{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-04-27","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1921-09-09","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0397077\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Nelson Joins\nTOURIST ASSOCIATION\nPage 8\n#S2\nRead the\nCLASSIFIED ADS\nPage 6\ntf'OU 26.\nNELSON, B. C, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921.\nNO..11?.\nConstitutionality of Order-in-\nCouncil Questioned;, Employment on Timber Limits\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 8.\u2014(By Canadian Press)\u2014Until the constitutionality of the Oriental order In council Validation act Is -passed upon by\nthe supreme _ court of Canada, the\ngovernment of British Columbia is'\nrestrained by Injunction granted today in supremo court by l&r. Justice\nMurphy from prohibiting the employment of Japanese and Chinese by\nthe holders of timber licenses,in this\nprovince. ,   .\nAttorney-General J. W. deB. Farris- explained that a hearing of tho\ncase will be sought b-efore the supreme -yfcourt of Canada, probably in\nOctober. The minister of justice,\nRight Hon. C. - J. Doherty, in view\nof representations from the Japanese\nconsul general at Ottawa, seeking\ndisallowance of the act, decided to\nrefjar the whole matter to the supreme court, and the case previously\nh-card here by the court of appeal\nand litigation concerning the present act, will be heard at the same\ntime.\nDecision wll| \\ turn on the constitutionality of tlie act and whether it\nis an infringement of tho Japanese\ntreaty provisions and discriminates\nagainst Japanese of British Columbia.\nThe caso. ultimately will be carried\nto the Judicial -committee of the privy\nCouncil, it is stated.\nMen Stripped to Waist as in\nOld Slave Mart; No Bid-\nders for, Unemployed*\nBOSTON,   Sept.   8.\u2014Jobb|ess   men\nwere placed on the auction on Boston    cqmmbji   today.     Stripped   to\nthe  waist,  after  the  custom   of  the\nold    slave    auctions,    they   declared ;\ntheir willingness to work by standing |\nbefore a crowd of thousands,  offer- i\ning their services to the hlghost bidder.\n\"Shorn lambs, of unemployment,\"\ntheir auctioneer, .Urbaln Ledoux,\n\u25a0called them. Ledoux a philanthropist worker, who recently opened the\nchurch of the unemployed in the\nwest end, 'led a groun of DO to the\ncommon, to bring home, he said\nthe people of Boston their stories of\nhuman misery* Lodoux's efforts\nto get work for his men was not\nrewarded. He announced that the\nauction was to be a daily ovent,\nto *bb cbrftlnired. at ieas^ forlthd\/c-\nipfUndep \u25a0 #f. tlio' iripijth...       \u25a0,-     .\nCELEBRATE CONSTWWM0NAL ANNIVERSARY\nGERMAN  PRE8IDENT REVIEWS TROOPS\nPresident Bbert, resplendent in a. shiny topper, and Chancellor Wirth, are here shown inspecting the honor\nregiment of~the German security guard on the occasion of the second anniversary of the new Gorman constitution.\nSince that time Ebert and Wirth have become uneasy over the growing resentment of the masses against the\never-increasing activities of the junkers.       \\ . ' '.\nDISCUSSES PROBLEM\nOF HARNESSING SUN\nNEW YORK, Sept. 8.*\u2014The next\ngreat achievement of science will be\nutilization of the sun's rays to provide light, heat and power. This prediction was made today by Arthur\nD. Little of Boston, in an address\nat tiie International convention of\nchemists.\nAccording to Dr, Little, the sun\nalone is worthy of scientific investigation as a source of energy. He\nrejected   wind,  waves  and   tides.\nAttacking the claim that labor is\na greater producer of energy, Dr.\nLittle asserted a few men with brains\nwould apply scientific prinicplo to\naccompany what mere muscle would\nnot. .\nDundee Police Have Difficulty in Dispersing Demonstrators.      ;\n, DUNDEE, Scotland, Sept. 8,\u2014For\nthe third consecutive night a mob of\nunemployed engaged iu window\nsmashing. The entire police force\nand a body; of special constables had\ndifficulty In dispersing the mob, but\nsmall parties continued their campaign of destruction. Scarcely a\nshop window in some of thc districts was: left,,-untouched. Damage\namounts to many thttdsand pounds.\nNumerous arrests .were made.\nBLEEDS   TO   DEATH\n, POttTAGE LA' PRAIRIE, Man.,\nSept. 8.\u2014Tho body of a man, believed to be John Coughan of Toronto, was found ln the bush alongside tho Canadian National railway\nin the neighborhood of Onah, yesterday, according to word received\nhero tonight. His left foot was cut\noff and he had apparently bled to\ndeath. The only means of Identification was a receipt from , the Loyal\nOrder of Mooso, Toronto, Lodgo No,\n1G0.\nDISCOVER SKELETON\nIN COLUMBIA RIVER\nREVELSTOKE, Sept. 8.\u2014This\nmorning provincial police officers of\ntho Markland, City Chief of Police\nW. W. Spratt and Robert Black-\nmore took the skeleton of a female\nfrom the Columbia river at tho foot\nof the old dock, near R. Sawyer's\nmill. The skeleton was practically\nnude, except for the remains of a\nportion of a pair of corsets clinging\nto tho waist. The body was located\nlast evening by David Sturdy and\nRodger Foote, but darkness presented the renjpval of the remains until\nthis morning.\nThe body is belipvod to be that}\nof May Clelland, who lost her life\nin- the unfortunate boat accident of\nSunday,   June   37,   1920.\nSANITARY ASSOCIATION\nCHANCES DESIGNATION\nOTTAWA, Sept. 8.\u2014The Canadian\nSp-nitary association will henceforth\nbe known as tl)e Sanitary Inspectors'\nassociation of Canada. The change\nwas decided on at tho concluding\nsession of tho, a-tisoc iatlon'a annual\nconvention here tooday. Winnipeg\nwas chosen aa the next convention\ncity.\nG. O. S, LafIattune, of Ottawa, was\nelected president. Vice-presidents for\nthe  ensuing year are as follows:\nOntario\u2014A. J. Bolus, Fort William.\nManitoba--\u2014H.   0\u00bb.. Trigg,   Winnipeg.\nSaskatoon\u2014M. K. F. Dun-ant. Moose\nJaw.\nAlberta\u2014J.   J.   Dunn,   Calgary.\nBritish Columbla\u2014W. S. Sturgess,\nVancouver;\nThe executive council will oe composed of F, 0- Austin, T. J. Booth,\nAi Barclay arid. C. Hargrave, all of\n\u25a0Winnipeg- _\n.   STEAMER ARRIVALS\nScandinavian,,  at   Antwerp\nMontreal.\nPatrlu,   at   Marseilles   from\n.i<n%: _,:.,:.-,\u2014_,_-\t\nNow\nONTARIO TREASURER\nOFFERS NEW LOAN\nTORONTO, Sept. 8.. \u2014 Provincial\nTroasurer Smith wUtl advertise immediately for tenders in his new\nloan. Contrary to original announcement which heralded'a $15,000,000\nloan, thp amount to be sought Is\nonly $10,000,000 although less figures iriay be somewhat Incrascd if\nthe offerings are favorable. The new\nloan is to be a 20 year loan, six\nper ccrit venture in tho market.\nFor the most part, tho new money\nis required to retire treasury bonds\nissued in April last, and a littlo\nof It for hydro expenditure.\nGENEVA, Sept. 8.\u2014(Associated\nPress).-\u2014The United States mandatory powers and countries that are\ncontinuing to arm came in for\ntrenchant criticism in tho first day's\ndebate ln the assembly of tho leaguo\nof Nations on the work done by\ntho  council   of  tho league.\nHjalmar Brantlng of Sweden, accused the council and the secretariat of the league of partiality and\nextravagance. Lord Robert Cecil,\nrepresentating South Africa, defended hoili the council and tho secretariat. - Lord Robert was very severe,\nhowever, about the countries, which\nhe said, according to statistics a,re\niipehdlhg about 21) per cont oi: their\nenergies on armaments and at the\nsame -limp complaining of economic\nInstability and bad trade conditions.\nHe blamed the United States for\nthe delay In the adoption of the A.\nand B. mandates, and introduced a\nresolution that thoso terms be immediately   defined.\nArticle X to Stay\nThe. ..committees continued their\nwork thla afternoon. The council's\ncommission of amendments finished its labors hy deciding not to\nrecommend tho adoption of an\namendment by Hon. C. ,T. Doherty,\ndelegate from Canada, eliminating\narticle 10 from the covenant of the\nLeague of Nations. At the same\ntime it passed an interpretative res\nolution intended to meet United\nStates objections  to the clause.\nThat a president, of tho United\nStates cannot alone, under the constitution bind his government on a\nquestion of mandate, is brought out\nbriefly In on,e* of the paragraphs of\nthe last note from that country on\nmanadates, copies of which are circulating among tho delegates of the\nassembly. The note is dated August\n8. \u2022\nTho note begins with a statement\nof the general United States position on mandates. Mandates respecting the former German colonies, ll,\nsays, were onl-yj made possible by\nthe victory of the principal and aa-\nsoclated powers, of which the United   States was  one.\nAffiims Equal Voice on Turkey\nThe United States -government although it did not tako part in the\nwar against Turkey, affirms the\nright to have a voice equal to that\nof any other power in. deciding the\nmadatcs over former Turkish possessions such as Syria, Lebanon, Mesopotamia and Palestine, because tho\ndistribution of these mandates was\nmado possible only through the\nvictory over .Germany, in which the\nUnited   States   .shared.\nThe note, In a ctear and firm\nmanner-, 'requires equal opportunities for concessions and commerce\n(Contlhued   on   Pago  Two.)\nOliver Denies Rumor of\nCalling Oif Fall Session\nAccount Federal Election\nVICTORIA, Sept. 8.\u2014Premier Oliver this afternoon denied the rumor\nelhanating from Vancouver, that the\nprovincial government has decided\nto. call oft tho fall session of the\nlegislature ana not meet until after the New Year as a result of the\nDominion election coming off before   Christmas.\n\"Ther\u00ab ls nothing in It as far\nas \\X  know,\"   said, -the  premier.\nAccording to . present, jplans the\nfajl. session will bo called about tho\nend   of   October j\nHungarians Led by Priests\nMarch on Burgenland;\nGovernment in Flight.\nVIENNA, Sept. 8.\u2014Superior Hungarian forces this morning captured\nZagersdorf \u25a0 and are advancing on\nMattersdorf, tho temporary seat of\nthe Burgeland government, which Is\nIn flight.\nPriests Lead Troops\nHungarian troops lgd by two parish\npriests, Stephen Varga, of Zagersdorf, and Karlschmidt, of Drassburg,\nlast night overpowered tlie sentries\nof the Austrian garrison at 'Zagersdorf. Two members of the garrison\nwere killed and many wounded, whil\nthe others were blindfolded and taken\naway in motor trucks. Reinforcements overtook the Hungarians this\nmorning and the Austrians were released. The priests were made prisoner aud taken to Weiner Neustadt,\nwhere they were almost lynched by\nan angry  crowd.\nFORT\" WILLIAM,  Ont,  Sept.  8.\u2014 labor   on   tho   railway  for  malnten-\nOF\nLack  Destitute  Bodies  for\nDissecting, Says Professor\nof Anatonmy.\nTORONTO, Sept, .8\u2014Prohibition Is\nworking a severe hardship on the\nmedical colleges of the country, -as\nit Is,causing a dearth of bodies, for\ndissecting purposes. Dr. J. D. *Mc-\nMurrich, professor of anatomy, said,\nwhen addressing the convention of\nthe Canadian Embalmers' association\ntoday.\n., Sinco prohibition. Professor Mc-\nMurrlch had found that, men belonging to tho class which formerly died\ndestitute through indulgence in liquor\nwere now leaving estates sufficient\nto give them burial. Tho profassor\nappealed to (he embalmera to assist the suffering colleges as mfieh\nas possible in their* present dlffl-\n\u00abUi^_* '    . , , , 9. __J_\nC. P. R. Officials here this morn\ning included President E. W. Beatty,\nSenator Beiuque, IC. C, director and\nvice-president Bank of Hochelagu,\nt>Slr Herbert Holt, president Kam\nPower company, _X\\ of -Montreal;\nGeneral Superintendent, J. J, Scully,\nMaster Mechanic, J, S. Allan, North\nBay, Vice-president, A. D. MacTter,\nMontreal; W. C, Guthrie, Superintendent, Hcreibcr, and E. F. McKee\nthe president's privajtc secretary.\nThe party came in at 6:15 this morning and left for tho west at 10\no'clock.\n. A. D. McTier and other eastern\nofficials returned east at 8 o'clock.\nWestern officials meeting the party\nhero were D. C. Coleman, vice-president, A, E. Stevens, general superintendent, I'1. Punnefather, master\nmochanic all of Winnipeg; J. J.\nHorn, supt, and J. J. Alan, master\nmechanic Kenora. Many local men\ncalled upon the president this morning. In course of an interview President Beatty said,\n\u25a0\"\u25a0While there still exists-pronounced quietness in business, especially\nin eastern Canada it is possible, indeed probable, that during tho fall\nmonths of tho year* there will be an\nimprovement largely duo to the stimulus and increased purchasing power because, of the excellent western\ncrop. It Is not to be expected that\nthe revival in -general business will\nbe other than gradual and it may\neasily be next spring before a general tendency towards normal conditions   Is   observed.\nPrepare  for Unemployment\n\"Unemployment exists in particular localities to a considerable extent but it .will not I think tiecomo\nacute during the fall months. Thoro\n,wHI undoubtedly be considerable\nunemployment during the winter but\nthe possibility of this has been thoroughly appreciated for some months\npast, and tho governments municipalities and corporations are prepared to<\ntake such steps as they legitimately\ncan to reduce>, it by the only proper means, nanrely, by wherevor possibly providing woi-k. Any other\nmethod of relieving the situation\nshould only bo considered becausa\nof   absolute   necessity..\n__l_W_j^M_W..?w\u00bba.s&utefis -si\nance work, and while good weather\nprevails the force's may be increased\nand thus' provido employment for\nthose who are willing to undertake\nthis kind of labor. There ia also, I am glad lo say, a steady improvement in the 'financial situation\nand a good demand for high grade\nsecurities, especially in tho United\nStates which conditions will' undoubtedly bo reflected in a short\ntime on those existing in Canada.\nNo Cnuso for Pessimism\n\"There ia nothing ln tho situation which should causo pessimism.\nThe problems wo havo to face are\nknown, and therefore oapablo of\nbeing dealt with. \\Tho period u\u00a3\nrigid economy which we havo gone\nthrough waa not without ita advantages, in nu other way could an\nadequate appreciation of the situation\nbe obtained, and while avoidable ex\npendltures of necessity been deferred\nthoy will have to be incurred later\nwhich will mean the carrying out\nof all. thoso that the necessary as\nsoon as the conditions warrant. Work\ndeferred is hot work completed, and\nextensions and additions'to existing\nplants will be necessary even to\nmeet a, normal expansion of business\nnext year.\nCoiiiiltibas I'luuluineu tally Sound\n\"Tho conditions In Canada are\nfundamentally sound. There has\nbeen nothing i n the nature of an\nacute depression especially as compared with Other countries. It Ib I\nthink a fact however, that the two\ngreat' necessities for this country's\nadvancement, namely, the obtaining\nof suitable settlers in aa large numbers as possible, and the attraction\nof capital for U19 extension of Canadian enterprises, should be most\nserious condition now and not later.\nIt ia politics which are initiated in\ntime of depression that aro usual\nthose of super-caution and not founded * on either hopes or courage, but\nthere- is nothing in Canadian conditions to warrant the lack of either.\nEconomy Still Necessity\n\"Governmental economy still should\nbe a watchword and the monies\nnecessary for the maintenance of\nthe country's institutions and the\nmeeting of its obligation!!, should\n(Continued, an Pago\u25a0 Two^\nAnnouncement in Week or\nSo; Ballantyne WOI Probably Retire.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 8.\u2014Cabinet construction is \u25a0 proceeding apace, but\nso far the prime\"'minister has not\nannounced his reorganized ministry.\nIt is expected, however, that definite announcement will lie \u2022miidc\nwithin a week or so. As a preliminary and following the usujfrt custom, iL i.s understood that resignations of aM present members of the\ncabinet are being placed in the\nhands of the premier. The idea is\nthat Mr. Meighen is thus given a\n\u25a0free hand in the work of reorganization. It does not moan that all\npresent ministers will retire, although\nfrom present indications. It is probable that a number will do so, Tho\nresignations would not tako effect\nuntil accepted.\nThe name of Hon. C. C. Ballantyne, minister of marine and fisheries, is mentioned today as one of\nthose who have definitely decided\nto   retire.\nREVERSAL TO TRIBALISM\n1\nPremier's Note to Republicans Asserts Rejection of LjB't\nProposals Without Conference Repudiation of AUegKce\nto Crown; Asks Definite Reply; Believed De Valenftfill\nAccept; Basis Is Untramellcd Parley With Singh\ndition of Ireland Remaining Within'British Emp\nwon*\nCORN   CROP   RECOVERS\nWASHINGTON\", Sept. 3.\u2014Recovery\nof the United States corn crop during August from the serious damage sustained from July weather conditions featured the September grain\nreport of tlio department of agriculture issued today. Favored with\ngood growing temperatures and\nplenty of.rain in practically the entire corn belt, the production \u25a0 forecast mado a jump of lfi4,000,OQO\nbushels, bringing 'the indicated production to 3,186,000,000 bushels, 01\nonly 48,000,000 bushels leas, than lasl\nyear's  crop,   the  largest  ever  grown\nLONDON, Sept. S.\u2014The text of\nLloyd G-oorge's letter, which waa\ndispatched tn Dublin from Tnver\nnest*, Scotland, yesterday, in answer\nto the latest message from TCamnnri\nDe Valera, the Sinn Fein leader,\nfollows:\n\"His Majesty's government has considered your letter of August 30, and\nhas to make tho following observa---\ntlons  upon  it;\n\"The principle of government by\nthe consent of the governed Is the\nfoundation of the British constitutional development, but we cannot\naccept as a basis of a practical conference an Interpretation of that\nprinciple which would commit us to\nany* demands you might present .even\nto the extent of setting up a republic ahd repudiating the crown.\nBasis Impossible\n\"You must he aware that a conference on such a basis is impossible,\nthe principle of government by thn\nconsent of the governed would undermine thc fabric of every democratic state and drive the civilized\nworld   back   into   trjbulism.\n\"On the other hand, we have Invited you to discuss our proposals\non their merits, In order that you\nmay have no doubt.as,to the scope\nand  sincerity  of our  Intentions.\n\"It would be open to you In such\na conference to raise the subject of\nguarantees on any points in which\nyou may consider Irish freedom prejudiced by those proposals. Hia\nMajesty's government la loath to believe that you wilt Insist upon rejection of their proposals without\nexamining them ln a conference.\nRefusal Repudiates Crown\n\"To ,decline to diacuas a settlement\nwhich would bestow ifpon the Irish\npeople the fullest freedom' for national development within the Empire, can only mean that you repudiate all allegiance to tho crown and\nall membership in ihe British commonwealth. \\   .\n\"If we are to draw this inference\nfrom your letter, the further discussions between us could serve no\nuseful purpose and all. conferences\nwould be in vain. If, however, wo\naro mistaken in this inference, as\nwe still hope, and if your real objection to our proposals is that they\noffer Ireland less than the liberty\nwe have described, '(hat objection call\nbe explored at; 'a conference,\n\"You will\"'agree that thla correspondence has lasted long enough.\nHis Majesty's government * must\ntherefore, ask fur a definite reply\nas to whether you are prepared to\nenter a conference to ascertain how\nthe association of Ireland with the\ncommunity of nations known as the\nBritish Empire, can best bo reconciled\nwith  Irish national  aspiration.\n\"if, as we hope, your answer Is in\nthe   affirmative,   I   suggest   that   the\nconference should meet at Inverness\non the 20th instant\"\nDesires Untrammeled Conference\nLONDON, Sept. 8.\u2014Mr. Uoyd\nGeorge's letter to Eamonn De Valera,\nthe Irish Republican leader, which\nwas sent to Dublin after the meeting of tho British cabinet at Inverness ' yesterday, seems at least to\nInsure that the Sinn Fein plenlpqten-\nItaries will meet the special commlt-\nteo of cabinet ministers at Inverness\non Sept. 20 for the purpogo of clearing up any ambiguity \"the Sinn Fein\nleaders\" may entertain about the six\nconditions the British government\nstipulated aa reservations In granting\nIreland  a dominion  statUB.\nTho prime minister's letter, like all\nhis communications since the Irish\nnegotiations began, la characterized\nby consideration for the Sinn Fein.\nWh'llo it suggests a date for 'the\nproposed conference, it Is in no dense\nan ultimatum and seta no time limit\nto the negotiations.' In fact, it tends\ntq prove what has Ween maintained\nthroughout by tl^me close to the premier, that he earnestly desires a settlement.\nThe belief Is almoat universal-tonight that Do Valera will accept\u2014\ntftat* what the premier offers is what\nDe Valera desires,, namely, an>.un-\n(ranuneled conference with the single\ncondition that Ireland remains1 in\nthe British Empire.\nAgreeable to League Membership\nThc guarantees which De Valera la\nsupposed to have In mind are membership In the League of Nations and\nthe Imperial conference, and these,\nit is believed, the government would\nbe   willing, to  grant. *\nAssuming that the conference will\nmeet as suggested, there - Is stilKthe$\nquestion of Ulster, which is not\ntouched on in the premier's letter.\nLloyd George's original proposal waa\nfor a conference, including Ulster,\nbut up to the preaent thero is no\nsuggestion that Ulster has yielded In\ntho slightest in its determination to\nbase itself on the Home Rule act\nand the northern parliament. A representative of the government, in an\ninterview at Inverness, said today\nthat in the event'of tho conferenco\nfailing, tire government would proceed with* the Home Rule act, which,\nby inference, may be interpreted to\nmean that the government regards\nthe .act  in  partial abeyance.\nUlster Problem Remains\nEven should the proposed confer-\nence at Inverness surmount the initial .'difficulties, there will still remain Ulster on which De Valera\nholds strong views. The question\nof tho desire of F-ermagh and Tyrone\nto be separated from the northern\nparliament also is lakely to be raised .\nin the conference, and this would\nbring a bitter conflict with. Ulster.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nDominion Alliance, Ontario\nBranch, Takes Steps Appealing ''Dry\" Candidates.\nTORONTO, Sept 8.\u2014Steps have\nalready been taken by tho Ontario\nbranch of the Dominion alliance to\nmake prohibition an Issue in tho\napproaching federal election. At\na meeting of r.hn executive committee of the branch held here today,\na resolution was adopted urging the\nDominion executive to make an appeal for the uoiniuaUi'on of candidates who will support Dominion-\nwide   prohibition.\nTRACTOR KILLS CHILD\nSASKATOON,      Sept.      8.\u2014Charles\nRussell, aged  7, was run over  by  a\ntrafclor   on   his   father's   farm   near\nWilli ie, today, dying almost instantly.\nI-Wa Uuiuggj. win h\u00a7 held,     ,   __   __\nmm pen\nUnited States Tourists Anonymously Send Gift to Premier Lloyd George.\nLONDON', Sept ,8. \u2014 Mr, I.hnd\nOeorge, it was learned, today told\nthe messenger boy who recently delivered to him and the members of\nhia cabinet a box of cigars from\nanonymous tourists as he signed the\nreceij)!:\n\"This Is the pen with which I\nsignrd the peace treaty, and t hop,!\nto sign the Irish agreement with\nIt.\"\nThe messenger brought back id\nIhe donors of thft' cigars a letter\nfrom Mr. Lloyd Oeorge addressed\nto \"my anonymous American friends\/!\nsaying:\n\"It is genuinely helpful, at a critical moment like lho present to re-\nceivo thla really delightful token of\nsympathy and good will from a\ngroup of Americans and I trust we\nmay succeed this year hi founding\nlasting pence and harmony between\ntho two great' races which have\nboth contributed so largely\nIjfe and history ot your gi\npublic.\"\nTHE WEATHER.\nthi\nSPECULATORS RUSH\nBOURSE IN BERLIN\nDUBLIN, Sept. 8.\u2014An onslaught\ntoday by speculators forced the governing board of the bourse to closo\ntho Institution for tho balance of\nthe day. The avalanche of buying\norders attained such dimensions that\nthey could not he accommodated\nthrough tho regularly established\nchannels.\nThe mark sold for less than one\ncent on the curb for a brief period\nduring the atteruiuu. Later it was\nquoted officially at _|7M  cents.\n\"Zimmie\" J\nVICTORIA, Sept. S.\u2014The barometer\nis steadily rising over northern British Columbia, Fine weather may bd\ngeneral for several days. Showers\nhave occurred hi lho prairie provinces,\npiprecasts for 3*1 .hours from 5 a. nu\nNelson   ant\nr nl .night.\nvicinity\u2014Fine and cool-*\nNELSON   \t\nVictoria   \t\nKamloops     ....\nCranbrook\nBarkervllle    ...\nAtliu     \t\nCalgary\t\nVancouver\nGrand   Fori!   ..\nKaslo\t\nNew tiazelton\nPrinqe Rupert\npuwaou    ,.,..,,\nMin.\nMax,\n41\n66\n50\n6*2\n64\n6G\n42\n66\n36\n.8\n28\n64\n40\n64\n56\n6S\n48\n71\n48\n50\n37\n64\n4a\n60\nU\n\u00bb\n Page 2\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhtrt  tht  Ti_v.llln|   Public   Dny  Obtain   Sup.rl.r   Accom.dntl.il\nTable d'Hota\nA  la  Carte\nM<\nV6%\nThe Premier Hotel'ol the Interior\nOEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nService Unexcelled.\nINCOMPARABLY THE  FINE8T TEA   ROOM   IN   B.   C.\nOpen Dally 10 a. m. to Midnight. Music and Dancing\nThe Latest Sundaes,  Ice Cold  Drinks and  Ices\n  Afternoon Tea (2 p. m. to 5 p. m.) 25c\nHeadquarters for  All Traveling   Men,  Mining   Men  and   Tourists\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nROOMS, $1.00 UP\nkm\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Black,\nEilnbourgh, Scots.; David Bairut, Cranbrook, Mrs. R. G. Warner, Slocan City;\nMrs. L.. Crass, Slocan City; J. N. Pennock, Koneberry; J. Hargrave, Toronto;\nB.  Wilson,  Vancouver;   W.   K.   Inwood,\nToiuito; S McCune. City; U. Halloa.\nNelson; it. w. Dawson, Spokane: .his.\nj. Gil-more; Vancouver j Mrs; Fred Car-\nsons, Slocan City; Gerald Kashby, South\nSlocan; F. A. MacDonald, Nelson; Joseph, F. Item], Marble; A. C. Robinson,\nMarcus;    Wm.   Cherry,   Calgary.\n \u2014 . . --.\npuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiir! iii! i; ::;-:i '-y-m;, Tmmz:,; t,r.: rm rm. i:i:ii;i: ii.i:i;:.i,i:i:!!:ri.ii :m: *:;:;\u25a0 iiiiTiiiLiimiitium'i'ii^Ei\"1;\nAmerican  Plan, $3.00 and Up\nEuropean  Plan, $1.00 and   Up\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\n\u2022 Nelson's Leading Hotel\nTHE  HOME OF THE COMMERCIAL  MAN\nWell lighted sample rooms, ort\nground   floor.\nSpecial winter rates by week\nor  month.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS HOTEL and SANITARIUM\nArrow  Lakes,  British Columbia\nAmerican Plan, $3.50 per day.\n$24 per week. For rates apply\nS+rothcona   Hotel   or   Halcyon.\nThe finest water for Rheuma- 11\ntism, Sciatica, Gout, Urlnic Oon- j\nditlona,   etc.\n1 H.W. SHORE\nIiiiiiiiii in fin 'i|imii ,\n: : :        Proprietor 1\n\u25a0\u25a0iiiiniiiiiiBiiiiiiiB\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean   and   Ameriean   Plan\n\u2022team Heat In  Every Roam\nA, LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nQUEENS\u2014Mrs. C- Clarlton. Bridea-\nvniej Victor Erickson, Sweden; E. O.\nWindsor. Calgary; A. Lalng, Hal for i;\nMr. and Mrs. F. \\_. Jackson, Calgary.;\nJ.  Dority,  Wcstley.\nHoliday Resorts\nBelow tlio :iniiimiici'itirnlii of ro-\nflorts in Kootchny-Boumlni'.v where\nenjoyable vacutloiis mny Im spent.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n618   VERNON   8T.   EA.t\nCemfortabl. Room.,  Hot and Cold\nWater.   Dining   Room   In\nConnection\nR.tea |1  and  up.'\nWHERE THE FISHING 18 GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishing,    Boating,    Bathing,    Golf,\nTonnis  Courts\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nStore   in  Connection\nW. A.  WARD,  Prop.\nRatee Reasonable Good Meals\nMADDEN HOUSE\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nFlrtt   Class   Rooms   by   the   Day,\nWeek or. Month.\nEvary  Consideration  Shown ta\nGuests.\nCor. Baiter and Ward 8ts., Nelson\n**i .\u00bb'\n\/ \" ***\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\"\u2022*\u25a0\nKootenay Falls Hotel\nSouth Slocan, B. C.\nClose tb famous Fishing Pool and\nBonnington   Falls.    Afternoon   refreshments for auto parties served\non   cool   verandah.\nFISHING   IS  GOOD   NOW.\nMADDEN\u2014O. TUrlette, Cascade. ]'.\nVolgotte, Cascade; Mrs, Toerns and\nfamily, Manitoba; A. M. Pherson, Calgary; E. J. Bowles, Edmonton; U.\nRaitus, Edmonton: A. Poole, Trail;\nA.   Mushta,   Trail;   J.   Burgoyne,   Van-\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF, NIL80N, Proprietor,\nBAKER STREET\nFurnished   Rooma   by   Day,   Week\nor Month.\nTREMONT \u2014 ]). Erleksun. Ci. Fuss,\nErica Carlson, Pete Nelson, Frank\nUntried,   Lake   Windermere.\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMr*.   Mallette,   Proprietress\nA heme far the world at reasonable\nrates.\nOpen   night   and   day.   First-\nclass  dining-room.  Comfortable\nrooms.\n818 Vernon 8t,     Near Post Office\nKOOTENAI-\u2014John Kel'lvuk. Creston;\nOeorge Yenson, Creston; Frank Carlson,\nErie; Harry Hunmpbrey, Erie: David*\nMartin,    Yahk.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned and run by Canadians. No\nalien labor employed.\nRoom and board, per month....$45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   Grandville   Street\nCosy,    bright .rooms.    Just   the\nplace   for.  your   vacation.    Ratea\nmoderate.    Write   for   particulars.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate of  Royal  Hotel, Granville St.\nLAST TRIBUTE TO LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR\nHOTEL MENUS\nWo print Hotel Menus, cither\nwith complete menus or with\nthe different headings Vand\nblank spaces for typing in tho\nbill  of fare. \u25a0\nThe   Daily   News   Job\nDepartment\nTho Homo of Good Printing\nNelson,   B.   C.\n\u25a0   t FUNERAL  OF   HON. LIONEL CLARKE\nUli!   lieulemuH-gnvernor  ot   Ontario,  leaving   St.  Paul's eathcdrul- Toronto.    The pall  bfti\nSmith, K. [.,. Cousins,  I*. W. BHis, D. B. Hanna,-\"VV, K. Alderaon and* A.   I).  Langmlur.    Ill   tfli\nqnd  Duuglas Clark.', suns of the deceased;    The clei-gymeiC on  Lhe  right  aro Rev.  Canon  Cody\nBrb'ughall.\nirs ure RI Home-\ndoorway  aro   Eric\nand   itev.   Canon\nConservative Candidate\nHON.   ROBERT   ROGERS\nFormer   ieuer.ii   minister  oE   works,\nwho  will run   for  South   Winnipeg.\nI\nSWEDEN APPROVES\nPROHIBITION BILL\nC11RJST1ANIA, Sept. S.-The lower In.use of parliament udopted tlie\nprohibition bill which forbids the\nImportation of liquor or wine can-\ntabling more than U per cent of\nalcohol\nThe bill now goes to thu upper\nhouse, where it Is expected to be\napproved.\n \u2014\u00ab\u25a0_.\t\nBarristers Meet Next Year\nat Vancouver or Victoria\nOTTAWA.. Sept. K.\u2014The next annual meeting of 1 hu Canadian Bar\nassociation will bo held either in\nVancouver or Victoria in' August of\nnext year., This was decided at a\nmooting of the executive council of\nthe   association   today.\n(Continued from Pago One.)\nnot only for all citizens of non-\nmandatory powers, hut also tho fullest equality with the nationals of\nmandatory powers both of A and\n1*5   mandates,.\nThe note Stipulates that no mandate shall he agreed to without the\napproval of tljjo United States government and that no mandato after\nIts approval, ahull bo changed without the consent of that government.\nIt was requested in the nolo that\nwherever in mandates it is mentioned that equal rights are to he\ngiven to \"members of the. League\nof Nations\" a phrase shall be substituted referring to eountries mentioned hi annex \" of the treaty of\nVersailles, among which Is the United   Stales.\nKleetloiu?er for Judges\nElectioneering for thc 111 Judges ot\nthe international court, created by\nthe Leaguo of Nations already has\nbegun and ia developing considerable ardour, This is particularly\ntrue among the South American\ndelegates, which, basing their claims\non tholr numerical strength in tho\nleague, \"are asking for four Judges.\nThc four principal power's\u2014Cireat\nBritain,   France,   Italy   and   Japan\u2014\n[are conceded one by election foroca.sl-\n. era. lt Is generally conceded that\none of them will come from tho\nUnited States and one from Holland.\nj League leaders aim to give all-\nround  information   to  the  nations  of\nI the world, which raises thc difficulty\nin their object of giving one seat\nto Scandinavia, . one to the Slav\ncountries one to thc British dominions and one to Gorman speaking\ncountries. This leaves only one foi*\nSouth    America.\nThe method of the election is being .studied and probabiy . will' be\npublic. The assembly and council, it\nIs understood wilT'liold elections consecutively, after which the lists chosen, hy each body will be compared at-\nthe   first   election.\nRELEASED  UNDER TRtfCB\nBELFAST, Sept. s. -of the. 1-30\nSir* Fein members of parliament;\n11*2 have beeil Imprisoned once, T<\ntwice, IS four tinics, s five tiiirey,\nthree seven times nnd two eight\nlimes. Tlie death sentence has been\npassed on If.. , All were released\nunder   the   Irish   truce.\nEf\nS OPTIMISTIC\nCatches Cold in Pyrenees\nPRINCE OF   MONACO\nSeriously    ill    fallowing    exposun\nwhilei hunting.\nPublic\nsini'.\ntelle\nra\nwho\ninf\nu-m the\nllite'ratc\n|)D\n\u25a0ulatli\n11\nare\n1\nHill        ill\nJhiriii.\nStirling Hotel\n711 Vernon St. Two blockq and\na half east of the post office.\nNewly opened. Light and cheerful\nrooms with hot aud cold water,\nsteam heat Also 2 and 3 room\nhousekeeping apartments.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nTHE STANDARD \u00a3AFE\nGO   Bikor   StreM,    Nelson,   B.   C,\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nIt   ts   2:30,   Special   Lunch,   -Mt\nPhone 154\nCLASSIFIED   ADS   WILL   BRING\nRESULTS   EVERY   TIME\nFair\nPrize Lists\nOur pamphlet and booklet department ia well\nequipped to print prize\nlists for fairs and other exhibitions.\nModern  machinery,  expert  workmen  and   high-\n\u25a0 class materials enable us to\ngive    exceptionally    good\nservice.\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS  JOB\nDEPARTMENT\nNELSON.  B. C.\nThin Folks\n\\{' yoU'.'are weak, lliin and iieryo'uS\n\u25a0'' iiii> Canada Drug & J look Co.\nrfipply ymi wilh Blti-p-'Phosphate. It\ns guaranteed !u Increase' weight and\nslrenfUh ii j 1 rt In rcalon; energy*-, 'vigor\nmd   nerve   force.\nThe People's Choke\nFor Over 70 Years\nfor digestive disorders has been\nBeecham'sPills.Youcanhaveeon-\nfidcnce in this remedy for biliousness, headaches, flatulency, constipation. Sluggish organs are\nstimulated and the whole system\nbenefitted by\nBEECiiAff\nSold every-\nwtinre In\nCanada\n\\m\nSwellings usually\nmean inflamed tissue.\nAbsorbine,. Jr. gently\nrubbed on the swollen\npart' will quickly re-\nducethe inflammation,\nand the swelling with\nit.\nThough   powerful, Absorbine,  Jr. is absolutely\nharmless, and can be used\nwith safety and comfort.\nIt is a dependable antiseptic and germicide.\nKeep it handy. >\nSI.25 a bottle\nnt most ilni-i-ii--'--.*\nW. F. YOUNG, Inc. -\n344 St. Pr.ul St., Montreal\n(Continued from Pago One)\nj ha obtained by measures which will\nbear u's lightly as possible upon the\nj individual tax payer, I think it\ni will be found that a reduction in tho\nincome taxes will be part o*C wisdom\nand as In (he United States, reflue-\ntldria In these taxes will be highly (leKfrahl.e- because of the consequence  .\n\"The aggregate monies for Investment thus mare available will be\nconsiderable and while it is impossible for us to meet thc eapitai 'do.\nniandH of the country with Canadian\ncapital alone, tho more of our own\nmonies whieh aro invented in Canada the better for the country. Tbe\nbest Canadian is bo who has a personal stake in the enterprises of\nhis   own   country,\nDecreased \u25a0 Rates  Xeetvssary\n\"There   is   nothing special   to   announce as to the'company's program\nfor '19__,tu_   that *wl?.l  not  bo   .leter-\niniued   until   a   later  U^Ip-\".\n.Aslte,.d-.-rWhot he . though of the\nrato situation, Mr. Beatty stated\nthat, undoubtedly decreases In ra.tes\nwould Ue necessary just as soon as\nfinancial conditions of the companies\nwarranted it. He pointed out that\nduring the period of strict economy\nthe purchases of the larger systems\nwere Very', greatly reduced, and from\nthe standpoint of the welfare of the\ncountry it was highly undesirable\nthat tbe finances should bo so contracted that fairly free spending\nof money iu Canada should be prevented, lie pointed out (bat all\nrailways preferred to make reasonable earnings through the free movement of traffic at moderate rates\nrather (ban a restricted movement\nunder higher rates; moderate rates\nrather than, itestrljcted movement,\numlor higherV rates; but that regard must be had to the-earning power and conse-nuent effect on the credit of the eompanios If monies were\nto be readily obtained to enable them\nto. meet the natural expansion of\nthe country which was Inevitable and\nnot.- in his opinion, in the distant\nfuture.\nsorbmeJl\nMU8T  HAVE\nHEALTH  CERTIFICATE\nSOFIA\u2014Tha draft of ' a public\nhealib la\\v placed, before parliament\nby tbe Bulgarian government requires that all persons desiring to\nmarry shall produce a,doctor's, ceiv\ntlflcate Avowing their stato of health.\n-French promoter's are considering\nirrigating* tracts in the Sahara desert\nfor golf links.\nSEES REVERSAL\nTO TRIBALISM\n(Continued   from   Page   One.)\nIt  will  thus  be  scon  that  there are\nyet many difficulties ahead.\nSinn   FeinerB  Impatient\nDfiBUK Sept. 8.\u2014Arthur Griffith and other Sinn Fein leaders\nawaited al tlie Mansion House this\nevening with some impatience thc\nArrival of Kobert C. Burtob,' who Is\ncarrying the British cabinet's reply\nback to Ireland, because, although\nthe terms of the reply aro known.\nthe- Slhii Felners are' anxious to\nlearn   furl her  details. V\nThe Sinn Fein - leaders are still\nsilent respecting their Intentions, but\nin ol her Irish political circles the\nopinion is ex passed that Lloyd\nOeorge litis shown a disposition to\nmeet all difficulties, Although thu\nKepLibliean leaders decline to discuss\nthe ' mailer publicly those in touch\nwith them regard it as certain that\nthey. will accept the invitation to\nmeet a,t Inverness. In. such event,\nplenipotentiaries would be selected.\nConsider Plenipotentiaries\nArlhui* Griffith, as foreign minister, certainly would, be one of them,\nwhile Michael Collins, commander of\nthe Irish Republican army and finance minister, is a possibility. Professor John MacNell Is considered\na likely selection as he is a distinguished scholar and speaker. He\nIs also a native of county Autrlin and\na member of parliament for Durry,\nboth within the area of the' northern   parliament.\nTherefore he is considered the best\nexponent of tbe attitude of the Ulster\nNationalist  minority.\nReplies to Labor Congress\nINVEHNlilKS. Sept. 8.\u2014Tho prime'\nminister today sent a reply to the\nmessage from tbe trades union congress as Cardiff in whieh he declares that nobody is more -opposed |\nthan Ills Majesty's government to|\nbloodshed, and must of all to war)\nbetween citizens _ of thu same Empire..   , .'...'\n\"nut.\", ho added, \"I have tho author! fy of the greatest democratic ]\nstatesman iu history for the belief\nthat even bloodshed Is better than\nthe disruption of the living political j\norganism, -whose strength and energy\nare essential to the freedom of the|\nworld.*,'\nLloyd G'.iorge probably will remain\nseveral weeks in Scotland' and\nthe event of -Do Valera's accepting!\nthe invitation lo the conference, will\ncall a preliminary meeting of thel\ncabinet   to   arrange   details.\nSilk\nUnderskirts^\nThe soft new SILK PETTICOATS'\nhave arrived, fashioned iu supple,\nsilks, they presage generous wearing quality and display a beauty of\nmode and excellence of workmantihlp\nwhich wins Instant friends.\nIn tailored and dressy styles. Suit\nshades and  evening  tones.-\nThe Early Models of the\nFall Suits, Coats\nand Dresses\nAre creating a most favorable impression.    The smart '\nstyles, the fine material, the tasty trimming, coupled with\nthe'reasonable prices ensure their popularity.\nSmillie & Weir\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\n*-\u00bb\nJust One Application\nand the Hairs Vanish\n._ ; : <i>\n(Modes of Today)\nA harmless, yet very effective, treatment .Is here given for the quick removal of hairy growths. Mix enough\npowdered delatone and water to cover\nihd' undesirable hairs, apply paste\nand after 2 oi* S minutes remove,\nwash tbe akin and the ' liah'H .have\nvanished. One application usually\nIs sufficient, but to be certain of results, buy the delatone in in original\npackage.    Mix fresh as wanted.\nnortheast of Lesser Slave lake, wh'.-ro\nhe Investigated the prevailing conditions among Indians and half\nbreeds.\nNot only were large numbers of\nthe Indians found to be tubercular,\nbut veneral diseases were prevalent\nand scores of children were showing\nsymptoms of them. It was particularly to look inlo the smallpox situation  that   the trip  was  undertaken.\nDr. Bell is in favor of a regulation\nproviding that only one family shall\nlive In any one-roomed hojtse. An\nother remedial measure proposed Is\nthat, a detachment of mounted police\nbe stationed in the district to enforce   health   and  other  laws.\nThe granting of rations t^ the\nnorthern Indians through tho Dominion Indian department is criticized\nby   Dr.   Bell   in   his   report.     In   his\nFriday    and   Saturday\nSPECIALS\nMen's  Ilartt   Shoes  in  black, or\nbrown,   round   or   receding   toe.\nS3SSS : $12.50\nC. Romano\nTht House for Solid\nLeather Shoes\nopinion this has done more than J\nanything else to degrade lho natlves.f\nIii many cases he found that the rations had been gambled away fori\nprunes and raisins, out of which to J\nmake    moonshine    whisky.\nFar North Indians in Danger of Extinction From\nHereditary Diseases.\nEDMONTON, Sept. 8.\u2014There Is actual danger of th-e 'Indians In the far\nnorth becoming extinct unless measures aro taken to safeguard them\nagainst their hereditary diseases, according to a report to the provincial\nhealth department by Dr. W. \"W.\nliell, health inspector, who states that\nbetter health conditions thero are|\nurgently needed.* Dr. Bell haa .just\nreturned from an Inspection trip\nthrough     the     Wabaskaw    district,.\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nj\nEither With Your Name\nor with the words\nDai*y Buttet\nAccording to the Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers who sell butter\neither to stores or privately\nare required to have it properly covered in a wrapper on\nwhich MUST appear In\nprominent  letters  the words\n\"DAIRY BUTTER\"\nThe fact Is also emphasized\nthat all butter in auch\npackages must.be of the full\nnet weight of sixteen ounces\nand In default of same a fine\nof from $10 to $30 for each\noffense la Imposed. Whey\nbutter must be so labellod,\neven when mlxod with dairy\nbutter and. dairy butter retains its label evei'i though it\nbe mixed with the creamery\nproduct.\nPri\nrices\nPRINTED   WITH   NAME   OF\nFARMER OR BRAND NAME\nIf you have your own name lot\nbrand on your wrappers you gain\nvaluable advertising for your but-\n'ter.    It causes people to aak for\nthe iiaiiin brand again,\n500, Paper and ma  nm\nPrinting M.-ii\")\n. 1000, Paper and rtjr? _t\\{\\\nPrinting    3) I .[)[)\nPRINTED   WITH   WORDS\n\"DAIRY   BUTTER\"\n100\ntor\n250\nfor\n600\nfor\n1000\nfor\n $1.00\n $1.50\n $2.50\n ____$4.50\nWE CAN 9HIP IMMEDIATELY ON  RECEIPT OF ORDER\n\/\/ wrappers are to be mailed include postage when\nsending money .orders\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE  HOME OF  GOOD  PRINTING\nBAKER STREET NELSON,  B. C,\n -TOE CTH3DW TOTCY WUW3, KtfDAY MORNING, SEWEMBEI 9, 192f.\n4\u00a33\nPago, 8fl\nmanufacturing* firms\u2014lhe Nelson\niron Works; the Kootenay Wire\nWorks, and W. W. Powell\u2014had answered the questionnaire in connection with the campaign to secure\nequalization of freight rateB..\nIndustrial  Report\nA report from the industrial com*-\nmlttee stated. that it had nqtifled\nthe \"patentee of the new type *of,j\nhinge, that it did not. seem ...probable\nthat, anyone would undertake the\nmanuTacture of that article in Nelson just at present, but that Jt\nwould keep the matter in mind and\nwould advise him of any new developments.  .\nA letter from, the -Fortes Vibratone\ncompany, which wishes to establish\ntoy factor ' somewhere, nnd,a letter\nfrom H. E. Reynolds of Repress, Cal.,\nwho wants Information on paper\nmills, were referred to J. 'E, Annable,\nchairman of the industries committee. .\nPresident P. J. Boles was in the\nchair, and there were . also, present\nSecretary E. F. Gigot, A.* b. McLeod,\nI. R. Poole, A. L. McCulIoch, W. S.;\nKing, A.. S. Horswill, WJ H. Jones,\n,B. Kryscher, II. D. Kenny, E! W.\nWiddowson, J. A. Irving, .1. A, An-*\nnable, VV. Rutherford, . W- Robertson and  H.  A.  Johnson.\nW>._A_-^4_-A.\nJK\u00a3\n:.---*\u2014\\.--t _i~-J7ic7i-~a<\n?\nSapperton Club Plans Tour\nof Interior; May Play Locals in Nelson.\nConsiderable oxcttr!mei*lt in lacrosse   circles   here   yesterday   over\nletter from W. S. Simpson, secretary of the Sapper ton Amateur Lacrosse club, a New Westminster aggregation that .Is trying to arrange\ntour of interior lowns Including\nVernon, KeloWna, Pontic!on, Revelstoke, and Nelson, 'i'he club requested information as tp llie possibilities of a game  with  Nelson.\nMembers of the\" Nelson ciub got\ntogether and eagerly discussed the\ninatter, and were very much In favor of a match with the New Westminster Invaders if it can be arranged\nto take place 'as a part of the* Nelson Fair sports program. Accord-\nlligl*;, negotiations regarding terms\ngtlty the date, are on, with Secretary\nParry Ferguson  doing the dickering.\nEXPECT ill\nLS\nNelson    Gardeners    Report\nRains  Have  Helped  Im\nj    mensely; Vegetables Also.\n'.Nelson'gardene,rs we:i;e enthusiastic\nyesterday as to the possibilities of a\n\u25a0banner floral section at the Nelson\nfall fair, which' opens week after\nnext, or on. Sept. 21. The rains have\nmade some differences in' the outlook, and while they expected to\n\u25a0make a good showing anyway, the\nprecipitation gives Vhe l'low-ers just\nthe needed stimulus to bring them\nto   perfection.\nTho vegetables will also benefit,\n-R. V. Ramsden pointed out yesterday, and the showing of the kitchen\ngardens ought to be exceptionally\ngood. , yy\nLegal Notices\nLAND    REGISTRY    ACT\n(Section   IIJO)\nIN   THE   MATTER   UK   FIRST:    East\n*     25 feet of Lots If, and lfi, block 18,\nTown   of Vmir,   Map   G10  and  SECONDLY.    Lots 16 arid-16. Block 18,\nTown   of    Ymir   aforesaid,    Except\ntha  East   26   fetd   thereof:     Kooten-\n\u2022   ay   District,       *:\nProof \u25a0 having   been   filed   in   my   office   of   the   loss    of   Certificates   of\nTitle, ' Noa.    2738K   (md    (I515A   to   the\nabove mentioned.lands in thc name*-* of\n.lohn    Keith    nnd .Mamie    Coleman    respectively   anil   bearing   dales   the \u2022 8th\nNovember,     1891),    aud    21st,     January,\n1U07.    I hereby give notice of my  indention   at   tlie   expiration   of   one   calendar month from the first publication\nhereof, to issue to the said JoWn  Keith\nand  Mamie  Coleman   provincial   Certificates   of   Title    in    lieu   of   such    lost\nCertificates.     Any  .person   having   any\ninformation   with   references   to   such\nlost   Certificates  of  Title   is   requested\nto communicate witli the  undersigned.\nDated   at   the.   Lsiud   Registry   Office,\nNelson,   B.   C.   this   22nd   day   of   August,    1921.\nE.  S.* STOKES\nRegistrar\nDate   nf   first   publication   August   21,\n.3921. (-iCOfi)\nX.ANX)    REttXBTUY   ACT\n(Section   227)\nof    Application    No.\nand\nIssue\n\u25a0fi    of\nIn     tbe    Mutter\n10449-1\nJn the Matter of Lot 15,  Block  1'S,  Nelson   City,   Kootenay   District.\nTAKE NOTICE that the above application has been made to register Ein-\n\u25a0ar August Olson as owner in fee of\nthe above lands, and for thn\nthe said Einar August Olstf\nCertificate of Indefeasible Title there\nto, and that, in support of sueh application there lias bee'ri produced a conveyance dated 27th June, 192!. from\nHarry .lames Wi.toiv tlie registered\nowner of said Innds under a conveyance dated lfi tli 'March, 1912; from\nEliza Margaret \u25a0McOandltsh, the said\nJ-)U?.;l Margaret MeCandlish having acquired the said lands Under the \u25a0 writ\nof William Edgar McCandlisb (deceased),- tbe said William Edgar McCandlisb, (deceased) having acquired\ntbe said lands uncle* a conveyance dat-\n\u00abd 1st May, 1!)11, from Tbe Dominion\nPermanent Loan Company under rb6\nPower of Sale contained- In iv certain\nmortgage dated 20th February,' 1$99,\n-Wherein Lewis W. Kribs was mortgagor and the said The Dominion Permanent   Loan   Company  -was   mortgagee,\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE\nthat registration will he effected in\npursuance of tbe above application and\na   Certificate!   of   Indefeasible   Title   to\nIthe said lands, issued to the said\nEinar Rugust Olson after' the lapse\n\u25a0OX-thirty' lays from the. service upon\nvou of this notice .(which may be ef->\nfected by publication thereof as hereunder directed), unless you shall-\ntake and prosecute the proper proceedings to establish your claim, If.any,\nto, tho said lands, or to prevent such\nproposed   action   on   my   part.\nDATED at the Land Registry Office, Nelson, B, C. this 7th, day of\nJuly,   A.   D.   1921.\nE.    S.    STOKES\nRegistrar.\nXFo Lewis W. Kribs,\n-J  direct, service  of  tlifs  notico, to be\nmade   by- publication   thereof   once   a\nweek for two weeks In a newspaper circulating in Nelson, B. C.\nZ*       * \u25a0\u00bb-.-\u25a0\u00bb.\u25a0   STOKES\n\u00a3iPD   __ _t- ___ -t^.. Registrar\nbia Associated Boards of Tjrade party,\npurporting to bring the board Into\naffiliation with tho provincial organization, was read In the minutes\nby Secretary,E. F. Gigot, the luncheon\nbeing reported as a meeting of the\nboard  of trade.    *   .\nW. H. Jones took exception to\nthis construction, * pointing- out that\nthe constitution had not been compiled wilh fn advertslng It as a\nmeeting of the board, and also lhat\nit .cost  75  cents  to  be  present;\nPresident F. J. Boles asked If the\nbylaws of the hoard had always been\ncomplied with in other matters. He\nstated, he. had given everyone a\nchance to vote on that occasion, and\nintimated if the board did not uphold his acts as president he would\nresign    the   office.\nHe   then   directed   the   deletion   of\nthe  minutes  of the  luncheon  gather-\nkiting  to affiliation,  stating  the\n\"Finer cherries do not grow^apywhere than ground Kootenay lake, and the other waters of 'the Kootenay district. Everyone will admit this, for it is a fact undisputed. This is a natural\ncherry territory,\" declared E. C. Hunt, assistant horticulturist,\nyesterday, with conviction.\n\"That point being carried unanimously,\" continued Mr.\nHunt, \"and it being, obvious that the district's ability to grow\ncherries is a natural resource that ought to be turned to special\naccount', the next thing is to see what varieties should be grown,\nin order to get the best market. A\u00a3 stated by' Mr. Emory and\nMr. Norman, this is a late district, and by growing Bings and\nLamberts, especially the latter, it' can' enjoy an exclusive market   .\nua   , ', T1 \u25a0 i mt. ' \u00a3\u2022     i. iie \u00ab___.; V&'jw _-.--_---y.-_ nn   master of affiliation could  be brought\non the,prairie, or one nearly so.   The. first of ojir Bmgs come,on up\\nA(tr the ojfosr ,,( new ,},l,in,HH.\nWhen the order was reached, a\nbrief discussion on affiliation took\nplace, all who expressed themselves\nbeing, favorable to it, and a formal\nresolution of affiliation was adopted,\nwithout, dissent. Tht; motion was\noffered by .1. A., Irving and A.* K.\nHorswill.\nEntertain   I'resident  Beatty\nPresident Boles raised the \u00abinestion\nof entertaining President E. W.\nBeatty of the C. P, R. when he is in\nkelson   next   Wednesday.\nThe president and Secretary Of go I\nwore appointed n. committee to ascertain from Superintendent W. Q. Miller the details in connection with\nllie president's visit, unci tp invite\nhim. to be the guest of the board\nof   trade   at   a   luncheon.\nIt was dociti-ea to invite the Boards\nof Trade of Western Canada to meet\nln Nelson, for thc conference whk'h\nis now being talked -of, and to forward   the   board's   affiliation   fee,\nThe freight and transposition committee    reported    that    three    Nelson\n\u25a0EtaillfTES WILL\nwith about the last of the Okanagan Lamberts, and oijr own\nLamberts have no competition at all.\n\"Practically speaking, our late Bings and our Lamberts\nhave tha prairie markets all to themselves with, of codivse, all\nthe advantages ,of high price. When the district gets to the\nstage of shipping its delicious late cherries in. car lots, more\ndistant and still higher priced market's will, of course, be then\nwithin reach. '- . .   \u25a0'\u2022\"\u25a0\u201e','\/_-' __\n\"There are said to be some spots in our lake district w'here\ncherries have not been successful. I think if these statements\nare examined it will be found in almost all cases that a remedy\nexists. In many instances, for example, the growers have\nrelied on the Bings and Lamberts to pollenize themselves. They\nare very poor pollenizers. One tree in six or perhaps one in\neight in an orchard of Bings and Lamberts should be a Black\nTartarian or a Black Republican.   This will ensure the proper\nyield. . .  .\n\"A distinct advantage possessed by the cherry is that it is an\nearly fruit, and is developed and in many cases out of the way\nbefore the dry period develops, if it does so. At any rate, the\neffect op it of a dry spell is a minor matter. Of course, they\nwill do better with moisture.\nWILL REPAY ATTENTION\n\"While cherries require less attention than most fruits,\ngrowers should not submit them to abuse. They will respond to\nattention\u2014cultivation, for instance, and considerably more of\nthis is good for them than most growers seems to suppose. There\nshould also be pruning to get the best out of a tree.\n\"Some of the oldest cherry orchards in th. West Kootenay\nhave just had the best yields in their history. The trees, if prop-\nerly cared for. come in at about five or six years.\n\"I have every sympathy with the movement to put the\nKootenay on the market, map as a late cherry district, and\nwould advise the systematic planting of the late varieties named,\nwith observance of the necessary conditions as to pollenizing.\nThey step will be a paying one, I am convinced.\"\nBORBD QFTBRDE COMMITS ITSELF\n10 DEFINITE PUBLICITY PROGRAM\n\u25a0Adopting the recommendations of\nits delegates to the Fernie publicity\nconference, the Nel.soh board of\ntrade last night, decided to become\nresponsible for $600, the sum alot-\nted ot It. of this amount, $100 must\nbe paid at once, to provide funds\nfor carrying on, ond *r>00 will be\nrequired next March, w.heu the big\nbooklet being prepared by J. F.\nSpalding, of Fernie, wil) be ready\nfor distribution. Tbe board, by\nconfirming the acts of Its delegates,\nbecomes automatically a member of\nthe Tourist association of Southern\nAlberta and Southeastern British Columbia, which they assisted in form\ndesirable to do: something on. this\nline he did not favor spending very\nmuch on that particular pla)). Some\nCOO touring cars arrived In Spo\nkane every day, the majority following a map, which at present showed\nnd' connection with Nelson. Thc important thing was to get the Ymir\nroad, when the motorists reaching\nSpokane could be brought, via Metalline Falls and Ymir to Nelson\ntaken east as far as Proctor, and\nthen sent home via Trail.and Iloss-\ntand.\nThis would give them a round trip\nwhich would have anything In \u2666he\nprovince   beaten.     Eventually;- when\ning, and  which will  Include  all  the   ^0   road   was   completed   to   Kaslo\nboar of, trade between Rossland and\nLethbridge and thc trans-provincial\nhighway route, together with Calgary.\nDelegates Report Plan\nW. Rutherford, chairman of tha\npublicity committee, reported verbally on the conference, and outlined\nthe publicity plan adopted, which\nwas n'most wholly the work of Mr.\nSpa'ilbig, who was subsequently ap-\npoir ed commissioner. , Various\namounts were assessed against the\ndifferent boards, to defray the cost\nof the joint illustrated booklet, and\nthe expense of its distribution. In\naddition to the big booklet, Mr.\nRutherford said Nelson should subsequently print a small booklet devoted to Nelson and district, using\n\u25a0the same cuts as in the larger production, and. that thd small booklet\ncould be sent to psalrle farmers.\nH. \"W. Robertson, the other Nelson\ndelegate, described the lystem of\nmapping the tourist routes, the transprovincial highway being a part* of\nthe red route across the continent.\nThe blue route came up from California, and included the ,}VTndermere,\nBanff and Calgary. . It-\u2014was Mr;\nSpalding's Idea, Mr. Robertson said,\nlas soon -as the Ross>and-Cascado\nlink was completed, to arrange for\ncars that came up from the Unltod\nStates ono way to go back another,\nthe commissioner predicted that next\nyear the traffic would be double its,\nrecent   figures,\nAnnable _Uoo.cs to Spokane\nthat city, could be included in thc:\nscope of the trip. If only 100 cars\nout the'500 came daily to Nelson, it\nwould be an immense thing. 'On\nthe other hand, traffic from the\nCrow' would have to be limited, as,\nafter local cars requiring transfer\nwere taken care of, there would be\nroom for not more thnn four on tlio\nCrow boat each trip. To take ful)\nadvantage of the Spokane traffic, It\nwould be denim hie to station a man\nthere, who would visit t'He motor\ncamp, distribute literature, and give\ninformation.,\nIn reply to Mr. Annable, Mr. Rutherford contended that if the Crow\ntraffic developed, thc C P. R. could\nbe relied on to provide barges or\nmake other arrangements' to tajte\ncare-ot it. He also contended that\nthe Fernie scheme, heing cooperative,\nwould furnish valuable publicity at\nthe cheapest cost. It \u25a0 would also\nhelp settlement from Kaslo to Castle-\ngar.\nA. S. Horswill expressed a high regard for both plans. He. thought the\ncity council to be relied on to' corpe\nthrough with a portion of the necessary funds.\n,H. A. Johnston said thoso preparing,\nthe booklet should see,that the Yrritr\nroad   was  mentioned.\"\nOn motion of A. 1% Horswill and\nA. L. McCulIoch, the board adopted\nthe recommendations, of its* delegates  In  full.\nFormally   Affiliates\nThe resolution  adopted, at- the rf}\nNumerous Growers Will Cooperate in Sending Exhibit to Fruit Fair\nF\\vo, or. six of Nelson's flower\ngrowers have already promises to\nparticipate in Nelson's * exhibit for\nthe Trail, fruit fair of .three days,\nwhich opens next Wednesday, A.\nWlgg stated last night. Beside Mr.\nWigK, who is getting up the . exhibit',' Hi Selous. Tt, V. Ramsden.\nAlf Wood, E. Frost, and George\nFletcher will be represented, among\nothers.\nIt \"is expected thnt the vegetable\nmen will also try for the Trail prizes, and. several are thinking of taking a shot at the collection, of potatoes,    four    varieties    strong.\nMr. Wlgg will take some exhibits,\nand others will be billed to his address at the fair.\nGOLD RUSH IN AUSTRALIA\nr '\\_rf-!\nSYDNEY Australia,-\u2014 A rich gold\ndiscovery is reported from Glen Innes ii ml a  rush has set in.\nBanking Facilities For\nForeign Trade\nThe Bank of Montreal is folly\nequipped to give unsurpassed banking facilities in connection with\nForeign Trade. It has a well organized Foreign Department at its head\noffice in Montreal; its own offices in\nthe financial centres of Great Britain,\nFrance, the United States, Mexico,\nand Newfoundland; and correspondents in every part of the world.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nESTABLISH^ MORE THAN* 100 YEARS\nNELSON BRANCH\nUB. B, DE VEBER\nManager.\nLocomotive Co. Declares Dividend\nKINGSTON, Sept. 8.\u2014At the un-\nnua! mer-tlng of the Canadian T_6~\neomotive company held today the\nu*sual quarterly dividends of one and\nthree-quarters per cent on. preferred slock and two pBer cent on common   stock   were   declared.\nAn eastern university has been\nmaking ' moving pictures of jellyfish\nto show tho muscular react ion to\nacids and  electrical stimuli.\nreme\nIT'S BEER HAS NO EQUAL\nIt has been, in evidence the past few weeks, as the\nmost popular appetizer of the day.\nWhy swelter in the hot sun, with your throat parched\nfrom thirst?\nWe are in a Position to Supply You\nTHROUGH YOUR VENDOR\nthis decidedly cooling, wholesome and palatable drink in\nany quantity.\nWe has just bottled a brew of especially hopped beer,\nwhich has had om- attention for the past three months.\nWe can guarantee this brew to satisfy the* palates of those\nwho desire a medium hop flavored beverage. It has all\nthe.superior qualities of our other brews, which have stood\nthe tests for so long.\n* \\\nWhen ordering do not overlook our PORTER IN PINT\nBOTTLES. You need this in your home. It has all the\nnutritious qualities of the greatest body-builder knbwn.\nWe recommend this as an invigorator and tissue builder.\nPHONE   96 \u2014DRAWER   1175\nHi 11 BREWING\nCOMPANY. LTD.\nIt took a hundred\nyears of tea-blending\nexperience lo achieve\nthe delicious taste and\nenticing fragrance of\nTetley's Golden Tips.\nTETLETS\nMakes good TEA a certainty\nIts perfect flavor and clear,\ndeep color can come only from\nthe young, tender top leaves\nof carefully nnrhired and care-\n** fully selected tea plants.\nXdcc:\n\u2014ALSO\u2014\nMANUFACTURERS    OF    AERATED    WATERS\nJ.  B.  Annable said whllo it waa cent luncheon to the British Colum-    \u2022**_\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOffice Smelting and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH'COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF   GOLD,   SILVER,   COPPER   AND   LEAD   ORES\n.   Producers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Bluestone,  Pig  Lead,  Zinz\nTADANAC TRAIL\nRoyal Export Beer\nFull   Standard  Strength.    Order  through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nFree   Delivery\nDIRECT   FROM   BREWERY\nNELSON J.BREWING  COMPANY, LIMITED\nPplp3SgSK*fSH\nE_E*Jfc'__-_-_*. ::-.;;  \u25a0\u2022*li-.aMB._8r\"i*i.TT\nHow to Eat Iron\nYour body needs iron, but\nyou can only get it from the\nfood you eat \u2014 not from\ntonics or ten-penny nails.\nThat is Nature's plan. Of all\nthe minerals the body needs\niron is the most important.\nTry this iron-food for breakfast:\nBiscuit With Stewed Raisins. Heat two\nBiscuits in the oyen to restore their\ncrispness ar.d cover with stewed raisins\nand mil!., ft supplies ail the iron you\nneed and all the food you need in digestible lor-ii a food that puts you on your\ntoes for tiie day's work.\nTRISCUIT is t^e Shredded Wheat\ncracker. A crisp, whole wheat toast\neaten with butter or soft cheese.\nbSS^l\n\u25a0H&\nt\n *\u2022\u2014*>\nmmm\n\u25a0r\u2014\nrfSgfV\n1\nSPHE NECSON BATEY N^WS\/ERTDAY M07WTN0, SEPT*EM*R*R*R !*), 1**T2T.\n.THE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Bmn-\n\u25a0ay by the News Publishing Compur,\nLimited,  Nslaon,  B. C, Canada.  *\nBusiness letters should be addressed\ntad -checks and money orders mads\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and tn no case to Individual members ot ths statu\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on re-\n(uef-jt or may be seen st me office of\nany advertising agency recognised by\nthe Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates; By mail (country), 60 cents per month; 16 per year.\nOutside Canada, a month, 7Cc; a year.\n17.60. Delivered, 76a per month; $4\nfor six months; 17.60 por year, payable\nIn advance.\nsTsmbec  Audit  Burt.au  ef\nOfcwulattoe\n<_ff^^tE,\nFRIDAY,\nSEPT.\n9,     1921\nThe Ymir Road to Be Built\nNelson public bodies, notably\nthe board of trade, have worked for years to secure from the\nprovincial government the construction of the Ymir road.\nHithertp the efforts have been\nwithout success.\nIt is'gratifying to learn from\nthe dispatch from Victoria,\nsent out by the Canadian Press\nleased wire service, that Pre-\n\" mier Oliver has promised the\ndelegation now at the coast that\nwork shall be commenced this\nyear and the road completed\nnext year.\nThat is definite enough and\nvery satisfactory.\nIt is pleasing news to the\npeople of Nelson and the district as a whole and must be\nespecially so to those who have\nbeen foremost in the fight to\nsecure the construction of the\nhighway, a necessary development in the highways of the\ndistrict, which has been too\nlong delayed.\nThe Redistribution Question.\n' There is ground for the argument that it would have been\nbetter for redistribution to have\ntaken place before a Dominion\nelection. Premier Meighen has\nexpressed himself clearly\nenough to this effect. But there\nare weightier reasons Why the\nelection should be held as early\nas possible.\nAs Mr. Meighen has pointed\nout, the country is in a condition\nof political and economic uncertainty and will continue to\nbe so. until an election has been\nheld and the tariff question\ndefinitely settled.\nWhile redistribution, was desirable it is infinitely more desirable and more important\nfrom the practical, viewpoint\nof the prosperity of the country that the present condition\n6f- uncertainty should be\nbrought to an end as rapidly\nas possible.\nIn any event, it comes with\nill-grace from the two opposition groups and their spokesmen to criticize the government\nfor calling an election before\nanother session. On at least\ntwo occasions the opposition in\nthe Dominion house has moved\nand voted for. resolutions demanding an immediate dissolution and election. To say\nhow that there should be no\nelection before redistribution is\nlather obvious insincerity.\nffieienf\nbuseh\nLour a. A. Kinktnon\nHEADERS' DLSCOVEIUns\nMrs. A. B. H,: \"When I boll plain\npotates In salted water, then dm in off\nthe water, to .serve them, I fold a imp-\nKin and put It over the polatooa and\nthen put the cover on tight. In this\nway, the potatoes do not get dry as\nthey do without a napkin over fiiem.\"\nReader .Housekeeper: \"I believe more\"\nhousekeepers would like to know of\nthe little fluted parafflne cups now\non the market, which I buy and put Into the 'welis' of my eup-cako baking\npans before pouring fn the cake batter. By using these, one does not\nhave to grease the pap; one never\nbreaks the cup cakes in getting them\nout; and one Haves having to wash\na greasy pnn after the baking. Small\npaper drinking cups may be used in\nthe  same way,  cut  down  halfsize.\"\nBride: \"When 1 bake a berry pie I\nalways put my meat pan under ft, in\nthe oven, so that if any of tbe berry\nJuice bubbles over, it won't get all\nover the oven. It Is so hard to clean\nan oven! And when I broil slices of\nham or chops I always do the same;\nthat is, I put the meat pan under the\ndripping meat Instead of the regular\npan which comes for this purpose with\nevery stove\u2014and thereby save the\nnuisance of scouring a large dripping pan. If I broil only 1 chop, I\nuse a pie pun under it to catch the\ngr\u00bbse.\"\nNowly-Weds: \"We have no chaffing\ndish yet, but we serve a-l the delicate\nchafing-dish dishes by cooking them in\nthe top of our double boiler, over water\nSo many peoplo think they can't have\nchafing-dtsji dhlntlR-s because they own\nno chafing-dish. For a guest supper\nI make a Welch Rarebit, for instance\nnnd put lt on individual plates, on\ncrackers, then bring these plates Into   tbe   dining   room.\"\nM. L. \"Kni-e is my husband's favorite tomato relish, which bas a\nrather 'hot' taste    Tomato Relish:    18\nripe tomatoes skinned by blanehing,\nthen put through tbe food chopper; 3\nred peppers, 1 small onion (chop tneSA\ntwo vegetables small. a'iso); 2 cups\ngranulated sugar, 1 teaspoon mnce, H\ntablespoons ground cinnamon, 2 teaspoons allspice,\" 2 teaspoons ground\ncloves, .<_,' teaspoon mustard unprepared,\n1 teaspoon celery seed,  1   teaspoon gin-\n?er. Simmer these ingredients together\nor 2 hours, then turn the mixture\nInto hot, sterilized jars nnd weal while\nhot,\"\nReader-Subscriber: \"Just try my'\noriginal recipe for Apple Chutney: T'eel\ncore and chop 10 Hour apples, discarding seeds. Seed and chop 2 green peppers and pee. and chop 2 large onions.\nPut these all into the preserving kettle,\nadd 1 cup seedless raisins, l cup brown\nsugar. 1 tablespoon salt, 1 cup vinegar and 1 tablespoon mustard seed\nand let' simmer for 30 minutes. Then\nturn at once into hot, sterilized pars\nand seal while hot.\"\nA Mother: \"I kept washing and\nironing my little girl's dresses constantly until 1 hit upon the idea of making her a 'Cow Gin's costume (it is\nJust like a cowboy's suit,' only with\nskirts). My husband then mado her\na small lent of canvas, for the back\nyard\u2014and she plays happily almost\nall day, dressed .in this little Khaki\ndress! It has been such a help to\nme. for now 1 have only a few light\ndresses   each   week   to   wash   for   her.\"\nTomorrow\u2014Two   Fish   Suppers.\nAll inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman In care of tho \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns in their turn. ThlB\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received.\nSo If a personal or quicker reply Is\ndesired, a. stamped ana self-ad dressed\nenvelope must be encloaed with the\nquestion.\u2014The Editor.\nAdvance on Angora Through\nInhospitable Drought\nStricken Mountains.\nDaily Recipe\n|       The Lighter Side\n\u25a0$ ; $\nYou can always tell a statesman\n\u25a0who is a big gun. He doesn't go off\nhalf-cocked.\nThe coming generation hasn't heen\nneglected. It can stand nt Ai-mn.-\ngeddon and .pay taxes for  tho Lord.\nAnd If we can believe the famous\nold writers of fiction, Jn * the day\nwhen men wore short pants there\nwas much talk about the beauty of\na man's leg.\nToo many people think that thrift\nconsists in paying cash for gasoline\nand  letting  the  grocer  wait.\n, Our Idea of a fast second baseman ls one who will make a throw\nto first base and baek up first base\non the  throw.\nBig navies are a useless burden, of\ncourse, but if China had one the\nsign above tho Open Door would\nprobably bo \"Exit.\"\nAbout the only thing to be said\nIn, favor of frequent divorce is that\nthe system provides a frequent\nchange of relatives.\nIt may be, as the doctors say, that\nRun and air Will make you an optimist; but it Isn't always true of\nth6 son and heir.\nA magazine writer says very few\npoe^ts are blondes. This is probably\ndue to the fact that poets are born,\nand not made.\nANGORA, Sept. 7.*\u2014(AssocIatod\nPress)\u2014Tbe Asia; Minor campaign of\nthe Greeks to break tho power of the\nTurks, the decisive battle of. which\nmay take place near this city, is\nstaged on fields among the richest\nthe world with battle memories. Midas, Alexander the Great, Jienobla of\nPalmyra, lbe Romans of Augustus\nand Caracalla, Mithriadates, Cyr-iis\nUie Great, Harun-el-Raschld aud a\nhost of others passed here with their\narmies, robbing and plundering, sometimes stopping lu build fortresses and\ncasiles, making ihe place n strong-\nbold and tran spur I a tion center midway  betwen Persia and  the  seas.\nThe fortune of war may have it\nthnt General Ismet Pasha will deliver\nbattle on the plains of Cbibtikabad to\ntho north of this city, on' the very\nplains where Tamerlane, with his\nMongol hordes, in 1738 defeated IX'i-\nyezld, tbe latter marcbrng from Constantinople to stop the Mongol.\nWaterless Malarial Valleys.\nThe advance of the Greeks is\nthrough a thinly settled country of\ntreeless, rolling ranges of limestone\nmountains two to four thousand feet\nIn height, rising dry and hot out of\nivell nigh waterless, malarial valleys.\nAt dawn and sunset the faco of the\ncountry ls mantled with a velvety\nscreen of rose coloring which the\ntuavcler learns to love and almost\nrepays for the stifling heat and dust\nof broad day, hardly untempered hy\nthe scorching winds that, blow steadily . across the limitless, broad distances.\n\"Ours les a rulher unhappy conn-\ntry in summer,\" explained a Turkish\narmy doctor at one of the halts along\nthe railway to Angora, where the\nsoldiers were poisoning ami filling in\nthe well after taking the last supply\nof water. \"I spend my days and\nnights feeding quinine,\" he added.\n\"_*ybout here only TuVks, sheeps and\nshepherd dogs can live.\"\nNearer Angora, or -in tin- districts\ndistance from tho valleys through\nwhich pass ihe rajrway, however, are\nsometimes discovered villages and\ntowns scorning like little paradise\nby contrast. Thoy are planted in\nvalleys beside streams or springs of\nliving water which the heat of sum\nmer doesi not entirely devour. Seen\nfrom the mountain tops as tiie traveler apbroaches with their loft poplar trees and green gardens and white\nmosque, there Is a brief fear that they\nare but mirages seep in tho desert\neountries.\nOnco in a long while the valley is\nmade fertile by abundance of water,\nat Tschlbuk and then are seen\nsilvery olive trees quivering iin the\nheat, delicious grassy prospects, horn\nlarks with cardinal red tops twittering by the roadside, green and brown\njaybirds, darting magpies with handsome black and white bodies, pink\nsweet Williams peeping from the\nbushes and, if tbe season be not too\nfar advanced, ripe melon patches and\norchards of white and red cherries.\nPaste this In your cook bonk\nCRAB COCKTAILS IN\nTOMOTO CUPS\nPeel, cut slices from lhe stem ends\nof six firm, mpdium-sixed tomatoes;\nwith a teaspoon carefully scoop out\nthe soft pulp and seeds, to form cups.\nUse fresh or canned crab meat. If\nthe latter is used turn into a bowl\nand mix with tlie following dressing:\nFinely chop one medium-sized mild\ngreen pepper and one-hall' a mild red\npopper,, then pass 'through the meal\nchopper. Add one-half cup of tomato catsup and one tablespoon of\ngrated onion. Mix thoroughly with\ncrab moat nnd fill tomato cups,\nslightly rounding the mixture above\ncups. Serve each in a nest of curly\nchicory leaves arranged on small\nplates'; garnish each with a plume of\ncelery, ilf fresh crabs are used the\ncrabs should be cooked twenty to\ntwenty-five minutes, drained, chilled\nand the meat removed frum the\nshells.\nSCENE AT DUBLIN MANSION HOUSE\nBY LENOXX\nv_y\nWhntover. may he finally accepted\nby the fashionable women of Paris\nas tho smartest length for street\nwear, it seems reasonably established that the threatened ankln-iength\nskirt is still a ' tiling of fashion\u2014for\nthe average American. At least this\nseason skirts will remain fairly short,\nthough longer, of course, than during the Spring and Summer Tn\nNew Vork, 'which may be said to\nset the fashion Hlnndards for\u2014shfll-\n,1    eay     Main    Street?-\u2014they    do    not\ntravel  so  fast  up and  down  tho scale\nof   skirt   lengths.\nin the above Illustration it is the\nslender pencil silhouette which gives\ndistinction to the model, a .suit typical of many to bo -seen tills fall. It\nis of soft velours do laine in Sorrento blue, with beaver col-ar and\nself-color embroidery in simple border.   \u2022\nPATTERN   NO.   254\nA pattern for the above model (No\n2*..) can be obtained tn .siz-is 34, 3*. or\n38, by sending to The Daily News,\nyour name, nddroHS, and 50 cents in\npostage stamps. He sure to keep this\nnewspaper clipping of the .sketch and\ndescription of the garment to use as\na working model when thn pattern\nreaches vou\u2014which will be within lwo\nweeks'   timo\u2014The   Editor.\nFor   afternoon   and   dinner   gowns\n!Parla   is  favoring  long  sleeves,   embroideries   constitute   the    most   im -\n, __.&prtant trimmings on the new; models.\nWHERE  SINN   FEINERS   CONFER\nA large crowd gathered oufstde the\n.o decide on the terms of the Sinn Fein\n\u2022Ival of the mon who were lo make the\nthe sessions, 'while others bad been \"on\nbuilding where the so-called Irish Republican parliament met on Aug. 18.\nreply to the British pmposabi. Great Interest was manifested on the ar-\ndecision, a number of thqm having been released from prison to attend!\n\u25a0Ibe run\" for morithfc. \/\nTen Tears Ago Today\n(From the Daily News, Sopt. 9, 1911.)\nGreeted at Willow Point last night\nby the largest crowd that has ever\nattended a meeting at that place, A\nS. Goode.ve. Conservative candidate,\nWith a splendid speech on tbe Issues\nbefore tbe people in tho present election aroused the greatest, enthusiasm\namong his audience.\nTwo now teachers have been appointed In tin*j staffs of lbe public\nand high scluVds, Alfred Webb of\n...tmonton Has la-en engaged to teach\none of tbe junior classes in tlie public school and A. \u2022-W. Kenmnn's position at the high school has been filled\nby B. P. Steeves, who comes from\nNewcastle,   X.   f:.\nD.   St.   Denis\nfrom  ft  visit   lo\nreturned   last   night\nSlocan   City.\nMr.   and   Mrs. C.   F.   McHardy   of\nCrescent  Valley were   visiters   to   the\ncity    yesterday, registering    at     the\nHume.\nTwenty Yean Ago Today\nhave  been  India, as  (be   noble  .Loi\nwns just preparing a. speech on famine  in   that country  during  bis  vice-\nroyalty  as  eomljored   witli   the present   Russian  famine.\nBrland's thoughts woro evidently\nfar away front m-etters of state,\nwhile Camorlynclt, the official Interpreter, was trap-slating into English a. speech the French premier\nhad just delivered, for ho drew a\npicture of a. wedding : couple just\nemerging from one or the Parisian\nchurches. The French premier Is a\nbachelor.\nft state is a state which guarantee**!\npower to workers and the poor,\n\"One of Ibe simplest, cases or examples of how the Soviet government\nguides the development of capitalism\nalong the path of state capitalism\u2014\no'f how it 'plants' state capitalism \u2014\nconcessions. Everybody now\nagrees that concessions are necessary, but not everybody fully appreciates the significance of concessions.\nSoviet,    Reaps   Advantage\n\"The Soviet government secures\nthe advantage in the form of tbe\ndevelopment of productive forces\nand an increase in the quantity of\nproducts available immediately or\nwithin a short period. We have,\nsay, hundreds of enterprises, mines.\nforests, etc., we'cannot develop Lheip\n.ill; we have not enough machinery,\nfood  or  transport.\n\"Jn 'planting' state capitalism In\nlhe form of concesMions, tho Soviet\ngovernment strengthens largo production against smutt production, Ihe\nadvanced against the backward, 'machine production against hand production. H Increases the quantity\nof products of large industry ,in Us\nbands and strengthens the state\nregulation of economic relations as\nn counter-balance to tbe petty liour-\ngcoise   lo   anarchic   relations.\"\n[[ill EXPLAINS\nLUNCHROOM    PROFITEERS\nBOSTON\u2014The average plate of\nbaked beans, served in armchair\nlunchrooms in Boston contains 235\nbeans, which, together with bread\nand butler furnished with it, cost\nabout two and one-half cents, the\nstate commission of necessaries of life\nreports. The usual charge to tho\npublic is ID cents, the commission's\ninvestigation  found.    -\nFrankfurter sandwiches, popular\nwith those patronizing quick lunches,\ncOBt an average of two and four-\nfifths cents, including mustard, and\nusually sell for ten cents, the report\nsaid.\nPRESERV-fANTIQUES\nLIMA\u2014Exportation of arehaeloglcal\nobjects, particularly those belonging\nto the ancient Inca civilization, has\nheen prohibited by government, decree. It supplements a- similar decree Issued years ago which limited\nthe removal of Peruvian antiquities\nto foreign countries and provides for\na heavy tine for wilful destruction\nof objects of ibis .character.\nFrom   the   Tribune,   Sept.   II,   1901\nD.    Wilson,    provincial    school    In\nspector  for  the  Nelson   district,   has\nreturned   from   a   trip   to   Boundary\npoints, whore he has been Bizing up\nseliool    requirements.\n\u2022   \u2022   e\nJ.   C.  Eaton, who  made* a cleanup\nout   of   the   well   known   Whitewater\nmine,  is  ih  Nelson for a few  days,\nand   is  accompanied  by  Mrs.   Eaton.\n..'\u2022\u25a0:..'-\u25a0* e.\nC.  J. Honeyman  left for Portland,\nOregon, yesterday  morning.    He expects  to bo gone  several weeks.\n\u00ab   \u00ab   \u00ab\nWalter J. Keo is back from a three\nweeks' trip through the Lardeau district,  which  he  reports'fairly   lively.\nBOTH\nYip\nScribble and Draw Things;\nJournalist Rescues Samples From Waste Basket.\nPARIS, Sept. 7.\u2014The hours dragged monotonously for' the allied\npremiers during the last meeting ol\nthe supreme council at Taris, while\nthe interpreters wero translating the\nvarious speeches from French Into\nEnglish and Italian and, to while\naway the time, the prime ministers\nscribbled und drew various figures\non pieces of paper which they later\nthrew Into the waste basket. A Journalist rescued them and this Is what\nlie found:\nLloyd George probably inspired hy\nthe designs on Marshall Foeh's uniform right across the table from\nhim, had drawn a perfect oak leaf.\nLord Curzon's effort proved to be\na geographical map, but tho country\nwhich it purported to bound remained a mystery; lt might have been\nUpper Silesia and then again it might\nConcessions Necessary to Secure Development of Resources ; Soviet Guides-\nLONDON, Sept. 8.\u2014III the first\nnumber of the new Labor Monthly,\nPremier Lenine explains 'tlie discovery of the Soviet government of\nRussia that it could not get along\nwithout capitalism in some fnrm and\nwhy il has compromised on what lt\ncalls \"state capitalism'.'.'\n\"State capitalism,\" he said, \"is\nincomparably higher edonomlcnlly\nthan our present economic system--\nthat is one point; and secondly there\nis nothing in il that is terrible for\nthe Soviet government, for the Sovi-\nHUNTING SEASON\nIn a few days you will be able to shoot all kinds of game.\nAre you prepared with necessary Guns, Rifles and Ammunition? We have Shot Guns, Rifles, Cartridges, Cleaners?\nGun Oil, Greases, Hunting Clothing, Rifle Covers\/ Knives,\netc., etc.   Lowest prices.\nNES0N HARDWARE COMPANY\nBAKER  STREET,\nNELSON,  B.  C.\nREDUCTION  IN   PRICE\nTaking Effect July First\nJohn iBurns & Sonl\nervice\nUnusual Things\nAnything about the home\nthat needs washing and\nthat will not be hurt by\npure water itself may be\nsafely immersed in the\ncreamy, pure, cleansing Lux lather.\nSilk shades, linn jingo, oil-\npictures and their framed,\njewelry, bric-a-brac, heir-\nlooms, etc., all are purified\nlike new with Lux,\nLEVER    BROTHERS\nLIMITED, TORONTO\nIS A FEATURE OF OUR WORK\nt ; '\u2014'\u2014*\"*\nrfT The rapidity with which we fill\norders is one of the reasona for\nthis   growth  which has  taken\nplace in our printing business.\n\u00bb       .                   j i\nr                                                        \"\u25a0\nrff And   quality   is   always   maintained.    Workmanship is of the\nbest,   materials   of the  highest\ngrade.\n___\nWe Can Print any ofthe following fog yo<*\nLetterheads\nNoteheads\nBillheads\nTags\nGummed Labels\nLoose Leaf Sheets of all\nKinds.\nMemorial Cards\nDance Programs Tickets\nVisiting Cards Ledger Sheets\nWedding Invitations Hotel Menus\nWedding Announcements    Christmas Cards\nEnvelope \"Stutters\" Business Cards\nStdtements Wedding Cake Boxes\nEnvelopes Pamphlets\nInvoice Forms Fosters\nRULED   FORMS  OF   ALL  KINDS MADE UP TO SUIT YOUR OWN\nVouchers\nVoucher Checks\nPrize Lists\nPARTICULAR  PURPOSE.\nFolders\nOrdinary Checks\nButter Wrappers\nDodgers\nBooklets\nLoose Leaf Ledgers\nDaily News Job Department\nQuality Printers\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON,  B. C,, fo3,\n ____________\n'.THE NELSON *D~AIT,Y NEWS,  FRIT*) AY MOP\u00abNTNC,vSEPTEMBEIl 0', 1921.\n'  '*'\u25a0'.\nTap?'\nSmart\nMen's Shoes\nFoi- fall Wear, in black or\nbrown. Recede toe. A\nshoe which combines good\nstyle    and    serviceability.\n $8.50\n  $9.00\nBLACK,\nPall' ' .\nBROWN,\nPair   ...\nR. ANDREW & CO\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nWEDDINGS\nLATE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR LYING IN STATE\nAt   tho  time  of tho  opening' of  the\nCivil War military experts deemed It\n' Imyjoselhle for one man  to  direct an\narmy of 100,000 men.\nNc Soap Better\n\u2014 \",:or You** Skin\t\nThan Cuticura\nI'C ]So*i>, Ointment,Tali-urn,!fic. each. Sulil a*-sry\\**hero.\nii |Cln. D\u00abDot; Lymnun, l.lmlt.J, fit. pr..] tat., UoultfiJ.\n^!,!l I.MiiMM.'hM l;!l!i l!:il.::::i:!.!,!-!iM!M MM '..I :i: i; :!,'!*:!: !:.i::i.i 'ill m;!:!::!1-:!1:!!'!'\n! Apples! Apples! i\nRUSH\nI   WEALTHIES    AND    GRAVEN-\nSTEINS\n1     Loading Sept. 14th\nKootenay Fruit Growers' |\n1 Union 1\nft'PHONE   180 '       NELSON 1\n^iThi eiii inii inii iMii t ii tii ii i iiii 11 riui ii iit i i i li ii m h i ii ui ej i n i in iiriii i is i si: h ii: ii ii in:: eiii ii iii ii!i ii tn! iirr?\nReadgf-^*p^=-\n^henpineedit\nGRAND PORKS', Sept. 8.\u2014Holy\nTrinity church was thronged this morning for the purpose of witnessing\nthe marriage of Miss Emmas Necdhani,\ndaughter of T. K. Needham and Mra,\n-Needham to Veral KIdwell of Laurier,\nWn., The Bride,' who looked extremely, pretty was attended by Miss Joyce\nMcLeod arid Miss Maud Raeburn and\nthe groom waa supported by the\nbride's brother James Needham. The\nchurch was prettily decorated for the\noccasion. At the conclusion of tlie\nceremony a dainty wedding breakfast\nwas served at the residence of the\nbride's father at which a number of\nguests wero present. The young couple\nleft by the' Great Northern train for\nSeattle followed by the best wishes\nof  a  host  of   friends.\nGRAND FORKS NOTES\nGRAND FORKS, Seut. C\u2014Mr. Clfeve\nland, Water Controller accompanied  by\nW.   F.   Groves,   engineer, ln   charge   of.\ntho   irrigation   project  are   In   town   lfi','\nconnection   with   the   proposed   system.\nMrs. Graham, wife of Major jGrnlutm\nof the Irrigation staff has arrived in.\nthe city accompanied by her little\ndaughter.\nThe many friends of James West\niw;lll be glad to hear that he Is recovering from a sudden attack of\nIllness   which   seized   him   on   Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. H. L. MacKenzie accompanied by Mrs. MacKenzie's moth-\nMrs. Barlce spent the week end\nSadner's Hotel nt tho head of\nChristinn    Lake.\nCol. Hill and Mrs. and Mrs. T.\nLynch have been stopping at Sadner's\nHotel. <\nBon Ralph, who has been ln charge\nof the Kminyside ranch for some time\nhaa moved Into the eity and is residing In the residence lately vacated\nhy Mrs. W. H. Clay.'\nThe Public and high schools opened loday, at the former the pupils\nwere addressed by the mayor and some\nof the trustees, reference being made\nlo the dedication of the- peace .portal\non the International boundary which\nwas   heing   held   today.\nRESISTSTRBEST;\nSHOOTS POLICE\nCriminal Escapes, Followed\nby Posse of Several Hundred Men.\nNIBBING, Minn* Sept. 8.\u2014Chief\n\"of Police Daniel Hayes nnd Chief of\nDetectives ' Gene Cafferty are dead,\nand William Clark, a traffic officer,\nall of Hlbblng, is in a local hospital,\nthought to be fatally injured, from\nrifle shot wounds inflicted by John\n\\Vebb at poison, just, .south of nibbing, late today. The offlcera were\nattempting to arrest Webb on a statutory charge. Webb made his escape toward Wilpin and is being pursued hy a posse of several hU'ndrocj\nmen.\nAn IS year old son of Webb's came\nhei'c this afternoon and swore out\na warrant against his father, alleging' ah offense against Webb's\nyoung daughter. itaynes, Cafferty\nantl Clark immediately went to\nWebb's   home   lit   Nelson.\nKills   Two,   Injuries   One\nWhen Chief Hayes opened tjie\ndoor, ho wns shot through the\nheart and killed by Webb, who\nused a 30.30 rifle. As Cafferty\nstepped In ho was shot in the\nshonld<er, dying within a -few minutes. Clark was hit in the shoulder, and was brought to a nibbing\nhospital, where It' was stated tonight   hla   recovery   Js   not   expected.\nWhen news of the tragedy became \u25a0 public, several-* hundred men\nset. out in pursuit, of Webb, who had\nfled. Webb has the reputation of\nbeing a crack shot nnd the posse\nwere   warned   about   this.\nWebb, is a widower and the father of six children, Recently neighbors said, he liad been acting In b\npeculiar manner. Last night he\nterrorized his children and they\nslept   in   tho   woods.\nY CASKET   REPOSES   UNDER GUARD.\nFollowing a brief funeral service at Government Iiouse, the remains o\ntenant-governor, were borne to St, Paul's Anglican Church on Bloor street, w\nlie funeral.   Photg shows the casket reposing,In the church under guard.\nf Hon. 'Lionel Clarke,   Ontario's  lleu-\nhere. Ihey laid in state until the pub-\nwin\nCHEMISTS MEET\nSubjects Range From Filtration Water to Vitamines;\nProminent Speakers.\nNEW YORK, Sept. (!.\u2014Chemists\nof Great Britain; Canada .and the\nUnited States began an international\nconference here today which was\nheralded as the greatest meeting\nin the history of \u25a0 their science and'\nIndustry. _ Moro than 3000 of them\nwere expected to attend the series\nof addresses, symposiums find- exhibits which will continue through\nSeptember 10, embracing all phases\nof chemical ,work, wilh particular\nemphasis  on   post-war  problems.\nThe fo'ilowing seven days will bo\ndevoted to the seventh national exposition of the chemical  industries.\nProminent among those scheduled\nto address the gathering Were Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover,\nSir William .1. Pope, president of\nchemistry professors fr.oni univer.-ii-\nties of the United States. England and\nCanada and head's of research departments In many industries of the\nthree  countries,\niv from Montreal, whore\nf Chemical Industry of\ni recently, held a eon-\nNew   York   t hey   were\nAmerican, division   of\nGladioli King-\n_HJM^A___>M^liai\nnTHE rich, luscious\n-t contents of a box of\nMoir's do not need even\nthe charms of a pretty\ngirl to herald their _ attractions. The eye and\npalate are alike delighted\nth -what they find\ntherein.\nMOI&S QhoeoUes\n\\ _ . f\nrill!\n\u25a0 hi\nThe\ntions t\nthe  S(\nTireat Britain\nvention. iu\njoined hy Llio\ntheir organization and hundreds of\nmembers of the American Chemical\nsociety.\n.  Broad   Field   of   KiirtenVoi?\nUnemployment among chemists\nwas scheduled as one of the foremost topics I'or discussion, in tli is\nconnretion chemists expressed hopes\nof absorbing many of the itneniploy-\ned graduates of chemical schools in\nresearch work in preparalion for ex**\npected freshening of Industrial activity.\nTariff legislation affecting the\nchemical Industry in America also\nwas   booked    for   consideration.\nA broad field nf chemical endeavor is represented* in the various\nsymposiums. These will include\nsubjects as old as the filtration of\nwater anil, ati now as vitamines which\nlike appendicitis may .always have\nexisted but were late lu being recognized.\nsnapshot   i<*\nOka   Agrli\nTho\n[-Of   lh.\nLa Tnppe, ,\n'cresting fit;\ngladioli e-xhl\nSt. Thomas,\n100 named vi\n7:*,0l)ll   bulbs.\nAPPOINT BLACK NEW\nCOLONIZING MINISTER\nOTTAWA, Sept. 8.-\u2014W. .1. Black,\nformer chairman of the soldier settlement board is to be appointed\ndeputy minister of immigration and\ncolonization.\nMt'. Black has had a long experience in connecllon with colonization\nand agricultural problems especially\nln the west. Ho Was deputy minister of agriculture for Manitoba from\n1904 to 1005 when he was entrusted with the task of organizing the\nManitoba agricultural college, being\nprofessor of lhat. Institution for 10*\nyears. In 1015 he was appointed\nsec rotary of the economic and development commission which did important war work.\nOn the death of Dr. C. G. .fames,\nfederal commissioit^r of agriculture\nin ItMG, Mr. Black was appointed to\ntake office, and in 1918 he was\nasked by the government to undertake the organization of the soldier\nland settj-oment scheme. \"Under his\nchairmanship, the work of ih\". board\ndeveloped rapidly and over 10,000 returned soldiers wero settled oi the\nland with loans approximating 5V'>,-\n000,000.\nThe  friends  yuu  buy  never  last\nlong as those you mako yourself.\n..~j_.        , r.\t\n.: .P&ck&rXtf    \\\n'    WILSONS\nFLY FADS\n'.WILL KILL MORE FllES THAN 7\n\\$8\u00b0-\u00b0 WORTH OF. ANY \/\n^STICKY; FLYCATCHER\/*\/\nClean to handle.   Sold by all\nDruggists, Grocers and\nGenera! Stows\n\u00a5:<r .,\u2022,'\u25a0-\"*'\nr'*_\n\u2022 \u2022   ..\n\u25a0\u25a0 :.\/-'\u25a0>\u25a0' '.-. ,\n\u25a0           _.\nm\n\"X ?\n..'\u25a0'*':.. ft )\niX '.'.j-\n^C*lJi*s_____\nif   -\"*S\ntfifl\nm-M\nMM\n1\n1 m\n&W_ \" ft\nSW-\n*\u25a0\n*\"\u25a0 ''P_\niWf-WM\nC*;-w|\n%&m\nPpPl\n-SiKf-;\\.,-:'.'\n-\u25a0\n'.'.';   .\n:\nDeclares Grand Trunk Shares\nWorth $2,000,000; Expected  Justice at Least.\nLONDON, Sept. 8. \u2014 (Canadian\nPress Cable)-\u2014Regarding the majority of the Grand Trunk arbitration\ncommission made public Wednesday,\nthe Evening Standard says that after the manner in which British Investors in Canadian utility companies have heen treated during tho\nlast 'few years, it was hardly to he-\nexpected that any morc consideration would be shown tho Grand\nTrunk    shareholders.\nHowever, if generosity was not\nexpected, says tin.' Standard, it was\nthought that justice would be done\nat least, While staling that, in declaring the, ordinary and preferred\nstocks valueless, the arbitrators have\nelected to wipe out capital amounting to $:i7,000,00.0, the Standard admits that about two millions is the\nreal nominal value of this, and\nthe 'fact that the stocks are worth\nanything Is because \"there are always peop'w.- who yro ready to gamble\non.  a   possibility;''\nFATHER   LEOPOLD\nFattier Leopold\nure   Institute  a\none of the in\nthe mamm.Hl\neeenily held a\nher Leopold ha.\nif gllatHolliis nm\nAPPOINTS COMMITTEE\n, UPON ENCAMPMENT\nACCEPT REDUCTION AS\nNOTICE OF DISMISSAL\n \u00ab'\"' r\nmil   six\n,   As-\nWilli\nprinting\na nl' tho trail\nthe Intlmatli\nprjslwl\nweek   iii\nol' 'the re\ns.il.    Th,'\npence\nrlnlers,\nrinlers'\nmem-\naccept-\nTRADES UNIONS ADOPT\nSUPPORT FOR ACTORS\nLONDON, Sept. 8.\u2014PoUoWIng the\nappearance this afternoon\" before the\nBritish Trades Union congress at\nCardiff of representatives of the\nActors'   association   of   England,   the\ncongress pa:\nthat labor\ngoverning hr\nsoelatiuns 111\ngnrd to the\nThe apokt\nITI\nalleged   wnrk-t\nvincial theater!\ntolerated    in    *.\nshop.\"\nCongress ols\nfavoring legisli\nof all theatrh\nand circus null\nthe \"Unioniziii!\namusement\" in\nid   a   reso-Uttii\n\u2022presenta lives\nics give   the  n\nfullesl    suppi\nwage   qtiestloi\nr   lhe   n\n,'   ennditi*\nwhich  \"\\\netc\nurging\nn ' local\nor   work-\nIK\n&\u25a0 resolution\nion for (be licensing\n1, * vaudeville, concert\ni'gevs and agents, and\nof every place, of\nic*\" United Kingdom.\nTRAP ^CHURCH   THIEF\nTORONTO--After a scries of\nthefts extendinfg. over many weeks\nfrom the collection plates of St.\nBasil's Catholic ehurch here, the theif\n\u2014a\" member of the church\u2014was trapped la the vestry by detectives.\nOperations in apprehending the\nthfef involved tbe use of high powered f binoculars, a considerable\namount of marked bills and silver,\nand the detectives keping a vlllgont\nwatch fr.om positions of vantage in\nSt. Michael's college lower, a distance of about 140 feet. By means\nof tho binoculars they were able to\nsee his movements in gatheripg the\nmoney off the plates and when confronted with the thefts the man. ad-\nmilted his guilt, The marked money\nwas Sound  in   his  possession.\nmderstood   the   church   will\n.it\npot    prosecutet    ond\nhave been made up,\nthe    shortages\nLONDON, Sept. K.\u2014(fly Associated\nT*ross)~The government's decision to\nappoint a committed, comprising Sir\nRobert   s,   Home,   chancellor   of  the\nexchequer; T. .1. Ma'cNamara, minister of labor; Alfred M. Mond. minister nf health, and Robert Munrne,\nsecretary for Scotland, to deal with\nthe unemployment <|iiostion, probably\nIndicates .the Intention, to meet the\nproblem' raised hy the imprisonment\nni' iho cotinclllbrfl iu the borough ft\nPoplar;\nThe government's unemployment Insurance plan lias failed, owing lo the\nremarkable depression in trade. The\ninsurance pay, which was Inadequate\nto the present cost of living, has\nlapsed until November, when the new\nyenr will begin*. In the meantime\nnil unemployment bureaus are. to be\nthrown   upon   boards   of   guardians.\nTHIEVES   FIGHT   IN   SEWER\nVIENNA; Sepi. 8.- -In a raid on\nthe sewers I'or thlevcfl who were\nsuspected of availing themselves of\nthose short cuts into houses they\nintended to rob, a numh'er of men\nhave Juki been ''captured by Hie police after a, fight  with revolvers.\nWomen e'.nd in black tights wore\namong  them.\nWar Veterans and Others\nClimb to Reconsecrated\nStatue of Madonna.\nMO.NTK GRAPPA, Italy, Sept. S,\u2014\nPhis mountain, GOOD feet high, amid\nthe rugged crags of the Alps, has Just\nM-e:i tlie scene of a vast pilgrimage\nnf L'i,000 veterans of tho world war,\nivomeii   and   eliililren,   who   for   days\nbt\nunimit wl\n1\nna an\nmemer\nlonght\nThe\nmiles\npasses,\nrllmbl\ne   the\nhitd*  wa;\ny of the Itali;\nin these moua\nroad    to     tlie\nin   length   and\nskirts  the  odg>\nreach    the\nie of a Madon-\neonsecrated \\n\nri heroes who\naln fastnesses.\nsummit Ja 18\nwinds through\n\u2022 of  bottomless\n*The Store for Style\nravines and rises finally to giddy\nheights, where to the south one seer?\nthe plains of Isonzo to fhe sea, to the\nnorth continue chains of towering\nAlps. It was thus that during the\nwar, the army that occupied Monte\nGrappa controlled the plain. It was\nthe mounla-inous battleground of the\nItalian and Austrian armies and its\nchanging of bands during the course\nof the war is the story of'the whole\ncampaign.\nTaken   Away   During   War.\nThe Madonna which has now retaken her plaee on. llm summit, was\nplaced here in 1910 by Cardinal Sarin, patriarch of Venice. In'May, 11U8,\nwhile the stronghold was in posses\nslon ot the Italians, an Austrian\nbomb struck thc pedestal on which\nthe  statue   rested*.\nA captain of engineers and a hand\nHe Store for Quality\nLadi^FalllDresses\nAt $25:00 to $125.00 Each\"\"\nJust Received\nOur New Fall Dresses\nWe have now on display a splendid assemblage of DRESSES, original and up-to-date In\nstyle and- exclusive with us. These Dresses\ncannot be bought at any other store In the\nKootenay. There is great variety In the mo--\nterlals, styles and colors, and it should be an\neasy matter to select your DresB front such a\nshowing.\nMaterials are SILK, SATIN, TRICOTINE,\nCANTON CREPE, CREPE-DE-CHENE and\nOrEOROETTE.**\nStyles Include some strictly tailored Dresses,\nas well as the MORE ELABORATE EMBROIDERED, BRAIDED AND BEADED\nMODELS. .     \u2022\n$25.00 to $125.00\nPrices  from\neach    _\t\nttBII FALL\nPlaid and Striped Skirts\nAt $1400 to $27.50 Each\nYour opportunity to\nsecure these new FALL\nSKIRTS at a reasonable price. . We 'have\nevery wanted color and\ncombination, you can\nget one to match almost any shade of\nsweater. Made of good\nmaterials, nicely pleated. Sizes __ ' to 32-\nInch waist measure.\nPrices,   each\u2014\n$14.00,  $16.50,  $18.50\nAND UP\nTO\n$27.50\n611 Baker Street.\nPhone 200\nfill of men left their dugouts among\nthe rocks and in a terrific bombardment lifted the statue and took It to\na pjfiee of safety. On a convenient\ndny, it was taken .down from the\nmountain \" and carried back to the\nrear to remain until the end of the\nn;ar sn thai it could be erected with\nsafety.\nRecounts   Italian    Exploits.\nFor the ceremony of replacing thc\nMadonna, which has just taken place,\nthe King was represented by the\nDuke of Gergamo, who delivered an\naddress on the sacrifices made by\nItalian troops in tho defense of\nO-rappa. Former Premier Orlando\nmade tho principal speech, tn which\nhe recounted the heroic exploits of\ntbe Italian army in overcoming tlie\nseemingly unsurmniintable difficulties\nof the mountain strongholds. There\nwere special commissions at the ceremony from the senate nnd the chamber of deputies. After the addresses,\n1 mass wns celebrated. The cardinal\nof Venice with five bishops of the\nVeneto officiated In the religious\npcrenibhy.\n(Jeneral Olardlho, known as tbe\n\u2022'Defender of (irappa,\" received a gold\nmedal from the city of Trevlso.\nWhile the ceremonies were performed a huge Italian dirigible hovered\nover the mountain heights signaling\n'.o the mountain villagers. It also\n\u2022arried a message tp Orappo from\nthe eity of Venice, which read as\nfollows:\n\"The bulwark of lhe nir salutes the\nlUlwnrk of the mountains.\"\nThe circular skirt comes bob-\nilng its way into the realm of .fash-\non with a peculiar persistency, and\nit will not be downed.\nCLEANSING  BUENOS  AIRES\nLURNOS AIRES\u2014Sunrise every\nmorning finds Buenos Aires in the\ndowntown section in particular fresh\nWashed, clean, as a Dutch housewife's\ndoorstep and smelling like a bos-,\npilal, This is a result of the thorough washing given all the streets\nevery night, and the liberal doaos\nof disinfectant that nre spread about\nin order to check communicable dltt-f\noases.\nAbout midnight, every night gangs\nof wiiite clad men, armed with brooms\nand hose, appear and undertake to\nrout out any chance germs that may\nbo lurking in gutters and dark - corner. But this Is only a part of tiie\ncity's constant war on disease. It\nalso carries on educational campaigns, using posters principally Jn\norders to warn the people of tha\nmoans   by- which   disease  is  spread.\nMAIN   STREET   WANTS   STAR8\nCHICAGO\u2014\"Nellie\u2014the Beautiful\nCloak Model\" nnd her sisters of melodrama, heroines of the gallery gods,\nhave ' heen buried by the Central\nManagers' association, (representing\ntheaters in moro than fifty small\ntowns.\nThe curtain hns heen rung down on\nthe shop-worn thrillers, tbe theater,\nowners said, ' as Main street wants)\nthe same shows New Tork and Chicago see.\n\"We are going to insist that sonw\nof the Broadway stars stop off at\nour towns,\" Nathan Appell, secretary\nof th-c association,  saict.\nCity of Trail\nTenders Cement Sidewalks\nSealed tenders will be received hy lhe undersigned up to 4:30\np. m, on Wednesday, September 14th, 1921, for the construction of\ncement sidewalks on the following streets: Bay Avenue, .Eldorado\nStreet, Helena Street and Cedar Avenue. Plans and specifications\ncan be seen at the City Hall. Tenders to be marked \"Tender for\nCement\/) Sidewalks.\" The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. 1\nW. E. B. Monypenny,\nCity Clerk, Trail, B. C.\n I   rPm *\ni#PBE MfiLSDN D'ATLY NEWS\/ PMHAY M6HN1KG, SEWEMSEfi 8f, 193T.\nShorts, on Foreign Advices,\nRenew Aggressive tactics; Leaders Fall Back,\nI     -.     ;,-     (_____, .   J      ;\nNEW YORK, Sept. 8.\u2014The upward\nmovement in the stock market today\n\u2022was halted, shorts . renewing *thef:\naggressions' 'partly as ' a result of\nforeign advices which bore morn or\nJess   directly    upon    home , markets.\n' Private   cables   from   London   hinted\n* at another crisis In the Irish sttu-\natlon, although this was not reflected  In  the British  exchange rate.\nf The collapse of marks to' virtually\nthe'lowest1 (juotatlon slrice the armls-\n' tice,   however,   directed   attention   to\n' -Germany's -strained economic situa\ntion.      Unsettlement      in   the    local\n; cotton market, where options suffer-\n. ed another setback, also served' to\nrestrain bullish operations.\n\u25a0 * Gains exceeded recessions at the\noutset, but market leaders soon developed a backward trend. Motors\nand equipments, as well as chemicals,\n' fertilizers, toboCoos ond sugars, led\nthe decline at gross depreciations of\n3 to 4 pointh\/t Oils, rubbers, junior\nSteels and the loss prominent food\nspecjlalties  seemed  to draw their  ir-\n. regular strength from the manoetiv-\n\u2022ers  of  pools,   but   broke   sharply   in\n. the  final   hour.     Mexican   Petroleum\n. \"wafi   most   adversely   affected. .\nSales  wer 47fi,000  ssares.\nBecause   of   the   light   Inquiry   for\nfunds,   call   money  fell   from   ii y_   to\n,6 per cent before noon. Later, in\nthe open market, these accommodations   were    obtainable    at.    4%    per\nI cent' Sterling was firm, as also\n-Dutch and Scandinavian hills, bui\nFrench and Belgium rates eased, and\nall central European quotations were\nadversely affected by the break in\nGerman and Austrian  exchanges.\nThe' better'' trend of the bond list\nconfirmed the impression prevalent\nin many quarters that investment\nmohoy contInues to seek an outlet.\nLiberty issues showed mixed gains\nand  losses.\nTotal  sales,  $13,6150,000.\nClosing   Quotations\nHigh   Low   Close\nChino      23       .....      23\nC. P.-R 113%    113       113W\nC. M. & St. P.   ... 20%     2W4      25%\nInt.   Marine      10%\nMo. Pac, com... 10%     19]A     10%\ndo  pfd 38%      38%      38%\nPierce  Arrow   ....,12        ll%     12\nStudebaker     75%     73%      74%\nTT. S, Steel, com... 77 76(6     7l5%\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, Sept. 8.\u2014The stock\nmarket lost some of its snap today,\nand whiles there was moderate firmness, there was no continuation of\nthe forward movement on the scale\nof the previous two days. On thc\nspeculative slda -Toronto Railway\nsoftened, while among the industrials there was good buying in Canada Bread and Ontario Steel Products. Bread sold up to 25, a gain\nof 2%, while 'steel products gained\n1%, closing at 52%. It is only a\nweeks since this stock was selling\nat  32.\nVictory bonds were, inclined to soft-\nSifiss.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 8.\u2014Offerings in\nthe yards up to 9 a. m. today were\nD40 cattio, .55 host, .and 400 sheep.\n'. Steers\u2014Choice, \".5.60 to *fu.7.r>; fair\nto good, J4.00 to J5.25; common, $3.00\nto :(3.25.\nButcher   heifers\u2014Choice,   $4.25     to\n*f4.50;  fair to* good,  $3.00 to $1.00.\n.   Blttchor    cows\u2014Choice.      $3.75      to\n$4.25;   fair   lo   good,   $2.75   to,$3.50;\nTanners'and cutters, $1.00 to $1.75.\nBulls\u2014Good, $2.50 to $3.00; common,' $1.60  to  $2.00.\n'pxen\u2014Good, $4.00 to $4.50; medium, $3.00 to $3.ii0; common. $2,00\nto \"$2.60.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice, $4.25 to'\n$4160; fair fo good, $3.00 to $4.00.\nStocker steers,\u2014Choice, $3.25 lo\nW5; fair to good, $2.60 io $3.00.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3.00 to\n(._,50;   fair to  good,  $2.25  lo   $2.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice; $8.00 to $8.50; good,\n($6.0(1 -to $5.60; common, $3.60 lo\n$4.50.\nSheep\u2014Good, $5.00 'to. $5.60; common,   $3.00   to   $3.50.\nlambs\u2014 Good, $7.00 to $0.00; com-\nJluSri,  $4.00   to   $6.00.\nHogs \u2014 Selects. $14.00; heavies,\n48150 'to $11.50; lights. $12.60 to\n\u25a0.13.60; sows, $6.50 to $8.50; slags,\nS.S',00 to tioo.\nMONTREAL LIST\nMONTREAL, Sept. 8.\u2014With only\ntwo declines of 2 and 3% points\nrespectively, and with advances ranging from \u25a0% to 3 points distributed\nover 21 issues, the stock market today again moved upward. Intense\nInterest, centered in national hrew-\n<!ries, which closed at 53%, registering a %\u25a0 point gain. Papers wore\nagain form. The most important\n-gain of the day was fn \/Asbestos,\n\/ivhloh advanced 3%' points to 43,\nand the preferred was also up %\nat G-%. Dominion Bridge was 2%\n' higher, at 65.\nDeclines were confined to 3% points\nin' Lake of.the Woods, which sold\nat 132%, and a decline of 2 'points\nJn To'ronto Railway.\nBonds fell off somewhat from yesterday with gains and losses about\n\u25a0etiually divided. '.\nTot-al sales\u2014Listed, 8051; hohds,\n9160,458.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK. Sept. 8.\u2014Canadian\ndollars,   00.\nFrancs\u2014Tiemand,- $7.02; cables,\n$7.02!.!..\nUre\u2014Di-mand,  $4.37;  rallies. $4.-37!_-\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW. YO!;K, Sept. 8\u2014Sterling exchange irregular at %$._$ tor-fill-day\nbills and Va $Z.._'A- for'demabd.\nNELSON, Sept. K.:-Ciirrent counter\nexchange  for  sterling,  $1.13%.\nCANADA BONDS.\nWINN1PHO, Sept. 8.\u2014Bid pi-Ire*\nfor  Dominion  war   issues:\nWar loans\u20141025. $01.40; 188],\n$92.20;    1937,   $30.00.\nVirlory loans\u20141922. $98.lj5; 1923,\n$97.26; 1927, $97.96; 1933, $94.45;\n1937, $99.10; 1924, $90.10; 1934,\n$34.55.\nmta!1\u2122et.\nEGG MARKET\nOTTAWA, Sept. 8.\u2014The present\negg situation Is uncertain and there\nIs a very small amount of husInesB\npassing. Current quotations, while\neasier, give very little Indications\nof the unsettled state of the market.\nMontreal\u2014Firm; specials, 50 cents,\nToronto\u2014Western markets, Chicago- and   New  York   unchanged.\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN   QUOTATIONS\ni \u00bbpen    High    Low    Clow\nNRW YORK,  Sept. 8.\u2014Copper firm.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot  nnd, nearby,   iL'Mt\nto   l2y_. \\-'\n\u25a0   Tin\u2014Easy;    spot   and   nearby   and\nfutures,   27.00. ,    .\nJrob\u2014Unchanged.\nLead\u2014Steady;   spol,  4.50,\nZinc\u2014Steady;    spot,    4,25.\nAntimony\u2014Spot,   4.50.\nAt.   London\u2014Standard   copper,   spot,\n.CO?    7s   fid;    futures,    \u00a3(18    10s.\n\u25a0Electrolytic\u2014Spot,     i.,'72;     futures,\n\u00a374.\nTin\u2014Spot,     .C151) . 2s    lid;    futures,\n\u00a31111   12s.\nLead\u2014Spot,    \u00a328    2s    fid;    futures,\n\u00a322   12s.\n\u25a0Zinc\u2014Spot,    \u00a325   2s   I'.d;    Jhilures,\n\u00a32\/j  U.S.\nBANK CLEARINGS.\nWINNIPEG,\nSept.   8.\u2014The   follow-\ning   arc   the\nlinnk   clearings   of   the\nprincipal   idties   of  the   Dominion   for\nthe  week   ending  today  and   the  cor\nresponding   W(\nek   last   year;\n1921                 1920\n$ S5.S40.09S    $108,472,077\nToronto     \t\n72,817.418       88,297,172\nWinnipeg\n43,266,710       -_0.675.60E\nVancouver   ...\n13,499.392       10,502,935\nOttawa   \t\n5,865,1150         8,627,S'iil\nCalgary     \t\n5,414,968          6.300.700\nHamilton    \t\n4.724,227         5,884,201\n5.393.769          7.506,869\nEdmonton    ...\n4.156,091         5,188,440\nHalifax   \t\n2.949,503          4.892,220\nLondon   \t\n2,473,256         3,139,180\nWindsor'   ,.*..\n2,8,3,902         3,083,070\nReglna    \t\n8,579,314          4,920,009\nSt.  -John   \t\n2,433,721          2,334,230\nVictoria    \t\n1,938,083-       2,903,015\nSaskatoon    ...\n1.660,398    \t\nMoose  Jaw   ..\n1.454,712          1,487,900\n1,090.811    \t\n8111,079            702,767\nFt.     William..\n733,870            922,975\nKingston\n771,231    \t\nLethbridge\n269,977 .         705.480\nMedicine    Hal\n411,611            404,067\nNew Westmin\n. 505,310            '824,654\nPetcrhoro    ...\nS23.027             S64.686\nBrantford     ...\n942,700       - 1.040.851\nShcrlirooke    ..\n859.181   ,     1.170,217\nKitchener    ...\n826,8011          1.069.02S\nIWHEftT\nRill\nFALLS, BUI\nnull\nLd unR-flru\nWhent\u2014\nSept.    ...\n..14814\n148'.\n148\n148\nOct\t\n..143\">i\n146%\n143M,\n144%\nNov\t\n..148%\n145%\n143\n14414\nDec\t\n..141\n141*4\n110\n110%\nMay   ....\n.. i \u25a0;:,\n147\n145\n146 ti\nOats\u2014\nOct;   \t\n.:.  411%\n47\n46 y_\n47\nNov.    '....\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0M_\n47 54\n40*,\n4714\nDec\t\n..   41,%'\n40%\n\u00abK\n461.\nMay     ....\n..  405S\n63*\n49 V4\n50-4,\nBarley-.\nOct\t\n-..' 7) \"-4\n72Vi\n11%\n72'\/.\nDec\t\n..   \u00ab8\n118V,\n08\n6814\n' Flax- .\nOcl\t\n.. 1 99\n202 .i\n109\n20114\nNov.     ...\n,.203'\/j\n203%\nDec\t\n. . 20 I\n205\n201\n205\nHye\u2014\n..111 3\n116*4\n112 M\n1145.1\nDec\t\n..112%\nt        _,\n11.3\n112!'.\n113\n1\nILL TO\nSir George Foster Only Ex-\n' ception;    Drayton    May\nContest His Seat\nTORONTO, Sept. S.-^-The Telegram\nprints the following In ils news\ncolumns   this   evening:\n\"All Hit' I.iberal-Conservntlve\nmembers of parliament In Toronto\nconstituencies will run again and\nwill contest their ridings, with tho\nexception of Sir Oeorge Foster, minister of trade and commerce, .who\nwill retire In north Toronto.^, fs\nthe word given out at Liberal-Conservative   headquarters   today.\n\"Edmund    Britol,    K.    C,    M.    P\u201e\nchairman tt central headquarters,\nhas established offices and assumed\npersonal charfc* of the central division.\nA meeting of the central association\ncommittee will be held within tho\nnext two weeks to arrange for nominations   and   complete   organization.\n\"The man to run In place of Sir\nGeorge Foster ln North Toronto\nhas not been selected. There is a\nrumor that Sir Henry Drayton might\ncontest this seat, but it lacks confirmation.\"\nNo Confirmation Yet\nOTTAWA; Sept. 8. \u2014 Si* Henry\nDrayton is ;. ot ' present away from\nthe capital on a few days' holiday.\nConfirmation of a report 'from Toronto that he might contest the\nseat now held hy Sir Oeorge Foster,\ncannot   be   obtained.\n1-abor    Will    Havo    Foun\n. TORONTO, Sept. S.-^Labor\ncontest four of the Toronto\nin the coming federal ejection,\n\u00bb mass meeting-called by tho\nrepresentation committee in (he\nor temple*1 tonight candidates\nnominated  as  follows.\nSouth Toronto, ..John W. B\nCenter Toronto, .lames Simpson,\nToronto, .fames Richards, West\nonto ' Mrs;   Hector Prentor,\nwill\nseats\nAt\nlabor\n]&))-\nwere\nruce.\nEast\nTor-\nVsed Article.\nRed Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoat* uni\nAutomobile*\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nOne reason Oasnr invaded Britain\nwas lo raise money to bribe the party\nleaders .at   Rome.\nCity Cab Co.\n8. J. TOWGOOD, Proprietor,\nCar   Meets  all  Trains   and\nBoats.\nHeavy  and  Light Transfer\nBusiness.\nContracts taken for\nMine Hauling and Packing\nIn any Part Of District.\nPiano, and Furniture Moving\nPhone 18\nWard Strut*. P. O. Box 944\nNELSON, B. C,\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Clr-.BHif.oa \/. avert! ning\u2014\nOne nnd a half cents per word per Insertion. Six* Cents per word per week,\nor 22Mio'per word per month, cash in\nadvance. If charged l%e a word\nstraight, Transient ads accepted only\non a cash-In-ftdvance basis. Each initial, figure, dollar sign, etc., counts us\none word. . Minimum 25c,' If charged\n50c. Display type double ibove rates.\nlocal Beading Notices\u2014so per word\neach insertion. In black face or machine capitals 4o'per word. BJack face\ncapitals 5c a word. 26 per cent discount if run daily without change of\ncopy for ono month Or more. 'Where\nadvertisement Is set out in-shdrt lines\nthe charge Is 12%c a .lino for Romab\ntype, 15c for black face, and 20o for\nblack face capitals. Minimum. 3Cc, if\neln-rtff-d   Ttflo.\n13 Situations Wanted\u2014Male\nSITUATION- WANTED \u2014 As cook In\nsmall camp where wife can be along.\nWould  talui  contract  to  Board  men.\n_Apply Box  48T4_ palljr:Now_.   (187-1)\nEXPERIENCED MAN\u2014Inlen'-fni to\nsettle fn Nelson, or In vicinity of the\nI.aki-s, the cure of Eruit oV Ktook\nI-arm or gohlf concern until sining,\nwith a view to purchase. Question\not salary not important must locate\nIn B. C, I'or health of relatives, give\nparticulars by lev\"*-. uox 4806 Dally\n__News.  _J___*>>\nSITUATION WANTED\u2014By experienced\ncoolt economical and temperate. Ho-\nl.el\u201e01'. c!\"nP. Address, Box 4817\nDally   News.  \u25a0 (4817)\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nOOOD COOK\u2014Requires situation. Mrs.\nI. Thomas, Nelson,     ' (4727)\nPOSITION' WANTED^Tmmedlat'oly by\ncompetent stenographer. Apply Box\nisr.:   Dally   News. (4878)\n11 Female Help Wanted\nThe Best Way\nT^ON'T risk loss by enclosing cash\n*-' in your letters. You will find the\nMoney Orders issued by this Bank a\nsafe and convenient way of paying\nyour out-of-town accounts.\nOur Teller can issue them without delay at the\nname cost as Post pffice'or Express Orders.\nWIS WELCOME YOUR BUSINESS  _*   .\nCANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE\nBranches  in   Kootenay  and   Boundary at  NELSON,   FERNJE,  CRANBROOK,\nCRESTON,  GRAND  FORKS, GREENWOOD,  NAKUSP,  TRAIL.\nCHICAGO, Septf: S.\u2014Wheat\naveraged lower for ji, good pi\nthe day, lint rallied Hhiirply ne\nclose and ut inu- time the di\ndeliveries were higher than >\nday's   finish.\nSeptfertiber   made   a   gain   fo\nday of %  to  %  over last  night\nIsh,   while   Deuemher   elosetl   n\nsame   us   the   day   previous,\nand   outs   were   firmer.     Corn\n%   to   %   higher,  whili* oats\n1 to l vi higher thrin yesterday\nProvisions   averaged   lower.\nir th\"\n\u25a0ferrfd\n\u2022erttcr-\n\u2022 v lhe\n\u2022s fin-\nit th.'\nCorn\nelosed\nnishett\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTRHAI-. Sept. S.\u2014Prottljoo\nprices steady.\nCheesi\u2014 Finest .-iBtei'ris, IS In in'\/,\ncents.\nButter\u2014Chbicesl crearnery, :tr\u00bbv4\ncents.\nEggs\u2014Selected,  IB  In -IC ccnls.\nPbtulm-s\u2014IVr    liliB,    t'lirliils.     $1.70\n\u25a0*.0ll.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMIN-NliAI'OUS, Sopt. 8.\u2014FlQur un-|\nchanged. Shipments, 70,0211 barrels.!\nUrun\u2014*13.00 to SIS.00.\nWheat\u2014No; I Northern, %IM'A. |\nCorn\u2014No. II yellow, -17* tu -IS cenlsJ\nOats-No.    2    while.    33,%    lo    3-1.%\ni.-lax\u2014No.  1. *2.01'\/j   lo\nSELL YOUR\nUsed Articles\nThousands of Daily News readers are looking\nfor bargains in household, farm and other effects\nwhich are no longer needed by their owners.\nTell what you have to offer and the price you\nwant for it in a\nDAILY NEWS\nClassified Ad.\nThere is no better way in which to turn, used\narticles into money, l^c a word, 6 insertions i'or\nthe price of four when cash, accompanies order.\nWANTED\u2014Help hr, home on ranch,\n(loolthiff and some housework. Apply   Box_4882_I3nily_News.  (-18B2)\nAVANTKD\u2014Girl -with experlenco T In\nmen's tailoring, iSox 747, Fcrnio, B.\nC.          (48CII)\n34_ T^a^e^^nted^\nWANTED\u2014-foaeher for Princess Creek\nsmall school one willing to butch.\nApply   to   F.   L.   Fitch,   Secretary\n (4894)\nTEACHER for Glenllly school, man or\nwidow with family preferred.    Apply\nA. L.   Barnhardt,   -Secretary,   Yank,\nB. C. (4827)\n18 Miscellaneous ior Sale\nAl'l'1,10 BOXIW\u201416 cu*nts ciich F. O.\nJi. W-ynndel- Prompt sliipnumt, name\njiliinl.-d on bo_|. Wyinidfl Uox Fac-\nlory, Wynndel, IJ. C. (P.IM)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Twenty shares, ValUO\nt.Mi eacli In the T. H. Waters com-\nna'ityi Owner )xeli.g anxious io iciaic\ninimedialely for Alhertii. wilt accept\n$90 per shiire. Arthur Smith. Hoar\ntin me school. Uox 980, .Net-son H.\nC, - \u25a0'        (4*12(1)\nPercy    Blakeman,    Taxidermist,    Edge-\n_wood.   B.   C. __ (4784)\nATTENTION   PBTJIT   OBOWESS T?\nAPPLE   UOXES   und   Fruit   Crates   at\nreduced  prices.      Write  us  for  (.juo-\ntatioiis on boxes delivered before you\nplace   your   order.       We   can   make\n.  prompt   shipment.\nWSTNNDEL   BOX   FACTORY\n(4718)  Wynndel,   B.   C.\nSHINGLES\u2014Buy  them now  from  Nakusp   Shingle  Mill.   Box   1,   Nakunp,\nB.   C.     f (-1828)\nFOR SALE\u2014FruTtvale school district\nissues 20 DebeiUures or Bonds at\n$100. each. They are 7 per cent securities sold nt $95. denomination's\nof iwo or more debentures will be\nsold lo any applicant.\nPrvucipal and interest payable In Nelson in ten Annual payments. Ma\nturity in 30th Sept. 1931. Apply tt\nFruitvale    Sjchool    Board;\n_   COLE,   Secretary   Treasurer\n73G) Fruitvale   School   Board.\n1(4\n14^^raishe^ROTm\u00bb^toJleii!\nFURN.ISHKD  rooms   Ior  rent,   OM   JiC-\nK(!IJhini>   atrotjt. llllJH)\nl-'OR    KENT\u2014Kurnlnhcil    housj]<oopljlg\nrooms   over.Poolt?   Drug. f-I\u201e_D.\nDo You Want to\nSELL\nProperty?\n^I Plenty of .sales are being made this summer.\n\u25a0JT Advertise your land or\nresidence in these columns. . ,\nli\/_c A WORD\n23    Property For Sal*\nParticulars Wanted ,\nOE city antl .country propcrt^for sale.\nI have buyers. Your .property may\nbe the one to suit. Let me hear from\nyou.\nH. E. DILL\n508  Ward  St,,  next  to  Canada   Drug\n' Store.\n(4824)\nFOR   SALE\u2014 _   room   house,   four  lots\nthirty   fruit   trees,   Furnished   If   required,   terms,   Page,   Stanley   Street.\n(4?16)\nIF.  LOOKING   for   a   House   see   715\nStanley   street   before   you  buy.\n'  (4527)\n$650\u2014 High street, 4 roomed cottage;   a  snap;   cash.\n$800\u2014Victoria street. 5 roomed\nmodern   house;   a \u00abn;ip;   terms.\n$850~Rfoh:ird \u00bbtreet, 5 roomed cottage*; a sanp for cash.\n$1350\u2014Snivu street, 4 roomed cottage, modern. A. bargain;  on terms.\n$2200\u2014 Statjley street, (J roomed\nhouse, ,on 4 level 'lots. A snap.\nTerms.\nSitOOO-Kdgewond avenue, 5 Toom-\nei| j'tilly modern up-to-date Iiouse;\nIc-rms.\n$1200\"-Mpuhtatfi stalion, 4 acres,\nhmisei aiid furniture. * A snap. Easy\nterms,\n$1500~fJranItl\"r0a(:i'\" 20 acrGS fnti'iy\nlevel,' 8 acres cultivated;   terms.\n$250O~p(,'ld \"d'Oreille valley, 144\nacres  level,   good   grazing;   terms.\na. t. McMillan\nREAL   ESTATE'\n624  Baker  Street Phone 601\n-    \u25a0 . - \u25a0 . (4877)\n20   Livestock For-Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014Young pigs, real pigs\n, hut we want eight dollars for tl\u00bb in.\n Appleton _I*h*oth^rs,   I'roi.tor.     _ Uil'tB)\nFOR SALE\u2014Heil'er from good iriilklhg\nstock, Ayrshire gradbi freslu'ii in two\nweeks. Wm. Winstanley, Crescent\nValiey,   B._C. ^(4910)\nFOR KALE\u2014Jersey cow. Due to freshen, September lfitb,\/T. A. Airey, R.\nR,    No.    J,    Nelson. (4'JIO)\nFOR SALE\u2014Good team mures, 0 and\nT. years old wkh harness. George\nKanegen,    Klnn*li'd,_Ii. .C_[ (\u00a3900)\nFOR SALE\u2014Heavy team, harness. Fit\nfor logging. Wagon with equipments, G. Knotts, Cascade, B. C.\n(4K8U)\nONE Ayrshire MiiTlT Un- sale, lour yearn\nold, No further use for It. Will\nsell chfttt'p. Apply, Mr. Beresford\nBlueberry    Creek.   (4888)\nFOR- SALE\u2014Registered Ayrshire . Bul.\nVerv ipriet and gentle. For particulars. Apply A. Livesley, Yahk   (1889)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two young cows $100.00.\nMilking, .one calf, Ayrshire and shorthorn.- Will trade for chickens or\nlot. What offers, E. Askew Ryan,\nVabk,   B.-C. (4890)\nFOR -SALE\u20143 Ayrshire heifers two ten\nmonths and ohe sixteen months, pedigreed; \u00a31-00 the lot.    G. W. Bartlett.\n* * (487r,)'\nFOR   SALE\u2014Small   cow,   40   lbs.   milk,\n\\;$7.S. Apply   Rokmd_Bourl(e.    (4562)\nCOLLlE*lmpH~\"for sale,  males\"' $_'.   \"Atkinson,    Granite    Road.* (487S)\nEXTRA large Toggerburge-Nubian\nBuck. Age 2M-. years. What offer.\nBox    4851    Daily   News \u00b1A^sM)\nFOR SALE -\u2014' Ten Yorkshire Chester\nWhite pigs six weeks ?(i.!50 eacli.\n\u25a0ti.   SulllVttn.   yalllfen,-B.^C,   (4844)\nFOR SALIC\u2014Good ranch horse. Choice\nOf H, or would trade for fresh cow or\nheifer about to freshen. A. Mackie,\nBo.swell (4848)\nFOR SALE\u2014Eight heavy work horses\nand harness, eight six weeks obi\npigs. Allshouse,  Summit Lake.   (4849j\nCH'ESTER \"White. pigS six weeks-so.\nTrio    Toulouse    Geese    2    years    old,\nfin\n.hill pi.\nceding stock $15. Wlfi buy Bide\nTom Taylor, Kaslo  (4'UB)\nONE young team'5 years and C years,\nNew harness and express wagon.\n$35(1.00. Apply, J. P. Morgan. Nelson. (4820)\n22       Misceilant_ons\nSAFETY Razor Blades resbarpened,\nGood work guaranteed 35 eents per\ndozen, B. C. Razor -Sharpening Coni-\n___y.   X^ox   97,  Vicloria,   B.   C.   (177.'i)\nl^POTLTRTTATi^EGGS\nl'XlH SA1.K-\u2014100 Leghorn Hen.s\"*7iTive\nor dressed delivered for $1.01) each.\nSuitable for cannlhff. Huusohj Bal-\nIAur.  \\   (4896)\nWANTKD \u2014 La.rge   or   Small   number\nof White IJegTl'orn imlletB.    March or\nApril batched.   Cox 48113 Dally No.wb.\n- (4803)\n42        Matrimony\nOKflTl.lOMAN worth JIO.OOO wishes to\ncorrespond with young lady. Send\nfull dlscrlptlon and photo in replying. AddreKH Southern Exchange.\nHill,   South  Jaclisonville, Fla.   (1892)\nWOULD TOU  MAP-BY\u2014A pretty  widow   worth   $100,000.     Write   Mrs.   A.\nHill,   South   Jacksonville,   Fla.    (4893)\n27   Machinery Wanted\nWANTED\u2014S.mall portable sawmill with\nor without' power. Full particulars\nBox   4757   Dally   News, (1757)\n16    Room and Board\nBOY ln second year high school wantB\nhoard and room for service after\nschool and Saturdays. A. Rochan-\nlk.   Kenata,   B.   O. (4788)\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nFOR. Car   In   good   condition   for   Sale\ncheap.      G.   TJ.    Campbell,    Falrview.\n(4911)\nFOR SALE\u20141921 Chevrolet-Model 490,\nGood as new, $75h. Terms arranged'\nif necessary\u2014Write Box 4881 Dally\nNews. (4881)\n25      For Exchange^ *>*\nWILL trade rtl**n?1?tenrvarnlslied row-\nboat nearly new for cow. P. Thom-\nlin-son, Willow Point.       \/ (4909)\nwTllL exchange new single barrel\nshotgun for white leghorn pullets.\nApply  Box 4908  Dally  News.   (4908)\nWILL trade 2 Kock's Barber chairs\nCost $80.00 each. Good order. What\nhave  you  got,  P,  O.  Eholt,  B.  C.\n49      Farms For Sale\nARROW LAKE fruit ranch.- 8 acres\nin fruit trees piu-t bearing, large\nacreage, suitable for mixed farming,\nhouse, oul buildings, etc., Near\nSchool Tost Office and wharf. Box\n4913   Daily   News.  (4913)\n35'\nFor Rent\nPOR RRNT-\u2014New six room bouse apply Win; Oosneil, Nelson Brewing\n\u25a0Company.   (491S)\n28 MisceKafieous Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Small Hotel or Cafe for\nlease in good locality. Address Box\n4818   Dally  News. ' (4818)\nBusiness aid Professional\nDirectory       ..\ni   r\nTailoring\nLadles   and. Gents   Tailoring,   CloanlTin\nPressing, Repairing.   Suits made to rl\u00a3\nJames Stout 411 Josephine St.   Phone 1_%\n\u2022 (4C40)\nLodges\nNELSON LODGB No. *>, B. P. O. \"\u25a0\u201e\nMeets 410% Baker St., first and thlrt\nTbursday. '  (4829)\nBoots & Shoes\nMill   KEE   fe   OO.\nBoots and   Shoes  Mada   to  Order.    B\u00bb\npalrlng.     012 -FRONT   ST. (4830)\nFlorists\nORIZZELLE'S  GREENHOUSBI, N\u00bblr\u00bb\u00bb\nCut flowers and floral designs.\n(4831)\nAssajrers\n1. W. WIDDOWSON, Box AU08, N\u00abl<\n\u25a0on, B. C.   Standard -western ohargoo.\n< (4832)\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD 4 CO., WHOLHSAL1\nGrocers and- Provision Merchant*.\nImporters of Teas, Coffees, Spice*,\nDried Fruits Staple and Fancy Groceries,-    Nelson,    B.    C (4833)\nArchitects\nM. EMHS BEAD, M. B. O.  \u00bb. A_\nARCHITECT.\nBay Avenue. Trail, IS. \u00bb\n(4834)\nEngineer*\nHiSiBOII, 8. O.\nOITII,   AHU   MIHIHO   EHQIIJEnna\nB. O., Alberta and Dominion\nLAND  KUBVEVOBS\nCrown Grant Agontn.        Uluo Printing\n ! (4836)\nA. Ji. McoOtaoOB\nHydvunllo Xinglneee\nV-Ovlnolal  Xetsna  flurvoyol\nBaker St.,-N\u00bbloon, B. C,\n(1837)\nAuctioneers\nW.   CUT_.EB\nAnotlonear, Ai)_miiw, Vnlnatoi\nGoods   sold   privately   or   at   Auction,\n211 Ward Street.    \u25a0                 Phono 7f\n (4838)\nFuneral Directors\nD.  J.  ROBERTSON,  F.D.D.  eet H\u201e  Ml\nVictoria   Street.    Phona   IM;   Nl\u00bbh\u00ab\nPhone 1D7J.  (-1839)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE\nCOMPANY\nC, J. Carlson, II nd or taker, Undertakers and Embalmcrs and Funeral\nDirectors. The finest and most up-to-\ndate undertaking parlors and chapel in\ninterior ii. C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children Day phon-a 8fi;\nNight   phone   252   and   64. (4840)\nA woman will go to all aorta oC\ntrouble to, deceive a man about some-\nthinj*\"*;. .ami then work . ber self up\ninto'-a' seething foam of Indignation'\n\u25a0liecause he do*efln't \"try' to find out\nmat 1% l_A\nBRINGING UP-FATHER\n*:\u25a0*\n\u2022;\u2022\n\u2022*:-\nrt\"      *\u25a0'!\u00bb\n\u00bb\u25a0?'\u2022\nBy Georse McHuu\nWELL- IF I HfWE TO <iO\nTO THE HO .PITAL- THE\nSOOtsEf, , ^EE S^^e\nAN HAVE IT OVER. - THE\n-1     SETTlip-i-\nTHAT THINC, OOC,HT\nTO  BE  O_EF0l_ A_>\nWELL A-b ORNAMENTAL!\nIBS!   BY  INT'L  FEAtUtta  S_HVtO-!.  INC.\nNOW- MA<_ilE-\nOARUKl'- WILL\n\u2022? TO  KEA-bON\n1\n_m\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921.\n'Pate V\nPUBLIC IS URGED TO\nHEED NWS WARNING\nThousands of People Suffer Perament Loss of Health Because of Neglest\u2014Nature Has Set the Danger Signals for\nUs and We Cannot Afford to Pass Unnoticed the Warning That She Gives Us.\nGood digestion tneans good health; bad digestion means bad\nhealth.\nA .sound stomach is worth a hundred times its weight in gold.\nProbably eighty per cent of all diseases originate in the digestive\norgans. , Dyspepsia, or what is more commonly known as indigestion, is not only one of the most prevalent, but it is one of the\nmost difficult to treat of all present day diseases, and has for\nyears baffled the skill of leading specialists everywhere.\nStomach   trouble   Is  almost  always^ \u2014 \u25a0\nfollowed   \"by   a   complication   of   dis-^earned that it probably -provides the\ncases. One of thc first being an ovcr-\n'worked liver, with all llio symptoms\nof biliousness, followed in turn with\nheadaches, coated tongue, nausea,\ndizzy spells, pain in the back, palpitation of the heart and other distress-\njug symptoms. Sootier or later tho\nkidneys will become involved and that\nIs just why theso danger signals\nshould be heeded In time. A wise man\nputs out the firo before there Is -too\nmuch destruction;*** thu same theory\nshould apply  to stomach trouble.\nGas In the stomacti means fermentation instead of digestion; decay, Instead of nutrition for fermentation\nproduces poisons, whicli are absorbed\nby tho blood, and which frequently\nbring on the condition known as auto-\nIntoxication or self-poisoning. This is\nalso why we develop acidosis, which\nbrings on so many complications,\nsuch as rheumatism, hardening of\nthe arteries, high blood pressure and\nother conditions, which may mean\npermanent loss of health. Acidosis\nlis one ' of tho main forerunners of\nBright's disease and diabetes hence\nit is evident that if we have stomach\ntrouble, however slight, we arc foolish indeed if we do not take prompt\nsteps to correct it.\nK wo aro not fit us a fiddle in the\nmfrning; if we don't feel better than\nwhen we went to bed;, if our breath Is\noffensive; and we have that bad\ntaste Jn tho mouth; naturo -has set\nthe danger signals for us and wc\ncannot afford to neglect the warning that she gives us. That is just\nwhy tho demand for Tanlac, the great\nStomachic, Systemic and Reconstructive tonic, has broken all world's\nrecords.     The   American   people   have\nsurest, safest and quickest, remedy\nfor all such troubles, ahd millions\nupon millions have taken it with the\nmost, astonishing and gratifying results.\nTens of thousands of men and\nwomen of all ages and In all walks of\nlife afflicted with -stomach, liver and\nkidney disorders, some of 'them of\nlong standing, as well as thousands\nof weak, thin, nervous men and women* apparently on the vergo of collapse, have testified publicly that\nthoy have been fully restored to their\nnormal health, strength and weight\nby its use. Still others who seemed\nfairly well, yet who suffered with\nindigestion, 'headaches, 'shortness of\nbreath, dizzy spells, sour, gassy stomachs, coated tongues, foulness of\nbreath, constipation, bad complexion,\nloss of appetite, sleeplessness at night\nand terribly dejected, depressed feelings, slate that they havo been entirely relieved of these distressing\nsymptoms and restored to health and\nhappiness   by   Tanlac.\nNOTE: Tanlac Vegetable Pills are\nan essential and vitally important part\nof tho Tanlac Treatment wherever\nconstipation  Ih ^present.\nYou cannot hope to get satisfactory\nresults from the Tanlac Treatment\nwithout first establishing a free and\nregular movement of the bowels. It\nstands to reason that no treatment\ncan do the greatest anjoun't of good\nwhen you nre suffering from constipation or biliousness, or when your\nsystem is clogged up with waste\nproducts and   poisons.\nTanlac is sold in Nelson by The\nCanada Drug & Book Co., and by\nleading- tp'ugglsts  everywhere.\n01HOHIIDS\nTigers Hit Up 15; Athletics\nWin Despite Ruth's Homer; Browns Overtake Sox\nCLEVELAND, Sept. 8.\u2014Cleveland\nwound up Its 1921 home games today by being defeated by patrol t\n15 to 1. Dauss was effective all\ntho way, while none of the Cleveland pitchers could stop the Tlg-\n-ers. R.  II.  E.\nDetroit .15   20     1\nCleveland   1    10     2\nHalleries\u2014Dnuss and Bossier; Soth-\noron, Caldwell, Clark, Morton and\nO'N'eiil.\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 8.\u2014_\\ double\nby Perkins and a single by .iohnsiou\ngave Philadelphia, two runs and a\nninth\" inning victory over New York,\n6  to   fi.\nBabe Ruth mil do his 53rd home\nrun this season, lie now needs only\none more to equal his world's record\nof  last   year. R.   II.   K.\nNew    'York      .-  T.     5     0\nPhiladelphia       li .  S)     -I\nBatteries\u2014Collins,        Rogers\nSchang;   Rommell  and   Perkins.\nST; LOUIS, Sept. 8.\u2014St. Louis overcame a' thre-o-riiii lead gained by\nChicago in the first Inning, and\nmade il Iwo straight, winning today's\ngame 1 to 3. Thc game was featured   by   five   double's. tt.   II.  V\nChicago      _      ii     0\nSt,  Louis    I    HI\nBatteries\u2014Wilkinson    and     Schalk\nBayno  and   Severoid.\nYorkshire  Cricket Club\nDominion Cricket Champs\nTORONTO,, Sept, 8.\u2014Defeating tho\nAlbion cricket club today by nine\nwickets, Yorkshire cricket club won\nthe Dominion cricket championship.\nThe Alblons, who qualified for the\nfinal by defeating lhe West mount\nclub of Montroal at tho beginning\nof tho week, scored 95 and 9*1 In\ntheir sessions at the bat, while Yorkshire made 117 in the first innings.\nWith 72 runs necessary to win, Yorkshire played vigorously- and hit them\noff, with  tho loss of only one wicket.\nSPORTING BRIEFS\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nHiUtimoi'i-  i,  Reading   I.'\nHul'falo II. Hyniclisi! li.\nItoi-h'iiHtoi'  fi,   Toronto   I!.\nJersey   City   5-2,   Newai'lt   12-3,\nAdvertising Is the Motive Power of Business\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION,\nIndia.nap-.lis   l!-4,   Columbus   3-7.\nKansas   Cily  7,   St.  Paul   '_.\nLouisville  5,   Toledo   7.\nMilwaukee   9-7,   Minneapolis   10-8.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSeattle 5, Portland :..\nSacramento   l!,   Salt   Lake  ;t.\nSan Francisco 3, Los Angeles -l.\nVernon   2-3,   Oakland   1-5.\nner\nfor the Money\nCanada's best buy-\nthe ECONOMY Package\nimiiimmmmiiH*\n'\"\u25a0            .                                                                                         ;\u2014\u25a0\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUsa thi. blank \u00abn which to writ* your condensed nd., one word In each ipace.    Enclose meney\nerder or check end mail direct to The Daily News. Nelson, B. C.\nRate-    One and a half cont a word each insertion,  six  consecutive  insertions  for   price  ef  four\nwhen  cash  accompanies  erder.    Minimum, 26o,    Each  initial,  figure, dollar sign, etc., counts as one\nword.   No charge leas than 50 cents,                                                                                           ,\n'\u25a0             |\n>      \u25a0\n:\n1    \u25a0\n*\nPlease published the above advertisement....,.,.. timea for whioh 1 encloee |......\u00bb.......__..\nt\nIf desired, repllea may be addressed to Box Numbers ai Tho  Dally  News Officer,    If  replies art\nte be mailed encloao 10o extra to cover ooat sf pool ago and allow five words axtra far bax number,\nBritish Woman Golfers Win\nMO.NtTtKAL, Sept. 8.\u2014In a keenly\ncontested match played this afternoon over the course of (he Beacons-\nfield Golf club, Miss Doris * Chambers\nand Miss Edith \"Leltch, sister of the\nBritish woman golf champion, defeated Miss Kate Robertson and Miss\nMedio MeBrido of tho home club,\n\u2022t and 3. .   .\nHal B. Wins 2:15 Paco\nHAM LINK, Minn., Sopt. 8.-\u2014Hal B.,\ndriven by Johnson, won the 2:15 pace\nfor a purse of $1000 today at the\nGreat Western circuit moot here. His\nbest  time was  2:15V*,.\nChick Evans and Partner Win\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 8.\u2014Chick\nKvans, United States amateur champion, and Holt MacDonald, metropolitan open champion, defeated George\nDuncan and Abe Mitchell,' British\nprofessionals, 2 and 1 In an exhibition   golf   match   here   today.\nRAPID CITY, Man., Sept. 8.\u2014Th'e\nNationals id' Winnipeg today won\nUie Manitoba senior league championship by drawing wilh Rapid Cily\nfivo to five. Nationals won the\nfirst game in Winnipeg on Labor\nDay,  IC  to   !.\nWOLVES AND T JUNIORS\nDUE  TO  CLASH  TODAY\nEight Runs in Ninth Secures\nFirst Game, Boston Easily\nTakes Second; Reds Lose\nCIirCAGO, Sppt. 8.\u2014Chicago defeated Cincinnati 6 to 2 today, getting an even break on. lho series;\n\u25a0 R.   H.   E.\nCincinnati  2      7      0\nChicago      \/    6      9      0\nBattorles \u2014 Donoluie, Coumbo and\nWingo; Cheeves ami'OTarrc'l.\nBOSTON,. ..Sept. 8.\u2014Boston divided today's double header with Philadelphia. Oeschger pitched brilliantly in thc 'first game until the ninth\nand had a 6 to 0 load, then Philadelphia mado a eight runs in the\nninth, winning 8 to 6. Boston easily\nwon the second gamo  13 to  2.\nFirst game\u2014 It.   H;   E.\nFhi'adelphia     8    10      2\nBoston       li    16      3\nBatteries \u2014 Winters Bettcs and\nPeters; Oeschger, McQuillan and\nGowdy..\nSecond   game\u2014 R.   IT.   E.\nPhiladelphia     2     7     2\nBoston 13    15      1\nBatteries \u2014 Smith, Sedgwick and\nBruggy;   Watson   and   O'Neil.\nPlay on llie second hair ot tlio\nJunior City Soccer league st'i-irs will\nbe commenced this iiCternooh. when\nthe .Mountain Wolves and the Y.\nM. C, A. Juniors will meet at four\no'clock. B. Campbell of Kali-view will\nreferee.\nTile   teams  will   be:\n\u2022Mountain Wolves\u2014Ou.il. G. Schofield; backs. A. Jeffs and, W. .lefts;\nhalves, G. Wallach, J. Young antl G.\nHouston; forwards, h. O'Neill, J.\nWnllaee, E. 'Whitfield, F. Welsh and\nG.  Campion.\nY. M.C. A. Juniors\u2014Goal, H. Thurman: backsi T. McVlcar and R.\nSmyth; halves, It. WaldiO, F. Risdell\nand F. Thorpe; forwards, A. loanln,\nG. Long, F. Alllbone, T. Blnck and\nA.  Flrtridgo.\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL\nLONDON, Sept. S.\u2014((By Canadian\nPress cable)\u2014Results of .rugby football games played today in the northern   union   were:\nBarrow   IS,   Hull   Kingston   11.\nHull  41,   Bradford   \u25a0!.\nWILL RESUME PLAY ON\nSENIOR SOCCER SERIES\nTWILIGHT LEAGUE.\nWINNIPEG. Sepl. 8.\u2014The -second\ngamo of the scries boi ween Calgary\nand Winnipeg for the Western Canada league championship was called\nin the third inning today on account\nof   rain.\nNORWICH AND PLYMOUTH DRAW\nIJOl^DON,       Sept.       3.\u2014(Canadian\nPress cable)\u2014The result of the South\nern   league  associaiioh   football   game\ntoday    between     Norwich    and    Plymouth  was a  draw,  one goal  each\nDeals With International\nCourt of Justice; Traces\nArbitration.\n7\n2\n1\n16\n1\n2\n8\n10\n4\nil\nli\n8\n0\n0\nfi\n11\nCity    League   Standing\n'IVurns\u2014 p, W. D. L. Pts.\nMcLearies      10\nCorinthians     1)\nSt.   Saviour's    Ul\nHigh   School     5\nWith the High Hehool senior fool-\nball team again organized, play on\nihe last seven sanies ot* The Daily\nNews cup series will bo commenced\nthis afternoon, when the Corinthian.**-;\nand tiie High School Will clash at\nLhe recreation gmiindB-at 6;15 o'clock.\nTho High ScIl-i.'L team will figure\nIn each of (Ih* seven remaining\ngames, which liave been hold up on\naccount of lie; mid-summer school\nvacation.\nTho Corinthians' team will Im;:\nGoal, T. Middleton.; backs, 1_. Metcalf and A. Lane; halves, J. Adams,\n\u00bb\\r. B. Bradley and J.'. Morris; forwards, Qt Moitis, T. Boyd, J. Ball,\n\u25a0R   Schofield  nnd  C.  Ward.\nHcferee\u2014J.  Draper.\nOTTAWA, Sept.. K.~-(Canadian\nPress)\u2014In an address before tli\nCanadian Bar association at luncheon\ntoday, Hon. N.^W. TIowell dealt at\nlength on the establishment of the\nInternational court of justice- trac\ning the methods of arbitration from\nIts earlier forms down to the present day. This development was\nsteady and progressive, and fit*Ht took\nthe form of arbitration treaties cov\noring   partlculai*   disputes.\nThe seeond- step forward was t&e\ninauguration of The Hague' arbitration\ntribunal, and general a riii (.ration\ntreaties wilh respect to questions of\nvital importance and 'international\nhonor. Tlie .third move was Uie\nagreement among lhe nations, lo tli\nconventions establishing permanei\npeace commissions whose duty was\nto. investigate and report on all tpi-es-\ntioiis uot covered by arbitration\ntreaties, and containing an agreement hot lo resort to war until the\nreport was received. The establishment nf Hie covenant <\u2022\u25a0' llu: League\nof Nations covering lhe submission\nto arbitration or to conciliations by\nthe council on ail questions ahd an\nagreement nut to resort to war until three monlhs after the arbitrators   had   made   their   award,   or   the\nLineii    liad\nits\ntin\nthe  pen\nJustice,\nHALF MILLION FIRE\nAT ANNAPOLIS ROYAL\nANNAPOBIS BOYAL, N. S., Sept.\nS.\u2014A great black scar In thu earth of\nlhe beautiful lillle (own murks the\nplace where a hull' million dollar conflagration .raged yesterday. Danger\nof further outbreak of tin.' flames is\nsaid to be past, but the ruins wo still\ninder close observation;\nThe citizens are facing their losses\nwith admirable calm .and alter eolt-\nullatiun witli business men today,\nMayor Hardwiek was able to announce that must of the stores and\noffices would be rebuilt as soon us\npossible. Those rendered homeless\nby Lho disaster are being cared for\nby their neighbors. Foodstuffs aro\narriving in Annapolis Koyal from\nBridgetown ami other towns in the\n-Ilstriet.\nAppoint Chinese Girl\nto Be School Teacher\nin British Columbia\nVICTORIA, Sept. 8.\u2014Miss bavlnia\nFrances Dtekman, who will take up\nher duties at the Rock Bay school\nhero next week, is believed to be the\nfirst. Chlnose girl to be appointed a\nteacher in Canadian public school^.\nMiss Diekman,' although the daughter of Chinese parents, has spent all\nher life tn this province, having been\nborn in Nanaimd- B. C, 21 years\nago. Her father, who -camo to this\ncountry from China about 30 years\nago, Is 'a Methodist ^.missionary at\nNanalmg.\nrt, was\nmost recent measures\nTho establishment ot\nnt cour.t of international\nild. ho felt, go far to\nprevent serious conflicts in Llie future.\nMust Appeal to Bar\nEveryone recognized that the world\nwas passing through a period of depression and reaction following the\nnoble idealism and high' enthusiasms\nwhich had marked tho early days\nof jieace, but better conditions were\nIn store. To no body ot men would\nthe international court, of Justice\nmake a stronger, appeal than the\nmembers uf lhe 'liar in all parts of\nthe British Empire.\nBanquet Brilliant Affair\nOTTAWA, Sept. 8.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014Inspiring addresses pointing\nto tlie lofty ideals which must animate all members of the legal profession marked the sixth annual\nbanquet ot the Canadian Bar association held in the Chateau Laurier\nthis evening. The position of tlie\nprofession was declared to be Is the\nvan of the forward march of humanity and in tlie upbuilding and\nmaintenance   of  civilization.\nTn the absence of Sir -lames Alliens, K.C., tho president, who was\nrecalled to Manitoba, on public business, II. W, Atwater, K.C., Montreal, presided. \u00ab The speakers Included Right Hon. Sir John Simon,\nICC.; Hon. H. L, Carson, Philadelphia; Sir Francois Lemleux, chief\njustice of tho superior court of Quebec; on. W. L. Mackenzie King and\nMr. Justice Hodgins, Toronto, is ex-\ncellehcy, Baron Byng, was present,\nas wera leaders in the legal, political and social life of Canada.\nElect M ar.N n n*| ii ton\nOno of the pleasing features of the\nbanquet was tho unanimous election\nof Sir' Malcolm MacNaughton, a\nprominent member of the British bar,\nto an honorary membership In the\nCanadian Bar association. The\nspeeches which were marked throughout by graceful references to the\nenergy   and   ability    of   Sir 'James\nNew Goods for Fall\nAll on the Lower Priced Market\nIN OUR MEN'S OWN STORE\nStanfield's Underwear, red label, heavy ribbed; two-piece.\nPer .garment     ^^^^^^^^\nStanfield's   heavy  ribbed   Combinations,\nat -\nStanfield's fine ribbed, two-\npiece, for dress rjprt Off\nwear. Per garment.. *35\u00ab\u00ab*wO\nCee  Tfeo  Turnbull's  Pure Wool\nCombinations,   up   to  size  40.\nPer suit\nfor \t\nSizes 42, 44 and 46. <\u00a3-| -j AA\nPer suit  - tD-LJ-iUU\nWolsey Pure Wool Combinations. Per $7.50\nsuit    - ....*-\t\n.$2.25\n.bed   Com-\n$4.50\n3Cd,      two-\n$2.25\nPure Wool\n,   to  size  40.\n$10.00\nMen's Fall Shoes, a smart boot\nfor the fall weather, in the\nt\\vo colors:\nBrow-p,  per  pair\u2014\n$7.50 and $10.00\nBlack, per pair\u2014\n$7.50, $9.00,\n$10.00\n, Don't forget School Shoes for\nthe boys in black or brown,\nIn  all  sizes.  Prices,   per  pair\n$4.75, $5.00,\n$5.50\nLadies'   Heathor   Mixturo\nCashmere Hose\nFull  fashioned  all  wool.   Slzea,\n9, 0',_ and 10. fl\u00bb*|   f7P\nPor pair  tDl.lO\nLadies'  Wide   Ribbed\nCashmere Hose\nSeamless toes and heels, brown,\nnavy'and tony shades. 9, 9*_,\n\u00a3TJ* $1.50\nGirls' English Jersey Dresses With Bloomers to\n.   Match, 2 to 8 Years, $4.50 .and $495\nMany mothers prefer these little dresses to others. They aro\nintended to give the desired warmth and are knit from all\nwool English yarns. Owing to direct buying from England\nwe are enabled lo offer these at a lower price than for some\nyears past, in  the following colors:    Emerald, Navy, Cardinal\nam,SttX0: $4.50 ano $4.95\nAt\nAdvance Showing of New Fall\nSuits, Coats, Gowns\nand Skirts\n\u25a0ill t'iiul the present display* most interesting from  the point\nof stylo and quality.    Prices are   moderate.\nCOATS,   ranging\nfrom   \t\nSUITS,   ranging,\nfrom   ...\u201e,, -\t\nDItUSSES, ranging\nfrom    *\t\n$27.50 to $55.00\n$29.50 to $75.00\n$25,00 to $55.00\nHudson's Bay Co.\n\\ikens, all carried the forceful opinion that law and justice were two\nnf the predominant factors in tho\nbinding together of tho Brltisli Empire, This was particularly, stated\nby Sir John Simon, who declared\nthat the iiritish Empire was not hold\ntogether by formula or machine-made\neoiiKliUilinn, but by the friendship\nbetween man and man, woman nnd\nwumun ami the justice of common\nlaw.\nHAND   OVER ECREMONT\nMONTREAL, Sept. 8.\u2014Arthur\nEcrement, former federal member for\nBorthler county, Quebec, was today\nordered handed over to United States\nofficers, to bo taken to Buffalo to\nface charges of being implicated in\na fake betting scheme, by Judife\nChoiiuette,   extradition   commissioner-\nEcrement is accused with others\nof stealing amounts aggregating $125,--\n000 from Michael Connelly, a. local\ncontractor, sinco dead. He has already been acquitted on a similar\ncharge   in   thc   Montreo.1   courts.\nApplication for a writ of habeas\ncorpus was granted this afternoon\nFind Ecrement was released on \u00a510,-\n000 bail pending hearing of argument\non the writ, which will come up in\nuourt   Tuesday   morning.\nWIFE HIDES DOLLARS\nFROM ARMED BANDIT\nWINDSOR, Out., Sept. 8-\u2014Menaced\nby a gun in the hand of a bandit,\nMrs. Allan, wife of George Allen,\ncaretaker at tho raco track of tho\n\"Windsor Jqekey club, today saved\nher husband ?6000 by quick thinking.\nCompelled  to  open tiie safe by the\nthug, who called at tlie house ask.\ning for work, Mrs. Allan eroucheq\nin front of the safe with the bandit'**,\ngun pressed against her head, swepi\na wallet containing (6.000 in bills jntt\nher clothing* and with her left hanq\nshe gave tho thug $1)00 from a cas*(\nbox on . the top shelf of tho safe.\nThe bandit made his getaway in nr}\nautomobile   driven   by  a confederate,\nCommissioner Gillespie Resigns\nVICTORIA, Sept. S.~F. J. Gllles.\npie, commissioner for the provincial\ngovernment *ln South Vancouver h'i!j\nresigned and will it is understood,\nleave the government service at the\nend  of this month.\nll, is said he may bo a Llbernl\ncandidate in the coming federal\nelection   iu    Vancouver   South.\nDate palms may be denuded ot\ntheir leaves and charred with fire\nand slitl not be injured for production\npurposes.\nI  \"Canada's Staple Cigars\" I\novido\nHABANA *\"*\nSPORTSMAN\nSIZE\n15c\nA DISTINCTIVE SMOKE\n a\u2014aawas.\n\u2022\u2014\u2014st\nf '\"jvmv\nTHE NELSON\" DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER % 192T.\"\n| THE ARK\nFor Fall Supplies\n11-1 Flannelette Blankets, $3.00\npair, 32-4, $3.75 .pair. Ladles' Heavy\nHOse .for. fall,. 40c pair. Grey and\nBlue Lisle, 35c pair. Good Towelling\n25c per yard. Men's Heavy Blue\nOveralls, $2:50 pair. Apron Gingham,\n.39 Inch, 30c and 35c per yard. Dress\nGinghams, 30c per yard. 34-inch\nWhite .Flannelette, 35c yard; 34-inch\n\u25a0striped 28&c yard. Dark, 27-inch, 30c\nyard. 9\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u2022hon.  634\n60S   Vern.n   81\nSchool Books\nand Supplies\nText Books, Scribblers\nand Exercise Books, Pencils, Pendiclers, Erasers,\nDrawing Books, Chalk,\nCrayons, Paints and\nBrushes.\nCome Early and\nAvoid Rush\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nMill Orders Fillod Promptly\nPh.no 11 P. O, Box 1087\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL & RITCHIE MONUMENTAL   COMPANY\nSuccessors -to Kootenay Granite\nand  Monumental  Co.\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHONE  10\nrreservlnp     Peaches,     Elbert as,\nCall   pack,   crato $2,35\nBasket\n50tf\nCfintelouptes,    largo    size...-20*^\nMedium   size    _..v X-\u00bb_*<t\nSmall   size,   2   for \u25a0-.____*$\nGrapes,   Concords   and   Malagas\nCitron,   for   preserving,   lb....*Q^\nWatermelon,   lb.   - \u201e <Q\u00a3\nIce Cream Melon, lb. -. -\\Jjj*\nPears,   basket    \u25a0\u2014*\u00ab-BO*\u00bb\nBantam    Corn,   Egg    Plant   and\nall   other  Vegetables  in  Season,\nMILK\nBorden's Evaporated\nTall   size,   each\n4-Doxen Case _\nDozen   ,\n\u2014ao*\n-89.00\n-$2.30\nEarly  Crawford\nPeaches\n8upcr-Quality from Poachland,\nQkanagan, now on hand at,\nPor   crato    S2.35\nBuy B, C. Fruit and Keep Your\nMonoy  at homo.\nJust 3 crates Apricots, No. 2,\nat   at   crato $1.75\nFLEMING'S STORE\nOreo-men,   Drygoods,  Eta,\nSt. Charles Milk\nTha    Old    Standby\nFamily  \u00abize,  6   for   ......S1.00\nPest Meals\nIn the City  Prepared by\nAH White Help\nCome   to\nTREMONT CAFE\n;.   E.  JAMES,   Prop,  and   Chef\nOpen 6 a. m. to 8 p. m.\nSSISTANCE\nDuring rftdiool hours and home,\n.studies   will   greatly   relieve  the\nnervous  system and  bo  conducive to better health and facilitate   Intelligent   study. >\nCJIiisses for that purpose need\nnot be expensive to be effective. Tt requires special skill\nfor children and that wo havo\nat our disposal.\nMake your appointment and\nhave the family's eyes examined\nand your mind and oyes will be\nf To. PATENAUDE\nOuptometrist and Optician\nYour Watch Repairs\nPromptly*    Perfectly    and    Accurately   Done,\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nWatchmaker and Jeweler.\nAll Roads Lead to\n__.,_L._u^_ m?_hi~mmr.gm~.__mt-_-\nThe Gem Theatre\nDO\nNOT\nFORGET\nThat for the balance of\nthis week you can get\nMen's and Boys' Shoes\nat extra special reductions', ;    .\nGoodyear Shoe Company\nPane's   Old   Stand,   Baker  Stroot\nD.   WADE,   Manager.\nSIIIIIIIJSIB!\nSiii\nWHEnE\nChief White Elk\nIs  Appearing   in   Person\n' With\nBefore the\nWhite Man Came\nAn   All   Stpr   Indian   Drama\nThe Farmer\nIn Business\nWe hftvn on hand a full stock U\nof   Flour,   Bran,   Shorts,    Mid- W\ndllngs,     Oxmeal,     Feed,     Flour, 8\nOats    and    Oat.    Chops,    Barley g\nund    Barloy    Chops,    Breakfast If\nFoods,   Table   and   Cattle   Salt J\nnnd   Condimonts.\nEE_\nTcrms:      Non-momben     cash ji\nwith   orders.\nSpecial Children's Mati-\n' nee Tomorrow\nWhen Chief White Elk will'\nireBent presents to the children\nliving best answers to questions\nie will submit to them about\n.he   Indian.\nNelson & District United f\nFarmers' Cooperative   1\nAssociation\ni:i\u00a3llll!I!llii;il!!llllllIllll!IIliinilliDIIIlll!llllllllllllli\nHIGH CLASS FURS\nA very fine selection kept\nin stock or made to order.\nCustomers' own furs made\nup into any article desired.\nOld furs repaired and remodelled.\nG. GLASER.\nManufacturing   Furrier\nPhono 106 Nelson, B, C.\nHunting Time is Here\nAnd vftll be in  ftill swing on  .September 17 when the\ngrouse season Opens,'\nTRY US FOR\nGUNS, RIFLES, AND AMMUNITION, \"DUXBAK\"\nWATERPROOF CLOTHES, CAMP\nEQUIPMENT, ETC.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd. ,\nBAKER STREET,\n_wm__mmmmmmm_m\n1-I-I1MMIJ\nNELSON, B. C.\nI\".    I)   l   II    -l.\nFair Alpinists Pay High Tribute to Attractions of Sel-\nkirks.\n\"They draw you to Banff to seo the\nfamous Johnson canyon. But in your\ndistrict I have seen the equivalent\nof half a dozen Johnson canyons.\nYour people do not realize what you\nhave got here. You have scenery\nthat the world will come to see. Because yuu live in the midst of It,\nperhaps, you do not appreciate it.\"\nThu speaker Was Dr. Cora J. Best\nof Minneapolis, retired physician,\nwriter, lecturer and mountain climber, who waa one of the member*-) of\nthe Kokanee Mountaineering club's\nexpedition lo the glaciers, and nod-\ning approval to he)' remarks stood\nMr.s. Audrey F. Shippam, of Ann Arbor, Mich., wife of Major Shippam,\nof the Unitttfl States coast artillery,\nand Dr. Best's companion and 'col-'\nlabora lor In both mountai n climbing\nand scientific 'pursuits. Mi-h. Shippam is an artist, with both brush\nind camera, pursuing these activities\nas a pastime,- and such glimpses o\u00a3\nthe glorious Kokanee ice field as she\nwas able to obtain on the recent trip\nwill be preserved in permanent and\n.irtistir   form.\n\"We are very enthusiastic over\nyour magnificent peaks, tho immense\nglaclor that we visited, y.our beautiful\nlakes and thc many wonderful vistas\nthat tourists are bound to appreciate,\" contributed Mrs. Shippam.\nNot Excelled by Rockies,\n\"While there are higher peaks In\nthe Bookies than you have adjacent\nto you, the country from which they\nrise is also higher. Relatively your'\npeaks In the Selkirks are just as\nhigh a's those in tho Rockies, for 'their\nbases are lower.. To tho mourn tuin\nfilm bor they are just as attractive\nas famous peaks lh the Rockies. Do,\nnot   let   anyone   belittle   them.\"\nDr. Best has had four season of\nmountain ciimbfng -in Canada, and\nMrs. Shippam has \"Jiad t\\Vo. Both\nalso have pursued this exhilarating\npastime iu both the United States\nand Alaska, and ure also, familiar\nwith the Swiss Alps. While the United States boasts many organizations\nthat are addicted to mountaineering,\nit has no Alpine club uf its own, and\nwhen these visitors get back to Minneapolis they will take up the organizing a branch for .Minnesota\nof the Alpine club, of Canada. New\nYork is the only state at present\nwith such a branch.\nNext year these visitors will come\n(jack, with reenforcements, and will\nplay among tho crags and glaciers\not what may by* that tlmo be called\nKokanee park.\nSays Nelson Needs Jolt.\n.\"You have. the nucleus Of *i very\nimportant organization Ih your Kokanee Mountaineering elub,\" declared\nBest. \"The people of Nelson\nshould join it en masse, both for\neiiffit they will gain from, following the cult of the great outdoors,\nnd In order to gi-v.c It support, for\nhe results \u25a0 of its-endeavors will -be\n\u25a0ery far reaching. Make no mistuko\nabout this\u2014the time will come when\ngreat numbers of tourists will cume\nhere specially for the mountaineering\n.all-actions und the people of Ne!s6n\nran considerably hasten or retard the\narrival  uf that day.\n\"There Is such a thing as an automobile fasting on dead center. If\nil is given a push it will go ahead.\nNelsun seems to be in that ''position\npf  equilibrium..\n\"What Nolson needs principally is\na good, stiff jolt. It is the principal\ntown of a district that has wonderful scenic resources, and it should\norganize itself to take advantage of\nand develop thoHO resources. What\nhas Banff lo show tourists in comparison witli what you hiWvo here?\"\nDr. Best and Mrs. Shippam spent\na portion uf Wednesday at Brilliant,\nbecoming posted un the Doukhobor.s.\nYesterday afternoon they Wsre the\nguests of Ma-s. J. A. tinker arid A.\nB. Gilker on * a. motor hip to Upper\nBonnington aiid last evening kept\nan appointment to become intimately\nacquainted with huckleberry pie, the\nbasic material fur which camo froni\nsome altitude.\nThey will leave this morning for\nlhe Crow, en route to Cardston, Alta,.\nfrom which point they will try to find\na feasible route to Glacier national\npark, Montana, which route, if fuund,\nwill bo boosted by the Great Northern\nrailway.\nAre Naturalists.-.\nPersons so conversant with the\nmitdoors cpuld not help but be naturalists. The two women, for instance, have a hobby for studying\nbaby birds, and in many, cases have\nspent hours in getting one photograph\nof nestlings.- Dr. Best l%v also an authority on mushrooms, and belongs\nto a university society that studies\nthat edible fungus. Yesterday she\ngathered several specimens of tho\nInky-Top Coprlnicus, a relative of\nthe Shaggy-Mane Coprlnicus, growing on the Granite road. Fossils also\ncommand her Interest, 'particularly\ncrustaceans of the Cambrian period,\nwhich she has found in the Rockies.\nThese pets of-hers are from three to\nsix million years old. She and her\nhusband are both physiciansv and\nspecialists and IB of her ancestors\nwere doctors. After giving up ac-\nlice practice, which was unnecessary\nin her case, she *devoted five years\nto voluntary practice among the- pooV\n'as a manorial to her mother. t\n<   Mis.   Shippam   was   unablo   to   get\noverseas with the. American expeditionary force, but did the next best\n'thing, and operated a farm of 300\nacres, plowing, seeding and harvesting, and participating fully- In. the\nhard work. Her husband, Mejjor\nShippam, Is a lecturer at Michigan\nuniversity, to tho university unit,\nupon gunnery.\nBoth the little women prefer the\nfreedom of male attire and use their\nalpenstocks as j-anes. _ ,\nmonster nelson grown\nApples excite growers\nFive magnificent specimens of Nel\nson grown apples, every one weighing over ope pound, are causing\nmuch speculation among horticulturists and fruit farmers here as to\ntheir variety. The prize dumpling\nfillers are being exhibited in the\nwindow of the Thurm.ari cigar store\nun Baker street, and are from the\ntrees of Thtmos E, Nolson of Fair-\nview. s\nMr.. Nelson himself is In doubt as\nto the name of the variety, although\nhe has made a number of shipments\nto eastern points in the past, some\nof which ran 47 apples to the box;.\nThe most authoritative pronouncement on the vexing question yesterday was 'made by E, C. Hunt, assistant provincial horticulturist, who\ndeclared tho giant apples belonged\nto  tho Peas Good Non-Such variety.\nSocial and Personal\nCapt. Gerald K. Ashby, the Soutli\nHloeun  rancher,   Is a. city  visitor.\nMrs J. P.-Slndel and two daughters\nroturned Wednesday night from a\nvisit   to   coast   cities.\nI. R. Poole and family arrived Wednesday night from Edgewood, where\nMrs. Poole and the children have been\nspending    the   summer.\nM. C. Monaghun and J. C. Devlin\nleft yesterday for Sheep erCok to examine the Iron Mountain group of\nclaims, with a view to bonding the\nproperly.\nSidney Norman, editor of the North\nWest Mining Truth, in company with\nW. B. Pooie, one of the owners of\nthe Reno Mines on Faun Creek, loft\nyi-stcrday to mako an examination of\nthe    Reno   Property.\nMr. and Mrs. C J. Currier, formerly of I_.e tlib rid go, have come to the\ncity to reside'. Mr. Currier, who was\npreviously with tlie Asslnaboia Music\ncompany, will take .over the management of the Helntzniuii Piano company's\nstore here. Mrs. Currier will be on\nlhe Staff also and will look after the\nclerical \u2022 work of llie slore. F. W.\nWhitfield will remain with the .staff\nin   the   capacity   of   salesman.\n.There is 100 undeveloped horsepower Jn a fall, in the Alyakmon\nriver, Greeoe.\nNelson  Newt  bf  the  Day\n\/   , _-.. I,' i .... _T\n, Kindergarten opening, Monde.y, *8ept.\n12. Apply Miss F. McVicar, 623 Mill\nstreet.  * PhonB 394R. W02X)\nBradshaw plums 5 cents a pound.\nFine selection ferns. Bealby'*. Stall\nSaturday's   Market.     Phone   277L1.\n  (492_)\nLocal fresh killed beef, mutton, lamb,\nand veal and potted meats\u2014Mars-\nden's   Stall   Saturday's   market.   (4923)\nDAHOE\nBlue Diamond Pavilion tonight\u2014Old\npopular music will be played by the\norchestra. Admission 75 cents Includes  supper. (4922)\n*      NOEMAM B.  BRADLEY\nTEACHEB O?,, PIANO\u2014Haa Several\nvacancies for pupils\u2014Phono G43I..   \u25a0\n'        ; (4905)\nPrincipal A. J.*\"\" Mather wishes to\nmeet the parents af the High School\npupils, at the High School, Room 7,\\\ntonight at 8 o'clock, to discuss* with\nthorn various phases of tho High School\nwork   for  the  present  year. (4928)\nA meeting* of the Nelson Match Syndicate will be bold In J. S. Annable'n\noffice  tonight at 8   o'clock. (4325)\nFish and Chips Restaurant, Mrs. D.\nMcAllister, 508 Josephine street. Open-\nning,   Sept.. 14.    \" - (4735)\nDance at the Blue Diamond Pavilion\nFriday. .        (4906)\nIn future all orders for Neleon Beer\nplaced with Government Vendor w.II\nbe delivered dlreot from the Brewery\ncellars.      No  charge  for   delivery.\n' \\ (4823)\nQlrl wanted at once McDonald Jam\nFactory. (4867)\nNEI.80N    BUSINESS    COLLEGE\nEARN   AND   LEARN\nNight classes every Monday and\nThursday. Individual tuition. Commence* now. For particulars apply Box\n14,    Nelson,    B.    C* (4916)\nDaughters and Maids of England meet\ntonight in  K. P.  Hal! at  8 o'clock.\n  (4917)\nSouth Slocan Hall today 9th, September. First of series of four entertainments. Lantern views. Mrs, Jar-\nley's waxworks. Season tickets $1.00.\nSingle admission GO cents. Opening\naddress by Dr. Rose M. P. P. at 8:30\nP.   M.   .      (491.5)\nACCIDENT OCCURS ON\nCANADIAN IMPORTER\nASTORIA, Ore., Sept. 8.\u2014Meagre\nreports picked up today by the naval\nradio station here said an accident\niceurred this morning on board the\ndisabled British steamer Canadiar\nImporter, which is,- being towed to\nVictoria py the tug Spa Lion. An\n[engineer on the craft is said to have\nbeon badly burned.\nGLASSES that were not\nmade to fit the exact\nmeasurements of your eye\ndeficiencies are worse than useless and should not he worn.\n'The crystalline lenses from another person's eyes would not\ngive you the proper sight if\nthey were placed Jietwoen the\npupils and retinas of your eyes.\nNeither will glasses that are\nnot made to your eye.measure\nbenefit you. We are competent\nto serve you.\nA* Higginbotham\nSPECIALIST\nNew   Parlors,   next   Dn.   Stood\n&  Ganser,  Nelson,  B,  C,\nYour Nerves and Your\nJob\nTJnknowlnly-\u2014* 70 per cent of\nub all have poor vision, In somo\ndegree. Stop \"thinking\" that\nyour vision is all right\u2014know!\nSee an optical specialist. Remember correct vision means bam\nished \"nerves,\" more mental en-\norgy and efficiency to put Vnto\nyour * job.\nJ. J. WALKER\nJeweler, Optician and  Enflrevtr\nORDER NOW\nPut In your coat .now. while lt Ib\nto be had.\nThe rush of orders will noon be\non and cars.scarce, as they will be\nrequired   for   the   transportation   of\ngrain,   consequently   a   shortage   of\noal when you will most need lt.\nWe  handle  onlytthe  beat   of Domestic   Coals   from   the   Lethbridge\ndistrict and Furnace Coal from the\nCrowa  Nest MlnaB.\nWo have also a large stock of the\nbest of dry wood all lengths, also\ndry cedar and slabs for summer use.\nORDERS PROMPTLY ANJ1\nCOURTEOUSLY ATTENDED TO.\nMcDonald Cartage & Fuel\nCompany\nCoal, woofl and' General Teaming,\nTHE\nSugar Bowl\nSPECIALS   FOR\nFriday and Saturday\nBlue Ribbon Tea..\nSeal Brand Coffee....\nFry'H Cocoa ,*_s\t\n\u25a0-55*\n85_*\n35<*\nSilver    Gloss    Starch 156\nCorn Starch, 2  for 25\u00ab#\nGold   Drop  Pastry Flout1,  24s,\nt'1   \u25a0\u25a0' 81.55\nJoco Furniture Polish, qts..75^\nSt. Sharles Milk, family size,\no <*\u00ab>\u25a0 - 90\u00ab*\nSt.  Charles  Milk,   tails,  0\n\"\"*   81.05\nPacific or B. C. Milk, B for..g5(i\n110\nOrders  to   XXV        Prices\nCOR.   MILL  ANO   JOSEPHINE\nAnother Slash  at  the\nHigh Costs\nFor | period ef thirty day* we\nwill nil wood at\n$6.00\nA lead delivered.   South ef Latimer,   etreet    25    oente    more,\nPHONE   171\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nManufacturer  ef  Match  Block*\nFOR SALE\nSome of the BBS* RESI-.\nDBNCES  ln Nolson.\nSeo my list of IMPROVED\nRANCHES. Some of them suitable for mixed farming.\nPrice price and terms apply\nD. A. M'FARLAND\nInsurance, OreenhlU Coal, Seal\nEstate\nRoom 6 X. W. O. Blk. Phone 49.\nGOOD BUYS!\nFOR SALE \u00ab\nSmall four roomed cottage, close in, two Iota. Price. $900\nFOR SALE\nSix rooiwd modern houne. at'onn ffumdiktion. un   iljiii str-pet,. m**nr enr\nline.   Good condition.-   Fruit trees. Two lots, l-'rice.* 1..;. $2500\nCharles P, McHardy\nINSURANCE PHONE 135 REAL ESTATE\n'im_-mmmmmMmMkwmm\n- -.-i--...J.t,_sa\\-mse-wm\nGUARANTEE!\nWe guarantee that a \"HECL-A\"\nPIpeless Furnace wilh heat your\nhome -properly. We cannot\nmake It stronger than that!\nYou aro to be the judge. Wo\nwill fjtand hack of our product\n\u2014absolutely.\nCLARE BROS. & CO., LIMITED\nProston, Ontario.\npuRity\nm\u2014mmaaam-m\nI\nWIVES, takes your husbands to see this picture; they will\nnpt be so neglectful arid inconsiderate after .seeing it\nEminent Authors Present\nDorrt Neglect\nYour Wife\n\u2022    BY GERTRUDE ATHERTON '\u2022*\nWith an. All Star Cast Including\nMABEL JULIENNE SCOTT, 'LEWIS STONE AND\nRICHARD TUCKER\nThe  Law\u2014the  man-made  law\u2014commanded  her to  stay  with   her\nhusband, who had treated her. with cold and selfish neglect.\nBut the law of her heart urged  her ta the side of the man  who\nhad mado her life blossom with the flowers of his devotion.\nWhich did she follow?    Every  man a\/id  every vyoman  vwll  want\nto see this remarkable drama of the irresistible forces of life.   \u25a0\nTwo  Real Comedy\n\"Out Ior the Night\"\nThe Game of Polo\nAa soon  by the eye..of tho;.\nSLOW MOTION CAMERA *,\nPlumbprs'    Brass    Goods,    Fixtures\nand Supplies. Tile and,_Sowor Pipe.\nB. C. Plumbing and Heating Co.,\nNELSON, Q. C.\nHigh   Class  Reataurant,\n.    ROYAL CAFE\nOiicn day and night. Quick aery-\nice.    Dinner,  11:30  a.  m.  to 2:001\np. ip\u201e .40c.    Special. Suppqr,   5:30]\np. m. to 8:00 p. ra., 40c.\nPhone 182. 604 Baker Street I\nI\nWE SAVE YOU MONEY\n-Bananas,   lb 2_2<\u00a3\nCheese, lb 35*^\nBacon,   Ib 45**$\nOld Dutch,   _   for 585$\nToilet Paper, 3 for 25^\nCream   pf    The   West   Flour-\nmoney back il- not satisfactory.\n4f\u00bb Iby $5.90\nM lbs J(..... 82.95\nDelivered    free.\nB.   C.   MILK\nTails Size,  .1 for   9 .40\nPer  case,   1   doz.   ........  8.3(3\nFamily   Size,   2   for    25\nPer   case,   4   doz.    ....... 5.85\nQT. CHARLES  MILK\nTall   Size,   2   Tor.    9 .35\nPer csiho, 4 doz 8.25\nFamily Size, * *W\nPer wise. 4 doz 7.10\nP. AND W. GROCERTERIA\nOUR      GOODS\nSPECIALS\nNelson   Business   College\nw***vy?^-**-'**-****^^\nEARN and LEARN\nYou  Are  Never Too Old io Learn How to Earn\nMORE MONEY\nIf you have not yet reached your FULL EARNING CAPACITY, you can do so whilst spending the long winter\nSCHOOL, held every Monday and Thursday evening from\nevenings profitably and pleasantly at the NIGHT\n7:00 p. m. to 9:15 p. m-.\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION    COMMENCE ANY TIME\nI FOR  PARTICULARS,  APPLY\nP. 0. Box 14, Nelson, B. C.\nR. H. MABER\nAGENT,\nNELSON,  CI.  C.\nJOHN DALY\nCABINET CIGAR STORE\nHAIL ORDERS ATTENDED TO\n1     PROMPTLY\nSmoking Tobacco, Snuff, Pipe*, and\nFull   St.ok  of  Cigar*,   Cimretl.i,\nOthor SmtkerV SuppIlM\nNew\nFall Hats\nChoose your Hat from this big\nselection of new styles, produced\nby some of the best hat makers in\nthe world. You'll be sure of quality,\nsure of value, and.sure of getting a\nhat with distinctive individuality.\ncolore  ,|n\" Velours   and\n$6.00 to $8.00\nAll   the  new  Fall\n\u25a0Scratch Felts,\npriced frojri \t\nBtetsgna and Borsallnoa,\nat     , \u201e\u25a0.\n$9.00\nEmory & Walley\nV_-__IM.l\u00bb\n.... i.Hi,ii...\u00bbJ\u00bbiiij..i.i\u00bb_l,>_j^iiW\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1921_09_09","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0397077","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1921-09-09 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1921-09-09 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0397077"}