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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":" City Reservoir\nIS DOWN TWO FEET\nSee Page 3\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1924\nNo. 272\nEmpire Chambers\nHEAR STATESMEN SPEAK\nSee Page 2\nMcADOO PASSES 500 VOTES; BRYAN MOB-CENTEI\nSOYRING FOU\nBACK AFTER T\nFATAL STA!\nMade Pyykko's Ear Bleed\nBefore He Fell, School\nGirl Testifies\nJURY ACCUSES\nTHE FINLANDER\nSfc Thorn Describes Wound;\n^Several Other Witnesses\nTestify\nROSSLAND, July 2.\u2014\"We find that\nthe deceased came to his death by\na blow by a knife in the hands of the\naccused,   Charles   Pvykko.\"\nThe above verdict was returned\nthis evening bv the coroner's iurv\nempanelled to inquire into the death\nof Gus Snvring of Rossland. who\nwas stabbed, it is alleged, by Charles.\nPwkka. on Second avenue yesterday\nafternoon at 4:15. whila Pyykko was\nunder the Influence- \"of liouor.\nPyvkko was brought before Magistrate Nohle Rinns of Trail.' before\nthe inouest onenad. for preliminary\nheartier en a murder charge preferred\nby Chief of Police R. Timms, but no\nevident was taken, and the hearing\nwas adlourned to tomorrow, to permit\nthe inquest to be held first.\nKnife Cut the Heart\nTestifvlnsr at the inquest, Dr. J. D.\nThorn of Trail, who had performed\nvn autopsv last evening, said:\n-'\"^^Jwrnql examination showed a\nypfi-Hpurished. well-nvuscled man of\n.niddle age:.:'Jjlcod mixed with air\nwas oozing from the mouth, apnarent-\nly \u25a0irbmirET from the lungs. Further\nexamination showed an incised'wound\nitbout 1 y? inches in diameter, about\n~\\*t, inches from the center line of\nflfip chest.\n\"It cut across the sternal end of\nthe fourth rib, cutting clear through\nthe eartflape end of the rib. The\nrut went through into the sac containing the heart, and the examination showed that the incision had\ncut deeplv into the heart itself. The\nblood had flowed freely into the sac,\nwhich In  itself would cause death.\n\"In mv. opinion, death was caused\nhv a stab-wound through the muscles\n'ffito th\u00a3-j)\u00bbpart. I believe that the\n!w*>und ,j(W| \"nave been caused easily\nhv the'lffyifV in the possession cf. the\nchief of police. In fact, it must have\ntieeh caused by such weapon, or a\ncorrespondingly heavy one\u2014one that\ncould be gripped and would not\ndouble  up.\"\nRuth Describes Affrav\nThe star witness was Ruth Jones;\n12-' years '\"old. who was going home\nfrom th%x,f)^lk when, as she said, fa,\nman came along and said,' 'Hfello' to\nanother man. and knocked his hat\noff.\" TH\u00abi, she said, they started to\n\u2022wrestle, and saw one take a knife\nout of his fyeiket and hit- the other\nman once through the heart.\n\"He lust about cut his shirt, and.\nhe -pulled it out, and stuck it in\nagain,\" she said. \"The man strucik\nwith the knife started to fight again,\nand made the other man's ear bleed..\nThe mani with the knife started up\nthe plde-sjaik. and' the man who was\nStruck fell against the wall. By that\ntime the train had cc-me in, and a\nmil man ill khakHPChief R. H. Devitt)\ncame and shouted for the man who\nwas runrflhk away, to-eton. 'He caught\nhim bv the arm and hefil him until\nChief Timms came.\"\n, The evidence of jCJhjlef Devitt corroborated *Chis. sK^\nThreatened Bystander\nAnother wWffSss was\/ Charles Pbloa,\n-who said he had cojne' up and seen\nSoyring lying: Von the ground. He\nsaid  to Pyykko:\n- \"What are you doing?\" The accused  had-jwiswpred,   \"i  did  that.\"\nPoloa s,aid: ''That pretty, bad, that\nman dead.\" The accused had answered, \"I don't care. I got knife,\nand  I do  the same  to you.\"\nPoloa said. \"What for?\" Pyykko\nanswered, \"Because you are talking\ntoo much.\"\nChief Timms showed plainly in his\nevidence that the accused was intoxi-\nBoth Mien Had Been Drinking\nCharted Gfcirdon, who keeps a rooming house in Rossland at which\nPyykko and' Soyring had called earlier in the day, was another witness..\nBe said they had been drinking, and\nwere arguing.\nThe last witness was James .Ken-\nson, who had come up from Soyring\n-fell. \u201e\nDr J. H. Palmer, coroner, warned\nthe accused that anything he might\nsay would be used against him, and\ntold him he advised him not to make\nany statements until his trial.\nfLEET VISITORS\nIN BIG FIGURES\nBy Saturday Total Visitors\non bruise Will Reach\nTwoJ^pllion\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014The number of visitors to the British special\nservice squadron is nearing the 2,-\n000,000 mark, and by the time the\nfleet leaves British Columbia waters\nSaturday, it is expected that this\ntotal  will   have   been   reached.\nUp to June 6 the total' of visitors\n: was 1,519,614, and today the figures for Honolulu and Victoria became available. At the Hawaiian\nport the ships were inspected by 47,-\n175 people, and at Victoria by 52,-\n006, so that the total up to reaching Vancouver on June 25 was 1,618,-\nff\u00bb6.\nMore than 5000 people a day have\nbeen going over the ships here so\nfar, and Sunday and Dominion day\nexceeded this- estimate.\n\u25a0Two thousand of the city's chil-\ndren were guests on H. M< S. Hood\nthis morning.\nSays Britain Won't\nAbandon the Sudan\nLORD  PARMOOR\nLord president of the council in the\nLaborite ministry, definitely announced that Great Britain is not\ngoing to abandon the Sudan in any\nsense whatever, regardless of the\npressure being, brought to bear by\nPremier Zaghloul Pasha and other\nEgyptian Nationalists.\nADMIRAL GAV\nNO ADVICE\nPOL\nTalked as a Sailor in Answer to a Question; the\nPrairie Farmer\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014When the\nattention of Vice-Admiral Sir Frederick Field, now visiting here, was\ndrawn today to questions asked in\nthe house of commons yesterday\ncriticizing a statement purported to\nhave been made recently in Victoria\nby the commander of the British\nspecial service squadron to the effect\nthat Canada should equip four cruisers\n\u2014two for- - service on . the Atlantic\nand two for service on the Pacific!\"*\nAdmiral Field categorically denied\nthat he had made any such observation\nor made specific reference as to\nwhat  Canadian  naval policy  should  be.\nWhat Admiral Field ' did say in\nVictoria was in reply to a direct\nquestion asked him in the course of\nan   interview.\nQuestion  and  Answer\n'^yvhat   do  you   think  Canada   should\nhave  InVthe   way   of   a   navy?\"   Admiral   Field   was  asked.\n\"I can't answer a question like that,\"\nhe said. \"I am not here to dictate\nto Canada or to offer gratuitous advice on matters of policy. All I can\ndo in reply to such a question is to\nlay the plain facts before you as a\nsailor sees them and leave Canada\nto   judge.\n\"I will, put it to you. in this way.\ntt\u00a33y were a Canadian former depending for his living on overseas trade,\nor the head of a big Canadian commercial concern to whom foreign\ntrade meant anything, I think I\nshould be anxious to see that my\ntrade routes would be adequately protected in time of war. As to what\nnaval force such protection might\nentail it seems to me that two\ncruisers on this coast would be found\ninvaluable should occasion arise. They\nwould afford protection to the farmers' grain or the manufacturers' products part way to their markets to a\npoint where other ships of the British   navy   could   pick   them   up*\"\nQuebec Delegation\nfor Bonne Entente\nWith Saskatchewan\nREGINA, July 2.\u2014Ninety strong,\na delegation of clergy and laity from\nQuebec spent four hours in the city\ntoday in the interests of the creation of a \"bonne entente,\" similar to\nthat set up between their province\nand the province of Ontario.\nThe delegation plans to secure first\nhand information regarding western\nCanada, on which to base inducements to their people who bave\ngone to the United States, in an\neffort to convincethem that, western Canada is a netted place for\nthem than the oun.-.ry to 'which\nthey   have   chosen   to   go.\nSTEAMER *ARRIVALS\nAdriatic, at New York, from Liverpool.\nSaxonia, at London, from New-\nYork.\nEmpress of Canada, at Yokohoma,\nfrom Vancouver.\n:CTED\nTHREE TO 01\nBanking   Committee 'Asks\nfor Enlarged Instructions\nto Include it\nHOUSE'S ANSWER\nVERY EMPHATIC\nAll Liberals and All Conservatives but Three\nAgainst Report\nOTTAWA July 2.\u2014By a vote of\n109 to 32, the house of commons just\nbefore midnight rejected the report of\nthe select standing committee on\nbanking and commerce, seeking the\nenlargement of the scope of the committee to Include the investigation\ncf \"some- type of central or federal\nbank system in Canada.\"\nThe vote came after an all-day debate, in which the support of the report, and of the idea of a federal\nreserve bank, came chiefly from the\nagrarian   members.\nOf the Conservatives, only Leon\nLadner.V-'South Vancouver, and W. F.\nMacLean, South York, supported the\nreport. These, with J. L. Stanzell,\nEast Elgin, were the only Conservatives to vote for the report when\ndivision was taken.\nAll the Liberals, and about half a\ndoaen Progressives, including J. Fred\nJohnston, chief Progressive whip,\nvoted against.\nMany were the arguments heard,\nboth for and against. It was argued\nthat establishment of federal reserve\nbanks in the United States had been\nbeneficial. On the other hand, and\nthis view was put forward by Hon.\nJ. A. Robb, acting minister of finance,\nit was doubted if further study of the\ncentral reserve system by the banking cpmmittee this year would be\nuseful. E. J. Garland, Bow River,\ncharged that banks had grossly discriminated against the western\nfarmer   in   interest   charges.\nGirls Won't Pick\nBerries With the\nSailors Around\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014The\nfleet squadron has flayed havoc with the berry picking, at\nthe busiest season. The girls\nwould not leave the city. Six\nhundred are needed in the\nFraser valley alone.\nINDIAN TRIBE IN\nSTARVING STATE\nTrapper   Says   Vancouver\nDenial Worthless; Ten\nYears Since a yisit\nEDMONTON, July 2.\u2014Substantiation of reports recently received\nhere that the Siccani Indians in the\nFindlay river valley, northern British Columbia, are starving and in a\ndeplorable condition because of the\nunchecked ravages of disease, was\ngiven here today. Angus Sherwood,\na fur trader of Findlay Forks, upon\nhis. arrival here from the north,\nsaid the information given by Henry\nStege of Fort Graham, concerning\nthe condition of the tribe was correct. ;-*fiP\nBlinded by Disease\n\"The condition of this tribe, half\nblind, and existing In a stage of\nsemi-starvation, is a national disgrace,\"   Mr.   Sherwood  said.\nReferring to a denial of Mr.\nStege's information, by the Indian\nagent at Vancouver, recently, Mr.\nSherwood said it is impossible for\nthe Indian department to have accurate knowledge of the condition of\nthe Indians, as they have been visT\nited by a government agent only once\nsince  1914.\nOTTAWA July 2. (By Canadian\nPress)\u2014Enlargement of the scope of\nthe commons committee on banking\namd oM^inerce to permit the discussion of \"some type of central federal\nreserve bank in Canada,\" was asked\nin the sixth report of the committee,\nthe adoption of which was asked for\nwhen  the house  met  this  afternoon.\nThe chairman of the committee,\nThomas Vien, Liberal, Lotbiniere, declared that if the object of the dis-\ncjjspion was to form immediately a\ncentral reserve bank, he thought such\na move was undesirable. He gave a\nnumber of reasons which he thought\nthe system as maintained in the United States would not be suitable to the\nCanadian system of  banking.\nUnsettling banking conditions were\nby no means peculiar to any one\nsection of Canada, Mr. Vien said.\nThe same economic difficulties which\nconfronted the western farmer, also\nfaced all farmers all over the United\nStates, where a federal reserve bank\nwas in operation. He pointed out\nthat business organizations other than\nbacks' had suffered because of the\nshrinkage of financial credit, which\nhe regarded as an aftermath of the\nwar.\nShaw   Wants   Better   System\nJ. T. Shaw, Independent, 'galgary\nWest, declared that the request was\n\u00bbBlmply to consider and study the\nsystem, and not adopt it. Mr. Shaw\nsaid it was the duty of parliament\nto furnish adequate credit facilities\nfor the country, and it was necessary\nthat a betted system of rediscounting\nshould be  found.\nHe approved of Hon. J. A. Robb's\nresolution to .provide an inspector-\ngeneral of banks. It would convert\nthe finance department from \"an\nundertaking institution for banks, into\na hospital clinic, where they might\nbe  treated  for   their  ills.\"\nThe proponents of the system did\nnot seek a revolution of the present\nbanking system, but rather an evolu-\ntion. It was necessary also to restore the confidence of the public\nin  the. banking   institutions.\nRobb   Says   Protection   Ample\nHon. -J. A. Robb said this question\nhad been pretty well threshed out\nlast year. There was ample information available on the subject, and\nfurther research this session by the\nbanking committee would be useless.\nAnswering Mr. Shaw's reference to\nthe necessity for a better system of\nrediscounting, Mr. Robb thought the\nprovisions of the Finance act afforded Canadians as much protection as\nthe federal reserve afforded Americans. He would vote against the\nreport for' three reasons.\nL.-. J.   Ladner,   Conservative,   South\nVancouver,   urged   that   a   principle\nwas involved.    Parliament was either\ngranting or  denying  to   the- banking\n(Continued   on   page   2)\nft\n'You Will Find My\nBody in the Hill;\nNotebook Conveys\nBIG RIVER, Sask., July 2.\u2014\nEarl Alcock, a resident of Big1\nRiver for several years, is reported to have committed suicide at his camp about 25 miles\nsouthwest    of    here. Indians\nbrought in a notebook In which\nAlcock had written to his rela-\n. tlves: . ..jjisj\n\"You will find my body in a\nhill outside my camp. Do not\nmove It.\"\nProvincial police have gone to\nInvestigate.\nWINNIPEG MAN\nDIES OF HEAT\nJAPAN LOSES\nMONEY WIZARD\nIN lATSillTA\nPrince Helped Empire Defeat the Shoguns in the\nCivil War\nEIGHTY DESCENDENTS\nMOtfttN       STATESMEN\nFor Nearly Half a Century\nHe Dictated Every Financial Advance\nTOKYO, July 2.\u2014Prince Masayoshi\nMatsukate, one of the two genro or\nelder statesmen of the Japanese\nempire, died this evening. He was\n89   years  old.\nManitoba  Swelters in  the\nNineties; Alberta Cools a\nLittle\nWINNIPEG, July 2.\u2014Manitoba\nsweltered today in the ..r-jyarmest\nweather recorded in the province\nthis summer. The mercury in Winnipeg reached a high mark of 90\ndegrees in the shade, which, however,\nis several degrees lower than other\nwestern points.\nA -man believed to be William\nGreen of St. James, a suburb of\nWinnipeg, was stricken by the heat\ntoday while riding a bicycle on Portage avenue. He died before reaching the hospital. \u2022\nEdmonton and Calgary report a\nslight drop in the temperature from\nthe respective high marks of 90\nand. 91 registered yesterday.\n;, S&rmers throughout the west are\nsatisfied with the weather conditions, the general belief prevailing\nthat the rise in temperature will materially aid the crops towards the\nripening stage, but rain is needed in\nmany districts.\nThe Dominion weather service bureau forecasts that it will get still\nwarmer before the  mercurv recedes.\nBring Pressure on\nMeighen to Release\nStevens or Tolmie\n':> VANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014A drive\nis being made on Rt. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen, Dominion Conservative\nleader, to have either Hon. S. F.\n' TWmie or ffpri. H. H. Stevens,\npreferably the former, retifiMfi'ifln\nDominion politics and lead the\nparty in British Columbia. _ Mr.\nMeighen is stated to be willing\nto allow Mr. Stevens to go, but\nseems to wish to retain Mr.\nTolmie. Negotiations are undelr\nway.\n -\u00ab.\t\nCHRISTIANIA, July 2.\u2014The Norwegian capital is t to revert to Oslo,\nits ancient  name.\nPrince Matsukata, one of the few\nremaining Japanese genro or elder\nstatesmen, was the founder of Japanese finance. He was a member of\nthe ancient feudal clan of Satsuma,\nfrom whose descendants spring the\ngreater number of officers of the\nJapanese navy. He was -born in\nFebruary,   1835.\nHe served under Prince Shtmazu,\nthe feudal lord of Satsuma, and\nfought in the Japanesjf (- civil war\nof   restoration.\nGovernor Under Empire\nWhen the imperial government returned to power, taking the place\nof the Shoguns, lie entered the government service as a prefectural\ngovernor, and later became attached\n\u00a3o the department of finance under\nthe then minister, Count Shigenobu.\nOkuma. With Count Okuma he laid\nthe foundation for a stable state\nfinance, which was in chaotic condition on account of the feudal system\nof administration. A notable achieve-\nm ent of Matsukata was the organization of a land tax.\nIn 1879 he was dispatched to\nFrances as vice-p .-esident of the\nJapanese section of the Paris exposition. On his return he was appointed home minister, and contributed\nto national progress by reorganizing the post and telegraph system of\nthe  empire.\nIn the cabinet organization of 1881\nhe was made minister of finance,\nwith the additional post of councillor of state. During the following\n10 years he remained in the post\ndespite     frequent     cabinet     charges.\nOne of his great steps in strengthening national finances was the organization of the Bank of Japan,\nand of a stable currency svstem. He\nbrought about the redemption of\nbonds issued by the state of feudal\nlords in payment of immense tracts\nof lands which they held in or hear\nthe big cities. He also established a\nseries of national banks.\nRedeemed   Feudal   Bonds\nHistorical, also, was his work In\nreadjusting the paper currency. Paper\nmoney had fallen below par in consequence of excessive issue during\nthe civil war, and Matsukata brought\nabout a restoration of its value. A\nsteady money market facilitated commercial and industrial development.\nIt was during this period that many\nenterprises, notably railways, spinning and other manufacturing industries sprang up and prospered.\nMeanwhile the country's foregin commerce  made a  marked  progress.\nIt was Matsukata who opened\nJapanese legations at New York,\nLondon and Lyons, the largest markets for Japanese exports at the\ntime. He inaugurated the system of\nforeign exchange as a\/jUmeans of\nencouraging Japan's exports, and to\nabsorb specie from abroad in view\nof the scare production of gold and\nsilver in Japan. The policy proved a\nsuccess. The government was able\nto accummulate about 43 ^million\nyen specie in the treasury at the\nend   of   1885.\nSet up  Good Standard\nMatsukata's second ministry in 1896\nto 1897 again emphasized his right\nto be called the founder of Japanese\nfinance, for it was then that he\nestablished a system of gold standard for the empire. He was finance\nminister in the succeeding Yamagata\ncabinet, and in 1902 traveled extensively through the United States\nand Europe. During the Russo-\nJapanese war he was made a marquis for meritorious service, and\nsome years later was appointed lord\nkeeper of the privy seal. In 19 22\nhe retired from the latter office, and\nwas elevated to the peerage, taking\nthe  title  of  Prince  Matsukata.\nPrince Matsukata was the head\nof a numerous family. It is generally believed that his children and\ngrandchildren numbered between 60\nand 80. Several of his sons are .lead-,\ning figures in the Japanese business.\nworld.\nGovernor Is Sent\nto a Felon's Cell\nWARREN  T.   McCRAY\nGentleman-farmer, and internationally known breeder c<f blooded cattle,\nwho cherished an ambition to be the\nrichest and most powerful man in\nIndiana, resigned the governorship\nof that state, and is now an inmate\nof a felon's cell at the Atlanta federal\npenitentiary.\nDate for Count of Absentee\nBallots Is Altered to the\nFourteenth\nVICTORIA, July 2.\u2014Official election figures released by the provincial secretary's department late today indicate that at least 13 ridings\nhave voted in favor of beer by\nthe glass. TfThey are Alberni, Atlin,\nCariboo, Columbia, Esquimau, Fernie,\nFort George, The Islands, Nanaimo,\nOmineca, Prince Rupert, Rossland-\nTrail, Skeena and Yale. The vote\nin Burnabyi^and Greston is a tie.\nAbsentee ballots, it is expected, will\nalter the result in some constituencies.\nAsked by long distance telephone\nlast night about Creston, Russell\nLeamy, Creston riding returning officer, said the dispatch was in error. The riding's corrected vote is\n795 for sale by the glass, and 745\nagainst it. The riding is therefore\nin the wet column.\nSIX TO EtPIATE MONTREAL MURDER\nHere are shown, left to right, Leo Davis; Louis Morel, former Montreal detective, who made a plea for clemency for Davis; Tony Frank, Frank\nGambino, Mike Valentino\" and J.Q,e: Serafini, all sentenced to death for the murder of Henri Cleroux, bank chauffeur, and Harry Stone, one c\u00a3 thei\",,,\ncompanions, in the holdup of the. Banque d\/Hochelaga\/coJlegjion. car on April 1, when $142,288 was. stolen,   J?lp a**M.\nDefer   Count   Three   Days\nVICTORIA, July 2.\u2014Absentee ballots have been sorted, and are in\nmost cases already in their \"home\ntowns\" throughout British Columbia\ntoday.\nThe count, however, will not take\nplace until July 14, three days after\nthe date heretofore named. The reason is that July 11 was found not to\nallow for a full 21 days as required\nby the act to elapse before the final\nfigures are reached. July 12 will be\nSaturday, and by general consent the\nmatter has been postponed to the\nfirst day  of the following week. \u25a0\nUntil the vote is all in and counted, none of the party leaders in Vic-,\ntoria will make any announcement'\nof. plans. Things are very much at\nsixes and sevens. Hot weather adds\nto the evident inclinatipn of every\none not to rush matters.'\nROYALTY CAN'T\nSEETHE SHOW\nKing and Prince Are Always Surrounded and\nHave to Turn Pack\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Neither King\nGeorge nor the Prince of Wales has\nhad. an opportunity to make a detailed visit to the British Empire\nexhibition because of the dense\ncrowds that go each day, Capt.\nA. M. Williams of the exhibition\nstaff reported after his arrival here\nyesterday. Two hundred thousand\npeople visit the exhibition each day,\nhe said, and whenever the King or\nPrince of Wales go, they - are recognized, surrounded, and forced to\nturn back. He said a plan was under\nway to close the exhibition for a full\nday to allow the royal family undisputed possession of the grounds\nand the  side  shows.\ni^prld's* Greatest Pageant\nCaptain William announced that\nthe, government would go into the\nshow business at Wembley, and produce the greatest pageant ever performed anywhere. It will be presetted by Wiljl^ft Lunn, a former\ncoal miner, who'-|s minister of overseas trade in the MacDonald cabinet. It plans to presejit in pageant\nforin the British Ehfpire; its peoples\nand their accomplishments. Some\nof the words are being written by\nAlfred Noyes, the poet, and among\nthose who will take part will be Mrs.\nHerbert H. Asquith, wife of. t\u00a7ie former premier; Miss Isabel MacDonald,\ndaijghter of the present premier, and\nLady Irene Curzon. Lady Diana Manners has been asked to play the\nqueen of beauty.\nThe curtain on the pageant will be\nrung up on July 21, and it will be\nheld in the stadium at Wembley,\nwhich,has accommodation for 200,000\nspectators. It will conclude on Au-\n.gust 31. The first day will be called\n\"Westward Ho,\" and will present\nthe explorations of Sebastian Cabot\nand others to Newfoundland and'\nCanada.     .  ,\nTHIRD DAY OF\nIT1B SEES\nM'ADOOSWING\nBryan Espouses His Cause\nAnd Precipitates Unexampled Uproar\nSHOUTS OF \"OIL\"\nHURLED AT HIM\nSmith     Managers     Claim\nThey Have Big Reserve#\nMcAdoo Under Half\nSHANGHAI, July 3.i\u2014Stuart McLaren, the British around-tlte-world\nflier, arrived here at 11:25 this\nWfifRing,\nMADISON SQUARE GARDEN,>MW*'\nYork, July 2.\u2014William Gibbs McAdBa\nran to a new high mark in tonigwrs'\nballoting in the Democratic national\nconvention. He passed the mtieffl-\nsought goal of 500 votes, by dint \u00ab|f\nmuch frantic work and persuaglgB\nand maneuvering on the part of his\nfloor managers, who declared they\nhad not  finished  their work yet.\nRunning   close   to   the   46   and M4r\nballot   record    of   the   Baltimore  ;a\u00abd\nSan   Francisco   conventions,   the  Ngis'\nYork exhibition  gave promise of S&*\u00bb4\nting- a new mark.\nMcAdoo hit his high mark so far In\nthe 40th ballot, when he polled 505%\nvotes. Smith at that time had dronned\na little below his hieb level, $$$%, .\nmade on previous ballots. At the\n'\"lose of the 30th ballot last nietit\nWcAdco had stood at 415% votes.\nThus he srained nearly 100 In today's balloting-, and the votes he got\nwere taken principally from John W.\nDavis, who fell to 70 on the last\nhpllot tonight.\n\u2022The McAdoo peonle went into to-\n\"ie-ht's session attertiTvtlTier to erfl-\nmato what damage bad been done-So*:\ntheir pa.use bv the riototis pei-foritl-\nance of the late afternoon session,\nwhen William .TeTininers Rrvan t>re-\n\"initnted a riot with his proposal of\nMcAdoo from the platform, aroused\nfflpes of \"Oill.\"\nAt   first   therp.werp  -varimica   rv^orHo-\n+ *rtr,<?   rf.Tvh^t    thp    offftf>l    mlir],t   >,p   -or\nthe niq-ht oooolnn -hut whor> rha loa.rt-\nPr\u00ab P-nf ontsi^p nnfl t>in\"Pht it &.\nit hpfprnp nnnoronf tv>nt th\u00b0 nrlnptna!\nftffe.pf   of  thp  Prvnn   inpiMpnt  Tiad   hpen\nto R(Yii\u00abWv thp Rmlt.ii fo'WrGiH. and to\nsnur the McAdoo nonnlo n\u2122 to a, new\npf'r,rr       TV>    nasq    thp    Rnn    mark   tn-\nni\u00b0-h+    snfl    arUrmrn    -mViflp    it    W\"\u00ab    hp1<l\ntv.o^Q    was-j Vhe'r    first     eral,       They\n\"n^u    ft.\nTo attain a -mainrjtv was thair -next\ngnal. Whathpr thev can do that\nwin  Tip  flpoiflprl   tomorrow.\nMav    Attark   Toio-ttiirrlR    Rute\nTV,pn. in thp ofing. lies a new\"\nthroat of an attanlr on thp two-thirds\n*.iila   oftpT.   t>\u00bbp   ma-lori+v  has   hppn   lii-\n*o!n0ri That issue remains to be\nMpri'fipri, Thorp is.-;'n^5-B\u00abyi\u00bbnr!ip information      oonoprninp*     thp      McAdOO'\nnlanq     avflilahlp     trTtlght.\nThp dav's nroppprline-o watp fiilT of\ninoiMpnt and nolor TtvoIva ballots\nmro thp ar-onmnliahmpTit of thp two\noeoaions    of   thp    fla.V.\nThp rlpoprtion of two votos In fine\n-Mpto \"Vork delpp-ation from Smith to\ni\\f~Artno. gave the M^Arlro neonle all\nthey wanted for a demonstration at\nthe dav session, and the sliding of\nMissouri and Oklahoma, to WfcC' McAdoo standards at the night session\nfuT-niohpd   thp  oojo'asion  for  the  dem-\nons+rations    tonight.\n\u25a0Rut the real feature of the day\nwas Bryan, as cf old. getting on the\nplatform to make- speeches on pretence of explaining his vqie: launch- ;\ning anil attack on big business and\norganized wealth, and presenting1 a\nlist of candidates whom he considered\navailable\u2014headed   by   McAdoo.\nThe rumpus Brvan kicked up has\nseldom been enualled at any national\nconvention, and it probabW\"^iever''1SftS'-\nbeen surpassed in anything shoiit \u00ab|f\nblows and bloodshed. For half the\ntime allotted to him, Bryan \"was\nshouting into a howljng mob which ;\nwas hurling cat-calls, threats and\nepithets at him, and heckling him\nwith demands to explain McAdoo'a\nconnection with \"oil,\" and his a'ctitM-\nties as an attorney Securing tax refunds for corporations . from thei\ntreasury department.\nOklahoma-Missouri    'Deal\nThe strategy by which the McAdoo\nmanagers picked, up enough votes t\u20ac*\npass the 500-mark was said -to-jjlltef,\nan arrangement by which OkJahOJttia\nand Missouri promised to come CveB\nand give the McAdoo candidacy a'\nchance to develop its strength for\nthe satisfaction of wavering delegates.\nMississippi was in the throes of deciding whether it would go back from\nMcAdoo to John W. Davis tomorrow*\nmorning.\nThe Smith people decided, contrary'-\nto report,--.that they would not trot\nout their full strength tonight, and\nfrom aX evidences they did not do so.\nThe McAdoo people declared they\nknew there were more Smith votes on)\nthe floor ft\u00bb0^be brought out when\ncalled for, 'ana they were playing aj\n(Continued   on   page   2)\nThfeSyeather\nThe temperatures below are for tb*\n24 hours ending yesterday afternoon\nat   5   o'clock.\ny \u2022 'Sfl v\nVICTORIA,    July    2.\u2014Nelaoif   am?\nvicinity:   Continued finje and hot.\nMin.    Max*\nNELSON    Mi, ~.     53 97\nVictoria     _.. \u2014 . _ . _.-    65 75\nKamloops     \u00ab. ~.     62 100\nPrince  Rupert   ........     52 62\nAtlin     ..\u201e.     44 56\nVernon     .. _ . _ .     60 101\nCranbrook    ....... _..     75 100\nEdmonton   \"v.. _ . Wgji 68 98\nPortland    \u00ab... -...-..-.     62 86\nSeattle     .._.     60 80\nVancouver    -. \u2014 .-.. Ln    58 70\nBarkerville   -. . _. _.     50 78\nEstevan   \u2014..-..._._.     64 6,2\nPenticton    \u201e._.    60 95\nGrand   Forks   . \u201e . \u00ab.     60 109\nKaslo  .^..v.     63 94\nNew  Hazelton  \u2022.\u201e. \u00bb\u00b1-,    48 70\nPrince Albert ,v-.\u00ab.    58 SO\n8m  E'EaSCiSQCj  wj^tf   M H\n faaeaasUk\n\u00a35735\n^i:mm\nfage iVo\nTHE NELSON DAjLx NEwS, THURSDAY MOBNING, JULY S, 1924\nI\nI Leading Hotels of the West\nWhen Smpetiot Accommodation May B* Obtsmei\n\u00ab<\u2022\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN .RATES  $3.50 to  $5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters  for   all  Travelling  Men,   Mining  Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $1.00\nTHE   MOST   COMFORTABLE   ROTUNDA   IN   THE   CITY.\n,' HUME\u2014Miss Thompson, Spokane';\nH. H< Johnston, Rossland; Mr. and\nMrs. C.' C. Levan, Portland; R. J\nJohnson, Slocan City; Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas  McNeish,   Slocan   City;   W.  A.\nGreen, San Francisco EH&P. Campbell,\nW. W. Powell, city; Mrs. G\u00a3 a.-\nft'cheay, High River; A. B. Thompson,\nVancouver; B. T. O'Grady, Revelstoke; J. P. Coates, Edgewood; Lee\nSam,   Calgary.\nHotel Strathcona\nUnder New Management\nW\u00a3::     When in Nelson, Try the Strathcona.\nSatisfaction  Guaranteed.\nBright, Light Sample Rooms on the Ground Floor\nffpt for Commercial Men.\nROOMS FROM $1.00 PER DAY UP.\nQueen's Hotel\n.   . -Steam Heated Throughout.\nIll   center   of   business   district.\n.' Mining, Lumber, Traveling Men\nand  Family  trade  invited.\nA* Lapointe,\nI\nManager.\nQUEENS\u2014C. Jansberg, Slocan City;\nMrs. J. Trinca, Saaidon; William T.i\n\u25a0Nlion, Bonnington;; P. Bergstrom,\n\u25a0TaHt's Siding; Mr. and Mrs. Cook,\nKitchener; B. Davies and family,\nTrail; D. L. Davies and family, B.\nPort man, Birmingham, England; T.\nJUchaTafc-Cranbrook; C. Saroine, Wasa;\nMr., and Mrs. \u2022^.\u25a0.'\"W. Harms, Renata;\nR.   Manning, . ^Arrowhead.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\n'   T:   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-heated .Rooms  by. the   Day,\n\" Week jar Month. . *-;7fctj\nEvery    Consideration    Shown    to\n.   \u201e     \u2022\u2022?*?!-    Guests.  \u2022   Wijt\nCor, Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson.\n. .r        - ' -\u00bb\nr MkjJbEN\u2014F. L. ' 6'Hears, ' H. T..\n^felDyY^'r. \"CftCicte, Vancouver; J. A.\nMonte'y, 'Revelstoke; Dan- McQualg,;\nClearwater; Mr; and- Mrs. C.r Peter-\n\u2022 son,\u00bb Tank;   John   Dahl. - \u2022\nNEW \u00a3$$> HOTEi.-;\n5,-ffe^ 616    Vernon    St.,    Easts-\n. Only, brick hotel in city. . Steam\n' heated,- hot and- cold i water.\n\"\"European 'a'Ad   American   plans.'_\nNEW GRAND\u2014H. D. Lea,. Slocaci\n\u00bbCijtyT Mr. and Mrs. Fi Taylor, Trail;\n\"B.\" Ba-tSlden, Sa'ndon; 'Mrs. G. E.\n''MeWflliams,' Wesley\" McWUliams, Miss\n-Jfean<*Hincney,r Moose   Jaw;   P.   Andfer-\nland,   Wyn\u00abael;   Mrs.   C.   R.   Foss .and\nchildren,  .$-. , W.    Spooner,    Trail;    W.\nDaugherty,   lone;   G.   Davis,   Trail;   W.\nFirkl^isT   Vancouver.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMr*. Mallette & Son, Proprietors.\nJJTce\/Warm, comfortable rooms at\nreasonable   rates.     Open   day   and\n.' '\u25a0 '        night.\n.Corner.  Hall   and   Vernon   Streets.\nLAKEVIEW \u2014 E.     Malow,     Wiley^s-\nSpur:' Jj.  L.   Carter.\nClassified Ads.\nWfJring  Results\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.   C   TOWNER,   Proprietor.\nThe   home   of 'plenty.\nFifty rocms  of solid  comfort.\nWe   serve   the   best   meals   in\nNelson.     It's   the   cook.\nSHERBROOKE  HOTEL\nNear  C.P.R.   Station.\nRooms at  Reasonable  Rates.\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor.\nTHIRD DAY OF\nB ALLOW SEES\nMADOO SWING\n(Continued  from  Page   One)\ngame which would force all the Smith\nvotes   out' before   they   brought   out\ntheir own full strength.\nOn the surface the situation, when\n^the_convention adjourned tonight, had\nnot reached the stage for final dealing between the leaders. It was\nobvious that the McAdoo strength\nand the Smith strength had reached\nsuch proportions that the contest was\nnot going to be decided in open football play, and it was mere certain\nthan evejr that each side \"had a veto\non the Other. The deadlock, therefore, was becoming tighter.\nSmith   \"Yet   to   Start\"\nThe race for the nomination was\ndescribed by Franklin B. Roosevelt,\nmanager of the Smith candidacy,\nwhen the convention adjourned tonight, inthe following statement:\n\"From eur standpoint, only the obvious \"developments have taken place.\nWe have conserved our strength. The\nMcAdoo forces have extended theirs.\nThey have now had 42 chances to\nwin, and have not come nearer than\n40-some votes to a majority. It is\nobvious they cannot obtain the necessary twc-\u00b1hirds, and it is doubtful\nif ever they can obtain a majority.\"\nThe Smith men declared they had\ndeclined to permit any increase in\ntheir total tonight beyond the 320\npoints.\nVyBthen Mr. McAdoo has finished,\"\nMr. Roosevelt told his assisWnt floor\nleaders,  \"then we will have our run,\nBUY IN NELSON\n,WE   Expect   a   Profit\nON   Everything   We   Sell,\nAND   Do   Not   Profess   to\nGIVE  Tou  \"Something for Next\nTO Nothing,\" but Values Always,\nIN   Men's   and   Boys'   Wear.\nCommunity\nGrocery\n10 Sacks Old Potatoes\nVery Fine Quality\nTo   Clear   at   $2.50  a   Sack '\nDelivered. \u2022\nEverything    for    Picnic    or    Outing.\nPrices    and    Quality   Right.\nStanley Horswill - Phone 245\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n\u2014-*,\n715   Vernon   Street   East.\nSteam    heated.      Hot   and   cold\nwater.'\nWe  are   here  to   serve  you.\"\n' M   ,      P.  H.  BUSH,  Prop.\nSummer Resorts\n^WrfERE THE FISHING  IS GOOD\n3   OUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER,   B.C.\nrishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Oolf\nTennis    Courts.\nFishing   Tackle   supplied.     Grocery\nStore   in   Connection.\nW.  A.   WARD\/' Proprietor, i\nDay, $3; Week, $17 to $19.    Special\nMonthly  Bates.\nK(\u00a3fc-A-NEE\nKOOTENAY'S\nFLOATING   HOTEL\nand\nSUMMER   CAMP\nDeanshaven,   B.C.\nDining   Room    Open'  to    Non-\nResiclents.\nRates $2.50 a day up.    Write for\nparticulars.'\nBUT ADVERTISED GOODS\nDress, Eat, Live Better\nNelson's Best Cafes\nPhone 571\nS13 Baker St.\nTHE GRILL\nTHE PLACE TO EAT\nJ\u00abM Sanders, Prop.     Nelson, B.C.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic  Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevails\n7OPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nLuncheon,  11:30 to 2   Mi\nSpecial Dinners, 5:30 to 8  ..'.. Slo\nW* Specialize in Chop Suey\nv and Noodles\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n\u202220    Baker    Street,    Nelsen,    B.C.\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch  .. We\n1:80 to 8:00 p.m., Supper .... ISe\nPhone  154\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, fur-\nnlshed rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe cater' to private parties.\nELECTRIC CAFE\n807 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nOpen Day and Night\nExcellent Meals, Quick Service.\nEverything cooked by electricity.\nLuncheon; 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 85c\nSupper, 5:00 p.m. to 8 p.m., 85c.\nSpfcial Sunday Turkey Dinner, 60o\nplate. Phone   450.\nbut the time is not opportune yet for\nany demonstration of full balloting\npower.\"\nRuling    Under   Bryan   Attack\nStill reeling under the effects of the\nbombardment and counter-attack\nwhich swept the Democratic national\nconvention late this afternoon, when\nWilliam Jennings Bryan took the\nplatform for William McAdoo, the\nconvention assembled at 8 o'clock tonight  for the  thirty-ninth  ballot.\nThe effect of Bryan's \u00bbove, and the\nstorm which accompanied it, was the\nsole topic of discussion among the\nleaders when the convention assembled. Who had been benefited, and\nwho had been hurt, were the questions. There was agreement on all\nsides that if anything had been necessary to solidify the Smith people\nit was Bryan's reference to the necessity for a candidate whose position\nwas right  '.'on the liquor, question.\"\nSenator Walsh o? Montana, a declared supporter of McAdoo, had\ngiven way in the chair for the night\nsession to Senator Walsh of Massachusetts, a declared supporter of\nSmith, so Khat the way may be\ncleared of any embarrassments for\nclearing the galleries of Smith rooters\nif they became unruly. Slowly the\nrecord of ballots was climbing toward\nthe records made at Baltimore, and\nSan Francisco, where it took 4\u00ab and\n44,  respectively,  to  find a nominee.\nThe thirty-ninth ballot was as follows: McAdoo 499\/ \u25a0 Smith 320%.,\nDavis of West \"Virginia 71, Underwood 38%, Cox 55, Glass 25, Ralston\n32, Robinson 23, Ritchie 18%, Davis\nof Kansas 3, Walsh 1, Saulsbury 6,\nOwens 4, Jackson 1. Not voting, %.\nTotal, 1097%. McAdoo gained 55,\nSmith lost half a vote, and Davis of\nWest  Virginia  lost  35.\nMcAdoo   Passes   Five   Hundred\nOn the fortieth ballot they stood:\nMcAdoo f05%, Smith 317%, Davis of\nWest Virginia 70%, Underwood 39%,\nCox 55, Glass 24, Ralston 31, Robinson 24, Ritchie 17, Davis of Kansas\n3, Saulsbury 6, Owen 4. Absent, %.\nTotal,   1097%.\nThe passing of the 500-mark for\nMcAdoo was attained in a great drive\ntoward getting a majority, with rumors of a fight on the two-thirds\nrule in the offing.\nMissouri and Oklahoma had been\ninduced to come to the McAdoo column for a few ballots at least, to\nsee what McAdoo floor managers\ncould do with the advantage of their\nmoral support. There was quite a\nhowling contest between the Smith\npeople in the galleries and the McAdoo  people on  the floor.\nThe forty-first ballot resulted:\nMcAdoo, 504 9-10; Smith, 317 6-10;\nDavis of West Virginia, 70; Underwood, 39%; Cox, 55; Glass, 24; Ralston, 30; Robinson, 3,4; Ritchie, 17%;\nDavis, Kansas, 3; Saulsbury, 6; Owen, 4; Cummings, 1; Spellacy, 1;\nnot  voting   %.   Total   1097%.\nOn the forty-second the standing\nwas: McAdoo, 504 4-10; Smith,\n318 6-10; Davis, West Virginia, 67;\nUnderwood, 39%; Cox, 55; Glass,\n28%; Ralston, 30; Robinson, 24;\nRitchie, 17 %; . Davis, ' Kansas, 3;\nSaulsbury, 6; Owen, 4; Spellacy, 1;\nnot voting  %;;rtOti\u00a3jpl097%.\nTHREE T\n(\u25a0Continued from Page One)\ncommittee the right to investigate anl\nstudy the question.\nUnless some steps were taken to\nprovide' a board which could consult\nin all food will with the government\nand tlte bankers on the best way to\nadminister the national banks, Canada\nwould be faced within 10 years with\na very  regrettable  situation.\nH. E. Spencer, Progressive, Battle\nRiver,   supported   the   motion.\nMacLean  for Government System\nW. F. MacLean, Conservative, South\nYork said he would like to se\u00a7 the\nbanks prosper, but they must not\nlose sight of the fact that the underlying principle should be the credit\nof the nation before anything else.\nHe stated that banking In a number\nof other countries had evolved into a\nfunction' of the state, and suggested\nthat at some future date it might\nbe necessary to apply to Canadian\nbanks a somewhat sttnilar process as\nthat which resulted In the formation\nof the Canadian National railway system.\nCanada should create a national\ntreasury with gold reserves and note\nissu.es under an expert controller.\nMr. MacLiean predicted further\nmergers of Canadian banks In the\nfuture. He believed the time had\ncome to consider seriously the regulation   of   the   bank$ig   system.\nG. G. Coote, Progressive, MacDeod,\nsupported the report. Mr. Coote\nthought the government should issue\nnotes at various points in the Dominion which would be available for\nbusiness. This could be done through\nthe medium of a central bank. He\nalso said that the logical way of safeguarding depositors was to improve\nthe facilities of the post office savings  bank.\nHe advocated the establishment of a\npermanent board for the administration  of  the  Finance  act.\n -w  \u25a0 \u25a0  .\nSASKATOON, Sask., July 2.\u2014Andre\nLyons, North Battlejford, died here\nthis afternoon as the result of injuries received in an automobile accident Tuesday.\nEarl of Derby Says' They\nHave Grown up; Time\nto Cooperate\nSEEK AN EMPIRE\nSELF-CONTAINED\nThomas Will Invite Oppositions as Well as Govern-\nii&l   ments in Future\nLONDON, July 2 (By Canadian\nPress Cable).\u2014The Earl of Derby\npresided at a banquet here tonight\ngiven in connection with the con-\npress of the Empire Chambers of\nCommerce. Many men distinguished\nin political life were present, including many representatives from\nthe   overseas   dominions.\nThe Earl of Derby, in proposing\nthe health of the British ministers,\ndeeply regretted the relations in which\nthe dominions were involved in homeland political controversy.. Empire affairs should be taken out of these\nrealms,   he   said.\n\"We have reached a critical stage\nin our history,\" he declared. \"Our\nrelations with the dominions are being\ncompared with the relations of 'a\nfather and his children. The latter,\n\u25a0when young, have been reprimanded,\nsometimes smacked; but the time\ncomes when they can be no longer\nreprimanded but only advised.\" He\nsaid that moment had now arrived.\nThe father who made his son his\ngreatest friend and the son who made\nthe greatest pals of his parents were\nmost likely to secure the greatest\ncooperation and success. These were\nthe relations he desired to see with\nthe dominions. \"We must let our\nchildren lead their own lives, carving out their own futures; but advice could be given.\"\nShould Conform, in Policy\nThe dominions, continued Lord\nDerby, were great growing children\nwhose policies ought to conform with\nthat   of   a   united   family.\nBritain, for the moment, had decided to be a free trade country; but\nhe felt sure that where, for purposes\nof revenue, any duty was imposed, it\nwas the duty of the mother country\nand the dominions to give preference\nto their own' kith and kin. It should\nbe remembered the Empire could be\na self-contained nation, and everything\nshould  be   done  to   facilitate   th&t  end.\nLord Derby regretted that the Imperial conference resolutions had not\nbeen ratified because ratification\nwould have been a graceful and grateful recognition of what the dominions\nhad been doing for the motherland i\nHe feared the nonratification might\ndestroy confidence. He was convinced\nthat the Empire to which he. was\nproud to belong had a great future,\nbut foresight and tact was required\nin   developing   it.\nJ. H. Thomas, colonial secretary, in\nreplying, said that a majority of those\nthroughout the Empire who had attended the last Imperial conference\nwere already out of office but still\ninterested   in   Empire   affairs.\nThe clear definite moral to be\ndrawn was that in questions so vital\nand far-reaching the time had arrived when no party should be known\nin public affairs. He was going to\ntake the risk in future of inviting\nto Imperial conferences not only members of the governments of the day\nbut leaders of responsible oppositions, thus insuring a continuity of\npolicy.\nThe government was taking the\nnecessary steps and exploring the\nwhole situation with a view of avoiding difficulties in the future. \u25a0\nHome for Positive Policy\nSir Robert Home, Conservative,\niGlaSgow, said that if the suggestions\nof the dominions were to be rejected\nsomething positive must be put in\ntheir place. It was impossible to go\non drifting and leave the dominions\nto- the cajolery  of  outside  nations.\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nDemocrats   Deadlocked\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014The Democratic convention is still deadlocked\nthis afternoon on the presidential\ncandidate. The leaders were McAdoo, 439;   Smith, 323, and Davis, 107.\nEpinard   Shipped  to  States\n' PARIS, July 2.\u2014Epinard, the great\nFrench race horse, is shipped to the\nUnited States for a series of races\nthere.\nReparation    for    Actual    Damage\nPARIS, - iTuly    2.\u2014Premier    Herriot\nannounces   that   France   merely   asks\nnew for reparations for war damage.\nEarly   European   .Cannibals\nTOULOUSE,  July 2.\u2014Human bones\n6000   years   old,' found   here,   indicate\ncannibalism- existed at that time.\nMethodists  to   Come   Together\nCHATTANOOGA, July 2.\u2014A merger\nof :7,000,000 north and south Methodists is to be consummated at the\nconference   now   in   session   here.\nBritish   Plane   at   Foo   Chow\nFOO ' CHOW, July 2.\u2014The British\nworld  fliers  arrive  here.\n-  Post Office Approaches Normal\nTORONTO, July 2.\u2014The post office\nis practically back to normal today,\nwith temporary helpers resigning\nsteadily.\nMeans and  Secretary to  Do Time\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Gaston B.\nMeans, the former justice department\nIF\nWednesday\nSpecials\nTHE LIGHT FROCK\u2014Cool and bright, in Voiles,\nCrepes, Ratines, Sport Flannels,  etc.\nPrices  $5.50 and Up\nUNDERWEAR\u2014Knitted,   Silks   and   Dimity.     Full\nlines.    Very reasonable.\nVests or Bloomers, 3 for $1.00\nHOSIERY\u2014Lisle and Silk. The best makes. Children's Silk Lisle, short and medium length. All\nshades.    These are beautiful ranges.\nSUITS for Summer and Early Fall. Finest tailored\nmodels and novelty styles, at prices so low that\nyou will not refuse them.    Call and see.\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES'  WEAR SPECIALISTS\nagent, and E. W. Jarnecke, his secretary, are sent to the penitentiary\nfor two years and fined heavily, for\nviolation of the national prohibition\nlaw.\nHumiliation   Day  a   Failure\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014The \"humiliation\" day staged by the Dominion\nChinese as a protest against the new\nCanadian immigration law was gen-,\nerally a failure.\nMercury Goes to\nHundred and Nine\nat Grand Forks\nHertzog Says Britain   Is Chief Friend\nPRETORIA, July 2.\u2014Premier Hertzog announces South Africa's first\nand chief friend Will1 always be Britain, and his Nationalist government\nwill cooperate with the Empire where\nthe interests of the union permit.\nbig lumberman\nMdies in east\nDaniel Sprague of Vancou-\n' ver Was Formally Prominent in Winnipeg,\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014Daniel E.\nSprague, prominent lumberman of\nwestern Canada, formerly of Winnipeg, and of recent years residing in\n\"Vancouver, B.C., died of pneumonia\nyesterday after a brief illness in a\nlocal hospital. He was in the east\non business. Funeral arrangements\nare held up pending instructions\nfrom his son, Harold, of \"Vancouver.\nHe was prominent in Conservative\ncircles in western Canada.\nMr. Sprague, who was born at\nKeswick, ~$&flt bounty, N. B., 7 6\nyears ago, and went west in 1872,\nsettling in Winnipeg, where he established one of the largest lumber\nplants in western Canada. He retired in 1916, served overseas with\na western infantry battalion, and\nduring the past few years he spent\nmost of his time on the Pacific\ncoast. Mrs. Sprague, the widow, is\nat present in Los Angeles.\n -^\nINTERMEDIATES\nHERE SATURDAY\nTrail Nine to Meet Nelson\nPlayers on Local  \\\nDiamond\nTrail's intermediate ball team will\nperform in this city Saturday afternoon net in a return game with the\nlocal intermediate nine which visited\nTrail   some   time  ago.\nLocal intermediate players have been\npracticing faithfully and expect to\nbring in a victory. The local lineup   will   be   somewhat   strengthened.\nAccording to a Trail report the last\ngame in Trail was one of the best\ngames for some time and. both teams\nplayed good ball, the Nelson boys\n.being termed as gentlemen both on\nand  off the  field.\nGets Back Money\nPaid for Title\nThat Didn't Come\nLONDON, July 2.\u2014 (Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014The jury hearing\nthe suit of Col. George Parking-\nton, a Blackpool contractor, for\n<>he return of money alleged to\nhave been paid to an organiza-\nation known as the College of\nAmbulance, on the understanding\nthat he would he awardede a\ntitle, today delivered a verdict in\nfavor of the plaintive for \u00a33000,\nthe full amount  of the  claim.\n _\u00bb-\t\nDo your noble acts today and your\nmeans ones tomorrow.\nm\nTHE   GVMPS-SWEET\nT OMORROW\nRX4l&b&'\nSOME 0? \"SHE reSS\\M\\STS WHO THuHVC.'AVL.\n\\N\\VV CU&HGS   TH<\u00a3\\R JVttrVbS  \/Vmft.    I\n\/ F.N\u00abH   \"\\HfcOVvtN<3> V0OR*>S  OV   vv 1ST? OKA To\nHH V0Te^   U  ^E tic,   (pVMp FOU\n1M GOxtafe^O' \"\\>SUVER VT LAKE  ^Ht\nItU   MJVKE  MH \u00a7FG\u00a3CU SHG.SX AN\\> SN&??N\n<\\Nl>  AS   FOU-' OF   A\/VcJCr A>S \"WE VCOCK W^&S -\n\\N0N~r 'fc\u00a3T^. ^o yyvE. soc*c-$oum> Coast\nTrl^   ?I^C\\F\\C-  LET.TMS CA_Vr-A$t-tt0r4-E\"k   S?\u00a3tU\n&rVb^2S   GIVE *TV4E   ?EQPVt 6\u20ac0afc*?HH \\-ESS0MS-\n\\ AK A^KVN(b FOR A  sioB  FfcOK ^THE <a^EW\nAME.R^C^H ?Ed?tE-    WE   k??l>{ FOR.  YHt\nK>SW\u00bbC*\\   1H   A \\>\\6rA\\V\\E\\>,  SCHOLA^VN MAMN^fc.\nYIV   &PPEAL XO THEAR HEATOr ANb THEIR\nBRAIN  AT   THE SAIvAE,T\\ME-\nNou   CANT MAKE  A o\u00a3ENT  ME'vOVt SDUHt>       \\\n600X>   ON  (K %UK OttOAVA-   \\'U,   JU^T   TAKE A.\n|P   THROAT ^AELETS   SO THE WOR^   vo\\u,\nf>Kl?  FROtA  MM  LWS   lOMOR^DVU   AS SWEET AS\nME\\TEX> HOWES-   l\\L BET   at MAKE  M>\/\nr\\Ot>\\EHCE SWM UKE A Fl_OCtf OF\nVAthA TREE'S- \"THE RECEPTOR   1\nGET WHEN \\ STEV ON THE KOSYROKAl\nW\\a BE FOR ?\\ST PERFORMANCE\n^B\\rr the xerrvevc ovation a\\_\nGET WHEN \\  FVN\\SH\nM ORAXORICM EFFORT\/\nVOHX BE A RECENT\nGrand Forks experienced a maximum temperature of 109 degrees yesterday, the highest of any point reported by the meteorological service.\nVernon's maximum was 101, and that\nof both Cranbrcok and Kamloops 100.\nNelson came next, with a maximum\nof 97, and a minimum of 53. Pentic-\nton   registered   95,  and   Kaslo  94.\nThat  Alberta,  in  the northern  part\nof the  province at  least,   is  sufferinf\nfrom.a hot wave, is shown by yester\nday's      temperature      in      Edmontoi\nwhich   was   98.\nSpokane had 102 degrees on Tue\nday, while other \"inland empir\npoints  went  higher  still.\nA telephone message from Cast\ngar yesterday noon said the um\nficial  temperature  there was  106.\nA stump speech isn't necessarily\nshort one.\nAnswering\nQuestions'\nWe are printing a little serie:\nof these announcements deal\ning with the purity, richnes\nand natural flavor of Pacifi\nMilk.\nSo many letters ask why. Othei\nwant to know what we do 1\nfresh milk to make it so rici\nSome want to know how we g<\nthe natural flavor, a\nAnswering the last one first, -w\ndon't get the flavor. Wa onl\nkeep the flavor nature gives t\npure,  rich\" milk.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nFactories   at   Ladner   and\nAbbotsford,   B.C.\nGet Rid Of Irritations\nBy Using Cuticura\nBathe freely with Cuticura Soap and\nhot water to cleanse and purify. Dry\nlightly and apply Cuticura Ointment to\nsoothe and heal. Nothing better for all\neczemas,, rashes, pimples, itchings and\nirritations. Cuticura Talcum also is ideal\nfor the skin.\nSimple Each Fret by Mall. Address Canadian\nDepot: \"Cuticura, P. 0. Box 2618, Montreal.\"\nPrice. Soap25c. Ointment26and50c. Talcum25c.\n^$3i\u00a3\"* Try our new Shaving Stick.\n^liilbfAN\nWeek-Ent\nft Fares -\nNelson to       f'.-\nProcter-Balfour\nCOMMENCING    MAY    15\nDATES    OF    SALE\u2014Saturdays    am\nSundays.\nRETURN   LIMIT\u2014On or before Mon\nday   following,   except   when   Mon\nday  is  Public  Holiday tickets goo<\nto  return  Tuesday. sCmI\nFARE   $1.25\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A. i\nNalson\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 3,1924\n| :Page- Three ~^i\nMOVIE MAD\nBy HAZEL DEYO BATCHTCLOR\nCopyright, 1924, by Public Ledger Company.\nGloria King comes to Hollywood\n\"with the idea of making good in\nthe movies. She becomes hardened\nby the life, and marries, Rolf Tem-\nl-'Mttton, the great screen star, a man\nshe desplftes, but one who can\nfurther her career.\/ Later she\nleaves him, and it is then that\n, she. makes good through talent\n\/alone. By this time, however, she\nhas become spoiled and plunges\ninto a life of false gayety. Just\nas she makes plans for regaining\nher freedom, Rolf is seized with\npneumonia. In his delirium he\nraves- of his love for her, and\nGloria searching her heart, discovers that she, too, cares. The\ncrisis passed, however, Rolf remembers nothing of what he has\nsaid, and Gloria returns to her\nown bungalow without letting him\nknow that she has been with him\nduring his illness. Vera Vamp,\nbelieving that things are breaking:\nup between Rolf and Gloria, decides to try to vamp him for herself.\nCHAPTER   XLIX.\nV'era's Mistake\nA   LONE with Rolf after the others\n\u00b1\\.\nhad gone, Vera drifted over to a\nseat nearer him. He watched her\nlazily as she fitted a cigarette into a\nlong holder, and then leaned forward\nto light it for her, but she was too'\nquick  for him.\n\"Oh, no, Rolf, you are not to do\nanything like that\u2014yet. We must\nspoil you for a while until you're\nreally yourself.\"\n\"I'mygettlftg tired of being spoiled.\nYou have no idea how tyrannical\nevery one is. And the things they\nmake me eat. It's like being on a\nsteamship, and having food six\ntimes a day.\"\nVera inhaled deeply, expelling the\nsmoke  in   a   fragrant   cloud.   \"Gloria\ndoesn't spoil you any too much, does\nshe ?\"\nWatching him closely, she saw his\nlips    tighten,    and    she    hurried    on\nwithout  giving  him  time   to   answer.\n\"Everyone   thinks   Gloria   has   behaved disgracefully. The truth of the\nmatter   is,   she's   spoiled,   she   thinks\nit no one but herself. Why isn't she\nlere   with   you?   Why   did   she   rush\nlome just as soon as you had passed\nhe   crisis?   It   certainly   looks   as   if\nhe  only  came  in  the  first  place  so\nas.to keep people from talking.\"\n:JiU\u00bblf sat up suddenly. \"What was\nthat you said?\" His voice was sharp.\n\"What do you mean about Gloria's\nleaving   as   soon   as   the   crisis   was\npast?   Do   you   mean   she   was   here\nduring   my  illness,\"\n\"Why, yes.\" Vera answered before\nshe had had time to think, and then\na moment later, she saw her mistake. She had blundered sadly, and\nyet how absurd to think that hi\ndidn't know. How had it happened,\nand why hadn't she been more careful?\n\"Gloria was here, actually here In\nthis   house?\"\n\"Yes, of course, hut surely you\nmust have known.\" Vera's voice was\nsullen. She had no idea how to extricate herself from this difficult\nposition, and there was something\nabout Rolf's attitude that puzzled\nher. Could It be that he cared for\nGloria? Was that it? Rolf, the cynical Rolf, who could have any woman he wanted, romantically in love\nwith a woman who cared nothing\nfor him! The idea was ridiculous.\n\"I didn't know.\" Rolf was speaking\nquickly. \"But why wasn't I told-?JSfl\nwas the fever, of course, and the fact\nthat I was delirious most of the tiitt\u00ab?.->\nBut why didn't Townsend say something about It? I can't understand it\nat all.\"\n\"But the fact remains that she left\nas soon as she decently could,\" in-;\nterposed Vera. \"Good heavens, Rolf,\nWhere's your pride, Gloria's cold and\nselfish. She thinks of nothing but\nherself, she hasn't it in her to care\nfor any one.\" Vera's slim white fingers wefe on Rolf's arm, her warm\nvivid face was close to his. She was\ntrying desperately to regain the\nground she had lost, but Rolf\nseemed entirely unaware of her propinquity.\n\"Gloria was here.\" He kept repeating under his breath. \"Then I didn't\ndream it after all. She was here,\nshe  held   my  hand,   she  kissed   me.\"\nThe words were not spoken audibly. Vera could hear only a confused\nmumbling, and her grasp of his arm\ntightened.\n\"Rolf, what are you saying?\" Her\nvoice had a petulant note. It irritated her to feel him so far away from\nher. And then suddenly the scene\nwas interrupted by the cool, serene\nvoice of Miss Mitchell. Vera started\nand drew back as the nurse approached.\n\"Mr. Templeton, I'm afraid you\nmust come in now. It's getting damp\nout here, and you must have your\nsupper. I'm sorry,\" she said turning\nto Vera. \"But you see, Mr. Temple-\nton is. still somewhat of an invalid.\nHe isn't strong enough to stand too\nmuch   excitement.\"   \u2022\nCITY WAT\nSUPPLY DROP\nCOOPL\nNelson Water Users Asked\nto Conserve Supply by\nEliminating All Waste\nSprinklers running fujjj. force and\nhoses playing, in addition to taps,\nlowered the level of the water in the\nreservoir two feet on Dominion\nday, and none of this depletion was\nmade up during the night following,\nin spite of the fact that both the\nCottonwood and Anderson creek intakes are taking in all the water\ntheir  capacity*- permits.\nWhile no report was available\non the further depletion that must\nhave occurred yesterday, it must\nhave been considerable.\n\"This points to enormous waste\nof water somewhere,\" said Alderman\nRoss Fleming, chairman of the fire,\nwater and light committee last night,\nin giving the foregoing facts, \"It\nmeans that sprinklers, hoses, and\ntaps were going all night. Normally,\nthe depletion from the extra demand\nmade by a hot day is made up during the night.\n\"We appeal to the citizens to stop\nIthjSv inordinate waste,'$voluntarily.\nThe serious position the town would\nbe in. t&. a fire occurred, with the\nwater supply depleted, can easily\nbe   realized.\n\"If the citizens do not respond to\nthis appeal immediately by effectively conserving water, the step of\nclapping on restrictions will have\nto be taken.\"\nCrawfotd Bay Pupils\nObtain Certificates\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C., July 2.\u2014\nCrawford Bay school awards and promotions   are   as   follows.\nRoll of honor\u2014Proficiency, Lorna\nLytle; deportment, Beatrice Adams,^\nregularity and s, punctuality, Olive\nAdams.\nPromotions, in order of merit\u2014.\nGrade 7 to Grade 8, Lorna Lytle,\nEvelyn Mooney; Grade 5 to Grade 6,\nArthur Fox, Olive Adams; Grade 4\nto Grade 5, Beatrice Adams, Dorothy\nFox, RobertVMear, Evelyn Jacobson,\nJean McGregor; Grade 3 to Grade 4,\nAlvin Mooney, Doreen Butler; Grade 2\nto Grade 3, Ursula Dale, Jstck King,\nMarjorle Mear, Viccor Jacobson;\nGrade 1 to Grade 2, Amy Mear,\nPhylis Deverson, Eileen Butler; beginners to Grade 1, George Richard-,\nson,   Ruth   Adams.   ,\nEvery child whose writing was!\nsent to Vancouver from Crawford\nBay was successful in obtaining the\nMacLean Writing certificate, ' their\nnames being Olive Adams, Beatrice''\nAdams, Gwendoline Freeman, Rolf\nJadobson, \u25a0 Margaret Jacobson, Evelyn\nJaiobson. Lorna Lytle, Robert Mear\nand   Evelyn   Mooney.\nWORK 0\u00a5ERTI\nKamli\nBranch Reported^\nFour Are Rejected\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014The last of\nCanadian National branch lines was\ndisposed of by the senate railway\ncommittee tonight, when the Kam-\nloops-Kelowna  branch  was  reported.\nIn all, 22 of the 26 branch lines\nhave been approved by the senate\ncommittee, and four have been rejected. The four rejected are the\nGuysboro-Sunnybra line, the Rousseau line, in Quebec, and the Kelving-\nton and Melfort branchesValn Saskatchewan.\nMAN AND HOR!\nDIEATRlDEO\nPUPILS PICNIC AT\nPRINCESS CREEK\nTomorrow\u2014Miss  Mitchell   Tells   the\nTruth\nTWO CHINESE\nlARE INJURED\nBroken Leg and Cuts About\nFace Result of Horse\nBolting\nMah Goey, a Chinese gardener who\nhas his plot in Rosemont, was seriously injured, and a young Chinese\nschoolboy also badly cut about (the\nhead, yesterday morning, the result\nof a runaway accident in the upper\npCrtion   of   the   city.\nA horse being'driven by the Chinefeef\nbecame excited and threw the drived\nfrom the wagon i His leg caught in\nthe spokes and was broken badly.\nThe young Chinese was thrown from\nthe wagon, and sustained nasty cuts\nabout    the    head.\nBoth are patients in the Kootenay\nLake   General   hospital.\nYoungtown Has a\nDisastrous Fire;\nHundred Thousand\nCALGARY, July 2.\u2014Fire of unknown origin tonight destroyed three\n\u2022fflpmmercial establishments in Ycungs-\ntown, Alta., northeast of here, causing damage estimated at $100,000, according to information received tonight.\nW. C. Auld's hardware store, C. G.\nFRECKLE-FACE\nSun and Wind   Bring Out Ugly Spots.\nHow  to   Remove   Easily.\nHere's a chance, Miss Freckle-face,\nto try a remedy for freckles with\nthe guarantee of a reliable concern\nthat It will not cost you a penny\nunless it removes the freckles; while\nIf It does give you a clear complexion the expense is trifling.\nSimply get an ounce of Othine\u2014\ndouble strength\u2014from any druggist\nand a few applications should show\nyou hew easy it is to rid yourself\nof the homely freckles and get a\nbeautiful complexion. Rarely is more\nthan one ounce needed for the worst\ncase* 'ZWs:\nBe re to ask the druggist for the\ndou'bit strength Othine, as this\nstrength is sold under guarantee of\nmoney back, if it fails to remove\nfreckles.\nStenhouse, Ltd., 35 St. Francois\nXavier   St.,   Montreal.   Que.\nNelson's gents' furnishings, and\nWylie's drug store were razed by the\nblaze. Hart's general store and the\nRegal Lumber company suffered\nslight damage.\nPRINCESS CREEK, B.C., July 2.\u2014\nMiss Edith Maudesley and her sister,\nHelen, of Princess Creek, were at\nKaslo, and sat for the entrance examinations.\nThe Princess Creek school children\nwith their parents and friends had a\npicnic last Tuesday. Miss Thersa\nRosmund, the teacher, arranged the\naffair..\nShipyard Staff Busy in Order to Get Boat Out for\nRotary Convention\nIn order that the steamer Moyie\nmight be completed by July 18, the\ndate of the big Intercity Rotary convention to be staged here, the crew\nat the Canadian Pacific railway shipyards in Fairview is now working\novertime.\nThe Moyie has been on the ways\nfor some time, and has had considerable work done to her steel frames\nas well as many repairs to the house.\nIn order that a boat may be chartered for the up-the-lake trip, the\nMoyie must be ready to take her run\non July 18. The men are working\nevery night until 6 o'clock, and\nworked all July 1, in crder to get the\nwork   done   as   soon   as   possible.\nThe California railroad commission\nis going into all phases cf telephone\ni service except the most important\u2014\nytiow to  get the number  you  call for.\nMacleod Jubilee Costs Cowboy's    Life;    Famous\nRacer Drops Dead\nMACLEOD, Alta., July 2.\u2014Kicked\nin the head by Death's Head, an outlaw broncho, two minutes after'^h'ei\nhad come whooping out -of the chutes,\nCharlie King, a Lethbridge cowboy,\nwas probably fatally injured at the\nrodeo here this afternoon.\nKing lost h,is balance when the\nhorse sunfished on leaving the chute,\narid although he rode for four jumps\nwith his head practically under the\nhorse's belly, he was finally thrown.\nWhen picked up, blood was literally\npouring out of his ears and mouth,\nand medical men who were rushed to\nthe center field announced that the\nbase of his skull had been fractured.\nCowboys   Get    Burned    Hands\nTwo other cowboys, Walter Armstrong, Calgary, and Tex Dawson of\nMontana, received badly burned hands\nwhen they roped two extra husky-\nlocking calves around the hind legs.\nThe calves started to run after the\ncowboys had dismounted, and the\nlariats burned deep into their hands.\nTen minutes after King had been\n. carried off the field, Roxie, a thoroughbred race horse, dropped dead\nafter finishing second in the Macleod\nJubilee stakes. Roxie was 14 years\nold, and has won thousands of dollars' worth of stake money for his\nIndian owner.\nApplaudingest Woman\nRoots for McAdoo on\nthe Slightest Excuse\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014The\napplaudingest woman in the\nwhole convention is Miss Florence M. West, of Pueblo, Colo:,\na' McAdoo .alternate; Every\ntime McAdoo's name is mentioned in any connection she\nbursts out in wild applause.\nLightning calculators it'today\nfigured that Miss West has\napplauded-her favorite at least\n1000  times.\n\"I don't like the way those\nColorado delegates are voting,\nand I want to -show it,\" she\nsaid.\nCanadians Will\nMeet Americans,\nAfricans, First\nPARIS, July 2.\u2014(Canadian \u2022 Press\nCable.)\u2014Canada's Olympic representatives,   while, returning   from   practice\non an adjoining field today, found\nthemselves locked out of the stadium.\nThey were compelled to climb over a\nbarbed wire fence and scale the structure to the skylight passage leading\n\u2022to the dressing room, in order to get\ntheir clothes.\nThe Canadian relay team will meet\nthe .Americans and Africans- first. As\nonly two runners will qtfaliiy. from\nthis heat, a gruelling contest is expected. The Canadians have been\npracticing faithfully, and are confident  of   victory.\nField gossip affairnis that Canada's\n27 athletes will knock at the door\n.for .points in the 100, 400 and 1000\nmeter events; the walk, relay and\nmarathon.\nYankees  \u00abs  Uosts\nThe members of all Olympic teams\nwere entertained at. luncheon by the\nUnited States Olympic committee today.  . Marshal   Foch   was   present.\nOn Sunday night Great Britain\nwill banquet Canada's .Olympic- team.\nThe' Prince  of  Wales- will' presrae.\n-*\u00bb-\n,SAN FRANCISCO\/ July 2.\u2014The\nfirst westbound night flight air mail,\nwhich had left Mineola, NY.,. 34\nhours, and ,40 minutes earlier, arrived\nat the air mail field here at 5:45-|\no'clock tonight. The-'two planes arrived   5   seconds  apart.\nThis  advertisement  is  not  published   or  displayed  by  the\nLiauor Control Board or the Government of British Columbia.\nOCIALCI\nNV\nProgram Adopted at Toronto Has a Very Wide\nApplication\nTORONTO, July 2.\u2014The international conference on social work of\nwhich W. J. Norton, of Detroit, has\nbeen elected president, concluded its\nsessions here today. International\ncooperation for social welfare, adult\nsocial Ideals underlying case work\nwith relatives, sources of industrial\nfreedom, and the department of\nstate hospitals, were all discussed\ntoday.      *\nAs an outcome of the conference,\nPolish social service has been formed,\nwith Miss tFaiia Lesniak of Catholic\nWelfare, Toronto, as secretary-treas-\nur\u00a7r.\nFollowing a discussion of questions\naffecting labor this morning, a program was adopted which included the\nbuilding up of a political party, participation in the social, industrial,\nand business enterprise of labor,\nparticipation in the . cooperation of\nworkers, and efforts toward greater\ninternational cooperation between\nlabor and producing groups in the\npresent struggle.\nIt was the consensus of opinion\nthat joint activities between labor\nand the social workers should be\nundertaken to get employer and\nemployee to a better understanding,\nand an adjustment that would give\nlabor a living wage and hours and\nother conditions that would trend\nto lift the present disatisfaction of\nthe  masses.\nam\nYANKEE FLIERS\nSEEK UMBALLA\nj LONDON, July 2.\u2014The United.\nI States army around-the-world fliers\nhopped off this morning from Allaha-\nI bad for Umballa, British India, a dis-\nI stance of 550 miles, according to a\nI dispatch   received   here.\nOrder in as large quantities as you can and save\nmoney.\nYou can buy as cheaply in Nelson as anywhere in\nCanada.\nTHEDAILYNEWSJOBDEPT.\n*<t\njt\n'Quality Printers'\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nend coupon today for fl\npackage and make crispness\ntest yourself   J|: \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\"\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0 ;\n1\\yfi11i\/\\rie \u00b0^ women have found in Post Toasties\u2014the\naVI11,IIOHS improved corn flakes\u2014a new breakfast food\ndelight. For' Post Toasties stay crisp in milk or cream.\nHighest quality white corn gives Post Toasties its original\ngoodness. Secret processes bring out all the tempting corn\nflavor. Then our own special toasting makes these the finest\ncorn flakes.\nTest Post Toasties Crispness\nat Our Expense\nBy simply filling in and sending us the coupon below, you will receive\na generous test package of Post Toasties free. When it arrives, notice\nthe sealed-tight, wax-wrapped carton as you open it. Shower some of\nthe golden-brown flakes into a bowl, add milk or cream, eat them slowly\u2014critically.\nYou will be delighted with their rich, toasted corn flavor. ', You will\nfind the last spoonful deliciously firm and crisp.\nInsist on genuine Post Toasties, the improved corn flakes which stay\ncrisp in milk or cream.   Your grocer has them.\nhere's\nCANADIAN POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY, LIMITED\nHead Office: Toronto    -    Factory: Windsor\nDOUBLE     f*4\"k4\u00bb\nTHICK       \u25a0%m*%J$W,\n\u25a0HltllWrWMNW\nuwuiiiw\u2014iiiimMiw.'ni \u25a0wMSMmnrjaenre\n ir f\u00bb&ge ^cniFHIf\n*3E\u00a3 jtfSLSON 3MLt tfEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY S, I9g\u00a3\nirrrn ~r ht-irrt\u00bba^a>aaaa*awWa^aMaMBaafcasaaaaaaigBia5a^\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sun-\nflay by The News Publishing company,\nlimited.   Nelson,   B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing company, .limited, and in no oase to Individual  members  of  the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and AB.G.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, dr may be seen at the office\nof any advertising agency .recognized\ntoy the Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION    RATES\nBy mail  (country)  per month  ..$   .60\nPer   year     6 00\nJ*?  \u2122a\u00ab ,Jttlty>   Per  year    13.00\nOutside  Canada,   per  month 7t>\nPer  year     7 50\n.Delivered,   per   week     'ss\n*  Per year  13;00\n     Payable   In   Advance\t\nMwnber   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulation\nTUESDAY,   JULY   3,    1924\nH Preventive, Not Curative\nm There probably is not a man\nin Europe with a right much\nbetter than that of Prof. Albert\nCahnette to speak about tuberculosis, and so high is his au-\n\u2022\u00bbr I that anythin& he says\nwill be taken with respect in\nmedical circles everywhere The\nannouncement by him, therefore, of the discovery or preparation of a new vaccine that\nwill confer immunity from the\nmalady which he has been\nstudying so long must be accepted as important.\n. F*\u00b0\u2122 the information at\nhand, however, this vaccine evidently is not the long-waited\nremedy for tuberculosis, for it\noffers no help to those already\naffected by the scourge in even\nthe slightest degree. As next\nto everybody, if carefully\nenough examined, would show\nevidence of having at some time\nbeen to some degree infected by\nthis most widely and constantly\ndistributed enemy of human-\nKind, the use of the Calmette\nvaccine apparently can be effective only in the case of young\nbabies; and, judging-from the\nexperiments on young calves,\nthe immunity is for only a year,\nand then must be restored by\nanother administration.\n^ It seems unlikely that in families reasonably instructed in\nhygiene the .danger or the fear\nof tuberculosis ever will be sufficiently great to require or\neven to warrant precautionary\ntreatment of that kind. It is\nnatural, therefore, that several\nCanadian specialists, when\nasked for an opinion of Professor Calmette's discovery, while\ncrediting him with much knowledge, confessed their inability\nto see just what practical value\nfor them his vaccine would\nhave. They did not claim that\nthis judgment was final or conclusive, however; and it is not\nto be supposed that the professor, and colleagues best informed as to the nature of his\nwork^S would ascribe to it the\nimportance they do if his vaccine were not of value.\nIts field may be like that of\nthe anti-typhoid serum\u2014excellent for those who, like soldiers\ngoing to war, are sure to be exposed to infection, but needless\nfor those who are in no such\ndanger and can take other precautions.\nJS*# \/ iK^\u00a3%^iii,\niUf^AJCittesR\nCANNING  CORN   BY   THE   INTERMITTENT   METHOD\nTOMORROW'S    MENU\nCoffee\nBreakfast\nPeach   Sauce\n.Cereal\nScrambled Eggs\nToast\nLuncheon\nBaked Beans Catsup\nLettuce, French Dressing\nTea Rolls Jelly\nDinner\nFried Pan Fish\n.Boiled   Potatoes Beets\nCold  Slaw      Berry  Shortcake\nCoffee\nNote to Readers\u2014Any reader of\nthis column who sends me a stamped and self-addressed envelope will\nreceive without charge my two multi-\ngraphed articles oh \"What Every\nPreserve Closet Should Have\" and\n\"Eight Popular Pickles.\" The first\narticle includes recipes for apple\njelly, plum butter, plum conserve,\nraspberry jam, cucumber pickles and\nplcalilli or green tomato relish. The\nsecond article includes recipes for\ndill pickles, mixed pickles, Dixie relish, corn relish, Chili sauce, mustard\npickles, pepper relish and plain cucumber pickles. Please do not use a\nvery small envelope, as these two\narticles comprise three typewriter-size\nsheets of paper, which will not fold\ninto a tiny envelope.\nTo Can Corn\u2014Remove husks and\nsilk from freshly picked corn (choose\ntender, juicy corn which has not yet\nreached the starchy stage) and put\nthe cobs into a cheesecloth bag; lower the bag into boiling water from\none to three minutes (if very young\nears, one minute will do, otherwise\ntwo or three) then remove from\nboiling water and plunge the bag\ninto cold water for an instant, only.\nNow cut corn  from  the  cob  by  first\ncutting just the tips of the kernels\noff, then removing lower part of\nkernels by a second cutting; this\nmethod gives a creamy consistency\nwhich is absent when the kernel\nis cut close to the cob with only one\ncutting.\nHave hot sterilized glass jars ready.\nFill them with the corn to within one\ninefe'of jafe^t'op, add one and one-\nhalf teaspoons of salt and sugar\n(mixed together) them also add boiling water to within one-half inch\nof jar-lop. Slip a wooden paddle, or\na piece of clean bamboo, down InSlde\nthe jaJRrnear the glass, to help the\nboiling water to feet to the bottom\nof the jar and also to remove air\nbubbles, then put on new rubber,\nsterilized glass cap, put up^'top wire\n(do not press down side wire) and\nstand the jar on a wire rack or\ntbjekiy folded cloth in your wash-\nboiler canner in boiling water to\ncover- jar.\nLet water boil around jar for one\nhour, then remove, press down side\nwire, and let stand in ordinary room\ntemperature overnight. Second day\u2014.\nRelease side wire and boil jar in the\ncanner exactly as on first day, removing and completely sealing at end\nof hour, and again letting stand overnight. Third day\u2014Release side wire,\nagain boil the jar one \"hour in canner, but this time label and store\nafter completely sealing and cooling.\nThis method is safer than the one\nperiod  cold  pack method,  for  corn.\nTomorrow\u2014Hints and Recipes From\nReader  Friends.\nAll inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman in charge of \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nin these columns in their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received.\nSo, if a personal or quicker reply is\ndesired, .a stamped and self-addressed\nenvelope must be enclosed with the\nquestion. Be sure to use your full\nname, street number, and the name of\nyour   city   and   province.\nTHE   EDITOR.\nscattered about came from the windshield.\nOnce they went to Paris to see\nwild women; now they go to get\nrid of them.\n o\t\nWell, if Dawes can't make the vice-\npresident's job romantic the case is\nhopeless.\nThe Eighteen Greatest Men\nof Learning and Culture\nWho are the men who have\ngiven the largest measure of\nlearning and culture to the\nworld? You can probably name\ntwo or three off-hand. But\ncould you select 18 such\ngeniuses adorning as many\nfields of human endeavor?\nThis was the large order\nplaced hefore the faculty of the\nUniversity of the State of\nWashington. A magnificent\nnew library, now in process of\nbuilding, is to have the figures\nof the world's greatest men on\nits facade. |Piie faculty chose\nthe following representatives:\n1. Adam Smith, social science.\n2. Beethoven, music.\n3. Dante, poetry.\n4. Darwin, biological science.\n5. Leonardo da Vinci, art.\n6. Benjamin Franklin, public\nservice.\n7. Galileo, physical science.\n8. Goethe, poetry.\n9. Grotius, international law.\n10. Gutenberg, printing.\n11. Heredotus, history.\n12. Homer, poetry.\n13. Justinian, law and adiaan-.,\nistration.\n14. Moses, religion.\n15. Newton,  mathematics and\nphysics.\n16. Pasteur, medical science.\n17. Plato, philosophy.\n18. Shakespeare, drama.\nThe Lighter Side\n\u2014\u2666\nFriends are people who dislike the\nsame people.\n.  H 3\u00a7 seldom that all of the glass\nIt's a matter of poor distribution. The popr immigrant who\ncomes over doesn't get enough\nto eat, and the celebrity gets too\nThe hard part about reading a\nman out of the party is to dfefine the\nparty limits.\nWhen a wife decides to make the\nbest* of it, she becomes domestic; a\nhusBand  hunts  flappers.\nEnforcing    law    obedience    is    not\nmade  difficult  by  general  cussedness\nbut by general apathy.\n 0\t\nDignity is the quality that saves\na man's face after he has argued\nwith a woman  for an hour.\nScience knows everything except\nwhy a demonstration car isn't used\nafter   5000   miles.\n o\t\nIn six days any ordnary woman\nwill dare to go bare-headed and let\nthe  world  know  it's   bobbed.\nCorrect this sentence: \"Yes, sir,\"\nsaid the -.nurse, \"he told the doctor\nabout his symptoms and his wife\ndidn't say a word.\"\nWhatDoYouThink?\nThe Daily News Invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public interest. A nom-de-plume may.\nIf desired, be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\nas a guarantee of good faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief, and\nmust avoid personalities. The\nDaily News does not hold itself,\nIn any way, responsible I for the\nviews of correspondents. Letters\nwhich contain advertising matter,\nor propaganda which Is classed as\nadvertising, will not be accepted\nunder  any   circumstances.\nBoth Canadian and\nEuropean Scum in\nNeed of Attention\nTo  the Editor of The Daily News:\nSir\u2014Will you kindly allow :me\nspace in your valuable paper for\nthe   few   lines   I   will   write?\nSome time ago I saw in The Daily\nNews a criticism written by a gentleman from South Slocan against the\nforeigners. I would have nothing to\nsay against this criticism if \u00abhe\nhadn't used the high-toned words\nsuch    as    \"European    scums.\"\nWell, I think he forgot that his\nancestors came as well from Europe,\nbut that doesn't worry me; only\nwhy don't the foreigners answer these\n\u2022critfoisms? I have been trying to\nsee- If anyone has anything to say,\nrealizing that such a great number\nare of the foreign element and live\nin    this    country.\nI was trying to find the reason\nwhy no one challenged the words,\n\"European scums.\" I saw a lady\nfrom Appledale use biblical words to\n'defend the foreign element but I\nam not satisfied that the English\npeople should defertd the foreigners..\nA loyal foreigner to this and as\na desirable citizen should defend,\nhimself.\nWell, I have tried to find the\nreason and have succeeded In finding   part    of    the    reason.\nOne old man says to me, \"Me\ncan speak nor write no good English.\" Another fellow says, \"Don't\nwant to write to paper because I\nmight lose my job.\" Another one\nsays, \"Oh, me no care; only want to\nmake a few dollars and go back to\nmy  country.f\nIf the South Slocan gentleman\nonly realized that the three western\nprovinces^are settled of 50 per cent '\nof the- foreign element and of different denominations, and- probably their\nbiggest fault is that tftgy do the\nhardest  work   in   the   country!\nIs   it  right  to   drive   the  wedge   be\ntween, the English-speaking people and\nthe foreigners and- drive them from\nthe close association of the Canadian\ninstitutions, or is it not better to try\nand get them in as much as possible closer to the' Canadian institutions,    to   make    one    solid    country?\nIt is true we have . some..European\nscums; it is aso true that we have\nsome Canadian _ scums. It is up to\nthe South Slocan gentleman,\" others\nand myself to clean these scums out\nof the country. It is true this country   needs    to    do    something.\nThanking you for the given valuable | space, ,\nDESIRABLE   CANADIAN.\nNelson,   B.C.,   June   29,   1924.\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL, July 2.\u2014Trading on\nthe stock market today was again\ndull. Canadian Industrial Alcohol\nled ,in activity and closed at 30%,\nex-dividend, down 1. Brazilian came\nsecond in volume and closed at 51%,\ndown %. Detroit Railway gained 2\nto 32 %j Shewin-Williams preferred\nwas   also   up   2   at   102.\nClosing prices: Abitibi, 57%; Brazil,\n51%, Breweries, 51%; Brompton, 30%;\nCement, 87; British Empire Steel\nfirst preferred, 36%; British Empire\nSteel second preferred, 9;- Spanish\npreferred, 112; Spanish common, 105%;\nSmelters, 38%; Montreal Power, 170%;\nQuebec Power, 75%; Textile, 55%;\nSteel  of  Canada,   72.\nToronto Board\nBy its yoke shall ye know it.\nThe midsummer frock, I mean. In\nthis model the yoke is extended to\nproduce a drop shoulder effect in\nplace of sleeves, and, with engaging\nindividuality gives the effect of tying itself into long streamers. This\nis only harmless pretense, however.\nThe narrow scarf ends are. knotted\nin the center and attached to the\nyoke  separately.\nYou will observe how the bodice is\nsoftened by slight gathers at each\nside. Otherwise, the design is entirely plain, being cut on straight lines\nand gathered into the waist by a\nnarrow sash of self-material. The\nnarrow.-frills are pleated, and appear\nonly in the front and at the \"sfSes'\nof the skirt, the back remaining entirely flat. This is a charming idea\nboth for plain and printed silk,\ngeorgette,   and   voile.\n\u2022 TORONTO, July 2.\u2014No unusual activity occurred in any single stock\nor group in today's session on the\nstock market; but there appeared an\nimprovement   in   market  sentiment.\nDairy common came out at 51% and\nmoved to 52, and all offerings were\ntaken at this price, which is a new\nhigh.\nThere was a fairly lively trade in\nCanadian Salt at 112. There was also\nmoderate buying in  Twin City at 49.\n$>-\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From  The Daily News, July  3,1904)\nThere was considerable disappointment among the Kootenay Indians\nassembled in this city to participate\nin the celebration over the fact that\ntheir babies were barred at the baby\nshow held on Friday. The displeasure\nwas of the open-mouthed, defiant\nkind, and in order to prevent ghost\ndances and a possible uprising of the\naborigines,., D. McArthur & Co, generously donated a rubber-tired baby\ncarriage to be donated to the prettiest'\npapoose. Mr. McArthur, however,\nstipulated that T. G. Procter and\nMelville Perry should be~~tHe\" judges,\nand the latter should whesJJh^prjze^\nwinning baby from his store to the\nBank of Montreal and back .again.\nSome 12 little aborigines were ranged\nin rows while the judges searched for\nsigns of beauty among them. It was\nno easy task to find it, but after\nmany consultations it. was decided\nthat Melika, son of Mr. Sit-In-the-\nSun and his devoted spouse, Juanita,\nwere entitled to the baby carriage.\nHe is a moon-faced kid with a nose\nlike a piece of dough. Mr. Perry put\nI the little aborigin into the baby\n! carriage and \"moved proudly down\nj the street, the observed of all observers, and accompanied by the entire delegation of Indians. Many were\nheard to remark as he passed on his\ntriumphant way, \"How much the\nchild resembles his father.\" The Indians are much pleased at the generosity of Donald McArthur and say\nhe is a \"heep good man and a skoo-\nkum chief.\"\n* *   *\nMrs. William Lawrence and Miss\nLawrence of Revelstoke are the guests\nof Mrs. James Lawrence, Silica street.\n* *    * isu$U-<\nMiss   Ida   Tencate,   proprietress   of\nthe Neflson cafe, has been obliged to\nretire from business owing to ill\nhealth, and her place has been taken\nby Mrs. Armitage, who will conduct\nthe   business   in   the   future.\n* *    #\nSome dishonest person broke\nthrough the rear of Emory & Wal-\nley's store on Baker street some time\nduring the night of July 1, or early\nyesterday morning. The thief helped\nhimself to a valuable dressing case,\nsome fine clothing, and nightware,\nand then decamped. The matter is in\nthe hands of the police, who had information as to the culprit last\nevening.\nThis flier who was up in the air\n;for 14 consecutive hours has nothing\non the Democratic convention.\nAinsworth Pupils\nHave Fine Picnic,\nReceive Diplomas\nAINSWORTH, B.C., July 2.\u2014The\nAmsworth school held its annual\npicnic on the school grounds Thursday -afternoon.\u25a0 '\u00a3 There- was quite- --a\nbig gathering io4 parents and friend's;\nof the children, and about 50 sat\ndown   to   supper.-\nGames were played before supper,\nafter which a number of contests were\ntried. The tug-o'-war between ladies'\nteams captained by Mrs. L\u201e W. Ought-\nred 'and Mrs. Thompson caused much\nfun, while the ice cream eating by\nladies and gentlemen was the cause\nof much hilarity. The ladies were\nquitters in the latter, as they would\nnot finish the quantity of ice cream\ngiven to them. The chldren's races\nwere an enjoyable event. Miss Agnes\nAllen, the schoolmistress, arranged the\naffair. \u2022 W. E. Lane assisted with the\nsports. Mrs. Lafe McLellan gave\nthe use of her Kitchen to boil the\nwater, and the ladies of the town\ncontributed the cakes, pies, sandwiches\nand salads which were served at\nsupper,  and  also  served  the  supper.\nSchool closed Friday, when the.\nfollowing promotions were announced\nby the schoolmistress, Miss Allen,\nwho also presented the children with\nthe MacLean writing certificates and\nthe rolls of honor \u25a0 they had gained:\nFrom Grade 6 to Grade 7, Isabel McLellan; from Grade 4 to Grade 5,\nIfabel Oughtred and Billy Lane; from\nGrade 3 to Grade 4, Stanley McLellan and. Wesley Thompson; from\nGrade 1 to Grade 2, William Ought-\nled, Thomas Lane and Margaret\nThompson.\nRolls of honor were awarded as\nfollows: Proficiency, Isabel Ought-\nted; deportment, Isabel McLellan;\nregularity and punctuality, William\nOughtred.\nDiplomas for MacLean method of\nn.uscular handwriting went to Isabel\nMcLellan, Isabel Oughtred, Billy Lane,\nStanley McLellan, Wesley Thompson.\nThomas Lane, William Oughtred and\nMargaret   Thompson.\nB\u00a7 Jmmes W. Bmrtm. MJK\nTo Beat the Heat\n(Registered in accordance with the\nCopyright   act.)\nThere will come days of hot weather\nthat will cause prostrations more or\nless throughout the entire country.\nThe old-fashioned methods of treating these are still good enough. That\nIs, a cool, shady spot with -cold water to head and chest. A little later\nif attack has been severe, enough\nto cause collapse, you give stimulants\nand actually apply heat to the body\nto induce perspiration. But you've\noften read about the natives and\nothers of hot countries who really\nknow   how   to   beat   the   heat.\nThey simply go off to sleep during\nthe hot part of the day and give\ntheir bodies a complete rest. Because\nthe real cause of heat exhaustion is\nthat the intense heat has interfered\nwith wou own heat centers, and has\nactually paralyzed them. The trouble\nis actually due in most cases to the\nfact that you can't get rid of the\nnatural heat of the body, and the.\nnatural waste matter that should\n\u25a0go out of the body by perspiration.\nAnd yet if you work, you manufacture more heat and waste matter.\nIf an electric fan is working near\nyou and you are perspiring well, the\namount of heat and waste matter of\nwhich you rid your body is enormous.\nUnder conditions of this kind, if you\nare in good shape physically you can\nendure a great amount of heat. If\nyour circulation is poor you are in\na run-down condition generally, then\nin very hot weather it would be wise\nfor you to follow the custom of the\npeople of hot countries, and lie down\nin as cool a place as possible during\nthe middle of the day.\nBut the real way to beat the heat\nis to have yourself in good physical\ncondition, with a heart muscle strong\nenough to send the blood around\nthe body, and to the skin with good\nforce.\nThen with the skin kept clean with\na daily bath, and light, loose clothes\nthat allow a good circulation of air\nnext to the skin, you help the evaporation of the heated water from\nyour   body.\nEat light food in small amounts,\n\"tnat IS \"Easily digested, even-if- you\nhave to eat an extra meal a day.\nCut down on your meat and heavy\npastries. Keep out of the sun. Have\nyour .windows protected from the\nsun, and then you can keep some windows open.\nDon't do any more work than is\nabsolutely necessary during the hot\npart of the day.\nAnd another big thing. The best\nrefrigerant for the, body at all times\nis  an   empty  large   intestine.\nS>-\nTen Years Ago\n-3>\n\u00ae\t\n(From The Daily News, July 3,1914)\nA 12-foot dirigible balloon on\nwhich is inscribed the words \"Chacko\nMika, Nelson, B. C, July 13 to 18,\n1914,\" is being used by the Nelson\nVisitors to the Coeur d'Alene regatta\nto advertise the big event. A large\ndeputation of visitors is expected to\nvisit the city from Coeur d'Alene\nduring   Chahko   Mika.\n* *    *\nArchibald Ward Bishop has been\nappointed provincial noxious weed inspector for what is described as the\nKootenay lake and Arrow lake district.\n* *    *\nYesterday in Nelson was the hottest\nday of the year, the merucry rising\nto   91   in   the  shade.\n* *    *\nMrs. R. A. Heyde will leave on the\nCrow boat this morning for Prince\nAlbert, Sask., to visit her father,\nRev. James Isbister, and before returning   will   visit   friends   at   other\npoints.\n* *   *\nC. G. Westhead has been appointed\nagent for Nelson and district for\nthe Vancouver Wood Pipe & Tank\ncompany,  and has  opened  offices  In\nthe   Patenaude   building.      SK '\u25a0<\nW. F. Bryan's watch was lifted during the excitement over the naming\nof Al Smith. Here is one crime in\nconnection with which the Republican\nparty should be able to establish\nan alibi.\nMidi\nMaterial\nLet   us   figure   your   bills   of\nBuilding Material.. Coast Lumber  a  specialty,\nJohn Burns & Son\nFor the reason they save food, and keep everything\ncool and sweet for days.\nPRICES RIGHT\nOnly a Few Left\nWholesale md Retail  Quality Hardtonri\n&WLSON M.O,\n\u00abses\nIt's Different\n\u00b0\u2014}t does not rub off\nor soil the clothes.\nWhite Cleane\nA Substitute Will Disappoint You\nEXPERT   CLEANING\u2014There    is   more  to  the  proper  cleaning of\nyour  clothes  than  removing  the   surface   soil.     WE   CLEAN   them\nthoroughly,   inside   and   out.     Th ey    are    sterilized,    pressed    and\nfinished.      That    is    why    our    service    always    means    quality .i\nPrice   List   and   Information Upon Request.iSjsSIi\nEELIAELE\u2014THAT'S   AEIi\n234-236  12th Ave.  W.,   (Opposite  Public Library)  CALGARY, Alta.\nDelicious Mayonnaise \u2014 made in 3\nminutes with Mazola and at much less\ncost than expensive olive oil!\nAnd for frying and shortening Maxola\ntakes the place of all other cooking\nfats.   A trial will convince you.\n\u25a0   Write for EDITARDSBURG Beclpi Both      .'<E$$jj\nTHE CANADA STARCH CO., Limited \u00a3\nMONTREAL\nPaying a Higher Price\nwon't get you better quality.\nInsist on Blue Ribbon\u2014\nthe best l at   any   price.\nSend 25o. to BHie Ribbon Ltd., Winnipeg,\nlor the Blue Ribbon Cook Book bound fa\nwhite oilcloth\u2014-the best oook book lot\nevery day use in Western homes.\n\\S\nBy Hazel Deyo Batchelor\n|Robbcd of Her\njHPffiood Name::!::|l\nWhat is left for a girl? Should she marry the\nman whose name is linked with hers ? Or mtMf'\nshe face the world and prove her innocence?\nMiriam Folwell had the courage to cry\nat the gossips and to fight for her ultimate\nhappiness. |pp\nRead this latest love-problem serial by\nHazel Deyo Batchelor\nin which is discussed openly and with penetrating insight, the question most vital to all girls\n\u2014the power of a good reputation.\n\"SLANDER\" will begin in\nThe Daily News Shortly\nn\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY S, 1924\nT Page Five\nWhite\nYou will want White Shoes\nfor the Holiday.\nWe can assure you we are\nprepared to supply your\nwants, whether your size be\nlittle  or  big. WM\nStrap   Effects,\nOxford   Effects.\nLeather Soles or   ^\nRubber Heels.\nFOR\nMEN, WOMEN\nCHILDREN.\nPrices to Suit\nEvery    Purse.\nR. ANDREW & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nWillow Pointers\nMake Great Hit\nat South Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, EC, July 2.\u2014The\nWillow Point Amateur Dramatic club\npresented its excellent variety entertainment in the hall recently before\na crowded house. The orchestra,\ncomposed of Mrs. Richardson, A. W.\nIdiens, J. L. Bartindale and R.i W.\nDawson,, gave, a delightful selection\npjf   music.    \u2022', t\ni:( The singing- of Leslie Craufurd, who\nmade his first appearance at South\nSlocan, In his inimitable Scotch character songs, was received with the\ngreatest applause, and he responded\nto repeated encores. Miss ivy Brown\ngave two very pretty numbers in\ncostume, a Spanish dance and song,\n\"Castanello\" and \"My Holiday Gown.\"\nTwo very appealing duets were sung\nby Mrs. jC. W. Tyle* and J. Ir.rBartin-\ndale, \"The China Maid\" and \"A\nLfcsSon in Love,\" which delighted the\ntudience. vVvjv\nThe dramatic number, \"The Col-\naborators,\" by Mr.i and Mrs. Guy\nIreenwood, Was well played. The\nomic sketch, \"Packing Up,\" by Col.\nnd Mrs. A. W. Taylor and their son,'\nlyprlan, made a decided hit.\n\"Between  the  Soup and the Savory\"\nwas another play which caused the\ngreatest merriment when Mrs. Frederic Niven as the cook, Mrs. D. H.\nBaylis as the parlormaid and Mrs.\nEric Dawson as the kltchenmaid\nshowed   their   accomplished   acting..\nSocial Happenin\nIn Nelsonl\nThis column Is being conducted\nby Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news\nof a social nature, including recep-\nions, private entertainments, personal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMrs.   Vigneux.\nParked Car Runs\nOver Embankment\nat Bonnington Falls\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B.C., July 2.\n\u2014A motor car belonging to A. R.\nDefieux which was parked at the\ntennis court for nearly an hour\nThursday, everting from some unknown\ncause started off and tan across the\nmain road, crashing down the mountainside and landing amongst some\nbirch trees, which stopped it from\ngoing over onto the railway, track.\nThe car, which is a six-seater, is\nreported   to   be   a   toal   wreck.\nMrsi W. C!\" Motley, with her children, Phylis and David, has left for\nVancouver for a visit of some weeks\nwith   her  mother,   Mrs.  C.  Horner.\nMrs. ' A. S. Murray and children,\nRobert and Jean, left Thursday evening for a short visit to Grand\nForks. Mrs. J. E. Thompson of\nSouth   Slocan  accompanied  her.\nLast night, at 8 o'clock, at Trinity\nMethodist church, was a pretty scene,\nwhen Miss Evangeline Irwin, only\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. L.\nIrwin of this city, became the bride\nof Harold H. HInitt, youngest son of\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Hinitt of Manchester, England. Miss Lillian McDonald acted as bridesmaid and Floyd\nL. Irwin as best man.. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. H.\nWright. The ushers were Dr. G. A. C.\nWalley, Dr. Roy Maurer, Harry Bolton\nand  William  Brown.\nThe bride, who was given away by-\nher father, was becomingly dressed in\na gown of white crepe-de-chene.\ntrimmed with lace.\\ She carried a'\nshower bouquet of pink and white\ncarnations and wore a veil kept in\nplace by a cororiet of orange blossoms. , The bridesmaid wore a rose\ncanton crepe gown heavily beaded, and;\ncarried a bouquet of pink and white\ncarnations. At the church, which wasi\ndone in elaborate floral decorations,\nMiss Enid Etter sang \"My Prayer\"\nwith much feeling during the signing of the register and Miss Loreen\nDunham played  the  wedding march.\nAfter the ceremony the guests were\nescorted to the bride's home, 804\nCarbonate street, where a delightful\nreception was held. The bride's\nmother assisted in receiving, and\nwore a hetCvily beaded black canton\ncrepe. Mrs. C. W. Tyler sweetly sang\n\"O   Promise  Me.\"\nThe groom's gifts to the bridesmaid-\nf>.nd best man were respectively a\ngold  brooch   and   gold  cuff   links.\nThe happy couple leave this morning by the Crow boat for a honeymoon to be spent in Spokane, Port-:\nland, Seattle, Victoria and Vancouver,\nthe bride traveling in a navy blue;\nsatin-faced crepe, with picture hat to\nmatch a white ermine choker, the\ngift    of     the    groom.i\nThe invited guests were James\nAllen, Percy Amas, Miss Queenie\nAnnable, Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Arne-\nson, Harry Bolton, Mr. and Mrs.\nA H. Boss and family, Mr. and Mrs.i\nThomas Brenilson, William Brown,\nMiss Susie Cain, Mr. and Mrs. L. O.\nCampbell, Miss A. Cant, Miss Florette\nChoquette. Mr. and Mrs.. J. F. Croll,\nMiss Mamie Crolf; Miss Loreen Dunham, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Emory,\nMrs. Etter, Miss Enid Etter, Dr.\nand Mrs. J. GanSner, Mrs.i T. Gibson,\nMrs. A. Goldswith of Kaslo, Miss Elva\nHanna, Miss Muriel Harrop of Harrop,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Higgtnbotharh, Mr.\nand Mrs.- F. Hinitt of England, Mrs.\nW. J. Hinitt of England, Miss Helen\n.Hodgson, Miss Freeda B. Hume, Mr.\nand. Mrs. J. A. Hunter and family,:\nFred Irvine, Mr. and Mrs. J. A.\nIrving, Everett Irwin, Mr.i and Mrs.\nEd     Irwin     and     family     of     Seattle,\nWatson's Semi-Annual Clearance\nAll our White Canvas Footwear is Reduced.\nWe have a very complete assortment.\nIf Id J|\nWomen\n\"HART\" AND \"ASTORIA\" BOOTS\nAND OXFORDS. Regular values\n$9.00 to $12.00. & A   QA\nSale Price tP^r.Ol\/\nMEN'S BOX KIP BLUCHER\u2014Standard   screw.     Will   give   good   wear.\nSale\nPrice\t\nMEN'S ASSORTED WORK BOOTS\u2014\nRegular values from $5.50 to $7.50.\nPrice  5p4.0l\/\n200 PAIRS OF ASSORTED SLIPPERS\n\u2014Black and Brown, in many styles.\nRegular values $5.00. to\n$8.50.    Sale Price \t\n$3.30\n$3.80\n\"HART\" SLIPPERS AND OXFORDS\n\u2014In Black or Brown Kid or Calf.\nRegular $9.00 to $10.50.\nSale Price\t\n$5.80\nP Boys '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nSIZES 1 to 51\/2\n\"LECKIE,\"    \"GREB\"    AND    OTHER\nGOOD  MAKES\u2014In  strong  wearing\nshoes\"? Regular values $5.00 to $6.00.\nSale d\u00bbQ  QA\nPrice Mm - tPO.OV\n'PERTH\" SLIPPERS\u2014In several styles\nand leathers. Broken lines. Regular\nvalues $6.00 to $7.50.\nSale Price\t\n\"GRACIA\"   SLIPPERS\u2014In   Black   or\nBrown; 2-strap.   Regular\n$5.75.    Sale Price \t\n$3.80\nBlack   or\n$2.80\nCjilFlS\nSIZES 11 to 2\nFINE  GOODYEAR-WELTED  DRESS\nSHOES\u2014In   Black   Calf.     Regular\nvalue $4.50.\nSale Price  .\u00ab.\nSIZES 8 to IOV2\nGOOD  SOLID  WEARING  BOX  KIP\nBLUCHERS\u2014 tf\u00bb-|   f\\f\\\nSale Price  $JUi\/U\n$2.25\nMISSES'   (SIZES  11 to 2)   PATENT\nSLIPPERS\u20141-strap, fr*\\ QP\n2-button.   Sale Price .: <P\u00a3\u00bb&D\nMISSES'  BOOTS \u2014 \"Packard\"  and\n\"Eclipse\" makes. \u00bb Goodyear  welted.\nRegular value $5.50.\nSale Price \t\nep\u00a3\u00ab f D\nAll our Children's Shoes are going at just Half Price.\nGet the little ones fitted now and save half.\nWe cannot mention all the different   bargains here, but everything is reduced.\nBuy your shoe needs from this store   now, and make a substantial saving.\nLet Us Do Your Shoe Repairing\nFloyd L. Irwin, Fred Jeffers of\nSpokane, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Kennedy, Mrs. Ed Kerr, Mr. and Mrs.\nLouis Kerr, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kerr,\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. .Lambert, Isaac\nIougheed, Dr. Roy Maurer, Dr. and\nMrs. W. R. Mustard of Ocean Falls,\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Meston of Vancouver, Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Morrison,\nMrs. McCoy, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Miss Gertie McDonald, Miss\nLillian McDonald, Miss Hughella Mc-\nFadyen of Seattle, Miss Frances Mc-\nHardy, Mrs. M. Neelin-, 'iMiss.. Thelma\nNeelin, Miss Helen Quin of Harrop,\nMiss Minetta Simms, G. C. Sholander,\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Smith, Dr. and\nMrs. W.' Steed, Fred Steeves of. Ke-\nlowna, Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Stibbs,\nMiss Edith .-Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.\nD. D. Townsend, Mr. and Mrs. Ci W.\nTyler, Dr. G. A. C. Walley, Mr. and\nMrs. Fred Waters, Mr. and Mrs.i\nFerguson Wilson, Dr. and Mrs. J. -W.\nWoodley of Vancouver, Rev and Mrs.\nJ. H. Wright, Miss Dorothy Wright,\nDr.   Fj   W.   Wright   of   Vancouver.\n* *    *\nMiss Mhora McDonald of the Cen-r\ntral school staff, who has been visiting with friends for the past few\ndays, left last evening via the Kettle\nValley for Cresoent Beach, where she\nwill   spend   the   holidays.\n* *    *\nH. H. Johnston of Rossland spent\nyesterday    in    town.\n* *    *\nMr. and Mrs. J. Leckie of Trail\nspent Tuesday in town enjoying the\nDominion   day  sports.\n* *    *\nMr. and Mrs. F. T. Abel of Kaslo\nreturned to their home Tuesday after\nspending   the   day   in   town.\n* *    *\nMiss M. Balfour of Trail was a\ncity   visitor   Dominion   day.\nr.ffia-T   *    *    \u2022\nMiss Agnes Jerome, 'daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Jerome,\n&12 Victoria street, has arrived in\ntown from Coal Creek, where she\nhas been teaching. She intends leaving this evening for Victoria, where\nshe will attend the British Columbia\nuniversity   summer   school. %J$\n* *    *\nMiss Peggy Cameron, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Cameron, Granite\nroad, \u00bbhas returned from Erie, where\nshe has been teaching, and will\nleave in a day or so for Victoria-\nto attend the summer school at the\nBritish   Columbia   university.\n* *    *\nMrs. J. Potosky, of South Slocan.\nand her daughter, Julia, who attended the Dominion day sports here,\nleft yesterday morning by the Great\nNorthern   for  Spokane.\n* *    *\nMr. and Mrs. A. Willey and family,\nof Bonnington motored to town Tuesday   to   take   in   the   celebration.\n\u00bb    \u2022    *\n. Miss O. V. Abey of the Hume school\n\u2022 teaching staff left by the afternoon\nboat Tuesday for her home in Kaslo,\nwhere she -will visit with her parents,   Mr.   and   Mrs. . E.   T.\u00bbAb\u00bby....\n* *    *\nMiss Edith Wilton, 801 Victoria\nstreet, left yesteiday morning for\nNew Denver to spend her vacation\nwith  Mr.  and Mrs.  W.  Eccles.\n* *    *\nMrs. Frank Martin of Bonnington\nspent   Tuesday   in   the   city.\n* *    *.\nLome J. W. Stewart, soft of Sergt.\nand Mrs... \u201eAJex -Stewart. \u00a3 Xictoria\nstreet, has left for Spokane to spend\nhis holidays with his brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. E. J.\nMcGregor.\n* *    *\nJ. L. Kvistz of New Denver arr\nrived in town yesterday and leaves\nthis morning for New York, where\nhe will sail on the Berenga'ria July\n12  for  Norway.\n* *    *\nMrs: S. H. Brew of Kettle Valley\nand her young daughter, Biss Babs\nBrew, are guests at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. George Johnstone, 912 Kootenay   street.\n* *    *\nMiss B. Hurst of Vancouver Is in\ntown visiting at the home of her\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr, and\nsMrer Thomas \u2022 Hwrst,   Hall-street. ...  .\n* *    *\nMiss Charlotte Douglas, whq has\nbeen teaching at Gray Creek for the\npast term, is spending the holiday\nwith her mother, Mrs. R. L. Douglas.,\n509   Cedar  street.      $ifeti&sh.\u00b1'\n* *    *\nMiss Lillian Hunter, Hall Mines\nroad, returned to town last evening\nafter spending the past school term\nat   Nakusp   teaching.\n* *    *\nA. F. Mahoney, police commissioner\nof San Francisco, accompanied by\nMrsj Mahoney. Miss Rosalie Mahoney\nand A. F. Mahoney Jr., was a city\nvisitor Tuesday. They made the trip\nby   motor.\n* *    *\nF. C. Hanneman, assistant road-\nn aster of the Great Northern railway\nwith headquarters in Spokane, spent\nTuesday    in    town.\n* *    *\nMrs. S. S. Fowler and her daughter were city visitors yesterday and\nreturned to their home by the Kaslo\nboat.i\n* *    \u2666\nMiss G. Sanderson of Macleod is\nin   the   city.\n*    *    *\nM. L. McCormick of Spokane is\nrelieving W. J. Grove in the Great\nNorthern telegraph department here\nMr. Grove will be in Spokane for\nthe  week  or   so.\n* *    *\n- Mrs. B. Angrignon of New Denver\narrived in the city last evening and\nleaves this morning by the Crow boat\nfor New York, She will sail for\nNorway  on  the  Berengaria July \u202212.1*\"'\n* *    *\nMrs. S. J. Dedrick of South Slocan\nspent Tuesday in the city taking in\nthe Dominion day games. She' left\nyesterday morning by the Great\nNorthern   for  a   holiday   in   Spokane.\n* *    *\nMr.   and   Mrs.   R.   Steeper   of   Trail,\nformer   Nelsonites,    spent    Tuesday   in\ntown   guests  at   the   home   of  Mr.i  and\nMrs.   Heddle.\n\\~\\ . \u201e\u25a0    \u2022, ^..Bfc ,wrtb   *    *\u00ab,. *.. ...       s>:..-.   ,  ,.t\nMiss -Violet MeDougal and Miss\nFlorence McPherpon, of Grand Forks,\nwere    city    visitors    TuesdaV..\nAlthough informal the Nelson Rowing club dance which was held at\nMasters' pavilion Tuesday evening w.v\nmost enjoyable. Besides the younger\nset several out-of-town guests were\npresent. R. M. Watson and Leslie\nBedford were the convenors of the\nwhole affair. The hall! \"was attractive in its green and white decoratioti.\nthe club's colors. Re'freshments were\nserved during the evening.\n--OF*!' \u25a0  *     *\nCecil E. Crossiey arid Ralph Young\nleft by the Crow boat yesterday\nmorning for the Le Pas country.\nnorthern   Manitoba.\n' .- *    *    *\nMrs. H. Jenne and son. of Fair-\nview, left yesterday rooming by the\nGreat Northern for a visit to Col-\nville.   Wash.\n* *    *\nMrs. W. B. Martin and her four\nchildren, who have been spending the\nlast two weeks at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs i J. F. Coates. left for their\n.home in Crestdn yesterday morning by\nthe  Crow  boat.\n* *    *\nMiss Charlotte Nicholson, matron\nof the Ymir hospital, Mrs. Andy Burgess, Miss Mayme Burgess, Miss Edna\nBurgess and Matthew Burgess, all of\nYmir. motored to the city Tuesday\nevening.   \u25a0 a#M\u00a7\n* *    *\nHiss Helen Tait of Calgary has arrived in the city to spend a vacation\nwith her pargnts, Mr. and Mrs. John\nTait,  714 Silica street.\n* *    *\nMr. and Mrsi B. Little of Leth-\nbridge, who have been in the city for\nthe past month and guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hooker\nfor the past couple of weeks, left\nby the Crow boat yesterday morning\nfor their home accompanied by Miss\nBessie Hooker, who will enjoy a visit\nwith her uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. E\u201e B. Hooker, al?o of Lethbridge.\n* *    *\nOdin S. Sostad left last night for\nVancouver, where he wHl spend a\nfew .days before leaving on the\nsteamer Princess Louise for Skag-\nway and the Yukon Territory. He\nwill spend a few months with his,\nfather,   arid   on   his   return   will   take\nThis Semi-Annual Clearance Continues to Win\nthe Highest Degree of Public Approval. There\nIs No Letting Up in Value Giving*   For Today We\nOffer\nWomen's\nSAMPLE  DRESSES\nat One-Quarter Off\nTravellers' Sample\nDRESSES, made o f\nVoiles and Ratines, just\narrived today. A range\ni>f new styles, colors and\ntrimmings. All sizes.\nRegular prices from\n$14.00 to $22.50. Sale\nPrices from $11.20 to\n$17.00 each.\nGINGHAM DRESSES\nat $2.95\nPorch or Beach Dresses,\nmade of good imported\nGinghams, in a range of\nstyles. Sizes 36 to 44.\nValues to $5.00. July Sale\nPrice, $2.95.\nJunior DRESSES at $3.95\nLight, Medium and Dark\nVoile Dresses, in several\nstyles. Sizes 15, 17 and 19.\nAlso some Women's sizes,\n36 to 42. Values to $6.50.\nJuly Sale Price, $3.95.\nWomen's SUITS\nat $17.95\nPlain-tailored and Sports\nSUITS, made of Navy Botany Serges' and Mixed Col-\n3rs. Sizes 16 to 38. Values\nto $45.00. Sale Price,\n? 17.95 each.\nWomen's SILK DRESSES\nat $19.95 Each\nOnly twenty of these left, and if your\nsize is here you can secure a bargain.\nThese are made of Canton and Flat\nCrepes, in sizes 16, 18 and 20. Values\nto $40.00. July Sale Price, $19.95\neach. SllS\nChildren's Wear, $1.00\nOne Table of Children's Dresses and\nRompers, in a range of sizes, styles\nand qualities. Values to $2.75. July\nSale Price, $1.00 each.\nCrepe de Chene and\nGeorgette BLOUSES\nat $6,95\nThe greatest Blouse value we\nhave ever offered. Made of\nbest materials in plain-tailored\nand overblouse styles, hardly\nany two alike in the lot. Values to $15.00. Reduced to\n$6.95.\nAll Other Blouses Reduced 20 Per Cent.\nWomen's SUITS at $39.95\nThe best Suits we have ever offered\nat this price. Smartly tailored ^of Poiret\nTwill, some belted, others with plain\nbacks. Also some show novelty Vests.\nCoats lined with Crepe de Chene. Sizes\n16 to 44. Values to $85.00. July Sale\nPrice, $39.95.\nup his studies at the British Columbia\nuniversity.\n*    *    *\n. Miss Hilda Heaton of Penticton is\nthe guest, of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hig-\nginbotham, Victoria street, who are\nestablished at their summer cottage\non   the   north   shore.\nSixty-five Chinese\nRegister in Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 2.\u2014In Rossland 65 Chinese registered under the\nnew Registration act. No Humiliation\nf'ay   was  observea. j&*,?\nTWO HOSTESSES OF\nKASLO ENTERTAIN\nAINSWORTH NOTES\nAINSWORTH, B.C., July 2.\u2014Mr.\nand' Mrs. D. D. F. Strobeck of Los\nAngeles arrived Tuesday night to\nspend   a   few   weeks  here.i\nMr. and Mrs. A. A. Skead of\nKimberley came in on Tuesday's boat\nand are spending a holiday here.\nThey have camped near the school-\nhouse and are enjoying rowing and\nfishing.\nMiss Dorothy Barber of Spokane\narrived last Wednesday evening and\nis the guest of Mrs. L. W. Oughtred.\nHer small nephew, Marsh Hawes, came\nwith  her.\nRev.i M. C. Campbell of Kaslo\nvisited here last Wednesday and\ncalled   on   almost   every   one   in   town.\nGet the\nFor  Your  Family\nKOOTENAY     VALLEY\nMILK   CO-OP.     ifc|\u00ablH\nOpen   8   a.m.   to   12   noon   and\n8   p.m.   to   12   midnight.\nKASLO, B.C., July 2.\u2014Mrs. George\nStott entertained at the tea hour\nlast Wednesday afternoon complimenting Mrs. Armstrong of Spokane and\nMrs.   Drysburg   of   Chicago.\nMrs. J. J. Binns entertained^ at a\ndelightful bridge tea at her home on\nA. avenue, the rooms being prettily\ndecorated with a profusion of sum^\nmer flowersi The honors at bridge'\nwere won by Mrs. W. H. Burgess,\nMrs. J. W. Power receiving the consolation prize. Among the guests invited were Mrs* Monty Davys, Mrs.\nGeorge Stott, Mrs. Kirk, Mrs. Douglas\nBarclay, Mrs.i Allen Anderson, Mrs.-\nW. H. Burgess, Mrs. O. Strathearn.\n-Mrs. Stubbs,- Mrs. H. Giegerich, Mrs\nChester. Mrs. Power, Mrs. Hacking,\nMrs._ George Read. Mrsi- James Anderson \"and   Mrs.   S.   Hunter.\n-j *i*a, .r^ uVu Ci'--i \u00bba u \u00abi u .u.\"ii.*i ^ -'. * il * qv^gsr\n Page Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1924\nSTOCKS SOAR; I\nTHENCHECKED\nAfter,  Score   Make   New\nHighs,   Profit-Taking\nShort Selling Acts\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Profit-taking\nsales, combined with a renewal of\nshort selling in certain sections of\nthe list, temporarily checked the upward movement of prices in today's\nstock market after two dozen issues\nhad  soared to new highs for the year.\nCall money renewed at 2% per\ncent, the highest for nearly a month.\nand then gained slightly to 3 per\ncent; but opinion was divided as to\nwhether the highest rate influenced\nany  appreciable  amount  of  liquidation..\nChief speculative interest again centered in the specialties with the\nWilson Company Issues, S. S. Kresga,\nAmerican Water Works common,\nJulius Kayser and Phillips-Jones recording neT gains of from 3 to 10\npoints. -\nUnited States Steel common after\ntouching a new high at 100% fell\nback to 99%, down %. Baldwin\nclosed % down at 114% and American  Can   lost   %   to   114.\nRalls were mixed. Southern Railway hit a record-breaking high of\n64%; Nickel Plate established a new\nyear's high at 95%, and Louisville &\n.Nashville also sold at best price for\nthe year.\nTime   money  was   unchanged.\nTotal sales,  846,100  snares.\nClosing   Quotations\nHigh      Low    Close\nChino   Copper     ... 18%\nC.M.&St.P      14 13%       13%\nInt.   Marine          8%        8%        8%\nInt.  Nickel     15%      15%      15%\nMis.   Pac     16%      16%      16%\nMis.   Pac.   pfd.    ...     47 46%       46%\nMiami  Copper  ... 21\nRock  Island         30 28%       29%\nStudebaker            36%       35%       35%\nU.S.   Steel     :  1$$%      99%      99%\n 1^\u00bb\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG, July 22.\u2014Receipts today totalled 773 cattle, 200 calves,\n1000  hogs  and   200  sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice, $6 to $6.75; good,\n|5   to   $5.75.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, $5.50 to $6,\ngood,    $4    to   $5.25.\n\u2022Butcher   cows\u2014Choice,    $4   to   $4.\u00a30;\ngood,    $3    to   $3.75.\nBulls\u2014Good,   $2.25   to   $2.75.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice,  $3.25 to $3.75.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3 to $3.25;\n.good,. $2   to   $2.75.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice, $4 to $4.60;\ngood,   $3   to   $3.75.   J\nCalves\u2014Choice, $6 to *$7; good, $4\nto   $5.\nHogs \u2014 Select bacons, $7.97%;\nheavies,   $6.50.\nLambs\u2014Good,   $10   to   $13.\n w\u00bb\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014Egg quotations\nare: .\nMontreal\u2014Jobbing, fresh extras 35c,\nfresh   firsts   30c. ..\nCalgary\u2014Jobbing,  firsts  $7 per  case.\nEdmonton \u2014 Jobbing, extras 30c,\niprsts   27&v\nVancouver\u2014Jobbing, extras 29c to\n30c, firsts  24c to  27c.\nBritish Cables\nLONDON. June 30 (Shillings per 10\ndozen).\u2014Pi;tefis, firmer; English 14 to\n16, Dutch 16 to 18, Danish 14 to 16,\nIrish 13% to 15, Syrian 12, Belgian\n15,   Russian   9%   to  10.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid Asked\nConsolidated     $36.00        $\nCork-Pi*)vince    08 .08%\nDouglass  Channel  .00%\nEldorado     .50\nIndian   Mines    gig ....        . . .25\nInt.  CoalpT,- 1       .t08% .12%\nMcGillivray  Coal 64 .80\nSilver  Crest  Mines   ..       .. .05%\nSurf Inlet  Gold  .45\nSunloch   Mines            . . .28\nTrojan  Oil    04% .05%\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, July 2.\u2014Potatoes and\nbutter  quiefr.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns, 17 %c to\n17%c;   finest  easterns,   16%.c   to   16%c,\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized, 34c; No.\n1   creamery,   33c;   seconds,   32c.\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag, car lots, $1.35\nto   $1.40.i\nEggs\u2014Fresh extras, 35c; fresh\nfirsts,   3 6c.\nM\nt.\noney\nAT WORK\nBrief      but     Important      Lessons     in\nFinance,   Markets,   Stocks,   Bonds   and\nInvestments\nPROVINCE WANTS\nt FIVE MILLION\nHon. John Hart Calls for\nTenders on Three Millions; Rest Shortly\nVICTORIA, July 2.\u2014Tenders on a\nloan ,of $3,000,000 were called today\nby 'Hon! John Hart, minister of\nfinance. Bids will be received up\nto noon next Tuesday. - The new\nloan will be used to pay off out-\n|standing    treasury    certificates.\nThe bonds will bear interest at\n5 per cent. Alternative bids on a\nthree-year, 15-year and 25-year basis\nwill be accepted. The loan will be\nrepayable   in . Canada   and   New   York.\nLater this month the government\nwill float a $2,000,000 refunding loan\nto   meet   maturing  obligations.\nCranbrook Conductor Wins\nDamage Suit for Wrongful Dismissal\n\u2666 PRICE HAS\nA MEANING\nONLY WHEN\nPURCHASE\nIS MADE BY\nANEXPERW ,\ni3fe wise way to pnrofcase anything\nis to' defend on the judgment of an\nexpert for v^lue and wee your own\njudgment In choosing between, things\nol  equal   value.\nIn purchasing anything many people\nuse the price tag as a measure of\nvalue.i Then they .make their choice\nand   are   usually   dlBS&tigfied.\nOrdinarily, when anything is reduced   in  price,   it  is  reduced  in   qual-\n-M'ty.-\" It may look the same to the\naverage purchaser, but he is no\njudge of quality. It takes an expert    to    judge    quality,  in    any    line,\n\u25a0^Whether it is investments, furniture\nor   houses,     v'tisvi\n\u2022 Do your trading through some\none you know to tie an expert; then\nvou can have them pick out things\nof equal value at various prices.\n0'hey can explain why one thing\ncosts- more than another. Consequently you will know what you\nare paying for and can make your\nchoice wisely.\n(.Copyright,   1924,   Associated   Editors,\ninco-rporatS.cl.X ^gsegk\nSterling Exchangi\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Sterling exchange firm at $4.30% for 60-day bills\nand   $4.33   for   demand.\nCanadian   dollars\u201498   29-32c.\nFrench   francs\u2014Demand,   5.18c.\nLire\u2014Dernarid,  4.30%c.i\nNelson    counter    rate    on    sterllng-\n$4.37%.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 2.\u2014Quotations\nare:\nFlour\u2014Un changed.\nBran\u2014$21.\nWheat, No. 1 northern\u2014$1.(25 % to\n$1.29%;  July,  $1.23%.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Quotations\nare: i\nForeign    bar    silver\u201466%c.\nCopper\u2014Quiet; electrolytic, spot and\nfutures    12%c.,\nTin\u2014Steady; spot and futures $45.25.\nIron\u2014Steady;   No.   2   southern   $20.\nLead\u2014Steady;   spot   $7.\nZinc\u2014Steady; East St. Louis, spot\nand  nearby   $5.80   to   $5.82.\nAntimony\u2014Spot   $8.40.\nAt  London\u2014\nCopper\u2014Standard, spot \u00a361 7s 6d.\nfutures \u00a362 5s; electrolytic, spot\n(\u00a365   10s,   futures   \u00a366.\nTin\u2014Spot \u00a3228 7s 6d, futures,\n\u00a3228   12s   6d.\nLead\u2014Spot    \u00a332    10s,    futures    \u00a330.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a332 2s 6d, futures\n\u00a331   17s   6d.\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN   QUOTATIONS\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nJuly    ..\n.   121%\n125\n121%\n123%\nOct.     . .\n.   118\n120%\n117%\n118%\nDec.    . .\n..   116\n117\n114\n114%\nOats\u2014\nJuly    ..\n\u2022     43%\n44%\n43%\n43%\nOct.     ..\n\u2022     44%\n45%\n44%\n44%\nDec.    ..\n.     43\n43\n42%\n42%\nBarley\u2014\nJuly    . .\n.     70%\n72%\n70%\n71%\nOct.     ..\n.     68\n69\n68\n68%\nDec,    ..\n. .     64\n64\nFlax\u2014\nJuly    . .\n.   215\n217%\n215\n216%\nOct.     . .\n.   199%\n200%\n196-\n198\nDec.    . .\n.   192\n192\n190%\n191\nRye\u2014\nJuly   ..\n.     79\nSO\n77%\n77%\nOct.    ..\n.     82%\n82%\n81\n81%\nAnanias was probably the first to\ndiscover that truth was stranger than\nfiction.\nCALGARY, July 2.\u2014Mr. Justice\nWalsh has handed down judgment\nin favor of the plaintiff for $10,000\nwith costs, in the action of Thomas\nD. Cavan, railway conductor, against\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway company. Cavan sought damages for\nwrongful dismissal following an investigation by the company of alleged\nimproper returns made by Cavan to\nthe company.\nThe judgment in effect means, that\nthe agreement between the Canadian\nPacific railway and the Brotherhood\ncf Railway Conductors is a binding\ncontract between each railway conductor and the railway company, and\nnot, as contended by the company,\nmerely an agreement with the\nbrotherhood, of which the men can-i\nnot take advantage as individuals.\nCharges   Must   Be   Immediate\nIt also settles the point, bitterly\ncontested between the men and the\ncompany, that spotters cannot charge\nconductors with taking fares for their\nown use long after the offence Is sSld\nto have been committed, thus giving\nthe 'conductor no opportunity of\nidentifying and calling the passengers\nfrom whom it was said he collected\nfares, to disprove the charge.\nMr. Justice Walsh held that where\na conductor is continued in the service, after such an offence has said\nto have been committed, the railway\ncompany is deemed to have condoned\nthe offence, and cannot afterward\ndischarge him from the service.\nA. A. McGillivray, K.C., and S. J.\nHelman acted for Cavan; Hon. R. B.\nBennett, K.C., George A. Walker,\nK.C., and D. W. Clapperton for the\nCanadian Pacific railway.\nEDMONTON IS TWO\nSHORT OF HUNDRED\nEDMONTON, July 2.\u2014Edmonton\ncontinued to swelter today when the\nsummer's first serious heat wave continued, sending the temperature to 98,\neasily a record for this  city.\n .a^.\t\nOntario Will Have\nLiquor Plebiscite\nTORONTO, July 2.\u2014Assurance that\na plebiscite is on the way, so far\nas Ontario temperance is concerned,\nwas given tonight by Hon. Dr. Forbes\nGodfrey, Ontario minister of health\nand labor, at a Conservative rally in\nsupport of W. H. Edwards, the party\ncandidate for the byelection for seat\n\"A\"   in   Northwest   Toronto.\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEG,. July- 2.\u2014Dominion- war\nissue prices:\nWar loans\u20141925; $100.50 bid; 1931,\n$100.50 bid; 1937, $102.60 bid, $102.80\nRefunding loans\u20141928, $100.10 bid;\n1943, $100.15 bid, $100.25 asked.\nWar loan renewals\u20141927, $101.40\nbid; 1932, $102.50 bid.\nVictory loans\u20141924, $100.30 bid,\n$100.50 asked; 1927, $102.55 bid; 1933,\n$104.75 bid, $104 -85 asked; 1934, $103.25\nbid; 1937, $106.50 bid.\nB9\u00bba\u00bbwg!55ft!S\nChoose now the space you prefer at prices.you wish to pay \u2014\ndon't get caughtm the last hoar\nrush for accommodations.\nSee the British Empire Exhibition, which runs till October\n.... A delightful time of year\nfor travel.\nSail from Montreal or Quebec\nvia Canadian Pacific\u2014the short\nsea trip to Europe. On a Mono-\nclass (one class) cabin ship or\ngiant Empress liner. Further\ninformation from local steamship agents or\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice   Smelting   and   Refining   Department\nTfRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\n\u25a0ni\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nCLASSIFIED\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\ni   Lost and Found\nLive Stock\nMachinery\n.Farm Produ^\nTimber and Mines\n'^WWttfW\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal Reading Noticos\u20143c per word\neach insertion. In blackface or machine capitals 4c per word. Blackface\ncapitals 6c a word; 25 per cent dip-\ncount if run daily without change of\ncopy for one month or more. Where\nadvertisement is set out in short lines\nthe charge is 15c a line for Rdman\ntype, 20o for blackface, and 25c for\nblackface capita^. Minimum 35c, if\ncharged   50c.\nWant and Classified Advertising-\nOne and a half cents per word per insertion. If paid in advance six cents\nper word peT week, or 22 %c per word\nper month. Transient ads, accepted-\nonly on a cash-lpyadvance basis. Each\nInitial, figure, dollar sign, etc., counts\nas one word. Minimum, 25c, If\ncharged   50c.\nBirths, Marriages, Deaths and Xn-\nMemoriam Cards, 50c per insertion up\nto   33   words.     Additional   words   l%c.\nLists of Wedding Presents and\nFloral Tributes at Funerals 10c per\nline.\nMale Help Wanted\nMEN, women to learn barbering; paid\nwhile learning; tools supplied. Catalogue free. Moler College, Vancouver., (5345)\nCARPENTERS WANTED \u2014 At Bonnington, B.C., for power plant construction. Wage's, seventy cents per\nhour for first-class carpenters; nine-\nhour day, long* Jjob. good accommodation. West Kootenay Power &\nLight   Co.,   Ltd. (5307)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced edgerman. If\ninterested, wire Staples Lumber\nCompany,   Wvcliffe. (5236)\nSituations Wanted Male^\nENGLISHMAN\u2014Public     school,     wants\njob   on   ranch;    no   ranching   experience,     but    keen.      Procter,    Willow\n. Point,    Nelson. (5340)\nC. W. KETCHAM, automotive engineer\u2014Satisfaction guaranteed. Post\nOffice,   Ross   Spur^B.C, (5173)\nFIRST-CLASS-CAMP-COOK WANTS\nboarding contract or work by the\nmonth. Apply, G. L. Poisy, Wynn-\ndel,   B.C. (5296)\nTELL   your  wants  tnrough   The Dall*\nNews  classified  columns.\nFemale Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Waitress,\ntal   Hotel.\nApply    Occiden-\n(5322)\nWANTED   \u2014   EXPERIENCED     DISH-\nwasher,   male   or   female.     Apply   at\n,   The   Grill. (5306)\nTeachers  Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Teacher for 'Gray Creek\nSchool. Apply, starting\" \u00abagje and\nqualifications,   to   the   secretary.\n(5323)\nWANTED \u2014 Experienced teacher for\nBoswell school, male preferred;\nsalary,   $1020.     Apply   Secretary.\n \u2022 (5332)\nCLASSIFIED aos.  bring results  quick\nly and  economically     \"4c a  word\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\nFOR SALE \u2014 Four cows and one\nheifer, pure bred Holsteins. Arthur\nRavenor,   East  Arrow  Park,   B.C.\n  (5305)\nLAND FOR SALE\u2014Three lots, good\nland, all fenced, near parliament,\nbuildings, price $275; also full-sized\nwashing machine, hand and treadle,\nwith new wringer, board and bath.\n$26.     Apply  V.   M.  Warr,   Kaslo,r?B,C.i\n (5319)\nh'OH    SALHi\u2014Fru.t    Farm,    apple    and\n'   cherry orchards, with fifteen, twenty\nor    fifty    acres    good    land.      Idea)\nsituation.     E.   Francis,   Procter.\n(4987)\nCLASSIFIED ads.  bring results  quickly  and  economically.    l%c a   word.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nIN   THE   SUPREME   COURT   OF\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nIN THE MATTER of the Fernie-\nFort Steele ' Brewing Company,\nLimited,  and  Reduced;\nAND     IN     THE     MATTER     of     the\n'\"Companies  Act,   1921.\"\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVIJJN that\na Petition for confirming a resolution\nreducing the paid-up Capital : of the\nabove Company from $372,2(t0.00 to\n$297,700(00 was on the. 27th day . of\nJune, 1924, presented to the Supreme\nCourt of British Columbia at Fernie,\nBritish Columbia, and is now pending;\nand that the list of Creditors of the\nCompany is to be made out as for\nthe   30th   day   of   June,   1924.\nHERCHlpR   &   MITCHELL,\nFernie,   British   Columbia,   Solici-\ntors  to  the  Company. (5342)\nTo Oat=of=ToW]n\nSubscribers\nOut-of-town subscribers who\nwish to answer classified advertisements in which only the telephone number of the advertiser\nis given, may send their replies\nto The Dailji News, and The Daily\nNews will communicate such replies to the advertiser.\nCity Property for Sal*\nFire lestDrairice\nPHONE  269\nCity   Property.\nRentals.\nCo W. App'leyard\n(5339)\nI investigate\nOpportunity te buy 6-roomed\nHouse; furnace; 2% lots. $2400,\nterms.\na. t. McMillan\nRoom   1   (next   to   Drs.   Bennett   and\nEaton), 501 Baker St.    Phone 601.\n(6365)\neal Home\nWell-appointed 6-roomed House,\ncement foundation; 4 lots, beautiful garden. Don't miss this opportunity. Price $3200. Terms\narranged.\na. t. McMillan\nRoom   1   (next   to   Drs.   Bennett   and\n'  Eaton),  501  Baker  St.    Phone  601.\n (5310)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Seven-roomed house,\nstone foundation, sleeping porch,\nclose.     Anply   P.O.   Box   154.      (5287)\nNEW SEVEN-ROOMED BUNGALOW\u2014\n$5500. easy terms. . Apply P.O. Box\n781.  Nelson. (5308)\nFor Rent\t\nCOMFORTABLE FURNISHED COT-\ntage for rent at Balfour\u2014Lake\nfrontage, safe sandy beach, three\nminutes wharf, store, etc; moderate\nrent by month. Apply George E.\nShaw,   Balfour.        (5jfel).\nFOR RENT\u2014-Houseboat International.\nG.i   B.   Matthew,   Rlondel. (5361)\nFOR RENT\u2014Summer cottage, newly\ndecorated; half mile from ferry,\nboathoUse.     Phone   289R4. (5328)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms   over   Poole   Drug. (5362)\nFURNISHED HOUSE\u2014Modern, five-\nroomed furnished house, gas and\npiano, close in; for summer months.i\nPhone  629R.,  P.O._Box  1137.       (5316)\nROOMS FOR RENT\u2014Board feffifflj\nsired.      Phone    387R2J       (5303)\nFOR RENT\u2014One Single Room, One\nTwo-Roomed Suite, One Three-\nRoomed   Suite;   Annable   Block.\n (5316)\nFURNISHED SUITES\u2014Also an Unfurnished Five-Roomed Suite. I Kerr\nApartments. (5139)\nTWO AND THREE ROOMED SUITES\nfor   rent.     Stirling   Hotel.     \u00a3 \u25a0XSSTST-\nLost and Found\nFOUND\u2014A check for large amount.\nOwner can have same on proving\nownership and paying for this advertisement.     Call   at   Daily   News.\n(5366)\nLOST\u2014Pair gold-rimmed spectacles,\nin ball grounds\/ Return to Queens\nHotel.       Reward. (5337)\nLOST\u2014Gold band bracelet; engraved\ninitials, M.A. Substantial reward.\nPhOne   224. (5311)\nWANTED\u2014Clean cotton rags. Flv*\ncents   per  pound      The  Dally   News.\nCountry Property\nSALE OR TEMPORARY LET\u2014Furnished modern bungalow, eight-\nroomed; two-acre plot , chicken\nhouses, 80 laying hens, fruit trees,\netc., near depots. Rev. Clarke,\nGrand    Forks,    B.C. (5290)\nRoom  and Board\nWELL-FURNISHED       ROOM  \u2014  With\nboard.     Phone  339L. (5364)\nDance Programs\nProgram Pencils\nDance Invitations\nWe can supply high\nquality materials and\nworkmanship at reasonable prices.\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers\nNELSON,  B.  C.\n\\     Machinery for Sale\nPORTABLE SAWMILLS \u2014 American;\nI used mining equipment all kinds,\n', rebuilt; boilers compressors, logging\nI machinery. Send for stock list.\n' National Machinery Co., Ltd., Vancouver. (5347)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR     SALE:\u2014Boy's     bicycle.       Apply,\n'\u25a0   John   Dolphin,    Scout   Troop,   No.    2,\nP.O.    Box 798. (5369)\nWRITE   RUTHERFORD   DRUG   COM-\npany,     Nelson \u2014 Mail     orders     filled\n.  promptly. (4950)\nFOR SALE\u2014Odd-pieces of \"furniture;\nalso complete set of Books of Knowledge.     35,  Annable  Block. (5327)\nBARRELS\u2014MacDonald Jam Company,\nNelson. &S3\u00a7      (5243)\nBABY CARRIAGE \u2014 Cream. light\nweight, practically new. Phone 235,-\nWilson. (5309)\nROOFING _SUPPLIES,_. ETC.\n\"~ 2000~~rolls best*\" quality 2-pIy\"\"\nRoofing, $1.50 per roll; 3-ply extra heavy mineralibed surface,\nnothing better made in roofing,\n$3.00 per roll; Shipyard Air Hose,\nexcellent for gardens, 6c per foot;\nMixed Wire Nails, $2.00, per keg;\n50,000 feet 1-inch Water Pipe;\n7c per foot, ether sizes low prices.\nManilla Rope, Wire Rope, Canvas, Belting, and Logging Supplies.\nB.C.   JUNK   CO.,\n135-   Powell   Street,    Vancouver,    B.C.\n(52051\nBusiness Opportunities\nFOR SALE\nE L F 0 R D\nBOAT    LIVERY\nFive Launches With Houses.\nMany     Parts,     Accessories     and\nOffice   Fittings.\nIt will pay you to  buy now.\nOne   Only:    Canoe.\nThose having canoes  in  storage\nare   requested   to   call   and   take\ndelivery.\nW. H. JONES\nAt the Livery Foot Josephine St.\n1*11111 (5368)\nFOR  SALE,\nTHE    NELSON    STEAM\nLAUNDRY,\nA    GOING-    CONCERN,    READY\nFOR   IMMEDIATE   OPERATION,\n'ON   A   PROFITABLE   BASIS.\nThis     business     is     completely\nequipped.\nReason   for   selling:    Death   of\nlate owner.\nApply\u2014\nMRS. P. NIPOU\nCor. Josephine and Vernon streets,\nNELSON,   B.C.\n(5172)\nLive Stock for Sale\nFOR     SALE!\u2014Two    black     cub     bears.\nWhat  offers?    M.  Ulvin,  Lardo,  B.C.\n <(5&m\nLive Stock Wanted\nFOR SALE\u2014One male and four female   Airedale   pups,   pedigreed;   also\nr first recross Chesapeake Spaniel and\nLabrador. Apply, Watson, Box 855,\nTrail. (5338)\nPURE BRED CHESTER PIGS\u2014Ten\nweeks, ten dollars; fresh milking\ncows and heifers, dead cheap.\nLepage,    Fruitvale. (5330)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Yorkshire pigs, six\nweeks,   $6.     Boothby,   Edgewood.\n(5333)\nGOOD FAMILY COW\u2014Recently freshened, T.B. tested and quiet. Gilroy,\nR.R.   1. (5294)\nLive   stock   sells  quickly  when   it   Is\nadvertised   in   these  columns.\nBoats and Automobiles\nELFORD    BOAT    LIVERY\u2014In    whole\nor    any    part.    . Launches,     fittings,\naccessories,     launch     houses,   'OMlefc-\n\u2022 fittings;    one    only    canoe.      W.    H.\nJones. __(5336)\nFOR    SALE\u2014Launch,    good    condition,\ncheap.    Phone  417L. (5317)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nChimnev Cleaning\nTKTX.     FOWXES,     Official     CMmnsj\n\u00bbV     Cleaner.\n(4988)\nShoe Repairing\nIDBAIi  SHOB REPAIRING, next Hud\nson's    Bay.    C    Romano,    manager\n(5138)\nCarpenter and Joiner\nIAWSOK\u2014Store Fixtures, Oak and\nCedar Chests. Below Public Market.\n(5014)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOHm\ntfContlnnea)';'^\t\nRepairing\nHB.   KITTO\",     Gunsmith   --   Tennis\nRackets   Bjestrung   and   Repaired.\n(5152)\nElectrical\nHOWS EEECTBIC CO.\u2014\nBower, Eight and Badlo Installations\nAgents for Delco Lighting Systems,\nEureka Vacuum ISweepei's, Sunnysuds\nWashing Machines, Mazda Lamps.\nDealers   in   Electrical   Supplies.\nOpera House. Blk.    P.O.  Box 928\nNelson,   B.C.                              Phone   580\n (4973)\nPRINTED stationery  or all  kindfO&av,\nDailv    News   Printing   Department\nCall a Taxi\nNBEBON    VRANSFBB    CO.\nComfortable  Cars\nCareful Drivers\nMeet   all    trains    and    boats;   Oaracw\nMcLaughlin  *nd  Chevrolet  Berries.\nMums SB                                   Bay ox Xlfln\n (5268)\nPrinting\nTBCB DAIEY NEWS\u2014Quality Prlntlaa.\nRuling.    Loose Leaf Forms.    Ledges\nSheets and Binders always In stock.\nPiano Tuners\nH\nKDX.EY W. WIUDELL, Bxpsrt\u2014Ft\nanos. Player Pianos, Organs, P. 251\n       (5249)\nInsurance and Real Estatf\nRW.   DAWSON\u2014\n\u2022 Beal    Estate,    Insurance,    Rental\nAnnable Blk. P. O. Box 733. Phone.;'J>!\n(534\nHB.     DXEE,     INSURANCE,     FAS\n\u2022     AND   CITY  PROPERTY.\n608  Ward  Street. Nelson,  B.v_\n.S\u00bbJSSSSSWSSSSSSSSMSMSMSISS\u2014^^l^W^Ma.lSSSSSSISBSMSSMS\u00bbSMS\u00bbSMSS>BMM\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbM^\nMonuments\nCAMPBEEE      ft      RITCHIE      MONU\nMENTAE  CO.\u2014P.  O.   Box  865,  Nelson,  B.OV Telephone  164. ij.^mj\nPainters and Decorators\nMURPHY   BROS \nAutos Painted\nDealers in Wall Paper\nStore\u2014 Auto  Shop^'lS!\n701   Baker   St. 4U   Hall \u25a0'St,'\n'; \\oX5i)\nAccounting\nCHAREBS   F.   HUNTER\u2014\nAuditor,  McDonald Jam  Buildtosr\nBox  1191 Nelson,   B$\n(5352\nFlorists\nGBIZZEEEBS    GREENHOUSE,    NEE\nson. Cut flowers and Flower designs\n (sasjp\nW~ M.   S.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   342.     Cut   riowsrs.   Potts*\nPlants  and  Floral  Emblems. (5260)\nMBS. B. V. BAMSDEN, Cemetery Rd.\nCut Flowers.  Floral  Emblems  and\nPerennials.   Phone   326L2 (5231)\nWH.     MA WEB\u2014Hardy- Perennial\n\u2022 Plant Grower, Nelson, B.C.  (5348)\nWholesale\nAMACDONAED   ft   CO.\u2014\n\u2022   Wholesale   Grocers   and   Provision\nMerchants.  Importers of Teas, Coffee!^;\nSpices,  Dried Fruits,  Staple aad Fanw\nGroceries.    Nelson,    6i<g. ;\u25a0 (535jjfc\nEngineers\nee* Bros., Burden Co\nGt\nNEESON,  B.C.\nCIVIE     AND     MINING     ENGINEERS\nB.    C,    Alberta    and   Dominion\nEand   Surveyors.\nCrown Grant Agents.        Blue Printing.\n1^,'.       _| (535 39\nD.    DAWSON,    Land     Surveyor,\n\u2022        Mining  and  Civil Engineer,\nKaslo, B.C. | (535ff)\nAssayers\nE\nW. WIDDOWSON, Box A1108 NelS\n\u2022 son, B.C. Standard western charges\nAuctioneers\nWCUTEEI\n\u2022 Goods Sold Privately and at auction\nNelson   Auctidn   Mart,   Vernon   Streafc\n        (53.58)\nFuneral Directors\nDJ.    BOBBBTSON,    F.D.D.    Si    B.\u2014\n\u2022 801    Victoria   street.      Phone   2ij\u00ae.\nNight   Phone   157L (5359)\nStandard Furnisnre\nCo.\u2014 Undertakers,\nFuneral Directors,\nAuto hearse, vp-.tw\ndate chape:. Pert\nservices. Prices\nreasonable. (536JK\n THE NELSOTi DA1LX JNEWtS,  IttU^oDA:. iV.KJ^jNj.JN^-', JUL: c>; I&s4\nssssMtaiga\nNews of\nor\niiWuilWBriinfiriiSigifigi\nLENGLEN WATCHES\nFROM THE STAND\nSees   Wills   Beat   Satter-\nthwaite; Is Now Sorry\nShe Eliminated Ryan\nWIMBLEDON, Eng., July 2.\u2014All\nof the events in the Wimbledon tennis championship tournament reached\nthe semi-finals today, and the women's singles were carried up to the\nfinals through the retirement of Suzanne Lenglen, world's champion, because of illness, and the victory of\nMiss Helen Wells, the United States\nstar, over Mrs. Satterthwaite of\nBritain in the last but one match\nwhich the United States champion\nmust win in order to capture the\ntitle, which has been held since the\nwar by the  superb  French  woman.\nDespite the orders of her physician\nto go to bed and stay there, Suzanne\nbobbed  up  in  the   competitors'   stand\nthis afternoon, remaining there watching the play on the center court.\nWills   and    McKane   Meet\nMiss Wills, the Californlan. will\nmeet Miss McKane in the final encounter Friday.\n\"I am heart broken about it,\" was\nthe champion's comment to newspaper\nmen after she learned of the doctor's ruling that she should stop\nplay.\n\"I suppose I was not so well as I\nthought, and the hard play Monday\nwas too much for me. It troubles\nme that I defeated Miss Ryan, who\nnow is unable to compete in the\nfinals. If I had not defeated her,\nshe had the best chance of winning.\"\nBritish   Pair   Beat  Yankees\nIn the mixed doubles, Francis T.\nHunter and Miss Lillian Scharman,\nthe United States pair, were eliminated by the British pair, L. A.\nGodfree and Mrs. Shepherd-Barron,\nwho won  9-7,  7-5.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee,   I;    Minneapolis,   7.\nColumbus,  2;   Louisville,  11.\nKansas   City,   8;    St.   Paul,   4.\nToledo-Minneapolis,  rain.\nThis advertisement is  not published  or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nMSB\nMPS\nCULAR TOURS\nI Summer\nVACATION TRIPS\n$39.20    $37.60    $44.40\nNelson\nArrow    Lakes\nVancouver\nVictoria\nSeattle      *ffc\u00bb,\nSpokane\nNelson\nGood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nthe reverse.\nNelson\nKootenay   Landing\nSpokane\nSeattle\nVictoria or Vancouver\nKettle   Valley    Ry.\nTo    Nelson\nGood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nthe reverse.\nNelson\nK. V.  Ry. to  Penticton\nOkanagan   Lake\nVernon,   Vancouver\nSpokane,   Nelson\nVia   Kootenay   Lake\nGood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nthe reverse.\n$46.20    $44.60     $51.40\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\n1.\nThe above Circular Tours are available from any point\non the Circle. On Sale Daily till September 30. Return\ntill October 31. Good for stop-over at pleasure within\nlimit. Jlpi-' -:*#-i-\u00a3s i\nAsk local agents for details, or write\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., NELSON    |\u00a7\nBBe-%\nLaurie\nThe best way to find a buyer is to advertise your\nlaunch in The Daily News Classified Columns.\nVAC a word a day, 6 insertions for the price of\nfour when cash accompanies order.\n4\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nVANCE HOL\nGIANT\nROBIN\nNational League Leaders\nAre Walloped by Their\nBrooklyn Brothers\nNATIONAL    LEAGUE    STANDING\nWon. Lost. Pet.\nNew   York    45       23 .662\nChicago     39        26 .600\nBrooklyn-   36        30 .545\nPittsburgh      _ 36        31 .537\nCincinnati \u201e 34        36 .486\nPhiladelphia  _...27        38 .415\nBoston 27        39 .409\nSt. Louis  25        43 .368\nFournier Gets Seventeenth Homer\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Vance held\nthe 'Giants to five hits today and\nbroke the New York spell over Brooklyn with a 4 to 1 victory. Fournier\nmade his 17th homer of the season\nand De Berry and Wilson also hit\nhomers.      Score: R.   H.   E.\nBrooklyn     4    10     0\nNew York  ~  15      3\nBatteries*\u2014Vance and De Berry;\nWatson, Nehf and Gowdy,  Snyder.\nCubs   Retire  Rixey\nCHICAGO, July 2.\u2014Rixey of Cincinnati was knocked out of the box\nin the first inning today, Chicago\nscoring- six runs on four hits, two\nwalks, an error and two stolen bases.\nCaveny of Cincinnati hit a homer in\nthe ninth. Chicago' won 7 to 5.\nScore: \u2022    \u25a0       R.  H.  E.\nCincinnati    ~  5    11      1\nChicago      7     7      1\nBatteries\u2014Rixey, May and Wingo,\nSandberg;  Keen and Hartnett.\nBOSTON, July 2.\u2014Behind Carlson's\nexcellent pitching, Philadelphia defeated Boston 3 to 1 today, moving\ninto sixth place.    Score:        R.   H.   E.\nPhiladelphia   _  3    12      0\nBoston      15      4\nBatteries \u2014 Carlson and Henline;\nBarnes and O'Neill.\nHornsby Gets Hundredth Hit\nST. LOUIS, July 2.\u2014The Cardinals\nwere helpless before Cooper today and\nlost to the Pirates in the final game\nof the series, 3 to 2. Rogers Hornsby\ngot a triple, his 100th hit of the\nseason.    Score: R.   H.   E.\nPittsburgh   3      7      1\nSt.  Louis   _ -  2      8      0\nBatteries\u2014Cooper and Knox; Haines\nand Gonzales.\nIDOL FRISCO IN\nSTRAIGHT HEATS\nBRANDON, Juy 2.\u2014Idol Frisco,\nowned by A. Gunn, Fielding, Sask.,\nwon the first and feature, $1000\npurse race, at the provincial exljlb,!-\ntion here today, winning in three\nstraight heats with Texas Earl entered by G. Queenell, Saskatoon,\nsecond.\nOPPERMAN SETS\nDAZZLING PACE\nWINDSOR, Ont., July 2.\u2014Cutting,\nout a dazzling pace at the break,\nOpperman of the Triple Springs farm\ncaptured first money in the Windsor\nhandicap of $1500, 3-year-olds and\nup, over the mile and 1-16 track at\nDevonshire' park   this   afternoon.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nRochester,    6;    Buffalo,   2.\nBaltimore, 4-5; Jersey City, 1-3.\nReading,  6;   Newark, 9.\nSyracuse, 6;   Toronto,  3.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSalt Lake, 5; Oakland, 4.\nSacramento, 13; Vernon, 5.\nLos Angeles, 3; Seattle, 4.\nSan Francisco,  2;   Portland,  10.\nBaseball\nAS  BIG   LEAGUER8   PLAY  IT\nWHEN YOU\n'M\"PULLABONER-\n\" %v\" 1\n^^-M&s&\n-\u25a0\"\" fM    KEEP\n^ POOL\nVICTORIANS TURN\nBACK CANADIANS\nWhat Is the proper way for an  outfielder to go back after fly balls?\nAnswered  by\nED   EOUSH\nFielder, Cincinnati Nationals; one\nof the greatest hitters and outfielders\nin   the   game   today.\n\/>*imbF \" *     *\nThe illustration makes this clearer\nthan telling about it. The reason for\nusing the method shown, however, is\nthat it gives so much greater speedi\nand, it gives more \"footsureness\" to'\nthe i outfielder*? <i \"Running backward\nafter a fly ball is a clumsy way of\ngetting about for the ordinary outfielder, although Tris Speaker can\ndo it to perfection. At- first it will\nbe a little difficult to judge balls\nwhen running back after them -as\nshown, but a little practice will overcome this difficulty.\n(Copyright, 1924, Associated Editors,\nIncorporated.)\nYANK\ndoi\nWITH ATI El\nChamps  Lose First  Game\nby a Run but Run Wild\nin the Second Contest\nAMERICAN    LEAGUE   STANDING\nWon. Lost. Pet.\nWashington   .41 28 .594\nDetroit  39 32 .549\nNew York  _ 35 30 .538\nCleveland    _.33 34 .493\nSt.   Louis    32 33 .492\nChicago      32 34 .485\nBoston     ..._ _ 32 35' .478\nPhiladelphia _ 24 43 .358\nYanks    Come    Back   Strong\nPHILADELPHIA, July 2. \u2014 After\nlosing the first game 9 to 8, New\nYork came back strong, and by timely\nextra-base' hits, coupled with free\npasses, defeated Philadelphia 10 to 1\nin the second game. Scott hit a\nhomer  in  the   second   game.    Scores:\nFirst game\u2014    \u2022 R. .H    E.\nNew   York    _  8    11      3\nPhiladelphia _  9 . 13      2\nBatteries\u2014Shawkey, Bush, Hoyt and\nSchang;  Harris, Rommel and Perkins.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nNew   York    _ 10    13      1\nPhiladelphia    17      0\nBatteries\u2014Pennock and Hoffmann;\nHeimach,  Hasty  and  Gibson.\nSenators    Take    Five    of   Six\nWASHINGTON, July 2.\u2014Washington made it five out of six by taking\nthe final of the series from Boston\ntoday  5  to  0. .  Score: R.   H.   E.\nBoston  p?   0      2      1\nWashington    _  5      9      0\nBatteries\u2014Ferguson, Murray and\nPicinich;   Zahnizer  and  Ruel.\nDetroit Game Pitchers' Duel\nDETROIT, July 2.\u2014Whitehill and\nConnally fought a pitchers' battle today, Detroit winning 2 to 1 from\nChicago. All the runs were made in\nthe   first.     Score: R$*'R-   H-   E-\nChicago        1     '7      1\nDetroit    _  2      5      0\nBatteries \u2014 Connally and Wirts;\nWhitehill and Bassler.\nBrowns   Stop   Indians'   Course\nCLEVELAND,*- July 2.\u2014St. Louis\ninterrupted Cleveland's winning streak\ntoday, winning 6 to 4. Cleveland took\na three-run lead in the third, but\ncould not hold it. R.  H.  E.\nSt.  Louis  ...:..._  -.- 6    12      1\nCleveland   _  4     9      1\nBatteries\u2014Danforth    and    Severeid;\nMetevier,   Cheeves   and   Walters.\n. i  ,\t\nJohnson Presses\nReardon for Bat-\nHonors in League\nJohnson of Rossland is now pressing Reardon for premier batting honors in the Kootenay International\nBaseball league.\nBatting    averages    for    all    players\ntaking   part   in   games   played up   to\nand including games of June 29, 1924:\nA.B. H. Avg.\nReardon,   Nelson    18 8 .444\nJohnson,   Rossland   16 7 .438\nLangill,    Nelson     , 21 8 .367\nMolisky,   Rossland    20 7 .350\nA. McDonald, Trail  18 6 .333\nBrennan,  Nelson    6 2 .333\nHallett,    Trail    19 6 .316\nMarsters, Rossland  19 6 .316\nJoe  Ferko,  Rossland  ....23 7 .304\nKraft,   Nelson   ..._ 20 6 .300\nSchurch,   Metaline    10 3 .300\nBlair,    Nelson      ,..17 5 .294\nDrew,   Trail     24 7 .291\nMorgan,   Trail    -...24 7 .291\nMeKenzie,   Rossland   .... 7 2 .284\nLauriente,   Trail    -...25 7 .280\nMcLellan,    Rossland   ....25 7 .280\nSinger,  Rossland    22 6 .272\nNotman,   Nelson        19 5 .263\nW.    Rae,    Rossland    ....23 6 .260\nCarpenter,   Metaline   \u2014.16 4 .250\nRyman,    Metaline     16 4 .250\nDemidoff,    Trail    16 4 \\ .250\niFreeman,' Metaline  17 4 .235\nMeek,    Metaline    13 3 .230\nL.   Desireau,   Nelson  .... 5 1 .200\nMurchison,  Trail  \u2014 5 1 .200\nRobinson, Metaline  20 4 .200\nDehuff,  Metaline   15 3 .200\nRyan,    Trail    _  5 1 .200\nDi  Pasquale,  Trail  21' 4 .190\nJohn  Ferko,. Rossland....21 4 .  .190\nHunt,    Nelson     16 \u2022 3 ,(.188\nMarquis,   Nelson   16 3 .188\nCollins,  Metaline  19 3 .158\nGarland,   Trail    :.15 2 .133\nLister,   Nelson   ..._ 23 3 .130\nD. McDonald, Trail   8 1 .125\nRichardson,    Nelson   \u201417 2 .118\nRogers,    Metaline   ': 17 2 .118\nA.   Rae,   Rossland    10 1 .100\nSiegel,    Metaline     11 1 .090\nDwyer,  Trail   3 0 .000\nJones,   Rossland     3 0 .000\nLampsis,   Metaline     6 0 .000\nRoutledge,    Trail     .-- 4 0 .000\nSamms,    Metaline   .\u2014* 2 0 j .000\nScanlan,   Nelson   ..._  2 0 .000\nViets,    Metaline      2 0 .000\n -\u00bb\u00bb-\t\nCumberland Wins\nSoccer Trophy\nby Four to One\nNANAIMO, B.C., July 2.\u2014De-\nfeating the Vanoauver Elks for\nthe provincial finals of the Con-\nnaught cup series here this afternoon, hy four goals to one,\nCumberland football team showed\ntheir superiority over the mainland team, in no one-sided\nfashion. They were the best\nteam all the way through.\n -^0-\t\nCONNATJGHT PLAYOFFS\nSET FOR LATER DATES\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014The Con-\nnaught soccer cup play-offs between\nAlberta winners and British Columbia winners has been postponed\nuntil July 11 and 12, on account of\nthe delay in deciding the provincial\nwinners.\nThis announcement was made by\nVice-President John Russell of the\nDominion Football association this\nafternoon,\nAustralian     iTeam     Wins\nHard Soccer Match.in\nthe    Final    Quarter\nMELBOURNE, July 2.\u2014(Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014Canada's touring all-\nstar soccer team was defeated by a\nteam made up of the best players in\nVictoria, by a score of 2 to 1 here\ntoday.\nCanada played in bad luck, having\nthings all her own way until the\nlast quarter of the match, when the\nVictorians made a supreme effort,\nand scored twice. M'osher was obliged to retire early in the second\nhalf, and his loss was keenly felt.\nNo substitutes have been played so\nfar\" during the  tour.\nFord, Wilson, Sandford, Nose-\nworthy and Chapman did not play\ntoday.\nThe Canadians' defence was brilliant, time after time turning back\nthe speedy Australians, but the forwards were weak in front of the\ngoal. Stoddart and Llnning were the\nstars for Canada.\nThe Canucks have won seven\ngames, lost five and drawn five.\nOf four test matches, they have\nwon one, lost two, and drew one.\nAn all-Australian team will meet\nthe visitors in Melbourne next Saturday.\nFours Final to Be Staged\n.Shortly;   Regatta   Is\nHuge Success  <sM\na\nCrews stroked by Jimmie Nctman\nand Edward Murphy won their respective classes in the regatta staged\nby the Nelson Rowing club on the\"\nmorning of Dominion day. There\ncrews were to run off the final last\nnight, but owing to Murphy being\nunable to get out his crew, the race\nwill  be  staged  later.\nIn th.e first four race Notman's\ncrew, composed qi Jimmie N'otman,\nLeo Desireau, Fred Hartwig and\nGeorge Fleury defeated Dill's crew\nby three lengths. Dill was stroking\nhis crew and had Boyce at three,\nKinahan at two and Jelfs in the bow\nseat. Notman's heavier aggregation\nwas too much for Dill's men, who,\nhowever,  put  up  a   sporty  fight.\nIn the second heat Ed Murphy's\ncrew . of lightweights easily defeated\nSkilling's crew. Eddie Murphy was at\nstroke, Waldie at three, Watson at\ntwo, and Simpson at bow for the\nwinners of this heat, while Skilling\nhad Les Bedford at stroke, Howard\nMurphy at three, Jack Morris at two,\nand himself in the bow seat.\nA touch of comedy was added to\nthe regatta when Wilbur Blanchard\noutrowed Charlie Murphy in the\nsingle skiffs event. Both of the men\nare new at the ganxe,. but, acQQrdina\nto the experts, will make good oarsmen as soon as they get down to\ntraining.\nThe third heat in the fours competition then took place, Notman's\ncrew again beating their lighter opponents in Gosline's crew. Gosline\nhad bad luck at the first with his\nrather inexperienced men, but after,\nthe first half-mile he had his crew?\nrowing very nicely. Gosline was\nrowing in the \"three\" seat, and had\nHec MeKenzie stroking, Vernon\nWright at two and Gordon MeKenzie\nin the bow.\nWib Blanchard and Gordon Irving\ngave some very snappy exhibitions of\naquaplaning * from behind, Hxving's\nlaunch.\nC. F. Hardy, president, and A. B.\nGilker, vice-president of the rowers'\norganization, handled the races to\neveryone's    satisfaction.\nIn the evening a dance was held in\nMasters' pavilion, and, like all other\ndances put on by this organization,\nwas   a  real   success.\nFrom now, the boys will be in\ntraining for the annual regatta, when\nNelson   will   meet   Kelowna   for   The\nDaily News cup.\n. mt\t\nGrand Forks Beats\nMalo in Slugging\nMatch on Sunday\nBOUNDARY   LEAGUE   STANDING\nTeam\u2014 Wop Lost Pet.\nCurlew     >    4        2 .667\nMalo    4        3 .571\nRepublic         4 3 .571\nGrand   Forks      4        4 .500\nMidway       1        5 .167\nForks Wins Swatf est\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., July 2..\u2014The\nlocal team had the best of a slugging match in the Boundary league\n(game played here Sunday with Malo,\nwinning   18   to   17. R.    H.    E.\n\/Malo         17    17       4\nGrand  Forks      18    20      4\nBatteries \u2014 Perkins, Johnson, Hil-\nUebrand. and Caldwell; Docksteader,\nCrowe  and  Gowane.   '\nNo   other  games  were   played.\nOhio Stakes Are\nWon by Tennessee\nNORTH RANDALL, Cleveland, O.,\nJuly 2.\u2014For the second consecutive\nyear the Ohio stakes for the 2:08\ntrotters goes to Memphis, Tenn.i It\nwas won today by Belmar, owned by\nTaylor & Bowman and driven by\nSandy  Taylor  of  that  city.\nAmong other things to grieve over\nis the fact that Methuselah never had\na  safety  razor.\nIs Wanted Every Minute\nof the Day*\nWe ate waiting to serve you with\nthe very best at the lowest prices\nyou have paid in years*\nReady-tcvWear\nWHLTE DIMITY BLOUSE WAISTS, with Peter Pan\ncollars, trimmed lace. Smart little black bow at\nneck.   Very cool and comfortable.   d*0 OP\nPrice\nUP\nWHITE WASHING SKIRTS\u2014Good quality Gabardine, with slit pocket.    Smart little belt.    White\nis always cool.\nPair   \t\nJpJt.Ze) to JpZ.\/O\n$7.95\nNAVY AND BLACK SILK SKIRTS\u2014With elastic\nwaist, so that they fit any size. Smart shape.\nPrice, <\u00a3Q QK\neach    \u00abP \u00ab\/\u2022 t\/tf\nThe same in a nice shade of fawn and\ngrey.   Price\t\nA  KIMONA IS A MUCH-WANTED  GARMENT\nTHESE DAYS.   TRY ONE TODAY.\nCREPE KIMONA, trimmed silk embroidery and\nquilted ribbon. Some have a large loose sleeve.\nNice colors of salmon, pink, sky, blue, mauve and\namethyst.\nPrices From \t\n$3.50 to $4.95\nMen Want Something Cooler\nm Too, We Have It Here\nMEN'S OUTING SHIRTS FOR THE WARM\nWEATHER\nFINE ^QUALITY MERCERIZED COTTON SHIRTS,\nwith turn-down collars or open-neck style, in white\nor tan shades. Very cool and good- (JJO OPw\nlooking.   Each   v-S.^tJ\nMEN'S WARM-WEATHER UNDERWEAR\nWHITE NAINSOOK B.V.D. STYLE ATHLETIC\nCOMBINATIONS\u2014With ribbed piece at back.   All\n $1.00\nsizes.\nSuit\n-Ex-\nMEN'S TOPKIS NAINSOOK B.V.D. STYLE ATHLETIC COMBINATIONS, with ribbed piece at\nback.   All sizes. <_-|   (fA\nSuit  tD J..OU\nZIMMERKNIT BALBRIGGAN UNDERWEAR\ntra fine quality.\nCombinations,   i$jpj?\nsuit\t\nShirts or Drawers,\ngarment\t\nHATCHWAY    NO-BUTTON     NAINS< \u25a0 \u25a0: .\nLETIC COMBINATIONS\u2014All sizes.\nSuit \t\n$1.50\n75c\n$1.50\nHATCHWAY NO-BUTTON  WHITE  LISLE  COMBINATIONS\u2014Short knee length or ankle length.\ns^tsize!: $2.00\nShoe Department\nCANVAS SHOES FOR THE WARM WEATHER\nLADIES' WHITE CANVAS OXFORDS\u2014Leather\nsoles, military heels, with rubber top d*0 QK\nlift.   Pair  .:......:.: *P&*VU\nAlso stocked in Brovm Canvas.\nCLEARING   LINE   OF    LADIES'   CANVAS   OXFORDS, in sport style.   White Canvas with black\ntrimming.\nPair \t\n$2.95\nMEN'S BROWN CANVAS BOOTS AND OXFORDS\n\u2014Leather soles and leather toe caps and counters.\nPer <_q rrn\nPair tpO.DU\nMcGBAW FINES  AND\nSUSPENDS MCQUILLAN\nNEW YORK, July 2.\u2014Hugh McQuillan, Giant pitcher, has been\nfined and indefinitely suspended by\nManager John McGraw, for alleged\nfailure to keep in condition and\nviolation   of  training rules.\nJ*\nFRANK ROSE, M.D,\nBECTAI.  SPECIALIST\nr*\u00bbf Internal,     Protruding     or\nI 1I\u00a3*S Bleeding Piles cured with-\n*\u25a0 \u25a0I-1-V\"J out operation\", \\ Treatment\npainless. Cure guaranteed. Be cured\nwhile working. Write for free book\non    rectal    diseases.\n623   Pernwell   Building       -       Spokane.\nMain   2133.\nYour pipe tobacco, alwa}\n*s in its\n^original fine condition-\n\u2014when\nyou buy OGDEN S CUT r\nMmdKJ Vi   111\nthe Vfclb. vacuumizedtin.\n Page EigHl\nTHE NELSON LTAIEY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1924\nThe Ark\nAluminum Preserving Kettles,\n$2.75 and $3.25- Used Sealers,\ngallon Jugs, a limited quantity for\nbale. Also used Dinner Set, -62 pieces,\n$8.00. Ginghams, 25^ Per yard.\nSecond-hand Cook Stoves, Ranges,\nBought and Sold. Croquet Set for\nsale, cheap. Hosiery, 25# to $1.25\npair, to suit the most fastidious.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone  534\n606  Vernon   Street\nREMEMBER\n83 1-3 Per Cent Saved on\nSpectacles.    See\nHIGG1NB0THAM\nBathing Suits\nThe balance of Boys' Bathing Suits\nto go at  50$  each.\nFILING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW\nDYEING\nIf your garments are faded, or\nif you want a new color, send to\nH. K. FOOT\nI High-Class    Oyer    and    Cleaner\nFAIRVIEW   -   NELSON,   B.C.\nForgets Check in\nSuit at Cleaner's;\nSignature Forged\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014J. Hylan\nsent a suit to the cleaners, but forgot\na check for $91 in the pocket. The\ncleaner denied ever seeing it, but it\nturned up at the bank, the indorsement forged and the money paid.\nCabinet Shuffle\nDue at Victoria;\nManson Is Weary\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014TThe reorganization of the cabinet is assured. Hon. A. M. Manson, and\nseveral other ministers find too many\nduties, and an attempt to give relief is hkely to take the form of a\nshuffle of portfolios.\nDon't Strain\nYour \/Eyes\nIf you are far-sighted or have\nastigmatism,   you   are.\nStrain produces heat\u2014heat, inflammation j\u2014 inflammation, congestion \u2014 and congestion, all\n\u2022-manner of \u2022 ailments, of whteh\none. of the most disagreeable\nIs   cataract.\nStrain is the most common\nan'd most neglected of refractive\ndefects.\nGive your eyes a chance to\nrelax by wearing proper glasses\nprescribed after a most thorough   examination.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST\nIF THE FAMILY PURSE\nIS THIN\nand not only every dollar but\nevery penny means much, you will\nfind our shoe repairing a great\nsource cf economy. Figure up\nhow many pairs of shoes are worn\nthrough in your family, and how\nmuch we can save you on each\npair. It makes av big sum of\nmoney.\nCOUCH'S   SHOE    REPAIR\nStanley Street Nelson, B.C.\nPARLIAMENT MAY\nKEEP ON SITTING\nLatest   Report   Is   Three\nMore Weeks of Session;\nKeep King Home\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014With a whole\nday spent by the house in discussion\nof one phase of the banking problem,\nwith Ontario redistribution still in the\nair, and supplementary estimates still\nto be brought down, prorogation by\nthe end of next week is doubtful.\nThere is now talk that the session\nmay run en another three weeks or\nso, unless decision is reached to put\nover till next year some of the government measures.\nIt is doubtful whether parliament\nwill prorogue in time for Premier\nKing to attend the allied reparations\nconference, if he should be invited to\ndo so, and it is regarded as unlikely\nthat  he will  go.\nIt is possible that another member\nof the cabinet might go, if an invitation  is  received.\nMANITOBA POOL\nFOR ONE AGENCY\nOttawa Hears\nStevens to Drop'^\nOut of Federal\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014The rumor is\nrevived that Hon. H. ;-^H. Stevens\nwill retire from federal politics to replace W. J. Bowser in the leadership\nof the British Columbia Conservatives\nin the legislature, according to the\n(Sltizen  tonight.\nMany representations have been\nmade in favor of either Hon. S. P.\nTolmie or Mr. Stevens, the newspaper continues. The former is doing\ngood work as executive Dominion organizer of the federal party, and it is\nnot  wished   that  he go.\nWhile Mr. Stevens is valued very\nhighly here, there would be less impediment to his going. He was a\ncandidate for the provincial leadership\ntwo  years  ago.\n \u00bb\nVIDJDA  KNOCKS   O\/CT\nCATONA  IN  FIFTH\nWEST NEW YORK, N.J., July 2.\n\u2014Pancho Villa, flyweight champion\nof the world, knocked out Harry\nCatona in the fifth round of a\nscheduled 12-round bout here tonight.\nA school for jurors is  proposed in\n,New York to educate the public how\nto judge questions of fact.    But such\na   school', would   have   to   draft   its\npupils.\nEo\\\u00a3\n^NEG\nA daring drama of love, passion and regeneration,\nwith Paris at its gayest as the background.\nBy Far,  POLA NEGRI'S Greatest.\nA   varied   assortment   of\nshort subjects-r-\nFELIX THE CAT\nINTERNATIONAL   NEWS\nCANADIAN SCENIC\nComedy, \"WIDE OPEN\"\nAnnual Meeting Empowers\nDirectors to Negotiate\nWith Other Pools\nBRANDON, Man., July 2.\u2014Resolutions, supporting the formation of\nan inter-provincial selling agency to\nhandle wheat in the three prairie\nprovinces, and fully empowering the\ndirectors to proceed with the creation of a selling agency, were\npassed at the first annual meeting\nof the shareholders of the Manitoba\nWheat  Pool here today.\nA bylaw providing that the president and vice-president be elected\nfrom among the board of drectors,\nand that the secretary-treasurer be\nappointed by the board, was adopted. Seven members will make up the\nboar<J.\nThe arrangement made with the\nmortgage companies in connection\nwith wheat pledged to the pool by\ntheir tenants, was explained by J.\nMurray, Winnipeg, counsel for the\npool. This arrangement is one by\nwhich the tenants of the mortgage\ncompanies are enabled, by the corporation of the companies, to market\nthrough the pool not only their own\nwheat, but the wheat of the companies.\nA further session will be held tomorrow.\nSACRAMENTO LADS\nONLY YANK LEFT\nUpson    Plays    Sensational\nGolf at Toronto; Defeats\nMcLuckie\nTORONTO, July 2.\u2014After being\nfive down at the end of the forenoon round today, Lauren Upson, the\nSacramento youth, sole United States\nsurvivor in the championship fight\nof the Canadian amateur golf tournament at Rosedale, won six of the last\neight holes in the afternoon round,\nand' halved the other pair, squaring\nthe match against W. McLuckie of\nMontreal, Canadian amateur champion in 1920. Then, by a sensatldnali\n45-foot effort o^rthe 38th hole, from\njust off the green, Upson holed out,\nand won the match, and the right\n\"\u00bb;.lWeet F. G. Hoblitzel of Sarnia\ntomorrow.\nIn the morning round McLuckie\nshot a brilliant 73, one over par.\nHis morning performance was brilliant. He had six birdies, and also\nwas stymied four times on the round.\nExtra-Hole    Match\nAnother Montreal player participated in an extra-hole match in the\nchampionship fight, G. B. Griir^OE\nMount Bruno winning from John\nHaddon of the Toronto club, at the\n37th, by holftig out a 50-footer for a\nbirdie. This match was the most\nclosely contested one of the day, both\nplayers playing very close to par.\nC. C. Fraser of Kanawaki and W.\nM. Hodgson of Royal Montreal had\na close battle, Fraser winning at the\n13th,   7   and   5.\nSeymour Lypn of Lambton and\nNorman Scott of Royal Montreal\nboth won at the 12th| 7 and 6, against\nC. T. Lennox of Montreal Country\nclub and C. M. Jtmes of Scarbore\nrespectively.\nFrank Thompson and W. Maybain\nof Rosedale ended their match at the\n13th, the former a 7 and 5 victor.\nSandy Somervllle, the London boy,:\nwas one up on John Lewis, 5 and 3.\nF. G. Hoblitzel of Sarnia had the\neasiest match of the day, eliminating\nA. Gooderham of Rosedale, 11 and 9.\n\u00bb\nDurant Wins the      ;\nFlyweight Title\n|p   Putting Britt Out\nMONTREAL, July 2.\u2014Bobby Eber\nof .Hamilton, Canadian bantamweight\nchampion, was awarded the decision\nover SJylvic Mureault of Montreal,\nafter  a   10-rouhd   bout  here  tonight.\nLack of ring generalship and experience accounted for the defeat of\nMureault. He was never the equal\nof the HanSilton man, and was unable  to  stand   off t^ie  attacks.\nFighting for the flyweight championship of Canada, Clovis Durant,\nMontreal, knocked out Jimmy Britt,\nof Toronto, f$i the f$!th round of the\n10-round bout,  semi-final.\nEDMONTON NEWSIES\nPLAY m OTTAWA\nOTTAWA, July 2.\u2014Eight thousand\nOttawa citizens tonight attended an\nopen-air concert given by the vi&itlhgj\nEdmonton Newsboys' band, who are\nproceeding to the British Empire exhibition at Wembley.\nThat Chicago alderman whom prohibition officers in New York found\nin possession of a- satchel full of\nchoice booze may have trouble explaining the incident to thirsty constituents.\nREWARD\nTen Dollars Reward will be paid\nto anyone giving information leading to the conviotion of the party\nwho willfully damaged the electrical\nwiring in Mr. A. S. Horswill's new\nresidence, corner of Vernon and Cedar\nStreets, between 5 p.m., Saturday, and\n8 a.m., Monday. D. W. Guy, electrical contractor, Vernon Street, Nelson,   B.C. (5329)\n'LAMATCO'\nThe Universal Wall Board\nIS THE   BEST  FOR\nPanelling, Lining Walls and Ceilings of\nHomes Camps, Factories, Stores,\nOffices and Garages\nCan be   Stained,  Painted   or   Kalsomined.      Made    in    B.C.\nfrom native Cottonwood.    Literature  and  prices  on  request.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.,\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON*   B-C.\nRETAIL\nm\nCozy Modern Bungalows\nFor Sale\n5 Rooms   (including  electric range and electric light fixtures),\n_ Fairview    - \u2014 \u2014$3100.00\n6 Rooms (cement foundation), Gore Street  .$2700.00\nCHAS.  F.  McHARDY\nREAL ESTATE\n.INSURANCE\u2014Fire,   Accident,   Life\nBONDS\nPHONE   135\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nA. S. Horswill & Ct\u00ab\nPhone 121    Ip\nNew Potatoes, per lb. . XO$\nBeets,   Young   with   tops,\n4 bunches  10c^\nCarrots, New, 4 bunches \u2014-10^\nFinest Rhubarb, 6 lbs.  25^\nEdam Cheese, from Holland^ tor\nib #;>60^\nKraft Cream Cheese, lb 40$\nKiltie    Salmon,    large    tin,\n2  for  35^\nRed   Spring   Salmon,   %s,   per\ntin   - 15$\nLobster, large tins, each \u2014.54}$\nLobster, small tin, each ....30$\nShrimps,   per   tin    25$\nvHojhouse Tomatoes, lb 40$\nSliced  Boiled  Ham,   lb 50$\nHorswill's Special Tea, lb...70$\nOranges, from,  per doz 25$\nFleischmann's  Yeast  Cakes\nPROMPT   SERVICE\nNelson News of the Day\nGo Swimming\nJT'S A FINE THING to know how to\n1 swim. But you can enjoy the beach\neven if you don't; and that's the way you'll\nlearn.\nThe opportunities of summer make up\nfor its discomforts. Get one Of these All-\nWool Bathing Suits. Get out to the beach.\nIt's great sport, and refreshing. A cool\nplunge will take the torture out of a hot\nday.-\nPlain and Fancy Stripes\n$3.75 TO ^4.75\nOPEN ALL DAY\nTODAY\nNOTICE\nThe unrestricted and excessive use\nof water for sprinkling and garden\npurposes both day and night is liable\nto cause a shortage of water, and\nuftle%s more care is exercised by the\npublic the city will be forced to\nrestrict or prohibit the use of water\nfor these purposes. BY ORDER.\n(5363)\nKerr's  Jitney.    Phone  491.\n(6043)\nJ.   Burgfess,   Carpenter,   Phone  350R3.\n(5343)\nCUMMINS   TAXI.     PHONE   44.\n(5206)\nSealed Tenders are called for the\nconstruction of the Chtfodh of the\nRedeemer, '5%Strview. Plans- and specifications may1 be obtained frpm George\nBrant. All tenders to be in my hands\nnot later than 5 p.m., 9th instant.'\nLowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.     George   Brant. (5335)\nCourt Star of Kootenay, Court Royal\nNelson meet tonight at 7 and 8 re-'\nspectively. (BS67)\nm\t\nDonald Munroe of Winnipeg, one of\nthe oldest settlers of the Red River\nvalley, died suddenly at Winnipeg.\nMr. Munroe was a son of one of the\nLord Selkirk pioneers, having been\nborn In Kildonan 67 years ago. He\nis survived by his widow, five soils\nand  one   daughter.\nUnbreakable\nCOMBS\nAt a Special Price of\n29c Each\nMade from PYRALIN, in colors of Black or White, and are\nmuch superior to the ordinary\nrubber comb, being much more\nstrong and durable.\nSold in the ordinary way at\n50c each, we are offering while\nthey last at the Special Price\nof 29$  each.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co.\nLimited\nNELSON,  B.C.\n\u2014HAS IT\u2014\nStates Applies Quota\nRule to Canadians\nWhen Not Native-Born\nVANCOUVER, July 2.\u2014Hundreds\napplying here for admission to the\nUnited States are being told that\nunder the new Washington regulations, not being Canadian born, they\nare classified according to the country from which they came to Canada, and are barred if, the quota is\nexceeded. Native born Canadians\nare  not affected.\nRabbits, which have defied the\nUnited States government by \"digging everything except clams\" and\nundermining \"everything except the\nlighthouse\" on Smith island, a small\nlone island in the Strait of Juan de\nFuca at the entrance of Puget sound,\nwill soon have a hard time to exist.\nPoison bait is to be scattered abcut\nthe island in an effort to bring the\nrodent pest under control.\nSEE US FOR\nHOT WEATHER\nGROCERIES\nPHONE 235\nDELIVERIES    TWICE    DAILY\n\"Made Its Way by the Way It's Made\"\nShades of the Frozen North\nbrought to your door in the form of\nCurlew Ice Cream\nduring this tropical heat.\nOrder From Your Dealer   r\nCURLEW CREAMERY CO., LTD.\nNELSON, B.C.\nBig Double Program\nSTARLAND\nTONIGHT\nMm\n'.\/\u25a0Si\nBetty Balfour\nBritain's Queen of Happiness\nm\nLove, Life and Laughter\nTHE STORY OF TIPTOES\nA Beaufiful Romance That Will\nFascinate and Amuse\nProduced by George Pearson, assisted by Leslie Hiscott\nPhotographed by Percy Strong\nLondon Night Photography by A. H. Blake; M,A.^\nDresses by Mme. Elanor and Messrs. Nathan\nTo Miss This is to Miss\nOne of the Best\nPhotoplays of\nThe Year\nExtra Added:\n4-Reel\nComedy\n^Entitled\u2014\nRFMFMRFR     U's  C\u00b0o1   in  Starlan\nn.blULMTlDE.11   Aftj,nd   FIRST |SHC\n\"THE THREE\nMUST-GET-THERES\"\ncl.\nHOW.\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_1924_07_03","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\/1.0401658","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":"1924-07-03 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":"1924-07-03 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: Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery","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":""}]}