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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":" \u25a0\u2014i\n\u2022\u2022     <-,\nKootenay Tennis\nHONORS DISTRIBUTED\nSee Page 3 .\n;   * \u2022 55       IAPR24\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0->  MO\u00bb   L I BflARI AM\nVICTORIA    I   C\ni\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923\nTrail Defeats All\nVISITING TEAMS\nSee Page 3\nJAPAN CALAMITY GREATEST IN MODERN DAYS\nLOSS OF LIFE\nMAY BE FIFTH:\nOFAMILLION\nNaval  and Military Forces\nTake Command in\nStricken Cities\nOne of Five Women\nElected in Ireland\nI\nRIOT AND HOLOCAUST\nIN RAILWAY STATION\nGas Mains in Tokio Broke\nand Ignited Ail Parts\nof City at Once\nOSAKA, Japan, Sept. 4.\u2014Almost\nthe- whole of Toklo and Yokohama\nhave been destroyed by earthquake,\nfollowed by fire, and the loss of\nlife now Is estimated at 120,040 to\n200,000 or more. Two hundred thousand houses have been burned down\nin  the two cities.\nWater mains have been broken,\nand food supplies destroyed by fire,\nand the people are near starvation.\nIt la reported, but not confirmed,\nthat the section of Toklo where\nmost -of Ita foreign population resided Is not greatly damaged. Martial law has been proclaimed, and\nno one Is allowed to enter the\nstricken  districts.\nMilitary   and    naval   forces    have\n.been   gathered  at   the  imperial  villa\nat   Nlkko .for  use   In  controlling  the\nsituation,   and   other   forces   are   on\nduty  in  Toklo  itself.\nThe air is filled with violent rumors. Including one that the new\npremier, Count Yamamoto, waa assassinated within a few hours after\nformation of hia cabinet. There- is\nno confirmation of this, however.\n. Gar   Mains   Ar*   Ruptured\nThe reason for the rapid spread of\nthe fire which took such an awful\ntoll in Toklo came to light today\nwhen It was learned that the pipes\nconveying gas for lighting and heating purposes throughout the city\nwere broken by the earthquake,\n\u25a0 which twisted the ground almost un-\nbelleveably. The escaping gas promptly caught fire in dozens of places,\neach outburst ft torch that set alight\ndwellings on all sides of It. Thus\nthe whole lower section ol Toklo\nwas kindled at once Into a furnace\nof flaring gas from the breaks In\nthe malna, olatlng wooden dwellings,\nand glowing metal beams and girders from the newer and more modern structures heated by the flames.\nThe fire, uncontrolled more than\n24 hours after lt broke out, eventually was checked through the use\nof explosives, soldiers blowing up\nhundreds of lightly constructed Japanese houses with bombs, to form a\nf barren space in the path of the\nflames.\nEight   Thousand    in   Station\nA terrible tragedy was enacted in\nand around the Ueno station In Tokio Saturday afternoon. Thousands\nof refugee*, unable to find shelter\ninside the great railway station\nbuilding, were massed In Ueno park,\nwhile inside, lt is estimated, 8000\nwere gathered1.\nAn outbreak of fire from a break\nin a gas main nearby threw the entire mass into\" a panic, which became\nworse when the fire attacked the\nstation    buildings    themselves.\nNo usttTnate of the casualties which\nensued has been made, but those\njewing,, the place said these were\n\"staggering\" in number. Bodies\nare piled helter-skelter around the\nstation, -men, \u2022\u25a0 women and children\nmingled: Indiscriminately aa they fell\nand were trampled in the mad rush\nto escape from the fire,\nThough virtually all railroads In\nthe Island of Hondo were heavily\ndamaged the 'tne running from Toklo\nto   Kobe   suffered   worse.\nMonth   to    Restore   Tr>affio\nCasualties in the region traversed\nby this road, it Is feared, will be\nheavy. The recovery of railway\ntraffic will require at least a month,\nit is believed.\nThe Yokosuka naVai base wad destroyed ln part by the quake, and\npartly by the tidal wave whlrh followed. There was heavy damage to\nships anchored there. AH lighthouses\nwere thrown down and night travel\nin the bay therefore ia hazardous\nin the extreme.\nLoss of life among foreign residents of tUe two stricken cities, and\nnmong tourists is expected to be\nlees than it might have been had\nthe earthquake come at fl different\nseason. Most of them had gone to\nsummer resorts.\nNothing is known here of the\nfate of the embassies and legations\nat Toklo, though it is rumored that\nthe British, American and French\nembassies have been destroyed.\nNor Is anything definitely known\nas to the numerous consulates at\nYokohsma, but it is supposed all\nwere destroyed by the tidal waves\nand flrea which followed the earthquake.\nTood   Slots   in   Toklo,\nSAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8. \u2014 Food\nriots have broken out in Toklo, according to a radio received tonight by\nthe Radio corporation from Iwlakl\nstation, IBB m'lles from Toklo. The\n, gendarmerie are reported, ln these advices ,to hare used the most strenuous measures to suppress the disorders, even attacking tha rioters with\ntheir  sworde. ,\nNogeyama, a better class residential\nSection of Yokohama; Iseyama, another section where stood a marble\nstatue of lo Naosuke, prime minister\nof the Shogun at the time Japan was\nopened to foreign Intercourse; and\nKamonyama, a third section, all were\ndestroyed, leaving their Inhabitants in\nextreme  misery.\nThere has been no newa received in\nJapan from the Bonln islands, on\nwhich is located a- cable relay station,\nsnd it Is feared, the advices declared,\nthat the land there waa submerged by\nthe  tidal  wave.\nIsland Swept Away.\nThe advices also confirmed earlier\nreports of the submergence of the\nIsland of Enofihima, \"picture island,\"\none of Japan's most beautiful spots.\nThis Inland, the message said, was\nowept away by a tidal wave, as were\niCuwiiaweii  ua page  two)\nCOUNTESS    MARKIEVICZ,\nWho was defeated as a Republican\ncandidate in Dublin ln the first Irish\nelections, made the grade in the contest Just over. ., ,\n\"IhlLJNG\nA SCORE,\nRED CROSS SAYS\nThirty-two Wounded Are in\nHospital, and Fifty Are\nSlightly Wounded\nATHENS, Sept. 2.-<:olonel Stephen\nK. Low of St. Louis, member of the\nRed Cross and attached to the near\neast relief at Corfu, reports that altogether there were 20 killed by the\nItalian bombardment prior to the\noccupation of the island. Among\nthe victims wero 16 children, most\nof them killed by shrapnel, which\nwaa- fired among a crowd of Red\nCross orphanage children bathing lu\nthe   sea.\nThe first direct news from Corfu\nsince the Italian occupation was received today, with the arrival of\nthe Greek steamship Ismlnl, which\nhad aboard Colonel Low, Miss Emma\nWood of Baltimore, chief nurse of\nthe Corfu near east relief hospital;\nDr. Kennedy of KingBton, Ont., director of the British Save the Children fund, together with a group\nof expelled Greek officials and 60\nGreek  soldiers,\nShells   Fell   Among   Children\nColonel Low, describing the bombardment, said:\n\"The number killed reached 20;'\nnine of these were killed outright,\nand eleven died In hospitals. Thirty-\ntwo wounded are now In hospitals,\nand there were perhaps 60 slightly\nwounded.\n\"All the killed and wounded were\nrefugees or orphans from United\nStates and British orphanages housed\nIn the o!d fortress.\n\"The large number of children\namong the casualties was due to\nthe fact that several shells landed ln\na barracks which waa being used as\norphanages, whflo shrapnel shells exploded ln the water In front of the\nfortress, where 400\u00b0 near east relief\norphan boys were bathing at the\ntirne.'' k\nCoolidge Heads\nStates Appeal   j\nfor Relief Fund\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 3.\u2014The United States moved swiftly today to\nbring the full force of the government and the people to the aid of\nBtricken Japan. While government\nexecutive departments were directed\nto assist in the work, the public was\nurged in an appeal issued by President Coolidge to contribute funds\nthrough the American Red Cross' for\naiding the unfortunate and giving\nrelief to the people of Japan.\nThe Red Cross at once announced\nthat it had started the fund with a\ncontribution of $100,000 for the relief\nof   victims   of   the   earthquake.\nCanadian Again\nTackles Tough\nChannel Swim\nCALAIS, France, Sept. 3. \u2014 (By\nCanadian Press Cable, via Reuter's)\u2014\nThe Canadian swimmer, Omer Per-\nrault, entered the water at Cap Ores\nNex at 1:10 this afternoon in his\nsecond attempt this year to swim the\nEnglish  channel.\nPerrault's ' previous attempt Was\nmade on August 5, when the roughness of the sea compelled him to\nabandon the attempt when only six\nmiles from thel English coast, after\nswimming   from   Calais.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nOrduna, at New York, from Hamburg.\nLeviathan, at New York, from\nSouthampton.\nCarmanla, at New York, from Liverpool.\nMauretanla, at Southampton, from\nNew York.\nEmpress of Britain, at Southampton,  from  Quebec.\nCedric, at Liverpool, from New\nYork.\nCanada, at Liverpool, from Montreal.\nAnsonla, at Plymouth, from Montreal.\nParthenla, at Glasgow, from Mon-\n.treaii       \u201e \u201e ;\t\n\\Hobo King and a\nSociety Leader\nAt   Toronto   Luncheon   He\nSays British Constitution\nSafe in Its Hands\nWARNS CANADIANS\nAGAINST MISTAKES\nAdvises   Labor   Men   Must\nKeep Within Pastures of\nPeace and Gratitude\nTORONTO, Sept. 3. \u2014 Another de-\nCade will see the Labor party forces\nIn charge of the government of Great\nBritain, Frank Hodges, secretary of\nthe Miners' Federation of Great Britain, told the gathering at the Labor\nday luncheon of the Canadian National exhibition directors today. Mr.\nHodges was a guest at the luncheon,\nalong with other prominent labor\nmen.\nMr. Hodges touched on the European political situation, which he regarded as very gldomy, not only because of the flare-up between Italy\nond Greece, but because of the\nstrained situation ln western Europe.\nGreat Britain, with its million and a\nhalf of unemployed, was facing a\nserious winter.\n\"But,\" he went on, \"In the face of\nthese difficulties, that are both political and economic, the Labor movement has not lost heart. It is battling\nthese political and economic forces\nwith a courage that is worthy of the\napplause of the workers in this newer\ncountry  of yours.\"\nVictory la Bight. .\nMr. Hodgea believed that, politically, victory was In sight for the\nLabor, forces. Within the next decade,\nhe declared, If the party continued to\nattract adherents at the same rate as\nit had in the past, lt would form the\ngovernment   of   the   country.\nHe denied strongly that a Labor\ngovernment would mean one that\nwould be radical, and would disorganize the country. The Labor party,\nhe declared, woulft be \"as careful\nabout guarding the essentials of the\nnation's constitution as any of the\nolder  parties.\"\nTORONTO, Sept. 3. \u2014 An appeal to\nthe workers of Canada, with their\nfreshness and vigor, to do the right\nthing in the interests of Lab, or and\ntake extreme care to avoid mistakes\nof the workers of the old world, was\nmade by Frank Hodges, secretary of\nthe Miners' Federation of Great Britain, In addressing an open air meeting here  tonight.\n\"The workers of Canada can glva\nUfa and guidance to the workers of\nthe world,\" he said, \"but we must do\nour utmost to keep free from greed\nand strife, and keep within the common pastures of peace and gratitude,\nwhich spell happiness for all.\"\nForge   Oversea*   links.\nMr. Hodges said the Labor movement was beginning to detect signs of\nuneasiness in Canada, the United\nStates and Great .Britain. \"We are\nall of common kinship, and more or\nless common culture,\" Mr. Hodges\nsaid.\n\"I have been received In Canada\nwith some feeling of assurance that\nthe workers will respond- to the call\nfrom their fellow-workers across the\nsea, for the binding of a greater link\nof  cooperation.\"\nSTATES DESTROYERS\nCARRY PHYSICIANS\n'Fleet    of   Six    Leaves   Chinese    Port\nfor   Yokohama   With   Medical\nMan   and   Food   Supplies\nPEKING, Sept. 3.\u2014Six United\nStates destroyers left the port of\nDalren for Yokohama this afternoon\ncarrying a number of doctors, and\nlarge quantities of food supplies to\naid the earthquake victims in tlie\nfltric'T-n city. Tho flagship Huron\n> \u2022\u00bb**j Asiatic fleet picked up Admiral Anderson at Che-Foo, and is\nproceeding to Japan.\nTho Japanese legation here issued a statemnt to the effect that\nthe foreign office at Tokio had burned. No other authetlc news has been\nreceived from the stricken area, although it Is rumored there are 10,-\n000   deaths   fn   Yokohama..\nBody of Missing\nMan Is Found in\nRiver at Waldo\nBAYNES LAKE, Sept. 3.\u2014The\nbody of Mr. Nelson of McNab,\nwho has been missing for two\nweeks, was found In the river at\nWaldo Friday by Harry Parker.\nThe old man was 85 years of\nage.\n\u25a0 \u25a0     !\u25a0*\u00bb        i\nAlberta Mine Teams\nCompete in Rescue\nWork ol Collieries\nEDMONTON, Sept. 3.\u2014The Hum-\nberstone mine rescue team won the\nchampionship of northern Alberta\nhere today, in the annual mine res-\ncuo competition, with bIx teams competing. The Premier Greenfield\nshield goes to the Higrade Coal\ncompany's team from Drumheller,\nwhose aggregate of 673 at the July\ncompetition was unbeaten by the\nHumberstone, who had three points\nless.\nJEFF DAVI8\n\"Who has traveled five times around\nthe world as .a hobo, is here seen\nshaking hands with Mrs. William G.\nMcAdoo of New York, daughter of\nformer-President Wilson, and perhaps\nthe wife of a future Democratic\npresident. Davis has just visited the\nCanadian national exposition at\nToronto.\nJAPAN CONSUL IN\nCANADA RECALLED\nTamekichi   Ohta   in   Announcing   Departure Says Relations of Countries   Are   Friendliest\nOTTAWA, Sept. 3.\u2014Tamekichi, the\nconsul-general of Japan for Canada,\nhas been recalled by his government, and will likely leave Ottawa\nabout September 18. He will be\nsucceeded by N. Matsunaga, who is\nwidely experienced in Japanese consulate   services,\n\u2022Mr rth\" li\u00bb>\",nr\"l,'nir \"f his departure from uttawa, said he had\nfcund life congenial and happy in\nCanada.\n\"As to lhe international relations\nbetween Canada and Japan, I am\nglad to say that they are continually increasing In their cordiality,\nwhile mutual confidence remains unshaken. Trade and commerce between the people of both sides of tho\nPacific is also very promising, and\nI em happy to leave without any\nconcern ln  that regard,\" he said.\nFLASHES ON QUAKE\nWill Commandeer\nOSAKA, Sept. I.\u2014Under ' the\nEmergency Commandeering act, now\nIn operation, food, building materials,\nmedicaments and Vehicle*, as* well\nas human labor and services, may\nbe commandeered. Perfecto governors are authorized to issue commandeering orders for goods, at a\nprice based on the average market\nprices for three yenre. Failure of\ncompliance would be punishable by\na heavy fine, or three years' imprisonment.\nEuropeans Believed Safe\nLONDON, Sept. 3.\u2014The Daily Mail\nprints a special dispatch from Kobe\ndated Monday saying Japan's calamity is of unprecedented magnitude.\nThe death roll was declared to be\nIncalculable.\n\"All tho Europeans ore believed\nto be safe, both in Tokio and Yokohama,\" read a .cable dispatch received by a London firm, from an\nallied company in Japan, according\nto  the   Daily  Express.\nToronto Churches Worry\nTORONTO, Sept. 3.\u2014Anxiety regarding the fate of many Protestant\nmissionaries In Japan Is being felt\nin church circles in this city. Only\nthe Methodist and Anglican churches\nIn Canada are represented by missionary agents ln Japan, the former\nby almost 40 missionaries, and the\nlatter by approximately the same\nnumber.\nSHANGHAI, Sept. 3. \u2014 The fire\ncontinues in Tokio, und it is impossible to estimate the loss of life.\nNearly all concrete and brick buildings have collapsed. An airman\nfinds difficulty In flying over the\ncapital because of the intense heat.\nSo acute has the food shortage become in Tokio, the hungry people\nhave been trying to catch carp in the\npond at Hiblya park. So extensive is\nthe disaster it is possible the capital\nmay be moved to Kyoto or Osaka\ntemporarily.\nTeamster Guilty\nof Negligence Is\nVerdict of Jury\nSASKATOON, Sept. 3.\u2014Charles F.\nDavis, aged 56, teamster, under the\nwheels of whose gravel wagon 4-year-\nold Jackie Hutchinson was fatally\ncrushed here Thursday, was found\nguilty of negligence by a Jury at\nthe coroner's inquest here Saturday\nafternoon. He cornea up for summary trial in police- court tomorrow,   if   he   la   able   to   appear.\nITALY WILLING\nHAGUE DECIDE\njyRllCTION\nIf League of Nations Rejects\nHer View, She Offers\na Way Out\nITALY ADVISES HER\nREFUSAL TO LEAGUE\nBritain  Claims League  Eligible;   Scandinavian\nCountries Also\nROME, Sept. 3.\u2014If Italy's\nviewpoint 'that the Leanue of\nNations is not competent to\nsettle the Greco-Italian difficulty\nis not accepted by the league,\nItaly, it is uncK-itood, is ready to\nsubmit the question of the league's\ncompetency to the international\ncourt at The Hague. This court,\nhowever, if called upon, must\ngive a decision from an abstract\nstandpoint, without reference to\nthe present Greco* Kalian conflict.\nMAY WITHDRAW DELEGATES\nROME, Sept. 3.\u2014Premier Mussolini, it is understood, is r\u00abady\nto withdraw the Italian delegates\nfrom the Geneva conference if\nhis viewpoint concerning the\nconflict with Greece is not shared\nby the League of Nations.\nDisposes of Intervention\nPARIS, Kept. 3.\u2014News was received here this afternoon that the\nItalian representatives had informed the council of the League of Nations that Italy refused to accept\nthc league's jurisdiction ln the Greco-\nItalian   dispute.\nThis was taken here as disposing\nof the proposition for league intervention, and it Is thought highly\nprobable that a direct meeting of\nthe Greek and Italian representatives will be held within a day or\ntwo, probably at Athens. Informa^\ntlon received at the French foreign office frm Greece indicates a\ndesire on the part of the Athens\ngovernment to negotiate directly with\nItaly, and a disinclination to insist\nupon action by the league.\nIt Is declared in diplomatic circles\nthat the league council has already\nset a precedent against intervention\nfn a case which is before the am\nbassadors* council. It is recalled\nthat when Albania demanded league\nintervention to prevent encoarcruentn\nupon her territory by Jugo-Salvia,\nthe league council decided it could\nnot take up the matter so long as\nit was in the hands of the ambassadors.\nItaly   Grimly   Holds   Corfu\nLONDON. Sept. 3.\u2014Italy is holding Corfu, which commands the Adriatic, as a pledge for Greek reparations, and Is waiting grimly for\nGreece to comply with her ultimatum. Greece, having appealed to\nthe League of Nations, is also waiting, and Italy thus far has ignored\nthe protest of the council of ambassadors against her action in seizing Corfu.\nThe Greek legation here made public the text of the Greek reply to\nthe ambassadors' council, proposing\nthe appointment by the council of a\ncommission consisting of three members, for an inquiry Into all the\ncircumstances of the Janina crime,\nand declaring readiness, if Greece\nIs found In any way responsible, to\ngrant all reparations decided upon\nby such a commission. The reply\nrequests tho intervention of the council   with   Italy.\nItaly   Claims   Not   Bound\nThe prospects of an early settlement   nre   not   Improved.\nThe Italian government takes the\nstand that it did not sign the treaty\nof 1SG4, which confirmed the neutrality of Corfu, and is. therefore,\nnot bound by the treaty. Further.\nPremier 'Mjussollnl has Instructed\nthe Italian representatives nt Geneva\nto abstain from further discussion\nof the affair, and the only hopeful\naspect is that Itaiy seems disposed\nto have the court of International\njustice pronounce on the league's\ncompetency to deal with such an\ninternational  dispute.\nThe British government Is still\nfirmly supporting the view that the\ndispute is eminently one for the\nLeague of Nations, and regards the\nwhole question as subjudlcc. pending\nthe league's decision. In the event\nof the league council abstaining from\nintervention. it Is said that the\nScandinavian countries are ' resolved\nto withdraw from the league, as did\nArgentina   In   1\u00bb20.\nThat Italy was able so quickly to\nland 15,000 men In Corfu Is considered\nproof  of   Mussolini's  determination.\nDivide Island in Zones\nROME, Sept 3.\u2014New precautionary\nmeasures have been made on the\nIsland of Corfu by the Italian occupying forces. . and the governor\nhas divided the (eland Into zones.\nwhich are presided over by the military. No serious Incidents have occurred.\nThc consuls of foreign governments residing ln Corfu were informed today by the governor, that merchandise on boats In Corfu before\nthe Italian occupation began and\nthose boats which tbe Italians have\npermitted to dock, excepting those\nof  Greece,\" might  be  unloaded.\nWas Close Friend\nof King Edward\nTHE   EARL   OF   FARQUHAR,\nWho died Thursday in London,\naged 80, was lord steward since 1015.\nThe duke and duchess of York spent\ntheir honeymoon at his country\nplace,\nWIlLEXliNE\nALL VETERANS\nIN OPTION\nDominion Command Secures\nNew Probes Into Mental\nStatus of Prisoners\nOTTAWA, Sept. 3. \u2014 Following a\nrequest by . G. MacNeil, secretary of\ntho Dominion command of the Great\nWar Veterans' association, Gen. W.\nS. Hughes, superintendent of Canadian penetentlaries, has directed the\nscrgeon at each institution to conduct an examination of returned soldier Inmates in order to ascertain\ntheir mental   condition.\n.follow   Wisconsin.\nThe move is in line with the action\nin the United States, where, in Wis\nconsln, more than\" 5tr per tent or the\nveterans tn tho penal institutions\nwere mentally abnormal, and wher<\n20 per cent of the men were suffer\ning from 6om\u00abs mental disability declared to be traceable, to military\nservice.\nGeneral Hughes, in answering the\nappeal of the G.W.V.A., said that\nthere were few ex-soldIers among lb\nInmates of the penitentiaries. He also pointer out that aU prisoners, upoti\ntheir arrival at Institutions, if found\nto be irresponsible, were at once returned to the municipality where\nsentence was Imposed, or to whatever\nho^ital for the mentally deficient the\nmunicipality concerned might designate.\nThe G.W.V.A., In seeking an examination of soldier prisoners, believes it\npossible that a number mentally disabled ex-soldters may be serving!\nterms in Canadian prisons, and could\nbe \"benefited by institutional treatment.\nIrish Elections\nJustify Coalition\nSays Birkenhead\nMONTREAL Sept. 3.\u2014Tho Irish\nFree State elections were a \"complete vindication of the. coalition,\"\ndeclared Viscount Birkenhead on his\narrival here today for the purpose\nof taking part in the eighth annual\nmeeting of tbe Canadian liar association.\nThe former lord chancellor added\nthat the justification of the coalition\ngovernment would be found in tho\nconduct of the war, and in the\ntreaty which brought into being the\nIrish  Free   Slate.\n\"That treaty was possible only\nunder the coalition. The Liberals\ncould not achieve it, and it was not\nto be looked for from the diehard\nTories.\"\nMay  Reunite Sometime\nHe  thought  the  reunion  of  Ireland I\nwith   England   might   come.     \"There j\nare  facts,\"   he   said,   \"which   will  uid. i\nsuch   as   the   economic   realities,   the I\nI business    relations,    the    matters    of I\n| trade and commerce, the customs, and |\n[ kindred   subjects.\"     He   pointed   out\n| that   England   was   Ireland's   greatest\n| customer,   and.   in   the   present   state\nof  the European  market  Ireland  was\nthe   biggest   customer  of  England.\"\nQUEEN VICTORIA\nOF SWEDEN HL\nCOPENHAGEN. Sept. 3.\u2014Quem\nVictoria of Sweden, who is in hei\njQfctu war, J* critically. JU,   \t\nCorfu Mob Burns\nItalian Flag end\nAttacks Legation\nATHENS,   Sept.   3.\u2014A   violent\ndemonstration against Italy took\nplace today after a solemn\nfuneral service held in the Catholic\u00a9 cathedral for the victim*'\nof the Corfu bombardment. The\ncrowd burned the Italian flag,\nand attacked the Italian lega-\n\u25a0   HUJ  I ,\t\nSaskatoon Auto\nHits Street Car;\nTwo Are Injured\nSASKATOON, Sept. 3.-Mra. R.\nH. Mabbee. wife of a Canadian\nNational railways engineer, was\ndangerously injured here Saturday\nnight when an automobile driven\nby her husband collided with a\nstreet car. Her daughter, Mrs. F.\nDegeau, sustained a bad cut over\nthe left eye, which required five\nstitches to close. The other occu-\npiutil vt iUa vac \u00bbCW uiUuiuxtiO,\nBRITAIN WILL SPEND\nHUGE SUMS ON WORK\nThough      Hundred      Million      Already\nGranted, Government Will Meet Fall\nRequests   of   Local   Authorities.\nLONDON\", Sept. 3.\u2014tBy Canadian\n1-rens Cable) \u2014It is stated that the\nGovernment is prepared to meet all\napplications from local authorities for\ngrants to assist schemes to provide\nwork for the unemployed, al though\ngrants already made represent an outlay of more than \u00a323.000,000, compared   with   \u00a310,000,000   originally.\nIt Is believed that schemes already\nsubmitted will find work fcr more\nthan 300,000. These schemes include\nthe construction of docks and harbors, electrical undertakings, roads,\nparks, cemeteries, bridges, tramways,\nSnd  land   reclamation.\nMELVILLE POWER\nPLANTJS GUTTED\nSASKATOON, Sept. 8.\u2014 Th*. mur.V-\nlpal light and power plant, Melville,\nSask., was gutted by fire early yesterday morning,   causing  an  estimated\n,leij ul iivi-yHiu.\nMILLION ARE\nHOMELESS IN\nJftPANCITIES\nEstimates  of  Loss   of  Life\nGrow With Each Fresh\nReport\nLARGE PART OF HONDO\nIS NOW A WILDERNESS\nNot a Standing Building Can\nBe Seen in Yokohama;\nDisaster Still Enlarges\nSAN rmAKCISCO. SeptL. 3. \u2014\n\u25a0very report received from Jape*\nthroughout the day either confirmed or Increased previous eauL-\nmate* of the havoc wrought ta.\not-ath and . destruction by the\nQuadruple catastrophe which haa\nbefallen the central eastern section of Hondo, largest of th*\nislands of the Japanese empire.\nBeginning- at noon, Saturday, by \u00bb\n\u25a0eriea of earthquakes which rased\nmost of the city of Toklo and\nlarge sections of Tokioama and\nother cities la that vicinity, the\ndisaster was continued by fire*\nwhich broke out in score* cf\nplaces. Tidal wave* followed, engulfing and washing Into the sea\nhundreds of buildings. **\u2022\u00bb\ncame a typhoon, adding a final\nand txt-ic touch to what la probably the greatest calamity In modern times.\nTopping all previous estimates of\nCeath and ruin, Uro Oyama, Japanese\nconsul-general in San Francisco today\nreceived from Schicltaro Tada, Japan*\nrso consul-general in Shanghai, a report that 1\u00ab0,000 persons were killed\nor injured, and 1,000,000 made homeless, in the Toklo-Yokohama section.\nTearful .estimate of Toklo.\nEatimates from various sources had\nplaced the casualties as high an\n150,000 dead m Toklo alone. One bf\nthese came from the Japanese minister of marine by way of Osaka,\nOther reports told of heavy casualties\nboth  on   land   and   sea.\nA composite of reports depiota\nToklo and Yokohama as a shattered\n-wilderness of mortar, bricks aad\nstone, where once stood some of the\nl lateliest structures In the empire.\nDead and dying are on every hand.\nSurvivors, who can grope their way\nabout through the fire and smoke and\nrubbish, are leaving the cities. Those\nwho still live are threatened with,\nstarvation.\nIt Is estimated that at least 100,000\ntons of rice alone is needed to meet\nthe emergency created by the food\njihortage*. The imperial palace hast\nbeen thrown open to needy and injured   survivors.\nYokohama Only a Surmise.\nWhat happened at Yokohama can ba\nbarely more than surmised. But\nevery report confirms the worst of\nfears. While it teems certain most\nof the foreign residential section,\nescaped, It Is estimated 1400 building*\nIn the city were destroyed. The number of dead is countless, An officer\nof the steamer London Maru reported\ntlat bodies were scattered everywhere,\non land and in  the water.\nHow extensive the quake was cannot be accurately stated. It is known\nIt extended as far south as the Idzu\npeninsula on the eastern seaboard,\nabout 100 miles south of Tokio.\nA message by cable from Kobe to-\nnight said there was a bad shake In\nToyama, a city of more than 60,00tl\npeople, near tbe northwest coast of\nJapan, nearly 200 miles northwest of\nTokio. and In Kobe, fully 350 mllea\nsouthwest of \"Toklo. The vibration\nseems to have permeated the island\ntransversely.\nIn addition to the hundreds of\nlarge public and private buildings destroyed, which Include a large number of Japanese government buildings,\nJcpanese and foreign naval hospitals,\narsenals, printing plants and news*\npaper offices, it was learned tonight\nthrough Osakai that the Italian and!\nFrench embassies   were   destroyed.\nNothing has been learned fo tha\nfate of the United States embassy\nand   its   staff.\nEight of Tokio's 15 wards ar\u00ab\nknown to be almost totally wiped out,\nwhile the. remainder are likely in\nruins or burned. The total number\not buildings destroyed Is placed aC\nIIUQ.UUO   for   the   city   and   suburbs.\nIn Yokohama bay and at Yokohama,\np, city of 70,000, the destruction Ita\nmarly as great, population consid*\nered.  as   lt  Is  lu   Tokio.\nShipping Wiped Out.\nReports came today of new quaked\ncentering in Yokusaka, yesterday afternoon, doing great damage, especially\nto ships. It is known that Saturday'**\nquakes aad subsequent tidal waved\ndid great damage to Japanese naval\nvaMSla. The extent of the. damage,\nhowever, is  not determined.\nThe quake yesterday, today's re-\nporm said, destroyed tho tt:lephon'\u00bb\nexchange at Chojamacbi and killed *l>\noperator*.\nAt 7 o'clock last night quakes shcoK\nKawaguchf. destroying iOO housta\nand   d:\\maglng   1500   more.\nOther places where destruction wad\ncomplete, or nearly so, as a result of\nSaturday's   quakes   are:\nNagoya, with a population of 620,*\n000,  \"virtually  destroyed.\"\nSaakao, 6u0 perished when rail*\nroad   tunnel   collapsed.\nIto, 600 houses  washed away.\nHakone,    famous    mountain     resort*\n\"easier  to   count   the   living   than   th-a\ndead.\"\nYoshlma, volcano emitting smoke.\nOdawara,  swept  by   tidal, wave.\nOther volcanoes in  the islands near*\nby are reported active.\nChoose Cabinet aa Building- Tails.\nWhen the first shock came, a ees\u00ab\nsion of Japanese leaders anil statesmen was being held In the Naval club\nfor the purposo of selecting a new\ncabinet to take the place of that of\nthe late Premier Kato, which resigned\nwhen the premier died. Although tha\nbuilding collapsed, tbe leaders whq\nvUnUnuvu  111  y&gtj iwui\n Page Tv7<n\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY-\u25a0 MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN  PLAN RATES J3.50 TO |6.M\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY. DINNER $1.00\nTHI   MOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nHUME \u2014 Tom Gurkovlch, Drumheller; C. F. Sherwln, Plndel; Mrs. J.\nBuchanan, G. F. Prltchard, H. E.\nWade, Trail; Miss Hunt, Longbeach;\nH.. *C. Mclnnea, New Denver; J. H.\n.Weaver, Cleveland; P. 8. Oettel, Mr.\nnd   Mrs.   Charles   P.   Robblns,   Misses\nFrances and Louise Robblns, A. M.\nAnderson. Hpokane; 0. Jordan, Silver-\nton; Charles T. Tidy, S. W. Morson,\nWinnipeg; St. O'Moore, Hroadwater;\nA. W. C.ivln, Vancouver; J, L.O'Brlen,\nToronto; B. Kenward, Revelstoke; W,\nJardine, New Westminster; Mrs.\nSkoko,   Drumheller.\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nH. W. SHORE, Prop.\nNELSON'S  LEADING   HOTEL\nSpecial attention to Commercial Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN\u2014$1.00  UP\nAMERICAN   PLAN\u2014\u00bb3.00   UP\n\\    STRATHCONA   \u2014   Mrs.    A.   Carney    bridge:  J.   R, Conway and wife,  Eileen\nJr.,    Kaslo;    J,    C.    Ryan,    B.F.Rogers,    Conway.   Vernon.\nH. V. Bouth, Spokane; A. Pisher, Leth-\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam   Heated    Throughout.     AH\nrooms   modern.\nSpecial Weekly and  Monthly Rates\nA. Lapointe\/\nProprietor.\n;;- QUEKN'8 \u2014 E, E. MeMahon, Rud-\n.dell; It. Hanna, Slocan; W. H, Suun-\n,ders, Passmore; Bob Sopples, W.\n'Stewart, Salmo; C. J. Vandcrgrlft,\nNew Denver; N. A. Brauson, Chicago;\nMrs. John Thomson, Velne Terry,\nMontreal; Mrs. J. S. Purdy, Slocan;\nMrs. T. A. Danseath and son, Wynndel; Mrs. H. Thurgood and daughter,\nNakUHp; A. Y. Bulloch and family,\nAlberta.\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE  FISHING  18  GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing,  Golf,\nTennis  Courts.\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nStore In Connection.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nDay   |3; Week   $17   to  $19.    Special\nMonthly   Rales.\nMILLION ARE\nHOMELESS IN\nJAPAN CITIES\n(Continued from page one)\nsurvived   adjourned   to   another   building,   and   completed   the   cabinet.\nA report from Osaka this afternoon\nsaid that Viscount Takaha, former\npremier, and 20 other leading members of the government party, were\nkilled while holding a conference, and\nlt Is said lt was the conference to\nselect   the cabinet.\nNo   Standing   Building   in   Yokohama\nNAGASAKI, Sept. 2.\u2014There is no\nbuilding in sight in Yokohamma, only\nthe ruined walls are visible, according to the captain of the Shinyo\nMaru, which Ms Just arrived here\nfrom   Yokohama.\nThousands of refugees gathered In\na park were half drowned by a flood\ncaused by the bursting of the city\nwater   pipes.\nThe fire in Tokio, lt Is reported,\nsubsided about 5 o'clock last evening, which Is held to mean that\nnothing inflammable was left Jn the\ncity. The Chinese legation was\namong   the   destroyed   buildings.\nThe Inmates of the Tokio prison, including recently arrested Socialists,\nwere liberated when the building\ncaught fire.\nFrom today, army airplanes will\nfly daily between Toklo and Osaka\nto carry Important news and official\nmails.\nPrince Masayoshl Matsukata, former premier and lord keeper of the\nprivy Boal, has died from injuries\nsustained in the earthquake, according to a report received by the\nNagoya   railway   bureau.\nTokio    Deaths    Seventh    of    Millii\nOSAKA, Sept. 3.\u2014The minister of\nmarine today estimates the fatalities\nfrom the earthquake and fire at\nTokio  alone  150,000.\nIt Is reported that Viscount Taka\nhashi. former premier, and 20 other\nleading members of the Seyukaf, or\ngovernment party, were killed on\nSaturday while holding a conference.\nA representative of the Osaka JiJl\nShimbo met a number of destitute\nforeigners   at   Hakone,    who    stated\nHER BABY\nSUFFERED WITH\nSUMMERS\nCOMPLAINT\nSIRDAR, B.C.\nOn the main highway Nelson-Calgary. East Kootenay's Summer Resort. Good Fishing. Bathing Beach\nand Camping Grounds. First-class\naccommodation.\nB.   F.   WHITESIDE.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nOCCIDENTAL     HOTEL\nA.   C.   TOWNER,    Manager\nThe  home  of   plenty.\nFifty  rooms  of   solid  comfort.\n\"We   serve  the  best  meals   in  Nelson.\nIt's   the   cook.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320    Baker   Street,    Nelaon,    B.C.\nOPEN    DAV   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30  Special   Lunch... 354\n5:30 to 8:00   p.m.   8upp\u00abr   \u201435^\nPhone  154\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nPirit-Clai.    Roomi    by   the\nWeek   or   Month\nEv.ry  Consideration   Shown  U\nGuest.\nCor. Baker .nd Ward Sta, Nel.on\nDay,\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic  Restaurant.\nRefinement  and  Delicacy  Prsr&lla,\nOPEN  SAT AND  NIGHT\nLuncheon 11:80 to 2     85o\nSpecial dinners 5:30 to 8     35c\nWa specialize ln Chop Suey and\nNoodles.\nA fact mothers must face is that\nsummer complaint with the prostration, often verging on collapse, which\nsometimes accompanies this disease,\nmakes it one of the most serious\nand dangerous to contend with during  the  hot  months.\nThousands of infants die annually\nwhose lives could have no doubt been\nsaved by the timely use of Dr.\nFowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry,\nand it has been the experience of\nthousands pf mothers during the past\n78 \u25a0 years this valuable preparation\nhas been on the market, that lt is\nthe safest and most effective remedy\nfor use in all cases of looseness of\nthe   bowels.\nMrs. S. Lafontalne, Great Desert,\nOnt., writes:\u2014\"My baby, when a year\nold, waa suffering with summer complaint. Two doctors attended him,\nbut nothing would stop the vomiting and diarrhoea. A friend told\nme to try Dr. Fowler's Extract of\nWild Strawberry and after the second dose the baby waa better and I\ncan   say  it   saved   my   baby's   life.\n\"I wouldn't be without a bottle of\n'Dr. Fowler's' In the house for untold   gold\"\nPrice 50c a bottle; put up only by\nThe T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto.   Ont.\nTviADDEN \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. S. Hayward, Cranbrook: Charles Wells, Hal-\nmo; Ronald Wilson, Apnledale; W\nHolmquist, St. Paul; C. Banow, city;\nA. O. Oon, Scaia. Edgy wood; (Jeorge\nDobwon, Harry Rohllni. Hope; Mr. and\nMm.   Alatson,   Vancouver.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest equipped restaurant tn tha\nCity, OPEN DAY AM) NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe  cater   to  private   parties.\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nAND  afterwards,   what'.'\nWILL  your  Men's   and   Boys'\nWEAR   give   the   satisfaction\nYOU   deserve?     Try   Morris.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616   Vsrnon    St.,    East\nOnly-brick   hotel   in   city.     Steam\nheated, hot and cold  water.   European    and    American    plans.\nNEW ORAND \u2014 J. J. MacKay, Toronto; Hlva Q. Hanna, Amelia M.\nHanna, George W. Hanna, Kaslo; G.\nT. McGrejfor, Crawford Bay; H.\nKeeyes, Meadows; T. J. Polrler, Newport ;C. Stansen, Salmo; Mrs. C. Lar-\nl on. Spokane; A. H. Carter, Lethbridge; C. R. Hlgglns, S. R. Sherman,\nBoswell; J. W. Pool, Creston; George\nDoyle, New Denver; S. Brlggs, Cranbrook; D. Norberg, city; Mrs. A. Mackereth and children. Lower Arrow\nLakes.\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nThe only Cafe In town cooking\nelectrically. Dinner 11:30 a.m. to\n2 p.m. Lunch 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.\nPer cover, 35c. Special Sunday\nDinner,   per   cover,   60c,\n611    Baksr   St.\nPhona   450\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs. Mallttte e\\ 8on, Proprietors\nNice, warm, comfortable rooms at\nreasonable   rates.     Open   day   and\nnight.\nComar   Hall   and   Vsrnon   Streete\nFIFTH OF MILLION\nACRES ARE ADDED\nREGINA, Sask., Sept. 3.\u2014Approximately 216,000 acres was added today\nto the acreage signed up for the\nwheat pool, according to actual contracts received at headquarters during  the day.\nCalgary Golfer Wins\nTitle for Province\nLAKEVIEW   \u2014   T.\n. David,   Benton   Siding.\nHeley,   Thomas\nSherbrooke Hotel\nNtar   C.P.R.   Station\nRooms at Reasonable Rates.\nH.   DUNK,    Proprietor.\nCALGARY, Sept. 3.\u2014Carson Mc-\nWilllams, St. Andrews club, Calgary,\nwon the amateur golf championship\nof Alberta here today by defeating\nTom Gillespie of the Calgary Golf\n& Country club, 1 up, after a dra\nmatic  finish.\nVANCOUVER, Bept. 3. \u2014 Rev\nWestminster defee-ted Vancouver,\n9 ta 7, la a lacroese game today.\nOne mora riotory ln the four remaining s'amea will give Raw\nWestminster  tha  Minto  cap.\nA WANT AD. IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT,\nthat about 40 foreigners bad perlBhed\nthere.\nThe' Italian and French embassies\nIn Toklo were destroyed by the earthquake. This Information Is given\nIn a late wireless message from that\ncity.\nYokohama Still Burns\nPEKING, Sept. 3.\u2014Wireless messages intercepted Irom the steamer\nKorea . Maru, in .Yokohama harbor\nstate that fire Is still raging through?\nout the city and thousands are homeless. Food supplies are already beginning   to   arrive,   Is   was   said.\nThe emperor and empress are reported safe, while the prince regent\nis  said   to   be   unharmed   In   Tokio.\nThe fire was brought under control yesterday noon after virtually\ndestroying  five  wards.\nNaval   Baaaa   Destroyed\nLIVERPOOL, Sept. 3.\u2014The Japanese naval baseB at Kamakura and\nYokosuka were entirely destroyed\nin the earthquake, according to advices received by the Japanese consulate   here.\nEight of the 15 districts in Toklo\nwere partlal'y destroyed, and the\nfires are not yet under control In\nsome districts. All the bridges over\nthe river traversing Toklo were carried  away   by 'the   tidal   flood.\nThe small volcano on the Island\nof Koshina, 30 mi'.es from Tokio, is\nerupting.\nTokio Blocks Vanish\nLO.N'DON, Sept. 3.\u2014The correspondent of the Osaka Malnichi received a cable today saying that\nnearly all the large buildings in Toklo had either collapsed or been\nburned. The telegram added that\naU the newspaper offices had been\nwrecked, with the exception ^of the\nNlchl   Nlchi   building.\nThe health resort of Karuisawa,\nabout 80 miles northwest of Tokio,\nwas not damaged by the earthquake,\naccording to a message received today by the Church Missionary society.\nCanadian Pacific Loses\nHONGKONG, Sept. 3.\u2014An intercepted wireless message received here\nreports that the office building of\nthe Canadian Pacific steamships, In\nYokohama was destroyed. The general agent 'pf the company, who made\nthe report, was unable to say definitely as to the fate of his staff.\nCommissioner  Eadia  From  Canada\nWINNIPEO, Sept. 3.\u2014Commissioner\nand Mrs. William Eadle, who, according ' to New York advices, were\nIn charge of the hospital and training school of the Salvation Army,\nwhich was destroyed by the earthquake in Tokio, were until a year\nago stationed here, where Commissioner Eadie was territorial commander of the Salvation Army from\n\u25a0 Port .Arthur - --to-. -the - Pacific coast\nand Alaska. After a six months' rest,\nCommissioner and Mrs. Eadle proceeded to Tokio, where Commissioner\nEadie assumed command of the Japan   territorial   district.\nReports that Commissioner and\nMrs. Eadie and their staff were believed to have perished in the holo-\naust were discredited by Commissioner- Hodder. who succeeded Commissioner Eadle in-western Canada.\nCommissioner Hodder aaid that the\ntraining school, where natives were\ntrained, and the hospital at Tokio,\nboth of which are reported to have\nbeen wiped out, were staffed exclusively by natlvt^ and that the\nheadquarters of the territorial district of Japan, whore Commissioner\nand Mrs. Eadie and their staff would\nbe located, were far removed from\nthe  hospital  and  trainipg  school.\nThe commissioner voiced the belief\nthat had disaster befallen the army's\nsta ff in Toklo, he would have received word by now through the\nheadquarters of the Salvation Army\nin   London.\nSalvation Army Wiped Out\nNEW YORK, Sept 3.\u2014All Salvation Army officers and workers in\nTokio are believed to have lost\ntheir lives in the earthquake, according to a cable received by the\norganization's headquarters today by\na round-about way. The message\ncame through San Francisco, where\nit was received by Colonel Masahut\nKobayashi, who, for many years,\nhas been In charge ofa corps of\nJapanese Salvationists on the Pacific   coast.\nThe Salvation Army training school\nand hospital were in the heart of\nTokio, and are said to have been\ncompletely wiped out. Commissioner\nand Mrs. William Eadle and a full\nstaff were In charge of the hospital\nwhen   the   disaster   occurred.\nCommander Hooth immediately re-\np'ied to the message with an announcement that money and supplies\nwould be rushed to the stricken areas\nof japan by the army with all possible speed.\nLOSS OF LIFE\nMAY BE FIFTH\nOF A MILLION\n(Continued  from page one)\nalso    Honomuku ' and    Isoko,    villages\nIn   the   vicinity   of   Enoshima.      Many\nEuropeans,   visiters   and   residents   of\nthat   section,   are   missing.\nBridge   Drops   With   Thousands.\nThe famous Ryoguka bridge, spanning the Sumida river In TokiO, collapsed at a time when thousands who\nwere fleeing to the mountains were\nupon It, with resultant loss of life\ndescribed   ss   \"Innumerable.\"\nKeljl university, at Toklo, the higher\ntechnical school, the women's higher\nnormal school, and the first high\nschool,   have   been   burned.\nThe Island of Oshlma, 60 miles\nsouthwest of Toklo, and which had\nan active volcanic cone, is reported\nto have Bunk beneath the sea, observers having been unable to see anything   In   its   direction   but   water.\nFire which had spread from the\ncentral section of Tokio to the Aoy-\nomya district still waa burning yesterday   morning.\nAncient   Temples   Oo.\nIn addition to the offices of the\nNlchi Nlchl, which earlier reports had\nannounced were spared by the flames,\nthe office of another leading Toklo\npaper, the Hochl, also escaped, but the\nmaohlnery in each was so badly damaged that publication of a newspaper\nwas Impossible. Other buildings destroyed include the patent office, the\nbuilding occupied by the board of\naudit, the Chinese legation, Nlcolai\ntemple, the residence of Prince Shi-\nmazu Arisugawa, the temples of\nTsukljl and Asakuaa, the latter said\nto have  been  founded about 600 A.D.\nSix hundred thousands koku of rice\n\u2014nearly 3,000,000 bushels\u2014are being\nsent from Osaka to Yokahama for\nrelief   work.\nRefugees   on   Steamers.\nThe Toyo Kisen Kaisha steamer,\nKorea Maru, Is safe In the harbor of j ending with\nYokohama, with 2500 refugees on\nboard, according to a cablegram received at the company's office here,\ntoday  from   its agents in  Kobe.\nCommunication!! of all kinds have\nbeen reopened up to Numazu, 85 miles\nwest   of   Tokio,   the   cablegram   said.\nFall Fashions\nMake a Big Appeal\nMILLINERY is admired by all. The models, straight\nfrom the fashion centers, have won all along the\nline. You should make it a point to see these\ncreations at an early date.\nTHE COATS are crowding in, but already they are\nmoving out nicely. This will be a great Coat\nseason, and the styles are so different and so attractive that most ladies are planning to get one\nof these stunning models.\nTHE DRESSES, too, ate worth a special trip.\nLet Us Show You Our New Goods!\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nStates fell off during the same period. ilflMr. CFflRflF   -Ml THF\naccording   to   a   bulletin   Just   Issued  s\\in_   UCUKOE, ANU   I Ht\nby the Dominion bureau of  statistics, i\nmonths    ending\nTRADES UNION HEAD\nDENOUNCES MUSSOLINI\nWEAK, RUN DOWN\nAND AILING\nLydia E-Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Brought Relief When\nOther Medicines Failed\nPort Mann, B. C.-\"I took Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound because\nI waa tired and rundown. 1 had headaches and no appetite and waa troubled\nfor two yeara with\nsleeplessness. I tried\nmany medicines, but\nnothing did me any\nreal good. \"While I\nwas living in Washington I was recommended byastranger\nto take Lydia E,\nPinkham'a Vegetable Compound. \u25a0\u2022 f am stronger and feel\ntine since then and am able to do my\nhousework. I am willing for you to\nuse thewe facts as a testimonial. \"\u2014Mrs.\nJ. C. Greaves, Port Mann, B. C.\nFeels New Life and Strength\nKeene, N. H. \u2014\"J was weak and run*\ndown and had backache and all sorts of\ntroubles which women have. 1 found\ngreat relief when taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable (Compound and I also\nused Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative\nWash. I'am able to do my work and feel\nnew life and strength from the Vegetable Compound. 1 am doing all I '\u2022an to\nadvertise It.\"- Mrs. A. F. Hammond,\n72 Carpenter Street, Keene, N.H.\nSick and ailing women everywhere\nin the Dominion should try Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound.       0\nCongress Qf  British Worker?  Is  Asked    to    Intervene    on    Side    of\nWorld   Peace\nPLYMOUTH. Sept. \u2022..\u2014The British\ntrade union congress opened today\nat Plymouth with TCP delegates in\nattendance, representing 4,\"6tf,000\nmembers of affiliated unions, a decline of more than half a million\nas  compared   with   last  year's, roil\nJ. B. William, chairman of the\ncongress, presiding, denounced Italy's action against Greece, and naked did they intend to stand idly by\nand see the world's peace imperilled\nbecause the mad lust for Imperialism\nhad been transferred from a Ho-\nhenzo'lern    to    Mussolini?\nHe protested In the strongest terms\nagainst any warlike action, constituting a breach of the letter or\nterms  of   the   League   ot   Nations.\nThe chairman suld he believed the\nlabor movement would do everything I\nin its power to prevent the people\nof this or any other country being\nsacrificed to the wild ambition and\nmad 'lust for power of any man.\nSympathy  for Japan\nIn token of sympathy for the vlc-\ntinies of the earthquake in Japan.\nthe delegates stood In silence for\nseveral minutes.\nDuring the four\nwith July last, Canada's Imports\nof agricultural, vegetable and animal products from the United States\nwere valued at about $39,000,000. us\ncompared with less than $33,000,000\nfur tho corresponding period ln 1922.\nOn the other hand. Canada's exports\nof agricultural, vegetable and animal products for the four months\nJuly of the current\nyear were approxlmaetly $36,000,000,\nas against $38,000,000 for the similar\nfour months of last year.\nApart from agricultural produce,\nthere we're large Increases In Canadian exports of wood and paper to\nthe United Staes, while ln Imports\ninto 'Canada from the United States\nthe chief increases were in iron and\nIts products, and in nonmetalllc mineral   products.\nPOPE SEND SYMPATHY\nWinnipeg Brewers\nRefuse to Supply\nBeer for Hotels\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 3.\u2014Owing to the\napproaching change In the liquor\nregulations*. aB a result of the recent referendum on the question, the\n\u25a0Winnipeg breweries have decided to\ndeclii'e all orders from hotel proprietors.\nThe decision was reached at the\nend of the week, and drinking in\npublic bars of liquor containing more\nalcohol than the provisions of the\nManitoba Temperance act permits Is,\nor will >be, a thing of the past so far\nas   Winnipeg   is   concerned.\nRegina Civil Service\nBeat Winnipeg Rangers\nREGINA, Sept. 3\u2014In the first interprovlnclal soccer game played in\nRegina the Civil Service selected team\nbeat Fort Rouge Rangers of Winnipeg tonight  by a  score of 2  to  1.\nLONDON,   Sept.   3.   \u2014  King   'Jeorte\nhas   sent   the   following   message   of '\ncondolence to the emperor of Japan:\n\"I hasten to express to your lm*\nperial majesty the horror with which\nI learned of the appalling disaster\nwhich has befallen your country, by\nthe earthquake, and Ita terrible con-\nsequences, at Toklo, Yokohama an i,\nother places. I sympathize profoundl-'\nwith your majesty In this overwhelming catastrophe, resulting ln loss tt\nlife and property, and In untold sufferings   to  thousands of your people.\"\nPontiff Condoles. ,\nROME, Sept. 3. \u2014 Pope Pius ha-\nsent through the apostolic delegate U;\nToklo, profound condolence to the\nJapanese Imperial family, and the,\ngovernment  and people  of Japan.\nVancouver \"LW.W.\"\nJailed oii Plains\nSASKATOON, Sept. 3.\u2014John Spei r\nof Vancouver was sent to Prince i\\j\nbert Jail for 30 days on a vagrar.\ncharge by a Justice of the peace \u25a0\nRtsetown, Sask., on Friday. He lu\nbeen distributing I. W. W. literati;;,\nand was carrying an I. W. W. card i\nthe   time  of his arrest.\nSASKATOON WINS\n., ATHLETIC TITLE\nREGINA, Sept. 3.\u2014Saskatoon \u00abn\nried off the honors at the provi.\nclal championship track and fl\nmeet here today. Chief credit for\nthe northern city's win goes to %X.\\\nKerr, who won the individual title\nwith  four  firsts and  three  thirds..\n\"LORD RENFREW\" WILL\nRANCH FOR A MONTH\nAmalgamate First,\nHarmonize After,\nSays Ontario Vets\nST. CATHARINES, Out, Sept. 3.\u2014-\nAi_, lUi' QtMYeuUuu of the Ontario\ncommand of the O.W.V.A. here today,\nthe Ontario executive was authorized\nto take s*:uch steps as they may consider will best advance the Interests\nof veterans in Ontario, and expedite*!\nthe . consummation of a Dominion-\nwide   amalgamation.\nThe resolution adopted maintained\nthat the question of determining a\nmutually acceptable policy should not\nprecede,  but follow, amalgamation.\nAlarm was expressed in a resolution at the tendency in some political\nquarters to return lo the patronage\nsystem, and the Dominion command\nand the. people of Canada were urged\nto recognize the necessity for the\nmaintenance of an independent civil\nservice   commission.\nOn   Return   From  Alberta,  Prince Will '\nVisit   Baron   Byng   for  a\nCouple   of   Days |\nLONDON, Sept. 3\u2014(By Canadian '\u25a0\nPress Cable,)\u2014When the prince of I\nWales,' traveling, as Lord Renfrew,!\nsails on Wednesday for Canada, he I\nwill be attended by the members of\nhis suite, Oei-eral Trotter, Kir Ood- i\nfrey Thomas and Major Metcalfe.\nThe prince  is due  to  land at Que-\nbee  on   September   12,   and   will   pro- i\nceed    direct    to    his    Alberta    ranch, |\nwhere   he  will   remain  until   the  second week of October.\nAs has been stated, the prince will\nnot accept any Invitations, to participate In public functions, but on the\nreturn Journey to Quebec he will\nstop at Ottawa, whero he will pay\na private visit for two days to the\ngovernor-general,  Baron Byng.\nThe prince will embark at Quebec\non  the return journey  on  October  13. [\nCANUCKS CONSUME\nMORE YANKEE FOOD\nLast    Four-Month    Period    Agriculture   Imports   'From   States\nGrow, While Exports Stump\nManitoba Defection\non Wheat Pools Not\nHurting, Says Wood\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 3\u2014\"The fact that\nManitoba Is staying out of the wheat\npool movement so far aa the marketing of this year's crop Is concerned,\nwill not in any way be detrimental\nto the success of the Alberta and\nSaskatchewan wheat pools,\" H W.\nWood, president of the Alberta organisation,    stated    tonight.\nAged Lady Fatally\nHurt by Engine in\nYards at Saskatoon\nSASKATOON, Sept. 8.\u2014Mrs. Anne\nMcCurdy, aged fiO, whoBe relatives\nhave not yet been traced, Was knocked down and fatally Injured by a locomotive early yesterday morning in\nthe Canadian -National yards at Nu-\nt.ana,   Sask.\n. OTTAWA, Sept. 3.\u2014Canadian Imports of agricultural products from\nthe United States Increased considerably during the four \u00abmopths\nending with July, as compared with\nlast year, while Canadian exports\nof   similar   products   to   the   United\nLast Chance This Year\nSeptember 15 to Bug\nREDUCED RATE, ROUND-TRIP TICKETS to the\nEast at Fare and MO\nTravel on the fast, through, new steel train, the\nOriental Limited\nSEATTLE:\u2014TACOMA\u2014PORTLAND\n(Portland   via  S.P.  and   S.   Ry.)\nTo CHICAGO without change\nSuperb   roadbed,   unexcelled   service,   perfect   cuisine,\nand  scenic  wonders,   via\nGREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY\nFor   Information,   apply\nE. L. BUCHANAN, City Freight and\nPassem.cr Agent, 421 Baker St.,\nNelcon.\"\nH.   E.   DOUGLAS, *Agent,  Fernie,   BX.\nGlacer Park Season Closes Sept 1   j\nMild and Fragrant\nORINOCO\nIs made In two forms-.\nCUT FINE for Cigarettes\nCUT COARSE foruour Pipe\nSOU) EVERYWHERE\n =\n\u25a0\"\u25a0ee\n'THE.'NELSON \"DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY'MORNING,- SEPTEMBER 3, 192&\n'Wffifc-T\nMADE\nIN\nCANADA\nRoyal Yeast Cakes\nreach the user in sealed\nair-tight waxed paper\nwrappers, each cake being wrapped\nby machinery\u2014not by hand so that\neven after package has been opened,\nthe cakes are protected from dust\nand other harmful contamination.\nROYAL\nYEAST\nCAKES\nRICH IN\nVITAMINES\nLACROSSE BOYS\nPUT UP CLEAN\nAND EVEN GAME\nTrail Winners Over Nelson\nin Close Game; Final\nScore 5 to 4\nTHAIL, Sept. 3.\u2014Trail's intermediate lacrosse team took a firm hold\non the league leadership today when\nthey handed a 6 to 4 beating to\nthe Nelson intermediates, in a close\nand well-contested game, which was\none of the best witnessed here this\nyear.\nNelson'a rally In the last period\nhad the whole Trail team on the go,\nand In the last minute of play two\ngoals were secured by the visitors,\nwho were plugging away at the local\nnets  quite strongly. *\nIn   the  first   period   It   looked   like\na   walkawny   for   Trail.    Fereno    in\nthe Nelson goal  being  peppered  with\n\u25a0 shots.    Two   tallies  were  chalked   up\nagainst the visitors in this period.\nIn the second period Trail secured\ntwo more, while the Nelson boys also\nbroke into the score sheets with one\ntally. Taking the field ln the last\nhalf with the score 4 to 1 against\nthem, tha Nelson boys bucked up\nsome, and after some pretty combination work oo the home,  goals  began\nTENNIS HONORS\nACCORDED WIDE\nDISTRIBUTION\nCoast  Players Take   Open\nSingles and Men's\nDoubles Titles\nNELSON WINS MEN'S\nB CLASS SINGLES\nPacket of\nWILSON'S\nll\u00a5f;\/-l!H\nWill Kill MOQEFlirCTHftN\n\\ S8-?WORTH  OF  ANY   \/\n\\S1ICKV FLYCATCHLR\/.\nClean to handle.   Sold by al)\nDruggist*, Grocers and\nGeneral Stores\nto come. Trail secured', another4,- tally\nwhile  Nelson  collected  three.\nTrail'*' team throughout played a\ngood game, the home defence working in grand style, the passing of\nthe home boys being bIbo short and\nsnappy; while* the Nelson boys failed\ntime and again to pass the ball,\nwhich would no doubt have spelled\nvictory for them.\nOnly two penalties were handed\nout during the game, McVicar of Nelson and Demidoff of Trail gracing\nthe boards for a short rest. Fred\nMorrish handled the whistle and\nkept the play clean and fast.\nCELEBRATION AT\nTRAIL PROVES\nHUGE SUCCESS\nCitizens and Visitors Enjoy\nHoliday at the Smelter\nCity\nTRAIL, Sept, 3.\u2014Labor day was\ncelebrated in grand style at Trail\ntoday, when the citizens turned out\nin great numbers to celebrate Trail's\nholiday. From early morning till\ndusk the crowd lined the recratlon\ngrounds and enjoyed the various\nsport events.\nField .sports and Intercity games\nprovided the attractions, while the\nTrail city band livened up the occasion  with  musical selections.\nIn the lacrosse game between the\nTrail and Nelson intermediate teams\nthe home team was victor In a close\ngame, the final score being 5 to 4.\nNorthport and Trail played baseball,\nNorthport being hopelessly beaten\nto the tune of 17 to 0. Demidoff,\nheaving for Trail, allowed but one\nhit.\nTrail also took the footer game\nbetween Trail and Nelson by a 2 to 0\nscore.\nThe open races attracted much\nattention, contestants being entered\nfrom neighboring cities, the majority\nof prizes, however, finding owners\nIn Trail. A huge dance wound up\nthe day's entertainment, which proved\nthe   usual   success.\nSincere\nTribute\nWe deeply appreciate a sincere\ntribute to our product, such as\nthe letter sent to us by Mrs. J.\nC. Davidson from a small town\nup tht' coast. Among other\nthings, she says: \"I came to\nthe coast from a dairy farm on\nthe prairies and was prejudiced\nagainst the use of tinned milk\nof all kinds. Since the first\ntrial of Pacific Milk I have used\nit extensively for all cooking\npurposes and have found It more\nthan satisfactory.\"\nThen she goes on to say she\nfeels we ought to know what\nwomen think of this good British\nColumbia product.\nPacific Milk Co.?\nIDDIIO\nFactories    at    Ladner    and\nAbbotsford\nClear Your Complexion\nWith Cuticura\nBathe with Cuticura Soap and hot\nwater to free the potea of impurities\nand follow with a gentle application\nof Cuticura Ointment to soothe and\nheal. They are ideal for the toil*.\naa is also Cuticurs Talcum for powdering and perfuming.\nbnlii Oisl.nl !5.\u00abiSfc. W..\u00ab2S\u00ab. Sold\nthroughout thpDomintrm. Canadian Depot:\nLr..... Uaait'd. M 51. r.sl St. W. M.strasL\n\u25a0V~Cuticur. Smp \u00bbh..c. without mm.\nFOOTBALL FEATURES\nHOUDAY IN ENGLAND\nLONDON',    Sept.   3.\u2014Today's   football and  rugby  scores  follow:\nENGLISH   LEAGUE\nFirst   Division\nBolton   W.,   4;   Sheffield   U.,   2.\nTottenham   i!.,   0;    Chelsea,   1.\nWest Bromwieh,  3; \u25a0 Nottingham,  2.\nEverton.   3;   Burnley,   3.\nSecond   Division\nBlackpool,   1;   South   Shields,   1.\nBristol   ICty,    1;    Barnsley,   1.\nCoventry City,   1;   Bradford C,  0.\nDerby   County.   2;   Oldham   A.,   1,\nFulham,   0;   Bury,   2.\nHull   City,   2:   Clapton   Orient,   2.\nNelson,   1;    Stockport   County,   1.\nThe Wednesday, 2;  Port Vale, 1.\nSouthampton,  0:   Manchester U.,   0.\nStoke,  1:   Leicester City,   0.\nThird   Diviiion\u2014Northern   Section\nBarrow,   0:    Accrington,   0.\nBradford,   2;    Orlmsby,   1.\nChesterfield,    1;    New   Brighton,   0.\nDoncaster,   2;    Ashington,   1.\nRochdale, 1;   Wlgan, 0,\n\u2022 Rotherham,   1;    Wolverhampton,   1.\nTranmere  vs.   Halifax  T\u201e  unplayed.\nThird  Division\u2014Southern Section\nNorthampton,   2;   Luton,   0.\nCharlton,   4;    Soutlynd   U\u201e   1.\nNorwich   City,   5;   Abordare,   0.\nPlymouth, 4;  Brentford, 1.\nSwansea, 5;  Reading, 1.\nSwindon,   1;   Mlllwall,   0.\nRUGBY\nNorthern   Union\nHuddersfield,   13;   Warrington,   18.\nRugby  Union\nCamborne, 15:  Plymouth, 8.\nDempsey Perfects\nDefence to Employ\nAgainst Mr. Firpo\nSARATOGA RPRINC1S, Sept. 3. \u2014\nPerfecting a defence for the style of\nbattle he expects from Luis Firpo\nseemed to be. the chief object of Jack\nDempsey's training at his camp today.\nDempsejr boxed two rounds each\nwith George Godfrey, Farmer Lodge\nand Jack McAullffe, in addition to\ngoing through his other stunts fol\nthe brnafit  of cameras.\nBecause Jack Kearns considers that\nDempeey'l has reached a satisfactory\nstage in his training, the tltleholder\nplana to take a day of rest tomorrow.\nDAUGHTERS OF SCOTIA DANCE\nThe Eagle hall waa last night tho\n.\u201e.,.,i(< ,,f a successful dance under\nh\u201e a,r-i*:\"\" of the Dmighters of\nScotia. A large crowd was in attendance, and at midnight dainty re-\nfre\u00abhmi-nl9 were served. Scotch reels\nand   dances   were   the   Order   of    the\nevening. \t\nVETERAN*'   DANCE\nA large crowd was In attendance\nat the dance erivwi I <'\u25a0 \" Aum-ry\nlast night by the Oreat War Veterans. The floor, was in excellent\ncondition and a good time wa. had\nby all.   . ' _     '\t\nWhat has become of the oi.i rationed noyeiist who merely toM a\nstory? .           __\u25a0 -.'. . ..ji-\nWillow Point and Trail Do\nWell; Grand Forks Wins\nVeterans1 Competition\nThe finals of the Kootenay Tennis\nclub tournament were played off yesterday afternoon on the upper courts\nbefore a large crowd, and In warm\nbut  excellent   tennis weather.\nAs a result of the play, coast competitors took two of the events, the\nmen's oppn singles being won by V.\n\u25a0Westwood of Vancouver, and the\nmen's open doubles by D. Mahood of\nVancouver and H. Mcllwaine of Pow>\nell River.\nNelson took the B class men's\nfl.ngl*s, A. T. Godfrey beating Dr.\nFergie of Cranbrook, and had the\nhonor of having a contender, Mrs. O.\nHallett win the ladles' doubles with\na Willow Point partner, Mrs. H. Rosllng.\nWillow PoUt Prominent.\nWillow Point players did well\nthroughout. Mrs. H. Rosllng won the\nClass A singles, beating Mrs. a. Hal\nlett of Nelson; Miss B. West beat a\nclub mate, Miss W. Thompson, In the\nClass B ladles' singles; Mrs. H. Rosling was one of the winning pair in\nthe ladles' doubles, playing with Mrs.\nHallett of Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. B.\nTownshend won the mixed doubles;\nand K. Metcalfe only lost out in the\nveterans' singles in the finals, being\nbeaten by C. F. Pincott of Grand\nForks. It was a big day for Willow\nPoint.\nTo Grand Forks goes the veterans'\nsingles' title, C. F. Pincott playing\nsplendid tennis to beat K. Metcalfe\noi Willow Point.\nScores In Tlnal*.\nThe   scores   ln   the   flnaj   matches\nwere:\nMen's open singles\u2014V. Westwood,\nVancouver, beat W. Harrison, Nelson,\n0-6,   6-2,   6-2,  B-l\nMen's open doubles \u2014 D. Mahood,\nVancouver, and H. Mcllwaine, Powell\nRiver, beat G. Wallinger, Trail, and\nK.  D. McBean, Trail,  8-1, 6-4.\nMen's singles. Class B\u2014A. T. Godfrey, Nelson, beat Dr, Fergie, Cranbrook,   6-2,   6-4.\nLadles' singles, lass A \u2014 Mrs. H.\nRosllng, Willow Point, beat Mrs. O.\nHallett,   Nelson,   8-3,   6-2.\nLadles' singles, Qlass B \u2014 Miss B.\nWest. Willow Point, heat Miss W.\nThompson, Willow Point, 6-1, 7-5.\nLadles' doubles\u2014Mrs. Gordon Hallett, Nel son, and Mrs. H. Rosllng,\nWillow Point,'beat Mies Eileen Robertson, Toronto, and Mrs. G, S. Godfrey,   Nelson,   6-2,   6-1.\nVeterans' singles \u2014 C. F, Pincott,\nGrand Forks, beat K. Metcalfe, Willow   Point,   6-3,   6-4.\nMixed doubles \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. B.\nTownshend, Willow Point, beat V.\nWestwood, Vancouver, and Mrs. H.\nRosllng, Willow Point (by default).\nXxbltebtnt Over Singlet,\nAs will be seen from the above\nsummary of results, every match, with\nthe exception of one, waa won In\nrtrafght sets. The exception was ln\nthe men's open singles, where W. Harrison of Nelson and V. Westwood of\nVancouver were the contestants. Unfortunately Westwood severely\nstrained a ligament In his leg, and\nwas forced to retire for \u2022 medical\ntreatment. Dr. H. H. MacKenzie of\nNelson and Dr. A, C. Major of Prooter\nrendered assistance Immediately, and\nafter a little time Westwood decided\nto continue. At that time Harrison\nwas anything but beaten, but he\nshowed real sportsmanship In the ensuing play, and Westwood beat him,\nthe final score Btandlng 0-6, 6-2, 6-2,\n6-3.\nAffected Mixed SottbUs.\nThe mishap had further effects in\nthat it resulted in the mixed doubles\nbeing won by Mr. and Mrs. B. Townshend of Willow Point by default,\nWestwood belnff unable to enter the\nfinals with his partner, Mrs.'H. Rosling of Willow Point. Up to the. time\nof the accident to Westwood the game\nwas a delightful one to watch, and\nthe  spectators  were -nthuslastlc over\nthe splendid volleying and driving of\nboth players. |\nHarrison took tha first set and carried Westwood 6-2 and 8-2 in the two\nfollowing. It was In the deciding set\nthat the accident occurred, and on resuming ploy, Westwood took  lt 6-3.\nUndoubtedly the finest play of the\nday waa ln the men'B doubles, when\nMcBean and Wallinger were called\nupon for three hard events, and stood\nup remarkably well under them all,\nonly losing out ln the final to Mahood and Mcllwaine.\n&om Corp Thi* Yt-ar.\nIn tha doubles, S. G. Blaylock and\nGeorge Murray, both of Trail, who\nheld ths trophy last year,, went down\nto defeat before the two younger players from the -smelter city\u2014G. Wallinger and K, D. McBean. one of the\nremarkable features of the men's\ndoubles was that H. Mcllwaine of\nPowell River Just seemed to be unable to do anything wrong. Everything that was tried seemed Just to\nhis liking.\nIncidentally it may be remarked\nthat Westwood takes the cup ln the\nopen singles for the second time, having won It also last year.\nAnother winner who showed consistency Is Mrs. H. Rosllng of Willow\npoint, who won ths ladles' Class A\nsinglts for the third year in succession.\nFowsd to **tirs.\nThe only Caigary contender, F. V.\nRtuart, was forced to retire from thc\ntournament, and returned home on\nSunday night, When It was found that\nhe had sprained an ankle. At the\ntime tits accident occurred, he had\nreached the semi-finals of the men's\ndoubles,' playing wit* K. Metcalfe of\nWillow  Point. \u2022\nAt the conclusion of tha finals Mrs.\nC. W. Appleyard, wife of the president of the Kootenay Tennis association; presented the cups to the winners ln tne various events, and a\nhearty vote of thanks was voted to\nall those who had assisted ln referee-\nlng add In tbe other necessary work\nduring th* tournament.\n\u25a0nsrgttlo OommitU*.\nThe visitors were loud ln their\npraise of tht manner ln which the\ntournament had been carried out, and\nS. G. Blaylock of Trail moved a vote\no\u00a3 thanks to the committee ln charge\nwhich was W. P. Dickson, George\nMurray, B. Townshend, C. W. Apple-\nyard, and G, 8. Godfrey, All were\nunited In declaring the tournament\nJust closed one of the best ever put\non  by  the  association.\nIn this connection It was mentioned\nthat a most gratifying face had been\nthe large number of B class entries,\nwhich It was stated showed that the\nyounger players were taking a greater\nInterest,\nThe house committee, which, under\nMrB.   F.   C.  Whitehouse,   proved   most\nBOY DIES OF\nODDJSHAP\nObject Lodged in Lungs of\nGordon Bremner Hat\nFatal Remits\nGordon Bremner, 8-year-old son of\nArchibald Bremner of Ymir, died yesterday afternoon in the Kootenay\nLake general hospital after having\nmade  a   particularly   plucky   fight.\nThe boy some time ago was playing with some youths in a field, and\nswallowed some object believed to\nhave been the  top of a hay stalk.\nHe became seriously 111 shortly\nafterwards, and was rushed to the\nhospital, but there !t proved Impossible to remove the obstruction, which\nhad settled in his lungs and had\nset  up  bleeding.\nFor a time his life was despaired\nof, but he made a remarkable rally,\nand it was hoped that this was due\nto the fact that the object In his\nlungs had been dislodged. This unfortunately proved unfounded, and\nhe gradually became weaker until\nthe end yesterday afternoon.\nA sad feature of his death Is the\nfact that a sister, aged 12, died of\nappendicitis only about  a  week ago.\nTRAIL WINS\nFOOTBALL BY\nTWO-MORE\nNelson Team Fails to Budge\nthe Nets in Holiday Contest\nenergetic,   was   also   remembered   ln  a\nvote of thanks,\nSemi-Flnals   Yesterday.\nThe results of the semi-finals\nrlayed yesterday  were:\nMen's open singles\u2014V. Westwood,\nVancouver, beat A, W., Idiens, Nelson,\n5-7,  7-5,   6-1.\nW. Harrison beat K. B. McBean, 6-2,\n6-1.\nMen's open doubles\u2014G. Wallinger\nand McBean beat Idiens and MacKy-\ns*y,  6-4,  4-6,  8-6.\nMahood and Mcllwaine beat Harrison  and  Appleyard,  6-3,  6-8,  6-3.\nMen's singles, B Class\u2014Dr. Fergie\nbeat G.   Builder,   6-3,   7-9,   6-3.      .\nA. T. Godfrey beat V. Hvight, 6-4.\n6-2.\nLadles* singles, Class A\u2014Mrs. O.\nHallett beat Mrs. A.  Lord.   6-2,  6-2.\nMrs.   H.   Rosling   beat   Mrs.   H.   C.\nCaldicott,   6-2,   2-6,   6-3.\n-   Mixod   doubles\u2014Westwood   and   Mrs.\nH.  Rosllng beat C.  W.  Appleyard and\nMrs. G.  Hallett.  6-1,  6-2.\nB. Townshend and Mrs. Townshend\nbf.at C. F. Pincott and Mrs. G. S. Godfrey,  6-1,  6-2.\nMinnesota Fob\nTeam Sacctssfwl\nin C*p Defence\nFORT BNELLINO, Minn., Sej*. 3\"\nFort Saellinff retained pos\u00abes-lon of\nthe Siflon cup for the second time,\nwhen the Fort Bn*aUoS<jf \"A\" I**** defeated the Rt. Charles club \"A\" team\nof Winnipeg I to 4, In the International   polo   tournamtnt   bene   today.\nTRAIL, Sept. J.\u2014Two more points\nwere added to Trail's cup-hunting\nfootball team today, when the Nelson\nsenior team was put away by a\n2 to 0 score ln a fast game. The\nheat of the afternoon told on the\nmembers of both squads, and toward\nthe end of the game lt lagged somewhat.\nNelson put up a great fight, and.\nIf anything, had the breaks against\nthem, as the locals' nets were in\ndanger just as man\/ times as was\nthe  Nelson  goal.\nNotman, in the visitors' goal, played\nan excellent game, and should have\nturned in a perfect record tout for\nhard luck. Ho handled all difficult shots with suddenness and ease,\nand the only tallies scored against\nhim were on easy shots. The first\ngoa I was scored from close in, the\nsun blocking the Nelson goalie's\nview. Following this score, Nelson\ncame back strong and gave the Trail\ndefence  some busy  uetislons.\nAt the end of the first period the\nscore stood 1 to 0, a nd remained\nthus almost through the entire second period, the second tally being\nsecured about five* minutes before\ntime was called.\nNelson's team was not the strongest that has been fielded this year,\nnor was the Trail lineup up, to Its\nusual strength, four of the local\nplayers being unablB to participate\nln   the  game.\nTaking the game all through. It\nwas well received by the fans, both\nteams receiving ahout equal support.\nToth Starts 'Steenth\nEnglish Channel Try\nDOVER, Sept. 5. \u2014 Charles Toth of\nBoston began his attpmpt to swim the\nEnglish channel tonight, when the\nsea was  smooth.\nToth started swimming at a fast\nclip, and at the end of the first hour\nwas   two   miles  off   Dover.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0tm*\nWho First Felt |\nLike\nCiCK-FiGHTWG \u2022\u00ab\u00ab kens\nwith tht cock*.\nBut it Is only 80 ytare tea ttisf\nthe first man felt \"like \u25a0 fighting\neockt\"\nNow he bat brothers, sisters,\nnephews, nieces, ill over the worM\n-all feeling \"like a fighting eockl\"\nIt happens this way: A person\nhalf sick with bad stomach, dull\nand heavy headache, takes\nBeecham's Mis hist before gofng\nto bed IminediatelvlBePHIake-\ngin to harmonise tht digestive an*\neliminatne organs.\nConsequently, this person has \u25a0\ngood night's sleep and arises In\nthe morning with dear brat*\nbright eye, keen appetite, aad full\nof energy for work and play.\ntt la new hist 80 ytaca ttaoe\nBeecham's Pills first began correcting disordered stomachs tad\nstirring sluggish livers and bowels\nto natural activity \u2014 and feeling\n\"like a fighting cock\"is associate*\nas inseparably with Beecham'a\nPills, as tht pilla ace with teed\nhealth.\nAt All Druggists\ni.\nNorman E. Trimper\nTHIS   MAN   TELLS   YOU\nHOW   TO   KEEP   FIT!,\nBear River, N.S.\u2014\"My back was\nso bad I could hardly work, I waa\nalways tired out and had no ambition ; was nervous and dizzy, and\neverything seemed to worry me. I\nalso had terrible pains ln my right\nsldo I felt badly for about eighteen\nmonths, and could not do my work as\nit should have been done. , X tried\nseveral doctors, and also bought\nabout $25.00 worth of put-up medicines, but I found no relief until\nI took Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical\nDiscovery and Doctor Pierce's Anuric\n(an-ti-urtc-acid) Tablets. I have taken\ntwo bottles of the Discovery, and four\nof the Anuric Tablets, and can say\nthat I feel as well as I have felt\nfor the last ten years. I advise any\nsufferer to give Dr. Pierce's remedies\na fair trial. I cannot recommend\nthem too highly for what they hove\ndone for me, and shall be pleased\nto> answer anyone who cares to write\nt\u00bbf>.\"\u2014 Norman   E.   Trlmpef,   R.R.I.\nObtain these famous medicines now\nat your nearest drug store, In tablets or IU411 Id, or send 10 cents to\nDr. Pierce's Laboratory in Bridge-\nburg. Ont., for a trial package of any\nf his n-m ties. Write Doctor Pierce,\nPresidi t InvaMfls Hotel in Ruffs lo, N T., if you desire free medical\nadvlc* _+   '     .\nLIFE INSURANCE MAKES FOR A HAPPY\nAND CONTENTED PEOPLE WHILE ITS\n'TRUST FUNDS' GREATLY AID NATIONAL\nDEVELOPMENT.\nLIFE INSURANCE SERVICE\n 7Vig& Tv3P\ntl..\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublish-td \u2022very morning except\n\u25a0undny by The News Publishing oom-\npsnr.   limited.   Nelson.  BC.\nBusiness letters should bs addressed and checks and money orders\nmsds payable to The News Publishing company, limited, and ln no cass\nto Individual members of ths staff.*\nAdv-artlsing rite cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the offlcs\nof any advertising agency recognised\nby ths Canadian Press Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATE8.\nBy ms.ll   (country) per month....! .60\nPer  year    100\nOutside Canada, per month 75\nPer    year     T.60\nDellvJred, per month   75\nPer  six  months   4.00\nPar   T***r    \u2022\u2022*    ....7.60\nPayabl* In Advance.\nAudit  Bortan  of  Olronlatloa.\n\u25a0 THT-TTEESDN CKLY VEW, TOTStTATlIORNlNC-; SEFTEHB]8t\"CD&\nTUESDAY,  SEPT.  4,   1923\nA Successful Sports Event\nThe Kootenay tennis and golf\ntournament which ended yesterday\nwas easily the most successful which\nhas  yet   been  held.\nBoth sports are popular ln the district and are increasing in favor\nyear by year, while the standard\nof play is improving every season.\nTennis entries during this tournament came not only from Kootenay\nand Boundary, but from the coast\nand Alberta, and there Is every\nreason for expecting that next year's\ncompetitions will draw players from\nstill   wider   territory.\nOne of the gratifying, features of\nthe tournament was the manner ln\nwhich the victories were distributed.\nNo one center had a monopoly of\nsuccesses.\nWideni\nbusek\nL*ur%- A* Kit taut*\nANSWERED    LETTERS\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nStewed  Prunes\nCereal\nCoffee Scramb'ed  Eggs\nWhole   Wheat   Toast\nLuncheon\nCorn   Fritters\nPruit   Salad\nTea Cookies\nDinner\nVeal   Cutlet,    Brown   Gravy\nMashed   Potatoes\nSpinach\nCoffee Lemon   Gelatine\nThe Soft-Spoken Bolshevik\nThe German Communists are stooping to conquer. The Vorwarts, organ of the German moderate Socialists, has just discovered and published a detailed plan apparently\ngiven out to German Communist\nleaders for winning over reactionary\narmy officers, both in service and\nretired, to collaboration with the\nBolshevikL This Is a policy already\nenjoined on German Communists by\nMissionary Bishop Dadek, representing the Russian headquarters of the\nfaith; extreme right and extreme left\nwork together to overthrow moderate Democrats and moderate Socialists, with the struggle against\nthe French in the Ruhr as the immediate excuse. The minimum objective is described as the keeping\nout of \"the coming civil war\" as\nmany as possible of the reactionary\nnationalist military elements; the\nmaximum, the inducement of some\nof these sabre-rattlers, whose military value is admitted, to go over\nto the Reds when they strike for\nthe mastry of Germany, and to help\nthem hold the power after they have\nwon lt\nThe Bolshevik feeling his way\ntoward callaboration with some mus-\ntached general of the old regime Is\nadvised to establish personal connection through somebody who isn't\na member of the Communist party, if\npossible an officer of the old army.\n\u2022\"The greatest care\" is enjoined.\nDon't go too far or too fast; above\nall,   don't   be   bigotted.\nGet around, so far as possible, the\npoints of difference arising from the\nlimitations of Communist theory; emphasize to the utmost points on\nwhich both can agree\u2014the fight\nagainst Poincare and against the\nmiddle classes In Germany. The\nmanner, In the .conversations, must\nbe courteous and amiable in the\nhighest degree. (Call his \"Your Excellency,\" and so on.) Don't intrude\nquotations from Marx. Say as little as possible about the party program, but deal as much as possible\nIn   personal   compliments.\nThese personal contacts are to be\nsupplemented by discreet propaganda\ndesigned to affect the entire officer\nclass. Perhaps needlessly, the document explains: \"This Is not to be\nconnected in any way with the propaganda already conducted among the\nrank and file, which is quite different in both purpose and content.\"\nHigh military positions are to be\npromised m the good times coming.\n\"Speculate on ambition,\" say the\ndocument,  \"but not too  coarsely.\"\nTo the bourgeois reader this Is\nmerely amusing, but the orthodox\n\u25a0 Socialist naturally finds it not only\ntreasonable but sacrilegious. Count\nReventlow, once the chief of the\nteeth-gnash ing reactionaries, has\nbeen writing appeals to German Nationalists to work with the Reds.\nPaul Froellch, a Communist, holds\nout a welcoming hand In the Bolshevist press, \"Call him 'Your Excellency' seems to be the rule,\" says\nthe) Infuriated orthodox Vorwarts.\n\"Not less than half a dozen times\nwe find the address 'Herr Graf in\nthis article devoted to the class\nstruggle.\" But what are principles\nto the Bolshevisk, or a German Nationalist either, if he sees a chance\nto win?\nBride\u2014\"Have you a recipe for\nmagic pie crust?\"\nAnswer\u2014A reader of this column,\nJ. B., has kindly sent one in: \"Magic\npie crust\u2014Warm a mixing bowl by\npouring hot water Into It; let stand\ntwo minutes, then empty it. Put\nInto the bowl one cup of shortening\nand pour one-half cup of boiling\nwater onto it; beat with a fork till\nIt becomes a smooth liquid. Now\nsift together three cups of flour, one-\nhalf teaspoon' or Bait and one-half\nteaspoon of baking powder and add\nthis to the shortening liquid. Stir\nwell together, and turn out onto a\nbread board. Roll out thin. This\nrecipe makes two pies (four crusts).\nIf only one pie is desired wrap the\nremaining dough in waxed paper and\nput in it the ice box, where it will\nkeep   for   several   days.\"\nMrs. I. B.\u2014\"How can I clean embroidery on goods which will not\nwash?\"\nAnswer\u2014One way Is to apply gasoline with a cloth. But a way which\nI have recently heard about, yet\nnever tried, is the following: Cover\nthe embroidery with a thick paste\nof powdered French chalk and alcohol, mixed, and lay a piece of clean\nmuslin   over   it;    then   roll   up   the\ngoods like a je'.ly roll, place ln a\nI dark place for several days, or until\nthe alcohol has evaporated entirely,\nunroll, and brush off the dry chalk.\nTry this method on a corner of some\nembroidered article which you do not\ncare particularly ai>out, before using\nit for cleaning a more cherished\narticle. It is always wise to experiment, In this way, before going ahead\nto  cleanse  anything  nne  values.\nOld Housekeeper\u2014\"It seems as if\nI'd never cease to learn new things\nabout housekeeping\u2014thdugh I have\nbeen a housekeeper for almost 60\nyears. Here is my latest discovery:\nA pretty good substitute for linoleum\ncan be made by tacking an old Brussels carpet onto the floor, wrong-\nside up, and then giving It two coats\nof good floor paint 24 hours apart.\nFinish with a coat or two of spar\n(waterproof) varnish. This Idea has\nsaved me from buying new linoleum for my kitchen floor\u2014which I\ncould  not  really  afford  to  buy.\"\nAnswer\u2014I am sure that a good\nmany of our column readers will try\nthis excellent hint. Thank you for\nit, and write again if you can help\nus   furthpr.\nMiss V.\u2014\"Ts there anything that\none can do to keep a jelly roll from\ncracking during the rolling process?\"\nAnswer\u2014Yes. Turn the thin sheet\nof cake out of Its baking pan onto\na cloth wrung out of coM water,\nthen spread with jelly. As lt Is\nrolled the steam from the wet cloth\nwill prevent the shrinking, and consequent cracking, of the  top crust.\nTomorrow\u2014Dainties to Serve on the\nTea Table.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Miss\nKlrkman In care of the \"Efficient\nHousekeeping\" department will be answered ln these columns ln their turn.\nThla requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number received. So, If a personal or quicker\nreply Is desired, a stamped and self-\naddressed envelope must be Inclosed\nwith the question. Be sure to use\nYOUR full name, street number, and\nthe name of your city and province.\u2014\nThe  Editor.\na square deal Is whining for a set-up\nat  a  corner   pocket.\nA dangerous fanatic doesn't become very dangerous until some fool\nin  authority   makes  him  a martyr.\nDon't think he Is important just\nbecause he appears to have a grouch.\nWho ever heard of a grouchy winner?\nA peace loving land Is one where\nonly 8 per cent of the people know\nthe second verse of the national\nanthem.\nThe strange part is that a woman\ncan't be an \"affinity\" without getting some practice as another man's\nwife.\nMen are more modest. A woman\nwill make up her face in public,\nbut a man won't even make up his\nmind in public office.\nThose African natives who use a\njaw bone as a musical instrument\nprobahly produce nothing more atrocious  than  our   chin  music.\nThe Lighter Side\nHint to wives: About the only sure\nway to keep a husband in is to keep\nhim   in   bed.\nThis mad and fiearilsss striving after money seems supscialy\nwicked to those of uw who can't\n0\u00abt  any.\nAs a rule, the man who whines for\nLater triumphs never afford the\nthrill a small boy feels when he\nfirst learns to spit through his\nteeth.\nOur notion is that women are)\nnaturally more heroic than men.\nWho ever saw. \u25a0 man with nerve\nenough   to   pluck   his   whiskers?\nIt Isn't disregard of his comfort\nthat makes a man wear a high collar\nso much as a fine contempt for the\nbeauty  of  his   Adam's  apple.\nCorrect this sentence: \"If you\nwill let me have a hundred,\" begged\nthe Intimate friend, \"I can make a\nkilling and  I'll  split  with you.\"\nThe fault of the average highbrow\nIs that he never knows whether to\nlike a permormance until he reads\nwhat  the  critics  say   next   day.\nIt may be that modern novels contain fewer llustrations because the\nillustrations would necessarily be too\nnaughty   to   pass   the   censor.\nnsHlMir\nRIPE OLD AGE\nBT^ENQM.\nVelours de laine in a soft, woodsy\nshade of brown, combines with seal\nto make this charmingly youthful\nsuit, which indicates which way the\nwind will blow in young women's\ntai.leurs. At least one of the ways.\nFor no little Importance Is given to\nthe slender three-quarter length coat\nintroduced in I*aris. and gray furs,\nnotably squirrel, are stressed as\ntrimmings. Many young women,\nhowever,   have   a   preference   for   the\ntlvity for 53 years, and of carp still\nlonger, but such are \"hardly comparable   In   verity   with   the   records    _\t\nof     existing      public      and      private   trated;   and   where   there   are   panels\nin   the   back,   they   are   often   longer\nthan    the    skirt.      Fur   edgings   are\nhlpllne type of coat, wtilch with the\nsnug band fastenings frequently gives\na buoyant swing to the figure not\npossible   with   a   longer   coat.\nSkirts are fairly short for daytime\nwearT The wrap-around movement\nis conspicuous, hemlines are frequently uneven, often marked by a point\nin   the   front.as   in   the   model   lllus\niiouariums. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nThe New York aquarium still has\nspecimens (191.3) of the mudfish or\nbowfln and the long-nosed gar which\nwere received in 1903. There are\n\u25a0ilso living short-nose gars brought\nfrom the Mississippi river ln 1904.\nEleven-Y-sar Bass\nIn the aquarium certain North\nAmerican fishes have lived for long\nperiods, viz., striped bass, 2<J years;\nwhitefish hatched in the building In\n1913 are still living; large-mouthed\nblack bass, 11 years; muskelunge,\ncalico bass, rock bass and yellow\nperch, 10 years. The last four were\nadults   when   received   and   are   still\ntrlpe'd baHs kept in captivity | \u2022Uj*\nfor 19 years weighed 20 lbs. and\nwas three feet long when it died.\nUs length when received was about\nsix inches. This species sometimes\nattains a weight of 80 lbs. or more.\nIt Is likely that some species grow\nfaster in freedom, where they find\ntheir natural foods, but other kinds\nmay develop faster In suitable ponds,\nwhere they are well cared for and\nprotected   from   enemies.\nWild fishes of exceptionally large\nsize being often found, we may assume that fishes continue to grow\nthrough life, the period of life depending largely upon enemies. In\na world besot with sharp fangs and\nclaws, the life of a wild animal\neither in water or on land is apt to\nend   In   a ' tragedy.\nINDIA PROTESTING\nTAX ON MOTOR CARS\nCALCUTTA \u2014 The Imposition of\na 30 per cent import duty on motor\nvehicles coming into British India\nhas brought out a vigorous protest\nfrom the Ind ia Motor Trade association.\nThe argument Is advanced that\nan enormous class, In urgent need\nof modern transportation, has been\nprecluded from buying, and that the\nlower priced American cars are not\n\\meeting the situation. Motor Imports were lower in 1922 than 1914,\n1915   and   1916.\n* The development of road transport\nIs of special importance in a j#un-\ntry with limited railroads, the association says, and India will suffer\nserious consequences If this restriction upon the industrial development of the country is not removed.\nSome  Specimens   of   Finny  Tribe   Existed   for   53   Years;    Savage\nEnemies Account for Many\nOTTAWA\u2014Little can be learned\ndefinitely about the ages attained by\nfishes, unless individuals are kept\nunder observation in captivity, either\nin public aquariums or in the ponds\nof   fish   culturists.\nThe tagging experiments made on\nyoung fishes at government salmon\nhatcheries on the Pacific coast have\nyielded Information as to the ages\nwhen these fishes, after attaining\nmaturity in the sea, return to spawn\nin   their 'native   rivers.\nAs all the five species of Pacific\nsalmon perish after their first and\nonly spawning, tagging reveals only\nthe age at breeding maturity, which\nseems to vary between- the fourth\nand seventh year, according to the\nspecies.\nData   Is   Reliable   \\\nThe records of public and private\naquariums, however, furnish data\nthat we may consider reliable. The\nEuropean eel has undoubtedly lived\nfor long periods In captivity. According to accepted authorities, a\nfew specimens kept ln aquariums\nhave lived for periods varying from\n20 to 25 years. Boulenger, In the\nCambridge Natural History, slates\nthat an eel kept by the French naturalist Desmarest for \"upwards of 40\nyears\"  reached   a  length   of  4**&   feet.\nIt Is recorded that four* Russian\nsturlets had lived In the private\naquarium of Captain VIpan in Northamptonshire for 25 years. He also\nhad a golden orfo still living after\n24 years of captivity. A record from\nthe Brighton aquarium la that of a\nsturlet which died after having been\nkept  there  \"about   38  years.\"\nThe Australian lung fish Is known\nto have lived at the London Zoological  gardens  more  than   19  years.\nThere are accounts of European\ntrout said to have been kept in cap-\n_so to be noted.\nIn addition to velour de lalne.\nbroadcloth and ribbed fabrics are\nln favor, and the French models are\nfrequently brightened with embroidery or a slender stitching of dull\ngold, applied, for example, in the\nsame manner as the self-cording In\nthe suit sketched above. Save the\nclipping!\nDeaf Mutes Too Noisy; When\nneighbors complained of a terrific\nnoise emanating from a house at\nConey island detectives raided the\nplace and found thirty men playUig\nNineteen of them were\nmutes. The court decided they must\nhave been innocent of the noice, and\nfined  the  others.\n .\"-^\u2014r-1-\u2014: ^*\nCanned Plums are\nRefreshing\nPut them up this watt.\nWash sod pack closely ln Perfect Seal,\nCrown or Improved Gem Jars. Mil with\nboiling syrup made ln the proportion of I\npint of autar to ,\\}>_ plaits of water.    Put\non rubbers and tops snd sterilize for 15\nminutes. Seal according to directions\ngiven on page 11 of our recipe book.\nPerfect Seal, Crown and\nImproved Gem Jars on sale\nat all stores.\nSend for free book of Hfthty tested\nean.nl nft and preserving recipes.\nDominion Glass Co..\nLimited       Montreal\nElephant\nWhite Lead\nElephant White Lead has stood the test for years,\nand is regarded by all to be the BEST. 'This is why\nso many people are asking for and insisting on getting\nELEPHANT  GENUINE  WHITE   LEAD.     .\nIt costs the same to paint with good material. Why\nnot get the Genuine?\nWe have a Complete Stock of\nELEPHANT GENUINE WHITE LEAD,\nBOILED and RAW LINSEED OIL,\nTURPENTINE, DRYERS, COLORS IN OIL,\nALABASTINE, VARNISHES and BRUSHES.\nNow Is the Time to Paint!\nPrices Guaranteed\nNelson Hardware Co,\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL \"QUALITY HARDWARE\"\nBAKER STREET NELSON. B.C.\nof\nfiourtf\nB9 liirm W. Btrtm. f_fJ\\\nFood Balance\n(Registered    ln    accordance    with    the\nCopyrfght   Act.)\nMy readers are perhaps tfred of\nhearing about food. And yet your\ncwn common Bense tells you that you\nnre Just what your food makes you.\nIn the treatment of an ailing child,\nwhat is now the first thought? The\nbaby doctor of the past was, perhaps,\nthe one who seemed to be able to null\nchildren th rough severe attacks of\npneumonia od diphtheria. Such Is not\nthe  case now.\nThe baby doctor of the present age,\nard likely for ages to come, is the\none whose special line Is scientific\nfeeding,\nOf course, he will instruct the\nmother about bathing, airing, and\nresting the baby, but his main\nthought  Is   the  proper   feeding.\nA youngster off Its diet for a short\ntime is In a dangerous condition, and\nso the first thought is to get It nourished.\nAccordingly, all sorts of tables are\ndevised from the feeding by the\nmother, partial feeding by the mother,\nand   artificial   foods   entirely.\nNow, what about a man or woman?\nJust   as   the   baby   was   sick   from\nsome error ln its diet, so are many\nadults.\nWhat's   the   matter?\nWell, the baby's diet had to be balanced   in order  to  save  its  life.\nTour diet must be balanced or\nyou'll have Indigestion, vomiting spells\nmaybe diarrhoea, and often constipa-\n| tlon.\nNow, why not give lt a thought or\ntwo?\nAre you eating too much white\nbread, too many potatoes, perhaps too\nmuch raw fruit? Perhaps you have\na light office job and are eating too\nmu<:h  meat.\nRemember what was said before-\nVery little meat if you did very little\nwork.\nAlways plenty of vegetables- anyway, but Increasing your meat and fat\nsomewhat If you worked hard with\nyour hands or took plenty of exercise.\nKeep   your   diet   balanced.\nA Fiend for Punishment: A barber\nln Virginia has been living with Blx\nwives.\nDAILY HERALD, LABOR\nORGAN, WILL SUSPEND\nLONDON. \u2014 The Dally Herald, official organ of the Labor party, which\nhas the support of the big British\nlabor organizations, announces that as\nthe result of the report of a committee which has Investigated Its position, a recommendation to cease publication on September SO, will be submitted to the trades union congress\nnext   month,\nThe paper has already died ono\ndeath as a labor publication. It was\nrevived three or four years ago, but\nby Its own repented admissions has\nhad a* hard struggle to keep alive. It\nattributes its present position to the\nfact that \"millions of members of the\n] ,abor party and members of the\ntrades unions have miserably failed\nto  respond   to  appeals\"  to  support  It.\nHe Has a Mental Illusion: Vollva.\noverseer of Zion City, 111., has abolished sunrise and sunset. They are\noptical Illusions,  he  says.\nBuilding ^^^^^\nMaterial John Burns & Son\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nBORRTCDTflLCVJrl\nSend coupon for\nfirst 10 shave j\nShave in Real Comfort\n\u201410 times at our expense\nWe want you to know what millions of men now know\nabout shaving:\nThat it can be done more quickly, and in far greater comfort.\nSo we make this test offer\u2014which costs you nothing.\nIt gives you a chance to check up on our claims for\nPalmolive Shaving Cream, We spent 18 months perfecting it\n\u2014made 130 laboratory experiments. In 5 ways we made shaving easier, more comfortable:\nCream multiplies itself 250 times in rich lather.\nSoftens any beard in one minute\u2014no rubbing.\nRich lather lasts for 10 minutes, if necessary.\nExtra strong bubbles hold each hair erect-^for\neasier, cleaner cutting.\nYour face is left gratefully cool and comfortable\n\u2014thanks to the blended palm and olive oils.\nIf,these claims are justified you would not shave with any\nother cream. If you should find them unjustified\u2014well, only\nwe lose.  So make the test. '\u25a0\nPost the coupon for your 10 shaves, free.\nTHE PALMOLIVE COMPANY OF CANADA, Limited\nMontreal Toronto Winnipeg\nVJS                 -   __L                             Mad' *\" C'a\"ada\n10  SHAVES FREE\nJust fill In and mall to The Palm-^\n1   olive    Company    of   Canada,    Ltd..\nDept,   D409,   Toronto,   OnL\nCity     ,         .._\nPALMOLIVE\nSHAVING CREAM\n2111\nMore food for\nless money\nTo cut down the cost of food and keep up\nhealth and strength for the Summer days you\nmust get back to Nature's food. A wholesome,\nstrengthening diet for Summer is Shredded\nWheat with fresh fruits and fresh vegetables.\nFor breakfast, for lunch, for dinner you can\nprepare a delicious, satisfying meal with\nShredded Wheat without going into the\nkitchen. We do the cooking for you in our\nsanitary, sunlit factory. Being ready-cooked .\nand ready-to-serve Shredded Wheat is a wife-\nsaver in Summer and a constant joy to\nyoungsters and grown-ups.\nTRISCUIT\nia the Shredded Wheat cracker\u2014\na real whole wheat toast\u2014eaten\nwith butter, aoft cheese or marmalades.\nThe Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Ltd.\nM.,sr\u00bb Fsll,, O.tsri.\n___\\A\n\u2022  \u2022\ned\nShra\nWheat\nDon i tOorrj about cooks\n 11\n' THE NELSON DAILY NETTS\"\/TUESDAY HORNING\/ SEPTESIBEE \\ 1923\nI Pass Five\n10 Boys\nIned Hard for 30 Day\/\nlo Wear Out These\nExtraordinary Boyi\nShoes Bui Couldn't\nKootenay and Boundary\nR. Andrew & Co\nLeaders in Footfashion\nAgente\nNAKUSP OBTAINS\nHIGHWAYPLEDGE\nMinister Promises Appropriation for Grading, Crowning and Surfacing Streets\nNAKUSP. B.C., Sept. 3. \u2014 Hon. W.\nH. Sutherland, minister of puhlic\nworks, accompanied by Mrs. Sutherland and J. McKenzie, superintendent\ncf roads for the Revelstoke district,\nwere in town on Thursday on their\nreturn from the opening celebration of\nthe  Nelson-Ymlr road.\nWhile here,, advantage of his presence was taken by pointing out to the\nminister the deplorable condition of\nthtf Nakusp roads, as already taken\nup by the board of trade. Mr. Sutherland could not help but see for\nhimself\u2014saw the cars running through\ndeep sand, and the bad shape of Marine Drive at the entrance to the town.\nHe made note of all the requirements,\nand promised that attention should\nbo given the matters Immediately, by\nan appropriation.\nThe outlying roads also require\nwidening out, especially now that\nlarge, wide trucks are In operation\nwith logging transportation on the\nNakusp-Glenhank road. He agreed\nthnt. Broadway from Slocan avenue to\nLake avenue, and Slocan avenue from\nthe hotels to the fair building, should\nhe surfaced at once, and properly\ncrowned and graded before the date\nof   the   fair.\nThe party continued on Its way\nnorth on the steamer. The minister\nwas much impressed with the Industrial  activity  in evidence  In Nakusp.\nGRAND FORKS WILL\nRETAIN CREAMERY\nBoard of Trade, Buslneas Men, Kanch-\n\u2022rs   and   Managamenl   Beach   This\nDechrton at Conference.\nGRAND FORKS. Sept. 2.\u2014The Curlew Creamery company will continue\nto operate Its Grand Forks plant, and\nan effort will be made to Increase\nlocal loyalty for the creamery products. This decision was arrived at\nlast night, following a rather protracted conference between local\n| ranchers and \"Business1 men, with President J. P. Helphrey, of the Curlew\ncompany, held under auspices of the\nhoard of trade.\nThe Grand Forks creamery plant for\nmany years was a highly remunerative\nconcern, with a wide field to draw\nfrom. When the Nelson plant was\nstarted some few years ago. tt cut off\nmuch of the cream that had previously oome to Grand Forks, and new\nplants In the Okanagan had a similar\neffect. With some delated shipments\nr.ot arriving In good condition, the\nproduct of the local creamery had\nheen Berlously undermined, and the\nmarket for the product had contracted. The result was a decision to\nclose  the  creamery.\nAfter a careful analysis of the situation last evening, however, It was\nfelt that there were good reasons for\nbelieving that a plant could continue\nto be operated successfully locally,\nnnd a committee' of business men\nand ranchers will confer with the\nninnagement to this end-\nNear-Beer Bar Fizzles: The near-\n.fieer bar established at Ellis Island\n(to give the Immigrants a \"taste of\n(\u25a0Ymerloanlzatfon\" hasn't been an unqualified success. The Germans in\n\u2022nartlcu:ar object to It, and it fills\n'\". hem with dark forebodings as to\nj heir   future   life   In   the   new   coun-\nThe simplest way to *nd a corn\nis Blue-jay. Stops the pain instantly. Then the corn loosen*\nand comes out. Made in clear\nliquid and in thin plasters. The\naction is the same.\nAt your druggist\nBluejay\nCranbrook Teachers\nNumber Twenty-two\nfor Ensuing Term\nCRANBROOK. B.C., Sept, 2. \u2014 The\nteachers have been returning to the\ncity during the past week, In readi-\nr.cflM for the opening of school on\nTuesday next. All th-a vacancies have\nbeen filled, and the .Central school\nstaff will consist of 15 teachers, ln\ncharge of separate divisions, with the\ntwo as well as the south ward school,\nand   one  other at   Kootenay  Orchards.\nAt the high school tne staff Is reduced to four, the commercial class\nhaving been discontinued. L. C. Porter Is the new high school principal,\nnnd on his staff are Mr. Davles, formerly of Slocan City; Miss Porter, of\nVictor in; and Mr. Barclay, who has\nremained on the staff from last year.\nBAYNES LAKE NOTES\nBAYNES LAKE, B.C., Sept. 8. \u2014\nMrs. Simpson and Miss Maxlne Simp-\nsen of Verdun, Sask., who have been\nvisiting Mrs. Morrow, left on Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. Flatt and family, who\nfor two years have resided at Baynes\nLake, where Mr. Flatt has been\nschoolmaster, left today for Tantallon,\nSask , the home of Mr. Flatt's parents.\nMiss Kirk of Lethbridge, who has\nbeen staying with Mrs. A. F. Lea at\nHaynes,   has left  for  her  home.\nA dance was held at Waldo on\nThursday night, the music being supplied   by   the   Happy   Five..,\nMiss Marguerite Griffith will teach\nthe Baynes school the coming year.\nLONGBEACH HELPERS\nTO RETAIN IDENTITY\nGuild   Tote*  to Continu*,   and   Suggestion for Women's  Institute la\n\u25a0helved  for  Present.\nLONGBEACH, BC, Sept. 8.\u2014There\nwas a special meeting of the Churcn\nHelpers on Friday at the home of the\npresident,   Mrs.   Robert   Hill.\nAfter tea had been served, the president spoke for a few minutes on the\nrelative advantages of the existing\nchurch guild, and a possible women's\nInstitute, and lt was unanimously\nagreed to continue the Church Helpers, with fortnightly meetings when\npossible,  In  the winter, months.\nThe matter of a women's Institute\nwas  shelved for the  present.\nIt was settled that a \"pound tea\"\nshould  be  held  In  the  near future.\nA way was hit upon to combat the\nnuisance of moths' eggs in the church\nfurniture, and the ladles and three\nmen agreed to give the church floor\na   thorough   scrubbing next  week.\nThe decorations for the^ forthcoming harvest festival were also arranged  for.\nFirst Cars 0\/\nForks Apples\nRoll Eastward\nGRAND FORKS. Sept. 2. \u2014 Four\ncars of apples have been shipped to\nthe prairie this season, three cars-being shipped the past week and one\ncar the week before. Wealthy apples\nhave come In earlier this year than\nusual, in fact nearly two weeks ahead,\nand local shipments are expected to\nbe on a par with the Okanagan, Instead of being later. Thomas Byrnes\narrived from Vancouver last week, and\nIs again federal inspector fnr fruit\nfrom this district, as well as from\nArrow   lake   points.\nGmcida^Mcmla^Smcm\nBRIER\nTRADE MARK\nREGISTERED\n73\nEXPLORER IS\nBARRED FROM\nLHASSA CITY\nArrested by British Authorities for Having Violated\nSacred Tibetan Ground\nCALCUTTA\u2014Dr. Hugh McGovern,\nwho recently succeeded in penetrating the world's greatest rampart of\nmountains, the Himalayas, behind\nwhich lies the fofbidden city of\nLhassa, has just returned to Dar-\njeellng after having been arrested\nhy British frontier authorities for\nviolating Tibet's sacred ground. The\ndoctor reports that in his attempts\nto get Into I-hassa he and hla four\ncompanions suffered intense privations and exposure in the enow-clad\nmountains, which are 600 feet higher\nthan the highest peaks in the United\nStates.\nAfter battling with snowstorms day\nand night and being compelled more\nthan once to retrace his steps; Dr.\nMcGovern at Hangu was confronted\nwith a strike of his servants, who\nrefused to go further. He had to\nbeat them into submission before\nthey would resume the journey. He\nkept his ultimate destination secret\nfrom his companions, fearing they\nwould desert him if they knew the\ndistance and the hardships. On the\ndesolate mountain pass of Karula\nhe revealed his \"objective, Only under\ncompulsion did bis companions continue the journey with him.\nPainted   Hie   Body\nTo avoid detection by the fanatical Tibetans. Dr. McGovern dyed his\nhair and painted his whole body so\nas to look like a native, Thus disguised and attired In the dress of\na peasant, he played the role of\neeolle and cook. After many weeks\nof, trying experiences and reverses,\nhe finally reached Lhassa, only to\nbe apprehended by the TfEetans, who\nordered his immediate deportation.\nHe la now with friends In Darjeellng\nand will soon leave for England.\nAn American who is planning to\nenter Tibet is Capt. Merl La Voy,\nof Seattle, Washington. Armed with\ncredentials from the American state\ndepartment and permits from the\nChinese government, La Voy with\na number of American scientists and\nexplorers will leave India late In\nthe fall and proceed directly for\nLhassa.\nPut on Night\nCrew to Load\nNakusp Poles\nNAKUSP. B.C., Sept. 8.\u2014Llndsley\nBros. Canadian company are rushing\nthe loading of telegraph poles, and are\nputting on an extra night crew to\nccpe with the orders. The yards will\nbe lighted up by electricity Immediately for the better working of the\nnight  crew.   \u25a0\nJohn Lee, provincial assessor of\nRevelstoke, was a business visitor to\nthe   town.   Tuesday.\nRt. Rev. A. J. Doull, D.D., bishop\nof Kootenay, paid a visit to Nakusp\non Tuesday, and Interviewed the vicar\nand wardens. ' Rev. M. E. West, the\nvicar, accompanied him to Salmon\nArm. He has been appointed to the\nparish of Sorrento, succeeding Rev.\nMr. Grfce-Hutcheson. much to the regret of his parishioners in Nakusp.\nHe will be succeeded In Nakusp by\nRev. Mr. Ramsey of Dundas, Ont., who\nwill   arrive  in   October.\nMrs. Ralph Isllp, with her daugh\nters, Mollle and Nancy, left on Tues\nday for Malakwa, on a visit to friends\nfor a week or so.\nRev. A. R. Wiseman and Mrs. Wlse^\nman left for Vancouver on Tuesday,\nwhere they will  remain for a period.\nLONGBEACH NOTES\nLONGBEACH, B.C., Sept. 3. \u2014 Miss\nMargaret Hill motored up on Friday\nevening to the delightful concert and\ndance at Queen's Bay, and remained\nfor the nieht as the guest of Mrs.\nBlewer of  Balfour.\nMrs. V. L. Trail and Miss Nancy\nTrail left Longbeach , on Saturday\nnight and caught the Kettle Valley\ntrain for the coast, the former to\nspend a month with Mrs. Corfield at\nCowlchan, and the latter to attend\nnormal  at Victoria.\nMiss Dorothea Sandercock of Nelson  spent Tuesday  in  Longbeach,\nBuilds Bone and Muscle\nThe inimitable flavor by which you know\nGrape-Nuts is but an index to the healthful\nnourishing elements contained in it. It\nbuilds bone and muscle\u2014keeps you fit\u2014it's\ngood for every member of your family.\nEat Grape-Nuts regularly. Enjoy its delicious crispness and flavor. Ready to serve\nright from the package. Order it with your\ngroceries\u2014to-day.\n\"There's a Reason97\nCANADIAN POSTUM CEREAL CO., LIMITED\nHead Office; Toronto        Factory; Windior\nSocial Happenings\n[\u25a0\u25a0In Nelson \u2014\nGrape=Nuts\nA THE BODY-BUILDER\nMADE IN CANADA\nThis column Is conducted by Mra,\nIf. J. Vlgneux. Al) newa of a social\nnature, Including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear In this\ncolumn.   Telephone Mrs. Vlgneux.\n\u2022 The C. G. I. T. group of the Methodist church held a delightful weiner\nroast, Saturday afternoon, at Bealby's\npoint Swimming occupied most of\nthe afternoon, and later a bonfire was\nmade, around which they sat and enjoyed their refreshments. It was decided by the girls to make the occasion  an   annual   event.\nThose present were Mrs. J. Paterson, Miss Gertrude Ritchie, Miss\nEileen Calms, Miss Martha Scott,\nMiss Georgia McKeown, Miss Vera\nKilby. Miss Othella Olson, Miss Elsie\nG. Dee. Miss Gwendolyn Thorpe, Miss\nRuth Hancock, Miss Myrtle McKeown.\nMiss Evelyn Wood, Miss Edith Wood,\nMiss Mona George, Miss Rita Robert-\nsen, Miss Leda Boss, Miss R. Graves,\nMiss Ida Randall, Miss Gladys Randall, Miss Ida Ryan and Miss Elizabeth  Young.\n\u2022'-#\u25a0**\nMrs. George Truscot of Harrop, ac-\nccmpanled by her daughter, Miss Ruth\nTruscot, arrived In the city, Saturday,\nby the morning boat. Mrs. Truscot Is\nremaining a few days at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. A. Dolphin, while Miss\nTruscott left Saturday evening for\nVancouver, where she will attend\nschool at   Point  Grey.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs, C. Ward and family,\nEdgewood avenue, left Saturday evening, for Trail, where they remained\nover Labor day with  friends.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Sr J. Dedrick of South Slocan\nspent Saturday ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Guy Greenwood or Willow\nPoint was a  city  visitor Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. H. H. Crofts left yesterday\nmorning via the Crow boat for Winnipeg.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Maybee of Calgary, accompanied by their family,\nwho have been holidaying ln the oily\nfor the past month, left yesterday via\nthe Crow boat for their home.\ne - \u2022  s\nMiss Mary Barker, Vernon street,\nleft Saturday evening via the Kettle\nValley for Victoria, where she will\nattend normal. '\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA. Pogle arrived In the city Saturday from Colville, Wash. He spent\nthe week-end here, and left tnis morning for Alberta. '\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. J. Fingland of Trail was a weekend  visitor In  town.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss   Mayme   McPhail,   daughter   of\nJ Mr.   and    Mrs.    John   McPhail,   Silica\nstreet,   left  on   the  Crow  boat  yesterday  morning  for  Newgate,   where   she\nhas  accepted  a  position  as  teacher.\n\u2022 \u2022    s\nMr. and Mrs. John Llnblad of Edmonton, who have been visiting In\nNelson for the \"last couple of weeks,\nleft by the Crow boat yesterday morning  for   their  home.\nsee\nMr. and Mrs. R. M. Kitchen of\nBonnington left Sunday morning for\nthe   east.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. A. Neelln and her daughter,\nMiss Thelma Neelin, Kerr apartments,\nIt*ft Saturday evening for a vacation\nto be spent at the coast.\n\u00bb    *    \u2022\nDr. and Mrs, Henders and family,\nwho have heen visiting In the city,\nleft Sunday morning via the Crow for\nCalgary.\n\u00bb'  \u2022   a\nMiss Kathleen Shaw, Houston street,\nleft Saturday evening for a vacation\nto  the  coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Buchanan of Trail spent the\nweekend in the city attending the\ntennis and golf  tournament.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss   Kathleen   Brodlw,   daughter   of\nMr.    and    Mrs.    James    Brodie.    Silica\nstreet,   left   Sunday   evening   for   Victoria,  where  she will attend normal.\ne   e : \u2022\nMiss Eulalie Gagnon, Silica street,\nwho has been attending British Columbia university summer school, in\nVancouver, returned to town Sunday\nevening. On her return trip Bhe remained a few days ln Penticton visiting at the home of Miss Geraldlne\nNagle.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. Veryl Martin of Silverton was\na   week-end  visitor   In   the   city.\n\u25a0   v   m\nMrs. Anthony Madden of Slocan\nCity, accompanied by her son, who\nhas been visiting with relatives and\nfriends ln Vancouver and Bellingham,\nWash., for the past two months, returned to the city Sunday evening,\nand   leave   tomorrow   for   their home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nCapt. Douglas Brown left Saturday\nevening via the Kettle Valley for\nPenticton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert Thompson of Willow Point\nspent Saturday  in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Jack Miller, Hall street, left\nyesterday morning via the Oreat\nNorthern for Tacoma, where she will\nspend several months with her\nmother.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss Margaret Jarvis, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Jnrvls, Ward\nstreet, left Saturday evening via the\nKettle Valley for Victoria to attend\nNormal   school.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00ab\nMrs.     Thomas    Cornall of    Willow\nPoint paid a visit to the city Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 '\nThomas Bush, Ward street, left\nyesterday morning via the Grea*\u00bb\nNorthern for Spokane, where he will\nitlend   the   Spokane   Interstate   fair.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Beatrice West of Willow Point\nwas a city visitor Saturday, and took\nnart   in   the   tennis  tournament.\n\u2022 |    \u2022\nMiss Jene Stanfleld left Saturday\nmorning via the Great Northern for\nMarcus, Wash., where she is visiting\nfor   the   next  10  davs  with   friends.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. O. W. Humphry and daughter,\nMiss Myra Humphry of South Slocan,\nhave been visiting fn the city for the\n'ast few days. Mrs. Humphry left\nlast evening for her home, and Miss\nHumphry will remain here to attend\nhigh   school.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss Esther Levlne arrived ln the\ncity Saturday evening from Calgary\nto spend her vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Levlne, Del-\nhruck   street.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss Katie Binnish spent the weekend  at  her home   in Slocan  City.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nMrs.    Andrew    Sutherland    and    her\ntwo   daughters,   Helen   snd   Fiona,   re-\n_urned  Saturday night from   the coast,\nwhere   they  spent the holidays.\ntee\nMiss Ruby J. Glaser, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. G. Glaser, Front street,\nIf ft last night on the coast train for\nNaramata, where she assumed her duties as principal of the Naramata\nschool.\nt    \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Helen Tait, daughter of Mr.\nar.d Mrs. John Tait, Silica street, who\nhas been spending part of her vacation here and In California, left for\nCalgary Sunday morntng via the Crow\nboat.\ne   e  e\nTommy West of Willow Point was\na city  visitor  Saturday.\nMrs. William Waldie. Stanley street.\nleft   for   the   coast  Sunday   evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Marjorie Quinn, daughter of\nMr.   and  Mra   Robert   Quinn   of  Har-\n$11 Baker St.      Phone 200\nNew Fall Sports Skirts\nAt $14.00 to $18.50 Each\nJust arrived, this season's latest\nnovelties in Sports Skirts. These\nare made of all-wool novelty\nChecks, Stripes and Plaids. Some\nmade with narrow box pleats,\nothers in wrap-over styles. Colors\nare the latest Fall shades. Sizes\nup to 32 inches waist measure.\nSplendid Values at, each\n$14.00,   $16.50   and   $18.50\nNew KNIT SILK OVER-\nBLOUSES and JACQUETTES\nat $8.00 to $10.00 Each\nThese are extremely smart and\ncomfortable. Made of fancy\nknit Silks, in all the newer\nbright shades, as well as\nheather mixtures, etc. Yoti\nwill want one or more of these\nwhen you see them. All sizes.\nPrices each, $8.00 and $10.00\nREADY-TO-WEAR HATS\nSoft   Felt   and   Velvet\nReady - to - Wear   and\nSports  Hats are ready\nfor     your     inspection.\nWith your Tailored Suit\nyou need something new\nand smart in millinery.\nLet  us  show you  this\nFall's favorite modes.\nFelt Hats at\nfrom .. .84.00 to $9.00\nVelvet Hats at\nfrom $6.00 to $15.00\nrop,  was a  city  visitor  Saturday,  and\nleft   that   evening   for   Victoria,   where [ #\u25a0\nahe will attend normal school.\nKenneth Campbell. M.P.P., left Saturday   evenine   for  Penticton.\n...\nMr. and Mra. T. E. Lavaseur of\nthis city, and party, consisting of Mr.\nand Mrs. Arthur Miller and N. Richardson, motored  to Trail yesterday.\nPEANUTS MAY SOON\nBE FIVE A BAG AGAIN\nMore\nplanted\ncording\nculture\nacerage\nCHICAGO\u2014The bleacherlte and\ncircus fan will get a bigger hag\nof peanuts for his money when this\nyear's record crop is harvested, Guy\nH. Hall, director of the national\ninstitute of progressive farming, said\nin a statement In which he predicted also a return to the five-cent\nbag In a  short   time.\n\"The old familiar call of 'Hot nea-\nnuts, five a bag,' will return within\na  short  time,\"   he  said.\nthan 986,000 acres were\nln peanuts last year, acta the department of agrl-\nflgures, while this year's\nIs forecast by the Institute's\nsurvey to exceed the million mark.\nThe total yield last year was 5^3.-\n507,000 pounds, valued at ahout\n129,222,000.\nIncreased peanut production recently has resulted from the greater\nuse of machinery, Mr. Hall said,\npointing out that machine methods\nof digging also put the crop to\nmarket   more   quickly.\nThe \"goobers,\" as they nre known,\nare grown extensively in sections\nwhere the siol is either sandy or of\nsandy loam, or where the climate\nor boll weevil seriously handicaps\ncottof production. For high quality\nof nuts the soil should be limy and\nloose to allow for free penetration of\n\u2022he hloom pegs, the nuts forming underground In the manner of the po-\nato,   the   Institute   points   out.\nPurity and Richness\nThe quality of our products.\nMilk, Cream and Ice Cream, Is\nfirst class and our service la\nearly  and   reliable.\nThe Kootenay Valley\nMilk Co-Op.\nFoot of Victoria St.     Phona 116\n\\r\nGay Spring Gardens\nPlant our Daffodils  and Narcissi  and\nlee   what   the   Kootenay   can   produce.\nSpecial Offer, 2 dozen fnr  $1.00\nDelivered.\nCraigend Bulb Farm\nR.R.1.   Nelson,   B.C.\nHI MIL\nDENTIST\nNorthport Wash.\n_t yon have 130.00 or more\nwork done, X will pay yonr fare\nto Xorthport from XUlion, Boss-\nland or Trail and District; If\n940.00 . or more, your far* to\nKorthport and return.\nGOLD   CIOWHB     $5.00\nr\u00bbEE    PAINLESS    EXTRACTIONS  WITH   PLATE   OS\nBKIDQfiWOXK\n\u2014   AIL   XT   PLATES   PIT   \u2014\nSend It All to Ut\nRelieve yourself of the work\nnnd worry of washing and\nironing, and place the burden\non our efficiently organized\nmodern laundry. We have the\nstaff and equipment for the\nbest work, and our charges are\nreasonable.\nPhone   1-2-8   and   we'll   call\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nC. A. Larson, Mgr., Nelson, B. C.\nCOLD MEATS\nFor\nA Quick Meal\nFor toduy buy some of our\ncold cooked meats. Cooked Ham,\nRoast Ham. Roast Beef, Roast\nVeal, Roast Pork, Jellied Tongue,\nVeal Loaf, Cheese Loaf, Corned\nBeef, Bolognas, Weinera, Pork\nTies.\nAlso Sweet and Dill Pickles\nand  Hweet   Relish.\nP. BURNS & CO., Ltd.\nBerrloe Phon* 50 Quality\nKELSO*. B.C.\n \t\n\t\nPage Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923\nCAPTURES GOLF\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nDefeats   Laren  Forin,   Last\nYear's Winner, in Final\nMatch\nPRESENTATIONS\nEND TOURNAMENT\nTOMATOES RUSH WOMEN WARY\nCALGARHIART\nBoth East and West Ship to\nPrairie; Many Cars Are\nOver-Ripe\nVnder the caption of \"Tho Week tn\nCalgary.\" J. A. Orniif, pi-nlne mar-\nkins commissioner, In the current\n\"Markets   Bulletin,\"   Bays;\nThere Is a more cheerful feeling\npmong'st business men, and business\nis Improving- The fruit nusmesi \\n\nhowintf    improvement    all    'ilomr    the\ntin.>.\nNineteen Holes Prove Necessary in the Mixed\nFoursomes\nThe men's open golf championship\nwas won yesterdady by A. Hlgglnbotham, who captured the trophy\nfrom Laren Forin, last year'B winner.\nThe final game in the men's first\nflight went to D. Mclntyre of Trail,\nwho defeated W. Allison of Nelson.\nThe event of the day, perhaps,\nthat drew much attention was the\nmixed foursomes ln which T. R,\n\"Wilson nnd Marion Blackwood defeated H. M. Whimster nnd Muriel\nSmith ln 19 holes.\nRobert Walker of Trail won the\nmen's second flight In the final game\nwith   E.   Kinglund,   also   of   Trail.\nHazelwood of Trail won the final\nIn the third flight, his opponent being  E.  C.  Wragge  of  Nelson.\nMrs. C. W. Appleyard. Nelson,\ndefeated Miss Cameron of Nelson in\nthe  ladies'  first  flight.\nAt the conclusion of the games\nyesterday the prizes were presented\nby Dr. E. G. Smyth, president, In the\nclub house. This event was marked\nby a large and enthusiastic gathering, the tournament having been\nvoted most popular In every respect,\nYesterday's    Play\nTtve    results    of    yesterday's    play\nare:\nMen's  Championship\nForin   beat   Rogers.   Higginhotham\nbeat Potter, Forin beat Wilson. Final,\nHlgglnbotham    beat    Forin.\nMen's   First   Flight\nAllison beat Cartmel. Mclntyre beat\nBlackwood.      Final,     Mclntyre     beat\nAllison.\nMen's  Second   Flight\nWalker beat Ritchie.  Finglund  beat\nMackenzie.   Final, Walker beat Fing-\nland.\nMen's  Third   Flight\nHazelwood  beat  Robertson.    Final\nHazelwood   beat   Wragge.\nLadies'  Championship\nMrs.    Benson    beat    M Iss    Marion\nBlackwood,   in   final   game.\nLadies' 'First   Flight\nMrs, Appleyard heat Miss Cameron.\nMixed    Foursomes\nin final game.\nMcBrlde and Mrs. J>lth beat Bun-\nyans, Wilson and M. Blackwood beat\nBlackwoods, Lewis ond Babe Blackwood beat Cartmels, Whimster nnd\nMiss   Murial   Smyth   beat   Bensons.\nSemi -finals: Wilson and Marion\nBlackwood beat McBride and Mrs.\nL-Mth, Whlmsler and Murial Smyth\nbeat  I*ewls  and  Babe  Blackwood.\nFinal: Wilson and Marion Blackwood beat Whimster and Murial\nSmyth.      (19    holes.)\nOF PENNILESS\nBAP NOW\nEuropean Marriage Market\nFinds Decided Slump in\nMatrimonial Business\nFirpo Goes Through\nStrenuous Program\nas if It Were Play\nATLANTIC CITY, Rept. 3. \u2014 In\nhigh good humor, Luis Firpo went\nthrough a strenuous training session\ntoday as if It were play. He sparred\ntwo rounds with McCann, one each\nwith Frank Koebel and Jeff Clarke,\nsnd two with Natallo Pera, the entire workout being an exhibition of\nspeed and defensive work. Firpo did\nnot punch hard today, contenting\nhimself with a few cuffs on his\nhelpers'   ears.\nMetal Markets\nLocal grown vegetables hflva almost\ncompletely displaced Lffltixb. Columbia\nshipments.\nThe first car of Bartlett pears from\nFeachland arrived In an overripe condition, many very email. Later arrivals from Kelowna are sirln? up\nbetter,   md are  in beN;.>r  condition.\nWealthy apples are rather slow in\nmaking   their   appearance.\nWe notice several Yakima salesmen\nIn Kaskatchewan and Manitoba pushing their wareB. This week's f.o.b.\nqnotatirns from Washington shnw a\ndecline In the peach pric<;i. We are\npleased to note the good worlt done\nby agents of British Columbia shii>-\npers In getting the trade and ihe shippers lr. line with prl-rea Just under\nolferlncs  from   the  south.\nConsiderable Improvement Js nerded\non the part of the British Columbia\npacking houses as we ifnd ptar-i and\nplums considerably below standard\nweight.\nWashington Is now quo'.'nr* Pal Ian\nprunes   at   45   per   (suitcase*   box.\nIndependents from Verno.i are quoting tomatoes In Calgary at 55c f.o.b.\nshipping point.\nThe tomato season is on In earnest\nsnd they are being shipped Into the\n1 roirle market from east and west.\nPome local grown loinatoes are be;rig\noffered   In   Regina  nnl   Saskatoon.\nThe popular crate for tomatoes. Is\nthe 4-basket tin top. Lugs and baskets are not  wanted.\nWe notice that the tomatoes arriving in stock cars are th*i best, but\nthat may he partially due to care at\nshipping point. Prices would I e much\nbetter If more discriminating rare\nwas given in the packing house. Too\nniiiny cars have been packed in an\noverripe condition. These cars have,\nto be Jobbed, and this brings down\nthe price of carefully packed stuff.\nTumatoes for distant shipping should\nbe  pocked  in  a semi-ripe  condition.\nFolk'wing   the  nice,  smooth  hnthous\u00bb\ngrown    tomatoes     most    of    the    field\ngrown stuff  from   Ontario   and   British\nColumbia   looks   coarse,   and   Is   coarse, I\ndirty,    spotted,    misshapen,    nnd    some I\nunfit   even   for   factory   purposes.\nTomato growers must give more I\ncare to growing and selection in pack- I\ning. They would be well advised to |\nship only Buch tomatoes as they'\nwould cure to eat off their own tables.\nWe noticed that a careful grower\nnt Leiimington. Ontario, selected and\nwrapped his best field grown toma-\ntres, und they were sold at a good\nprice early In the season as hothouse\ngrown.\nWe cannot see profit to the grower froTi the returns that flooding the\nmarket with poor stuff will bring.\nCar arrivals, August 22 to 29:\nB. C.\u201417 mixed fruit and vege- ,\ntables; 3 mixed rfrult; 3 apples; 2 I\npears, I berries. I\nCali'ornla\u2014_   canteloupes,    1    grapes. 1\nWashington    \u2014    2    mixed    fruit,    1\npi unep,   2   peaches.\nOnlrrio\u20141   plums.\nCalgary Wholesale Prices.\nApples\u2014B.C. Duchess No; 1. box,\n$1.75 to $2; B.C. Duchess, per crate,\n(1 to $1.2.1; B.C. Astrnchan No. 1, %f.\nPeaches\u2014 Washington Eibertn, heavy\npack. $1.65; B.C, Klberta. SI.CO; R.C.\nCrawford. $1.60 Pears\u2014H.C. Bartlett\nti.ncy, hox, $275; B.C. Bartlett, C\ngrade, box, $2.SO: B.C. Bartlett <*.erv\nsmall), $2. Plums\u2014B.C. Bradshaw\nNo. 1 $1.66 to $1.76; B.C. Bradshaw\nNo. 2, $1.35; B.C Columbia, $1.65.; B.\nC. Burhank, $1.50. Crabapples \u2014\nTranscendent, per box, $1.23. Black-\nhe Tries\u2014B.C., per crate, $3 to $3.25;\nOntario, per basket, $2.50. Huckleberries, per lb., 15e. Grapes\u2014Malaga,\n$i! to $3.5n; Tokay. $4.75. Tomatoes\u2014\nLcoal hothouse, per lb., 9c; B.C. hothouse, per crate, $2; B.C. field, per\nease. Bfic. Cauliflower, per lb., Be.\nCabbage, B.C., per lb., 3c. Pickling\nonions\u2014Per peach box, $1.75; local,\nper lb, 10c, Cucumbers, per peach\ncrate, 50c to 7Sc. Marrow, squash and\npumpkin, per lb., 3c. Turnips, beets.\narrots. per dozen bunches, 25c. Creen\nmm, No. 1, per dozen, 30c to 3i\u00bbe.\nOnions, B.C.. per lb., 4c. Carrots and\nbeets, per lh.. 2e. Tomatoes., green,\np. r   cise,   $1    to   $1.25.      Potatoes\u2014B.C..\nper 1-).,  I\u00abo;  local,  per  lb.,  lc     Egg\nplant, per lb.,   10c.\nl,he daily papers are filled with the\nadvertisements of marritoge agencies which describe their clients in\ngreat detail, give their financial\nstatus and requirements, leaving only\nthe   names   unmentioned.\nMovie Elephant to Die: Sentence\nof death has been passed on Charlie,\nan elephant that acts in the movies.\nHow to kill him, however. Is the\nproblem, as the Los Angeles Humane society says It must be done\npainlessly. He Is 1S3 years old, end\nweighs five tons. He has grown too\n'ugly  to  he  safe.\nBERLIN\u2014International matchmakers, the men and women who used\nto do a thriving business marrying\noff titles and high social position\nto wealthy plebeians, have been hard\nhit by the war and the resultant\nfinancial distress. Marriage among\nhumbler folks all over Europe has\ni Increased under the distress, hut not\nI so   with   the   leaders   of   fashion.\nJune, the month of weddings, did\nnot produce the large number of\nsociety weddings which always characterized the moi'th ln prewar days.\nThis is especially noticeable In central Europe. Fashionable churches,\nhotels, oafes, dressmaking shops.\nJewelry shops and flower shops do\nnot show the old-time June activity.\nForeign tourists are not visiting\ncentral Europe in large numbers, \u00a7__$\nthe residents of central Europe are\nnot traveling abroad. Tho romances\nwhich used to begin on ocean trips\nre fewer and fewer. American and\nEnglish women with comfortable fortunes are not wandering ahout as\"\nthey did In old times. Travel Is\nnot so Inviting as It used to be,\nand families from the lands of good\nexchange apparently have little desire to expose their daughters to\nthe sort of tragedies which have\ngrown out of many international\nmarriages recently. Titles which\ncarry with them bankrupt estates\nare apparently at a great discount.\nThe uncertainty of titles to baronial\npossessions makes ambitious mothers\nhesitate. They have seen to many\npenniless princes and counts and\nbarons rattling about Paris and European capitals, trying to market\ntheir family  tree.\nAre Still Active\nBut the professional matchmakers\nhave not given up hope and are still\nactive. Vienna has a number of\nsuch matrimonial agents who are\nhard at work, and with the revival of Vienna which has come\nabout as tbe result of foreign assistance, their opportunities are improving. Vienna's old gaiety Is coming hack.' Its fashions attract foreign women, and music-lovers flock\nto Its opera. Tourists who visit\nItaly also go to Austria in large\nnumbers.\nIn Berlin commercial matchmakers\nare having a harder time, The decline In travel and upset political\nconditions work against them to a\ngreater degree than In any of the\nother European capitals, and the\nfailure of war hatreds to pass away\nmakes it difficult to do anything\nwith principals who were enemies\nin   the   struggle.\nMany    Matrimonial    Ads\nOne    professional    marriage    agent,\ntitled   woman   who   was   once   a\ngreat    success   In   her   profession,   is\nonstanly   seep    ahout    the   prominent\nhotels   In    Berlin,   and   she   has   not\nlost   h^r   ability   to   meet   nearly   all\npromising  visitors.    But  she has col-\ntfd  a commission only once In  the\nlast   twelve   months.\nThe agencies which advertise extensively nnd nrrange marriages on a\ntrictly business basis, without social1\nrlmmings, are faring far better than\nlie agents who specialize In aristo-\nrats.      Throughout    central    Europe\nLONDON, Sept. 3. \u2014 Standard copper, spot, \u00a363 10s; futures. {64 7s fid;\n* irctrnlytlc,     spot,     \u00a3C8     10a;     futures,\nut\nTin \u2014 Spot, tin 17s 6d; futures,\n\u00a3infi   17s   6d.\nLead \u2014 Spot, \u00a325 2s fid; futures,\n\u00a324   17s   \u00abd.\nZinc   \u2014   Spot,   \u00a333;   futures.   132   10s.\nSCIENTISTS DISAGREE\nAS TO RELATIVITY\nrormer Premier Declares World Never\nKai   Turned;   Einstein   Theory\nFinds  Boms   Support,\nPARIS. \u2014 A division In scientific\ncircles has been made here by thc\nrelativity theory- of Einstein, challenging old conceptions of time and\nspace,    i\nFormer Premier Palnleve, first a\nmathematician and later a politician,\nis threatening to drop politics long\nenough to prove that the earth has\nMopped turning. In fact, he asserts\nthat It never did turn. M. Palnleve\nhas a brand new theory of the universe, based on mechanics. He says\nEinstein is right, except that he Is\nnot   right enough.\nProfessor Langeviii, physicist of the\nCollege of France, inventor of the\nsounding machine by which ships may\nbe piloted In any sea, has made what\n1 is friends describe as a religion of\nthe Einstein theory, combating old\ntheories and all others with much\nardor.\nEmile Picard, the genial permanent\npecretary of the Academy of Sciences,\nfrom his retreat In the Institute pal-\nnee, has sought to dodge this battle\nof the worlds. However, he Is Inclined to the belief that the old-\ntimers were  fairly  correct.\nDirector Balllaud, of the Paris ob-\nrervatory, says that In many respects\nscience Is still, like Diogenes, stumbling- along with his lantern. ''As for\nme,\" he added, \"I have no opinion as\nto the relative merits of the discussion. It would take two years of my\nlife to become familiar with the Ein-\nBtein theory, snd as I am 75 now, I\nreally  haven't   the   lime  to  spare.\"\nONTARIO   MIKE   FAB   A\nHAL?   MILLION   SURPLUS.\nTORONTO, Sept. 3. \u2014 The financial\nstatement that will accompany dividend checks on the Keeiejt Silver\nmines, an R per cent disbursement on\nwhich Is being made on September\n15. will show upwards of half a million 'dollars surplus, after making allowance   for   the   dividend.\nFIND MUCH STOCK\nIS BEING WASTED\nMANILA. \u2014 A request by the\nemergency board for a statement from\ngovernment office heads, listing their\nunused equipment, has disclosed that\nabout $1,000,000 In supplies belonging\ntc tlie Insular government are rotting\nfrom disuse in warehouses. Efforts\nwill be made to save the stock.\nTHE NEXT ISSUE\nof the\nKootenay\nTelephone\nDirectory\nCloses   SEPTEMBER   1st,\n1923\nIf you are contemplating\ntnklng new service, or making\nany changes In or additions to\nyour present service, you should,\nsend notification, in Writing,\nnot later than the above date,\nln order that yon may take\nadvantage nf the new directory\nlistings.\nI\nU\u00abdArticl\u00ab\nReal Estate\nRoonu\nBoanl\nTo Rent\nBoati and\nAutomobiles\nI         .   i    -\nClassfied\nAdvertising\nHelp Waatei\nPositions Waste*\nUtt and Fond\nlivestock\nMachinery\nFam Produce\nTimber and Mine*\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLooal Beadlnff Ifotloes\u20143c per word\neach Insertion. In blackface or machine\ncapitals 4c per word. Blackface capitals 6o a word; 25 per cent discount\nif run dally without change of copy\nfor one month or more. Where advertisement is set out lo short lines\nthe charge Is 12He a line for Roman\ntype, i5o for blackface, and 20o for\nblackface capitals. Minimum l&a If\ncharged   60c.\nLists of Wedding- VreMmts and floral\ntributes   at   funerals\u201410c   per   line.\nWant and Classified Aavu-ttilnf \u2014\nOne and a half cents per word per\nInsertion. Six cents per word per\nweek, or t2\u00bb^c per word per month,\ncash In advance. Transient ads. accepts only on a cash-ln-advance basts\nEach Initial, figure, dollar sign, eta,\ncounts as one word, Minimum 25o, If\ncharged   50c.\t\nMale Help Wanted\nMEN, women to learn barbering; paid\nwhile learning; toots supplied. Catalogue free. Moler College, Vancouver. (H\u00ab)\nTELL your wants mrougn  Tbe Dally\nNews olasslfled columns.\nFemale Help Wanted\nWAITRESS wanted.    Apply Occidental\nhotel. _____ l___)\nSituations Wanted Male\nHARRER wishes position in small\ntown; willing to do light work as\na side line, or will rent good place.\nGive full particulars. Box MTt,\nDaily News. (3671)\nSituations Wanted Female\nYOUNG GIRL will do light housework. Please state wages. Apply\nBox   9767,   Dally   News. (9767)\nHIGH SCHOOL girl wishes home In\nreturn for services. Apply Box 626,\nCranbrook. (9701)\nBOOKKEEPER, typist, Ten years\ngeneral office experience. Miss L.\nde Clifford, 213A, Underwood Block,\nCalgary,  Alberta. (9702)\nGIRL desires position as help in\nhouse ln town. Apply Box 9709,\nDaily News. (9709)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED to purchase, a few good\nmilk cows, also some early pullets.\nE. H, Foster, Cottonwood Creek.\nNelson, B.C.  (9678)\nAgents Wanted\nAGENTS to take orders for Guaranteed Made-to-Measure Raincoats.\nParticulars free. Glasgow Rubber\nCo of Canada, ' 198 St. Catherine\nstreet   west, -Montreal,   Que.     (8779)\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice Smelting and  Refining  Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n- Smelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore*.\nProducerg of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nPRUSSIA MAKES\nRICH OIL FINDS\nMANY VIOLINS ARE\nMADE IN PRAGUE\nPRAGUE. \u2014 Favored by a natural\nlove of murtc, a plentiful supply of\nthe right kind of resonant wood, and\nd\u00bb-ft craftsmanship, the violin making\nIndustry In Czechoslovakia is assuming   an   Important   position.\nSomething like 4500 home workers\nare engaged snd the- Instruments all\nare of high quality. \"One hundred and\nthirty-three thousand vlolina were\nturned out tn 1922, beside 2100 cellos\njtiid 1200 double basses.\nPEINE, Prussia.\u2014Oil containing 20\nper cent benzine ta report (d to have\nbeen struck it Olle'g, ne-ir b*.r* It\nis stated that the well spouted as\nhigh as the lofty boring towers when\nthe *irst & rlke was Made. The urea\nunder   exploitation   co\\era   9000   acres.\nNo: Likely to Become Populnr: A\nman struck by lightning at Minneapolis, was cured of  his  rheumatism.\nAccount\nR5 Interstate Fair\n___ _______  ,. >\nSpokane. Sept. 3 t\u00a9*8\nSpecial Excursion Rate\n,    FARE AND ONE-THIRD RETURN\nTickets on Sale Sept. 1 to 8\nReturn Limit, Sept. 10\nFrom   stations   ln   British   Columbia,   Midway   and   East.\nArrowhead   and   Month   Blalrmore,   Alta.,   nnd   West.\nDetails    from   any    Agent,   or   Purser,    Kootenay    Steamer   Routes,\nor  write\nEARN extra money this Xmas taking\norders for our high-grade, moderate\npriced, Personal Clreetlng Xmas\nCards. You can make $f' up each\nevening. Beautifully illustrated\nsample book supplied. Full time\nagents make J50 per week up. Write\nManufacturers, 122 Richmond West,\nToronto. (9586)\nCity Property for Sale\nNew\nConcrete foundation, large living\nroom, 2 large bedrooms, breakfast nook,  bathroom.\nApply\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhon,  269.\nBox  121\n(9746)\nLook This Over \u2022\n7-room House, 3 bedrooms, large\nliving rooms. Cement foundation.\nLot 120x120, corner, level. Fruit\ntrees. Offered for quick sale\nat  12200.00.    Terms arranged.\nHugh W. Robertson\n414   Ward  Street\n__________     * (9723)\nLive Stock for Sate\nFOR SALE \u2014 July and August pigs.\n7 weeks. Yorkshires, $6. Norcross,\nOranite   Road. (9738)\nT. B. TE.HT F.D Ay rah Ire cow; fresh;\n3 years; good milking strain, T. A.\nWhelldon,    South   Slocan. (9720)\nBAT~OELDNQ, ten years; 1250-lbs.;\ngood horse ln every way. Phone I.\nC. Campbell,   R.R. No.  1. C9726)\nFOR SALE\u2014Milch cow. Will freshen\nIn December. Can be seen at Crescent Valley. Apply D. StDenls,\nAuthorized   Trustee,   Nelson,   B.C.\n(9730)\nWOULD like to trade away a young\npony for Ayrshire cow, to freshen\nthis fall. For particulars write\nWalter   Sahlstrom,   Castlegar,   B.C.\n(9673)\nFOR   SALE\neach,  f.o.b.\nraden.\n\u2014   (5-weeks-old   pigs,   $6.00\nAinsworth.     A.   T.   fiher-\n(9674)\nBoats and Automobilei\nFOR   SALE \u2014 \"Star\"   car.   all   mod\n__ improve ments.   Apply   Queen's   Ho\nFOR sXLE^Farm dump\" cart; Mai\nHarris. What offers? C. R. I\ngens,  Boswell. (87\nKOWBOAT, equipped with IK ho\npower motor and pa lr of o\nPrice $75. P.O. Box 183, Nelson.\n(97\nFOR SALE \u2014 Ford  Touring  Car,\nest   model,   Al   condition;   foot\ncelerator;   oil   gauge   and   other\nprovements;    looks    good    as    r\nPhone   697L1  after   ^  p.m.       (97\nFOR SALE\u2014One Maxwell truck ((\nand half tons), in good condltl\nfor sale cheap. Apply Ike McLe\nTrail,  B. C.  (\u00bb7\nFORD CAR for sale; cheap for ca\nApply William Dovey, Trail, B.C\n  (97\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE \u2014 Flash lights, them\nbottles, Ingersoll watches,\nrasors and blades, cameras, grar\nphones and records. Rutherf\nDrug Co. Jl\nFOR SALE\u2014Willis p:ano, practlca\nnew; cheap for cash. A. Der\nWaldo,  B.C. (97!\nPERSIAN KITTENS (neuter), .\nfemales, thoroughbred, for sale.\nStewart-Dodd,  Vsrnon,   B.C.   ,   (Bfl1\nTHREE   hundred   empty   potato\n|2.60 per hundred   f.o.b. Nelson,     P.\nW.   Grooerteria,   Nelson,   B.C.     (94\nSHINGLE BOLT cutters\u2014three-tw\nty-flve per cord. McQueen, flllv\nton. <\u00bb8\nFOR   SHINGLES   write   McQueen,\nverton. (96\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nInsurance and Real Esti\nRW. DAWSOB\u2014\n.   Rsal   Batata,   Insurance,   Scat\nAnnable Blk.   P.O. Box 733. Phone\nJ (97\nFOR SALE\u2014One team gelding*, harness, wagon; will Hell lot for $275.00\ncash; 9 young shoats, 3 months old\nYorkshire Whites, J8.00 each. H. B.\nLewtas,   Kdgewood,   B.C. (8639)\nPURE-BRED Holsteln cows, heifers,\nyoung bulls. Matthew Hill, Waneta,\nB.C.       (9608)\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Small brown pockethook, with\nthree $r> bills, (our 11 bills. Reward to one who delivers to Sam\nHuddleston, 502 Houston street,\nNelson. (9782)\nLOST \u2014 Bunch of keys, on 7:30 am.\nstreet car. about two weeks ago.\nFinder please return to Daily News.\nReward. (9670)\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT \u2014 Five-roomed cottage.\nApply G. B. Matthew, 905 Edgewood\navenue. (9764)\nFarm and Dairy Produce\nFINE  Burbank  plums  for  sale,  cheap.\nHnmhiln,  Deer   l'ark. (9729)\nLegal Notices\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson   J\nIN THE MATTER OF THE \"MINERAL ACT, R.S.B.C. 1911\" AND\nAMENDING ACTS AND IN THE\nMATTER OF A DELINQUENT\nCO-OWNER AND IN THE MATTER OF THE \"SECOND CHANCE\nMINERAL CLAIM\" AND \"JUNO\nMINERAL   CLAIM.\"\nTo:\nWilliam   H.   Rhomberg,\nSnlmo, B.C.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nJoseph Barnard of Erie In the Province of British Columbia, co-owner\nwith William H. Rhomberg or any\nperson or persons to whom he may\nhave transferred an Interest ln the\n\"Second Chance Mineral Claim\" and\n\"Juno Mineral Claim\" both situate on\nWhiskey Creek, Group One, Kootenay\nDistrict, on the North Fork of Salmon\nRiver, said Kootenay District, recorded\non the 27th day of June, 1905, at Nelson, British Columbia, unless you, the\nsaid William H. Rhomberg, or any\nperson to whom you have transferred\nany Interest, within the period of\nninety days after the first publication of this Notice, pay the sum of\n$200 00, your proportion of money expended by me In performing two\nyears' assessment work together with\nthe cost of this advertising, your Interest in the Bald claims will become\nvested in me, who have made the required expenditures on the Bald \"Second Chance Mineral Claim\" and \"Juno\nMineral Claim\" under Section 48 of\nthe   \"Mineral  Act.\"\nThis Notice Is published under Section 28 of the \"Mineral Act\" R.S.B.C.\n1911.\nDATED at Nelson. British  Columbia,\nthis fith  day of  August.   A.D.   1923.\nJOSEPH   BERNARD.\n(9418)\nInsurance\nIosoire==Be Smre\nGood   to   Be   Sure.\nBetter   to   Be   Insured.\nBest    to    Be   Insured   With\nFire.   Life.   Accident.   Automobile.\nANNABLE   BLOCK\nPhone   197. r.O.   Box   733.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nTO   RENT   \u2014  Furnished   housekeeping\nrooms.      507   Carbonate. (\u00bb784)\nFURNISHED  ROOM   with   board.     417\nCarbonate  street (9696)\nFURNISHED    front   suite  'over    Star-\nland.    See  Mrs.  Papailan. (9707)\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms over\nPoole  Drug. (9flf-\nSUI TE\u2014Campbell's   Studio.\n(9747)\nFOR RENT \u2014 Three-roomed furnished\nsuite.     Annable   Block. (9748)\nPTJRHISHED   SUITES\nKERB    APABTMEKTS\nPoultry and Eggs\nFOR    SALE\u2014White   Wyandotte    yearling   hens;   laying;   $1.50   each   f.o.b.\nRiondel.      John   Sutcllffe. (9770)\nTo Let\nTO LET\u2014Queen's Hotel Dining Room,\nnil   furnished.     Apply  Queen's  Hotel.\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Lapstreak rowboat, about\nfourteen   feet;   cash;   give   condition,\nprice.     Drawer  3,  New  Denver.\n (1*700)\nWANTED \u2014  A  lady's bicycle,  second-\n_  hand.        Reply     Box     9tl87,     Nelson\nNews office. (9687)\nMonuments\n11H7BILI     k      SITCKU      MO!\n1 unu co\u2014p. o. Box 166. :\nson,   Bt'.     Telephone   164. '   _{_\nPainters and Decorator!\nM*\nOKPHY BK08.\u2014\nAntoa Palntad\nB,alsra la Wall Papar.\nStore\u2014 Auto Shop-\n413 Josephine St. til Hall\n<\u00bb7!\nAccounting\nCHABI.ES T. SUVTBB\u2014>\nAuditor, McDonald Jam BnlldlBf\nBox 1191. Nelson. B.\nFlorists\nGMMELLS's onnrHOirsas, n\nHon. Cut Flowers and floral deals-\n(971\nXtjta. b. jomirieir\u2014\n\u2122    Phone   342.    Cut  Flowera,   Pot\nplants   and   Flornl   Emblems. *     (962\nWholesale\nAMACDOVAU) k OO\u2014\n\u2022 Wholesale Oroeera and Provlai\nMerchants. Importers of Teas, Coffe\nSpiees, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fan\nGroceries.     Nelson,   B.C. (975\nEngineers\nGtce*\nBros., Burrf(\ne\u00b0Cft\nWBLSOlf, a.o.\nCIVII. AND  MINIMO SHOI)\u00ab!\nM. O., Alberta and Dominion\nLand  Surveyors.\nCrown Oraat Areata.       Blua Brlntl\n(971\nHO. DAWEOV,   B.C.L.I.\u2014\n\u2022 BnftoMi and \u00aburreTor.\nKaslo,  B.C.      (97!\nAssayers\nE.\nW. WIDDOWBOH, Box A110S, N\nson, B.C. Standard western chart\n(971\nAuctioneers\nWCUTLBR\u2014\n\u2022   Gooda Sold Privately or at Anotl\nOpera House Blk.   Phone 71.   Box 4\n(971\nFuneral Directors\nT\\    3- BOBBBTSOK, ?J>J>. k B\u2014-\n\"'  801 Vtotoria street.     Phona\nNtg-ht Phone\n1\n(\u00bb7\n\u2022tajtdJird TnnUt\nOo. Undertake\nFuneral Dlrectt\nAuto hearse, update chapel,\nservice. P Me\nreasonable.   (971\n\u2014\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McMam\nwell-Heme iam in   l-\nI TOWN AT LAVr \u25a0 VOO\nARE TO TAKE. ME TO\nI     VOUR HOUtE\nTft    MP. Jl^<i<b:\n 4Maaawawaammm  '\n'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923\nPage Seven\n[lady Golf Champion\nTurns In Remarkable\nCard in Local Coarse\nMrs. J. H. D. Benson, who won\nthe ladles' golf championship yesterday from Miss Marion Blackwood, made a score for the first\nnine holes of 41, which Is one\nof the best cards ever turned\nln by a lady on the local course.\nDonoghae Asks a\nModest Fee for\nRiding Papyrus\nLONDON. Sept. 3.\u2014Steve Donng-\nhue, the premier Jockey who rode\nPapyrus in the recent winning of\nthe Epsom derby, has asked ' a fee\nof \u00a315,000 to ride the derby winner\non his forthcoming appearance in the\nUnited States against the champion\n3-year-olds  of   the   United  States.\n.i'X'\n\/\n\/*\nGOODjm&AR\nALL-WEATHER TREAD\nExtraordinarily\ndense.toitghfim'\nproved -rubber\nGoodyear means\nOood Wear*\nGoodyear Tires\nAre Handled in Nelson Exclusively by\nTHE NELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\nCor. Vernon and Stanley Sts.\nPhone 35\nYANKEES TAKE\nFINAL MATCHES;\nKEEP DAVIS CUP\nAfter Two  Great  Days  of\nBattle   Australians Slump\nand Lose\n ,\nI FOREST HILLS, Sept. 3.\u2014The\nUnited States scored a clean sweep\ntoday i\u00bb the final two ningles\nmatches of the Davis cup challenge\nround, finishing the international\nchampionship series with a margfn\nof four games to one over the Australian   challengers.\nAfter William M. Johnston had\nclinched the cup by routing John B.\nHawkes In the first match 6-0, 6-2,\n6-1, William T. Tilden conquered\nJames O. Anderson 6-2, 6,-3, 1-6, 7-5,\nin a match filled with both brilliant\nand    mediocre   play.\nUnexpectedly   Easy\nThe crushing character of the closing Victories, though again securing\nthe United Slates possession of the\nDavis cup, catne as a distinct anticlimax to the gruelling, spectacular\nplay In the. first two days of the\nchallengo round. Tho gallery of\n13,000 had come expecting a last\ndespeiwte stand,on the part of the\nAustralians, who had proved so unexpectedly powerful In dividing the\nfirst two singles encounters and\nforcing the doubles match Saturday\nto five terrific, record-breaking sets\nbefore bowing to defeat. At no stage\nof today's play was there the least\nuncertainty of the outcome, for the\nmastery of both Johnston and Tilden\nwas complete at practically every\nstage  of  both  matches.\nFor two sets Tilden had his opponent helpless in the face of withering, relentless, accurate attacks.\nTilden had everything. His cannon-\nball, service was invinclbte, he drove\nAnderson from side to side with\nforehand and backhand shots that\nstreaked across the court, and 'his\nmixture of pace had the Australian\ncompletely at sea. Anderson was\nwild and his service was far from\nits  usual   effectiveness.\nGallery    Gets   Tilden's   Goat\nAn incident, .one of the most unusual recorded in international play,\noccurred suddenly to change the complexion of the match. Tilden's final\npoint in tho ninth game of the second set, a cross-court shot, seemed\n| several    Inches   out,   to   the   gallery,\nSPLITS FEATURE\nWITH NATIONAL\nSeven Out of Eight Clubs\nHave a Win Each; Rain\nPrevents Eighth Game\nYOUTH SWIMS\nLAKE IN JUST\nNINE MINUTES\nWater  Sports   at  Lakeside\nPark Yesterday Proved\nInteresting Events\nlliey certainly\narc* good  \u00bb\nv\n\u00a3\/>\ncigar:\n4\nBULL\nDOG\nSIZE\nCIGARS\nGENERAL CIGAR CO..LIMITED\nCONTROLLED   AND   OPERATED   BY\nIMPERIAL TOBACCO  CO..OF CANADA  LIMITED\nIN ALL THE RACES\nSix-Year-Old Girl Swimmer\nCaptures First Prize in\nThree Contests\nPirates Wallop Cincy\nPITTSBURGH, S-pt. 3.\u2014Morrison\nwas effective against Cincinnati In .\nthe morning game of a double-head-1\ner today and Pittsburgh won 7 to \u00bbmhi pfYhMDUTITIfkW\n2. The second game was postponed FVEXll l^U\/Mitl HIUW\nun   account   of   rain.\nFirst   game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nCincinnati   .    2      6      2\nPlttehurgh      T    15     1\nBatteries\u2014'Benton. McQuade and\nWlngo;   Morrison   and   G-ooch.\nGiants Win  in Tenth\nNEW YORK, Sept. 3.\u2014The Giants\nand the Braves sp It even fn the\nholiday bill here today before (6,040\nspectator* at the polo grounds. New\nYork won the first game 3 to 2,\nin 10 innings, while Boston took the\nsecond, 8 to 1. The Braves batted\nfour pitchers in the second affair\nfur  13  hits.\nFirst   game\u2014 R.   R,   I<\nBoston       2      6> 0\nNew   York     3      6     3\nBatteries\u2014Marquatd, Killing im and\nEL  Smith;   McQuillan  and  Snyder.\nSecond   game\u2014 R.   II.   E.\nBoston     \/...  8    13\nNew York     1      7\nButteries\u2014Oescliger    i\\\\d    O'Neil\nOne of the finest days the children of Nelson have yet had\u2014and\nincidentally, a not at all unpleasant\nday fur the grownups who attended\n- was staged at Lakeside park all\nday yesterday, when an extensive\n._ program of interesting water sports\nwas   run   off.\nThe events produced both keen\ncompetition and some remarkable\nswimming. Little 6-year-old Frances\nWest, who recently provided a sur-\n01 prise by swimming across Kootenay\n5 [lake several times, loomed large in\nthe   swimming   races   yesterday,   cap-\nSmith;   Ryan, Jonnard, Barnes, Gear-\nin  and  Gowdy,   Snyder.\nturlng no less than  three first prizes.\nThe    various    lake-crossing     races\nprovided     close    contests.       In     the\nPhillies Win Opener ^)mln'B   race*   ?frs- __   *}c}vort   w\u00b0n\nBROOKLYN. Sept. ^-Philadelphia the honors, making the trip in the\nwon the first game from Brooklyn \u00ab00(* time of 10 minutes. In the\ntoday 4 to 2, and lost the second men 8 .event Kenneth Campbell was\n6 to 4. Brooklyn won the second the winner, his time being 10:30\ngame   in    the    eighth    inning,    when nimutes.\nHigh was safe on Tiery's fumble, and      \u201e._       8rlv\u00bbr Cup  Presented\nscpred     on      Berg's     sacrifice     and1    **\u2022   &\u00a3*   8'lver   CUP   Presented   by\nGrimes'   single. |*-   *-\u2022    \" hitehouse   for   the   boy    lb\nFirst   game\u2014 R,   H.   EL *\u2022*** \u25a0 0,d    or   younger    who     could\nPhi'ad\u00ab'lphia     ,,,. 4    10'     0 mu'te   the   fastest   time  in   swimming\nBrooklyn     ...'............,,  2      6     1!across   the   lake  was  won   by   Robert\nRing   and   Wilson;\n[QUEEN* HOU8W0LD\nPILLOW COTTONS\ndfStfthkv^atxxmmMX\nBatteries-\ntfltf   and   Hargraves.\nSecond   game\u2014\nPhiladelphia     \t\nBrooklyn    \t\nBatteries\u2014Couch , \u25a0 and\nGrimes  and   Taylor.\nRcu-\nR.   H.   E.\n4 12      2\n5 10      4\nHenline;\nStDenls, with Stewart DesBrlsay sec\nond.    StDenls   finished  ln  the   fastest\ntime of  nil  for  the  swim\u20149  mmutes.\nA similar trophy, presented by Mrs.\nWhite  house  for a  similar  event  for\ngirls,   was   captured   by   Sybil   Archibald,  whose   time   was  10:30  minutes\nA large crowd witnessed the events\nOne  Run  at Chicago !and  a   fleet   of   small   boats   followed\nCHICAGO, Sept. 3.~Chicago and|the a\u00bbnmatttui* on -tfia longer races.\nSt. Louis divided a double-header Tll\u00ab committee in charge of the\ntoday. Roger Hornsby's 15th home program was greatly assisted by the\nrun of the season ended a pitching fact lhat prizes donated -by many\nduel between Keene and Stuart in individuals and organizations made\nthe  first  game,   the  visitors   winning  the sports possible.    Chief among ^he\n1 to 0.\nFirst  game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nSt,  Louis      1      5     1\nChicago       0     6     2\nBatteries\u2014Stuart and McCurdy;\nKeene, i'ussell and O'Farrell, Hart-\nnett.\nSecond  game\u2014 R.   H.  E.\nSt.   Ijouis       4     9     1\nChicago    5      .}      4\nBatteries.\u2014North, Barfoot and McCurdy. Clemons; Osbotne, Dumovich\nand O'Farrell.\nthough it was ruled a placement for\nthe United States champion. The\ncrowd, however, voiced vigorous disapproval of the decision, and called\nfor a replay. Both players, nonplussed by the situation, offered to\ndo so, but the referee ruled otherwise, and the third set was then\nstarted amid a noisy outburst. The\ndemonstration so nettled Tilden that\nhe virtually tossed the third set away\nwith  his  listless  work.\nBoth settled down in the fourth\nset, and Tilden, while he failed to\nstrike the paiT: he maintained in the\nfirst two, won after the most spirited battle of the match.\nHawkes* downfall at the hands of\n.lohiuiton served as an additional\nproof of tho fact that the lefthander's forte is In double play.\nAgainst the withering speed of Johnston's forehand drives, the matchless position play and machine-like\naccuracy of the little Californiun's\ngame,   the  Australian  was  outclassed.\nDOMINION SOCCER\nGATHERING OPENS\nConsent   Will   Probably   Be   Given   to\nNanaimo   Going   to   New   Zealand   If   Invited\nFORT WILLIAM, Sept. 3.\u2014Reports\nof the president, secretary, secretary-treasurer and auditors w'ere\nsubmitted at this morning's session\nof the ninth annual convention uf the\nDominion   Football   association.\nPresident John Easton of Winnipeg touched upon the dark days\nthrough which the association had\npaNsed last year, but, he said the\nstatements of the auditors and the\nfinancial showing demonstrated that\nthe association was on Its feet again.\nThe association will likely give, its_\nconsent to the Nanaimo, B. C, soccer\"\nteam, Canadian champions, going to\nNew Zealand next summer, should\nthe request for such a visit be repeated. Tlie New Zealand Football\nassociation asked for a representative Canadian team to tour that\ndominion in 1H24, but, owing to the\napparent Imposstbf'ity of making arrangements, no action by the Dominion Football association was\ntaken. Nanaimo has asked permission to go should the invitation be\nrepeated.\nThe convention is likely to he\nharmonious, according tj officials,\nwho states that no contentious matters whatever are to be brought up.\nIt Is probable that all the prtaunt\nofficers will be reelected for\" another\nyear.    ,,\n1  ss*\nOttawa Shamrocks\nVirtually Win Title\nby Cornwall Game\nOTTAWA, Sept. 3.\u2014Tha Shamrocks of Ottawa virtually won the\neastern Ontario lacrosse championship here today when they defeated\nthe Cornwall team by 5 goals to 4.\nThe Shamrocks will likely represent eastern Canada In the national\nlacrosse tournament to be held in\nWinnipeg during the latter part of\nthis  month.\nSTOKE    FOOTER    STAR\nSIGNS    WITH    ARSENAL\nLONDON, Sept. 3.\u2014J. Sutherland,\nwho recently resigned from the Stoke\nsecond division club, has again\nsigned on with\" the Arsenal first\ndivision club. He will be given\ntryout in a friendly game against\nBrighton and Hove Alblan next' 14:00,\nThursday.\norganizations assisting were the Ro\ntary club, the women's institute and\nthe  city council.\nA. A. Perrier acted as starter, and\nthough ait times this was not at all\nas easy a task as might be thought,\nthe events were all well started.\nIn addition to J. B. B. Smith, swimming Instructor, who supervised all\nthe events, valuable assistance was\ngiven by C. I,(. McHardy and W\nPfeiffer.\nInterspersed throughout the pro\ngram were a number of unusual\nevents which supplied much comedy\nfor the crowd, particularly the greasy\npole contest and the candle race, in\nthe latter of which it will be noted\nboth the winners were girls.\nThe   Prize   Winners\nThe winners in the various events\nwere:\nFirst   Year\nWading race, 5 years\u2014Kathleen\nRussell,  Ruth  Matthews, Jackie  Lord.\nSwimming, girls 6 years and under,\n25 yards\u2014Frances West, Helen Cook-\nyon.\nSwimming, boys, 8 and under\u2014\nTeddy    Matthews,    Bert    Green.\nGirls, 8 and under, 25 yards\u2014\nFrances  West,   Kathleen  McLeod.\nBoys, 10 and under, 25 yards-\nTom  Mowat,  Allen  Woodrow.\nG.irls, 10 and under, 25 yards\u2014\nPeggie  Whitehouse,   Eileen   Lawson.\nBoys, 12 and under, 30 yards\u2014Ing-\ndon   Sorenson.   Tuard   O'Sulllvan.\nGirls. 12 and under, 30 yards\u2014May\nKirk,   Evelyn   Wallace.\nBoys. 14 and under, 40 yards\u2014Wesley  Negus,   George   Hill.\nGirls. 14 and under, 40 yards\u2014\nJosephine Whitehouse, Margaret Hipperson.\nBoys, 15 and under, 50 yards\u2014\nWesley   Negus,   Jack   McLean.\nGirls, 15 and under, 50 yards\u2014\nMoira McLeod.\nSecond    Year   and    Open    Events\nSwimming race, girls 8 and under,\n25 yards\u2014Frances West, Lillian\nCookson.\nGirls, 10 and under, 50 yards\u2014\nTena   McLean.   Helen   McGregor.\nBoys, 10 and under, 50 yards\u2014\nJimmie   Sutherland,   Cecil  Skinner.\nGirls, 12 and under, 75 yards-\nMerle   Archibald,    May   Kirk.\nBoys, 12 and under, 75 yards\u2014\nJohn   Stark,   George   Wallach.\nGirls, 14 and under). 75 yards\n- Josephine Whitehouse, Shirley\nBoomer.\nBoys, 14 and. under, 75 yards\u2014\n.Hubert iUiJeui*4,,WalH\u00bbn..Skinner.\nGirls, 16 and under, 75 yards-\nShirley   Boomer.   Sybil   Archibald.\nBoys, 16 and under, 75 yards\u2014\nCameron   StDenfs,  Stewart  DesBrlsay\nMen's open, 75 yards\u2014J\". Dawson.\nC.   StDenls.\nMarried women's, 75 yards\u2014Mr?\nO. L. Kemmerling, Mrs. A. A. Perrier.\nGrear.y police contest\u2014John Harlow.   Stewart   DesBrlsay.\nObstacle race\u2014George Fawcett, L.\nMcBeth.\nBack race, girls\u2014Josephine White-\nhouse,  May  Kirk.\nBarrel race, boys\u2014C. StDenis, W. J.\nRussell.\nCandle race, open\u2014Moira McLeod,\nMerle   Archibald.\nFancy diving\u2014Stewart DesBrlsay,\nCameron   StDenls.\nDiving   for   distance\u2014Robert   StDenis,\nCameron StDenls.\nDiving for style, over 16\u2014Tom McDonald,   Cameron   StDenis.\nDiving for style, girl 16 and under\n\u2014Martha   Scott,   Edna  Marquis.\nDiving, boys 16 and under\u2014Walter\nSkinner,   D.   McCualg.\nDiving, girls 12 and under\u2014Tena\nMcLean,   Dorothy   Sturgess.\nBoys. 12 and under\u2014John Stark,\nB. Taylor.\nSwimming    Across    Laka\nMen\u2014Kenneth Campbell, 10:30;\nAlex   Ionian,    12:00.\nWomen\u2014Mrs. J. Mclvor, 10:00;\nEdna  Marquis,   13:00.\nBoys, 16 and under\u2014Robert StDenls,\n8:00;   Stewart   DesBrlsay,   9:30.\nGirls. 16 and under\u2014Sybil Archibald,   10:30,\nGirls. 14 and under\u2014Ruth Hancock, 10:30;   Marjorie Hawkins,  11:00.\nBoys, 12 and under\u2014J. Dolphin,\n11:00.\nGirls, 10 and under\u2014Helen McGregor,   12:30.\nGirls,   8   and   under\u2014Frances   West,\n12:00;      Kitty    Cookson    and     Merle\nArchibald,   tied,  litM.\t\nDOUBLE WINS\nIN AMERICAN\nYankees, Indians and Tigers\nTake Both Sides; Red Sox\nand Senators Split\nTwo to Ono in  Thirteenth\nPHllMtWWUJA, Sept. 3.\u2014New\nYork took both holiday games from\nPhiladelphia, winning the morning\ngame after 13 hard fought innings\n'2 to 1, and capturing the afternoon\ncontest 7 to 4, when Walberg weakened   in   the  tlRhth.\nFirst   game\u2014 B.   It.   E.\nNew    York       2    12     1\nPhiladelphia      1    10     1\nBaltrrles\u2014Shawkey   and    Hoffban;\nMeiniach,       Harris       and\nBruggy.\nSecond   game\u2014\nNew  York   \t\nPhiladelphia\nfjiris, 12 aad under\u2014MoIr\u00bb McLeod,\nQueen s  Household\nI Pillow Cottons\nAre made in England of FULL-BLEACHED ENGLISH CIRCULAR PILLOW COTTON of a superior\neven weave. Warranted free from dressing. This\nexcellent cloth launders well and has most satisfactory wearing qualities, Offered in widths of\n40, 42 and 44 inches wide.\nPer yard  \u2022\u2014\n69c\nHours  of Business:\nCommencing today (Tuesday), we shall revert\nto our old hours of business\u2014Open at 8:30 and\nClosing at 6 o'clock each evening except Saturday.\nTomorrow (Wednesday, Sept. 5th) we shall be Open\nAll Day, as Monday was a holiday. Out-of-Town\nCustomers please note.\nfflfflJudsigJgJS IBg-J ([\u00ab\u00bb,!\" P\u00bb\"B\nLittle Lessons in\nBig Sports\nPerkins,\nR.   H.   K.\n    7      7      1\n    4    13      2\nbatteries\u2014Pennock and Hoffman;\nWalberg  and   Perkins.\nBrowns'  Triple  Play\nCLEVELAND, Sept. 3.\u2014Cleveland\ndefeated St. Louis in both games\nhere today, winning the morning\ngame 4 to 2 and the afternoon contest 5 to 2.s A triple play by the\nBrowns wan the feature of the first\nfan*, which marked L'hte's 24th victory of the season. In the second\ntanu Speaker hit a home run with\ntwo   on   bases.\nFirst   game\u2014 Ti.   H.   E.\n%St.   Louis      2    13      1\nCleveland         4      7      0\nBaUmies\u2014 Davis, Kolp and  Collins;\nUhle    and    O'Neill.\n'    Second  game\u2014 It   H.   E.\nSt.   Louis       2      3     1\nCleveland       > 1    9      6      2\nBatteries\u2014Shocker and Collins;\n'.CJ wards  and O'Neill.\nSplit   at   Boston\nBOSTON. S.-pt. 3.\u2014Boston defeated Washington 5 to 4 ln the opening\nlame of their double-header here to-\nlay, but lost the second game 7\nto \"3.\nFirst   game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nWashington        4      9      2\nBoston         5    It      1\nBatteries- \u25a0Zaehn.ry. Johnson and\nGharrity; Quinn, Murray, Howe and\nDevormer.\nSecond   game\u2014\u25a0 R-   H.   E.\nWashington             7    14      2\nBoston   \u00bb   3     6     1\nBatteries \u2014 Russell and Ruel;\nEhmke.   Howe,   Murray   and   Plcinich.\nTigers   Have   Batting   Bee\nDETROIT. Sept. 2.\u2014Detroit took\nboth ends of today's double bill from\nChicago, winning the morning game\n14 to 4 in a batting bee. and nosing\nout the White Sox ln the afternoon\ngame   ln   the   ninth,   6   to   5.\nFirst   game\u2014 R.   H.  E.\n'Chicago         4    12      0\nDetroit     14    20      2\nBatteries \u2014 Robertson. Cvengros.\nLyons, Thurs'ton and Schalk; Davis,\nClarke, Pillette and Bassler, Wood-\nall.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   H.   EL\nChicago        5    11      1\nDetroit            6    12      2\nBatteries \u2014 Blankenship, Thurston, Gillingwater and Crouse; Hoi-\nloway.  Pit ett\u00ab.  Johnson  and   Bassler.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nTENNIS\nRUN UPTO NET ON MAKING \u2014\n**\u00bb, | A FORCING\n\u00bbNOT\n*    **     I ^-X\n-\u2022 n l MunnAt\nSTAKTlMb FOR\nTHS NIT\nWhen it it advisable to run\nup to the net on receiving a\nball?\nAnsweied    by\nR. LINDLEY MURRAY\nBrilliant left-handsd player. national champion, 1918. Winner of Ka.-\ntional patriotic slnflra tournament,\n1917. Famid for his speed, especially\nIn   serving.\nYou should run in to the net when\nyou have received a fairly easy short\nshot and have returned lt deep and\nwith enough speed to make it what\nis called a forcing shot. You should\nalso run in to the net when you\nhave forced your opponent to drop\nand run back to get one of your\nloba. It is also usually desirable to\nrun to the net on making a hard\nfirst   service,   but   rarely   if   ever   on\nweak   second   serve.\nA lot' of general consideration must\nalso be taken into account, as for\nInstance whether you are a good\nvolleyer or not, or whether your best\nstrength lies In a base line driving\ngame.     \t\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNewark,   3-2;   Jersey  City,   2-5.\nKouheBter,   4-1;    Toronto,   1-3.\nBaltimore,   3-4;   Reading,   1-10.\nBuffalo.    6-15;    Syracuse,    4-0.\nPlayed More Than 60\nGames in Set; Then\nMade It Sudden Death\nColumbus.   3-7;   Toledo,   4-6.\nMinnenpolls,  5-7;   St.   Paul.   6-4.\nLouisville.    4-7;    Indianapolis,    1-*.\nKansas City, 11-1; Milwaukee, 4-2.\nThe longest set in the tennia\ntournament yesterday was that\nplayed by Dr. Fergie of Cranbrook against Geoffrey Eyton of\nNelson.\nAfter each taking a ,long set,\nthey played the final 'set until\nthey were 16 all. At thla stage\nthe committee, on account of the\ncourt being required, ordered,\nthat it be a sudden death game,\nand   Dr.   Fergie   won,   17-16.\nThere were more than 60 games\nlp   the   set.\n \t\nPage EigEtj\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1923\nTHE ARK\nM-lncb 12-oj. White Duck, $1.50\nyard; Green and White Awning\nBtripa. 60t^ J\"\"\"1; ladiea' Silk\nHo.e, all colon, 904 and SI.00\npair; Dress Gingham, 25^ to 50^\nyard; Children'* Short Hose, 35\u00a3\npair. Ladiea' Vesta and Bloomers,\nBtaple Dry Goods, , a large stock\nsecond-hand   Storves and  Furniture.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhon.   S34\n606   Vernon   8t\nSchool\nOpening\nPUBLIC   AND   HIGH   SCHOOL\nTEXT   BOOKS\nJust   Arrived. Order   Early.\nValues in\nEXEKCISE   BOOKS,\nPENCILS,   PENS,   Eta,\nCan't Be Beat.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nLimited\nNELSON,   B.C,\nSPECIAL SALE OF\nRegular    Domeatio    Irons,\nwith   Cord   \u2014 -,....\ncomplete\n- S4.\u00abr.\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\n7h.S30   Op.ra Ron.. \u00bblk.   MBojlis\nNo Less\nAn Important part ln the prescribing of glasses is the spectacle mount, or frame. The\nbest correction In lenses possible\nfor you. tntght not give any\nsatisfaction If not' tn a frame\nof correct size and angles with i\nthe fafe. It is a delicate matter, a*id one which we are very\nparticular about. It Is the \u25a0\nfinesse of a good examination.\nNext time your spectacle frame\nbreaks or needs straightening,\nbring   It   in,   and   lat   us   attend\nto   It.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptlst ana Optician\nFURS\nG.   GLASER\nManufacturer   Furrier\nOuaranteed   High-Class   Furs.\nNice Selection kept In stock and\nMade   to   Order   from   Selected\nSkins.\nCustomers' Purs Made Up,\nRemodelled and Repaired. Skins\nDressed and Mounted at Reasonable Prices.\n416 WARD ST., NELSON, B.C.\nPhone   106.\nHigh-Class Dyeing\nand Cleaning\nIs   Economical   and   Gives\nReal   Satisfaction\nH. K. FOOT\nFairview Nelson,    B.C.\nSome Oil News\nI have just received the following telegram, which haa\nreference to the Nelson Sunburst Oil Company, Limited,\nNon-Personal Liability, first well.\nHugh W. Robertson,\nNelson, B.C.\nSunburst, Mont,\nSept.  2,  1923.\nRig up and tools moved on location and am now rigging up to drill expect to be spudding in by fifth or sixth.\n, .... .\u201e.;....' W. R. BURKS.\n| Mr. Burks is \u2022 the .contractor who is drilling our first\n\u25a0 well, and before this well is finished anyone who wants\nj shares should send me their order. You can see our\n' Company means business, and this may be your last\nchance to buy stock in this Company. Shares are 1 cent.\nI ?10.00 buys 1000, $50.00 buys 5000 shares.\n,      Write, phone or call, and I will be pleased to give\n! you any further information I can.\nHugh W. Robertson\n' -      414 WARD  STREET,  NELSON\nI\n*^tw,t^> ^\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nRex Beach's\nGREAT STORY OF THE YUKON\nThe Spoilers\nA brand-new production, immeasurably superior to \"The\nSpoilers\" you saw six or seven years ago.\n\u2014Usual Prices\u2014\nCHAUTAUQUA IS APPLE OUTPUT\nCONTRACTED FOR\nBusiness Men and Representative Citizens Become\nGuarantors for Next Year\nNelson will have Chautauqua; in\n1824, as the result of the signing\nof a contract with Dominion Chau-\n*tauquas by a number of business\nmen and other representative citizens.\nThe guarantors of the $11100 contract are Dr. W. 0. Rose, J. A. Mc-\nDouald. J. J. Walker, Arthur A. Perrier, John Bell, Arthur B. Gilker,\nFred L. Irwin, Robert R. Irwin, John\nBlomberg, D. D. Townsend, F. F.\nPayne, I* W. Humphrey, M.P., George\nFerguson, Charles F. McHardy, H.\nE. Dill, E- W. Widdowson, Kenneth\nCampbell, M.P.P., George A. Brown,\nAlderman A. 8. Horswill, R. W. Dawson, C. A. Larsen, II. J. Smith, F. P.\nDeacon, A. Q. Lambert and W. W.\nPowell.\nAuction\nSale\n313 LATIMER ST.\nWEDNESDAY, SEPT. 5th,\nat 2 o'Clock\nI have received instructions\nfrom Mrs. James Mclvor, 313\nLatimer street, to Bell at Public\nAuction all of her Household\nGoods,   consisting   of:\nPathe Phonogniph, White Ito-\ntary Sewing Machine (new).\nRound Oak Chief Range, Queen\nHeater, 2-Jet Gas Stove; Brass\nBedstead, Spring .and Mattress;\nCurtains, Blinds and Fittings;\nBureau, Carpet, Floor Oilcloth,\nLinoleum Square, Bedroom Rugs,\nDlning-Room Suite, small Fancy\nTable, Refrigerator, Book Stand\nwith Drawers, Divanette, Pictures,\nassorted Chairs Including Rockers,\nMirror and Curio Stand, Kitchen\nTable, Dinner Set, Kerr-Mason\nEconomy Jars (1-quart size),\nGarden Implements, and other\nKitchen Utensils.\nTerms\u2014Cash. ,      ..\nGoods   on   View   Morning   of   Sale.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer.\nA. HIGGINBOTHAM\nEyesight\nSpecialist\ny.\nUli'rt&iiMneftl\nGloria Swanson\nin\nThe Gilded Lily\ni\nLET US HELP YOU TO\nMake Preserving Easy\nWe have a great variety of Kitchen Utensils (or the\nHousewife at this season.\nTwo-Part   Comedy\n\"COLD CHILLS\"\nTopics of the Day\nOfficial Weekly Report Sets\nProduction This Year at\n120,000 Boxes\nThe output of apples from Kootenay and the Arrow lakes Is estimated by the horticultural branch\nof the department of agriculture in\nIts weekly report on the fruit situation as 120,000 boxes, as compared\nwith an estimate of 140,000 in July,\nand the total production for this\ndistrict  last  year  of   190,000   boxes.\nThe report in summing up conditions in  the various districts Btates:\nKootenay and Arrow Lakes\u2014Owing\nto damage from scab since the crop\nreport of July was issued, also due\nto slight damage by hall, It ia\nnecessary to make a change in fruit\nestimates   at   this  time.\nApple scab is still spreading to\nsome extent, and the crop On many\norchards will be of poor quality owing to this disease, The size of the\nfruit, however, in most of the orchards, is above normal and making\nfair to good growth. Wood growth\nhas been good on almost all varieties.\nPears  Are   Doing   Well\nThe estimated output of apples\nfrom the Kootenay and Arrow lakes\nat this time iB 120,000 boxes, as compared with an estimate of 140,000 in\nJuly, and the total production for\nthis district last year of 190,000\nboxes. There Is very little change\nIn the estimates of the pear crop\nBlnce the July report, Pears are\nmaking good growth and are very\nfree  from  scab  and  of   good  quality.\nBartletts will be moving in ten\ndays aa well as Clapp's Favorite. A\nfew early appes are moving to th\u00bb\nlocal markets, but so far no car\nshipments have gone out. Indications\nare that Wealthy, Kootenay Gem\nand    Gravenstein'  will   be   ready    to\nNO ROOM TO BE\nIN NELSON\nWEEKEND\nHotel Accommodation Was\nOxertaxtd by Large Number of Visitors for Holiday\nSo great a crowd of vlrltcrs speht\nhe week-end In Nelson that late\nSunday night at the local hotels\nU became a cane qf eating room\nonly, there being not a room to be\nhad.\nIn nddltlon to the large number\nof visitors here for the tennis and\n?olf tournaments, there were many\ntourists from Washington who came\nin over the new road, one of whom\nstated that the highway wai now\nIn anything but good condition. He\nhad motored from Sand Point to\nNe'son In 17 hours with a purty of\nfive.\nIncidentally, It may be whispered\nthat sleeping accommodation was\nso scarce on Sunday night that two\nwholly law-respecting citizens spent\nthe night in the police cells. There\nwere no other beds to be had.\nOur Aim\nIS TO GIVE YOU\nSATISFACTION\nIF   YOU   DO   NOT   ALREADY\nTRADE     WITH     US,    8TART\nTODAY.\nPhone 235\nWE ARE OPEN ALL DAY\nTOMORROW (WEDNESDAY).\nVEGETABLES\nand\nFRUITS   .\nEmory's Golden  Bantam  Corn\u2014\nPer    doz.    ...- 45-\u00a3\nCantaloupes\u2014Each  20\u00abt*\nCuoumbors\u2014Large,  doz 40<\u00a3\nWatermelon\u2014Per   lb 7**J\nGrapes\u2014Malagas,  per  lb 30$\nPears\u2014Per   lb 15$\nRed   Astrachan   Apples\u2014\n6    lbs - 25$\nGreer>   Peppers\u2014Per  lb.   .-20$\nCauliflower. Green Onions, Radishes, Leaf Lettuce. Cucumbers.\nHot-house Tomatoes and California Field Tomatoes, Cantaloupes,   Celery .\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nThe Oreat Supply House\n613 Baker Street.        Phona 161\nA. S. Horswill & Ca.\nThe Best in Groceries\nPhone 121\nBiackberriaa   at     15\u00a3\nWalnuta   and   Filberta\u2014Per   lb.\n =\u2014I 4 150\nHaad   Lattuca\u2014Per   Ib 15\u00a3\nOrange., from, doz 400\nWatarmalon,   Ib. GO\nLab.ter, tin  ...650  an4  350\nCanadian 8ardin\u00aba, 7  for 500\nRipa Tomatoaa, lb.   100\nSquirrel   Peanut   Butter  .250\nHainx Chopped Olivea  -450'\nLea S. Perrin'a Sauce  400\nBoiled  Ham, Sliced,  lb 600\nPROMPT   DELIVERY.-    .\ntral school this term, at 1:30 6'cldch.\n(9187)\nG.   W.   V.   A.   Keneral   mretlnic   tonight, 8 o'clock.    Executive 7:15 \u00bbhnro.\n(9788)\n-\u2022Wo^ftave   received   tho   required\nSchool    Book,   for   Hume   School.\nMake   sure   of   your   copies.\nFLEMING'S STORE, Fairview\nMother's Bread\nFor Sandwiches\nFor   the   dining-room   table,   or\nfor  picnics,  sandwiches made with\nour    freshly    baked    loaves    taste\nbeat.     They   are   nourishing   and\nsustaining.\nChoquette Bros.\nPhone   268\nLADLES\nDIPPERS\nKETTLES\nSTRAINERS\nCANNING RACKS\nCHERRY STONERS\nHOUSEHOLD SCALES\nCONSERVO COOKERS\nEtc., etc\nWoou-Vallanee Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B.C.\nRETAIL\nFOR SALE\n6-Eoom   House   (lot   60x120)   tn   Fairview,   ln   first-class   condition.\nSplendid  garden.    Chicken  house  and   parage   (2100.00\nJ-Room   Modern  House   on   Victoria, Street\n J1300.00\n6-Room Modern House, tn good condition.   Good washroom ln basement.     Front   Street    : .\u201e,  _..J J2000.09\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL  ESTATE        Authorized Trusts* in Bankruptcy BONDS\niNSUF\/NCE-r-*-   A\u00abc,denlt   tifa PHONE   138\npick by the 10th  to  ICth  of September.\nIndications arc that the apple crop\nln the Creston valley will be up to\nthe previous estimates, 150,000 boxes,\nas against 170,000 in 1922. The\nfruit In this section Is sizing up\nwell and the co or and quality are\nvery good. Very little scab po far.\nA few orchards where the grower\ndid not spray are showing scab;\nNorthern Spy seem to be the worst.\nIn the Creston section lt is expected Wealthies will move about the\n1st of September, Mcintosh about\nthe 15th, followed by Kings and\nJonathans.\nVsrnon\nWeather conditions during the\npast week have been very satisfactory, rather hot days and cool nlghtB\npreval Ing. All fruits are sizing and\ncoloring well, excepting In orchards\nwhere dmsVleihUe winter -injury\noccurred, or there has been a lack\nof nufflclent Irrigation applied.\nWealthlea are moving very heavily\na,ii(1 should be cleaned up by the\nmidd'e of next week. Although the\nmajority are carrying fair color, it\nwill be difficult to obtain aiy high\npercentage of extra fancy, as the\napple would be undoubtedly too mature in many cases tf left on the\ntrees to obtain the GO per cunt requirement. Jefferies and Gravenstein\nare also going through the houses;\nalso Bart ett and Clapp's Favorite\npears. Yellow Egg, Black Diamond\nplums and Italian prunes. There are\na few Early Crawford peaches also\nshowing. It has been noticed in\nsome orchards In the district south\nof Vernon that Mcintosh appl\u00aba were\nalmost at the stage of maturity when\npicking shou'd commence. This\nseems to Indicate that from a maturity standpoint some Mcintosh\nfrom these earlier orchards should\nbe moving about the end of next\nweek.\nLeaf    Roi lor    Does    Damage\nDuring the past two weeka there\nhas been some Increase in the Bpread\nof scab, and it la now noticeable\nthnt in many orchards a very severe injury has been done to the\ncrop by the activities of the leaf\nroller. This, in addition to the\nheavy hailstorms experienced In the\nArmstrong district during the pant\nweek will tend to again reduce the\nestimate as outlined for this district\nin the last crop estimate issued.\nAt present there does not appear\nto be any great movement of vegetables, and this will probably continue to be slight until the fall\nharvesting of the various later crops.\nThc threshing. of grain' ia well\nadvanced and yields appear to be\nexcellent. Some very fine cuts of\nsecond cro*.) timothy and clover have\nbeen noticed, which, under present\nweather conditions, will go into\nthe stack In excellent condition. The\nthird crop of alfalfa also promises\nto be good.\nKelowna\nWealthy apples, plums and Bart'\nlett pears are moving through the\npacking houses. Wealthies are of\ngood quality, but extra fancy are\nscarce owing to tha very high\ncolor requirements set for this variety.\nMcintosh apples will be moving\nabout   the   middle   of   the   month.\nWinter apples are sizing and coloring  well.\nItalian prunes will be moving in\nquantities   in  a  few   days.\nCanning tcftnatoes are rlpertfng\nvery fast and the canneries are running  at   full   capacity.\nPenticton   and   Kerenvrtas\nWealthies are coming in freely,\nsize and color fair. Jefferies and\nGravenstein arc moving.\nYellow St. John peaches are about\nover. Crawfonls are romlnn In in\nquantity and Elberts should te moving freely by the end of the week.\nFlemish Beauty, Bartletta and\nBoussock   pears   are   moving.\nNelson News of the Day\nQuepn City Rebekah Lod*t;e, No. 16.\nI.O.O.F.,   meets   tonight  at   8  oclock\n.  (9788)\nDied, on Monday. September 8, 1923\nOpnrge Swanson Bremner, son of Mr,\nand Mrs. Archie Bremnpr of Salmo\n\u00abC. The funeral will take ilace on\nWednesday afternoon at 2:30 irom Ri\nSaviour's church. (9785)\nO. W. V. A. Ladles' Auxiliary will\nmeet tonight at  8 o'clock. (9783)\nIna. M. Steed will resume pianoforte\nteaching, September 10, 205 Victoria\n\u25a0street   <j78i)\nThe regular meetitiii of the Bov\nScouts will take place at tie City\nHall at  8   o'clock   tonight. 9780)\nOlivo Campbell, L. Mub, teacher of\nPianoforte and Theory. Bfginners'\nclnss commences Saturday, September\nSth; fee. $1.50 per month. Koom 8.\nGilker Block. (9771)\nKELSON BUSINESS COLLSGE.\nINDIVIDUAL        TUITIOW. COM\nMENCE  ANY  TIKE.    New   term commences   Tuesday,    September   flth.\n(9735)\nRIVER WHICH RAN\nRIOT TO BE CURBED\nramona   Chinas*  Strssm  Which   M^de\n\u2022  Vw  S<4   Will   Bt   Ftwbsd\nBack Into Old Channel.\nPEKING. \u2014 The Yellow river,\nChina's most treacherous waterway.\nwhich caused Incalculable damag.\"\nwhen It broke Its banks two years\naso and made a new channel, is to be\nreturned to Its original course. Fourteen thousand laborers are engaged ln\nthe building of dykes, and it Is expected soon to Increase the number\nto   20,000.\nW. H. Mallory, executive secretary\ncf the China Internatiolal Famine relief commission, estimated the cotit of\ncorralling the Yellow river at $1,500,-\n000, Chinese currency, of which sum\nthe finance commission of the government relief bureau has provided $360.-\n000.\nHundreds   of  square  miles  of   terrl-\n?\\J\nFALL UNDERWE\nCOMB men wear Sun\n^ underwear later In\nFall. Others change\nheavier weight with tha\ncoot days. Here Is the\nsort of underwear If you\nsu'-li a change. It Is\nenough to keep out the |\nof early Fall days.\nFROM $2.50\ntory north of the old river b\u00ab\nvicinity of Kung Chla Pa, wen\nduring tho -spring of 1921\nbreaking of a dyke and thou\nfamilies were made homelesi\nthen the district haa beei|\nt>part-ely repopulated, due to f<\nrecurrence of  the catastrophe'.\nAUSTRALIAN BLAST\nKILLS TWENTY-\nSYDNEY,   Au.tralta,   Sept.\nCanadian Press ' Cable,  via,' Rf\n\u2014Victims    of    Saturday'a\nand fire In the Bclbird collier;\nnumber  22.\nFor Distribution This Morninj\nCAR OF\nElberta\nPtfesefvfo\nPeaches\nLa*ge Siies\nSee Your Grocer Today and Get\nthe Pick of the Stock\nJ.  T.   BERRINGTON,\nWHolma'la   Fruit   Merchant\nA.G.LAMBERT CO.,Ltd\n'**\u25a0'\"   Manufacturers of and Dealera In\nALL    KINDS   OF    LUMBER    AND    BUILDING    MATERIAL*,\nSHINGLES,  LATH,  MOULDINGS, WINDOWS,  DOORS, COA8T\nEDGE GRAINED FLOORING AND FINISH AND BEAVER AND\nWALL BOARDS \"\nDrawsr 1086\nPhona No. 82\nNtlson, B. O.\nMiss Minnie E. Fletcher tflll resume\nlessons In music, September 4; 405\nFalls  and  Vernon. (t\u00bb705)\nJ.  Burgess,  Carpenter.   Phote   621R.\n(8407)\nHousewives\u2014Mouonald'a n\u00abw pack\nstrawberry Jam Is ready. Get tt *i\nyour grocer's. (9749)\nWanted   \u2014  Apples.\nMcDonald   Jam\n(9668)\nCo.\nAll Hume and high school pupils\nmust present themselves at 9 o'clock\nthis morning. All Central school\npupils who have never attended nchool\nIn Nelson, aluo at 9 o'clock. All other\npupils who have already attended\n\u2022NbUuii;  jciagolst gj_i wil* MUud Cfca* J\nEvery Day in Every Way\nScatter Sunshine\nIt WHIP ay   ;;.\nI SEE __\nThe Sunshine til1\nShowing Again TONIGHT,\nStarring DOUGLAS MACLEAN ,of \"The Hottentot.'\nHE\nEXTRA\nADDED\nATTRACTION\nLARRY SEM0N, in a 2-lleel\nComedy 'THE SPORTSMAN'\n\u2014Remember\u2014 \u25a0\nIf You See It at S T A R L A N D-Ifs \"Good!\n!\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_1923_09_04","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\/1.0401179","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1923-09-04 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1923-09-04 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":""}]}