nCASH\nNO GOODS\nON\nAPPROVAL\nThe Store for Style\nAnnual August Clean-Up Sale\nCOMMENCING TUESDAY AUGUST 8, CONTINUING FOR  TEN  DAYS  ONLY.\nThis store is now about to be placed in order to receive goods coming in (or fall. We will therefore\nhave to clear out all Spring and Summer Apparel, as well as many lines suitable for early Fall, at a small\nportion of their actual values, to make room for Fall and Winter stocks now on the way. This will be\nthe greatest sale event of the year. Come prepared to take advantage of the great bargains offered.\nBelow are a few of the many lines offered for opening day.\n$15.00\nWOMEN'S TWEED and FLANNEL\nSUITS at $15.00 Each.\nFive only Tweed ami  Flannel   Suits,\nsplendid quality goods, and well tailored.    Sizes 16, 18 and 20 only. August Sale Price,\neach\t\nSERGE AND HOMESPUN SUITS\nAt $19.95 Each\nOnly fifteen of these Serge, Tricotine\nand Homespun SUITS in Navy, Rose\nand Copenhagen. Sizes 1G to 42. Regular values to $40.00. (J\u00bb-| Q Qr\nAugust Sale Price -J\") It\/.t\/t)\nWOMEN'S TRICOTINE SUITS at $39.95\nOnly 23 in this lot, including some of the finest\nshown this season. Mostly plain tailored styles with\nlong roll collars, and some with novelty embroidery\ntrimming. Best of tailoring and coats lined throughout with Pussy Willow Silk. Sizes 16, 18, IS6, 38, 40,\n42 and 44. Values to $69.00. <CQQ Qf\\\nAugust Sale Price  tpOtJ.VO\nCLEARING WOMEN'S COATS AT HALF PRICE\nLook at price tickets and pay just half. A range\nof plain-tailored and novelty style Coats, made of Velours, Bolivia and Tricotine, all individual styles,\nSizes 16 to 40:\nRegular $35.00 Coats for $17.50\nRegular $50.00 Coats for $25.00\nRegular $75.00 Coats for 937.50\nDRESS BARGAINS\nJUMPER DRESSES at $6.95 Each\nSix only Serge and Flannel Jumpers,\nsizes 16, 18 and 20. Regular values\nto  $0.90.   August (*\u00bb\/*; Q(T\nSale  Price tPUsi\/tl\nWOMEN'S SERGE DRESSES\nAt $14.95 Each    \u25a0\nFifteen Serge Dresses, all good styles,\nstraight line effects. Values to $27.50.\nAugust Sale\nPrice   \t\nWOMEN'S   PLAID   AND\nSTRIPED SKIRTS\nAt $10.00\nAbout three dozen fine\nSKIRTS to clear at less than\nthe materials cost. All are\ngood styles and materials are\nof the very best. Hardly any\ntwo alike la the lot, plain and\npleated styles. Sizes to 31-in.\nwaist    measure.      Clean-up\neP.T $10.00\nWHITE GABARDINE SKIRTS at $1.49 Each\nThe balance of our white wash SKIRTS in women's\nand misses' sizes. Values to $3.50 each.\nTo clear at, each \t\n$1.49\nDIMITY BLOUSES at $1.49\nLess than half the regular price. We\nhave several dozen of these, made with\nshort sleeves and Peter Pan collars.\nValues to $3.50 each.\nSale Price \t\n$1.49\nCHILDREN'S DRESSES at $2.59\nWorth  regularly  up  lo  $6.50 each.    Made of fine\nChambray in a range of colors and styles.    Sizes 6\nto 14 years. August Clean-up\nPrice, each     !\t\n$2.59\nCLEARING OUT MILLINERY\nTWENTY TRIMMED HATS in a splendid range of\nstyles, colors and sizes. Values to $9.00     (J>rt QQ\neach.   August Clean-up Price only, each....'t!')\u00abWss\/0\n$14.95\nMODEL DRESSES AT ONE-THIRD OFF\nCLEAN-UP OF WASH GOODS\nDRESS MUSLINS to Clear at 25c\nin light and medium\n25c\nSix pieces only of Dress Mus\ncolors.   Full 27 inches wide.\nAugust Clean-up Trice, yard\nClearing out all model dresses, including many that\nhave been in stock onlv a very short time, AT ONE-\nTHIRD OFF REGULAR PRICES. This is a splendid offer. Dresses are made of such new materials\nas Canton Crepe, Roshanara Crepe, and Crepe-Knit.\nThis season's best colors in the lot.    Regular values\nAugust Sale Price.. .tfrZOsUU TO tPOu.UU\nWATCH FOR CHANGE\n69c\nPLAID CREPE at 69c Yard\nOnly three pieces left, all good colors and width 36\ninches.   Regular price, $1.25 yaid.\nClean-up price \t\nNOVELTY VOILES at 75c Yard    \u2022\nTen  pieces  Dress  Voiles,  medium  and dark  colors.\nYard wide.   Regular value $1.33. r7CC\/\u00bb\nAugust Clean-up Price, yard   4t\/C\nOF ADVERTISEMENT DAILY\n611 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 200\nArnold    C-iilson.    UnO\/    Martin,    Lewi-\nHe. s    Hulph-   OI-HOO,      iNoiniirii     Heatf;-,\nRonald    Heatly.    Stirling    Melntyre,   Al-I\nbert   Jeftrv   nml   Jfnnnv   Milne\n\u2022 |     \u2022\nMIms   Kraiics***   McHardy   had   nn   In r\nguests last   week  at   the  bu miner home I\nat Halfour her p..\"nts. Mnyor and Mrn  j\nC.   V    McHunlv.   .Mies  Queenle   Ann-ible.\nMl:m   H\u00bbr.<\\    Laurie.    Wllmer   McHardy |\nand   Kiiiron  .Vichih;iid\nMr and Ht* tmOWS O'Slo a. Mc-^:uid\nUN \u25a0 A. Lowe, little |f|H ft_\\H I\nHe ih. ri. Mr*. C. W. Appleyard and T. H I\nWilkin went by launch to I'rocter on\nSal unlay and tten wc-k-eiid guest*- at\nthe  UJtlet bOUl,\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\nLf-dle H'ig'itwlek kim nt the week-end\nat hid ranch at Croooont Hay.\nlira. W, i:. Canity of Ptrnlo arrived\ntin thf Crow boat hist evcnlnn; to Vltlt\nwilh her mother. Mm. Kealley, Cnrbon-\nad   ttn 't.\nMn A. MalltMW and daughter. Violet, are leaving thin morning-.on the\nllooan train for Silverton, where th.y\nwill spend the neit few weeks vlnitlng\nwilh   Mm.   Award   White.\nItiiland C Crow, the Trail barrister,\nwas u visitor In town on Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMlH Henrietta McQualge left yealcr-\nday for Spokane where ulie will tnke a\nOOttTflt  Iii  training a: th? Sacred  Heart\nhonrital.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nII. K Sexton of Spokane relumed to\nhis homo on the Oreat Northern Saturday   morning.\n\u2022 \u2022    |\nOeorge Klmmerllng end party motored to Trail yeHterday to attend the\nbaseball  game.\nt e t\nOus Erlcknon of Penticton and formerly of the Orand Central hotel tn\ntills city, lenvej* tonight for hla home,\nafter spending the week-end  lu town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nF.   E.  Archer of  Kaalo was a  visitor\nIn  town  on  Httturday.\n\u25a0   w   *\nCharlie -McLehn   of   Nelson,   who   has\nbeen  visiting  his aunt and uncle. Mr.\n: and   Mrs.   O    MoLttll  of  Procter.\nI cily  visitor  ou  Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\n| P.ev W, J Lobl. and fumiij, Who SMO\ncainphiK at tlu tourlsis* camping\nground. It pastor of the Cnlted church\n' at 1'etlaw, Alia. They reinaln-'d a we,-*\n; at Creston on tlitlr molor trip lo Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMi* and Mrs L S. Ttradley of Mill\n\u25a0tTMt and Mr. ami Mrs. H. I'. Hall of\nSilica  sine'   ipttll  Saturday Ht   the  Pool.\nand rttortttd with \u25a0 good aatafe.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH'*v. Norma Larmonth. who has\nbe n spending the Inst f\u00abW weeks hi\nSpokane vlattitlf with his mother, returned to tht city the latter part of\nthe   week.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss May Cr-min of Proct* r epent\nSaturday   lu  town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss   Hnlg Simllle   of   Procter   wan   al'\ncity  visitor  on  Saturdnj.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs,   lltifly   nnd   datichur.    l'*lorenc*>.\nof   HrlMlant.   wero   visitor:   In   town   on j\nSaturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMrs. c   W, BreSsOhtxw and ducbtor, I\nAJaati   of   Victoria,   who   have   been   the ,\nguests  of   Mr.   and   Mrs.  (I.orge   Hunter |\nfor thf past five weks at thalr summer ;\nplace across  tic  lake,  leave   tonight   for\ntheir home.\n.     .     .\nMiss IVrry Hlaki more i.r Procter was I\nu vlaltor in town yetttrda)'*\n\u2022 at\nII. O. Klopp of Spokane, who has been ',\nattending  the  mtetln-B  in  Ssmbui  of the\nSilversmith     mini s.     returned     on     thc |\nOreat  Northern  Saturday  morning.\nMiss I'.lma Madden of Sb.cnn City\narrived on Krlda*. night ami Is visiting\nWith her aunt, Mrs. Thomas Madden,\nHaker street,  for a few days.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nThe   Homemham   family   of   919   Car- j\nbonale street  tie camping at  Procter.      I\n\u2022 *     \u2022\nMiss   Madeline     Kelly     of     Missoula. |\nMont . Is visiting tn the el'y for about i\na week with her aunt and uncle. Mr. .\nand Mrs J. W. Oitllagher, Haker streer |\nMist Holly hat bpent a month In Port\nland, Ore., previous to comlm; to N.lson She is en the hlfb sill.ml staff in\nCrenclitowii.   .Mon'.\n\u2022     \u25a0     t\nJohn   Mortality  of  \u25a0pefcaN  Lft  on\nthe Oreat   Noilherii  Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs H. C Thomas. Hc.ompu-\nnled by lhe UKse* Hugh-s ..f <'algai>.\nHre visitors iu tOWH Mr. Thomat U\nIn   the   hole]   b\u00ab0lfMM   In  Calgarj.\nDEER PARK NOTES\ntflm PAHK. Aug. \u00ab.\u2014Dutim,- tin\npast few days the iHimlno'. tiov..rnin<lit\npile driver has been siHtioned at the\nwharf, completing the rcinum under the\nsur\u00bbTvlslon of Capt  P. P. Armstrong\nHecenl visitors are tht HUlmp nf\nKootenay.  the   Lev.  B,  A    L.   Punaldsoe,\npr\u00bb -t In charge of On- prrl^i, and \\V.\nJowett    of    Edgewood,    who    conducted\nthe taenmtnt of holy confinnatlori on\nTuesday e\\iniug last, six children being confirms*.!, and on Wednesday\nmOIHlng the bl -hop iMlver***.l to a con-\n\u25a0ynfattOB an i-loi'uciit and Itupr-ttMnlve\naddress,\nC. H. Hamilton waa a week-end RUcat\nof  Mr.  Tht.lkeld.\nFishing has greatly Improved of laUV\nA number of fair catches of Hulinoii ami\nrainbow  have  been  made.\ntjulte a quantity uf early npplee and\nbltokbs-irrles are being shipped to Trail\n\u25a0 nd   Hossland.\nThe Iv.r Park Lumber company h*\u00ab\nmad- its flrat shipment of TUOft MM*\nas part order of tbt Harrop Conservative aatoclatlon and Is working ov-****-\ntime.\nNature's remedy for constipation\nwill give you permanent relief!\nThousand* upon thou.tiiD.l-t of\npeople are todin hiifTeriujr Irom eon-\nItipotion in ull its biJoou\u00abness; 1'rw\nTealirp either the cuu.*e of their rondi\ntion or tmsti it will eventually Iratt to I\nAlb the tivrrnge man or cumin if\n'they ara eOMUpatod and they will\n\u25a0 nnwer \"Nol\" This they firmly bt\nlicve. But. Ihe flr.-il thing ths ptayai-\ncitn atln hit pntient in\u2014\"I-et ntc \u2022*\u00bb-\u2022\nrour tongue.\" If lhe tonguu in coated\nhn know* tlir* patient it auffcrtog\nfrom ronHtipation!\nA coated tongue, a bad breath\u2014\nthey aro tonttlpttioa glfMavl Httrt\nthe use of nature * remedy\u2014URAK\u2014\nKellogg 'a Hran, rnoknl and krumbled,\nta fant aa you can! Vou munt eiimi\nnale thia dangerous condition beraua-**\nIt goet from bad to worse I Toiic\npoiaon apreads throufV tha whole aya\njtn; orjKDi btoomt affec'.ed; tha\nbrain alows down.    Any Ml of many\naeriout diaoa.tet w lik\u00abIy to loltow]\nI '.'.< ronatipatioi w;ih Kellogg a\nIlran! For, Hraa ii nature 'a own\nsweeper, rlnflnner snd purifier! It will\ncorrect the moat chronic rate of mn\ntitipation if it ia mlm regularly; lt\nwill prevent consiipetion if a littlo\nis eaten enrh day! For mild raaat,\ntwo tthlrapnor.fula daily; in ebMnic\neaset, rat I'rin with earh meat. Your\nphysician wi1! rtvommend K\u00bbllo^g'i\nBran for cons*ipahon!\nKellogg'.* Hnin is fine fer children,\nbeiping th'-m grot bi; and rohr.it.\nKellagg'a Itran i-. dtHdooory good\naa a eereal, tprink el t*nr your favorite cereal, or used in linking and enol.-\ning. It nuke* wonderful pancakr-t,\ntiufPlns, mm kr-ud, tt*. S\u00abe rvcipei en\nMi*h p*cV*|i* I Pur K\u00bb1I.i\u00abb'i Pr\u00abn at your\npwr'i     In tin '\u25a0\u2022A'AXTTTaV' ratkags.\n ' Pap\" Sir\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 7, 1922,\n\u25a0?**-\u2122*'\"a'--\u00bb\u00ab\"WW\u00bbai\u00bbPSS\u00bb\u00bb\u00bba\u00bba\u00bb-\u00bba\u00bb.j\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb.\u00bb-.^\u00bba-a\u00bb.\u2014\nMaAet^afSnaKce\nMarket Registers      j Wheat Collapses\nModerate Advance       Under Pressure\nVancouver Stocks\nBid.      Asked.\n.14 .1*1)4\nNtiKBet   \t\nSilversmith\n.32\nHiwliiliiry     01%\nEmpire            .111*14\nSpartan     110'.\nTrojan        .01$\n.05 !4\n.out\n.01%\n.0314\nIn Brief Session\non Chicago Pit;\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL,\n*d\nul     f\nAug.     li.\u2014 Iluthr    latr,\nhi s.-;   other   irli-\nNEW YORK, Aug. 5.\u2014Mt. derate gains\nwere registered by most of the act,ve\nItaOea in today's half holiday session of\nthe stock market. Total sales Mpm?-\nniatcd 250,000 ehares. The rcqUt^t of\nthe four railroad brotherhoods for it\nconfertnoe with President Hardin* on,\nthe ground tbat a serious situation writs\ndeveloping In connection with the rail\ntstrlke bad little effect on the marker,\nstocks generally making appreciable\nadvances. Several new highs for the\nyear wero recovered in this grout*, notably by Chicago Northwestern. Southern Rullway common and preferred, Atlantic Coast Line, St. LouiH & Soiilh-\nwestern and Fere Marquette. Hlio.'t\npressure was directed against some ol\"\nthu speculative favorites toward the\nclose of the sesulon, Mexican Petroleum\nreacting 1 Va points and Baldwin dropping Vt, but the goneuhl list held up\nwell.\nKresge company, following In the\nwake of Woolworth, which reached \u00bb\nnew high mark in the week, jumped up\n6 points, presumably on reports of Increased July earnings by chain storee\nCorn Products also broke through for\na new high, and a good demand was\nnoted for the sugar and tobacco stocks.\nSterling rate:*- were strong, but some\nIrregularity was noted in the conll-\nnnntal exchanges. Marks were down to\nIS cents a hundred, nearly a cent below\nlast night's close, on reports lhat tier-\nmany had refused to loeut the stipulated payments on prewar debts to\nFrench citizens.\nThe clearing house statement showed\nan   Increase   of  actual     loans   nnd   discounts,   nearly   ft-M&OM   as   compared\nwith an increase of ||l,000,000 the week\nbefore.     Member  banks   increased  their j\nreserve  lu   the  federal reserve hank by '\n19,258.000,   as    against    a    decrease of J\n35,260.000 a week ago.\nPrices in the bond market wero\nstrengthened considerably in today's\nbrief f-ession of the stock exchange.\nRailroad bonds, which have been In '\ngood demand throughout the Week, [\nwere again the favorites. Chieago\nRailway [is were t*spee.ully strong, \\\njumping _\\_ points, while St. Paul,\nKansas City Short Line 4*3s were up\nIH- Pennsylvania general 5s. Norfolk\nft Western convertible la and Wisconsin Central 4s moved upward 1 point\nThe foreign group was irregular, Argentine 7s and some of the French municipals stiffening slightly, while R raid Ts and Ss reacted moderately from\nye st onlay's cloaing quotations. Dominion of Canada 5*ia of 1920 reached a\nnew high price for the year, presumably\nin response to the higher rate of Canadian exchange,\nIn   the   Industrial   list   Cuba  Cane   Ss\nCerro   de   Pasco   hn .and   Goodrich   6l\u201ei\n\u25a0 gave a good account of themselves.\nClo-riDg- Quotation!.\nHigh.    Low.    Chi**-\nC   P.   R \\_\\\\     HI\nC. M. * St. P 3\\i_      gg%\nInt,   Marina       _5\\x       __i_\n\u25a0     Mo.    Pacific   com...   II^       lt%\ndo pfd      57*-i,      GfiT,\nFierce-Arrow        IO1***       Kn4\nRock   Island        t?> U%\nStudebaker    . .'. 131 -^     I3ula\nV. 8.  Steel  com 101 \\t    100%\nWillys    \t\nCHICAGO, Aug. (!.\u2014Wheat was under\npressure- in the last .10 .minutes Fntur-\nd:ty and prices broke sharply, closing\nl'.ic to l%c lower, witYt Peptttnbe-\n$\\M*_ to 11.07 and Deem ha? at $1 07\nto, S1.07M..\n\u25a0Born declined %c io I Sc; oats were\no|f Vic to \\c, and provisions down If.c\nto 27 i.e.\nSterling Exchange\nHWW yoivk.     Aug.  *i\u2014\u25a0Rurltug ta*\nei';mge Saturday firm at J4l'l% tor W<\nday bills and $4.4.~>%  for Utiuaml\nNKLSON, Auk- 6.\u2014Current co.inter\nexcluviige for \u25a0'tciiing on Saturday.\n|i.\u00abl,\nForeign Exchange\nNEW   YOUK.    Auc.    &.\u2014 Bar    all ver\u2014\nForeign, H%ft\nCanadian dolli ro\u20149941c.\nFrnm-s\u2014I lenia n d,   S, 19 S c\nJ.ire\u2014TifMiialiil,   4.62'iiC.\nJlarks\u2014liemand. 013c. cables.\n..*>;*; v\nMEW      YORK.      AUf.     i;.-Charlie\nWhile of Chicugo. and   Bobby   BUTOtt\nof llilladelphia. will meet In a l.i-\nMHUid bout tomorrow night to decide which will ba next to meet Leonard, lb** light weigh I tii uiipioii, tor\nhis   title    Uiiire    1:\ntSoogoa.,\nCheese\u2014Flhast    easterns,    11 tic    U\nIS 1*0.\nRutler\u2014Choicest    creamery,    Hftfl    tt\nMo\nKggs\u2014Selected,  32c to  33i*.\nis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS,   Aug.   1\u2014Flour   un*\nchanged lo 10c higher at 17.10 lo |7.1j\nshipments, 14,411 barrels.\nBran\u2014I'nilnuigcd.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern, |1.II to $1.38\nCorn\u2014No. *\u00bb yclow, Ei I **** i* to II&\nOat.--No. .1 while, 111(0 to 30'^c.\nFlax\u2014No.  1. 11.41 V   to IS.SIfc,\nVERLEY SHINES AT\nTENNIS TOURNAMENT\nRed!\nT.Real\nB-mh nd\nAnto-BotUd\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nPtsiDoni Wanted\nLost nd Found\nLnrestocL\nMachinery-\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Classified Advertising\u2014\nOne and a half eenls per word per insertion. Six cenIs per word per week,\nor IlKc per word per month, cash In\nadvance. Transient mis accepted only\non a cnsh-ln-ndvance basis. Bach Inl-\nI Ial figure, dollar sign, etc., counts as\nono word. Minimum -.r>c, If charged\nuOe.   Display  type double ahove  rules.\nLocal Reading Notices\u2014.\"<\u2022 per Word\neach Insertion. In black face or machine, capitals 4c per word. Hlack face\ncapital** _c. a word. H par cent discount If run dally without chance of\ncopy for one month or more. Where\nadvertisement li set out in short lines\nIhe   Charge   is   lH^C  R   line   for   Roman\ntype.  u.e. for knack faaa, and 14a for\nblack   face   capital's.   Minimum   35c,   If\nchurned   |4a> _^_^^\n18 Miscellaneou ior Sale\nFOR SALK\u2014Pool table In first-class\nCondition, tiieap. Apply Sainmons,\nProcter, B, C, 1.1752)\n|     VICTORIA,   Aug.   C.:-St.   L.   K.   V.i-\n: by     won    the    men's    singles    kaUB\n< hntii]iion*iiip     at     Kritish     t'olumlila\nIrom    Marshall     Allan    of    Scatllu    in\nthe   finals   today.\nThe score WU 1-ft |-T, 7-\"., I**?\nVerley     was     also     in     the     teams,\nwhich won UM men's doubles and  the\nmixed    doublet-    linn Is.    respectively.\nto   Male Help Wanted\nWA NT] :it-Immediately, experienced\nlumber pliers nml lumber jnckers;\ngood wages; will consider eontnutt\nwilh experienced men. Wire tu quick\nIf Interested. Also want bushmeii.\nB.  C. .Spruce  Mills. (1T1I)\nails  for  Europe\nGENEVA,   Aug.   6.\u2014The   balloontaU\ncompeting In the Gordon 1U mult\nrace rose from the ground this afternoon in the presence of ,*i0,000 spectators    inul    with    fa vi nil de    weather.\nThe Span lata baHooo, Jeatu Fernanda\n\u2022Dtinb piloted by K. Magilahiiu, landed this evening in Orand Sacconiie,\nmar   here.\nwantko\u2014lielibov.    strathcona  hotel.\n!  t:bW7)\nj MAKK MONICY AT HOME\u2014$15 to $60\n| paid weekly for your spare time wrlt-\n! Ing showcards for us. No canvassing.\nWe instruct and supply with work.\n', West Angus Sliowcard Service, 1 Col-\n|      bourne   Bldg..   Toronto. ____*___\n13 Situations Wante-I\u2014Mai**\nI4I-S\n314\n1C,\nMH\n57\n10\\\n*:,:;\nIII M\n111 ||\nLOCAL MARKET.\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither W&h Your Name\nor with the words\nWANTKD\u2014Position by experlonood\nj     bush     foreman.      Apply     Box     IMT,\nDally  News. (3fi67\u00bb\nI WANTED\u2014Suitable     employmont    by\nyouth who has Boooontully oomplot-\ned   there  years'  commercial   course  In\n1     high    school;   also   passed    Dominion\ngovernment   examination     for     Junior\nclerk-atanosraphtr.     J.    C.    Ingram\nRogers.   Nelson (4444)\n11 Female Help Waate-J\nTrading was active on Satuidaj\nat the local market. A large array of\nmeats and vegetables were tin sal*'\nthat were fairly well * leaned up by\nnoon. Spring i Imkons created u good\ndemand and the Htuckfi wen- quickly\neold oul. Fresh meats held firm, no\nchange being noted for thc past few\nwevks.\nQuotations were:\nBeef,  per lb     10    to    .:0\nPork,  per lb 25    to    .30\nMutton\",   per   Ib 18      to     Jl\nVeal, pvr lb Ll-ft IS    .80\nHoef.  liver, pt-r lb.   ... .10\nLamb,   per  lb    up \u25a0 lo    Jl\nSpring. Chicken, per lb. ..-VO\nlowls,  drcssud   per  lb. .30\nI'rebh   eggs,   per   doz. .10\nNew   Potatoes,   per   lb. 04\nAsparagus,   p-ur   bunch .11\nRaipbe-rrlQB, per busk-el .i:'',:\nGrave ostein    tipples.\nper   Ib  0J\nCherries,   per   lb      ., 10     to      15\nDairy butter, per lb. ., .10\nllcul    Cheese,   per   lb. N\nHume-made cheese, lb.    .45     lu     .\"5\nllotnemade    Jelly,    i\u00ab*r\nlb., up from     !\u2022'\u2022\nArtichokes, -4  lbs.  fur Jl\nS;ring bt'aiis.  3 lbs,     . 2o\nBcarlet Runner betuna\n3    lbs  Jl\nYfcllow  beans     .1 -!*\u00bb\nBroad  beans,   1  lbs. J|\nPeas,  per lb  Jl\nBcettt, per bunch     M\nNew cabbage,  per lb, Jl\nOnions, per lb  12*i\nCelery, per head    J|\nLettuce, per lb.     15\nGeraniums, from  -2,\nSwett peas, per buiuii 10\nPut  plants 15     to     .fto\nDairy Butter\n\u25a0wiMMirro ouiii  quotations\nwiicat\noct. ...\nD*s 1\nOala-\nOCX. ...\nLa?c\t\nHsrl^\u2014\nurt.\t\nDec\t\nFl.x\u2014\nOM  -\nI)rc 1\nHyr -\nnrt\t\nI)\u00abc\t\np\u00abli. Ulsh. Low.\n1 IH 111 14 I li\u00bb %\n\u20227'i 107% lull\nU%\nio.\nill\\\nCI\t\nIin\n111%\nIll\n20111,    itr.%   in1,\n7*l\u00abi       7:4      72S\nEgg Market\nOTTAWA. Aug. fi\u2014Toronto eggs\nweak; epciaU, 140 to lie; extras. 33<\nto M\u00abJ ffrsts. 27c to 2Hc; eeconds, llfl\nto 2*c.\nNew Brunswick country points. 25c;\nHt. John, 29c to 16c; extras, 36c to 3*c\nPrince Kdwsrd Island country points,\nliQ to He; retail Charlottetown, 2*c to\n%_m\nring   tho  civil   war   30.15$   Union\nConfadcrHt    aoldlers   died\n\u25a0prlnopert of  war-\nAccording to tho Donili\ngovernment reruhitlona *i\\\nfarmer* \u00bbdio eell htrttar\nei'her to itorea or pri-rmtaly\nare required to have It properly covered in a wrapper on\nwhich MIST appe*r tn\nprominent   letien   th-\u00bb   wordi\n-DAIRY  BUTTER-\nTbe fact Is alM emphaalxed\nlhat ell butter In mtfh\npaik.ig's must be of the full\nnet weight of nlxlwn ounces\nend In default of mm* \u00bb fin*\nof from $10 to $M for <*\u25a0*\u2022\u00bb\u00bb\noffense it imposed. Whey\nbiilier must be *o Inbr 11*1,\neven when mixed wiih darty\nhotter and dairy butler rets.ns its label even though It\nbs mlied wilh the creamery\nproduct.\n3       Prices\nPRINTED    WITH    NAME    OF\nFARMER   OR   GRAND   NAME\nIf you hAve your own name or\nbrand on y\u00ab-*or wrapper*, you gain\nvaluable advertising for your but*\ntfst. lt rauses people to ask fur\nthe same brand ttgain.\nLH.   Paper   and\nPrinting    \u201e\t\n100$,  Paper  and\nPrlntinc\t\nPRINTED    WITH    WORDS\n$4.25\n$7.00\nWANTED\u2014An experienced waltnu at\nnee.     Allan  Hotel,   itopsland,   H.  C.\n   tttll)\nWANTED\u2014At one**. ex|ierl\u00bb*nceu waitress and upstairs girl. Castlegar\nHotel. tSfiDl)\nCLASSIFIED ads.   bring   results qulck-\n1 v    and    i'1'oniiniii'.illv. L'*\u00a3_ a    word.\n12 Situations Wanted Female\n'.Illlsl attending high school desires\nhonip in return for assistance wtth\nhousework or children. QoOd home\nessential    I Protestant*).      Apply      Hox\n$718, Dally Newe n?isi\n20     Lost and Found\nLOST\u2014 Wire-haired    terrier,    from    Willow   Point,     A   J.   Masters. (HTlfi)\nLOST\u2014Thirty  dolan   ta   Wnod-Vallanee\nenvelop*.    Return to Krncal K.atbv,\nI'oniinloii   I'mu. ss   eomiany.        CtTL'Ti\n40     Agenti Wanted\nMKN AM) WOMEN, not to canvass,\nbut travel and a appoint local representatives, iJ.\\ a week olid expenses,\nwith good chance, lo make $50 a\nweek and expenses. State age and\nqualifications. Experience unnecessary.     Winston   Co.,   l)t*pt.   W..   To-\nBABY huggy, collapslii'e; good condition, liione Mrs. Kwannell, Pair-\nview.   (1414)\nFull  BALE\u2014U-h   p.   Imperial got or\nk-roseiie   enirine,   |M4.      E\u00abr   particulars apply C. O. UgilVie, Vabk, H. C.\n< 3 C 4 R)\nEtllt \"SALE -Very large Itoyal Anne\ncherries. 6 cents per pound on the\ntrees.    .1.   H.  Qlss,  Nelson, (3C4S)\nTELL   your  wants   tnrougn   The   Dally\nNews classified columns.\nCANARIKH FOR SALE\u2014Ounranteed\nsingers. Lethbridge Hird Rooms,\nSteve Lawson, 416 11th St. S- Lethbridge l____t___\n14 Furnish?d Rooms to Rent\nFOR ltENT-3 furnished rooms (half\ndouble house), gas. $16 per month.\nPhono IKfixl mornings, or cnll evenings    rear    &^4    Latimer. _      (3637)\nWOU   KENT\u2014One\" \"suite     housekeeping\nrooms.   Morgan   Hlock,   Haker   street.\n(StitlO)\nFURNISHED    SUITE     FOR     RENT\u2014\nKerr block. (3f;:\u00bb3J\nSClTE-CHmpbell's  Studio ($444)\nBINOLE  ROOM \"and  two-roomed eutte,\nfor   rent.     Annable   block. (Hit)\nTELL   your   wants   through   The   Daily\nNews  classified   columv:\n34~ Teaehen'Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Teaeaar for Lumberton\nschool. Salary $1144. Apply, sta'ing\nexperience, to B, Klllott. secrelarv-\ntreasurer,   Lumberton,   H.  C.       *t3*.7~\u00bb>\nWANTEH-Teacher for Yahk school.\nII to 3T. pupils. Oood qualifications\nand references essential, foninieiic-\nIng salary $1-00, w::i three-roomed\nOOtUaa, partly furnished, free. Apply E A. Lyihgoe, secretary to trustees, Vnhk, H. C.        . tSlifil)\nWANTED\u2014Principal    for   Sloean city\npublic siiiool, salary $1300 per annum; also teacher for division -, salary $10(10. duties to commence September fith. Address applications to\nthe Secrelary Trustees, Slogan City,\nB. C. (364.r>)\nWANTED\u2014Teacher for Crescent Valley school. Apply with full particulars to William Winstanley, Secretary,   Crescent   Valley,   D   C,\n_ (369C)\nPRINTED stationery of all kinds.\" The\nllally   News   Printing   Ivi.arlment.\n23 City Property for Sale\nFOR SALK\u2014At New Denver, five-\nroomed shlngb-d bungalow; bath; hoi\nand cold water; usual outhouses;\n\u25a0front-proof cellar, fash or terms,\nApply '\"i-aliani Trickett, Sloean City.\nH. C. (3755)\nFOR SALE\u2014Beautiful home, lako\nfrontage; close to Nelson; government road. Good soil, chicken house\n(modern); raspberries. Viewing lake\nand Nelson. Price right. Miljcovic,\nIt.  R.   1,   Nelson. (3731)\n49   Farms and Ranches\n+ \u25a0\u00a7\u2022 + + + +*\u25a0 + + + + + + + + + + + + + *tr + + + +--\n4- +\n+ 10  ACRES +\n+ +\nO Nearly   all   cleared,   good   hot- \u2666\n+ ton   land.     Has  30ft   fruit   trees, +\n+ commencing to bear, and Quan\u00bb +\n* tity   of   small   fruits,     House,   5 +\n+ rooms,   chicken   house,   root   eel- \u2666\n+ lar.   barn,   etc.     Close   to   school +\n+ nml     shipping     point.     Splendid +\n+ properly     for    a     small  chicken \u2666\n+ ranch. \u2666\n+ Price $3700, on terms. +\n+ +\n+ HtJOH  W.  ROBERTSON, +\n+ The Lund   Man, +\n+ Nelson,  B. C. +\n+ +\n+ + + +*. + + + + + + + ++.*. + + + + + + + + + + +\nFOR SALE\u2014350 UN| good land, suitable for fruit, alfalfa or stock ranch.\nOood soil; plenty of lime. 90 acrey\niilmont level, lias lake frontage, A\nsnap. Particulars, apply Mucker\"th,\nBroadwater, Lower Arrow Lakes.\nB. .C (3721)\n70 ACRES land near -rooter, with lake\nfrontage. $20.00 an acre. Apply\nSammons,  Proeter. (3753)\n-1   Live Stock Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Pony suitable for boy lo\nridn to school. Reply stating age and\nprice to Bayley, It.  _%,  1, Nelson.\n(3fiil5)\n28 Miscellaneous Wanted\nHOTEL and house owners, make your\nchimneys draw good; get them\nCleaned by expert wilh proper tools\nbefore winter comes on. Box 21. Nelson, B. C (373S)\nWANTEH\u2014Two good pianos cheap ior\ncash. Box  166.  Nelson  P.  O.       (3676)\n*\u00bb   Poultry tad E*p\n55 For Sale or Exchange\nFINK   Yorkshire   boar.   U   months   old.\nuuiet  nnd  good  br ter     Cheap foi\noaah, or will conalder ezchanse young\npigs  or  cow.     E.     F.     Jan Is,     North\nShorn, Nelaon. (3751)\nr et K11; v e 11  dog,  4  month s;  hunting\nsloek;    $20.      Or   exchange    for   collie\nequal  value.     Koehle,  Kaslo,  B.  C.\n*367fti\nii\nInsurance\n1(5     Room and Board\nrd,   privatu   bous*\n\u25a0Mi\nFor Sale\nTHE RISK IS GREAT\nThe premium small.\nThere is no safety without\nInsurance.\nWe assume the risk for\nyou.\nINSURE TODAY\nFOR SALE\u2014S. C. W. Leghorns, cockerels. L. Tt. Guild strain, Rockwood,\nOntario. W. J. Richards, Box lit,\nNelson, B. C. (3711)\n45     Property Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To not for 192.1. small\nfruit ranch. Muat ha suitable- liu'lil-\nInss anil water. Whin wrltlnK sin-\nfull pnrtlcnlura. Will pay rent In\nadvance. A. F. Collier, Maple I'l-i'k\nS.iak IJISII\n33 Fruits and Vegetables\nSPLENDID local new apu.la llila week.\n13.75 Kin pound, delivered In Nelaon.\nr..  F.  Jarvla.   North Shore,   N.laon.\nI37.',0)\nProfessional and Business Directory\u2014Continued\nPlasterer\nC.  II.  FAWCETT  COMPAMY\nLathers and   plasterers.\nEstimates Giveu.\n(Jeneral Delivery. Nelaon.\n(3315)\nInsurance and  Real  Estate\nB.   W.   DAWSOW.\nReal   Fstale,   Insurance.    Kentals\nAnn..1.1. Blk. 1'. O. Box 73]. l'hon. HI\n(3700V\nMonuments\nCampbell   A   Hltchi.   MonumanUl   Co.,\n1*. O.  Box  8\u00ab5. Nelson,  B.  C.\nTeh phone  161. (3701)\nCANADIAN  AUTO  AND  XZ.ZCTBIOA*.\nSUPl'tY   COMPANY\nBattery l.rvlo. Btatlim\nElectrical tiipllancea,  tuolor snd fell,\n.ralor   repairs,   electrical   and  mechanical   Installing,   oxy-acetylcne   welding,\nmachine shop work, alemlt. lubrlestlnl\nsystems,   h.Asslck   products.     P.   O.   Bos\n51,  IOC   Baker  .St..  Nelson.   Phon.  6,1.\n13702)\nPainters and Decorators\nMURPHY   DUOS,\nrslst.r. snd  Decurators\nDealers  In  Wallpaper\n,13 Josephine St. (3703)\nTim Fl.-iy.r Interior decorator, pnp*r-\nhanirer. Phone or call 511 Stanley 8L\nPrice, reasonable. Work Guaranteed.\n(1701)\nLodges\nNELSON   LOPC.R  No.   I.   B.  P.  O.  B.\nMeets 11 til, Baker Bt., (Ir.t sod third\nThursdav. (37'ir.)\nAccountants\nCKABLEI T. HDNTJtB\nSuccessor  to the  1st.\nJames   li   laiwrenc.\nBox llll N,1\"\u00b0\"'(*,0?)\nFlorists\nORIZZELLES   (1UEENHOUSB,   Nelsoa\nCut flowers and floral designs.\n(3707)\nAssayers\nB!.  W.  WIPDOWSON    Box  A11SJ,  N.lson. B. C. Standard ws.t.rn oh.rs.s\n1370*1)\nWholesale\nBESKINOTOir    A   BRAWN,\nWhol.aale   rmit   Merchant..\nCherries, Haapherrlea.  Hlack Currants\nsnd all root VKetaliles liousht for cash.\nTelephone  Hi. Nelson. B. C.\n(S7M)\nA- MACDONALD It CO. WHOLESALsi\nOrocers and Provision Merchant*\nImporters of Teas, Coffee, Splc%\nDried Frulta, 8taple snd Fsoer Oro-\nceriea.   Nelson.   B.  C. (1710)\n*\u00b0   Live Stock ior Sale\n-DAIRY    BUTTER\"\nIM\nfor\n:>\u2022\nfor\n500\nfor\nloon\nfor\n$1.00\n..$1.50\n$2.50\n$4.50\nI'Olt SALE\u2014T\nMS), seven V\nMill.     Plume\ns.mm.ZI        R W* DAWSON\ntee  old,   y_  each.    820 j P.O. Box 733. Annable  Blk. Phone 197\n\u25a0JMltl. (37-45) I (3f*9S)\nPOR SALK\u2014A>rshire hull, or would\nexfhange for Ayrshire heifers. For\nInformation   apply   A.   Llvesly,   Yahk.\n_ B. C. (37^r>)\nFOR SA'LE\u2014Gray horse!\"weight l'>00;\nIdaek saddle horse, weight 11G0. age\n4 years; two aete heavy team hurness,\nlo'.ir pack saddles. thre\u00ab riding sud-\ndles, road cart, light ha mens, heavy\nwagon. All In good condition. Can\nhe aet'ii any time. W. E. Lane, Ainsworth.   (3720)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two good ijiich cowa arid\nIS months old heifer. Mackereth.\nBroadwater, Lower Arrow Lulu's,\nU  C. (J7S3)\nArchitects\nWE  CAN  SHIP IMMEDIATELY ON   RECEIPT OF  ORDER\nIf wrappers are to be mailed include postage when\nsending money orders\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE  HOME OF  GOOO  PRINTING\nBAKER f-TEET NELSON, B. C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOffice   Smelting   and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchattrt   of   Gold,   Silver,   Copper,   Lead   and   Zinc   Oreo,\nProducer!  of   Gold,   Silver,   Copper,   Pig   Lead  and   Zino\nTADANAC, TRAIL.\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nI FOR UmtM TailUlll. nlne-pasaenger;\n]     Cray  engine,     l'r Ice   moderate.     Also\nthe   hoal   house,   rlty   wharf.     F.   C.\nWhitehouse,  Nelson. tS7:!fi)\nI FOR SALK \u2014Ford car, lu good running\nI      order;  five  gooil  tires;  cheap.    Applv\nC. Tlllev. 1Q'>2 Kootenwy street. iUC9)\n22        Miscellaneous\nAdvertising is the Motive\nPower of Business.\nGENTLEMAN requires cool, comfortably furnished HkIiI houaekrapinK\nroom, close In. Apply Hox .17:11).\nLiully News. (373(1)\nBusiness   and   Professional\nDirectory\nCarpenter and Builder\nT.  A.  LAWSON.  All  CI..... of Work.\nr.ctory,  MS  Hall   Bt.   Lamatco   pan.la,\nITEEPI.EJAOX.\nChlmneya. roofs, aawmlll burners,\nbini.Iim;.... \u00abtc painted and repaired.\nKatlmatea given. R Knight. Thon.\nHIHK^IiOJBm^t. N.lson. B._C. (S006)\n>. IUMS  BFAD,  M.  B.  O.  \u00bb. A.\nAltCHITECT.\nBsj  Av.nu.. \u2022 Timll.  B   O\n__I.I111)\nEngineer!\nGteeo\nBros., Bur-\/,\ne\u00ab\nMtl.ROlf,   B.  O. \t\nCITIL     AMD     MININIt     llHOIHIEB*\nB. C, Albert, snd IKmliilon\nLAND    BUSVllVOHS\nCrown Grant Ac.nts. Bin. rrtnMii^\n (3711)\nA.   L.   McCDLLOCK '\nHy.lraullo    En,U..r\nProvlncliU  Z.snd  Burv.yo,\nBsk.t   St. H.l.un,   B.   Ok\n . (3713)\nMIKIHO   EKOIBBBB\nB.   O.   Land   Surv.ynr\nB. D. Dsw.on, Ks.lo, B. O.\nAuctioneers\nW.   OIIMB\nAnetlon..r,   Apprsli.r,  Tftlnnlo,\nQooda   .old   privat.17   or   At   Auction.\nIll Wsrd gtre.t. I'bon. TT\n (37111)\nFuneral Directors\nD. .1. ROBERTSON, F. D. P. * B.  Ill\nVictoria  .hi,i.    l'hon.  ill:    Nl.lit\nrhone 157J. (3711)\nStandard Furniture Company\nUndertaker* and emhalmere and Funeral Director*. The finest and moat\nup-to-date undertaking parlnra en*,\nehapel In interior  it   C.    Dar phone l(.\nNlghl   phono 2l,'\u00a3 and 64. (3717)\nWANTED\u2014-Household    furniture.    Peo-\npu    who    will    want    furniture   rend\nthese   columns.   Tell   what   you   have\nto  eel],   i \\.e. a word.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\n\u2022:\u2022\n3QB a\u2014 i t i~* \u2022 j\nBy George McManus\n1^5 COINC. TO\nLE^VE. U*b-\nOH'. I*b TH*aT\n\u00bb>0-  WHEN l^\nHE. COI-M?\n\u00a9 l\u00ab2 IV Ints.  rt.ru..  S.\u00abV'\u00ab.  I\"1*\nV '\"   'ti   \u00ab!'\u25a0\u25a0       \"\"     .     \"\n 773\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  MONDAY MOTiNiNC, AUGUST 7, 1522.\nPage Seveif\nNews of Sport\nUN FAIL TO   BROWNS EASILY\nIEACHDECISION BEAT SENATORS\nce Hillhursts and Westons Yanks   Lick   Tigers;   Babe\nto One-Goal Draw;     Hits Homer; Indians and\nPlay\nj Try Again Today\nAthletics Win\nRonton     2    13      0\nCleveluud     3     11       0\nIlatteries\u2014Qiilun  and   Wallers,   Ruel;\nCoveleihit   and   O'Neill.\nTimely IMMing Tells.\nCHICAOO,    Aug.    6\u2014Timely   hitting\nby     Philadelphia    won    today's    game\nagainst   Chicago,   li   to   1,   making   the\nfifth straight defeat for the While _\\o\\.\nR.   11.   B.\nPhiladelphia    5     8     s\nChicago    l     *     o\nBattarloa\u2014Naylor       nnd       Perkins;\nCouilncy, HOdgal and Schallt, Yaryan.\nAMERICAN\nLEAGUE\nWon\nbo*\nr.'t.\nSt. I.onig   \t\n.. II\n4i\n.r.'ir,\nNtw*    York    \t\n.. ti-'\n\u25a0ll\n.r,7i\nU\nr.i\nChlorico   \t\n.. r.n\n.Ut\nCleveland    \t\n.. r.i\nII\n,(M\nWiialllllRlon     \t\n..  49\nr.i\n.4 7'.!\nPhiladelphia   \t\n.,   41\ntt\n.10.1\n114\nMi\n.VINNIPEG,   Aug.   6.\u2014For  tho   ioo-\nII   time   In  two   daya   tho  Calgary I\nlllhursts    nnd     Winnipeg     Waatoni\nlied    to    come    to    a    decision    to!\nj.*Ido which team will travel cant  to I\ntent    for    the    Connaught    trophy\nhey again played In a one-goat;\n.w  on   Saturday  afternoon,  muklng\nother  frame   necessary   on   Monday.\nFriday  ganiB ended  In  the  tame\ny.wlth   the  result  thnt   each   team;\nled    up   n   total    of    two   goals    In | SiiaiUy. \u25a0\ntwo   games. Babe   Scorer.   Twentieth,\nturday'a contest wis another bit- DETROIT. Aug. G. New Y\nstruggle with nn even break a hated Detroit.\n, criterion of the relative merit! \u25a0*\">\u2022 of **\u2022\nthe teamH though the visitors (Ol\nequalizing goal by way of ;i\nhalty kick midway ln the session.\nThe locals were first to tally after\nteams had Bought the first bilf\nthout a score. Knlll, Wetton'a ecu\nr, banged the ball Into the Calgar?\nt from clone range two mimite*-\nter the start of the second nation.\npenalty kick allowed Caitwiight to\nen up about 2ft minutes afterwards,\nie brilliant defense work of tha\nsitora   featured   a   real   rup   tie   con-\nPrince.of Wales'\nMare Wins the\nOpening Handicap\nlilt   his   2'Hh   home\nthc sixth Innlnit, \\vl\n\u25a0   tads\ni.r   Uu\nNew   York\nlvtrt.lt    ...\n\u25a0 -llti\n\u25a0 h snd S.-li.tntr;\nml  %\u25a0. ... .1.11,   Ita\nopening\nRuth\nil.r.\nSt.\nEASTERN LACROSSE\nAt   Montreal,   Shamrocks.\nal Nationals,  -I.\nAt   Ottawa,   Gunners,   6;\nBrowns SUU WUtfUf.\ns*r    l.'H'is.    auk.   I.\u2014Thfl   Browafl\nknocked Walter Johnson off tht mottml\ntoday and easily dafaatad Washington,\nI to C for thtlr fourth sir-iluht vict..ry\nTwo  home   reus by  Tobln   featured,\nH     11     I\nWashington  \u00bb    ;>    3\nSt     l.oills     S     1.1        I\nBat twite -Johnaon,     Brlllhaart    and\nVUinleh;  Shocker and  Collins.\nIndians Defeat Bed Box.\nCLKVIXANI),       Aug.      6.--Ch<velfind\ntook the first -game of tho series from\nIfosmn today, -I to 2, In ll Innings.\nK.   It.   ft\nVANCOUVKR. Aug. &.\u2014Oarabo-*se, I\nth>- F. year-old marc owned hy H. Tl. H,\nthe Prince of Wales, won the opening\nba&dleap Of one and one-eighth miles\nIn the fifth race at Hastings park Saint.lay   afternoon.\nSmmuarjr.\nFirst race, five furlongs\u2014Chattan-\ncourt won, Hen more 11. second, Klllar-\nue.-   Balk third.    Time.    :,'.1 \u25a0..\"..\ngaeond race, five furlongs\u2014Vol I ma\nwon, I'avcade second, l_\\6y Edmonton\nthird.     Time,   MM.\nThird race six furlongs\u2014Miss Sedalia won. Hill Hlackwell second, Ring-\nlend.*r third.    Time, 1:16 2-1.\nPou rih race, six furlongs\u2014Mabel\nHule won. Halwekht second, Shelhy-\nvitle   thlfd.     Time,   till 3-5.\nFifth, race, mile and an eighth\u2014Cara-\nI.dski'  won. Marcrlla Roy second, Woodie\nMontgomery   third.    Time.  l;il 2-r,.\nSixth race, mile and \"ft yards\u2014Hobo-\nllik won, Prince Direct *-econd Nebraska   third.     Time,   1:19.\nSeventh race, five furlongs\u2014Joe\nHInIr won. Or. Corhett second, Juanita\nFrederick  third.    Time,   :5X 2-u.\nCUBS SQUASH\nNEWYORKERS\nBatting Rally Yields Eight\nRuns in Tenth; Reds Victorious\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nWon Lost Pel\nHn    Yorlt        61 41 AU\nSt.  I\/iuls     61 42 .59*8\nOhlcngo       r,3 4S .F,*14\nPittsburgh     M 47 JU\nfinfiiinaii    r*'> H Ml\nHrooklyn     '\u25a0\u25a0> H -*M\nVhilmli Ipl.in       36 N .379\nUoston      33 6i> .337\nTRAIL WINS     I\nCLOSE GAME\nRally in Last Inning Gives\nBall Game to Trail Players; Play Snappy Ball\nfi\nUth centrry the  \u2022*,',, I (\u25a0-\nmnat   warlike   peiipl-j   In   Ell-\nGeneral   Cigar Co. Limited\nControlled and Operated br\nImperial Tobacco Co. of Canada Limited\nIteds Take .final.\nBROOKLYN', Aug. 6.\u2014The Cincinnati\nIPds won the final game of the series\nfrom Brooklyn, 6 to 3. B.   H. ft\nCincinnati     fi    12      1\nBrooklyn   | 3    lft      1\nHattcrles\u2014Keck nnd Wlngo; Grlmep,\nMamaux and  Miller.\nTenth Fruitful of Bane.\nNKW YORK, Aug. fi.\u2014A Chicago batting rally in the lftih Inning yielded\neight runs, ennbled the Cuba to defeut\nthe (Hants In the fifth game of Iheir\nseries today,  10 to 3. It.   H.   ft\nChicago     10    |J      1\nNew   York      3      8      3\nBatttriea   Oahanw    and    OTfcrrall;\nByan,   N.   Barnes and  Smith.\nBASEBALL\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUl\nSunday\nToronto,    9    Buffalo,   i\".\nBaltimore.    G-T>;    Newark.    2-1.\nRochester,   4;   Syruuse,   1.\nReading,   3-4;   Jersey   City.   7-\nEAST   CANADA   LEAGUE\nSundty\nOttawa,   7;   Cafie   Madeleine,   14.\n\u2022 Three   Rivers.   8;    Montreal,   ft.\nSiturdty\nThree   Rivers,  4-1;   Cape   Madeleine,\n0-0.\nMontreal, 2-4;   Ottawa. 3-7.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUl\nA ninth Inning rally hy the Trail\nhall stars won a game for them yesterday ovor the local nine. The final\nscore was 3-2 and the local boys had\nthe better of the play almost the j\nwhole way through. Both teams played I\nairtight ball and the work of the\npitchers wast exceptional Mlchaeley,\nwho twirled for the locals, in particular,  plnyed a  good  game.\nOnly oat had feature marred the\ncontest when M'intyrc, who was receiving for Trail, In the fifth frarfie\ncaught one on his bare hand, which\nbroke his thumb. lie retired In favor of Henry. Nelson started things!\nIn the fourth when they drove out j\ntwo runs. Mlehtilloy pitched air- j\ntight hall, which, wtth good support,\nheld Trail In check for seven Innings. * In the last framo with two\non bases, Howard hit Into a double\nwhtrh broke up thc game giving Trail\na  one-run  margin.\nHero Is a record of the game by\nInnings:\nFirtt Inning.\n\u25a0 Nelson\u2014B. Anderson struck out;\nModdrell flied out to Drew at short;\nAnderson passed; O'Niell grounded to\nDrew, who threw Anderson out at\nsecond.\nTrail\u2014Howard out to Andersoh at\nsecond; Drew passed on hit through\nshort; Henry out to B. Anderson In\nleft field; Mclnlyre out, Anderson\n(o Moddrell.\nSecond  Inning.\nNelson\u2014Notman  drew a pass;   Ker-\nby   filed   out   to   UaDOBtM   In   left\nfield;   Richard   struck   out;   Mk-haely\nstruck out.\nTrail\u2014Butorac  hit  safe  over  short;\nMorgan    drew    pass;    McDonald   filed\nout to first, doubling Morgan at first; I\nMaze flied out to  B.  Aiidersorf,\nThird   Inning.\nNelson\u2014Kcmmerling  struck out;   B. j\nAnderson   hit   along   third   base   line; |\nModdrell filed out to Morgan In con- j\nter;   Anderson out on attempted steal,\nto second.\nTrail\u2014I'atton filed out to Mlchaely; |\nHoward   out,   Mlchaely   to   Moddrell;\nDrew  hit   to   left   for  a   doubt,   out   at\nthird   on   trying   lo   s!retch   hla   hit,\nAnderson   to   Not man.\nFourth Inning.\nNelson\u2014Anderson out. Maze to\nHenry. O'Nell hit over first for a\nsingle; Notman hit Texas leaguer\nfor a flngle over second; Kerby struck\nnut O'Neil and Notman gained a\nbase each on Mclntyre's fumble.\nRichardson hit through second, scoring O'Neil and Notman. Mlchaely out.\nBatnrday.\nSacramento 2, San Francisco  1.\nOakland  5.   1'ortl.ind   10.\nSalt Lake 1, Lou Angeles 2.\nVernon  5-.r>,  Seattle  2-6.\nSunday\nVernon.    1-1;    Seattle,    4-3.\nSnll   hake,   3-7;   Los   Ang'ies,   1-0.\nSacramento, 2-0;  San Francisco, 4-f.\nO.ikluml,   1-3;   Portland,   9-1.\nHenry.\nhits,   two\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nSunday.\nSt.   rattl,   R-3;   Toledo,   l\",.T,.\nMilwaukee,   !\u2022;   Imllannpolls,   n.\nMinneapolis.  15;   Columbus,  r>.\nKiinatts Cily, 13-11;  Louisville, ll-J\nMICHIGAN-ONTARIO\nSaturday.\nSaginaw.  3*.   London.  2.\nBoort   Huron.   3;   Kitchener,   1\nBay   City,   1-3;   Hamilton,   2-4.\nFlint,   3;   Branirord,  8.\nMcLearies and Saints\nPlay Footer Tonight\nOne of the best football games of\nthe season Is expected tonight In the\ncity league, when tho St. Saviours\nand McLearies meet. This game,\nwhich Is a benefit game for three\nplayers recently Injured lu city\nleague games, Is at present drawing\na great deal of Interest from followers of the football game.\nAccording to the news from tbe\nSaints' headquarters, they Intend to\nspring a surprise, as they have a\ncouple of dark horses In their lineup- The Macs, however, are not\nlistening lo nny football scandal, but\nstate that they are staging as strong\na  lineup  as  they  can   muster.\nJ.   Draper   will   referee   the   match,\nThe teams consist of the following;\nSt. Saviours.                   MaoLearlcs.\nCnry     -   -   Deslreau\nCoal.\nBar wood\nRradley   ..\nHorswill\nBossley ...\nBath   ___.\nHalf Backs.\n..  Pitts\nSmith\n    Boyd,\n.   I.   Spiers\nMcKenzle\nA.  Spiers\n    Talbot\nHa lion\nnraa\nTrail\u2014Henry out, Notman to Moddrell; M'intyre filed out to Kcmmerling; Rutorae hit saMy; Mnrgaln\ngained first; McDonald gained first\nnn fielder's choice. Butorac was retired nt third. Kerby to Notman.\nFifth   Inning.\nNelson\u2014Kcmmerling hit over short\nfor a single; B. Anderson out on fly.\ntn Patton; Moddrell flied oul to Bu-'\ntnrca.     H.   Anderson   struck   out.\nTrail\u2014Maze   flied  out  lo   B,  Anderson ;    Put ton    fouled   out    to   O'Neil;\nHoward  out,   Kerby   to   Moddrell.\nSixth   Inning.\nNelson\u2014O'Neil out, Howard to:\nHenry; Notman struck out; Kerby\nstruck   out.\nTrail -Drew    struck     out j       Henry'\nflb-d out  to  BlfltiirdaoTt    Wilmes  hit\nsafe  through   first   base;   Butorac  out.,\nft Anderson  to  Moddnll.\nSeventh    Inning.\nNclj-on\u2014Bichnrdson flied out lo1\nMorgan; Mlchaely out, Howard to\nHenry; Kemmerllng hit by pitched\nhall, gaining first; ft Anderson struck\nout.\nTrail\u2014Morgan    hit   thrpugh    short;\nItoDanaM    hit    Texas    leaguer    over\nsecond, scoring Morgan;   Maze safe at\nfirst on hunt to Michnely, who threw\nIIoDOOAU  out  nt  third.  Patton  gain-;\ned   first;   Howard   out   on   a  liner   to!\nNotman, who doubled Maze at second;\nto   Anderson.\nEighth  Inning.\nModdrell   safe   nn   Drew's   error;    E.,\nAnderson struck out;   O'Nell flied out\nto   Morgan;   Notman   struck   out\nTrail\u2014Drew  flied out  to  R.  Aaitflr |\nson:     Henry    drew    base    on\nWilmes   struck   out;    Butorac\nout.\nNinth   Inning.\nNelson\u2014Kerby safe on Howard's\nerror; Richardson filed out lo Morgan; Mlchaely hit over second for\nsingle; Kcmmerling gained first when\nPat Ion tried to double Mlchaely at\nsecond; B. Anderson struck out;\nModdrell hit to Drew, forcing Kcmmerling at  second.\nTrail\u2014Morgan gained first, McDonald hit Texas hagucr: Maze out.\nNotman to Moddrell; \u25a0 Patton safe\non Kerhy's error; Morgan put out at\nplate*. Howard bit to short right\nfield, scoring McDonald and Pal ton\nfor  the   winning   runs.\nScore by  Innings.\nNelson  00 0 20000 0-2\nTrnll   000000102-3\nThe  box  score  was  as  follows:\nhalls;\nstruck\nBall      \t\nAtkinson    \u2014\nBight  Wing.\nJohnson    McDonald\nCenter.\nV     flravcs     _ Bnwkctt\nElliott          Martin\nLeft Wing.\nReserve\u2014St. Saviours:   Ti. Welsh, B.\nAnderson, II. Ward.\nLACROSSE MEN\nHOLD WORKOUTS\nTrall'n track aggregation of lac\nrosse players will visit Nelson oi\nWednesday, when they will oMl\nsticks with the loci) boys, This fix\nturn, which will bo a regular league\ngame, promit-e-- r*nmo atftlon, ns a win\nfor the locals will mean a tie In\nthe   West Kootenay league.\nSome stiff arorkOttta havo been held\nby   the   Greenshlrts   In   tho   Mat   t\nweeks,  a real live one  was  held over\ntbe week-end at which a good turnout\nof playert wat recorded.\nNelson.\nB    Anderson\nModdrell.   Ib.   ..\nAnderson,    2h.\nO'Nell,    0\t\nNotman, 3b\t\nKerby,   ss\t\nRichardson,    < f.\nMlchaely,    p,\nAB. H.   ft\nu\nKcmmerling, rf  4\nTotals     \u201e 3S 7 2     3\nTrail.                                AB. H. B.   ft\nHownrd,    2b,    lb  B 1 ft      1\nDrew,   ss.  4 1 0      _\nHenry,   lb..   0  4 0 0     r\nMelntyre,   c     2 0 fl      f\nWilmes,   2b  2 1 0     f\nnulorae,   If  4 2 0     (\nMorgan,   of  4 1 1      I\nM'Dou.ild, rt  4 2 11\nMaze,   2b    I 1 fl      (\nPatton,   p  4 0 11\nlfl u ds\u00bbfVS *U a y $j0ftl p a n y\nThis Week\n\\Ve shall feature Cretonnes\nand Muslins for house furnishings. New designs in lovely\ncoloring. Many of these arc\nnow used for ladies' Dresses.\n50c\n45c\n$1.00\n$2.50\ncolorings, heavy quality; 50 inches\nwide.   Per yard\nWe shall soon have on sale the merchandise from Europe which has been purchased\ndirect from the actual manufacturers.\n-H This has been made possible hy the efforts of\nthe II. B. Co.'s buying committee, whose duty-\nit is to find the lowest possible market.\ntj These expert merchandise men are picked\nfrom the II. D. Co. organization who know\nthe Canadian trade and are, therefore, able to\njudge the finest details concerning these\ngoods.\ntJ They were sent over to Europe this spring\nto personally select these goods and we know\nfrom the patterns they brought back with\nthem you are going to have some splendid\nmerchandise otherwise not procurable.\ntl This is vhere our organization will save ijou\nmoney this fall.\nl.y    pitcher\u2014Komtncrlltig   by   Patton.\nTwn-biisp   hits\u2014Drew.\nTime  of   gamp,   one   hour,   45   minutes.\n15 YARDS ONLY HEAVY QUALITY CRETONNES,\nflowers and bird designs; 32 inches wide.    Regular 85c yard.   Special,\nper  yard  \t\n30  YARDS   FANCY   CRETONNE,   cream   ground,\nfloral and bird design; 31 inches wide.    Regular,\n79c yard.   Special,\nper yard \t\n25 YARDS ONLY HEAVY ARMURE CLOTH for\nmaking heavy curtains; rose shade only; 50 inches\nwide.    Regular, $1.25 yard.\nSpecial, per yard \t\n35   YARDS   EXTRA   HEAVY   TAFFETA   CRE-\nTONE, reversible, suitable for covering chairs and\nfurniture;   rich,   dark  coloring;   52  inches  wide.\nVery special value,\nper yard  \t\nFANCY COLORED CRETONNES, small, effective\ndesigns; ideal for dresses, etc.; 36 inches \/Ifl\/s\nwide.   Per yard  4Ut\nREVERSIBLE SHADOW CLOTH, brown and green\n$1.25\nFANCY COLORED ART SATEENS for covering\nbed    comforters,      cushions,    etc.,      28      inches\n>S'..Per 65c and 75c\nMERCERIZED REPP FOR CURTAINS in plain art\nshades, brown, green and rose; 52 <j*-t *WJ*\ninches wide.   Per yard  \u00abp.L. ItJ\nJUST ARRIVED\u2014NEW PARISIAN BEAD BAGS\ndirect from Paris.   No two alike.   Each,\n$5.75      $7.50      $7.95\nRED RUBBER \"NO BURST\" BALLS, high bouncing       I\nquality; about the size of tennis balls. .)*\" -        I\n- Each   ODC\nSTUDENTS' WATER COLOR BOXES, complete\nwith brush.   Special values, each,\n15c     20c     30c     35c\nSporting Briefs\nBig Vallvy Jump* Into Load\nCALUARY. Aug. 6.\u2014Big Valley, on\nthulr own Kliamond on Saturday\nJumped tutu lhe lead In the semi-final\nnf the Albarta amateur IwHcball I\nchampionship by defeating Edmonton]\nBed %)m *ix to five In a free hitting |\ngame that went 10 Innings. The return (Tame will be played ln Edmonton Wednesday.\nMill   America   Glide*   Home.\nCHICAOO,   June   6 \u2014Running   true;\nto   form   Our   Wood's   Miss   America, I\nworldi        ehamplnn        water      glider,\nromped   he,me   today   ahead   of   Commodore  Sheldon   Clark's   Miss Chicago;\nIn   the   last   day   of   the   speed   boat\nraces at the Chicago pageant of prog- :\nreus.   The victory gave Miss America i\nthe   Oreat   Lakes'   championship   and i\nthe   Harry   F.   Sinclair   trophy,   with\na  score  of   6-fi-fi   against   Miss  Chi- ]\ndigit's 6-5-5.\nCurtis Point Saturday evening.\nAudrey Or if fen, Victoria, was tho\noutstanding slur, rapturing ;i Canmlinn\nre-conl. i-lso bnaking two P. If. \\. championship**-. Sin* gained n I>otninion honor In the f.n-v-ird Indies* free style, wfn-\nning In 29 4-j seconds. The two P. N.\nA, laurels which Miss iJriffen won\nwen- the 100-yard l.-di.**.' ttOS stylo in\n70 seconds flat, the previous record b**-\nIng 70 1-5 seconds, and the 880-yard\nladles* fne wtylo in 14:2r>, thereby\nbreaking llu* existing record by 37 seconds.\n\u2022\u2022i\nTotals     37     9     3     J\nSummary.\nStruck     nut\u2014Hy     I'ntton,     Id;     hy\nMlrhafly.   I.     DraM*   plays\u2014Notmun\nto   Anderson;    MotMrsll   to   Anderson.\nBases ob barra=4H MIchae^TT. TTit\nShatter Numerous\nSwimming Records\nVICTORIA. Aug. B.\u2014S\u00abven Pacific\nNorthwest \u25a0\u25a0toilllTtfla'l swimming records were \u25a0ftaiUrtJ and one Canndlan\nrecord established here today ut tli* an- '\nnual pwhoming nnd water polo Cham-\nplonnhlp   gala,   conducted   by   thn   Van- '\ncouver island   Athletic   association at 1\nAUCTION\nSALE\nOf Nelson Cily Prooerty, at E. Sut-\ncliffe's Store. 411 Baker Street, 2:34)\nCity    Time.    Thursday,    August    17th,\nDeseiipii'm of properties: Housfl\nsituated at Ml Victoria street (opposite Kerr ltlnck), lot 2.\". by 120 feet,\n2 bed rooms, dining room, sitting\nroom, kitihen, pantry, bath nnd toilet,\nelectric light, gas connoctlons for\ncooking, cement wall and steps ln\nfront, veranda front and back, yard\nfenced In. co:il nnd Wood shed. Kreo\nfrom all i n. iimbrnii i'. Immedlatft\npossession. Subject to u reserve tho\nabove will be offered for sale by\nauction. Terms, '*t rash, balance I\nand '1 years. 8 per cent Interest. &\np\u00abr cent will be nlinwed for carh\nmile. Plenty of time to Inspect property,     \u2014\n rvm g~g\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING,. AUGUST 7, 1922.\n\\eo3M w \u25a0\nMaori \"\u00abJDYf 'ns,al!s  SEND PETITION\n-  0'dRad,oReee,v,rig     ||| HR J-\"\"\"^\nSet; Works Good\nAsmlnf Strips, rreen and whits,\nheaviest grade, per yard, (50<*\nLadles* Silk Hose, 90\u00ab* and $1.00.\nBoys'     Bathing     Suits,     90<*     \u00bb\"d\nfl.OO. Ladles'       S1.35     and!\n1.90- Mosiiulto NflUng. 15\u00ab*. \"**\u25a0 B\u00bb\u00bb**aMI a lonil yunlh. _\nyard. White Duck, 7 OS., *35\u00a3 per* Hie latast hoy to Kit lh*' laclin POf.\n\u2022\/ard. Middy Cloth, 35,* pa> yard. ,||B r,\u201e,.iv|\u201eK s\u201e,, \u201e.\u201e,,.,, \u201e , ,.onl,.,.\nDreas   OlnKhama,   _tr,l^    JO\/*     .1*^\/* .    .\nrard. Ladles' Vea\u00a3 Bllme'r. and< VUnre Wt,rked l)U( \u25a0\u00bb himH\"1' \"\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab\nHosiery, Linoleum, Furniture, Ruga \"',- PKfM\" In-oadoisted fn>m The\nGlassware,  cheapest ln  the  city. Daily  News StsttOO, ft .1. r.   i:, quite\n! clearly   on   Mat unlay   nlglil.\nJ. W.  HOLMES Th\"    N'elson    youth's    rSOfttVtDg    set,\nPhono 534 606 Vernon Ik I *M\u00ab* \u2022* '\"* *< orystsJ type, Is quits\nin  novelty, in as much as it  is eon\u00ab\nFairview   Property\nApply to Board of Health\nThrough Member\nby creating faith  In our heart  by Its\ndivine power.\nRefers to Contents of Bible\nIn speaking about the contents of\nthe Illble. Rev, KorMlz remarked: \"Is\nit right for a man. who after reading\nonly the title of a hook wmild lazily\nlay     It    aside,     saying    \"Who     knows\n! whether   that   book   Is   whnt  the   title\nOwners. \u25a0V*-**\"  Is ll right   that so many speak\n' Against the Uible. when they have\nnever rend the entire 'J.I bit* and so\ndo Mt know what it contains? My\ndear friends, in order tfl lodge a book\nme must first read it to know what It\ncontains. So U to jiidt*e the Ilible.\nWS must first examine its contents.\nTherefore search,  read  ihe  Bible!   In\nBathing\nCaps\nOne Week Special\nBargain\nThose Caps are all new\nand    of    latest    design.\n90 PER CBNT OFF\nHurry,   ladies.\nCANADA DRUG &\nBOOK COMPANY\nPhone 81.\nP. O.  Box 1087\nst meted frmn materials which are\ngenerally known as was!,, gnd rubbish. The box which holds ihe receiving apparatus ia a comnum wim-I-\n.11 OfStOT teX, The \"i-iits wliisker,\"\nand irystal, with which the sensitiveness and clearness Ot thS broadcasted in u*s received is reflated,\nconsists   of   a   coniinuii    pin    and    a\npiece iif galSM which are attached ii-nvlneial hcal'h i.ri'l*\nto the inner Workings or the set by I'lnnlnK, secrel-ry of\nB   paper   fastener. Kate-payers'    association,    recommend\nMine  paper  !*sUnsni and  to  fsst jla* ll1'' temer Installation as i vsn\nat    fine    wire    constitute    the     inner   necessary   service   to   the   distil, t.\nworkinn of  thi machine., a  tnnln* Adopt Simplified  Plan.\nswitch,     made    from     another     paper,     stt,   Flemiiu;    ffpsaldni   with   refer\nfastener,    so    pl;.ced    that    it    can    be   \"\"''''   '\"   l\u00bbS   petition   for   SSWSrig*   li\nturned   ebOUt,   BO   as   to  connect    wilh, KMlrvlew   staled   that   -this   prOCSdun\nUM inner fasteners. Is the means id\ntuning this set op to the tone re-\nipiired.    A    Knmnd    wire    and    a     few\nSigned by 130 nf thf properiy owners in Fairview. the petitiun for BOW-\nWags,  addressed   tO   Dr.   H.   R   Ymin\u00ab,\nof ihe provincial board ot health, many ways does it bear wrttnsss et\nasking thai on mtftsry grounds the .itself, that it is tin* wort of Qod,\nboard reeomnieiiii to the eity council Oas et such passages we havs In the\nof Nelson the construction of sewers Kith verse of ourrtext, when* we are\nto serve subdivisions MA and If asjtold hnw ws are saved frodi sin and\nprovided  by section  io of the  t-aeal|eternal death and how we ars to ob-\nbnprovement  aet  of  1911,  has  i n tain sternal life.**\nforwarded to Kenneth Campbell M. in his concluding rehuirk Rsv, Kor-\ni* P. iiH'iuiii'd with the petition werejblti gekh \"Ws have n.-w seen that the\nenclosed   i, Tiers   of   recommendation I words   of   the   Bible   are   ths   living\nfrom   Dr.   Isabel    V'thur,   city   ntedic.i'   words   nf   the    living   God.   Therefore\nhealth ofttear, Df h. R McJCensia,| eearon the scripture and >ach then\nn.l Ross to your children, Let us asep dose\nFairview I and ever dose to our Btblss, that we\nlivery f. o, b. Nelson of one thousand\nstreet railway ties. Class of ties to be\nSpjeelfted   in   lender.\nW. E WASSON.\n(3B79) City Clerk.\nLadles'\no'clock.\na. or. v. a.\nxillary   meet\ntonight nt  K\n(ITH)\n(WKTU'KKlHT, Man., Aug. 6.\u2014\nMurray Ceinmfll. Bftd 11, and his\nbrother D'Arcy, K-fttf 0, were accidentally drowned while bathing here\nyesterday.\nhe\nuirh\ntruly    wlsi\nunto\nfaith    whieh    is\nslvatlt\nChri\nNelson News of the Day\nconnections   with   the   inner   pins,   ta-jeounoll   deem    |j\ngather with a telephone redeVar were\nall   the  other  niiuirements   necessary\nToung  Uaniher was ipiite SnthUSlas-\ntic    abOOt    his    :ittle   set,   whieh    eosl\nabout three d.iilars  to set  up, and   li<*\n\u25a0tated \u25a0aturday night that it irarfcafl\nperfectly.\nI    AM    BUSY\nTESTING EYES\nMy patrtvis do (he advertising. My complete, accurate systrm always gives satisfactory results. Glasses\nsupplfed. Itroken lenses replaced.    AU  repairs  made.\nA. Higginbotham .\nOptometrist  and   Specialist\nRacn.il 3, 4 and 5, Griffin Blk.\nHave Your Eyes\nChanged?\nThere   is   a   slow   but   constant\nehangs In svory person's vision.\nClasses lhat fitted you perfectly\na \\'r\\v years ago are probably\nentirely unsnlted lo the needs\nof your eves In.lay. Kvery p.r-\n\u25a0Ml slmilU blLVS their e\\'es tested   at   least   .-very   two   years.\nCall   anil   BUS   us  a\nlet  you krinw If vim\nlhe   prOPST   lenses.\nwill\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptict   nnd   Optician.\nmay appear to BOms as being rather\ndrastic, Inasmuch that im contra action is taken Into account, if the city\nxpidienl to COn*\ntrUCl   sewers,     llnwevcr,   this   simpli-'\nt'ieii plan was adopted in preference\nto the usual local improvement pstl*\ntion, which requires the Blgnaturss of\ntwo-thirds  r\u00bbf the  roglstsrsd  ownoi%\nrepresenting  one-half   of   lhe   BBS I SI 111\nvaras af the land concerned.\n\"With ihe splendid  building indications already   Showing   in   I-'aiwiew.   ft\nis unite apparsnt.\" Mr. Ftantag aitd,\n\"that tin* uilvent of sewer SOCTtWt will\nBtgnallas a ooaatdorshls butMing botanl\nin   this   favorable   district,\"\nLUTHERAN PASTOR\nTALKS ON BIBLE\nBenefit font bull same .Monday ntgbl\nnl 1:10 p. rn.. for the hen.'lit of injured\npi.-ivers. UcLesrles vs. Ht. Bsvlour'a\nLesgoe game.   Admission Me.     (:t.-'..)\nWen tad\u2014\n-nt applea\n\\t  one,  Y-iiow Transpar-\nMcDonald Jam Factory.\n(MT3)\nTfaStsd USSnhsmtS, black currants.\ngooseberries, blscaherriss and red currants.   The McDonsld Jam Co., Nelson.\n(t\u00abtl)\nNo   more   cherries   will   be   SCOspted.\nMcDonald Jam Company, (MW)\n\u25a0trayed   \u2014   Blghr>montas   Alrdale\npuppy.   Tax   nnriilier   1TI,    Reward    tor\nhir-    return.    K.    A,    Kiikpatrid;.    I\u00ab\nCor\u00a9    street. l-r.fi:t;\u00ab)\nT#ndera*wlll be reeetvi\nprslgned op until noon \\v\nIII   of   August,   fer   the   I\n1   by   the   uh*\nrne.liate   de-\nA Public\nMEETING\nOf   The   Supporters   of   the\nNational Liberal and Conservative Party and the\nBritish Columbia Conservative Party\nfa the Nelson electoral district\nwill he held In the Hoard of\nTrade rooms on Monday, August\nT, al I p. m., for tbe election of\ndelegates  to   the  Conservative\nCONVENTION\nwhich   will   be   h(\non   August    IL   :\nin   Vancouver\nand    2'i    next.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD,\nRepresantatlvs of the West Kootenay National Liberal nnd Conservative   Association.\nC. F. McHARDY,\nPresident Nelson Conservative\nAssociation,\nHATCHWAY\nNO-BUTTON\nUNDERWEAR\nThis Underwear is prefered by a great maiH\nWe have them in the Athletic style comb(J|\nno  sleeves,  short  lees.    Each ,^H\nAlso in Balgriggan and light weight ribbed\nshort   sleeves   and   long   le-js.     Each $j\nYOUR   MONEY'S\nWORTH    OR\nYOUR    MONEY\nBACK\nRED MITE KILLER\nFor Poultry Houses. Use It\nevery week and prevent troublesome pests   35<^ P^t.\nToultry Idee Powder, Insect\nPowder, Gopher Death. Rose\nSprays.   * \\ v\nIt   Pays   to   Deal   Here.\nRutherford    Drug    Co.\nTRY      A     CLASSIFIED     ADVT.\nJOHN DALY\nCABINET CIGAR STORE\nMAIL ORDERS ATTENDED TO\nPROMPTLY.\n8moking Tobacco, Snuff, Pipes\nand Full Stock of Cigars. Cigar*\nettes.    Other Smokers'  Supplies.\nSuncrush\nOrange|\nStone Jars, each. .8!\nSTAR GROCER]\nPhone 10\nIF    YOU    WANT    RESULT*     I\nA  CLASSIFIED ADVT.\nSumlay  ikkIu at  7:::o\nMil  apokc  sit   llu*   V    V\nsakjact: \"Tna Male, thi\nol <;<..!.*-  ii,.  (lagan  his\nlt.*v. 1*. Kr.r-|\nC. k. \"ii Un\npmvtn word\ntUaosuras l.y\ni...r.i (ran\nHIGH CLASS FURS\nA very fine selection kept In\nstock or mads tn Order. Customer's own furs made up into\nany article desired. OM furs\nrepaired nnd ranwdsled, Ten\nper   cent   sum in t r   discount,\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing   Furrier\nPhone 1C6, Nelson,  B.  C.\nWATCH REPAIRS\nWatch       and      Clock      repalra\npromptly    and     properly    dona.\nOur   charges   ara   moderate*\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nt N\nNOW   THAT   YOU   HAVE   TRIED,\nTHE    WHITE    NAPHTHA    SOAP\nBRING     YOUI*.     COUPON     AND [\nGET YOUR OTHER  FREE CAKE,\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW\nTonight\nM\n\u25a0THE PICK OF THE PICTURES\"\nTonight\nHere il a very modern love story in I very ancient\ncastle, with the heroine niusqueiadinjr as a maid and\nthe hero an American millionaire, and when we tell\nyou that the winsome maid is\nConstance\nBinney\nyou and your whole family will want to see\n\"Room and Board\"\nA lively romance, full of charm and color.\nHALLROOM    BOYS   COMEDY\n\"MATINEE IDOLS\"\nTOPICS OF THE DAY\nj quoting th.* wunis nr tin\nths tixiii efeaatat ol  lh,  (oapsl ac-\nror-ttro tn s-t,  I.*!!,.\u25a0:  -Can Hi** Mind\nlead  Hi.. Wad? Shall  la\u00bbj  aol  both\n1 rail   iiii.i   th,.   iiui'ii* *   Thsas   mirdi\nfast..!-   Korblta    ii'i-h. .1   to   aplrllual\niiiink-s. .\u25a0f*i.,.,.|;,i]y .,, ti,,. natter con-\nr.itiiiiK tli.. a,mis salvation.  In tsAst\nin fin,I Um srny t** baavan. tn nin^i\nj malt.*  mr,-  thai   are  ara  Eollowtag a\n| Mat,-, aa tin, ii'itiit guide,  namely las\n! Bible.   Hi.*   word   ..!'   holy   icrlplure.\n', wiii. li Is laa one and only nis lulde\nin Hi,, way nl salvation.  In ardw to I\nliruv.'   thai   tin.   Oil.I.-   is   th,.   |*r,iv, li\nword of il,*,l, r..A*. Knrliiiz selerted the\nlexii  : Timothy  3.  r,-iT. \"And  thai\nfrmn   a    r htl.l    tllna    liast    lini.wn    111*-\nlinly    anil'tuna,    \\.lii,'h    a*-,*    til.','   tn\nmake that \u00ab;.,* anto ...thitinn\ni tiiri.uis-h faith which is In Carl.i Jaaua\n' ah Mrtptsra ia given hy maph-atlon\n..r ti...I. ami is prafltabl, tor doctrtaa\nfor r,-pn\u201e'f, for oorraotlan, f\"f instrin -\ntlon in rtghteouaneas: thai tha man\nof tl.nl may ba perfect thoroughly\nrurniahad unto \u00abu u**\"*i  worta.\"\nTin* Lutheran pastor gave three\nI reasons why the Bible is proven to be\n(-,<\u201e!'. own wntii. muBet) the orlftn\n|ol Hi,* mil.' (which was given hy\nInspiration <>r Oodl, tli** contanta <*i\nthe Blbls (which made ms wtae unto\naalvatlon by faith in fiirist Jaana),\nand tha affeata and frnits. wht, h\nth,. woi-ii of  Oad  predueaa  (namely\nj\nCook your entire meal with a\n\"Conservo\"Steam Cooker\nUse over one burner on any kind of a stove.   Just the\nthin*? for preserving.   Saves labor, time\nand fuel.    Reduced price\t\n$13.50\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nBet Churn on thc Market.    Makes\nButter in One Minute. At th.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany\n, NELSON.  B. C.\nAUCTION\nSALE\nWednciday.  9th   August,  at  423  Silica\nStreet,  2  o'clock   aharp.\nH-ivltiff I..-, n f.iv..rtil wilh I list I PS\ntlnns from Mrs. AV. Irvine. I \"ill offer\n;:t |uilil!.' iiiH'tUm nil h?r hmis.holil\nfiirnilure and effect*. MMttttVI ol\nlir.i'H and white enamel Ix-iln nml\nlieiMlruf, Ofltermoor ud It.'stnmnr\nm.ittrcsnf!*, bedspreads, pi 1 lows, bureaus, shaving outfit, clothes cupboard, bookshelves, unl'ii\"' nvilintf-\nuny table, oak tea table, setlee, Mtt\nnnd lenther chairs, dark ml^lon din-\nln\u00bbr sulto of peven j>lecp\u00bb, llhrary table, leather rocker and easy chnir,\ncombination music cabinet, nuk snd\nIrnthcr davenport, linen bo\\, OSl tables, refrigerator, ruira, cots, sMtst\noak flo.ik, large bureau, oak bottl 0B*S|\n6-hole Gurney rang**, kitchen cabinet,\ngas range, kitchen ot\u00abMllB, flower\npots, snmn plants, some crockery, etc.\nOn view  morning   of   snip.\nn_\u00a7      TERMS;  CASH.\nW. CUTLER, Auctioneer.\nTHEODOR\nCOLDWYN'S SENSATION-SARDOU'S IMMORTAL\nROMANCE\nSTAR (ir) LAND\nf Scene Prom Qoldwyns'THEOPORA\" T\n\"Snooky's Wild Oats\"\n2-Reel Christie Comedy\nUsual  Prices\nFacts About' Theodora'\nMore than two years required in the making\nof \"Theodora.\"\nActual pioduction cost exceeded $3,000,000\neven at the present rate of exchange.\nA cast of 25,000 was employed; the cntiiao\nnumber appear in some of the scenes.\nIt was directed by Commendatore AmbrosfiC\nwho pave the world \"Cabiria\" and many of t*N\u00bb\nother big Italian spectacles.\nPrincipals include thc greatest actors of all\nEurope, with Itita Jolivet as the empress.\nForty half-starved lions were loosed on thou**:\ns.'intls of actors to afford realism for the great\nhippodrome scene.\nArmando Brasini, famous architect of Ihe\nVatican, designed all of these magnificent set*fl\nOver 30,000 different costumes, all of whicjB\nwere made especially for this production, weftB\nrequiied.\nCloaks worn by Theodora and Justinian wei\"S\nmade of the cloth of gold and were so valuabH\nthat they have been preserved in the Imperi\/H\nLibrary at Rome.\nMore  than  500,000  feet  of  film  were e*B\nposed in making the negative; at times batterie*\nof thirty motion picture cameras were emnlovaM\nThe story follows faithfully the drama wrltH\nten by Victorien Sardou, one of the greatesM\nnames in all literature.\nIt   was   originally   the   vehicle   for   Sarah\nBernhardt and has been played by many world-.'\nfamed actresses.\n\"Theodora\"   was   brought   to   America   by\nSamuel Goldwyn, who witnessed the making oH\nmany of the scenes in Italy,\nTONIGHT\nFirst   Show,   7   p.   m.     Second   9; 10   p.   m.\nCOME EARLY\n7 AND 9:10 P. M.\nCOME EARLY\n7  AND  9:10  P.\n'\nMining convention moving pictures have arrived\u2014and they are gcoif.    They will be shown at\nStarland Wednesday and Thursday, together with our \"East Lynne\" program.\nREMEMBER-\nIf you see it at STARLAND-\n\u2022ITS GOOD\nGOOD LAND AT LESS THAN GOVERNMENT\nPRICES\nI have been authorized to offer two lots containing\nfive hundred and ten acres at $1.00 per acre, on terms.\nThe main highway between fruitvale and Columbia\nGard\u00abH runs through this properly. I believe this land\nto he above average in quality.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL   ESTATE PHONE   135 BONDS\nInsurance\nflRE ACCIDENT LIFI\n!*\u2022-\nWe  have  just  received  a   large\nConsignment    of\nCUT GLASS\nIt     includoa    Sandwich     Platei,\nRosa      Bowls,      Vaiei,      Sherbet\nQtSSSS*, Salt  and  Pepper  Shakers   and   Cream   Pitchera\nAT   POPULAR    PRICES\nThote  will   at and  inspection\nJ. J. WALKER\nJeweller and Optician.\nIF    YOU    WANT    RESULTS    TRY\nA  CLASSIFIED ADVT,\nAdvertising Is the Motive Power of\nBest aM Cheapest\nBread is your best and cheapest food\u2014tat more of I\nRye, Wholewheat and Graham Bread.\nCHOQUETTE BROS.   * !\nPhon. lit. Sol. Maker, of \"Mother*.  Br.aaSR\nwd\n' I\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_1922_08_07","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\/1.0400326","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. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1922-08-07 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":""}]}