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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":" P\".Ov,fsiC|Ai.   L-'tBI-AtJuV\nyi'cio'itu-*8'c:?-'\u25a0 \"'\/-- \u25a0\n,\nSENDS UP HUGE\nSMOKE CLOUD\nMillion* of   Feet  Timber\nBurned in Province by\n,.,,4Various Outbreaks\n)l:i\\?V \u25a0\u25a0 r,.     , ' \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nCREWS ON FORTY-SIX\nKOOTENAY > PATCHES\nStillwater on Coast Worst\nBlaze; Missing Man Is\n-. ?*-:>?'; Located'* '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\".\u25a0\ni\nLATEST FIRE  REPORTS\nWestlay fir* nur Casl.lejar,\n\u2022 krtwks out- I'\nWlmer,- Edg.wood,. Beaton, havel\nnew  fire*.\nPaterson blare fought by 30 mon.\nHighball flrt, In Windermere, in\nthick timber.\nShookumehuck fir*, nur Cranbrook, quiet,\nStillwater fire, on coats*., dangerous..\nKamloops flret out of control.\n; Victoria's   wtterehed    threatened.\n\"We \u2022 have very few new reports\nen .the fires caused by the lightning\nof Saturday because our men In the\n\/Held are too busy fire, fighting to\n(cake them,\" said A. E. Ffcriow, of the\nforestry deparAnent, yesterday. He\nadded that crews had been sent to\nevery one of the 49 lightning fires\nreported, and that It waa not. thought\nany one Of them had got a big start\n\u25a0 Six' of - these flrea are on the west\nside of Kootenay lake, along the\natrotch of. shore that Is uninhabited\nand'are small ones. ' rrT.\n--\u25a0^yi-^-:t*t\u00bb:-iX-wmta*f'.' -.'.',\nThe:amoke Vhlcli blurred tho out-\nllws-ef .the Mils about Nelson yet-\nteTday comae from a fire at Westley,\nthe other?tide-ot Castlegar. A number of men taken out by truck from\nNelson at 1:10 Monday morning are\nfighting thla fire.        \"    -\nNo report from tho Evans creek\nflrt, to which men were sent at the\nsame time, was received yesterday. '\nNew lightning flrca have been reported around Wllruer ond , towards\nEdgewater, on tho Columbia river\nabove Windermere. Local men and a\ncrew from Oolden are fighting these.\nOther* were'started\" Saturday night\nnear-Beaton,  and nro  being guarded\n' by a Revelstoke crew.\nThreatening to thrvja l.^ir\n\u25a0 Down on the border west of Patterson, a crow of SO men Is trying to\nprevent   a   fire   that   started   on   tho\n-other sldo reaching Canadian territory. Thla lire wns being held on\nthe-American side, where a number of\nmen are* fighting It, yesterday\nThe big Highball fire ln the Invermere, which covered around 18 square\n-mllea.Ms -quiet,*-.but'still helng guard\n, ed'by- of large drew. Very llttlo good\ntimber-was oonsunied |n this fire, but\n\" \u00a3\u00bb\u2022* tfilr' priVeHted 'from- reaching\nthe Randolph Bruce property by hard\nfighting.' \u25a0-'' .-\n-   JL; \u00ab\"*\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u00ab KOei l*orm Boad\nThb Skookuniehuck fire, near Cranbrook, anether big one, Is also quiet\n,Thlj fire was It miles off n wsgon\nroad. So that all fire fighters- equipment* and Supplies had to be packed In\nA. big   cCew   Is   still   watching   the\nSfJ?\" 'irc: W pu\"\"*\u00ab- *\"\" \"P\"' \"\u00ab?\u25a0\nwithin the* fire lines, which If not\ncarefully* watched now might cause a\nreorudeecenco of the-big blase.\n' '*s yesterday's weather forecast from\nheadquarters at Victoria'1 to the forestry department was for several days\nof hot, dry weather, every precaution\nis being taken.to) prevent the fires\ngetting at big start-now.\n.  M*$EfrXZ$X!.t TlmbCT Burn\u00ab\"\u00ab\nVANCOUVER,   Aug.   d.\u2014Mil.\n\u25a0     \"onr-of  \/e\u00abt   ot   merchantable\n*\"    J   j (jfOntlBfred on'jPago Two.)\nfjNSTANT INTERVIEWS\n-*\n* I Kenneth Campbell, ex-M.P.P:a-lt\nIs ttiio that-1 have bten approached\nby I several, people who want mo to\nrun In th\u00bb coming Dominion election.\nThey aU-e'fclnd enough to aseureme\nof'tfenty Of support at tho nomination convention, but I will have to\nconsult Mrs. Campbell before 1 make\nany promlsea. \"\u2022\u2022,\ni.*'\nk\nill\nA. B. Parlow,-fprest department-^\n.The moat oomfdrtlng thing In a bad\ntire situation Is that while the acreage burned over thla year has been\nlarge, the, loss 'of > actual merchantable timber has been small,    \"\nJlny Jobpeon, motif tourist, Huntington, Cal.\u2014<Tou have a mighty fine\nlittle town here, and we like It, and\nare gWtig to stay* With you for three\nor foifr-d-ws. \u2022\u00bb ='\u2022     *'\u25a0\u2022\"- --\nArchie ' Jdlinaoh,' ex-liquor board\nchairmani 'hupcr-angler\u2014The West\nKootenay Power A Light? company's\npower development .at Lower Bonnlngton Injured 'my flahlhg. The\ncompany1 for  Its' original! develop-\nRent  ht*s(ed out .ot. the river  my\nvorlto rook, from which I used to\noatch the big onw.'\"-   y\n\u2022 Mr*'William'Rutherford, president\nof the .Horticultural. society\u2014Nelson\nHas the'-ellmate'to grow linyUlng at\nail and If i people Were so \u2022 Interested\nIn their* gSJiUns lhat they would all\ngntribute some little exhibit to th*\nrwer show, we should have a show\ntint would be talked about from one\n\u25a0at Uu-ssuBia to \u00aba flttst-w.'\nDowafa Duchess\ni^V7- 'Xyirilt in Canada\nIr'atf\nn\n\u25a0   *s\" v'-fe^-*' \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0   '\u25a0'\n.|*\/>-V* \u2022\n*&\n\u25a0            -\n- ? B\n\u25a0 ^sssssr.*^\nmm\n\u25a0I.    \"-.,,\u2014-\u2014,\u00ab>\niff*\ntJMnwgHHB'm^g\n^^*?\nwL \u25a0 f^siS* v\n3w\nm\\\\sss\\%aI.VMW&*i\nw\n__rWkl%i*-Wt' >\nV,\nrara^f -'        J aHE3\nL't^\nOPERATORS AND\nMINERS 'BREAK\nWAGE DISPUTES\nNegotiations Regarding Anthracite Scale at Atlan-\nV VticCitf All Off\nMINERS REFUSE TO\nCONTINUE DISPUTE\nMILLICENT,  DOWAGER   DUCHESS\nOF SUTHERLAND\nFormer leader of London society,\none of the richest and most democratic of British peeresses, who Is\nln Canada after visiting Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks ln California. \u2022   .\nSCOU INSANE,\nDECLARE FIVE\nOFALIENiSTS\nMurder Trial \"Result Conspiracy to Prevent Exjios\ning. of Crookedness\" \" V\nCHICAOO, Aug. 4. \u2014 The effort to\nnave Russell Scott from the gallows,\nWith a proof of Insanity, . was con-\neluded today with the testimony of\nfive alienists that they bad found\nhim mentally' deficient\nOne said - he suffered from paranoic\ndementia; another, that he was not-\noriented as to his surroundings In the\ncounty' Jail; and another that he suffered delusions of persecution. ' A\nfourth Bald he believed his trial for\nmurder here last December to have\nbeen the result of a gigantic conspiracy between the crown nttorneys of\nCanada and state ' officials \"to pre\nVent him from exposing the crookedness ot Canadian officials who set out\nto destroy him.\"\n\u25a0 Three jailers who guarded Scott in\nthe death cell, testified for the prosecution  that   they  believed   him   sane.\n\u25a0 Fifteen other jailers and five state\nalienists still are to be heard. The\ncase Probably will go to the Jury\nThursday.\nThe scope of the defence expert testimony was sharply limited by the\ncourt to matters tending to establish\ndevelopment of Insanity-since Febni'\nary 14, thla year, the date of Scott's\ndeath  sentence.\nsto ramlly History Allowed\nTestimony Intended to establish a\nhereditary basis for Scott's mental disorders * wa're abruptly halted by the\ncourt, and a question put to the prls\noner's mother requesting her to \"de\nscribe tho birth of Russell\" brought\na sharp rebuke from tho prosecution\ncounsel. \" The court would permit no\nexamination of the family history of\nthe petitioner and the mother and\nfather wero on the stand merely for\nthe questioning necessary for tho rec-,\nord. The proferred deposition , of\nMrs. Catherine Scott, wlfo of the con\ndemned man, was held Incompetent\nand inadmlssable.\nThere was no cross-examination of\nthe prosecution witnesses.\nAfter defence testimony relative to\nScott's declaration ot Innocence' of\nthe murder of Joseph Maurer had\nbeen excluded, the declaration twice\nwent to the Jury In tho testimony of\nthe Jailers. One guard said the prisoner declared \"he would not beg for\nmercy because he was innocent.\" Another said he declined to submit himself for the examination of state\nalienists because he \"knew lt would\nbo nothing but a psychological third\ndegree, arid he did not need that to\nprove his Innocence.\"\nToronto Liberals Ashed to\nSuggest Returning Officers;\nDoes This Indicate Election?\nTORONTO, Aug. 4.\u2014It la reported Uut Toronto Mhcrnlg-\nIrnvo been naked to recommend\nmen 'for returning officer* In\ncity federal ridings, Thla ig taken na an Indication that an election this fall luu been decided\nupen.\nBritish Swimmer ,v.\nLeaves France On\n[,    Channel Attempt\nBOULOGNE,     Aug.     \u00ab.\u2014The -\nBrltlah  swimmer,, Colonel  Fre-\nborg,'  started   from   Cap*   Oris\nNei at 8:25 p. m. to awlm th*\nEnglish   channel.. He  will   attempt  to  lower  the  record   Of\nTlrabocchl,   who   crossed    the,\nchannel  In   IMI   in   lt   hours, s\nIt minutes.\nfix\nBelief Now That Suspension of Operations Will\nEnsue in Mines\nATLANTIC CITT,'N.J.. Aug. 1. \u2014\nTbe anthracite scale negotiations were\nbroken off at an early hour tonight\nThe motion'to adjourn \"sine die,\"\nproposed by C. J. Oolden. president ot\ndistrict No. \u00bb. United Mlno workers,\nwas seconded by several operators,\nand passed by the Joint committee.\nThe conferees reported they were In\ncomplete disagreement on the miners'\ndemands in that further negotiations\nappeared useless.\nJohn - L. Lewis, president of lhe\nUnited .Mine workers, submitted a reply to the letter ho received yester-\nday from Samuel D. Warriner, chair-\nman of the anthracite operators' conference, ln which the miners' leader\nsaid, ln  part:   .....\nXo OeaatraotlT* Contribution\n. 'The mine workers' representatives\ndeeply regret that the anthracite operators .have seen' fit to publicly announce their refusal to negotiate upon\na tysls of fact. Public statements of\nMr.' W. W. lnglls and yourself obviously given out while the negotiations\nwere In progress, demonstrate that the\noperators do not propose te make any\nconstructive contribution toward the\nsuccess of the conference. With those\nfact* In mind, tho mine workers' representative Is of the'Judgment that it\nIs utterly futile to continue further\nin th\u00ab,so wage scale negotiations.\"\nThe operators went into secret caq-\ncub for SO minutes, and upon their- return they asked Mr. Lewis:\n\"Are we to understand from your\nletter that in view of our opposition\nto an increase of' wages and the\ncheck off, you' refuse to continue negotiations?\" :\nMr. Lewis answered \"Yes,\" according to the account given by Mr.\nlnglls, chairman of the operators' committee.\n\"In view of the difference between\nus,\" came a second question, \"do you\nflatly, reject the proposal that all mat.\ntors In dispute bo submitted to Impar.\ntlal arbitration under conditions Insuring adjudication fair to all parties\nconcirned, work to continue at present rates pending the result of auch\narbitration?\" .\nLewis replied, according to lnglls\nquoting from his letter to Warriner,\nto the effect that arbitration would\nnot be acceptable.\nMr. lnglls later charged Mr. Lewis\nwith deliberately wrecking the wage\nconference.        ,\nThe official communique issued by\ntho Joint conference after adjourn,\nment waa as follows:\n\"August 4,'1911.\n\"The anthracite, committee met today.\n\"Unable to reach an agreement, tho\ncommittee adopted the following-\n.\u201em'^V*. *''\"-\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab   adjourn   sine   die.\nsubject   to   the   call   of   either   side\nthrough the chairman.\"'\nBoth Operators and miners were\npreparing to break camp tonight. The\nJr*.:!,t..n15ye ,'a \u00ab>*cl\"d to come from\neither Harrisburg, Pa., or Swampacott\nMass., according to tho sentiment ol\nthe. various leaders. Nothing Is ex.\npeeled from Harrisburg soon, and re.\nS? . ,m s\u00bb\u00bb>nPSCOtt indicate, in\nthe opinion of those concerned here,\nthat nothing need be expected from\nthere before  September  1.\n*\u2022** lupeastoa Work\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug 4. \u2014 With\nth. breaking off Iri Atlantic City to\nnight of the anthracite wage negotla-\ntions those In close touch with the\nsituation expressed the belief that a\nsuspension of hard coal operation,\n\u2022SS52, u, ordere<1 by official, of the\nunited Mine workers upon tho expire-\n1\u00bb.\u201e\u00b0, a. ' *\"\"mt W\u00bbK\u00b0 agreement,\n\"on which la not at present apparen\n'Wieat Rant Twenty-.   -\n,\/ii|e to Forty-five\n\u25a0   ,.-     Bushels in Ontario\nJPfi^fe'.***! \u00ab--Whcat harvest\nwell, advhhqod, of nearly completed\nn southern Ontario I*, now genenu\nIn  ehe   eastern   and   more' northern\n\u00abU1trlef; Th' yleM *\" \u2122nnlng from\nJS to...4B..hu\u00abhele and Is of good\nquality, according to tho report Issued\ntoday by the Ontario department\nagriculture. Bailey and otvts \u00ab.-.\nripening fast and In the aouthern\noountrles, harvest Is well on.\n\"'    TOVttt BVMIAJt -paovM\nCUPAR. Sask., Aug. 4. \u2014 A young\nRussian aged about 20 years, known\nas,\"John,\" drowned tonight ln\"a dam\non; the farm of Donajrf McKtniJon,\nfive mills southeast ot Oupar.\n^STEAMER ARRjWS^\n\u25a0   Mlnnekfiada, at London, from New\nYork. r\"*MII\n-Canadian ,Trapp*r,   at , Montreal,\nftJffl; -t^'\"- ' \u25a0  .,     .   .\nlhmorSe^eWilll X y\nSuggest-Government-:\n. Operated Railways\nTORONTO; Aug., 4.\u2014A . special  dispatch  from  Ottawa  to\nthe    Evening-..Telegram -says:.\n;\"lt  Is Jear'ned  on. good*, authority (hat the special senate\n. committee appointed to Investigate, the railway situation will\n. iiand down its report on iCuguat\n16.    This  report  will  Include,\n' it is 'said; recommendations\nthat the government take over\nthe management and operation\nof tho Canadian - Pacific railway, the i-eport, It Is under-\nstood will also recommend that\nSir Henry Thornton be. appointed Joint general manager-\nwith Edward-W. Beatty, K.C.,\npresent head of the Canadian\nPacific! These two ' railway '\nmagnates will be supervised by\na ' high government .official,\nwhose name Is not mentioned,\nit Is reported.        -;)    ....\nTORONTO GETS\nWARMED UP FOR\nHE)CT ELECTION\nPresent Local Representatives Not to Have*Nom-.\nination Walkover\nCONSERVATIVES AND\nI'*:. LIBERALS ACTIVE\nLiberals Name-Dates for\nI Party Conventions; Re-\n..': port Hopeful Views\nCAVE-IN KILLS\nKIMBERLEY MAN\nSULip MINE\nCave-In at Stope Fatal to\nAngus. L-ivingstone; Two\nHours to Rescue    \u25a0\nNansen Plans for '\nArctic Trip in Dirigible\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Aug. 4.\u2014 ,\nIrt a fatality; which took plaoo'\n.about'noon on Monday at the '\nSullivan mints Klmberley, Angus\nLivingstone loot his life..- He wa*\novcrwhclmvdiliy a cave in at the\nstopo In'-wtildihe, waa'working,-\nand It was about 2 hour* bo-;\nfore ho could be extricated. Ho\nwas 44 years-of age,.and leaves\na wife and two children at Kim.*\nbcrley. Tlao funeral takes place\non \/Thursilay afternoon at 4\no'cl'ock, nt tlic Klmberley Union\ncliurclk *> '\nPREMIER KING     i\nAT REUNION\nKitchener's Old Bvys' Affair Draws Many; Premier Speaks at Dinner\nKITCHENER. Ont., Aug. A.\u2014The\nfourth day of Kitchener'!** old boys'\nreunion wag featured by the presence of the city's mont noted native\n\u25a0on, Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King,\npremier who participated \"in several\nfunctions. The outstanding event\nwas the civic reception to the premier   at   the   city   hall.\nThe premier spoke at a noon-day\nluncheon and this afternoon hoisted\nthe \"Union Jack at Chlcopee heights,\nthree miles out of the city and the\nhighest point ln western Ontario.\nHere he spoke of the significance\nof the flag and the appropriateness\nof flying It at this spot. In his\nspeech at noon Mr. King aald that\nannexation was not even thought of\nIn Canada and that If It ever were,\nhe would oppose it with all the\npower In his' command. He said\nthat he dismissed as unworthy any\nattempt to break up the confederation  of Canada.\nNew Westminster Men \u2022    \u25a0\nWill Demand Beer\nParlors From Manson\n. TORONTO, A\\ig. * 4.\u2014Evening\nnewspapers of this city, discussing\nprospects of a Dominion general\n\u2022lection, and nominees for the same\n\\)y We two major political parties,\nIntubate that the present local members of the house will not all have\na. walk over (n the party conventions.\ni The rt Toronto Telegram predicts\nthat the Central Conservative as.so-\nelation which meets tomorrow night\nwill have some heavy work before\nIt ln the making up of a satisfactory\nslate for; the Toronto and, district\nridings. In the Toronto west, says\nth.at paper, H. C. Hocken, M,P., will\nhave the opposition of Fred G. Mc-\nBrlen, M.L.A\u201e< for the Conservative\nnomination. T. L. Church, M.P.\nNorth West Toronto, may be opposed\nIn the party council by John R.\nMcNlcoI.\n'\u25a0. In Toronto j West Center where\nftori. Edmund'Bristol has generally\nhad ' clear sailing. In the party\nlists,. there will be \"new blood In\nIhe field\/' - according to \u25a0 the Telegram* ' kt '\u25a0 - \u2022'\u00bb.- \u25a0\"   -     \u25a0-'- \"--V\"\n'     Sharp   Contest    Expected\nNorth Toronto, a, riding ntw ln\nboundaries though, not in name, will\nbe the scene of a sharp contest for\nthe Conservative nomination between\nR. C. Matthews-and Richard Baker.\nDr. Charles Sheard, M.P., south Toronto, Is not mentioned as a possible\noandtdate ln the Telegram's list\nwhich intimates that the contest\nthere for the nomination will be\nbetween Louis -Monahan, a young\nlawyer, and James McCausland, the\nproponent of \"stronger beer\" in the\nOntario  legislature.\nThe Toronto Star says, however,\nthat lt quotes Mr. McCausland as\nsaying \"I am going to stay In the\nlegislature until a sensible liquor\nlaw Is passed and until people can\nget a decent glass of beer.\"\nE. B. Ryckman, seems to pe assured of the Conservative nomination In East Toronto, and David\nSpence, M.P.. In Parkdalc.\nOntario Liberals nro warming up\nto the election campaign, according to tho Star, Hon, Duncan Marshall, who -has been organizing that\nparty throughout the province today expressed from his standpoint \"a\nvery  hopeful  view  of   the  situation.\nLiberals have already been named\nin party' conventions for 15 of the\n82 federal constituencies ln Ontario\nand several, more nominating picnics\nand conventions will be held shortly.\nMaclESTTBTS\nHIS AIRPLANES\nPAmiHaPDTi\nTEN THOUSANO\nACRE BONUS UP\nIndividual    or    Syndicate\n. Must Sell Holdings\nReasonably* ,\nCRESTON BOARD\nSNAPS AT OFFER\nLoca) Syndicate Will Organ-\nDrainage District\nat Once '.\nlze\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 4.\u2014More than\nan hundred business men of New\nWestminster at a meeting decided\nto send a delegation to Attorney-\ngeneral Mason requesting beer parlors for that city.,\nSpencer Robbers Did Not\nTouch Second Safe on\n, Same Floor; 'Twas Empty\nVICTORIA, Aug. 4.\u2014Were the rob.\nbera who on Sunday night plew open\nthe Spencer-, limited; safe1 rwcurlng\n$16,000, possessed of Inside Hnowi\nedge, or did they Just play in luck?\nThis Is the question puaillh-a*. the police following the discovery that an-\notMtv, safe on the same 'floor -was\nnever touched.    It.watl.'empty.\nWinnipeg Officers in\nV(ar Vets Resifni'First\nStep Towari-ijtot Union\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 4.iiA step toward\nthe- union ot veterans' organisations\nas advocated by Field Marshal Earl\nHalg was taken heW tpnlght- when\nthe resignations of all officials and\nthe'staff of the 6.*W.V.A. Vera tabled\nat 'a meeting ot 'the association.\nThey will be placed In ' the'. hands\nof 'Sir Richard \u2022 Turner, Dominion\npresident,\" hnd.' will taK\u00bb effect Immediately. -Tho proposed, amalgamation' of vets' organisation* : becomes\nan accomplishes fact. >'. \u25a0\"_\n.'.Two hundred vets attended the\nmeeting tonight and endorsed the\ngrojSBal ICC till amalfa.nu'.tlon. -\t\nDR. FRIDTZOF  NANSEN\nNoted  Norwegian explorer, who Is\nto lead an attempt to reach the north\nwaMIt\nfor arrest\nofschwartz\n'\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0'*.. i      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\/\nDetective Signs a' Warrant\nCharging Missing Man\nWith Murder\n\u2022 MARTIKf-Kif-Cal.;-Aug. 4.\u2014A'war.\nrant charging. Charles \u201e Henry\nSchwartz, vice-president and general\nmanager of the Taclfic Cellulose\ncompany, with the murder of an\nunidentified man whose charred\nbody was found In the ruins of the\nCellulose plant at Walnut Creek Ian\nThursday, was sworn out hero late\ntoday and signed by detective Clyd-J\nLaird. Schwartz has been roUt-in?\nsince the explosion and fire Thursday night antl officials are convinced\nthat tho charred body Is not tha: of\nSchwartz.  \u2022\nBosworth's Body\nArrives Canada\nTomorrow Noon\nMONTRKAL. Que., Aug. 4.\u2014The\nremains of the late G. M. Bosworth,\nChairman of the Canadian Pacific\nsteamships who died in London\nJuly 26, ure due to arrive on the\nCanadian Pacific liner Montroyul\nnext Thun-duy afternoon nt Quebec,\nIt was stated at headquarters of the\nrailway  here today.\nFuneral services will be held at\nSt. George's church Friday afternoon\nand the body will Ho In state at\nthe church between noon and 2\no'clock. A specliil suard of honor\nof Canadian Pacific railway police\nwill be ln charge of the casket from\ntho slip at Quebec up to tho time\nof  inhumation at tlio cemetery.\nOne Comes Down; Extent\nof Damage Unknown;\nNot Believed to be Big\nWASHINGTON. Aup. 4,-Safely\nestablished at their base at Btah,\ntho MacMlllan arctic expedition Is\nmaking rapid progress ln Us plana\nto explore by air the unknown regions\nof the north. Two of the naval airplanes carried northward by tho exploration party, had been put ashore\nyesterday. One of them engaged In a\nsuccessful test flight Immediately\nafter being assembled. The other,\napparently, had .a breakdown but lhe\ngarbled radio message received today\nby the navy department, did\nIndicate  any  serious  damage.\nnot\nCRESTON. Aug. 4. \u2014 \"Up to 10.-\n000 acres of Kootensy Flats land will\nbe deeded free -of cost to any person\nor syndicate who will undertake It\"\nreclamation on the drainage district\nplan, and sell such portions as It mar\ndecide to dispose- of, at a price tbat\nwill assure of the acreage reclaimed\nlelng put under crop.\"     ..*    \u25a0 .\nIn these terms Hon. T. Pattullo.\nminister of lands, who was here yesterday In connection with grazing matters, stated a new-and favorable poN\nIcy In connection with the 45.000 acres\nof land embraced In Kootenay Flats,\nwhich for years tho lands department\nhas been steadily urged to drain and\nmake  available  for settlement\nPattullo   Keete   Xttpmtatiaa  \u2022\nTho proposition was made to a delegation from the Creston boart of\ntrade, headed by President C. W. Allan, which body has of lato urged Mr.\nPattullo to consider developing this\nImmensely fertile area along drainage\ndistrict lines, which has worked out\nsuccessfully on the Idaho side at\nBonners Ferry, where already two\nsuch districts are cropping 8000 aerea\not dyked land. w|th two other districts formed and at work on dyking,\nand a, flfUi .district .ol --I0M - acre*.\nseeking the necessary authority to\nproceed .with  such work.\nThe situation of the lands in British Columbia is held to be eually.aa\nlavorablo as those In Idaho, where\nthe reclamation cost In no case haa\nrun hlRhrr than *4fi an acre, on much\nof which, last year, five ton* of\ntimothy, S5 bushels of oats, and SO\nbushel* of wheat wero harvested to\nthe acre. On tlic first of these Idaho\nitrainafTi- districts, tho undertaking appealed so favorably to the engineering\nfirm doing the drainage work that It\ntook up the entire Issue of bonds\nfloated to finance the project, ln payment fur Its work, and in the other\nthree district* where there has been\nn keen demand for the drainage bonds.\nAlreadr  Busy  With Details\nMr. Pattullo was hardly out of town\nbefore the executive of tho Creston\nhoard of trade was In session, and the\nheal lawv.r is now busy on the Land\nnet. ascertaining the details in connection with the formation of a drainage\ndistrict, and Immediate acceptance by\nn local syndicate of Mr. Pattullo's offer is assured.\nTbe mlnlMer feels that if the gift\nof the acreJiBe will serve to demonstrate tho fraufbilfty of reclamation.\nthe department can readily dispose- of\nthe remaining .tri.'KiO nores, and with\nIts development get much revenue both\nin provincial taxes as well as ln selling  price. *  '\nTHREE KNIFED IN\nA STREET BRAWL\nThree Given Eight\nYears Burglarizing\nHomes in Quebec\nQUKDKC, Aug. 4.\u2014Alfred Uuilin.\nPhil Trudi-1 nnd Anijelo D'Annunlso,\nwho pleaded Kullly t\" burglarizing\nthe homes of Han. Gentrd Power and\n.1. F. Iturstull wt-vii sentenced today\nby Jiid^e Cluiuette to ,-lclit years in\ntho penitentiary each, nn both counts,\nthe  sentences  to  run concurrently.\nChinese Girl Cafe\nSinger Held on Sale\nof Liquor Charges\nManitoba Ruthenians Held\nby     Police;     Fought\nThrough Streets\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4.\u2014As the result of a midnight street brawl,\n[our brothers, residents of the Kl\nPhlnstone. -Man., district nro beinrt\nheld hy the provincial police, and\nthree other men ur,- receiving mcdl-\nenl attention for knife wounds. Othor\nur-reats were made. Tho fight which\nfollowed an argument in a pool\nroom ut El 1-hlnstune waB waged\nthrough the Htrcets of the town.\nsticks and stones, and knives being\nthe weapons of wnrfate. The brothers Amed Kupnllskl, nre Uuthenlana\nand   tho  wounded . men   Englishmen.\nFrank Itlddell, who received a\nknife thrust In the lung. Is In a\nserious condition nt Shoal Lako hos-\npltril. The other two men were leas\nseriously    injured.\nGondolas Swamped\nWhen Storm Sweeps\nCanals of Venice\nttOMB .Vug. 1. \u2014 Passengers in\ngondolas on the canals ol. Venice und\nbathers along the Italian Riviere narrowly escaped death today 'when a\nViolent storm swept across northern\nItaly.. . Several Venetian gondolas\nwere swumped und their occupunts.\nIncluding many women, were thrown\nInto the water ttnil saved from\ndrowning by heroic rescues.\n\u25a0 Great damage -is reported from\nPadua, Verona, Turin and titella.\nHeroic Brothers \u201e\nSave Two From\n,    ^Drowning in East\nMOOSE JAW, Aug. 4.\u2014Harry and\nArthur Webster, young sons of\nMr.' and Mrs.' H. Webster, Chaplin,\nBask,, performed heroic deeds - today when they saved from drowning two playmates who went- beyond their depth at a swimming\nhole near Central Butte. The lads\nwent under throe times before be\n'ng racitjd,   \u201e^  ..^..^\nVANCOUVER,    Aug.    4.\u2014Ft\nthe\nfirst time in local police history\na Chinese filrl. Ah Soo. pretty cute\nsinger, has been arrested charged\nwith tlie sale of liquor. She is alleged to have served two liquor operatives with Chinese wine and beer.\nDISCOVER PLOT KILL\nPRESIDENT MASARW\n1'RAGUK. Aug. -I.\u2014Tho police assert that they have discovered u plot\nto assassinate President Masaryk, by\norder of tho Moscow Internationale,\nnnd have taken Into custody Dr.\nHouser. secretary of the communist\nparty, and a communist writer named\nattistny.\nFlivvers in the Future\nMost Likely to Float;\nHenry Buys Junk Ships\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 4.\u2014Sale of\n200 vessels for scrapping was awarded\nto Henry Ford today by tho shipping board.   Ills bid was $1,760,000.\nThe vote was 4 to 1 with Com-\nmlasloner Benson, who has opposed\nsale of' the ships for scrapping,\nCW-${ <fcl ft\u00bbfAMtl bftUojt,\t\nThe Weather\nt\nor the -\nThs  tpimicrutures below are f\n2t hours ending yesterday afternoon at\n\u00bb o'clock.\nVICTORIA.   Aug.   4.\u2014Nelson   and\nvicinity:   Continued  fine and\nwarm.\nMin.\nMax.\nNELSON          \u00ab\nas\nVictoria        83\n72\n71\nKnmloops     a ' 54\n14     '\nBarkervllle        42\n\u00ab\u2022\nPrince  Rupert        50\nII\nE.atevutl         64\n14\nCalgary    ',, ( 41\n71    i\nWinnipeg  i...    55\nII.  -\nPortland         58\n14\n- San Francisco  ......    52\n\u20224    ,'\nSeattle    '....    51\n14\nSpokane      66\nll\nPentlcton      51\n14\nHaselton    ti a,    41\n41    '\u2022\nVernon     II\nII   V\nGrand Forks ........    61\ntl    i\nCranbrook  ...a,    41\nII    '\nEdmonton  .. i   '40\n74\nHumidity   dropped  tar   below   the) .\ndanger point ot ll  yestordt)\nby 1\no'clock, although It Wae high In the\nmorning. At I a.m., lt waa II, at\n2 p.m., lt waa 56, and at I p.m.,\nit waa 17. Saturation point If mh\njarded as 140, J\t\n?\u2022-' \u25a0 '-  \u25a0       '    \"  \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0     i -:\n \u00a3>t^>TvWT\n\u00bb=\u2022'\u25a0\u00ab\nTHE NELSON DAILY. NEWS,rr.WBjDNESDAY MOANING,: AlfGUST $tl925\na#\nGeorge BenweB, Proprietor\n-,       The Premier Hotel ol *>he Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN     - RATES, $190  TO  \u00abU\u00bb\n;\u2022-   'Rooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\n\u2022  Headquarters for all Travelling Men,-Mining Men,\nV    .    .   ,*' Lumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS'\n\u2022-\u2022\u25a0   SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE   MOST  COMFORTABLE   r6tUNDA,IN   THE   CITY\n* HUME \u2014 F. Margrave. D. A. Smith.\nA. R. Thompson, Vancouver; H. W. El-\nJer, Wilmington. Del.: Mr. and Mrs. I.\n. H. Jackson. Trail; T. rt. Leag, C.\nRutherford,    J.    D.    Haggart.    Ray   C.\nFrench. Calgary; A. Cohen, Montreal\nJames It. White, it. C Lainmeis. Spo-\nl:ane: A. H. Carter, Lethbrldge; Mr.\nand Mrs. C. H. Chapman. Edmonton;\nC.  H.  Cavei-ley, Cranbrook.\nHotel\n\u2022\nHKSit;-j^\"4*\n* *jH          Hfefefflm'\nHsmmW                                   ___n______W \"\u00bb\u25a0?\u25a0''\nStrathcona\nTB ^BH BsBBMnBMLt\nEuropean Plan\niii nil\n\"A Home for Those Away\nFrom tiome\"\nW______mm______xsnm\u2014\nTOURIST   HEADQUARTERS\n-,        COSY ROOMS    \u2022    U\nN EXCELLED 8ERVICE\n<*' \"      \u25a0      \/\u25a0\"\"\"\" '\u25a0'    '\"\u25a0\u25a0'-   \u2022\u25a0-\u25a0--\"'*'\u2022 ;-*-'   *\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0New Grand Hotel\n111 VERNON   ST.  EAST   -   \u2022    S.  E.  MILLS,  PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters for Everybody.   Hot and Cold Water.\nTelephones in AH Rooms.\nFREE-.BUS   FROM   STATION.'AND  BOAT\nI\n'NEW   GRAND   \u2014   T.   W.    Holland,\n..Trail;   Mrs.   II.   Gibson,   Guy   Johnson,\nSyringa Creek: Capt. K. O. Floyer.\nWanetn; W. II. Thornborron. Z. Fa-\nfuse.   Victoria;   A.   Krlsnian, Coriuk.\nQueen'sHotel\nTHB CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water In every room\nSteam  heated.\nA.   LAPOINTEt   Pr%*.\n\u25a0**\" QUEENS\u2014T.   W.   Leash, Cranbrook:\n' W.   D.   Miller.  Crow's   Neft;   Mr.   and\n'Mrs.   A.   DublKTly,   Metallne   Vails;   T.\nUordon, Rossland; W.  Wood,  Trail.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n\"'\/,. Blocks East ef Post Office\nSteam   heated'   Hot  and   cold\n\u2022rater.   Rooms by day or week.\nAlso  Furnished  Suites.\nP. H. BUSH, Prep.\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear C.P.R. Station.\nRooms  at  Reasonable  Ratea\nH. DUNK, Proprleter\nSAVOY HOTEL\nBAKER ST,   NELSON B.C.\n2 BLOCKS FROM DEPOT\nSTEAM HEATED\nHOT -*\u00bbC01D Rl\/WWNC WATER\n...-\u25a0  in rooms.\nJ.A.KERH. \" Pnopfttuon.\nSAVOY\u2014K. Mayhury,' Thomas Iten-\nwlck, Vancouvpr; Mr. and .Mra. c. .J.\nNorthquld. Hpokane; A. K Carrutha-rs,\nI.. 11. Hk-k.a, Hourls. Man.: W. it. Popper. Fernle; H. Kckforal, I'. HrrKslrom,\ncity; tl. 13. II. Clifton, Uoniiiiiaton: M.\nHanoi,  Trail.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNER. Preprleter\n'    The home  of  plenty.\nliftr  rooma of solid  comfort.\n(fa serve the best meala In Nelson\nIt's the cook.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.  MADDEN,  Prop.\nateanvheated  Rooms by the  Oey,\nWeek  or  Month.-\nEvery consideration  shown  te\nguests.\nCor. Bshor and Wsrd Ste, Nelson\n\u25a0'.'MADDEN \u2014 -a. Jlmson, Hpokan.-;\nM McNeil. T. 1',-rdu. Bonnlngton; I).\nBarrett, city; llMrry Hughes,, (aN.Ity.;\nL.   Thompson.'  Troy,   Mont.\nVisiting Cards\nFor Ladies  or\nGentlemen\nWe can give you\nprompt delivery of personal visiting cards.\nHighest grade printin-i\ntnd ftiaterials.\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printert\nNELSON, B. C,\nW. P. Fallon, sailor, died from a\nfractured skull after being detained\nat police station In Montreal aa a\ndrunk. :   - ' i'\nSay \"Bayer\"-Insist!\nUnless you see the \"Bayer\nCross\" on tablets you are not\ngetting the genuine Bayer product proved safe by millions and\nprescribed by physicians for 25\nyea\u00ab; VVVV\nC\/v\/fe^ ACCePt   \u00b0-Ul2 i\nXjOf^^ Bayer package\nwhichcontains proven directions\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablets\nAlso bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggists\nAapirln la tbo trad, mark Oglstered la'\nCanada) of I),yer Mntnifariura ol Hone*\nataUcacltetcr of s.llcjllcucld.\nare, easi\/y ofspcttedof\nir (fie. n$ti( ir^e^oa'\nis usee\/ \/btseft nfyeiri\nUse a^JajiVM\nModern Pavements\nMake Feet Tired\nThe miles, and miles of hard surface\nroadways and side-walks are very wonderful, but, being hard, non-resilient, and\nexcellent conductors of heat and cold, they\ntorture our poor feet unmercifully.\nIt has been found that if tired, sore feet\n\u25a0re bathed in warm water containing a few\ndrops of Absorbine Jr. they will be delightfully cooled and refreshed.\nBut this is not the only use for Absorbine\nJr. It is a liniment, antiseptic,'and germicide in one\u2014the handiest, most Useful\narticle in the family medicine cabinet.\nNot only does it kill germs and prevent\ninfection in open cuts and sores, hastening\nthe healing\u2014not only does it limber up to\nnew freshness, tired, stiff muscles, but asa\nmouth wash, throat spray or garble it\nprotects you against wandering disease\ngerms and leaves behind a pleasant, clean\ntaste and odor, fi.15 a bottle at your\ndruggist's.\nNelson s Best Cafes\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER, B. C.\nflakier,  Beating, Bathing, e>oU,\nTennis  Courts.\nriahlsr Taokle Supplied. Oroeery\n\u25a0tore la Connection.\nW. * A.    WABD,    SroprUtor.\nDay, 13; Week, \u00bb17to\u00bbl\u00bb. (peeled\nMonthly Bates.\nROYAL CAFE\nClastic   Restaurant\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevalle\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIOHT\nLuncheon, 11:30 to J Mc\nSpecial   Dinners,  5:30  to   8 15c\nWe Specialize In Chop Suey\nand  Noodles.\nPHONE  182\nm:\nMCMeRS\nAND TNflU'tWlLOREN\n(MpWer*\nCosts Less With\nAdded Tariff Tax\nTHE COOLING OFF GAME\nOne Mother Says: ,\nIn hot weather when 1 see the\nchildren 'playing too hard, perhaps\nlosing their tempers because of -the\nheat, Jot*-, becoming over excited, \\\ncall them In for lemonade or something cool, and suggest that they\nplay ths \"cooling off' game. -One\nchild '. begins a story, the only reV\nquirentent\/of which Is that It be\nabout something cold. As they take\n'turns, they; vie with each other In\nmentioning '-the'-* coldest things that\nthey can think of,' and from the very\nsuggestions tjiey .become cool.   ,\u201e   '\nFORTY SPECIAL TRAINS\nTO CARRY HARVESTERS\nMOttTHH&U ^ Aug. *.\u2014Crop re-\npurts from Western Canada continue optimistic Iri tone and th,e Indications'remain, steady that the harvest this year will bo the largest in\na number of years. Already the\nCanadian railways have issued a call\ntor   50,000   men. *\u25a0\u25a0?.'\nThe Initial movements of harvesters to the west will amount to at\nleast   25,000. \"\nForty special trains will be required. ;.\u25a0*-'.\nThe quota from Toronto and eastern Canada will move on August 18\nnnd from Toronto and western Ontario on August  31.\nPutties Up Cracks and\nTurns on the Gas^Is\nFound With Life Gone\nSEATTLE*, Aug. 4.\u2014J. H. \u2022 Bloedel,\nSeattle lumber dealer, the flnJt'witness at a hearing here of the United\nStates tariff commission on logl Imported from Canada, testified today\nthat timber from north of tho\nboundary with tho tariff of $1 a\nthousand feet added costs less than\nthe' American. ...\nThe commission expects to conclude\nthe hearing by Saturday. Afterward\nthey are to deal with halibut.\nit was announced that the purpose of the Inquiry was to decide\nwhether reduction of the duty on\nlogu should be recommended to\nPresident Coolldge who can cut It\none half.\nANGLICAN BISHOP'S\nRESIGNATION TAKEN\nLONDON, Ont., Aug. 4.\u2014Gas from\nfive Jets ho himself had opened took\nthe .life today of S. Ilancft, aged\n30, a Toronto hebrew.\n-Htr had-closed-up-the cracks of\nlhe doors and-windows of his room\nwith putty.\nBishop Bidwell of Ontario\nWas Active in Immigration;  Wife Joined\nKINGSTON, Ont., Aug. 4.\u2014Ht.\nHon. E. J. Bidwell, bishop of the\nOntario dloceso -, of the Church of\nEngland In Canada, having presented his resignation through tho house\not bishops, tho executive committee\nof the diocese In session here today, decided to recommend that\nthe resignation be accepted.\nBishop Bidwell has been ln England for some months and ' he has\nbeen active In connection with emigration under church auspices to the\nDominion   of  Canada.\nDIARRHOEA\nDon't suffer from thin weakening, distressing, Kuninier complaint. A few\ndoses or Chumbcrlaln'8 taken In sweetened water puts an end to dlarrhoeu\nHnd   colic.     At  all  druggists.\nCHAMBERLAIN'S\nCOLIC     BE M.K 1> Y   \\\nMrs. Bidwell, wife of Bishop Bid-\nwell, was recently received Into tho\nRoman Catholic faith nt Kingston.\nIt is generally understood that the\nbishop's resignation was \"promoted\nby  this fact, \u25a0   *\nByng Now Visits\nAlong Arctic Red   '\nRiver Territory\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4. \u2014 I'l-esslng\nstead fly northward, Uaron Byng,\ngovernor-general of Canadu, und his\nparty reached the Arctic Red river\nand Fort McPherson. yesterday. At\ntho latter post, his excellency visited\nlhe Anglican mission, inspected pensioners and former employees of the\n'Hudson'*, Bay company. He alsu\n; visited the graves' of n number of\nRoyal Canadian Mounted police who\nWere lost on tho Dawson patrol In\n3-ebruaiy, 1911. The governor-general\neverywhere has received enthusiastic\nreceptions.\nLawyers in the Charles Ponrl\nbankruptcy case at Boston have already received $159,790.40  ln fees.\nWESTLWIZE\nSEND:\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nPineit-eqiilpped  restaurant  In  the\ncity.     OPEN   DAT   AND   NltlHT.\n8PECIAI Ice Cream, Boda Water\nanil Hot-Drinks.   Nice, clean, furnished rooms*; hot and, cold water.\nWe'Cater   to   Private   Parties.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n120 Baker Street, Nelson,  B.C.\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIQHT\n11i30 to 2:30, Special Lunch Me\n6:30 to 8:00 p.m. Supper 36e\nPhone  IM\nReduced Rates\nSummer\nVacation  Trips\n$33.05   $37.35    $41.75\n.Vancouver- \u25a0 _       Victoria Stattls\n\/ Via    Kettle   Valley,   returning    same.\n$39.20    $37.60    $44.40\nNelson .\nArrow Lakes\nVancouver -\nVictoria\nSeattle\nSpokane\nNelson\nGood     going     via\nVancouver,   returning\n.through, Spokane,   or\nthe reverse.   .\nNelson\nKootenay Landing\nSpokane\nSeattle^\nVictoria or Vancouver\nKettle Valley  Ry.\nTo Nelson\nOood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spoke ne, or\nthe reverse.\nNelson\nK. V. Ry. to Penticton\nOkanagan \"Lake\nVernon,   Vancouver\nSpokane, Nelson\nVia  Kootenay Lake\nOood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nthe reverse, .\n$46.20    $44.60    $51.40\nAs above, ext-eikl As above,. except As above, except\n.via. Portland, Ore., via I'orttand, Ore., via Portland, ' Ore.,\nhetweon Seattle, 8po- between Seattle, Spo- between Seattle, Spokane, 'kane. kane. -\nCircular Tours available from any point on the Circle.\nSold Daily,Ull September 30.    Return till October 31.\nGood for stop-over at pleasure within limit.   Fares quoted\nthrough Arrow, Okanagan or Windermere Lakes, Calgary,\n-Banff;-take* Louise.   Ask any agent for details, or write\n\u25a0''.-\u25a0   J. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent\nNEL80N,  B. C.\nSMOKE UND\n(Continued   Ffom  p3g**0riM\nUmber are King destroyed, fcI-\nUemrnta,    homos    and Mmi-lns\ncamps are threatened, A.Vl tfrdn-\nsands   of   acree   of   Uiu.'jer   and\nJnv&% tenfU are being liu.^-d aver\nby   the \/ numerous   foim   fIn*\nprevailing aU over the privliwc,\naccordingvto  Major  C' S.  Cow.\nan,  chic? forester of yaitooiiver\ndistrict,  who  returned ism* to*\nJilffht after vUtlng th; mrne nf\nthe major outbreaks.\nThe  most  serious  ton'lagratton   Itf\nat    Stillwater,    45    ml lot    wuiU    of\nPowell river.    Here the fUnins haie\nswept through J00 ticres! of timbered\nlands   destroying   P,0t)0^oo   feet   of\nstanding  and   fallen   timber.    Huge\ntimber stands lay In the^patlj. of iho\nflames In* this locality is elsewhere,\nFires   Out, of   Coiilnd\nDriven by high wind* the fires at\nPender Harbor and  He the it are  reported lo be out of  control hnd although fought by .hundreds of nien,\nare   sweeping   toward Jfflen   tlmi>er,\nA logger named Oaoun-ft who fras\nmissing, (or the last *6 tours In the\nStillwater ^rea and thought to have\nbeen cut off by tho fi-rr. wtuj [\u00ab-und\nTuesday night fn nn ex naustrd con\n4ltldn, but safe.    '\u25a0        \/ <\" .\nMany of the 60 tire* reportt-d to\nbe burning In the Kamloops district\nare reported out of\"; control and\ndestroying timber; As a result of\nthese fires a heavy pall of smoke extends right through:the interior to\nthe coast and even,; spme distance\nout to.sea..-. ,' Bv\".\nVICTOniA, Aug. 4. \u2014 Victoria's\nwatershed around Sooke lake wus\nbrought Into danger today by a forest\nfire which has destroyed a sawmill\nami broken out of control.\nFrom the fragmentary Information\navailable here this afternoon, lt was\nevident, that tho fire had reached\na point only u mile and a half, below the lowe- end of -Books lake\nwhere the Intake of- the city's water\nworks system Is located. Meanwhile\nthe blaze is near the edge or valuable\nwatershed timber. .\nWatershed   in   Danger\nVICTORIA,    Aug.    4.\u2014Forest    fires\narc raging In the vicinity ot Victoria\ntonight    nt    Sooke,    Metchosln    and\nLang fort] lake.\n' The blaze at Sooke, blggost of tho\nthree, ate Its way Into the Sooke lake\nwatershed this afternoon alter raging\nacross an area burned over 15 years\nago. Tonight, 'no longer fanned by u\nhigh wind, it Is being got under\ncontrol nnd may be subdued entirely\nIn the morning.\nThe Metchosln,,and Langford fl\\i\naro both small blazes which started\nthis afternoon. ' ,\nArrowhead Outbreak\n11KVBLSTOKK, B.C., Aug. 4.\u2014Wllh\na large flro raging up the Big  Bend\narid - a new outbreak \u25a0 reported from\nArrowhead, the forestry departr.mt\nIs again directing \u25a0 alt Us attention\nto the.^flre .situation..; .The extent\nuf the' fires' Is hard to determine\nowing to the dense nmuke.\nFourteen\" men are .engaging In IJifi\nBend country while about u dozen\nwere sent to Arrowhead at noon to-*-\nday. ...\nWESTMINSTER FOLK\n\u25a0SBC? IN VANCOUVER\nSkis\nAll-Wool, with - tine line .\nstripe, plain and a line' of\nchecked Kashas..*   '.   .\nAlso Fancy Crepes, In\nsilk-threaded checks. Price\n97.00'each.  '\u2022''\u2022\"\u25a0'\nFlannel Skirts,' pleated,\nat 84.5D. ''r    \u2022\u25a0:-\nWool Crepe Skirts, pleated, at 93.00.   '  \u2022\nGirls' and Misses' Serge\n\u2022Skiits, at ?2.00 and\n\u25a0 93.50.  ... \u25a0  ..?\"--,;.-:.'\n\"BLOUSES\n. A   Siik   Knitted   Over-\nblouse, , all, colors. - Only\n92.75. \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0': -yV ;.\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0.;\nNeUon Dry Gdod* Co.\nLadies', Wear Specialists\nPROGRESSIVES START\nDRIVE FOR FUNDS\nSaskatchewan Federals Decide on House to House\nCanvas\nREUlffA. Aug. -U. \u2014 A' provlnclal-\nwlde drlv\u00bb for campaign funds will\nIn- staged shortly by\\the.Sas)catohcwan\nt'edvral Progressives,' it was decided\nat the convention of the party held\nhere today. The drive will bo\nhouse-to-house canvass conducted alt\no\\t?r the province in one day. Every\nelector   In   each    federal   constituency\ntil lie ai-kt-d (o contribute to tlm party funds. The date for the drive has\nnot yet been  set. .,\nhe provincial ^committee ,will ap-\nl\u00bbo!iit an executive ' Wednesday,: und\neim vent Ion will di*-custi organlza-\ntton ntattern frum a provincial and\nntorpiov'nclal point of,view, as well\nis un;' ri-Kolutlons that may be Intro-\nUuewl. The convention was held In\ncamera. Exactly 100- men attended.\nfour, representatives from each con-\n\u25a0stltueticy, and the li> federal members\nfur   Saskatchewan.\nClaim  That Beer Parlors\nDraw Trade; Ask Oliver\n'   for Parlors\nVICTORIA. Aug. 4.\u2014That their potential customers are lured 12 miles\naway to Vancouver to do their shopping by the beer parlors in the latter city, was the assertion made\nhere today by a delegation representing New Westminster business\nmen which conferred with Premier\nOliver ln an effort to secure permission for the *. opening of \u2022 such establishments  In   New  Westminster.\nNo decision haa been reached by\n'the government.\nIt Ih expected lhat representatives\nof the \"diys\" who secured a large\nmajority when the question was\nvoted upon here last year, will\nEljortly.,como to the capital to oppose\nthe   granting   o\u00a3 tho   privilege.\nDeserter of His Wife and\nChild Fights Expulsion\n. CAUiAUY, Aug, 4.\u2014liyrun D. Jones,\nwho wan arrested in Calgary Monday\nnight on a charge of ileaertliig his\nwlfo and minor child In the city of\nProvo, Utah.1 hits declared that he Is\ngoing to right extradition In volte of\nthe statement he made when arrested.\nthat he was'willing to go buck , to\nFrovo-and face, the music. \/*   '\n\u25a0 When he was arrested Monday he\ntold tlie offkVrt* that he hail married\na Ml\u00ab\u00ab'Whitehead two months ago In\nliuttc,  Mont.\nParties Perfect\n* Election Plans\nin Manitoba\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 4.\u2014With ? Rti\nHon. Arthur Meighen, Conacrvallvo]\nIwuler visiting - the province, (cd-\nitrnt election goaftlp holds sway 1\ntimong tlie voters ot Manitoba. Mr. 1\nMeighen -fill continue his speaking I\nlour tomorrow when he addresses]\ntho electors of the Neepawa dis-1\ntrict and on Thursday he will speak]\nat Dauphin-. .\nBoth Conservative and Liberal or- ,\nganizatlons In the province, floowing\ntheir recent annual conventions hero I\nare perfecting election plans. Senator H. A. Mulholland of Port Hope,\nOnt., who arrived here tonight, expressed confidence that \"Premier\nKing will go to the country In tho\nfall.\"\n1 '.     \u00ab\nI Old DutchBl\nCleanser\nOld Dutch\nSaves Time\nSaves Labor \u2022\n\u2022\u2014because the soft,\nflat, flaky particles\ncover more surface\nand remove visible\nand invisible impurities quickly and with\nless labor. It's eco--\nnomical, too, as you\nuse less and it goes\nfurther. For health-\nful cleanliness always use\nOld Dutch\nMADE IN CANADA\n IPJPJWPIIW^\n^EpTC!I^N#>AII^\nsrj\u00bb 2j.\u00ab tr1 .'.tsa s **.\n;T#e- Wolves|\n,i'\".  rarid the Lamb'\n\u2022  '    By J.;S\/FLETCHER; \\\/X   v7~\naaaaaa. . , ,   I i m |    \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0..\u2022',..,..'\n\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0 .\u25a0:'. ...   CHAPTER, IV.    i;\nA Dead Han's Orders'\nCarsdale's first a action, on : receiving thin intimation from Mra.\nWalslngham, was . to step . swiftly\npast - her,, and ' to close the? door\nthrough which she had Just come,\nand'. which communicated with a\ngeneral .office wherein the boy Grit-\n\u2022fkin,\u201e and* a young lady typist were\n.-wont,to discharge their tasks and to\n(rcoelrp callei-s,. He turned round\non the secreetarjr wltlv-nn astonished\njMare,.   .1,  \u201e \u201er ; .,    '..,;,' -.   .5.\n\u2022 \"What\u2014-here, almost within an\n;hour.,of. her father's deathl\" he exclaimed. '. .;.      .! \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0.        \u25a0.\" .\n'rt:,t(ild\u25a0 you she..Is u sharp as\nyou .are,-' aald ..Mrs. Walslngham.\n-\"She..-hunt hare called for Winch\nand brought hln\\ straight here. And\n':,' Chredale first 'shrugged his shoiil-\nidera and ;then spread out hla hands.\n. \"(joodhess knows\u2014I don'tl\" lie\nanswwed.    \"It   Seenls\u2014unseemtngly.\n>PerhM>s. she ?*ahts  some   papers\u2014\n[j the Will,,it may be,'   Besides as you\n,know,   Leverton i had   his I own   prl-\nivate Concerns here, Jush as I have\n\u2022nine.   I can't stop her from going\nUnto her father's private room.\" \u2014;\n'\u2022NO, because she's ln,\" aald Mra.\nj Walslngham.' \"Ahd .what la . more,\nthe door's, locked. \\ Orlffkln heard\nIt lock as soon as they- entered.\"\nI     \"TtW.'door\u2014locked?\" ho exclaimed.\n\"Oood,,God, ..what does- that meant\nThat: sounds\" mysterious.\"   '.. ,\n\"I,*. should. thlnjt   It , means   that\n.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n- TO WHOM. I* HAY OOMCtim '\n. TAKE NOTICE thai tile {loyal Cafe\nIs'being*sold to the? Hong Lun Tong\nCohlpany; \u25a0 'ahd all recounts--owing by\nthe Rdyal Cafe .must be presented for\npoyirtent'at once.->\u2022 The new management-will not be responsible for any\nof the debt* owing by .the present\nproprietors of the Royal Cafe.    !\nDated   at   Nelson,   British   Columbia,\nthis 4th day of August, A.D. 1125.\nBROWN AND DAWSON.\n:'\u25a0 Solicitors   for   Hong   Lun   Tong\n.' \u2022    Company. (10755)\n!\nGENTBIFFED\npKICKEDIi\n'f\nGOX^ ORE   sXtKTXO   OO.   <LM>.)\nNotice Is' hereby given that the\nItefcWlent Engineer, No. 1, Northwestern Mlncrnl Survey District, British\nColumbia, upon receiving notice of an\nadvertised and solicited sale of share.s\nin a\" certain Company, via., the Gold\nOre Mining Company Ltd. (N.P.L.).\nupoh statements or terms not In accordance With the actual, facts- and\nccndltiorts has notified the undersigned, the Minister of Mines, who upon\ninvestigation and In pursuance of\nSection 16 \"Mineral Survey & Development Act,\". Chapter HO, R.8., B.C.,\ni'| 1924, finds it necessary to 'prevent In\nF jury to investors to give the follow\n!*{ Ing notice:\nIt That., the. nald. Resident Engineer.\nr under date 23rd July, 1925. has sub\n{.) mittrd to the Minister of Mines a de\nV tailed report' and comment on state*\n\";;, ments contained In .ait advertisement\nJ appearing In a certain publication cir-\n\u25a0\u2022' tulated In the Vrovince of British Co-\n'\u25a0\u25a0\"- lumbia, and  composed in  terms which\n\u2022 vi solicit the Hale of shares In the said\n\"   Gold Ore Mining Co. Ltd. (N.P.L.).\nSaid advertisement is hesded \"Gold\nOre\" and a leading paragraph reads;\n\"In cpeaklng of the l-^gle group of\nclaims    belonging    to    the    Cold    Ore\nMinihg  Co.   Ltd..   'John  the  Finn*  has\nthis   to- My,   'Tnere  are   two  distinct\nveins   on   th-*   property   that   can   be\ntraced   for   four  hundred   feet   on   the\nsurfac<\\*\"\nThe   said  Resident   Engineer's  com\n: 'i ment ott the foregoing follows:\n' ,\\      \"The   north  vein   has   one  open   cut\ni on   it  and   the   south  vein   has   three\n\u2022 I | cuts whleh trace It for a distance of\n\u25a0 '   about 'ICO feet,\"-   \u25a0\u25a0\n..       Said    Advertisement    In    the    same\n!; paragraph  '.contains     the     following\n\u2022'ii words: <\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022,*\n., \"One vein  varies  ln width from  25\n: \u2022 to 30 feet, while the other runs from\n\u2022 -, 10 to 12 ftct.\"\n* - The   said.  Resident   Knglneer's   com-\ni  . mont hereon follows:.\ni \"The  north   vein   shows   a  mlneral-\n,; Ized  wMth   of approximately   10   feet.\n:\\) The sppth veto-Taries from 4% to e\nif feet In width.\"\n|  i Said advertisement In the same para*\nl'; graph  contains  the  following words:\n.' *'Ope,n   cuts \u2022 on   these - veins  at  dif-\n'\u25a0il ferent distances have shown an aver-\n.; age of better than. $30.00  to  the  ton\nIii lu Gold\/ Silver and Lead.\" .>\u25a0\u2022',\nt, ! The' Resident-  Engineer's   comment\nI j, hereon follows:\n, ji \"An   average   sample   taken   across\nj| the   face   ot   the   north   vein   where\n1 stripped on the surface, for a width of\n\u25a0 *.'; 9 feet, gave assay returns of 20 cents\n; j per ton gold and  7 cents per ton Rll-\n.:!\u25a0*,] ver, or--a. total of 27 cents per ton.\n\u25a0; There Is*no lead showing In this vein\nwhatever. \u2022 - .*. .; ..\u25a0\n;,'-)| \"An average sample taken across the\nupper cut on the' south vein, across\n64 mches about one foot' from the\n-,'\u201el bottom of the cut, gave assay returns\n,rj of 20 cents per ton gold, $3.43 per ton\n\\*i In silver at-70-cents-per ouiice, and\n\"' the negligible amount of 1.51% lead,\na total of $3.65 per. ton.\n\"A selected sample from the dump\nfi.l of the-upper, cut on: this south'vein\u2014\nin the north vein is or no Importance\u2014\n|| I of the beet-.ore, consisting of clean\niron sulphides with a trace of galena,\n. gave assay returns of 40 cents t>er ton\nti in-gold, 127.65 per ton ln silver, or a\n;\\\\ total of $28.05. . There is however a\nvery inhall percentage-of this class of\nI ore\/and It Would not pay-to mine and\nmill -tht average ore to make this\n1 class of  concentrates.\" i\nThat a pamphlet, on the first psce\nof which appears the t words \"At the\nEAtt ot the Trail In Y\u00abjur Search for\nFiifteess; Gold Ore,\" has been \u25a0 published and circulated ln the Province\nof British Columbia, and that the\nsame-ln its terms solicits the sale of\nshares In the said Gold Ore Mining\nCo. Ltd.  (N.P.L.).\nThat the said pamphlet, In one of\nIts leading paragraphs, and In respect\nof; the Morning Star Group of Mineral Claims, which is described . as.\n\"property number two'* of the Gold\nOre Mining Co. Ltd. (N.P.L.) usc3\nthe following  words:-\n\"This property (meaning the Morn\nIng Stir Group) lies adjacent to such\nwell-khown properties as the Sunshine, IL.-' ie lt\u201e Glacier, Dunwell and\nothers.\"  \u25a0- .; - . .-, \u25a0   . ,.\nThei Resident Engineers' comment\nhere en followsc \u25a0- .*; ...\n\"It idjolhs the Sunshine, which Is\na prdfcptfct. It Is a hiile from the\nL.- * L., and over 2-M .miles from\neither'the Glacier Creek or Dunwell\nproperties.\"     '\nThat the said pamphlet, ih reference\nto \"property number, one\" (meaning\nthe Eagle Grout) of Mineral Claims)\nuses the  following words:  .\n.\"This (property number one) will\nhe drifted on the .vein and It is\nthought that ore taken out from the\nstart will more than pay for the expenditure, at the same time proving up\na big body of high grade ore.\" L\nTho Resident Engineer's ,. comment\nhereon  followai.. _\n. \"Impossible from vtfte- of ore as\nexplained preceding. .There la ho high\ngr.de or..- \u2022 \u2022 \u2014   ^.^ \u25a0 I\nMinister of Hlnea.\nJnlrt.lMI...    . -.  .__..    ...    tttaW,\nshe and \u2022 Winch -, art going through\nleverton's-tirtVate desk ahd his prl.\nrate aata,\" I (aid Mrs. Walslngham,\nregarding him steadily, \"What do\nS*bu   think?\" \u2022      ..'   v    '\"       :i \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\ni But carsdkl* merely ahrutged hlfi\nshoulders again, and smiled enigma-'\nttcklly.'- He'turned to the paper-\nlittered desk behind him, and picking\nup Richard Shrewsbury's letter,\nplaced it carefully ln * his pocket-\nbnok.    ,\n\"l're' already * said that \"1 can't\nhelp what she Or Winch do ln that\nroom,\" he answered. \"What's more\nto the point Is\u2014what do you think\nof the youngster?\"\n\"That he*d bette'r h\u00bb caught\nyoung,\" replied Mrs.\" Walslngham\ntersely. ' \"He'i the sort that Will\nsoon grow.out'of the callow stage.\nHe's ho fool, Jack-Tonly young and\ngreeh. Be careful. And don't. go\ntoo;faat at It.\".,\n, \"No. no!\u2014I think I see the. way\/-\nsaid Carsdale, \"Now, \u25a0 these people\nIn Leverton's ^rbom? Tou'd > better\ngo back to yours, ahd I'll go on\nwith niy work\u2014J ,want them;.to.\nthink that all's going on as. usual.\nI'll leave my door open, so that I\nshall: know . when they dome out\u2014\nI'd give &om\u00ab0ilng to khow why on\ntorth- came at aill\"\nMrs^ Walslngham made no reply\nto this; ? she plbked up BOtna docu-\nments and Went,away, and:Carsdale\nhaying' followed; her . out Into the\ngeneral office to , give some orders\ntp thb girl typist; left his door open\nahd kept (an eye on that behind\nWhich his late partner's daughter\nand her solicitor were busied with\u2014\nwhat? And Instead ot sitting down\nat his,desk, he moved restlessly? about\nhis room, wondering why Frances\nLeverton should havo hurried away\nfrom her . father's, death-bed, and\ncome to'the of flee, in this mysterious\nfashion.        \\\nBut Carsddle\u2014and a few other\npeople\u2014knew thftt the ' business relations of Barclay Leverton and himself were peculiar. , There was no\nlegal partnership between them. It\nwas true,that their- names appeared\nIn conjunction on the list of ten.\nants painted up ln the marble-\npaved hall on the ground floor of\nthe palatial building of which they\noccupied the top-story; that they\nwere blpzoned forth, again In conjunction, on the heavy brass plate\nof tho swinging doors which gave\nadmission to their offices, but the\nreal truth was.that they were only\npartners when It suited them both\nto - be partners. They Joined in\npaying the rent and the rates and\nthe office expenses; they mutually\nshared the services' of Mi's. Walslngham, of Miss Rousby, the typist, and\not Orlffkln, the office-boy. . They\nhad had business affairs in common; sometimes they had business\naffairs In which other men Joined.\nBut each had his own affairs, his\nown business; each had his own secrets. ' And the people who * knew\nLeverton well, and \"Carsdale well,\nknew that each could, If he pleased,\nbo as close and secret as the grave.\nTo men who had only a superficial\nknowledge . of this establishment,\nthe - precise' nature of the business\ncarried on by Leverton & Carsdale,\nIn conjunction or- separately, was\nmore or less of a mystery. They\ndid not ' describe themselves, and\nwere not described anywhere, as anything. In plain truth, they were\nagents, speculators, and dabblers of\na comprehensive, all-embracing sort.\nThey turned their brains, hands,\nmoney to anything that seemed like-\nly- tio be profitable. They were\nadepts at promoting-companies, at\nadvising people on the Investment of\ncapital, at introducing men of ideas\nto men of means, at showing a poor\ninventor how to profit by his invention. All manner of strange\nand curious folk went up and down\nthe elevator to and from ' Leverton\n& Carsdale's\u2014some Wore ' glad and\ngleeful countenances, even at the\nend of a year's experience of them;\nsome began to cultivate a r gnashing\not teelh and a muttering ot curses\nbefore many - weeks had passed.\nThere were men Who hinted that\nstrange tales could be told \u25a0 of the\nestablishment, who wagged the head\nat the name of Leverton, and winked\nthe eye at that ot Carsdale, but ln\nspite of that there was always a\nsteady stream of business, ahd each\nman always seemed to be advising\nsomebody, or engineering some Important schemes for somebody else.\nAnd there were still other men who\nhinted\u2014more quietly and darkly\u2014\nthat If anybody knew the real and\ninner workings of the concern,\nwhether In Us Joint or Its single\ncapacities, that person was the lady\nknown as Mrs. Walslngham, who\nWas held to be the confidante of\nblith men, nnd represented them very\nreadily in their absence.\n(To Be Continued.)\niiaMir\neplies    Smashed\nHat Due to Hitting\n;   ' Ground \u2022      i\nDOCTOR TESTIFIES\nTO CUT UPON LEG\nCoates Sees Men Waving;\nFists; Decision Is\nReserved >*   -\n!:.fcfr\nwfertbr,\nIfcwtRetirnig\n:\n;i;\nul,\nHi\nlt<\n%\nTO FORCE HRM\nDELIVER RUBBER\nGregory Tire Company. Is\nGranted Injunction to Secure $20,000 Worth\nVANCOUVER, Aug. al.\u2014An Interesting development ln the high rubber situation which has led to a\nsharp controversy between Britain\nand' the United States through the\nlatter declaring that British monopoly Is forcing high prices, occurred\nhero today when Sheriff McDonald\nseized at the docks where lt was\nbeing loaded Into a ship, rubber\nworth $40,000.\nAction was taken at the'lnveetl.\ngallon ot the Gregory Tire company,\nwhich alleges that the rubber arrived\na few-Weeks ago hut without any\nbills ot lading.\nLater these arrived but before\nthe company could take delivery an\nordel- arrived to ship It back, \u2022depositing a bond to coVer the original cost of the rubber, \u00bbS0,000. the\nGregory T|re company today secured\nan Injunction and .Will force delivery In courts. \u25a0 .   . ?   ,\nA charge of. common assault was\nbrought up before Magistrate William Brown In city.police court Monday, morning by - Reginald Howe\nagainst Thomas , Sargent both of\nthis city. Howe charged that Sargent borrowed an electric fan from\nhim, and when he went to get It\nthe' next \u25a0 day, they quarrelled, and\nSargent hit him, breaking his straw\nhat, and also kicked him on the\nleft leg, which resulted ln a ver^\npainful wound. The case ' was' adjourned until yesterday - owing to\nWitness J. F. Coates failing to appear In court. - This witness was\nheard yesterday, and Magistrate\nBrown then'deferred judgment until\nnext Monday morning. ,     ,\n'., Clifford Irving prosecuted. ' ; ,\n\u2022' Howe In his , testimony . .Monday\nswore he \/ had - rented ,' an . electric\nfan to Sargent on July 28, on the\ncondition that - the fan would be\nreturned it the Howe 'Electric company had the means of selllhg It.\nThe following morning he entered the\nKootenay Garage, * and told -, Sargent\nhe wanted the fan to take . home\nfor his mother, who was sick, Sarj-\ngent gave the fan to him,and.when\nSargent asked htm Why he didn't\nask for a fan from one of the other\nparties -to , whom he ' had rented\nfans, the. quarrel began. -.\n' Howe said thati when he saw Sargent f was about to - atrlke him, he\ntried to defend himself, but was too\nlate, as Sargent had struck him oh\nthe head, smashing his : straw , hat.\nWhen he. called Sargent a liar, the\nlatter kicked him, on the > left leg.\nSargent Denies Assault\nSargent, In his testimony, denied\nthat he \u2022 either struck Howe, or\nkicked   him. .\nHis account of the encounter was\nthat he, merely knocked -Howe's\nhat out ? of his hand when ; Howe\nstuck .. lt   at   his - face.\nHe said. Howe'a straw hat was\nbroken when - It fell to the ground\nand not when struck.\nDr. D.' W. McKay, the doctor attending Howe, gave evidence as.to\nthe else and condition of'the wound\non , the leg, -He said-Howe came to\nhim on the morning of July 28,' with\na triangular cut, < which he treated.\nThe base'.of the cut,' he said, was\nabout two inches long.   -\nCoates Turned Back\n- J. P. Coates,-the witness who was\nabsent during.the first bearing,-sat\nyesterday's continuation of the case,\ngave a statement as,to.what.he had\nseen and heard during \u2022 his . presence\nat' the garage on \u2022 the ' morning - of\nJuly 28. lie stated he saw Sargent\nand Howe talking very.. harshly at\nthe - entrance - ot. the . garage,. and\nthought he would wait for Howe, as\nhe.had some business matters to fix\nup with Howe. .He went over to thi\ngarage, and heard tho two-men talk;\ning about an. electric fan, both talk^\nIng In a - hot'' tempered manner;\nWhen he saw the men waving,fists\nat each other, he told them to \"cut\nIt  out.\" ,\nCoates said he turned his . hack\nand walked a few feet, from' where\nthe men stood, and when he turned\naround again he saw Howe .picking\nup his badly damaged . straw hat\nfrom the ground. - He stated he did\nnot see Sargent kick Howe, or strike\nhim ln any way, but merely saw\nHowe picking up his mutilated straw\nhat. He heard Howe tell Sargent\nthat he would have to buy him a\nnew straw : hat,'to which Sargent\nmade no reply.\nThe witness said he and Howe\nleft the garage together, but before doing so' Coates said he told\nSargent that he had a fan over at\nhis office that he would rent to\nhim, but would not sell lt.\n, Magistrate Brown said he would\nreserve his decision until Monday,\nNO HARVESTERS\ni    FROM.OVERSEAS\n'. OTCAWA.'.AW 4,\u2014Aft\u00ab\/\\tjl''*Ar'i'\nas .-director \"of; the royal *mlntya(t] \\\nQttawa.dbtflngwhlch time he When-\nvised the erection of the mint -building, organised the staff and brought\nit to such a high state of - ettttU-\nency that the profits of the Canadian mint, since - he. flrat .took over,\nhare amounted .to qloae ' to }8,000,a\n000 Arthurt M. W. Cleave, 1.8.0;,\nM.i.M.E, deputy .master of the (royal\nmint .is retiring owing to 111,health.\nHe will leave Ottawa on August 2?,\nfor England, where he expects In\nthe  future . to  make   his  home.\nThe appointment ot his successor\nat Ottawa Is in the hands of Rt.\nHon. Winston Churchill, thmcellor\nof the' exchequer, hy virtue of this\noffice, ex-offlclo master ot the royal\nmint. It la not likely that tbe appointment,will be made before'Oo-\ntober.,.' ,?;''.' -   - ' -.''\n****\u00a3v\nannounces \u2022 sufficient rubber will be\nj-eleasedifrom Ceylon, Straits Settle-\n^inents \u2022 and ** Malay -states   to   retWa**\"\nshortage.* \u25a0>;.', i  ! ,\n, Sliow ^Iricreaise tfor-.Six\nyM6nWtX-ir'X:',i''X -VV\nALBERTATAKES\nMJfMW\n-v||jFgs\nMore Satisfactbry\u00a3&nlui.g\nTerms Needed; Northern\n; Railway Operation    ';};'!\nEbMONTOJ*,' AUg. 4.' \u2014 Preliler\nGreenfield, announced, In the legislature this afternoon that the government will take no action ln regard to the acceptance of, either ot\nthe offers {or'the operation of the\nnorthern ntllways until more satisfactory terms have been arranged\nwith the Royal bank. I\nHe also stated that the original\noffer of the C.P.R.. through President E. W, feeatty, has been amended,\nraising the annual cash payment frorii\n150,000 to 160,000 per year. \u2022      '.\nDetails of the C.P.R. ofler;ore: i\n' 1. To cohtlniie operation oft the\nroad for from. five to seven years. ;\n2. In view of tho premier's ot>.\njection that 10 yenrs is too long.\nMr. Beatty, otters seven'years as a\ncompromise.\n3. The C.P.R. will put into effect\nprairie rentes , on paesenge'-s ahd\nfreight, and the same rates on express and 4elegramB as \u201e exit lh\nAlberta  and   Saskatchewan. a\n4. In addition the,C.P.R.-will pajr\nthe government .of Alberta $60,000 a\nyear Instead .of $50,000 previous^\noffered\nAdditional Cost Assumed\nThe agreement Is, to follow along\nthe general lthes of the present\nagreement, providing among other\nthings that all interest charges as\nwell as capital' expenditures ot the\nrailway 'and the cost .of any additional\nmileage shall be assumed by the\nAlbena government.'*\u2022\u00bb *-\u2022**- '\u2022*\u2022'-' ;\n. In \u25a0 the event of a competing line\ntoeing constructed through any of the\npasses to. the coast,' to a . point ot\nconnection with the .C.N.R., or elset\nwhere, cither parly may terminate\nthe agreement on giving SIX months'\nnotice.\nA failing' off of 80; per, cent In\npoles:'cut: and of 8 per cent in saw-\nlogs cut - for., the tint six months\nof 1826, as compared with the same\nperiod ot 1824, Is revealed by a statement complied by R. CI St. Clalr,\ndistrict forester, covering comparative\nfigures for the ..new forest district,\nwhich comprises.' the former districts\not Cranbrook, Nelson and Okanagan.\nThe other Items, of piling, ciird-'\nwood, ties,, fence posts and mine\ntimber, show considerable increase\nover the cut of the first six months\nof 1924.- ..-',',\n\u25a0 .. \u25a0 ,   Tabulated* Figures\nFigures supplied by Mr. St. Clair,\nfor the first six months ot each year.\n\" Pcjse, ahd Foch Send Mexna\u00abe\u00ab'\n' DUfcUTH, Aug. .4.\u2014Messages from\nPope Plus XI. and Marshal Foch\nread at .opening of 68rd, annual convention'   of , Knights,   of    Columbus\nHire.: -' ;>;'..     . \u25a0' : :,\"\n.Plan Drive Against Hoollegglng\n'WASHmoTON, Aug. ,4\u2014 Immediate organization ot a force sutflcent\nto patrol 100 miles from' Detroit to\nPort HUi*ori to prevent boot-legging\nand -smuggling announced  officially.\npi's  heif  old '\u25a0\u25a0 **te , e\u00abtal\u00bb'. ****\u2022 '\n.\"  Bhips Needed tn MowJOrep*'*.'''-''.'\u25a0\u2022':\nCAPETOWN,   -Atog.  \u2666\u2022\u2014*>\u00abIOt  Afc';.'\nrlcan * farmers   are   threatened  ,W10\u00ab.\n8200.000,0(10 loss because ,12.-mlllllm\nbass of  maize  available -tor! export\ncannot be, moved o^v|ng to insufflel-\nenCy of ahlba.'-' '-'^'-\u201e.?;''?' -\u25a0--''-\u25a0,,-*l**K >-'\nFreight Cuts Wrxkeip,\n,T}V^ota^nen^fil'EaMt\nX :\u25a0 Bound Trains Rerouted\n\u25a0   ;..?,,,?.\/;,-;.\u00bb! wiji.i\"-' i-.flW.--y',.;\u25a0.,\nSASKATOON,;   Aug.   J' i.-rfaf__il .\nfreijtnt- \"eSiIiW On  the  Cda*4la#\u00ab#nt-':\ntional, west of Blggar werp derailed |\nat    noon   -today, , necessirtatttiff\"-til*\nKITCHENER, ' Aug.    4.\u2014Premier j muting of? the transcontlnetiUQ 'fault\nKing   attends   an   opening   of   \"Old\nHome Week*' and delivers' a speech\nextolling Canada's place in the cm-\nPremier In Old Homo Wock\nbound off the main line via Porter\nto   nn'.tleford.;   No   person   was -In.\nJured.   ,',..'...?'-'.;,'?f':',*'.,  , 'a..;.lu,. -i.. ] '\n'\u25a0\u25a0    '''\u25a0   '\"     t*'i,'ifiiVrr\",**-'in\"i''ii''\narj=fa\nshow:                      '\u25a0 iM5 '-\u25a0;\n1W4\nBawlogs,\n'  P.B. M.   ......79,246,406\n85,784.332\nPoles,\nvilneal   feet    2,820,358\nriles,-flr,-\n3,742,106\n\\llneal   feet   ...*    216.734\n28,028\nPlies, cedar,, .   ,:  .\nlineal   feet   ....    119,746\n' 31,446\nCordwood,        '   :-'\u25a0'\u2022'    (\ncords   ......;...-        B.67*\n'      8,772\nShingle bolts,.\ncords \u201e          <30\n. 2,280\nMlsfteltaneoua w;\n\u2022ties   ;.    Br\u00bb3,59a\n5!8,67.r,\nFence  posts, -\nnumber'...\u00bb..,,       7.C4&\n6,153\nMlAe props.\ncords   ..->\u2022 \u00ab        6,442\n10,654\nMine timber.\nlineal   feet   ....     253,326\n81,276\nt-aggingi cords. ..'         ,    ,\n,723\nBRIEFS FROM JHEy WIRE\nSuper Tax,on Boer Is Plan  .\n\"\u2666\u25a0\"LONDON, Aug. 4.\u2014The govern-\nhient expects to - raise the necessary\nmoney, to. bonus the miners, by. a\npupor-tax on   beer.   ,\n. Negotiations Broken Off\nATLANTIC CITY, Aug. 4.\u2014Anthracite scale' negotiations will definitely be.broken off .-.\"bating unforseen\ndevelopments,\" * the. miner's executive\nannounced-this . morning. .\nCoal Prices Reduced\ni\nTake   advantage   of   our   summnr pr^'es nn Coal and lay In your,\/,\nwinter iupyy^OW.'-^.r.      ,-if?   J,!,:    . ^ ?.   ,\nGait  Lump, per ton ,^..\nImperial, iLunlp.i per   ton ,  ... .....:.....\u201e...\nKlrenbtirn, ,Acme Lump,   per  ton    .'....,.'.......'.t^.,.ti,C.\n< i,Special Quotations Given on Quantities\nS11.TB\nS11.75\n8*2.00\nPHONE 33\nWEST.TRANSFER C6.\ni Crops Damaged by Storms ,\nCHICAGO,.- Aug. 4.\u2014Floods from\nrecent storms .are causing much damage In the middle west,-In Texas\ncottbn 'fields' are? flooded. ;hall stones\nas . large as eggs - and. snow nre 'reported from Kentucky, where tobacco  farms.are  damaged..\nC0NTEST8\nLOR-d' ,\nMAYOR*\nELECTIONS\nNo Efforts Made'Declares\nDepartment Immigration\n!   69,000 Hands Needed .\nOTTAWA, Aug. 4.\u2014Inquiry at the\ndepartment of Immigration and colonization today elicited the information that approximately 60,01)0 harvest hands would be required for\nthis year's western' crop. O\"? this\nnumber It Is estimated that'the Western -provinces will supply about 19,\n000, .and that from 30,000 to 35.000\nmay be secured from eastern Canada, owing to the early harvesting In\nthe   east.\n\"Are you arranging a program to\nbring harvesters from the United\nKingdom?\" the department was\nnsked. .\nNerer  Arranged   Program\n\"Wo have never arranged any\nprogram of this kind.\" was - the\nreply. \"It la always left-to the\ntransportation companies, but, as ln\nthe year 1923, we ore always prepared to cooperate,- There can be no\ndoubt that if we were approached by\ntransportation companies for cooperation ln bringing harvesters from\nthe United Kingdom to Winnipeg,\nat an approximate rate of 12 pounds,\narrangements could be put . under\nyay at once which ought to bring\nanywhere from 3 to 5 thousand men\nwho,,would fit In the, harvest work,\nWe have, however, , not heen approached hy any transportation com-\nistny, so far. It may be, however,\nthat they expect to get' the required\nnumber from Canada and the United\nStates.\"\nMONTREAL. AW. - 4.-4Canadtan\nPreks)\u2014At the age of 78, Sir Wlllam\npryko ' as senior \u2022 alderman of the\ncity of Iaondon hal been chosen for\nelection  as   lord  tnayol:  tit .London\n\u2022awf.awtuww. '  .,.! \u25a0 . .\nS. Constantino was killed at\" St.\nCatharines'by the collapse of a wall\non the Welland Canal.\nfar. Henry Van Dyke, Princeton\nprofessor, urges 1 students to study\nless and thttk ftwts. '\n.'. Frehch   Swimmer   Sighted\nDOVER, Aug. 4.\u2014Mile. Jane Slon,\nFrench* swimmer.  Was slghtM  here\non her attempt- to swim th-j English\nchannel.    \u25a0'\u25a0.'..\/\u25a0\n' Gtlpek Troops, on Urt'gnr Bnrrti-r\n* PARIS. Aug. 4.\u2014While Creek and\nBulgarian legations here deprecate\nthe talk of war .between their countries, Greek troops are - arriving on\nthe Bulgarian border.\nSubmarine. l'l.itraus   Rl.*p\n   LOItlEN'T, Aug.* 4.\u2014Reportcl v.lsl\n- If the C.P.R. offer Is accepted, the   submarine    plateau    has    risen    off\nnew   rates'will- be ' In -\"effect   hy I French coast reducing depth of water\nOctober 1. .\nTwenty-five-year    Lease.\nSir Hehry Thornton's otter proa\nyldes for ' a' 25-year lease at 4\nnominal mcharge of ,$1 a year, the\nAlberta 'government,,to pay all exa\nistlng fixed charges.   ,\nThe C.N.R. would make at their\nowh expense ? ahi- capital 'improvements necessary to the property.\nIn addition to the dollar-a-year\nrental, the. C.N.R. \u25a0 would . pay one-\nhalf of the' operating, profits, If anyi\nto the 'Alberta government.\nThe C.N.R. offers to putthe'prairle\nrates Into effect at once.,  \" . '\nAs far as the coast outlet is cbnJ\nCorned, Sir -Henry stands hy his offer\nto construct 'It when the export\ngrain from .the Pence river reaches\n10,000,000 bushels yearly for three\nsuccessive years.    '.\nThe question of Innd .grants would\nbe considered at that time.\nHis concluding paragraph Is to the\neffect that the C.N.R. is willing to\nenter Into a joint? operating 'agreement with the C.P.R.\nBank Asks Settlement\nThe fact that the \/Royal bank,\nholders of debenture stock' ln the\nEdmonton, Dunvegan and British Columbia; railway to a par value of\n$2,400,000, which they offered to\ntransfer to the Alberta government for $2,000,000 payable in\ntreasury bills due ln seven years at\n3 per cent Interest, would not consent to a further lease Of the roll-\nway for a period of five years or\nmore, but demanded settlement ot\ntheir claim, proved the stumbling\nblock to the Alberta government.\nPremier Greenfield, in his statement to.the legislature on Tuesday,\ntold the house that the government\ndid not feel that it should recommend payment of the sum asked for,\nfor the securities offered by the\nhank, nnd that until some more satisfactory arrangement could.be made\nwith the bank, the government must\nreceive Its decision as to the method\nof operating the road, ? and would\ntaW, no action, on either x>f the two\nOffers received from -the railway\ncompanies. \u201e\nDaughter Jazz-Crazy,\nClaims Cohen; Rouge,\nPowder*and Boys\nk'eW YOnK. Aug. 4.\u2014\"Look at\nher Judge,\" urged Arthur Cohen\nwhen he brought Into court his 17-\nyeor-old daughter declaring her Jaas\nmad. \"Look at the rouge and powder,\"  he  said. .\n\"She haa a dozen boy friends and\nstays out most of every night. \u2022 She\nis my daughter ond that Is something\nto me. I propose to maihthln u\nhome I havo held together for- 18\nyears.\" \u25a0\nThe daughter and mother claimed\nCohen used \u25a0 abusive . language. A\ndecision was' reserved.'\nJULY FIRES MONTREAL\nCAUSED SEVEN DEATHS\n? *MONTRteAU  Aug.   4.\u2014Seven   persons were either burned or,asphyxiated In city fires during the rnonth ot\nJuly, Chief Oauthier, of the tire do\nirtment, a,ays - ln hie : montkiy '\u25a0 re\nfrom htindreds of fathoms,to 30\nThyrrld  fjrafilng\nPARIS.    Aug.    4.\u2014Noted    French\ndoctors   have   announced   success   of\nthyroid  grafting glands of 'executed\nerffnlnul  to   backward   child.\nHarvest 111 10 Bays\nWINNIPEG.   Aug.   4.\u2014The   rapidly  mnturlng  western   Canadian   crop\nwill be ready for harvesting within\n10. days says an official report. ',\nNEW TORK, Aug. 4.\u2014nev. John\nRoach Straton, pastor of Calvary\nBaptlsf-chnrch says the leadership\nof United States Fundamentalists\nforces vacant by the death of W. .1.\nBryan, has been  offered to him.\nWill Relieve ' Rubber- Shortage\nLONDON,  Aug,  4\u2014Colonial  office\nHere's\n\" TWmtober, it's often tropically hot in Canada. So when you feel lazy\u2014when the heat\nseems to \"get to you\"\u2014a dash of ENO in a\nglass of water will cool your, blood, clear\nyour head and buck you up for work and\nplay. There should be a bottle of ENO's\nsFruit Salt\" in every home, and in every\noffice too, these summer days, because ENO\nis the safest, most pleasant, most cooling\nhealth drink for hot weather.\nENO'S\nFRUIT SALT-\nAbe\nThe World-Famed Effervescent Salino\nNo Other Drink\nSo Fresh\u2014So Pure!\nK,\n;.-\u2022-,. , |....... .\n> Just that! Just Orange-CRUSH! Here's a perfect drink\n' \u2014wholesome, nourishing, invigorating. And its flavor is\nf a delight to the palate.\ni For ,Orange-CRUSH. contains (1) The natural fruit oil\nI of oranges\u2014for that delightful flavor; (2) The natural\n, acid of citrus fruits\u2014to give the tang; (3) Orange juice\nI\u2014which everybody likes; (4) Carbonated water for\n\/sparkle and purity; (5) Certified food color; (6) Pure\nfcane sugar.\n\" Nationally advertised\u2014sold everywhere. Order a case\nof 24 bottles from your dealer. Then you'll always have\nit fresh off the ice;\nAU sell under the\nOrange - CAUSK\nLabel \u2014 your\nguarantee e f\nhealth   beverages.\nmm\nfe.CRUSH ^iknmwasa\nAlso 041 Ginger Ale and O-C Grape\nKere'e what's la the\nOrsaga-CBVIS tattle\u2014\n1-\u2014Ti,. tutors! (nit'\noil  of  brsagia.\nB,\u2014Tbe natatsl fntt\n\u2022bids  ef  the  oltm\nfrmlts (ersagss. Has-\none,  and limes).\nS.\u2014Ortnge-Jnlee.    -\n4.\u2014rot*   carbonated\nwater.\n\u2022.\u2014Certified        toot\ncolor,   .   -,.    -\n6a\u2014Vara esse Mf***,\n\u25a0L\n__________________\n \u2022PageFouF-\n-,i iTHE 1TCLSON MM-TO\nPmE DAILY NEWS\nVuhtdshed eesry morning esoept Sua-\n< pija-to-The News Publlehlng company,\nftifttea, felsoa. BC\n-\u2022   Business letter* should be addressed\nand, cheeks'and  money  orders  made\npayable to.The News Publishing com-\nptnj; 'limited, and In no ease to lndl-\njrtu-al members of tht staff.\n\" Advertising   rate  cards   and   ABC.\nnatomeat*. ot. circulation   mailed   on\nreoUest, or may be aeen at the offlc*\nOf  any advertising agency  recognised\nvy.. th* Canadian Press association.\n.   *    .   SUBSCRIPTION RATES\nByimall (country), per month..$   .M\n!\u25a0**\u00bb\u25a0 ysar;\nJet. \n(city), per year\t\n- Outside Canada, per month,,,.\n. Jfttt jr*\u00bbr -...a ,\t\nDelivered, per week \t\ntitK y**r\t\n\u2022r*.       'i Payabl* In Advance\n8.00\n18.00\n.78\n7.(0\n.11\n13.00\n. .Hfember Aadlt Sanaa ef otmlatloa\ni-., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1925\n; The\nlighter Side\nReader* ot Th* Dally News eon*\ntribute many of th*'best (Mm* to\nthis column. Just sign your nsm*\nor Initials, or nom-de-plume, and\nsend In your brightest Idea*.\u2014Edi\ntor, Lighter Side.\n';';\u25a0 Eleven Years Ago\n'y Eleven years ago yesterday\nsince the cables flashed around\nthe world, and the wireless\nSparked over the arc of the\n. Bess; the message that Great\nBritain was at war with Germany.  :\n^ That message was expected,\nhut how. it transformed things 1\nThe world has never been\nthe same since.\n'For a few days the universe\nseemed topsy-turvy \u2014 people\ncould not get their footing.\n\"F.ttw had had experience.\n. V Enlistments started on the\ninstant in. every country, organizations were born to perform various useful functions,\nand, earnestly, and yet in some\nSense, \"\u25a0' blithely, the . younger\nBritish nations launched themselves full force into an enterprise wholly. strange to them,\nand almost strange to the entire generation.\nBritish honor, it was universally felt, was involved in two\nways\u2014the British signature\nwas oa the treaty that sup-\ns posedly protected Belgium from\naggression, and impliedly, Brit-\ntain's - bonne entente with\nFrance meant that she must\nfight by the side of invaded\nFrance. When in the British\nhouse of commons it was announced that Britain was not\nso bound to France in spite of\ntheir 'defensive alliance, when\nit was officially stated that\nparliament could refuse to permit declaration of war on Germany, a feeling of shame ani-\n'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 \"mated many Britishers in all\n'' 'lands for 24 hours. Then, when\nparliament, with practical unanimity, backed the government\nof_ the day in demanding war,\nBritishers held their heads high\nagain, and started to consider\ntheir personal part in-the enterprise.\n\u2022Millions of British lie under\nvarious skies as a result of\nthe decision taken in those\ntroublous days, and among them\n60,000 Canadians.    -\n* While everyone regrets with\n* his whole soul that the war occurred, no one can ever regret\n- the  decision  that the  British\n' family of nations took, in the\npath of honor\/after exhausting\nevery possible effort to turn\naside Germany from its mad\n'\u25a0course.\n* \".\"May this generation of British-peoples see no repetition,\non even the smallest scale, of\nwar participation.\nTo this end, the whole weight\nof all the British family of nations is thrown, rightly, behind\nthe League of Nations, which is\n'the promise that the nations,\nlarge and small, -will act together against an aggressor nation that attempts to enforce\nits uninsf desires'by violence.\nAUNT HET\nEideht v\nHousekeeping\niAwba*-^. simntA-a    '\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n.MH-tfW\nSOUR MILKCAKES\n\"Pa Is-lnnocent-mlnded, but\nI notice all the young ladles\nhe takes a fatherly Interest In\nIs good lookln'.\"\nTHAT PRIZE POWER PI-ANT\nLorrV Campbell, is   a   horticulturist.\nwe  understand i ' \u25a0\n, At l***t, they tell u*, whether eooi\n'-'     or hotter,\nWhile he doesn't cultivst*  so  many\npistil* upon th* Und,\nHe's   sn   adept   at   developing\nwater. -'\nHis  plants   produe* th* vsry  finest\ncurrent* to bd found,; *\nAnd hi* n*w*\u00abt No. 1 hss all els*\nskinned.\nIt en:*red  in th* all-Canadian  plant\nshow, I'll  D* bound,\nIts  ribbon  soon  would  float  upon\n\u25a0.\u00ab\u2022\"\"*        . -LENS.\nThings even -up. When day breaks,\nfewer laws are broken.\nThe public Is neutral In a coal\nstrike,   lt cusses both sides.\nWELL. {P~~\u00b0   DARWIN   '     IS\nRIGHT THE SURVIVORS AT DAYTON ARE THE FITTEST.*.\nYou get what Is coming to you.\nThe roll called up yonder Is a pay\nroll.\nDiscretion by any other name\nwouldn't change the temperature of\nthe feet. ,\nTOMORROWS MENU\nBruMast.   \",'*. \"V\"'-\"\n\/ Apple Sauce.\n.' \u25a0 Cereal        \u25a0   \u2022..   *\nFried Liver and Bacon  -.-.-..'\nPopovers \u25a0   ', .-'    Coffee\nLuncheon\nEgg Salad,V' **\nRolls      Marmalade    ' 'Iced Tea\nCookies     . .   , ;\nDinner\nLamb Stew (with\n\u25a0Peas, Celery and Potatoes)\n':\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0  ' Cabbage Salad,      ?,\nPeach Shortcake Coffee\nThat Body\nof Yours\n*\u00bb\u00bb*\n{What the Press Is Saying \\\n!\u00bb- \u2014--\u2014\u2666\nTammany's Grand Old Man\n> John R. Voorhla. president of the\nboard of elections, who yesterday\nWas 98 years old and spent the day\nwas born. Is not In \"Who's Who.\"\nwas born, la not an In \"Who's Who.\"\nBut every year as he approaches\nnearer to a century, the events ot his\ncareer are revived. In the newspapers, and he Is Interviewed about\nthe old times and compares them\nwith the new. Of Dutch stock that\nlabored six days and kept the sab\nbath, Mr. Voorhls, who is neither\nbigot nor prude, does not think the\nworld Is growing better. In hit\nJudgment there are not so many men\nwhose word Is as good as their bond\nas was the case In hla boyhood\nThat Is the chief point of his criticism. The girls are as sweet' aa\n\u2022ver, but they do not dress so modestly as they used to when he was\nyoung.\u2014New  York  Times.   .\nIt Would Help Too\n.What is needed In Nova Scotia Just\nnew la expressed In the Gaelic war-\ncry which the forefathers of many\nof ua used to shout on the field of\n\u2022battle' aad which has Its counter-\n' part lo th* English \"shoulder to\n\u25a0 shoulder.\" If officers and men of\nI the corporation could only get their\nI''-' shoulders together and push they\nwould soon come to a -happy con-\n\u25a0 \u2022' .elusion of their troubles.\u2014Montreal\n\u2022    *' Herald.   '.\nOld friends are best, of course; but\nyou get a little tired of their ssme\nold stories.\nYOUTH AND AGE\nBy  Virginia Stalt\nAcross   the   space  called  years   you\nquestion me:\n\u25a0 \"Why   are   you    gladful,    knowing\nyou must wait,\nAnd   chance   a   boat   to   some   place\nfar remote.\nThat   may   return   with    love,   be\nwrecked, or late?\"\nAcross   the    space    called    years   1\nquestion, too:\n'Forsaking    all\u2014is    ytour    love    so\nsublime-\nAre you so made that you are' un\nafraid,\nAre you so sure of harborj anchor,\ntime?'*\nHarper's Magaslne.\nThe smaller the town, the more\nadjectives are used In the wrlteup of\na party.\nTha eoit**rv*liv* driver I*\ncomparatively sale If hs has a\ngood rasr bumper.\nAmong the nations that seem to\nhave no \"rights\" In China are Swlts\nerland und China.   .\nAS A RULE. CONVICTION'S ARE\nWHAT YOU GET BY ASSOCIATING\nWITH I'EOI-LB WHO HAVE\nTHEM.\nScience won't make great headway\nwhile religion is taught early and\nevolution late.\n.'Hot weather brings Its problems of\nusing up the milk * which has accidentally soured. The following cake\nrecipes, calling for sour milk,- will all\nbe found delicious on * the home\ntable:' . ,*     '\u25a0-.'\nSour Milk Chocolate Cake\u2014Mix together one cup of granulated sugar\nand four teaspoons of cocoa powder.\nAdd a pinch ot salt and then cream\ninto this dry mixture two \u2022 tablespoons of lard. Now flavor with one\nteaspoon ot. vanilla and mix In one\ncup of sour milk \u2022 In which Is dissolved one teaspoon ot baking soda.\nAfter mixing welt,-add two cups of\nordinary bread flour and turn the\nbatter Into two buttered layer cake\npans nnd bake twenty \u25a0 minutes ln a\nhot oven.- Put together with ordinary\nuncooked   chocolate   Icing.\nSour Milk Spice Cake\u2014Cream together one-halt cup of butter and\none-half cup ot granulated sugar.\nAdd the beaten yolks of two eggs,\none-half > cup of molasses, and pne-\nhalf cup ot sour-milk In which one\nteaspoon of baking soda has been\ndissolved. Also add one and one-\nhalf cups ot bread flour sifted with\none-third teaspoon ot ground cloves,\none teaspoon of ground cinnamon,\nand one-fourth teaspoon of ground\nnutmeg.: Last, fold in the two stiffly\nwhipped egg whites and add one-\nhalf cup of,seeded raisins and one-\nhalf cup of' chopped, walnut meats.\nBake for about forty minutes In a,\nmedium oven, , in a buttered loaf-\ncake pan, ' or ' bake In greased cupcake pans for about eighteen minutes\nln a hot oven. \u25a0\u2022.'-.'\u25a0\"\n,- Fudge Cake^Cream a piece ot butter the else of an egg and Into it rub\ntwo tablespoons of dry cocoa \u2022 powder.\nNow add .one well-beaten egg, one\neup of granulated sugar, one cup of\nsour milk,-a pinch,ot salt, and one\nand one-half cups of flour sifted\nwith one,teaspoon of baking powder.\nLast, add one-half cuu of hot water\nIn which one- teaspoon ot baking\nsoda has been dissolved. .; Wifrk\nquickly, turning the batter Into a\ngreased loaf-cake pan.. Bake for\nforty  minutes  In  a  moderate  oven.\nSour Milk Drop Cookies\u2014Children\nlove these and they are easy to\nmake. Begin by mixing together one-\nhalf cup of granulated sugar, two-\nthirds of a cup of Barbadoes molasses\nand one-hall cup of butter. Now\ndissolve one-half teaspoon of soda\nin one-half-cup of sour milk and\nadd this also to the mixing bowl\nwith one beaten egg, three-quarters\nof a cup of raisins and three and\none-third cups of flour sifted with a\npinch of salt, one teaspoon ot ground\ncinnamon, and one-half teasnoon\neach ot ground nutmeg nnd cloves.\nDrop on a greased pan by teaapoon-\nfulla one Inch apart and bake eight\nto ten minutes In a moderate oven.\nTomorrow\u2014A Crocheted Sleeveless\nSweater.\nAddress inquiries to Miss KtrkmsD,\nend inclose stamped-addressed envelope\nfor reply.\u2014Mitor.\nJoshua Marsdeh'i   ,\n\u2022*   Biil D-toVBhe\n#%*\"\u25a0 A Be\u00abwe Test\n\u25a0\" ', Immliratlon officiate who mk to\n\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 trap Canadians poalng aa American!\n\"by taking them to repeat tha word*\n'\u25a0 of the 8taf-Bparicl\u00ab4 Banner might\n' ;fei aurprlaed  to   learn  Jtow  few   of\n7 (hem know their own national an\nI    Jbfm.\u2014-Hamilton Spectator.\nAny orator 1* a man who waxes enthusiastic about your duty to get\nbusy,\nSt ill,   the   world   would   laugh\nloudly If It knew about nome of the\nUnited Htates' other queer laws.\nThere are compensations. While\nhunting for the man who stole your\ncar, you   need  no longer  hunt park\nIng 'apace.\nIt Isn't a \"feature picture\" Unless\nlt lines ono reel to Introduce the\ndirector's friends and the camera\nmen.\nWives nre of two kinds: Those\nwho think everything their husbands\ndo Is right, and those who think that\neverything their husbands do la\nwrong.\nCORRECT ' THIS SENTENCE:\n\"YOU WpN'T NOTICE THB HEAT,\"\nSAU> HB, \"IP YOU WON'T LOOK\nAT THE THERMOMETER.\"\nAnother Life-Savin; Method\n> In- a railroad wreck some time ago\nthe fireman-, waa severely burned. - I\naaw him, In company with the* railway'surgeon, and ventured tn guess\nthat he \u25a0 would likely recover. The\nsurgeon shook hla- head, nnd said.\n\"Too much' surface burned; he hasn't\na chance.\" \u25a0 The. surgeon was right,\nas he died a day or two Inter.\n\u25a0* Death following severe burns has\nbeen ascribed to shock, but even more\nto the poisons from the decomposing\nburned flesh, which, absorbed by the\nblood, poisons the entire svstem. It\nIs of-vital Interest In all of us..thon,\nwhen we resd of a few. treatment for\nburns, that haa been developed bv\none of the physicians of the Srck\nChildren's  hospital,   Toronto. ,   t\nThe Idea underlying It is - very\nsimple.v A' certain quantity of, the\nblood11 poisoned by the severe burn,\nor even poisoned ,by other substancei.\nIs removed from the body by opening\na blood vessel. By the .removal of\nthis blood, laden as It Is with poisonous products of \u2022deeomnos-titlon, the\nfirst atep Is accomplished.\nThen, by Introducing fresh, pure\nblood Into the system, the circulation\nIs maintained, and this fresh blood\ngoes to build up the Injured parts\narid i\u00abmove more of the poison from\nthe burned area. ...\nAnd now that the transfusion\/of\nblood Is being used so extensively In\nanemia and other1 wasting conditions,\na great deal that is new has'been\ndiscovered by our research men. '\u25a0'\u2022..\n-\u25a0 They have found methods , for\nmatching the blood of the one who\nIs giving with the one that Is receiving, so that, there will be perfect-\nfusion, no,clotting or other accidents.\nAlso a method whereby blood may\nbe kept for some time In properly\nprepared vessels and bc available tn\nan emergency.\nAnd even further, a method whereby\nblood may be given to a patient\nwho is not \"doing well\" on the operating table, by connecting by means of\ntubing, the giver of the blood and thp\npatient. The transfusion is accomplished even while' the operation is\nbeing carried on.\nThus this matter of removing bad\nor poisoned blood, and replacing it\nwith pure, fresh \u25a0 \"matched\" blood,\nhas  wonderful  possibilities.\nDuck Flies From\nFurnace Through,\nBlazing Papers\nKELVINQTON. Sask;, Aug. i. \u2014\nWhen Charles Ferguson, a local resident, and avowed teetotaler\/touched\na match to waste paper In the fur-\nnape of his store one* morning recently, he got the .biggest shock of\nhis 40-odd yenrs. A lone derelict\nduck emerged through the blazing\ndoorway and flapped around his feet.\nIt was found to be all right, barring\nscorched wings, which prevented it\nfrom flying. .The bird was placed\non the shores of, a nearby hike to\nconvalesce. *   .\nIt is believed that the duck,-of the\nwild \"wood\" variety, mistook the\nstore chimney for a harbor of refuge,\nnnd explored its way into the furnace,\nSt. > Bernard Monks\"\nEnter the Hotel\nBusiness for Revenue\nLETTER TRAVELS FOR\nTfflRTYOTi YEARS\nFather's .Letter to Son \u2022 De-\n\" livered ^Alter- Gbing 7,\n.Through Five Rations :\nTACOMA.'. Wash., Aug. *\u00ab.\u2014Haakon\nBader, who-left' his native town In\nJlojway ln 1888, recently \/received, a\nletter mailed from the earns place\nshortly a\u00ab*rward.,a' During, It*,\".?\"\nyears' wanderings; the missive had\nbeen handled by the postal services\nIn five different nations, for in that\ntime Norway gained ber Independence\nfrom, Denmark, under ..whose flag\nBader was born.  -\u25a0 -.1 *\"*\nThe letter witlen by Bader\"s\nfnther, long since dead, expressed, his\nlove and good wishes for. his .sailor\nson and contained. photographs of\nUuder'a parents.  . .' . -.-\nWhen Under, a lad of \u2022 IS. -went to\nr.-a, . frbm ' his-   native . village . of\n, . Kragero, -Norway,'- the letter- followed\nyou   get   back,-   one   of    his   ip.ites   him   to   Cardiff.. Wales,   but   arrived\nshot out -at  him.  and- we  all  hnd  a j shortly   after   he , had   set   sail   for\n... ' w\"?'.\".. iv    \u2022'''' \u25a0\"' Buenos , Aires..   He. had   also   left\n'A   Doukhotapr-1   summoned   oh-| Buenos .Aires  when It reached  that\nJected -very   -strenuously   when    he   city, and k arins turned over to the\n. \"Humor Is. the spice, qt life, snd II\nIt Is st midnight, or at 2 o\/clnck In\nthe morning, on - : unwelcome but\nnecessary lob. so much. the. better,\"\nremarked'; Joshua'' Marsden, the 'Tag-\nhum rancher,. Monday afternoon.* ;   |\n-.-About,; midnight last' night the\nforestry, people asked me''to raise\nsome mento*be picked up by truck\nat 2: SO this morning, to fight the\nbig, new fire that 'Saturday night's\nlightning started at  Slocan City.\n\"I ran Into all-kinds, of excuses,,\nof course. -One fellow - pleaded slck,-\nness. He is so sick, 1 believe, he Is\nleaving, tomorrow- for -the 'prairie to\ntake   a   harvesting?   job. ,  - '\n\"Aftep I had rounded up ' the\nbunch, one. chap derided he- needed\na shave.: and proposed that I let\nhim go home so that he could cp-uce\nup for tho,occasion.        ' . *> ?\n\"'The fire will singe.your whiskers,\nnnd   you'll   be   clean    shaven    when\nBarcee hospital aqd Walked to Mori,\na distance of. 80 mils*, In. two days.\n, a* was confined fl, the hospital ti\neye treatment, and fearing that th\ndoctors in charg* iVould -pot porttjl\nhim to leave. In- order to .bring hi\ntribe through the mountains for. th\nIndian'celebration \"at Banff.recently\nh* took no, chance*.. Tb* \"chief\nsneaked away early In\/tbe mornln\ntnd walked across the pratrte\nthrough the .'extreme heat. He w\u00bb\npractically \u2022 barefooted when he? ar\nrived at tho reeerv*. , \u2022' ',-*?..-\u00bb\nOld Peter, slept In the open an\nsurvived nn feettlaa^and :.water. a\nhas only one eye left, and that doesn\nserve him very well, but his India\nInstinct' can-led' him across countr\nt\u201e hl\u00bb goal.         '\nTen Years Ago\nBritish school * of archaeology In\nEgypt haa revealed successive stages\nof civilisation reaching baok 14,000\nyears,\n- General Motors Corporation of De>\ntrolt paid 118,000,000 for the Yellow\nCab .Manufacturing Company of\nChicago.\nProvincial Secretary Lincoln Ooldle\nleft Ouelph recently for Quebec, en\nrout* to Europe.\nThe   Dally   News   of   Aug.   6.   1016.\n\"C** company of the 5Uh Kootenay battalion will leave Vlernon\ncamp  shortly, (or  the  front; .-\n...\nBorn, on July 31, to Mr. and Mrs.\nT. Alrey, Cedar Point, B.C., a son.\n...\n' Pte. Frank O'Qenskl of the Clth\nbattalion at Vernon, arrived in the\ncity laat night on leave.      - -\n...\nMiss Gertie Annnble left last night\nfor Vancouver, where she will attend\nnormal.\n...\nPte. Arthur Bush arrived from Vernon last  night' on leave.\nOld Faithful *     ~~ v\nGeyser Getting\nMuch Slower\nYELLOWSTONE, Aug. 4.\u2014Even Old\nFaithful, suppneed to *e the most constant, and certnlnly the most celebrated geyer In the world, Is undergoing\nchanges. Thin year Old Faithful Is\nerupting every 67 minutes, and his\noutbursts hint for about five minutes. In the memory of living sclen-\ntlnts thin geyser became active every\nCf minutes, and there la much speculation as to changes beneath the\nearth's surface which are slowing\ndown  this old  wonder.\nMany geysers In the basin of tha\nFlro Hole river, the greatest geyser\narea In the world, have ceased shooting entirely within the last SO years,\nwhite others which were formerly Inactive are again shooting. Old Faithful still sends steam and water Into\ntbe air to a height of HO to 200 feet\nsnd la surrounded day and night by\nthrongs of tourists awaiting his outbursts, ,\nSurvivots of German\nGunboat in the Boxer\nRising Meet at Reunion\nBERLIN, Aug. 4.\u2014Are union of surviving officers and crew of the for-'\nmer German gunboat litis, ths first'\nwar vessel to run ths gauntlet of tha\nTaku forta during the Boxer uprising\n25' yeara ago, was held here recently.\nFormer Commander voit Lena, now a\nretired admiral, welcomed former officers and m\u00abn,\nThe only war correspondent aboard\nthe vessel during the Taku forts' engagement waa an American, Joseph\nHerrings, who waa the flrat man on\nboard to be wounded, an exploding\nahell fracturing twe e; hla ribs.\nST. BEUNAUD, Switzerland. Aug.\n26.\u2014The monks of the convent of\nSt, Bernard are to enter the hotel\nbusiness. Their hospitality, which\nhas been proverbial for centuries,\nhas been taken advantage of to such\nan extent that lt became Impossible\nto accommodate all who wished to\nbo   their   guests.\nThe monks, therefore, decided to\nbuild a hotel near the convent where\ntravelers might be put up for tjie\nnight. Their original plan was to\nlet the hotel concession to some\nrestaurateur. Now they have- decided that they might as well conduct the pluce themselves and obtain the revenue for their' order.  ,\nfound his Job was to--fight fire, and\nthreatened to quit,' : -',\n\"'You had.better go,* I told him.\n'If you don'ti \/(rti'll get 60 days In\nJail, and while they'll give you three\nmeals a day. you'll, get' no pay,*\ni \"-'I, guess I'd better go,*: he' aald. v\nV\"Thent*.ha decided he must' go-\nhome .for an- early, breakfast firsts\nand   I   gave  him   permission. \u2022 i\n.\"'Can I go, across, that, field?' he\nasked, \"rrhe bull .won't \u2022 bite me,\nwill It?'      --..*<, -. >v\n\"The bull didn't bite him. and he\ngot back safely of course,-and when\nthe truck arrived, between this, and\nother Incidents, the fellows left for\nthe firing line in a* fairly merry\nmood.      .   .' ^  .\nGermans Fight lor;\n-.'\":  France Against\nRiffs, Say Berliners\nBERLIN, Aug. 4. \u2014 One-half of the\nforeign, leglonalres fighting on the\nside of France against Abd el Krlm\nIn Morocco are Germans,. In the\nopinion of Berlin military experts.\nNot only Is It untrue that Germans\nhave come to the aid of the Moroccan chieftain, they say, but on the\ncontrary France is being supported\nby about 12,000 to 15.000 German\nsubjects enrolled In the foreign\nlegion.\nThis rather startling fact Is explained In the following manner: In\narticle 179 of the Trea,:y of Versailles, Germany undertakes not to\npermit any of Ita subjects to enter\nthe service of another , power, except that It Is specifically provided\nthat this, article shall not- he ap-\npllcable to the i French foreign legion.\nDuring IMI. and, 1823. many Ger-\nman young - men 'found themselves\no-at of JobB. Others found the dally\ngrist of Germany's . reconstruction\ntask too dull and - unadventurous.\nThey readily listened, it Is said; to\nthe nrguments ol French recruiting\nofficers, who told ; them. of comfortable wages, exciting. service, and a\ncarefree life In the French Iforelgn\nlegion. -v   -\nIn this way at least' 15.000- young\nmen enlisted in service for France,\nlittle thinking that they would soon\nhe called upon to shed their blood on\nthe battlefields of 'Morocco for a\nnation nganst which they.fought only\na  decade and  less  previously,-\nARMY PLANS AID\nFOR INDIA'S NEEDY\nLONDON, Aug. 4. \u2014 > scheme\nfor .the establishment of hospitals,\ntraining garrisons nnd other institutions for the welfare of the native\npopulations, has been launched- In\ncommemoration of the approaching\nbirthday of Oeneral Bramwell Booth,\nof the Salvation Army.\nA world-wide appeal has achieved\nsuch response as to ensure the erection of buildings costing $1,000,000.\nHalf this amount will be spent In\nIndia und Ceylon, nnd the erection\nof 100 industrial village homes, a\nlarge hosplt'ol for lepers,' and- a\ncentral hall In the city of Calcutta\nIs  contemplated.       ' ,\nOther countries sharing ,In the extension are China, Japan, Korea.\nWest Indies, Dutch East Indies,\nSouth Africa and  Kenya  Colony.\nDanish consul there.\nt There. It lay In the consular files,\nwhile Bader. pursued hla. seafaring\nlife over most of the 'world, including\na visit to . his home village. Later\nhe Joined the gold rush, to Alaska\nand then came-to Taco'mai where he\nopened a: cigar >tore.    V , '*\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 ,\n\u2022Some two months ago someone' discovered tKe ancient letter In the consular files at Buenos Aires, and^lt Was\nreturned to its place, of origin* There\nfrlendsge.ve postal authorities Bader'a\nlast known address In Tacoma and tt\nwas sent here and* forwarded again\nto his present place of residence.\n, The letter, written In hla father's\nhand and still plainly legible, was\nlike a  message from another world.\nVeteran Indian      ,\u2022\nWalksjghty\nMiles Two Days\nBANFF. Alta., Aug. 4:\u2014Eighty-\nyear-old Peter \u25a0 Wisely, chief of the\nNordegg brahch of the Stoney In-\ndiana, drewed and departed from the\nDTWAISON S\nBuilds Up\nTour Health\n\u25a0CaaUr, \u00bba**e \u2022*\nfcoau.? Ita \u2022 *a*k-\n'\u2022\u00bb. which sask..\ntin. fslhana. .\ngold at sll leadlag\nstart*, .r write te      ...\nM.  ALLEN A OO.\n- C.I Tlmpans*. Ik, Tsiantt, Oat.\nDept, t\nv When using xx\nf   WILSON'S    x\nFLY PADS\n\\%\"Ar\u00b0,\n,0   DIRECTIONS\nCAGEFUUY AND ,\n- ^     EXACTLY_\nBest of all Fly Killers lJc\nper Packet at all Druggists,\nGrocers and General Stores\nBee Supplies\nWe Are Headquarters for Bee\nSupplies of Every Description, ,\nIncluding\na   lb.    ; ^ \u2014\u2014\nBROOD    FOUNDATION,   I\nFRAMES, per cwt\t\nEXCLUDERS\u2014Zinc.    Each\nEXCIaUDERS-Wlre.   Each\nSmokers, Veils, Knives, Hive Tools, Wire, Swarm Catchers, Rub^\nber Oloves. Containers, Extractors,   eta    PRICES LOWEST.\n\u2022\"**' \u2022\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail 'Quality Hardware\nNELSON\nv. a\n\"Poor Dorothy\u2014\n. \/ she's still top weak*\nto romp and play\"\nTHE h'aid of sicknesi touched her\u2014and it .was all'so'piti-\nfully unnecessary.'\nShe touched a door handle, a book, money,? telephone, or\nsomething upon which other hands had left invisible disease\n. germs. Thegerms passed into her system by way of htr nose\nor mouth. Then the fever\u2014the days of dread\u2014the long convalescence\u2014the impaired vitality.\n' Mothers\u2014protect the tender health of your children. Have\neveryone in the family use Lifebuoy frequently\u2014because\nLifebuoy is a real health soap and combats the ever-present\ndangers of dirt. ,\nThe rich, creamy lather of Lifebuoy carries a gentle antiseptic\ndeep down into every pore and leaves the skin purifitd. The\nwholesome odour soon vanishes\u2014but the Lifebuoy protection\nremains.\nLifebuoy is a pure,\nbland soap, made from\nthe rich oils of palm\nfruit and cocoanut. .It\nagrees with your skin\n\u2014keeps it soft, clear,\nglowing with health,\nU-SJr,\nLever Brotiiri Limited,\nToronto.     -\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty. \u2022\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nGoodrich\nBalloon tires\ngivegreaterriding\ncomfort. Goodrich Silvertown\nBalloon Cord Tires also give\nlonger mileage and greater econ-\nomy-Goodrich quality yet holds\nat prevailing prices. Let us\ns convince you.'  .\nXti;\nHit\n WW. \"v. W.B.4I' > .u \u25a0. \u25a0 i    \" # .1,.   W!WK ^.i -i. ;V ff.lj,\u00bb H^'fl,' :\n.-      __-     -^rT^-^**^-.,-r~=*.-_=:\nHi\nC-J-wVC**^ ** \u25a0.?  ft\nTO?mSONDAn\u00a3NEWt?,! ^DN^^;MORNING\/AUGUSTJi\n';'aVia4>Va>.'\nixm It.\n:\nWilli\nAi Bargain Prices\n'\u25a0*.>...\nMen's Canvas Oxfords,\n?, , -. LeatKBr.-, Sofas,\/. \u25a0\", \u25a0*';\n;$2i8ff\n,Men'\u00ab; Canvas.Shoes,i7\n\u2022 - -Xeather Soles, '? \u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0\n;$&15\n\u25a0 Ladies' Caiivas Oxfords\n;,,.  'and- Slippers,'. '-v\n$2:65t$4.65\n'Misses' * Canvas Slippers,\n795e i   -\n'Childs* Canvas Slippers,\n' Sizes 8 to 10V&.Y\n?M '85c \"77\nR. Andrew & Co.\n\u25a0\u25a0*' Leaders inFootfashiim\nA fck Take\n\u25a0        ItheTip\n\u25a0HI Come in\n^| ^T    and Hear\n' .^||^F     the New\n, Bruiuvrick Record*\n, JU3T RELEASED TODAY\nKootenay\nMusic House\nTHE l\u00bbIANO 8TORE\n304 Baker Street (near Bank of\nMontreal),  Nelaon, B, C.\nPROCTER BOYS WIN;\n7\u00a3IRI?S CAME IS TIE\n,,?.,  ' vy \u25a0x    \u25a0 \u25a0   '\u2022 '\u25a0\u25a0\", \u2022-\nJELmihi Boys   Beaten   at\n-Basketball; Girlg-Hold\n; ^: j Procter! Down\nPROCTER,', Auj, J.\u2014Two axettlnff\nbasketball games were played on the\ngrounds at Procter achool - on ' Friday\nevening.* - The flrat game-' waa between the Harrop -boya and the Procter boya, and, resulted In a acore -of\n11-7 in  favor*of Procter, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nOf the Procter boya Kenneth Chandler arid Kootenay gammons played the\nbest game, while Butler and Noel\nHarrop were the best of the Harrow\nteam.    The teams were:.\nProcter,\u2014 Center, Kootenay Sammons; guards, John Bonaeei and Rob*\nert-Smith; forwards, Kenneth Chandler .and   Charlie   MacLean.\nHarrop \u2014 Center, Wilfred Ogllvle;\nguards, Noel Harrop and Clarence\nHowell; forwards, William Russell and\nRaymond   Butler. v\n\u25a0   Margery Severn refereed the game.\nThe girls'.game which followed resulted in a score nf 2-all. It was a\nclosely  contested  game  throughout.\nIn the first five minutes Helen\nSewell scored the only shot for Harrop and.within the next few minutes\nNancy Severn \u25a0 scored the only shot\nfor Procter.\nIn the second half there was no\nscoring.    | .\nFor the Procter girls .Nancy Severn\ndid the but' work, while Helsn Sewell was the best of the Harrop team.\nThe teams were:    \u2022\nProcter \u2014 Center, Nancy Severn:\nguards. Joyce Bdgeumbe and. May\nCronin; forwards. Margaret Smellie\nund   Margery   Severn. \u25a0\u25a0.\nHarrop \u2014 Center, Helen Sewell;\nguards, Winnie Harrop and Ava Ogllvle; forwards, Jessie Harrop and\nEvan   Thoinaa. \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-.\u25a0\nRaymond B u lie r_refe reed lhe game.'\nKINNAIRD VISITOR\nRETURNS.TO HOME\nKINNAIRD. Aug. 4. -U. Mrs. W. H,\nDavis of Balgonle. who has been vls-\ntlng her sisters. Mrs. R. Swanson and\nMrs. J. A. Klllough. returned to her\nhome on  Wednesday  last.\nPROCTER-SCOUTS\nLEAVE FOR CAMP\nE^ght   Boys  Join   Nelson\nScouts for Outing at;\n'..; Kokanee \u25a0\u25a0>\u2022;\u25a0 \u25a0\"-.'-\nPROCTER, Aug, 4. \u2014 The Proctet\nBoy Scouts left, on the morning boat\non Saturday for Kokanee, where tney\nwill camp with the Nelson scouts for\nthe next two weeks.\nThey -were accompanied by their\nscoutmaster, ,R\u00abv, Chtstopher Reed,\nwho spent the day with them, returning here at night.\nThis Is the first yenr, that such a\nlarge number of scouts from Procter\nhas attended camp and also the first\nyear they have all had their uniforms. , The .new. uniforms, arrived\nthis   week. .  \u00a3%\nThe scouts who went to camp were\nPhilip Kdgcumbe. Xitwrence \u2022 Smellie,\nKootenay Sammons, Charlie MacLean,\nKenneth Chandler, Donald Rlackmore,\nKenneth Higby. Willie Merrlfleld will\nleave for camp in a few days.\nTwenty-five Men       y\nProcter, Harrop and\nBalfour Figkt Fires\nPROCTER, Aug. 3. \u2014 About 25 fire\nfighters left here on Snturday morning for the fires In the near vicinity.\nMen from Procter, Harrop and -Balfour went.\n\u2022This is the first time that such a\nlarge number of men .has been required\nto fight fires from this* district.\nCRANBROOK-FERNIE\nSCOUTS IN CAMP\nMen's Work\nWatch\nA good 7-jewel movement, In a\ndustproof  case,   $8.00\nA. T. NOXON\nYour  Jeweler\nTwenty-nine   Boys   Under\nCanvas; Coast Leader\nSpeaks to Parents\n,    Thin, cotunro ia> being oonduoted\nby Mr*. Vlgneu*. !A1I news, of a\nsocial nature, Including receptions, -\nprivate    entertainments,?   personal (\n\/ items,-hial-rlagea, etc., .wtlf-ipwir -\nIn, this (solumti. .   Telephone- Mr*-.\n;;vigneu\u00bb*.;.:.y \u25a0 \u25a0   *.. \u25a0 \"-',;;',.,\u2022\/ \/,-]'\nBummer ^flowers' were -used ^wlth\ngreat effect, Monday, when Mrs.-A. la.\nMcCulloch, Mill street, made a charming tea I hostess,. entertaining - at-, the\nNelson Golf and County club, honoring\nMrs. Alei. Lelth's sister, of Winnipeg,\nMrs. H. Clark, who has been a much-\nfeted guest. The hostess was assist*\ned at the tea hour by Mrs. l*lth and\nMrs. JameB O'Shea, wlto poured. The\nInvited guests Included. Mrs. Hugh\nRobertson. Mrs. H. H. MacKenale, Mrs.\nB. Townshend of Willow Point, Mrs.\nE. C. Wragge. ' Miss Bertha Wragge\nof Toronto; Mrs. \u00bb'. C. Whltehouse,\nMrs.\" J. H. D. Benson, Mrs. John Hamilton of Willow Point, Mrs. Thomas\nGibson, Miss Cant, Mrs. J. A. Forln,\nMrs. Wllllani Iiuthorford, Mrs. Prank\nWillis of Trail. Mrs.' W. E. Wesson,\nMrs. W. O. Rose. Mrs. -W.- O.- Miller.\nMrs. W. M. Walker, Mrs. Fisher, Mrs.\nA. D McLeod, - Mrs, .William Waldle,\n\u25a0Mrs. . James O'Shea, Mrs. J. S.\nDeschamps, Mrs. J. T. Andrews, Mrs.\nC - B. Hamilton, Miss M... Cameron.\nMrs. Frank Hawthorne, Mrs., Oeorge\nJohnstone. Mrs: It. B. Darley of Calgary, Mrs. Arthur Lakes, - Mrs. L, S.\nMackersy, Mrs. John Cartmel. Mrs. E.\n(1 Smyth, Mrs. C .Dudley Blackwood,\nMrs. W. M. Cunllffe, Mrs. William\nRichardson and Mrs. W. E. Keyt.\n\u2022 ... ,\n\u25a0James KClagnon, Silica street, returned   lo  town Monday evening  from\na   month-spent   fighting   fire   In   the\nEdgewood   district\n\u2022 .'\u2022-,\u2022\nMr.   rind   Mrs, ,A.   E.   Parlow,   714\nSilica   street,   have   Mies-Dorothy   Fox\nof  Victoria as their houso guest.\n..*\u2022'-\u2022    \u00bb.<-,'\nFranic Roy of Cranbrook has arrived\nIn town and taken up bin duties as relief man in the CP.lt. telegraphs.\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0#'..' \u2022\nJudge   0. 'A.   Underwood    of   lone,\nWash., motored \u25a0 to slocan City yesterday.  '      -       \u25a0',.?. - '\u25a0-**, \u25a0 . ...\n-.,  .   ,*.    .      .\n.Mra. J. D. Kerr of Longbeaeh was a\nNelson shopper yesterday,  '-.\u2014\t\nZ. K. Ayers,?L. \u25a0 H\u00bb.' Johnson, E. 'M.\nHoey and W. Owen,-all of San Francisco, are city \u25a0 visitors, having made\nthe trip by motor.      * ,\nMonday, and are itleata'SiTMill itiwt\nat the home of-Mr. and,-Mr\u00ab\/ A.  1,\n,\"?\":;-\u2022 .*,\u25a0\u25a0: r:V\"..7.-7'.;-:V. \u2022:\u25a0\u25a0!:-.\n\u2022 'oeorge MacKay of trail siisnt the\nweek-end In the oity.- - \u25a0 :V\/\n,*       \u2022\u25a0\u2022-.'    ....  \u25a0 -1  \u25a0\nMrs, Frank Hawthorne has Mlsa\nOretchen Johnston of \u2022 Victoria as her\n\u2022\"\u00bb\"\u2022;. \u2022-, ; .'\u25a0,.'.'.:'.\u25a0 \";':\u25a0\u25a0 -r:\nMiss Olsdys Lambert and her brother, Cecil Lambert, Falrview,, have\nleft by motor for a' trip to the coast.\nMrs. W. J.v Aatley, BHIca street,\nleft, yesterday -to spend a fortnight\nwith he, daughter and son-ln-la\u00abr. Mr.\nand Mra. Kenneth Attree of Queen's\nBay,    \u25a0       (.\u2022\u25a0 '\u25a0? ?\u2022'\u25a0-        ,\"':, i ,:,|:.\n..\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0 ..\u2022.\u25a0,;..',.,.\u25a0\u2666 ,'.,\u2022<-.. a-.'--],\n'\u25a0\u25a0 Stephen Atkinson ? was a city visitor\nSunday, accompanied by his sister.\nMiss Adelaide Atkinson, and Miss\nMollle Johnstone of Rossland. wjio\nhave been holidaying nt,Crescent Bay\nwith Mrs. Oskes. .' :\nm\nfc* tVp*--\u00ab- *!f\u00bb; vv-*\nI\"\ni*Jf;'\nKiijg fitjcar^Sardines, unrivalled\nin quality.'' Delicious in wnd-\nwiches and salads for trips, picnics and .social functions. Ask\nyour grocer, ^\nCRANBROOK, Aug. 4. \u2014 Together\nwith a number of scouts from fernle\nand Michel nnd their scoutmasters, 29\nboys accompanied by J. M. Clnrk ond\nMartin Harris left Monday for Peek-\nham's lake, where they will camp for\nthe next two weeks, O. H. Scarrett.\nassistant provincial commissioner,\ncame in on Friday to help In preparing the camp. Previously he'had\nlents and other- equipment sent In\nfrom tbe coast. On Friday evening\nhe addressed the scouts of the various\ntroops in the city, advising them what\nlo take to camp and giving them some\nGeneral rules. Following this a meeting of those interested In scout work\nwas addressed by Mr. Scarrett,\nTo the boy, scouting - gate something definite to do, as well as healthy recreation; to the parent, it aided\nln the education problem, and by\nmaking good citizens out of the boys\nit helped the nation,- said the speaker.\nHe said that a great many people\nbad tho Idea It. was a sort of military\ntraining. It taught the boy to be\nself-reliant, taught him how to be-a\ngood comrade, ond helped him to find\nhis own  particular work In life.    ',\n\u25a0In conclusion, Mr. Scarrett hoped\nthat the people of Cranbrook would\ncome to have a better -understanding\nof the movement, and would give the\nboy.s the support they must have.\nScoutmaster Sykes of Victoria is also accompanying the boys In their\ncamp. \u2022\u2022\nKING OSCAR\nSARDINES\nI\nHot Weather\nConveniences\nELECTRIC  IRONS\nELECTRIC TOASTERS\nELECTRIC GRILLS\nELECTRIC  COFFEE\nPERC0LAT0R8\nELECTRIC CURLING IR0N3\nELECTRIC   SOLDERING\nIR0N8\nTHERMOS BOTTLES\nTHERMOS FILLERS\nTHERMOS KIT8\nFLY  SWATTER8\nPRIMUS  OIL   STOVES\nWIRE  DISH  COVERS\nNESCO PERFECT WICKLESS OIL STOVE\nNo Smoke\u2014No Odor\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\ni \u25a0-..-.\nV    Loo^lt   for   ths   Red   Hardwars   Store-\n* PHONE 497\nP.O. BOX 414\nRECORDS EQUALLED AT\nWINDSOR, FAST TRACK\nWINDSOR, Ont., Aug. A.\u2014It was\nintensely hot at Ken 11 worth park\ntodny and the track so fnst that a\ntrack record was equalled within a\nsecond. Lieutenant II., won the fifth\nrace, the best of the day, with HI1.\ndur second and Ceyjon Prince third.\nIt was the fastest three-quarters of\nthe meet at 1:12 4-6.\nMrs. A. C, May was a city shopper\nyesterday. '\n\u2022 \"v  ;\u25a0' \u2022   \u2022   \u2022 -'\nMiss   J.    M.   Robinson -.leaves   this\nmorning by the Crow for the east.\n..\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nMr. and. Mrs. Scythes of Toronto are\nvisitors in  Nelson. .'\u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0\n'..*\u2022\u2022\u25a0 *\nHoward Scott has returned to Nelson nfter a month's fighting fire In\ntho  Edgewood district.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nA. Defteux of Bonnlngton was In\ntown  Monday,- '\n\u2022 *    *\nMr. and Mrs.' R. O. White and\ndaughter, Miss Frances White, of Sandon, ha\\e left for their home after a\nfew days' vacatioa spent In Nelson.\nOn their return- trip they were accompanied by their niece, Miss J.\nWhite of Spokane, who will visit with\nthem. ,    ,\n\u2022 *    \u2022 V\nMiss W. Oliver left last evening for\nthe const. '\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRay French of Vernon la In town\nto relieve J^ 8. Bradley, who with\nhis family .leaves on a motor trip\nshortly. '       '.   .\n\"\"\u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\u25a0\nMrs. W. W. Bell of Bonnlngton was\nIn  town  yesterday,\n\u2022 -\u2022\u2022'\u25a0\nA. K. h. Harvey of Longbeach spent\nyesterday  In. the city.\n\u2022 \u2666        4)\nA, C. Mesker of Midway was a visitor In Nelsoh Monday, .and left yesterday for Spokane.\nJ. ' Rudd   of   Trail   was   a   week-end\nvisitor ln  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u25a0. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nEH. Hnnley and Harry A. Johnston left yesterday morning for n.motor trip to Banff. .   \u25a0.'.-\u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb'\u25a0\"\nMr. and Mrs, F. 8. Peters of-Rossland and Miss Kdlih Pet el's have, n\ncottage at Balfour for the remainder\nof the season. ;;\n'\u2022'-:**    \u2022 .\nBilly   Houston,   Falrview;   who   has\nbeen   fire   fighting   in   the   Kdgewond\nvicinity  for the  past  month, returned\nto town Monday night. .\n.  , \u2022    \u2022    \u2022 ''. \u25a0\nMr. and  Mrs.  C   E.  Mansfield,  Hoover street, ha\\e returne4| lo town from\nspending the week-end at Kaslo.    'V,\n'.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nCharlie Hamilton.\" T. Wheatley. Norman Foggo and Mr. Jackson, all of\nTrail,, have returned after spending\nthe week-end at Mr. Hamilton's parents' summer place at  Fourteen-Mll<h\n\u2022 *%*,\"\u25a0 1\nMiss   Mollle   Archibald   of   Rossland\nwas a city visitor Sunday.\u00ab - *.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 .        \u25a0,-\u25a0*,'''\u25a0'\nO,   I*.   Thompson,-  C.P.R, 'agent- at\nTndanac, spent the week-ond in town.\n\u25a0' - - \u2022 \u2022 . \u2022\nRev. W, J. Bllverwood. recently appointed vlear of Boun-ngton and\nSouth Slocan parishes, who since his\nappointment hits been residing nt\nTrail, will take up his residence in\nNelson  today.   .\n\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0 \u2022    \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. A W, K'rk and A. W,\nKirk Jr. of Berkeley, Cal., who have\nheen spending the past month with\nMr. and Mrs, II. M. Vincent nt Dulce\nDomum on the north shore, have left\nlor  their home  by  motor.'\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 \u2022\nMrs. Laura R Brown of Seattle,\nWash., ta visiting with her cousin.\nMrs,  Hudson-Tyler.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nArthur   Smith,   assistant   accountant\nin the C P.R. general offices here,\nreturned from Fort. William Monday\nnight, where he lias been on a two-\nweeks'   vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nH. E. Qenest returned  from  Pentlcton  nnd   the  okanagan   Monday  night,\nwhere   he  has  been   fur  the   past   two\nmonths on a vacation.\nIn Your Summer Home\nYour guesta will appreciate* the\nfresh cake of Kaby's Own Soap,\nwhich in so many summer homes\nis always chosen for the guest\nroom. Keep a few cakes in reserve\nto be sure not to be caught unprovided. *.\u25a0\u25a0..'\u25a0\nNo imported soap Is better value\nthan the Baby's Own which has\nbeen the accepted nursery and\ntoilet soap in Canadian homes for\nfor so many years.\nBold ilmort everywhere nt 10c for full\nsize cake lo the Individual carton.  4o-bi\n,       \"Bf st tor you and Baby too\"\n1850\u2014YsOlde Firme\u20141925\nThe mune. is your guarantee\nHeintzman & Co.\n511   Baker  Street,  Nelson,  B.  C.\nC.   Major of\nyesterday.\n'rocter was in Nelson\nCranbrook and\nKimberley Gyros\nEnjoy a Picnic\nCIlANBnOOK. Aug. 4. \u2014 Thf Ovrn\nclub hrld their annual picnic on Sunday afternoon nt Pcckhnnr'H lake. The\nKlmberley Gyro* had been Invited to\nJoin them, arid nlroRelher between .',0\nand f.O people enjoyed lhe day im.\nmensely. The weather waH a little\ncooler, and \u00bb|>orla> of different kind*\nwere Indulged In. Ten was\"nerved lo\nthe grown-ups. while the children had\nfree candy arid pop. A sort hall rrame\nwas played between the two clnhs.\nthe result belnff I\" lo 2 In favor of\nCranbrook.\nMrs. Scott Wardle nt Longbrach and\nher Eue.il, Mra. A. C. Lofts of Long-\nbench, spent yesterday shopping In\ntown.\n.    .   .. \u2022\n.It.   O.   Holmes  of   Vancouver   Is   n\ncity visitor.\n...\nMiss Phyllis Church returned Monday .evening from week-ending at\nKdgeayood with her mother, Mrs.\nChurch.\na     .     .\nThe   Misses   Violet  nnd   Jo.in   Hamilton    hna-e    Miss    Peggy    Fnuldlng   ot\nItosslnnd    ns    their    house    guest    tn\nI'ourteen-Mlle.\n...\nMr,   and   Mrs.  J.  A,'  McDonald,  Mill\n\".\".'. J'''-6  \"'<-'' dnUKhter.   Miss Jes-\ns c  McDonald,  who has completed  her\n*\u00a3!.i.??\". \"\u25a0\u201e *\u25a0?ln,n\u00ab at Ht- '-ul\"*'\u00bb\nhospital in Spokane, ns their gue-sl\nduring   her   vacation. .       .\n...\nMadame   A,   Longvllle   of   Winnipeg,\nwho  Is a French :teacher - In  WlnnMieg\ncollegiate,   Is   spending   a   holiday   In\nNelson en routeto the const cities\n...\na.,Mr\";, ?;   \u00b0-   c'ov\"   and .her   sister.\nMiss B. Newman nf Trail, spent Satur-\nday in town shopping.\n...\nM.   Daskln, Silica street,   motored   lo\nTrail Monday.\n...\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Lapolnte  have  return-\nsr\u2122r,\"m \"a m\"lnr \"'!> tn K'lmonton\nslopping n few dafs at ltndlum, Banff,\nlalgary, Cranbrook and  Klmberley.\nr ^\"\" H.U-n Sloan, head of the Hilt-\nr>,\u201e?\"!!.mli,1\" \u2122tP>\"\"\"\" company at\nf.rand    Porks,   with- her   sister,   Miss\n..^'fT' S'01\"',\"' \"\"-a Central school\nstaff  here, arrived ln town  by motor\n4\n'M\nInvoices, Statements,\n:|!j Time Sheets, Etc* '\n^Phone or Mail Us Your Requirements.\nGood Workmanship Snappy Service\n! Entire SaUsfaction\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPt.\n\u25a0\"     PHONE 144 (Two Linei)    \/      V|\nPRINTING1 \u25a0   RULING   -   BOOKBINDING\n\".a- \u25a0' *   i .\nmmmmmmmm_mm\nThe Frechette\n2-in-l Snap Hook\nCo^Ud.   v\nWhy Are We Locating\nOur Works in Nelson?\n\u2022That question Is often. Halted\nme, and I'will try and answer\nIt here.  '\/':,.'     '*7 ....   *\n1. Because     electrical     power\n.  rates  are  the  most   reasonable I can find.\n2. For cash, we have bought a\nfactory site that ve could\nnot duplicate ln Eastern or\nWestern  large  cltlea for 20\n. times   the  amount. .\n3. Because we have the sole\nright to manufacture theso\npatent articles. We hav\u00ab\nshipping facilities in all\ndirections nt our door. Thero\nare no malleable Iron works\n\"In the West, and there la\nsurety   room   for   one;   here\n\u2022now. We are starting on a\nsmrilt    scale,   and    wish   to\n1 . grow     according     to     our\n' . means. And, after all, do\ncltlea  build  good . Industries,\n,1    or'da Industries build cities?\n.A. A. Frechette,\nv V   , Pr#tid\u00abntand Manager,\n$1\nPtr Day\nHotel Canada\n514  Rirsharda   St.\nVANCOUVER\nWhen you comp to Vancouver\nstop at the Hotel Canada. It Is '\nlocated In the center of the\nshopping district close to\nwharves and C.P.R. station. For\nthe tourist, the family mnn or\nlndlea unattended, thero Is no\nhotel more deslrabl.. Clean?\nairy rooms. Every bed. fltte-I\nn'lth box spring mattresses. l-*ltst\nclass refreshment parlor for\nladiea and gentlemen. Free bus\nand touring cars to ' and from\nhotel. 1.      - \t\nWe Are Proud of\nthe Work We\nTurnOut\nWe take pride In seeing our\nlaundry work done as you would\nhave It done. A satisfied customer meaps a great deal to us,\nand shall dn our utmost to\naee that you are satisfied.\nPhone 1-2-8 , and ) have ' our\ndriver call.      \u25a0'   *.'\n^KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nC. A. >.ARaOf., Muriaasr\nArchibald Heads\nGrand Priory in\nKootenay District\nVICTOniA. Apr*. 4. \u2014 The forty\nsecond assembly of the sovereign\ngrand priory of Canada of the\nKnights Templar concluded here today nfter the elecllon of officers.\nTho selection of the meeting place\nIn 1926 was left 10 the grand\nmaster.\" The officer* chosen were:\nSupreme grind muster. 1.lent.-Col.\nGeorge 1). McLeod, Edmonton:\ndeputy grand master, Horace A.\nPorter, St. John, Nil,; grand chancellor, W. H. Kokhardt, Montreal:\ngrand clr.-iplaln, Itcv. !\u2022'. II. Fntt.\nVictoria; grand constable. ,1. \\\\*\nl-omeroy. Victoria. Il.C; giaml marshal, Hon. O. S. Harrington. Sydney.\nX.S.; grand treasurer, Charles i*.\nMnnscll, Toronto; grand registrar.\nD. 11. McFarlane. Dawson, V.T.\nGrand Council\nThe grand council will bc composed\nof John A, Cowan. Toronto; I*. Dnvie-\nDlamomt, Hellivllle. ntri.; Thomas\nKssery, Montreal; A. I\u00bb Han-. Lon.\ndon, On(-\u201e and -I. T. Boyd, of Winnipeg.\nThe heads of the grand priories\nthroughout Canada were constituted\nas follows:\nLondon dlsrflct-S. J. Mnllin. Blrnt.\nford.\nHamilton district\u2014Arch McPhall.\nGuelph.\nToronto \u2014 1.. E. llowcrrnan, Tor-\nronto.\nKingston-Ottawa \u2014 J. A. Derby,\nshire,  Rrockvllle,\nAlgonia \u2014 H. S.  Leek. Slldltllry.\nQll.-lic-c-1-Vank     T.     llown.     Mortl-\nreal.\nNew II iioawlrk \u2014 Auslin Diinphy.\nFredfrlcklon.\nNova Scotia\u2014Thomas Kelly. Hall-\nfax.\nMnnlloha \u2014 11. D. Hardy, l-on\nArthur, onl.\nSasknichewan\u2014.V.   A.   Wilson.   I'.,--\ngln.-i.\nAlberta\u2014J, I, Tlpp, Edmonton.\nPacific  coast   \u2014   C.. 8.   Merrlfleld.\nVictoria.\nKootenay\u2014William Archibald, Rossland.\n,      ;...-,\u2666 Jill Baker Street.   Phone tOOt   . a-? .  ,\n'^M-AxXXM. :.-. v.:- Xyrr^m^'\nSuper Values for tfae\nYou can save real money if you are shopping\nhere this morning.   We must crowd* a (ull day's\nbusiness into a few hours, and these values should\ndo it. ' .   ' '-\"'-Xt\"\/\n35 WOMEN'S DRESSES TO CLEJ.R\nAt $4.95 Each   X X.XC\nA full rack of Women's and Misses'.'\nDresses, consisting of Plain and Striped ,\nBroadcloths, and Fancy Suitings in a)\nrange of smart styles. Sizes 16 to '88-'\nonly. Values to $10.00. SPECIAL SALft -\nTODAY, $4.95.\nCLEARING VOILE BLOUSES\/if*.'\nAt $3.00 Each '*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMost of these are less than half pricft*1'\nTliey come in fine Voile.   Both long and\nshort sleeve stvles in the lot.   Sizes to 42.-- \u25a0\u25a0\nSPECIAL TODAY. ?3.00  EACH.        \u2022\nWORTH-WHILE SAVINGS ON   '.\nHOUSE DRESSES, at $1.59 Each:\nWortien's Hoii.-.o Dresses of good quality\nGingham, in a range of patterns. Sizes to'42.. .SPECIAL TODAY, $1.5!).\nWOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S VESTS\n3 for $1.00\nFine Cotton Vests.   Sleevclefs stvlc, for Women and '\nChildien.    SPECIAL, 3 FOR ?1.00. - -\n10 DOZEN SILK HOSE\nTo Clear at $1.50 the Pair\nA Pure Silk Hose in fine even\nweave, including such well-known\nmakes as Penmans, Holeproof and\nWinsome Maid.' Assorted colors.\nTO CLEAR\" AT $1.50 THE\nPAIR.\n10 PIECES OF FRENCH\nRATINE\nTo Clear al $1.00 the Yard\n38-inch     French     Ratine     and\nSponge Cloth, in assorted colon\nand designs.    Values lit i*l.!l.\">.   SPECIAL TODAY,\n91.00 THK YARD.\nlegal authority for \"interfering\" and The service was then continued under\nwhen tills w;as not produced Mr Fee \u201e\u201e. ,.|,.,.-,i0\u201e ol Mr. Lancaster, as.\ncalled  on all    continuing'   Presbytc-1   . ,   ,    ,       ,, ^      \u00bb..-,,\nrlans to. walk out of the church \"*\"\"d by l\">v* nr* McFaj-den or\nwhich    they   did,   led    by    Mr.    Fee. j Queejls   Theological   college.      ,'\n^\nhe Motorist\nWRIGLEY'S\n-~*^l\nc\n$l\",'3xLr\nP\nWALKOUT OCCURS\nKINGSTON CHURCH\nMinisters Argue Then One\nLeads Continuing Presbyterians From Building.\nKINGSTON, Aug. 4.\u2014SI. John's\nUnited church In Pittsburgh county near this city, was the scene of\na \"walk out'* last Sunday, There has\nbeen somo disputing as to whether\nthe unionists or anti-unionists carried the church in the recent voting\non church union. Last Sunday\nmorning, when Itev. Mr. Lancaster,\nthe present incumbent of the charge\nundertook to open the services, ho\nwaa called to task by Itev. W, M.\nFee of Plcton, Ont., who undertook\nto assume charge ot the service. ,Mr.\nLancaster asked Mr. Fee to show hla\n7line passes faster,\nyour wits are keener\nand your nerves\narc steadier with\nWrigley's   to help.\nSoothing and sweet to\nsmokers - refreshing\nwhen you're \"dry-\ngood for that stuffy\n' feeling after hearty\nmeals.\nWrigley's will stimulate appetite and\ndigestion, remove\nbad taste, and keep\nyou fit.  It cleanses\n1^\nr\n\/\nm\nafter every meal! : jj\ni\nSEALED\nTIGHT\nKEPT\nRIGHT\ntest of All - the Cost is Small!\n INDUSTRIAtS LEAD\ngMl^ETDAY\nAdvances Fr^^o t0 \u00a3ev-\niferi Points in Many Issues;\nv ;* States Steel Advances\niNEW TORK, Am, 4. \u2014 High-grade\nindustrial? led another broad  upward\n\u25a0* tnovement   In   today's   stock   market.\n;The advance, which ranged from 1 to\n7   point*  la i many Issues,   took place\n, In' the   face  of  a   stiffening  of  call\nmoney; rates and a bear attack against\nthe Pan*&merlcan Issues, which broke\n(   about S points each.\n\u2022    !, United, \u25a0 -States    Steel \u25a0 common \u25a0 advanced 1%,  to  120H.    American Can\ntouched 215%, Mack Trucks 187%, Du-\npont     201,     International     Telephone\n;   1S7\u00ab, United Drug 13SH and Atlantic\n.Coast   Line'182*4.     Most   of    them\n, closed   near.\" the , top,     Nash   Motors\nrallied' above   428   today,   a   gain   of\nmore,.than 15 points.\nThere was weakness ln the Pan*\n''American Issues, the \"A\" stock clos-\n, Ing hearty .3 points lower, at 67K,\n' and the \"B** stock showing a net lods\nrof 1%, at \u00ab7H.\n':\u25a0 In the motors, General Motors attained a new maximum at 92%. Kx-\n7 cept * for the 8-polnt jump In Atlantic\nCoast Line, ana the establishment of\nnew peaks by the Wabash Issues there\nwas ifttle of Interest ln the rails.\n, Call money opened at 4% per cent,\nand then advanced to 4%.'.\nTime money and commercial  paper,\nsteady. '\nTotal sales\u20141.498.SO0 shares.\nMuket  Quotation*\nWHEATPRICES\nSTILL GOING UP\nPrice 12:Cents Per Bushel\nHigher llian oh Saturday's Selling\nCHICAGO* Aug. 4. \u2014 Wheat ran up\nIn price today to nearly 12c a bushel\nabove figures which were current on\nSaturday. Disquieting crop report*\nfrom the spring wheat belt, Canada ln\nparticular, aroused new - speculative\nbuying and so, too, did scantiness of\nthe movement of winter wheat to\nprimary markets. Closing quotations\non wheat were unsettled at 2>4c to\n4%c net gain, September I1.60H to\nS1.60-U, nnd December 51.60?* to Jl.11.\nwith corn -He to ^c up. oats showing %c to 3-ic rise, and provisions unchanged to 20c higher.\nSavings Should Be Used\nfor Income Production\n\u2022Wgh\n,17*4-\nLow\nClose\nBait A Ohio ....\n7614\n77(4\n142%\nCan.  Pacific  ....\n. .....\nOt.   Nor.   pfd. --..\nNor.   Pacific   ...\n?'\u00ab\u00bb'**\n\u2022ltd.\n69%\n\u25a0 47\n661.\n67\nN.  T.  Central\n, 117*\nIll*\n117\u00ab\nRock Island   ....\n4\">,4\n45-%\n4\u00ab%\nSou.  Pacific   ....\n9S\\\n98\u00bb\n98%\nt.-nlon   Pacific   ..\n,,,,,'\n141H\n41\n\"ai',4\n41*S\nChile   Copper    ..\n34%\n34\n31 >M\nlnsp.  Copper- ...\nIntl.   Nickel   \t\nII\n27%\n28\n3114\n31\n3114\nKenne.    Copper..\n51H\n6344\n6411,\nAmer.   Loco. \u2022 ....\n112!,\n111K\n1118\nV.   8.   Steel   ....\n120*4\n1181,\n120%\nOn. Motora  ....\n92%\n.    89 *>i\n\u00bb!%\n48-4\n47*3\n47T4\nPacific   Oil    \t\n56\n66%\n66\nPhillip*  retr.   ..\n4! It\n41%\n4H4\nShell   Union   Oil.\n23'*\n22%\n22'4\nStan.  Oil  N.  J...\nt!V,\n41%\n4t%\nStan. Oil  Ind.   ..\n63%\n63 >,(,\n6S14\n66 >5\nStan. Oil  Cal.   ..\n56%\n56\nTex.   Gulf   Sulph.\n11344\n1114a\n111*4\nAmer. T. AT...\n110\n139*4\nHO\nAmer. Tobacco ..\n98\n97%\n97%\nCorn. Products ..\n\u2022  31\n33%\n33%\nRadio Corp\t\n53-4\n52 V.\n52%\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n'.;'       \u25a0*.\u25a0.\nBid\nAsked\n1.20\n.06\n2.60\n.24\n22 >i\n.24 '.4\n05\n.06\n.1714\n10*44\n.18\nNational  Silver   .\n.30\n2.25\n* B- C. Montana,   ..\n.00-4\n.0014\n.12\n.01\n.02\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW TORK, Aug. 4.\u2014Copper firm:\nelectrolytic, spot and nearby, 141ic:\nfutures.  14 %c. ,    \/\nTin \u2014 Steady: spot and nearby.\n$59.26;   futures,   $59.\nIron\u2014Steady   and   unchanged.\nLead\u2014Steady: spot. J8.50 to $9.10.\nZinc \u2014 Firm: East St. Louis, spot\nand  futures,  $7.50.\nAntimony\u2014Spot, llT.RO-to $1\u00ab.\n'London:\nStnndard copper \u2014 Spot, \u00a3\u00ab2 10s;\nfutures,   \u00a36S   10s.\nElectrolytic \u2014 Spot, \u00a367'5s; futures,\n\u00a367   Hs.\nTin\u2014Spot, HM 12s \u00abd; futures,- \u00a3267\n2s 6d.\nLend\u2014Spot, \u00a337 Bi; futures, \u00a336 7s\n6d. r ',\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a335 7h Cd; futures. \u00a335\n10s. .\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK. Aug. 4.\u2014Sterling exchange firm nt $4.81 H for -.fin-day\nbills   and  at   $4.85%   for   dem:md.\nBar  silver\u2014Foreign,  6$%c.\nCanadian   dollars\u20141-1-fi   premium.\nFrancis\u2014Demand,  4.73 Ii-r.\nLire\u2014Demand,   3.65c.\nNelson approximate rate strrlhiK.\n94.S4K. \u25a0   \u25a0\t\nCANADA BONDS\n$1001,;      1031,\nil     1913,\nfOO.OOh,\nSpending Saving Alone;\nMaWs^u Poorer\n\"Without Profits\n\"there Can BeNo\n-Income ^\n\u25a0Anyone, government or Individual,\nusing savings for living expsnses instead of for Income prcdnction, becomes steadily ^oowr, and borrowing\nwon't help any.\n\u2022 :; *...\u2022\u25a0\nFor eiRht years Kussta has been\ntrying to do business for service only.\nShe has wiped out profits. Without\nprofits, there la' no income, and-without Income there can be no savings,\nand - no addition   to  business capital.\nRussia, then, has lived on her business .capital, which iu an Individual\nwould be termed saving.**. Naturally,\nIt has steadily diminished, nnd the\ncountry has grown  p\u00bbmrer and  poorer.\nSho hns been trying to borrow hundreds of millions of dollars from other\ncountries to build up thut business\ncapital again. If thnt nrnnep, too,\nshould not be used to build up profits\nnnd income. It will just be eaten up In\nliving expenses and she would be\npoorer than over. No matter ho*\nmuch one has, -or, how much ho borrows, if it Ir not used productively\nhe becomes steadily poorer.        , 4\nMONTREAL P0?ER\nMARKET FEATURE\nMANITOBA CROP\nNEARSIARGEST\nWillis\nBumper 7^ Crop Predicted\nACter i Spjfvey; Much. Depends Upon This Week if\n. WNXlPtoO.\" Aug. 4. \u2014 Manitoba,\nhaa jn the making, iho second largest\ncrop In'.the,history of the province,\naccording to a survey conducted by\nthe Winnipeg Tribune. During the\npast two ttays, more than 300 miles\nof widely sepkrated territory was\ncovered., arirt, the general summing\nup was to :the effect that with the\nException of a ,few Isolated districts,\nparticularly in -the southern sections,\nthe province will- produce a bumper\ncrop.  7 ..' r,   .'\n.       Rust   Report CorrJ;t       \"^\nThe field experts admit thnt much\ndopenda '-upon    feather    condJtlohs\nU\u00abd Articles\nJ  Rooms\nV Board , !\n,   To Rent. :\nAutomobile*)\n33S\nHelp\nfonfioni j\ntoil and Found\n\u25a0* '.<'i.y,'o\\h'Vi.*^>-t:.\\\n. ' vl4TMtotf!7,-;,\nv Machinery V\nFamPrtdice  (\nTii^er'and Mines\nClassified Advertising .Rates\n.    ...2\\___.  .fHf. __?._*   F4i,4^fi.frlli|H-\nWast ufl OlaiilfleA Aflvsrtlslng, \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per,Insertion. If bald ln Advance, (to pet\nword per weelc, ot IS We per #ord per\nmonth. s*Transient ads accepted only\non a cash-in-advance basis. Each initial, figure, dollar sign, etc., counts aa\none .word. Minimum -zSo, If charged\n60c. \u25a0\u25a0,-\u25a0 -\u25a0   <-; \u25a0 \u25a0  <\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 \u25a0 t ii,\n' Local Reading Notices\u2014Three cents\nper word each Insertion, In blackface\nor machine capitals 40 per word.\nBlackface capitals 5a a word. Twenty-\n, ,     , .five   per   cent  discount   If   run  dally\nduring <.ynx\\   present   week.     Reports without change of copy for one month\nof r:-d rus; ; infection In the southern or more.    Where advertisement la set\nout ln short lines the charge Is l5c a\nline for Roman typo, 20o for blackface\nand 25c for blackface capitals. Minimum 35c, if charged SOc    -.-\u25a0\nSPOKANE STOCKS\n(Reported by C. W. Anplejarrl)\na\u00abar,\u2122\u00bb\nBid\nAsked\n.0244\n,03>i\n.01M\n.01%\n.03\n.03%\n2.34.\n1.4!\nKichmortd   ,\nM H\n.0!\nBilrersmith\n.23\n.24\n.1!\n.14*4\nHmotheck\nLucky   Jim\nMcGllUvray\n.10\n.12\n.14\n.15\n.04\n.72\nBelndMr    .\n.01H\n\u25a001H\nGladstone\n.221,\nOMS\nWHTKIPEO   OEAIlf\nQVOXAT1\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh     I-ow\nClose\nOct.    ...\n112\n145\ni    442\n145\n'.  DfC.    ...\nIM\nH2\ni    139\n142\nMay   ...\nnay.\n14*\ni43\u00bb;\n14\u00ab?i\nOatia\u2014\nOct.   ...\n49\n.9\na      48%\n49\u00bb;\nDec.   ...\n47't\n48\n47>i,\n47%\nMay   ...\ntofi\n51\nIr      50%\n51 *t\nBarley\u2014\nOct.    ...\n18\n80\n-i      It\nSO-li\nDeo.   ...\n.....\n78\nFlai\u2014\nOct.    ...\ntin\n2, fa\n23il\n23815\nDec.   ...\nnt\n231\n22'!,,4\n2291,\nMay  ...\n230H\n236\n230',,\n23*>Vj\nRye\u2014\nOct.    ...\n9\u00abW\n98\nf.      9\u00ab'.l\n98\nDec   ...\n98 'i\nWINNIPEG, Auk. 4. \u2014 llo;n!nloii\nwnr Issue prices:\nWnr   loans   \u2014    192\n1102b:   1937,   '104.2(11,.\n-Refunding  \u2014   H2s,   J100.401\n$102,101),       -102.211a;       1944,\n197.25a.\nWar loan renewals \u2014 1927. Jlol.Sftb.\n$101.70a;  1932.  S1031,,  $l03.40a.\nVictory loans \u2014 1927. *l\u00bb2b: 1933,\nJ105.85b; 1924. $103.75b. 1103.90a;\n1937,   $10S.75b.  *109.10a.\nCOMMON STOdS\nUPATTORONTO\nDominion Bridge and-Maple\nLeaf Common Outstanding at New High\nTORONTO, Aug. 4. \u2014 Pi.mininn\nBridge nnd .Maple I.enf common were\nthe outstanding Toronto ntocks in today's stock market. Another spectacular showing was made by Mclntyre\nPorcupine .Mine?, with the attainment\nof n new high at $1!\u00bb.W. Consolidated Smelter? moved between X^'\"*. and\n109-;.\nConsiderable interest whs shown In\nthe International I Nickel i-.li.ires. The\nunlisted oil group was Inactive and [\nprices w-j-re reactionary. Winnipeg\ncommon was off 1, tn 51. and Duluth\nvery dull at 331. Maple I.enf com-\nmon was up A, tn K(t, Winnipeg common was off 1. to Bl. and Duluth was\ndull nt 33',s. Atlantic 8ugar'common\nwas lower nt 31 *\u201e: F. N. Hurt common receded   I, to 5.\"'.\nOther' price Changes: Bread common, 1; Canadian Industrial Alcohol.\nup *i: City Dairy common, off N;\nChristie Brown common, up -i; Crow's\nNest, off 1: Dodge Brothers preferred,\noff 2-V; and Steel of Canada, off  \\,\nAdvances   to   New   Peak;\nQuebec Power Advances\nThree Points\nMONTREAL. Auk. I. \u2014 Montreal\nP\u00ab.wer was the chief feature uti today's stock market.' Thl\u00ab lasu*.*- advanced steadily t<\u00bb th*' new peak (>f\nIlls'-, ex-dlvldend.'us It Im now selling*\nex-divldend 'i iter cent.. It Is eiftiivn-\nlenl to. 200V Quebec Power closed\nat the new top of 110. a net\/advance\nof ,1 points. Shawinlpaii sold at 161,\nup :'. Second In trade volume came\nDominion Bridge, and was also the\nt-trong feature of the st'ssion. This\nIssue registered an advance of 3V at\nsi rx-dlvldi-nd. Smelters was nn ix-\nccptlon. dropping   \\.  at  \\U_,\nOther chans's: H. K. Su-el se.-ond\nI't'eferred. iip'l'j; (Canada Cement, up\n>\u00bb; Canadian Industrial Alcohol, up\n'!\u25a0; Laurrntlde, up '1\\ Penman's, up 2;\nTrice rtrothers, up 1; Spanish River,\n<>1 C Vi and the preferred off \u00bb-.-; aim\nWinnipeg Klectrlc, off >i.\nClosing prices:, RrstlL 57-J4; Brompton, 21; Cement. 106: Laurentlde, M;\nII. R. Steel first preferred, L'.'l'j; R.K\nSteel, second preferred. b%; Hpanish\npreferred. 113 'i; Spanish common,\nifla; .Montreal Power. 1H%, Qmbee\nPower, lfl'j; Smelters. 10S>{.; Steel of\nCanada, R5S Textile. Hi%: Atlantic\nSugar, 311,; Winnipeg Klectrlc, r.L\"4;\nV. S. Steel,   I30'i; C.P.R., NT..   14\u00ab\u00bb',.\nEGG MARKETS\n4.   \u2014  Toronto\u2014Job-\nextras,   tne;   firsts-.\nDOMINION LIVE STOCK\nWINNIPEG, AUg, 4.\u2014Ilccelpts to\nday were 1000 cattle, 600 calves, 600\nhogs and 300 sheep.\nSteers \u2014 Choice, |S to JC.fiO; fair\nto good,   $5.\nButcher heifers \u2014 Choice. $5; fair\nto   good,   $4.\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice. $3.75: fair\nto  good,   $2,75.\nBulls\u2014Oood,   $2.50.\nOxen\u2014Good.  $3.\nStdcker steers \u2014 Choice. $3.75; fair\nto good,  12.50.\nStocker heifers \u2014 Choice. $3; fair\nto   good,   $2.25.\nFeeder steers \u2014 Choice, $4; f\u00bblr to\ngood, 13.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $6; good, $5.\nHogs\u2014Selects.   $14.57>4.\nLambs\u2014Pair to good, $12.\nSheep\u2014Fair to good, $5.50 to $7, .\nEDMONTON.    Aug.    4.    \u2014    Heeeipts\ntodpy   were   167   cattle,   11   calves,   18\nhogs ,and  1  sheep.\n\u25a0Steers \u2014 Top, $*.\nButcher ateers\u2014Oood, $4.50 to $5.50;\nmedium,   $2.50 to $3.50.\n.Butcher   heifers \u2014  Good.   $4  to  $6;\nmedium,  $2.50  to  $3.50.\nBulls\u2014$1.25  to $2.\nFeeder steers \u2014 Good,  $3.50 to  $4;\nmedium,  $2.50  to  $3.\n.,   Stocker   steers   \u2014   Oood.    $2.75    to\n$3.25;  medium,  $2   to   $2.50.\naVealers\u2014Good, $4.50 to $5,50.\nCalves\u2014Medium. $2 to $3.\nCALGARY, Aug. 4. \u2014 Receipts over\nthe week-end were 934 cattle, (55\ncalves, 140 hogs.\n\u2022 Hogs \u2014 Thick smooths, $13; select\nbacon.   $14.30.\nButcher steers \u2014 Good to choice,\n$5.25 to $8; medium, $4 to $5.\nExtra choice heifers \u2014 $4.75; choice,\n$4 to $4.60.\nCaws\u2014Good   to  choice,  $3   to  $3.50;\nmedium, $2.25.\n\u25a0Bulls\u2014Fair to' good, $1.90 to $2.50.\nCalves\u2014Fair to good, $4.50 to $5.75.\n. - Feeder ateers \u2014 Fair to. good, $3.60\nto |4.|0\/\n' Blocker steers \u2014 Fair to good, $$,26\nto ll.T-t. V :>.i..    -v   ;\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\ninNNEAPOLIPrAuif.   4,;\u2014   Flour.\n20c- to *4JC higher, at  $9.\u00ab.Jlo $9.85 a\nbarroL-*)'        '\u25a0\u25a0  '   \u25a0     '\u25a0\u25a0'\"\n.  \u25a0   Bran\u2014$24. .\nWheat \u2014 No. 1 northern, $1.(SH to\n$1,I5J4; .September, $l.ft8\u00bb4; December,\n\u25a0    Corn\u2014No. I yellow, $1.05 to ll.ot.\n.      Qats-rNo. t white, l\u00bb%.q to lt%e..\nOTTAWA, Aug.\nbing specials, 42c\n?.'c;  seconds,   33e.\n>Iontreal \u2014 Dealers paving extras.\n35Hc; firsts. 33\"ac; seconds, 29c f.o.b\nOntnrlo  points.\nWinnipeg\u2014Finn; extras. 22c; firsts,\n30e* seconds.  26c cases  returned,\nSaskatchewan\u2014Dealers delivered extras,   32c;   firsts.   2Sc;   seconds.   24c.\nAlberta \u2014 Extras. 2nP to 2'Jc; firsts,\n26c to 1'Sc:  seconds,  20c to  21c.\nVancouver \u2014 Firm: country points\nextras,   3Rc;   firsts.   3fic.\nChicago and New York \u2014 l*n-\nchanged.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL.    Aug.    4.\u2014Eggs\nbutter and  cheese,   steady.\nCheese    \u2014    Finest    westerns,\nfinest   easterns,   23c.\nButter  \u2014  No.   I   pasteurised.\nNo.   1   creamery,   37',ic;   seconds.\nEggs    \u2014    Fresh    ex t ra s,    41 c:\nfirsts,   38c.\nSave\nWith\n6%\nis'.r:\n3\u00ab-4r.\nfr, ah\nEXPECT REDUCTION IN\nIMMIGRATION STAFFS\nQUEBEC, Aug. 4.\u2014Immigration of-\nflcial| here nre-expecting a gener.il\nreduction of immigration staffs\nthroughout Canada, but declare that\nthe slash will not be made until\nafter the federal elections. A reduction by as much as 35 per cent of\nthe personnel Is iinticlpated.\nThose who nre putting by \"a\ngiven sum each month can by\ninstallment nr partial payment\nplan put their savings Into\nbonds; and, nt any time they\nwish, withdraw the money paid\nin, with f'.*7<*\\ Interest or more,\nearned. Those who are to adopt\nthis plan might find it stimulates the desire tn save. Those\nwho would understand more nf\nthis plan are requested to write\nthe Ilond Department, this office.\nPEMBERTON & SON\nFinancial   Agents\n418   HOWE  STREET,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nAgents   Wood,   Gundy   &   Co.,\nToronto\npart of the province is gubptantlatfri,\nbut In the central, and northern Uls-\niricta this- menace, ,hafl\" not ntani-\nfested It self to any extent, and .mapy\nfields give Indications, of producing\nanywhere Aom 25. to 40 bushels to\nthe, acre. Hat-Vesting has commenced\nin several districts, hut cutting will\nnot he general (or; another 10 days.\nThe co:ir.\u00b0e grains ,*were reported to\nhe making progress and give promise\nof nn average yield. *\nPR0P~0SED\u00bbTAX\nIS v NOTi; POPULAR\nAU  Parties Opposed; 'Believed Only. Government\nTrial; Naval Estimates\nSituations Wanted Male\nJUNIOn Cl.RIiKS* EXAMINATION\nfur lhe C'ivll Sorvlco of llrltlxh Co.\nImnbla ' will be lia-ld. on H.-iturday\ntiftcr noon. August 29lh, 10-5. l-'or\nH|ipllc:rtlon forrnB ct rial further Information apply to ,tho na-urPMt nov-\nt-rnnitiit   Agent,   or  in   W.   H.   Mhc-\n;  Imics.    Civil    Krrvlco    ConunlHslonor.\n._V|gtorlji. 11C.   - - (107471\nACCoi'NTA'NT  ANIi IlOOKKEEr-En\u2014\n-.': tlioronghly. exporlenocil.   locating   In\nNulsann,   rleslre.-r   pn.-titlnn.     A.   Smith,\n, f-irathconrt , Hotel. (106*7)\nCountry Property,\n** Particularly, well built and n,t- j\ntractive five-roomed 'Bungalow, :\nnear? Crescent Bay wharit.' Fine j\neandy -beach..*.., - : ? '-jt _-j\nTrice |2Q0(> ca\u00bbhi tmtl^oa tetma. [\n:7.^'CHAS'-Ii'\/McHARDY'':-.i\n?*' ' - H -7, i,Sty-^..,  yyt-VOm)\nCity Property for Sale\nml\nMEN, WOMKN \u2014 To learn liarberlng:\npaid wiille learning; toola supplIe-L\nCntaloRue free. Moler College. Van-\ncouver. \u25a0  1I0\u00ab77)\nSituations Wanted Female\nLONDON,! Aug.   4.\u2014The  house   ofK BNtfUSlflVdMAN   wants   work,   hour\ncommons tonight finally adopted the\ngovernment's nhval estimates, including tlie program for the construction nf war ships. Tlie bill\nwas passed by a vote of 31.5 to\n125 without debate-, ln the lobbies\nof parliament, this evening, the main\ntopic of conversation was n suggestion for taxing, beer tn provide for\nthe coal subsidy. The suggestion\nwas generally regarded as n sort\nof trial balloon sent up by the government to discover how the country Would take to the idea.\n.It was commented upon by the\nmembers of all parties, mostly with\nhostility. In any case, such a measure could hardly be proposed until\ntho next budget statement Is made in\nli*2(1. The labor members n[ parliament Were especially hostile to the\nsuggestion..\nCOOLIDGE\nFOR    RAIL\nCONSOLIDATION\nBWAMPSCOTT. Mass.. Aug. 4. \u2014\nSolution of the iranspoi tattoo problem. Presldcn; CoolWge believes,\nwould J.? greatly facilitated by voluntary  consolidation of  railroads.\nSafe\nInvestments\nAs. tho small seed produces\nthe strong oak, so small savings\ncarefully Invested produce prosperity.\nIt is our business to study\nnnd advise on .Investments. We\nhave experience, judgment, reputation and perviee to guide\nyou.\nIt costs nothing to consult us.\nand no sum Is ton smalt to start\nwlth-lt  will grow.\nWrite\nWAGH0RN, GWYNN\n& CO., LTD.\nINVESTMENTS\nVancouver\nday:    thoroughly\ngdon    needle    avtininn.\nDully N.-w.'i. i   '\ndomesticated:\nllox    1074S,\n (107)8)\nFemale Help Wanted\nWANTKD \u2014\u25a0 Onnl; for Victorian Hospital. Knrjlo, Jl.lV Wanes J00.no per\nmonth.- Apply ll. P. Palmer, secretary. (10750)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nroL-r.TREN-   I1V   SIXTERN   tent   ami\nfly.    llonm  Twelve, K.  W.  C.  Bulld-\nIrii;.   iilne   to   four' o'elneU.       (107r,l)\npipe_and\"fittings,\nbarbed wire, etc.\nComplete line Tipe and Fittings,\nall sizes; Special 1-lno.h Pipe,'8c\nper foot. New Galvanized Barbed\nWire. , $3.50 per spool. Roofing\nFelt, l-ply, |1.50; 2-ply, $2.00;*\n3-ply, J2.G5 per roll, Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, 90 lbs. pe-f\nroll. Special, $125. Mixed WJra\nNails, $2.00 per keg. Wire Hope,.\nCanvas. Logging-Supplies and all\nkinds equipment,   \u2022 -\u25a0 . \u25a0\u25a0-..,*;\n- b: c. jtJNic-co.v\nI It 1-nTvell St. Vancouver, B. C.\n(10081)\n*1 Uedrooma, Bright Living.Ilonms,\n\u25a0'\u25a0'-.i' +*ircpllice.\nGarden   I,ot.     .   '\u2022.\u25a0\u25a0'\ni'.r.M, J350 Cash.JBelanceMonthly.\n,. ~~      '.     i.     \u25a0   I\nStoek'n\u2014Plre    Insiirpn;c,\u2014Bnndn   ;\nAulomolille\u2014Llfo    ond    Accident -j\nCity   Property. ' .   ,j\nBOX  626\n\u25a0*,''7!***?k \u25a0*;''.\"\". \u25a0: ' 1\nBusiim&mDx \\\nPROmSSiGNA-\nDIRECMintY]\nGarperifert-\n-\u00a5\u25a0\nJOKtC KtnllBB,* Nelson, B.C.\u2014Alter-I\natlona  or , shingling '.roofa  or  new I\nhOatsee   built.       \u25a0-,'\u25a0' .:.(ll)\u00bb\u00bbl T\nAccounting\n\u25a04k I\nCXAMM T. BV-RIB\u2014\n, Auditor, HecDonalr- Jam  Balldlita I\nBox U9L-     . .Nelson, B.C. I\n,*     -      tl  s.   ... (10M5) *\nTransfer\nAtzihsow xs^ni-n \u2014 Coal and\nWood.    rlione-4*il.   ,     .-.    (10184)\nWnLtAKS\" **MMtri*\u2014Btnate.\nCoal and Wood* \"Wfcne 101.'.tlt|fT)\n \u25a0-     i\n>l\nWood Working-Factory^\nIAWSOK\u2014Below inarket    We 'niake I\nJ   anything.hardwood,     .:     (10427) |\n\"T^\"1***^***^**-^-**\nLife Insurance\nTEL.   26tt\n(10707)\nA\ngaum\nMILL FTRERt\u2014A neat, comfort- !\nable 5-room House, fully mod- \u25a0\nern, good bathroom; nil newly j\npainted and decorated.. $.12G0 \u25a0\nrnah, or $1360 with $3fiO cash.\nR. W. DAWSON I\nAnnable Block t\nrilONE 107 POST riOX 73i\n,\u2022     (107811\nFOR SALTS \u2014 Five-roohi bungalow)\nnearly new, four lots, rruit trees and\nchicken house, full cement basement. K.-tsy terma. Apply W.\nFowlea,   Pox   298. (1073S)\nFor\nSdh tn-a ln_vttktto*. eo.   on\nCAKADA\u2014J. C. Kanifed]-. Dlatrlct\nRep.   Offices\u2014Ollker Blk,..Nelson,,B.ft -\n\u2022.., -_____m_i \u00bb**'\u00abT\u00ab>\nPlnmbetfs *     |i *\nW.\n_   I\u2014Plumbing   and-Hellt-\nhone'.3t)8Lr?:  , (107JO)\n\u2014 nn ii  I  i\n\\   !\u25a0\u25a0\" Chimney; Cleaning,f;|\n '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 i  i    i -\u00bb\u25a0\nWTM.    IOWI.ES,    Official     Chlma.y i\nTT meaner, (10488)\nInsurance and Real Estate j\nI>     W. DAWSOH\u2014\nIV.   nail Batats,! Xasaraaoe, Bsatatla,\nAnnablo   Blk.,   l'.O. Box 733.   Phone 117.\n_ <_   _ _. . J110690)\nHa!~oiu, .nravBAaba.   xa\u00bb_\n\u2022 Ann cut pbopmitt.\nSOS   Want   Street. .      r     .   .\nMonuments\n(106\u00bb1)\nCAMTBILL     a)     HITOHIS     MOITO-\nMSHIAI, OO^-P. O. Box 146, Nal-\nr.on.   ll.t-.    Telephcme  164. (10692)\nChiropractors\n\"ARUELS. KKtlS AND EMI-TY\natcks \u2014 UucDonalr) Jain Company.\nNelaon. (lOCSS)\nBoats and Automobiles\nI-OIt   SALE   \u2014   Ford\n1'ond,   Nelson.\nCheap.     S.\n(10733)\nPOlt SALE \u2014 lS-ft. launch,\n\u2022ayihnler   4-cycle engine.     Ah\nat   t2iio,     l'.O. llox  K-6,  Nolson.\n(10711)\nh.o. :-\nbargain\nRoom and Board\nKOARl) AND ROOM wanteil for stu\n(b-nta - attending the Nelson Business\nCollege. Forward name*, address,\ncharges and whether boys or glrlR\ndesired, by mall to the Nelson Iiusi-\nnesH  College,   Itox   It,   Nelson.\n(10737)\n! Very desirable 8-roomeil Dwelling, close In; good ,'condltldtt. A.\nbargain. -''\".,\nh .See (J. A- Hunter, office Grltfin\nBlock, ur phone 477Hr>, across\nIjtkt\nV-4   \u2022        \u00ab' \"\n\u2014*?r  J*-***\nTELL your wants tnrougn Tbe  Daily\nNews  classified   rolumna\nLive Stock for Sale\nYORKHU1M5' PIQ8, C weeks old,- $6\nf-aeh. . Three f;it eows, ^1 gc-ldtng\nhorse, I'ercheron, 1500 pounds, sound\nand, good ln all harness. I). Sullivan,  Valllcan,  D.Cj  (10745)\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited  [\nOffice Smelting and   Refining  Department\nTRAIL,  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\nMining, Timber, Lumber\nWANTKD \u2014 Two carloads flre-kllled\nflfly-foot cedar poles. H, I*, l'ond,\nNelr-on. V  (107.14)\nFor Adoption\nl BONNY BA11Y BOY for adoption,\nru-o w,ck\u00bb old. Apply llox 10711,\nDally  News. _(10MI)\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014From I.onc n-.-nch. Aultuat 3rd,\nflat hortom gruen row boat, with\noars. I-'hidt-r plense return to ,!.\nSeott    -Warili-I.j   l!mvard: (107SI)\nTeachers Wanted\nTEACHER WANTED -\u00bb I-*or Sullivan\nHill Public School, having flrat or\nsecond class certificate and pome\nexperience. Apply to Niels Nlolson,\nSullivan   Hill,   Klmberley,   B.O.\nWANTED\u2014Married teacher wllb two\nchildren . of school nKe. Apply .loe\nDilMont,   lirlilenvllle.   Il.C, (IQTSfat\nFor Rent\nFOR  RENT \u2014 Two-roomed  furnished\nsuite.     Telephone   3 2. (10741)\nFruits and Vegetables\nWANTKD \u2014Apples, Onions and Mixed\nFruit of all kinds. We have the\noutlet, and can secure best prices\nfor you. We are aleo open to buy\noutright. Write us. Langstaff Coal\nCo.,  Moose  Jaw,  Sask. (10714)\nCHOICE YORKSHIRE SOWS, three\nmonths, ten dollars. Clark, .Crsiy\nCreek. (10729)\nFOR SAI.K \u2022\u2014 One black horse, -7\nyoars old, ono cow 6 years old giving 24 quarts milk per day, nine\ntonB Timothy hay. one set harness,\none cream separator, potatoes, sewing innchinn and .household furniture.    Dell Loxorlff, Klocan Park.\n(10660\nDB.X.S.GKAY\u2014Chiropractor. .Hm&m\nI IR, Res. SSI Y, Gllker blk.'Mount   \u25a0\n10 to 12 a.m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.m*   I\nexcept  Sundays.    Consultation .free.\n'\u2022Vi\"i'7f1!'\nsT\u00bb.o:\u2014Phone' 614.'\nAILAH B.  D0DD3,\nOffice hours: 10-11:1-4 and by an^\npolntment.  - Aberdeen Block, Nelson, B.C *\n .       (IQlWa)\nFlorists\n,\"!\u25a0\nGsuziLsa's oxiawHOusa, 'irmu. -\neon. Cut flowera and Floral dealirna. ,\n.   ...             .(moor,)\n\\intt. \u00bb. jOHKSoir\u2014 .-.  - -    >,\nTt      Phone S42.   Cut Plowera. Potted\nrlants  and  Floral   Emblems,     (10494)\nWholesale-.*\n \u25a0\u25a0  I, !*\u25a0(.-\nAKAODOHAXS   k  OO\u2014\na    Wholesale Grooera end Provision\nMercbantrt, Importers of Teaa, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fancy-\nOrocerles. - Nelson.  B.C.  ' ?    \u2022\u2022     (.10497)\nQREY    MAHI3,    7   years   old.    weight\n.   ltr,0,   guaranteed,   Rentlo   and   true,\nP. O. Box 4-Si, Kaslo, B.C.       (10706)\nn*m-:~iTr.ED jeiisey nui.i, calf.\n0 months old, for sale. I'rlco '50.\nOr will trade for pood milk cow, O;\nNickel,  llrlffln  Ranch, Creston,  B.C.\n-.-.;. -i   (loc&s)\nYOUKSIIinn TIGS \u2014 Good elock, 0\nweeks, 4,r,-, 8 weeks, -6. \u25a0 Floyer;\nWaneta. (I06r.7)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWII.I.  KEEP  HOttSE on  SmaH   ranch\nfor his use.    Box 10717, Dally News.\n(10717)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nTHUEE-ROOM   furnished   suite.\"  Stlr-\nllnn   Hotel.  (10649)\nl-'Olt RENT \u2014- Clean, wcll-rurnlslied\nIhree-room suite, I?**. B07 Silica\nstreet. (10652)\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable Block, one\nnicely furnished bedroom, one Blngle\nroom for light. housekeeping, one\nfurnished suits. 110678)\nKERR   APARTMENTS-.\n(10679)\nSUITE for rent\u2014Cempbell'a Studio.\n  (10680)\nFor Exchange\nFXCIIANOE\u2014Cow* for gotate. Floyer,\nWaneta.. .     .   _   <1Qfl5*>\nTI^I. 'your wants through The Pally\nNews classified columns.\nEngineers\nGteea Bros., Bnnfe. C<fc\nmiLsow, \u00bb.o.      \t\norrn, sxd  ssmita  naxraaM.\nS.C., Alberta and Domlnlom\nD.   DAWSOH, nil   \u00bbnrrayor.\nMining and Civil anflaeer.\nKnslo, u.c. '\n(10699)\nH.\nHO. -HSOHOB*\u2014ToMrt SB5SS6, I\n. Cranbrook,   B.C..   P.O. .Box   Ml.\nTimber Cruising, Mapping,  Surveying.\n (10700)\n.Arokt.\nC- MOOBB. Prov. Land Surveyor..\n\u2022Mining, Crown drama. Creston, B,C.\nAssayers\nE- W. WIDDOWfOW, Box A1108, Ml*\na  son, B.C., Standard western ohargea.\n (10702)\nAuctioneers\nVy    OUTIiBB\u2014\nOooda Sold irrtvataly and o% anetlox.\nNelaon   Auction. Mart,   Varnon .Street.\nFuneral Directors\nDJ.   BOBBBTIOV,   P.DJ9   ft   B-\u2014\n. 801  Victoria etreet.    Phone  III.\nNight  I'hone,   167L.  (1070))\n\u25a0tasdard rarxttu*\nOo. \u2014 Undertakers,\nFuneral Director*.\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. - Beat\nservices. Prleei\nreasonable.    (10744)\nBRINGING JJR FATHER       \u2014X\u2014  \u25a0    -\u2022\u2014        -\u25a0-        -:\u2014-:\u2014        \u2014!\u2014       \u2014 \u2022\u2014       ~^ \u2014^i\u2014       By George JfcWanst I\nl-l\u00abo.  1,  lt.ll, W\nlite, l\u00bb!4o to I\nl.jl.tOitiOli\nNELSON BUTTERFAT\n\u25a0\u00bb**\nft**^;^xA^>w;*a;\nI: '\u25a0\n '7777''.. 7, .7>\t\n:\u25a0'\u25a0>   \u25a0-\u2022n----\u00bbi--j;\n^Jfe'^^\nTf^^fcvW;\n7\u00a7ii\n'\"'\u2022\"-\u2022 '    ' '!'\u25a0  'I    '.   .,. . .       I < ~\nFRENCHGIRL\nFAILSTOSWIM\nTHECHANNEt\nMORS WIN\nTHEIR GAMES\nJPhHadelphia Bate'.\" Well;\n\/Zachary. Mainstay for the\n\/Washington Team     -\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE  STANDING!\n\u25a0.''-:.',   \u2022\u2022 . ,\u00ab..'\u25a0.-? \u25a0-;.i-*;.lW..'.U.; Pet.\nPKIAdenihla   '..,.*....-....\u2022**\u2022* .'II \u25a0*\u25a0 .160\nJ Washington-........,...\u00ab    17 - .(SO\nI :i(lcago  ...........,.^,,..BB v-41    .614\nSt. .Louis -.51     SO ;  .(OS\nDetroit ...:......t.,....M    M    .400\nCleveland\"..... .'..,..-...47     68     .468\nNew   York   .1,11 44 ',  68 - ,.440\nI Boston \u25a0>\u2022;.,.. ..:.,:.....2\u00bb     73. \\287\n- Yank, T*k* Third '\"\u2022-'' ':\nNEW,?YORK, Aug. 4.\u2014The,Yanks\n| nade It three out of lour from the\n- Cleveland Indiana by-winning today's\n| tame 4. to 1. A seventh Inning New\nfork rally contributed to the down*\nj all.of-the Speaker tribe. ?  A H. B.\nCleveland*    .,:  1.   7.1\n| few  York    , 4     \u00bb    0\nBatteries\u2014Can* and Myatt; Shock-\nr'and Scbang. .     . \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0_\"\u25a0.\n.'.:. Athletice Beat So\u00ab\nPHILADELPHIA.' Alls*.-'4.' \u2014 The\nI Philadelphia Athletics found their\n,? ratting; eye* today and won their\njj iscond game of the. series with the\nphlcago White Box. J to I, Gray\nj iltched great ball to gain his eleventh\nrlumph of the season.   -      R. It. E.\nChicago  17     1\n'hlladelphla    ....:..,.*-:... \u00bb   18 ...0\nBatt'eiles-^-Thurwton, - Cvengros   and\nCroUse, Oray, BaUmgartner and Coch\nane,', '*-.\u25a0,'*    ?''-\n-, Brown's  Clesn   8w\u00bbp\n.TBOSTON.   Aug.   4.\u2014The   St.   Louis\n-jJrowns made a clean sweep of tlirt-e-\n-..ahio   series'  with   the' Boston   lied\n\"loxby taking ln the final 10 to 7.\n;!.' - . \u2022\u2022* r . ,     R. H. E.\n.   lit.', Louis  ., *, 10   15     3\n'Alston    : *...\"... 1   11     1\nBatteries\u2014Gaston and Dixon; Fuhr,\nloss and Blschotf.      '      ,\n, Zachary Wins'for Senators\nj! WA8H1NGTON, Aug. 4. \u2014 Tom\nMuchuty held Detroit to, four hlu\ntoday and the Senators made it three\n1 ,'Ictorles, In four starts by winning\n(,- to '2. Zachary allowed three ol\n1 he hits in \u2022 the - second Inning und\nihe^e, Willi nn error gave the Tigers\nihelr   two   runs. It.  H.  E.\nI Uetruls.-......:  2     4    .1\nI j.Vashlngtun  6   10     1\n,1   Hatteilea\u2014 Whtiehlll   und   Woodall;\nrtaehary --and- Severeld,   -       .     *-\u2022\n[CALGARY ARRANGES FOR\n.\u25a0Ai FALL  RACING  MEET\n\\'; CALGARY\/ AUg. l.-^-Caigury is to\n''kve a full race meet starting, on\n)'iaturday, Sept. 19. The- Chinook\n\u2022Xockey .club mile track which, was\nrtjuflt during . the war. and never\n,-j'perated, will be the scenft of tl.e\n'faceting. Work   on   erecting   thel\nV tables, \" paddock; 7 parlmutuei plant,\n\u25a0>;rand stand and club house Is well\n|t'linder'way, the contract'having1' been\n'[ et to A. Q. Creclman und rompuny.\n1 vho, built Polo park nnd Whlttler\n\u25a0 i\u00bba'rk  In  Winnipeg,   \"it. James Spea's\nI    'I  Winnipeg  will manage  the   meet. J\nOLD SINNER WINS      *7;\"|\nAT LANSD0WNE PARK\\\nClub Coach\nHas Hard Job,\n7      YouJefEm\nt MISHT AS Will HAVt\nA OUMHY COACM1N6 AT\n1T\/Wiieiwwst-\u00ab pn>fcrl\n'(\u2022.\/ (h\u00bbv\u00bb a cHMtwa tcwirt\nMf IS-StCONO 6Ut\u00bbSED\"BY THS\nMANA6CR OUR1NO A BAIL 0\u00bbM1\nyou toip ne\nm SH*oe tt\nYOO   HAYIirT\nBlfiHT list'\ntrj  HI WAS ]   .\u25a0{_   I     ' \u2022\nTO PITCH!    'if.fc.\n^M\u00ab:'\nHE HAS TO USTtN TO 1WI MAH\u00bbM\u00abS\nHARP IUCK STORItSAFTIR a OAMC\nTHAT tt>6 TlPPro off)\n\u25a0tot \u00bbo\u00bb\u00bb Tttwwei\nAND  \u00abVBN   THB-   ;.\u25a0\nPlAYtRS SLAMS HIM\nWHtN THIY ARE CAUGHtl\nBMAKING 8UU8 BULtS\n\u25a0 By   AL   DEMAREE\nThe -Job   o'l   being   a  coach   ou   u\nmajor league baseball club Is .nut as\nsoft   a   berth   an   the .average   fan\nImagines.     The   manager   of  a\nnaturally looks to htm (or some ad\nvice   und    counsel,   or   he.  wouldn't\nPIP l\nW|flE$;i\ngums down\nCards Take Third Straight\non Home Grounds; Chi\n7 cago^Victors   7 7    7\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE   STANDING\n-'.   -...-..,   \u25a0:-.-'   ,1 '.--.    :.  W.. ,Ia..:.Pct.\nPltttburgh 1...68\nNew .York   ;...........68\nCincinnati   ...,.;.. 68\nBrooklyn' \u25a0*\u2022'......\u2022 \u2022... ...M\nSt.   Louis '.........,....48\nPhiladelphia ............40\nllik-ago -... .V...........48\nBoston    ................41\n- CarrJInu'*' Beat Giants\nST. ' LOUIS, :'\u25a0 Aug. 4.-iPlaylng\nwithout Manager' Rogers Hornsby,\nwho* Is under ; suspension, the Car-\nd'nals made lt-:-three. In -a row\nover New York by winning 4'to 2\nin tho'series final. Bell's'freak circuit \"clout In the eighth with one\nman on. broke the tie and won for\nSt. Ldu.'S. His high fly dropped on\nthe corner of the left field pavilion\n'for. a  homerT .., '.',, -t   .R.  H.  B.\nNew York  -.....'.... .  I      SI\nSt.  Louis   4    10      2\nBatteries\u2014Dean and Gowdy; Sher.\ndel  and   O'Farrell.\n39\n.698\n48?\n,580\n46\n.686\n\u25a07 i\n.FOta\n68\n.476\nbt)\n.474\n66 \u2022\n.484\n\u2022l-\n.402\nWdtREWSWIlL  :\n7p(\u2122oiraA\nNefsonySending Botfi|-;k\n: Men's and a Women's 7\n\u2022, Fours    -.-'\u25a0 -i -'\u25a0\nNelson'* Rowing club Is now preparing . to send two crew's of fours,\nto the Kelowna regatta to be staged\nln Kelowna, August 15. \" One crew\nof women and one crew of men will\nbe sent from.Nelson,(and will complete for honors against the Kelowna\nand Vancouver crews. ? ,,\nThe women's crew will. consist of\nMrs. Q. Wright (stroke), Mrs. J.\nMclvor, Myraid Morrison and Eileen\nDill, They are now practicing steadr\ntly every .night at-the club, and are\nreported'to, be making good time.\nA men's four has not yet been\nchosen, . but members of the club\nturn out daily for practice, and the\nbest will compete for Nelson. This\ncrew will be picked within the next\nfew  days. V \u25a0   -\nThe crews will leave Nelson 00\nthe night of August 11, giving them\ntime to try out and rest before the\nraces.    ' . \u25a0     y, '\u25a0\u25a0-.\nDEMPSEYHAS\nBARRIERADDEO\nv   ' Chicago Wins '\nCHICAGO, Aug. 4.\u2014Chicago gained\nan even break In the-four-game series with Brooklyn by taking the\nfinal gamo 5 to 2. . \u25a0 R.   H.   E.\nBrooklyn   .,-...   2      9      4\nChicago   .................  6      7      8\n.Batteries\u2014Osborne and Taylor;\nAlexander   and   Churry.\nPirates Are Losera\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 4.\u2014Philadelphia made it three out of five\ngames from the Pittsburgh Pirates\nby taking the final game of the series today 8 to 4. . Tho- Phillies\ndrove Morrison from the mound In\nthe  first   inning. R.   H.   E.\nI*;'   Philadelphia       8.14      1'\nc        Pittsburgh   4.9      1\nI     Batteries\u2014Mitchell    and    Henllne;\n      \u25a0 .       .. ,,, \u201e | Morrison,     Shechan,    Culloton    and\nhave   signed   him   lor   the   posltlon.. I gmlt,     s        \u201e,\nln .baseball  a  man muy  be  right  In       0n,y   lhre_ K\nhis   dopo   theoretically   and   still    It\nwill turn out dlsaslrously In practice\non the field.   Thla gives tho manager\ntin  excellent  opportunity  to  \"second\ngue-s\"  tho coach, and only a player\nwho has  been  \"second  guessed\"   can\nappreciate   tho    full   significance   ot\nhow tough It 1\u00ab.   Tho coach Is usually\ncoatlied at -third  bate where,  If he\nRUeKscs wrong ,on  stopping or  sending a runner In. It la fatal.    And ho\nLi  the  go-between   In   flashing   signs\nfrom  the manager' on  the bench  to\ntho   hitters   nnd   runners.    .This   also\ngtts  him  in  a   lam  at  time's* as   no\nplayer   ever   admitted   thut   he   ever\nmissed   a  sign   In   his  lite.-   Ih addition, he Is suspected by .the players\nof   tipping   off   tho   manager   every\ntime one of  them gets 'In the hotel\nlate  or  breaks  other  club\"' rules  on\nthe'road.       ...,'\nVANCOUVER,'Aug.  4.\nWell\nrTd-j Z\nMUTUELS PAY HIGH\nHAMILTON RACES\nHAMILTON\", Aug. 4.\u2014Good weather and a fast track brought out a\nlarge crowd to the Hamilton Jockey\nclub today. The feature race was\nthe Novice purso. mile and a sixteenth.    Eight horses ran, and  Mrs.\nH.   McDonald's   Bill   lloberts   was\nOnly   three games spheduled.\nFltzsimmons Says\nDempsey .Will Meet\nWiDs Near Chicago\nLOS ANGELES, Aug. 4.\u2014\nFloyd FitiwliiinmitH, fight promoter-who yesterday fulled to get\nJark IK*inpHi*y*s stgiutluro to a\nbout' wllli Ifarry Greb in September, annvunct'd tonight after\na conference with tlie' champion\nthat an a rctmlt of UcmiMcy's\nbanlthment by tlic New York\nboxing com it) talon, . the lteavy-\nwelght'champion liud agreed tb\nfight Hurry WHlrt tor him \"fomc\nwhere near Chicago\" next July 4.\nOld Country Cricket\n\u2022pr-uny-*-\nWas Within Mile and Quarter of Dover When Cold\n*>;! Forced Her Out     7\nESTABLISHES NEW1\n7:    WOMEN'S RECORD\nIn Water Thirteen Hours\nand Thirty Minutes;\nTides Strong\nJOHNSON TIU)EN\n?FMARE BEATEN\nRicha'rdft '-V and    Williams\nTurn Tables and Win ;\n7 Four Straight Sets  7\nJ-OHEST HILfcs, N.T.,; Au*.' t. \u25a0 \u2014\nVincent Richard* ahd It. N. William*\nturned the tables on William T. Tilden and William 'Johnston In the\nsecond doubles match-of their.Davis\ncup tests today winning a ? four-\nset   struggle   Ji-15,    1-4,   4-3   and\nIn the -round, robin singles. John\nHennessey., of Indianapolis, defeated\nOeorge Lott jr.; Chicago, 7-6, 7-6, 6-7,\n6-3, whllo Howard Kinsey of California beat Cranston Holman of Le-\nland, Stanford university, 6-7, 12-14,\n6-4 and -8-8..\nf -   .\nGBEB  WINS   BY   KAYO\nLONDON,      Aug.       4.\u2014(Canadian\nPress    Cable.)\u2014County   cricket   results   today   were:\nken 'by\" Jockey Orceirwou'l. old Sinner! the w'nner.   He was a neck ahead of j     Middlesex won by one wicket from\n\u00bb Von the first rece at Lansdowne park i Sea  l-'alry  which  aa-as a nose  ahead , Surrey.\n.'\u25a0tits  sfternoon   and   paid   the   longest   of   Play   On. I     Tho    Olamorgan-H.D.O.    Leverson-\n1>h*a   \u00ab\u00ab- ah.   ,!,...    t,9ss   f..r   .   15,    jjrs. A. E. Alexandra's Care Freel Cower match was drawn.\n'irlce   of   the    day.    (12.36    for   a   *2\n,'jtralght ticket.. Lady  Barrett, mak'ne;\n[ ,\"l ,|er first -appearance on a British Co-\nk f 'utiibla   track,   ran  second,    favorites,\n',[*  a   rule,   won .out   In - most   uf   the\nivents:\nUNADIAN GOLFERS\nCONTINUE TO FRONT\nwon hlsflfth ronsecutlv.\" victory\" ti-1    Gloucester   defeated   Somerset   ln\nday   when   he * took   tho   fifth   race  tho   first   innings.\nb_re I     Kent won from Hnmpshlre by six\nMtittlfI   prices   ruled   high\" today   wk-kcts.     * .   *       '\nChlnuela, In the second race,  paying!     Leicester won on  the first Innings\n1123.35 on a 12 straight ticket and ,'rom..Northamptonshire.\n\u25a0la.\nHAItl'liN C1TV. L.I.. Auu.  I.\u2014While\n'juymnnd   McAullffe   or  Buffalo,   N.Y..,\n?Jurprlsed   97 - other   public   link   play-\n,.,trs   by   slrootlltff   70.   three   lens   Hum\n:';t,,ar   over.the   JSulisbury  Country   club\n\u25a0ourse    In    the    first    round    of    Ihe\n[fourth anmiHl  public links golt Cham-\n-.^lonalilp^oday. Canadian  plnyei-s inan-\n;'feed to keep tho Dominion well up to\nlithe   front   during   the   first   18   holes.\nj|i hlrty-lwo holes will decide tlie quall-\n, :*>\u2122.\nLlll C, 11. Illackburn. Toronto, made 77;\nHP. Jspp, London. 88; J.- Kutlerton,\n. l] lainllton, 79; and .Hay. Bronston, To-\niVnto. 81.\nThe   Toronlo   team   score   was   323.\nIrleh placed them tenth In the list\n'M 16 below New York, . Cleveland,\n\"uftalo, I'lltMbVirgli. Washington, Chi-\nno,. Philadelphia, Detroit and Jack-\nmallle. New York scored 310; Buf-\nilo 113 and Detroit 320. Scores- of\nie leaders:\nllaymond * McAullffe. ' Buffalo, 70;\nII Ross, Cleveland. Jl; Walter Mur-\nhy.   *t.   .Louis,    72;    Carl    Kaufman,\ni'lttsburgh. 73; Nelrton Davies, Cleve-\nnd, 73; 10. U. Lloyd. Chicago, Jt; W.\ntvne, Jacksonville. 74.\nit\nHANBURYS  BEATEN\nIJIJVANCOUVBB, Aug. 4.\u2014The North.\n1'-[n riiclllc baseball team of SI.\n, ikaul, Minn., defeated the Hanbury\n.-. Ham of. tho Vancouver Senior Ama-\ni JNir league 6 to 0 hero, this eve-\n|i,*j|n\u00ab-' \u25a0       '\nInternational league\nChester, 1; Jersey City, 3.\niTororito, 6; lteadleig, 11. .\nRaltlmore, 5; Buffalo, I.' .\nByra-suse. 6;  Providence. 0.   \u2022\nlnJIERICAN ASSOCIATION\ni   JMIrineapoll\".  \u25a0'\u2022 Toledo,  6. ''\nlt\u00bb\u00bbHt. Paul, 9; Columbus. 6.     ,\n|U;U,Kansae  City,  4;  Indianapolis,  10.\n,tj[Mllwsukee,   7;   Louisville,  8.\njfAClFlC COASTLEAGUE*\nlalt   Lake,  S;   Lo* Angeles,  1.\nIscrsmento. *: t>\"t Prsnclsoo, I..\nikland, 6j BeatUs, t,      -    ?      \u00ab1\n$6r,.10 to pluce, whllo Lady Argos ln\nthe npenliif; event paid 186.85 and\n142.16.\nLONGlilOT PAYS OVER\nTWO HUNDRED SEVENTY\n\\ \u2022 ,       ,.\u2022'\u25a0*. v\nAUItOUA, 111., Aug. 4.\u2014Lulu\nForbes, a buy mare by U. Torbea,\nby Waittr T. Chandler of AtlanU.\nGa\u201e and driven by J. Thomas, won\ntwo out of tho three events-in the\n2:10 pacing class at the grand\ncircuit races here this afternoon. In\nthe first race five furlongs, she\npoked her nose under the wire ahead\nof Bonnie Watts, the favorite ownad\nby Jacob Weinberg, Chicago, and\npaid $57.40 on a $2 ticket In thy\nmutuels.\nThe long shot In the history of this\ntrack went over ln the sixth ra^e,\nwon by Sonla, owned by E. J, Baker,\nSt. Charles; HI, a |2 ticket on\nRontn paid $278.40 or $139.20 to\n$1  in the mutoels.   .        '.-   >\nWeismuller and Mila\nBreak World's Records\nin Victoria Swim Pool\nVICTORIA, Auk. 4.\u2014Two world's\nrecords w-p-e (\u2022haltered Ht tho K<\u00bbla of\ntlie Victoria Amateur Swimming club\ntonight at the crystal garden ln the\npresence* of tho biggest crowd that\nhas ever wllnessed any lnd\u00bb}or u<|tiatle\nspoils In this city. Johnny Wels-\nmuller, Chicago, awimmlnK In a hand-\nleap race with Albert Schwartiof\nthe sumo city, broke the world's mark\nfor the 100 furds open style swim\nIn the remarkable time of 51 2-6\nseconds, shattering the record, held\nby himself, by 3-5 of a second.\nConrad Mila, also of Chicago, In\nths 440 yards back stroke, swim\nlowered tho world's record held by\nniitx of Belgium, by four fifths of a\nsecond by swimming the distance ln\nsix minutes and ons and one-fifth\nseconds.  .\nSID TE.RRIS  OET8  DECISION\nNEW YORK. Aug. 4.\u2014A judges'\ndecision was awarded Sid Terrls, New\nYork lightweight, over Basil Qallano.\nof New Orleans, after lt rounds of\nfighting here tonight. *     .  ,\nNottinghamshire beat Surrey on\nthe   first   Innings.\nLancashire also won from York-\nshirr on' the first Innings.\nWarwick ' beat Derbyshire on the\nfirst   Innings.\nEssex beat Worcester on the first\nInnings.\"\nCALIFORNIA PLAYERS\nSTAND OUT IN TENNIS\nBYE, N.Y.. Aug. 4.\u2014The round before the setjil-final was reached In\nthe second day of play for the New\nYork state women's championship today with four products of California\ncourts in the brackets. They were\nMiss Helen Wills, national champion.\nMrs. May Sutton, Mhs Elizabeth Ryan\nand Miss Mary K. Browne.\nAlthough she experienced' trouble\nwith her backhand today, Miss Wills\ndefeated. Alice Francis, with the loss\nof a gume, '1-1, 6-0.\nMrs. Bundy likewise only dropped\none game to Helen Jacobs, but Miss\nItrowno was extended, to vanquish\nCharlotte Hopnicr. 6-3, 6*2.\nDoubles play was started In the\nafternoon, with Miss Wills and-Miss\nB owne ad-Ainclng Jto the thilrd\nround.-   ...      ,\nFighters Baniied Who Meet\nHim Before He Signs for\nWills Bout\nNHW YORK, Aug. 4.\u2014The bars of\nIneligibility, lowered against Jack\nDempsey for his alleged dilatory\ntactics in signing for a title mktch\nwith Harry Wills, wero reinforced by\nun added barrier tonight when the\nNew York state athletic commission\nruled It would suspend any boxer\nwho meets Dempsey before he signs\narticles of agreement and posts a\nsuitable forfeit for a match with\nWills.\nFlaying Demp^ey's Jetter-wrltlng\ntactics as an intentional evasion of\nthe Wills' Issue. Chairman Farley\nsaid the commission would \"wash its\nhands'' of the whole situation\"until\nsuch time as the champion or his\nlegitimate manager binds a match\nwith Wills with a certified bond.\nCsn't   Declare   Title   Vacant\n\"We cannot suspend Dempsey.\" dc\ndared Chairman Farley, \"as he holds\nno licence with this commission. . We\ncannot declare the title vacant because we have not the power, but he\nIs already on the Ineligible list and\nwill remain so until he signs for tho\nWills fight. If we could declare the\ntitle vacant we would.\"\nWalker Not Discipline Yst\n* Mickey Walker, world's welterweight champion whose tactics ln\nevading a match with Dave Shade\npluccs him In a.7simitar category\nwith Dempsey, was not disciplined\nby tho commieslsn today. Walker's\nsigned agreement that he will meet\nShade on or before August 15 Is still\non file with the commission and the\nboard ruled that lt would take no\naction against Walker until the expiration of the time limit for thla\nmutch.\nDempsey Says Match Open\n1-OS ANGELES. Aug, 4. \u2022\u2014 Jack\nDempsey when informed of today's\nuctlon of the New York boxing commission, banning any fighter who\nwould ^ieet hlm^ before he signed\narticles and posts a forefeit to fight\nHarry Wills, Bald:\n\"If New York bars the Wills match.\nIt Is open to any or all promoters\nthroughout tho country.\"    .      \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0*\nIn a written statement the\" champion \u25a0 drew tho deduction that the\nNew York body had In mind some\ncertain club or promoter to stage\nthis fight.\n\"Of course, there Is method in the\nofficial degree, but it Is past mo to\ndo a lot of guessing.\"\nBORG BREAKS OWN\nSWIMMING RECORD\nUPS A LA, Sweden,' Aug. 4.\u2014Arne\nHo'rg, the Swedish swimming champion, today swam 1000 meters tn 13\nminutes, WA) seconds. This time\nbroke his own world's record af 13\nminutes 28 4-5 leconds, made In\nFebm-ay of lhe , present year in\nMiami, Florida. *\nWEYBURN TRAP-SHOT\nTO SHOOHN STATES\nCarried Off Premier Honors at Wianipeg Trap\nShooting; Scores 192\n^VINNTPEO, Aug. 4.\u2014Bill Geatfos\nof Weyburn, Sask., will represent\nthe Manitoba-Saskatchewan trap\nshooters at the grand American handicap shoot which will be held at\nVandllla, Ohio, this month. To gain\nthis honor Geatros carried off premier\nhonors of the two-day meet here,\nhaving a score of 192 out of a possible 200 at a* range uf 16 yards.\nP. O. Sehwager of Dundurn, Sask.,\nwon the doubles event winning the\nShaunavon trophy.      *\nAnother outstanding prize winner\nwas Chezlk of Tortal, N.D., being\nhigh In the American competition\nat 850 targets and second ln tho\nclass \"A\" competition.\nIn the consolation \"H\" class Glrgl-\nlis,   of   Saskatoon,   was   second   with\n86. ....;\u25a0<\nWHIRLWIND BOUT,\n. CLEVELAND, Aug. 4. \u2014 Peto Sar.\nmlento of the Phlltlplnes, and Eddie\nAnderson, Wyoming ban tysi weight,\nstaged a whirlwind 10-round no-\ndecision  bout here tonight.\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nTh.   Al*  with   th*   ml  fl\u00bbV\u00bbr,*|2^0 doi   Ordta- through\nGOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   STORE.\nFREE DELIVERY DIRECT FROM BREWERY. '\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY LIMITED\n(Thi* advertisement I* lift published, or displayed ir tht Uvsot.\nControl Bomt or bjr tb* Government ot British Columbia.)\n'\u2022  'OOVBR,   Enolsnd,   Aug-   4.  \u2014\n-Mil*. Slon, th* French girl swimmer, f*il*d tonight in h*r *4fort\n, to   awim   th*   English   channel\nSh*  wa*  within  *   mil*   *nd   \u2022\nquarter of Dover when sh* gav*\nup, \u25a0 -..-.\u25a0\nM He. Sion wa* overcome by th*\nlow, temporsf.urs   of   tM  water.\nSh* waa taken *bord th* escort-\n. ing tug which turned *bout and\nstarted back for Franc*.\nAlthough she failed in her effort,\nMile, Slon set a record for women\nswimmers In the channel, as the\nnearest of any of the several members of her sex .who have attempted\nthe feat baa come to the' Ertgllsh\nshore was five miles.' , This was\nMiss Lillian Harrison, the Argentine,\nwho on July 16 cBsayed the swim\nfrom Cape drlx Nes to Dover. Like\nMile. Slon she was forced to abandon\nthe task owing to the low temperature\nof the water. ,\n\u25a0 Swam Strongly\nWeather and water conditions were\nfavorable when Mile. Slon took hor\nplunge at Cape Grt* Nes at 8:10\no'clock this morning. The sea was\nunusually calm. She swam strongly\nand steadily throughout the day and\nfar Into the night.\n\u2022 By mid-afternoon she had reached\na point approximately half way,,and\nearly ln the evening had threshed her\nway to a point within five miles ot\nPover. The sea still remained calm\nbut adverse tides were holding back\nthe swimmer. The tug accompanying\nMile. Slon could be plainly seen out\nIn the channel moving slowly alolig\nwith her. Early tonight she had\nfought her way iri against the rising\ntide to about four miles from her\nobjective.\nKatn began falling about this time,\nadding to the trials of the swimmer.\nShe fought on, however, and beat\nher way ln. toward tho shore another mile. Apparently she still was\nswimming strong.\ni The final effort brought her to\nwithin a mite and a quarter of\nDover, but the rushing tldo and the\ncoldness of the water forced her to\ngive up. Sho waa pulled aboard the\ntug which put about and started\nback for France.\nMile. Slon left the water at 9:40\np. m., having been swimming 13\nhours and 30 minutes. This a record\nfor   submersion   by   women.\nKANSAS CITT, Kans., Ay\u00ab. 4.\u2014\nHarry Oreb, middleweight champion,\nof the world, knocked out Ed Smith\nof Neodesha, Kan., in the fourth\nround of a scheduled ll-round bout\nhere tonight.\nIn Portugal, - ths most popular\nsport* are lawn tennis and football.\nYour nose will teD      \"t\nyou the delights.   .7 1\nAnd your taste will :\u25a0\u25a0 -\\\nsupport the verdict.   -   7\nm\nv\u00bb,\nm\nKENTUCKY\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.C.\nBARGAINS\nWednesday Morning Specials that will still be bargains even after the\nmost exacting comparison.\nCLOSING AT 1 P.M.\nSpecials in Women's Wear\nBLOOMERS\u2014In cross-bar Dimity.\nDouble shirring at knee. Mauve, pink\nor  blue.    Special    05<\nWATSON'S SPRING NEEDLE RIB\nBLOOMERS\u2014Come in white and\npink.   Special 50<>\nTHESE POPULAR SILK BLOOMERS\nare the kind to wear any time. Come\nin a hetivy Silk Tricolette in shades\n- ~ of peach', white and black. Special\nat ?2.25\nSpecial in Summer Coats\nAll the newest and latest style Coats,\nformerly selling at $16.95 and $17.50,\ngrouped for a Wednesday clearance.\nVelours and Blanket Cloth, made in\nutility style, with Raglan sleeves and\nbelt. Colors of sand, rust, brown and\ngrey, in plum shades and checks. Regular $16.95 and $17.50. Wednesday\nMorning Special  $12.05\nDress Goods\nA FINE QUALITY HABUTAI SILK\n\u2014Splendid for dresses and underwear.    A price to suit every need.\n' 36 inches wide.\nRegular   $1.25,   Wednesday   Special\nat 98?\nRegular   $1.50,   Wednesday   Special\nat 91.39\nRegular   $1.75,   Wednesday   Special\n\u2022at  '. ?1.08\nGUARANTEED    WATERPROOF\nTULLE\u2014A  wide   range  of  bright,\nfirm colors.    Fast dye.    36 inches\nwide.   Regular 35c.   Wednesday Special, per yard  19\u00ab?\nREGULARLY 39c YARD, . THIS\nWHITE VESTING is a special bargain. Comes in a flower and stripe\ndesign. 36 inches wide. Wednesday\nSpecial, per yard 29<\nTHIS COTTON CREPE, in a neat\nflower and stripe tdesign, is a great\nfavorite for dresses. 27 inches wide.\nRegular 35c.   Special, per yard....29<\n\\\nFootwear Dept.\nMEN'S BROWN STORM CALF WORK\nBOOTS\u2014Military style, and good\nserviceable sole. A special purchase,\npassed on to you. Splendid value\nat   $3.95\nA FINAL CLEARANCE OF WOMEN'S\nWHITE CANVAS OXFORDS\u2014Flat\nheels with rubber top-piece. Glossy\nPatent leather or black Kid trim-\nmings. Sizes 3'\/, to 5'\/>. Value to\n$.'S..r>0.   Clearing at    . -..92.25\nA FEW PAIRS OF MEN'S WHITE\nCANVAS YACHTING BALS\u2014Rubber soles and \"heels. Sizes 6, 61\/., 7.\nSpecial at  91.50\n\u00a30yS' PURE WOOL BATHING\nSUITS\nThe balance of our stock to clear\nat n.itO.\nUNIVERSAL-MADE PURE WOOL\nBATHING SUITS, sizes 24 to 32.\nCombination colors of black and\nbrown, green and orange, grey and\nred, fawn and brown, purple and\ngold.    To clear at  ?2.50\nChina Department\nPRESSED GLASS CELERY HOLDERS\u2014Tray style. Regular 50c. Special -19.?\nHALF-PINT   CREAM  JUGS\u2014Pressed\nglass.   Regular  35<\nPriced at :26<\nA ,GR0UP OF CHINA CUPS AND\nSAUCERS\u2014A good assortment of\nfloral and fruit designs. Regular 50c.\nTo clear  39t?\nCHINA CREAM JUGS\u2014Floral design.\nRegular 30c.   Special 24**\nSEMI-PORCELAIN TEA SET\u2014Gold\nedge. 25 pieces: Six 6-inch plates,\nsix cups and saucers, six fruits, one\nberry .bowl.   At  .....?4.00\nBit ViLMMMM\nM\n41\nim\n^^^.\n \u2022**-*.*tf,***\u2022*\u25ba*\u00bb'\u2022\nI\n$8lfe*:2tHRl\n:   fllt-U^and feoys* 'bdsii eltti 5 to \u00bb',\nhe*^'1-^rtslght*,ifcoi6r*'!*lack,1 brawn\n. and MUt**-. priori %Q4 '\u00bb 25* P\u00bblr-\n. QincWk 20*' '* $)W p<* yard,\nLadle** Bilk Hor&.'to oieafc all 'colors,\n'50*\\f_    BWfor j^Jtaji^ar, mi-\ntaint irim   Crap's, 354 per yard,.\nPJwm *H   .\u2022'\u2022- ... . (MS iW\u00bbt\u00bb'? 8*.\n\u00ab^KyMB^lB*BrB!r,^r*!i*rr^g,*<W\nTSE-NIiLSOJf-DAILY ]\n,     f.lV'n   Mu\u2014   '\n\u25a0   i-.%   4  } XX'      1*   \u00bb --\nHalf Price\nj    Sale fev\non AD Bathing Caps\n- For , on* week only we are\noffering all Bathing Caps at\nHal* Price.\n' TMM* Cap* are all this year's\nstock, fresh from tbe factory.\nNow  Is  your opportunity  to\nMt,a new Cap at.a real bar-\n'*.'<\u25a0' \",-;*\u2022'- i, ;\nCan.idai)rug &\n;    Bqo&Co.\nNELSON, B.C.\nHASH\nm BOWUNGGAME\n; '   \u2022ijtilii-il-na'. ?\u25a0\u25a0*\u00bb\u25a0'* ,-;\u00bb,'\u2022;., -VV-,'.\nAre Three'iPoiritflfAhead of\nRailroad; %n on the\n-   .Final End .   s\nThe. new Pattern in\nHolmes & Edwards Table\nSliver. We have a complete stock for immediate\ndelivery.   ,\nJ..0. PATENAUDE\nJeweller\nNext Tuesday Is Last Day\nfor Signing on for Trip\nto Kokanee i '\nAt a meeting*' of the-'Kokanee Mountaineering club held Monday evening\nIt was decided -(hat the club would\nclimb- tbe Kokanee '.glAcler as ln former years, on Its' annual \"hike, which\nIt was previously announced will tain\nplace on Wednesday, August IS.\nAutos* will ' take-'the \"hikers from\nthe city as far as the Molly Qlbaon\nmill, where , they will start to climb.\nThe last date for., signing'on for the\ntrip will he Tuesday,- August 11.\n' A'discussion oh building a permanent camp, for the club, on a site yet\nto be located, took place,: and lt waa\ndecided to let the matter stand until\nafter the trip, -; V   -      .\n\u25a0A-large number attended the meeting, at which some signed os th* list.\nSentence of Crew :'-'-'\u25a0\nBritish Boat Upheld\nby United States Judge\nMOBILE, Ala.. Aug. *'.\u2014Establish'-\ning a precedent tor, the United States\nJudiciary system, Judge R. T. Er-\nvln, In federal court haa ruled that\ntha prohibition laws ot the United\nStates extended beyond the three-\nmils llto.lt, when he upheld the conviction of tha six members ot the\ncrew of the British schooner Francis E., by a federal Jury* on charges\nof violating the Tariff act and Fro\n' hibltlon  act\nHitherto,   the   procedure   of   the\ngovernment  has  been  to  seise  the\nliquor  laden   crafts   and   the  crews\nhave been released or, deported.\nlas        --\u25a0\nShow Little Interest in\nRevelstoke Power Vote\nREVELSTOKE, B.C., Aug. 4.\u2014\nLittle Interest was manifested yesterday ln the\"new vote on the power\nImprovement bylaw necessitated by\na technical error ln connection with\ntho vote held on May 15. Yesterday 92 voted for the bylaw and 3\nagainst. On May 15 mdre than.500\nvotes were cast.\n'Unloaded Revolver' Shot\nWounds One and Just\nMisses Second Man\nGet The Daily\nNews Every\nDay\n\"AU the News While It Is\nNews\"\nDelivered to your door\nin Nelson before breakfast\nevery day for 26c a week.\nBy mail outside Nelson,\n60c a month, $6 a year.\nFull \u2022 cable, telegraphic\nand British Columbia news\nservice.\nAll the best features.\nSubscribe\nToday\nTORONTO,  Aug.   4.\u2014Albert   Stod-\nIdard. nged 45, Miami, Fla.. lies in\nhospital in a scries condtion, the\nresult of nn accident which just\nmissed being a double tragedy to-\nday. \"When a revolver which he\nhad taken into a store to be repaired\nand which he said waa \"empty'\nwas handled by the gunsmith, i\nbullet ploughed through Stoddard's\nleg. through the flooring, through a\nwall and missed striking a man en\ntering the downstairs store, by\nInches. \u00ab\nPrince Visits Place Where\nNapoleon Was Interned on\nIsland of St Helena\nST. HELENA, Aug. 4.\u2014A guard\nof honor of British ex-servicemen,\nboy scouts and girl guides and enthusiastic crowds welcomed the\nPrince of Wales hero today from\nCapetown to South Africa.\nThe prince went to Government\nHouse whero he received prominent\nmembers of the community. Later,\nhe visited Longwood, Wiiiere Napoleon\nwas interned and was shown around\nthe   estate.\nIn the afternoon he played golf\nand In the evening was tho guest of\nhonor at an official dinner, afterward attending a reception and\ndance. * i\n\u25a0   \u2014-*>' T_L   -       * ' \"\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0' '*},','\u25a0'<    1'\u25a0'-\u25a0',-\u25a0 \u25a0*,\nThe Skotikuni Tlllikum club won Its\nfirst vlctoty over ttttv.OaP.lt. bowlers\nlast, nlfht on ..Um C.P.R. rink, by *\nscore of .81*18.*.\" The'game was scheduled to be played on the Skookum\nTllllkum rink, but, dry* conditions up\ntho hill have been against the ttnfe. so\nlt-WM decided ,to play ou tho C.P.R.\nrlakfc  \u25a0\u25a0   ..-,\u25a0,' ..\/,., \u25a0 -..j\nCP.n. bowlers have thus far takes\ntwo gameB,  tied  one,  and  lost one,1;\nThe S..T.,m*de, three points' In Iho\nfirst couple of ends, after whleh the\nrallwaymcn ,Jv\u2122P*d ** ,ev\u00ab\u00bb *n the\nnext three, scoring a five In the\nfourth. The 8. T. again had a-run,\nand made; 15 points. In the next elf\nends, allowing., the C.P.R. only one\npoint1 '\u2022'..\u25a0 ,   ' ' ;      ;\n;ln the lGth end the C.P.R. took a\npoint, find }n the 36th tho S. T. made\ntwo points. , Th.vCP.ri. took four\" oul\ndf the remaining five ends, making\nnine points for a total of 11, The S.\nT., with 10 ln hand, added one on* the\nfinal.end, taking the game by'a score\nef M-ll. V'. \u25a0,';\/.  .-'\",-; !\nThe teams were:.:,\nSkookum Tllllkum club: l J.\\; Snei-\ngrove skip, J. 8. Oouldlng, M. Woods,\nT. Waters.*., .,\u25a0 ;v .\u00bb-,',.,-. -,,:>- ;\nrC.ra^B. Y* Brake skip,? B. jln\nDawsen, V: W. -Rlvtrs, Leo McKtentoi\nF6RKE\" URGES? THAT\nMHCHEN_J11D OP\nProgressives Will Support\n\u2022Progressive Measures .,\n: Not Believed Serious    ,\nREGINA, Aug. 4.\u2014\"When the\ngovernment , Introduces progressive\nmeasures they will be given(pro-\ngrtsslve support,\" declared ' Robert\nForks, M.P., leader of the Progressives ln the federal house' who ad;\ndressed a largely attended public\nmeeting here tonight. \"I tun prepared,'to say the same thing to Rt.\nHon Arthur Meighen. Whfen he In?\ntroduces Progressive measures he\nwin got Progressive support,**, he\nsaid.\nMr. Forke described the 1925 budget as a stand pat budget apd went\non to declare that high protection\nwas more likely to lead to United\nStates domination than free trade\nbetween the two countries. .\nAsks  Constructive Work\nThe Progressive leader declared\nthe great fault of the King government was that It had stood true to\nthe Liberal platform while he said\nthe Progressives would appreciate\nIt If Mr. Meighen would use his\ngreat ability to bring forward something constructive. The Progres\naivo party was the most united group\nIn the house and declared, Mr,\nForke, \"When you hear of Progressive disintegration, take It with a\ngrain   of   salt.\" \"-\nMr. Forke declared the future\ngreatness of tho Dominion rested\nupon tbe development and prosperity of the, prairie provinces and the\nproblem of bringing agricultural\nprosperity was not a group ques-.\ntlon. It had remained for the Progressives tn the federal house to\nbring In tht needs of the agricultural population.\nTwo-Story Building . i \u25a0.\nFalls; Three Killed\nand Several Hurt\nrj!S^^M^\n-AfcM\nKe^tR <ampbeU Takes a\nContract Rock Fill Uii\u00ab\ntta^alk       ;\n1 k\u00ab\u00bbn\u00ablh- .Campbell atarted ,? work,\nM&mlay, ttn a contract to replace *\nlarg* iwrtlen V 'the. wall arouno, the\ncourthouse grounds on Vernon., and\nWaiw\u201eH.tT\u00bb*tlra,anal paft of the \u00bblde-\n;w\u00abit aidlotalnir ;the wall- T^e e\u00bbtla\nxoeltt., w\u00bbt ot tlie work Is aM>i*oil-< .\ntnately I6M0, and, It will, take at least\ntwo inonths ,io ?complete..\n, The., wall .and . eldewalk are being\nreplead . ttoma the entrjidc* to the\ncourthouse on Vernon .street,' east, to\nthe corner, ot.Ward, snd then north\nto the Ward., street ^maln entrance,\nantflajBo,' dne,v, sectlon'-'horth' of-the\nentrance, ?; Tbe present 'hialn entrance\nwilt not be  to\u00abched. \u25a0\u25a0'-..' y \u201e\nThe;work. is necessary because the\npresent concrete wall has shifted,'-and\nthe sidewalk has become' very-'un-;\neven, particularly On Vernon ktreet.'\n' \u00bb*w Wall Xeotonay Oraalto\n1 the- wall will be replaced by one\nof- stone, hammer dressed. Kootenay\ngrey ; granite, . built in even .-course,\nwhich- will be topped by the present\nmarble 'coping of the 'old. wall. This\ngranite, wall. Will be 1 feet 10 Inches\nwide at the botton and 2 feet wide at\nthe . top,' and twill rest on . concrete\nfootings 5 .feet wide, ,.''.' '\n_ Mr. Cenipbell stated last night, that\nln order.,to mak^ the wall secure'he\nwill-put 'tlra'-a- four-foot rock .fill all,\nthe, .way, down to., the., bottom on the\nouter side of^thq,wall on, both streets.\nAt the bottoin, beneath this fill, will\nhe a '-Inch agricultural tile drain to\ntake care of the seepage.\nI ,Jt Is expected,..that th* new wall\n;a|lU,\u00abdd, ti ST*at,'-ile*l ,to,the appear\nened \\>t'tttw toutthoUso epd streets.\nCanadianpForms\nMoroccan Warfare\nTHE DUKEOF(NORTHUMBERLAND\nWho has opposed the dole, receiver*\na severe castlgatlon from Ben Tiliett,\nex-M.P., seatretary to the political\nand' International department of the\nTransport- and General Workers!\nunion, at the convention of that organisation. \"The duke's dole is \u00a34000\nweekly,\" Tiliett declared, \"in-addition\nto royalties ot OVi pence to the shll\nling for every ton of coal, which Is\nsold at from 14 shillings to IS shillings a ton at the pithead and yet i-\nratallfd at tr.om > 45 ,to, 85 shillings a\ntan.\"*'- -.'\u25a0--'\u00bb i   '__ ':'.   i   -  \u25a0'\u25a0'\n*SBS***gS*il,,as.lr ''  \".\u00bb. jS!!?jFt^fri, .,.,.?Ji...   -f \"^jjff\" 1,1 . ,'-,(\nAnother Shipment of 'Hollywood\n' We have just received another shipment <4 thi\u00bb popull\nblue sWrt, tanik ot P?igli>h BJoadcjotJi In ne\u00bbt #Pl\nchecks wdvs)pot8.vv6nattin^ec. tar.ForiytH..i. 7;.\n:mwi\nQUALITY\nswwex^\nSATISFACTION\n.\/Hi\ntM\nPARIS, Aug. 4.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable)\u2014The call for volunteers to\nform an American. eseadrllle to go\nto Morocco, to assist the- sultan\nagainst the Riffians has enlisted\nSergt. Commander W. J. Hussan,\nformerly . of Ottawa, Canada, who\nearned fame by winning seven decorations as pilot and engineer. -Sussan\nis leaving for Morocco on Aug. 6 ln\ncommand of tho second oscadrille..\nHie most' notable exploit In the | diamond drill,\ngreat wav . was, the bombing of\nConstantinople and the sinking of the\nBreslau  and  Goeben..\nNo Recollections in Canada\n! OTTAWA, Aug. 4.\u2014Air force officials, communicated with this evening, could recollect, no Walter J.\nSussan In the flying corps, either\nof the rank of sergeant or of commander... He may, of course, have\nbeen .at member, of tbe -French air\nforce.. \u25a0*  -*.-'. ,   .    , a\nYou Can't Go\n1       Wrong\nIn giving -a \"picture,\" It Is\nalmost Impossible to-go wrong.\nI That the subject will be duplicated is  highly Improbable;   it\nI lasts a lifetime, Is always seen,\nI is reminiscent ot the donor, and\nInvariably, fills a want,    lt  is\nI eminently useful and decorative.\n: affords' much enjoyment ami\nmay-contain a special message\nof significance 'twlxt giver and\n; receiver.   As a gift to.yourself\nI or a gift to another, think of\nj pictures!\ni       J. tt ALLEN\n.   Amateur   Finishing\nPicture Framing\nSuggests Fares Be Paid\nHarvesters and Then Be\nDeducted From Wages\nHAMILTON. Ont.. Auk. 4.\u2014As 0\nmean--- of cuplng with uni-mploynient\nIn urban renters, Mayor Jutten 1ms\nsuggested that tho federal government advance the railway lares to\nthese Jobless , mon'who wish to go\nwest n\u00ab , harvesters und lhat the\nmoney ho advanced he subsequently\ndeducted from their wages,; Muyor\nJutten further urged that the rate\nof a half cent per mile west of\nWinnipeg on the outward trip also\nbe made applicable to the homeward\ntrip.  .\u2022\u25a0..,\n.  . 1  \u00bb_tn\nPeterboro Taxi Men\nSeek  Franchise  to\nOperate When Cars Stop\nPETERBORO, Ont., Aug. 4.\u2014Two\nlocal taxi and bus men have applied\nto the city council for an exclusive\nfranchise. to operate a bus service in this city for 21) years, the\nfranchise to date from the time the\nPeterboro street railway ceases operations. They are ready to spend\nfrom 160,000 to 175,000 to start the\nservice.\nSporting editor was elected head\nof the Christian Endeavor organisation at Clarksburg, W.Va.\t\nKANSAS CITY, Aug. 4.\u2014At least\nthree persons were killed and several Injured when a tWo-story brick\nstore and apartment building col\nlapsed today. Beside the three whoso\nbodies were recovered, three\nothers were missing tonight and believed to,bo In  the debris,    \u00ab\nThe bodies of Mr. and Mrs. J. M.\nHolllday aged 79 and 76 years, respectively, and William Banks, a\nnegro, were taken from the ruini\ntonight. *\nThe building fell when workmen\nwho had been making repairs on\ntho first floor removed supports.\nCAPACITYOF\nPRUMILt\nCapacity Will Be More\nThan 400 Tons. Per Day\nSays Authority\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 4.\u2014Milling ca\npaclty at the Premier mine in tho\nPortland canal district, is to be\ndoubled, according to B. W. Wood,\npresident of the company, who has\nreturned from 10 days' vls|t to the\nmine and other properties. The capacity when the new work is completed will be more than 400 tons\nof ore a day. ' ''\nAsked regarding the reported purchase of control of the Forty Nine\nmine by the Premier Interests, Mr.\nWood replied that his company now\nwere   examlng   tho   Forty  Nine   with\namond drill.\nThe only other shipping mino In\nthe district Is the Porter-Idaho, on\nMarmot river, which is getting considerable tonnage down tt>' tidewater\n(or a shipment thi-s month.\nBIG PREPARATIONS\nFOR FLOWER SHOW\nJce  Leaves ?*61acler Bay\nJust Below  Yukon;  Is\n-Direct Outlet   ,      t\nVANCOUVER, Am.' 4.\u2014The 8un\nthla morning publishes the* following\nfrom Stewart, B.O.:\n\"Canada may \u2022 have a new ocoan\nport giving 41r*ct- access to the sea\nfrom Yukon territory i and obviating\nthe' present necessity of crossing\nUnited States territory from Skag-\n*ay, according to statement, made\nby J. P. Ford*, Dominion government\nengineer, who passed' through\u25a0'\u2022 here\non his way to the head ot Glacier\nlaay, an Inlet, west of Lynn canal.\n\u25a0'When the boundary between Alaska and Canada- was delimited, -It\nran east, and west several miles north\nof the head of open water ln Glacier\nbay, but crossed a field' ot solid Ice\nor glacier-connected with tha waters\nof tho bay. Changing climate, un\nusually wajm, weather:or some na-\ntural upheaval of the ' Ice body has\ncaused the, ice to disintegrate, Mr.\nForde declares with the- result' that\nthe open waters of Glacier bay now\nextend past the boundary line Into\nCanadian territory.\n\"This would make' Glacier bay an\nInternational waterway, lt Is assumed\nand a Canadian port. A direct outlet Is, therefore, feasible, provided a\nroute can be found to connect with\nthe Yukon' river or other, streams,\nof the Interior.** ' '\nBONNINGTON NOTES\nM D\u00abv CIsss-MloM CtU*.\n*'INDIVIDUAL- TUITIOM I\nCOMMENCE ANY TIME-\nW* Oo Not Clew th* Ooll\u00abs* P\nIii* 8umro\u00bb<\\.\nOL BAKERY\n714 Stanlsy St * Ph*ti* ^\nWHOLESALE AND RBTAII\nfor. P*rf*et T*\u00abrt   ln*tk\u00bb**M*\nYou Most Hav. It\nii.i i\" \u25a0* i\nfor Satisfaction,-Tr\nDOMINION   RA1\n..   \u2022'\u2022 T-HONE   1UL2\nOur Milk Is FREBB, and ls|\nered  to you from our own lip\nless than i hour*.   . .      .\nPARTIAL MOON ECUPSE\nNOT VISIBLE IN CANADA\nBONNINGTON FALLS,* Aug. 4. \u2014\nMiss Ruth Weeks of Seattle, who has\nbeen visiting her v sister, Mrs, Alex.\nMacdonald, for tho past six weeks,\nItift on Sunday evening on her return\ntrl|>, and will visit at Pentlcton en\nroute.\nMr. and Mrs. W. C. Motley with\ntheir, daughter, Phyllis, and son, David, aro spending two weeks camping\nat Willow  Point  '\nMiss Jessie Adam, who has be<;n\nspending a month's vacation, the guest\nof Mrs. R. Grayson, returned to Van\ncouver today.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   J.   G,\nPlumbers' Braaa Goods. FUt\u00ab\nand Supplies, Tile and SeverP\nB. C. PLUMBING\nHEATINGC0.\nNELSON, B. C.\n8M Baker 8t '     Nelson,\nleft for a visit to Vancouv-\nother coast cities beforo fetun\neastern Canada.      K\\        _\u25a0;*\u25a0      '\nJ. Cavell, who hag been emplojh\nthe electrical work of the powe^j\nbaa   returned  to' IttthbWdge: j r\n'SOUTH SLOCAN N0t\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Aug. 4. \u2014 1\nSomervllle   haa   left   to   spend\nweeks visiting in Vancouver.\nMr. and Mra. Beauregarde and.\nlly    have    removed    to    Moyle,\nBeauregarde was an  employee* f\nBonnlngton - construction   work, \\\n\u25a0 *\u00bb Tl\u2014~i\n- Lincoln Ellsworth, financlsj\nbacked Amundsen's last tri\nhe Intends to reach the port\n. Police   motor, ambulance li\ncago with patient Inside waif\nHarris   have  turned In collision with anoth*]\nTwelve-Year-Old . :\u00bbi\nGirl Burned Death\nWhen Cabin Burns\nLET US HEIP, YOU TO      ;    7\nMiake Preserving Easy\nJVe hav0 e. great variety of Kitchen Utensils for the\nHousewife at this-season. ..\n!\nWood-VaDance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nLADLES\nDIPPERS\nKETTLES\n\u2022TRAINERS\nrrc, *rc!\nCANNING  RACKS\nCHERRY 8TONERS\nHOUSEHOLD SCALES\nCON6ERVO COOKERS\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, BX,\nRETAIL\nCOBALT, Ont., Aug. 4.\u2014Trapped lu\ntlie log dwelling house in which the\nfamily resided, Gladys Boland, 12-\nVenr-uld daughter ot _. J*. Boland,\nKli-kluncl Lake, -was burned to death\nIn nn effort to rcacuo a younger child,\nMr, Boland and his son escaped\nthrough a window.\nThe origin of the fire 1, a mystery,\nbut Is being Investigated. ,\nDELEGATES'PARADE\nDULUTH STREETS\nDULUTH. Aug. 4.\u2014-Messages from\nPopo Plus .and Marshal Foch, of\nFrance, were brought here to bo read\nat the opening sessions of the 43rd\nannual International convention of the\nKnights ot Columbus by J. A. Fla\nherty,   supreme   knight.\nA parade of several thousand dele\ngates and visitors from many parts\nof Canada and the United States and\nopening of thu Duluth Knights of\nColumbus club hout>e wet-e high lights\non today's program. -,\nSLIGHT SHOWERS HELP\nTHROUGH MANITOBA\nW1NNIPEO, Aug. 4. \u2014 The mercuryl\ndid not make such strenuous strides\nin the western provinces, today, and\nwith light showers in some localities\nthe wiathor was much cooler. Tern*,\nperatures ranged from 74 at Calgary\nto -61 at Winnipeg, as compared with\n00 and pver on Monday. At Regina,\nwbere the \u2022 99 mark waa hit Monday,\nthe high today was 85.       7\n\"Fair knd warm with a few scattered showers,\", was the prediction for\nWednesday. .\/\nThermometer Climbs , J\n[}\u25a0:;;'yj[One Degree)Higher*\ni The thermometer climbed X a degree yesterday, when the maximum\ntvnperatura. was ,IS,, after. being- - 841\non Monday. ' The minimum yesterday\nwat. 41..- v \u25a0   \u25a0   ---\nA'slight breeie blew during the\nday, and mitlfaUd tha heat,   ,.\n' OTTAWA, Aug. 4.\u2014The partial\neclipse of the moon which' takes place\ntonight Is .not visible from the Dominion observatory or from any point\nIn eastern America. The phenomena\nIs visible only in western America,\non the Pacific and the Indian ocean\nand ln Australia,\nObservatory   officials   are   making\nno attempt to see the partial eclipse.\n'   .     i **-\u25a0*\"        . \u25a0      '\\\nSaskatchewan Harvest\nGeneral by Week-End\nMOOS13 JAW, Aug, 4.\u2014Crop reports\nfor Saskatchewan Issued today by\nKern agencies, this city, show conditions, Ih, this farming urea, favorable\nwith a need for rain slightly felt\nIn some localities. No , hall, no\ndamage by Insects und no rust has\nbeen repprtetl. It Is expected thaf\ncutting will be general by the end\nof the week, cutting having already\ncommenced ut Murtlach, west of the\ncity, and near Tuxford, to^tfa.0 north,\nwhere white tip has bt'guili to damage\nstanding. fields of grain.   ,\nStove Explodes and:\nKills Man; Sort Lies in\nSerious Condition\nZEPHYR, Ont, Aug. 4.\u2014As a result of. burns ; received when the\nstove hy was tending exploded and\nburned his house -down yesterday.\nCharles IJarron, 32, night operator at\ntho C.N.R.\" station, here, died today\nIn the general hospital, Toronto, while\nhis, eldest Hon Sidney, 9, who was\nstanding outside tho , kitchen door\nat the time now lies In a neighbor's\nhouse nnd conceded but a chance for\nrecovery.\n' Barron who was alone In the kit-\nchen when the explosion occurred.\nIs thought to have poured oil into\nthe stove Id ,gn eff\nblaze.        , i\nConcert Program Includes\nDancer    and    New\nSinger    *\nGreat masses of color and fragrance being carried Into the fair\nbuilding In big baskets or In arm-\nfuls; exhibitors with a harried look'\ndemandns more (lower vases, or\nwater, or a piece of string\u2014these\nwere part of the stir and bustle In\nthe fair building last night, as preparations for today's annuat flower\nshow wero  in full swing. \u2022\nEntries were many more than usual, nnd It Is expected that when\nthey aro all ln place today they\nwill prove part of one of the best\nflower shows ever held in Nelson.\nIt will bo opened today at 2\no'clock by L. W. Humphrey, M.P.,\nand ln the evening an unusually good\nconcert will bo given. In addition,\nthe city band will play during the\nevening.\nAs well as having well-known local artists for tho concert several\nnew people will contribute to the\nprogram. Among these are Miss\nRuth Deschamps, who will dance,\nand   Ml.ss   M.   Balmcr,   a   contralto.\nWhile Mrs. William Rutherford,\nfqr the last three.years president of\nthe Horticultural-society holding the\nshow. Is not an exhibitor, she Is as\nusual decorating the platform for\ntho concert with flowers from her\nbeautiful garden on tho north shore.\nPrince of Wales refused to* permit\nAfrican natives to follow their cus-\ntorn, of dancing till one dropped dead.\nMember of railway .construction\ngjpig at Port Arthur, Ont., caught a\nflail* with  one head and two bodies.\n)fforj. t\u00ab>\nhaston a\n*li\nNelson News of the Day\n: ronr   bead   this   \u2014   sututs-\nOBCltTSTRA, X-BOK SUIT LAKH\nOITY. Will, OITE A DAJ-CS, AVO.\n6, AT KAITZM' PATILIOK,    (1071*)\n.McDonald's new pack strawberry Jam\nis ready.    Ask for It-at your grocery.\n(10173)\nWood From Ancient\nHouse Again in Use\nA good example bf the hard-wearing qualities of the wood used ln\nbuilding the earliest houses In Nelson has recently been discovered In\nlumber salvaged from the old house,\none of the earliest In 1-ielson, recently burned nt ihe, corner of Victoria, and Josephine streets.\n'The wood from.this house, owned\nby Mrs. A. p. Fapaslaa, was taken\nto ths Strathcona hotel to be used In\nthe construction .of new sample\nrooms at the back of the hotel, and\n-workmen, there.told .\"Mrs., Papaslan\nthat lt was very well, preserved and\nquit. t.LtoJ,.<u.:d .grUn^ t<), ,\nBONNINGTON SCOUTS\n|   LEAVE FOR KOKANEE\n! BONNINGTON *\u00bbALLR*'A-a|'.*' 4! \u2014\nSeven scouts,-. members of the- Bon-\ntilngton-Sduth slocan', troop) 'have left\nhere for Kokanee, where they, will\ncamp for the next two weeks with the\n- - - Those' go-\nvara*,\nFred\nWanted    \u2014    Blackberries.     Plums,\nGreengages,        Yellow        Transparent\nApples.     McDonald  Jam  Co.,  Nelson.\n(10675)\nNelson atid Procter scouts,    r.  \u201e\nIng to camp ware Jsok Ed wards, Bain\nOllvM,    Henry   Whelldon,    ~\nDr. G. A. C, Walley, dentist, Orlffin\nBlock.. (10578)\nConcert Program)\nAt Flower Show,' Tonight, at 8 p.m.\nSong\u2014\"Bird of Lovtj Divine '..H. WoodJ\nMrs.-C. W. Tyler\nDance ....-\t\nMiss Ruth' Dgschamps\nSong\u2014\"When - Spring Comes to the Island\" .....\nMrs. J. T. Andrews\nSong\u2014\"Indian \"Love Song\" from \"Rose Marie\" .\nMiss Margaret Allen       .:';,'?\nDance  ........j ..........:..\nMiss Ruth Deschamps\nDuet\u2014\"The World Is Waiting for the Sunshine\"..Feits\nMrs. J. T. Andrews, Miss M. Balmer\nSong\u2014\"Home  Along\"   ..:.....\nJ, L. Bartindale\nSelections \u201e.. ..'....\n.,.,.',..      Nelson City Band  _        \u25a0 '*\u25a0\u25a0-.\nADMISSION      -      -      -      -      -    '35?\nTonight\nResetwe the evening of August 18\nfor Lawn Social at the home of Mrs.\nGelinas, Victoria street.' Bake Table.\nIA aid of the Catholic Church. (10749)\nI Willow Potat Esse*, Saturday, August tbe Sth. .- Blanohard'a Jaas Orchestra.   Proceeds for Crystal Club.      ,\n\"\u25a0; , \u25a0 ,      .       .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' (107\u00ab\u00bb>\nTo Insure Independence In old age.\nNorth\" American I.lfo, . 3-3 Aberdeen\nBlock, E. H. Hanley, District Manager. ; (10751)\nDance\u2014Eagle Halt, -Saturday night,\n\u2022 to  13. j (10758)\nwards, Douglas Ridge,  Marwood Yeat-\n\u25a0~-   Haroli* Rhode*. ...-.\/.;:.\\_ ,\nDon't forget the Flowtr'Show today\nIn the Fair Building.\" (10710)\nW.' W. Ferguson. Barrister, Solicitor,\nNotary Public Gllker.-, Block.    (10171)\nO. W. V. A. General Meeting Thursday; August 4th at \u00bb p.m. Electlor\ndelegate to Provincial Convention, antl\nother Important business,   ,,    (10744)\n\u2022'Keep  In  mind Rowing Club Jitney\nDance,   Waterfront   Pavilion,   Monday,\nAugust   10.\ntr*.--.\nBlanchard's Jass Orchea\n........     -    WW)\nTonight\n^Sinners in Silk1\nFeaturing Adolphe Menjou.\nEleanor Boardman,\nConrad Nagel\n.      ' A Jazz picture built on new lines, pack*,\ning a bunch of thrills that- will bring\n.   you to the edge of your seat...',\n- '-.*';\u2022\u2022\u2022 ,,* ;< [;\u25a0;\u2022,.,'  ,'   '   '.-; 7.7:'?-:''-.'\"(\nThe Screen, Boasts No Funnier Cobxedian Th\n'Here he is in a brand-new - one,\n\u201e'7?V ^qfee^VV\n777:?7Vwfi|s:REviEw; 7\n\u2022 Something of (interest for everybody.\nOR\nsens\n\u25a0\u2022-   \u25a0\u2022\u25a0-''   -  \u25a0\nim_lm__m_________\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. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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