{"@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":"2021-07-21","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1923-06-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401016\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Douk Fanatict Get\nONE MONTH IN JAIL\nSee Page 3\nCr\n. IBa=      i    Is\"    ii*     ' ^f-tsssssssM.\n\"I   -Papyrus Ne!*\/ Favorite\nFOR TODAY'S DERBY\nSee Page 7\n-514\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 6, 1923\nNo. 40\nCITY IN LORRAINE TAKES ANTI-FRENCH STAND\nRECIPROCITY OFFER IS VERY RADICALLY AMENDED\nOLIVER HOLDS A\nROD IN PICKLE\nFOR THEJOUKS\nThey Must Obey Laws, and\nLegislature May Act,*\nHe Says\nSCHOOL BURNING IS\nPART OF A POLICY\nManson Will Prosecute to the\nLimit If He Finds the\nGuilty Parties\nVICTORIA, June 5. \u2014 That the\nDoukhobors must learn respect for\nthe ,laws of the province, and that\ntheir action in tmrnlng the school\nnear Nelson would not be tolerated, was Btated by Premier Oliver\ntoday. \"We may, If necessary, have\nto take legislative action,\" he stated.\nHe pointed out that an attempt\nto burn a. school ln that district\nhad been made some time ago, and\nthat Dr. MacLean had received intimation from the leader of the\nDoukhobor colony that no guarantee could - be given that a similar\nattempt would not be made. On\n! ^Saturday night the\" school was\nburned.\n\"The Inference Is,\" stated, the premier,   \"that   it  le part  dt  a   policy.\n\"It Is not the government's intention to tolerate any action of\nthat sort. No community as a\nmatter of policy can destroy public\nschools.\"\nAttorney-Gen eral Manson when interviewed   said:\n\"The matter will be Investigated,\nand if the guilty parties are found\nthey will be prosecuted to the\nlimit.\"\nIMPERIAL CONFERENCE\nWILL TALK DEFENCE\nKaval, Military and Air Kattere, and\nImperial   WU-eleee   Will  Ba   XHi-\ncusstd,   Bays Premier Xing.\nOTTAWA, June 5. \u2014 The Imperial\nconference is to be discussed in the\nhouse this seBBlon. Premier King intimated this afternoon that opportunity\nwould be afforded on a vote in supply.\nThe conference, he added, would begin with statements from all of the\ndominions, and \u00bb\u25a0 general review of\nthe situation Bince 1921. Matters of\nnaval, military and air defences would\nbe taken up, and there would be a review of the naval situation growing\nfrom  the Washington conference.\nThere would be also the economic\nconference, and there would be discussion of the imperial wireless connections. There was also a matter\nconcerning the nationalities of subjects marj-led   to  foreigners.\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen believed\nthat there should be a statement as to\ntlie lilies of policy which the prime\nminister intended following.\nMr. King said there would be further opportunity for discussion along\nmatters connected with the conference.\nAPPOINTING POWER\nFOR CONCILIATION\nBrotherhood   Head   Argues   That   Government Should Be Authority to\nBam* Chairmen.\nOTTAWA, June 6. \u2014 \"It Is absurd\nto suggest that the government of the\nday, which has power to appoint supreme court judges, is not competent\nto select chairmen for boards of conciliation appointed under the Industrial Disputes Investigation act,\" said\nA. R. Mosher, grand president of the\nCanadian Brotherhood of Railway employees,  here today.\nMr. Mosher's reference was to an\namendment to the act, proposed in the\nsenate. The amendment provides that\nwhere the parties to the dispute fail\nto agree on a chairman, he may be appointed by the chief justice of the\nsupreme court. At present, the chairman in such a case is appointed by\nthe minister of labor.\nWill Be Bridesmaid\nWhen Brother Weds\nOiler Public Prayers\nTill Parliament Gives\nVeterans \"Full Justice\"\nOTTAWA, June 5.\u2014A proposal that\nthe question of proper legislation ln\norder to bring \"full measure of justice\" to ex-soldlers and dependent pensioners, be made the subject of prayer\nin all churches throughout Canada,\nhas been placed before the executive\nof the Dominion Veterans' alliance by\nthe Army and Navy Veterans of Canada, one of the constituent organizations. The suggestion originated In\nthe Victoria unit, t is also proposed\nthat such prayers shall be offered\ncontinually  until  they are answered.\nSaskatchewan Will\nReduce Net Debt\nby New Debentures\nRBOINA, June 8.\u2014A net reduction\nIn tha public debt of -Saskatchewan\nof more than ,$1,600,000 will be effected iby sale of over $3,000,000 provincial debentures today. Bids from\nfive financial houses were opened\ntoday by the provincial treasurer for\nf> per oent debentures maturing in\n1933, totalling $3,14,900, the proceeds\nof which will be used to repay in\npart debentures maturing July 1.\nThe tenure of Aemlllns, Jarvis & Co.,\nof Toronto, of 85.00 on the basis of\npayment ln United. States funds, waa\n*cseptid\u00ab      __  .,_ _ (\t\nLADY DIANA SOMERSET\nDaughter of the duke of Beaufort,\nIs to be a ibrldesmaid when her\nbrother, the marquis of Worcester,\nmarries   Lady   Mary   Cambridge.\nRUSSIAN REPLY\nIS ACCEPTED\nBUT QUALIFIED\nMoscow Journal Accuses\nBritain of Interference in\nSoviet Asia\nMOSCOW, June 5.\u2014 Russia's reply\nto Lord Curzon's latest memorandum\non Anglo-Russian relations was forwarded to London today, and will\nprobably be delivered by Leonid Krassin on Thursday. The document Is of\nconsidM-ab'e length, and is understood\nto be V not unqualified acceptance of\nthe - British demands, though it is\ngenerally satisfactory.\nPlaying Bew York's Policy.\nIn the Pravda, M. Probrazhensky, a\nnoted publicist, declared that Curzon\nis \"playing the policy of New York\"\nin minimising the importance of Russian  trade to England.\nIf Europe economically Is gradually\nbecoming a province of America, then\nwhy, he asks, \"should .not English\ndiplomacy, little by little, become the\nmouthpiece of the American people?\"\nMoscow newspapers print at length\nalleged evidence of British interference In soviet Asia, and make reference to a document containing an\nagreement of last September whereby\nthe British promise to finance and\narm anti-soviet forces at Bokhara,\nTurkestan.\nMANITOBA.WILL RUN\nSUNDAY EXCURSIONS\nProvince    Will     Proclaim     Act     Law\nDespite Appeal   of   Lord's   Day\nAlliance\nWINNIPEG, June 5. \u2014 Railway\ncompanies will be permitted to run\ntrains to the beaches on the Sabbath, Hon. W. R, Craig, provincial\nattorney-general announced late thia\nafternoon, and the first Sunday excursion will leave here June 10.\nDespite objections of the Lord's\nDay alliance, the act enabling the\noperation of Sunday trains will be\nproclaimed  shortly.\nThe alliance is appealing the decision of the Manitoba courts upholding the provincial government's\namendment to the Lord's Day act\npermitting the operation of Sunday\ntrains.\nGeneral Merkaulofi\nof White Army Has\na Wait at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, June 5.\u2014Last year's\ncontroversy over the status of Sem-\nenoff, hetman of the Cossacks, ia recalled here tn the negotiations now\ngoing on ibetween General S. D.\nMerkauloff, former head of the White\narmy in Russia, and United States\nimmigration authorities. Merkauloff reached Victoria Monday morning on the Empress of Russia, with\nhis wife and daughter. They seek\npermission to travel east to Washington and New York. As in the\ncase of Semenoff, bis application is\nthe subject of a special exchange of\ntelegrams between Victoria, Seattle\nand Washington. Meantime Markau-\nloff if remaining ln Victoria,\nFORMER HEAD OF\nLONDON BANK DIES\nLONDON, June 6. \u2014 Thomas Baring, until recently the head of the\nLondon banking hotise of Baring\nBrothers & Co., died. Monday at Newmarket. He was the grandson of the\nfounder of Baring Brothers, \u201eand a\nbrother of the first earl of T^romer.\nHe represented the firm in New York\nln the eighties.\nSTEAMER   ARRIVALS.\nMelita, at Antwerp,  from  Montreal.\nEmpress of Britain, at Southampton, from Quebec.\nTyrrhonla, at Hamburg, from New\nTork.\nBECK WILL RUN\nAS CANDIDATE\nFQRTHEHYDRO\nToronto Globe Urges That\nHe Be Given Acclamation by London\nHE SAYS ENORMOUS\nISSUES AT STAKE\nGovernments of Canada and.\nStates and Ontario and\nNew York Involved\nTORONTO, June 5. \u2014 Sir Adam\nBeck will be a \"hydro-electric candidate\" for his home city of London\nln the forthcoming provincial election.\nAsked tonight whether he had reached\na decision on the invitation of the\nConservative convention to contest the\nLondon constituency, the chairman of\nthe hydro-electric power commission\nreplied that he had decided to accept\nthe nomination. *\nGiving his reasons for entering the\ncampaign.  Sir Adam said;\n\"The great issues affecting the future of the hydro-electric system of\nOntario must come up for settlement\nduring the legislature joon to be\nelected. It is essential that members\nof the house shall be put in possession\nof the best available information\nwhen these schemes come before them\nfor consideration.\n\"The matters In question are the\nrevision of the waterways treaty, to\npermit of the increased diversion of\nthe waters of the Niagara, nnd the\nmaking of an agreement ^etween the\ngovernments of Canada and Ontario\non the one side, and the governments\not the United States and the utato ot\nNow York on the,other, for the proper\nutilization of water powers ttf flu St\nLawrence.\n-     Must Develop It, Lawrence,\n\"In order to meet the power demands in this province, lt is necessary\nthat the St. Lawrence development be\nElven immediate consideration, .ind if\nelected for London, I shall regard it\nas my duty to do everything possible\nto secure for Ontario the greatest\npossible extension of the use of tho\nNiagara's water, and the early and\nample development of St. Lawrence\npower for the benefit of that part\nof the province within the St. Lawrence power zone.\"\nGlobe Backs  Hydro Father,\nTORONTO, June 5. \u2014 Sir Adam\nBeck, chairman of the Ontario hydroelectric commission, has decided to accept the proffered nomination of the\nConservative party in London, the\nToronto Globe will state editorially\ntomorrow  morning.\nThe Globe will review Sir Adam's\nreason for entering the contest, and\nadds:\n\"The Globe hopes that ln view of\nthese explanations, the Liberals of the\ncity of London will look upon Sir\nAdam Beck as a unique public servant, not as a party candidate, and\nwill refrain from putting a candidate\nIn the field.\"\nTour  Other  Candidates.\nIt was stated in political circles today that If Sir Adam decided to enter the field in the forthcoming pro-\nvnclal election, four other candidates\nwould enter the campaign in the western  Ontario city.\nIf the hydro leader runs, Mayor\nWenlge has announced his intention\nof entering the fray as an Independent\nConservative, while J. It Donohue is\nalready campaigning as an Independent Conservative pledged to the modification of the Ontario Temperance\nact. Dr. Hugh A. Stevenson, who represented Ontario In the last legislature, will likely be nominated again\nby the Labor party, and the Liberals\nmeet next Thursday to select a candidate.\n.British Rhineland\nStrike Is Ended;\nCommunists Vpset\nLONDON, June 5. \u2014 A Co*\nlogne dispatch to the Times says\nthat the Communist hopes of\nprovoking serious trouble in tha\nBritish area were frustrated today, when the trammen returned   to   work.\nThe strike at Dusseldorf, however, continues, and also the\nstrike in the industrial areas\njust outside the  Ruhr.\nCROP CONDITIONS\nON NATIONAL GOOD\nWheat  Seeding   Completed   Except  in\nAlberta,   and   in. Some   Placet\nBlade  la Seven  Inches High\nWINNIPEG, June B.\u2014Favorable\ncrop conditions prevail along western\nlines of the Canadian National railway, according to the weekly report\nissued here today. Most districts\nreport rain during the past week,\nwith crops in excellent shape and\nprospects  good.\nIn most districts in Manitoba and\nSaskatchewan seeding is completed,\nand only a few places report that\nthere ia a little barley and flax to\nbe sown.\nIn Alberta nearly all localities report seeding completed, and that the\nwheat  is   in   very  fine condition.\nIn many -sections of Saskatchewan\nand Alberta wheat Is from three to\nseven  Inches  above the ground,\nWants Thirty Thousand\nFrom Wesley College\nPROF.   W.   G.   SMITH5\nFormer vtee-principal of the Methodist institution*1 at Winnipeg, was on\nthe stand five days last week, in his\nsuit  for wrongful   dismissal.\nWHY NOT OPEN\nIN RECIPROCITY\nON COAL ITEM?\nMeighen Says If Fielding\nSincere He Will Take Up\nthe States' OHer\nOTTAWA, June 5. \u2014 A suggestion\nthat Hon. W. S. Fielding, minister of\nfinance, commence reciprocity negotl\natlons with the I'nited States by\nmeeting that government on the clause\nIn tbe Americar itariff offering trade\nin bituminous coal, if that class of\ncoal were made free coming into Can\nada, was made ln the house of com\nmona tonight by Rt Hon. Arthur\nMeighen, leader of the opposition, during discussion of a section of the\nbudget resolution which places anthracite and lignite on the free list.\nThe item carried.\n\"Why   don't   you    meet    the    United\nStates   on   this   offer?\"   Mr.   Meighen\nasked.\nCanada Wants Duty, Says Yielding.\nMr. Fielding replied that when the\nUnited States picked oat a particular\nitem and offered reciprocity on that,\nhe did not consider that a sound argument. People, of Canada, as a wholi\napprooved of a duty ou* bituminous\ncoal.\nMr. Meighen retorted that the argument of the minister that reciprocity\nwas all right as long as Canada kept\naway from coal. The house would\nrealize from this the measure of the\nvalue of the minister's attitude on\nreciprocity. \"There will never be reciprocity in coal while the honorably\nminister is  in office,\"  ho declared.\nMr. Fielding emphasized his belief\nin reciprocity. The United States bad\ngiven the president power to vary the\ntariff on certain commodities. He had\nselected a number of those things in\nwhich Canada was most vitally interested as a basis for an argument. In\ndoing so, however, he was merely con-\nidering a. temporary arrangement, and\nnot the broad principle of reciprocity,\nwhich he  favored.\nA. W. Neill, Independent, Comox-\nAlberni, brought up the question of\nputting bituminous on the free list.\nwhen he asked Mr. Fielding why it\nwas not given the same treatment as\nanthracite and  lignite.\nMr. Fielding replied that the differentiation went back to 1778.\nMr. Neil said-* this did not explain\nthe change now beign made as regards\nlignite, which was being added to the\nfree list.\nCHANGE OFFER\nRECIPROCITY\nAny Reductions  at All by\nStates Will Be Basis for\nGranting It\nwont waTTfor CUT\nOF FIFTY PER CENT\nMoose Mountain\nInsects Under the\nEyes of Officer\nOTTAWA, June 6.\u2014Replying to O\nR. Gould, Progressive, Assiniboia, ln\nthe house this afternoon, Hon. W. R.\nMotherwell, minister of agriculture,\nsaid an official of the department\nhad been sent to the Moose Mountain forest, reserve, where a serious\noutbreak of irfsect  peats is reported.\nThousand Hums Will\nAttend the Family\nReunion at Montreal\nMONTREAL, June C. \u2014 Members\nof the Hum family in Canada will\nstage rt rally in Chinatown next\nSunday and Monday. Nearly 1000\nHums are expected to attend, and a\nlocal reporter, describing the affair,\nsuggests it  will  be  a \"Hum  dinger.\"\nDr.\nMacLean Leaves\nfor East to Attend\nat Two Conventions\nVICTORIA, , June .\u2014Hon. * J, D.\nMacLean, provincial secretary and\nminister of education, has left to\nrepresent British Columbia at the\nannual meeting of the Canadian council of public* health at Ottawa, June\n18, 19 and 20. Dr. MacLean also\n\u25a0will represent British Columbia at\nthe Canadian good roads convention\nat Hamiltoa Rtflft week.\nTariff   on   Foreign   Raisins\nWon't Be Raised Till\nAustralia Signs Up\nOTTAWA, June 5.\u2014The increased\ncustoms tariff on raisins will not\ngo into effect until a trade agreement has been concluded with Australia. This is the effect of an\namendment to the budget resolution proposed in the house by Hon.\nW. S. Fielding tonight, and adopted.\nThe original budget resolution proposed a considerable Increase in the\nduties on raisins and dried currants, except when Imported under\nthe British preference. The present customs duties per pound are:\nBritish preference, %c; intermediate\nand general, %c. Under the budget\nproposal, made with a view to encouraging importations from Australia, the duties would be: British\npreference, free; intermediate and\ngeneral 3c per pound.        ,\nTonight, however, Mr. Fielding intimated that it might be some time\nbefore the Australian government offered a return, and it was po-\nposed to let the existing duties remain in force. When a trade agreement was reached with Australia,\nthe new rates could be brought Into\neffect by proclamation. The resolution  was  amended  to  this  effect.\nOne   Progressive   criticism   charged\nthat  under   the   Increased   duties   the\nCanadian   consumer   would   have\npay   four  cents   a  pound  more,  or\ntotal,    based    on    last    year's    consumption, of nearly a million and a\nhalf dollars.\n,       British   Preference   Passes\nThe   resolution    td   grant   an    increase   In   the   British   preference   on\nImports entering Canada by Canadian\nports was carried,\nThat embodying another offer of\nreciprocity with the United States\nwas held over, although Mr. Fielding\nIntimated thnt he would havo an\namendment to provide that if the\npresident of the United States determined to reduce duties on specified items, Canada might act similarly. The original resolution read\n\"'reduce by 50 per cent,\" Tlie\namendment strikes out the reference\nto   50   per   cent.\nBefore adjournment, the house\npassed all the sections affecting the:\ncustoms tariff, with the exception of\nthree minor items, and the resolutions In regard tn drawbacks, with no\nexception.\nReciprocity Amendment\nIn ennnection with clause 2 of the\nbudget resolution covering the provision for reciprocity with tho United \u25a0tales, Hon. W. S. Fielding, minister nf finance, moved to strike out\nthe words \"by 50 per ,cont,\" when\nreferring to reductions which might\nbe made by the president of the United States, This would leave the\nway open to negotiate for any reductions   which   might   be   available.\nDuring the discussion of tho British preferential tariff changes, grant-1\ning a discount of 10 per ceht on the!\npresent British preference rates un-j\nder certain conditions on goods tn*]\ntering through Canadian ports, Hon.\nH. H. Stevens, Conservative, Vancouver Center, asked the minister to\nconsider extending the discount to\ngoods entering via Pacific porta\nwhich had been transshipped ut\nHongkong.\nPacific Via Hongkong\nThis   was   not   against   the   spirit\nof  the  clause,   he  said.\nMr. Fielding said this was a matter worthy of consideration. He\nthought the governor-in-council had\npower to deal with it under the i\nTariff act. If sueh was not the case,\nhe would have the matter gone into,1\nand would see that power was is-'\nsued before the bill was put through!\nfinal   stages.\nRobert Forke, Progressive leader, \u25a0\nthought the preference ought to ex-]\ntend to any and all ports. The I\nBritish market wns Canada's hope\nfor years, and one of the present\ndifficulties would disappear if larger\ntrade with Britain were secured. The\ngranting of an extra 10 per cent preference wns all right so far as maritime ports were concerned, but from'\nthe western point of view the advantage would soon be eaten Op\nby the Increased cost of the long;\nhaul. Mr. Forke wanted to help the\nmaritime ports, but not at the expense of other parts of the country.\nTrade would eventually go to the\ncheapest  route.\nHon. James Robb and Hon. Jacques\nBureau took tjie ground that thc\nfinance minister's proposal would\ncertainly induce shippers to come to\nMontreal and Quebec, and thus the\nwestern farmer would have moro and\ncheaper shipping space, and this\nwould help also to reduce the railway  deficit.\nGentle Pressure\nMr. Fielding added that this wns a\nsort of gentle pressure upon shippers to use Canadian ports. \"It is\na gentle persuasion on them, which\nwe hope they will do any way,\" he\nsaid.\nMr. Fielding said he knew the\nwoollen industry was affected to some\nextent, but he had hoped that with\nthe returning prosperity the loss that\nwas being sustained frpm the small\namount of protection being taken\n(Continued on rase Seven)\nBonar Law's Secretary\nAttains Cabinet Rank\nRT. HON. J. C. DAVIDSON\nHas been appointed chancellor of\nthe Duchy of Lancaster in the Baldwin   cabinet. \u2022!\nSAARBRUCKEN\nDEKMTCS\nA^JFRANCE\nV ** <\u00bbty   Thousand   People\n.     Under Leadership of\nBishops Take Part\nRESOLVE TO REMAIN\nIN GERMAN CHURCH\nResolution Advocates Withdrawal of Children From\nFrench Schools'\nTRY COLLECTING\nIN RUHR FIRST\nADVISES TEMPS\n w  j\nParisian Daily Says Next\nPoint Is to Stop Passive\nResistance\nPARIS, June 5. \u2014 Whether the\nlatest German reparations offer is\ndiscussed seriously at Brussels or\nnot, Le Temps believes the two\nimportant questions on the table\nwill be how to make Germany\nabandon her rsistance policy, and\nhow to bring Great Britain and\nItaly Into line with France and\nBHi?fiim in \"Wttafever- plan Falnoare\nand Theunis finally adopt for obtaining really practical results from\nGermany when a settlement is\nreached.\nThe reports drawn up by the\nBelgian .experts and sent to Paris\nsome time ago have been carefully examined, and their suggestions for allied control of certain .\nGerman monopolies, and other means\not obtaining money, are certain to\nbo discussed by the premiers. Since\nsuch collections of money would\nnecessarily require some authority to\nenforce them, Le Temps suggests\nthat they be tried in the Ruhr\nwhere the allies have authority in\ntho form of troops and physical\ncontrol.\nSuch remunerative administration\nof the Ruhr, with financial reforms.\ntho proper collection of taxes and\nsimilar measures, nya the newspaper, would serve aa an example\nto Germany, and make t easier fnr\nthe Belgian government to do likewise iu the remainder ot the country.\n\"Family Trust\" Is\nPassed by Senate\nOTTAWA, June 5. \u2014 The Montreal\nFinance Trust was rechnstened\n\"Family Trust,\" in the banking ami\ncommerce committee today, and the\nsenate bill granting it incorporation\nwas   put   thriugh.\nThe directors' of the company as\n\u25a0et forth in the bill are all members\nof  'the  Caafraln   family.\nThis   corporation   has   been   called '\na    family    affair,    remarked    P.    F.\nCaegraln, Liberal member for Charle-\nVlox,    \"so    we   are    prepared    to    call\nit a family truet,\"\nSTRASSBOURG*    June   5^-An\nanti-French      demonstration      erf\nlarge    proportion*    cV-curred   'in\nSaarbruckc.n,      Rhenish     Prussia,\nSunday,   during   the   laying   of  a\ncorner   stone   for   a   new   church.\nThe bishop of  Trier and  two German  bishops officiated,  and later reviewed   a   procession   of   some   70,000\npersons carrying banners and headed\nby   bands  of   music.\nLater the crowds gathered in all\navailable halls of the town, and\nadopted resolutions rejecting a proposal to establish a Saar diocese\nwith a Saar bishop, and insisting on\nremaining under German ecclesiastical    jurisdiction,\nThe meetings expressed unshakable\nfidelity to Germany, and to the\nl\"cal  German  religious  creed.\nThe resolutions ndvpeated the withdrawal of Gorman children from\nFrench   schools.\n\u2014     \u2014    \u2666\nThousands of Essays\nI      in Forestry Contest\nj Have  Been Submitted\n\\     VICTORIA,     June     5.     \u2014     Between\n16000   and   8$$$   essays   on   British   Co-\n1 lumbia forests and. the urgency of fin*.\ni protection  have  been   s'.'bmMed   to  the\nforest   branch    of   the    department   of\nI lands,  In a compe'rlc*  for prises and\n; medals,   MaJtA*  C.   it   C-nvan,  forester,\nannounced    today.      Personnel   of   th**\ncommittee    of    Judges    war **nno\u00abnced\ni today    ty    -jonMir.t    of   C     B     E'etersoa,\nhear!   cf   the   lands   department   offices,\nmd  J.   D   Gillis,  assistant   superintendent   of   tho   department   of   education,\nali ng wilh   Major COwan.\nDr.nes Also Contend\nStates Liquor Ban\nViolates World Law\nLONDON, rJuae. l. \u2014 A Copenhagen\ndispatch :o the Tunes says the\nDanish government haa forwarded a\nprotest to Washington against the*\nL'nited States liquor law as related\nto foreign shipping. It is contended that this law ll contrary to\ninternational   regulations.\nBUENOS AYRES, June 5. \u2014 The\nBolivian government has decreed a\nstate of siege in some departments\nalleging that the mine workers aro\nplotting a revolutionary strike, according to the La Paz correspondent\nof  La   Nacion.\nlht vV'eather\nLcnigan Denies\nWould Abolish\nRailway Board\nMONTREAL, June r\u00bb, \u2014 W. B.\nLanigan, ventral traffic manager of\nthe   Canadian   Pacific*   railway,   today\ndenied having made the statement\nattributed to him in the Toronto\npress to the effect that he had\nadvocated the. abolition of the board\nof railway commissioners. He deplored as unjust and un-Canadian the\ntendency In some quarters to criticize\ntlie   board   and   its   personnel.\nCanadian Gold Seeker's\nShip Comes in When\nHe Turns Eighty-three]\nTORONTO,  June   5. \u2014 Robert Hold- f\ning wrote \"finis\" to his fill-year search.)\nafter gold today, when he  sold an un- I\ndeveloped   claim   In   the   West   Shining\nTree   district,   North   Ontario,   to   R.   J.\nFleming  of  Toronto,   for   $;t*i,000.   During his  quest after   gold,   Mr.  Holding,\nwho    Is    now    S3    years    of   age,    has\ntravelled    over    almost    every    country\nin   the   world.     He   was   born   in   England.\ntu_f\\\\ \u2022   \u00ab\nWhen Making Charge\nThat Combine Exists\nMust Solemnly Swear\nOTTAWA. June 5. \u2014 Th<\u00bb house of\ncommons tonight accepted the senate\namendment to the bill to provide for\nthe investigation of combines and\nmergers. The amendment provides\nthut the complaint to -be filed with\nthe government to initiate Inquiry\nmust be made in the form of a solemn\n-statutory declaration,\n1 i.c temperaturea below are for\nthe 24 houra ending yesterday after*\nnoon   at   o   o'clock.\nVICTORIA, June 5. \u2014 Nelson and\nvicinity; Generally fair and warm,\nwith  local   thunderstorms.\nMln.   Mix,\nNELBON    45       tt\nVictoria     S4       7*\nVancouver     54       78\nKamloops         E0       88\nBarkerville        44       70\nAtlin         38       78\nDawson     34       78\nCalgary    ..-.    40      <s\nWinnipeg      B8 70\nPortland      60 88\nHun   Francisco     60 \u20ac0\nSeattle       \u00a38 82\nPentlcton      48 77\nVernon      49 78\nGrand   Forks  M 81\nKaslo      K 47 71\nCranbrook   A,., ^   It      fj\n Pag? Tt-70\nTHE NELSON DaTCTx NEWS,\" WEDNESDAY MORNING, JL*NE 6, 1828\nLeading Hotels of the West\nW\u00abW\u00ab Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nim\u00a3_\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES J3.50 TO J5.0O\nn  Rooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $1.00\nTHE     MOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nHUME \u2014 B. Hodge, Vancouver; W.\nH. Farrell, Kaslo; V. Johnson. Slocan\nCity; T. Clough, Marble Head, daho;\nW. Rrockway, Spokane; A. tt. fitruin-\ndell,   J.   G.   Dorman,   Kitchener;   L.   M.\nJames, I,, Prieslley, Vancouver: Miss\nDixon. Seatlle, Wash.; J. 1'hlllips, H.\nH. Lemon, Vancouver; J. T. Buck, F.\nHargrave, Pentlcton; Mrs. It. M. Bal-\nmer, Winnipeg; I.. A. Campbell, Rossland;   J,   H,   Wilson,   Spokane.\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\n.    \u2022 NELSON'S LEADINO   HOTEL\nFIRST-CUSS SAMPLE ROOMS FREE\nHie Home of the Commercial and Mining Man and\nof the Tourist.\nAMERICAN   PLAN 13 TO \u00bb5 PER DAY\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nSTRATHCON'A \u2014 C.   II.   Gordon,   W. ( Midway; J. Turner, Los Angeles, Cal.\nF.   Campbell,   Vancouver;   Tom   Haskin, .\nSASKATOON iS\nWATCHING RIVER\nCLIMB BANKS\nSouth Saskatchewan Rises\nFive Feet in Three Hours;\nPeople Clear Cellars\nSASKATOON*, June f,.~ Thousands\nof people thronged the banks of tlie\nSouth Kaskatrht'wan river tonight,\nwatching the rapid rise of its waters.\nWarnings from Alberta that a huge\nrise was to be expected had excited\nunusual interest. This evening tbe\nwater climb^MT~ffv*\u00bbti*et fn three hours.\nOre section of the sotttfc, bank Im already crumbling away under the\nflood, which at 11:45 o'clock tonight\n*-as within eight feet of the street\nlevel.\nHesidents along the south bank\nof the river \"were busy tonight removing everything perishable from\nth'-* basement of their homes, plugging basement sewer traps, and generally preparing for the overflowing\nof the banks, which is expected to\ncome  tomorrow.\nPAVIffSCHEME\nOFF TOR YEAR\nTo Scarify as Many Blocks\nas Possible This Year; to\nOil Streets\nQueen's Hotel\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nSteam Heated Throughout\nvlodernly Furnished Rooms.  Special\nWeekly   and   Monthly   Ratea\nA    LAPOINTE,   Proprietor.\nQUEEN'!* \u2014 A. Painting, Castlofar;\nC. Mankln. Jack ItOtlUl, Holt; H.\nMankin, Huntington; Q. Johnson, Tamarac; t. BylaH(lM. Ymir; William\nBrown, Spokane; \u00bbB. Olraux and wife,\nKitchener; G. W. Hrant, Castlegar; R.\nKmuln, Penticton; Mrs. A. tiresack,\nMrs.  It.   Carr,  Coleman, Alta.\nSherbrooke Hotel\nNear C. P. R. Station\nRooms    at    Reasonable    Ratea\nH.  DUNK,  Proprietor.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nThe only Cafe ln town cooklnj\nelectrically. . Dinner 11:30 a. m. to\nI p. m. Lunch 5 p. m. to 8 p. m.,\nper cover, 36c. Special Sunday\nDinner,  per  cover,   60c,\n611 Baker St.\nPhent 45a\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nJ, A. Kerr, Manager\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty   rooms  of   solid   comfort.\nWe serve the bent meals in Nelson.\nIt's the cook.\nTHE STANDARD  CAFE\n320   Bakar   Street,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special  Lunch. .35-**\n6:30  to  8:00   p.   m.,   Supper. .'.IT,*\nPhone 164\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nPint-class    Rooms    by    the    Day,\nWeek   or   Month.\nEv\u00abry Consideration Shown te\nGuests.\nCor   Baker  and  Ward  Sts.,  Nelson.\nMADDEN \u2014 Dan V. Harlman, Great\nFalls, Mont.; B. Heaia, Fernie; Edgar\nJamleson, Passmore; Miss Bennett,\nCranbrook; O. Swanson. Port Arthur;\nP. Billings, T. Tracy, Kdgewood; D. L,\nMiixc, Klmberley; M, R. Maze, Trail;\nK.   J.   Michand,   Mrs    F.   Rapley.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFlnset equipped restaurant ln the\ncity. OPEN DAT AND NIOHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water and\nhot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished\nrooma; hot and cold water. We cater\nto private parties.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616   Vernon   St.,   East.\n>nly   brick   hotel   In   city.     Steam\nabated, hot and  cold  water.   Euro\npean  and  American  plana.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic    Restaurant.\nBsflnement and Delicacy Prevail*.\nOPEN  DAY  AND  MIGHT\nLuncheon  11:30 to 2     ISo\nSpecial dinners 5:30 to 8        I be\nWe   specialize   ln   Chop   6uey   and\nNoodles.\nEARLY INVADER\nOF THE CARIBOO\nCROSSESDMDE\nWilliam Glover Was in First\nGold Rush There; Arrived\nVia the Horn\nSpokane Hotels\nConsiderable discussion over the repairing of the streets hi (he city took\nplace at last night's city council meeting:. Estimates of thp cost for paving\na block of Baker street between Stanley and Kootenay streets, relaying the\nwater mains and putting the car tracks\nin shape at the corner of Baker and\nStanley streets, were submitted by the\ncity .engineer   and   totalled   $8130.\nQuestioned by the aldermen, Engineer Meyers stated that up to Saturday\nnight Inst, the cost of scarifying and\nrerolling the three blocks on Baker\nstreet   had   cost   about   5273.\nAt this} price lhe council waa of the\nopinion that it would be a better\npolicy to treat as great a number of\nroads In the city as possible In the\nsame manner as these blocks on Baker\nstreet h\u00bbvp been done, Including the\nblrck between Stanley and Kootenay,\nami postponement of the paving of\nthnt block till next  year.\nAlderman Walley Objects.\nAlderman Walley objected strongly\nto such procedure on the grounds tliat\na block of permanent roadwork should\nbe done each year, and thus start\nsomething  worth   while.\nThe question of permanent roads In\nthe city would be taken as a Joke by\nthe citizens, who have been fooled so\noften,  stnted   Alderman  Turner.\nAfter discussion it was decided to\neliminate tbe Baker street paving\nscheme, which was Included in the\nyear's estimates, nnd In Its stead to\nscarify this block and treat ft as the\nother three Mocks, and including Victoria street from Stanley to Josephine\nand Hall street from Vernon to Baker\nin the year's estimates, lt is the plan\nof the engineer to scarify the road\ndown past the provincial Jail to the\nwholesale section of the city.\nTo OU Streets.\nVelson's streets will this summer\nrei-elve a coating of oil, and it is\nhoped the continuous use of the\nsprinkler will be abolished. Last\nnight the public works committee\nt. commended the purchase of a car of\noil. This, it was stated, would be\neconomy over the water sprinkler,\nwhich 19 a detriment to the roadwork.\nTbe recommendation was indorsed by\ntliB city engineer, \\V. Meyers, and was\nadopted   by   the   council.\nFAIRV1EW1TES\nWISH REMOVAL\nOF PIG PENS\nA petition signed by T. Hulls and\n50 residents of Fairview was submitted to the city council last night,\ncalling attention io the unsanitary I\ncondition through the keeping of pigs\nin the residential district ln Fairview,\nit being unhealthy and detrimental to\nthe community.\nThe residents wish the removal of\nthe pigs. The letter was referred to\ntie health  committee  of the  council.\nComing\" west nearly 70 years ago,\nat the age of 17, around the Horn,\nplunge with his uncle Into the\nwilds of the \u2022C\/triboo in that territory's first gold rush, and ever since\nthat time a British Columbian, except for a period in the United\nStates, William Glover, who died at\nii o'clock last nfght In Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, aged 85, was a pioneer  among  pioneers.      ,\nAfter the first invasion of the then\ninhospitable Cariboo, the youthful\nfilovtr and his uncle, Elijah Forsyth, separated, the mule going back\nto Ontario, and Glover spending a\nIVw years in the .States. Then he\ncrossed the line again and returned\ntu the Cariboo, where a large part of\nthe acllv period of his life was then\nspent. The Ulg Bend, Baskerville,\nand other parts of the northern mining country were his stamping ground\nat various times, and he used to\nrecall to intimates the Joys and the\nhardship* of those days, one of the\njoys being Christmas turkey at $1\na  pound   on   one  occasion.\nAfter his days in the hills were\nover, Mr. Glover settled at Victoria.\nAbout 10 years ago he moved to Nelson to reside. He was a man of clean\nlife, and strong constitution, and\nonly   yielded   In   the  end   to-cancer.\nOf recent years Mr. Glover Indulged\nhis love of culture, being a wide\nreader. His birthday occurred last\nWednesday.\nHe was born at Scotland, Brant\ncount, Ont. A brother, Samuel\nGlover, died in this city about 12\nyears ago. A 'sister, Mrs. T. McDowell, of Woodstock, Ont., survives\ntim. ,\nWISHES MILK\nLAW ENFORCED\nDairyman States Unfairness\nIs Shown in Regulations in\nRegard to Herds\nA letter from H. Bourgeois &\nCo., milk vendors of this city, was\nread at the city council last night\nby M.ayor L. H, Choquette, protesting against tho present regulations\nof the city In regard to dairies\nnot being carried out by all dairymen  and thus  making an  unfairness.\nJn lit 14, stated the letter, a law-\nhad been passed regulating the supply of milk in the city, which provided for tho erection of suitable\nbuildings and for clean and healthy\nherds. When the war broke out,\ntho law was killed, and has never\nbeen again enforced. Several dairies\nunder the law cleaned out their\nherds and erertod sanitary build-\nIngH at a great expense, while\nothers did not, and are still, carrying on under unsanitary conditions,\nand    creating   nn   unfairness.\nMayor Choquette wished to induce\na regulation calling for the Inspection of all cattle and buildings\nbefore licence be issued to the milk\nvendors on July ]fi. After discussion, the matter was referred to\nthe health committee for consideration  nnd* report.\nAppreciation\nOur 'Overstocked' Sale Is Being\nThoroughly Appreciated\nA Big Reduction in All Lines Meets the Needs of Everyone\nOut-of-Town People Are Flocking In and Are Highly Pleased\nBARGAINS IN READY-TO-WEAR\nSUITS-\nAll-w o o 1 French\nTricotine. The season's latest models,\nsilk lined, in novelty and plain tailored models. Reg.\nvalues to $42.50.\nSale Price $29.75\nThis offering is a\nhummir. .All other\nSuits are reduced\nstrongly.\nSPORT SKIRTS\u2014\nAlso tailored Skirts,\nin fancy plaids and\nstripes or plain Tricotines. Values to\n$11.50. While they\nlast for   $7.75\n9-4 BLEACHED SHEETING-\nGood heavy quality, 5 yards for $3.75\nTHIS IS GOOd'bUYING\nDRESSES-\nChiffon taffetas, Duchesse Satins and\nCanton Crepes. New models. All\nleading   shades.     Values   to   $37.50.\nfor $27.50\nTO SEE IS TO BUY!\nAll other lines of Dresses at Sales\nPrices.   Make your own choice.\n75 SWISS VOILES & GEORGETTES\nAll shades and sizes. Clearing Half\nPrice.  _\nL0NGCL0TH AND WHITE COTTONS\n86 inches.   Regular 35c, for  25a*\nJAP CREPES\u2014\nHeavy weight, all colors.    Only....32^\nIMPORTED GINGHAMS^\nFast colors, 32 inches wide. Sale\nPrice ..- 30-j*\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLadies' Wear Specialists\nTHREE TELL OF\nHOTEL FIRES\nTraveler Pleads Not Guflty\nin Strathcona Hotel Fire\nCharge\nAlfred If. Carter, the traveling\nsalesman chared with setting fires\nin the Htrathcona hotel on tho\nmorning of July 4, appeared before\nMagistrate William Brown yesterday afternoon and pleaded not\nguilty to the charge. E. O, Matthew Is defending Carter, and James\nO'Shea    is    prosecuting.\nW. H. Shore,' the hotel proprietor,\ntho first witness called, told\nhow the rooms were situated on\nthe first floor of the hotel and of\nroom No. 1 being occupied by C.\nH.    Collins,    a   guest    at    the    hotel\nNEW ORAND \u2014 Mrs. H. T. Thnm-\n1 In won, Slocan Pirk; William Johnson,\nCastlegar; T. J, Poirier, North port,\nWash.; A. H. Newton. Thomas Allen.\nTamarac; N F. Nelson, Ciir.s lairs!\"\nAlta.; H. Hospirn, Creston; W. Kenny\nand wife, Blalrmore; Mrs. L A. Acton,\nf>eaftle.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs. MalletU &. Son, Proprietors.\nNice, warm, comfortable rooms at\nreasonable   rates.      Open   day   and\nnight\nCorner   Hsll   and   Vernon   Strests.\nAMERICAN HOTEL\n721 Trent, Cor. Post St.\nFireproof,   Modern,   Iteasonabls.\nA  friendly .hotel.    Take  Yellow\nCab  *<rom   depot,' free   service.\nSummer Resorts\nLAKEVIEW \u2014 Pete Swan son, Dan\nNord, William Walters, Creston; John\nWinters,  Salmo;   M.  J. Roberts, Castle-\nigar.\nWHERE THE  FISHING  IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTEB\nPlshlnjr,   Boating,   Bathing-,   Oolf,\nTennis   Courts.\nPishing   Tackle    Supplied.     Grocery\nStore   la    Connection.\nW.   A,   WARD,  Proprietor.\nDay  |3;  Week   $17  to   $19.     Special\nMonthly   Rates,\nMAY PURCHASE\nTRUCK FOR THE\nELECTRICIANS\nAlderman A. T. Walley at last\nnight's meeting of the city council\nbrought up the question of the purchase of a liglu truck for the use\noi! the electrical department of the\ncity. He showed how it would in\na short time pay  for itself.\nCity Kb'ctrical Kngineer MacCiuIre\nslated to the council that he could\nmake the car pay. After some discussion the matter was referred to\ntlie fire, water and] light committee.\nWILL SHORE UP\nSEWERDITCHES\nPrecautionary Measures Are\nTaken by Contractors to\nPrevent Accidents\nThe   time   to   think   of   nccidents   I\nbefore   they   occur,\"   said   Alderman   A\nHorswill    at    last    night's    council\nmeeting,    in    reference    to    the    sewei'\nconstruction   work   In   Fairview.\nNarrow ditches from five to six\nnnd a half feet deep are dangerous to\nworkmen, and in order that the\ncouncil might he protected, Alderman\nHorswill recommended that the city\nengineers recommend to all eontrac-\ns and subcontractors that they use\nall necessary preeaiition to avoid accidents occurring from cavelns and that\nthe trenches he dug wide and shored\nfor  the  safety  of the workmen.\nEngineer Meyers stated that he had\nbeen keeping that In mind. Several\nboulders had falle !n, he stated, but\nno one was hurt or ln the ditches at\nthe time. The shoring will be carried\nout,  he  stated.\nFire Chief Stops\nCouncil Argument\nFire Chief Frank Boyd last night at\nthe city council meeting objected to\nthe city repairing a wooden building\nwithin the fire limits. This, he stated,\nwould be setting a fine example to\nthe   citizens.\nThe question was over the repairing\nof the band stand on Vernon street,\nwhich is in a dilapidated condition.\nThe matterwas referred to the public\nworks comthittee.\nMURPHY NEVER\nSAW SUCH CROP\nGenera)   Manager   of   Western   Lines\nSays   Prospects   Bsyond   Anything   Ho  Has   Known\nCALGARY, June 5. \u2014 \"Crop prospects are beyond anything we have\nhad since I have been in this country,\" remarked Charles Murphy,\ngeneral manager of the western lines\nof the Canadian Pacific railway,\nfor tho evening; room No. 2 by whn arrived in the city yesterday\nhe accused and  th\u00ab adjoining rooms | afternoon from the west.   \"Everyone I\nhave talked to  say they have never\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nHE was from   th\u00ab camps\nBUYING   Men's   Wear.\nWHEN   leaving  we  wished  him\nLUCK.    \"All   right,\"  said  he,\n\"WHEN we want  some more\nWE'LL  call   again.\"    That's  how\nWE like to serve.\nAdvertising is the Motive\nPower of Business, ,\nEngineer Submits\nCost of Extension of\nLines Over Tracks\nRely on Cuticura\nTo Clear Away\nSkin Troubles\nThe approximate coat of extending\nthe electric light service to those residences above the Oreaf Northern track\nwhose owners petitioned for the service, would total J-tfiO according to the\nestimate given the city council by\nthe   city  electrical  engineer last  night.\nIt would be necessary t-A construct\na 2J00 volt line up Observatory street,\na distance of-a half-mile; to lnstal a\ntransformer and then run a 110-volt\nline   to  the  several   customers.\nThe\" 110-volt line at present terminating at the foot of the stairway below, the mountain station, could be\nextended to the petitioners at a cost\nof about $285. This would give a low\nvoltage of about 85, which would be\nunsatisfactory.\nThe matter was referred to the city\nclerk in order that he might notify\nthe petitioners of the necessary arrangements.\nNos. 3 nnd 4 being vacant.\nClark had been at a party In\nShore's room till 12: 30, and had\nthen gone to bed. Shortly after\n12: HO Mrs. Shore smelling smoke,\nMr. Shore and Collins rushed down\nto locate the trouble. A screen\nin front of the fireplace was found\nin flames. It was extinguished nnd\nthrown  out   on   the.  verandah.\nAt about 3:30. or 4 o'clock Collins\nrushed up to his roow. stating that\nthere was a fire. On investigation it was ~N>und that room No. 9\nwas charred, but that the fire had\ngone out, they then went to \u201eget\nCarter up, and being unable' to\narouse him (he door was broken in.\nThere was no fire in that room.\nRoom No. 3 was then opened, and\nwas densely clouded with smoke.\nUpon the fire being extinguished by\nthe firemen, further Investigations\nwere made, and room No. 14 'was\nfound to be charred, and partially\nburned paper with an oily smell\npicked   up.\nCross-examined by R G. Matthews, Mr. Shore stated that after\nhe burning of tbe screen he did\nnot thing it necessary to Vail the\npolice. Carter was a friend of his,\nas he had known , him for four\nyears. When the door of Carter's\nroom was hurst In, Carter was in\nbed In his pyjamas. He did not\nknow who laid tho charge against\nCarter, and stated that it might have\nbeen anyone who had fired the\nhotel, as far as he knew.\nLee Fook, the Chinese cook, told\nof coming to the hotel about 4:30,\nand smelling smoke nf cotton burning. He looked In the kitchen and\ndining room, but found nolhlng.\nSeeing smoke in room No. 4 he\ncalled Collins, who went for Mr.\nt-thore. The cook then went upstairs, nnd looking out, of the window saw some smok* coming from\nrooms Nos. 2 or 3. He helped\nhre.ik the door to Carter's room, and\nthe-u called the other hotel guests,\nHe   was   not   cross-evamined.\nC, H, ''ollins, a guest at the\nhotel for the evening, corroborated\nthe story told hy the two first\nwitnesses. He told of the finding\nof the oil-soaked paper, and the\nfinding of oil in the tool kit of\nCarter's. He. was not cross-examined.\nThe case resumes at 10 o'clock\ntoday.\nseen anything like it.\" Asked If it\nwas too early yet to attempt to\nsay what the possible yield might\nhe In Alberta this year, Mr. Murphy said that the conditions generally   were   so   far   in   advance   of\nthose   In   1915,   when   there   was\nhig   crop,   that  one   would   be  almos\n\"scared\"   tn  make  an   estimate.\n\"Some   of   the   local   gralnmen   saj\nIhere   will   ln   all   probability  'be\n100,000,000-hushet crop of wheat,\" n\nmarked   the   newspaperman.     \"Woub\nthat  figure  apear  a  fairly  conserva\ntive   estimate?\"\n\"On    the    basiR    of    last    season'*\ncrop,   I  Bhould  think there  might\nevery reason to expect such a yield,'\nsaid Mr. Murphy.\nReplying to another question, tht\ngeneral manager said that as the result of present conditions, bnslnesi\ngenerally would soon be on the jump\nUndoubtedly the excellent prospecti\nwould In themselves Increase busl\nness.\nYou'll Get Rid of\nBlackheads Sari\nThere is one simple, safe and sure wa:\nthat never fails to get rid of blackheads\nthat Is to dissolve them. To do this\nget two ounces of peroxlne powder frotr\nany drug store\u2014sprinkle a little\nhot, wet cloth\u2014rub over the blackheadi\nbriskly\u2014wash the parts and you will 1\nsurprised bow the blackheads have dls\nappeared. Big blackheads, little black\nheads, no matter where they are, sln-pl;\ndissolve and disappear. Blackhead an\na mixture of dust and dirt and seer-\ntions that form In the pores of the Bkln\nThe peroxlne powder and the water dls\nsolve Ihe blackheads bo they wash rlgh\nout, leaving the pores free and cleat\nand in their natural condition.\nLutheran Synod at\nHamilton Is Opened\nHAMILTON,    Ont.,    June    5.\u2014Ths\nbusiness sessions of the annual synod\nnf   the ..Lutheran   church   of   central |\nCanada  opened  here   today.\n^DODDS n\nKIDNEY;\nv PILLS^\n^ KIDN[,v D^\nV ^iT'HT-s   0^_r.c_,l'Vj\n\u2022 I\nDead!\n\"Dead\" oil is damaging thousands of can\nevery day. Maybe it's damaging yours.\nYou think not, of course. You wouldn't\nhave it if you knew. But most oils do be-;\ncome dead before you know it.'\n'SUNOCO\nTHE DISTILLED,OIL'\nis different. It isn't compounded of light oil\nand \"cylinder stock.\" Ir's such oils that quickly\nbreak down and go dead.\nSunoco has a longer lubricating life. It's the\nonly oil of six types, each of which is wholly\ndistilled. It's pure lubrication. It lasts longer\nand makes your car last longer.\nAsk your dealer or write us for booklet,\n\"What's Happening Inside Your Mcrtor?\"^\nMARSHALL-WELLS COMPANY\nVANCOUVER        MOOSE JAW EDMONTON\nCALGAKY        WINNIPEG\nTktst dialers nil SUNOCO- talk lubrication wUk thorn\nSMEDLEY'S   GARAGE,  523   Vernon   St,   Nelaon,   B.C.\nHIPPERSON    HARDWARE    CO.,   Nelaon,   B.C.\nHENDRICK'S   GARAGE,   Kaalo,   B.   C.\n ^\n\u2022THE NELSON tTATLY NEW3, WEDNESDAY MORNING, .JUNE 6, _1&3 U\n6\"o\nPaga Tfirti\"\n9*e\n'..Legal Notices\nQXrO-KAXIOV   OF   TU   CITY   0\u00bb\nJf BLSOH.\nBTtAW   Wo. 368.\nt. Bylaw to authorize the extension\nthe Electric Light and Power Sys-\ni of tho Cily of Nilson from lis\nsent terminus at or near Willow\nnt along the Norlh Shore of the\nst Arm of Kootenay Lf-tjte to Bal-\n>r,   and   along   the   South   Shore   of\nVi  West  Arm   from  Procter to   Har-\nfHEREAS the Electric Light and\nver' System of the Corporation of\nCity of Nelson now extends\niugh the locality adjacent to the\n\/ of Nelson along the North Shore\nthe West Arm of Kootenay Lake\nh point at or near Willow Point;\nND WHEREAS it is expedient that\nCorporation further extend its said\n(tern along the said North Shore of\n' West Arm of Kootenay Lake to\nfour, and across said West Arm\nI along..the South Shore of said\ntot .Arm frqm Procter to Harrop to\nply electric light and power to the\nubltants of the said District;\n(ND WHKttEAS It is necessary and\nJedlent for the said Corporation to\ntow the sum of Forty Thousand\n(3,000.00) Dollars to be used for said\nposes;\nND WHEREAS the amount of the\nt which it is intended this Bylaw\nfl create Is Forty Thousand ($40,-\n00)   Dollars;\nND WHEREAS electric light and\ner rates or charges of the Munlc-\n'.Ity of the City of Nelson are en-\neable under the Provisions of the\nilclpal Act and Amending Acts;\nND WHEREAS the estimated\nJunt of electric light and power\nn or charges' of the said City of\nfcon chargeable for the year of our\nil    1923    Is    Seventy-five    Thousand\n000.00) Dollars;\njtffr WHEREAS the amount of\n\u25a0ey already charged upon the said\ntrie light \/ates or charges and\nkble yearly Is Twelve Thousand.\nf Hundred and Thirty-seven and\n\u00bb0 Dollars ($12,537.30);\nfiV WHEREAS the said debt of\n\\y \u2022 Thoimand ($40,000.00) Dollars\ncreated upon the security of the\nI electric light and power rates or\nnres;\nND WHEREAS the estimated de-\njncy in the said electric light rates\nhharges required to make up annu-\n1 the amount of interest and sink-\nfund  upon  the  said  proposed debt\npW1   THEREFORE    the    Municipal\nhell of the Corporation of the City\nNelson   enacts as  follows:\nf\u2014That     the     Corporation     of    the\nof   Nelson   do   construct   an   ex-\nIon of' the electric li^ht and power\nem of the  said Corporation  to and\n.ugh   that   certain   locality  adjacent\n.he said City and being the district\n7 along  the  northerly shore of the\nt   Arm   of   Kootenay   Lake   extentl-\nfrom   the   present   terminus   of   the\nsystem   at   or   near   Willow   Point\nJialfour   and   across   the   said   West\n.   suitable   point  or  points   at\nIt\\lwe\u00abn Harrop and  Procter on  the\nUtterly   side  of  said  West Arm. and\nhigh the district on the said south-\nside of said West Arm from Har-\nto  Procter,   and   to  supply  electric\nand   power   to   the   inhabitants  of\nsaid   districts   or   others   requiring\n[\u2014It   shall   be   lawful   for   the   Cor-\ntlon of the City of Nelson to bor-\nby   way   of   debenture***   upon   the\nitity  of   the   said   electric light   and\nter   r*tcs   or   charges   a   sum   of\nley   not   exceeding   Forty   Thousand\nLOOO.00)    Dollars,   from   any   person\ntarsons,  or  body  or bodies  corpor-\nj who   may   be   willing   to   advance\nBame.  and   to  cause all  such  sums\nborrowed   to   he   paid   to   the   said\n>\u00bb>ration for the purpose and object\nlnbefore  recited.   .\nr\u2014It shall  be  lawful   for the Mayor\n,he   said   Corporation   to  cause   any\n|her    of    Debentures    to    be    made,\nluted   nnd   Issued   for   such   sum   or\nla as. may be required for the pur-\n1 and   object  aforesaid,   not exceed-\nhowevef, the sum of Forty Thous-\n: ($40,0(10.00)    Dollars,   each   of   the\nDebentures being of the denomln-\n*   of   not   less   than   One   Hundred\nOdO)   Dollars,  and   all   such   Deben-\np shall  be   sealed   with   the  seal of\nCorporation    and    signed    by    the\nJar thereof,   \u25a0\u2022.,\n\u25a0The   said   Debentures   shall   bear\nthe    first    day    of   August.    A.D\nand   shall   be   made   payable   in\nnty   (20)   years   from   said   date   In,\n'til mnnev of Canada at the RANK\nMONTREAL   In   the   City   of   Nel-\nBritish Cqlumbla. which said place\npayment    shall    be    designated    by\nsaid   Debentures,   and   shall   have\n(phed tn them  coupons for the  pay-\n[t  of  interest  and   the   signature  of\nMayor    to    the    Interest    coupons\n(be either written, stamped, printed\nlithographed.\n\u2014The   said   Debentures   shall   bear\nest   during    the    currency    thereof\nie rate of Fl*-e and One-half  (5%)\ncentum   per  annum   from   the   date\n_ot.   which   interest   shall   be   pny-\nsemi-annually   at   the   said   office\nhe   Bank    of   Montreal   in    Nelson\n'said,   in   lawful   money  of  Canada\nhe   first  dav   of  February and   the\nday    of   August    respectively    in\nyear during  the currency thereof.\n-The   specific   sum   necessary   for\nIpayment  of   Interest  yearly during\ncurrency   of   the   said   Debentures\nbe   the   sum   of  Twenty-two   Hun-\n($2,200.00)   Dollars,   and   the   spe-\nsum to be set aside annually for\npayment   of   the   debt   Incurred   by-\nsaid   Debentures   will   be   the   sum\n'ourteen  Hundred  and  Eighty-eight\n60-100     *'$L488.60)     Dollars,    and\nis   hereby   Bet   aside   each   year\nof   the   electric   light   and   power\nI; or charrres of the City of Nelson\nmn  of  Twenty-two  Hundred   ($2.-\n0)    Dollars,    for   the   payment   of\nannual    Interest   on   the   debt   in-\n\u2022d by said Debentures and the sum\nfourteen  Hundred  and   Eighty-eight\n60-100   Dollars   ($1488.60)   for   the\njient of the  said  debt.    Such  sums\ni from montli to month and as said\na    or    charges    are    collected    be\n?d   in   a   special   account   with   the\nI of Montreal  at  Nelson aforesaid,\nuch   other   bank   as   the   said   Cor-\n\u2022_lon   may   from   time   to   time   de-\nIne,   such  account  to be known  as\n['Electric Light and Power Interest\nSinking   Fund   Account,\"   and   all\n)ric    light     and     power    rates     or\nifes   received   by   the   CKy   of   Nel-\nshall   be   placed   in   said   account,\nthe   same   shall   be   set \u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0aside   and\nlrawn    from    the    annual    revenue\nhe   Municipality   of   the   City   of\nm;\n,OVIDED always that any moneys\nii may have ,r> be advanced or\nu may have to be paid by the\ncipality of the City oi Nelson withe guarantee given hereunder,\n[my surplus beyond the sum annu-\nj required for such interest and\nhg fund shall from time to time\nansferred from the special fund\n\u25a0y directed and refunded to the\nhit of the annual revenuo of the\nCity.     I\n-It shall be lawful for the Munlc-\nCouneil   of   the   said   Corporation\npurchase   any   of  the   said   Deben-\nupon    such    terms    as    may    be\nd   upon   with   the   legal   holder  or\nts  thereof,  either at  the  time  of\n(or any   subsequent  time or   times,\nall     Debentures    so    repurchased\nforthwith   be   cancelled   and   de-\nbd   nnd   no   reissue   of Debentures\npurchased   shall   be   made, in   con-\nnee   of   such   repurchase,\n\u2022The   Corporation   of   the   City   of\nn unconditionally guarantees pay-\nof all moneys, both principal and\n'Ht    secured    by    the    Debentures\nsed   to be   issued  under this   liy-\nThe   Debentures   shall   contain   a\nntee   in   the   following  words,   or\nt   to   the   like   effect;     \"And   the\n;ipallty   at   large   guarantees   pay-\nof   the   said   sum   together   with\nitereBt thereon.\"\nThis Bylaw   shall   take effect up-\nhe>   registration    thereof   aa    pro-\nby Seottun  174 of the Municipal\n|\u2014This bylaw .may be cited for all\nsee as the \"City of Nelson Elec-\nLlght   and   Power   Extension   By-\ni Clint lixae in Council M-i\nTHE DRAWS\nFormer Employee of Bonnington Resident Sentenced by Magistrate\nIrvine Hendryx of Bonnington, who\npleaded guilty to the charge of\nstealing a number of articles from\nthe residence of G*. N. Brown, his\nemployer, at Bonnington, during the\nlatter's absence in the city on May\n2. and who wa* remanded for\nsentence by Magistrate John Cartmei, was_on June 2 sentenced to\nthree months' hard labor, by the\nmagistrate.\nHendryx, who decamped after picking up several belongings of Mr.\nBrown, was discovered and placed\nunder arrest through Miss Brown,\nwho recognized him on Baker street.\nNo author seems brilliant when\nhe must compete with the chap\nwho writes the stuff on the book's\nJacket.\n<\nINTHE STRIPED PACKAGE\n-as\nas Us name\nTHE NORTH WtST BISCLIir COMPANYLTD\nJust One Application\nand the Hairs Vanish\n(Modes of Today)\nA harmless, yet very effective,\ntreatment is here given for the quick\nremoval of hairy growths: Mix enough\npowdered delatone and water to cover the undesirable hairs, apply paste\nand after 2 or 3 minutes remove,\nwash the skin and the hairs have\nvanished. Ono application usually\nIs sufficient, but to be certain of\nresults, buy the delatone in an original package.    Mix fresh as wanted,\nA WOUND IS\nAN OPEN DOOR\nAbsorbine Jr. enables you to shut\nthe door quickly.\nThe skin is Nature's own protection\nagainst germs. When it is bruised-,\nbroken or cut, that protection is withdrawn. The door is open. As quickly\nas possible Nature closes it by forming\nwhat wc call a scab and renders you\ncomparatively safe against infection.\nBut this scab sometimes takes days to\nform and until it has fully sealed the\nwound, even until the wound has\nthoroughly healed again you must furnish the required protection  yourself.\nA few drops of Absorbine Jr. in the\nwater will give you an antiseptic wash\nthat will kill all possibility of infection\nand help nature to heal the wound. As\nwell as being a very powerful germicide,\nAbsorbine Jr. will draw out the inflammation and bring instant relief.'\nAbsorbine Jr. is antiseptic, germicide\nand liniment in one container\u2014handy\nlo keep always in the house; easy to\ncarry around if you travel.\n$1.2$ a*: your druggist's.\nsemblert this twenty-first day of May.\nAT>.   1&23.\nReceived the assent of the electors\non   the       day  of  June.   A.D.   1923\nReconsidered,      finally     passed     and\nadopted   on   tha       day   of  June,\nA.D.   1023.\nMayor.\nCity  Clerk.\nHOT ICE.\nTake notice that the above is a true\ncopy of the proposed Bylaw upon\nwhich the vote of the electors of the\nMunicipality of the City of Nelson\nwill be taken on Wednesday, the 6th\nday of June, 1923. between the hours\nof nine o'clock a.in. and seven o'clock\npm. In the Council Chambers of the\nCity Hall, corner of Front and Wan\nStreets.\nW.   E.   WASSON,\nCity Clerk.\nNelson, British Columbia,\nto* 2-2*3, 1*25.,\" .1    iM.M>.\nRETi\t\nWITH ACCURACY\nInitiation and Seconds Must\nBe So Described, Nelson\nReports\nCONVENTIONDELEGATE\nREPORTS TO BRANCH\nMerritt Won  Out  by One\nVote on Final Ballot for\nNext Convention\nBritish Columbia retail merchants,\nIn convention at Kamloops!, asked\nthe federal convention to piss legislation to compel manufacturers to\nstamp goods with the actual quality,\nso that, for example, cotton could\nnot be marked \"wool,\" or imitation\nsilk, be marked \"silk,\" reported I. G.\nNelson, delegate from NVlsan, who\ngave a summary of the proceedings\nof the convention, at a meeting of\nthe local branch of the Retail Merchants Association of Canada, last\nweek.\nAnother resolution, with the same\npurpose. of protecting the public,\ndemanded lhat when a manufacturer\nmakes both a \"first\" and a \"second\"\nIn an article, each should bo clearly\nstamped with Its grade, so that a\n\"second\" could not Sw* confused with\na   \"first.\"\nMr. Nelson, who is president of the\nNelson branch, announced that he\npresented an invitation to the delegates to hold their next convention\nin Nelson. After three or four\nvotes, Merritt won the honor, tout\nby only one vote.\nPersonal   Property  Tax\nTho convention reiterated the demand for the abolition of the personal   property   tax.\nIt discussed a proposal from Vancouver, Victoria and New 'Westminster, that the weekly half-holiday\nbe abolished The coast cities, which\nprofit a great deal from tourist\ntraffic, eomplali'cd that they were\nlosing much business through their\nstores being closed one afternoon a\nweek.\nOkiinagan delegates, Mr. Nelson\nsaid, oppojittl tho a boll tlon of the\nhai .'-holiday, and tho convention de-\ntldtd to leave it to thu executive of\nthe association to discuss with the\ngovernment the question of making\nspecial provision tu meet t'lio difficulty   of   the   coast   cities.\nUnfair    Cartage     Charge\nWhatl Vancouver wholesalers sell\ngoods to retailers In Vancouver, they\ndeliver* them anywhere in the city or\nsuburbs free of charge. \"When they\nHell to an up-country merchant they\ncharge him cartage to the depot. The\nconvention passed a resolution against\nthis practice on the ground that It\nwas  unfair.\nProtest was made against importers or manufacturers marking imported goods falsely as to counlry ot\norigin. The convention asked the\nDominion government to mln it\ncriminal offence, and to prosecute\nUnder the Fraudulent Adv.ilisiug act\nany importer or manufacturer who\nmarked goods ns coming from any\ncountry other than that In whiuh\nthey   originated.\nAmong other resolutions Vere several which dealt with, the relations\nbetween  wholesalers  and  retailers.\nMr. Nelson mentioned that George\nS, Houghan, the British secretary,\nhad been promoted to Dominion headquarters   at   Ottawa.\nA resolution of thanks to Mr. Nelson for having attended the convention, and for his interesting report,\nwas passed.\nREMARKS OF\nCLERGYMAN\nUNCAp FOR\nSo States Mayor Choquette\nin Protest Against Rev.\nWestman's Remarks\nRecent remarks by Rev. J. P.\nWestman from the pulpit of Trinity\nMethodist church were last night\nbrought up at tho city council\nmeeting by Mayor L. II. Choquette.\nquette.\n\"On behalf of the city council\nI wish to protest against the sedition uttered against tho city council and the police by Rev. Mr.\nWestman,\"   said   Mayor   Chcquette,  .\n\"ills words would lead tho people\n'of the city lo believe that the\ncity council would not Stand for\nthc enforcement uf laws. The statement that the police were being\nheld back was an insinuation against\nme, and the police were never at\nany time held back by me or by\nthe police commission,\" slated the\nmayor.\n\"If anyone bad any information\nto lay .they should have done so to\nthe proper authorities. Ituv \"West-\nman did not do this, and ;akes advantage of his position to utter further Insinuations against the city\ncouncil which I think are unfair,\nuncalled for and false. It is my\nduty to make a strong protest\nagainst   thla,\"\nHave   No   Power\nAlderman Turner \u2014 We have no\ncontrol whatever over the police\nforce.\nAlderman Horswill\u2014I admit that\nI was surprised when attending Rev,\nMr. Westman'B farewell sermon,\nwhich was a good sermon, but was\nspoiled by a few utterances. His\nstatements wero made where no rebuttal could be made, I have attended all council meetings this year,\nand we never did discuss tne doings\nof bootleggers in council. A few-\nweeks ago Mayor Choquette made\na few comments, which he again\nreiterated   tonight.\nAlderman Fleming\u2014I think Mr.\nWestman's remarks were uncalled for,\nHis accusations have never been\ndiscussed at any length in council,\nand it Is unfair to t\\\\*\\ council to\nstate that \u25a0 no actions toward persecutions -were   taken.\nAlderman Cunliffe \u2014 We should\ndrop the whole thing. It would have\nbeen better for Mr. West man to\nlook  into  the council before speaic-\n-&* aa *m _&_:_:_-.. \u25a0 -..-.:'-\u25a0 __^\nVOTE ON POWER\nBYLAW TODAY\nPower Extension to Balfour\nand Connections With the\nFlorence Mine        '\nPolling1 opens at it o'clock this\nmornng, and continues throughout\nthe day until 7 o'clock, on Bylaw\nNo. 3888 for the city of Nelson\nlight and power extension for the\nWest Arm communities, and for\nconnection with Ainsworth and the\nFlorence   mine.\nAnyone Who is the registered\nowner of property within the limits\nof the city of Nelson is entitled\nto a vote, whether he or^she is\non last year's .voters' list -or not.\nIf the bylaw carries It will be\na great benefit to tho city and community as whole, and will be another\nsource   of   revenue_ for  the  city.\nIt Is hard to understand Just how\nCain felt toward Abel until some\ndub stands up in front of you when\nthe bases are full.\nFANATICS TAKE\nMONTHJN JAIL\nTwo Doukhobors Who At\ntempted to Interrupt the\nSchool Classes Sentenced\nBill Chernenkoff of Grand Forks,\nand Pete Perripekan of Pass Creek,\nappeared before , Magistrate John\nCartmei yesterday morning charged\nwith disturbing the proceedngs of\na public school at Brilliant on Way\n3'J. They pleaded guilty, and were\nsentenced to a fine of $10 or 30 days\nin Jail.    They  took jail.   \u25a0\nThese two are members of a\nfanatical set of the Doukhobor settlements, and have been for some\ntime preaching to the children of\nthe schools, trying to induce them\nto leave the institution. They were\narrested through the efforts of the\nlocal  provincial   police  department.\nThe difference between a swimming suit and a bathing suit is that\nthe water doesn't spoil a swimming\nsuit.\nAlways Uniform in Quality\nDelicious\n!!\nII\nImpossible For You to Get More\nTire Value\u2014Needless to Get Less\n~\"' \u25a0 \u00bb\u25a0 \"\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014   \u25a0\u25a0\"\"   \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0  \u2014\"\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u2014\nDUNLOP\nTIRES\nMatchless\nas a\nNon-Skid\nSupreme\nin\nMileage\n^Wioay^ a\n1 &avouri{&+\nCHASE 6, SANBORN    Monti-oaf,\nHAS  THE   LARGEST   SALE   OF ANY\nPACKET TEA in  north AMERICA.    I *\\ WANT AD. IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nSilverplate of Greater\n\\erit for the Bride *\nJamestown\nrPHE   Trade-mark \"Holmes &  Edwards\"  on\n*   silverplate stamps it at once as having unusual\nmerits.\nIts gleaming liand-burnished lustre alone proclaims its superlatively rich quality. Exquisite too,\nin their charm and simplicity are the facinating\npatterns\u2014patterns whose CXclusivcness is appealing\nin itself.   \u2022\nBut crowning all these merits \"Holmes & Edwards\"\noffers tenacious, life-long utility and joy because\npure silver is generously used in making it.\n,\nYour jeweler will be interested in\nexplaining to you, the two superior\nqualities in \"Holmes & Edwards\"\u2014\n\"SILVER INLAID\" and \"SUPER\nPLATE\" \u2014both protected at the\nwear points.\nMantifaclurctl exclusively in Canada b_\nTHE STANDARD SILVER CO.\nof TORONTO, LIMITED\nde-\nleat *\nrom\nrenting '\nh\u00bb\nrt- .\nu   a\nHOLM ES| EDWARDS\nSILVERPLATE\n\"Protected Where the Wear Comes ',\nif\ni\nYour Jeweller\nHolmes & Edwards' Silverplate Is Handled  in Nelson by\nA. T. NOXON\n416 Baker Street\n ..\".J.JUJUl. .J'JJW\nmumm\n I    ' PigB Foul\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\/WEDNESDAY MORNING\/JUNE 6, 1923\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nSPttyttthed every inorn.r.t >*xospt\nnd*.\/ by The News Publishing, co*-\nny. limited. Neisoo, B.C., Canada*.\nBusiness letters should be ad-\nifeiwd and checks and, money order!\ntrfcds pa>able to The News Publishing tfojppany, limited, and tn no case\n10 Ind)*idu*l nffmbrrs of the staff.\n. Advertisln-s; rate omrds and A. B. C.\n\u25a0tiHB-fttiU of circulation mailed on\nNqlHt, or may be seen st the office\nef any advertising agency recognised\nbf the Canadian   Press Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES.\nBy  mall   (country),   per month...! \u25a0\u2022\u2022\nPer   y-sar     ).... 1.00\nOutside  Canada,   per   month......    .7t\nPer    year     7-50\nDelivered,   per  month     .76\nPer  sU  months     400\nPer   yew    1.10\nPayable   ln   Advance.\nMesabet Audit Bnreaa of ClrcoUtbML.\n\u2022-   -WEDNESDAY,   JUNE  6,   1W8\nVote for the Power Line Ex-\ntensxon Bylaw Today\n.\" Nelson property owners will have\nan opportunity to vote today for\nthe extension of the city power\nline to Balfour, Procter and Harrop.\nConipletion of this line will enable the city to serve ranchers\nat 'these settlements and between\nWlHoW   Point   and   Balfour.\nFrom Balfour the Florence Mine\ncunvpany will construct the line\nto Ainsworth, and when this line\nhas been completed will hand title\nto It over to the city. Tlie Flor\nence company Is contracting to take\nnot less than $5000 worth of power\na year and as a guarantee has already deposited $20,000 In cash to\nthe city's credit as payment of\n-the minimum amount for four years.\nThis sum the city is using to assist ln financing the construction\nof the West  Aj-m line.\nFrom the Balfour-Alnsworth line,\nto be built by the Florence people,\nthe city will be able to supply\nQeen's Bay and the people of Ainsworth, as well as any other mines\nat. Ainsworth which may desire to\npurchase power.\n; The deal Is a good one for the\ncty financially and is a splendid\nproposition from the viewpoint of\nthe development of the district.\nNothing helps Nelson so much as\nthe extension to the surrounding\ncountry of comforts and conveniences which make the \"district more\nattractive   to   settlers.\nWeight of Evidence\nAs a wartime measure, preventative ot disease, French soldiers\nwere Inoculated with an anti-typhoid\nserum. It had Home rather unpleasant effects though they were\nnot prolonged. Now, an epidemic\nof, typhoid fever haB broken out\nIn Paris, and three times as many\nwomen are reported to be affected\nas men. The serum Is protecting the\nmales. This offers proof that the\ntreatment has efficacy in warding\n, off disease. Yet there are those\nwho contend that the serum not only\ndoes no good, but works harm,\nit. has been a long time alnce vaccination against smallpoxv waa discovered, but there are still those\nwho refuse to admit its value. They\ngo even further and allege Its injury to the victims.\nIf It takes all so long nnd is so\ndifficult to convert all to a doc -\ntrine of which there seems to be Incontrovertible proof, Is it any wonder\nthat reforms move slowly because\nthere may be difficulty in demonstrating clearly the best method?\nNot every proposition that seems\nsound can be set forth with mathematical precision, and If nil could\nthere would still be some who\nWould dispute the result. It is\nnot wise to be credulous, but lt\nIs as srlevous an error to refuse\nto be influenced by weight of evidence.\nWhat the Press la Saying\nHealth From the Sun      '\nIt .wajs the application of science\nto modern life which snatched awav\nfrom our sight the green fields and\n;the sunlight falling among our hills\nand valleys, and the smoke of them\nfor a generation haa darkened our\nspirts. But now it Is science, repent\n'Ing tUfrt.achievement, which bids us\n,. save ourselves. \"She has measured\nthe price of sunless cities and mean\nstreets; it is death, disease; the suffering- of little children. \u2014\u25a0 London\nTimes.\nMexican Recognition\n- Tqrelgn concession-holders cannot\nescap6 the effects of a measure which\naffects so radically the great Mexican\nlanded proprietors. There Is no\ndoubt that the hour of rapprochement\nis nigh. The mistrust of Latin\nAmericana for \"Saxon Yankees\" 1b\nnot productive of good results, nor\ndoes it help business. It is, therefore,\nopportune* not to say urgent,, for\nWashington to alter her attitude towards Mexico and the other Spanish\nrepublics of the continent. Official\nrecognition of the Mexican Government would not then wait much\nlonger.\nSpending tho Tu*ft\u00ab\nThe country requires a Ministry that\nWill recognize that taxation, even for\nnecessary purposes, is a drain upon\ntne community, and the Government\ncan spend money collected from the\npeople leas advantageously than the\npeople can spend lt If It Is left with\nthem. Those favorable to economy\ndo not complain of the money spent\nto pay interest on war loans It Is\na burden, but not a necessary bur\nden. They do not object *.o Govern\nment ladling1 out money extracted\nfrom the taxpayers as a whole for\nthe benefit of sections, whether those\nbenefited are meat producers, sugar-\ngrowers, or skilled tradesmen look-\nins; for highly paid and useless work\nia   shipyards.\u2014The   Australian.\nRelatively\n, Professor Einstein must be relatively happy today, but only relatively\nso. The Canadian astronomors who\nwent to Australia to see the eclipse\nof the sun report that their observations bear out his prediction that\nt*te   obscuration   ol   tho   \u00bb\\xo.   world\nEfficient\nhusek\nU*uru- A. Wrtewn\nFOUR OOOD  HOME RECIPES.\nTOMOUOW1  KIHU.\nBreaJUwt.\nStewed  Dried Apricots\nCereal\nDropped  Eggs\nCoffee Toast\nXiiuichaon\nBaked   Grapenuts   Dish\nWholewheat Bread\nStrawberries\nTea\nDinner\nTomato Soup\nCold Sliced FreBh Tongue.\nFaked Potatoes\nStewed  Beet Greens\nCold   Slaw\nCoffee Indian Pudding\nTou will like these four nourishing,\neveryday   recipes:\nDate Muffins.\u2014(Excellent for children,) Cream together one-fourth cup\neach of granulated sugar and butter\nBeat one egg and add to lt thrrc-\nfourlhs of a cup of sweet' milk. Add\nthe egg-milk mixture alternately to\nthe first mixture with two cups of\nbread flour which you have sifted with\nfour teaspoons of baking powder and\na pinch of salt. Stir well together and\nbake in gem pans in a hot oven for 25\nminutes.\nBaked Bean Soup.\u2014(Good way tu\nuse leftover baked beans.) Measure\ncold baked beans and add to them\ntwice their quantity of cold water;\nbring to a boil and let simmer for\nor.e-half hour, then add the Juice .from\none can of tomatoes, let cook a few\nminutes Tonger, rub through a strainer,\nseason to taste and serve.    (If neces-\nwould reveal a certain displacement\nof the stars tending to confirm the\nEinstein theory. The observers at\nthe Lick Observatory in California\nalso find, from photographs made at\nthe same place in Australia, that the\nphotographic record is In exact accord with the requirements of the\ntheory. Again the scientists of the\nTlurcau of Standards at Washington\nfind that tests of tht; weight of topaz\nand diamond crystals made under\ncertain circumstances bear out conclusions of Einstein with regard to\nthe laws of gravitation which are at\nvariance with the Newtonian theory.'\nAll these conclusions to Einstein's\nconclusions.\u2014Boston Transcript.\nsary, thicken with one tablespoon of\nflour, and bring to a boil again before\nserving.)\nCodfish Chowder.\u2014Flake one cup of\ncodfish and soak in cold water for one\nhour. Pare and slice three good-sized\npotatoes and put them on to boil for\n10 minutes; drain off the water and\nadd one pint of fresh water to the\npotatoes, also add the soaked codfish\nand cook for 10 minutes more. In the\nmeantime fry one-fourth pound of salt\npork (cut In cubes) In your frying-pan\nand put Into it one or two Binall\nchopped onions; add this onion-seasoned fat (strained) to the chowder,\naud also add one pint of milk thickened with one tablespoon of flour.\nSeason with salt and pepper to suit\nindividual taste, let stand five minutes and  serve with   toasted crackers.\nCheese Baking Powder Biscuits. -\u2014\nSift two cups of flour with four teaspoons of baking powder and one teaspoon of salt. Work ln this dry mixture, with the finger-tips, three tablespoons of butter. Mix into it three-\nfourths of a cup of sweet milk. Turn\nout onto a floured board, and cut with\na biscuit cutter. Spread each biscuit\nwith a little melted butter and sprinkle\nwith grated cheese. Bake 20 minutes\nin a very hot oven.\nTomorrow\u2014More \"Latest Wrinkle^\"\nin funcywork.\nAll inquiries addressed to Miss\nKlrkman in care of the \"Efficient\nHousekeeping\" department will be answered in these columns In tiietr turn.\nThis requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number, received. So, if a personal or quicker\nreply Is desired, a stamped and self-\naddressed envelope must be Inclosed\nwith the question. Be sure to use\nYOUR full name, street number, and\nthe name of your city and province.\u2014\nThe Editor.  r\u2014\nchildren    who    never    lie    to    them,\nand  some are not  so  gullible.\nt      Thejjghter Sid*\nTheMj\nThe Turk has one diplomatic advantage, lie has f no friends to\ncramp his  style.\nA third party always seems to\nhave too many leaders and not\nenough   followers.\nYou can raise a boy on love,\nbut'there are \"times when you'must\napply it to the  seat  of  his  pants.\nThat Ruhr Invasion would indicate that France Is obeying the\nInjunction to take no thought -for\nthe  morrow.\nThere can't be tranquility while\nhalf the world thinks of Germany\nas a debtor and the other half as\na  customer.\nAnd what is it the height of when\ncity    official    parks   his    car    in\nfront of a fire plug?\nThe objection to a closed car is\nthat there isn't roqm enough in-\nflde  for   a   wasp   and   a   driver.\nDon't overdo your bluff. The\nlarger the diamond, the greater\nthd   probability   that   it   is   glass.\nSome   parents   have   perfect   small\nI     Twenty Years Ago     I\nfc- \u25a0 *\u2014\u2014*\n(The  Daily  News,   June  6,   1903)\nEli Sutcliffe made a record catch\nol U\/-& pounds uf troUt iu two hours.\n\u2022, *    *\nW. H. Bullock-Webster, chief of\nthe provincial police, left last night\nfor   a   trip   through   the   Lardeau.\n* *    \u2022\nCaptain Trong, manager of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway company\nat Victoria, has been appointed general superintendent of the Canadian\nPacific Railway company's British\nColumbia coast service. Capt. J. C.\nGore is appointed superintendent of\nthe British Columbia lake and river\nservice, with headquarters at Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nA daughter was born yesterday\nto   the  wife   of  A.   S.   Houston,\nBTLENOM.\nOnce upon a time long ago\u2014oh,\nwell, hot centuries ago~a suit of\nsome good, warm woolen material\nwas tfuite the last word in correct\nstyle for bathing. And now, \"Look\nat the durn things!\" says Mr.\nDooley. And do believe you can't\nhelp seeing some \"of them in the\nshops, where they stand out against\nmore sober models in all the giddy\n\u25a0colors to which the past few months\nof giddy printed silks have accus-\ntunieifc us.\nThat some very colorful bathing\nsuits were, worn   a lot at  the  fash\nionable winter rssorts- is e. --fact-\nWhether they will be seen quite so\nmuch at the less exclusive sum-\nipoC- beaches remains to be seen.\nThe sketch illustrates a typical model\nmade of printed silk crepe of a\nsubstantial weight, the predominating color purple. Thla Is accentuated in the purple taffet knickers\nand  trimming.\nFor the more conservative, but\nequally of the moment. Is the\nblack taffeta dress with fashionable double-tier skirt and Jade green\nbinding throughout.\n\u2014      i  I        aem*\\\nCanadian National\nEarnings Increase\nMore Than Fifth\nMONTREAL, June 3\u2014Gross earn-,\nlugs of the Canadian National railways for tho week ended May 31,\nlast, were $0,741,619, being an increase of $1,207,902 over the corresponding period of 1922, or 22 per\ncent. Gross earnings of the Canadian\nNational railways from January 1,\n1923, to May 31, 1923, have been\n$93,566,526, being an increase of $12,-\n843,797, as compared with the corresponding period of 1922.\n$3.98 1000 $3.98\nGALLON FAINT SPECIAL\nHaving made arrangements with the. makers foe a. large (juantity\nof this Al Quality Paint, and bringing it, as we do, in carload lots,\nand allowing a certain percentage for advertising, we are thus able\nto offer you the Greatest Saving in Paint Values offered since the war.\n$3.98 Per Gallon\nWe are offering the public 1000 gallons at this price and the sale\nis good from now until SATURDAY NIGHT, JUNE 1G.\nREMEMBER\nthat now is the time to Paint. After this date the price will go back\nto the regular price. We will reserve no goods. First come, first served.\nfive shades to select from, white, cream, grey, green and maroon.\nTaJO*   , ,t_>\\'_,'\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nBAKER STREET . . NELSON, B. C.\nof\nours!\nBy fames W. Bartem, M.D,\nDo You Get the Blues?\n(Registered   in   accordance   with   the\nCopyright   Act)\nYears ago we were taught that\nmelancholia was a brain disease.\nThat there was a severe mental\ndisturbance, great depression, and\na desire to commit suicide, It was\nthen supposed to be due to lack\nof   rich   red   blood   in   the   brain.\n\"What is the idea about it now?\nThat nearly all of the cases are\ndue to the absorpltion of poisonous\nmatter into the blood from the waste\nthat should have been thrown out\nof  the body.\nPerhaps  you   know   the   symptoms\n\u25a0loss of appetite, coated tongue,\noffensive breath, and our old arch\nenemy, constipation. The blood gets\nthin, and there is usually loss of\nweight. There aro the mental delusions, fear, and a desire to make\naway  with  oneself. ,  \\\nNow, why do I write about such\na   subject?\nSimply because thut in these postwar days when there is a tendency\nto depression in many of us, that\nwe face this matter fairly and\nsquarely. You say: Oh! What's\nthe use. This melancholy streak is\nin our family, and so I can't help it.\nThere's no use denying that hcr-\nIdity has its influence, because you\ncan inherit a lazy liver and intestine,   all   right.\nNow, what's the tratment?\nWell, first, get some interest in\nlife. An interest that will take\nyou out doors, will help to occupy\nyour mind.\nTake enough exercise or work outdoors that your body will just\nhunger for your food, and your intestines will bo stimulated to digest it, and to carry the was to\nmatter  completely   out   of   the   body.\nAlso, you will be so tired that\nsleep will come to you .naturally\nand   no   drugs   will   be   required.\nI>e you  see- my- point?\nYou will live the life your body\nwas .intended td live and with a\nmind occupied by something other\nthan   yourself,   you   w^U   get   better.\nMost cases get better anyway, so\nthere should be a 100 per cent\ncured    by    persistent    treatment.\nWhatDoYouThink?\nThe Dally News invite* latter*\nfrom readers upon matters of public Interest A non-de-plume may.\nIf desired. b\u00ab employed, but everr\nletter must be signed by the writer\nan a guarantee of good faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters Bhould be brief and\nmust avoid personalities. The\nDally News does not hold Itself, tn\nany way, responsible for the views\nof correspondents. Letters . which\ncontain advertising matter or propaganda which Is classed as advertising will not be accepted under\nany circumstances.\nCan't the Englishman\nCompete in Dominions?\nMagazine Says He Can't\nWaneta, B.C., June 5. 1923.\nTo the Editor of The  Dally News:\nSir:\u2014Perusing a magazine article\non surplus population, the following\nparagraph caught my attention:\n\"As for sending the children of the\nupper classes to the colonies, that Is\n-the climax of human folly. This\nwriter   has   met   many   English   gentle\nmen in the colonies, and there Is not\na more pitiable object under tbe sun.\nHe has no chance ln any f>rof>sslon\nagainst the men born in the country\nHe Is hopelessly devoid of the neces-\nsiry 'smartness! to compete in business with Americans, Ch radians or\neven Australians. All he can do is to\ntake a farm, and labor from morning\nto night with his own haiulu, with an\nIlliterate Pole on one side and an\nItalian on the other. He hates the\ncountry anq Ihe people of the country\nhate him His suns become stable\nboys, and his daughters, become 'lady\nhelps.' and do the work of a servant\nfor  half the wag-e.\"\nWhat   have   our   English   settlers   to\nsay to this?    Will they give me wherewithal  to refute  this bold  iitatement?\nMALTHb'HIAN.\n|        Ten Years Ago\n(The Dally  News,   Ju^e \u00ab,  1813)\nCapt. D. C. McMorrls will leave\ntonglht for Nanaimo,, to represent Nelson lodge at the Grand\nEncampment   meeting.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nE. jC. Hunt of Creston arrived In\nthe city yesterday, and will be in\nthe  city  for  some   time.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. Alex Leith has returned from\na   three-months'   visit   to   the   east.\n%   e  w\nEighty   men   are   employed   on   the\nprovincial  government ~ro*d\nFauquier   and   Burton.\n\u2022   \u2022    *\nA number of blocks of ce\nsidewalks and numerous new b\nings are being erected in (\nForks, according to Judge B\nwho is in the city.\nPREPARE   FOR   WAR   AND-\nLord Birkenhead informs the\npie of Great Britain that f\ncould destroy London in one\nmoment because her air force\nmuch greater than that of Bri\nHe will find very few people\nto challenge the statement. Bu\nhat thread be regarded by the\nish tax-payer as his instruct!'\nvote more millions to put Br\naerial navy ln a position to d1\nParis In one quick moment ?-\nalmo Herald.\n .am\u2014      \u25a0\nASKING   FOR   TROUBLE\nThe   grave   risks   of   the   p\n\u25a0policy     of     scattering     our\nthrough   the   East   must   be\nfaced.     All   the   time   minister\nkeeping  detachments   at   Const\nople,    at   Chanak,    in    Mesopo\nland in Palestine they are leavir\nfortunes of the British Empire\nmercy   of   an   acdident   and   4\n\"asking for  trouble.\"\u2014London\n-.Mall.\nEvery spoonful of Kellogg's Bran\nhelps free you from loxie polsoi\nConstipntiotl is largely responsible\nfor auto-intoiication that leads to\ndangerous\" diseases unless it is not\nonly checked but permanently relieved.\nConstipation, in fact, ia the basis of\na majority of human ailments which\ncould be headed off if peoplo would\nonly help rid themselves of this serious,\nhealth-undermining condition, which\ncan be easily done.\nConstipation must b-> fought to a\nfinish\u2014not with pills hnd cathartics,\nwhich are dangerous to the delicate\nmembranes of the intestines and temporary at best\u2014but-with nature's\ngreatest cereal health food\u2014Bran\u2014\nKellogg's Bran, which is as delicious\nas it is beneficial*\nKellogg's Bran is wonderful in ita\nwork becauso it is ALL BRAN. And,\nto got permanent relief, ALL BllAN\nis a necessity, fof it is the \"bulk]\nKellogg's Bran that sweeps and l\nfies, ridding tho system of poisons|\nbringing conditions to. normal.\nKellogg 'a Bran regularly\u2014at\ntwo tablespoonfuls daily; as much!\neach meal in chronic cases\u2014an<f\nguaranteo that you will get relief I\nmanently and naturally.\nKellogg's Bran is delicious,\ndo not have to learn to like H.\nit as a cereal or sprinkle on or I\nwith hot or cold cereals. Or, cooj\nwith hot cereals, allowing two I\nspoonfuls for each person. Kello\nmakes wonderful muftins-,griddlcci\nraisin bread, macaroons, etc. E\u00ab\non package.\nLeading hotels, clubs and\nrunts servo Kellogg's  Bran in\nvidual packages.   All grocers,\nOld\n|Dufcl\n8 Keeps you\nclean and\nsanitary.\nRemoves <|rea.\nand dirt.\n\\ Gives bettei\nresults witr\nless work.\nLet us figure your bills c\nBuilding Material. Coast Lun\nber \u2022 specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial   John Burns & Son\nAt a time like this who\ncares about adjustment?\nThe most liberal tire adjustment is poor compensation\nfor the inconvenience and annoyance, the lost pleasure\nof your trip, caused by a tire faulty in construction or\nmaterials.\nThe car owner who best appreciates the dependability\nof Dominion Tires is the one who has had most tire\ntrouble on the road.\nWhen you buy tires you want dependability rather than\nadjustments.\nIt is a fact that in Dominion Tires you get the greatest\ndependability that can be put into a tire. This extra\ndependability is an extra value which costs nothing.\nDominion Royal Cords\n\u2014with the white atrip\nDominion Nobby Tread\n\u2014the fabric tire\nDominionTires\nBuilt for Canadian roads\n \u00bb.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 6, 1923\nFage Ktb\nFor This Solid Leather\nWork Shoe\nNot big in price, but Big\nin Value.\n,    Ask for the Tan Grain\n'Army Shoe.\nR Andrew & Co.\nLaaderi in Footfaehion\nWINLAW NOTES\nWINLAW, B.C., Juno D. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. E. Holland, M rs. Benlger and\nMiss Fanny Smith spent a few days\ntn   Nelson.\nMr. Jackson of Trail was here on\nbusiness.\nSeveral families gave Mrs. E. Holland a surprise party on the occasion\n\u25a0ofher birthday.\nCASTLEGAR NOTES\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., June 5. \u2014 Miss\nDorothy Farmer and friend spent the\nweek-end al the home of the former.\nMrs. Pete Hardie has returned trom\naui   eight-months'   trip  to   Scotland.\nJ. Iti'lkoff, who received serious Injuries at the Edgewood Lumber company's mill last week and is now in\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital\nat   Nelson,   is   progressing   favorably.\nThe debris from the CoHtlegar-Kinnaird train wreck is now all  cleared.\nMrs. Downey, mother of the school-\ninls treat* here, from Comojr, Vancouver Inland, is spending tha rest oi the\n\u2022school session with her daughter on\nMr.   lHoomer'8 ranch. \/\nNick Moloff has made great Improvements to his store, having enlarged the building.\nKootenay Shingle\nRepairs Finished;\nStarts on Monday\nSALMO, B.C., June 5. \u2014 C. T.\nArchibald, manager of the Kootenay\nShingle, company, reports that he expects to have the mill started by\nJune 11. Uepalrs are being completed\nand everything got in readiness for a\nbusy  season.\n,  William Miller has  returned from a\nbusiness trip to Spokane.\nKASLO NOTES\nWest Demars Rancher\nDies Very Suddenly;\nGprdener to Edward\nNAKUSP, B.C., June 5. \u2014 Louis\nPabst, who has for some years been\nfruit ranching at East Demars, 10\nmiles south of here, was taken suddenly and seriously ill on Saturduv.\nDr. E. 8. H. McLean was called, and\nattended the sick man until he died at\n-S  o'clock   in the  evening.\nHe came to the district from Leth-\ntrldge about 12 years ago, cleared and\nplanted about 20 acres ln orchard, and\nhad been living on his property ever\nsince. Constable P. W. Jupp brought\nthe body to Nakusp to await disposition by friends.\nHe was a member of the Fruit\nLanda company whleh operated on the\nArrow lakes some years ago in connection with Freeman & McLeod of\nLethbridge. He had previously been\na brewer at that city, and it is said\nhad ,been a gardener to King Edward,\nwhile   the   latter was   prince   of  Wales.\nOriginally he came from Germany,\nbut had become naturalized. Papers\nfound in his possession showed that\nhe was a member of No. 4 lodge, A.F.\n& A.M., Lethbrldge, which lodge has\nbeen notified of his death. No relatives of his are known here.\nSlocan City Loses\nto Appledale Nine\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., June 4. \u2014 The\nbaseball game played here on Sunday\nafternoon between Appledale and Slocan was a walkaway for Appledale,\nthe score  being H-2.\nThe ttam was accompanied from\nAppledale by Mr. and Mrs, Kopecki,\nMrs. B. Stevens. Mr. and Mrs, Leleau\nand  Miss   M.   Avis.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOCAN CITY. B.C., June 5. \u2014\nLingle & Johnson brought In eight\nhead of horses from Nelson on Friday  for  their logging  camps.\nThe Misses E. ,F. and Roaie Oraham\ncame   home   from   Nelson   on   Friday.\nA.\" Madden went to Nelson on Friday for a few days.\nWinlaw Organizations\nDecide to Purchase\nthe Community Hall\nWINLAW, BC, June 5. \u2014 The\nLulled Farmers, the Fruit Growers,\nand the members of the Egg exchange\nheld a meeting, Friday, and it waa\ndecided that thp three associations\nshould   purchase   the   Winlaw   hall.\nA committee was also elected to go\nahead with the fall  fair.\nSlocan Baseball Dance\nProvides Uniform Fund;\nTiny Tots in Orchestra\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., June 6. \u2014 The\nSlocan baseball club dance held on\nFriday evening in I.O.O.F. hall to raise\nfunds to buy uniforms and other\nequipment for the team, was a huge\nsuccess.\nThe embroidered linen centerpiece\ndonated by Mrs. W. A. Blackburn and\nauctioned during the evening by William Hicks, captain of the team, real-\nlied J4G.25. The music was furnished\nfree by Borne of the members of the\norchestra and others Including Miss\nWflletta  Hicks.\nThe treat of the evening was dancing to musio furnished by two tiny\ntots, the Misses Frances and Ruby\nNye\u2014Frances, aged 9, playing the violin; and Ruby, aged 6, beating perfect\ntime on the trap drums. The two little\ngirls are the daughters of Mr. and\nMrs. II. C. Nye. Mn, Nye accompanied the  children on  the piano.\nRefreshments were served at midnight. Mrs. George Long and Mrs.\nW. A. Blackburn made and Berved the\nice cream  throughout the evening.\nSutherland Inspects\nthe Ymir Road With\nCampbell and Experts\nSALMO, B.C., June 5. \u2014 A party\ncomposed ot Hon. W. H. Sutherland,\nminister of public works; Mr. Phillips, head of the provincial engineering department; W. Ramsay, dlstdiet\nengineer; and P. J. Gallagher, district\nroad superintendent, motored to Salmo\nyesterday, where they were Joined by\nK. Campbell, M.P.P. The party then\nJourneyed out over the new road to\nthe camps which are situated about\ntwo miles and a half from the United\nStates border. Later they motored to\nYmir to inspect the road, which Is\nvery bad owing to the steep grades\nand sharp, dangerous turns, and returned to   Nelson   in  the  evening..\nBonnington Man\nBags Huge Brown    .\nBear at Glade\nBONNINGTON NOTES\ni SALMO, B.C., June 5. -A. B. Buck-\nwortlu deputy minister of railways for\nBritish Columbia, was a week-end\nvisitor In town as the guest of B.\nArchibald.\n'\"A.- V. Buckley. Arthur Lakes and\nHa roll Lakes left Salmo for an In-\napecllon or the Queen mine.\nJohn Benson has returned to Salmo\nafter spending the past year ln the\nstates.\nVictor Garvin ha s left for Fernie,\nwhere he intends to work on a gasoline   tractor.\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B.C., June\n6. \u2014 Sergeant and Mrs. J. T. Browning, who are leaving Nelson, were the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs, G. N. Brown\nat Cora Lynn on Tliursday, previous\ntheir  departure   for Vancouver.\nColonel Goods is spending the weekend visiting friends at Nakusp.\nMrs, B. U. Ilennle of Nelson is lhe\nguest of Mr. and Mrs, Collingwood\nGray, who spent yesterday at the Slocan   Pool. '\nMr.: %nd   Mrs.   W.   Clinton   Baddeley\nf    Willow    Point    are    the    guests   of\nMr.  and   Mrs.  G.   N.   Brown.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C., June D. \u2014\nCapt. L. Russell of Riondel ts tho\nguest of his brother, F. H. Russell,\nfor a  few  days.\nMalcolm McKenzie of Nelson was\nthe guest of James Maeaulay at Stoue-\nbyrrs  for the  week-end.\nMr. and Mrs. T. N. Stewart of Vancouver have leased the vicarage for r\ntime.\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B.C., June G.\n\u2014George Helbecque shot a large brown\nbear at Glade last week, measuring\nsix   feet   five   inches.\nMrs, R. Balmer, accompanied by her\nlittle son David, who has been visiting her brother, Harry Broadwood, for\nthe past two weeks, is returning to\nWinnipeg  on   Wednesday.\nMr. Broadwood, who Is severing his\nconnection with the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company, with his two\nchildren and nurse, Miss M. Bennlng-\nfield, will return to Winnipeg with\nMrs.  Baliner,\nPERRY SIDING NOTES\nPERRY SIDING. B.C., June 5.\u2014Mr,\nand Mrs. G. Walker of Los Angeles,\nwho have been visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nP. Schonberg recently, returned home\non   Friday   last. *\nA shipment of baby chicks from\nVancouver Island arrived on Friday\nfor G. V. Wood, who Is going in extensively   for  the   poultry  business.\nH. J. Cutler of Winlaw was visiting\nhere between trains on Friday.\nConsiderable road work is being\ndone   at   the   bridge   these   days.\nPerry Siding folks who took in the\ndance given by the Slocan ba.sebali\nclub at Slocan clay on Friday were:\nMrs. Dawney, Miss Robertson, Miss\nM.  Avis, G. Avis and I. Nixon.\nMiss Robertson went to Nelson by\nthe stage on Saturday to spend the\nweek-end  with her  parents.\nSocial Happenings\n\u00a9\nIn Nelson\n\u00a9\nNakasp Girls Give\nBanquet to Friends\n\"Nugget\" Them\n\u2014it makes white shoes\n. stay white.\nNUGGET\nWhite Dressing\nA substitute will\ndisappoint you.\nWARM WEATHER NECESSITIES\nHot  Point  lron\u00bb Screen   Doors\nHot  Point Toasters       Screen  Windows\nClectric  Hot   Plates      Wire   Cloth\nWater   Hose\nWater    Sprinklers\nBusy   Sprayers\nH1PPERS0N HARDWARE COMPANY\nLook for tho Rod Hardware Stort\nBo\u00ab 414\nPhono 497\n,    forhedm\nU stimulates the digesu\nassimaat.ng your food..\nyitmastbeColinan's\nNAKCSP, B.C., June G.\u2014-The Canadian Girls In Training gave a banquet\nto their lady relatives and friends\nFriday evening at the Masonic hall.\nGreat preparations had been made to\nmake it the huge success it turned\nout to be. The tables were loaded\nwith all the delicacies of the season\nand the C G.I.T. emblems overhung\nthe center table, making a very pretty\ndecorative effect. About 40 sat down\nand a most excellent time was spent,\nwith a very enjoyable musical program. Owing to an accident to the\nelectric light plant that evening, a\nnumber of gasoline lamps had to be\nrequisitioned at tlie  last  moment.\nma    \u2014 \u2014\u25a0-\nNELSON   DELEGATE'S\nNAME   MISSED\nIn the list of delegates to the convention of fruit growers held in the\ncity on Monday, the name of W, J.\nMoKIm   of    Nelson    was   missed    in\nCouncil Receives\nNumerous Requests\nReports, from the city engineer\nregarding water extension to the\nresidence of H. E.\" Tlialn *on~Sel-\n\u25a0wyn street, were read last night\nand submitted to the public works\ncommittee _ with the recommendation of the council. The engineers\nalso--reported en- the cost of a sidewalk to serve three residences between Elwyn and Kootenay streets\non Nelson avenue, which was also\nreferred to the above-mentioned\ncommittee.\nTwo residents up the hill requested water service, one at Latimer and Cherry streets, and one\nat   Rosemont.\nAn application to purchase lols\n13 to 19 on the Granite road below the old Hall Mines Smelter\nbridge, by the United Fruit growers,\nwas also read.\nThomas A. Mo watt appled for the\npurchase of a lot on Kootenay\nstreet. Thfr nbove requests were referred to the engineer for consideration,  and with power to act.\nI. O. Johnstone of Cedar street\nwrote asking that the steps from\nVernon street, behind the residence\nof J. A- Gibson, be put in better\nshape. This was also referred to the\nengineer. *\nAsk   Sewer   Connection\nJ. Ramsay and W. K. Smith, who\nhave under construction two houses\non Silica street on the old Nelson\nclub grounds, wrote to the council\nstating that basement drainage cannot be secured on that street, and\nasking that a branch sewer be constructed to connect on the Kootenay\nstreet branch. This was referred to\nthe   engineer.\nTrusts-is Ask Work\nA request from the trustees of\nthe Nelson school board asking that\na sketch and plans for the draining and grading of the Robson street\nschool site be prepared, was referred\nto the city engineer to carry ollt the\nwork, the same to be charged against\nthe school board.\nWork will commence as soon as\npossible on the sewer construction\nfor 15 residents above Innes street\nwho nave applied for sewerage.\nThree residences up the hill also\nrequested sewer connection.\t\nThis column is conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. AH news of\na social nature, including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMrs.  Vlgneux.\nMrs. William Watdte and her daughter, Miss Marfan Waldie, h04 Stanley-\nstreet, were at home to a number of\ntheir friends yesterday afternoon. At\nthe prettily appointed tea table, which\nwas centered wilh Marguerite daisies,\nwere Mrs. K. Melbourne and Mrs. Gilbert Hartin, who did the honors of\nthe afternoon at the tea and coffee\nurns. Others assisting were Mrs.\nJames McGregor, Mrs. Benjamin McGregor, Mrs, David Hartin, Mrs. A. D.\nMcLeod  and  Mrs.  Frank  Hawthorne.\nAmong the guests wore Miss Lela\nDowswell of Regina, Mrs. Frank Hawthorne, Mrs. James O'Shea, Mrs, John\nCartmei, Miss M. Cameron, Miss Jean\nCameron, Mrs. T. H. Caudwell, Mrs.\nN. Melbourne, Mrs. W. S, King, Mrs.\nDavid Hartin, Mrs. W. L. Affleck.\nMrs. C. I. Archibald, Mrs. Alexander\nLeith. Mrs. A. D. McLeod, Mra. L. E.\nBorden, Mrs. H. H. Pitts, Mrs, G. A.\nHunter, Mrs. A. T. Eyton, Mrs. Andrew\nSutherland, Miss Kay, Mrs. 8. J. Towgood, Mrs. W. R. W. Hinton, Mrs. A.\nH. Wallace, Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson,\nMrs. G. T. MacOulre, Mrs. W. J.\nMeagher, Mrs. M. J. Vlgneux, Mrs. W.\n0, Rose, Mrs. F E. Morrison, Mrs.\nGilbert Hartin, Mrs. J. T. Andrews,\nMrs. W. R. Jarvis, Mrs. C. W. Apple-\nyard. Mrs. E. J. Vanderwater, Mrs E.\nG. Smyth( Mrs. C. D, Blackwood, Mrs.\nGeorge Johnstone, Mrs. Arthur Lakes,\nMrs. J. A. Gibson. Mrs. W. M. Walker. Mrs. D. O. Thomas, Mrs. H. R.\nTownsend, Mrs. W. A. Thurman. Mrs.\nGeorge M, Clarke, Mrs. Robert Thompson, A. B. C. Dando, Mrs. N.\nMurphy, Mrs. William Seaman. Mrs.\nJames McGregor, Mrs. Benjamin McGregor, Mrs. J. A. Gilker and Mrs. F.\nP. Armstrong.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW. H. Fvrell of Kaslo returned on\nthe afterncton boat yesterday after\nspending the day  in  the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs, Agnes Scott of Ainsworth, who\nhas been tv-city visitor for the past\ntwo weeks, \u25a0 a guest at the home of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. T. Jerome, High street, Fair-\nview, returned on the afternoon boat\nyesterday to her home. In spite of\nher age, being 93, Mrs. Scott enjoyed\nherself Immensely, shopping and joyriding,  while  on   her  little   vacation.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nE. C. Applcwnaite; \"the ' Ropsland\nbarrister, who has been spending the\nweek-end with his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. E. H. Applewhaite, at Willow\nPoint. wa,s a city visitor yesterday, and\nleft last evening via the Kettle Valley for his home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Fitipatrick of Willow\nPoint were in town yesterday to attend the funeral of Mra. Fltspatrlck'B\nrather, W. J. Mohr,\n\u2022 I    *\nMrs. J. Thompson of Willow Point\nwas a city visitor yesterday to attend\nthe funeral of the late W. J. Mohr.\n\u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0    \u00bb\nMr. Ling of Fraser's Landing came\nto the city yesterdav to attend the\nfuneral of the  late  William  Tod.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nA. WUIfj*, .of the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company\" at Bonnington, was a city visitor yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. P. F. Neville, 706 Mill\nstreet, left Monday by motor for Pentlcton. Mrs, Neville will remain there\na couple <>f weeks, the guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Booking.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss   Elva   Hanna.    who    Is   on    the\nCentral school staff here, returned\nyesterday morning from Kaslo, where\nshe spent the week-end with her parents,   Mr.  and   Mrs.   L.   Hanna.\n\u2022 \u2022   ' \u2022\nD, IL Nellis of Woodberry was a\ncity visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Cooper of Balfour spent yes\nterday in the  city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2666\nJ. Harwood of Vernon was a city\nvisitor, Mondav. for the purpose of attending the meeting of the British Columbia School Trustees' association.\n\u2022 *    \u25a0\nC,    H.    Wheatley    of    the    Bank    of\nMontreal staff, returned Monday evening via th\" Kettle Valley frnm Victoria, where he has spent the past\ntwo weeks, mwt\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson of\nVancouver are visitors In the city,\nguests at the home of Mrs. Wilson's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. E. Koch,\n117 Victoria street. They are accompanied by  their  little daughter Patsy\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Marjorie Jerome, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. T. S. Jerome, High\nstreet, Fairview, arrived in town Monday evening via the Kettle Valley\nfrom the coast. She has been attending school in Victoria, and spent the\npaBt couple of weeks visiting with\nfriends on the island.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. Fraser of Fraser's\nLanding came to town yesterday for\nthe purpose of attending the funeral\nu-Tthe lafe  vVUllam Trtd.'\n\u2022 t    '\nMr.   nnd   Mrs.    Hosklns   of   Fraser's\nLanding attended the funeral of the\nrate- WIlHam Tod. which took-place\nyesterday-mwnittg----* \u25a0-\u00bb\u00bb.\u25a0*.\u2022    .. \u201e .   .\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nGuy    Constable    of    Creston    passed\nthrough the city last evening M his\nway   to   Pentlcton.\n\u2022 \u00bb    *\nMiss  Vera   Redpath   returned  on  the\nCrow bout last evening from Camp\nLister, where she has been visiting\nover the holidays with her sister, Miss\nMuriel Kedpath, who Is one of the\nteaching  staff   there.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Learmonth of Willow Point were-among the visitors to\ntown yesterday to attend the funeral\nof the late William  John Mohr.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nJ. ftlley of the City power plant\nwas a city  visitor  yesterday,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.   A.   E.   Bath   of   Fruitvale   is   a\nvisitor In the city, a guest at the\nhome uf Mr. and Mra, A. C. Lawrence,\n\u20225U8   Hoover street.\nP. A Jorfes, accountant at the Bank\nof Montreal here, left on the afternoon\nboat yesterday for Kaslo, where he\nwill remain for a couple of weeks, relieving  the  managerr R.  A. Chester.\nMrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite of Willow Point was a city visitor yesterday, and attended the funeral of the\nlate W. J. Mohr, which- took place\nIn   the afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW.    F.    McMahon,    Mill    street,    left\nfor  Grand   Forks   Sunday   evening.\ns   \u2022   e\nMrs. Turner Lee of Bonnington was\na city visitor yesterday, and attended\nthe meeting of the diocesan board of\nthe woman's auxiliary, which took\nplace yesterday  afternoon.\n\u2022 e    *\nV. A. Ltndgren, who left Monday\nevening via the Kettle Valley for\nSummerland, was Saturday evening\nthe guest of honor at a delightful\nfarewell party given at the home of\nMrs. F. E. Tyler, Kerr apartments.\nThe evening took the form of a shower, and Mr. Llndgren waa the recipient of many useful gifts, a delightful supper was  then enjoyed by all.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nLjattJmm-t Mrs. E. J. Cook of Fraser's'\nLanding were in the city yesterday to\nattend the funeral of the late William\nTod, which took place yesterday forenoon.\n\u2022 *    I\nMr. and Mrs. E. O. Matthew, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. G. B.\nMatthew, motored to Trail and returned Monday. At China Creek they\nencountered a deer, and at blrchbank\nthey averted an accident by escaping\na huge truck with 14 occupants.\n\u2022 \u25a0   i\nMrs. Burgess of Willow Point was\namong those who attended the meeting of the Kootenay branch of British\nColumbia School Trustees' association,\nwhich   took place   Monday.\nfew\nE. McGregor of the city power plant\nwas a city shopper yesterday,\n\u2022 \u2022   a\nMrs. C. W. West of Willow Point\nspent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 \u2022    #\nRobert Quinn of Harrop was a city\nshopper yesterday.\nfew\nMrB. George M. Benwell and daughter, Miss Elizabeth Kathleen, will\nleave the Kootenay Lake General hospital this afternoon for their home at\nthe  Hume  hotel.\n\u2022 * . \u2022\nW. II, North of Silverton arrived in\nthe city Monday evening and left yesterday afternoon by motor for Skican\nCity.\n\u2022 i    * ,\nMrs. C. W. Appleyard, Til Hoover\nstreet, who has been on a two-\nmonths' visit to her sister, Mrs. Grobe\nin Spokane, returned via the Crow\nboat Monday evening. She was accompanied by her sister, Mrs. E. J.\nVanderwater, formerly of Rossland,\nwho, with her husband, is taking up\nresidence on the island for the summer months.\neel\nMiss Ragnhild Olson, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. E. A. Olson of this city,\nwill sail for San Francisco on the\nH. F. Alexander from Seattle on June\n12. Miss Olson has been teaching in\nIhe commercial department of the high\nschool at Olympia, Wash., during the\npast year, but has accepted a position\nwith the Hcalds Business college, San\nJose,   Cal.,   for  next  year.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs, H. E. Dill's home, 418 Mill\nstreet, was the scene of a very successful church tea yesterday, when\n<iv.*r ~$!00 was received by tlie cashier,\nMrs. F. F. McKechnie. The tea was\nunder the auspices of Mrs, Dill's sewing circle of St... Paul's Presbyterian\nchurch. The flowers used throughout\nthe Itving-rooms were snowballs, hawthorn blossoms and lilies. The tea\nlable, which was presided over by\nMrs. George Steele, Mrs. D. Boyd, Mrs.\nJ. Simmons and Mrs. Elmer Titsworth,\nwas artistically centered with a silver\nbasket, which contained bleeding\nhearts and foliage, ln charge of all\ntea arrangements were Mrs. D. C.\nMcMorrls and Mrs. W. T. Choate, assisted by Mrs. S. C. Frost, Mrs. John\nMcDougal. Mrs. T. W. Ledlngham,\nMrs. W. M. Simpson, Mrs. W. Coleman,\nMrs. W. il. Smythe, Mrs. J. Ramsay\nnnd Mrs. Mclvor. The fancy work\ntable, which was a great asset to the\nafternoon's funds, was attended to by\nMrs. James Brodie. A table where\nthe home cooking was laid w-as taken\ncharge of by Mrs. Alexander Carrie\nand Mrs. W. Stewart. This booth, of\ncourse, was very popular, as the ladh\nof the Presbyterian church are noted\nfor their skill in this line. Mrs. R. \"\nPeebles and Mrs. G. B. Russell had\ncharge of thc candy booth. An exceedingly Interesting musical program\nwas rendered during the afternoon.\nThe artists were Mis. James Mllroy,\nMrs. T. Martin, Miss Erma Ferguson,\nMiss Lottie Annable and Miss Sylvia\nScott. **\nBoswell-Sanca Ladies\nStudy Making of Rugs\na Home Industry\nJ__\n611 Baker SI.       Phone 20'J\nWednesday Morning Specials\nFrom Shelves, Racks and Cases crowded with reliable merchandise, the following are offered at specially reduced prices to tempt you down town this\nmorning:\nWomen's DRESSES at $2.98\nA Wednesday Special\nin Gingham Dresses\nfor porch or house\nwear. Made up in\ngood ginghams in\nsmart styles. Sizes\n16 to 40. Special this\nmorning, each if2.98\nWomen's WHITE\nSKIRTS at $1.69\nWell-tailored Gabardine Skirts with pearl\nbutton trimmings.\nSizes 24 to 30-inch\nwaist measure. Values\nto $3.75. Special\nat ,...$1.68\nWomen's COTTON VESTS\u2014Three for $1.00\nRibbed or plain-knit 'Cotton Vests, some with short\nsleeves, others sleeveless. All sizes. Three for $1.00\nSPORTS COATS at $10.00\nFive only, Sports Coats, sizes 16, 18 and 20, made of\ngood Polo Cloth.   Wednesday Special, each....$10.00\nCORSETS at $1.00\n\"D. & A.\" Corsets for slender and medium figures, sizes 20 to 26. Splendid\nvalue for the money. Wednesday Special, each  $1.00\nChildren's WASH DRESSES\nAt $1.98\nGingham and Beach Cloth Dresses,\nsizes 6 to 14 years. All well made.\nValues to $4.50 each. Wcdnesday\nSpecial    $1.08\nBRASSIERES at SOc\nFlesh Colored Brassieres, front and\nbaek fastening, all sizes. Special this\nmorning, each  50-\u00a3\nremoved    to    Lady    Minto    hospital, j ntng.   when   questioned   on   the   de* I\nHopes  for his recovery  are held out.   velopments with regard to the wheat f|\n! hoard   that   may   have   resulted   from\n| his    meeting    with    Premier    Green-\n| field  earlier  in   the  day.\n\u25a0   \"Can    wo    say   you   are   expecting\nI to   make ;tn  announcement  soon?\" h\u00bb '\nDUNNING REFUSES\nANY INFORMATION\nI was   asked.\nDeclines   to   Reveal   Lines   of   Confer- ,\nence   With   Premier   Greenfield        ,      \"I   '\"'   \u00ab''\u25a0>'   'udhtng. was   the   re-,\non Wheat  Board P-V-      \"I    would   like   to ph e   you   a\n . story,   but  il  cannot   do it\nIU'XHNA,   Juno   4.\u2014\"I   have   noLh- j     Premier   Greenfield   la etill   In   tha\ning  to announce.\" said Premier Dun- j city.\n05\nBOSWELL.   tl.C.   June   I*\u2014 A   special\nmeeting of the Boswell Kancu Women's Institute was held at the home of\nMrs. J. Coupland, convener fur home\nIndustries. Thursday, Mrs. A. Kennedy, president, in the chair, when\na very interesting and instructive demonstration in run; making was given\nby Mrs. I. Lewis, Following that.\nMrs. J. Coupland provided ewA served\ntea  nnd  Ices.\nA silver collection was taken to provide hospital funds for crippled children.\nA hearty vote of thanks was accorded   the   hostess   aud   Mrs.   Lewis.\nFear Civil War in\nHonduras and Send\nFamilies to Safety\nNE WORLEANS, June 4.\u2014Reports\nof an Impending civil war ln Honduras were given impetus by the\narrival here from the Central American republic of several women and\nchildren who had been sent to New\nOrleans for\" safety by their husbands and fathers.\nSewer Gas Kills\nTwo at Melfort\nCleaning Tanks\nMELFORT. Sask., June 4.\u2014Two\nmen were killed by sewer gas, and\na third overcome, while cleaning the\nrefuse tanks at the sewerage disposal  works  here  yesterday.\nThe dead are John Pruner and\nErnest Avison. J. Scaife was still\nliving   when   help   arrived,   and   was\nLIVER TROUBLE\nPains in Stomach\nMost of tlte misery and Ill-health\nthat humanity Ib burdened with arise\nfrom disorders of the liver, stomach\nor bowels.\nIf you are feeling out of sorts, have\npains in the stomach, especially after\neating, sour stomach, bilious spells,\nsick or bilious headaches, heartburn,\nwater brash, etc., you Nhould take a\nfew doses of Milburn's Laxa-Liver\nPills. They will liven up the liver,\nregulate the bowels, and tune up the\nstomach.\nMr. T. C. iiallman, Hlghgate, Ont.,\nwrites:\u2014\"I have had liver trouble and\npains in the stomach for a long time.\nI started to use yuur Milburn's Laxa-\nLiver Pills, and In a short time I noticed they were helping me. Now 1\nwould not be without them and cannot recommend them too highly.\"\nMilburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c\na vial at all dealers, or mailed direct\non receipt of price by The T. Milburn\nCo., Limited, Toronto, Ont\nAfter\nEvery Meal\nWRIGLEYS\nThe Great Canadian Sweetmeat\nTeeth were glv*n to man to use.\nLike our muscles, they need exercise ,\nand plenty of lt. '.I'.Z.\nWRIGLEY'S provides pleasant\naction for your teetb\u2014also, the soft\ngum penetrates the crevices and\ncleanses them.\nAids digestion by increasing the How\nof saliva which your stomach needs.\nUse WRIGLEY'S after every meal-\nsee how much better you will feel.\nTh*perfect g?im it mada render\nrenditions oi absolute cltanli-\nrutss hone pure materia is, euui\ncomes to vc* in sanitary war.\nwrapped packets.\nt   \u25a0  -   .  .*   .:,..:;\n *Pag* Hi\nTBE NELSON DAILY NEW3? WEDNESDAY MORNING,. JUNE 6, 1923\n  -   T * 11 \u25a0\u25a0.--...         \u25a0 -     \u2014 -    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      ' \u2022-    - - \u2014\nIMets ___ Finance\nPRICE TRENDS .-.\nREVEAL UHLE\nViews   of   Specula tore   aa   to   Tnture\nCannot   Be   Predicted   From\n.        Day's   Activities.\nNEW YORK, June 5.\" \u2014 Price movements In today's stock marktt threw\nlittle light on the speculative attitude\nregarding the future cour.^c of business. The line of least resistance\nseemed to be on the upward side, with\nchief interest centered in a few specialties and a select assort ment of\nsteels, equipments, oils and low-priced\nrails.\nSeveral times during the course of\nthe day brokers operated a wide spread\nbetween the bid and asked prices, even\nof some'of the most active stocks. On\none ocicasion Baldwin .which had just\n\u2022old at-129H,, was quoted at 130 bid\nand 1-30->\u00ab asked, the next sale being\n600 shares at 130. The stock closed\nat 132, for a net gain of 2% points.\nUnfavorable conditions In industry\nwere reflected in the weakness of\nthose stocks, American Hide -ft Leather\npreferred and Central leather preferred each declining $__ points to\nnew low records for the year. International Harvester also established a\nnew ldw at  78%.\nSteels showed moderate improvement. Coppers were firm on reports\nof better trade conditions. Oils were\nInclined to sell off, Phillips Petroleum\ndropping nearly 3 points and California Petroleum closing a point lower\nat 112%  after having  touched   116.\nTotar sales  were   fi.19.20n   shares.\nClosing Quotation!.\nHigh '   Low\nBULGE IN CORN\nBOOSTS WHEAT\nC.   P.   R\t\nChlno i\t\nC. M. e. St. P. ..\nGen. Motors ....\nInt.   Marine   com.\nInt.   NJckel   \t\nMo. Pac. pfd. ...\nRock   !Island    . ..\nStudebaker   \t\nU.   S. ,Steel   com.\n22*4\n21%\n15\nT*\n1514\n'29\u00ab4\n112'4\n15\n152%\n21V.\n14*\nt%\n14\nIt*\n37*4\n29\n112%\nj Egg Market\nOTTAWA, June 5. \u2014 Toronto jobbing carton  extras,   16c;  firsts.   31c\nMontreal\u2014Extras, 35c; firsts, 32c\nto 33cJ\nSaskatchewan quoting delivered,\ncases returned, extras 20c; firsts, 180\nto   19c.r\nBritish Columbia, 23c at country\npoints.\nChicago, lowftr, spot, 23!ic; futures,\nstorage packed, June, 32 \\_c; refrigerators, September, 28Vic; October, 2t)c;\nNovember,  29-Vic;  December.   29V-iC,\nBritish ca bios\u2014Prices shillings per\n10 dozen.\nLondon\u2014Little change, English lis\nto 13s; Irish, lis to 12s; Danish, ll'.is\nto 14s; French,  lOHs to 13s.\nGlasgow \u2014 Irish. Id'jS to ll'-is,\nf.o.b., fair supply, good demand. Danish sixteens. 11 Via; clghtecns, Uttl E.\no.b.,   demand   good.\n[ *-\u00abp\t\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. June 6. \u2014 Flour\n\u2022unchanged to 15c lower, at 31.25 to\nJ6.50 a barrel. Shipments, 40.153 barrels.\nBran\u2014}24.\nWheat\u2014No.   1   northern,   fl.lOH   to\nCorn\u2014No.  3 yellow,  To  to 78'.c.\nOats\u2014No.   3 white, 3SUC   to 39,\/.c.\nFlax\u2014No. 1,  M.I0  to ll.lt.\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL, June 5. \u2014 Trading on\nthe stock market was extremely dull\ntoday with a soft trend prevailing In\nthe broad ranpc of issues that WM\nout. Lanrriitide was the most active\nHock and was fractionally off to par\nat the close.\nBrazilian came second In market activity, and closed at 48**i for a net\ngain   of   %.\nThe greatest, gain In the list was\nof 2 points, ami was recorded by Slur-\nwin Williams and Woods preferred, the\nlatter closing at the new high of 117\nand the former at 112. Illinois Traction suffered the greatest loss, closing\nat   BOV   for a not decline  of  t%.\nTotal sales \u2014 Listed, 4686; bonds,\n$396,500.\nConsolidated Bhares.\nMONTREAL, June 5. \u2014 Consolidated\nMining    &    HmeUlng,    3&H    hid;    25%\nasked.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, June 5. \u2014 E\u00abS down;\npotato\" trade good} butter firm; chee.;e\nquiet.   -   .-'*...\nCheese . Finest   easterns,  17Vic  to\n17^c*      \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0''\nButter   \u2014   Choicest   creamery,   33v*c\nto  33-\".ie:       \u25a0    \u25a0\nEggs\u2014Selected,   33C,\nPotatoes\u2014Per    bag,    car    lots,    $1-30\nto  |1.4\u00bb. \t\nDominion Live Stock\nGossip    Of   Reparations    Frog-res \u25a0    Also\nHas Supporting Influence on\nGrain Markets,\nCHICAGO, June . \u2014 Helped by a\nbulge in the value of corn and by gossip that a new reparations offer from\nfiermanv might bring about a settlement with France, the wheat market\noday Feored an advance. Closing\nprices for wheat, although unsettled,\nwere at %\u2022 to %c net gain, with Julv\n(l.Ofl'i to $1.01-14\u25a0 and September -Jl.O'J\nto 11.01%. Corn finished ftc to 2c\noats ^c to H\u00ab up, and provisions\nfrom 7c to 12c higher.\nSILVER STEADY\nAT OLD FIGURE\nNEW TORK,   June  5.\u2014Silver,   65\nSilver,    B\nLONDON.   Jun\n31  11-ltiil;  fulur,\n11 %<1.\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Juno 5.\nfor Dominion war issue*\nWar loans \u2014 1925,\n$10135;  1937,   J102.30.\nVictory loans \u2014 1933\n$100.55: 1927, $103.35;\n1939,  $103.20;   1937,  (107.\n\u2014   131(1   prnces\n$100,50;    1931\n$100.50;   1924.\n1933,    $105.20\nSterling Exchange\nX7<:\\V YORK, June Ei. \u2014 Stirling ex-\nchange irregular at $4.60*4 fur 60-day\nbills  and   $4.62 _'  for  demand.\nForeign Money\nNEW YORK, Jan. 5. \u2014 Ear\nForeign,   63 VJc.\nCanadian  dollars\u201497 25-32c.\nFrancs\u2014Demand.   6.41 \\_c.\nLira\u2014Demand,   4.65V.C.\nMarks \u2014 Demand, .0014c;\n001HJC. \t\nMetal Market\nNEW TORK. June 0. \u2014 Copper\nsteady; electrolytic, bpot and futures,\n15c.   \u2022\nTin\u2014Kirnier; spot and nearby, $42;\nfutures,  $41 87.\nIron\u2014Steady   and   unchanged.\nl,,.ad \u2014 Steady:  spot.  $7.25   to  $.37.\nZinc \u2014 Quiet; spot and nearby,\n$6.35   to   $6.40.\nAntimony\u2014Spot,   $6.90   to   $'.\nAt London \u2014 Standard copper, spot,\n\u00a366 17\u00ab 6d; futures, \u00a367 10s; electrolytic,   spot.   \u00a373   10s;  futures.   \u00a374.\nTin\u2014B(\u00bbt. \u00a3197 17s _a_\\ futures,\n\u00a3197   17s  6d. . -.\nLead\u2014Spot,   \u00a323   13s; futures,   [18   11\nZinc\u2014Spot. \u00a330 15s; futures, \u00a330\n7s 6d.\n      a,\t\nEXPRESS    DIVIDEND.\nYORK,   June   5\u2014A   quurtorly\nSCHOOL BOH KILLED\nBY KICK OF HORSE\nWIDTUORST, Bask., June 4.\u2014\nWhite out in the pasture Sunday\nafternoon at his home near Kipling\nto get a. horse to ride to Sunday\nschool, Reginald llaunkc, a 10-year-\nold boy, was kicked in the head and\nInstantly killed. He was tho eldest\nof six children of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nHaunke.\nSawn Lumber Barns\nin St. John County\nST. JOHN', X. B-, June 4.\u2014Damage\nestimated at $18,000 was done to\nHtWD lumber nnd a largo tract of\nland burned over by a fire which\n'broke out nt Carnftt, St. John county, \u2022 on Saturday. The lumber was\nthe property of Mclntyre & Johnson.\nToronto Board\nTORONTO. June B. \u2014 The pro-\nloacad holiday over the week-end apparently left no impression on the\nloral   market,   either   good   or   bad,   for\ntrading was maintained today In about\nthe usual volume of preceding sessions. Barcelona, and Brazilian were\nfairly    active,    the    former    responding\nto  London buying and  closing   %   up.\nat 21 |t. Canada Hread common\ndropped to B4^> \u00bb nPt decline of 1%\npoints. C.P.R, pained 1% points. Du-\nluth Superior, Qoodyear Tire, Toronto\nRailway and Twin City were fractional I v higher. nil stocks were, lower\nwith but one exception, International\nPetroleum   rinsing.   Up   hi   )Kdnt.\nFLOUR LOWEST\nFOR SIX YEARS\nFlour\nM1NNKAPOLIB,\nprices   dropped    i<\nJune    5.\nthi\nlowest    in\nill\nof the largest mills\nhere cut thc price 15 cents a barrel on\nfamily Patents today. The new low\nwas 18.56 a barrel when <=old in car\nlots in 18-poUlid cotton sacks for the\nhighest grade of family patents,\nVancouver Stocks\nunloeli\noundary\nAsked\n.18\n.21\nC    .00%\n.02\n;H\n.01 u\nNKW\ndividend of $1.60 ..\nmon    stock   of   the   American   CXpn\ncompany    was    declared    today\nof    -*2,\n1IM.\nwhich    has    been\ntead\nsince\nCOTTON JUMPS\nNEW  YORK,  June   !>.  \u2014 Cotton   today   advanced   teen-  llian   *4   a  b:ile-\nRenewed nervousness over new crop\nprospects and numerous reports of\nloll  weevils   caused   the   rise.\nrH_\nVmtlBtm\nMlstaia\n~~^^a~\nRoomi\nBo*rf\nte Rent\nBoat* and\nAutomobile*\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\n*\u00bb.\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nlivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rate*\nlocal Heading notices\u20143c per word\neach Insertion. In blackface or machine\ncapitals <c per word*.\" blackface capitals Gc a word; 25 per cent discount\nif run daily without \"change of copy\nfor one month or more. Where advertisement is set out ln short lines\nthe charge Is 12^-tc a line for Roman\ntype, 150 for blackfade, and 20c for\nblackface capitals. .Minimum 3&c, if\ncharged  &0c.\nWant and Classified Advertising \u2014\nOne and a half cents per word per\ninsertion. Six cents per word per\nweek, or 21%c per word ptr month,\ncash in advance. Transient ads. ac-\ncpte only on a cash-in-advance basis\nBach Initial, figure, dollar sign. etc..\ncounts as one word, Minimum 114; if\ncharged COc. \u2022.       * ,\nLists of Wedding Presents afcd floral\ntributes  at  funerals\u2014-10c  per  lino.\nMale Help Wanted\nL.LECTKICTAN, to operate small\n. hydro-electric plant. Must be capable repair pipe lines. Wages $150,\nand opportunity to earn extra\nmohey. The Sandon Waterworks &\nLight Co., Sandon. (8519)\nWANTED\nporter.      Apply\nAn\nexperienced    hotel\nStratKcona,      (8495)\nCEDAR POLS contract to lot. \u2014 We\nlet contract for making and skidding\n15,000 cedar poles, fine timber, good\nskidding, near Blue Klver, B.C.\nState, first letter, your experience\nand resources, giving references.\nWill let contrnct within ten days. I\nBox   8188,   Daily   News. (8188) j\nCity Property for Sale\n++++++*+++\u2666+++\nUnder Construction   \u00ab.\nBungalow\nRapidly noarlng completion,\nhalf 'block from upper car line.\nThis Bungalow has been very\ncarefully planned. Has large\nliving room, 20 feet by 13 feet,\ntwo large bright bedrooms,\nentranco hull, BREAKFAST\nNOOK, bathroom, cement foundation.\nAnyone Interested ln the above\napply to\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nrS&pS1E!f,SrS^^\n\u2022gaums\nMEN.   women   to  learn  barhering;   pald^t*\nwhile   learning;   tools  supplied.   Cat.s->>&\nlogtie   free.     Moler  College,   Vancou- j\nv.-r. (l-tell\nFemale Help Wanted\nWA1TKES.S, July 1; wa\nan for general woi\nHotel   Reco,   Sandon.\nWorn- \u00a3\n\u25a0S    $50. i \"ill\n(8518) rn\nWAlNTED\u2014At     once,\ndining-room \u25a0 girl,\nmonth. Apply\nNakusp.\nan    experienced\nwages    $35     per\nLeland       Hotel,\n(8427)\nLATZMDR   STREET\u20145-Roomed j\nI   House.    Modern 2 lots.    Frice |\nf 1000.\nNEEKON    AVKNTB\u20145-Roomed |\nJ   Fully modern cement fouuda-\nj   tlgn,   in first  class  condition.\nI    2    lots,    fruit    trees.      Price,\nj    |2100.     Cash   $1000. [\nJCHBRRT       AN U       HOOVER j\nSTREET \u2014 4-RuonieU     house, j\nOHMItt    foundation,     2     lots\nfruit  trees.    Frice.  $yoQ.  Cash j\n$500,  all  cash,  $800.\nLive Stock for Sale\nGOOD THRIFTY young pigs. Poland\nChina and Yorkshire cross; 8 weeks\nold; $7 each. W.lll pay express on\norders of sl)c or over. L. C. Morrison,    Needles,   B.C. (8512)\nMARE, about 1200 lbs. for sale; also\nbuggy, harness and saddle. Rankin,\nBonnington. (8511)\nWELL-BRED Holstein, 5 years this\nfall, good milk and butter cow.\nCalved January and due to freshen\nIn November. Milk capacity, fourteen to sixteen quarts dally; quiet\nand gentle. Reason for selling,\nworking away. Price eighty dollars.\nApply Box 84U8, Dally News.    (8498)\nCHESAPEAKE BAY retriever puppies\nfor sale. Big, healthy pups from\nregistered stock; best blood obtainable. Born March 6; Just right for\nyour fall duck hunt, Write E. T.\nCooper,   Cranbrook,   B.C. (84&1)\nREGISTERED Shorthorn Bull \u2014 very\nfine animal. Five years old; from\nDuncan Marshall herd, Alberta. R.\nD. Kennedy, Lemon Creek, via Perry\nSiding,   B.C. (8454)\nLAST LITTER of our choice Yorkshire pigs for sale, 6 week. Price\n$6.     Major Bros.,  Procter. (8441)\nFOUR-YEAR-OLD Ayrshire Jersey\ncow, guaranteed good producer,\ngentle, easy milker. Removal necessitates sale. De Laval cream separator, No. 10, In good condition.\nOne ton good timothy hay. E.\nWood,   Winlaw. (8423)\nREGISTERED Yorkshire pigs, fifteen\ndollars; grade Yorkshires, seven dollars each. Belgian hare In kindle,\ntwo dollars. Jowett Bros., Edge-\nwood,   B.C. (8425)\nWANTED \u2014 Girl for general housework. Apply Mrs. Harry Ferguson,\n908   Stanley   street\nWANTED \u2014 At once,\nchambermaid. Apply\nHotel.  _L\nExperienced\nNew     Grand\n(84C2)\nTELL   your   wants   UiroUg'o   \"The  Dail)\nNews olaanitled columns.\t\nWe Make It a Point to Go\nat tho earliest possible moment when\ncalled upbn to do transferring. Our\nequipment is ample for any demand,\nso you can rely upon prompt -service\nat all  times.\n\"HANDLE   WITH   CARE\"\nIs an unnecessary direction to ua.   We\nhandlu everything as carefully as can\nbe.\nPianos  a   Specialty *\u00bb\nCITY CAB\nPhona 18\nReceipts' In\ntoday   were\n\u25a0WINNIPEG, June 5. -\nthe yards up to 6 a.m.\n600   cattle   and   4Sj   bogs...\nSteer's \u2014 Choice. $7 to $7.50; fair\nto   good,   15.71   to  $6.75.\nButcher heifers \u2014 Choice, $6.50 to\n$7; fair to good, $5 to  $6 25.\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice, $4.75 to\n$5.25;   fair  to good.  $3.75   to  $450.\nBulls\u2014Good,   12.75   to   fi.\nOxen\u2014Good.   $3.50   to   $4.\nStocker steers \u2014 Choice. $1.25 to\n$4.75;   fair  to good,  $3   to   $4.\nStocker heifers \u2014\u2022 Choke. $3.50 to\n$4; fair, to good, $2.75 to $3.25.\nFeeder steers \u2014 Choice, $4,15 to\n$5.25; fair to good,  $:t.50   to  $4.50.\nCalves   \u2014   Choice,   $7   to   $8.\nHogs \u2014 Select, -$8.69: heavies. $6.1*0;\nlights and feeders,   $7.90   to $8.\nLambs \u2014 Fair to good, $10 to $12.50.\nSheep\u2014Fair   to   good,   $6   to$7.50.\n\" 'TORONTO, June 5. \u2014 Cattle receipts, 1351*. Trade very draggy,\nHeavy . beef steers, $8.85; butcher\nsteers, choice,  $7.75.\nCalf -receipts 61*6:   choice,   $12.\nSheep' receipts   228;   lambs,   top,   $20.\nHog receipts 1121; fed and watered\nbasis,  thick smooths,  $.1.35.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\n520,030,000\n679\nINCORPORATED   1869\nCAPITAL   PAID   UP    * \u2122'_l_''rZ\nRESERVE    '\u25a0     iS'^-S?\nTOTAL.   ASSETS   \t\nTOTAL   NUMBER   OF   BRANCHES i\t\nHEAD   OFFICE,   MONTREAL\nSIR H.  S. HOLT,  president;   E.  L.   PEASE,  Vice-President  \u00bbn\u00ab\nManaging Director;  C. E.  NEIU.. General Manaeer.\nCuba, Pmto  Rico, Dominican  Republic,  Costa  Wea,  Haiti.  Colombia,\nFrench' West Indies, Antlguu, Bahamas, Barbados, Dominica. Grenada,\nVeiiCtuela.  Jamaica, Trinidad, British Guiann,  British Honduras,  and\nat Barcelona, Spain; London, England;  and New Tork City.\nKOOTENAY   DISTRICT   BRANCHES\nNelton\u2014 *\u2022\". Cranbrook\u2014\nA.  D. McLeod, Manager, \u25a0      U. I\\  Marsh.  Manager.\nRosiland\u2014 Gn>nd  Forkt\u2014\nE.   J.   Vanderwa'.er,   Manager. O.  A.   Kplnk.   Manager. \u2022\nBUSINESS    ACCOUNTS   CARRIED   UPON    FAVORABLE   TERMS\nSAVINGS   DEPARTMENT   AT   ALL   BRANCHES\nFor Rent\nSMALL HOTEL in first class comll-\nliun. turnlahad: VulUbla for restaurant Nine rooms. J. M. Harris,\nSamlon^B.C.        - -8S-0)\nBARBER SHOP.*\u2014A good van guaranteed If willing to- undertake other\nwork.    Hotel Koco,  Siandon, \"*^\nSUITE\u2014CainliIje,t^PlU'Uo____(^528)\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished  bungalow  due.\nAnnable  Block\n197 P. O. Box 733 j\nlatbl)\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished house for July\nand August.    l'hone  Hit or Box; TH.\n< B14 4 >\nHOUSEKEEPING   room*\u2014Apply   J.   P.\nMorgan, 300 [laker street. 18130)\n~ for    rent.     Hall\nskating   rink\u2014$2i>\nBox   8131,   Daily\n(P431)\nFURNISHED house\nMines Koad, near\nper  month.     Apply\nBoats and Automobiles\nKIR SALE.\u2014Overland .touring (model\n90), perfect running order, condition\nguaranteed; privately owned. 1 rice\n$000. Apply Box 1019 or Lam\nRegistry   office,   Nelson. (8119)\nFOR SALE \u2014 One seven-passenger\nStudebaker car at Hanson Garage\nCrnnnrookk,   Bit  '8-'->\nA SNAP\n$2100\u2014A good 6-roomed Bungalow, cement foundation, full-\nbasement on 2 lots, and 4tt\ngood bearing fruit trees, a large\nquantity of smalt fruits. On\nterms,   $1000   cash.\nNote New Address\n.a. t. McMillan\/  \u25a0\nRoom 12, Gilker Block.\nP. 0. Bex Gl. 510 Baker St.\nRes. Phone 358L2\nOffice Phone will be installed shortly.\n(810S)\nNICE house, nine rooms, full basement, nicely located. Comer close\nto car track. Everything up-to-date.\nFor sale cheap for cash. Apply\nOwn.T.   312   Carbonate   street.     (8487)\nMiscellaneous\nPoultry and Eggs\nCOCKERELS WANTED for fattening\nLeghorns, fit' to six Weeks old, fif\nteen cents; Rocks, Wyandotlcsu Or\nplngton Reds,* 25 cents*, each.\nCook,   llaltour. *\u00bb*   O\nE,   J.\n(KID\nBARRED ROCK BOGS\u2014Two dollars\nper fifteen delivered. Pekin Duck\nEggs, two dollars per thirteen. T.\nRoynon.    Nelson. l8-09>\nVANCOUVER   WHEAT.\nVANCOUVER, June 65. \u2014 Closing\nprices today tor wheat, basis No. 1\nnorthern, delivered f.o.b. cars Vancouver,   for export;\n\u2022 i'- Bid       Asked\nFor prompt shipment\nfrom   prairie   points    >1.14%    U.V.%\nWIHMITEO   OBAIK   quotahom.\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nU1H\nOet\t\n107 ft\nOats\u2014\nJuly      ....\niS%\nOct\t\nI2\\\nBarley\u2014\n53\nOct\t\n52\nFlax-\nJuly     \t\n224\nOet.    .....\n205\nRye-\nJuly     ....\nH7H\nPet,    _j_jm\n. W5i\nHigh\nlJIft\n108!.\n48\n44\n54ft\n231\n208\n70ft\n.'.0.\nLow\n111 H\n106ft\n46 ft\n42H\n67 ft\n,63ft\nClose\nillft\n108 ft\n47ft\n43ft\n64 ft\n62\n230\n207\n69 ft\nn\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice 8melting  snd  Refining  Department\nTRAIL,  BRITI8H  COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nCOCKERELS\u2014Eight    v\neach.     Leggatt,   R.R.\nNo.\n-,,   50   cents\n1,  Nelson.\n(S411)\nRoom and Board\nLADY could aeeoni\nboarders.    Apply\noodate two or three\n711  Vernon street.\n(8424)\nROOM    and\nstreet;\nboard.    . Baker,\n518    Mill\n(8432)\nLost and Found\nLOST\nOffl\n-Bunch-.keys. ,   Leave\nWHY OPERATE?\nWhen HEPATOLA removes GALL\nSTONES in 24 hours without pain,\nand relieves APPENDICITIS, stomach and liver troubles. Contains no\npoison.    Not sold  by  druggists.\nMrs. Geo. S. -Almas\nSola   Manufacturer\n230 Fourth Ave., 8o.\u201e Saskatoon, Sask.\nPrice,  $6.00 Phon* 4855\n(8485)\nAercnts Wanted\nMKN AND WOMEN to travel and appoint locnl repreatntatlva* Yearly\n\u2022uarantee $1092 (wfpkly average\n$.!1) anil eTCperiMs', eommiRsion be-\nlM0l, Writ** for Particulars. Winston   Co.,   Dept.   O.K., Toronto.   U&14)\nPayroll\nSheets\nFor    Mining,   Lumbering,   Co\nstruct.on Camps,  Etc.\n50...\n100..\n -..$1.75\n $2.75\n$4.00\nThe Daily News\nPrinters   and   Publishers\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nHOUHEHOLD furniture, eoMUUni of\ndinlng-roofn chairs, buffet, linoleum\nrttf,   tfl-MMrs,   etc.     Apply   8^a   Mill\nWHAT about the dry month! thftt are\ncoining     Order   your   irneation ..pip'-\nNOW.    Jamleson,  Paasmore.       (8490)\nGALVANIZED Iron boathouse. Apply\nPalmer Rtttledffe, Dominion Express\ncompany. (till)\nSMOOTH Tew Terrier pups, pedigree\nand particulars. Marlborough Kennels,   Uray   Creek,   B.C. (MO)\nPHOTOGRAPHIC   equipment   for   nule\nat a bargain; 11x14 studio, 8x10\nview camera; four high-grade -It-iiNes,\nbackgrounds, etc. Everything necessary to open first-class Htudlo. For\nsale en bloc only. Xiox 104, Tr-iil.\nH.C. (8412)\nWOOD PIPE for sale, for irrigation\nand pressure systems, (suitable for\nheads up to 300 feet. Tarry &.\nChalmers,   Tarrys. (8311)\nWOOD Irrigation Pipes For Bale.\nDeer Park Wood Pipe Co., Deer\nPark, KC,       ,*; \" \\ [____\\__\\\nkegs.\nFOlt   SALIC   \u2014   Empty   barrels,\nsacks.     McDonald   Jam  Co.\n(SUIT I\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nHOUSEKEEPING  rooms.  Apply K. W.\nC.   block. (8510)\nFOR RENT \u2014 Three housekeeping\nrooms, partly furnished. Ideal for\ntwo.     Apply  717  Josephine  street.\n(8515)\nFl'KNlSMICD housekeeping rooms over\nPoole Drug. (8524)\nCLEAN\nsuite.\nell-furnished     three-roomed\n7  Silica  street. (8486)\nFOR RENT \u2014 Three-roomed furnished\nsuite.    Annable Hlock. (I4H)\n.FURNISHED   SUITES\nSERB    APAKTMENTS\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Small   house,   for cash,\nS.   Matheson,   Queen's   Hotel.      <8!V\nFarm and Dairy Produce\nFRESH   DAIRY   BUTTER  for   sale  at\n35o  per  lb.    Hox  'J*  Creston,  B.C.\n(8175)\nNursery Products\nBEANS AND ONION SETTS. \u2014 We\nhave too many. To clear will sell\nSeed Beans, 25c lb., 5 lbs. $1; Onion\nSetts zOc lb., 6 lbs $1; Seed Potatoes\n2c lb,    Rutherford Drug Co.      (8402)\nSTRONG, healthy cahuage plants, Jl\nper hundred; cauliflower, ll.lf. w.\n- Mawor,    Nelson,    B.C. (HI*)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Tomato, Cauliflower,\nGreen Pepper and Flower Plants,\nNick Maglio. P.O. Box 368, Phone\nFiSL'Ll. (82,r.4)\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\nON GRANITE ROAD, near city power\nplant, 191 acres, about four hundred,\nfruit trees, chiefly apples, some\nblackberries and good hay meadow.\nFour-roomed hou.se. For quick sain\nwill sell at less than cost of crown\ngrant. One thousand cash or fifteen\nhundred (terme) with cash payment,\nor will consider any reasonable cash\noffer. Apply D. StDenis, Nelson.\n   (8516)\nFuR SALE \u2014 320 acres known as\nSub-lot 54, near Arrow Creek; any\nreasonable offer considered. W. K.\nEsling,   Rossland.   B.C, 18453)\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Hay rak*. 8 or 10-foot,\ngood order, slate price for cash.\nBox. 8428,  Dally  News. (8428)\nCOW HIDES, five cents pound; calf,\neight cents. J. P. Morgan, Nelson,.\nIll' (8471)\nBusiness Opportunities\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap for cash. Frame\nhotel, 30 rooms, 20 furnished, steam-\nheated, paying business, In town of\nNatal, B.C. For further particulars\napply to Box 354, Fernie, B.C.  (8426)\n-se~;__-  \t\nTo Let\nTO LEASE \u2014 Ranch, I acres, cleared\nand irrigated; bungalow with tnree\nbedrooms. Half a mile from Ferry\nLanding. For particulars apply to\nR. W. Dawson, Annable Block. P.\nO. Box 733.    Phono 197.* (8468)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nInsurance and Real Estate\nB.   W.   DAWBOB,\nltetal Eatata, Xnauranca, Xantals.\nAnnable Blk. P.O. Box 733. l'hone  197.\n(8472)\nH.   X.  DILL,\nGeneral Insurance Affenor.\nCity and Country Property For Sal*.\n508 Ward Street. rfcon* ISO\ntH-Tt)\nMonuments\nCampbell\n\u00a5.0.\nm   Ritchie   Monumental   Go.\nHox   86.1.   Nelson,  B.C.\nTelephone  lfi4. (8173)\nPainters and Decorators\nAutoe Painted\nMtJRrHY  BBOS.\nDealer! In Wall Paper.\nStore\u2014 .   ' Auto Shop-\u2014\n*13 Josephine St. 411 Hall Bt\n (8474)\nCaroenter\nT.   A.   LAWSOS\nHope   Chests.   Remodelling-,   House   Repairs.    Malcolm mag., Varnon St.\n (8366)\nAccounting\nCKARX.ES   P.   HTJHTER,\nAuditor,  McDonald Jam  Building,\nUox H91 Nelson. B.C.\n(847S)\nK.  J.  HEWLAY,  A.B.A.A.\nAii'iitlne.   AcM'ountinp   Systems,\nInvest igidioiis, Income Tax.\n(8199)\nFlorists\nGIUZZEU.E'S      GREENHOUSE,      Nel.\neon.   Cut flowers and floral dealKna\n  (8476)\nWM.   S.   JOHNSOW.\nPhone    342.        Cut     Flowers.     Potted\nPlants   and   Floral   Emblems.\n(8273)\nW.   E.   MAWER,\nHardy  Plant  Grower,  Nelson,\nBC.\n(8162)\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD fi CO., WHOLESALB\nGrocers and Provision Merchants.\nImporters of Teas, Coffees, 8ploe%\nDried Fruits, Staple and Fancy\nGroceries,   Nelson,  B.C. (8477)\nEngineers\nS.   D.   DAWSOlf,\nB.  C.  Land  Surveyor,\nMlnlnc   Ene-lneer,\nKASLO, BO.\n(8478)\nGte* *01\" B\u00abtfe, c,\nHEI.BOW,   B.O.\nCIVII.   AND   MIHINQ   ElfOIRBEU\nB. C, Alberta and Dominion.\nLand Surveyors.\nCrown Orant Agents. Bin* Printing.\n      (8479)\nAssayers\nE.  W.  WIUUOWSON   Box A110S,   Nelson,  B.C.    Standard western charges.\n\u25a0*     \u25a0- \u2022 ' (8480)\nAuctioneers\nW.   CUTLER\nGoods Sold Privately or at Auctlom.\nBox 474     Opera House Block     Phone 71\n (8481)\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERTSON, S\\ D. D. A E., \u00bb01\nVictoria   street    Phone   292.     Night\nPhone   157L.  (8482)\n__ \" \"\"' i\"H\nStandard rornltun\nOo., Undertakers,\nFuneral Director!,\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nservice. P r 1 o \u00ab \u2022\nreasonable.      (8483)\n\"BRINGING UP FATHER\"\nBy George McMana*\nJICi4*b' DMJCHTESa*;   I\nA BEA.OT)FOU       J\n\"* **\n)\n &1\nTHE HECSOS P3ILT NTrs; WEDNESDAY FORMING, JTJNT! 6,1928\nPa28 SerST\n[SAVED FROM\nAN OPERATION\n[Restored to Health By Taking\n\"Frult-a-tives\"\nI Made of Fruit Juices and Tonics\nThe most convincing proof of the\n['true north of \"Frult-a-tim*' as a\nmedicine for women is found in the\n[letters written by thorn to\"Kruit-a*\nLtives\".   For instance:\n\"I Buffered with all tlie symptoms\nI of female trouble, pains low down\n! in the hack ami slues, constipation\n[ and constant headache. A doctor\nIadvised an operation. I started\nI taking \"Fruit-a-tives\" and this fruit.\n\\ medicine completely relieved me of\n[all my misery\"*.\nMrs. M. ?. GOItSB,\nVancouver, B.C.\n00c. a box, fi for $2..V). I rial size Wa.\nAt   dealers   or   from   Fruit-a-tives\nI Limited. Ottawa. Out\nr'lRST SANATORIUM\nGOES TO SASKATOON\n| 'REGINA,  June   5.  \u2014  The directors\nI   the   Anti-Tuberculosis   society,   at\nmeeting   here   today,   decided   that\nhe   first   of   the   two   $200,000   sanl-\nIirias  to  he  built   by   the   provincial\n(overnment    for    the    treatment    of\nTuberculosis shall be erected  at  See-\n|atoon.    Work  will commence within\nmonth. _________    \t\nNews of Sport\nDON'T\n00 -\nTHIS!\nUse      li\nLEONARD\nEAR OIL\nIT DOES RELIEVE DEAFNESS\nand HEAD NOISES. Simply rub\nlt In back of the ears and insert\nIn nostrils.\nSpecial Instruction* by s noted\nmt tp-t-Lialiui in <e\u00bb\u00abh psekise.\nMADE IN CANADA\nDescriptive circular sent art retjuett\nA. 0. Ltonard. Inc.\n** filth AvenM Na\u00ab York\nFor aali, ln Nelson by City\nDrug and Slatinnery Co., 1'oole\nDruS Co., MA.,, ono all rellabl.\ndruggists.\nMACS REACH\nLEAGUE TOP\nDefeat Saints in Rough-and-\nReady Game, Which It\nDisgusting to Fans\n.League Standing\".\nW.    L. P. Pts.\nCorinthians      2 0 1 \u2022\nMcLearles       * -1 I 5\nSt.   Saviours     1 \" l 3\nVeterans       \u2022 2 I -1\nIn one of the roughest and most\nungentlemanly games of football witnessed on the local grounds for some\ntime, the Mcl.earys last night were\nvictors over the  St.   Saviours  team.\nIt seemed to he the whole policy j\nof both teams to play the man and j\nforget about th**** ball. Numerous Illegal checks were tried and several j\nhad spills occurred, one nearly winding up in a fistic encounter. In fact,\nseveral of the spectators went home\ndisgusted.\nJudging from the hard feeling\namong the players on the field last\nnight, Referee Draper would have\nheee Justified in banishing several.\nMcDonald and Simpson seemed to be\nthe chief offenders last night, while\nseveral of the spectators eot'dncttd\nthemselves in ways not according to\ngentlemen.\nIn the first half the Saints took the\nfield shy of two men. As a result the\nMacs gathered In two goals through\nthe efforts of McDonald and Bowkett.\nIn the second, McDonald scored again.\nThe Macs last night fielded a' strong\nlineup and as a. result occupy the\nhead of the league on an equal basis\nwith the Corinthians.\nJ, Draper refereed the  game.\nThe   teams  lined   up  as   follows:\nMcLearles St. Saviours\nGoal\nPIRATES STEP\nUPONDODGERS\nPush Second Place Aspirants\nin National League Back\nto Third\n;       \t\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE   STANDING\nW.\nNew York     3S\nI'ltLnburgh     25\nBrooklyn     21\nSt.   Louis     22\nCincinnati    21\nChicago      20\n1'hllaiiclphla   U\nL.\nPet.\n11\n.758\nlt\n.5\u00ab8\n20\n.545\n22\n.500\n21\n.500\n2>\n.408\n31)\n.302\nH.   Ward\nBrown\nWard    .\nBacks\nHalfbacks\nElngrose\n.   Bradley\nBarwood\nHorswill\nSimpson\nJohnston\nFraser     \t\nArchibald    \t\nWelsh    \t\nForwards\nMcDonald         Atkinson\nLeemlng         \u00a7W\u00abtt\nHowkett\nBolton\nMacKenzie       Bradshaw\nDempsey-Gibbons Fight\nSHELBY, JULY 4\nExclusive  Ticket   Sale  Kootenay  and   Crow's   Nest\nPass District\nSemaphore Cigar Store\nNELSON, B. C.\nChoice Seats.    All Prices.    Canadian Currency Accepted\nat Par.    Reservation! should be made at. once.\nPiraUi Win by Fielding\nPITTSBURGH, June 5. \u2014 Pittsburgh won from Brooklyn loday.\nf\u00bb to 2. Several remarkable fielding playe helping Meadows in his\nfirst home game since Joining the\nPirates. A great catch by* Grimm\no( Nels* liner, which was turned\ninto an unassisted double, nipped\nth Dodgers' potential rally In the\neighth. R-     H.    E.\nBrooklyn     2     12       0\nPittsburgh     5     12       0\nBatteries \u2014 Diekerman, G. Smith,\nCadore and Taylor* Meadows and\nSchmidt.\nHoldout May Walk Soon\nCHICAGO, June 5. \u2014 New York\ndefeated Chicago today. 8 to 3.\nHentley, who started for New York,\nwalked the first three men and\nwas replaced by Jesse Barnes. In\nthe sixth, Hartnett's double, following two walks and a single,\nnetted three runs, and forced his\nretirement. R.     H.    Nt\nNew   York    \u2022\u25a0\u2022 8     14      0\nChicago       3       5        0\nBatteries \u2014 Bentley, J. Barnes,\nJonnard and Snyder; Cheeves, Russell and o'Farrell.\nLuque Gets Six in Seven\nCINCINNATI, June 6. \u2014 Luque\npitched steadily today, the Reds\neasily defeating the Boston Braves,\n7 to 1. Miller was knocked out\nof the box ln the lirBt Inning.\nRousch made a home run ln the seventh with two on base. It was\nLtique's sixth victory In seven starts.\nR.     H.    E.\nBoston    t       6        1\nCincinnati        ?     1\u00b0        I\nBatteries \u2014 Miller, Benton, Wat-\nsonanu*  Gowdy;   Luque and  Wlngo.\nKootenay Ale\nThe Quality Ale, $2.20 \u2022 Doieo.   Order through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nFREE     DELIVERY     DIRECT     FROM     BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\nTommy Gibbons Gets\nHind Foot of Rabbit\nFrom St. Paul Mayor\nST. PAUL, Minn.. June 5. \u2014 The\nleft hind foot of a buck rabbit, 'said\nto have been killed at midnight ln\n'a cemetery under a full moon, was\nthe good-luck gift of Mayor Arthur\nNelson to Tommy Glhbons when the\nlatter left here today for Shelby,\nMont., to begin training for his\nheavyweight championship battle wfth\nJack  Dempsey.  July 4.\nLETHBRIDGE   SEMI-PRO\nFOR TORONTO UNIFORM\nTORONTO, June 5. \u2014 Clark Pren-\ndergast, a Lethbrldge semi-professional baseball player, has arrived\nhero for a tryout with the Toronto\nInternational league club.\nPAPYRUS NOW\nFAVORITE FOR\nTODAnDERBf\nDisplaces Town Guard Because Donoghue Up; Cold\nSnap Forecast\nLONBON, June 5. \u2014 The Derby\nfestival opened today In dull, cold\nweather. For hours this morning\na force of men was engaged In\nsweeping and clearing the course,\nwhile a small hand of enthusiasts\nviewed the candidates for tomorrow's\nrace. The horses were given light\nexercise.\nJust hefore Town Guard was\nbrought to the starting point for\na workout, Victor Oilman, the son\nof Town Guard's trainer, discovered a large rusty Iron hoop and\nsome stones about 400 feet from the\npost which, had they not been discovered, might have Injured the\nhorse In the gallop. How the hoop\ncame to be on the course, which\nhad been thoroughly cleared, Is a\ncomplete mystery, but it Is not believed that lt was placed there with\nmalicious   Intent.\nRectnt    Winners    Work   Out\nTown Guard was given a oouplo\nof six-furlong gallops. He went\nwell, and showed that he had quite\nrecovered from his mishap of last\nweek.\nEllangowan, the winner of the\n2000 guineas at New market, and\nother candidates were given light\nexercise, ln fact, the only one to\nstretch out was My Lord, who apparently had been backed for solid\nreasons. The persistent rumor thnt\nSteve Donoghue will ride My Lord\nInstead of Papyrus, was authoritatively   denied   this   afternoon.\nThe course is ln good condition,\nthe rain having kept the earth from\ndrying and cracking. No trainer\nneed fear that his horse will come\nto harm. According to report, Legality, owned by Lord Furness, has\nbeen issued for tomorrow's race in\na sum big enough to recover not\nonly Legality's own value and the\nDerby stakes, hut a fair-sized stable\ncommission as  well.\nContest    It   Open   On*\nA glance at the wagering shows\nthe open nature of the contest, but\nit appears likely that Papyrus, owned\nby B. Irish, will start the favorite,\nthe exploits ot Donoghue at Epsom\nbeing a great factor. Donoghue is\nhopeful of making it three in a\nrow, having won the last two Derby a\non  (Humorist   and   Captain   Cuttle.\nThe weather has been getting\nsteadily warmer, hut the weather ex-\nperis delivered a bombshell this\nafternoon with the forecast of a\nsudden   cold   snap   for   tomorrow.\nFollowing were the odds in London\ntonight on the  leading candidates:\nThirteen to 2 against Papyrus; 7\nto 1 against Pharaoh; lfi to 2 against\nTown Gua rd; 17 to 2 aga i nst Le -\ngality; 19 to 2 against Ellangowan;\n100 to 8 against My Lord; 100 to 7\nagntnst Knockando. all taken and\noffered; 25 to 1 against Salt Ash,\ntaken; 25 to 1 against Twelve\nPointer and Parth; 33 to 1 against\nRoger do Biisli; 35 to 1 against\nBold ond Bad; 40 to 1 against\nDoric; 66 to 1 against Pnrtumnu and\nApron, taken ond offered; 1&0 \u25a0. to\n1 against Safety First- and Top\nBoot, offered; 200 to 1 against\nCanova, taken and offered.\nH. Beasley will ride Portumna, and\nJ.    Leach   will   ride   Canova,\nBOSTON WARMTH\nstops mm\nRed Sox, However, Give the\nCleveland Indians a Severe Drubbing\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE STANDING\nu\nPet.\n13\n.638\n19\n.548\n20\n.646\n21\n.488\n23\n.477\n22\n.421\nH\n.406\n25\n.375\n\u00a3ve%yasneSce-\nw*\n77\nCONDENSED 'WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each apace. Endow money\norder  or  check  and   mail   direct  to  The   Daily   Newi,  Neleon,  B. C. ]    \u00bb- i   u   |\nRatei One and a half cent a word -each insertion, tix coneecutive insertion! for prica of feur\nwhen caih accompanies order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar eigne, etc., count at on*\nword.    No   charge   less  than   50 cents.\nPlease publish the advertisement below times, fof which I enclose %\t\nW.\nNew York    30\nPhiladelphia  23\nCleveland  H\nfit.   Louis     20\nDetroit    21\nBoston    16\nWashington    17\nChicago     15\nRed   Sox   Slug\nBOSTON. June 5. \u2014 Boston hit\nI'hle and Edwards heavily today,\ndefeating Cleveland, 10 to 6. Qtilnn\nwas compelled to retire in eighth\nbecause of heat, and Ehmke finished  effectively. R.     H.    B,\nCleveland   *     II       J\nBoston      10     15       I\nBatterels \u2014 Uhle, Edwards and\nO'Neill; Qulnn, Ehmke and De-\nvormer.\nTigers Blank Senators\nWASHINGTON, June 5. \u2014 Detroit\ncombined hits with Washington errors to win the first game of the,\nseries today, 3 to 0. Cobb was effective ln the pinches. Spectacular\ncatches hy Cobh and Rice featured. R.      He     K.\nDetroit     3       6       1\nWashington      0       9       2\nBatteries \u2014 Cole and Bassler;\nZacharay,   Russell   and   Gharrlty.\nBrowns Chase Rommel\nPHILADELPHIA, June 5. \u2014 St.\nLouIb batted Rommel hard in the\nopening inning ot today's game, getting four runs and then drove him\noff the hill with three more counters\nIn the fifth. St. Louis won the\ngame,   10   to   3. R     H.    E.\nSt. Louis    10     17       4\nPhiladelphia     3       7       1\nBatteries \u2014 Shocker, Kolp and\nSevereid; Wamel, Walberg, Ogden\nand   Perkins.\nYankees Stop Stump\nNEW YORK, June 5. \u2014 After\nsuffering three successive defeats,\nthe New York Americans resumed\nthdr victorious course today, defeating Chicago In an exciting, hard,\nfought, 10-Inning game, by a scope\nof  7 to 6. R.     H.    E.\nChicago      6     14       2\nNew   York      7     12       0\nBatteris \u2014 Robertson, RIankcnship\nand Schalk; Shawkey, Jones, Mays\nand   Hoffman,   Bengough.\n-ft Ti\"^i?> U\u00bbg(I\u00ab,J!gpawB 3$\ngBBm^-  in  ' Mil '*m\nClosing at 12:30 Todag\nLadies' Sports\nClothing\n$7.95\nSEE OUR SPECIAL KHAKI SUIT for Ladies, made\nspecially for fishing.\nNORFOLK COAT in Khaki Twill,\neach  \t\nNORFOLK COAT in Khaki Gabardine, (*>1A(\\r\neach    > \u00abDlAJmVU\nLADIES* SKIRT in Khaki Twill\n$5.00 and $7.50\nLADIES' KHAKI BREECHES,\nlaced knee \t\nLADIES' KHAKI KNICKERS,\nbuttoned at knee\t\n$7.95\n$7.50\nFIELDING WILL\nCHANGE OFFER\nRECIPROCITY\nDempsey Seeks Speed\nby Boxing With the\nVery Little Fellows\nGREAT FALLS, Mont., Jime 5.\u2014[position members toM him that the\nSpeed was the word at the Dempsey Woolen Industry would he hard hit;\ncamp today, the world's champion' \u00bblso that tho eost to the consumer\nheavyweight    champion    going    eight  would  go up, Instead ot down.    This\n(Continued  from  Page One)\nawa.y  would   be  more  than  made  up\nby increased volume of business.\nMr. Meighen said the minister two\nyears ago had mado the s\u00bbmo mistake,   and   again   last   year   tho   op\nI   I\nI\n |\t\nI\nIf daeired, replies may be addreesad to box numbere   at  Tha   Daily   Newt  Office.   II   repliea   art\nte ba mailed endow 10c  extra ta cover coet of pottage and allow fiva worda extra for box numbar.\nhad been borne out, and the woolen\nIndustry had been further damaged.\nMr Fork** observed that the cause\nof the depression In the woolen trade\nwas not overproduction, hut underconsumption. If prices of woolens\ncould 'ho reduced to a point where\nthe people could afford to purchase\nthem there would be a great demand.\nHe wondered how many people in\n'Canada were forced to go without\nunderclothing in winter because they\ncould   not   pay   lhe   price   for   It.\nKnitting Mill Cloiee\n.Sir Henry Drayton, Conservative,\nYork West, asserted that the price\nof woolens had Increased last yc\u00abr.\nHe also remarked that a Canadian\nki'itting   mid   hud   closed   down.\nMr. Fielding said that the argu-\n-mrnt of Sir H^nry Drayton appeared to be that if duties were reduord\nprices Increased. He refused to take\nthis seriouslv. He also remarked\nn.*\u00abm\u00ab\u00abJ Till*. r,.\u00bb.'n-, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\" tariff changes which wen* rc-\nUiamona I MS CVening jgarded by opposition speakers as ln-\nslgnif leant during tho budget debate\nhad  now assumed vast proportions.\nrounds with the little fellows, it\nwent two rounds each with Frank!\nGrendetta, flyweight; Lee Moore,\nlightweight; .Toe Benjamin, llgrht-\nwdght, and Harry Wells, English\nwelterweight. The sparring was for\nspeed, and Dempsey showed he was\nfast. ,\nJack Kearns announced today that\nJoe Benjamin had been tentatively\nmatched with Benny Leonard for\nthe world's lightweight championship,\nLabor day, tho fight to take place ln\nGreat   Falls.\nThe fight Is conditional on Dempsey mooting Harry Wills here or tn\nHeet York on I-abor day end will\nnot take pla^e in the evert of a\nDempsey-Wills fight that day.\n .*-\u2022*\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb.\t\nBrewers and McLearles'\n.   Meet on Lacrosse\nBaspball fans of the city will see\nbase.hftll as ,\u00abhe hns never been played\nbefore at the hall grounds this\n.evening when th\u00bb Brewery Huaklas\nand the. McLeary Tightwads will clash\nIn the opening game of thp season between these two squads, who, last\nyear, drew large crowds at their\ngnmt*s.\n\"Babe Ruth\" Lyonnaise, \"Who created such a sensation on the mound\nfor the Brewers last year, has been\nputting 'em over the pan in great,\nstyle in practices, and will .deliver the\ngoods today. Several other of the\nBrewery stars of last year are on the\nlineup. \u2022 ,\nJust who will represent th\u00ab\nMcLearys could not be ascertained las\"t\nnight, as they have a number of dark\nhorses. Tommy McDonald, one of\ntheir lineup, has, however, been training hard and has been catching hoppers at midway in preparation for tht\u00bb\ngame. F. Boyd and N. Mallette will\ndo the guessing.\nThe Brewery lineup follows: Babe\nLyonnaise p, J. R. ReiHtener c,' Williamson lb and captain, T. De Qer\u00bbl-\nlmo 2b, W. O. Mills 3b, T. DeFerro, se,\nA. Traves rf. T. Maglio cf, D. Manhart If, J, Rlestener Jr. sub, Oeorge\nHawthorne manager, Bobble. Hawthorne\nmascot. Umpires\u2014Boyd and N. Mallette.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSan Francisco,  11;   Fortland,  4.\nLos Angeles,   5;   Sacramento,   3.\n.Mr. Forke expressed the opinion\nthat middlemen were great factors\nin enhancing prices. Ho wished to\ndispel the Idea that farmers were opposed Jo the manufacturers. \"We\naro not fighting manufacturers,\nare fighting a system which Wt think\nhas worked badly in this country,\"\nhe paid. He- thought It would ho a\ngood thing if the manufacturers and\nfarmers  could  get closer together.\nIllustrating the argument that middlemen enhanced prices greatly, Mr.\nForke referred lo the casp of a western farmer who had heon charged\nJ2.R0 for a box of apples. He had\nfound on opening the apples a card\non which It wm stated that the producer of the apples had received 40\ncents for  the box.\nMr. Fielding said that raw wool\nImports into Canada had increased\nfrom fl,2r.0,000 pounds in 1920. to\n18,250,000 pounds in 1922. This would\nIndicate a demand for outside wool\nfor manufacture  In   Canada.\nThe resolution respecting change*\nIn the customs tariff was considered\nRespecting the duty of. three cents\na pound on raisins and dried cur\nrants, intermediate and general tar\niffs, Mr. Fielding intimated thnt H\nmight he some tlmo hefore the Australian government would manifest\nits concurrence and offer any reduction. It was, therefore, proponed by\nart amendment that the .old rates\nshould remain for tho time \u25a0being,*\nwith tha condition that the new rates\nmight   be    brought   into    effect    by\nLADIES' KHAKI SHIRT, with pockets\n$3.50 and $4.25\nThese goods are specially selected for Ladies'\nwear and are suitable for Fishing, Hiking\nand Riding.\nSEE OUR TWO SPORTS WINDOWS TODAY\nSpecial Purchase of\nLadie^ White Canvas\nPumps and Lace Boots\nOffered at a Clearing Price of $1.30 per Pair\n_fhege are all of splendid quality and make,\nbut are the surplus stock of a well-known\nEastern Maker.\nWe have all sizes in stock today, but they\ncannot last long.\nMail Orders for this line will have prompt\nattention as long as they last.\nPumps and Lace Hi-Boots, all one price, $1.30\nHours of Business for tlie\nSummer Months\nOpen every morning at 8 o'clock, closing at\n5 o'clock each evening, except Saturday 9 o'clock.\nPlease shop early in the day if possible, a.s we\ncan give you better service then.\nproclamation   fliy    the    govornor-ln-\nermncil.\nRobb'a   Australian   Agreement\nMr. Meighen questioned Hon. J. A.\nRobb regarding his tour of Australia\nin connection with a trade agreement\nwith that country.\nMr. Robb said that the Australian\ngovernment would shortly be submitting lis proposal to the Australian\nparliament, and ho \u25a0 would then be\nin a posltlion to give tho house par*\ntlculars.\nL. P. Bancroft, Progressive, Sel\nkirk, was glad the government had]\ndecided not to put into effect the |\n\"|W per cent increase\" in the tariff:\ntax on raisins. Such an Inerease in j\nthe duty would meon an Increased'\nprice of four cents a pound to the,\nCanadian consumer. Based on last\nyear's consumption, that meant an\nIncrease of $1,489,538. And last year.\nCanada purchased 30,000,000 pounds i\nof raisins from tho United States,\nand  only   180   pounds from  Australia.\nMr. Robb argued tho Australian\nproduction was growing reeontly.\n(Vreat Britain had a tax of 2 1-4\neepts a pound, and they were doing\nbetter ln introducing a free British\npref-prenro,-   \u25a0\u2022\nMl. Fielding paid that It had been\nIntimated. ta ,bim that; If they made,\nthla cona*|H)JT it would go a long\nway toward*'persuading the Australian\ngovernment to come to terms on the\npreference   for   Oreat   Britain.\nA. J. Lewis, Progressive, Swift Current, thought lhat tho duty on raisins\nwait rather, au expensive method of\nsemiring an agreement with Australia,\nespecially as Canada had an ex-\ncfcdingly good source of supply near\nat  hand.\nThe  item !as  amended  carried.\nSugar   Items    Pate   Committee\nTariff Items 134 and 135, applicable\nto Imports of refined and raw sugar,\npassed the committee with practically\nno discussion.\nTho tariff item on cigarets also\ncarried.\nItems passed rapidly until tbat\nfixing tha rate of duty on separators\nwas reached, when D. F. Kellrver,\nProgressive, Edmonton, asked whether\nit would not be proper to abolish\nthe tariff, and pay the manufacturers a sum of money.\nMr. Meighen said that this seemed\nan Item to w'hich Mr. Keddner's\ntheory might well be applied. Surely\nhe was not going to accept a simple\nrejection by the finance committee\nfor Anmethlng Tor which he had agl\ntated for  years.\n\"I thought the right honorable gen\ntleman    would 'recognize,    the    value\nof   my   argurtient,\"   came   back   Mr.\nKellner,   \"and   would  support   it   with\nan argument of his own.\"\n\"I cannot nee any value In the\nargument,\" returned Mr. Meighen,\n\"and I never did. Rut why does\nhe not press it? Has he given up\nhope?\"\nMr. Kellner went on to stress the\nview that tire duties paid by the\ngovernment Itself on typewriters\nwould  ba  sufficient  to  pay  the  en\nlire income of a company assembling\ntypewriters   in   Canada.\nElection    Machiges\nThe item carried, and when that\nregarding slumping machines was\nreached, Robert Gardiner, Progressive,\nMedicine Hat, asked if they were\nthe kind used in elections.\n\"I presume my honorable friend\nrefers to the present campaign ln\nOntario,\"   remarked   Mr.   Fleldlrtg.\nAfter this Item had been adopted,\nT. VV. Caldwell, Progressive, Victoria-\nCarleton, advocated putting fertilizer.1*\non the free list ln connection with\nan item to remove the duties Trom\nmachinery used for the maunfa-rturn\nof fish meal, stock ami poultry rood,\nand fertilizers from fish and waste.\nHe wild thnt in 1320 tbe present premier hnd advocated putting fertilizer.1*\non  the free list.\nSir Henry Drayton demanded protection   for   spinners   or  botany   yarn.\nBRITISH PR0PAG.\\NDA\nIN YANKEE HISTORIES\nMayor    Hylan    and    Hie    Commisiion\nFind  Oeeplaid   Plot;   New  York\nWorld  Ridicules\nNFTW YORK, Juno t^j-fa an editorial under the caption jv-ftio Britiah\nBogey in School iristrtries,\" tft.-i\nWorld today ridicules Commissioner\nof Accounts David I Hirs^hfle'd'n\ncharges that a \"British propaganda\nplot of proportions' 'could bo traced\nIn several text books on American\nhistory, which he condemned as nr6-\nRrltish.\nThe   World   says:\n\"Hirschfieid refutes half a dozen\nof the country's most competent historians. What the fathers of tho\nrepublic would think of the need\nof a defence of their reputations ftt\nthe hands of this late-day champion*\ncan only bo conjectured. Tho\nWorld characterizes the report as\nthe \"most preposterous conceivable\nmunicipal   <>oeument.'  '\nMayor Hylan today passed tho\nHirschfieid report on to the (board\nof education, with instructions that\nit note what he called the \"suffecat-\nlng atmosphere of British propaganda,\nwhich envelopes the volumes. Thin\nneeds Investigation, and the trial\nshould be followed, though it leads\nto   the   highest   doors.\"\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nSt.   Paul,   6;   Columbus,   2.\nMinneapolis,   5;    Toledo,   \u00ab.\nMinneapolis,    6;    Louisville,   ?.\nKansas   Clty-Loulm\/illa,   rain.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nniwhestor.    11;    Butfalo,   ). j\nReading:,   16-5;   Newark.  8-8.\nOnly   two   fames   scheduled.\nI\n 'ftqp ETgH\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,\" WEDNESDAY MORNING, TONE 6, 1923\nMARK\nThere Is no danger of high water\nreaching The Ark. But come and I\nget the advantage of the lowest priced\ngoods offered ln the city. Linoleums\nby the yard, or made up ln rugs; '\nWilton and Axminster Rugs, Table\nand Shelf Oilcloth; Furniture, Ranges,\nCooking Utensils in Aluminum and1\nEnamel Ware; Staple Dry Goods j\nThia Week's Special, Hosiery, five'\npair 2J..00' Awning, duck, white j\nand  green   stripe,  yard,   60<*\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPh.n.  634 \u2022 606   Vernon   SI\nREDUCED PRICES\nOn Our Stock of\nLacrosse\nSticks\nBaseball Supplies and\nGolf   Clubs\nSee Our Windows\nfor Values\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nSave Your Sight\nYOT'R eyes ought to serve you\nwell throughout life. If they\ndon't, in lhe majority of oases. It\nIh Just like a wrecked physique\u2014\nth*\" result of abuse.\nTreat YOUR RYES as- you\nshould, heed their warning, and\nyou will be blessed with wonder-\nful vision to your last day.\nHiVB YOUR STBS EXAMINED\nKEQULARLY _\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nOptometrist   and   Optician\nRAILWAY AVENUE  \u25a0\nIN FAIRVIEW MAY\nBE 0PEN2D UP SOON\nThere Is a possibility of the opening up of Railway avenue in Fairview\nIf the plans of the parks committee of\nthe city are carried out. This street\nruns between Second street and the\nferry landing parallel to the railway\ntrack and terminates at Kootenay\nstreet. It Is the plan of the council\nto open this up for the uBe of a parking space for cars of visitors to\nLakeside park, as no autos or horses\nwill this year be allowed in the park.\nThe removal of sand from the park\nIs now taboo. An order wan approved\nfor the repairing of the water system\nat  the  park.\nIn reference to the opening of Railway avenue, the city engineer was instructed to bring in a report of the\nopening of the street, and to notify\nthe people who at present occupy the\nland.\nFURS\nSummer discount has commenced on all goods and work,\nexcepting dressing and mounting of skins.\n.Large selection of CHOKERS\nat all prices.\nQ.  GLA8ER\nManf'fl.   Furrier\nP. 0. 767 Phone 106\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nPhone     The Old Reliable Phone\nf    KERR'S JITNEY  |\nPhon\u00bb       At Your Service   Phono\nPicadilly\nLONDON   MIXTURE\nA    High    Grade    Smoking\nTobacco\n10s\n'A*\nMm\nH. BUSH\n...30c\n...75c\n$1.50\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nA. HIGGINBOTHAM\nCorporation ol the City ol Nelson\nBY-LAW NO. 388\nCity of Nelson Light and Power\n* Extension By-Law--Balfour Une\nPOUING DAY\nWednesday, June 6th, 9 a. m. to 7 p. m., in Council\nChamber of City Hall.     ,\nProperty  owners  only  entitled   to   vote.\nMatinee\n4 p. m.\nS\nMatinee\n4 p. m.\nNight\n7 and 9 p. m.       ^\nXgpitoi\nr.i\\lerldii\\inei\\l\nNight\nJHSES^j'   7 and 9 p. m.\n(\nSpecial Matinee\n4 p. m.\nof the children, so that\npportunity of seeing\u2014     |\nAfter school for the benefit\nthey all may have the oppo\n'Reported Missing'\nPronounced by all who have seen it the funniest, as\nwell as, the most sensational comedy-drama they have\never witnessed.\nIf you want to\nRenovate Walls, Woodwork, or Furniture\nuse the new washable finish\nSATIN-GLO\nSee our Baker Street Windows for a sample of Old\nFurniture made as good as new\nWood-Yallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B. C.\nRETAIL\nPROSPECTORS\nWILL PROTEST\nCLAIMSTAXES\nAt Annual Meeting Oppose\nBurden on Crown Granted Claims\nWANT PROVINCIAL\nEXECUTIVE FORMED\nJack Mulholland Is Elected\nthe President for Another Year\nOn Saturday evening the British\nColumbia Prospectors' assocla tion\nheld its annual meeting at the residence of J. Mulholland, when thej\nfollowing officers were elected for\nthe ensuing year: President, J. Mulholland; vice-president, C. Wood-\nrow; secretary, R. O. Joy; treasurer,\nR. J. Elliott: other members of the\nexecutive, ft Klley, H. B. Morrison\nand   C   E.  Crossley.\nOther committees were: Finance,\nS. Ril^y, N. McColeman and R.\nYoung; auditing, II. B. Morrison and\nD.  Elackwood,\nCrown   Granted   Claims\nThe following resolution was passed:\n\"Resolved, That, whereas there Is\ntionsid*-rable (agitation to Increase\ntaxation on crown granted mineral\n'\u25a0laims, we, the Prospectors* Projective association do hereby protest against such taxation, as we\nconsider such actlort would be used\nas a means of forcing the prospector\nto sell his claims below market value,\nand In some cases prospectors could\nnot pay any Increase, thus losing\nclaims that at some future date\nwould toe of considerable financial\nassistance  to  them.\n\"The increase of taxes on crown\ngranted mineral claims would also\nbe a means of eliminating the pros\npector, instead of encouraging him\nto further effort, and we hereby re\nquest our friei'ds to aid us in our\nprotest,\"\nA   Joint   Executive\n\"Resolved, That lhe secretary write\nall   prospectors'   associations   in   Brit\nLsh   Columlbia,   inviting  them   to  form\na    provincial    executive    representing\nall  British Columbia prospectors' a\nsoclatlonu.\nNO FIRES IN\nMONTHOF MAY\nFire  Chiefs Report Shows\nActivities of Department;\nOrdtr Alarms Installed\nThere were no fires and no alarms\nIn the city during the month of\nMny, according to the report of Fire\nChief F. Boyd, as submitted to the\ncity    council    last   night.\nTwo horse drills were held each\nday. All lliro alarm Hoxes on\nthe streets were tested on May 26,\nand found In order. The alarm\nsystem was also tested, and readings\ntaken twice daily. Water pressure\nthe fire hall was taken three\nTimes a day, and an average pressure   of   147   recorded.\nOn May 17, 18 and 19, A. A.\nMcDonald, deputy fire mashnll of\nVancouver along with Chief Boyd In-\nspcted all the public buildings nnd\nbusiness blocks as well as the\nhotels and Apartments of three\nstories or over. Owners of the\nlatter have been instructed to in-\nstal   fire   alarm   systems,\nA recommendation thnt a truck\nbe secured, and that the horses\nbe senl out for a two-months'\npasturlrfg was made, and approved\n\"of by the council.\nB C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nAgontfi   for\nALBERTA    CLAY    PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE .nd DRAIN TILE\nSUMMER CLOSING HOT'RS\nWednesday 12:30 P.M.\nSaturday    9:00 P.M.\nOther Days  ._  6:30 P.M.\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nPhone 146.\nP, O. Box 48.\nFirst-class Laundry Work done\nat  moderate prlcea\nFrench Dry Cleaning and Dyeing\nWorks.   Steam Carpet Cleaning.\nAgency at Trail, B. C.\nC. Franeen (Barber Shop) Agent\nPARLIAMENT\nHAS A HEAVY\nPROGRAM YET\nReports of Royal Commissions Each Give Rise to\nSeveral Bills\nFINANCE ANDTlSHERIES\nALSO WILL BE COVERED\nMeighen Suggests to Premier\nThat He Get Another\nSpeech From Throne\nOTTAWA, June 5. \u2014 In the house\nthis afternoon, Premier King outlined tho executive program for\nthe balance of lhe session, lie said\nthere would be the amendments to\ntho Pension art, which were now\nbefore the house, and also amendments to the Returned Soldiers' Insurance act, and the short amending\nbill to the Department of Soldiers'\nCivil    Reestablish ment   act.\nArising out of the report of the\nroyal commission on lake grain rates,\nthere would be a bill to amend the\nShipping act, giving the government\npower by order- iiwounoil to suspend   the   coasting   laws.\nThere would also be a bill concerning a closed season for- halibut\nfishing In Pacific waters; a bill\nto reduce salmon cannery license\nfees; a bill for further advances to\nthe Montreal harbor commissioners,\nand a bill to amend the Biological\nBoard   act.\nIn connection with the finance department, there will be amendments\nto the Income Tax act; the Finance not, and the Audit Office\nact. There would also be a bill\nrespecting guarantee of railway bonds\nalready authorized.\n- Railway  Branch  Program\nThe department of railways had\na bill for the three-year branch\nline construction program. There\nwould also be amendments to the\nDrydock aot; the Foodstuffs act;\nih Dairy and \u00a9Old Storage act, and\na bill to arm'nd the Public Archives\nact by changing the name to the\ndepartment of historical and public\nrecords.\nPossibly there would be other\nlegislation based on the committee\nreports, and there would be supplemental   estimates,\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen suggested the prime minister might go\nback and get another speech from\nthe  throne.\nMr. King Bald that most of the\nmeasures proposed were single section  amendments,\nLAUSANNE, June 5.\u2014TAnet Pasha,\nhead of the Turkish delegation In the\npeace conference here, refused today\nto accept any of the allied proposals\nthnt their concessions in Anntolla be\nsafeguarded In the peace treaty now\nunder negotiation. Ismet professed to\nbe without authority to deal with the\nquestion, and a private meeting between him and the leading allied delegates in an effort to adjust this Question   proved   absolutely   fruitless,\nOpposing Sides Wait Tor Weakness.\nLAUSANNE, June &, \u2014 The near\neast conference is again lft troubled\nwaters, with each side waiting for the\nother to give way on unsettled problems, and no immediate solution of\nthe crisis Is ln sight. The conference\nIs virtually at a standstill, each delegation waiting for instructions from\nits home ^government which might enable the plenipotentiaries to break the\ndeadlock.\nJ\nTRUSTEES OF\nKOOTENAY SIT\nAROUNDTABLE\nDiscuss Problems of School\nAdministration; Province\nPresident Speaks\nA most successful and interesting\ngathering of the Kootenay branch of\nthe British Columbia Trustees' association was held in the Central\nschool   Monday.\nThe morning session, opened at\n10 o'clock with Mrs. Hugh Ross\nof Nelson presiding in the chair\nwas taken up largely with general\nbusiness concerning branch, association and organization work, reports\nof committees, and the signing of\nthe   roll.\nThe afternoon session opened nt\n2 o'clock, when Mrs. J. Harvard of\nVernon, president of the provincial\nassociation, gave a very Interesting\nand instructive address on branch\nwork in different parts of the\nprovince.\nVarious questions of both city\nand rural Interest were dealt with,\nand many finest ions concerning\nschool problems In general were discussed and left over to be dealt\nwith at the annual meeting, which\n\u25a0will be held about the last Thursday in August, when resolutions\nwill be prepared and acted upon\nIn time to bo forwarded to the\nprovincial convention to be held at\nDuncan,    October    15-18.\nDelegates present were: Dr. N\nWolverton and Mrs. Edith Burgess,\nWillow Point; O. S. Gilmour, Rossland; Cr. R. Thompson, Tadanac;\nMrs. Hepher, Boswell; Mrs. Johnstone and Mrs. R. W. Chalmers,\nThrums; B. C. Afleck, Fruitvale;\nMrs. J. Harwood, Vernon; Inspector\nE. O. Daniels, and Principal H.\nMcArthur of the Nelson Central\nschool.\nThe officers from the Kootenay\nbranch are: Mrs. II. Ross, president; Dr. N. Wolverton, vice-president; O. Tt. Thompson, Tadanac.\nsecretary-treasurer; Mrs. R. W.\nChalmors and Mrs. W. L. Hepher,\nexecutive   members.\nFIFTY-FOURTH TO\nHOLD REUNION AT\nFERNIE SATURDAY\nMajor Moffatt of Fernie, formerly\nof the 54th battalion, has written a\nletter to Mujnr Gilbert Anderson,\nalso farmerly of the 54th, stating that\nn monster reunion and banquet will be\nheld In Fernie on June 9. It Is expected that a large contingent will\nJourney to the Crow city from Nelson.\nW\nWHY?\n7 HT  do  peoples\u2014Intelligent   people,  come and   request  Insurance on  their homes, stores, mills,  motor cars,  in  fact  on\nalmost anything, but neglect the most, important form ot\nInsurance,\nLIFE INSURANCE\nIJfe insurance means a sure win\u2014other Insurance may mean\nprotection only\u2014life insurance inculcates the habit of saving. Your\nmoney returns with Interest to yourself If you live, or to your estate\nor dependents if you pass on\u2014It protects your estate and probably\npays off the mortgage and saves your home for the wife and family.\nThink ft over and call or phone me about rates,\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL ESTATE Authorized Trurt..   in   Banlyuptcy BONDS\nINSURANCE\u2014Firo,     Accid.nt,     Ut: \u25a0   PHONE  135\nHI H\nSSIONS\nARE\nBY THE\nS\nIsmet Claims He Has no Authority to Include Them\nin Treaty\nLAUSANNE CONFAB\nIS AGAIN HUNG UP\nTurk   Plenipotentiary   Says\nAllies Won't Answer\nAbout Evacuation\nIsmet   Paeha   summoned   a   Turkish\nHatchway\nNo-Button\nUnderwear\nNo more button bother, as. there is not a buttj\nthese Union 'Suits. They are thoroughly comfortj\ncomfortable now, comfortable on hot days\u2014comfel\nafter laundering.   They fit and hold their shape.\nfl.75, $2.00, $2.50\nYOUR\nMONEY'S\nWORTH\nOR\nYOUR\nMONEY\nBACK\ncorrespondent tonight and InfornSed\nhim that the Turkish delegation had\nsaid Its last word on concessions, and\nthat the Ottoman debt and peace depended on the reply of the allies. He\ncomplained that he could get no definite answer from the allies as to when\nConstantinople would be evacuated,\nalthough he had been given to understand it would b-g as soon as Angora  ratified   the   Lausanne  treaty.\nIsmet Won't Sign Impossible Pact.\nIsmet said he promised the Angora\ngovernment not to slga a treaty which\nannihilates Turkish resources, and unless the allies made some arrangements whereby Turkey would not be\nobliged to pay the interest on the\ndebt on settling, the treaty would be\ncrippled.\nAs for foreign concessions, Ismet\nwas convinced that the negotiations\non these would be successfully terminated by Angora, but in aay case\nhe was not empowered to Include them\nin the Lausanne treaty, as the allies\nwished.\nHUNDRED BOYS\nUNO-MAS\nScout Association Expects\nHuge Camp (or Two\nMonths\nIt Is estimated that over 150 hoy;,\nwill this summer ho under Cftnvaa\nfrom the two Nelson troops of buy\"\nscouts and wolf cubs, according to\nfigures dealt with at the monthly\nmeeting of the Boy Scout association   at   the   city   hall   last   night.\nPlans for the ramp were fully\ndiscussed, and it was officially announced that lt would be held\nfrom the first to the l!>th of August\nat Kokanee Point on the property\nof C. W. Busk, who has kindly\ngiven the use of his grounds for\nthe occasion,\nNo small share of the work of\nplanning of thp camp Is being undertaken by the members of tho\nladies auxiliaries of the troops, who\nhave guaranteed every assistance and\na strong financial support toward\nthe   expenses,\nThose present at last night's meeting were: L. Craufurd, F. L. Trwln,\nS. Leno, Wee, N. Larmonth, Ernest\nKeatley, Nelson Ball, J. Foggo, Rev.\nF.  R.  O.  Dredge  and  J. Mclntyre.\nA deputation from the two ladies'\nauxiliaries was composed of Mrs.\nLeno, Mrs. Jeffs, Mrs. Anderson,\nMrs.  Rhodes and  Mrs.  Berry.\nDOUBLE FUNERAL\nLARGELY ATTENDED\nMrs. Bangston and Howard Thor,\ngrandmother and grandson, which\ntook place from the undertaking parlors bf the Standard furniture company.\nThe late Mrs. Ba ngston came to\nNelson just over three years ago.\nand has resided with her daughter,\nMrs. P. Thor.\" She was 86 years\nof age, and Is survived by her\ntwo sons, Victor Benson of Buffalo, Minn.', and Sigurt Benson of\nBarrett, Minn., and her daughters,\nMrs. P. Thor of Nelaon, besides\nseveral grandchildren and great\ngrandchildren.\nThe late Howard Thor was born\nat Ross Creek, Alta., and came to\nNelson when he was but 13 years\nof age. He had attended both the\npublic and high schools of Nelson,\nand* was a member of Kokanee\nMountaineering cluh. He was 24\nyears old. and Is survived by his\nfnther and mother, five brothers and\ntwo  sisters.\nThe pall-bearers for Mrs. Bangston were: W. A. Robertson, J. M,\nArmstrong, J. Fox, A. Moore, Will-\nlam  Oliver  and  John   Levlne.\nFor Mr. Thor they yere: Tom\nBrannas, Stanley Jeffries, Jack\nBoyce, Delacourt Desbrlsay, Egnard\nKillburg and  James La mon t.\nNumerous Floral Tribute*\nThe following floral tributes attested to the popularity of the late\nMr. Thor: Mr. and Mrs. J. Sinclair, brothers and sisters. Mr. and\nMrs. Rnnmark, Mr. and MrB. A. John-\nj son and family, Mr. and Mrs. John\nAustin and family, Alex McCuaig,\ni Mrs. Matheson, Miss Matheson, the\ni Robertson family, Mrs. E. Hanson and\nMiss D. Peterson, Robbie, Ernie and\nJulius Reisterer. Miss C. McLeod,\nMr. and Mrs. \\V. J. Hipperson, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Bergstrom, Mildred and\nSwea Bergstrom, father and mother,\nGordon Boyce, Mr. and Mrs. T.\nJ. Rock, Mr. and Mrs. T. Otter-\nburn, J. Lamont, Tom and Sam\nRatcliffe, Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Heddle and Mary, Bates family, Mr.\nand Mrs, Marquis and family, Mrs.\nMichelson and Mrs. Johnscon, Mr.\nnnd Mrs. E. Collinson, Eddie Brown,\nStanley Jeffreys and family, the\nArmstrong family, Mr, and Mrs.\nLevlne and Ida, Jack Boyce, Mr.\nand Mrs. and Annie Mastberg, Bill\nand Jack Byers, Kokanee Mountaineering club, W. Mawer, Miss Mabel\nFox   nnd   Irene   Fox.\nThe floral tributes to the late\nMrs. Rangster were: Children,\ngrandchildren and great grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. l^eonard Nelson,\nMr. and Mrs. N. Peterson, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Laurlty, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nBergKtrum, M. and Mrs. Hawes and\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. O. Johnson\nnnd family, Mr. and Mrs. T. J.\nlloclc, Mr. and Mrs. A. Collin, Mr.\nnnd Mrs. Levlne, Mr. and Mrs.\nAnnie Mastherg, Mrs. E. Hanson\nand   Miss   D.   Peterson.\ngovernment  had   reports\nderground     movement     deal\noverthrow authority.\nThe   government,   added\nIster,   was   careful   not   to\nIn  any  way  with   the  dom*\ncerns   of   the  Free   State,\nnot  close Its eyes  to what\npenlng   there,   an.:   recent   e|\nthe  border  confirmed  Its   ta\nNelson News of thi\njrama xt iat\nBig Carnival Dance by Colol\ncert Party at Armory Frida\nNovelties by Carnival Co. 1\norchestra.    Watch  for further!\nCourt   Ellen,   A.O.F.,   will\nnight   at   8   o'clock.\nCity band concert at the ban\ntonight,   Wednesday,   8   p.m.\nTOBTCOHT\u2014O   W.   V.   A. whl\nand dance. Armory, at 8 \u00bbhntT\nond half at 9. Dancing 10 ti:\nnight.     Refreshments.     Admlasl\nMr, and Mrs. P. Thor and j\nwish to thank their many frisf\nkindnesses, sympathy and flori\nutes In their recent berea^\nThey wish especially to thank;\nRobertson and  E. Bergstron.\n.The   jitney   will   run   on\nonly at  2 (\/clock to the Golf .\nBuy    your   Sunday's   cakes.\nChureh    Helpers'    Bake   Sale,\nmorning   at   the   Nelson   Meat\nI wish to thank all the Fruitf\ners woo have so kindly slgnedj\nagreement with  Brilliant Jam\nThose   who   have   not  been   vigj\nour     representative,     may     wi\nprices   direct   to   Brilliant,     L.\nIffiu.\nTht; Milkmaid Jam Co. will h\nall your Strawberries, RatflH\n''no\u00abf berries, Black Currant^fl\nCherries. Red Currants, e*^_\nprices to be the same as paid b |\nLun.ii Jum Manufacturers for th\ncrop. ^fl\nWe carry in stock Carbon fl    \u25a0,\nfor  the  following  cars:     podaB\nlaughlln,   Chevrolet,   StmlebaM^\nerland   and   Ford,\nHOWE ELECTRIC\nOPERA HOVSB  BLOC\nP. O. Box 938.\nSupervisor in\nPark for Months\nof My and August\nAs   in   the   past   two   years   there\nwill  be an   Instructor  and   life guard\n! nt  Lakeside  park  for  the  months  of\ni'July and August, according to action\n* taken    by    the    city    council    last\nnighf.\nAldermnn Ross Fleming wished the\nman to be engaged two weeks\nearlier than usual, but the council\nfelt that the two months was sufficient, and a man will be engaged\nat the same salary as offered last\nyear.\nULSTER FEARS AN~\nUNDERGROUND MOVE\nMrs.    Bangston    and    Howard    Thor\nLaid   at   Rest;   Many   Flowers\nMark   Esteem\nLargely   attended   was. the   double\nfuneral Sunday afternoon of \"the late\nBELFAST, June 5. \u2014 In the\nnorthern parliament today the home\nminister, Sir Dawson Bates, justifying the maintenance of the present\nstrength of the police, declared that |\nthe hostile movement against Ulster .\n\u00abad  been  scotched,  not  killed.    The I\nThe Science of Opt\nTHERE    are    many    form*\nlenses an eye may requf\nFor example: The right eyJ\nbe   long  sighted   in   one   me*|\nand   short  sighted   In  anotti\nmight also be quite straight.\nthe muscles might have a tea\ncy to pull it to one side.    An\nin  this condition  requires .\nwith three entirely different I\ners.    In one meridian the strJ\nwould magnify, in the other\nthe   opposite,    it   would\nThe third power would be i\nplacing power, that    is.   Id\nthrough the lens at an objeol\nobject would appear in a dlffl\nplace as when viewed wlthou\naid of the lens.\nJ. J. WALKER\nOptician and Optometi\n7 p. m.\nSTARLAND\nTOM\nMOORE\n9 p.m.\nLAST SHOWING\nTONIGHT\nMARY\nMILES\nMINTER,\n'The Cowboy and the Lady'\nA Well Dressed Western Picture\nSpecial 2-ReeI Comedy\nTHE WONDER HORSE\nand MULE\u2014\n| The Kokanee Glacier and Park\nPictures with Nelson All-Star\nCast\ni\nRemember II you see it at Starland it's good\nCOMING TOMORROW-GEORGE BEBAN\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1923_06_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0401016","@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":"1923-06-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1923-06-06 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\/1.0401016"}