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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":" IT0\u00a3.\"24\"v\n.H5XS0N, B. &i MONDAY M\u00ae&N WGy;AUGUST 24, ,1923\nNo. 108  .\nti}'; '*'-\\p\u00ab*\u00ab::^.'.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:\u2022>,\u25a0 ,*,-\u25a0?-;\nVI CtCiRIA   \u2022 C . \"\n\u00bb>T \u2022'\u2022\"**\n\"it '\u2022   \"\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\n.   Rains Help\nFOREST FIRE FIGHTERS\n:-'X-^te9kwM;'M\nESCAPED OREGON STATE GUNMEN CAPTUli\nKING RESENTS\nDICTATION 8Y\nJlSgWIVES\nIB Becomet Meighen to Dictate Time oi Disso-   -\niution ,\n|HOTpNSiEN\nTHE TIME COMES\n\u2022\nTtiks Foreign Policy\niGoTe\"rnment   Will  Not   Be\nStampeded Into, ah Election, Say* Premier\nOT~i,iffjt, Au'**. SJ.\u2014\"Whether or\nnot the prtuent fovernment will call\nanother leaalon of parliament la (or\nth* fovernment to decide. We do\nnot propose .. to be. stampeded ' Into\nany dissolution '\"of. parliament Just'\nto plea** tht. leader of the oppoel-\njtn and hi* press.\" So, declares\nPremier. Mackenzie King, in a statement to the Canadian Press tonight.\nPremier King's statements refers to\npublic discussion which Mfcs. been\ntaking place with regard to the\npossibility of a general election this\ntar. He proiieeds:' '.'The responsl-\nllty of carrying on the country's af-\n.lira has been given us by the people. ~r\u00bb. have exercised lt, nothwlth.\n\u2022landing; all, the- difficult clrcum-\n\u2022tanoe* with which we have' been\nconfronted,..in a manner which we\nbelieve has won us a steadily Increasing measure of public confidence. ..Under th* circumstances the\nresponsibility of advising a dissolution would app*\u00bbr?J0'be \">\"'*\" M\ngreat as that oTTSOntlnulng to carry\n? tana.- deapl*. B\u00bb.dKflcultlefc.of _ gov.\n\u2022rpment ; which., .^e'.necesaarlly experience.\" .-,\u25a0'*' \"\u25a0*'\u25a0.       ' \u25a0>'. . -.\u25a0'\u25a0 - _ --\n\u25a0 \u2022\"\u25a0' *iwor ?*in^\u00abiMa*B\u00abw\u00bb-\"--'\n\u2014When we ? twVt'Mubn to believe\nthat there are nallphal considerations\nto Imperative as to. necessitate an appeal to the electirite, I shall not\nhesitate \u25a0 to acquaint his excellency\nthe governor-general,with our views\nnnd to press for a dissolution of\nparliament. .When'that time comes.\nI shall be equally prepared to state\nthe .reason* to the. public.\"\nGovernment's Position   .\nThe statement  deals  In eomo.de-\n[tall    with    the   .political    situution.\nJ While not. making any specific dec-\n(Continued * on   fag*   Five)\n[WINNIPEG BANDITS\nLACK IN COURAGE\n10SANGELES\nCROOK CAUGHT\nATVApVER\nJohn Clarke Answers to Statutory Offence; Faked\nas Business Man\nLOVE CULT BROKEN\nIN ITS EARLY STAGE\n'Near* Holdups Reported; Store-\n' keepers Chase Armed\n,\"Men- Away'    -\nWrNNIPBO,' Aug. 2?.. \u2014 Winnipeg\nla experiencing an outbreak of \"near\"\nbanditry., ....   \u2666\nApparently Inspired by the recent\nsuccessful $87,000 bandit raid on the\npayroll of the > Winnipeg Electric\nHallway company, young men. operating by'twoH and fours have been\nstaging attempted holdups. They lack\nnothing in the way ot equipment but\ncourage.\nFriday night, four youthful bandits\nentered a grocery store on Portage\navenue an the proprietor was preparing to lock up for the night.\nFour big revolvers were produced\nand the grocer ordered to hand over\nthe   day's   receipts. Instead,   the\ngrocer, shouted an alarm and the\nfour showed their heels. They\nescaped In a motor car.\nLast night two men entered a\n| store In St. vital and at the point\nlot their \u2022 .guns, ordered - the storekeeper to produce what cash he had\non hand, * .The , iiarekeeper, Instead,\nleaped over the counter, but failed\nto catch, the would-be bandits, who\n(left.with surprising speed.\nFOOLING THE PEOPLE,\nDECLARES^ MEIGHEN\nLaval of Taxation at Paak)    Cannot\nB.   Maintained  and   Hold   Pwpl*.\nStat**   Opposition   Leader\nST. CATHARINES, Ont... Aug. 28. .\nEmphasising tlie need of economy to-\n[day In Canada\u2014municipally, provln-\nticlally and federally*-Bt. Hon.\" Arthur\n_ Meighen, federal leader, declared be-\nfore the Conservative \u2022 convention of\nUnooln county Saturday that the level\nof .taxation .in? the Dominion has\n\\ reached a peak that cannot be main-\n\u25a0& ialned and hold thi people; and lt\nH t Cannot be lowered at tho present rate\n\u25a0I rff \u00abp*ndlture. i  V      .'\u25a0\u2022'\"'\n' \"Koollng th* people,\" was the term\napplied to the present, administration'* method of announcing aur-\nplun* and debt reductions by leaving out the railway* In the reckon-\nInti \"and, they' have even ajiked\nparliament to leave out th* harbor*,\"\nhe iald.   '\u25a0 . '?.\"'.,' \u2022;.\u2022  \"\nGolden pinepays\noverseventy-eight\nWHNNIPEXJ,55581.\u2014Oolden Pine,\nswnett'byC. SI*, and, fresh^from\nDevonshire park, Montreal, paid the\ntdggeet Odds at *U*efr park on Satur-\nlay, paying Its\"hipkers 178.10 on a\nII Uoket. OoWW\u2122\u00bb nt^de a' runa-\nmx 61 tha %4fW*k . ,;,,,;,\u201e'\nT\u2122:.   \\  . ,v--'\u00bb\u00abjWfr\"'-\"' \u25a0\u2022\u2022 .\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-,\u2022\".\nThe'problem of giving the.dominions of the British Empire an adequate 'voice In the determination of\nIts foreign policy Is grave-but not\ninsoluble. Sir Robert Borden, former\nprime minister of Canada, asserted\nat the Wllllumstown Instltutte ot politics in an address on the \"Dominions\nand  Foreign  Relations.\"\nCOAL MINERS\nAT\nRESUMEWORK\nBy Margin of Eight Votes\n;i; Ac^jrt\/^ms^^-^i^\n;eratorsv :'^.v.  >'\nEDMONTON. Aug. ft. \u2014 The atriki\nof coal miners Jn the Kdmontnn district came tu an end this afternoon\nwhen the miner*!, hold a meeting at\nBeverley, and,-by a narrow majority\nof eight vMes, voted to resume work\nat the terms of the oper^ors. Ap-\njroxlniately 125 men  voted.\nThe strike has been in progress\nsince-June 30, und the miners are now\nreturning to work-at a reduction in\nwages amounting to IS per cent for\ncontract rates and 5 nnd 10 per cent\ntor company and day men. Tbe operators will meet on Monday morning\nwith \u25a0 representatives of the men to\nfinally complete the agreement, and It\nla expected that the mines -Will resume  operations   this  week,\nFi\\e mines in the Ednrtmton field,\nrnd approximately 6fi0. mon when tht\ninine\u00ab are worklu^fal full capacity,\nare affected,    ' \u25a0    ...\nProvince's Rate\nCase Forwarded\nDuring This Week\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 23.\u2014The case\nfor' equalized freight rates on the\nmovement of grain and flour through\nPacific coast ports, supported by\nschedules will be forwarded to the\nboard of railway commissioners in\nOttawa early this week. Premier\nOliver announced five days ago that*\npreparation of the case had been\ncompleted.\nBritish Columbia's case, us prepared, it Is understood rests on\nfour main propositions, the order-ln-\ncouncil which constituted the privy\ncouncil's decision on the appeal of\nthe prairie provinces from the judgment of the railway board In the\nCrow's Nest ; Pass agreement case;\nthe amendments to the Railway act\npassed at the \u2022 last session , of parliament. Premier King's official\nstatement In- parliament, and the\nstatistics which show that the western route is an established fact.\n'Douglas Day' to Be\nCelebrated by Native\nSons of the Province\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 23\u2014British\nColumbia's birthday, November 19,\nin future will be celebrated by Native Sons of British Columbia, according to an announcement made\nby Dr. George A. Upham, designated by the grand, post of the order to\nmake arrangements for \"fitting ceremonies to be arranged for the\nput the province. The date Is to be\nhold festivities each year throughout the , province. The date Is to\nknown as \"Douglas Day\" In honor\nof the \"father of British Columbia.\"\nCelebrations will be held In Victoria, Nanafmo, Ladysmith, New\nWestminster pnd Vancouver this\nyear, according to Dr. Upham, and\nnext year It Is expected that tne\nidea will be taken up generally\nthroughout the psovlnce.\nVancouver Indians\nBeat Westminster\nMann Cup Players\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 18.\u2014The New\nWestminster amateur lacrosse team\nWere defeated, 7 to B, here on Saturday afternoon, by Vancouver Indians In a Mann cup fame*\nHaJ   Spectacular   Career;\nBroke From Asylum;\n.       Girls Complain\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 23.\u2014John\nBertrum Clarke, describing himself\nas a waiter, has been arrested In an\noffice ot the Vancouver block and Is\nfacing a statutory charge. The raid\nupon the office, conducted by Inspector George McLaughlin, Is said\nby police to havo broken up In Us\nearly stages a \"love cult,\" and followed investigation by the .police\nofficer after allegations made by girls\nwho are said to have visited the\naccused man's office In response to\nadvertisements for a stenographer.\nClarke appeared In police court yesterday and was remanded for one\nweek.' \u25a0, \u25a0' *\nAniwersa Ad for Bteno\nVANCOUVER,   Auk.    M.\u2014\u25a0Investigation   of   an   alleged   \"love   cult\"   In   a\nlocal business skyscraper In which\nJohn Bertrum Clarke has been arretted charged with gross indecency\nfollowing the complaint of a 15-ycai-\nold glrU^wb-tt,. answered his advertisement for' a stenographer, reveals the\n[act 'that -Clark?. , usfng,..Ueu urcfi*\n'\u2022\u25a0reverend,\" had a spectacular carter\nIn Los Angeles.\"   *\u2022\n^Fft'-Z.^&it'K.t amy\nafter a woman detective had stated\nthat he had urged her to go through\na fake marriage ceremony, anotber\ncharge who laid\u2014that of contributing\nto the dellquency of a 15-year-old girl.\nAt the trial Clarke succeeded hi setting up an Insanity plea.\nWithin three months he picked the\nlock of the asylum door, and has been\nsought by'.'Los Angeles police ever\nsince.      .   ',\nWhen Clarke was arrested, his outer\noffico waa filled with women who\nprotested his arrest, declaring that ha\nwhs quite the \"master,\" and that they\null belonged to a class seeking permit\nattainment.\nam\nUnclothed Man\nLeaves Hospital\n*  and Drowns Self\n.MOOSE JAW. Aug. 23.\u2014Tony\nItedltls, a restaurant worker, walked\nout of 'the general hospital today\nwhen, attendants wero busy and hi.s\nbody was later recovered from the\nMoose . Jgw river which passes\nthrough the hospital grounds. Re-\nditls has been confined to the Institution for a, week after being\npicked up from a street where he\nhad fallen after being overcome by\na   nervous   disorder,\nRedltis left the hospital unclothed\nand made a dash for tho river.\nNurses and attendants rushed after\nhim but after the first plunge he\ndid  not  come  to  the  surface.\nBROKEFROM\nPEMCAUGHT\nJames Willos, Ellsworth Kelly\nCaptured on Road\nNear Portland\nCOL. GEORGE  H.  HAM\nI   i \u25a0\nMONTREAL. Aug* I'D.\u2014George 11.\nHam, \"grand old man of tlie Carm\ndlan Pacifk- r.illway,\" attained his\n78th- birthday Unlay. The \u2022\u25a0colonel\"\nIs one of the nmsit widely known and\nbest Iflted men In the lH*mlnton, and\nhis friends, who, If they could bo\ncounted, would mnke up n large pop\nulatlon of Canada, nut to mention\na few hundred thousands In lhi\nUnited States and Britain, wish him\nas long a life as it has been a merry\none.\nDespite the fact that he has beaten\nthe psalmist's allotted span by eight\nyears, he Is still as full of vim as\never and keeps a watchful eye on\neverything  that's Jiappenlng.\nWERE EATING\nTHEIR LUNCH\nOver Week Ago They Shot\nTwo Portland\nGuards\nBIG ALEX GETS\nFIVE YEARS IN\nPENJTJpARY\nIndian Guilty of Manslaughter Is Sentenced at\nPrince Rupert   ;\nPORTLAND. Cmc. Aug. 23.\u2014James\nWillos and Ellsworth Kelly, who,\nwith Tom Murray, made a break\nfor freedom from the state penitentiary on August 12, were captured\nat 4 p.m. Saturday In a ravine while\nthey were sitting In their machine hy\nthe side of the road, eating their\nlunch.\nDeputy Sheriffs Chrlstoferson, Ren-\nford and Jackson and Corn-table Gloss\ntrailed the convicts' cur into the\nravine \"and covered the puir wKile\nthey were sitting In the cur. Neither\nmade -ally resistance. The deputy\nsheriffs* found the' men when they\nstopped ot a point between Golden\ndalo and -Btckleton und nftvr sheriffs\nand every available officer In several counties had combed the hills\nand watched tbe roads and river\ncrossings   for   days,\nFLATTEN GRAIN\nCHANG   T30   LIN\nChinese general, virtual dictator of\nManchuria, rumors of whoso death\nure prevalent  In Peking. ;\n1RDERERS0F\nSUDAN RULER\nARE EXECUTED\nCrowds Gather at Cairo as\nCriminals Pay the Penalty\nWOMAN ACCOMPLICE y\nSUSPENDED SENTENCE\nI Want to Go Home\/ Says\n.Alex; Sqnaw Says\nWill Be Good\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C.. Aug. 23. \u2014\nFive years of imprisonment for \"Rlg'\\\nAl-ex, and release on suspended srn-\nU-nce for LMte Loot was the white\nman's Justice meted out hern yesterday to two Indians, both of whom\npreviously had been gound guilty of\nmanslaughter by the \u00abs.\u00ab.lxe court Jury\nthis week for participation In U'-j\n\"witchcraft murder\" of Wastetla Moe-\ncasnin two winters ago In the rcmoti*\nLiard river district of northern UritiMi\nColumbia. The* decision handed down\nby Mr, Justice D. A. MacDonald. repnr-\nRents the final steps taken by the law\nto exact punishment for the tnrbaroua\ndeath Inflicted upon Moccassln. Indian\nyouth, who was suspected by other\nmembers of his tribe of practicing\nwitchcraft in order to break his 'evil\nInfluence.\" It wa* decided that the\nboy must die, und he.was taken.Into\nthe open, lied to a tree In a crouching\n. position,  nnd  after   three  -days   In   tho\n.,.,\u201e,.     .. ,. 40-below-iero   weather,   the   lad   froso\nCAIRO,    Egypt,   Aug.   23\u2014 The   men | td death\nconvicted   of\"the   murder of   air   Lee I\nThe .party speeded toward Portland,   st*ck.  governor-general of  the Sudan,\nFarms on Winnipeg-Emerson\nLine Hit Hard; Wires and\nPoles Down\nWINNIPEG. ' Aug. 23.\u2014Severe;\nWind and rain ! storms swept portions of this province over the weekend und will result in further delay\nto   the   harvesting.\nReports from Emerson, in the\nsouthern section of lhe province, tell\nof a terrific rain and thunder storm\nthat swept along the Winnipeg-Emerson Une tonight. The wind was\nreported to have laid much of the\nstanding  grain   mi   tlic  ground.\nHalf a mile of telephone line\nbetween Dominion City and Aruaud\nwas blown down and Emerson und\nsurrounding towns were without\nlight   fur  several   hours. .\nTeeming rains flooded many fields\nIn the Otterbourne district, train\npassengers reporting that sheaves\nof wheat were seen floating In\nstocked   field.\nA'feature of the storm wus the i \u00bb\u00ab\"\u00bb'\";\u2022\u2022 \u00bb-\u00ab\"n\u201e \u00bb~L. if h\u00ab had \u00abud\nspectacle of a cloud composed of out. \"Hello. Kelly, as If \"\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\nthousands of  brown  butterflies,  fly-   denlv recognised one of his partner\nIng  In  agitated   fashion  through   thet\ncrossing at Hood River to the Columbia highway. It was expected1\nthat  the  trip would   take  ubout. six.\nhours. : \u25a0., v\/\u2022\".       '\u25a0 '\"\u25a0\nMurray Behind Bars \",\n'-PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. \u00bb.\u2014Turn\nMurray, fugitive convict captured at\nCentralis, Wash., last night, arrived\nat Portland yesterday morning under\nheavy guard, and after being (jues-\ntloned at the police station was continued on his way to the Salem jicn*\nItentlary  by  motor.\n^Murray arrived at the prison ut\n1:12 p.m.. according to advices from\nSalem. He was placed In a cell\nwhich Is reserved for prisoners condemned tn be hanged.\nThe cell In equipped with double\nlocks and the heavy steel bars are\nenclosed ln \u2022 a fine wire screen to\nprevent other prisoners from passing\nnny article In to tho occupant. Warden Dalrymple said that he had no\nother cell suitable for a man of Murray's desperate character. Armed\nmen will guard Murray day und\nbight.\nGrins   at   Depot   Crowd\nA milling crowd met the train In\nwhich Murray arrived. The bandit\ngreeted the crowd with a grin. If\nhe was nervous or perturbed he failed\nto  show   it.\nCamera men were given an opportunity to snap pictures of the desperado. During this term Murray\nI suddenly   turned   \\\\la   head   and   sang\n\u25a0   \"** Ho. Kelly.\" us If he bad sud-\nrs\nrain.\nDECOMPOSED BODY\nFOUND IN HAYSTACK\nMOOSE JAW, Aug. 28.\u2014Tho body\nof a man believed to have been Edward Hafermehl, of unknown address, was found in a strawstack on\nthe farm of Ben Thompson, five\nmiles  from  here  Saturday,\nJudging from the state of decomposition In which tho body was\nfound, the coroner estimates that It\nhas been in the stack about a month.\nThe name was round on a number of letteri which had been posted to addresses in Mooso Jaw and\nIn towns In British Columbia. The\nletters  dated   back   to  .March.\nVICTORIA CITIZENS\nSEEK BEER LICENCE\nMovement to Sifii Up Petitioners for Beer by the\nGla-s\nExplosion Was\nFrom Faulty\nBoiler, Says Report\nPROVIDENCE, R. I., Aug. 23.-\nWddcr* who want to th* deck of\nth* rtiatmr Mackinac to m\u00abk*\nrepair* to h*r boiler* on th*\nmorning of Aufcutt 18, ju*t before\neh* left on th* trip, were unable\nto mak* th* repairs, according to\naffidavit* mad* public by auiet-\nant ' Attorney.Qonerat 0. L.\nHelUen.' \u2022   \u25a0 .\n..Walter A. Parent, an employee\nof th.-Whol.y Boiler Work*, of\nthi* oity, dopoeed In hi* affidavit\nthat Chief Engineer John Grant\nof th* Maekinac had \u00bb\u00abid to him,\nwhen It waa found that repair*\ncould hot b* mad*, \"Now, don't\nyou fora*ty you hav* completed\nyour work, and If anything ahould\nhappen , later, It wa* *om*thing\nn*w,-V' ., As .\n\u25a0 :  ,          m.\nFOUND. DEAD 4M  WHEAT  FIELD\nWAPHLIaA* Sa\u00bbk., Au\u00bb. S3.\u2014George\nC. Lewi*, farmer, wa* found dead ln\na wheat flaid on hla farm, 17 mile*\nsouth of Mr Saturday. He had been\nengaged ln cutting hla crop, and apparently Tfa* a vlctlm*of heart dla-\nIn\nWhile\nV1CTOMA, Am. \u25a0::-.. \u2014 A new >\u25a0\u25a0:,\nplrblnolte limy b.- tl> m:iiiil>-il In ' Victoria \u00bbm well aa In NVw Westminster\nami Cranbrook. It I\" um).r*tot>rl n\nmovement h;in been M;irt\"il here to secure tly \"Ijcnntures nf to Iter cent ol\nthe vote\u2122 to .t petition nii'1 tlnii* comply wttli tlie condition, iimklnw u second vote Itosiillile. At tires, nt Vic-\nturtun* iniisi co to Ivaqiihnalt Tor ttiali\nbeer. .\nSHELLEY'S BAKERIES\nJOIN WITH ANOTHER\nVANGOUVKU,    Auk.    24.\u2014Annount\nment   was   med \u25a0   here   Saturday   of\nmerger  of   Shelly   Brothers,   bakers,   or\nVancouver.  Victoria, Nanaimo ami New\nWestminster,   with   Ickery 'plants   bleated at  lethbrldge, Calgary sad  Edmonton,   Alta.,   ami   Moose   Jaw.   Sask.\nThe   now   orgnniaatlon   will   be   known\non    the    Cahiiilli.n     Malierles,     limited.\nw|*h   ii   cjipltatlzilii-ii   of   about   S3.U00.-\nn> \u00bb.    The plant* in  tbe  ionv organlia*\nHon    already, ure    producing    7f\u00bbf\u00bbtO0D\nlo'iVes   of   bread   Wf-ekly.   ami   have   a\ncapacity   \u00ab>t   1,400,mm   loaves.\n\u2014       ^p\t\nWomen Socialists\n. Combat the High .\nCost of Living\nUAR8EILli\u00bb. Aug. -'3.\u2014The Wo-\nmen's soolallst congress, u prelude to\nthe International socialist congress,\nhas opened heir. Iti nations ure represented  by. 100  delegates.\nResolutions have been adopted demanding a greater share ln International socialist work for - women,\nurging socialists, to strength international against war and proposing\na serious Investigation into, means (or\ncombatting' the constant rise ln the\ncoet of living. -\nin flight..   Many In the erowd gasped\nand   turned  to see   If  Kelly were ue\ntually   there,   then   joined  Murray\na smile.\nAt the police station detectives\nurged Murray to divulge Information\nconcerning tho whereabouts of his\ntwo companions, whom he Is said to\nhave left in the woods near\nSalmon.   Wash.\n_ \"If your mot her were here she\nwould want you to tell us where they\nnre.\" eald Detective Oolts: \"she\ndoesn't want vou to hunir. She\ndoesn't want Kelly und Willos to\nadd more murders tn their record.\nYou know they will shoot anyone\nwho crosses them In their attempt ut\na   getaway.\"\n\"Can Th\u00bbt Trick Stuff\"\n. \"Can that sentimental stuff.'' Murray snapped. \"Leave my mother out\nof It. She's a decent woman, nnd\nshe's got nu business around crooks\nand cops.\" ,\n\"You can't get away from It.\" OoltK\npersisted.     \"You've   got   to. think   of\nwere hanged today, the. executlons.be\nIng spaced at 45-mInute Intervals,\nj The- flenth sentence imposed upon\nAbdel Fattah Knaynt, one of the con-\ngplrators...-Was romtnyted V> *\"fe Imprisonment' In View of' Ills services to\nthe crown   in   turning status'  evidence\nA great crowd gathered outside (he\nfirlson walls and watched silently as\nthe successive raising of a black flag\nindicated the program of executions.\nThe condemned men were permitted\nto say farewell to their families last\nnight. -Ml of them went to thu gallows with apparent composure except\nDr, Shnfik Mansour. He struggled to\nbreak away from the guard and shouted   us   he   was   Ifil   to   tiie   trap.\nThe bodies were given over to relatives   for burial.\nNine men wire convicted of complicity in the assassination of Kir Lee\nStack, which occurred November 19,\n1124. , They included two students.\ntwo railway workers, a carpenter, a\nlawyer, a deputy in the civil service\nand the chauffeur of the car in which\nthe conspirators were driven to the\ndeath scene. The last-named received\na sentence of two years' imprisonment.\nThe murder led to a crisis In Anglo-\nEgyptian relations which resulted In\nthe formation of a new,,Egyptian ministry after the Alexandria customs\nhad  been   occupiedJiy   British   fores.-;.\nCHARGED TAKING\nRUSSIANS OVER LINE\nVancouver Men Held for Trial\nat Bellingham; Claim\nWere Drunk\nSmlUt  Wli en  Sentenced\nTbe sentence waa conveyed to \"Big**\nAlex in simple language, so as to be\nunderstandable to the interpreter, and\nhe \u25a0 merely smiled when th\u00ab meaning\nwas Impressed 'upon him. When askfd\nas to why sentence should not-, bo\npassed. \"Big\" Alex- had said: ? \"I want\nto   go  home-\"\nTaking into conijIdcrifUgH Ihn recommendation of the jurV for mercy, hi*\nlordship paused suspended sentence on\nEdle. the woman who was Jointly\nfound  gulltv of  manslaughter.\nHe told her that she could return to\nher children, but tf she whs found to\nbe doing wrong again within 10 years\nthe would be brought back to tho\ncourt and would never return home\nagain.\n\"X Win Be Oood\/' She Sayi\nTaking the sentence with the n;\u00abjip\u00ab\nstolidity that ban featured her conduct- throughout the. proceedings Edle\nsimply made the remark:*\", will be\ngood.\"\nOn recommendation of L. W. l*\u00bbt-\nmore, crown prosecutor, his lordship\nundertook to recommend to the depart*\nment of Indian affairs that a Pension\nbe grunted to Lucy. Indian witness,\nfor the assistance *she had given .he\nofficers in their investigation, and hef\nattempt, ut the risk of her own 11 fo,\ntf.  prevent   Moccasin's death.\nKdle. with her child, the Loot,\nbrothers, and witnesses In the ca--\"e\nwill leave here early ne.\\t w<ek ou\ntheir return to their remote homes in\nthe north.\nFred Allen, whit- trapper, who camo\nhere to give evidence, . will be lu\ncharge  of  the   party.\nNow\"iflir\nTO CUT NAVIES\nBEI.LINGHAM, Aug. :'3.\u2014I-cleV i\nMcLaughlin, aged 'it. aii'l Oeorge j\nOeorry. ageil *.'\". of Vancouver, B.C., j\nhuve been houtnl over to the fed- .\nural Jury In Scuttle by I'llltetl States I\nCommissioner Flank Kailley on a j (1\nmuggling   Into '\nVice-Admiral    Ferguson    Says\nFutile to Cut Armaments\nin Light of Events\nMO.VTKKAU    Auk-    23.\u2014\"This    la\nttaluly not the time to consider re-\n\u201euctlon   ot navies or naval armaments.\"\ncharge   of   Illegally   smuggling   Into   wu>    lhl.    \u201e\u201eswt.r    given    by    Vlce-\nthc   country   Anna   Tokamakovu   ami I Ajm|,tt| sir James A. Kerguaon, K.C..\n' \"   \u25a0 \u2022\u2014-\u2014'\u25a0-    \" '\u25a0\u25a0- ' -'\" c.H. commander In chief or tho\nntln\nnfl  nn  mite  \"t\nMAN AND WIFE\nAREEECUTED\nMurdered    and    Dismembered\nOwner of Sausage Factory;\nUnable to Speak   . t i\nHUDAPEfiT, Hungary, Aug. ta.\u2014\nWith flvo minutes to aa>- goodbye\nbefore their death, allowed by the\ncourt, Mltil Lederer und her husband. Gustav, u former lieutenant,\nchoking with unguhdi und blinded'by,\ntears, were unable to say a. single\nword. They had been convicted of\nthe murder and dismemberment of\nthe owner of u sausage factory,\nKrunr. Kudelka, who was visiting the\ncouple In a suburb of Budapest.\nThe two embraced In a final meeting while the presiding Judgo held a\nwatch.\n\"You have five minutes,\" h'e\nsaid. ,\n\"Four\u2014thre-e\u2014two\u2014one\u2014and now,\nno more time to bid each other\ngoodbye.\" A\nThe men and wife were parted\nand immediately executed.\nV|told Levlstky, ItuH\u00abiuns, who were\nheld In lieu of bait as material witnesses, iioth defendants waived a\npreliminary hearing. They say they\nwere under the Influence of liquor\nwhen they were induced to undertake\ntho   venture   by   \"Higher   ups\"\nM.G.. ~\t\nNorth America-West Indies' squadron\nof the royal now. upon h!s arrival\nfin board his flagship H.M.tf. Calcutta, to a -i-uery upon proposals for\nreducllcn In armament*.\nI Hlr .lames haa been uway from\nj Knglaml tor over a year, but he ha\u00bb\n| followed the developments In the Old\nj Country in his absence with tho\ni greatest  interest,  he  suys.\nit wus futile of cutting down arm-\nTwo Airmen Are\nBurned to Death\nas Airplane CrttshesU^^\"if}^^ ll\\nt* lKT'b-\n r um   when   he   was  asked  to .estaD-\nWHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,\nW.Va., Au\u00ab. 23.\u2014Capt. Francis\nHale and Pte. L. C. Norris of\nBoiling Field, Wash., ware burned\nto denth at Whits Sulphur Springs\ntonight when the airplane in\nWhich they were returning to\nWashington fell, takinci fire ss\nit  crashed  to   the ground.\nskip limps Into\nPORT, BOW BUCKLED\nNEW YOHK, Aug. 23.\u2014With hen\n\"bow crumpled and buckled, the S.S. |\nRosalind of the Red Crows,line, which;\nwas In collision lust night with the\nTexas oil tnnker Harvester off Point\nJudith, returned to port today with\nUs 116 passengers. ' Officers of the\nship declined to discuss the -wreck.\n*Tho Harvester was badly damaged\non the aide, where the Rosalind's\nbow struck it. put Into Stapleton\nafter the collision. \"'   '\ni    \u25a0        -\u25a0 ^t\u00bb .\nLOS ANGELES. Aug. 23.\u2014Sixteen-\nyear-old Jimmy Kane, waterboy for\na crew of structural Iron workers on\na sky scraper Job here, missed his\nfooting on an eighth-floor girder\nand fell to a roof, five floors below. To workers who lifted him on\nto a stretcher he gasped. \"It's your\nturn now to give me water.\" He died\nJin the receiving hospital.\nIlsh it's views un Canada's navy,\nho demurred, saying lhat lt. wan not\nhis dei-ire to talk ut the Dominion's\n\"navj\" vr \"lack  of a  navy.\"\n\"I can f.iy this, however, thut\nyour men are reninrkably keen. Ono\nof your ships, the Patriot, him been\nwith the squadron and the officer*\nand   men   ore   excellent.     They   show\nI remarkable   fine   spirit.\"\nTheWea\nther     i\naw nr. for  th*\n!4 hours ending yeaterd\n6 o'clock.\n-II    \"*l\n\u2014  kelson\nund\nvicinity\u2014i'artly cloudy\nami cooler\n.   Min.\nMax.\n\u00abS\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022   }J\n\u2022\u2666\u2022I\n 'Page as\u00abn\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING,'AUGUST.24, 1925\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nX {Thi Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN  PLAN' . RAXES, |3M TO ISM\nBooms SrttK Banning Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.   .\nR^TARJAN   HEADQUARTERS\n.   'SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE  MOST COMFORTABLE   ROTUNDA   IN   THE  CITY\nHUME \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. W. K.\nTrice, Taklhm; H. D. Bohofield, Mr.\nund Mrs. R. E. Isman, A. Hayr, 0. It.\nWright, Margaret Blbbald, O. Darrlsin.\nIX J. Fraser. A. Martin, Vancouver:\nH. C. Coldlcott, Trail; W. T. Hill.\nLethbrldge; W. J. Yeo, Mr. nnd Mrs.\nJ. B. Henderson, M. S. Saunders. Mr,\nnnd Mrs. H. C. White, J. Kavaoaugh;\nCalgary; E. E. Harris, Winnipeg; Q.\nL. lrl\u00bbh, W. Cranfleld, Toronto; F. O.\nFuller, San Francisco; P. Albertlno,\nBlairmore;   Mr*.   J.   E.   Cunningham,\nMips Sun Cunningham, Mr. nnd Mrs,\nJ M. Hungate. Mr. and Mm, _,. 11.\nrcta-rson. W. M. Seavltt, Spokane; A.\nS. Caiiwell. Kltehencr, Ont.; lt. R\nCope, Kelowna; A. I!. Itltehle, Tadanac; Mr. ami MrH. J. W. Kump mill\nBon. Illvvr.lde; Marie Hivshon, Dunne,\nCal.; Mr. and Mra. G. F. Shea, llutte;\nK. T. Qushle. Iietrolt; K. McKemie.\nNewport; J. A. Slater, Vancouver; J.\nC. CarrutherH. city, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nM. Earle. New York City; Mr. and\nMrs. F. O. Pratt. Charles E. Thompson and family, Seattle.   '\nHotel\nStrathcona\nEuropean Plan\n\"A Home for Those Away\nFrom Home\"\nTOURIST  HEADQUARTERS\nNew Grand Hotel\nSIB VERNON  8T.  EAST   \u2022   \u2022    S.  E.  MILLS,  PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters for Everybody.   Hot and Cold Water.\nTelephones in All Rooms.\nFREE BUS FROM STATION AND BOAT\nGUNMEN WHO\nBROKE FROM\nPEN CAUGHT\n(Continued From Page One.)\nwhat your mother wants you to- do.\nYou think a lot of her, don't you?\"\nFor a moment Murray the ties**\nperado vanished, and Murray the boy\nwaa Hitting among a lot of policemen,\nexpecting to hang. He swallowed convulsively, rubbed hlB throat with\nnervous fingers, then Bhrugged his\nBhouldcrs  with   a  grin.\nAw, you can't pull that old trick\nstuff on me,\" ho said. \"All you cops\nare alike. What do I want to tell\non Kelly ond Willos for? . They've\nboon my friends. You -birds aren't.\nYou've been after me ever since I\nwas a kid. Birds like you put me\nIn San QucntJn when I was only 1\"\nyears old.\nOwe* Life to Willos\nWillos saved my life when a guard\nwas getting ready to shoot mc. I'd\nbe the lowest kind pf a rat, like the\nskunk who turned me In, if I told\non him.\"\nHe lighted another cigarette. II1\nhad smoked them Incessantly through\nout the night. ?\nAll lines of questioning failed to\nget the desired Information from the\nconvict, and at 11 o'clock he, was\nstarted on the last lap to the penl\ntentlnry, where tho break by Murray\nand two companions resulted'a week\nago In the death of two guards and\nanother convict.\nTelia   Story  of   Capture\nThe story of the captttw Is told by\nPhillip Carson,-26, who lives at the\nEden Helm apartments, Fifth nnd\nMain   street,   Portland,\n\"I hnd been arrested In Portland,\"\nsaid Carson, \"for vagrancy. They\ngave me 60 days' suspended sentence\nthat I might get out of town. I went\nacross the Columbia to Vancouver,\nWash. There I met Tom Murray. It\nwas in the railroad yards, where Murray was about to board the 6:45 p.m.\nfast freight for Centralla.\n\"Murray told me who he was and\nasked me to help him get awoy.   We\nNEW GRAND \u2014 It. Ii. Collins,\nLaurie Collins. Mr. and Mrs. C. V.\nWadham, Mr.' and Mrs. J. A. Havlg-\nhorst, Spokane; W. H. McLean. O. W.\nThomas, Itossland; E. B. Sullivan,\nGranite Mill; P. T. D. Celle, Vancou-   Sharpe, Yahk.\nver; O. F. SchcllingcbeiE, Trail; M.\nItlcliardson, Princeton; Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Jardlne. L. Hanna, Kaslo; C. E.\nLoRg. Lethbrldge; Mr. and Mrs. It. E.\nPaxter, E. A. Baxter, Hedley; Edna\nIieatty, Pentlcton;. Mr. and Mrs. 0, C.\nQueen'sflotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCI\nHot and cold water In \u00abyery toon.\nSteam boated.\nA.  LAPOINTE,   Praia\nWOP IIP\nROLLED SOCKS\nOne Mother soys:\nW summer the children lose tliclr\ngarters and I find It qulto a tuRk\nto keep a supply In readiness. From\nan Inner tube (smull Rlzc) I cut a\nvery -narrow cross-section, .which\nserves thb purpose very well. This\ndocs* not bind the flesh nnd Ih bidden\nfrom view by' tho rolled or folded\nstocking top. I prefer them to those\nmade of elastic. \u25a0\u25a0,,'.\nOliver,   Sutherland,   Philip,\nCampbell, Humphrey, Lister, Esling Share It   \/\nPREMIER DECLARES ',\nNEW FACILITY OPEN\nDIARRHOEA\nDon't suffer from this weakening, distressing, summer complaint. A few\ndo.se3 of Chamberlain's taken In sweetened water puts an end to diarrhoea\nand  colic.    At  all   druggists.\nCHAMBERLAIN'S\nCOLIC      It E M E J> X\nQUEENS \u2014 Mrs.- II. Jansruile and\ndaughter, Pandon; H. Apenstad. Julia\nBuckna, Len Lynda. Trail; Mr. nnd\nMrs. It Flshweld. Wyoming, HI.; Mr.\nnnd Mrs W. W. Kordbani, Colville;\nW. Klrby, Slocan City; Mr. nnd Mrs.\nE. Bluniidl, Greenwood; Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Andere, Montreal; Mrs. Wallace,\nMl*a E. Wallace. Vancouver; Mr. and\nMra. C. Boeur, Kamloop9.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nEft Block* E**t of Poit Offic*\nBteam  heated.    Hot  and  cold\nwattr.   Room* by day or week.\nAlio Furnished Suite*.\nP. H. 1USH, Prop.\nSAVOY HOTEL\nBAKER ST.    NELSON B.C.\n| 2 BLOCKS FROM DEPOT\nSTEAM HEATED\nHOT **.C01D RUNNINC WHER\nIN ROOMS.\nJ.S.KERR, P.o..,tro*.\nSAVOY \u2014 t J. Donovan, E. C. Hunt,\ncity; C. McDonald, Annable; E. J.\nScart. Hall; W. ..I. Dyson, Thrums; C.\nII. Watson. Edgewood; L. Cox, Cranbrook; L. B Cox. South Slocan; Al r.\nand Mrs. J. C. Baird. W. S. Culver.\nSpokane; Mr. nnd Mrs. J. M. Young,\nIt M. Morgan, Trail; J. P. Crabb. Bon-\nnlnston; Mr. and Mrs. V. A. Bradley\nnnd son, Calgary; T. Bcnwlck, Vancouver; J. P. Bill Jr., Laro Hell,\nPark's Siding; J. T. Teason, Coleman;\nO. B. Hurd,  Trout Lake.\nplanned to go to Tacoma* and stage\na stickup. While we were on tho\nway here Murray told me that nfter\nhe, Willos and Kelly arrived In Portland shortly before 10 o'clock Monday\nnight they Immediately drove in an\nautomobile to The Dalles and then\ncrossed over to White Salmon, where\nthey have been since hiding in the\nwoods and brush.\n\"Instead of going east Murray, for\nsome unknown reason, came down\nthe i river and went to Vancouver,\nwhero I met him.\nla Perfect Gentleman\n\"I want to say right here that I\nnever met such a perfect gentleman\nas Murray. . I would not have turned\nhim ln but for the fact that he declared I was a menace to society and\nlot of such stuff as lhat. When\nhe did that, I made up my mind that\nI would turn him over to the authorities, so \"when.we arrived here I took\nhim to the Savoy hotel ond we got a\nroom. Then we planned to do n\nstickup.here. I left him In the hotel\nand called upon Charles Pilling, mem\nber of the. night police force, and\nhired him to aid In the stickup. Of\ncourse, this waa all bluff, but a part\nof my game. Then t called on George\nBarbar, mayor of this city, and hired\nhim to be taxi driver.\n\"My next move was to return to\nthe hotel, go to our room, tell Mur\nray everything was all right and to\ncome ahead.  . We go downstairs and\nDishes Out Candies to Kiddies; Rain Forces Resort to Packing Shed\nHARROP, Aug. 23.\u2014Chug-chugging\nlack and forth at n rate of speed that\nmade the premier shudder and ask the\nferryman to choko down the engine's\nrevolutions one-third, the newly built\nand Installed Harrop-Longbeach ferry\ndid a record business on Us official\nopening day, when probably 30 cars\nfrom Nelson and points on the north\nshore used It to cross over to the\nscene of the official opening ceremonies, and others from Procter and\n.Sunshine Bay added to the numbers\nparked In the vicinity of tho Harrop\npacking shed. The much-needed and\notherwise very welcome* rain doubtless\nkept many visitors away, and it also\ncaused the waterside ceremonies to be\nI'bnndoncd in faVor of an indoor gathering addressed by the-premier and\nothers. .v.,.- t; \";       .. v -\nHold lerrtcti Indoors\nWhen seemingly the last carload\nbad arrived and the main body, of\nthose present. Including tho children\nand the ladles, were .comfortably seated on benchos, while some scores of\nmen stood, H. Falrbank assumed the\noffice of chairman, seated bcsjde or\nnear him being Premier Oliver, Hon.\nW. H. Sutherland, minister of public\nworks. Dr. Sutherland'-- deputy minister, P. Philip. L. W. Humphrey, M.P.\nfor West Kootenay, O. Barwls and\nLt.-Col. Fred Lister. M.P.P. for Creston. Later were added to these Kenneth Campbell of Nelson nnd W. K.\nEsllng of Itossland, federal Conservative candidate.\nAfter predicting that the ferry\nwould bo like the recently Installed\nelectric light, in that ln two weeks\nthey would wonder how they ever did\nwithout It, Chairman Falrbank announced the premier would open the\nferry.\nPremier Can't Xeplna\nPremier Oliver said he was unable\nto feel deep regret at the rain, as\nJust before he left Victoria he was\nshown a requisition of the forost department for $200,000 more needed\nwith which to fight fires\u2014now some\nof that money could buy gasoline for\nthe new terry. He said there, was a\nferry principally because of the efforts of tlic late member for Nelson,\nKenneth Campbell. No one could have\nbeen   keener   than   Mr.   Campbell,   hi\n1 introduce him to Pilling nnd Barbar _.__             _... .._  _...\nand tell them they are to assist us In \\^ldi   lu   representing  the   Interests  of\nthe   stickup   nnd   everything   ls   all  \"\"J1??- ,     ,.*.\u00bb.,\n.\u25a0J--.*   vj\u00abt tr. t-~- I     Taking   n   remark   ot  the   chairman,\nright, Hot to fear. I that \u00bbthay would havc t0 adapt thein.\n\"Just   at   that    point.   Pilling   and   Helves   to   circumstances,\"   tho  premier\nBarbar  stick  their  guns  In   Murray's '\" '\nTO PICK A BUYER\nWILL WING YOU\nINTLBESTtD\nPROSPECTS, JUST\nAS IT DOtS F0&\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNur C.P.R. Station.\nBoom* at Reasonable Rata*,\nH. DUNK, Proprlnttr\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.  MADDEN,  Prop.\n\u2022t*am-h**t*d Room* by th* Day,\nW**k or  Month.\nIv*-)\/ eon*id*ratlon *hown t*\nQuota,\nCor. B*l(*r *nd W*rd St*. N\u00bbl*on\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA. C. TOWN El}, Preprint**\nThe  borne of plenty.\nFifty room* of solid comfort\nIt* *ervo the best meal* In Nelaon.\nIf*, th* cook.\nSummer Resorts\nMADDEN \u2014 D, Barrett, Itossland;\n\u00bbtr. and Mrs. HnrnlH. Mr. rrnal Mrs.\nUradley. Spokane: C. McKachiron.\nEvans CrcpK; I*. model. IVnticton: J.\nD. McDonald. Olailc: K. McNeil. Hon-\nnlngton; K. Cameron, J. W. KlnK, J.\nMurnliy, J. McLeod, C. Vlslicr. Vancouver; J. McPeake, Castlegar; J.\nHoward.  Farron: George  shnw.  Smith.\nWHERE THE FISHING 13 GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER, B. C.\nrliklar,  Boatlar, BathUg, \u00bbolf,\nTennis  Court*.\nTlahlnr Tackl* Supplied. Oroouj\nBtoro ta Connection.\nW.    A.    VUD,   Proprietor.\nSay, S3jW**k, \u00bbmo\u00bblJ. ip**l*l\nMonthly Bat**. \t\nribs, and quick ns a flash he tumbles\nand   exclaim*,*; 'J-retty* clever'*'\nWmKIPEO    OBAIH    QUOTATIOUS*\nNelson's Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nClassio   Restaurant\nRefinement *nd Delicacy Pravall*\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nLuncheon, 11:31) to * ..__S5o\nSpecial Dinners, 6:30 to 8 ISO\nWo Specialize In Chop Suey\nand Noodles.\nPHONE 182\nWheat\u2014\nOct.    ..\nDec.    ..\nMay ..\nOats\u2014\nOct.    ..\nDec.    ..\nMay ,.\nBarley\t\nOct.    . .\nDec. ..\nFlax\u2014\nOct.    ..\nDec.    ..\nMay ..\nRye\u2014\nOct. ..\nDec. ..\nMay   ..\nOpen IIIrIi\n145* Hfitt\nllf.t, H2\u00ab\nJ4014' HOS\n4X14\n49*\n4S-H\n46':;,\nLow\n14514\nI41J4\nHill\n48 >4\n4\"H\n4\u00bbfc\n76\u00ab      -6U      75-14\nWitt 242\n214K 23.\",\n24214    243\n142-4\n231\n242%\nClose\nH6Vi\nHl%\n146\n\"*4S*4\n46**\n50\n76\n73Vi\n'241 tl\n234\n242-4\n102 V,\n102\n108\nLiquor case collapsed nt Hull.\nQue., when government witnesses\nadmitted  police  court  records.\npreached a little sermon on success\nand failure In British Columhla, de\nclarlnK that most of the failures lu,\nhad observed were not duo to lack of\nopportunities here, but to failure of\ntboso concerned to obtain a knowledge\nof conditions . before making tliclr\nstart, and to adapt themselves to circumstances.\nTalk* Hallway Sate*\nThe premier then turned to the\nrailway rale question, tn the light of\nthe Harrop district ns a fruit producer, needing the pnilrlc for Its market. The province, ho said, had been\nunfairly dealt with, the Dominion having unwisely allowed the railway* to\ncharge British Columbia from 75 to\n100 per cent more than they charged\nIn the east for similar service. This\nwns on the excuse that British Columbia was a mountainous country, notwithstanding British Columbia put up\n14.000,000 ncres of liiuil grant for the\nC.I'.It..   thereby   paying   for   it.\nThen. 28 years ago, the Crow's Nest\nPass agreement was made. In consequence of which a Vernon grower a\nfew years ago would pay 11.13 nn fruit\nshipped to Winnipeg, while a Niagara\ndistrict grower In Ontario, whose fruit\nTHEL D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant In th*\ncity. OPEN DAT AND NIQHT.\n8PECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drink*. Nice, clean, furnished room*; hot and cold water,\nW* C\u00abt*r to  PrivaU  Parti**.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320 Bakar Strttt, Nelaon, B,C\nOPEN  DAY AND  NIQHT\n11,30 to 2:30, SpMlal Lunch \u2014..36*\nti30 ta 8:00 p.m. Supper \u201e_.38o\n\u25a0        Phon* 164\t\nA   GENTLEMAN   said   to  a\nFRIEND ,of ours, In  speaking\nOF this store, \"1 know\nCHARLIE  Moerls,   and   If\nHE  Bays',a thing Is\nWORTH   *8.00,   that   Is   so.**\nNOW, we|'do not profess\nTO   be  any   better  than    \u2022\nWE ought to  be.  but\nIT   suits  our   disposition   best\nTO   Play   Fair.\nWE HAVE JUST\nUNPACKED SOME\nBOYS'JERSEYS\nWITH LAY-DOWN\nCOLLAR,\nSIZES 24 TO 32,\n$1.25 TO $1.50.\nCOME EARLY!\nT\u2014\"\u00bb'   '. uta^Bn-tasii-^^aj\nfor Winnipeg h\u00ab\u00ab to travel 178 mlle>\nfurther, paid only 61 ccnU. Tfc-W&j\ncent rate had now b\u00ab\u00abn wiped outty\nstatute, but the east still Tut4 the ad.\nvantage of an SB cent rate.^WhUfcUhr\nBritish Columbia rate waa unchanged.\nv Lumber, tho premier aald. from thla\nprovince* paid 100 to 200 per cent\nmore than eastern lumber, and canned\naooda SO per \u00abM*t \u2022 and up mora. \u2022 It\nwaa aa fair a proposition \u00bb\u25a0 \u2022* would\nbe to match. hlirtf with hip 100\npounds of surplus and useless fat,\nagainst the spare chairman ln S 100-\nyard face. (Laughter.) The premier\naald the fight against discriminatory\nrates would be carried .on unremittingly..,\n. Blows Hon for Butlwrtand -\nPaying a trlbuje to Dr. Sutherland's\nInherent modesty, which prevented him\nfrom blowing his.own horn about the\nro*ds, the premier. Intimated it waa\nnecessary -for him to blow It for him,\nand proceeded to do \u00abo. '\u2022\nBight years ago aald the premier,\nthere were several centers scattored\nthrough tho province, such as Nelson,\nVernon, Pentlcton. and. many other*,\nwhose lack of road connections made\ntlie country seem like a brokendown\nwheel. Tho policy followed hy the\ngovernment wa's to put spokes in the\nwhei-1 till now almost all the interior\ncould communlcato by road. One of\nthe bluest Raps was through the\ncoast ran*c, but thut highway was\nnow on the road to completion. Severs 1 smaller stretches had also to be\nbuilt, and it was the policy of the\ngovernment to connect them up aa\nfast as the  finances permitted. ;\n. Traffic had also changed from the\nhorse-drawn vehicle to the motor\nvehicle, whose locomotion was by friction against the surface of the highways, which wore out accordingly.\nWith the tendency to Increase loads\ncame the necessity of Improving the\nroads and strengthening the bridges\nto bear them. As a driver of a car\nhimself\u2014probably the only premier In\nCanada, except,, perhaps, the Prince\nEdwnrd Island fine, without a chauffeur\u2014Premier Oliver aald he knew,\npersonally, tho change that had taken\nplace In the roads, and almost anywhere now one cpuld drive 2. miles\nan hour. \u25a0*-\"\u25a0 i   \u25a0*\u25a0-.-'\nj\u201e Tcaata Perry With Water\nAfter advising, that the ferry be\nrun at a slower and safer- speed, the\npremier declared It open for the people of the province In general, and of\nthe district In particular, expressing\nthe hope that it I would make their\nUvea more pleasant, and the people\nmore  prosperous.\ni \"Good wnter Ih better than bad\nwhisky,\" declared the premier, as he\ntoasted the new ferry, to uproarious*\napplause.   - *\nSutherland Talks Rood Policy\nDr. Sutherland, minister of public\nworks, said it was pleasant to do\nthings for people, and to find they\nappreciated them. He referred to\ntho growth in motor travel, to the\nfgures of the Nelson and Castlegar ferries, to the road mileage of\nthe province being seven times the\ndistance between Vancouver and\nMontreal, nnd pointed out lt was inevitable there would bo hard pro'b-\nlcms to solve- This great highway\nsystem Included G6 miles of bridges\nand over 60 free ferries. In 1928\n70,000 motor tourists entered the\nprovince,  and   last  year  209,000.\nHe referred to tho necessity of\nconstant Improvement In the roads,\nbut In the Nelson road a new route\ncontemplated meant that there would\nbe no further Improvement on the\nsection It was known would' bt?\nabandoned. ,\nltullt From Motor Taxes\nTho main trunk roads, he explained, were beins built from motor llcenco nnd Easollne tux revenue, capitalised for ia period of\nyears. The object was not to put\nnew tuxes on the people of the\nprovince, but he hoped in this way to\nget revenue from 200,000 cars of\ntourists every year.\nAll could nut get tho Improvements they desired\u2014roads or ferries\u2014at once. Tlic government, ho\nsaid, had a program, and worked to\nIt, so every little bit of road built\nwaa on Us proper route when connected  up.\nIn the largo cities, he said, the\nmotor busses took both passenger\nnnd freight traffic from - tho railways, whllo the peoplo provided the\nroad bed, and paid the deficits on\nthe railways. Something would havo\nto   bo   done   about   this.\nDr. Sutherland said ho was glad\nthe small expenditure for the ferry\nwas appreciated, for after all it was\na considerable  one-\nPhilip und Humphrey\nIn a little sermon to the boys and\nKlrls, Mr. Philip, deputy minister,\nurged them to \"build their Ilv^s\nstraight.\" For tho benefit of the\ngrown-ups he dealt with the problems uf tho engineering force iu\nlocating nil roads In \u25a0 their proper\nand   permanent   positions.\nMr. Humphrey, ns federal member,\ndescribed the rural districts ns the\nbackbone of tho country, and said\ntheir development was valuable by\nTallway   and   motor,\nAgriculture, which had been up\nagainst it, was now getting some\nrelief   by. communications,\n\u2014w*\u2014\nIllilrSjpecials\nGingham, i Imported, 'JH\nyards for \u2122\u2122...:.S1,C\nAnderson's Ginghams, 2V\nyards |pr,.-..;.,....-W,C\nWhite    Madapollanv,    86-\ns  inch, S yards for 91.00\nFlannelette, Heiavk\nStriped, 4 yards....$ 1.00\nFlannelette, Heavy, White,\n3 yards for ?1.00\nHeavy Ribbed Sport Hose,\npair r?b9?\nHeavy. Knitted Bloomers\nor Vests, 2 for ....? 1,00\nDimity     Step. Ins.V P~X\n: pair ..v.r...\u201e.7;..\u201e|^\nCrepe Vests, each ...,$ j.,00\nPenmans Lisle Hose,';.\npairs for ...::....:....$1.09\n' Fancy   Crepe  de\"\u25a0: Chene \"\nHandkerchiefs,' .' % \u2022;' for *\n .v.,:.........^i.oo\nNelson Dry GoofU p).\n.      L*di*\u00bb'We*r Specialiat*\nMen'*\nMerino\nCombination*,\n75\u00abJ\nBorsCioTHED\nJSPJpsa\nMen Suited   j l\nSilk and Wool\n-Stockings,\nTurndown   Cuff,\n75^\nnot and should not build rpads tori\nthe few in . that class.*\" \u25a0 .\u25a0 ^.w I\nThe people of Harrop and -districtl\nho said, were fully convinced that!\nin getting the ferry that had onljf\ngot what was coming to them, Thia\nfacility was Just ; one mUestonq\npassed, and they now would ttghtei\nup their belts and go after the nexi\none. 1\n\"We don't wont them to go away, 1\nhe said, alluding to the premier andj\nDr. Sutherland, \"thinking 'now Jt'1\nall done, and, we don't have to^\nanything more for Harrop.\"*,'\nCampbell Boosts Cooperative DalryU\n\u25a0Kenneth Campbell was called ttl\nthe platform, and said he had re-J\nfused to go up earlier because he\ndemanded that\" Mr. Esllng, who wai\nnow ln public life, being a candidate, whereas he himself, by hU\nown choice, was not, should b<\ncalled up frst- This did not meoi\nhe was In favor of Mr. Esllng's pol\nMc.-.. a . \/  '\nWhen Mr. Esllng's name Was men\ntloncd, a voico called out, \"Out\nnext   member.\"\nMr. Campbell said if he hai\nhelped with the ferry, he had dom\nIt with a whole lot of nolsa, anc\nthe premier and Or. Sutherland, must\nhave   fallen   for   lt.   .-   \u25a0< \/.\nLooking on.tho beautiful and fertile valley, Mr. Campbell found hit\nthoughts turn to the financial re\nturns of ranching, which he b*\nlleved could bo greatly'incresed bj\nfurther extension of dairy. He re\ncalled three trips ho had made t<\nHarrop in an endeavor to contlnu'\nthe people they could go In mon\nfor dairying, on tho lines of ft co\noperative   creamery. \"\u25a0'-.'\u2022\nIt wus up to the people of tht\nwest arm, he said, to get after tht\npowers that were, and secure mon\ndevelopment, one of the avallabh\nways being by more dairying, H\u00ab\nhad nothing against the Nelaon in\nstltutlon that bought cream fron\nthe ranchers, but he believed in developing n cooperative Institution\nHe predicted the time would corm\nwhen, across that ferry, a truck\nwould go up ono side and down the\nother collecting cream for a cooperative creamery, which would mean\na   new   prosperity.\nG. Barwls was asked by the\nchairman to move a voto of thankt\nto the premier and his colleague,\nand briefly voiced tho thanks ol\nHarrop and district, calling foi\nthreo cheers, which were lustilj\ngiven.\nEtdhig Joshes 'Em    \u25a0\u201e\nThero were calls for Mr. Esllng\nand the chairman asked him to\nspeak. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-*.*>'\nMr. Esllng said all had had intimations   of  what  was   In  prospect\n.     , ... *  . In the near  future,  and It was evt-\nAn   important   phase  of  tronspor-   dent   tlie   premler   and   hlgfrlendri\ntation wns attraction of   our lata, Mr.   wou,u  u|ft t0 open  a Uny once a\nHumphrey declaring that this prov\nInco and district has attractions\nthat would favorably \u2022 advertise the\nwholo Dominion to tho tourists, provided,they were induced to como by\nproper featuring of these attractions.\nLister Advises to Ask Mora\nColonel Lister said that, as tho\nelected representative of tho people\nof Harrop nnd district, ho coupled\nhis thanks with thoirs, to the tntn-\nIster of public works. They had\nput on a sufficient demonstration to\nprove to the minister their appreciation,\nDr. Sutherland had told of his\nproblems ln keeping up the roads. He\nwoutd advise the minister not to let\nthe motorists go too fast with their\nballoon tires, for the province could\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014COMING  EVENTS,  ETC.\n\\ VIOHOEO. W-   \\   *\u00ab> \u00ab*>*\">\u2022   WHtv* v   *-VT\nCMlt-OS   \u00abw\u00bb MM  \u2022SAM-.-HOtS -    A H, 0002\n\u00bbS   t\\   LOT   OF   MOa-ae-H - ANt> \"^HNT *M>>-re ,\nfO\u00ab   JMM,00OS2   TWK-T    V**\u00bb    H\u00bb\\alt*VOTft**i-\n\\-o-jai o** e^u~tH co*o*wt>  \\ -evert. Me^T\n*WKT    NO*T*E     \\P    TA-MSS  \u2022SHOUUtJvVT\nCOM*\u00a3   OUT   -R.6HT 0\nT\nEl^M^H   TUOUSM****> ,*\u00bbQ\\.VK^*S   ft ft ft.Ik ft*\"\nt\\Jt*5-*a  ^*cNM-,   \\   WM> f-M  TV--C   \\MOR-wX>\u2014\nwws t>\\t>v\u00bb-T  \\ $10^ \u00ab*\u00bbx> T\u00abtfA-r< i\\ l\\vn.E lON6*e\u00bbJ?\n,  Val^S 6tTTNMC-\u00bb M.O**0\u00bb ~\\-\\- W6HT-   \\  MM>\nFOO**> To EW ANO *v. ROOf- 0^*>. M   H^AaTi\u2014\nA   CaVR TO  \u00abVT>E <H  AMt>   \\ *.\u00a91A'T 0\\W*e A CEKr\nTO   MMSBOtM -    A    VJiVti   COMT*\u00a3NT^\\>  A,Ht>\nH^P^-    *\u2022    M^MSR.   >\u00bbOOVt>   HAMfc\n\\1<V10VOM   \\ra*^\u2022AT-\n\"TC\n,0,'\n\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\nOUT HW4-   OH H5^\u00abieTTA.-\nVJVW ^\\*o MOV) X>o AT T   WlHEV*\u00ab <*!!\u00bb,\n^0*0   60 ?     MWO  VMM,V- MOU  *W1RW To\nVF   TWKt   ^ONEM   \u00ab   U5ST?    \\\nVJOUVfcvrf    H6.VE  A   l)\\IA*5 -   WVAAT\nVtOOLta   IWE WXUire   HOW> VOR. IWfc?\ni \\wouv,**\u00bb wme^o ?-s\\.\\, ueia^-reHCMS.\nTM\\N\\< OP   \\T- W.<\u00bb\\6 0\\>T A\n^^vstw^^l.t *ev.iST-ev\u00bbc*c -\n\u2022VtENRvtTTA, *We Q\\X>\n.AWV-e   WO-ANM''-\nir;\niiMit-r\nmd\nt>r Tl.j- Chidico tjiimm.\nweek. (Laughter). It gave them an\nopportunity to como ln and look\nover local needs, and put In a word\non   tho   side- \u25a0'   t\nFollowing the premier's theme of\nsuccess and failure, Mr. Esllng argued that tho Harrop settler* -had\nbeen perfectly Justified In comlnl\nin, nnd taking their chance.' Ltkt\nagriculture all over the province,\nthey had at times a hard row U\nhoe, but had secured their justification. \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0'*\"-.\nWhen their taxes, however,' wenl\ninto the province's coffers, it wai\nthe   cities   that  got  the   most.\"-\nHe congratulated the people\" or\ntho ferry which Colonel Llnter'i\npersistent appeals had won for them\nAs tho program came to-an end\nPremier Oliver, who had dlsap\npeared at about the third speech\nemerged Into view with a > pall Q\ncandles. Lining the kiddles up\nho rationed the candies, a -cupfu\nto each kiddie. When these wer<\nno moro kiddles to be treated, hi\ncalled.* \"Where are the btfrga\ngirls?\" ond several of the ladles ae\ncured   treats.      - ..        .;~,   '   <.\nTho majority of the visitor*-lef\nafterMhe program, to motor home\nbut some stayed for the dance li\nthe   evening. \u25a0   '     -\nCARDS WIN'miBiTIQN.\nGAME AT BALTIMORI\nBALTIMORE, Md., Aug. JJ.\u2014Die!\nHerman held the Baltimore Interna\ntlonnl tenm to four hit* her* to\nday nnd the St. Loul* Cardinal* wo\nnn  exhibition  gam*  8  to  \u00ab\u2022   ',\nBOY IS  DBOWKlp ,\nniMINA. Aug. JJ.\u2014Voeye. Huakor\nIS, waa drowned while Bwlmmlnjf I\nn iiond near here thi* afternoon. Joh\nBender, farmer, almost lost'hi* life li\nan attempt to rescue Ruskow.\"\nMerorlnglan cemetery of th* \u00bbt\ncentury dlitcovorcd In Fart* *ubur\nla  Interesting arohaeologKW.    ...\nSaskatchewan Progremlvea. pa*M\na ro*olutlon oppoiins \u25a0> merger -rlt\nany other poUU**! WtfW'\".\"   ,ju\n\\ .\n_\n 3H*\n\";'-\"T''' '\nrt NELSON DAILY NE$$-MONDAY MORNJNG, ATJQIJST'24,-19$\n *'\"  \" \"   \u25a0 ' ^\" '' \" \u25a0 iin-'i*'-\nana the Lamb9\n~~ ByJ.S; FLETCHER\nCHAPTER  XDC .   \" \u2022\n\" Mr*. Walringham.pursued a steady\nconn-e along King'William street.and\n'Green  street Into  Lelceeter  Square,\n'\u25a0'; and  eventually  plunged   Into   Soho,\nand  disappeared  In a  certain  cafe,\npast which the pumuer lazily rtrolled\nwith  Inspecting eye*.    He slied the\nplace, its possibilities, and It* prices\n..   up In one all-seeing* glaty-e.\n'     \"Well. T gue\u00bb* a dbllar will Just\nabout cov*t -what I'm likely to lay\nout 1? that spot.\" he mused, as his\n'  slow step slackened to a, halt. \"And\nanyway. If* time I ate, bo I'll turn\nIn and seo .where (he's got lo. Por\n. thAt'K, her \u00abuf*l'\",'. \\- \\,\\ '.'.;\nWithout more ado he pulled down\nover hi* eyes the big slouch hat\nwhich surround** his ;head like an\nover-slied Mlo, 'ihd pusKlhg orJen\nthe .swing doors; entered'' the\"* restaurant. HI* first glance at the\nBoftly.lighted Interior showed him\nMrs. \u25a0Walsingharrl, Who, 'stated ft the\ntable' which had' come to be regarded as hen,by right of long custom,', wall bending over a menu card,\n\/.and,'explaining* to her usual'waiter\nthat she had beeh away for the last\nwcelf or two.'Arid thhs engeged, she\ndid not notice the\"'stranger;' who\nslipped past and took- a seat a, little\nway;, off, with hla face'In the shadow.' <8ecure Waft of not losing her,\nhe sat back\"ahd lASpetted?'her at\nhis leisure, ,Mrs. Walslngham re-\n. malnlng all unconscious that she was\nbeing so examined.'\n,a \"That's h,er, sure' pop!\" said the\nstranger to himself. \"That's all\n.; right,. And'shej' looTts' flourishing\nenough\",   too.\"':?;'' ''\".',.,'\nMrs. Walslngham had made con\nsldcfable   progress   with   her   dinner\nbefore   she   became   aware \u2022 of   the\n'man's'presence.    She was'not given\nto  Sarins* about  her,  having other\nand  more Important matters to attend 'to,  and' It   was   only  by  accident that she  happened  to  look at\nthe particular  corner  Iri 'which   her\n*-*?   pursuer   had   placed   himself.   There\nhad   teen   but   few \"people   In   that\npart   of   the   place;   Aow   a   noisy\ngroup of young foreigners, men and\nwomen, came in, hungry and'hilarious, and a waiter turned up' an additional light.    It struck full on the\nstranger's  face,  and? Mrs.   Walslngham, happening to turn' at the sudden   glare,   looked   straight   at   him\nas he  looked straight at her.\nFor several seconds  the two  re-\n?     garded   each   other   steadily;   then\nMrs; ? Walslngham   looked   down   nt\nher plate and calmly went on with\nher  dinner.    But the  man,  stealing\n: a glance at her now and then, knew\nthat. she   had   recognized   him;   he\nknow also that she  knew  that  she\n-\u25a0\u2022\u25a0' had . recognised   'her.;    He    Waited\nnnd watched for 'a sign.'    And Mrs.\nWalslngham   gave   none.     Nor   did\n\u25a0he.-show any sign of perturbation;\n\u2022\u2022    or of alarm, or confusion; she con-\n\u2022   tlnued  to eat  and   drink  as  quietly\nas If nothing hnd happened, and If\nher'Jeyes  happened \"to'' turn  ln  the\nstranger's   direction,*'they   remained\n?    as expressionless'as if they rested on\na statue. . \"t','\".,\nBut .the .watcher knew very well\nthat. Mrs. Walslngham was contemplating something;, and that that\nsomething related to him, and he\n: continued to watch without seeming\nto'do, so. And. at last, while she\nwas trifling with her coffee ahd\ncreme de .menthe, he saw her take\nfrom her bag a' tiny memorandum\ntablet, oh a leaf of Which she scrlba\nbled \u00ab\u25a0 Une or two. THeh she folded the torn-out' leaf Into a. neat' 'roll,\n. \u2022 nnd .with a calm store at the strang-\n. *r across tlie ro'qm, ?ln'ld''it'On the\nouter''edge of the 'table' at which\nshe wns sitting. The stranger's left\neyelid flickered Inpercoptlbly. \u25a0 A\nfew moments later he nodded to his\nwaite*-, Wi 'HI* ' bill,\u2022- kh'S \"-slowly\nlounged out. Mrs- Walslngham was\nengaged In studying'.the pages of a\ncontinental journal a* he passed her\ntable\u2014when Bhe looked up again\ntho rolled-up scrap 'of paper'had\ndisappeared. And presently, she,\n' . too, paid for her entertainment, and\nwalked out with'her usual languid\ngrace.       '.,'   ,' '..\n\u25a0 The slrnnirer walked with swifter\n\u2022       steps  when  he  was   once  clear. of\nthe  restaurant.    He* ' made   for  the\n. corner of 'the street, and there unrolled the note and read, what Mrs,\nWalslngham   hnd   written.     '\n\"Oo Into Soho Square, and wait\n\u2022for. me at the cortier of Greek\nstreet.\" '\n\u2022The stranger smiled and' tore the\nbit of - pnper into fragments os he\nstrode   off. ''\u25a0\u2022\u2022'\"\u25a0\n\u2014I knew she'd be curious,\" he\nmuttered. \"Well, that wss a lucky\nchance.\"        .\nThere was no verbal greeting between them when she presently\njoined him. He lifted his hat, and\n\u2022he gave him a sharp nod, nnd they\nin\u00abtlnetlve)y turned towards a quiet\ncornet..'of\u2022 the square.\n\"That was'sheer luck,\" he said.\n\"I * was looking for you. I'd looked\nthree '.\"day*.\"    \u2022\u2022;\n\"Ana.'wnyf\". *he asked.\n\"Becaosa I've got something to\ntell you,\" . he answered. \"Maybe\nyou know It.' ,Maybe you. don't.\nYou see, I've come straight from\nthere. Well, It's Just this, whether\nyou  know it or  not.    He's\u2014dead.\"\nHe thought she was going to fall,\nfor she turned white to the lips,\nand he put out, hi* 'hand' (o clutch\nher, then he saw her sot her lips,\nand ln a second the color came\nback, and ahe turned on him with\nglittering   eyei'    -       ?'-**   \u25a0\n\"Prove to me ' that that's true\u2014\ntruel\"   she  sold   in   a   low,   Intense\n\u25a0 voice.   \"And, I-U-rl-ll-\n. \"What?\" he \u00abafd.\n.*\u25a0   . \"I'll. malt* it  worth your .while-\nshe .artkwered.    \"I Willi\"\nTho \"man,i\u00bbaratche(J hU'ohln.   -\u2022\n\"It's tni* .enough,\" he an\u00bbwered,\nwith a eftort laugh.\u2014 Ho was shot\ndead ln'a *crap at CaVville\u2014that'*\nin Notada\u2014MX week*;, ago. \"I wa*\nthere-Sa^W\/it. Prove Itt Well,\nI suppose you'd take) a letter or a\ncable from, say, the sheriff, a*\nproof! , He was going, under ' hla\nown name. tt'\u00bb nulte iitio. Of\ncourao, I \u2022 dldnl. kflpw1. wh\u00abre you\nwere, and there; wa* no\" on*,ol*\u00bb to\nlet you know.\"    ,-J,\n\"Olve   me ,that   \u00abherlff>   name,\nshe said.   \"H*r\u00bbT-wrll.e lt down\u2014th*\naddress, too.\"      \"\"\"'\u2022.' -.\n\u25a0 The man aorlbbled a line or two\nin the notebook \u00abho held out to htm.\nShe   glarfed   at, ,lt   and   (bruit-It\nmorrow,\" she aald. \"And\u2014here, 1\ndare say you'll find that useful.\"\nShe. pushed a bank-note Into hi*\nhand, and without staying. to hear\nmore, turne'd away and hurried in\nthe direction of Oxford street and\nto the nearest post office. When\nshe came out; 10 minutes later, she\nhailed a talcl.cab and bade the driver\ngo to her''flat.' At her own door\nher mald'met','her and gavo lier a\nmeaning look,'\n\"Mr. Shrewsbury's In tho drawing\nroom,\" she said.    \"He's Just come.'\n(To He Continued.)\nNASOOKIN HELD UP\nPREMIER GIVES I\nPROCEDURE FOR\nABEERREVOTE\nTells Board of Trade Order\njj !- in!GotocU Answer tor \u00b0\nu '    Requests' \u2022\nPETITIONS NEED\nmA : FORTY PER CENT\nBad  Windstorm  Is  Cause\n.',..' Delay. of < Boat on Sat-\n,- ...urday Night ..tl:\nPrevented' 'fiom *lea\\ing Kootenay\nLanding^for sevoral hours by a gale\nof wind a which tore her from her\nmoorings at one time, the Nasookln\ndid not reachvNelson Until midnight\nSaturday night.\n.What 3. S.' Carter, general passenger .ngent, who happened tD be In\nthe' vlelnlty.ut' the time, described\nns one of the worst storms he had\nseen on the main take,,'struck Kootenay Landing during Saturday afternoon. The Nasookln was torn away\nfrdm h^v, moorin'gH by'! the i ,rco ot\nthe 'wind, hut waa not, 09 far as\nMr:1' Cftrtcr '-knew, damaged In any\nwtty- The hoat\" was not able *o\nleave the wharf until arouni 7\no'clock, instead of at 4:30, lis usual ttmo:r \u25a0        ''\\.     '\nM^$ McARTHUR IS\nOil ftOSPlTj|L BODY\nMember of Executive of Brit-\n\u2022\u25a0. ish Columbia Hospitals\nAssociation\nII Reyotes Ordered, Revision\n'of Lists Will Precede\n\"' r the1 Votes'   '\nNANAIMO. Aug. 2Sv\u2014The ninth annual convention of tbe British Columbia Hospitals association complete:\nits labors Saturday nfterhoon after deciding lo. meet next year in Prln^\nRupert,, and electing tho'following officers: *'\nHonorary* president, Hon. William\nSloan; president. Dr. Q. B. Brown,\nNiinaimoj' fIrHt \u2022 vice-president. Oeorge\nH.iddon, Vancouver; wecond vlce-pres-\nWent, H. W. Birch. Prince Rupert;\nsecretary, E. S. Withers, New Westminster;. treasurer, J. H. McVeity.\nVancouver; executive committee\u2014C. K.\nWilson, Victoria; Father O'Boyle, Vancouver ;vMlHHa- (!urrle. New Westminster; R. h McCulloch, Abbotsford; R.\nA. . Brtliun\u00abv* Kamloopsf G. Dinger.\nKulowna; .Miss McArthur. Nelson;\nMother* Naxareth, Cranbrook; J. H.\nThompron;   Smithers.\nDr. Bell of Vancouver was made\nconvener of medical affairs; S. O,\nBurton of Kamloops, convener of business affairs; Miss Harrison, prince\nRupert, convener of nursing affairs;\nJ. H. O'Hnllornn, Victoria, convenor of\nconstitution and bylaws; and J. J.\nBamfleld,-.,* Vancouver, convener of\nmunicipal affairs.\nmm    \u2014'\u2022\nThree Naval Planes\nJ at  San ' Francisco\nfor Start Nonstop Flight\ni >        i,   y-j-_U_m       ,    .\nSAN )FRANvCl\/SCO,'Aug.\" 23.\u2014The\nthree. naval planes which will attempt- n non-stop flight to Honolulu on Friday arrived here today.\nThe P.N.9, No; 1 and P.N.9 No.'3,\ncame from Kan Diego nnd the p.R.t\ncame from Senttte,' Via Coos Bay,\nOre.\nExposition of the conditions under\nwhich the provincial . government\nwould take under consideration an\napplication for a beor-by-glaW plebiscite revoto In a partlculnr riding.\nwas mado.by Premier .Oliver Friday\nafternoon at his conference with the\nboard of trade, J. B. Oray mining the\nquestion (n view of tho dlapatch In\nthe morning's Dally News about the\norder-ln-councll on the subject.    .\nThe premier prefaced his explanation by saying thnt Mrs. M. Olbbs\nhad called him up on tho telephone\nand asked him the same question,\nasking him In considerable detail\naU about the order-ln-councll.\nRaised hy New-Westminster\nNew Westminster business men.\nwho claimed that New Westminster\nworVmen went \\o Vancouver beer\nparlors to cash their paychecks,\nraised the question by waiting on the\ngovernment with a petition signed by\na large number of the merchants,\nasking for a plebiscite revnte for\" the\nriding, the premier said. They were\nInformed the government could not\ntake the petition as representing the\nwishes of the voters of New Westminster. Thev then asljed what the\ngovernment would require, in the\nwny of representations' before It\nwould clve serious consideration to\na   request   for   a   revoto.\n'This was a fair question,\" said\nthe premier, \"and the order-ln-conn-\ncll   Is   nn -endeavor   to   answer   lt.\"\nIn the avcraee general election.\nhe said, the total vote cast ran from\n70 to 80 per cent of the names on\nthe list. In the caso of New Westminster In the plebiscite, In which\nthe riding pronounced decidedly\naualnst the sale of beer by the glass, j\nthe  proportion  vnttn*  wns  73. f\nFixed  tho  IdmUs\nThe premier Intimated the gov- j\nernment took It ns nn axiom that\nfrequent elections were not desirable. As the sale of beer by the\nalas* hnd only been ln force since\nMarch, not enough time had elapsed\nto give a good Indication of whether\nthe original decision made by the\nridings was wise or otherwise. 1\nThe government therefore decided thnt If a petition for a revote was I\nfiled  at  any time  up  to  next  May, |\nIT wonta not 16e cowlere^K*-U\nJ>ore thp names of less than. 40 per\ncent pr. Mi*! jroteri. . ;\"  ,*,\nAs liete with age became less representative, many ' legally qualified\nvpters being fift, for one reason ,or\nanother,. t)it government'set 36 per\ncent as the necessary proportion after\n#ar; \u25a0*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0>*.#$\n..-. This would necessarily apply both\nways\u2014to those asking for revotes\nIn ridings that voted for beer, and\nfor those asking such revotes In ridings   that   voted   against   beer.\nMrs. Glbbs, he .said, had, asked\nhim a revote wpuld be ordered. In\na  case where 40 per cent asked for\na revote and 4 ft per cent petitioned to the contrary. To this\nhe said he bad answered that, the\ngovernment Jn such a case would\nbe  unlikely (0  take  action.\nIf. revptes were ordered, however,\nthe premier said, none would be held\non the existing .llats.j Wherever one\nwns decided 'on, the government\nwould order a special revision of\nthe list, so as to make possible a.\nfull expression of the riding's deal res.\nThe revoto order-in-councll only\naffirmatively, ami. not to. places\napplied, ho aid, to .places that voted\nwhere the uct hnd been brought In\nby    proclamation.\nFIRST MEETING OF\nLOCALPRESBYTERY\nFollows Sessions of Methodist\n1      and Presbyterian Or*\n.    ganizations\nUnder lhe joint convenorshtp of\nRev. F. R. G. Dredge of St. Paul's\nand Rev, J. H. Wright of Trinity\nchurch, the first presbytery meeting\nof the United Church of Canada In\nKant and West Kootenay will be\nheld tomorrow in Trinity church at\n4 o'clock. , It will follow meetings\nof the West and East Kootenay\nMethodist district meeting and of the\nKootenay   prestiytery.    .\nOther Meetings\nThe West Kootenay -Methodist\ndistrict meeting will be held in\nTrinity church at 10 o'clock in the\n.morning tomorrow, the East Kootenay meeting at 2 o'clock.\nAlso at 10 o'clock In the morning\nthe Kootenay presbytory will meet\nin St. Paul's church.\n, All pastors and lay delegates attending these . r.irep meetings will\nbe the guests of the ladies of Trinity\nchurch at a luncheon at noon tomorrow In the church basement.\nES OF\nBRiriSHPARTY\nSHOWN SCENERY\nVisit New Bonnington Plant,\n' Local  Jam  Factory  and\nRide Trolley *\"\nA party of 65 British teachers of\nthe Overseas Educntlon league, from\nall ports Qf England nnd Wales,\nincluding some Scottish teachers who\nare teaching ln England..arrived In\nNelson from the coast early Saturday morning In the course of a tour\nof Canada. A warm welcome was\ngiven the party on their arrival by\nMayor John Bell, ex-Mayor I,. H.\nChoquette. members of the board\nof trade, and Daughters of the Empire, organisations, ench of the vis-\nIt nra receiving a beautiful bouquet\nof flowers, grown In. the Nelson district  from  the  women.\nA street car ride about the city\nbegan the  program.\nThe visitors wero taken In cars\nto the \" McDonald Jam company's\nfnctnry and shown through the plant.\nThey were then transported by\ncars to Bonnlngton. and shown\nthrough, the West Kootenay Power\n& Light company's new $10,000,000\npower plant- A guide led .the party\nthrough the plant, explaining the\ndifferent points.\nNext the visitors were brought\nback to Nelson and driven around\nthe city.-They were taken down to\nthe Kuskanook, awaiting them at\nthe wharf, where they had luncheon.\nThey left Nelson at 3:30 o'clock for\nKootenay Landing. , ,\n\u25a0 From Kootenay Landing they nre\nproceeding to Windermere, end will\nmotor to Banff, nnd will then return to Toronto, leaving there on\nSeptember   9   for  England. '\u25a0:'*\nSHIP BODY TO CHICAGO\nSAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 23.\u2014The\nbody of Edgar Bancroft, American\nambassador to Japan who died at\nhis post, was taken rom the Japanese cruiser Tama today and placed\naboard a train for Chicago where\nburial   will   take   place.\n\u2014\t\nBritish expert says low-heeled\nshoes worn by athletic girls are\nppolllng  the   shape   of women's  feet.\nBRIEFS FROM WE WIRE\n.* ^Ki.i    r*^x^\u2014\nBolshlee  Support Strike\nMELBOURNE, Aug.. 23.\u2014Bolshevik\nsupported \u25a0Reamou'-s ,\u00ab*tr\u00bbo is. spreading\nIn Australl:v.\n\u25a0?   Warfare Favors 7r*nch-Spanlih\nFEZ, Aug. 23.\u2014Bulletins announce\nv.arfars \u2022 situation- .in parliament; distinctly   favorable   to   tho: French   and\nfpfltlish. ' .  y.\nPostpone Debt Farter\nBRUSSELS, Aug. 23.\u2014Government\ndecides to \\ postpone discussion in parliament on United States-Belgian debt\nfunding  agreement  till   November, .\nXUHan Vrleet Captured by Chinese\nPEKING, Aug. 25.\u2014Italian consulate\nat 1'Canton*   announces    Rev. \u25a0 Father\nIllaushl,    missionary,    has   been   captured'by \"red\" Chinese at Kali I Fung.\nBirdi Short Circuit Wire; Bouses Burn\nPONTOISE, France, Aug. 23. \u2014 Two\nbirds perched on an electric light wire\ncaused p. short circuit which destroyed\n15 houses and caused damage estimated at several hundred thousand francs.\nThuf on Way to ltsxteo\n* PENSACOLA, Aug. 23.\u2014lt is now\nthought** George \"Dutch\" Anderson,\nmall robbrr and killer of Ben Mnce\nand wife, Is making for Mexico in a\nstolen car. ,  .\nBound Up Counterfeiters\nCHICAGO. Aug. 23. \u2014 Authorities\nhave started a- roundup .\"of counterfeiters who have flooded the middle\nweAt with bogus $20 centlficates. Suspects are under arrest In - Detroit.\nChicago nnd other places,\nVativts Killed in Belgian-Congo\nCAPETOWN, Aug.'23. \u2014 Religious\nfanatics In the Belgian- Congo slaughtered CO natives In attempted forcible\nconversions. \" Troops, have been- dispatched to handle the trouhlf.\n'   \u25a0 meal rayrou\"'  \"' \"'\nNEWARK,   N.J.,    Aug.    23.\u2014Holdup\nmen  In cars'steal  $3\u00ab0(r cash, payroll\nfiom fur company's paymaster.\nEastern Has Warfare\nCHICAGO, Aug. 23. \u2014 Motorists\nwearing broad grins as* rival dealers\ncut gasoline prices in oil fight. At\nDecatur, III., price. In down to lGc a\ngallon. \u25a0* ; .- x\n\/  This  Her  Twenty-fourth  Child\n'YUMA,  Aril.,  Aug.  23. -*  Mrs.  Rule\nRanches   gives birth   t#   twenty-fourth\nchild.\" She has bef-n married 24 years,\nOnly seven of the children aro alive.\nPIANO TUNING f\n\u25a0'SWRlAlin\n. \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0   J ii : \u25a0 > Jv i v       j        . V\ni\/l-U-d\nI       -.Mat\nInto her ti*\u00bb.\n;*:\nttttt m* h\u00abr* at tbl* ttra- to*lo*Ui.\nAlvln 13. Perklna, owing to un\nforiecn circumstances, will not b'\u00ab In\nNelaon* until sometime . durinn\nSeptember an* will m\u00bbK\u00bb* till tfltfa'\nQrder Your CW Now\nOur 25 years' experience in the   coal business enables us to offer\nto   our   customers   the   best   in    Domestic  and  Furnace  Cools.\nYour order  for one ton  or a   carload   will   be   appreciated.\nPHONE 33\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\namswmmwMm\nTrouble\n\\\nAfter the fire has destroyed your, property; after the)\naccident has injured you; after your death\u2014what atiput.\n.,    .        \u25a0 \u25a0 f       :\u25a0  \u25a0 ,,:i.'t I,\nthe insurance?\nIs it paid promptly, or is there a long session of haggling and wrangling with adjusters? .\nGood policies, carefully prepared, eliminate the annoy-.\nances of adjustment.        :\nSee that your policies are right, and that they afford\n* you the protection you should have.\nTalk it over with any of those listed below:   \u2022. ;,   i\nFor Fire Insurance\nAutomobile\u2014Life\u2014Accident and Sickness\u2014Plate\nGlass and All Other Forms of Insurance\nJ. E.'ANNABLE . R. W. DAWSON\nC. W. APPLEYARD \u00a3 \u00b1 SfuNTER        %      '\nC.D.BLACKWOOD C. F. McHARDY     ,.\u2022\nNELSON' INSURANCE AGENCIES\nR. J. STEEL     \u2022'.\nFor Life Insurance\nC. W. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.   \".\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, The Great West Life Assur-\n. ' ance Co.\nR. W. DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.\nH. E. DILL, Mutual Life of Canada.\nE. H. HANLEY, North American Life Assurance Co.\nJ. C. KENNEDY, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nS. C. LATORNELL, Dominion Life Assurance Co. .\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nNELSON INSURANCE AGENCIES, Canada Life Assurance Co. .\nFRED RITCHIE, Great West Life Assurance Co.\nC.E. WILSON,'Manufacturers' Life Assurance Co.\nil\nACCEPTED\nFOIL ADMISSION\nAT THESE J\"? THEATRES\nHippodrome, Toronto        Clinic, Owen Sound '\nCapitol, Montreal\nCapitol, Vancouver\nC*(itol, Winnipeg\nCapitol,  Caljarjr\nCapitol, Brindin\nI. Brocks Brock.ille\nTemple, Brantford\nCapitol, Cobouri\nStrand, Ctlfary\nGriffin',, Chathtm .\nPrince,,, Chatham\nEmpren, Edmonton\nCapitol, Edmonton\nRoy*), Fort William\nOrphcum, Fort1 William\nCapitol, Guelph\nR*l*nl, Gilt\nStrand, Hamilton\nCapitol, Kitchaner\nCapital, Kinpton\nCapital, London\nCapitol, Moo,* ' Jaw\nDominibn, Nanalm*\nStarland, N*li*n\n. R*|ent, Ottawa\nR*-ent, Oah*w*\nColonial,  Port Arthur\nLyceum, Port Arthur\nCapitol, - Pari*\nCapitol,  Petevboro\nRoyal, Port Hope\nCapitol, Retina ,,\nDaylight, Saikatoon\nClaiaic, Stratford\nOakwood, Toronto    -\nBloor, Toronto\nAlhanabra,  Toronto\nBeach, Toronto '\nB**\u00ab*r, Toronto\nCapitol,' Toronto\nColUgo, Toronlo\nParkdalo, Toronto\nSt. Clair, Toronlo\nPalace, Toronto '\nTank.  Toronlo '\nYork, Toronlo\nFamily, Toronto    \u2022\nBroadway, -Vancouver\nDominion,  Vancouver\nDominion, Victoria-\nCapitol, Walland .\nCriffln'i, Wooditock\nAlgoma,    Saull Ste. M*rl*\nGrlffin-i,\n1 Catharine,\nilrt fine\". with 1 its J policy! of \"Jerwice to the\nI 'public,r.'theiFAMOUS PLAYERS)\nCANADIAN CORPORATION,LIMITED,\n<\u00ab* operated fbr and by Canadian\/; with\nthe advent of the FIFTH .\/m\/ON OF\n\"CAPITOL ENTERTAINMENT\"\/\/' nowphc\\\nino1 on sale in 57 of its leadind motion^\npicture theatres, fiom Montreal to Vancouver^\nCAPITOL ENTERTAINMENT\nSCRIP B^KS\n^y\"this;plan cMotion Picture pafronsX'mt\n- Canada mil be saved thousands of dollars each\nmonth, at the same time placind \"CAPITOL\nj      mENTERTAINMENXV^\/c\/? has become a house?\n5      \" [hold uuoid ih Canada, within reach of those .ofV\nI'moderate ^means at greatly reduced cost^   .\n..CJDetached coupons flow the \"CAPITOL.    m\nJ       ENTERTAINMENT VCR1P BOOKxP\"'have the\\\n\u2022        'advantage of negotiability by ant\/one for admis~.m\nj       \u00a3rfon'at any of the 57 theatres heremith listed^-\n\u2022*5iSO|PBQ0HSS4-\u00bb  'TQAHSFHiABLEr\/\nJ ' -y COr^ENICNT' AND 'SA\\>ES' S>OU \u201e MONE^ '\nI' ,\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"-?;-;-\u25a0\n'   , ' Scrip Books are on sale at the Box Office of the\nj Starland Theatre.. Make inquiries of the cashier.\n\"C\u00abplul, Si. C*th*rln**J\nV\n\u25a0\n iwl-\n^-\u00ab-. r*r-\nMMBMMMM\nmmnL.\n '\u25a0\nPageFou^\nTHE NELSON DSILY NEWS, ^to6N&^M0RNINa AUGUST 2f, 1925\njTHE DAILY NEWS\n\" Publlahed *t*rj morning except Sunday by Th* New* Publishing company,\nlimited,. Nelson, B.C.\n. Buslnen* letter* should be addressed\nand checks and money order* mad*\npayable to Th* News Publishing com-\n. pany, limited, and In no case to Indl-\na-ldual members ot the staff.\n. Advertising rat* card* and A.B.C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nisqneat, or may be aeen at the office\nof any advertising agency recognised\nty   ta*  Canadian   Presa  association.   \u2022\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall   (country), per month..I   .60\nPer   year\t\nBy mall  (city), per year.....\nOutalde Canada, per month.'..\nPer   year   \t\nPellvered, per week  \t\nPer year\t\nPayable In Advance\n\u00ab00\n1J00\n.75\n7.r.o\n.26\n1S.00\nM**a>*g Audit Bnrsan of ciroiUatlon\nMONDAT.   AUGUST   24.\nStill More Tax Cuts lor\nAmericans\n, It is not becoming to be envious. To be covetous breaks\none of the commandments. But\nCanadians these days, under\ntheir burden of debt increase,\ncast their eyes enviously across\nthe international line, and wish\nthey had a Coolidge at the head\nof the state, and a Mellon his\nfinance minister.\nFor the third year in succession the axe is to rule the\nUnited States budget. .\nHundreds of millions of dollars were returned to American\nincome tax payers last year in\ntreasury checks, on account of\nthe saving made the previous\nyear.\nOther hundreds of millions\nwere saved this year by making\nbudget demands that much less.\nNow~ Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, with the backing\nof President Coolidge, is busy\nwith the details of a further\nincome tax slash, which the\nexecutive branch will demand\nof the legislative branch, that\nis, congress, at the coming session.\nAnyone who thinks it is easy\nfor the United States government to economize, while it is\ninherently hard for such economizing in. Canada, has an incomplete grasp of the facts.\nOnly by the hardest fighting\nwas the Coolidge-Mellon-Hoover\nprogram of economy, put\nthrough the last two years, and\nin the first of those two the\nDemocrats and Insurgent Republican bloc made over and\nextracted much of the virtue\nfrom the original Mellon plan.\nUntil recent years the United\nStates government had, the\nworst system of appropriating\nmonies on earth. After being\nrecommended by president after\npresident, the budget system\nwas only finally enacted under\nHai ding. Usually regarded as\none of the weakest presidents\nthe United States has had,\nHarding nevertheless did put\nthat across. But the constitution remains the same, and the\nexecutive branch has no control\nover the legislative branch. Any\nindividual congressman, any individual senator, may still initiate a money bill. The executive program has to be literally hammered through\u2014and\nthrough both houses.\nHere in Canada, with a parliamentary system in which the\nexecutive and the legislative\nbranches are' combined, no\nmoney bill may be initiated except by the government of the\nday. Also the senate, while\nhaving the power of veto over\nlhe entire budget, may not vary\na single item in it.\nYet in the United States, a\ndetermined government, against\nthe will of hundreds of congressmen, and millions of persons behind them, clamoring for.\nexpenditures,, inexorably and\nexpertly wields the axe on taxation, and relieves little fellow\nand big business man alike.\nIn Canada, where not one\ncent can be expended without\nthe concent of the government\nfor the time being, in office, we\npee not only the. same intolerable taxation, but nearly a hundred millions added to our already .crushing national obligations.\nGreat Britain, Australia, New\nZealand Do lt\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of Tha Dally News contribute many of the beat itema to\nthla column. Juat atgn your nam*\nor Initials, or nom-de-plume, and\n\u25a0end ln your brightest ideas.\u2014Editor, Lighter Side.\nAUNTHET\n\"Ever* time t dress a chicken\nit puts me to thinking about\nhow I'd look on a operatln*\ntable.\"\nIn Florida two is company and\nthree a group of boosters.\nNobody really lives as long as\nn   rich   retotive  seems   to   live.\nEast is east nnd west is west, and\nnever   the   twain   shall   meet   their\nobligations-\nWHEN THEY SPEAK OF TURN-\nFNQ LAND AT A PROFIT, THEY\nWON'T MEAN TURNING IT WITH\nA   PLOW.\nAnd so women can drive motor\ncars as well as men. Boy, file this\nIn   the faint-praise  cabinet.\nIt is better to stop, look and listen. The ear behind won't, knock\nyou as far as the  locomotive* will.\nMiddle age Is that period when,\nyou feel twice as old the morning\nafter  a  party.\nIf the other driver Is a fool, you\nmay dodge him; but it It's two of\na  kind, there isn't  much hope.-\nLet us hope that Hank's rumored\nnew model won't Hound so irritated\nnnd quarrelsome whent it backs,\nA lint covers ftio bald spirt,\nnnd balloon pant* hide the how\nlogs, but a paunch must, take life\nns it comes.\nA casua'l study of the situation\narouses the fear that about all the\nworld  is safe for  ls  the time  being.\nOnce in a while you can buy the\nsuit you really want, If the clerk\nhappens not to be a good salesmen.\nDiplomatic language Is nice. The\npowers call It a conference Instead\nof a clinic when thev discuss\nChina.\nTHE HONEYMOON IS STILL\nCOINCr STRONG IF SHE WON'T\nEAT A ONION  UNLESS HE DOES.\nThe easiest way to remember a\nman's name and face after a lapse\nof years !.\u00ab to have him owe you |5.\nStill, the three-letter wtrds you\nlearned by working puzzles don't\nhelp much unless you are a headline writer.\nIf he becomes great, hU college did it; if he fails, lt to be-\ncoukc a college can't make a\nwinner of a dumb-bell.\nCorrect this sentence: \"'She married wonderfully well,' suid the\ngossip;.\"not a rich man, but such a\nsplendid  character.\"\nThe Boswell-Sanca Women's Institute recently pointed out to The\nDally NeWa that Miss Laura A%\nKlrkman has not always featured\nlocal fruit as much as they might\nhave done. This criticism resulted In\nvarious ladles well-known for their\ncompetence In. devising menus being\nasked to arrange a few for publication in \"Efficient Housekeeping.\" The\nmenu   below   belongs   to   this  series;\nNEW  DISHES THIS WEEK\n(By Mrs.  \\\\*.  E,  Wesson)  XX\nTOMORROW'S    MENU\nBreakfast\n. Cantaloupe .;\u25a0;'   Cereal\nBoI|ed    Effgs\nCherry Marmalade    ,\n\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0To.'ist and Coffee\n'.'\"'-\u25a0' Of.nner ,y\n\\   J      T-^rled   Trout       t\nNew potatoes and Waxed Bean*\nBattana and  Lettuce  Salad\nBa-kerf'-, Custard   and    Stewed\n\\      Rhubarb '\u25a0:\nMuffins V - Coffee\n',   Supper\nTomato  an, 1 'Cucumber  Salad\nHomemade    -\"reinl   and    Butter\nRaspherrX \u25a0 nnd Creum\nCake \u25a0  ''. ' Tea\nThat Body\nof Yours\nsmjiJn\nrv\u00ab autos. tut\nBoiled Lamb with Cap-rr Sauce\u2014\nBuy a leg or a boned nnd rolled\nshoulder nf lamb und bnll.lt in water\nto cover, till tender and Juicy, Serve\nwith an ordinary white sauce to\nwhich you have added one-half of a\nsmall   bottle   of  enpers.\nPotalo-Egg Baked Dish\u2014Boil four\neggs till hard, then cool them. Also\nboll eight medium-sized potatoes till\ntender, peel off the skins and slice\nthem. Butter a baking dish and\nplace a layer of the cold potato slices\nin the bottom; add o layer of the\ncgfis, then finish by spreading the\nremainder of the potato slices over\nall. Now make n sauce ns follows:\nMelt \\\\_ tablespoon of butter in a\nsaucepan and stir into this one tablespoon of- flour, IH cup of warm\nsweet milk and a pinch of suit. Con-\ntlnue stirring till thickened, then odd\na pinch of pepper nnd pour it, while\nHtlll hot, over the dish containing\nthe potato nnd egg layers. After it\nhas worked down through the thre-?\nlayers, spread cracker crumbs over\nthe top. dot with bits of butter, and\nslip the di-sh into n moderate oven I\nto bake for 45 minutes. ' Serve hot.    '\nBanana Fritters\u2014(Many housewives\nlike to servo some kind of fruit fritter with n chicken dinner on Sunday.\nThit\u00bb Is n most delicious variety.)\nMake a batter -by mixing .together\none cup of sweet milk, one beaten\neirg, a pinch ot salt, one teaspoon j\nnf sugar and one cup nf bread flour\nsifted with two heaping teaspoons\nof baking powder. Cut large ripe\nbananas in elsrht pieces nnd dip these\npieces Into the batter, then place\nthem one nt n time in a perforated\naluminum spoon nnd lower the spoon\nInto a small saucepan containing\nsmoking-hot fat. When the fritter\nhns heroine a golden brown on one\nside, turn so ns to brown the top,\nthen drain on crumpled brown paper.\nFerve with hot maple syrup ns a\niwuce. Or serve with this vanilla\nsauce: Boil together for three minutes one cup of water and H-eup\nof granulated sugar; thicken this\nsyrup with one tenspoon of corn\nstarch powder*mixed lo a paste with\na little cold water, nnd stir in n piece\nof butter the* size of n hickorv nut,\ni\/i-teasponn of vinegar, and H-tea-\nspoon of vanilla  extract.\nOrange Rico Pudding\u2014Into a linking dish put l'A ouart of sweet milk,\none cup of well-washed rice, th\"\ngrated rind nf one large orange, a\nplnrh of salt, nnd one cup of granulated sugar. Let this mixture bake\nfor one hour and 40 minutes, stirring\noften, then add one cup of washed\nseedless raining and continue lo bake\n2!> minutes more. Delicious served\ncold.\nTomorrow\u2014Answered   Letters.\n.Being Afraid\nOne of the magazines had a baseball story regarding a raw recruit\nwho waa a wonderful player, hut\nhad no confidence In himself. Everv\ngood play or good hit that he made\nhe attributed Just to chance. This\nIs called inferiority complex. The\nhalt club 'was In despair completely,\nuntil a young lady took hold of him\nond made him think he was the best\nplayer on earth. She did her work\ntoo well, however, and thereafter he\nalways had an excuse for his errors\nby blaming It on the umpires, his\nfellow players, and so forth. He\nthought he was about the beat player\non earth.\n\u25a0\"\u25a0 Now, this matter of inferiority complex is receiving a great deal of attention these days. The underlying\ncause Is,, of course, fear, and our\nmental specialists have found that a\nchild Is jiorn absolutely without fear,\nand that fear doesn't come into ti\nchild's life Until it ls 3 years old.\nAnd unfortunately parents, In an endeavor to teach caution, really teach\nthe  child   to  be   afraid.\nProgress In health or In disease\nis greatly Impeded by fear, Ou*\"\nmental specialists are doing a great\nservice lo mankind by pointing oul\nthat most troubles, the biggest worries, the most severe Illnesses, art\nthe ones that never, come, and yet\nthe fear of them takes nit the fight\nout of the Individual.,\nOne of the most pleasing sight*\nin our cities these days ls the policemen holding up ull truffle, whilst h\u00bb\nescorts some lone youngster, or n\nnumber of them, across the street\nHe becomes a friend in the eyes o'.\nthe children. As youngsters we were\ntaught to be afraid of the policeman,\nto be afraid of the law In any form\nAnd yet .this inferiority complex,\nfear, is not a' new thing. That ol:*\nphllosopher,*\"SoIomonf had it ln mind\nwhen he said, \"He that regardetl\nthe wind shall not sow, nnd whoso\nregardeth the cloud shall not reap.\"\nIn other words, if you and I allow\nconditions to overwhelm us we'll nol\ntackle anything, nnd-so will int -\u00bbn\nor not attain anything. The Idea,\nyou see, Is very old, and yet tnei*\nnever was a time when It could be\nbetter dissected than at the present\ntime.\nGood ordinary caution' Is a safeguard for all of us. Respect for law\nnnd order and the rights of other\npeople should be part of the fabric\nof our lives. But this matter of fear\nof the dark, fear of the law, fear of\nillness, fear of consequences In an i\nordinary legitimate venture, should be\nrooted out of our lives, and replaced\nhy calm caution nnd common sense.\noverproduction which the distillers\nsay no amount of advertising ta able\nto overcome. Figures Issued by the\nBritish government and verified by\nthe trade show that while 28,024,000\ngallons were manufactured ln 1924,\nonly 12,583,000 were consumed by\nGreat Britnln. In many quarters\noutside liquor Interests this decline\nIn the consumption of spirits tn Britain wll of course be hailed with delight as Indicative of growing sobriety among the, population of the\nUnited Kingdom.*\u2014Spokesman Review,\nManufacturers and the Tariff ,\nCoupled with the imperative need\nfor a reduction ot taxes in Canada\nin keeping with the reduction made\nin the United States, in the interest\nof better business and the prosperity\nof all classes, Is the need for moro\npopulation to make use of our-ex-\npnnded facilities like - the national\nrailways to Increase the consumption\nof farm nnd. manufactured products,\nand to reduce the cost of government per capita. Rut how is population to be Increased unless taxes\ncan not only be reduced for the Individual, but the burdens on industry no adjusted that manufacturers will prosper, capital be encouraged to enter new enterprises, and\nemployment provided for those who\nwill build up the urban communities nnd create a demand for products of the farm?\u2014Revelstoke Review.\nMAfttnn innntrle-* \u00bbn Mis* Klrfcmai-i\nstnd Inclose stamped-addressed envelope\nfbr reply.\u2014\u25a0dltor.\nsurplus. ' This is reported in\nthe cables at \u00a31,243,800\u2014nearly\n$6,000,000. Considering the\nsize of New Zealand's population, Canada to do proportionately as well would have to have\na* genuine surplus of over\n$41,000.000,\t\nIt. ia not only the United\nStates that is reducing taxation,\nthis while also taking sufficient\nrevenue to make handsome reductions in the national debt.\nGreat   Britain   started-  her\ndebt reduction right after the\nwar, and paid off huge sums\nannually till the war increase\n, waa almost accounted for.\nThen in the last couple of\nbudgets she has been reducing\ntaxation. Sixpence in the pound\nwas cut off this year from the\nincome tax, lightening the burden of the great inVesting class.\nHere is Australia's latest, as\ndiscussed by the Vancouver\nProvince:\n\"The Australian government\nhas announced a surplus for the\nyear just closed, of \u00a33,018,000.\nIt has also announced a cut of\n121\/2 per cent in the income\ntax, and the federal treasurer\nhas stated that, during the past\nthree years, the war debt has\nbeen reduced \u00a322,000,000.\n\"Contrast the situation in\nCanada. We haven't any surplus, though the government\npretended for a time last spring\nthat there was one. Our income taxes, like our other taxes,\nremain, and our war debt has\nnot been reduced by a single\ndollar. The best we have been\nable to do is to refund certain\nloans at a better rate of interest.\".,...- - ;\nFor the matter of that, little\nNew Zealand, which did her\nfull share in the war, maintaining, the New Zealand division\nin the Australian-New Zealand\nor Anzac corps, as part of her\nwar contribution, has a current\nThirty Years Ago\nf What the Press Is Saying\nOmit   the   Tosh\nIt is absurd for the report to Bug-\ngen that the Empire Is a better\ncustomer for our manufactured goods\nthan the rest of the world.\" . . .\nThe Dominions tax our competing\nmanufacturers oh a high scale of\ntariffs, and there is no indication\nthey Intend to do otherwise. . . .\nWe do business with them, let us\ndo It on strict business lines, and\ncut out the 'toxh' of imperial tariff\nreform.\u2014Westminster   Gazette.\nToo Much Whlwky\nDistillers   of   whisky   in   Scotland\nare not nt nil hnppy at the present\ntime- .   The trade   ls   hampered   by\n(From The Weekly Miner of August\n24, 1895-)\nMr, Flndlny, the representative of\nthe British Columbia Iron Works\ncompany of Vancouver, Informs us\nthnt it has been definitely decided to\ne.rect u foundry ut Nelson. .\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe Nelson ball nine yesterday defeated the New Denver team by a\nscore of 34-20. At the end of the\neighth inning the score stood 23-21,\nnnd In the final Inning, Nelson collected   11   run*.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022'\nJock Campbell of Nelson yesterday won the long talked about 100-\nyard dash against J. A. Long of\nKaslo, In Nelson. Although Campbell was fouled by Long, he breasted\nthe tape first, thus winning (he flOO\nstnkes.\n(From The Weekly Tribune of .Aug-\n'    ust   24,   1896.)\nGrant McKean, a miner, had a\nnarrow escape In a bush fire last\nweek when a burning tree fell on\nhis left leg, breaking It Just above\nthe ankle,\n\u2022    \u2022    *\nCharles Wilson of Vancouver, one\nof the best lawyers In this province,\nspent several days In Nejson thla\nweek. .\nBRtM >D    FOUNDATION,\nFRAMEH,  per cwt\t\nEXCLUDER*-Zlnc.    Each\nEXCLUDERS\u2014 Wira.    Each\nBee Supplies\nWe Are Headquarters for Bee\nSupplies oi Every Description,\n'Including\n\u201e. * -\u25a0\u201e\u25a0 \u2022     ^,\nSI.C-\nHmokera. Veil*, Knlvti, HIT* Tool*, Wlr*, Swarm Catcher*, Rubber (Hove*  Container*. Extractor*,   eta    PRICES LOWEST,\t\nNelson Hardware Co\".\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hard-wars\nnelson \u25a0\u2022,;*. \u25a0..,-. ,' a. o.\n\u25a0'   \"   i . * - \"'<      **i.     \u2022 \u25a0\u00bb*\u25a0     : '\u25a0 '   \u2022 mm\nAmong the Innocents\ns Abroad\nl      \u25a0\u25a0\" vi   .   * \u25a0-.'\u25a0\u25a0' i\nI  THEY GET THERE  JU3T.THE  (\nSAME I\n1-    <   \u25a0-    '   '\u25a0:\u25a0;   !\nPARIS\u2014Paris haa been taking new\nsteps to solve Its street traffic prob-\nlem, and the result ao far is a lovely\nwar of Imprecations between the\ntaxi  drivers  and  the  police;        \u2022\nTo the visitor the street traffic In\nParis seema hopelessly confpsed, and\nthe rules of the road to he more\nhonored In-the breach than , in tho\nobservance. If your mxl man Is held\nup in front, and the easiest way\nahead Is to take (he wrong .side of\nthe street, he usually takes it, and If\nsomething .hobs up he trusts to his\nbrakes, yhleh fortunately nre generally of the four-wheel type.\nWhen three or four other car* sIro\nstop equally suddenly, and nil within\na few Inches of each other, and going\nIn three or four directions, the passengers get enough thrills to last\nthem  for a lifetime.\nBut the taxi men drive wonderfully well. \u2022 It is. astonishing how\nthey threod their way through the\ntraffic which, except at a few points,\nnearly always seems to be operating\non a cntch-as-cotch-can basis\u2014catch\nevery little bit of vacant street ahead\nof you that you can, and.if you get\nIn someone else's way, wait until he\nmoves. . Never give an Inch except to\npush ahead.\nIt ls very different from the orderly\ntraffic of a Canadian city, and it\nwould give Chief Long a fit: nevertheless there are very few accidents,\nfar less than ln Chicago or New\nYork. : ' \u2014F.   F.   P\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally Newn, Aug. 24, 1915;\nBorn, on August 22, to Mr. and Mrs.\nH. A. Matthew of Kalrvlew, a dauRh-\nter.  .\u25a0-..-\u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nPte. Thomas'* McDonald and his son.\nPte. Sydney J. McDonald, arrived in\nNelson last night on leave from the\n64th Kootenay battalion enmp at Vernon.\n'.;\u2022'\u2022\"\u2022    \u2022\nThe material used In putting the\nstreet car sub-station In commission\nIn being procured In Nelson and It Is\nexpected thnt the street cars will run\nwithin the next couple of days.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nRoy   Clark   of   Spokane   arrived   in\nNelson   yesterday  on   mining   business\nand Is staying at the Hume.\n\u25a0  \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nJudge Forln returned home yesterday and was present nt the non-com-\nmissioned officers* class of the Nelson\nVolunteer  reserves at   the  armory.\nState Operates\nUtilities Which .\nProfit Sweden\nSTOCKHOLM, Aug. 23.\u2014The Swedish state treasury was enriched $26.-\n424.300 during the last fiscal year by\nthe net profits of the various derailments, engaged tn public . business.\nIhls represents a net return of nearly\n5 per cent on tlie cnpltal of $546,749,*\n743   Involved.\nThe net profits of the various departments follow: Post of fine, $3.*\n7X7,600, or 38.6 per cent; telegraph\nund telephone, $5,628,386, or 8.06 per\ncent; state railways, $9,754,290, or 3.6\nper cent; hydraulic power plants, $2.-\nKS0.343. nr 3.68 per cent; public lands.\n$1,632,681, or 1.35 per cent. _\nBASEBALL BOOMS\nAMONG CUBA FOLK\nHAVANA, Aug. 23\u2014More than 1000\namateur and professional teams easily\nput baseball in first place as the\nmost popular sport ln Cuba. The\nAmerican national gnme, however, is\nnot the only one thnt engages the attention  of the youth of Cuba.\nAll the larger foclal clubs have athletic teams Including beside baseball,\nswimming, rowing, football, track,\nfr-neinK nnd Jul alut (Spanish handball).\nCuban Aviator\nWins Honor for\nParachute Jump\nHAVANA. Aug. 23. <U Lieutenant\nCulllermo Martull, the Cuban aviator\nwho on July 4 made the first parachute Jump seen In Canada from u\nCuban army airplane, has been decorated with a mt;:;ary merit medal jnd\ntwo Havana newspapers have started\nsubscriptions for a fund to give him\na house.\nMartull first nslted President Mach-\nado   ro authorise   him  to  take   up  an\ncbaolete plane on May 10, Cuba's in* .\ndependenoe day\/ set fire, to it and drop.\nIn a parachute..- The president thought\nthla too risky aVunt and disapproved It. Martull tben requested permU*\nslon, to make a Jump from a plane\ndriven, by a pilot , The president aa-\nproved the request, and, aa a mirk of\nlespeet to the United States, set the\ndate as July 4.     *-\nMartull   oropped   from   a  height  of\nabout 4000 feet Into the Qulf of Mex*'\nico.     A   swarm   of   small   craft* was\nstxtlonrd  off  shore to  effect  a .quick'\nrescue. _\nMary Pickford tn court testified\nher huaband warned her of kidnaping plot. ...\nGermany wants to raise $100,000,-\n000 in the United Slates to finance\nher' farmers.;.   .    ,'iv; v*. \u25a0*.'\n\/\nr\nA Sure Thing *\nBefore Henry Bell passed away he-\nmade iure that Mrs. Bell would never be\nthe victim of \"get rich quick\" *chemea.\nHe had \u00bbeen too much misery caused by\nunsuspecting widows placing their mite in-\nthe hands of smooth-tongued promoters.\nHe wanted a sdre thing\u2014and he got it.\nEach month Mrs. Bell receives a cheque\nfor $100. She will receive this as long\nas she lives, for Henry Bell was insured\nunder the \"Permanent Monthly Income\"\nPlan of the North American Life Assurance Company,\nThis form of insurance* provides no\nlump sum of. thousands of dollars for\ngrasping hands to dissipate, but a regular\nincome which lives on through the years\u2014\na monthly income for life\u2014a monument\nto your judgement.\nInvestigate this most protecting type of\nNorth American Life Policy. Our booklet\n\"A Permanent Income\" gives full particulars.   Write to-day. -\nNelson Branch Office;\n2*3 Aberdeen Block\nNelson, B. C.\nPlease send me your booklet\n\"A Permanent Income\"\nName \u20141\t\nAddress .\t\nOccupation Age .\nNORTH AMERICAN LIFE\nASSURANCE COMPANY\n'JSoliJistiieGmtineni\"-\nMm>1 Mmi Ttrwtt. tea.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure jrour bills\nof Building Material Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666t\u00bb\u00bb>\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab>\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbt\u00bb->\u00ab \u00bb\u2666*\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\"\nSpring-tied for tagless comfort\n4 continual-coil*\njoin the 26 iteel ,\n\u25a0trip*. Thil il an |\neicliaive feature.\nStopi tigging,\nadds comfort and I\neliminate! noise.\nBr esses your bed when made up\nHeir\/ border\nstrips ind cables\nprevent sigging\nedges. Noteextr*\nhigh risers, long\nand strong coil,,\nand stout corners.\nEverywhere\nin Canada\nSpring ties add sagless ease to the\nhigh-value, low-priced Slumber King:\nThe Slumber King is different from\nany other spring of its type\u2014and\ndecidedly more comfortable.\nIts 26 flat strips are not only suspended by coil springs but they are\njoined by four rows of smaller flexible coils. That is why the Slumber\nKing conforms to your body with\nout sagging in the center\u2014why it\ncushions you in unrivaled comfort.\nPatented design also keeps the edges\ntrim and taut. High risers give the\nbed the lofty effect ofa box-spring.\nThese features are exclusive. Big\nproduction cuts the price. Your\ndealer can supply the Slumber King.\nSlum\nBED SPRINGS\n'Built forSleep\nv\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbMMtHtMMtHtMM\u00bbMMtHtWM\u00bbm\u00bbtMMfMtMttMlltMltlMt\u00bb\n _\ni\n\u2014-\n\"\u2022sSL*.\" jmBi-..\n\u2022J ;\" -,>* !\ntoteantaa.u av-a.tf- ca'.vfla.i\nV.*?*T?\nie Kind That\niTour Game\n\u2022\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u00bb$. \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\"'\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0'\n'4-     Jt**\u00a9'*\n-Men's and -Wotnen's . Golf\nShoes, at prices that are'right.\nMen's :.t?5.45,' $5.95, $8.10\nWomen'^...:.....?...A:;......;.....?4.55\nWOMEN'S   OXFORDS   AND\nf,: [yl'\u25a0'.. SLIPPERS? ..;'. ',.\nGood .'^.quality;   broken- lot.\nAt ..r.:|...L.....,..;:....:.......S2.85\nBdYa?i STURDY* BOOTS\nSolid {leather.\"\u25a0''> Sites' if* to\u25a0 5.\n::: :.\\L:.p:.:::.:...1stt&r\nSame styles in Youths'. Sizes\n11 to 13,   At .....:...,..v.,.?a.35\nimit'S.\n.'\u25a0l\n' '\u25a0 '\u25a0        \"\u2022 fi* \u00abi \"\u2022 \u2022  '>ifi v-ii'i*ii'T,iiiii'i\"' ii\"niy'in'' mofiiai tiijiinrti-ihrij'\u2022\u2022\"\u2022'\u25a0'\u2022'-\n\u25a0\"ii    ii \u25a0        \"\"\"i '\"*\u25a0'    '\"\u25a0*\u25a0   \"\u25a0\u25a0 ' yB*!1^'   \u25a0 'i\"-i \u25a0' a    i.'i .hi \u25a0    * hit* .,\u25a0*\u00bb\u25a0 ,.Wmm \u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb*\u25a0***\u00bbi-mw4*jIh*u****.*-WI\"\"   .\u25a0    \u25a0**\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\" \u25a0\u25a0'\n1925-\nI   lllftH'il\n:X-;.-X:X:'^xMM\n. -*     Page Hta-V\n; ttiti Tti 'irf\"\" r\t\n**!\n?Wn\nSbdal|meni]i^|\nThi* column Is being conducted\nby Mr*. Vlgneux, All\\n*w\u00bb ot o.\n\u2022octal .nature, IncludlngireceptUin*.\nririvat*    entertainment*.-,   person*}\nterns,!- marriages, eta, will appear\nlit* lhi* column.     Telephone  un* |\n...VlgnatUi \u25a0:*\u25a0'.\u2022    \u25a0\u25a0.\":\u25a0\u25a0'? \u25a0'!*.,v\\ ;''*';;?'.;'\nA. D; 'McQueen,' oCth\"t\\B\u00bbnk ot\nMontreal *t\u00bbft. In VancoBVcrj wa* In\ntown Saturday,' having\" arrived from\nKaalo,' where no was spondlng'.hls vacation with hi* parents, ..'.'.''\nt Ball\nAsks Saving of Niagara\nAt\nL\nfORDS\nIn all leathers.   Best quality.\nAt  ..::;.. $4.25 to $8.10\n.IxitAtk'g in Footfashion\nZRESTOJt HENS LAY\n1      ,W URLY PERIOD\n\u25a0  Trip*'-*\u2014 -\n- CliBfc*^, Aug. 23. \u2014 Pullets tn\n'\u00a3tl:ls district -hrfe egg laying unusually\n<&ulck thi A*' year, according to reports\nfrom odtdftfe points. At (Erickson,\n. Paul BtiftsVl has some Incubator-\nhatched tVhito Leghorns laying in\nfjust about;-! months and 10 days \u2014\nMarch 13 batched birds producing eggs\n\"** Julv 28. At the (poultry* farm of\nMr. McAhilne at Creston the\/e are\ntome barred, rocks war Vrodu\u00abd *eft*\u00a3s'\nin 4 months and 20 days. The export\nof cockerels Is very heavy .this season\nfrom the Creston section, while . tho\nprevailing cash price of 40c a dozen\nfor eggs is much higher than at this\nfine a year-ago..;; \u201e-_\nThe late.\" Sir Adam Beck' as he\nlooked at the age of 11 years when\nin Baden, Ont.\nCreston Free   r     j\nfromi Climbing \"i\nCutworm Pest\nCrtftsTON. Aug. 23.\u2014While Creston\ncan usually boast of experiencing most\neverything ln~1he Insect pest line, the\nclimbing > cutworm is one specimen\nthat has not imidw tts appearance locally, although It Is causing heavy\ndamage nt other points in the Kootenay, The cutworm is much ln evidence at Kaslo. according to Hesldetft\nHorticulturist C U, Twlgg, who Is JuA\nback from a visit to that center. The\npest Is equally vigorous at Fernie. t\n''At, .Kaslo the insect shown a preference for rhubarb, potatoes and ton*4-\ntoes, but at Kernie it Is specialising\nmure or less on the cabbage, and. according to reports from fcast Kootenay, when the cutworms make n mans\nattack on a cabbage head It is hardly\nmore than sufficient for one night's\nre tlons\u2014tho insects doing all tliclr\nwork after dusk. '       '\nThey arc going Bo strong at Pernio\nthat Just now it looks as if the better\nrnrde.ns' competition might have to be\nTibandoned. . Accordiug to Mr. Twigg\n*the-,on1y r*rt\u00bbedy*i\u00bb*to set out poisoned\nbait'for tty-nr during their busy sea-\nsen.*-which lasts at least three weeks.\nCesco Wide\nVision Goggle\nTh* Ideal Godglo for the Motor-\nt t i\u00ab *r 'Railroad. Man  '\n$1.50\n83.00\nClear .\u201e. ,'^.\u2014__\nColored ...................\nA. T.N0X0N\n'.; Your  Jeweler\nTwo Babies Are\n..Christened at\nWillow\nPoint\nWILLOW POINT, Aug. 23. \u2014 Ven.\nArchdeacon Graham \u2022 of Nelson held\n.Sunday services In St. Andrews-by-the-\nLake church during which two baby\nboys were christened. \u25a0 These were Guy\nMoyle, son at, Mr. and . Mrs. Guy\nGreenwood, and Hlchurd William Asb-\nley, son of Mr. nnd Mrs. M, Roberts,\nboth of Willow Point. - , -,\u25a0 \u00bb\nm_\u00bb \u25a0    ,\nTOKYO, Aug. 23.\u2014Tho total sales\nof tobacco In Japan, Including cigars,\nctgarets and pipe mixtures, for the\nfiscal . year 11*24-1925, ended \u2022 lai*t\nApril, amounted to ?4 5,7 07,455 yen.\nCompared with the sales of 10 years\nago, the present figures show an\nIncrease of more than  500 per cent,\nNow is the time to replace those broken lights before\nthe (ibid days are here.\n.We can supply you with any size. ( ~\nHIPPERS0N HARDWARE CO.\n'\u25a0'''-^''*ah'?\u25a0\u25a0'   Look for th* R*dwH*,^dwa^\u2022 8tor\u00bb '\n\"phons w . * p-\u00b0- B0X <14\nn. Renwlck spent Saturday la Trail:\n\u2022   \";\u25a0#,\u00bb.\u00bb   -\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0'*''.'\nL.' Hanna,, Cedar   street   arrived   In\ntown Saturday from*Kaslo.   v \u25a0'.. 'V'\"\nif: i \u25a0>   ,\".-> : - ,*.'\u25a0'\u00bb    * \u25a0 \u2022\".  :* \u25a0'.:   ( >'\u25a0 \\\\\"\\\nMr, and Mrs. Roy Sharp ahd duoph-\nter.  Miss  Dawn,  leave  today  for  Balfour,  where   they  \\vill  occupy. a  bbt-\ntage for the next, couple of weeks.\\y\n\u25a0\"-: '\u2022\u2022'\u2022 \u2022 -' \u25a0*.'' '\"  - \u25a0\nJ, J, Warren, president of'tho Coit-\nsoliduted Mining & Smelting company\nat Trail, was a city visitor Saturday,\nand. left yesterday for i the. east. ;* \\\n',\u00bb,-._ . , .. * t *''-*\u2022 *; .-\nMr, and Mrs. A. K. Allen and daughter. Uoreeh, of Tofield. AHa., who have\nbeen visiting in the district, left -yesterday, for their;home.\u25a0\u25a0..\u2022 '   . \u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\n\u25a0 \u2022ns# \u2022*\u2022' \u2022       .- '^4-\nMrs.  A.  J.  liurnsldo  of  Toronto  Is\nspending  a   few. weeks  with   Mr,  and\nMrs.   H.   M.   WhlniStcr,   Third   street,\nFalrview.\n\u25a0\" \u25a0 \u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nRobert  Ferguson,* Kerr ' apartments,\nleft Saturday  for the coast.     ,        ,\nP.. T. D. Celle-**f< Vancouver\/ for-i\nmerly of tbe Central* school staff,1 Nelson, Is In the city for a.fewdays.\n\u25a0 -'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022.   \u00bb-.. \u2022\u25a0 ?. \u25a0 \u25a0 ,-\u25a0, ;\u25a0\nFred* Barbcris,   Victoria   street,   left\nou a trip to tho coast.Saturday,' .-.*-..,.*\n\u25a0i''     ;\u2022\u25a0 \u2022 \u2022. -\u25a0 .\u25a0*\u2022'.-'',\nM. McNeill of Bonnlngton spent the\nweek-end In Nelson.\n'\u25a0'.'\u2022\u2022\u2022\nMr.' and Mrs. j; Stanley Miller, Kerr\napartments, have had as their guest\nthe latter's sister, Mrs. S. C. Starratt,\nwho left yesterday for Calgary,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Robertson, Rose-\nmont. motored to Harrop Saturday to\nattend  the  opening of  tbe   ferry.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Barclay of Kaslo spent Saturday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u25a0'\u2022-.\u2022\nMrs. J. Campbell of Taghum was a\ncity visitor Saturday. *\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT.   E.   Maddock   spent   the   week-end\nwith  his  famllv ut  Procter.\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022,\u00bb\u25a0\u2022\nMrs. William Klrby and sou of Slo-\nc&n City spent Saturday tn town.\nI. It. Poole left yesterdny for Calgary, whero he will attend a meeting\nof the Mountain Lumber Manufactut-\neis* association. *\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. .Ktiineth Cimpbell wem\nammig Nel?onltea attending the opening of the Harrop-Longbeach ferry,\nJackie Williams, Silica'1 street, has\nreturned from a visit with Mr. Hnd\nMrs. J. D.  MacDonald nt Cedar  Point.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nN. N. Bentley. Erickson lumberman,\nsjient Saturday ,in town.\n\u2022 - \u2022\u2022\u25a0>.'\nMiss Penrl Leahy of Salmo And'her\nsister. Gertrude, were city visitors\nSaturday.\" Miss Leahy, 'a'graduate of\nSt. Joseph's academy, has accented a\nposition as teacher at  Kamloops, t\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022       ,i\nMrs. W. T. AVynne of Appledale \"motored tn town lo shop Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. I*. S. Mackersy and daughter.\nMonica, havo left for Vsncouver and\nVictoria, where they will spent the\nnext month.\nDenis Hotson and Jack Ink apant the\nweek-end nt Harrop. guests of Mr,\nand Mrs.  Robert Quln.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nLieut.-Col. Fred Lister of Creston\nwas a city visitor  Saturday,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nII. D. Hall, manager of C.P.R. telegraphs, left yesterday for Iteglna on\nvacatlom\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSir. nnd'Mrs. John Norcross, Granite\nroad, attended tho opening of tho Harrop-Longbeach  ferrv, \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. M. Macintosh and daughter,\nwho have been vf si ting in the city,\nleft yesterday for their homo in Winnipeg. Mrs. Macintosh was accompanied by Mrs. W. Blanchard. who\nwilt travel with ber as far as Wlnni\niwg, en route-to Chicago.\n\u2022 \u00ab    \u2666\nPremier John Oliver left Saturday\nTor Victoria, nfter officially opening\nthe   Harrop-Longbeach   ferry.\n\u2022 \u00ab    \u2022\nMr. nnd Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Mill\nstreet, received word Saturday that\ntheir daughter. Miss Lillian, who has\ngraduated. .from St. Luke's hospital,\nKpnknncr wri* stricken with append!-\nlitis, necossitsting an immediate operation. Mra. McDonald left yesterday\nfor Spokane lo be with her daughter.\nn r \u25a0' t? irr   -; *\n1S&__:\nNiagara^falls Is \"slowly''1 comffilttjng\nsuicide,\"- according to Secretary of\nCdntmerce Hoover,;, who declared,'.last\nwoek.'that'it was very -important.the\nUnited' States and Canada-Should\nreAohr sohie> agreement\" trt prevent\nfurther' diversion of '-'urater - from the\nMlltr if.' their -scenic : grandeur \"is to\nbe preserved to postcrlty.v X 'modification of-.*.the present treaty* could bring\nthe desired.remedy^'      - \u25a0\u25a0'; ''\n-*>' .'. ';> O r \u25a0:\u2022**'-\".') :\"\u2022 \u25a0\nMARION LHTCH \u25a0\nTeacher of Singing and Piano\n8tudios  N*. S Gilk.r Building.\nRe*id\u00abnc*i   Phon* 687R.\nLetterheads and\nEnvelopes\nAn^ \"BestPrice\n\u2022-, \u25a0\u25a0-\u2022 -'\u25a0?-   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    \u2022(-. '      . '.'.''\n;\u2014'Phone or-mail us for quotations.       >\n\", .- ,'\u25a0[) * : -\\   \\        }: '    ; .,.-';?      ...        '\\*\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nPHONE 144 (Two Linei) ;       V\nPRINTING   -   RULING   .-MOKBINDING\neSStirn\nv^HrH\nMr*.   G.\nVancouver,\nBruce   left   SaluiJujr   for\nTV. T. Clioale welil lo Harrop Saturday  to attend  tho' ferry opening.\nMiss Eva Armstrong of Vancouver,\nlaho ha* been visiting In Kaslo. was\nIn   Nelson   Saturday   on   her  way   to\noMB^1\nronTRAITS OF' DISTlNOnON\n715  Bak.r  81.    Phon* 46.\nWILSONS\nFLY PADS\nKill them all, and the\ngerms tooJ 10c apacket\nat Druggists, Grocers\n.. 9X|d General Stories.\nTrail--, to  spend a ifew  days.befors  ro\nturning'to' tbe cohst.\"1\"  * v \"'\nV ,   ,   .-;....\u201e_.....\u2022\u00bb.\u00bb.\u00bb,  -\u00bbi, ^.. -..',...\u25a0   '\nMrs.iHHl of.Willow.VolrU^pcpt Saturday* in town. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0*.' \u25a0-\u25a0\u2022! '** \u2022 \u25a0*\u2014 \u25a0-.'\ni..    ilTy,   \u00ab.\u25a0\u2022-\u2022'..*.\u2022;    ?l  ,*?.\"*** .;..\u00ab,'\nA. McQueen,, Kaslo., asneasor>.lfl on\nhla annual trip over, the Columbia\nriver, aha Slocan district.\n\u25a0   \u2022   \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.\nClarenco Cunningham of Alamo, Slocan mining, operator, spent, yesterday\nIn town.  \u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W.' Louis of Willow Tolnt\nspent the latter part of the week in\nNelson. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u2022 *   -\nJ. J. Campbell left last evening for\nVernon. _. ., : ,\n\u2022 \u2022    t.\nC. I. Archibald, Salmo lumberman,\nleft  Saturday for Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022 . i\nMrs. H. M. Whlmster haH been called\nto ErlcltRon by the death of her slater,\nMrs. T. Lewis of Manitoba.\n';..\u2022'\u2022\u2022..\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\nAlderman J. H.  Bennett  was'among\n(hose   who   motored   to   Harrop  Saturday to attend the opening of the ferry\n<\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022    \u2022      . .....\"\n. J. Hopwood and Frank Roy motored\nto Trail yesterday.    \u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMrs. Ii W. Kopeck I of Appledale\nwaa In the city shopping Saturday.\n\u2022 ;\u2022\u2022,...\nMr. and Mrs. S. J. McDonald and iHi\nfsnt son, James Kifaft, Mill atreet\nhave, returned from a visit to Mra.\nMcDonald's relatives In Vancouver.\n\u2022 *    1  .\u25a0\nMiss Helen McDonell of Rossland\narrived In tho city Friday to visit\nMiss  Margaret  Ulesterer.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss  Ueorgina   Motion was a 4tnt1t'\nend visitor in Nelaon at tho home of\nIter parents. Mr. and-Mrs. George F.\nMotion. Baker, street. t Mba. Motion haa\nbeen, holidaying-,at- liaiitf, nhd* after\nspending a few days a( Halcyon not\nbPrUiga ls returning 'to Iteglna via\nNt-ljfon.. She waa accompanied by Miss\nEva. Cheesman of-Maple Creek. Sask.\nMiss Motion ia on the staff-, of the\nmunicipal  public affairs,  Iteglna.*\nKING RESENTS\nDICTATION BY\nCONSERVATIVES\n(Continued From Page One)\nlaration whether it Is or not the intention of the government to call\nanother session of parliament before\nadvising dissolution. Premier King\nobserves thnt thn government first\nmet parliament with ft majority of\none beforo tho'spcaker Was appointed.\nToday after four sessions ond 91,\nby-elections,'the government had a\nmajority of olio without counting\ntho speaker. \"This, surely,\" ht' adds,\n\"does not look like any. luck of\nconfidence on tho part of tho electorate such us would n*ces\u00abitHto a\ngeneral election before another session.\" He remarked that Mr. Meighen\ndid not hesitate, when Sh1 ltobcrl\nBorden resigned In July, 1920, to\nform a Conservative administration\nand hold office for a' year nnd ft\nhalf without any authorization on\nthe, part of the people- \"Of all\npcoplo is tho world,\" says Premier\nKing, \"It 111 becomes Mr, Meighen\nto attempt to dictate the time of\ndissolution.\"\nPlans   Political  Moots\nMr.- King continues by stating\nthat it has been bis' custom each\nyear as soon after prorogation\npossible, to make a review of the\nwork of the session in an address to\nhis constituents, making this ad\ndress the first of a s&fles df polltl\ncat addresses In different parts of\nthe province or Dominlbn.' If*\nstates that he still Intends to follow\nthis practice and is in'communication with friends in North York as to\na suitable date and place for\nmeeting.\nThe statement In part follows:\n\"Mr. Meighen is saying we should\nhave a general election this year.\nHe was very careful not to Introduce into parliament any motion to\nthat effect, or any formal expression\nof want of confidence in the administration. He was particularly quiet\nwhen the results of the provincial\nelections in Saskatchewan wero announced and he recalled thft(, under\nthe new redistribution, Saskatchewan would send the third largest representation to the h6USfl td be followed - also by larger representations\nthan at present from'Alberta and\nManitoba. The changes < Of ftoVeftl*\nment In Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is alone responsible tot Mr.\nMeighen'a change of attitude\" ahd\noutlook, not any change In.tbtf policies under which, or the manner In\nwhloh federal affairs are being administered.\nWero Local Issues \u25a0\n\"The leader of the opposition fails\nto reflect-that these provincial elections were.fought out on purely local issues and have no significance\nfederally, beyond the fact that our\npast political history-has shown\nthat.where the public,comes to believe*.that one party ls. about to\nhave a lease of power in the federal\narena, lt ls Inclined to balance matters politically by giving Its support\nfor the time being ,In not a few\nof the provinces -to the - other party.\nThis was'the\" case In the days when\nthe Conservatives under Sir John A.\nMacDonald,  wore' in\" powor^at-Ot-\nWI Baker Street   Phone $00        < .\u25a0>,     *    K\nFur arid\nA Perfect Combination of\nCorrectness and Smartness\nWine-colored SQedine fabric,, trimmed ? with\nDyed Fax ;iir a new Brown shade, introduces\none model.,;A*luxurious use of Squirrel and\nlong-hatted furs enhance the attractions of\nstill another; Modified versions of the front\nflare, and equally prominent are the Wrap-'\naroufid models of slender lines. You will see\nhere all the modes most correct. Prices vary\nwith style.and quality from-  \".\n$45.00 to S175.00\n*.-1\na\nFormer Liberal Member\nBlame for agricultural decline _ in\nEngland is .placed on tho female aex\nand the lack of rural domestic science\nby Mrs. Margaret Wlntrlngham. former . Liberal member of parliament.\n\"The farmer's wife is not as interested In doing the adjunct.1) of farm\nwork as she used to be, nnd that Is\none of the reasons Why-agriculture\nla declining,\" Mrs. Wlntrlngham declared.\nro long as it Is supported- by the\nhouse of commons, has the legal\nright to continue In office- until\nJanuary, 1927. We feel no reason\nto believe' that such support as we\nhaVe all along been able to command\nin parliament will not continue to\nbe accorded at another session.\nConserve.ive Long Terms\n\"Conservative administrations have\nnot hesitated to continue In office\nto hnd beyond the full period time\nfor \"Which they were elected. The\nConservative administration of 1891\nto 1896 held office to the Ian hour\nof * the last day of the full legal\nterm, notwithstanding that during\nthis, period there was not feWer than\nfive different premiers* Sir J. A. MacDonald, Sir John Thompson, Sir John\nAbbott, Sir Mackensle Bowell und\nSir Charles Tupper. Those were the\ndays when'knighthood.was In flower.\nThe Conservative government of Sir\n\u2022Robert Borden, elected in 1911, held\noffice until 1917, a year beyond the\nterm provided by the constitution.\nThe extension of. that year beyond\nthe parliamentary' term wns brought\nabout by an amendment of constitution during a- time pf -war.\nWILLOW POINT DANCE\nWAS LAST OF SEASON\n' WILLOW POINT. Aug. V>. *~ The\ndance given In Crystal hall by the\nWillow Point Tennis club last night\nwas the last of the season and was a\ncolnplete success. Owing to the sudden change of weather, the crowd was\nnot ns large as ut recent dances, but,\nhowever, expenses were covered and\nthe club has a balance on hand.\nCanada's Golf Champ\ntuava and imwt of th<5 provinces\nbecome Liberal\" also otter Sir Wilfrid Laurler enme lo power, when\nnot a few of the provincial governments became Conservative. It will\nbe recalled. It wo* while the Conservative\", under Sir Itobcrt Borden\nand Mr. Meighen, were OBaln In office at Ottnwa. that the Progressives\ntirnt gained power In the provinces.\nThird I-orlle-i Wi-\n\"Another noticeable feature of\npolitical tendencies In Camilla is\nthat third parties have como into\nbeing almost invariably when the\nConservatives were In office at\nOttawa, and have as Invariably disappeared under Liberal administrations, witness the rise and decline\nof the patrons ot Industry movement prior ,to and . succeeding 1806.\nalso the rise ot the Progressive\nmovement between 1917 and 1922\nand Its gradual decline ever since.\nShould I bo alive after a Liberal\nadministration lias been continuously\nIh ottlco at Ottawa for 43 years, I\nshall undertake to do my part to\nsee that Mr. Meighen or his successor In the leadership ot tho opposition ls given a \u2022 chance, by way of\nChange, to form a Conservative administration and I beliovo the public\nwill be with me.\nMeighen'* Record Not Forgotten\n'. \"I do not believe, however, that the\nrecord of Meighen'* brief admlnistrn\ntlon' Is as yet sufficiently forgotten\nto cause the public to wish to see\nIts many errors repeated, for a while\nat least. In asking for an election\nnow that parliament Is no longer Jn\nsession, and because he believes the\ngovernment has this step In contemplation, and would, therefore, havo\nIt appear that ho had forced the\nsituation. Mr. Meighen forgets that\nthe only alternative In tho way of\ngovernmental policy ho has to otter\nls the program of 1921 on which he\nwas so roundly defeated, not having\ncarried a single seat in six provinces\nof the, nine, and that it was this\nIdentical program he put forward\nanew ln tho shape of a manllesto\nwhen parliament assembled at the last\nsession, and which when resented ln\nthe house of commons in June as an\namendment to go Into supply was\nvoted down on a division of 147 to\n82, the largest majority recorded\nagainst any motion declaratory of\nparty policy Jn many years, If not In\ntho history ot tho parliament ot\nCanada.\nIt was noticeable that , on that,\nparticular division, Liberal, Progressive, Labor and Independent members,\nIncluding tho one lady member, Joined\ntogether to declare their opposition\nto tho platform that Mr. Meighen\nnow offers to the country ln the namo\nof his party. In these circumstances\nwhat con thero be In anything Mr.\nMeighen has to offer the country\nwhich would Justify the bringing on\nof o general election at this time,\nto say nothing of a possible chango\nof government.\nI. Can  Remain Till   1927\n\"Under our constitution.\u2022 the.term of\na. single parliament Is fixed'at five\nyeara unless In the opinion of' tho\nministry of the day, or of Hi* Excellency, there la in existence -substantial reasons tor a dissolution before\nthe expiration of the full term, paving regard to the provisions of. the\n'coiutltuUon, th* present ministry \u2014\nShows Visitors\nAssaying Plant\nand Processes\nA party of the Rritlsh teachers,\nwhile on their visit to Nelson Saturday, were shown the ways of extracting gold and silver from ore, by\nE. W. Wlddowson. He first showed\nthom how the ore came In to tho\nmill, antl how it wnn crushed, then\nfluxed so that it would melt, as In\nthe   big   furnaces.\ni They were shown how the furnaces were operated, and various\notlur operations wero described to\nthem. Souvenirs of gold and silver\nOre. wore given to tho party, tin\nmembers stating that the only min\nIng they had seen on their trip\nacross Canada waa done at Hud-\nbury,   Out.\nF. Tbomason, of New York, kill.-\/!\nhimself nt his summer homo on Uin\ncastor island, near Brock vi lie.\nMISS   QLENNA   COLLETT\nPresent Canadian  open  golf cham->\npion and former United* States chamiv\nplon, whD will como to Canada' nekt\nmonfh  to defend  her Cnnudian  title.\"\nJn Baden, Out. ; ''\n 1\u2014-\u25a0\u2014 tm&m\nTrail Sheiks Thirst\nfor Some Nelson Gore;\nIssue General Deft\nTho Trail Sheiks yesterday issued\" '\"\".\na challenge to any ball nine In Nel* *-.\nuon to a game to bo staged lit *.'. *v\nTrail within the next two weeks, tha\nnews being brought frum Trait by*\nauto. The Sheiks defeated the Tral' l\u00bb:t\nsenior team yesterday, nnd nre hq#\nout after the Nelaon teams.. It\u00bbtf|.\na challenge to tho Nelsqn-'-iWiiiOrit''\ntho Elks, Gyrus, or nny other tear*\nthat feels capable ,of handing thi\nSheiks  a  defeat. . *\n'\u25a0vfrl\nMary Boland died as second vie-1\ntlm or fire at Klrkland take which\nclaimed  lite of her  younger  sister.\nTlte    situation    of   the    lieglstered\nOffice  ut   tho   It.   C.   Timber  Lands,.\nLtd.,   has   been  changod   to  Tort  Albernl,   P.   C   lo   which   address   oil\ncommunications  should  be  directed.\nLocal Inquiries may b\u00ab made to\nAir. P. 0. Murey uf the Nelson Iron\n\"Wurks,  Lid. - .---   ,\nFor the B. C. Timber Lands,\nLtd.\nROBERT FERGUSON, Secretary.\n24th   August,  1925.\nSimmons' Beds\nBuilt for Sleep\nSPECIAL\nDouble Bed, 4 ft. 6 in., Walnut Finish; Continuous\nPost, 2-inch; 5 Fillers, Flat. Coil Spring. No\nsway. Felt Mattress,'Art Tick, Roll Edge. Com-\nplete for          $39.25\n.Single White \u2022 Enamel Iron Bed, Spring and Mat*\n.  tress $21.00\nSlightly Damaged Bed, Double; 2-inch Post; White\nEnamel.   For $12.00\nStandard Furniture Co.\nCOMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS, NELSON, B.C.\n mmmmm\n\u2022\"\u25a0*\"\n'. ho& C\n\u2022Page Six.\nffHl NELSON DAILY NEWS; V MONDAY MORNING,. AI?GUKT! 24^1925\n'ML\naaaaW\nimSH NELSON\n\u00abT LANCASHIRE\nACOTTONOPOLIS\n*\n&\nirrows* Birthplace Boasts\nINow Fifty Thousand\ny ;j Looms; Big Populace\nifeoK NAME FROM INN\nIfAMED FOR SEA HERO\nTypical British Industrial\n[j City Progressive and\n|f;       Hustling\n' '(By William Burrows of \"Sunny\nKelson, New Ze.iland. who described\nIri- previous t rtlclca Nelson, B.C., and\nbis present .home; Nelson, New Zealand) \u2022\u25a0\u25a0''\",-''\n\"Our Lancashire namesake town of\nNelson is situated in tha northeastern\ncorner of that densely populated,\ncounty, famous the world over for Its\nmanufactures of cotton poods, of\nwhich Nelson is now one of its chief\nmanufacturing centers,' ranking the\nfifth largest in the county, and has\nnOw nbout 47.000 weaving looms, for\na'populatlon estimated at between 42,-\n000 and 43.000. and clnlnis to be one\nof the most modern, up-to-date, bright,\nc'ean and healthy towns In Lancashire. \u2022 \\\n' Great and Llttlt Marsden\n\"Unlike \"Sunny Nelson,\" Lancashire's\nNelson was not \"founded'* and settled\nwider that name. The hamlets from\nwhich it has evolved were known In\nhistory for hundreds of years ns\n\u25a0 \"Great and Little Marsden.\", At the\nbeginning of last century, when Nel-\n\u00abon won his famous victory, the population was only  2500,\n\u2022 Boon after that famous event, an Inn\n\u25a0was being built at an ansle of about\na-mlle between the two Marsdens, and\nwaa given the name \"Nelson Inn' \u2014a\nrebuilt hotel now stands on the same\nspot, in the center of tho town\u2014and\nthe  - ...-\n.__ old cronies In the hamlets on the\nbillaldes used to Invite each other \"To\ncum on daan t'oth Nelson,\" and from\nthis the village that was growing up\naround, the Inn came to be called\n\u2022\u2022Nelson,,, ln Marsden, and In 1861,\nwhen granted local KPverhnu-nt In tin-\nform of a local board. It waa designated so officially, and retained this\nhandle to its name until the Incorporation of the town In U90.\nI'\u2022 V    Weaving  Transformed  It\nIn the first decade of last century\nthe population of hoth Marsdens -was\nabout 2500. By the year 1881 the\npopulation had grown to about 10,000.\n\u2022\u2022 and by 1S91 had more than doubled.\nund haa added more than 20,000 in the\nintervening  30 odd years.\n\u2022, ,i In the first half of the last century\n<he district only Increased In population by 1000, and tlie progressive era\nof Nelson can be  traced  from the ad-\n\" vi nt of power-loom weaving, which\nbegan away back in the '50s, prior to\nwhich most of the inhabitants were\nengaged In hnnd-loom weaving. In\nthe late '60s began what Is known a.-***\nthe \"loom and power system,\" under\nWhich companies built and equipped\nlarge weaving sheds and warehouses,\nand let these off In sections, larpe or\n[.mall, and ninny of Nelson's now largest manufacturers becran under that\nsystem, with from 20 to 100 looms,\nwho today are running from 2000 to\nBono.    \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -?**\n-There arc now more than 12Q manufacturing firms, with, as nlready indicated, nearly 50.000 looms, running\nunder normal trade conditions, but\nthese have beon under\"tbe worst, with\ntbe longest depression In the town's\nhistory, since 1921, but appear to bc\nrow slowly picking up acaln.\nMany Public Utilities '\nStill Nelson claims to be a real\n\u2022\u25a0live, progressive community.\" Its\nmunicipal council of 24 members. Including IR councillors and six nlder-\nTr.en. mayor Included, has ever since\nIncorporation been run on pmcressive\nand democratic lines. Its public services are numerous and up-to-date, and\nircludo two larse t?as works plants, an\nelectric light and power plant, and\nwaterworks consist ine of five large\nstorage reservoirs. These three municipal services serve not only Nelson,\ntut also the adjoining small towns of\nBarrowford nnd Brierfleld, or a total\npopulation of nearly fiO.Ooo.\nThe town has also a well-equipped\nnnd fine service of municipal electric\ntrams, and tin so nre supplemented by\na recently Inaugurated service of motor busses, and has also through running connections witb two other tram-\n\"Way systems to surrounding towns\nnnd villages, including Trawden. Lan-\nShawbrldge nnd Colne, Burnley nnd\nT'adlham.    Tbe town has also lhe most\nw modern of sewerage works and refuse\n\u25a0d-rstructor.\n\"It has also an extensive system of\nparden   allotments,   and   its   latest   in-\n-rovatlon has been n municipal housini*\n. .neheme on a larg* scale, with 12\nbouses   to   tbe  acre,  as   compared   with\n.the old ord-pr uf between 30 and 40\ncottages  to   th*  acre.     Tbe   houp>?s   tn\n. Nelson are built of stone, lined wllh\nbrick walls, and are all of Hie two-\nstoried   type,, with   the   exception   of   a\n: Tew of almshouse;*'. The streets ate\nrJI paved, with trimmed paving stones,\nrnd tho sidewalks are flagged with\n\u25a0stone or cement j-lnhs.    Tlie streets ;ire\n' mainly   treeless,   and   gardens  of   more\n' than four or five feet are a luxury\n-that only a small proportion of cottages possessed prior to tbe municipal\n''\u2022housing   scheme   now  being   lnauqiurat-\n^ed.    But  Nelson  is  well provided with\n\"parks   and   recreation   grounds,   having\n'at least three of each in various parts\nof the town, fn addition to large foot-\ntall    nnd    cricket    grounds,    municipal\n\u2022\u2022bowling greens, tennis courlSaand other\nplaying areas.\nA City of Clubfl\n--\"Nelson   Is   well   supplied   with   places\n. rf   amusement,   and   these   include   n\n\u25a0 theater, palace of varieties, half \u00bb\n; 4cten cinema*, dance-halls and concert\nballs.     The town   can   boast of   having\n!ess   fully   licenced   public   bouses   in\nproportion    to    population    than    nny\nother town  in Lancashire, but  ibi^   Is\nvtry   seriously   discounted   hy   having\nmore worklngmen's  drink   selling clubs\n.than any other town of its size\u2014these\n\"numbering about  30.    Thero nre nbout\nA9   places   of   worship* nnd   about   thr-\nname  number  of   Sunday   schools.     Tt\n\u25a0haa   also   a   very   active \u2022 free   Church\n'Council,   and   united   churches,   temp*r-\n; ahce   council.   Band   of    Hope   union,\n'Good   Templars,    B.W.T.A..    and    other\n\"Counteractive    agencies,     and    on     a\n, plebiscite  being  taken  during  tlie  war\ni a,'-large  majority  voted   for   total  prohibition,  showing  a  healthy  sentiment\n\u25a0 in; the town.\n1, \u25a0\u25a0   Situational  and .Social  Bid*\n!' ftelaon     has     12     elementary     day\n\u25a0schools,      one      technical       wconday\nachool    and    five    technical    evening\n^'schools.   Including   a   weaving   school.\n;,XHfnay  not  be  generally   known   that\n-\"W, H. Foster, who has been for many\n:>years   a   resident  of   tho   British   Co-\n\"Jumbia    Nelson,    was    at   one    period\n\"(more than 30-years ago) on the night\n\u25a0i'schools'   teaching   staff.   In   the   Lan-\nf'OABhlre Nelson.    Many havo graduated\n' It:   these   schools   to   the   universities.\n\u2022Hand   several have become  members  of\n\u2022 ^'pprllamcnt, and many have filled some\n\"of  the  highest positions tn public life\nApt that and other districts.\n[I   , The town ls one of the mor.t musical\n*' In' the north of England. The town has\n':;aome famous church and chapel choirs\nJ and  these  have  produced  several  glee\n'parties,  two of  which   have  taken  the\nhighest prises at musical competitions\n'in many parti of the United Kingdom.\n| The  town  hai also  some  fine  orchestra,   symphonies,   clef   clubs   and   an\n-loljl established prise brass band.    The\n' municipal   council   engages   these,- and\n1 j\u00bbny  famous bands, to give concerts\nin the parks on Sunday afternoons and\nevenings \u25a0 during summer months. ,\n\u25a0. Cooperation novrlsAM ..' \u25a0\nMany people ln Nelaon own their\nown houses, and , h*ve been very materially helped to do so by the three\ntutldlng societies, and the cooperative\nsociety. The latter has more than\n10,000 members and carries on more\nthan SO different trades or businesses,\nemploys more than 400 hands, and ban\nassets at more than. \u00a3300,000. Tbe\nfoclety has Us own free library, toad-\ning. rooms, billiard rooms, Institutes,\nlecture and concert halls and ^nigftt\nclasses, and owns and manages farms,\nweaving sheds, Joinery works and\nlaundries. \u2022   .    '\u25a0\u25a0. \u201e\nNelson has very fine ami well-\nequipped public baths, built about 12\nyears ago. The cooperative has a fine\ngymnasium, and the corporation are\nintending to . build an educational\ngymnasium when they erect a new\ntechnical rchool. Many of the Sunday schools have also well-equipped\ninstitutes     and      gymnasiums. At\nhomes'* arc also a great Teature In the\nhocjal  work of  the churches. .\nNelson is a town of unlons*-polltlc-\nal, trades unions, and many other\nkinds of unions and clubs. The Conservative and Liberal clubs have -each\nmore than 500 members, and socialist\nclubs, several hundreds. Trades union\nclubB are practically as numerous as\ntrades unions. The Weavers union\nhas moro than 17,000 members.\nThe people of Nelson are of a\nthrifty type. The Yorkshire Penny\nbank, the Cooperative small savings\nbank, the post office, and most of the\nmills have saving clubs, and -large\nsums are saved up In these and disbursed on the eve of the annual holidays. \u25a0 . ; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..\"\u25a0'\nHas Rail Benefactions\nAmong the many of its past and\npresent citizens- who have showered\nbenefactions upon the town havo been\nthe Astley family, who presented a\nnursing and maternity hospital to the\ntown, ond tlie recently .knighted fair\nAmos Nelson has been a munificent\ncontributor to all tjie local charities\nboth during and since tho great war,\nand lias just recently offered to give\n110,000 towards a new hospital that is\nto cost between \u00a340.000 and \u00a350.000.\nFir Amos, trading* under the name of\nJames Nelson & Sons limited, Is the\nlargest cotton manufacturer In tne\ntown, en.ploying nearly 2000' bands,\nand for some years waB a town tft;un-\nclllor, alderman and mayor. Ma.\"-\"\nknowles Walton, J.P., some years ago\nbuilt and presented to the town about\nr. dozen almshouses for the aged poor.\nThere are many other notable generous gifts, especially connected with\nthe present' soldiers' memorial hospital, known as Reedyford Hall, which\nfrom 1914 to 1920 was used as a\nmilitary hospital, more than 3000 soldiers and sailors passing through ab\npatients.\nCllmats and Contour\nThe climate of Nelson, like that of\nLancashire generally, Is of a moist\nnature, and it Is largely this factor\nthat has made Lancashire what it Is\ntoday\u2014the greatest cotton manufacturing area in the world\u2014moisture being one of the most essential factors\nfor the weaving of the cotton threads,\nand, ns nlready shown. Nelson now\nstands only fourth or fifth down the\nlist of the largest weaving districts\nIn the county. The fall of rain is\nspread over a large portion of the\nyear, and for the past two or three\nyears the number of days on which\nrain fell has been abnormally high-\nwell on to 250\u2014and especially during\n1924. The annual rainfall over a\nseries of years averages about 52\nInches, but last year It was considerably higher. The district also gets\nfogs, frosts and snows, but of the latter the total fall annually is much\nless now than It was 30 and 40 years\nago. This ls no doubt due In some\nmeasure to the tremendous growth In\npopulation of that and many surrounding Industrial towns, the population of Lancashire being greater\nthan that o\u00a3 Scotland, or Switzerland,\nor Norway; tna-.' of Manchester alone\nbeing twice the tolnl of all New Zealand. Nelson ]s abon.t 3\u00b0 miles northeast of Manchester, ana l\u00ab within easy\nradius of the large am* well-known\ntowns of Burnley, Accrlng-i00- Liack-\nburn. Preston, Bolton, Wiga.\". Bury.\nBochdalc and Oldham. \u201e\nBuilt on Two Streams\nNelson is bultt on the slopes' \u00b0*\nWalvcrdene nnd Calder valleys throng**\nwhich the stream and river so named\nmeander their way toward the estuary of the River Kibble, and is In\nnear proximity tn the Pendle Forest\nand Old Pendle Hill, famous in history as the home of the \"P.cndle\nwitches.\"\nThe contour of the country around\nNelson is one of hills and dates, undulating In their formation, and dotted with a large number of farms\nwith their old English farmhouses and\nbarns. All are- devoted to dairying,\nand ate backed by large areas of\nmoorland, which is used as sheep\nruns. Except for.a period during the\ngreat war. there lias not been much,\nif any, cereal grown in the Nelson\ndistrict for nearly a century, but of\nlatfi years there has been a great expansion of allotments for vegetable\nglowing and  for poultry farming.\nThe town is well served by its\nweekly newspapers, the Leader and\nColney and Js'elson Times..\nNelson Is an inland town, from 40\nto r.O miles from the sea coa\u00abt, the\nchief resort of which, \"Breezy\"\nBlackpool, has no compeer for its fine\nstretch of smooth, hard sands, its\nmagnificent marine parades built In\ntiers, Us three piers that nre built\nfar out into the sea. nnd ore replete\nwith dance halls and other amusements. Fronting tho sea. are innumerable places of entertainment, and the\nfumous big wheel and great tower.\nAlong (he coast are South port and\nMorecambe, u few miles from which\nIs the ]j\u00abk<* district. Including Windermere, Thirlmere. Collision and others.\nMany point*- of interest have bad to\nbe omitted from this \"pen picture\" of\ntbe writer's native homeland town of\nNelson, and Its surroundings, that nre\nbrimful of historical lore and scenic\nbeauty.\nCHURCHES ENJOY THEIR HONEYMOON\nSEES CANADA AS    ,\nSOT^illPlRE\nAbovo are shown Mr, and Mr*. Frederic Cameron Church on their ^honeymoon\u2022 at -.Atlantic;City. \u2022 Tho bride\nwas formerly Miss Muriel Vanderbilt, and her wedding: was one ot.ijie event* of the 'Newport social season.\nTheir honoymoon was interrupted by the serious  Illness of Mrs. Chunl.'s sister, Consuelo Vandjrblll.' \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022.'.\nC. Shorey, 70, milk driver, may\nlose hi* life after his truck was hit\nby a train near Belleville.   .\n\"Waitress in Swiss hotel' con**acted\nfatal case of. lockjaw from faring\nsscond-hand earrings. ;\n\/\nBerlin's - dogowncrs threaten parade of 300,000 animals - as protest\na gal net increased tax. \u2022    '\nProfessor ^^''Madbijai^'^i'^f\nv Bristol '\u25a0 S&s Great Fu-\nv    ture for.Continent t\n-MONTREAL,  Aug.* tJ.\u2014Tlie  growing\nImportance' of Cma:a an une of ,tne\nleading units of the British 'Empire\n'Was tiressed bjr C.' H; Maclnriis, pro*\nfessor of' colon'al .and economic his*\n'ory \u00bbt*> the uni-'cratty of Bristol, England,* upon his arrival here on hi* v>f\u00bb\"\nfn Calgary, Alta;-.the place of hla\n.Urth.:: -,   '   f      ;,'. \u2022 ;     .\n'fa-, fjft* iiind. nothln-T can stop tht\n*!.North American continent from becom-\n',\u25a0 '-.. \"I \"mi* \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0- \"i\u00bb ehtet (nflutfnce of\nthe future, and I feel that In theycjrs\ni ,' ; '. \u25a0 '?\"\u2022>\u2022\u25a0 >\u00bbery Pkellhood of\nCanada\" becoming the .center of the\nii *.,.-.i \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0 v^mmonwealth' of '-< '\u25a0 nations,.\nWth , tlte'v necessary, political \u25a0 power\ntranv-ferredT to her.Mhe' said.  - * -  -   >\nProfessor . Maclrines graduated .... at\nLVlhoUJ-in and Oxford universities. He\nlost die sight of'both eyes as the re-\nrtilt of wounds received during? the\nwar. This handicap did not prevent\nhim from taking up his present post*\n''on. He Is the author of \"'\"The British Commonwealth and Its Unsolved\nl-'rubleiem\" -     ' \\ .- o .\nVeu-on. for Strength\n\"There, mvy l\u00bbe tome who would\nadvocate that .Canada should go forward- as nn independent nation, out-\nnide tne British commonwealth. I fall,\nto see this line of reasoning,'-for ' the\nfact thst Canada la within the Empire, appears to be one of the chief\nreasons of her strength,\" . declared\nProfessor Maclnnes. ,\n\"I wish,\" continued the visitor, \"that\nCanada would consider more than she\ndoes: at present, the advisability of\ntaking a share of the responsibilities\nin the distant parts of the Empire\n>or. that reason I would welcome more\nof the colonial services being thrown\ntpon to: Canadians. The secretary\nfor the colonies and overseas dominions s alive, to- thla fact, and* I hope\nIt will .materialize.'? He also empha-\n*>scd the.importance of the-Pacific In\nthe future affairs of the world\nCROSS!\nAOTOlfflitS\nOhio  State. Marks\n\/   'RrJad Inhere >M<\n^a sharp\n* COLUMBUS, Ohtb,' AU***-*!.\n-the sides of .Ohio's h'gbwgs\nout tbe length of the .stSto i\nand  Infrequent; Intervals' s\ncrosses. , They - mark >potS\ntomoblllsts have been.kill*\nAutomobilo i drivers ,'royruB\ncurve, in'many sections, come squarely unon a white cross,-or possibly two \\\nor three, mute .reminders that- one or\nmore persons have been1 killed at that\nipf't.      '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0',.:   .<+\\\\   .   \u25a0'..,.,\u25a0     ,\nGovernor Vic Don'ahey\" was* respon-\nf-'.ble for the, placing vof^.the crosses.\nIt was his idea that-they* would help\n\u25a0'\u25a0 v d\"\"*n, automobilo fatalities by\nmaking,' drivers more cautious, They\nhave not been installed long enough,\ni.o   \u25a0.\u25a0ver, to uiaw any-conclusions.\nMany automobile drivers say they\nexperience a , linking sensation when\nthey suddenly come upon the white\ncrosses. The governor has bean con*\ndf-mned for the move on the ground it\ngives rl.se to morbid thbughts; others\nhave praised It as being a good \"Mda-\nUvo\" for reckless drivers.\nFish Peddlers'Were\nForced to Buy Ice\nWhenChloride Short\nHOME, Aug. 23.\u2014When the Roman\nsummer reached its most-intense tor*.\nridity, complaints Increased that fish\npeddlers loath to spend money for\nsufficient ice, were resorting to the\nuse of bichloride of mercury to keep\ntheir Wares \"fresh.*'-;   . .\nNewspapers took up the complaints\nand published warnings to the public,\ntogether with ' caricatures showing\navaricious fishmongers Injecting embalming fluid with a hypodermic\nneedle into fish.        .   '\u25a0\nJAPAN  PLANS  A  BALL\nPARKIN GARDEN SHRINE\nTOKYO, Aug. 2.1.\u2014The spirits of\nthe ancient lords of Japan may be\nexpected to hold an Indignation meeting If plans promulgated by leading\nJapanese nre carried out. The somewhat revolutionary proposal Is to\ncreate, nt tho cost of 750,000 yen, tho\nlargest baseball park In Japan In the\nexternal garden of the famous Meljl\nshrine. The promoters of tho venture\nfigure that the shrine gardens arc\nIdeal for a baseball park in that they\nare easily accessible  to all of  Tokyo.\nIt Is reported that the Association\nof the Meljl Shrine is interested In\nthe plans and might be expected to\nContribute 400,000 yen io the work.\nIf the baseball park Idea 'should provo\nsuccessful, it ls hoped that wrestling\nhalls, tennis courts, swimming pools\nand other athletic courts can be added so as to make the external grounds\nof the shrine one complete national\nplayground,\nMACEDONIAN FIGHTER\nSHOT BY,POLICEMAN\nSKOPIE, Serbia, Aug. 28.\u2014Serbian\nnewspapers announce the death of\nAngelko Nlkoloff, for 20 years an\nactive fighter ln the ranks of the\nMacedonians.. Two years ago Nlkoloff\nwas sentenced to imprisonment, having received commutation of the original  death  sentence.       \u25a0*>\nRecently, when he was assigned to\nbard labor, he escaped from the po\nriceman who was guarding him, taking the guard's rifle. After six days\nhe was recaptured, but In another\nattempt to escape was killed during\nan Interchange of: rifle, shots with\nthe police. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0    '\nMrs. W. J. Bryan asked her children not to wear black clothing at\ntheir  father's\\ funeral, . \u25a0   .,_\nBeware\nDoirt Experiment with Your Good Complexion\nRemetmber, no soap that is safe for toilet use\nwill \"remove\" germs better than Palmolive\nTHERE'S a false idea going the rounds which, in the interest of fine complexions,\nwe must combat.. . for your sake and for ours.\nI j \u25a0 ... ..'.\u2022-'\nThat is, that some soaps combat germs and others not. And that for aseptic reasons certain toilet soaps should be used.  \u25a0..\",'.,\nThat is wrong. Don't believe it if it is told to you. Good complexions are too\nprecious for experiment.\nSoaps to \"destroy germs\" should be used only on the advice of a physician. And\nfor beauty's sake, remember this important fact:\nThe true difference in soaps is in their effect on your skin. All soaps \"remove\ngerms\" to a certain degree. No soap .suitable for toilet use will remove germs better than Palmolive. Why then take chances with a good complexion? .   \u25a0.'\u25a0\nIn old days, you were told, \"use no soaps on your face.\" For all soaps were'too\nharsh. Then Palmolive came. A soap made of cosmetic oils. A soap made to.be\nused lavishly on the skin. ,   '\"\nWomen tried it and were amazed. Palmolive became the leading toilet soap in the\nworld. In France itself, home of cosmetics, Palmolive is supplanting French soaps.\nPalmolive is a scientific soap. A soap made for one purpose only: to foster and\nsafeguard good complexions. When asked to try harsh ways, beware.\nPalmolive is not the only fine toilet soap. We know of two others that compare\nfavorably. But they cost you 25 cents, while Palmolive costs but 10 cents , .. no\nmore than ordinary soaps. Enormous production brings you- this modest price.\nWash, launder, cleanse with any soap you wish. But when beauty is at stake;\ntake care. Use Palmolive, a soap you know is safe to use. It is nature's formula\nJo \"Keep That Schoolgirl Cqmplexion.\"\nSoap from Trees\nThe only oils in Palmolive Soap are tlio\nsoothing beauty oils from the olivi tree, tlio\nAfrican palm and the coconut palm\u2014and no\nother fats whatsoever.\nThat is why Palmolive Soap-Is the natural\ncolor that it is\u2014for palm and olive oils, nothing; else, give Palmolive its green color 1\nThe only secret to Palmolive is its e*r-\nc\/usiVe blend\u2014and that is one of the world's\npriceless beauty secrets.\n.V=f..'\n*.- .:. ?\n \u2022        a.,'V~T~*~\"    -,\n^TBENiSll^DAIIX\nFageSoyen\n^mMj^^m^^^\n\"N oyV;&-' 6|;;.B.pjd#;t;\nPIRATESDRAW\nEVEN BREAK\niliiiii\nSplit Doiible-Header; Vance\nNearly Scores a No-Hit\n,: -.Game'''.-\nNATIONAL\nLEAGUE     STANDING\nWon   Lost   Pet,\nPittsburgh .,'.'.,.'',....'0\nNew. York ...........\u00ab8\nCincinnati ........'. ..68\nSt. Loul*   .-..- C7\nBrooklyn ' 56\nChicago .62\nPhiladelphia .62\nBoston ...6*\n.610\n.662\n.643\n,479\n.478\n.464\n.466\n.433\n\u25a0 NEW YOHK, Aug. 23.\u2014The Pitt*,\nburgh Pirate* drew an even break\nIn a double' bill with the New\n\\ork \u25a0 Giant* 'today, . winning * the\nsecond.3 to, 2, after losing tho open*\n. er 7 to 4. ' Pittsburgh, continue* to\nlead ln the1 National league by a five,\ngame margin. Rawllngs, a New York\ncutoff,; drove  In   the : winning  run\n' for tha* Corsairs. '   '\nFlr\u00abt gatm^- n.  H.   E.\nPittsburgh     ;.... 4     7     1\nNew York .............. 7    )1     0\nbatteries\u2014Adams,' Sheehan, Oldham   and   Smith;   Greenfield,   Scott\n\u2022and. Snyder. -       '\nSecond game\u2014    . ,     '    R..H.'K.\nPittsburgh  3     9     2\nNew  York  2  ,12     3\nBatteries\u2014Morrison. Oldham and\nOooch; Nehf and Hartley, Fltwlm-\nmona.\nSpeed Driver Has X ..\nV  Head Severed in ':,-_-\u25a0\n, Automobile Race\n\u25a0KO>onoAHaia\u00ab.    cm,    \u00bb*.,\nAug.   \u00ab3\u2014X.   p.   IrtMroun   of  \u2022\nWaahliigton,  Fa,,  wa*  kUl.1 haw*\nSMtnrday  in . a   100-inT.* automo* -\n11*   rac*   on   *. Urt   track. ; Kl*\n.\" htad  was? **T\u00abt*d. ,    Bight   oar* *\n. pU*d op to Ua*   aok itnton. wh*n .\njr*tt*m,an  clashed  Into   *   fane*.\nOther driver* **oap\u00aba serloa* ln-\n'   >xar' - '\nCatcher Tips\nGood Fellow\nIn Hard tuck\nVance Gor* Good Again\nBROOKLYN, Aug. 2S\u2014Brooklyn\ndivided a double-header with Chl.\ncago today, winning the opener 6 to\n0 and dropping the second 9 to 7,\nDaisy Vance was close to a no-htt\ngame In the. first game, the Cubs\ngetting only two hit* of the scratch,\nlest kind. Vance fanned nine batter*. .The Robins outbatted the Cubs\nIn the second encounter and Alexander had a rocky road to victory.\n-First game\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nChicago     0'    2      1\nBrooklyn  6   13     1\nBatteries\u2014Mllstead,      Blake      and\nHartnett, Vanoe and  Deberry.\nSecond game\u2014 . R. H.  E.\nChicago  9   11      2\nBrooklyn  7   13     6\nHERE5  A\nNI6E.FAST\nONE JOE 11\nDONT FOOL\nMe. NOW!!\nft\ni   A CATCHEH\nSOMETIplES TIPS OFF A HITTER,\nAS TO WHAT IS BEING PITCHED\n' THIRD BAS\u00a3MAN\nPLAYING DEEP TO\nLET HIS OLDByDOr\nBEAT OUT A BA3t\nHIJ WHEN HIS ClUB\nIS HOPELESSLY BEHIND\n>F Ua SZKAUB\nRny what you will, there Is a lot of\nsentiment In rneeball. If the hitter Is\na good fellow and well liked hy other\nplayers,  ahd'he   happens  to  be   In   -\nWINS CONTEST'McLEAWES T0NKHr\nFOR SECTORS\nAthletics Shut Out Chicago\nlor\\ Third Time in Their\nSeries''.\nAMERICAN J\nWashington\nPhiladelphia\nLEAGUE\nWon\n.........76\nSTANDING\nLost' Pet.\n41      .660\n,, ...60\n41      .644\n64      .646\n68      .608\n.*;.'..;. ..67\n60      .487\n.. ... 66\n67      .461\n.........48\n67 .   .418\n ..J6\n82      .299\n1   ' Hnrrbi* Homer Counts\nDETROIT, Aug. 23.\u2014'Alex. Ferguson, Boston nnd New York, castof(\nheld Detroit to four hits and Washington won today's game 6 to 4.\nA home run by Stanley: Harris in\nthe seventh,, seo'lng two ahead of\nhim,   gave   Washington   the'margin.\n     - ..,.; U.  H.  E.\nWajihinglon    ..\/.  ..8,7'   0\nDetroit   4      4      2\n. Hatteries\u2014Ferguson, Marberry and\nRevereld; Hollowny, Collins and Baa-\nsler.. '\/ ''\n*,:\u25a0,     (IliroRO    Shut    Gilt\"\nCHICAGO. Aug. 23.\u2014Home runs\nby Simmons and MMer, the latter\nwith, a man on, enabled Philadelphia to shut out Chicago 3 to 0 today, making their second straight\nfrom the locals. The White Sox\nwere without the services of Manager\nEddie Collins, who strained a ligament in his leg yesterday. Tt.   H.   E.\nPhiladelphia   3    10      2\nChlcngo    0      7      2\nBatteries\u2014Oray and Cochrane; Lyons nnd Schalk.\nA.   Brown,   Hubbell,   Oeschger   antl - that ntcliar,  with the full  knowledge\nHargrave*. JsWor.\nOnly two game* today.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSTANDING\nWon Xnat pct,\nSan   Francisco   ........\u00bb! 49\nSalt   Lake 86 68\nSeattle     .....80 61\nLo\u00bb   Angeles     78 62\nPortland      60 82\nOakland     60 82\nVernon 64 87\nSacramento   47 94\n4.\nSaturday\nPortland,  2;   Salt  Lake,  13.\nSan Francisco, 4-8; Oakland,\nSeattle,   3;   Sacramento,   4.\nLoa Angeles,  6-3;  Vernon.  4-6.\nSunday\nSeattle, 6-10;   Sncrnmrnto, 1-2.\nPortland, 12-6; Salt Lake, 13-3.\nSan Francisco, 1-9;  O.iklaml. 2-2.\nVernon.    2-9;  . Lo*    Angeles,    1-9.\nSecond game called 11th, darkness.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nColumbus,   1-1;   Mllwnukee,   11-2.1\nIndianapolis, 3-2; St. raul, 2-3.\nToledo,  4-6;  Kansas City,   1-4.\nLouisville,   42;   Minneapolis,   6-2.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJersey City, 2-7;-Syracuse, 5-4.\nBuffalo,   6-12;   Rending,  4-1.\nprovidence, 4-3;   Rochester,  2-4.\nOnly three games today.\nof   the pitcher,   will  tel^ him   whether\na   fast hall, or curve In being pitched\nhim.   Tills glv^H. hlnit-a b*g percentaffe\nIn making a base, hit.   Of course; thiH\n1h  only  pulled   when   there   Ih   nobody\non  hasp, or when  the  hltt**r'\u00ab team  I*\nhopelessly beaten.\nAnother   stunt   to   give   a   hitter   a\n\u201e.,   cheap,   but   nevertheless   real,   brine   hit\n652   *s f\u00b0r the third baseman to play deep\n'k34   r.nd   let  the   hitter'lay   down   a   bunt\nRR7   ft,onS   the   third   bane   line.       This   Is\n'?\u00bbi    pulled   occasionally   during   the    latter\n,fi&7    part of the season,  wlien a  player  hns\n.423   a bonus f.\u00bbr hitting over 30f> nnd only\n,423    t.eeds   a   few   hat*e .liitH    lo   rash    In.\n383   These  base  hits  never  mean anything\n'\u2022>\u00ab-. i In   the   final   result   of   the  game,   as\n**\" j the   spots   to   pull   them   are   picked.\nYears ago n player would exchange an\nout for a hit any time.\nj     \"Tell me  what's  coming.\"  he  would\nthe catcher,  \"and  If I- Ret  a base\nYanks Lose by a Run v\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 23.\u2014For the\nthird successive day, Cleveland defeated New York by one run, today's\nscore being 7 to 6. Both Schocker\nand Karr, .who Btarted the game,\nwere knocked out of the box. Speece,\nwho replaced Karr, did not allow a\n,man to reach flrat- Ruth made his\n1 14th homer of  the year.  B.  H.  E.\nNew   York   8      8      3\nCleveland       7    11      2\nBatteries\u2014Shocker, Pennock and\nBengmigh; Karr, Speece and L.\nSewell.    .   ,\nFormer Still Need a Point in\nV Order to Be Sure\n-;;   \u25a0'.\/\"\";>.; '    Of   CUP;\n\u25a0 ,'.m*   .Mi at   | ar\nThe'standing of the City Football\nleague   Is  aa  follows:\n1      W. Ii. D. Pet.\nFalrview    .............6     1 8;  15\nProcter .... 4     8 8     11\nCorinthians  ............3*   6 2       8\nMcl^arles    ............3    6 2       8\nThere will  be a  scheduled league\ngame  tonight  at   the   ball   park-be\ntween the McLearies and Fairview at\n5:4fi o'clock.\nFalrview's win against Procter, laat\nweek was cancelled after the protest put In by the Procter team.\nTherefore Falrview still needa another point before they will have\ncinched  the  footer  cup.\nThe   teams   will   be:\n1-alrview\u2014Disereau, R. StDenls, JJ.\nWard, Rlngrose, Bradley, Simpson, C.\nAVard, Leemlng, Evans, Campbell,\nScott,  Rees and  Livingston.\nMcLearies \u2014 - Scanlan, J, Ward,\nBrown, Hutchinson, Hebenton, Fraser,\nTalhot, Wright, Jeffs, Orton, PittB,\nDawes and  Benwell.\nhit you can throw me out Mealing!'\nAustralians Make\nit Four Straight Over\nJap Tennis Team\nBROOKL1NE, Macs., Aug. 23. \u2014\nAustralia made It four stright victories over Japan today In the final\nAmerican xone Davis cup match, when\n.Tohn B. Hawken defeated Masonosuke\nFukudn, 6-1,6-3, 6-0, By winning the\nfirst three matches yesterday and\nThursday tho antipodean tennis tenm\nhad already qualified to piny France\nfor the rlcht to challenge America,\nholder of the cup.\nGerald Patterson nnd Tnkeu-hl Harada met In the second match today,\nthe last of tho Japan-Australian\ncompetition.\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nTh*   Al*   with   th*   rtal   flavor, 12.40, del.    Order through\nGOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   STORE.\nFREE DELIVERY DIRECT FROM BREWERY.\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY  LIMITED\nhit advertisement  Is  not  published or displayed  by  tha  Llqt\nControl Board or by tha Government of British Columbia.)\n' ' St. IjOiiIs IUW* Boston %\nST. LOUIS. Aug, 23.\u2014The St-\nLouts Browns returned -to winning\nform todny with a victory over Boa-\nton , Red Sox 6 to 2. Tho bright\nspot of the gnme was Bennett's\ntriple in the fourth, scoring Staler\nand  McManus. R.   H.   E.\nBoston    2      8      1\nSt.  Louis    *.    5      7      0\nBatteries\u2014Ehmke    and    Blschoff;\nOlnrd and Hargrave.\nBaby Doll Pays\nGood Money at\nWillows Races\nVICTORIA, Aug. 2il\u2014Bahy Doll,\nprovided the biggest surprise of the\nfinal day's racing at the Willows\nhere Saturday when she came\nthrough In the fifth race' to win and\npay the price of J6!t.er\u00bb for a 32\nticket, the largest price lhat any of\nthe thoroughbreds has paid at the\ntrack this year.\nAnother upset almost happened In\nthe opening event of the day when\nSally Oolden, a 60 lo one shot, wns\nhentcn hy a nose by I>arrel J. Sally\nOolden, after leading nil the' way,\nran out on the last turn nnd lost\nnut nn the final jump. Her place\nmoney renrhed the figures of $24.35,\nwhile her show hackers wore awarded $14.R&,\nKirkwood Sets Neto\nRecord for,Moose Jaw\nGolf Course; Sixty seven\nMOOSE JAW, Aug. 23.\u2014Joe Kirk-\nWood, Australian golf star, playing\nIn nn exhibition' game -here Saturday, set a. new record for the local\ncourse of- the Moose Jaw Golf club,\nnegotiating the 18 holes in 67. The\nold record, 70, wns established recently  hy Walter Hagen. (\nCONDENSED'WANT'ADS ORDER FORM\nUm lhi. blank on which t* writ, your cond.n**d ad., en. word In **eh ap.c   Enoloi. mon.y *rdw\ner eh*ck and mall dir.ct to Th. D.lly N.w*, N.U.n. B.C.\n\u2022 Rat., On. and . hill cnl . word Meh Inwrtlon, .I* e.n.\u00abutlv.  Ins.rtlon.  for  prlo.  of  four\nwh.n x..h  .ec.n,p.nl..  .rd.r.    Minimum,  8B\u00ab,     E.eh .nltl.l. fl-ur*. dollar ,1,-., .1., count ..OK.\nw.rd.   H* cham* l*u than BO cant*.\n'.    PIm.. publUh th. .dv.rtl..m.nt b.low . tlm.., f*r.whlch I .nelos. 1-. .\t\ne.     \\\\     ...\n\u00bb d..lr\u00ab-  noilM may \\>\u00bb oiintni \\o b*\u00bb numb*r* at Th. D.lly N.w. OffttJ,    If r\u00bbpllM \u00abr\u00ab\nSANDY MacDONALD\nSAYSCROP GOOD\nWholesale Grocer Expects Farm\nProsperity; on Inspect-  \u2022'.\ning Tour\nA. MacDonald of Winnipeg, the\nwholesale grocer and big Nelson investor, was a visitor to the city\nSaturday, Inspecting the local branch\nof  A. MacDonald  & Co,       '\nOn his trip to Nelson he was told\nthe prairie crops were better this\nyear than they have been for many\npast, nnd he said both his companies\nand the farmers should have a good\nyear, as tho grain  prices were good.\nMr. MacDonald, who was thought\nto he very ill while here on his last\nvisit, stated that he is ln the very\nbest of  health.\nOn his way to Nelson he stopped off\nat many of the branch offices.\nHe left on the Kettle Valley Saturday night en route for Victoria and\nother coast cities.\nBENNY  LEONARD QUITS BOXING\nNHW YORK, Aug. 23. \u2014 Benny\nLeonard, retired lightweight champion, will not reenter the ring, he\ndeclared today in denying reports\ncredited to his manager, Billy Gibson, that he intended to try a comeback and fight Jimmy Goodrich, newly recognized champion, for the\ntitle.\nSMITH WINS OPEN\nGOLF CHAMPIONSHIP\nYOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Aug. 23. \u2014\nMacDonald Smith of New York today\nwon  the  western  open championship\nwith a score of 281, scoring a 09 or\nthree under par,  for the,final round.\nSmith played consistently throughout the tournament, scoring 70 on the\nfirst round and 71 on each of the\nnext  two.\nBill Mehlhorh made a desperate bid\nto retain the title, scoring 32 on the\nfirst nine and 34 on the second to\ntie the course record of 6*3. But he\nstarted too late, his total of 287 for\n72   holes  tying   for  second  place.\nMISS WILLS ENTERS THE\nFINAL TENNIS ROUND\nFOREST HIU.S, N.Y., Aug. 22. \u2014\nMiss Helen Wills advanced to the\nfinal round In defence of her national tennis title' when she swept\naside Miss Eleanor Goss of New\nYork, 3-6, 6-0, 6-2. ln the first of\ntoday's semi-final matches in the\nchampionship tournament.\nMiss Wills made it eight games In\na row when she took the first two\ngames of the final set, but eased\nup her game and lost two games before she pulled out the set, 6-2, and\nthe match. The young champion waa\nalways In command, however, playing easily and confidently. Miss Goss\nwns erratic, losing control, of her\nservice and netting the easiest kind\nof shots.\nMAD PLAY WINS\nCHICAGO SPECIAL\nCHICAGO, Aug. 23. \u2014 Mad Play,\nowned by Harry V. Sinclair, won tho\n$20,000 Chicago special at Hawthorn\ntrack today before 22,000 spectators.\nKentucky Cardinal waa second, and\nPrincess Doreen third. 'The race wa3\nat 1 3-16 miles, nnd was run ln\nl:Gfl  2-5, a  new  track  record,\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTER\nScottish   League\nLONDON, Aug. 23.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014Soccer football games\nin the Scottish league played Saturday resulted  as follow*:\nFirst Division\nAlrdrle,  4;  Aberdeen,  1.\nCowdenbeath, 6; Dundee United, 1.\nClydebank,   1;   Celtic,  l.\nDundee,  0;   St.  Johnston,  1,\n. Falkirk, 0; St. Mlrren, 1.\nHamilton,  A.,   3;   Heart*,  0.\nHibernian*,  S;  Kilmarnock,  0.\nMorton,  1;   Partlck,  1.\nQueen* Park, 4; Ralth Rover*, 0.\nRangers,   1;   Motherwell,   0.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nSecond   Dlvhdon\nArthurlle, 1; Third Lanark, >.\nAyr United,  6; Arbroath, n.\nBathgate.  3;  Armadale,  1.\nBoness, 3; Dunfermline, 1,\n. Clyde,  1;  Albion Rover*.  0.\nBast Fife, 1; Stenhouse Mulr, 1.\nKings Park, 8; Dumbarton, 0.\nNlthdale, i; East Stirling, 1.\nQueen of the South, 4; Alloa, 0.\n, St.  Bernard*,  8;  Broxburn,  0.\nIRISH   LEAGUE\n\u2022 Distillery, J; Barn, \\.r - \/\nOlenarm, li Belfaat Celtic, 0,\nArda,   6; 'Queen*. Island,   I.\n? Newry,'l! Cllftonvllle, 0,\nLam*,  li   Llnfield,  0.\nPortadowo, I; Gl.ntoran, I,\nM11I1S\nISAMAIEDR\nDefeats Weir in Sensational\nPlay After Each Had Assumed Lead\nCALQARt;*: Aug. 23. ~ Carson MacWllllams of St. Andrew's club, Cal--\ngary, became amateur golf champion\nof western Canada by defatlng Alex.\nWeir of Saskatoon on the 37th green\nin a thrilling final at the Calgary\nGolt and Country, club Saturday afternoon. \\\nThe contest, white a nerve-racking\nOne for competitors and the 800 or\nmore enthusiasts that formed the gallery, provided a fitting climax to the\nWestern- Canada Golf association tournament, the greatest event of Its kind\never staged  fn three provinces.\nMacWflllams' victory was the result\nof the most marvellous comeback ever\nchronicled In tournament,-play in these\nparts, aa at one time during the competition he was six holes down. Dls\nplaying the fighting spirit that characterized his brilliant form when he\ndefeated Ben Cool, a clubmate, to enter the finals, MacWllllams fought\ngamely back.to achieve a remarkable\nvictory, the ending of which brought\na High of relief as well as rejoicing\not the largest crowd that ever trekked\nover hill and dale to Bee a golf competition in Calgary.\n. It was % sensational competition,\nfeatured by Weir's phenomenal putting\nduring the first 18 'holes, and Mac-\nWilliams' determination during the\nnext 19 holes, which gave him the decision.    .*'\u25a0\u00bb-\n.-\"\u25a0 Weir was two up at the end of the\nninth, and four.up when the first half\nwas completed. MacWllllams first assumed the lead on the 23rd green, and\nIt was all-square on the 27th nnd the\n36th. \u2022 In fact, during the event they\nwere on even terms five times.\nMacWllllams was leading on the\nfirst green, 23rd, 26th, 33rd, 34th and\n35th.\nrorty-rire-root  Patt\nThe gallery was amaied by Weir's\nputting during the morning play, his\ngreatest effort on the greens being a\n45-foot putt on the 14th. On the second hole his putt was from IS feet\naway. On the 12th MacWllllams sunk\na 15-foot putt, a' birdie four, and Weir\nrepeated to the amazement nf the\ncrowd. Again on the 16th his putt\nwas 20 feet.\nStarting the afternoon play Mac-\nWilliams .Improved his golf, while his\nopponent was not so steady. Winntng\nthe 19th and 20th gave the CalRarian\nthe confidence that he lncked In th->\nface of Weir's sensational'green work\nin the morning. He reduced his opponent's lead to one by winning the\n23rd, squared the match on the 25th,\nand for the first time since the first\ngreen took'the lead on the 26th. Wclr\nrallied to square matters on the 28 th\nand be one up on the 29th. It was a\nseesaw affair until the 33rd, when\nMacWllllams went to the lead and became dormle two on the 34th. MacWllllams missed an easy putt ln the\n35th, which would have given him the\nmatch and championship, and Weir,\ngaining confidence despite tho grueling\nBtraln, won the last two holes to\nsquare the match.\nThe tension was high during the extra hole, both among the contestants\nand spectators, and when the break\ncame, MacWilliams took advantage of\nit for a victory that did not In nny\nway discredit the loser, for both were\nlauded for their marvellous showing.\n-    \u2014   \u25a0   m>        \t\nProcter Officials\nRepudiate Letter\nWritten by Major\nTo the Sporting Editor of The Dally\nNews:\nSir\u2014Would you kindly publish the\nfollowing:\nWith reference to the letter written by C. Major, appearing in your\nedition of Wednesday, August 19,\nattempting to excuse his conduct In\nthe Falrvlew-Procter game, I should\nlike to bring to the attention of\nthose readers of The Daily Nows,\nwho are Interested ln the City Football league, that he signs himself\nsecretary, and to point out that\nthis is an unofficial letter, written\nwithout the knowledge of the football committee of the Ranchers*\nUnited club, and purely a personal\nletter, to be regarded as such.\nC.  W. A. BAIUVIS,\nCaptain.\nC.  S.   PRICE,\nVice-Captain.\nHarrop,   B.C.,   August   20,   1925.\nSHINES O'ER CANADA'S DEAD\nr-vr\nTlie world's largest lighthouse has been erected at Lorette, France, where\nit  will shine  eternally  on  the  graves  of  the  Canadians  who  died   la  tb* .\nbattle, of'vimy Ridge in 1916.   In addition, the light, which' la visible.for\n60 miles on a clear night, wilt serve as a beacon for night air service.\nWe Couldn't Find a Better Tire\nA regular part of our service is\n<a to furnish Ames Holden Rhino\nCompare Tires  for your  car in either\nthe Wear\"'        low-pressure balloon  or  high-\npressure type.\nThese super tires are the only\ntires in all Canada made of the\ntough Rhino rubber\u2014an exclusive. Ames Holden discovery.\nThey save you money.\nCENTRAL GARAGE\nNELSON, B. C. ,M\nAMES HOLDEN\nRhino Tires\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nSparkling Orange-CRUSH\nAnytime\u2014Everywhere\nSparkling Orange-CRUSH flavored from big, luscious\nOranges is the largest-selling fruit-flavored drink in the\nworld. Orange-CRUSH has built an international de'\nmand because of its wonderful, genuine quality. It is\nrefreshing, delicious and healthful for young and old.\nNationally advertised\u2014sold everywhere. Buy it from\nyour dealer by the case of 24 bottles, the handy way.\nLook for the Orange-CRUSH Label.\nAU aold In th*\nOrang-* - CKUSK\nBottl. \u2014 T on'\nrairantu of\nhealth    bov.ng.a.\nmm\nAlso 0-C Ginger Ale and 0-C Grape\nTha  Six   Ingredients\nof  Drange-Crush\n1\u2014Tht natural fruit\noil  of  oraagtB.\nfl.\u2014The natural frnlt\nsoldi   of   the   citrus\nfmlta (oranges, Um*\nons,  and llmti).\nfe\u2014Orang e-Jnloe.\n4\u2014*nr#   carbonated\nwater.\n&\u2014C\u00abrtifM        food\ncolor.\n8.\u2014Tun earn* sugar,\n\u2022 \u25a0'      -\u2022\n!\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0..;,-.  [X,: .. '.':'\"\u2022 '  '    ';\n^^^^jjy^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^****^^^\n'   *\u2022\u2022\u25a0'\u00bb*\u00bb :*^-\n paisappsi\n''\";;*'',*:       \"'\".-   ry ?'\"\n*-mmmm^ipmim\n-)THRNfebSON^LY .$&#s\u00a3M0NDAY- MORNING.! AU&$T $f,r-*$-?\n\u00ab   Show   Lack, of  Fight\nonv.Wall ,;\u25a0 Street, .Jtyft\n\u25a0 -   Market i\n\u2022Vi\n\u2022'\u2022 ?KBW TORK, 'Au*.'' 'JS.\u2014Stock price*\n; bounded - upward again today under\n;;:.the \u2022' leadership of the? Southwestern\n\u2014 Tailroad share*. .With a'., plentiful\n\u2022: supply of money available Xor..Rtoelc\nipmarket^ purposes, meet-Mine* ef busl-\n...-nea*. reporting steady Improvement nnd\n:r.:a?*aWt traders'showing Utile disposition\n\u2022 to'renew 'their nttaeks'nn the general\n\u2022;:.llst,' operators; f\u00abr, the rise encounter-\n. *d: little difficulty' im bidding up. their\ni,,favorlte fitocks>.; Trading -was. in'sub-\n'':*lant-\u00b0! , volume*.'for a. - half,holiday\n..^session,-  running  ? wol|p<-over' 350.000\n\"\"\"shsiaps. \u25a0 '    '\u2022;*.''(.,        ' -\u2022     \u25a0 \u25a0:     ',-;._\u25a0   ,..; (iti, -\nExcept   . for     additional \u25a0. .favorable\nJrtly.   earnings   reports   there- was   nothing to'account  for..tho wteady.aeUon\n\u2022Z-ot. the- southwestern 'carriers,  most  of\nJ which 'have   been,  associated ,of, lat*\n, -.Willi' favorable   merger   and   dividend\nrumors. '.-St.    Louls'-tt   Southwestern\n_cpmnion. -'was   the- .individual* .feature\ni of .that group, hieing bid up more, than\n6 points Mi record high at C2V4, nnd\n,. then? easing about ;'n ;point  on   realls-\nStsJng.'-fiThe   preferred' touched, a. new\n\"-peak nf'7B?'\u00bb.1 Frisco common, crossed\n98   to   the   highest' reached   since, th,\nreorganisation   of- the   property. \u25a0 r K&y\n': common'l.\" Wabash    common   and    the\nprefsrred -'B--- and     Seaboard -   Airline\ncommon  also, attained  new  1926- peak\nI       PHc**,'??', \u2022'. \u25a0(       1  :\u25a0-\u25a0-.-:        '.,,,;,.\n\u2022 s^-*a Varkat\" Quotation* \". \u2022 ,-,...:'!,\n.        '    *'\u25a0-\u25a0 - High     Low ' Close\n'    Amer.  LocW-iV*.   tJi-4\"t.r,lM*Jt    IU Hi\nAtupr. T. & T.   ..    MO.      119%    140..\nAnaconda   i        4114    -JOS',    -ii\\\nCommission Concerns Acting\n..fpr:;MUtipsr Jpterests' Seek f-.r\n\u25a0 )\/,;: $fP^be*-f,'\\Yneat'-,.;.,'.\nCrflCAbOj'!A*ug,' 28. -ii Strength displayed In the nearby delivery waa almost! ;tlWa,<ontg feature In the wheat\ntrading 'here, today. Comtntsslon concerns, 'believed to'.be noting for .the\nfitllllnjc Interests., .wore*., after;., .September: wheat In a fre*. manner* The remainder of, the deliveries \u2022'. showed a\nstrong . undercurrent, however, i owing\nprobably to'the unfavorable weather\nnpor.lH fromi'tbe Canadian Northwest.\nClosing, figures, showed, wheat steady\natiHo tn .%c>net. advance, with September nli.aSl.M-iit.i \u00bbl.C**a. and December U.61,% tO' il.\u00abl-\\. corn 14o,;to\n\\,c .lower, wlttf Septrmha-r \u00bb1.0S% to\nil.OJ'J,, roat* . >4e.,tOMHc lower, and\npiatvlsions  unchanged  to -20c.lower.\nBale   &   Ohld\nChll, Copper ....\nGenA Motor* i'j...\nGt. Nor. pfdi\t\nInsp.   Copper   .,.\nIntl. -'Nickel    \t\nKenne. Copper ..\nN. Y. Central ..\nNor. Pactf to ....\nI-nclflc \u2022 Oils....\nPhillips . petr. ..\nHatllo ' Corpi ....\nKhefTUnlon'Oil..\nfool Tcc'ftc ....\nf-lari. Oil Cal.- .,\nSton. Dll N. J...\n\u2022Studebflker '.V. ...\nt'n'#n Oil of 0*1.\nUnion Pacific ..\nli.   B;-  Mecl   ....\nHilt\n35 H\n94 \"\nNX\n:\u00bb14\n*4*i\n5\u00ab*j,\n12S \u2022\n71U,\n1,3%\nMg\n22',\n100*s,\nr.3*S4.\n\u25a04*16\n4S'4\nIfs,\n143%'\n124'i\n4*\n8014\n\u00bb\n92%\n78%\n2814\n3114\n\u25a0Sfi '.\nm*\n. 7n-.i\ncan\n30 \u25a0*\n54 \"4\n23 \\\n1001.4\nr,3'.\u00bb\n39'4\nttV.\n\u202214 .\nHUH\n12314\n.al\n35 i\n9SS\n74*4\n2814\nMS,\nBat .\n12\"   \u25a0.\nrbi\n53H\n3914\n54 li\n22?*\n100U\n53 i\n39%\n451,\n34-\n142%\n121S\nMONTREAL STOCKS\n'IN EASIER TONE\nAfter Week Advances,  Prices\nSettle Down; Brazilian\nStill Soaring\nMONTRHAU Au*.* 23. \u25a0\u2014 After a\nstrenuous week of advancing prices,\niiii- Montreal stock exchange 011 Katur-\niIhj* displayed an cnf-K^r tone. Brnzil-\nIr-n continued Its upward movenient\nt'nd again led In aethity, after prlilnc:\nat tl;-* new lii\u00abh of 67=*;. rx-dlvidrnd,\nH   r^iclpd  to close at  6734,  up 1%.\nWinnipeg was  up  to 5'd. attor opening   nt   fil-%.    Montreal    Power   cb)f*ed\niit   210s;.     Kbawlnlsan   wan   off - %<  i\n17-IVi.  and  Ottawa   i'nwor Jit   Ji>3.   Qui\nI'tc   Power  waa  off   1.\nSp.inlsh Itlvcr common fell back to\n103. and tbe preferred nt llfi. Abltibl\n'\u2666-acted to G7: Laiirentide, to 83;\nT rorrpton, to 24-y, ; and Howard Fmitb\nat ,<fi.    \u25a0\nPrice Bros, lost a point lo 82; 13.C.\nFishing was steady ;*t 47. Cement\ncloeed a small fraction off after opening at 110. Ilridge -wns unchanred at\n07.\nCloyinK priees: Abltlbl. C?; Brazil.\n<7'.^: Ureweri.'N. ?>.%; Brompton, 2t;H;\n(,'anncrM, 117; Laurentlde. *J; B II.\niiteel second prefi-rri-d, 7'i; Spanish\nrieferred. llfi; Spanish common,\nJ07-H; Steel of r.-inada. D2; Textile,\nBlH: Montreal Power. 210**i: Que)>rc\nI't.wer. .llfi: Smelters. \u25a0 11\u00bbV.; Winnipeg\nKkctrlc. 53; U. ^. Htoel, 12-tii; C.V.H\nNew York.  14t^,.\nNEW  yohk.^ug.   21\u2014Sterlftig exchange   steady   at.. 1-1.81%    for   60-day\nbills, and ,$4.85% for demand. ,\u25a0 -.,  \u25a0\nBar. stlyer\u2014Foreign, ,70'^c. .      i ,\nCanadian -, dQll*irn-r3r6*l. prpmlum. - *\"\nl^lre\u2014Demand., 3.6.riHe \u2022   - ;\nNelson ...npproxlmato \u2022 irate, .sterling,\nKM,--   r-r>(,',.,M    ..*'...\n\u25a0\u25a0-:, v.. A j ,.. i   am \u2014r\u2014- *_\\-:-\nVancouver Stocks\nn. C, Silver ....\nDoun. lied Min..\nConsolidated     ....\nCork     .(.....a ..\nOamwoll .-..;.......\nOlaelor\t\ntlladslone   ........\nIndian    Minos\nU-. and. U   ..:....\nLucky    .llm   ......\nMrGllllvr.iv     \t\nNational    Silver    .\nPhoenix . ......'...\nPremier\t\nHowe Sound ..'..\nIt- C.  Montana   ...\nMaple   Leaf    \t\nTr..J:in   Oil\t\n.     \u2022.Ill\n.118.00\n1.6*'\n'\".is\n.20'\n.11\n2.11\n21.00\n.00 %\n.01 K\nAsked\n1.05\n1.13\n.15\n.84\n.05\n.27\n.ir.\n.70\n.25\n\".15\n2.20\n.'.i-10\n.12\n.0214,\nMontreal Produce\nMONTUKAU Aug. 23.\u2014Butter easy;\ncheese  dull; eggs  quiet.\nCheese\u2014 Finest   westerns.   21 ^c;   fin-\nit easterns,  21 ^c.\nButter\u2014No,    1   p;isteurl2ed,   39c;   No.\ncreamery,   118c:  ceeonds,   37c.\nWggs\u2014Fresh extras, 41c; fres-h firsts,\n38o.\nEgg-Markets\n-   Toronto \u2014-\nextras.     4flc\n41c:\nOTTAWA, Auk. 23. -\nJobbing special-Is, 42c;\nfirsts,   37c;   seconds,   34c\nMontreal    \u2014    Jobbing    extras,\nfirsts.   3Sc;   seconds,' 34c.\nCalgHry \u2014 Unchanged; dealers pny-\ning extras, 32c; flr-ats, 2sc; second?,\n22r.\nI-Mmonton \u2014 Healers .moting country .shippers delivered extras, .12c;\nfirsts.   J(io:   seconds.   22c.\nVancouver \u2014 Jidiblnt; extras, 42c;\nfir-is,   40c:   seconds   and   pullets.   36c.\nNo reports from Chicago and New\nVork  on Siiturdaj'.\nJOURNALIST WRITES\n\u2022HIS OWN OBITUARY\ni\nEASTERN-STAR-PAGES;\n'   iifflttlfcii ii\nThese three:j>age8 ,hi\u00bbd a bM\u00aby; tlnte at the c6nventlon'of the Ord^r of\nthe Kaatorn Star, which ended its session* In.Toronto a few days ngnr\nNEARLY HALF\nOFNEW SHIPS\nMore Than  Two   Millions\n'  Tonnage Now Under;Construction ih World\nLONnON', Auk.' 23.\u2014The' total new\nship construction throughout the\nworld for the nunrter ended June.30.\nwhs 2.869.831 tons, as shown by\nLloyds register of ship building returns. The total Is 27.000 tons less\nas compared with the previous t|Uart-\ner. of tho total there avas under\nconstruction ln Great Britain and\nIreland 1,003,5S7 tons, or 72,000 tons\nless than at Iho end ot XInrch. In\nother countries new construction\n\u2022amounted to 1.276,244 tons, nn Increase of 45,000 tons ovor the quarter ended in March. Tho fieures for\nthe lending countries abroad nre:\nOermany 407.3-36 tons. Italy 212,780\ntons, France 1C0.4S5 tons, Holland\n100,682 tons nnd I'nlted .-states 92,001\ntons.\n'    Less Tonnage\nThe total world tonnsRe under con-\nTHE ADVANTAGE\nOF AsVTOCK^\nCJMVIQtND \u2022-  A\nMARKETABILITY\njUsed Articles.\nReal Estate\n.   Rooms;\n! Board'.\nToRenU,\nV Boats and\nAutomobiles\nJHelpWi\nPositions W^ted\nLost and Found\n.Livestock \"\n\".;\u25a0  Machuiery     .\n..\/\u2022\u2022!^am^if(wi\u00bb;';;'\nTimber and Mines\n!.!!;;<* '*\u2022\u25a0 fy, ,\\M'\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWut'wd OU**lfI*A AdT*ltl*lBf \u2014\nOn*, and a half cent* a word per Insertion. If paid In advance, lc. per\nword per week, or JlHo per word per\nmonth. Transient ad* accepted only\non a euh-ln-advanc**ba*l*: Each' Initial, figure, dollar algn, etc., counts'**\none word, illnlmum 25c, if charged\n(0c.\n\u00a3<k\u00bb1 SraOlar HoUo,*\u2014Three eent*\nper word each insertion.. In blackfae*\nor machine capital* .40 per; word.\nBlackface capital* 5o * word. Twenty-\nfiv* per cent \u2022 discount if run dally\nwithout change of copy fof on* month\nor more. Where advertlaement I* **t\nout In short line* the charge I* 160 a\ntin* for Roman type, lOo for blackfae*\nand t5o for blackfae* capitals. Minimum 35o, if charged 60c. , -   ,\nFemale Hela Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Eiperlcnced waitress.\nApply Winnipeg Hotel, Grand Porks,\nB.C. (10807)\nWANTED\u2014Elderly lady for general\nhelp   In   good   home.   , Apply   P.   M.\n\u2022 Schonbferg., Call Cherry and Cnrbon-\nate streets. \u2022_____\u25a0 (10SC5)\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Good burlier,'at once. A. J.\nMartin, Trail, B.C. (10*432)\nWANTKD\u2014A   bellboy.\nHotel.\nApply   Humo\n(10301)\nWANTRD \u2014 Junior assistant assayer\nor apprentice. Wlddowson's Assay\nOffice,  Nelson. <lft884)\nThe Mr advftnug* or a \u00bbtocic dlTi-\ndend to tha invtrtor u marketebillty.\nSuppose a brick of cheese were sell-\nins for -|1. There are only a few\npeople wbo would care to buy a whole\nbrick. More would buy a half, and\nprobably still more a quarter.\nAltbnuKh no more cheeso is mnde\nby cutting up the brick, the two halves\nor four quarters may bo sold for more\n\"ban tbe whole brick alone.\u25a0\u25a0 Perhaps\n3fi cents would be paid for each quarter because of tills larger demand for\ntbe  smaller article.\nTbe same principle npplles to a\nstock dividend, which is nothing more\nthnn splitting up stock into smaller\nshares. An investor will not make\nanything from a stock dividend unless\nSituations Wanted Female\nTRADE IS ACTIVE\nAND PRICES FIRM\nToronto Board Reports  Gains\nin Several Stocks; Canada Bread Up\nTORONTO, Aug. 23. \u2014\/Trading on\nthft Toronto stock exchange on Saturday was comparatively active and\nprices firm. Canada liread common\nopened at 60^ and closed at Cl-Vi, up\n?,%. The B preferred moved up 1-.(\u25a0\nto 94%. Dominion : Canners common\nredd up to 117, a net gain of 3*<i.\nBrazilian wns up.1%. at fiVi. C3na-\ntV.an Industrial Alcohol closed at U\u00bb\u00bb\/i,\n:v net gain nf 1. Winnipeg Hallway\nwas up \u2022% to 62%, while ('. P. il. wns\nunchanged at 145. Consumers' Oas\npained Vi. lo 171; B. C. Fishinp. up %\ntn 41%; Maple I^af common, off 1~*,\nto 88; Steel of Canada, off %, to flr\nAbltibl. up Vi. at 6SVj; Brompton, off\nU,  to  25\u00bb,i.\nConsolidated Smelters active, yl.ld-\ni\u00abg   H,  to  119\u00bbi.\nPOSKN', Poland, Aug\/'J3.-!-Tadeus*i\nriubrynowicz. a Polish journalist, literally \"died in harness\" recently.\nAmong his belongings*. In th\u00ab hospital\nwas found his own obituary written\nby himself n short time before his\ndeath.\nIt recounted the devotion of a real\nJournalist to his work, and on behalf\nnf those for whom he wrote. It contained   tliis   paragraph:\n\"Now, just before bis death, be has\nat last found a moment for himself, which he devotes to penning his\nobituary, so as to tnke nn additional\nburden frnm the shoulders of his\ncolleagues,' who also never have nny\ntime'  to   spnie.\"\nConcluding the obituary, Cubryn-\nowicz asked his readers, if they felt\nth.it he deserved to rest in peace,\nto say a brief prayer for him. Answering those who mitfht sny it waa\na clever way tn solicit thousands\nfree   blessings,   he   said:\n\"Even if it be so, it will have\nbeen the fiist and Certainly the last\ntime in his life thnt he has ncted\nthe part nf nn exploiter or profiteer.\"\nGERMANY LOCATES\n. COTTON SUBSTITUTE\n\u25a0t\nMinneapolis Grain\nstriH'tion nmounts to 2,3119.831 tons, or   he, soils.     If   many  stockholders   sell,\n27.000 tons less as compared wllh the   the stock may even go down.\nprevious quarter     The  highest  pro-   , \u2122\"*.VV'-took^lvKnT  '\" '\"\u25a0\nwar  total,  reached   nn June  30,  1913,\nwns  3.446,558   tons.     The  tonnage  of\nvepsels   now   building   ln   tho   world\nwhich  are  to  be  fitted  with   internal\ncombustion   engines   amounts   to   1,-\n129.812   tons,   while   the   tonnage,   of\nsteam   vessels   under   const met inn   Is\n1,212.525  tuns.        The  motor   tonnage\nthus   equals   more   than   93   per   cent\nof  the steam, showing the cohtinned\ndevelopment    which    is   taking   place\nin this system of propulsion.\nSince 1914 there has been an Increase of lfi.271,000 tons in sea-going\nsteel and Iron steamers and motor\nships owned by tho principal maritime countries. In 1914 the tonnage\nof these vessels was 41Vr.14.000. while\nln   June,   1925,   It   was   58,785.000.\nDuring the hist. 11 yenrs the seagoing tonnago of the United States\nhas increased by over y.\",\">0,000 tons.\nIn 1914 (Ireat Britain owned nearly\n44H* per cent of the world's sea\ngoing steel and iron steam tonnage*.\nThe present per rentage Is under\n33. The United States, now occupies\nsecond place with 11,605,000 tons \u2014\nequal to nenrly 20 per cent. The\nother leading countries are: Japan\n3,741,000 tons, France 3.202,000 tons,\nOermany 2.H93.000 tons Italy 2.894,000\ntons, Hollnand 2,585,000 tons, Norway\n2,f.55,000 tons.\nA  considerable   Increase has.taken\nplace In recent years of the number\nof sea-going steamers nnd motor\nships of 4000. tons each and above.\nIn 1914 there-w*te''3608 such vessels,\nand now the number reaches 60C9.\nOf tho total shipping tonnage in\nGreat Britain nnd Ireland 25Vi per\ncent is lens than five years old,\nThe merchant; navies which have\nthe largest proportion of new ton\nnage (less thnn five years old) are\nas follows: Gorm.iny 50.6 pe.r cent.\nHolland 33*5 per ' cent, Fra'nce 27\nper cent, Denmark 26.7 lier cent, and\nNorway,  24  per cent.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   ,     \u25a0   i   \u25a0\u25a0   *'\nTWO SISTERS, domesticated, desire\nsituations, fond of children, good at\nhousework.    Box  24,  Deer Park.\n(10949)\nFor Rent\nFIVK-BOOMRb .HOUSE, 820 Mill\nstreet; modern; newly decorated;\n$22. Apply W. W. Ferguson. Nelson. (10844)\nTWO-BOOM eottago. furnished. Apply\n515   Hall   street. (10942)\nl-'liilWlt-llkD BUNGALOW \u2014 Modern,\nfurnace,     rhone   462L4. (10345)\nCOTTAGE \u2014 Opposite lakeside Park,\npartly furnished, for rent to June 1,\n1920, for $100. Cash. O. A. Hunter,\nPhone  477L5. .\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nCOMFORTABLY     FURNISHED     Bedroom.    I'hone 381R. (J0909)\nTWO-ROOM   FURNISHED\nStirling  Hotel.\nSUITE.   \u2014\n(1090R)\nTELL your wants  wrouRh  The  Dally\nNews classified columns.\nFOR BENT\u2014In Annable Block, ona\nnicely furnished bedroom, one slngl-a\nroom for lifiht housekeeping, one\nfurnished suite. (10678)\nKERR   APARTMENTS.\n(10679)\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\nMINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 2l~Flour unchanged.\nBran\u2014$24  tb  $25,\n'Wheat \u2014 No. 1 northern, $1.60% to\n$1.63%; September, $l.f\u00bb9\u00bbi; December,\n$1.6014;   May,  $1.63-6-\nCorn\u2014Noa   3   yellow., 9\u00bb\"4c  to  09?',c.\nOats\u2014No   3   white.   37-*,e  to. 3Se.\n' Flax\u2014$^.59   to  $2^61.\nCIRCULATION OF NOTES\nREPORTEDON INCREASE\nOTTAWA, vAu\u00a3. 23. \u2014 Circulation Ot\nTomlnlon notes increased Fllghtly during July, being $208,857,686 on July\n31; as asraini-t $208,391,417 on June 30.\nGttld held against the notes was $116,-\n364.062 against $116,263,993. The percentage of gold to notes waa 55.6\ncompared with-.55.7.\nREUTLINCiEN. Oermany, Auff. 23.\u2014\nCutting of cotton imports into Germany bv bait mny result from a new\nmethod of weaving cloth with hemp,\ninvented bv the German textile expert,\nDr. Gmlnder. The hemp, it is expected, will-replace In part the cotton formerly uw-d hi the cIMh.. There are\nnbnut 6,000.060 ueres of ninorland in\nOrmany adapted to the raising of\nbemp. \u25a0\nWIFE OF FACTOR IS\nDEAD AT VICTORIA\n. VrCTOniA, Aug. 23\u2014>Irs. Jono\nSutherland, wife of tho Hudson's\nRay fiictur at Fort McMurray, Altn.,\ndied here today. She nrrlvcd In\nVictoria a month ngo on a visit.\nGeorge W. Sutherland, Winnipeg, Is\na son.\t\n\u25a0 CWMt\n. No.   1\n' Nte 1\nNELSON BUTTER!AT\n\u25a0 j   , ; 1   ,,\u201e ,\n\u25a0our  ...'...- '.'....'...\nSPOKANE STOCKS\nSafe\nInvestments\n\u00a3   m -,-*e deal In all standard\n\u2122.   a securities.\nInformation nnd quotation* free.\nWaghorn, Gwynn & Co., Limited\nVancouver\n\u2014Loc.nl Broker\u2014\nC. W. Appleyard\nNtilson, B. C.\nBonds Protect\nand Increase\nSavings\nTlie partial payment plan Is\nln tho Interest of persons who\nsave $25 a month. The money\nIs deposited ln bonds. Bonds\nbecome n medium of savins.\nThey drnw high rate of Interest,\nt>r\/c to t,r\/c, and nro readily convertible.. The Investor's money-\nIs nt all times Bate.\nTh* Bond Dep*rtm\u00abnt ha*\n\u2022II information. Writ* or\ncall.\nPEMBERTON & SON\nFinancial   Au*nt*\n418   HOWE  8TREET,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nAg*nt*   Wood,   Oundy\nToronto\nA   Co,\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffic* 8m\u00abI.Sns *no* \u2022' R*fInlng p*p\u00abrtr-wi* '\nTRAIL,  BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, I\/jad and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\n. TADANAC, TRAIL .    * .      '\nr.ANCII AT THRUMS, price *two\nthousand dollars; five hundred cash;\nb;ilnnce one hundred dollars per year\nnt five per cent.   Collin*. Castlegar,\nB.C. <10891)\nFor Exchange\nrcXCHANni?-. \u2014 Rod Heifer. 3 yenrs.\nmilking, extremely nulft, fur pul*\nlets,    llox  24.  Peer  Turk. (10BRO)\nCountry Property.\nCOHNEB SITE\u2014One-third acre. .4-\nroom . horffee, excellent - Condition!\ncow, poultry, wood ftnd Ico houses.\nIn village, close to depot; $5f\".o. Bar-\ngain. Oeorge Castle, Frullvsle. B.C.\n\/....- .    U0&2?)\n\u25a0\u2022\u00bb\nParticularly well built and attractive, five-roomed Bungalow,\nnear Cre\u00abcent Bay ] wharf. Fin*\nsandy beach. *\nPrice 12000 cash; $2200 on term*.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\n\u2022 -. (loeso\nCity Property for Sale\nJ OHM KTOLEB. Nelaon, B.C.\u2014Alterations  or shingling  roof* or \u00abe-r\nhouaes    built -. \u25a0\u25a0       \"     (10811).\nCKARIIS r.'SVXTSS\u2014. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.;'.:,.n.\nAuditor, MacDonald ful Batldlut*.\nBoxnu.   \u25a0. Ne,\"\u00b0HoaS\nPINE   nESlDENCE\u20148   rooms, \u25a0 \" 'bed-\n\u25a0 rooms,   good   condition,   close- in,   u\nsnap.    Q. A. Hunter, Phone 477L5.\n, - . - r.-.:,.v   (10921)\nATKHSOK T\u00abAtSM\u00bb \u2014 Coal and\nWood,    rhone _421,;j y   U_0IH>;\nnuui   nuranm\u2014B*cM*i?\nCoal and 'Wood.  Pho\u00bb*l0\u00ab..(lW\u00bb7)l\nws\nHOUSE AND POUR LOTS\u2014All kinds\nof fruit; near Hume school. Terms.\nBox  8Sr,,  Nelson,  B.C. .(10891)\nANOTHER SNAP\n.CABBONATK  STREET\nFive-room Bungalow, part slone\nfoundation,- fully modern, lu good\nshape; on car line.\nA real.good buy at  J20OH.00.\n\u00bb Terms arrnngeil. \u2022\n1      Apply\nR. W. DAWSON\nSun lira  AsiuBAvca oo.   or.\nCANADA\u2014J. C. Kennedy. BUtrlot\nRep.   Office*\u2014Ollker Blk., Nelton,. a&\nAnnnbte   Ulock\n1-.  It.  733\n(10(118)\nLive Stock for Sale\nEAIU1AIN\u2014-Good young Chester bow,\nwith 5 half Yorkshire pigfl, ?45- By-\nmonfls,  Queen's  Bay.  (lOOjjit)\nYOnKBHlRio riOS, four Tl ol 1 a rs.\nBoothby, .Kdgewooil. \u2022 (10867)\nFLEMISH GIANTS ItABBlTS, from\npedigreed stock. AU ages. Prices\nreasonable. A. L. Champion, Riocan\nCity, .\u00bb.C      ,    . ,    . (10T70)\nrURE-BHED    Airedale    puppios    \u2014\nbig,  strong,   intelligent,   will   protect\nyour   home,    your   ranch   nnd   your\nfamily.      Male\u00ab(.   -HO.    'J.    G.    Hnsr,\nVernon.   fc.C. .      (lllKSa)\nLost and Found\nLOST \u2014 C.P.R.'' tnnipporlntion and\naccommodation   pass. '. Plnder  please\n\u2022 T'hnnc 7, or apply The Daily News.\nReward. (10lir.2)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results qulcklj\nsnd economically.    IHc a, word.\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nBAltBEtVS OUTFIT, Including one\nchair nnd three-chair mirror. Write\nBox  328. Nelson. (103-13)\nBoats And Automobiles\nFOU RALE \u2014- A snap\u20141923 Ch.ilmers\nSix. J89.ri. Buns nnd looks like new.\nWill guarantee same ns a new car.\nBest buy in town. Terms if required. Central Garage, Victoria\nstreet.    >109ri3)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nWATEB  NOTICE\nDIVERSION   AND   UHE\nTAKE NOTICE that Sullivan Creek\nLumber Co. Limited. whos\u00bb nddress Is\nBlrchbnnk. B.C., will anply for a licence to take nnd use three cubic feet\nper second of water out of Champion\nCreek* which flows westerly and\ndrains Into Columbia River about seven\nmiles south of Brilliant, B.C.\nThe water will be diverted from the\nstream nt a potnt nbout 500 feet east\nof West Boundary of S. L. C5, Kootenay District, and will be used for\nflumlng purpose upon the Innd described as appurtenant to the undertaking\nof the company.     \u25a0\nThis notice was posted on the\nground on the 16th day of August,\n1925.\nA copy of this notice nnd an application pursuant thereto and to the\n\"Water Act\" will be filed in the of-\nfie\u00ab of the Water Recorder nt Nelson,\nB.C.\nObjections to the nnpllcation may be\nfiled with tho said Water Recorder or\nwith the Comptroller of Water Rights,\nParliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C.,\nwithin thirty days nfter, tho first np-\npearance of this notice in a local newspaper.\nSULLIVAN    CREEK     L17MBER\nCO.   LIMITED,\nApplicant.\nBy H. W. Vanderhoof, Agent.\nThe date of tho first  publication of\nthis notice ls August 17th, 1925.\n' \u2022 (10873)\nBIG JOHN'S SECOND.IIAND\nSTORE IS STILL RUNNING\nA big' lot of new, mattresses\nand springs Just arrived; 7 phonographs, will sell cheap; 8 SLnying ,\nmachines, cheap; dressers, round\ntables, oak chairs to match. Store\nIs full of cook, gas and coal.oil)\nstoves, rocking chairs. Ono horse,\nweight 1500, sound, cheap: 1 two-\nseated express wagon, good ns new.\nDon't come aftor fi p.m. lo buy\ncheap.\n(10930)\nBUSINESS ANmxc.y\n'PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY,\n, : (Continued)   a'-IJIl  K,\n-Carpenters\nAccounting\nTransfer\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Below  market\n- anything hardwood. *\n,'W\u00ab'-ni\u00abk*.i\n\u25a0   (totn)i\nLife Insurance\nPlumbers\nW\u00bb.  PYNN\u2014Plumbing   and  Heat-\n.   Ing. I'hone 308L. \u2022     (10730)\nWS\nChimney Cleaning ;\nrowLis,   official   oiiiBouy\nCleaner. \u25a0 \u25a0 (10889>\nInsurance and Real Estate\nRW. DAWSON\u2014\na    lui mtaM, Jnranio*. BntaJ*.\nAnnabl*   Blk.,  P.O. Box 783.  Phon* W.\n. .   \u25a0     _.      .     , (10680)\nB. DILL,    XNSTTBANOB,    T.IIN\n\u2022 AND   OUT  rBOFBBTY.      rale.\n508   Ward   Street. \u25a0',   ,     - (10691)\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL * 8t     BITCKIB     KONV-\nMENTAL OO^-P. O. Box 865, N*t-\nson,   Il.C. , Telephone  104. j. ______)\nChiropractors\nDB. X. B. OHAY\u2014Chiropractor. PkOM*\n115, He*. B21Y, Gllker blk. Hour*!\n10 to 12 a.m., 2 to 5 and 7 to ft p.m*\nexcept   Sundays.    Consultation  free.\n(10SI3)\nALLAN 1 D0DD8, D.O.\u2014Phon* 681.\nOffice hours: 10-12; 1-4 and by appointment Aberdeen Block. Nelaon, B.C.\n  (10694)\nFlorists\nPIPE AND FITTINGS, *\nBARBED WIRE, ETC.\nComplete line Plpo and Fitting*,\nall *lzes; Special 1-inch Pipe, 8o\nper foot. New Galvanized Barbed\nWire, \"$3.50 per spool. Roofing\nFelt. 1-ply, tl.BO: 2-ply, J2.00; '\n3-ply. J2.65 per roll. Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, 90 lb*, per\nroll, Special, 13.25. Mixed Wlr*\nNails, 12.00 per keg. Wire Bop*,\nCanvas, Logging. Supplies and all\nkind* equipment.\n\u00a3 C. JUNK CO.     '\n1J5 Powell St Vancouver. B.C.\n.   ,   (l\"t>Bia|\nBARRELS, KEOS AND EMPTY\nsscks \u2014 MacDonald Jam Company,\nNelson. (10683)\nFruits and Vegetables\nWANTED \u2014 Applen, Onions and Mixed\nFruit of all kinds. We have the\noutlet, and can. secure best prices\nfor you. We are also open to buy\noutright. Write us. Langstaff Coal\nCo.. Moose Jaw, Sosk. (10716)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nCabinet Maker\nJK. CBAPMAN\u2014Furniture Repaired,\n\u2022    Upholstered   and   repolished.   318\nBaker.   Phono 704. (10855)\nGBIZZBLLB'S   OBEBBBOtma,   Nab\nson. Cut flowers and Floral design*.\n(10695)\n-mv.  8. JOHNSON\u2014\nit      Phone 343.   Cut Flower*, Potted\nPlants   and  Floral   Emblem*.     (10696)\nWholesale\nA     MACDONALD   B   CO\u2014\na    Wholesale Grocers and Provision\nMerchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fancy\nGroceries.  Nelson,  B.C (10697)\nEngineers\nfceeo Btos., Bnxdt\u00bb ^\nNELSON, B.C.\t\nCIVIL    AND    MJNINO    XNOINBXM,\nB.C., Alberta  and Domlaloa\nLand  luiWJOir*. ,     ,~\"\n(10698)\nHD.   DAWSON,   Zand   lunrn\n. MUlag aad Olvll BUglawr.    \u25a0_\nKaslo, B.C.  (10699)\nHC. KINOKOBN\u2014ror.st Bagia***,\n\u2022 Cranbrook,    B.C.,   P.O.   Box   IM.\nCruising, Mapping, Surveylhg.\n (10700)\n1 MOOBB. Prov. Land Surveyor. Archt\n.\/\u2022Mining, Crown Grants. Creston, B.C.\n (10701)\nAssayers\nEW. WIDDOWSON, Boa AlIM, -*T*K\n. *on, B.C., St&adard western charge*.\n ' (10702)\nAuctioneers\nw.\nCVTLEB\u2014\n\u2022 Oood* Sold PrlraUly aad at anettoa.\nNelson   Auction  Mart,   Vernoa . 8tr**t\n (10703)\nFuneral Directors\nD.\nNigh\nJ.   BOBBBTSON,   X~Jh \u25a0   \u25a0\u2014\n801   Victoria  .treet    Phon*   291.\nt  I'hone,   I57L. (10704)\nSt*ad*rd Paraltaia-\nCo. \u2014 Undertaker*, .\nFuneral Dlreotor*.\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Beat\naervice*. Prlo**\nreasonable.   (10706)\n-'Vntat cxtrti, 42df fresh first*. He,'\n\u25a0 -pullet*. 2(c        ; _..... .--.._. ;_\nBRINGING  UP  FATHER       -;-     .\"'\"\"..^\nOH!,  U\nMAGGIE! J\nBy George McManns\n \u2014*\u2022*-;-r-tft- \u25a0\"--\"\u25a0\ni < , .midSAW PAILY NEWS,'MONDAY MORNTOG, ATOPBT 24\/1925   \/^\nfepvrilik Pitches Good Ball for\ni.- Seniors} JMOJi Errors, ;,\n' ., In Infield\n\u25a0m\nTRAIL,;,B.C.,.Aug. 23\u2014The Trail\nlh\u00abHw:defeated the Trail Mtilijr\nteam to the-tune ot'\u00bb to 1. .Thb\nna* long bun the talk of baaeball\nfan* and today It wa* decided which\nwa* tha U\u00ab*t i team and the argument I* over with. \u2022 \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0(\u25a0,'..< 'i\n'< Ih spite ot the acore the game was\n\u25a0ood and.clean and although Gay-\nfillllt pitched a clever game, but error* In the Infield reaulted? In the\nbig score. \u2022 Id the fourth Inning the\nTrail seniors bad the bases full\nand no men out, but were unable to eoore. ;\nThe score by Innings: ',\nfiheik* ............'4 0 1 0,1,1 t\u20149\nTrail .;..........'..0 0 0 0 10 0\u20141\nTT- \u25a0 Lineup i -i '\u2022 |.\nThe team* were: -.,: >\u2022'\u25a0\n'? Trail Senior*\u2014F. Laurlente,, right\nfield: Matovlch, secrfnd base; Demore, center' field; *W., Depasquale,\nthird base; W. Hall, short stop; Pradolinl, pitcher: A, Hall, catcher;\nBustle, -' tint .base; G. Depasquale,\nleft field,\nI Sheika\u2014A. McDonald,'right field;\nButorac, center field;- Ryan, first\nbase; Drew, short stop; R. Ho.ll,\nthird base;\"Demldoff, second' base;\nP. McDonald, catcher; Griffith, center field; Gavrlilk, pitcher.   '\nO. 9\u00bb3j- tunplrad t|i\u00ab, game-\nAGED LADY DIES\ni-.'.-L...\nSTARS\nWas Seventy-five; Flames\u25a0 Almost Destroy Village of   \u2022\nCannifton, Ont.\nBELLEVILLE, Ont, Aug. 23. \u2014 Fire\nwhich this afternoon destroyed a large\nsection of the village of Cannifton;\nclaimed the life of Mrs. Louisa Parliament. 75. It Is presumed that she\nw\u00bbnt upstairs to her room to get some\nmoney which she had there, and was\no\\ercomo by smoke. Her charred remains were found ln tho ashes under\nher bedroom.\nTho fire broke out in pome outbuildings on the shore side of the\nMolra river and a southwest wind\nspread the flames. Buildings on the\neast side of the road took fire and\nwilling hands lent aid as the men\nfought the flames with buckets from\nthe roofs. All*the fires on the east\nRifle of the road were extinguished,\nbut the wind carried the sparks over\nthe hilt for some hundreds of yards\nand   diVroyed   the   barns   of   Hairy\n5oyce   and   hla   entire   season's   crop,\nsslstance   In' fighting'  the   fire' was\nsent from  Belleville and Corbyvillev\n!:,\u25a0        K    ST\t\nPrince Attends   \\\nRace Meet in His\nHonor at Palermo\nBUENOS AIRES, Auk. 25.\u2014The fa\nmous Hippodrome Argent I no, at Palermo, a t-uburb of this t*lty, was tn.\nscene this afternoon of a rnco meeting organized In honor of the Prince\nof Wales.\nA vast crowd faced about as the\nl>rlnce and President D'Alvear entered\nthe royal box, and sent up a rour of\ncheers.\n* Some amusement was caused when\nft number of young women appealed\nto-the prince to present .them with a\nbunch of violets, and he smilingly acceded to their pleadings. He tossed\nthe violets singly among the girls,\nand they replied by throwing flowers\nto' tho prince, who eventually retired\nWith his hat full. _\nHarvester Stabs.,\nSelf in Neck . t,\n! at Winnipeg\n' WINNIPEG, - Aug. 23.\u2014C. Am tied,\nwho\" boarded a Canadian National liar-\nventers' special ot Windsor, Out., is\nIn St. Boniface -hospital suffering\nfrom self-inflicted knife wound.? lu\nthe neck.\nAmncd wns found bleeding from the\nknife wounds when the train was east\nof -Reddltt early this morning.\n'According to. officials of the railway. Amncd explained tho stabbing by\nMating thut he wns subject to nightmares, and that ho had dreamed\nsnakes were crawling abtiut his neck\nand he attacked them with his penknife. His condition Is not believed\nto-be serious, but he will be kept\nunder observation.\n7n         mm\t\nOperators and Miners.\nHold to Own Views,\non Strike Situation\nr- . ' \u25a0\ni PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 23.\u2014Both\nanthracite operators and miners today were apparently proceeding with\ntheir original plans for whatever sit\nuntlon Is to develop ln the coal fields\nafter September 1, while citizens'\ncommittees ' appealed In vain for\npledges assuring peace.\nThe last week In the life of the\npresent working contract opens tomorrow with both sides seemingly\nhopelessly estranged. No single 'contract, direct or Indirect, still remaining.between the mine owners and'the\nmen, \u25a0 holds any hope of Immediate\nchange ln their attitude.\n! ^      \u2014\u2014   m\nLaunch Propeller\nAlmost Cuts Lady\nin Two; Swimming\n\u25a0\\yiNDSOR, Ont., Aug. 23.\u2014Caught\nIn the propeller of her husband's gasoline launch when she dived Into\nIjike St. Clalr, Mrs. Thelma Halman,\n34, was almost cut In two this evening. Mra. Halman,. who was tho\nwife of George Halman, vice-president and general manager of the\nFisher Body corporation, Detroit, was\ndrawn toward the boat as soon as\nshe'entered the water. Her husband\nand two other friends on the launch\nfailed to see her plight and her cries\nfor help were drowned by the engine.\nJohnston Wins      ...  v\nChallenge Bowl\nj* for Third Time\n^NEW PORT,  R.I., Aug.  \u00ab.\u2014Wll-\n. Iiam M. Johnston of San Francisco\nytoa      tha       Newport       challenge\nbowl for the third time today, when\nha defeated Brian I.  C.  Norton of\n..  St.'Louis ln the final  round * of the\nInvitation tournament bf tha Casino\nCourts,   6-1,   6-3,   (-3,   In  &   match\nrequiring   ..   minutes -to   complete.\nJohnston   and   Clarence   J.   Grlf*\nflng   of   Ban   Francisco,   won   the\ndoubles title, by defeating Ray Casey,\nBut Francisco, and Brian, I- C. Nar-\nK>D, Mi 6-1, l-VM, M.    *\nAmundsen's Ship    \\r\nMaud rmWayto\nBe Sold in South\nNOME,', Aiufe*&:' < Auf. 14.\u2014The\nAmundsen ; exploration ,- schooner\n\u25a0Maud-reached Nome,la^e last right\non her way to San FWtncJJco where\nthe vessel will he sold.. -After* Carl\nLomen had taken possession of the\nvessel In the name of the Norwegian\ngovernment, as vice-consul. Unite!\nStates Marshal Charles l D. . Jonca\nwent aboard with an attachment Of\nmore than $60$ which an oil company contended was ' owed for fuel\ntaken by the Maud before her departure In -1922. Lomen posted a\nbond for * the amount.- The Maud\ncame here from East Cape, Siberia,\nwhere she was to meet a Russian\nvessel with'a supply of oil after returning \" from on unsuccessful attempt to drift across the porth pole.\nwmBi**\nShipping Strike\nFizzling Ojit\n.    Ijoiidbii Docks\nLONDON, Aug. 23.-rAll was quiet\nat the London docks today. The unofficial strike of the shipping men\nhas hot only made no progress, but\napparently Is fizzling out. Several\nvessels which were temporarily delayed secured crews and sailed out\nof pprt.\nHavelock -Wilson,, president of the\nNational Seamen's union, who sailed\nfor Canada yesterdny, predicts the\nstrike will fizzle out. He declares\nthere are plenty of men ready to\nsign on but are being Intimidated by\nthe  reds.\nThe seamen's strike Is an unofficial\nmovement and Is understood to be\nfomented by Tarn Walsh, who was\nclosely Identifiedt with the shipping\nstrike In Australia. About 15,000 men\nare Involved, the strikers repudiating\nthe agreement between the two seamen's unions and the employers for\na reduction In wages.\ntan'mx\nSo\nin;\nTeachers Welcomed \u25a0\nat Invermere; Hear\nCapt. McCarthy Talk\n. INVERMERE, Aug. 23. \u2014 Sixty\nBritishers, members of the Overseas\nEducational league, unvr the direction of T. Button and Br. E. H. Stevens, arrived on a special train this\nmorning and are leaving by automobilo over tho Banff-Windermere high*\nway tomorrow.' Here -they were addressed after lunch by Capt. A. H\nMacCarthy, late Iea\u00a3.*i* of the Mount\nLogan expedition, .and in the evening\nen masse they attended Anglican service; ' ;'.<\nDeclare    Anti-Communist\n.-\"Labor--Leaders\n\u25a0_-\u25a0\u25a0.; .>-.. London  j\nLONDON. Aug. 2S.-.(Caiiadian Press\nCable)\u2014Tbe \u25a0 anti-communist i labor\nleaders appear.Just now almost anxiously nervous 'to'.assure- ths public\nthat the \"red\" Influence is practically\nnegligible. J. ft, Clynes, welUknoWn\nlabor leader, ln an interview in the\nSunday Times, declares that .the communists have really done labor a\nservice by publishing their histoi\/oal\ndemands for a campaign ot sedition\nand disaffection' among the soldiers lo\nrepudiate the entire communist con\nception of the  working-class action.\nFred Brantley, secretary of the\nTrades Union congress, asserts that\nthe talk of'class warfare ap4 the arming pf the proletariat Is . so much\npiffle. Despite such assurances there\nnr* e-rounds In believing that tho authorities, headed by the home secretary, are quietly but steadfastly. preparing for possible emergencies. Jlu-\nmors concerning preparations and tho\nstrengthening of the special volunteer\nconstabulary are not without foundation; however..It Is not probable that\ndefinite plans will be revealed f*\u00bbr\nHome little time as the coal nrmistlce\nassures a breathing space before possible trouble Is likely to eventuate.    (\n.  . -a*       \t\nWorld map covering 2750 square\nfeet, painted by prder of- the pope,\nwaa unveiled  at  the Vatican.    -\nRushes Into su       \u201e\u201e\nSavis ChU,'.Tlm.\n'..      Collapses on Porch\n.VAHCOtTVER. Aug.' \u00bb\u00ab.* \u2014 -BB\nthe flames when the draperlca J\nheme  caught  fire. Mtttgw&_3a6\nrescued her 2-weeka-oid Inf*nt an\nlapsed   on   her   veranda.     Th*   boaf*\n%*\u00bb badly gutted. '   -\u2022\u2022'.'''\n1S:\nPolice found a hidden still in New\nYork City with a capacity ot more\nthan 12,000 gallon* per day.\nFrench Lose\nane in\nSyrian Trouble\nPARIS, Aug. 23.\u2014Although un official telegram from Blerut today\nthat \"all ls quiet In Syrin,\" other\ndispatches report the wounding of\nFrench general, Soule, and his\naide, near Damascus, and the destruction of a French airplane over\nthe beleaguered citadol of Suedlah,\nIn the Jebel  Druse district.\nAn official report says that a\nFrench military airplane sent to\ncarry supples to the garrison nt\nSuedlah fell In flames over the citadel, the pilots being burned to death-\nUpper left' ls Miss Clare Stone, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George G.\nStone of Toronto, who last .season was one.of the leading dancers in \"Mercenary \u2022Mary,\" a popular Broadway*musical comedy which opens an eight\nweeks' run-in Chicago this week. Miss Stono has been In Toronto visiting\nher parents. Upper right Is Anna May Woug of Hollywood, Cal., who,\nalthough called a Chinese flapper, dOQgn't shingle her hair, roll her hose,\npaint or smoke. Photo shows Miss Wong on a visit to Atlanta, Go. Lower\nleft shows Charlie Chaplin on his first visit to New York in 2-ft' years.\nPhoto shows Charlie at a moro or less profound moment on the roof of\nthe Ritf Carlton hotel, imitating Rodin's \"The Thinker.\" Lower right Is\nMine. Marie Jarltzu, noted Australian soprano, who has severed relations\nwith the.Viennese opera, duo to dissatisfaction, and Is to'give future concerts in America only, where Fhe has already  made arrangements.\nSWITCH TRAIN KILLS\nHARVESTER AT THE PEG\nCAILLAUX IS\nIN LONDON\nBegins     Conversations     With\nChurchill   on   French\n. Debt Situation\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 23. \u2014 Joseph\nSweeney, Murkdalc,' Out., on his way\nto the harvest fields, was killed at\nthe Canadian Pacific railway depot\ntonight.\nSweeney attempted to cross the\ntracks to speak to some friends on\nanother platform when ho was struck\nby a switch train. Two couches\npassed over his body, terribly mangling It, .and he tiled almost instantly.\nSteamer Death List\n, Reaches Fifty; Three\nDie During Sunday\nLONDON, Aug. 23.\u2014Joseph Call-\nlaux, the French minister''.of finance nrrlved hero tonight. Tomorrow he will begin conversations\nwith Winston Churchill, chancellor\nof the exchequer to see what enn be\ndono  with   the  French  debt.\nPARIS, Aug. 23.\u2014M. Calllaux,\nFrench finance minister, has gone\nto London to try lo settle France's\ndebt lo Britain, amounting to \u00a3623,-\n000.000. As ho departed he said he\ntook with hiirt \"a gentleman's, offer\"\nbut was fully conscious of France's\n\"rights\" conferred by tho war nnd\nwas confident that Mr, Churchill,\nchnncellor of the exchequer, wnuld\ngive evidence of Dritain's friendship\nfor her ally.\nIt ls known that Itrltnln wants\n\u00a320,000,000 a year, and France has\noffered about \u00a310,000,000, but there\nIs only speculation as to the concessions each Is ready to make for\ntho purpose of reaching an agreement\nsatlsfacton* .,\u25a0 to.   both   sidps.\npiONmrnksTm\nDIES At PORTAGE\n- PORTAOB LA PRAlRm Man.,\nAug. 28.\u2014Rev. J. H. Ruttnn. 85. scholar and pioneer minister, died here\ntoday. .\nItev. Mr. Ruttan wan born In Kng-\nland 85 years a.go. He came to Canada as a young man and ieeelvcd\nhis education at Victoria collcee, Toronto. After being ordained he came\nwest and was stationed at Norway\nHouse. He had translated a number\nof books from the original Greek.\nChinese Police JVow\nDemand Thousands ..\nIndemnity for Dead\nHAXKOW, Aug. 2S.\u2014The Alt- \u2022\nglo-Chlmw negotiations looklnK\nto' the cooperation ol Chinese\npolice In tlie defence of tlw for-\ncgn conooa-don collapsed abruptly today wlH'ii native official*\nanddenly protrntetl a demand for\n110,000 Indemnity Tor tin killed\nand wounded ln the riots ot June\nIt 1* reported tlw Clilnewi\nchamber of conmicreo Sins been\nnotified officially to Intonalfy\nUio  antl-Brltliili   Iwyeott.\n' WELLINGTON, N.Z.. Aug. 33.\u2014Til\"\nEmpire Press union delegates arrived\nat New Plymouth toJay. They were\nmuch Impressed with a visit to tho\nWatmoto caves, which they consider\non* of the most wonderful tourist attraction* In the world. Th* dslegate*\nexpressed delight   with  JJew Zealand'*\nbum tttntft \u2014..,\t\nNEWPORT. Auk. *J3.\u2014IJaath had\nclaimed B0 lives ill the boiler explosion on Iho excursion steamer\nMuckinac up to tonlslit when Sarah\nPowers, 15, of Centra! Falls. It. 1..\nsuccumbed to burns from live sleaiu.\nEarlier In the day death ended the\nsuffering of .lames Henderson and\nCharles Koeford.\nMiss Ellingson Is\nGuilty Manslaughter;\nNot Yet Sentenced\nSAN FPANCISCO. An' 33. \u2014\nDorothy x'Ungson, 17-ytar-old oon-\nfaarea matricide, was found guilty\nrf manslaughter:.by a superior\ncourt juiy la-st night. The young\ndefendant tocfc the verdict c*Jm-\nly, Manslaughter cairles a penalty cf from l lo 10 yeara, elig-lhle\nfir parole  after on* year.\nLiberals Divided\nOver Donoghy as\nFederal Contestant\nVANCiH'Vl'l;. Auk. \u2022.':\u2022.\u2014As a rcnu'.t\nof I'fUli'lsm. a new Liberal convention\nis t\u201e be belli In North Vancouver to\nrutily Ihe selection of DuKald Don-\naahy as standard-bearer lu the federal\nelect leu. The recent meeting which\nnamed nonalilia* Is looked upon by\nsen),. I.il.eials as not ad-ordlng to tho\nconstitution, hut It is stilted that any\nother cauUt'lil'e will have but a poor\nshow.\nBREAKS LEG IN\nFALL FROM TRUCK\nPHILADELPHIA. Aug. Ti\u2014 Lyman\nFord of Jaalio Wood, X. .1.. bail his\nleg broken this afternoon when lie\nwas bounced off the top of n motor\ntruck. Ford hud Just arrived by\nparachute from an airplane half a\nmile up In the it ir when the truck\nlilt a bad  spot  In   the  road.\nArt has been aptly defined as \"the expression o\u00a3\nman's joy in his work.\"\n. Advertising may be defined as the expression of\nthe advertiser's confidence in himself.  \"*'.\u25a0'\nThe merchant or the manufacturer who spends\nmoney for newspaper space.has faith in his goods\nand in his service,\nRead 'the advertisements,; with - this \u2022 thought in\nmind. ,..--.,        4   ,     *.\nCount every newspaper advertiser as one who\noffers something for your convenience, your comfort\nor your service, with firm confidence that his offerings will find favor with you.\nTribesmen Now\nAttaching Medina,\nthe'Prophet's City'\nJlCtlUHALKM. Auk. 23. \u2014 Medina. ''\n\"tho prophet's pity\" in lli'djn\/,, It is I\nlutttucd iriuii a reliable nource, is be*\niiiK attacked hy 'the Wapnmbt tribes-\niiitii. These trlliosini'ii nrt* under the\nloadi-rship. \"f Pon Saoud. sultan of\nNejda, who early in the year captured |\nM-tcca and took over control of a considerable  part \"f Arabia.\nThe   bombardment   of  the  holy   city\nbegan   two   days   bro,   nnd   much   dc* J\nHtructhm. lias been wrought.\nQj^irinjgs We Gari Recom-\nmendW\nConfidence\nThe buying power of the Hudson's Bay Company is fully demonstrated\nin the numbers listed here.  These values are unmatched in Canada except at all our H. B. C. stores,, and are made to give you the maximum\n1 wear at a minimum in price.\nPry Goods Department\nHEAVY QUALITY \/TWILL SHEETING\u2014Made of good twisted round\nthreads,- which - will give excellent\nwear. Full bleached. 80 inches wide.\n'Yard *1.25\nOUR LEADER SHEETING\u2014Strong\nand durable. Pure finish. 80 inches\nwide.   Yard ?1.00\nQUEEN'S HOUSEHOLD PILLOW\nCOTTON\u2014Fully bleached, of a superior weave. Warranted free from\ndressing. 44 inches wide. Per\nyard 75f>\nGOOD QUALITY PILLOW COTTON\u2014\n40 inches wide, yard  45\u00a3\n42 inches wide, yard  50\u00a3\n44 inches wide, yard  55<>\nSHEETS\u2014Green ' Isle Brand. All-\nCotton. Made in Ireland. Made in\nfollowing sizes:\n72xP0, per pair  95.00\n80x09, per pair  ?6.00\nHemstitched. 80x99, per pair....?7.00\nPILLOW CASES\u2014Ready to use.\nPlain hemmed, 40 inches wide, per\npair 65\u00ab?\nHemstitched,   42   inches   wide,   per\n\u2022 pair  $1.10\nReady-to'Wear\nKIDDIES' SLEEPERS\u2014In Penmans\nmake. Ages 2 to 10 years. Priced\nat ?1.50 and $1.75\nCHILDREN'S   COMBINATIONS \u2014 In\nWatson's spring needle rib.    Short\nsleeves; knee length.   Natural shade. '\n2 to 12 years.   Each fl.00\nGIRLS' COTTON COMBINATIONS\u2014\nWatson's spring needle style. Cumfy\ncut top. Drop seat. Elastic band at\nknee. In white only. 6 to 14 years.\nEach  ?1.25 and $1.30\nCOME INTO OUR PIECE GOODS\n' DEPARTMENT  AND   SEE   THESE\nNEW BUTTERICK PATTERNS. JUST\nTHE THING TO MAKE UP THAT\nNEW MATERIAL FOR FALL.\nNEW SWEATERS\u2014To wear under u\ncoat. Light in weight. Come in cardigan style. Colors: Mauve, green,\nfawn, grey and black.   Each ....$1.75\nLADIES' CARDIGAN STYLE SWEATERS\u2014In a good medium weight.\nPlain self colors or in a mixed coloring; Scotch-made. Colors: Brown,\ngrey, fawn,'- blue, \u2022' etc. At prices . of\n 92.50, $2.95 and ?4.05\nKIDDIES' \u2022 SLEEPERS\u2014In strrped\nFlannelette. Drop seat, high neck,\nlong sleeves. Ages 2 to 6 years. At,\neach  ?1.35 and 91.50\nInteresting News From the\nShoe Department\nNow in stock: Our Full shipment of\n\"Empress\"  Shoes,   showing   the  new\nshapes which will be worn this season.\nYou will find some excellent values\nwhich will please you. .\nGORE PUMPS\u2014In Patent or light\nshade tan Calf, showing the new\nshapes. Neat round toes and good,\neasy  fitting.    At    96.05\nSMART 1-BAR PATENT PUMPS\u2014\nMilitary heels, with neat ornamental\nstitch on vamp.   At  95-05\nBLACK KID 2-BAR PUMPS\u2014Military\nheels. \u25a0 Plain vamp. Exceptionally\nnice fitting.   At .'. 95.95\nBLACK KID i BROAD BAR, 2-BUT-\nT0N PUMPS\u2014Medium heels, with\nrubber top-piece.    At  95-95\nSPECIAL TAN CALF BROGUES\u2014\nMade on genuine Scotch brogue lasts,\nSmart round toe, rubber top-piece;\nAt    97.75\niwitiuuw\n ^\u2022ypy -PiiiMipffssp\nPaB&l^n^\nITH# NELSON DAILY NEW&v; MONDAY MOEmNG; AUGUST 24,: 1925.\nv Qlrla' and Boy*'? Hose, *lse* 5 to 9,\nheavy weight;, color* black, brown\nAnd white; prlc* 10\u00ab* to 25*J P*l*-\nDlhgham*. JJO^ to 35(k per yard.\n'Ladles' Silk Hose, to clear, all color*,\n\u202260\u00abJ fa'*- Ladles-Underwear, bar-\njtoto; prices.    Crept, 354P*' yard.\n^       J. W. HOLMES\n;Phon*   S34\n80S   V.rnon   St\nGLASSES REPAIRED\nQUICKLY AND\nREASONABLY   ,\nIt does not matter whether\nyou got your glasses originally\nfrom us, In order for us to\nrepair them. \u25a0 We need only a\npiece or pieces of the broken\nlens, and we are able to duplicate it exactly.  \u25a0'.,\nThe work of this department\nreceives the same scientific,\ncareful attention as ts paid to\nan eye examination and an\norder  for  glasses.\nYour GLA83E8 need adjusting   at   frequent   intervals.\nCome in and let Us render\nthis service at any time, free\nof cost.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST   A   OPTICIAN\nConsulting   Optometrist!\nJ. Stanley Miller, O.D.\nCalgary Honofs\nIts Soldier Dead;\nByngs in Attendance\nCALGARY. Aug. 2S.\u2014Calgary did\nhonor to her soldier dead Sunday\nafternoon when two Impressive services wero - held at Central park and\nthe Union oemetery, attended by\nthe Governor-General ' and Lady\nByng.'..Hundreds of beautiful floral\ntributes from organisations and individuals were placed, upon the\ngraves and monuments to the military dead. At the close of tho th>t\nservice, held In the park, the sun\ncame out and shone upon the long\nsolemn parade which marched to\nthe cemetery where freshly decorated  graves  were  Inspected.      :\nPlumbers' Brass Goods, Fixtures\nand Supplies, Tile and Sewer Pipe.\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nNELSON, B. C.\n806  Baker St        Nelson,  B. C.\nHEAVY RAINS\nIMPROVE THE\nFIRESpiN\nHennigtr Loses Four Hundred Poles at McRae\n..'\u25a0:   Creek\nHUNDREDsllEN LET\nOFF KASLO DISTRICT\nFire Between Rossland and\nTrail Extinguished\nYesterday\nFor Satisfaction, Try\nDOMINION   DAIRY\n. riONE   188L2\n' Our Milk Is FRESH, and la dellv-\n*red to you  from our own herd in\nlea* than 6 hour*.\nA Hot\nWeather\nSpecial\nFor Friday and Saturday\nOne tin of Williams' Talcum\nPowder and a bottle of Jergcns\nCarnation Perfume.\nRegular  value,   60c\nSPECIAL  AT  35\u00a3\nThese goods are made by the\nbest manufacturers ln this line,\nand we can guarantee them.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co*\nNELSON, B.C.\nHAS IT\nO.R. BAKERY\n.  714 6t*nl*y St. Phon* US\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nYou  Mutt  Hav*  IL\nFor   P*rf*ct  Toast   In   th*   Morning.\nSafety First\nNow Is tho time your brakes\nare   getting  worn.\nBring them to us nnd have\nthem relined with RAYBESTOS\nby the Raybestos Lining and\nRlvetllng Machine.\nRaybestos Is the best brake\nlining you can buy;\nAll makes of curs done on a\nflat   rate.    Get  our  prices.    \\\nCentral Garage\nR. M. Smyth, Manager\n\u25a0'.-'- PHONE 282.\nAgent* for  Chrysler Car*\nNelson Business College\n'   Day Class\u2014Night Class\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCOMMENCE ANY TIME\nW* Do Not Close th* College During\nth* Summer.\nGet The Daily\nNews Every\nDay\n\"All the. News While It Is\n- News\"\nDelivered to your door\nin Nelson before breakfast\nevery day for 25c a week.\nBy mail outside Nelson,\n60c a month, $6 a year.\nFull cable, telegraphic\nand British Columbia news\nservice.\nAll the best features.\nSubscribe\nToday\nFormer Khedlvo of Egypt claims\n$14,000,000 for damaged property be\nlore Anglo-Turkish tribunal.\nift\n\u00bb\u2022*\nft\n6\nA GOOD photograph for\nremembrance. Slio longs\nfor a Rood, lasting likeness of you \u2014 th\u00bb*re nre\nmuny other friends who\nwant one, too. It will\ntake  little of  your  time.\nThere ls a Mote of Sincerity About the  Olft of\nTour   *hotogT*ph\u2014It   Is\na Personal Visit\nA fire situation much improved generally by the rains of Friday, and the\ndull weather of Saturday and yesterday, was reported last night from\nmany points. ln the Kootenays and\nBoundary. All fires heard from, either\nthrough local residents or the forestry\nbranch, are under control and not expected to break out badly unless\nweather conditions change very much.\nNo new flrep were reported, out the\nloss of poles belonging to E. C. Henntger, near McRae creek, was a bad\nfeature of Friday night's situation.\nFires In the Grand Forks and Boundary district. Including the Keely\ncreek, Wallace mountain. Deep creek,\nthe Carml,fire and the Mulligan creek\nfire, all out of control In Thursday\nnight's high wind.'were subdued by a\nheavy rain on Friday, and Saturday\nand yesterday were within bonds\nagain. Between 10 and 30 men are\nfighting  these  big   biased.\nThe fire on McRae creek got away\nFriday night and destroyed 400 poles\nbelonging to IS. C. Henniger. It was\nlater held at the government road,\nwhich acted a\" a fire guard.\nXaslo-Lardean   Normal\nVery heavy rain fell ln the Kaslo\npnd Lardeau districts on Saturday,\nwith the result that the situation is\nalmost normal as regurds fires there\nnow. Hundreds of men were released\nfrom fire fighting at various times\nduring the week, before the rain fell,\nacoording to a Kaslo resident, and\npractically no men aro left to patrol\nany of the fires now.\nAn exception ls the Davis creek fire\nIn the Lardeau, which ls still being\nfought by a  large  crew.\nA heavy rain on Grohman creek was\nreported Saturday, and from practically all local fires.\nTrail and Itossland both reported\nheavy rains Saturday, and yesterday\nthe fire which haw been burning between the two towns was practically\nout.\nmunicipal art\nschoolmaster\ntalks\u2122\nCharles Parker Sees Canadians as Loving: Efficiency\nin Education\nHungarian\nBeauty\nWMJ_m%\n____.'      ^$$\n^HL.\nm_r        ^*^    m\n'   Sr^L\n|sfr -'\u2022*. 'ih\n\u25a0 s * __&___\n\/.'\u25a0    yjjSpi.^1\nf{.^<\\ a a,.\n,j*$*<'^Xx\n-   '   ..SiM\nSHOW SHROUDS\nFOfflY FIVE OM\nKOKANET CLIMB\nSix Inches'^ of Filmv Falls\nFriday; Saturday Keep\nClose to Camp\nMME. NINA 8CH0LSPERIN\nOne of the most beautiful leaders\nof Hungarian society, claims the dls\ntlnction of having neither bobbed her\nabundant tresses, nor entered the\nmovies, although Bhe has won a num\nber of beauty contests and has had\ntempting offers to become a film\n\u2022tar.\nWONDERS OF GLACIER\nENTHRALL MEMBERS\nLast  Night  Spent  Around\nCamp Fire With Yarns;\nRoad Blocked\nthough < many crevasses had ?? opened,\nthe party returned to camp 'without\njr.n accident being reported. v >. [--.'\nThe , following day, Friday, '\u25a0\u25a0 seemed\nthe- hardest, as the flrat day's- hike\ntire tried then to take effect on :most\nof the party. The party split* up* but\nmost of them took - In the 'trip 'to,\nManvllle and Joker lakes, the, longest\ntrla daring the outing. They i left\ncunp at 8 a.m., returning 94-9 p.m, v\n\u25a0.        .   Know Friday Wight.  .\" \u25a0..'\nAt 1 o'clock the eame evening the\nparty had to -take shelter,1 as they\nwere visited by a heavy hailstorm.\nwhich later changed Into a snowstorm\nresulting In si* Inches of enow in the\nmorning.\nSaturday, many uf the party found\nit to be too wet to take a trip, and\n\u2022tayed aryund the camp. . Some of the\nInduetr'ous hikers went for a little,\ntrip, hut returned to camp a few hours:\nlat-*r wet und cold. ?\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"*\u25a0 \u25a0\nDuring the evening of . Saturday\nmost oT the time was soent ln games,'\nH'na- songs and Mory telling.'\nAfter a rood night's rest the party\nleft early yesterday morning and hiked\ndown hy way or the Kokanee route\nand returnutl to Nelson last night.\nMins Nurrlngtqn of the Manitoba\nUniversity, who 1s a member of the\nCanadian Alpine club, and who: has\nmadolr^-i to the Swiss glaciers, was\namong tv hikers and reported she had\nhad one of tlm most enjoyable times\nthe ever had on a hike\nWANTS MORE\nDr. Darwin Reviews History\nof Methodist Missions in\nCanada\nP^V,\nr>eQOP\n'     ^STUDIO\nMAGLIO BLOCK\nTEL.2Z4-P.O. BOX 69-1\nVelox\n\"The name denotes\na quality print\"\nA KEEN, sparkling print,\n\u2022\u25a0-\"*\u2022 preserving every bit of\ndetail ln the negative\u2014that's a\nVelox  print\u2014every  time.\nMade purposely for amateur\nwork, there's a. surface and degree of contrast to suit every\namateur   negative.\nLook for \"Velox\" on the back\nof your prints. It's thero If it's\nVelox.\nJ. H. ALLEN\nAmateur   Finishing\nPicture Framing\nBlacksmith Supplies\n\/     .\nTONOS\nRASPS\nVISES\nPINCERS\nHAMMERS\nHORSESHOES\nHOR8ESHOE  NAILS\nBAR  IRON  AND STEEL\n'GILBERT' SMITHING COAL\nAlways in Stock\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co.. Ltd.\nWHOLKSALi\nI    NRLSON. B.C.\nRETAIL\nCharles F. Tnrker, head of the\nJunior Municipal Art schools In Plymouth, Devonshire, England, and one\nof the 65 British teachers that\npnssc.T through Nelson on a tour of\nCanada Saturday, expressed great\nfeeling for Canada, nnd the groat\nbeauties he had  seen on his trip.\n\"The magnificence of your country,\nits engineering accomplishments, tho\nbreaking up of the land, and the\nvaried environment of the many people\nI have come in contact with,\" said\nMr. Parker, \"have Impressed me\ngreatly.\"\n\"Our trip over the Kettle Valley\nmade a very reriiarkablo Impression upon my mind, and 1 am only\nsorry that the limo at which we\ntravelled over It did not give us\nsufficient light to bt* able tn admire all that, han been accomplished\nby man In that wonderful d'strlct.\n\"I cannot also help referring to\nwhat I have noted ns I go through\nfrom prbvlnc\", to province at leisure,\nthe way you ull tackle your educational problems, because wherever\nwe go, we find thnt the Canadians\nhavo a great love (or efficiency, not\nonly In their educational building**,\nbut in the organization. Thlt.. in my\nmind, reflects the utmost creillt upon\nyou nil, nnd demonstrates to us\nyuur determination to secure the best\npossible chaoce for your children.\nAdmires Canadian Tenacity\n\"Wo recognize your difficulties, nnd\ntho forces of nature with which you\nhave to contend, not forgetting also\nthe constant outbreaks of fire*. But\nwe admire your pugnacious tenacity\nIn the dealing with them. We arc\nproud, however, to link up with our\nown,\" your hopes, your nmbltlons nnd\nyour good wills.\n\"In this great cause we arc Immovably allied, and It Is an olllanco\nbetween God and nature, fixed as the\nfirmament of heaven.\n\"I am delighted for this further\nopportunity of Investigating your\nactivities at Nelson, and am Indebted\nto your ex-mayor, I* II. Choquette,\nfor devoting himself to us during\nour brief stay ln Nelson.\"\nNelson News of the Day\nLost \u2014 One rowboat, clinker built,\nminted grey with green trimmings,\nleward, Outlet Hotel. Procter.  (10933)\nDr. O. A. C. Walley, dentist, Griffin\nBlock. (10676)\nWanted\u2014Sour    cherries.      McDonald\nJam Co. (10835)\nWanted \u2014 Blackberries. Plums,\nGreengages.    McDonald's Jam Co.\n(10836)\nParents' greatest ambition, the welfare of their children. North American Life. 2-3 Aberdeen Block, E. H.\nHanley, district  manager. (10948)\nThe Kokanee Mountaineering club\nollmberB. 45 Btrong. returned to Nel-\npon last evening at nbout 8;3f) o'clock\nfrom their annual hlk\u00ab to , Kokanee\nglacier. The whole party, with the\nexception of O. Bladworlh aftd A. L.\nMcCulloch, who returned via the\nLemon creek, returned by way of the\nKokanee route.\nOwing to the heavy wind .storms\nlast week the autos to bring the party\nout were not able to -climb very far\nup the hill as there were many trees\nfelled by the wind, the party having\nto hike as far down as to within\neight miles of the lake.\nA heavy hailstorm, followed by a\nsnowstorm, stopped tho hiking for\nmany, as there was at* least six\nInches of snow 011 thu ground on\nSaturday morning. The parties that\ndid go on their dally hike camo back\nwet and 'cold.\nAn advance party was ..sent .up to\nthe   glacier   Tuesday.\nThe main body left- Nelaon\" on\nWednesday morning nnd arrived at\nthe  camp at 4   p.m.   tne  same  day.\nThursday morning the club toon a\ntrip up to the ber ull ful Kukunee\nglacier, which was a sight worth\nwhile   seeing,   they  all   conceded.     Al-\nOYER THIRD OF\nINCH OF RAIN\nCold Wave Accompanies  Dull\nand Rainy Weather .With\nGusts of Wind.,\nNelson end district received tlie\nlong-wanted rain Saturday, when.\nabout noon In. the city rain started\nto fall. .IS Inch being recorded up tc\n(j o'clock.\n' During Saturday night the rain continued, Sunday getting the credit for\nIt In the shape of .20 Inch, mak.ng a\nlutal of .36 inch in the 48 hours. Yesterday the sun came out, but the sky\nwas   partly  clouded.      , .\nTlic temperature was cool all day\nSaturday, the maximum being 62 degrees end the minimum 64 degrees,\nwith a difference of only eight degrees. . Heavy winds occurred during\ntht   most   of   the   day,   blowing   at   u\nSg\n.'n'^rb,\n\u25a0 \u2022\"\u2022-'\u25a0    i \u2022-,  .: '\u25a0;<\u25a0. v.- yw \u25a0.' - !-\u25a0'\u25a0' *\u2022-\u25a0*'\nMade,\nto Measure\ndothiii^    :\nWe have received our.\nnew Fair samples of Suits\nand' Overcoats, and have\nnever, had a better selection of patterns to offer.\nA perfect fit guaranteed,\nMade by Fit-Reform . or\nLeishman. i    ,\n$40 TO $65\nrale   of   30   miles.an  hour, from   the\n\u25a0southeast. *.     -    :.- *.\nYesterday the minimum' was down\nto 40. degrees, and the maximum t\u00bb\u00bb\nto 66 degrees, wind traveling *t'U\nmiles from  the' southeast. \u25a0       \u25a0 \"  *.i'\nBUCHAREST,' y Aug. tl.\u2014Beat?\ndamage to property wai caused recently. In the region of. Calais, when\nduring a storm hailstones as large a's\nhens' eggs fell. The storm extended\nalong the River Sereth Into tht provinces of Bessarabia,- Dobrudja,' Tulcea\nand  Kustendjc,      .    \u25a0 ^ ' *'J^\nIn addition to'the property damage, crops were destroyed In tftYi\neral places. \u25a0 .   * .   \u25a0    \\ \u25a0' \u2022-!\nIrving L. Stone, founder and head\nof the Duplex Printing Press com-\npiny, died at Battle Creek. Mich., aged\n84. '     -    \u2122*    *\nA short resume of the history of\nMethodist missions ln Canada, and\na plea for even more work for\nmissions under church union, were\nmade by Rev. Oliver (Darwin, D.D.,\nsuperintendent of home missions for\ntho United Church of Canada for\nBritish Columbia, at Trinity church\nlast night.\n\u25a0 \"I. have been looking around the\nchurch and for the life of mo I\ncannot distinguish the Presbyterians\nfrom the Methodists,\" Dr. Darwin\nsaid In opening. \"When I remarked\non the same thing to a friend at a\nrecent presbytery he said it w-as a\ntragedy that two groups of people\nso alike had kept apart bo long.\"\nAppropriate to Union\nIlls text was one he thohght appropriate to church union, being\n\"The Lord our God be with us as\nHe was with our Fathers.\"\nThe dramatic march of time\nsweeping past lifts our thoughts to\nthe eternal\u2014speaks to us of God,\nour God ond our father's God,\" ho\nsaid,\n'Men have cleared many forests of\ndifficulty, dug out many a vein of\nsilyer thought and laid the foundations for many noble structures for\nus\u2014such men us Augustine, Luther,\nCalvin, Knox und Wesley- But, after\nalt, they only began mighty movements which we must carry on. Had\nthey not been what they were, or\nnot done what they did, however, we\nshould not be hero today. Abraham\nwas and ls not. David did a day's\nwork and sleeps with his fathers.\nFresh faces, new voices greet us,\nGod's work needs many workmen\nnnd workmen oft renewed. We\nhave Inherited a glorious heritage.\nIt   Is   ours   to   improve,\"\nIn this sense, Dr. Darwin said,\nhistory showed a movement upward\nand onward. Christ was far better\nthan Moses, hut lie came from the\nt-aino God- The modern preacher\npresents \u25a0 an interpretation of truth\nand duty which far outdistances medieval interpretations,-but which had\nthe   same   foundation.\n.Splendid Parentage\nSpeaking of the Methodist church\nmissions ln Canada, he said they\nhad been born over a hundred years\nago, of a splendid parentage. To\nshow how little the alms of the\nwork' had changed he rend a report made &6 years ago, which spoke\nof the need of log cabins and chapels of devotion rising together In\nCanuda.\nDr. Darwin described tho persecution and opposition, early missionaries met, and their vindication at\ntho hands of the Canadian legislature, which Investigated their work\nand made a very favorablo report\non It. He spoke of.the similar testimony, many years later, of the\nlate   Karl   Grey.\nOrganization of the work of Methodist missions in British Columbia\nin 1859 wns described, which followed a report Jn a missions paper\nthat Vancouver's Island was to be\nmade a British Colony, With borders\nextending out of tho Island to the\nRocky mountnns.\nAmong  early   missionaries   to   the\nprovince   mentioned   by   Dr.   Darwin\nwas Thomas Crosbie, who\" organized\nthe  work  In  Nanaimo.\n, larger   Parishes\nIn conclusion, Dr. Darwin Bald;\n\"Everything I nm, everything that\nhns made me of any worth In the\nworld Is'owing to the Influence of\ntho Methodist churih. But,, while it\nIs hard to give up the \"name of\nMethodist with alt Its associations,\nI thank God for the larger parishes\ndue to the union of three great\nchurches, with the great opportunities for new work.\"\nHe spoke of the brotherllneas observable at the three union presbyteries already held, and said \"Now\nwe must go forth ana aee that by\nthe grace of God we labor on the\nside of what continues to,'be the\nvery beet Influence In life,'and for\nthe esteem of our lord and master,\nJesus Christ.\"\nThe adjoarned meeting1 of the Kelson\nConservative Association win be held\nIn the Board of Trade Booms on\nTuesday evening\" at I o'clock. K. O*\nIrrlnf, secretary. (10947)\nComing \u2014 The Ladles' Imperial Orchestra, to play for a dance at the\nKagle Hall, Thursday, August 27.\n(10923)\nSons    of    England    meet    tonight\nWhite.Rose.   , , (10956)\nPrivate sale of household furniture.\nIncluding a large Gurney-Oxford steel\nrange, dining-room table and chairs,\ndlvanetts, arm chairs, kitchen cabinet,\nall ln first-class condition. Apply\nMrs.   E.  Mason. (10964)\nAKT   AWAXDI   XVOBSAUD\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 23.\u2014An additional prize of $:.00 has been added to\nthe list of awards for the 24th International exhibition of paintings at the\nCarnegie institute here, beginning October 15, and continuing until December 6.\nThe Garden club of Alleghany coun*\nty added the |500 to the regular prise\nlist of $3300. It will be awarded for\nthe best painting of flowers or gardens ln the exhibition. The award\nwill be made by the Jury, Which will\nmeet here September 26,-\nDUfaLIN, Aug. 21. \u2014 The fruit crop\nthis year has proved almost a complete failure, the Free State department of agriculture reports. The yield\nIs ths smallest ln many years.\nMatinee Today 2:30\nPay Nite Tonight\nChristian Girls Thrown to Lions\n\".   *'\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-\u25a0 \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '   \" ryy _.:i^i-_k^lk:._i\u00b1L2i_-_\nmmm\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1925_08_24","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0402734","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1925-08-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1925-08-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}