{"@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":"2021-07-26","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1923-09-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401151\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" wmm\n\u2014\nfr\nKootenay Tennis Tourney\nHAS BRILLIANT PLAY\nSee Page 7\nA J 55       IAPR24\nPRO*   LIBRARIAN\nVICTORIA    \u2022   C\nVol.  22\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3,  1923\nNo.\/116\nQueen's Bay Holds\nFAIR AND REGATTA\nSee Page 5\nQUAKE IN JAPAN KILLS HUNDRED THOUSAND\nITALIANS OCCUPY CEPHALONIA AND SAMOS ISLES\nMARTIAL LAW IS\nINVOKED TO AID\nSTRICKEN^ T0K10\nSafety Zone  Is Established\nin Wards Not Entirely\nWiped Out by the Fire\nMUST NOT\"ENTER CITY\nUNLESS PROVISIONED\nYokohama    Governor    Appeals for Food Donations\nand Relief Is Organized..\nSAP* FRANCISCO, fie.*. I. \u2014 Toklo\nIs under martial law. Nobody Is admitted Into the city unless they have\ntheir Own provisions. Nihonbashl ward\nie virtually annihilated. A railway\nman from Toklo says casualties them\nare  estimated  at  100,00(1.\nThis Information waa received here\nby the Radio corporation from Its\nIwakl  station,  near Tomloha,  Japan.\nNihonbashl Is the downtown business\ncenter of Toklo. The message said\nthe Mltsu Koshl and Shlroklya department stores were destroyed by the\nfire.\nTidal Waves Wipe Ont Cities.\nAn aviator who flew from Tokora-\nsawa, flying over the zone, said he\ncould not see a stngie ttouse remaining ln Kamakura and Tokbhuka, cities\nIn the vicinity of Yokohama, following\ntidal waves.\nThe wards of Kokowagan and Honjo\nwere  destroyed.    It  Is 'estimated   H00\nbousese   were  destroyed  in   Yokohama.\nTire* In Twenty Places.\nImmediately after the earthquake,\nfire broke out in Toklo in about 20\nplaces, simultaneously, and spread\nover the wards of Honjo, Fukagawa,\nAsakusa, Nihonbashl, Ushigome, Aka-\n\u00bbaka, Kojimichl and Shiba. There is\na safety sone In parts of the wards\nof Ushigome, Koishikwa, Yotuusya,\nAr,uba,  Honjo and north of there.\nReports indicate the marine corps\nHint ion at Yokoeutka has been annihilated, and ships there are stranded.\nYokosutka is a town of 70,000, and\nhad numerous government buildings,\nIncluding' a naval hospital, naval\nnrscnfll, naval engineering college, torpedo headquarters, and shipyard. It\nis  12  miles south of Yokohama.\nAmong the buildings burned in\nToklo are the Army anienal, the military academy, the Ushigome metropolitan police station, the Imperial\ntheater, the home office building, the\nllnanclal department building, and the\ngovernment printing bureau.\nMartial   Law   in   Tokio\nOSAKA, Sept. 2.\u2014A message from\nToklo reports that martial* law has\nbeen proclaimed there. The Nayaya\nnaval division is preparing airplanes\nto ply to Tokio to ascertain conditions   there.\nThe commander of the Kure naval\nBtatlon has received a wireless message reporting a serious conflagration at Yokohuka, one of Japan's\nImportant naval stations not far\nfrom Yokohama. The naval buildings\nand hospitals have been  destroyed.\nThe. emperor and empress are at\nNikko, and it Is confirmed that the\nprince regent ta safe.\nWireless from the Korea Maru reports 200,000 people of Yokohama\nhomeless and without food. Thousands have taken refuse aboard the\nParis Maru, Harbin Maru, and Italy\nMani.\nEleven Shocks\n' A - descriptive message from the\nReuter correspondent at Toklo says\nthat from' early morning a strong\nwind had been blowing, and the\nweather waa cloudy anj hot. At noon\nan appalling earthquake occurred,\nfollowed by more than 10 other\nshocks. Dwelling* were either completely   or   partially   destroyed.\nThe people fled from their houses.\nJamming the streets and open spaces.\nIntermittent shocks continued until\nsundown. Fires broke out everywhere, and then the flames, fanned\nby the strong wind, spread in all directions.\nWater   Supply    Ruptured\nIt was Impossible to control them,\nas the water supply failed at the\ncritical  moment.\nWhen the correspondent left a 9\no'clock In the evening many of the\ngovernment offices had been burned, including the home department\nand  the   metropolitan  police  station.\nTh** correspondent estimates that\n200.000 houses were reduced to ashes,\nand the fire was still burning in\nmany places. Estimates of the casualties for the moment are uncer-\nta In, but they are believed to have\nbeen  enormous.\nTroops and doctors were doing\nsplendid work. Many workmen were\nkilled or Injured in the government\nprinting   of\/Ices.\nSix hundred persons were killed\nat the Nihoklenkl electric plant. Amid\nthe flames of the burning city the\ncitizens of Toklo were seeking places\nof  safpty.\nIn Yokohama alone there have\nbeen 10,000 casualties from yesterday's earthquake, according to a\nradio message from the governor\nof Yokohama. Tidal waves also did\ndamage. Direct communication . with\nTokio la stltl cut off, but enormous\ndamage   was   done   there.\nThe prince regent Is reported   safe.\nYokohama     was      still    burning    at\n8:30   Sunday   night.    At   the   foot   of\nMount    Fuji    several   village*    were\n(Continued  on   page   two)\nSTEAMS*  AJUttVAJCS.\nCaron ia, at Liverpool, from New\nYork.\nCedrlc, at Queenstown, fro New\nTcrk.\nBerengarla, at New York, from\nSouthampton.\nTuscanla, at New York, from\nNaples.\nRelgenland, at New York, from Ant-\nBIRKENHEAD JOINS \"IN WRONG\" CLUB\n\u25a0\u25a0fen flMfe.\nW9^\n'_\u25a0\n\u25a0p* -\nlj        \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;.^A\nwkt_m\nViscount Birkenhead, l?ft, former British lord chancellor, addressed the\nAmerican Bar association at Minneapolis last week as planned, but Henry\nBrlckenrldge, right, formerly of President Wllson'a cabinet, made a fight\nto have the engagement cancelled, because the Britisher, in an interview\non   landing,   criticised   \"Wilson's   policy.\nLEAGUE REPORT\nAGAINST UNION\nOF SOUTH AFRICA\nAlleges Administration of\nMandate in Southwest\nAfrica Against Natives\nGENEVA, Sept. 2. \u2014 (By Canadian\nPress Cable,. via Reuter's) \u2014 Pointed\ncriticism of. the South African government's administration of Southwest\nAfrica is ' contained * in the report to\nthe League of Nations cf the third\nfltselon of the permanent mandates\ncommission, which sat \u2022 from July 20\nto August 10, at which session the\nadministration of 11 British colonial\nmandated territories was concluded,\nBlacks   How  Important.\nThe Bondelzwarts' rising in Southwest Africa was particularly Investigated. The chairman of the commission, the marquis of Theodoli, ln an\nannex to the report, declares that the\ncovenant of the league ban profoundly\naltered colonial administration, and\nthat the interests of natives are now\nmore important than the interostB of\nthe whites, but that the administration of Southwest Africa has been\nwholly concerned in maintaining Its\nown authority in defence of the interests  of  the   minority   whites.\nThe marquis of Theodoli, after\nrecognizing the difficulty of the task\nconfronting a mandatory  power, adds:\n\"My conscience, however, will not\nallow me. to admit that these difficulties Justify departure from tlie\nprinciples of the mandate; a departure whioh, Instead of appearing to\nbo a demonstration of strength arid\nsuperiority, might be considered as indication of weakness, anl Incapacity\nin the exercise of the mission, which\nis only a lofty one if its true spirit\nis respected,\"\nSmuts   Not to  Bltm*.\nThe report expresses the conviction\nthat the mandatory power, under the\ndistinguished and enlightened statesman, General Smuts, fully shares the\nideals of the covenant as regards the\nmandatory's responsibilities to the\nbackward races.\nThe commission considers that the\nprimary cause of the Bromlelzwart uprising was natural ,distrust on the\npart of the whites and the blacks,\nwhich was responsible for previous\nrevolts in Southwest Africa, \"where\neven educated classes have regarded\nthe natives bb existing chiefly for the\npurpose of labor for the whites.\" '\nThe report, referring to remedial\nmeasures needed in the Bondelzwart\nterritory, says that steps must be\ntaken to remove the dog tax and the\nbranding iron grievances, and to Inaugurate a revision of the native reserves.\nONTARIO COURT\nIS CONSTITUTED\nSir   William   Mulock   Becomes   Chief\nJustice  of Ontario, and  Other\nForcaster Promotion! Made\nOTTAWA, Sept. 2.\u2014Official announcement haa been made of four\nJudicial appointments to the supreme\ncourt  of  Ontario.\nSir William Mulock, K.C, M.O.,\nwho now is chief justice of the second divisional court of the supreme\ncourt of Ontario, becomes chief justice of the first divisional court,\nwith the style and title of . chief\nJustice   of   Ontario.\n\u25a0Hon. Francis Robert Latehford, a\njustice of appeal of the second divisional court. Is appointed chief\njustice of the second divisional\" court,\nHon. J. Fossbury Orde, a judge\nof the supreme couri of Onatrio, Is\nappointed a Justice of appeal of the\nsecond   divisional  court,\nW. H. Wright, barrister, of Owen\nSound, becomes a Judge of the high\ncourt division of the supreme court\nof Ontario.\nOFFER TORONTO COAL\nAT ELEVEN DOLLARS\nAlberta    Company    Approach***    City\nWith   Proposition  That   Board\nof   Control   Will   Consider\nTORONTO, Sept. I.\u2014An Alberta\ncnal company, in *-ietter to Mayor\nMaguire, offers to supply the city\n\u25a0with any quantity of Alberta coal\nIn lump, stove or egg as $11 a ton\nf.o.b, cars in Toronto. It is claimed\nthis coal Is a semi-anthracite, that\nlt is free from stone and slate and\nthat with proper handling it produces\ngreater heat and gives greater satisfaction than the best hard * coal\nfrom ^Pennsylvania. If this company\ncan deliver the goods it would mean\nthat householders and others' would\nbe able to secure the winter's fuel\nsupply at approximately $13.60 a ton\nlaid   down   ln   their   cellars.\nThe offer of the company Is to\nbe considered at a special meeting\nof the board of control Tuesday afternoon.\nLABOR'S SAY SHOULD\nBALANCE CAPITAL'S\nForn\\er Member\nto London Post\nPresident    Kosher    of    Railroad    Em-\n' ployeet, In Labor Day KHiaft,\nAsks  Xespect for Laws.-\nOTTAWA, Sept 2. \u2014 \"While great\nadvances along the right road have\nbeen made, there are still vita) factors\nbefore human labor reaches the,plane\nwhich the creator Intended. The men\nwhose sole Investments ln industry\nconsist of their labor and their lives\nmust ba given a directing voice In\nthe control of industry at least equal\nto that of those people who Invest\nonly  their  money.\"\nThe above statement Is embodied In\na Labor day message which was Issued tonight by A. R. Mosher, president of the Canadian Brotherhood of\nRailroad employees. He enjoins all\nworkers to be good citlsens, respect\nexisting taws while endeavoring to\nfind solutions for their Imperfections,\nand respect work as \"the prerogative\nof intelligence, the only means to\nmanhood and .the full measure of\ncivilisation.\"\nOntario Residents\n<      May Requisition\n..   for Needed Insulin\nTORONTO, , Sept. 2.~Hlatory Is\nbeing made In the medical profession in Ontario today. Through the\nprimary effort of Dr. F. O. .Banting,\nand support of Hon. Dr. Forbes Godfrey, minister of health, all residents\nmay   be   protected   from   diabetes.\nRequisition forms, have been supplied to the medical profession\nthroughout *h\u00ab province, and through\nthem insulin, can be procured.\nMOYTSEAX.   BROKE*\nJ>\u2014\u00bb PLAYING   QOLT.\nMANCHESTER,,  Vt..   Sept.   2.\u2014C.   B.\nthe    Quebec    parlia- , Garland  of   Montreal,  a  former  prom-\nFormerly\nmentary delegation, haa been appointed secretary to the Canadian\nhigh commissioner ln London, Hon.\nP.   C.  Larkin,   , ..\nInant official of the Montreal stock\nexchange, dropped dead while playing\ngolf at tht Kkwanok Golf club course\nher*' today. *\nADJOURN CONFAB TORPEDO BOATS\nTO AVOID BREAK ORDERED JOIN\n0FNEG0TIAT10NS ITALIAN^ F L E E T\nItaly   Formally   Refuses   to\nRecognize League  of\nNations in Dispute\nApparently Hopeless Deadlock in Coal Fields May\nYield to Time's Hand\nGOVERNOR PINCHOT\nSTILL OPTIMISTIC\nAdvises Both Sides to Study\nPublic Opinion Before\nWednesday's Meet\n\u00bb -\u2014\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. - 2.~-The\nrecess until next Wednesday ln the\nanthracite wage negotiations en me\nas a welcome respite to the group\nof miners and operators who have\nbeen attempting to reach an -nrnn-\nment on a new contract between the\ncompanies and the 155,01)0 mine workers. It was believed that the recess, to which each side readily\nagreed yesterday, prevented an immediate break, as the conference\nat the state capitol yesterday appeared to be in an almost hopeless\ndeadlock.\nGovernor Pinchot In his statement\nlast night said that he welcomed\nthe breathing space for the hard\npressed leaders of both sides, and\nurged them to use it in \"acquiring\na realizing sense of the public point\nof view.\"\nThe most vital point at Issue Is\nthat of wages. The governor proposed that all mine workers be given\na   10  per  cent   Increase.\nThe operators indicated their acceptance, on condition that a long\nterm contract be agreed upon, containing a provision for adjusting\nwnges annually, by arbitration If\nnecessary,\nThe union leaders looked with favor on the 10 per cent advanve for\ncontract miners, but said it was Inadequate  for  men  paid  by  the  day.\nThey cast aside the suggestion of\narbitration.   \u2022\nGovernor Tinchott'Ifl fltlil optimise\ntic of a settlement. No Important\ndevelopments ore looked for before\nthe  middle  of the week,\nLabor day ln the coal field, where\nthe suspension Is complete, will be\nobserved In the usual way, as though\nno struggle between the workers and\nthe mine owners  were In  progress.\nREORGANIZES CORFU\nAND CLOSES STRAITS\nHOME BANK REPORT\nWILL NOT BE READY\nWhen   Curator   Filet   It,   Bank*   Are\nExpected to Advance Money Against\nAssignment    of    Deposits\nTORONTO, Sept. 2.\u2014A. B. Barker,\ncurator for the Home Bank of Canada, will not be ready with his report by Thursday, when the petitions for winding-up orders will\nagain come before Mr. Justice Fisher\nIn the bankruptcy court. When the\nreport of tho curator is ready, and\nthe approximate amount depositors\nwill receive is made known, it Is\nbelieved that all the hanks wilt advance money against the assignment\nof deposits. This Is regarded by\nbankers and representatives of depositors as  a  good   plan.\nValue  Coast Timber\nA timber expert has been appointed, on the advice of three British Columbia bank manngers,. and\nhe is at work valuing timber limits\nHowe sound nnd Vancouver\nisland, held as security against loans\nby the Home 'bank. The timber\nlimits were part of the, holdings of\nthe Western Canada Pulp & Paper\ncompany, of which H. J. Daly, president of the Home Bank of Canada,\nwas vice-president. S. Casey Wood\nof this city, and a director of the\nHome bank, was also on the board\nof the Western Canada Pulp &\nPaper company.\nThe company's plan was located\non Howe sound, about 25 miles from\nVancouver. It came Into existence\nat the peak of prosperity ln the\npulp . and   paper   Industry.\nIt acquired the plant of the Rainy\nRiver Pulp & Paper company, and\nproceeded to extend the production\ncapaci ty. Before the company had\nbecome firmly established the collapse came, and created difficulties\nin the company's financial affairs.\nThe Home Bank of Canada was the\nbanker  of  the   company.\nThe Weather\nThe   temperatures   below   are   for\nthe 24 hours ending yesterday after-\ncoon  at 5  o'clock.\nSaturday's  Weather\n\u25a0VICTORIA, Sept. 1.\u2014Following were\nthe    weather    for\nthe   temperatures:\nNELSON          60 85\nVictoria          US <9\nVancouver         \u00abi> 1.\nPrince   Rupert        BO 42\nCala-ary         44 84\n(WinntiWff   '     44 88\nPortland         58 84\nSan Francisco       64 72\nGrind   Forks         64 90\nKaslo         67 86\nCranbrook     ,.\u25a0...   49 ,83\nNew Haselton       46 60\nEdmonton          48 74\nPolo Ponies Hurt\nRiders in Tourney\nFOR SNELLING, Minn., Sept. 2.\u2014\nMajor Ivan Jones of DesMolnes,\nIowa, suffered a \u25a0. fractured skull,\nand Capt. W. B. Tuttle of Fort\nSnelllng nnrrowly escaped aerl nis\ninjury when their horses tripped\nand fell on them during the Sifton\npolo  cup   tournament  play here  to-\nGreek Government Refrains\nFrom Overt Acts While\nLeague Is Moving ,\nATHENS, Sept. 2.\u2014The islands\nof Cepha Ionia and Samos have\nbeen occupied by tht Italians,\naccording to unconfirmed reports   in   circulation   here,\nCREEKS PROTE8T TO ALLIES\nATHEN8, Sent. 2\u2014Greece hat\naddrttttd an energetic protest to\ntht allies against tht bombardment by the Italians of Corfu,\nand the resultant killing of refugees.\nREFUSE    TO    RECOGNIZE\nLEAGUE\nATHENS, Sept Z-~ Signor\nMontagn), tha lifilian foreign\nminister, on behalf of the Italian\nr-overnmtnt, this afttrnoon informed Foreign Minister Alexandria that Italy will refuse to\nreoognizt the decision of the\nLeague of Nations in tht present controversy between Italy\nand   Greece.\nTORPEDO    BOATS    ORDERED\nTO   FLEET\nLONDON,   Sept.   2.\u2014A   dispatch\nto   tht   Exchange   Telegraph   from\nConstantinople    says    the    Italian\ntorpedo boats at Smyrna have rt- \u25a0\nceived   order*   to    ..oin   tht    Ital-'\nian fleet immediately in tht Adriatic   sea.\nCABINET NOT RESIGNING\nATHENS. Sept. 2.\u2014 Reports\nthat tht Greek cabinet had resigned art unfounded. Former-\nPremier Zaimis hat definitely accepted tht leadership of the Reconciliation party. Elections will\nbt   held   Octobtr   28.\nGreece   Mourns   for   Victims\nATHENS, Sept. 2.\u2014Complete order\nprevails In Athens, although the\nGreek people are profoundly depressed over the incidents at Corfu.\nAll places of amusement have been\nclosed since Friday as a sign of\nmourning for the victims of the\nItalian   bombardment.\nActing upon a protest from Signor\nMontagna, tho Italian foreign minister, the Greek government suspended for one day the newspaper Eleu-\ntheros Tipos, for characterizing the\nItalians as \"the fugitives ' of CapO-\nreito,\" and has dismissed the censor\nfor allowing the statement to pass.\nItaly   Closet   Greek   Canal\nTelegraphic communication with\nCorfu has not yet been restored,\nbut dispatches received by Indirect\nroutes indicate that the Italians are\nnow acting as If in a state of war\nwith Greece For Instance, they have\nclosed the Corfu canal to Greek navigation; have held up a Greek steamer\nat   Brlndisl,   and   fired   upon   another.\nPremier. Gonitas has reiterated the\ngovernment's intention to await the\ndecision of the League of Nations,\nand of refraining from any hostile\nor unfriendly acts toward Italy. All\nItalian vessels In Greek ports are\nallowed   full   liberty  of movement.\nInternal dissensions havo existed\nhere since 1314, hut today, for the\nfirst time, the entire press stands\nIn complete accord on the subject of\nthe  Italian   coup.   \u25a0\nThe Polltikl  says:\n\"By the bomhardment of Corfu,\nItaly ignored the League of Nations,\nof which she is a member, Italian\nshells were fired against misery-\nstricken human beings rescued from\nTurkish massacre by Americans. This\naction Indicates a complete absence\nof morality, and erases Italy's signature from an international agreement.\"\nAdmiral    Closes   Straits\nThe Italian admiral, Bellini, has\nforbidden the passage of all Greek\nsteamers through the straits of\nOtranto, and all Greek shipping companies have suspended sailings for\nItaly. Four Greek steamers are detained in Italian ports. An Italian\nsubmarine has seized the .Greek\nrteamer Olorgias ln the straits nf\nCorfu. \u25a0  |\nThe Italian military attache who\nwns sent to Janlnd tn inquire into\nthe murder of the Italian delegates\nhas been suddenly recalled by the\nItalian   legation.\nCorfu Step Provisional\n'LONDON. ' Sept. J.\u2014The Italian\npremier, Mussolini, has telegraphed\nto all the powers, and the League\nof Nations, that the Italian occupation . of.' .Corfu was. .a provisional\none, and the Italian minister at\nAthens Informed the Greek government that It had not been regarded\nas a hostile act and advised that\nGreece . should refrain, from belligerency, adding that the Italian fleet\nwould leave when Italy's demands\nhad ben complied with.\nGreece has protested to the powers against the bombardment of Corfu, and makes the point that the\nItalians opened fire at 4 o'clock in\nthe afternoon, whereas the second\nultimatum wm no* to expire until 5\no'clock. Greece also makes the point\nthat Corfu was not fortified.\nMussolini's Ambitions\nThe Italian navy proceeded with\nthe organization .of Corfu In a businesslike way. The proceeding is\nnot welcomed with enthusiasm\nabroad, certainly not ln Great\nBritain, from where there is, beneath the surface, unmistakable un-\nIConttnued on  page two)\nReport of Prince's V\nDeath \"Exaggerated\" \\V\nGAEKWAR OF BARODA,\nRichest prince In India, and the\nonly Indian potentate who failed to\nrender respectful homage to King\nGeorge on the latter's Indian tour.\nIs still alive. His son's death* gavo\nrise to the report. The gaekwar\nvisited   Canada   in   1910.\nTwo Hundred Thirty\nDestructive Shocks\nSince Fifth Century\nJapan has about 1500 earthquakes   a   year,   or   an   average\n_,t0_ur shocks a day. most of\nwhich are not violent. in\nTokio, a shock is felt on an\naverage  of  once a  week.\nMore or leas destructive\nquakes occur in Japan on an\naverage of once in every two\nyears and a half.\nThe greatest quake of the \"30\nserious ones that have occurred\nsince the fifth century was in\n1707, which shook the entire\nsouthwestern portion of Japan\nover an extent of about 600\nmiles. It originated beneath\nthe ocean, and was followed\nby   Huge  tidal   waves.\nOn December 23 and 24, In\n1SG4, there were two violent\nquakes, after which tidal trtVM\ncrossed the Pacific ocean in\n12 bourn and 40 minutes, leaving traces on tho title gauge\ndiagrams  at   San   Francisco.\nThe most violent quakes In\nJapan   were  ns  follows:\nIn 6S4 A.D., an area of ahout\nthree square miles in Tosa was\nsubmerged.\nIn 86!i A.D., earthquakes with\ntidal waves visited - Mutsu;\nthousands   killed.\nIn 1361, severe earthquake\naround    Koytl.\nIn 1408. quake at Tokaldo,\nkilled 20,000; Ha man* lagoon\nwas   formed.\nIn 1596, Rungi, Kyushu, visited by a quake; 7i)t) killed,\nKyotl   shaken.\nIn 1792, at Hisen, 15,000\nkilled.\nIn 1844, at Shinano, 12,000\nkilled.\nIn 1896, Sanriku districts,\n27,000  killed.\nT\nAND\nREPEAT\nSAN FRANCISCO\nThese    Grtat    Cities    and\nLesser Ones Burn; Streets\nHeaped With Dead\nconstantThocks\nlevel structures\nTidal Wave Adds Its Toll of\nLife;  Populations\nNeed Relief\nPOOL FINANCING IS\nNOT YET ARRANGED\nBankers'    Association     Wants     More\nInformation    on     Management;\nElevator   Deal   Waits\n\"WINNIPEG, Sept. 2.\u2014Delay until\nThursday in the negotiations toward\nsecuring elevator facilities waa announced yesterday following a conference nf Saskatchewan and'Alberta\nwhent pool representatives, with elevator   operators.\nThe wheat pool representatives\nsubmitted the memorandum suggesting a basis on which they should be\ngiven the necessary elevator facll- ]\nIties. Managers of tho e'evators I\nasked an opportunity to study the\nproposals and submit them to their\nprincipals, and it wns agreed the\ntwo parties should meet again next\nThursday,\n.  It   was   also   announced   by   H.   T.\nJaffray,    chairman    of    the    western\nsubsection    Canadian    Bankers*     association,   that   no  arrangements   had\nbeen  entered  into  yet with  regard  to\nfinancing    the    wheat     pools.       Tlie\nbankers   are   asking   more    information   regarding   the   personnel   of   ttW\nmanagement    of     the    pools,     details\nof   the   arrangements   made   with   the j\nelevator   concerns,   und   more   knowl-1\nedge   regarding   tho   extent   of   opera- j\ntions,    before    they    are    willing    to\ncommit  themselves  to definite  finan- I\ncial arrangements.\nTwenty-eight Die\nin a Colliery in\nNew South Wales\nSYDNEY,   N.   6.   W.,   Sept.   2.\n\u2014Twenty-tight men were killed\ntoday in an 'explosion in the\nPel I bird colliery in New South\nWales. Fifteen bodies have been\nrecovered.\nSpanish Cabinet\nResigns but Only\nRevamping Ensues\nMADRID, Sent. 2.\u2014The Spanish cabinet presented ita resignation   last   night.\nAt tht request of King Alfonso,\nPremitr Alhueemas hat reconstructed  hit cabintt.\n8AN    FRANCISCO,    Sept.    2,\u2014\nTokio, Yokohama and neighboring cities tonight wert burning\nruint, while more than 100,000\npersons in tht vicinity of these\ncititt wert reported dead, at a\nresult of yesterday's earthquake,\naccording to advices received in\nSan Francisco by tht Associated\nPress from its Shanghai correspondent and by tht Radit coronation from ita station at\nTomioka.\nTOKIO IS CENTER\nDeath and' destruction tprtad\nover an area roughly comprittd\nwithin a radiut of 50 miles of\nTokio. How axtensivt casualties and tht material damage\noutside that zont it, hat not\nbeen determined, as all communications with Japan art at ill in*\nterrupted excr.it for brief connections by radio with Tomioka,\nand occasional dispatches from\nJapan    to    Shanghai.\nWith    railroad    linet,    telephone\nwires    and    all    ether    meant    of\ncommunication     and     travel     between   Tokio   and   tht   remaindtr\n!    of   Japan   and   tht   outsidt   world\ni    cut   off,   Tokio    and   tht    other\n]    cities  on tht central   eastern   sea-\ncoast    on    tht    island    ef    Hondo\ni    are   isolated   in   their   desolation.\nThe  cities  of   Tokio   and   Yokohama   wert   described   by   the   superintendent      of     tht     Japanese\nwireless    station irad.o    corporation   as   \"like   hell.\"\n| Buildings  were falling,  fire waa\nfast   spreading   everywhere,   dead\nl     and     dyinr;     were    on     all     tides;\n!     there   were   explosions,   and   criea\n'    of  horror  and  fear  by  tht   panic-\nstricken    copulation.\nI    TIDAL    WAVES    SWEEP    SEAS\nWhat   quake   and   fire   did   not\ndestroy on  land, tidal   wave* wert\n1    reported  to  have crushed   er tunk\nat  sea.\nTho fate of the ships in Yokohama harbor, and what ship*\nwere there, stilt remain to be\ndetermined.\nThe best available reports re\u00ab\nceived today said hardly a structure was left, standing in the\nYamanote district, which includes\nthe Tokio wards of Honjo, Fuka-\ngawa, Akusaka, , Shitaya, Ninon,\nBashi    and    Kunda.\nThousands    are     without    'food\nand   water,   and    have   no   meant\nof   qcttirn   any at   present.\nNAGCYA   NEARLY   DESTROYED\nThe city of Nagoya it vtry\nnearly destroyed. Tht Japanese\nnaval station rjear Yokohama\nwas snoulfed by a tidal wave and\nthe imperial palace at Tokio it\nendangered by fire. Nagoya hat\na population of 620.000. It is\nabout 90 miles east of Osaka\nand   70  miles   west   of  Tokio.\nNew earth tremors wert reported today by various seismographs. The Manila observatory\nseismograph recorded shocks\ntoday at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. The\nshacks were violent, but could\nnot    bt    definitely    located.\nThe prince regent hat taktn\nrefuse   in   the   imperial   tanctuary.\nAll six bridges over the Sumida\nrover, which divides Tokio, were\nreported collapsed. Enoshima,\nthe nicturesnue island, was tub-\nmerged. ' Tho volcano on the\nisland of Oshima it continuing\nto   send   un   smoke.\nThe last word from Japan, received by the radio corporation,\nwas at 4:42 this morning. This .\nwas from the Tomioka station.\nAdditional advices from Tomioka\nwere   expected   at   any   time.\nTokio Arsenal  Explodes\nSHANOHI.   Sept.   2.\u2014One   hundred)\nthousand persons have perished ta\nTokio and Yokohama alone, according\"\nto bulletins received here front\nJapan.\nIn   Tokio   the  arsenal   exploded,  destroying  the  arsenal  and   the  adjoining    printing    bureau.      There    wen*\nseveral    thousand    casualties    here.\nScarcely    a    Building    Left\nIn the Nihon-Ilashi and Kunda.\nwa rd s, In w h ieh sea reel y a single-\nstructure is left standing, thousands!\nlack   water   and   food.\nThe Kui Jo building in the Mar-\nunaucht district collapsed, with &\nthousand   casualties.\nSix hundred persons perished when\nthe railway tunnel at Sasko, the\nlargest   in   Japan,   collapsed.\nTens of thousands of visitors1,\nmany of them foreigners, are in tha\nmountain resorts of the Hakone district. They were panic stricken\nhy the repented quakes. Mount Hakone. and the town of Ttama, wer\u00ab\ndemolished with the loss of six or\nSeven thousand dead.\nYokohama   Business   Section   Gone\nAt Yokohama the fire started In\nthe Bund, or foreign quarter, and\nspread through Hen ten and Alzakl\nstreets, wiping out the husiness district.\nThe lofty -biiihtlnfffl lining th\u00ab\nstreets opposite the Tokio Central\nrailway station in Tokio were burned. The ni\u00abIn building of the Central   railway   starion   remains   Intact.\nAt Ito. on the Edna peninsula, mor\u00ab\nthan 600 houses were washed away\nby   the   tidal   waves.\nBritish   Cruiser   Satis\nThe British  light cruiser  Despatch,\nthe only foreign war vessel st Shang*\niContinued  on  page  tw\u00ab)\n \u2014\n' Page TwiTI\nTHE NELSON D22LY NEWS'UONSK? MORNING, SEPTESIBEE 3^1923\nGeorge -Benutell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES $3.50 TO |6.M\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $1.00\nTHI    MOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nHUME \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. R. L.\nStrickle, Charles Sire and wife. Miss\nBracket t, Spokane; Miss Rosseter,\nMinneapolis; M. J. Wutmong, Fernle;\nJames Anderson, Kaslo; Mr. and Mrs.\nH. C. Smith, Miss M. Edwards, San\nFrancisco; Mr. and Mrs. V. W. Stewart, Victoria; Mra. O. R. Curwen, Mixs\nGreta, E. Curwen, Vancouver; J. Buchanan, J. J. Fingland, A. B. Ritchie.\nTrail; W. Hudt. Bonnington; A. G.\nBuilder, Shoreacres; P. O. TrusH.\nPrantford; O. Attrey, Calgary; Mr, and\nMrs. E. Haslewond, H. E. Wode, Trail;\nMr.    and   Mrs.    B,    Townsend,    Willow\nPint; E. Thorn, Dr. and Mrs. J. Bain,\nThorn; Mr. and Mrs. B. Hilton, Trail;\nMr. and Mrs. Lilystrom, lone; H. J.\nMartin, Windsor; J. W. Murray, wife,\nSouth Slocan; John M. Royle, E.\nCampbell. Bonnington; W. H. North,\nSilverton; W. E. Walter, Vancouver;\nHerman House. G. C. Fady, Vancouver; C. P. Coates, H. Mallne, H.\nFrank Waters. Winnipeg; P. H. Peck.\nSeattle; H. E. Gilmour, H. S. Reynolds, Rossland; P. S. McMurchte, P.\nC. Watson Calgary; Holt r,,Paidioott,\nArthur Paldieott, Trail; S. Edwards,\nMay   Masten,   Ladner.\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nH. W. SHORE, Prop.\nNELSON'S  LEADING   HOTEL\nSpecial attention to Commercial JJen, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN\u2014\u00bb1.O0  UP AMERICAN   PLAN-*&00  UP\nSTRATHCONA \u2014 Misa E. H. Pollard, A. M. P. Scaife and child. Vancouver; O. Atkinson, Victoria; Olle P.\nAnslle. Charles A. Campbell, A. O.\nKendall, Prlent River; Miss E. Summers, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Juniper, W.\nC. Webster, Spokane; P. K. Burden.,\nMiss Burdett, Newport; F. E. liurtheo\nand family. A. R. Wlnnulsch, wire\nand daughter. Dr. Gallbrenth, P. A.\nMelllcar, Spokane; Mr. and Mrs. B.\nHltchwlk, Sant Point; Mrs. Whiting\nHill, Miss Hltchwill. Los Angeles; Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Chrlstophersen, Misses\nBertha and Olga ChrlHtopherson. F. N.\nDodd,  wlte  and   son,   Lucille  Cole,   M.\nDarenny, Bt-rtha Darenny, A. D. Dar-\nenny. J. B. Darenny, W. H. Danger,\nSpokane: A. C. Baker. O. Parker, Toronto; F. E. Llnch, (i. F. Mackay,\nVancouver; J. W. Robertson, S. C.\nLoma M. Allin, Victoria; >. K. L.\nDewdnev. Rossland; Mr. and Mrs. F.arl\nHilton, 'lone; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lily-\nstront, lone; Mr. and Mrs. R. H\nOogel, Spokane; Mr. and Mrs. J. P.\nMcKenzie. K. L. tJlenti and wife, Dr.\nand Mrs. H. V. Flynn. Mr. and Mrs.\nJoseph Bagley, Ceoree Bagley, Bert,\nWallace, Miss E. Summers, Mr. and\nMra. A. S. Juniper, W. C. Webster,\nSpokane;   H.   H.   Johnstone,   Rossland.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam   Heated    Throughout.     All\nrooms   modern.\nSpecial Weekly and  Monthly Rate.\nA. Lapointe,\nProprietor.\n8 QUEEN'S \u2014 II. Doyle, Miss A.\nStanton. A. B. Martyn, Trail; Mr. and\nMr..   J.  H.   Stanton   and   family,   Ross-\n,land; J. M. Corbett and wife, H. B.\nKendall and wife, Spokane; G. H.\nShine, . Penticton; K. S. Mcintosh.\nSalmo; G. Dinney. Halls; Chin Wing\nfihow. Mr. and Mrs. Jones, A. L. Jones\nand brother. Chin Wing, Joe Joe, Far-\nTon; M. St. Mclvor. Cranbrook; H. Oliver,    city;    Fred    Hollows.    George    D.\n.Donald, Thomas Hollows. Coeur\ndAlene; M.  Rlllam, Birchbank; N. Nll-\n'.son and family. E. SJngren, Kitchener;\nF. Molander, W. Wbollog, Fernie; R.\nHopkins, Hall.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMr.., Mallette   &   Son,   Proprietor.\nNice,  warm,   comfortable rooms at\nreasonable  rates.     Open  day   and\nnight.\nCorner   Hall   and   Vernon   Streets\nYOKOHAMA AND\nTOKIO REPEAT\nSAN FRANCISCO\n(Continued  from page one)\nhai,   sailed   at   4   o'clock   this   morning for  Yokohama,   expecting  to  arrive in 18 hours.\nThe Nirhi was the only newspaper ln Toklo t# escape destruction.\nThe Japanese commi.nity here is\ngrief stricken. The most serious\ndamage was done to the tract covering the Pama-No-Te district, including the Tokio wards of Hon Jo,\nFuka Gawa, ..Akusuka, Shitaya, Ninon hash t and' Kanku. where hardly\na single structure was left standing.\nNavy Doein't Answer\nA naval radio dispatch from Funa-\nhashi says the Japanese navy department does not answer their\nradio call, and it Is feared the entire   department   has   bevn   destroyed.\nNaval wireless messages received\nfrom Funabashi narrating stories of\nrefugees from Tokio indicate that\nKoyohama Is an Immense mass of\nruins.\nThe harbor works there were demolished. Shlnagawa was swept by\na tidal wave.\nHeaped With Dead\nPEKING, Sept. 2.\u2014The streets of\nToklo are heaped with bodies of\ndead, acoording to advices from\nSouth Japan. The casualties In the\nJapanese capital are said to be\ninestimable.\nMost of the buildings were destroyed.\nHill Quarters Escape\nI-ONDON, Sept. 2.\u2014The foreign\nsection of Yokohama which Is situated high on a hill, escaped destruction, according to an Osaka\ndispatch   lo  the  Dally   Express.\n* There are many large modern\nbuildings in'Yokohama. Among them\nare the Pacific Mail offices, the\nToyo Yusen Kalsh offices, the\nAmerican Express building, Cook's\n(tourist) building, Arthur Bond, department store, hanks, hotels ond\nhospitals.\nAll Cities in Area Razed\nPEKING, Sept. 2.\u2014All cities and\ntowns between Toklo and Osaka were\ndestroyed by the earthquake, says\na message picked up by the Mitsu\nwireless station here. The message\ncame   from   South   Japan.\nCentral Japan Is entirely without\nmeans   of  communication,\n\u25a0  ii __m \u2022\nInstruments All Over\nWorld Record Shocks\nTremendous in Egypt\nCAIRO. Egypt, Sept. 2.\u2014The Hel-\ncuan seismograph registered a violent earthquake here at 3:11 o'clock\nthis morning, Greenwich time The\nintensity of the shock was tremendous. It was one of the greatest\never   recorded   In   Egypt.\nLONDON, Sept. 2.\u2014Another great\nearthquake was recorded at the West\nBromwich observatory at 4 o'clock\nthis    morning.\nShocks   at    Manila\nMANILA.      S\u00ab*pt.      2.~N'ew      earth-\nquake   shocks   of   moderate   Intensity | l\/rnrnnni)-   V\\anro_\nwere recorded on the Manila observa-1 ' wuuuver   I Iguies\nAustralian Empress\nRode Out the Wave\nwere recoi\ntory    iPlsmograph     at    8    a.m.    and |\n10    a.m.    here    today,    according     to\nFather   Serra,   chief   of   the   observatory.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 2.\u2014Severe\nearth tremors which began at 10:04\no'clock last night, and continued for\nmore than two hours, were recorded\non the Georgetown university seismograph. The disturbance ended at\n12:30 a. m., the Intensity reaching\na  maximum   at   10:52   p.   tn.\nFather Tondorf, director of the\nobservatory, tonight announced that\nanother disturbance, apparently in the\nsame area, had neen recorded on the\nseismograph between 5:48 p. m. and'\n6:50 p. m. The second convulsion, I\nhe said, was \"very, much\" less violent j\nthan the one observed  last night.      -j\nBoth shocks. Father Tondorf declared, occurred In the bed of the\nPacific ocean and were' In the ha-I\ntore of an adjustment ln the earth's!\ncrust after  the  Japanese  earthquake.!\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 2.\u2014That the\nliner Empress of Australia, of the\nCanadian PadJClc Ocean Services\nwaa In the path of the tidal wave\nwhich swtpt the Japanese coast Saturday, following the earthquake, is\na possibility discussed here tonight.\nThe great liner, with many Canadian,\nEuropean and United States passengers aboard, was due out of the\nport of Yokohama 12 hours before\nthe tidal wave swept the coast, en*\ngulfing thousands of small craft, and\ndrowning many thousands of people.\nIvocal officials believe that un-\nless the liner was caught Inshore\nshe could easily ride out the tidal\nwave, opposing her 20,000 tons displacement to any marine disturbance   which   has   taken   p!ace.\nLABOR DAY!\nStore  Closed\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nWHERE BANK DEAL WAS PLANNED\nSherbrooke Hotel-\nNear   C.P.R.   Station\nRooms at Reasonable Rates.\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor.\nSummer Resorts\n\u25a0 OCCIDENTAL    HOTEL\nA.   C.   TOWNER,    Manager\nThe home  of  plenty.\nFifty   rooms   of   solid   comfort.\nWe  serve  the   best   meals  In  Nelson.\nIt's   the   cook.\nMADDEN HOTEL\n\u2022       MBS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nFir.t-Cla>*    Room,    by   th.   Day,\nWeek   or   Month\nEv.ry Consid.ration  Shown  t.\n; Guest.\nCor.  Biker and  Ward   St..,  Nelson\n; MADHEN \u2014 Dan McCualg, Boulder:\nj-Ved WeyerganR, Erie; 8. A. Howe,\n_. F. Newton, Spokane: Mrs. H. Logan,\nMrs. R. F. DehaM, Coalhurst: A. J.\nCartipbell. wife and daughter, Calgary,\nA. Brand. E. Matthews, .T. Chp.ihire.\nTrail: Mr. and Mra. T. Winget. C. J.\n*A'lnglt. W. O. Hngndp.ll and wife,\nl*m H.  Fosh, Kettle Falls.\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER\nPishing,   Boating.   Bathing,  Golf,\nTennis  CourtB,\nFishing   Tackle    Supplied.     Grocery\nStore in Connection.\nW. A. WARD. Proprietor.\nDay   $3;  Week   $17   to  $19.    Special\nMonthly   Kates.\nSIRDAR,   B.C.\nOn the main highway Nelson-Calgary. Fist Kootenay's Summer Re-\naort. Good Fishing. Bathing Beach\nand Camping Grounds. Firat-clasa\naccommodation.\nB.   F.   WHITESIDE.\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nTO   All   Who   Work,\nGREETINGSl\nOUR   Job   Is   to   Supply\nTHE   Best  Possible\nMEN'S   and   Boys*   Wear\nAT   Popular Prices,\nten\t\n\"S&OIH\u00a9\nMen Suited\nNelson's Best Cafes\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n\u202216   Vernon    St.,    East\nOnly  brick   hotel   In   city.    Steam\nheated, hot and cold water.   European   and    American    plans.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   Street,    Nelson,   B.C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30  Special   Lunch...-35<1\n6:30 to 8:00   p.m.   Supp.r   -__*}\nPhon.  154\nROYAL CAFE\nClasiic Rertanrant.\nRefinement  and   Delicacy  Prevails.\nOFBW  SAT  AND  MIGHT\nLtmchpon 11:30 to 2     85o\nBpeclal dlnnem 6:31) to 8     85c\nWa speclalixe in Chop Buey and   .\nNoodles.\nNEW GRAND \u2014- William Nelson,\n'Trail; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Jones, Vancouver; Ben Hofer, Northport; Hugh\nNelson, Mrs, Bodt-unB, Mm, Hofer, A.\nA. Ahrens and wife, Spokane; Mr. and\nMrs, O. B. Carlson, Mra. Bright, Miss\nH-rlght, Trail; H. T. Rutler, Slocan\nCity; Mr. and Mrs. George White and\nson, Northport; Miss Reid, Victoria;\nVat Kanley, Trail; H. Segnahour, W.\nH Mdvor, R. T. Wllwn. city; M. L.\nMcCormick, O. F. Fisher, Spokane;\nH. Arnold and wife. Victoria; H, M.\nOfosse and wife, F. O. Baker and wife,\nHpokanp; Mrs. J. Haire, Vancouver;\nM. K Bnwditch and family. Mr. and\nMrs. H. Blake, Spokane; Mrs. W. A.\nifmfty and daughter, Brilliant; George\nVvilliama,   Calgary.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest equipped restaurant In tha\nelty. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe  cater   to  private  parties.\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nThe only Cafe In town cooking\nelectrically. Dinner 11:30 a.m. to\n2 p.m. Lunch 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.\nPer cover, 35c. Special Sunday\nDinner,    per   cover,   COc.\n511    Baker   St.\nPhona   450\nt\\ WANT AD. IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nfl Thc stamp of your approval is th*\nhighest reward a manufacturer covets.\nt When a man places his own mark\nupon his product and advertises it to\nyou he commits the reputation of his\nlift work into your hands; you become\njudge and jury.\n1 The articles advertised in this and\n\u2022very other daily newspaper are tha\nbest that can be made for a certain\nprice. , If they were not the makers\nwould not dare to offer them thus\nfor sale, f Advertising without quality is Business Suicide.\nV It pays you in money and time\nand comfort to read the advertisements in your own newspaper every\nday. Tha advertising of a merchant's\nService, Brand, Trade Mar k. or Name\nguarantees Value, Satisfaction, Defuv\nits Quality. \\\n\\ Advertising sets a high standard\nfor everything you buy and submits\nit to a test it is forced to meet.\n1 The advertisements in this paper\nare your best insurance against fraud\nand deceit; only the best that human\nngenuity can produce for the price\ncan live in such compttitioa\nREAD THE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nTh. Tim* U W.ll Spent\nTORPEDO BOATS\nORDERED JOIN\nITALIAN FLEET\n(Continued from page one)\neasiness regarding Mussolini's ambitions, fur the Italian' premier is\nstill a man of mystery abroad. It\nis not forgotten in Great Britain that\nabout the time of his rise to power\nhe made a speech voicing his belief\nthat Italy's destiny Is to play a more\npowerful part ln the Mediterranean\nthan   hltherfore.\nFrance's and Gren t Britain's ambassadors have not been instructed to\nmake any representations to the\nItalian   government.\nTension  Unrelaxed       '\nLONDON, Sept. 2.\u2014The lapse of\nanother day finds no diminution ln\nthe tension or gravity of the Greco-\nItallan dispute. No further overt or\nhostile act is recorded, but a grave\naspect of the situation ln the Italian\ndetermination, expressed beforehand,\nto refuse to recognize the status\nof the League of Nations In the\naffair,  or respect   Its   decision.\nThe British editorial writers have\nfound consolation In commenting on\nthe dispute, In the consideration that\nin 1914 no International body, such\nas the League of Nations, or council\nof ambassadors, existed, to Which\nthe Austro-Serbian dispute might\nhave been submitted with some hope\nof avoiding war. This hope will,\nthey say, be shattered if Italy refuses to recognize the  league.\nBoth the Greek and Italian governments are energetically occupying\nthemselves in placing their respective\ncases before the world. The Italian\npress does not hesitate to impute\ncriminal motives to Greece. The\nGreek government, on Its side, Is offering to submit the responsibility\nfor the murders to an international\ntribunal, and to abide by any decision, and pay the compensations\nthe   tribunal   decrees.\nItaly contends that the Greek government has not been recognized by\nthe powers, and lacks the status\nor right of appeal to the League of\nNations, which ought to regulate Its\napplication, and argues that otherwise Greece will secure recognition\nthrough   assassination.\nMeanwhile the council of the lengue\nwhich Is considering the dispute, is\nproceeding leisurely, and ' has adjourned   the   case.\nCrete  Demonstrates Against  Italy\nAnother disquieting feature of the\naffair Is a report from Rome of anti-\nItnlian demonstrations In the island\nof Crete, which, it is feared, may be\na prelude to a descent upon that\nisland,   like  Corfu.\nInternational statesmen are preserving a discrete alienee on the\nsubject.\nM. Poincare of France made his\ncustomary Sunday speech today, but\ncarefully avoided reference to foreign  policy.\nLord Curzon returned to London\ntonight, .brought back prematurely\nthrough ' the threatening situation,\nfie also declined to say anything\nabout the dispute until he had time\nto study official reports.\nIt Is not known whether Premier\nBaldwin will hasten his return from\nAll les Bains on account of the\ncrisis.\nGreece . Asks    International    Probe\nATHENS, Sept. 2.\u2014The Creek reply to the message from the Interallied council of ambassadors protesting \"against the outrage of which\nthe Italian mission has been the\nvictim,\" was handed to the French\ncharge today. It proposes an International inquiry to establish responsibility for the Janlna murders, and urges that such procedure\nwould he preferable to a Greek in- '\nqulry, which could not extend beyond   the  Greek   frontier.\nThe note adds that Greece la prepared to pay all reparations auch\na conference  might  consider  just.\nOsoyoos Government\nBuildings Will Be\nlocated at Oliver\nVICTORIA, Sept. 2.\u2014Contract for\nthe construction of provincial government buildings at Oliver, the new\nIrrigation town ln the Okanagan-\nOsoyooa district, was awarded today\nto Clark & Formey by the department of public works. The buildings\nwill be extensive enough to provide\nfor all the government services In\nthe   Osoyoos   district.\nHead  offices  of Canadian  Bank of  Commerce  in   Toronto, which\nhas   announced   plans   to   take   over   the   Bank   of   Hamilton. Left,\nSir John  Alrd,  general manager;   right.   Sir  Edmund Walker, president.\nVOTE FOR TREATY\nIS THREE TO ONE!\nFinal   Figures   in   South   Ireland   Bal\nlot ing    Shows    Seventy-six    Per\nCent   of   Voters   Uphold   It\nDUBLIN. Sept. 2.\u2014Final figures\non the balloting last week for members of the dall Eireann were made\npublic today. These show that the\npolling by parties was: Government, 415,143; Republicans, 286,181;\nLibor, 142.388; Farmers, 135,972; Independents, 24,291. The aggregate\nvote   cose   was   1003955.\nThe government statistical department in a statement says the results show that 76 per cent of the\nvoters supported the treaty, and are\nprepnred to work In parliament jn*W\nthe  constitution^-\nMARTIAL LAW IS\nINVOKED TO AID\nSTRICKEN TOKIO\n(Continued from page one)\ncompletely   razed,   and   hundreds   of\nlives  lost.    At Atuma. alone  000  persons   were   killed.\nTake  Relief Measures\nThe governor of Yokohama makes\nan urgent appeal fur food for the\npeople.\nAccording to a report received\nhere the Central Telegraph & Telephone company's office in Tokio\nwas completely burned. It Is believed the telephone system can be\npartially restored in a short time,\nbut that full restoration will take\nmore  than a  month.\nThe steamer Senkal Maru la being\ndispatched from Osaka for , Tukiu\nwith food and water, and ^mother\nship Is being sent to the capitul from\nKobe. *\nRefugees Fill Parks\nOSAKA, Sept. 2.\u2014An officer of\nthe steamer London Maru who landed at Yokohama reports the bodies\nof dead scattered everywhere, and\nsays that tens of thousands of refugees are huddled in the public park.\nOdawara, on the bay of Odawara,\n40 miles southwest of Tokio, has\nbeen  swept away by  a tidal wave.\nMany   Volcanoes   Active\nNAGASAKI, Sept 2.\u2014lt is feared\nthat the casualties in Tokio will exceed even those of the great disaster\nof 1856. when more than 100,000 were\nkilled In  Yedo alone.\nIt Is reported that the Fuji spinning mills, near Mount Fuji, collapsed, and that 800 of the operators\nperished,\nAt Hakone, a famous mountain\nresort. It Is stated to be easier to\neoui't the living than the dead.\nE'rlnce Saonjl, former premier, made\nhis escape safely to a nearby bamboo  grove.\n. A number of volcanoes are reported   to  be  pciive.\nSeveral mm \u2022 shocks were felt at\nYokohama at I o'clock this afternoon.\nToklo Is still 'burning, and explosions there are frequent. Nobody\nis being permitted to enter the city\nunless they have sufficient food for\ntheir Individual needs.\nCANADA NOT BACK\nOF WRANGEL TREK\nNationality    of    Island    for    Britain\nAlone   to   Be   Interested   in,\nDominion Government Says\nTORONTO. Sept. 2.\u2014Hon Charles\nStewart, minister of the Interior,\nstated here today that the Dominion\ngovernment was not in any way officially connected with the expedition\nto Wrangel is'and. The Borden government, he said, financed the Stef-\naneson expedition to the polar regions when the commercial possibilities\nof Wrangel Island were made known\nto  the   people of  the Dominion.\nThe view of the Dominion cabinet\nwas that it was more a matter of\nconcern for the British parliament,\nrather   than   for  Canada.\nHold First Services\nin Newly Named\nFairview Church\nManitoba Feud\nResults in Boy\nShooting Women\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 2.\u2014Mrs. Annie\nConka, wife of a farmer at Pine\nRiver, Man., was shot dead yesterday, it Is alleged by Peter Sawlcki,\na buy of 14 to 16 years old, according to the police. Thereis said to\nhave been continual altercations be-\nt ween the Conka and Sakicki families In regard to their cattle, which\neach claimed wandered over the\nothers   crops  of grain.\nThe boy is in custody. An Inquest\nIs to be held.\nMETHODISTS FEAR\nFOR MISSIONARIES\nIfienomination'i  Work   in   Japan   Was\nConcluded   in   Area   Affected\nJ   by   Earthquake\nTORONTO, Sept. 2.\u2014Reports of\nthe Japanese holocust have placed\nMethodist circles ln deep cocern,\nss the entire missionary force of the\ndenomination was concentrated in\nthe mid-Japan area affected. Sixteen missionaries and families many\nhundreds of college students, and\nthe native church are Involved, according to Information given at the\nmission rooms.\nNo direct cables had been received,\nbut it was known that a steamer\nbearing a party of workers, their\nwives and children, 18 In all, was\nnearing Yokohama. Many of the\nmisisonary families may still be ln\nthe mountains for the summer season, but lt was not known, whether\neven they would be safe from earthquakes and flames. Results of 60\nyears of mlsionary effort appears\nto. be In dire peril.\nFirst services ln the new Fairview\nchurch, the Church of the Redeemer,\nwere held yesterday, Rev. N. Larmonth\nconducting the services. The church,\nwhtoh wns formerly the Fairview mission under the charge of St. 8avlour's\nAnglican church, is now an ordained\nhouse of worship, with Rev. N. Larmonth as clergyman.\nYesterday  morning  holy  communion\nwas   celebrated,   Sunday   school   assembled ln  the afternoon,  and  last night\nevensong  was held.\n \u00aba>.\nMinnesota Polo\nTeam Takes Lead\nWinnipeg Series\nFORT SNELLING, Minn.. S^pt 2.\u2014\n\u2014Fort Snelllng's polo team virtually\nassured itself of possession of the\nSifton international trophy, for the\nsecond consecutive year, by defeating the St Charles Country club\nsenior four of Winnipeg, 9-4 today,\nin the first of the two-game series.\nTotal   goals   will   decide   the   victor.\nLadies Let Cuticura\nKeep Your Skin\nFresh and Young\nTwo Phone Lines\n*       for\nThe Daily News\nArrangements have been made so that both HI and\nlib may be used either day or night for either business or editorial departments. Both lines are now\navailable to the public at all hours. Hitherto 141\nwas the night phone and 144 the day phone.\nUse 141 or 144\nDAY or NIGHT\nIf  141 is busy,  Call  144\nIf 144 is busy, Call 141\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNELSON, B.C.\n I      -^mm^-m\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3, 1923\nPage Tfoes\"\nMONEY SHOULD BE EMWE& BEFORE IT ISSPtlfT\nSWIMMERS WILL\nLakeside Park Will Be Scene\noi Labor Day Aquatic\nMeet\n'\nLakeside park will be the center of\nattraction today when tho annual Labor day aquatic events for young and\nold will wind up tho season's activities at the  local  beach.\nAlready 40 persons have signified\ntheir Intentions of entering In the\nvarious swimming and diving events\nOil the program, which has been carefully drawn up by J. B. B. Smith, and\nfor which excellent prices and cups\nhave been  donated.\nComedy will be mixed up with the\nraces, ks a greasy pole nnd barrel\nrace as well as tub tilting will be on\nthe day's program. Special prizes will\nbu awarded for the diving of all\nclasses from the beginners up. Swimming races fqr tots, boys and girls,\nyouths, men' and' women, will be\nMaged, and the swimmers will be\nTraded according to first and second\nyears  of  swimming.\nAll arrangements have been made,\nand all Is set for thc staging of one\nof the best water njjorts meets held\nIn the park. The events, which will\nbe going on practically all afternoon,\nwill commence  at 10 o'clock sharp.\nBAR SILVER\nNEW   YORK,    Sept.    2.\u2014Bar    silver,\nforeign,  6_%c.\nRailway Company\nInstalls Danger\nSignal at Tracks\nAs a warning to autoists a danger\nsignal has been Installed by the\nCanadian Pacific railway at the\n^crossing on the road to the ferry\nlanding   in   Fairview.\nThe signal, which la a red illuminated ajfair bearing tho words\n\"Danger, Oo Slow,\" Is placed on\na pole and can be clearly seen by\nmotorists approaching the crossing\nfrom  the city.\nConcern Is Felt\nOver Canadians\nLiving in Japan\nOTTAWA, Sept. 2. \u2014 Grave concern is felt In Ottawa over the safety\nof many former citizens of the capital, known to have been living in\nthe cities in Japan where the toll of\ndeath was heaviest by earthquake and\nfire. Whether these survived the disaster, as there are no means for those\nin the stricken areas to communicate\nwith   the  outside  world.\nhigh standard of British Columbia\nfruit and urging them to buy1 as\nmtioh of it aa possible. The letters\nwill announce the dates on which\nthe various kinds of B.C. fruits will\nbe available in the different districts of Canada.\nEach recipient of a letter Is urged\nto forward to the Associated Growers a sales slip received when they\nmake a purchase of B.C. fruit, in\norder that the association may have\nfirst-hand information as to the\nspread in prices between that re\nceived by the growers and that paid\nby the consumer.\nThe letter states that Wealthies\nare available how In the stores of\nwestern Canada, Mclntoshes will be\nready after September 20, and Joi^a\nthatis   after   October   1.\nIn the United Kingdom, It is\nstated, Wealthies will be on sale\nafter September 16, Mclntoshes after\nOctober 15, and Jonathans after November   1.\nThe suggestion should be of Interest to residents of the district\nwho have friends living elsewhere\nin Canada, and undoubtedly many\nof them will write letters at once\nin regard to the forthcoming apple\nsupply.\nTELL FRIENDS ABOUT\nBIG APPLE SUPPLY\nMuch Interest has been aroused\nIn the campaign started hy tho Associated Growers for a united effort\nto bring home to the public generally the fine quality of British Columbia fruit and the great benefits to\nbe derived generally by the province in having as much as possible of the B,C. product utilized.\nTho association has called upon\neach member to write three letters\nto    three    friends    pointing    out    the\nImperial OH fs\nNot Abandoning\nFort Norman Field\nTORONTO, Sept. 2.\u2014A. M. McQueen, vice-president In charge of\noperations of the Imperial OH corn-\npany, denies reports that tho company\nlo withdrawing its rigs from Alberta.\nIn southern Alberta, he says, there\nlitis been a certain amount of switching of rigs as. naturally, work is not\ncontinued when a hole is found to be\ndry. Two such holes were abandoned\nlast   spring.\nThere has been absolutely no change\nin policy at' Fort Norman, and, he\nscys: - \u25a0 ' '\n\"We haven't abandoned our cam-\nptign In the west, by any means.**\n,\nSAYS PRINCETON TOURI\nROUTE THE\t\nOPENALL\nGregory  Shows  Record  of New Park at Rossland Even\nFraser Canyon Route, Answering Advocate's Letter\nIrt a letter Oo the Vancouver Province, Jn answer to one from an advocate of the FraBer canyon route\nfor the Interprovlnclal highway, P. W.\nGregory of Princeton sums up once\nmore the argument for the Hope-\nPrlrtceton route. The 'Princeton road\nexpert   writes: i I\nEditor Province,\u2014The recent letter\nof Mr, M. 8. Wade, -strongly advocating the construction of the coast\nto interior road via the Fraser\ncanyon, compels me to fcetf apace\nfor* reply. He maintains the, connecting highway should possess, above\nother characteristics: Historic interest, scenic interest, long open season,\nlow gradients\u2014and he would have\nhis readers believe that the. Fraser\ncanyon route along possesses these\nIn proper measure. Historic interest\nit must have, no matter 'what else,\nand I presume at any price, or Mr.\nWade wlil  not  be satisfied. '   '    \u25a0\nThe fact that Simon Fraser In. 1808\nfollowed the windings of. the Fraser\nriver through Its rocky canyons, and\nalong Its dreary, monotonous miles\nof fir-clad slopes and ugly rock\nslides, should not weigh very heav'ly\nwith those upon whose shoulders\nfalls the responsibility of selecting\nthe route for the coast to Interior\nlink in our transprovinclal highway,\nparticularly so when it is remembered\nthat there are already two transcontinental railways threading their\nway along its forbidding sides, from\nwhich the traveler seeking scenes of\nhistoric interest may pay homage\nto the Illustrious name of the great\nexplorer. Why should a third artery\nof travel be necessary In this narrow  and  unproductive  gorge ?\nIt Is most Improbable that the\nAlpine engineers intrusted with the\nlaying out of roads and railways\nthrough their formidable mountain\nranges exhibited any great anxiety\nthat their nl.te Bhould follow Hannibal's historic course, when he descended to the Italian plains wilh\nhis. mighty elephants and engines of\nwarfare. It Is unlikely one would\nchoose as a portion of the route\nfor a motor road from Princeton\nto Kamloops the trail selected by the\nnotorious train robber, Bill Miner, and\nhis daring associates, when on their\nhistoric sortie from Princeton they\ndescended and fell upon the Cana\ndian  Pacific  \"Flyer\"  near  Ducks.\nWith all due respect to that intrepid explorer, Simon Fraser, when\nhe bent his footsteps westward, and\nfinally reached the Fraser river, he\nknew practically nothing of British\nColumbia. It Is recorded that he\nwas aware water flowed down hill,\nand from certain observations he deduced the fact that the Fraser river\nflowed into tha. Pacific ocean, and\nhe determined to follow it. He did\nnot choose the route for Its scenic\nattractiveness, or for its directness,\nor because it passed through fertile\nland, or rich miner, territory. He\nwas a hopeful, expectant traveler\nand knew no better.\nCattlemen   Used   Southern   Route\nLong before the advent of th<_\nC.P.n. In this province, the cattlemen of the interior drove, year after\nyear, large herds of cattle out to\nthe coast. They came from Kamloops, Nicola, Similkameen and\nOkanagan. Which route did they\ntravel ? They selected and used a\nroute where pasture and water were\naccessible and plentiful \u2022 every few\nmiles, a route that abounded in\ncamping spots, where fish and game\nwere to be had at any place. They\nfollowed the old Dewdney trail from\nPrinceton to Hope, and drove their\nherds into Hope over that historic\n25 miles of road built by the sappers and miners, and that 25-mile\nsection of the trail Is not alone ln\nits claim to historic Interest for\nevery step Into Princeton has its tale\nto tell of the early fifties and seventies, when gold miners flocked into\nRock and Granite creeks.\nIs there any need to consider for\nan instant Mr. Wade's claim of superior scenic interest? Most people\nin the province have at one time\nor another passed through the. Fraser\ncanyon on one or other of Its two\nrailways, have seen and passed with\ndisappointment through its narrow\nconfines, which do not permit of the\nslightest favorable impression being\nconveyed to the tourist or traveler,\nwho is unable in Its restricted area\nto gather any idea of the character  of   tho   surrounding   country.\nWhat of the Hope-Princeton route?\nThe government engineer's report is\nconcise and to the point. It states:\n\"It may not be out of place to here\nrefer ta the scenic beauties of this\nrugged route. \u25a0 Apart from the attractiveness of the location along\nthe rushing creeks and rivers, and\nthe Bplendid forested areas of the\nwestern half of the line, there exists\nwithin a couple of miles of the main\npass, and to the southbound thereof,\none of the finest areas of moun-\nThe whole of the route Is one of\nvaried attractiveness to the tourist\ntain scenery to be found anywhere,\nand traveler and Bhould form one of\nthe most Inviting links of the great\nproject (I.e., the transprovinclal\nhighway) in which lt forms at present   the   largest   gap.\"\nHeavy -Snows in North\n' The question of the open season\non both routes has been dealt with\nby many before. One might imagine from Mr. Wade's letter that it\nnever snows along the Fraser canyon,\nbut many of us have seen It\/snow\nheavily there, and experienced a subsequent thaw, when trains on both\nrailways have been held up for hours,\nand sometimes days. 1 have before\nmo extracts from The Daily Province of a few years ago: \"January 15.\nTrains delayed on two systems,\nHeavy snow of the past few days,\nfollowed by heavy rain, has caused\nserious trouble to 'both the C.P.R.\nand C.N. railways. Service on both\nlines Is badly Interrupted. The Canadian Pacific grade near Haig was\nwashed out and no trains likely to\nget through until Sunday morning.\nThe Canadian National railway encountered trouble at Boston Bar,\nwhere the grade was affected similarly.'' Travelers over the C.P.B.\non this particular occasion tell that\nthe torrents formed by melted snow\ntore huge gaps ln the railway grade,\nA month later reports appeared in\nthe press of similar trouble Just below\nLyttoiv accompanied by photographs\nof train lying wrecked In consequence   below   the   C.N.R.   track.\nMr. Wade has referred to the oper-\ntion of the B.C. express along the\nFraBer canyon. Penult me to give\na few statements which, I possess\nfrom tho ptr. of the late Col. Robtrt\n3te*'e\u00abjor.; ' t\\\\c wcl'.-kr.o-rr, nlcr.tor\nQ\u00a3 13& xltt wt&i iwa ibu C*ritwo.\nProduces Stationery and\nRoad Maps  S\nSHOWER BATHS AND\nELECTRIC UGHTING\nNumber of Cooking Shelters\nContain Stoves, Tables\n-and Benches\nROSSLAND, B.C.,' Hept. 2. \u2014 With\nthe completion of the Rossland-Cas-\ncade highway, the Rossland board of\ntrade has emphasized its welcome to\nthe tourist by the completion of the\nmost modern camp In the Interior of\nBritish Columbia,   .\nThe natural beauty of (he. spot selected, lent Itself, lo the additional\npurpose of a children's park, and. to\nthis end the work was designed and\ncarried out i under the supervision of\nWilliam K. Esling, M.P.P.. of whose\nefforts the city Is deservedly proud.\n. It differs from all other camps In\nthat nothing has been neglected for\nthe comfort of the traveller, and\neverything Is free. The expense of\nthe camp was met by subscriptions\nfrom business men and others, numerous checks having been received from\nformer residents of Bossland, who\nstill felt an Interest In the welfare of\nthe historic mining camp. The location, which is but two blocks from\nthe business center, adds 'to the merit\nof the park.\nStores, Tables and Benches.\nThe entrance was designed by A. E.\nWight of Rossland, and contains modern sanitary conveniences, with show-\nen? for men and women. Against a\nlong rock bluff, which forms the\nbackground, is a series of five terraces, on which to pitch tents, and\nalongside of each Is a covered cook\nshelter, of rustic design. Each of\nihc.se contains a stove, table and\nbincheB. There are electric light and\ncit> water with plenty of free fuel,\ncut to stove length, and each shelter\nhas a receptacle for refuse and garbage. The city sees that the park\nla cleaned each morning, and as soon\nas a tourist pitches his tent, R.\nTlmms, chief of police, is on hand to\nsee that every need for the cemfort\nof the visitor is supplied.\nMaps   and   Stationery.\nNear the entrance Is a little build-\nhig where the traveller Is supplied\nwith plenty of stationery, maps and\npostcards, all free, and where he may\nuglster.\nThrough the length of the grounds\nIs a creek of clear water. This creek\nlty lined with trees and plants, while\na flower bed, kept in condition by\nthe citizens, adds to* the beauty of the\nentrance. More than 50 shade trees\nhave been planted, and a half acre\nof sod laid. There are benches* In\nevery shady nook of tho park, and\nchildren and parents take advantage\nof the conveniences for afternoon\nlunches.\nSmall Lake for Kiddies.\nAt the far end Is a miniature lake\nin which the kiddies paddle, and tn\nthe center of which is a constantly\nplaying fountain. Beyond this Is a\nplunge, where the traveller may take\na morning dip, ami where men and\nboys find pleasure In a swim on hot\ndays. The water is fresh and constantly running, and enters the little\nlake  below by a  pretty  waterfall..\nThe whole camp is brilliantly lighted\nby the city, and only the most favorable comments are registered by the\ntourists.\nThe city council and the board of\ntrade named the park after Mr.\nEsling,\" who. initiated the work and\ngave his time  to its  construction.\nRupert, Mr. McHardy stated that an\noutsider w\u00a3s Impressed with two\naspects, one beiryj the evidence of\nbad ' management''early in the city's\ncareer, particularly in tho matter\nof the laying out of streets. 'Fourteen miles of planked streets? were\nin usflf. making the cost of upkeep\nhigh. The school problems there are\nalso In a serious condition, he stated.\nA new school being'erected at a cost\nuf $100.0(10 has* already cost IJJlO.OOd,\nand  Is ,\/iot  yet  cpmpltted.\n\"There is great .future \u2022 promise\nfor the city.\" he stated, \"and In\ntime lt will without a doubt' make\ngood. Th* magnifli*fnt harbor.\nneaVer to the orient than any other\nharbor   on   the   Pacific   coast,   makes\nthe ocean trip 500 miles nearer. i s\nthe city is the terminus of th\u00ab\nNational railway systt-mv and a t\u00bbBt*r\nof the fi*h Industry, muuta <*u* -be\nexpected   from   it.\" '      - -    '\nA n*w'Hotel'-will he built shortly,\nin order that the. Vourist trade to\nAlaska   might   readily   be  lian,dl*Hl.\n\"The trip from Vancouver to Prinre\nRupert, however, was nothing out of\nthe ordinary to\" anyone ' frum the\nKootenays, aaid Mr. McHardy, axitt\nthe scenery at any place was not\nprettier than seen along the Kootenay\nlake. The passage was through narrow waterways similar to the In-\nj land lakes of the \u25a0 Kootenays\/ He\nI was loud ln his praise for the way\n[in which the delegates were treated\nI while   at   Prince   Rupert.\nCONVENTIONS WERE\nOF MUCH INTEREST\nC.   F.   McHardy,   Bsck   From   Coast,\nDeclares Sessions  of   B.C.   Municipalities   and   Good   Roads\nLeagues  Both' Successful\nEx-Mayor C. F. Hardy has returned from attending the Good Roads\nleague convention at Vancouver on\nAugust 20, and the Union of British\nColumbia municipalities sessions held\nin Prince Rupert on August 21! and 23.\n\"The conventions were both a huge\nsuccess,\" stated Mr. McHardy, \"a\ngreat deal of good, sound business\nbeing   done   by   both.\"\nSpeaking    on    the    city    of   Prince\nIn 1861 and spent 16 years mining\nin the district. Coming out to Victoria that fall (18611 he overtook\ntho late Governor Dewdney at Lytton.\nwhere he was snowbound. They were\nforced to remain at Lytton for two\ndays, as the snowstorm was terrible. The party consisted of Dewdney, Stevenson and three others. They\nwere the last men of that year to\nleave Cariboo, and the snow was\nnearly five feet deep at Lytton. It\ntook 10 days for the parly to reach\nYale, 57 miles, down tho canyon,\nwhich they reached on December G.\nBernard's express and stage line\ncarried the mail in those days, 386\nmiles from Yale to Barkerville, taking #tt days. The only serious\ntroubles experienced on the journey\nduring the winter were always for\nthe first 30 miles out of Yale, where\nsnow fell heavily and drifted under\nviolent winds Into heavy drifts. The\nexpress and stage company would\nsometimes have as many as 30 men\nshoveling snow to permit of, the stage\ngetting through.\nGradients\nFinally comes the question of\ngradients. The road, says Mr. Wade,\nshould possess low gradients. Government engineers have stated that\ngrades on the Hope-Princeton route\nwill not exceed 7 per cent and these\ngrades can be accomplished at reasonable cost, a matter which must\nbe of some surprise to anyone having\na close acquaintance with the features of that great area of unllfted\nand broken country which tends to\nbar the path of any road between\nthe coast and the Interior of thla\nprovince.\nNo mention Is made by your correspondent, when eulogizing the\nFraser canyon route, of a small matter of two dozen level crossings and\nwhat they will entail ln loss of life\nand property.\n*      p. \\V. GREGORY.\nPrinceton.   B.C.. _Aug.   28.\nGasoline, lo about 7 ctnts a -sailor.\nin Hollywood, Cal     That town cculd.\nBOYS'\nBOOT\n.cckie's Boys' Boots care for\ngrowing feet\u2014keep them warm\nand comfy and wear far longer\nthan ordinary Boys' 'footwear.\nLeckie's red-stitched boot *rith\nthe brass hooks and eyelets la\nbuilt specially for energetic boys.\nAak   to   sto   it.\nSizes  up   to   Stt.\nThe Shoe Stpres\nhave them.\n\"Give   a\nB.C. Product your     S\nfirst choice.\n_L\nSturdy EUOTS for Boys\nTV\nJ. LECKIE CO.  LTD., Vancouver, B.C.\nWe can make shipment immediately from\nstock.\nHighest grade duplex paper.   TSIzes 9x9 and\n10x10.\n50 lbs. or over, 15c a pound\nLess than 50 lbs., 20c a pound\nSEND ORDERS EARLY as supply at\nthese prices is limited. When present stock is\nexhausted it will be necessary to bring in smaller shipment at higher price and to pay less than\ncarload freight rate.\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers v\nTELEPHONE   NO. 144 NELSON, B, C,\n___%\n-*M\n \u2014\n-w-\nJ    ' T?c\\gt Four\"'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3, 192S'\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished STery mornlnf except\n\u25a0unday by Th\u00a9 Newa Publishing oom-\n\u2022pany.   limited.   Nelson,  BC.\nBusiness letters should bs addressed and checks and money orders\ntoads payable to The News Publishing company, limited, and ln no cass\nto Individual  saembers of ths staff.\nAdvertising rats cards and A. B. C\n\u2022tatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\nof any advertising agency recognised\nby the Canadian   Press Association.\nBUB8CRIPTION   RATES.\nBy mail  (country)  per month....! .60\nPer year  #.00\nOutside  Canada,  per month 75\nPer   year     7.SO\nDelivered, per month   7$\nPer  six  month*     4.00\nPar   year    7.10\nPayabla In Advance.\nMember  Audi.  Bnrsau  of  Oircniatlom.\nMONDAY.   SEPT.   8,   1923\nnit Bill Should Be Med\nIn lust week's British Columbia\nGazette appears a notice that an\napplication will be made at the\nnext session ot the legislature \"on\nfcehalf ot the barbers of British Columbia\" for an act \"for the purpose\nof governing and regulating the\npractice of barberlng,\" for the licensing of barbera and for a board of\nexaminers \"to insure the better qualification of persona following such\nprofession in British Columbia,\"\nIf thla bill gets through the private bills committee the legislature\nshould lose no time In killing It.\nThe Idea of forming under a provincial statute and with all the authority and limitations of the law, a\nclose corporation of barbers Is absurd and against the public interest.\nIt would establish a bad precedent\nwhich would very soon be followed\nby those in other occupations. If\nthe barbers were formed into a\nclose corporation we would soon\nhave statutes \"regulating and governing\" the profesion ot waiting at\ntable, of Journalism, oj grocery clerks,\nof butchers and a hundred other*.\nWe are being too much regulated\n\u2022and governed at vast expense and\nwithout real public benefit already\nand. ,Jnstead of cluttering up the\nstatutes with new laws what Is most\nneeded is the application of a pruning knife which would cut off some\not the unnecessary laws which are\na source of nuisance and expense to\nthe public.\nThe Bible a la Chicago\nIt is possible that the new translation of the Bible made by Profesor\nGoodspeed of Chicago will be useful\ni to students, but If the published\nexcerpts are typical of the entire\ntranslation, there is little danger that\nIt will replace the King James version. It may be more accurate, lt undoubtedly UBes more commonp'ace\nphrases. But readers of the Bible\nare less interested in precision of\ntranslation than they are in the\nterse richness which has made the\nKing James version one of the great\nmasterpieces of English. There is\nmore in a phrase than many liter-\nallsts can see. Long use gives it a\nconnotation which may not be strictly In accordance with the original\ntext, but which lends it force and\nmeaning.\nThe phrase from the Sermon on\nthe Mount which la the King James\nversion reads, \"Blessed are the meek,\nfor they shall Inherit the earth,\" Is\nmodernized to read \"Blesed are the\npeacemakers, for they will be called\nGod's sons.\" So also for \"Neither\ndo men light a candle and put it\nunder a bushel, but on a candlestick.\nand It glveth light unto all that tare\nin the house,\" is written \"People do\nnot light a lamp and put It under\na peck measure; they put It on a\nstand and It gives light to every one\nIn the \u2022 huose.\" It is conceivable\nthat some of these new phrases are\nmore accurate\u2014though even that Is\ndoubtful\u2014and it is clear that some\nare more modern. But the difference\nln meaning or intelligibility between\n\"Inherit the earth\" and \"portscss the\nland;\" or between \"the children of\nGod** and \"God's sons,\" is oert'-iinly\nso  ^f)11  tint, rt  fails  to  justify  the\n' substitution of ugly new phrases\nto*, .the rl^h old words which .through\nlong use have acquired a particular\nflavor. \"When It comes to the nub-\natttutlon of such words as \"lamp\"\nfor \"candle\" and \"peck measure\" for\n\u25a0\"bushel\" and \"stand\" for \"candlestick,** one is struck by the absurdity\nof endeavoring to \"modernize\" language. *Had the translator been\ntrilling to \"go the whole hog,\" he\nwould have wrlten \"electric light\"\nInstead of lamp, and \"fixture\" instead\nof stand.\nThe new version has a further demerit Not content with would-be\nup-to-date phrases, it also goes ln for\nmodern verbosity. A single example\nHunt rates this point. For the clear\nand forceful sentence In the King\nJames version, \"Think not that I am\ncome to destroy the law or the\nprophets; I am not come to destroy,\nbut to fulfill,\" the Chicago profeaosr\nhas written, \"Do you suppose that\nI have come to do away with the\nlaw or the prophets? I have come\nnot to do away with them but to\nenforce thsm.'*\nFor serious and scholarly studies\nof Hebrew and,Greek texts with a\nview to eliminating inaccuracies of\ntranslation there will always be approval. But with attempts to \"mod-\nernlie\" the language of the Bible\nby substituting for the vigorous and\ncolorful language of the King James\nversion such verbose and flat phraseology as Is given in the published\nextracts from the new Chicago\nversion there will be little sympathy.\nSERVE  'EMRIQHT\nWiclenf\nbuseh\nL*ur%* A. WrtUis\u00abs%\nDISHES IN  THI S   WEEK'S   MENU\nTOMiOR ROW'S    MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapefruit\nCoffee\nToast\nFried  Liver\nLuncheon\nSpanish  Omelet\nWhole   Wheat   Bread\nCocoa Jam\nDinner\nBeef  Loaf\nBaked Potatoes\nCorn   on   Cob\nCoffee Orange Custard\nmenu calls  for sweet  corn,  so I as-\nthnt   there   will   be   left-overs\nBeef Loaf\u2014Have your butcher put\ntwo pounds of rump beef through his\nmeat chopper, with a very little fat\nmixed with it. Add to this chopped\nmeat two well-beaten eggs, one-half\nteaspoon of sage, one-half cup of dry\nbread crumbs, one tablespoon of salt,\na little pepper, and butter the size of\na walnut, melted. When these Ingredients are well mixed, turn them into\na buttered bread pan, cover the pan,\nand bake for one hour\u2014possibly a\nlittle less\u2014in a hot oven. Five minutes before serving remove the cover\nfrom the pan, and place two slices\nof uncooked baron on top of the\nloaf, to give a delicious flavor. Serve\nhot  or cold.\nCorn Fritters\u2014Sift together one\npint of Hour, one-half teaspoon of\nbaking powder, one-half teaspoon of\nsugar and one-fourth teaspoon of\nsalt. Stir Into these dry ingredients\nthree-quarters of a pint of sweet\nmilk and one egg, mixed together.\nThen add one teaspoon of butter,\nmelted, agd corn grated from six\nlarge, cooked ears (or about one\ncan of corn if you have not the\nears). This is an excellent way to\nuse   l*ft-overs   of   corn.     (The   above\n|\n-\n1 from lt, for these fritters, on Wedncs*\nj day.) Drop this batter by large\nI spoonful! b onto a hot, buttered grid\nde or frying pun, and turn, when\ndone on one side\u2014like grlddlecakes\nBaconed Butterflsh\u2014Buy two\npounds of butterflsh (there are about\nthree small butterfish to a pound)\nand place these in a frying pan\nwith six slices of uncooked bacon;\nrover the pan and place lt over a\nmoderate flame. From time to time\nshake it well, to distribute the melted fat from the bacon. When the\nfish are browned on the under side,\nturn them over. Allow 30 minutes in\nall for cooking (they should be tender at'the end of that time). JVhen\nthe bacon is well crisped, remove It\nfrom the pan, place It on the plater\non which you Intend to serve the\nfish, ond add six more Blices of unbooked bacon to the frying pan.\nAfter you have once cooked butter-\nfish in this way you will never again\nprepare It ln any other way. Place\nthe last six slices on top the browned fish, to garnish. Serve very hot.\nFrizzled Beef\u2014Put one pound of\nthinly sliced smoked or dried beef\ninto a bowl with enough boiling water to cover; let stand 15 minutes,\nthen drain off the water. Now put\nin your frying pan two tablespoons\nof butter and when melted add the\ndrained beef; when the pieces begin\nto frizzle, break over them four eggs\nand stir till the eggs are cooked.\nServe hot.\nTomorrow\u2014Answered    Letters.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Miss\nKlrkman In care of the \"Efficient\nHousekeeping\" department will be answered In these columns ln their 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\ntbe name of your city and province.\u2014\nThe  Editor.\nThe Lighter Side\nHumor Is  an  accident,  that   befallB\nsomebody you don't like much.,\nSpain is no longer a great\npower, but she retains sufficient\nambition to keep Morocco as a\nsparring   partner.\nWe confess our Inability to tell\nwhether a classical dancer is trying\nto interpret a spring morning or trying to scratch her back.\nWhen a motor knocks, it may be\nfiring too soon. When an employee knocks, he hasn't been fired\nsoon   enough.\nYou can't blame Turkey. Give\nin too often to a squalling brat\nand it will begin to think it\nowns the  premises.\nCorrect this sentence: \"If I thought\nsmoking was Injurious,\" explained\nthe man with the cough, \"I'd give\nit  up  immediately.\"\nAll languages have something in\ncommon. Over here the farmer is\ncalled a hick, and in Russia he\nIs called a muzhik.\nIt may be possible to communicate\nwith the dead. The diplomatic corps\nat Peking has addressed a note to\nthe   Chinese  government.\nThe avalanches in ths Alps\ncauadd by the heat are not\nunique. W# have landslides over\nhere when the people get hot\nenough.\nIt is the Commercial bank of Budapest that is directed by a former\nlunatic, and we thought all the time\nit  was  the  Relchsbank.\nThe world is asked to give\nmoney    snd    preserve   the    holy\nElects    in   Jerusalem.      It    might\ne  a   good   idea  to   preserve  the\nteachings) al\u00bbo.\nWllhelm II. doesn't go outside the\nbarlrcade of matting erected about\nDoom. Doubtless he reflects that\nhe went tg the mat once too pftep,\nTwenty Years Ago      \\\n(The Dally News. Sept. 3, 1903)\nPlacer gold from Bird creek on\ndemonstration In the city is exciting\nmuch Interest. The gold* is course\nthroughout   and   fs   of   a   very   high\ngrade.\n* \u2022   *\nGranby smelter was blown out\nyesterday and will be idle the next\ntwo  weeks.\n* \u2022    *\nThe first six'-infisted steel schooner\never built was launched at Qulncy,\nMass.\n\u2022 t    \u2022'\nJames Footed of the HalflvTlnes\"\nsmelter staff tell from a car into\nan ore bin and sustained a severe\nfracture  of  the   wrist.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe large building of the Kootenay\nRiver Lumber company fs about completed on the waterfront. About\n40 men will be employed.\nSOLDIERS ARE NOT\nALLOWED TO SHAVE\nCETJTA, Morocco. \u2014 Orden have\nbeen Issued by the Spanish army authorities commanding all officers an*\nsoldiers of the regular army to grow\nmoustaches. The upper lip may be\nadorned with long or short hair, according to the wish of the owner o**\nhis  ability   to   cultivate   it..\nFARMER IS HELD ON\nCHARGE OF SEDITION\nMOOSE JAW, Bask. \u2014 Charged with\nmaking a seditious speech at a meeting of grain growers last*. January,\nFred Mclntyre, a farmer of the Royal\nGeorge School district, south of Caron,\nBask., was recently committed for\ntrial   here.    He   was   released on  ball.\nMclntyre is alleged to have made\nthe seditious remarks during a discussion on titles, and is charged with\nhaving said:\n\"I count myself as good a man as\nKing George. I would not be scared\nto challenge him to a foot race, to\nwrestle, or to fight, although he 'Is\nfed up In a box stall on choice food.\nIf I had my way, I would take a club\nnnd stand at the border and knock\nthe brains out of everyone that came\nInto the country with a title. I would\nmake no mistake about it, as I know\nwhere to hit them.\"\nB, lams, W. Batim, UJX,\nThere is one thing certain as to the\nfall fashions, and that is a complete\nabsence of monotony. In silhouette\nand in detail, the Paris openings\npromise a season of great variety;\nand If thus far nothing that Is sensationally new has been introduced,\nmost of the things shown aro extremely beautiful and wearable.\n--One silhouette that is novel Is introduced at the. house of Mme. Ko-\nflare below that point. The red'\nlande. It Is a combination of the\nsheath to the knees, with a circular\nflare  below   that   point.     The   red-\nThat Lump Behind theftar\n(Keglstered   ln   accordance   with   the\nCopyright  Act)\nWhen we were youngsters and\nthe lump behind a boy's ear seemed to be unusually targe or prominent we said that meant he was a\ngood fighter. I don't know how\nmuch there is in that, 'but 1 do\nknow that the lump may be able\nto tell' you something important\nduring certain illnesses. For instance ,in the case of a heavy\ncold, the flu, scarlet fever ln children, and other conditions a severe tendemes over this lump is\nHlways a warning sign to you, and\nto    your    physician.\nYou see there is a little tube running up from your throat right into\nthe middle, ear. This tube as you\nknow Is to permit air to enter, so\nthat the drum will have pressure\nfrom both the inside and outside.\nYou've often noticed a hole In the\nside of a big bass drum ln the\nband, which permits air to enter\nand thus keep both sides under\nequal    pressure.\nSo If you have as sore throat\nas in scarlet fever, flu or other\nconditions the inflammation sometimes continues from the throat\nright up into the middle ear along\nthis   tube.\nThen the ear begins to ache and\nthe first thing you know the Inflammation in the middle ear bursts\nright through the drum, and comes\nout of the ear. ThlH usually relieves pain somewhat, and makes\nthings   fairly    safe.\nHowever, sometimes the patient\nwill complain of pain in the lump\nbehind the ear. If it be a small\nyoungster he will put his hand on\nthe   lump.\nThe ear sometimes will seem to\nstand out from the head and be a\nlittle   lower   than    the   other   one.\nNow   what   about   it?\nTell your doctor at once. He\nwill likely enlarge the hole ln the\ndrum so that the discharge will\ncome   out   more   freely.\nPerhaps he will have the ear\nspecialist on hand immediately, and\na large portion of the bony lump\nwiil    be    chisselled    away.\nWhy?\nWell that** lamp\"'communicates\ndirectly with the middle ear just\nas did the tube from the throat\nand the inflammation has extended\nInto lt also. So keep your eye and\nthought on the lump, when there\nIs severe earache, or any discharge\nfrom   the   ear.\nCIGARETS\nPROHIBITED\nBY SPEAKER\nVeteran Baseball Manager\nDeclares Players Must Not\nBreak Training\nCLEVELAND\u2014A! rigid training\nrule laid down by Tils Speaker, manager of the Cleveland Indians, prohibits players from smoking cigarets\nor drinking anything stronger than\none-half of one per cent. The veteran manager-stiii* believes physical\nfitness   offsets   minor   playing   defects.\nTho Cleveland outfield, with\nSpeaker In center. Surmna In right,\nand Jamleson in lef\u00bb, is at least on\na parity with any in tho league,\nIn the opinion of Speuker. ' lie regards Summa as the greatest outfielder found by a major league club\nsince Ty Cobb marched out of\nGeorgia    to    fame    in    the     baseball\npennant wars. In Jamleson he has\nthe \"triple-threat\" excellent fielder,\nheavy  hitter and  Ideal   lead-off  man. i\nIn   the   Infield   Speaker   adrnfts   the\nattacking   force   Is   not   so   great   as |\nwhen   Stuffy   Mclnnls   was   at   first ]\nand   Gardner   at   third,   but   tho   present   Initial- and   far   corner' sarkmen, .\nGuisto  and   Lutzke.   are   expected   to I\noffset   4n   groat   defence   what    they ]\nmay  lack   In  offence.    Another   valu- I\nable   addition   to    the    Indian    camp I\nIs   Glenn , Myatt,   former    Milwaukee- I\nAmerican    association     catcher,    who (\nnow    alternates   with    Steve    O'N'etlt\nin   catching  and   waiting  for  a   pitch j\nhitting   opportunity..\nWhile  not  claiming  a  great\" pitch- i\ning    staff.   Speaker   says    he   has   a\ngood   lot   of   pitchers   and   an   exceptionally    strong    force    of    substitute \\\nplayers and pinch hitters.    In the outfield   as   substitutes   he   has   Brower,\nformerly  of  Wawhlngton,  who  Is also J\na   first   baseman,   and   Joe   Connolly, [\nboth   classy   fielders   and   heavy   hit- I\nters.        Infield     substitutes      Include 1\nGardner  ,at    third,    and    Stephenson J\nat  short  or Ahind.    Five  heavy   batsmen    are    thus    available    as    pinch |\nhitters.\nSpeaker,  \"who   says   he   will   never j\nbe   a   bench   manager,   still   has   his I\nhabit   of   drawing   two   lines   in   tho\ndirt   before   the   plate   and   knocking\nthe dirt from the cleats of his shoes\nbefore    taking    his    position   \"at    the I\nplate.\nThe Distinctive Flavor\nTen year* Ago\nfngote Is used as a basis of some\not the models, at Beer's, in which\ncollection the old-fashioned princess\niline la also developed in evening\ndresses.    And  at  Jenny's   there  Is  a\n(The  Dally  News,  Sept.  2,  1013)\nR. McQuarrie is the owner and\ndriver of the first automobile to\nmake the trip along the new north\nshore  road  from   Nelson   to   Balfour.\n\u2022 *   *\nW. J. Sheppard has been appoint\ned government apiary inspector, under the provisions of the provincial\nFoul Broods act, and instructor for\nEast Kootenay and West Kootenay\ndistricts.\n\u2022 *    *\nTo   haul   a   225-pound   deer  a   dls\ntance of 25 miles, nine miles of\nwhich was through heavy timber,\nwas the task which confronted J,\n'W. Ludwlg and H. W. T. Fesser\nwhen they shot the animal on the\nsouthern side ol? Silver King peak\nyesterday.\n\u2022 *    ->\nJohn Tait, one of the best known\nofficials of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway telegraph department of\nWinnipeg, has been appointed to the\nposition of district telegraphs, with\nheadquarters  at  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Erma Ferguson and Miss\nMarlon Wade leave today for To\nronto   to   attend   college.\nvery new sleeve, full above the el\nbow and crushed to the wrist, which\n\u2022will probably be copied extensively\nIn   American   frocks.       )\nMyrbor, the creator pf the frock\nsketched above, adheres in this de-\nBlgn to the strict chemise line, not\nwithstanding the many modifications\nto which this contour has been treat\ned. Large flowers made ln patch\nwork of various colors of appllqued\nsilk form the striking decoration.\nOften, gold or silver lame are used\nfor the  stems and  leaves,\nElephant\nWnite Lead\nElephant White Lead has stood the test for years,\nand is regarded by all to be the BEST. This is why\nso many people are asking for and insisting on getting\nELEPHANT  GENUINE  WHITE LEAD.\nIt costs the same to paint with good material.   Why\nnot get the Genuine?\nWe have a Complete Stock of\nELEPHANT GENUINE WHITE LEAD,\nBOILED and RAW LINSEED OIL,\nTURPENTINE, DRYERS, COLORS IN OIL,\nALABASTINE, VARNISHES and BRUSHES.\nNow Is the Time to Paint!\nPrices Guaranteed\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL \"QUALITY HARDWARE\"\nBAKER STREET   ' NELSON. B.C.\nof\n\"SALAM\"\nH401\nTEA.\nhas   won it millions, of users.\nTry  it today and Know why.\nOur Mothers Knew\nThe makers tell you why our Mothers\nused Sunlight Soap. It is the best because it is made from the pure oil of\nthe Cocoanut and Palm.\nCocoanut Oil gives you that soft easy\nlather that saves your energy and saves\nyour clothes.\nThe Palm Oil makes Sunlight firm and\nhard so that it is the most economical\nSoap in the world to use.\nSunlight is the purest laundry\n.   soap in Canada.\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial  John Burns & Son\nCANADIAN\n\\PACIFIL7\nk\\ RAILWAY,\/'\nExcursion Fates\nVictoria\nand Return\nVictoria Exhibition\nSEPTEMBER US\nNELSON, $29.55\nRossland,  $29.35.   Trail,  $29.35.'  Grand  Forks,  $25.75.\nKaslo, $30.90.    Silverton, $32.15.    New Denver, $32.35.\nTickets Sold Aug. 30 to Sept.  7\nRETURN LIMIT, SEPT. 10\nCorresponding rates from all points in British Columbia.\nBerth Reservations and details from any Agent, or write\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., NELSON\n \u2014\u2014-\n\t\nV\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING,  SEPTEMBER 3,  1923\ni\" Page Five'\n10 Boys\nTried Hard for 30 Day\/\nlo Wear Out. TKcje\nExtraordinary Boy's\n5hoejBul Couldn't.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nAgents\nSocial Happenings\nIn Nelson\ni\nCRANBROOK NOTES\ni\nCRANBROOK. B.C., rrepc. 2.~Rev.\nE. W. MacKay was at Nelson last\nweek tp attending a meeting of the\nKootenuy presbytery. Mrs, MacKay\nand daughter returned on Thursday\nfrom Kootenay Lake, where they have\nheen   spending   the   summer.\nWord hn\u00ab been received by members\nof his congregation from Rev. W. T.\nTapscott, pastor of the Baptist\nchurch, who has been spending the\nsummer In-the east, that he will return ear.y In September to resume\nhis pastoral work. Rev. E. E. King,\nof Hrandnn college, who has been supplying during the summer, is conducting his farewell services today, prior\nto returning to college to continue\nhis course. By the time Mr. Tapscott\nreturns, extensive improvements which\nhave been made to the church building, are expected to be almost completed.\nIndian Superintendent\nVisits Cranbrook and\nAgent for East Kootenay\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Sept. 2.\u2014Colonel\nPragnell of Kamloops, superintendent\nof Indian agencies for British Colum-\ni bia, has been In the, 'city and district\nthe past week, visiting with H. P.\nHelmsing, Indian agent for the reserves in this locality. Colonel Pragnell Is the successor to the late Major\nMegraw  of  Vernon.\nMiss Bessie Woodman, one of the\nlocal teachers who graduated from\nI the Victoria normal school at\u201e the\nclose    of    last    term,    has    secured    a\nhool   at   Dentil.   Sask.,   and   left   this\neek with her mother for that point.\nMrs.   Woodman  will   return  shortly.\nMrs. E. A. Hill and daughter, Miss\nLenore, returned on Thursday evening\nfrom Nelson, where they have resided\nsince last fall, the change having been\nmade primarily in the Interests of\nMiss   Bill's   health.\nVICTORIA JAPANESE\nOPEN RELIEF FUND\nVICTORIA,   Sept.   2.\u2014A fund   has\nbeen   opened   in   the   local Japanese\ncolony    for   the    relief   of sufferers\nIn the Japanese disaster.\nThis column Is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vlgneux. All news of s social\nnature, including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Itemn,\nmarriages, etc., will appear In thla\n- column.   Telephone Mrs. Vlgneux.\nMrs. W. K. King and daughter. Miss\nRosemary King, Josephine street, returned to the city Friday evening after spending the past week at Balfour. Whll\u00ab there they attended the\nQueen's Bay fruit and flower show,\nand also the regatta which took place\nFriday  afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nD. H. J. Fraser of Vanoouver spent\nthe   week-end   ln   the   city.\nC. P. Coates of Balfour came to\ntown, Friday, to take part ln the\ntennis tournament.\n\u2022 i    \u2022\nN. A. Wallinger, M.P.P., of Cranio rook, was a week-end visitor in the\n<Mty.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. f, O. Blaylock of\nTrail   were   week-end  guests   In   town.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nDr. A. C. Major of Procter came to\nthe city, Friday evening, ln order to\nparticipate in the tennis and golf\ntournament.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Apdrey Savage of Calgary, who\nfras\u00ab been spending her vacation, the\nguest of Miss Queen Ie Annable, Hall\nMines road, leaves via the Crow this\nmorning   for   her  home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. G. Mahon of Procter was a\ncily visitor Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 \\\nMrs.   C.   Jarrett,   August   and   Jack\nJtirrett, all of Trail, who have been\nspending the past week at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Jerome, 912\nVictoria street, left Saturday for their\nhome.\n\u2022 |    \u2022\nMrs.    A.    E. Underwood    and    her\n(iaughtef,    Miss Marjorie    Underwood,\nof Chase, spent the week-end In the\ncity.\nCharles F. Pincott, the Grand Forks\nbarrister, took part in the tennis and\ngolf   tournament   over   the   week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nFrank Ivens and his sister. Miss\nMaude Ivens, of Kellogg. Idaho, who\nmotored to town last week, are visiting at tha home of Mr. and Mrs. E.\nY. Brake, Baker street. They will\nreiurn to their home this week by\nway  of Trail.\ns ' e   \u2022\nMrs. W, J, Collins of Kaslo was a\ncity visitor the latter part of the\nweek.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss Marjorie Jerome, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. T. 8. Jerome, Victoria\nstreet, left the latter part of the\nweek for Revelstoke, where she will\nvisit friends previous to her leaving\nfor Golden, where she will be teaching school this term.\nVen. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham\nand family have returned to the city\nfrom' Willow Point, where they have\nspent  the  summer  months.\nWord was received ine latter part\nof the week' by F. C. Ingram, 1319\nStanley street, of the birth of a\ndaughter, at Berkeley. Cal , to Mr. and\nMrs. W. T. Ward, the latter formerly\nMiss   Marjorie   Ingram   of   this   city.\n\u2022 \u2022    I\nMiss LeonC McGregor, of the University of Alberta, at Edmonton, Is\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Vincent, at their residence , Dulce\nDomum, on the north shore. Miss McGregor Is a student In medicine at\nthe university, and Is spending the\nsummer vacation on Chautauqua\n\u2022Aork.\nI   i    l\nMiss Eva Gillett left Saturday night\nfor Victoria, where she will attend\nthe   provincial   normal  school.\n\u2022 \u2022    |\nMiss Ruby Glaser left last night on\nthe Kettle Valley for Naramata, where\nshe    will    teach    during    the    coming\nterm.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss- Marie Levesque of Bellingham,\nWash., who- Is on the Taber, Altn..\nteaching staff, arrived In the city\nFriday evening from tlie coast, where\nshe   has   been   spending   her   vncatton.\nRoofing and\nBuilding Paper\nGET YOUR FALL SUPPLY NOW\nWe carry a full Line of the following Brands:\nRAWHIDE ROOFING in 1 and 2 Ply\nMARSWELL'S ROOFING in 2 and 3 Ply\nESQUIMAULT  BUILDING  PAPER\nESQUIMAULT SATURATED TAR PAPER\nCARPET FELT\nBLUE PLASTER BOARD\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\nLook   for   the   Red   Hardware   Store\nPHONE 497\nP.O.  BOX  414\nShe left yesterday morning for Taber,\nand while here was a guest at the\nhome, on Stanley street, of her aunt,\nMrs.  M.  Madden.\n\u2022 *    \u25a0\nMiss    Nancy    Qracey,     daughter    of\nMrs.   A.   H.   Gracey,   Kerr   apartments,\nleft    Saturday    evening    for    Victoria,\nwhere she  will  attend  normal  school.\na     \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Doris Jerome.i Victoria street,\nhit the latter part or the week for\nTrail, where she Is visiting at the\nhome   of   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Harry  Ades.\nMrs. J. Currie and her daughter.\nMiss M. Currie, who are summering\nat Balfour, went to Ainsworth, Thursdav, to attend the funeral of a relative  there.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nH. C. Mclnnts of New Denver spent\nth<t .week-end In town, attending the*\ntennis and  golf   tournament. \u2122\nMr, snd Mrs. W. H. North and family, accompanied by Mrs. J. H. Thompson of New Denver, arrived In town\nFriday evening, and left Saturday\nmorning by motor for their home In\nS pokane. M r. North accom pa n lea\nth\u00ab*m as far as Tmlr,\n\u2022 \u2022   i\nDr. W. A. Fergle of Cranbrook, and\nGeorge Simpson, also of Cranbrook,\nare here to attend the tennis and\ngolf   tournament.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S, L. Laseny of Lethbridge were week-end visitors ln town.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nH. Perry Leake of Balfour was a\ncity   visitor   Saturday.\n\u2022 \u25a0    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. G. Daniels and\nfiiinlly, Hendyrx street, left Saturday\ne\\enlng for Vancouver, where they\nwill reside  In future.       **\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. T. M. Blackstockfof\nMedicine Hat arrived in the city Fri\nday evening.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nA. G. Builder of Shoreacres spent\nthij week-end In town attending the\ngolf   and   tennis   tournament.\n\u2022 \u00bb    i\nMiss Doris Gledhlll Johnson, Park\nstreet, who spent the last few days\nfn Spokane, returns to duty today.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Janet Carrie, B.A., daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Alexander Carrie, Silica\nstreet, left last evening for Victoria,\nwhere  she   goes   to  attend  normal.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. George Swannell and\ndaughter, of Rock Creek, who have\nbe<-n visiting with relatives for the\npast week, left yesterday by motor\nfor their home.\n\u2022 I    .4\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. McFadden or\nNew Denver were city visitors over\ntht!   week-end.\na   *   $\nP. G. Truss, a Brantford, Ont., business man, spent the week-end ln town.\nsee\n'Don Calvert of Kaslo arrived In\ntown Friday morning and Is the guest\nof Geoffry Eyton. Mill street. While\nhere he Is taking part In the tennis\ntcurnament. He leaves tomorrow\nmorning for Spokane, where he will\nvliiit  his  slater.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss ' M. McGaughey of Kettle\nFalls, Wash., will be the guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. J. Dill, 617 Mill street,\nfor  the  next week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Motile Colegrave and Miss\nGertrude Smith, both of New Denver,\nwere week-end visitors in the city\nantf attended the tennis and golf tournament at the Nelson Golf and Country   club.\n\u2022 \u2022    i\n11 A. Potter of Vancouver, formerly\nof Kelson, who has been In the Slocan district for the past couple of\nweeks, spent the week-end In *\u25a0 town\nand took part ln the golf tournament,\nMr. Potter was among the first to\nplay on the Nelson Golf and Country\nclub   course.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nW. A. Cameron of New Denver was\na  city   visitor  Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Cornish. Mill\nstreet, who have been spending the\nsummer months at their country plnce\nat Queen's Bay, returned to the city\nthe  latter,part of  the  week.\nMrs. W., A- Thurman, Silica street,\nleft Friday on the afternoon boat for\nProcter, where she spent the weekend at  the Outlet.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Ivy Brown af Bonnington was\na  city 'Visitor  Saturday.\n\u00ab    *    \u2022\nMiss Muriel Poole, Mill street, who\nl.ae. been holidaying at Harrop. a\nguest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C.\nD. Ogilvie, returned the latter part of1\nthe  week.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss B. Currie, who has been summering at Balfour, has left for her\nhome In Greenville, Sask., where she\nIs on the teaching staff of the Central   school.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. J. P. B. Day and Mrs. R. B.\nKirk of New Denver are among the\ntennis and golf enthusiasts who took\npart In the tournament at the weekend. ,\nKootenay and Boundary\nPREMIUM LISTS\nQUEEN'S BAY IS\nFOR TRAIL OUT SCENE OF FIRST\nFAIR \u2022 REGATTA\nFair Offers Specials for\nHeaviest Entries From\nVarious Towns\nTRAIL, B.C, Sept. 2. \u2014 Trail Is I\npreparing tor what it is hoped will j\nprove the banner year for fruit fairs !\nln trail. The dates are September 12,1\n13 and H. Premium lists are now\nout, and certainly are well up to the\nhigh standard of former years. The\ndirectors are hoping to receive good\nentries from outside points, and are\noffering special prizes for the exhibitor making the most entries from I\nNelson, Frultvale, Robson and Ross- |\nland, respectively, in addition\nvaluable prize for the\nIng the most entries ln the entire*'\nfair,   all   sections   included. ,\nSpecial entertainments have been\nprovided for. which will as sun! a\nenappy program each day of the fair,\nand the Nelson Kiltie band will be In\nattendance the opening day of the\nfair. The railway companies have\ngranted the special fare of fare and\none-third   for  the  round   trip. *\nThe judges for fruit and vegetables\nwill be __ W. White of Victoria and\nO. B. Appleton of Procter, whilst Mrs.\nW. Rutherford of Nelson will Judge\nthe home  cooking ad  ladles'  work.\nThere are no entry fees, and exhibitors may make as many entries\nas they please. George Relmann Is\nsecretary.\nOutlet Community Is Mecca\nof Surrounding Points\njor the Day\nSPLENDID EXHIBITS\n.       IN RACKING SHED\nAfternoon   Is   Devoted   to\n\u2022 ^hlb'uor mak-\"] \"Water Sports With Play and\ns   in   the   entires       \u2014 \u2022if*\nDance in the Evening\nWINLAW WILL HOLD\nFIRST FAIR TDDAY\nWINLAW, B.C., Sept. 2\u2014 A meeting\nwaa held by the fuir committee to get\nworkers to make the tables and fix\nup the hall In readiness for the fall\nfair, which will be held tomorrow.\nThis Is the first fair to be held in\nWinlaw. \u25a0'     *\nMrs. J. Green was a visitor to Nelson.\nMiss Wood from Saskatchewan Is\nspending her holidays here, the guest\nof   Mr.   and   Mrs.   J.   Green.\nMrs. Stowegard of Lemon Creek Is\nvisiting  Mrs. Swanson for a few days.\nMr. Newton Is visiting his old\nfriends   here,   Mrv and   Mrs.   Steward.\nH. C. Derrig has a good crcp of\npeaches, but the wasps are very\nnumerous, asd are doing a lot of\ndamage  among  the   fruit.\nTT\"\nProcter Beach Is\nScene of Bonfires\nand Corn Roasts\nPROCTER, B.C., Sept. 2\u2014Bonfires\nare very numerous at Procter thio\nyear, as scarcely a night passes without  one   somewhere   on   the   beach.\nOn Tuesday evening a Joint picnic,\nbonfire and corn roast was held on\nthe beach opposite the narrows, while\nMiss May Cronin was hostess at one\nal   Procter.\nOn Wednesday W. A. Ward had a\nhuge one on the beach In front of the\nI Outlft'hotel in honor of the opening\nof the Ymir road, while Friday evening another huge bonfire and corn\nroast was held  next to  the wharf.\nMr. and Mrs. D. O. Thomas, Silica\nstreet, accompanied by their family,\nhave been spending ^the last \u25a0 -few\nweeks at Longbeach, returned to the\ncity Saturday morning.\n\u00bb    \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. H. H. Currie returned\nFriday night, by way of the Arrow\nlakes, from a 10-day honeymoon at\nVancouver and Victoria, and have\ntaken up their residence at 822 Baker\nstreet, their home, purchased recently\nfrom   the   McQuarrie  estate.\nCollege    girls are   growing   taller,\nfeuch   fiapping aa   they   may    have\ndone   seems   to have   been   good   for\nthem.\nQUEEN'8 BAY, B.C., Sept. 2.\u2014Tho\nfair, which was held on Friday, and\nwas the first incident of the kind to\ntake place at Queen's Bay, passed off\nsuccessfully. The weather was perfect, and the whole community mad*\nthe evuit a holiday, Many visitors\nfrom the surrounding districts attended and Joined In the festivities\nThe wharf was most tastefully decorated and wore a gala appearance.\nj W. S. King, who. with Mrs. King.\nj came out from Nelson in the morning\n| on the Nasookin and Judged the ex-\n| hlblts, ably assisted by Mrs. A. J.\n! Cornish, opened the proceedings In the\n; packing shed, with an appropriate\nj speech At 2:30 p.m. A vote of thanks\n; tendered to the Judges, and tnree\ni hearty cheers from those assembted\nI ended  the   formal   opening.\nRegatta- Is Varied.\nThe program of the regatta was\nthen proceeded with. The lake was\ncalm, and the events passed off\nsmooth'y. W. S. King and J. H. Hoyle\nacted as Judges, A. J. Cornish waa\nstarter of the races, and F. J. Sammons of Procter, the steward of the\ncourse.    The  results were as   follows:\nMen's single sculling \u2014 1 Lord Aylmer,   2   J.   Ling.\nLadies' swimming, 35 yards \u2014 1\nEdna   Fraser,   2   Evelyn   Fraser.\nMen's swimming, 45 yards \u25a0\u2014 1 J.\nClement.   2   A.   Attree.\nLadies' swimming, handicap, 35\nyards\u2014Isabel  Fraser.\nMixed doubles, sculling, 165 yards\u2014\n1 L. Cook and Isabel Fraser, 2 E.\nCooper and  Mrs. Fraser.\nLadies'   single   sculling,   165   yards\u2014\n1  Gwen  Scott   Lauder,   2   Mollle  Green.\nBoys*   swimming,  handicap,   25   yards\n\u20141    K.   Chandler,   2    Kootenay   Sammons.\nLadles'   nail   driving\u2014Mrs.   Chandler.\nMen's   hat Htrimmtng\u2014\u00abEdward   Cooper,\nTug-of-war \u2014 Procter and Balfour\nwon   over   Queen's   Bay.\nMr. and Mrs. King being obliged to\nleave early In order to catch the boat\nto Nelson, Rev. J. S. Mahood distributed the prizes. Mrs. R. L. Codd,\nschool teacher, donated a prize to eacn\nof her pupils for general proficiency\nIn  their studies.\n\"SUepy Hollow\" Portrayed.\nIn the evening a piay entitled\n\"Sleepy Hollow\" was presented by the\nchildren of the Bay. The cast consisted of Isabel Codd as the \"Fairy\nQueen,\" Bessie Codd as \"Mother\nGoose,\" Norah Budd ns \"Bo-Peep,\"\nBessie Bashford as \"Miss Muffet.\"\nHarry Svmonds as \"Jack Horner.\"\nDennis    Budd    as    \"Boy    Blue,\"    Sybil\n611 Baker St.       Phone 20<T\nLABOR DAY!\nThis Store will be\nClosed AU Day.\n- _JQ* <^^_y\n^-         V<^l- \u25a0*-\u00ab* ft \u00a7T^\n\\   T_       *\u2014_?_r\\_\\     _m__r\nft__j\n\/_&S^_\n,\/Wtt\nrt.-r\nCOAL CREEK TEAM WINS MINE\n'     , RESCUE EFFICIENCY SHIELD\nTbt \u2022t\u00bbHt that mat mim ot,\nV Canadian Countryman.\nFERNIE, B.C., Aug. 31. \u2014 The first\naid and mine rescue competitions held\nunder the auspices of the East Kootenay Mine Safety association recently,\nwere very keenly contested by teams\n'Irorp Lethbridge, Blairmore, Hillcrest,\nColeman. HelleVue. Michel, Natal, Fernie and Coal  Creek.\n. First honors in mine rescue proficiency went' to the team from Coal\nCreek, captained by J.-Canfield. The\nprltt-s    were    leather    club    bags. By\nwinning this event the Coal Creek\nteam also won the right to contest\nfor the provincial mine rescue championship. They have, therefore, left\nfor Ladysmith, B.C., to take part in\nthe provincial competition there on\nLabor dny, which Is being conducted\nby the Vancouver Island Mine Safety\nassociation.\nThe runners-up In the East Kootenay competition Were: Second prize,\nMichel  team No.  2, Captain   Matt Litt\nler;    third    prize,    Fernle    team    No.    1,\nCaptain   E.   Hesketh.\nThe senior first aid event was won\nby Fernie team No. 1, Captain Joe\nHamer, the prize being a set of carvers. In addition to the individual\nprizes, this team again takes the\nmines department first aid cup and\nthe mine safety shield, presented last\nfall by Hon. Dr. J, H. King, minister\nof public works. In this event the\nsecond    prize    (cutlery)    was    won    by\n[Michel    tesm   No.    1,   Captain   William\nI Fowler;    third    (carvers),    tie   between\nI Lethbridge   and   Beltevue.     Both  teams\ni were   nwlrded   prizes.\nj In the women's first aid event, two\nteams competed: \u25a0 First prize (cut\nglass fruit bowls), Coal Creek, Captain\n| Mrs.   James   Miller;, second   (cut   glnss\n[ salad    bowls),    Michel,    Captain    Mrs.\nI Moseley,\nj Junior first aid: First, Fernle Boy\nscouts, Captain J.   Lamont,  prize auto-\n| rnatlc    rifles;    second.     Hillcrest    Boy\nj scouts,   prizes   scout   knives.\naabti\/i \"SPET\nROYAL\" is ths\nchoicest Scotch\nWhisky obtainable\nat any price. Th,er*\nart many brand*\not Scotch Whiskies\nbeing offered ts\nthe public, some at\nhigher prices, but\nno matter how\nmuch you pay von\ncannot get anything finer than\nSPET ROYAL.\"\nSPEY-ROYAL\nSOLD AT All\n60VEBNMENT UQUOB\nSTORES MB.C \t\nThla advertisement ia not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nSCOTCH\nWHISKY\nUSE PICTURES TO\nEDUCATE FOREIGNERS\nCHICAGO \u2014 Educating foreigners\nby use of the motion picture Is\nbeing adopted more and more each\nday, and has served to cause deep\nthought on the part of the leading educators and Immigration authorities of this country, according\nto Jaroslav J. 'Zmrhal, district school\nsuperintendent of Chicago, in a statement made to the society for visual\neducation   here.\n\"There has been a noticeable increase in the attendance at our\nnight classes and lectures on citizenship since motion pictures have\nbeen available,\" declared Mr. Zmrhal.\n\"The men found the screen answering their questions In a way they\ncould easily understand. Those who\nwere working for their naturalization papers were particularly delighted with these lessons ln picture  language.|\"    _\nWe are frequently told that man In\nthe early ages lived a life of simplicity and innocence\u2014yet the first\nman born killed the second.\n\u2022' Still, If all the town people moved\nback to the farms the farms >asuld\nJ>e crowded, too.\nScott Lauder a \"Fairy,\" Esme Scott\nLauder being unwell, Roger Cornish\nsubstituted as a fairy. Bobbie Codd\nacted as \"Simple Simon,\" Charlie Codd\nas a school teacher, and. Margaret\nCodd as \"Mistress Mary.\" The children acted and sang remarkably well\nand credit praise was awarded Mrs.\nH. Scott Lauder, who was the author\not the play and trained the children;\nand to Gwen Scott Lauder, the accompanist. Gwen Scott Lauuer and\nRoger Cornish sang three songs after\nthe play, to the delight of the audience.\nA dance under the able management\nof. F. J. Sammons, followed. Mrs. J.\nS. Mahood, Miss Gwen Scott Lauder,\nH. Falrbank, Rev. J. S. Mahood. Mrs.\nH. Scott Lauder, Mrs. R. J. Bashford\nand Mr. Learmonth furnished the\nmusic. A Jitney load under the care\nof Mr. Learmonth attended the play\nand   dance.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Cornish, R. J.\nflash ford, Mrs, McDonald of Harroi,,\nH. Scott Lauder and F. J, Sammons\ncontributed vocal solos and duets between   dances.\nMrs. (Dr.) Major and Mrs. Norman\nMajor walk*d from Procter and staved\nover as the guests of Mrs. A. J.\"\nBudd.\nThe whole affair was a great success, and W. H. Symonds, the prim-*\nmover of It. expressed a sense of\npleasure In the result. About Ml wuj\nrealized by the Welfare association.\nTrait   Winners.\nThe list of prize winners in the fair\nfollows;\nApples.\nGravenstelns \u20141 |{. A. Scott Lauder,\n2  R   J.   Bashford.  3   A,   Attree.\nWageners\u20141 G. Porteous. 2 R. A.\nScott   Lauder.   3   J.   H,   Hoyle.\nRome Beauties\u20141 G. Porteous, 2\nMrs.   Mahood,   3   A.   Attree.\nDelicious\u20141 A. Attree, 2 Lady Avl-\nnier.\nAny other variety apples\u20141 .7. H.\nHoyle.   2   R.   J.   Bashford,   3   A.   Att.rr<\\\nCollection of four varieties \u2014 J. H.\nHoyle.\nSpecial   prize   donated    by   T.    Eitott\ncompany,   G.   Porteous.\nPears.\nBartlett\u20141 Mrs. Budd, 2 J. IT.\nHoyle.   3   Lady  Aytmer.\nAny other variety pears\u2014Lady Aylmer.\nPlums\u20141 G, Porteous, I Lady Aylmer,   3   J.   H.   Hoyle.\nPeaches\u20141 G. Porteous, 2 Mrs. Mahood.   3   R.   J.   Bashford.\nCrabs, Hyslop\u20141 Mrs. MallOO-d, I\nLady Aylmer. Transcendant \u2014 Lady\nAylmer.\nRed    curran ts\u2014Mrs.    Mm hood\nBlack   currants\u2014Mrs.   Mahood,\nAny other variety curratus\u2014I R A\nScott Lauder, 2 Mrs. K. Attree, 3 A\nAttree.\nVe-retables.\nBeans\u20141 J. H. Hoyle, I R. J Bashford,   3   A.   Attree.\nPeas\u2014K.   Aylmer.\nTomatoes\u2014I Lady Aylmer, 2 A Attree.   3   J.   H.   Hoyle.\nRed beets\u20141 W. H Svinonds. 2 G.\nPorteous,   3   R.   A.   Scott   Lauder.\nCarrots\u20141 R. A. Scolt Lauder, 2 G.\nPorteous,   3   J.   H.   Hoyle.\nCorn-,-! J. H. Hoyle, 2 R. A. Scott\nLauder,   3   A.   Attree.\nTurnips\u20141 Tt. A. Scott Lauder, 2\nR   J.   Bashford.\nOnions \u2014 1 W. H. Symonds, 2 K.\nAylmer.\nCucumbers\u20141 J. H. Hoyle, 2 R. J.\nBashford,   3  G.   Porteous.\nCabbages\u20141 K. Aylmer, 2 Mrs. Mahood,  3   R.  A.   Scott  Lauder.\nSquash\u20141 J. H. Hoyle, _ R. A. Scott\nLauder.\nMarrow\u20141 J. H. Hoyle, 2 K. Aylmer,   3   Mrs.   A.  J.   Budd.\nPotatoes\u2014Special prize from George\nRutherford\u20141 J. H. Hoyle, 2 R. A.\nScott   Lauder.   3   G.   Porteous.\nBest collection of vegetables^\u20141 J.\nH, Hoyle, 2 W. H.'Symonds, 3 R. J,\nBashford.\nSpecial   for  highest   points,   from   P.\nBurns & Co.^J.   H.   Hoyle.\nHome Department.\nDairy products\u20141 Mrs. W. H. Symonds,   2   Mrs.   R.   J.   Bashford.\nEggs\u20141 Mrs. Symonds, 2 Lady Aylmer,   1   Mrs.   Hoyle.\nJar of honey\u20141 Rev. J. S. Mahood,\n2   Mrs.   W.  H.  Symonds.\nHoney   in   comb\u2014Rev.   J.   S.   Mahood.\nHorn*    Cooking.\nLoaf of bread\u20141 Mrs. R. A. Scott\nLauder, 2 Mrs. Hoyle, 3  Mrs.  Porteous.\nCake\u2014l Mrs. Bashford, 2 Mrs. Symonds. '\" \u25a0\u25a0\u2022*\u2022!\nPastry\u20141 Mrs. R. A. Scott Lauder,\nS  Mrs.  Mahood.\nBottled fruit\u20141 Mrs. R. A. Scott\nLauder,   1   Brs.   Budd,   Mrs.   K.   Attree.\nThe prises for home cooking were\ndonated   by   H.   Falrbank.\nJam\u20141   Mrs.   Mahood,   I   Mrs.   Sy\nmonds. 3 Mrs.  Porteous.\nriowsrs.\nRoses\u20141 Mrs, Bashford, 2 Mrs. Attree,  3  Mrs.  Hoyle.\nAsters\u20141 M.s. Hoyle, 2 Lady Aylmer.\nSweet |tti 1 Mrs. Attree, 2 Mrs.\nHoyle,    3    Mrs.    Symonds.\nAny other variety flowers \u2014 1 Mrs.\nHoyle, 2 Mrs. Symonds, 3 Mrs. Bash-r\nford.\nBest collection of flowers\u20141 Mrs.\nAttree,   2   Lady   Aylmer.\nSpecial prize for home cooking,\ndairy products nnd flowers, $2.50 ln\nmerchandise from R. Simpson, Regina\n\u2014Mrs.   W.  H. Symonds.\nEmbroidery\u20141 Mrs. Budd, 2 Mrs. K.\nAttrte.\nCrochet\u2014Mrs.   Mahood.\nSpecial prize for highest number of\npoints obtained in the show by an Individual, sack of fiour rrom Brack-\nman-Ker.   Nelson\u2014J.   H.   Hoyle.\nThe prizes for the home cooking,\nexcept the special, were donated by\nH.   Falrbank.\nSAYS SOME CHILDREN\nREMAIN UP TOO LATE\nPastor   Urges    Parents   to   See   That\nChildren  Reach School in  Mornings   Fresh   for   Study\nThe value of education\u2014particularly mural education\u2014was strongly\nfmphnsized yesterday ln a sermon\nat the church of Mary Immaculate*\nby Very Rev. J. Althoff. pastor, who.\nIn taking occasion to Impress parents-\nwith the great duty dependant upon\nthem tn send their children to school\nn'gularly, stated that the wise parent.\nIn addition, saw to It that the child\nwas not allowed to play around until\nlate hours at night, thereby reach-\nImr classes npxt morning in a too\ntir\"d   condition   for   psoper   study.\nThe exercise of parental authority,\nhe stated, was a branch of education, and the situation in the world\ntoday,   where   men  openly  flouted  all\nutlierlty as represented by law and\ngovernment;    the   present   world-wide\nhaos, where nations seemed full of\nhate, was due In large part to a\nlack of education In Christianity-\nmen today were growing up forgetting that their life ln This world\nwas only transitory, and that the\nlife hereafter should be the goal,\nand was the only thing really worth\nwhile. - -      \u2022   .\nThe   key   to   succes  can  seldom   be\nfettd  as  a  night key.\nGay Spring Gardens\nPlant  otir  Daffodils anfi Narcissi  ami\npc   what   the   Kootenay  can   produce.\nipeci.l Offer, 2 dozen for  $1.00\nDelivered.\nCraigend Bulb Farm\nR.R.I,   Nelaon,   B.C.\nH. W. AVERILL\nDENTIST\nNorthport Wash.\nIf ran h.T. 130.00 or more\nwork don., X will par your far.\nto Northport from H.l.on, Bom-\nlund or Trail and District; If\n\u202240.00 or more, jour far* to\nNorthport and return.\nSOLD   CaOWNS     $5.00\nmax    PAINLESi    XXTKAC-\nTIONB   WITH   PI.ATB   OB\naaiDoawoax\n\u2014   AU.   HT   rUTXI   tit   \u2014\n Page Six' 71 _\n'Hi:'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3, 1923\nrr?\u2014v\n| Markets sal Finance\n[MAKING TAXICAB\nI      F>li?\u00a3S laTliYG TASK\nBERLIN. \u2014 Taxlcab farcl In Berlin are now 7000 times the Jutnber of\nn.iirks  i,gltfcr.|l   on   taximtt.rs.\nJapan's Need of Land\nMay Be Cause of War\nin the Near Fature\nLONDON\u2014Unless    somo     of\nwestern nations are awakened\nstock prices     VEGETABLES\nSAG SOMEWHAT     j^g^f\nMarket: Ii    Unusually    Doll    Bocvuae\nTradfn   Absent   Themselves\non Labor Bay  Eve.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 3. \u2014 Stock\nprices showed a tendency lo m&\nthroughout    yesterday's   brief   session,\n*M th<' murket, wllh trading unusually\n('ull because of the abeeeoe of many\nirad'-rs on account of the Labor day\nholiday.\nDavison Chemical again Indulged In\na pyrotechnical display, opening 114\npoints lower, at 51, dropping to 4H. .it\n\u25a0which one sale of 6200 shares wan recorded, and then plunging to t$%,\nclosing at 38 for a net loss of lfi\\4\npoints, and Just half of last Thursday's top price. An official investigation of the movements af this stock i\nIs   under  way.\nProfessional operators, using the\nsuspension of anthracite mining and\nItalian military action against Greece\nrs excuses, began to offer* stocks down\nfrom the opening, but the losses did\nnot exceed a point or so In the active\nnnd standard Issues, probably because\nlittle long selling made its appearance.\nTool operations were again in evidence\nln a few specialties, Austin Nichols\nand Julius Kayser each rising more\nthan   a  point.\nAn attempt was mad.> to depress the\nautomotive shares following the announcement of additional automobile\nprice cuts, hut good buying support\nappeared, and the recessions, as a\nrule, we're limited to fractions. One\nblock of Ht.O'iO shares of General Motors changed hands Just he fore the\nclose at IT.lj. the price dropping luter\ntu  151*. ofr %.\nRails yielded slightly on what was\nfcenerally believed lo be profit-taking\nsales. The hard coal carriers failed\nto reflect any uneasiness over the\nanthracite   mining   sll nation.\nThe weekly clearing house statement ehpwed an increase of $78,741,-\n000 In loans, \u25a0 discounts and Investments, while-net demand deposits Increased $:>(,.632.010, and time deposits\n$12,248,000. The reserve of member\nhanks In the federal reserve bunk decreased   (5.848.000.\nClosing'   Quotations.\n\u25a0 I   ?>iMlMil[ lUlJIi:.-\". Ill        ti<\nPickling Cukes and Onions !^T\u201et\u201eaw1u'TU\nin Demand; Eggs Up Ten\nCtnts\nTaxlcab drivers ai; carry printed (h(,|r mlgtalten atl,tud, toward\ntables showing tin. totals the multiple\nproduces with various possible registrations on the Indicator. Every time\ntho'multiple is changed there Is endless confusion, and many disputes ensue which the police are often called\nupon  to  Buttle.\nClerks   in   phops   are   provided   with\nsimilar    tables.      ln    every     trade    an\nthe  mui-\nple   which   will   be   used   In   comput-\n\u2022 Ing   the   pries   of   articles   in   depreci-\n! ated   paper marks,  as against  the gold\nI mark price.'\nPickling    cucumbers     and     onions   prpC\/\/i\/)r   JAPAN  TQ\nwere   In   great   demand   by   buyers   at   * CAJU\/H\/C   J\/ir rtlf   1,1\/\nHigh\nLow\nC.   V.   It.   ...\nrhlnn     \t\n6   M.   ft.   St.\nv..\n(ien.    Motor*\n1:,%\nt*_\nInt.    Nickel\n1!\nI2\u00bb\u00bb\nJto.   Pw.   cm\ni     . .\nl\u00bb7i\nim;\nMo,   Pac.   pf<l     . .\n'.\".**,\n29%\nSturtebatoer\nJ (111 4\n1 or, T.\nV.  S.  Steel\n:,,iii .\n93\nII*\nWINNIPEO\nCHAIN    Ql\nOTAT\nWheat-\n< IJM'U\nHleli\nLow\ndel\t\n180**\n1021;\n1005;\nM\n99%\nN\n>lay    .....\n1025.\n1041,\n102%\nOats\u2014\nOct\t\n41 tt\n4r,\n44%\nPec\t\n41M,\n41'i\n40%\nMav    \t\n'i\\\nmi\n44%\nBarley\u2014\nOct\t\nr, 4 v>\n54',.\nu %\nM\t\nMS\nMay    \t\n55%\nFlax-\nnet\t\n197\n199 ii\n197\nMav    \t\nv.'iy\n194%\nHH'j\nRye\u2014   \u25a0\nlift\nMtt\n65%\nthe Saturday morning market, the\ndemand exceeding the supply. Other\nfresh- vegetables wore al\u00bbo 1n demand.\nButter advanced five cents on the\npound, selling at 54c. Kggs also took\na .lump of 10c nnd sold at 50c. A\nrather limited supply was on hand\nund consequently the eggs sold out\nrapidly. A large supply 0\/ fresh\ntomatoes were shown and sold\ncheap.\nThe usual supply of beef, pork\nand veal was on hand, while many\nfresh chickens were sold at from\nlie   to  3F\u00bbc per  pound.\nPrices    were:\nSpring    chickens,    10    3T>c\nFowl,    Ht   25c\nIleef,    lb 10c to 25c\nVeal,    lb 15c to 25c\nFont,   lb 20c to 30c\nBeef   heart,   lh  12 ^c\nKresh   liver,   2   lbs.   for '.  25c\nHa j sage,   lb   pa\nTotted meats,   lb   20c\nDairy    butter,    Ib 45c\nC neese,    lb  50c to 4 5c\nKKgs,    per   doz   50c\nGreens,   bunch         5c\nLettuce,   per   head      10c\nItadlshes,    bunch      ,     5c\nOnions,   bunch        5c\nCarrots, fi lbs. for   25c\nNew  Potatoes,   lb .,    2c\nTomatoes.    Ib ..5c to 12%c\nVeus,   5   lbs,   for     25c\nT'ot   plants,   each     15c to 75c\nCut   plants,   per   dozen        25o\nI Bulbs,   per   dozen   80c\nClow-1 j Homemade  Jelly,   lb.,   from    15c\nUt% I Jiun,   lb   15c\nJ51* j Cherries,   a lbs.  for   25c\nll | WHEAT ADVANCES\nUPON WAR NEWS\nClose\nmm\n9K>!.\n103%\n41%\n40%\n44%\nMil\nhi!\n19xt,i\n111%\n194%\n\u00abS%\n64 7.\nEgg Markets\nTon\nfirsts,\nextras\n38c;\nOTTAWA,   Sep!\neitrfta,  4ic lo 43\nMontreal\u2014Firm\n33c.\nSaskatchewan, Alberta and Hi\nColumbia   markets   unchanged.\nChicago\u2014Spot. ISe to 30c; refri\ntors, spot. 2714c; November, tie;\ncamber,   leftc.\nNew  York\u2014Extra   firsts,   Itc   to   35\nfirsts,   Ittto   to  3Jc.\nfn-\nMontreal Produce\nImproved     Wheat     Business     Sue    to\nEuropean  Situation Is   Factor  With\nHlghar Liverpool.\nCHICAGO. Sept. I.\u2014Wei M\u00abl Improved    export    business,    and    higher\nquotations at Liverpool combined Saturday to force a sharp advance In\nwheat futures here. At the finish\nwheat   showed   a   net   gain   of   1 %c   lo\ntfec, with paeember $1.0*% to li.Mtt\nto   $1.\u00ab\u00ab%;   May,   11.11%   to   $1.12%.\nCorn was up %c to fjkCI oats advanced 'Ac to 1 '-ie; and provisions\nwero   unchanged  at   10c  hlghei.\nForeign Money\nNi:\\v roftK. Sept. I. --- Starling\nxohenge Irregular at $4.55% for fiO-\nav   bills  and   at   $4.54 U   for  demand.\nCanadian   dollars\u2014 |T%c.\nFrancs\u2014Demand,   1.4* C.\nLire\u2014Demand,   4.23 Vic.\nMARKS \u2014 Demand. .000969c; cables.\nIHHIIHIlc.\nMinneapolis Grain\niept.\nKONTREA1* Sept. 2. \u2014 1\n\u2022 lian^ed; butter lower am\nquiet.\nChee.se\u2014 Finest   easterns,   22\nButter\u2014Choicest    creamery,\nFRUIT MARKETS\nrep\n\u2022rl*'d\nbra-ch-\nCalga\nlowing   Canadian   markets   are\nby      the     Dominion      fruit\ny\u2014H.\u00ab'. apples, boxes Transparent fancy. $1.90; Doefeeca, fancy,\nand C, $2; cmbt-Vple*, boxes. Tr.m-\nscen.ieiit, fancv and C. $1.75; peaches,\nboxes. Bales Early No. f, $1.75; St.\nJohn, fl.16; plums, 4-basket crate*,\nTragedy, Kurbnnk, Bradsiiaw. $1.75;\npotatoes, white, cwt, $1.5t\"; onions.\n\\ellow choice and sample quality,\nowl, $5: Ontario blueberries, ll-quart\nbaskets. $2.75. Car arrivals Awuat\n23 to 25 inclusive: BC, 2 mixed fruit\nand vegetable**, 1 apples; imported, 1\nprunes.\nEdmonton \u2014 B.C. apples, Ouches.',\nfancy varieties. $2 per box: crates\n81.50; Transcendent crabg-pplea, $1.26\nto $1.50; plums, Bradsbawe. Cleared at\n11.191 apricots, Royal, $2.25; tomatoes,\n\"1 XI 4-basket crates; colons, sample.\n^3 25 per cwt.; Imported pears, hOXev,\nCahtletrs, J3.N5; peaches, boxes. Slap-\nWf. $1.60; onions, cwt., Ktandard quality. Jt, i'uT arrivals, August 23 to\n25 inclusive: B.C.. 1 crabapples, mixed\nfruit and VflKf-tabla*; imported , 2\npears,   1   mixed   fruit.   1   onions.\nVancouver. - \u2022 Okanagan cantaloupes,\nKtandmrt crate\/'. $4; apples, boxes,\nDuchess. Aettacbans. Combination,\nfancy and C, $1.75; C prade. $1.50;\ncrates, SI 25; crabapples. Transcendents. V grade. $1.50; crates. $1.3$; tomatoes, lugs, field grown. |1; 4-basket crates, 75c; hothouse. $2.50;\npoaches, boxes, Crawford*. $1 5(i; imported grapes, 25-1 b. crates. Malagas,\n%2 25; Tokay. $4.25; plums, various\nvarieties. 4-basket crates, |9. Car arrivals, August 22 to 25 inclusive:\nlAical. J mixed voge tahles. 1 tomatoes. 2 mixed fruit and vegetables: Imported, 1 trrapi's, 3 cantaloupes, 1\nmelon*,   3   mixed   fruft.   1   pearw.\nDeclares Europe\nShould Stop Giving\nIts Advice to U.S.\nPARIS. \u2014 \"America knows Its own\nbusiness best, can Judge for Itself\n\u25a0whether or not tt will Join the League\nof Nations, and this without any advice from European countries.\" Gabriel\nIfaiintaux. former French minister of\nforeign affairs, said recently to the\nAssociated   Press.\n\"There Is no doubt In my mind that\nthe United Statea will eventually co-\nopurate more closely In European affairs, but whether this takes shape in\nthe form of joining the, league Is a\nmatter for Americans to decided,\" Mr\nHanotaux continued. \"America is\nveil able to look after its own affairs,\nnnd it Is my Impression that no blame\ncan be directed against Washington\nt r pm Eii ropo been use of fa 11 ure o f\nthe American aenata to ratify th*\nI -net   of   the   l.eaKue   of   Nations.\n\u25a0'For the present It behooves UB to\ntry and setUe our riwn muddled eltu-\natlon before attempting to give ad-\nvlce   tn   America,\"   Mr.   Hanotaux   con-\nMINNEAPOLIS,\nunchanged.\nBraa-\"ftt.M  to   $27.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 norther\n11.11%. September, $1.1K\nfl.lSH,    May,    ll.SSH.\nCorn\u2014No.   3   fellow,    \u00a7\nNo.   2   white.\nto  fta\nto   35 %c\nINCREASE SILK 0UTPUJ\nTOKIO. \u2014 The visit of the American si.k commission to Japan has\nbrought forth fruit. The object of\nthe commission was to <ty and inducu |\nlh* Japanese to improve f'icir raw I\nsilk and   the  methods of  marketing  it.\nTc bring this about a new silk j\nbureau has been organized by the de-1\npertment of agriculture, while the yllk !\nrtelers themselves have decided to em-!\nploy every possible means to Improve '\nthe   quality  of  Japanese   silk.\nAnother suggest ion of the Amer-\n[carta, the amalgamation of smaller\nmills, la being carried out. The lin-J\nportance of the silk tndusttry is shown !\nly the great increase In production.!\nWhile in 1912 the value of the crop\nWas llt0.000.000 yen, It reached 650,-\n909,009  yen  ln   1922. i\nthe\ni  to\nthe\neastern nations, the struggle between\neast and west will Involve the whole\nof humanity ln the most disastrous\nwar   the   world   haa   ever   seen.\nThese frank words were Bpoken by\nProfessor Hlshtnhuma. a Japanese,\nat a recent dinner ln London of the\nJapanese society. The limited area\nof Japan, the professor explained,\nwaa a cause of great anxiety to her\nstatesmen. With only 16 per cent\nof her territory available for agriculture, nod a population of 360 to\nthe square mile, Japan looked with\nlonging eyes to North and South\nAmerica, Canada, Siberia and Australia, where there Is so much land\navailable for development. Sho\nwants to send her surplus population\nto   those   empty   acres.\nCITY CAB CO.\nS. J. Towgood\nFurniture, Pianos and\nGeneral Hauling.\nTaxi Service^\u2014Careful\nDriver.\nPHONE   18\nplat\u2014Ne.   l. $2.27  to tl.U.\nHouse ol Lords Fears\nWest Indies May\nLeave the Empire\nLONDON* \u2014 Fear that American\nInfluences may eventually affect the\nrelations between Kngland and the\nimiish West Indies, has invaded par-\nIlment and caused some metnbors\nof the house of lords to urge that\nthe government lose no time in\nstrengthening the existing tk-nda wltb\nthe  T.rilish  colonies.\nViscount.   Burnhani   has   urged   that\ntpeclal representation at the Imperial economic conference he given\nthe West Indies, and that better\ncommunication on the sea and under\nlt be established at. once with that\npart 0< the Empire. He points out\nthat communication at. the present\ntime is very bad, a condition that\ndoes not obtain with any other part\nof tho Empire.    Almost  all  the  news\nnipplied lo the Wee)t Indian papers\ncomes from America, and reflects\nthe   American    point   of   view.\n.16 '\n.2f> ;\n\u2022 \u00bb0i*\n.01 %\n.00% I\n.04 I\n\u00b1k   Wilt*       'J\nDependable\nService\nFOR more than a century the Bank of\nMontreal has endeavoured to serve its customers loyally and well, ever mindful of the fact\nthat a Bank's charter is justified by the willingness of the Bank to play a constructive part in\nthe economic life of the community it serves.\nThrough a widespread system\nof Branches, each of which has\nbehind it the entire resources\nof the institution, it makes\navailable to small and large\ncustomers alike an adequate\nand dependable service.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nEstablished over IOO years\nVancouver Stock\nFid\nftunloota   Mines   \t\nBoundary   Hay   oil   ..\n.00 1-16\n.01\n.M%\nMARKET    CLOSEU.\nMUNTRKAI,.    Sept.    I.    \u2014   The\nStock   exchange   was closed  Satu\nAccount   j\nm Interstate Fair\nSpokane, Sept. 3 to 8\nSpecial Excursion Rate\nFARE AND ONE-THIRD RETURN-\nTickets on Sale Sept 1 to 8\nReturn Limit, Sept. 10\nProiB   st a t ionn   tn   British   Columbia,   M id wu y   a nd   East.\nArrowhead    and    Kouth    lilairmore,   Alta.,   and    West.\nDelaila    from    any    Agent,    or    Purser,    Kootenay    Steamer    Routes,\nor write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson\nUsed Article\nReal Estate\nRoomi\nBoarJ\nTo Rent\nBoats tni\nAutomobiles\nHelp W\"t\u00ab\nPositions W-urtoH\nLost mi FoumI\nLirettock\nMachinery;\nFarm Product\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal K\u00abadlaff Votlcee\u20143o per word\neach Insertion. In blackface or machine\ncapltala 4c per word. Blackface capltala do a word; 25 per cent discount\nff run dally without change of copy\nfor one month -or more. Where advertisement la set out In ahort llnea\nthe charge la 13 %c a line for Roman\ntype, U,o for blackface, and 10c for\nblackface capltala. Minimum I&o, If\ncharged   60c.\nLists of Wadding Frtaente and floral\ntributae   at   fnnerale\u201410c   per   Una.\nWant and Olaealfled Advertising \u2014\nOne and a half centa per word per\nInsertion. Six cenia-per- word per\nweek, or 22 He per word per month,\ncash ln advance. Transient ads. ao-\ncepte only on a cash-In-advance basie\nBach Initial, figure, dollar sign, eta,\ncounts as one word. Minimum 25o, li\ncharged  60c.\nMale Help wanted\nMEN, women to learu harberlng; paid\nwhile learning; tools supplied. Catalogue free. Moler College, Vancouver. (9741)\nTELL your wants rorougn  The  Dally\nNews olasslfled column*\nFemale Help Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 <lirl   for cigar store.  Apply  Hume   Hotel. (9665)\nV-fAITItESS  wanted,\nhotel.\nApply Occidental\n(9742)\nLive stock  sells   quickly   when  lt  la\nadvertised in these columns.\nSituations Wanted Male\nBARBER wishes posllton in small\ntown; willing to do light work as\na side line, or will rent good place,\n(live, full particulars. Box 9671,\nDaily  News. (9671)\nTELL   your   wants   tnrougn   Tha   Dall*\ni>J\u00bbw olwpwtHftrt  column* _^\nSituations Wanted Female\nVOUNd altO, will do light hoUHo-\nwork. PIMM stati' wages. Apply\nBox   S767,   Dally   News. (9767)\nHIl'iH SCHOOL girl wishes home In\nreturn for services. Apply Box fi26,\nCranbrook. (9701)\nBOOKKEEPER. typist. Ten years\ngeneral office experience. Miss L.\nde Clifford. 213A, Underwood Block,\nCalgary.   Alberta. (9702)\nGIRL, desires position as help In\n\"house In town. ' Apply Bor 9709.\nDally   News. (9709)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED to purchase, a few good\nmilk cows, alwo some early pullets.\nIB. H. Foster, Cottonwood Creek.\nNelson,  B.C. (967S)\nAgents Wanted\nEARN extra money this Xmas taking\norders foe our high-grade, moderate\npriced. Personal 6 reeling Xmas\nCards. You can make $5 up each\nevening. Beautifully       illustrated\nsample book supplied. Pull time\nagents make $50 per week up. Write\nManufacturers, 122 Richmond West,\nToronto. (9585)\nTELL   your   wants   tnrough   The   Dally\nNews classified columns. \t\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Steel tray wheelbarrow.\nI'hone   404L,   forenoon   or   evening.\n (9716)\nWANTED \u2014 Lapstreak rowboat, about\nfourteen feet; cash; give condition,\nprice.     Drawer   3,   New Denver.\n(9700)\nWANTED \u2014 A lady's bicycle, secondhand. Reply . Box 9687, Nelson\nNews  Office, \u25a0     (96K7)\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\nFOR SALE \u2014 80 acres ranch, lo acres\ncleared, 6 acres In cultivation, 5\nacres wild meadow hay; 40 apple\ntrees In bearing, 30 small fruits\ntrees; 2-rooin lotj cabin, barn, chicken house, root house, furniture,\nchickens, etc. Cheap for quick sale.\nApply   W.   Tipper,   Kingsgate,   B.C.\n__________  f9fi95)\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT \u2014 Five-roomed cottage.\nApply C*. B. Matthew, 905 Edgewood\navenue. (9764)\nHOTEL MENUS\nW. print Hotel Menu., either\nwith eomplete menue or with\nthe different headinge and\nblank epaceo for typing In tha\nbill   of  fare.\nThe\nDaily   Newi\nDepartment\nJob\nTha Home of Good Prlntlnf\nNolaon,  B,  C.\nCity Property for Sale\nNew\nConcrete foundation, large living\nroom, 2 large bedrooms, breakfast   nook,  bathroom.\n\u2022 -Easy Terms\nApply t\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhone 269. Box  82\u00ab\n(9746)\nLook Tliis Over\n7-room House, 3 bedrooms, large\nliving rooms. Cement foundation.*\nLot 120x120, corner, level. Fruit\ntrees. Offered for quick sale\nat   $2200.00.    Terms  arranged.\nHugh W. Robertson\n414   Ward   Street\n(9182)\n11400\u2014A nice little Bungalow,\nconsisting of 4 rooms; fully\nmodern.     On   terms,   $800   cash-\n$1850\u20145-roomed House. fully\nmodern. Unexcelled view. Terms,\n$850    cash.\n$2000\u2014A well-planned 5 -roomed\nBungalow, fully modern. Good\nlocation.    Terms,   $1000 cash.\nA. t. McMillan\nRoom   12,   Gilker  Block,  Nelson\nRes.   Phone  3681-2\nPhone   601 F.O.   Box   61\n  (9708)\nLive Stock for Sale\nJAY ORLDINO, 1400, 10 years. |100.\nor swap for pipe, stock or Implements,     Innes,   Valllcani (9672-\nFOR KALE \u2014 July and August pigs,\n7 weeks, Yorkshires, $6. NoreroHH.\nC.ranlte_.Road. (9738)\nT. B. TESTED Ayrshire cow; fresh;\n3 years; good milking strain. T. A.\nWhelldon,    South    Hlocan. (9720)\nBAY GELDNG. ten years; 1250 lbs.;\ngood horse In every way. I'hone I.\nC. Campbell,  R.H.  No.   1. (9726)\nFOK 'KALE\u2014Milch cow. Will freshen\nIn December. Can be seen at (\"res-\ncent Valley. Apply TV SIPenIs,\nAuthorized   Trustee,   Nelson,   B.C.\n_ \u201e_\u201e (0730)\nFOR SALI-i\u2014Gentle Jersey cow und\ncalf, fresh, $110. Apply to Mrs. Ot\nDavldge,   Wynndel. (9697)\nWOULD   like   to   trade   away   a   young\npony   for   AyrHh ire   cow,   to   freshen\nthis     fall.      For     particulars     write\nWalter   Sahlstrom,   Castlegar,   B.C.\n  (9673)\nFOR SALE \u2014 6-weeks-uld pigs, $6.00\neach, f.o.b. Ainsworth. A. T. Sher-\nraden. (9674)\nFOR SALE\u2014One team geldings, harness, wagon; will sell lot for $275.00\ncash; 9 young shoats, 3 months old\nYorkshire Whites, $8.00 each. H. E.\nLewtas,   Kdgcwood.   B.C. (9639)\nPURE-BRED Holstein cowg, heifers,\nyoung bulls. Matthew Hill, Waneta,\nB.C (9608)\nLost and Found\nLOST \u2014 Small   purse, on Ward  street.\nReturn  to  Dally  News. (9772J\nLOST\u2014Lady's sliver wrist watch, on\nThursday night oir Baker street.\nReward.     Return   to   Dally  News.\n(9727)\nLOST\u2014On 20th of August, between 5\nand 10 p.m., on car, op Baker or\nWard streets, a gold brooch. Valuable to owner. Return lo Box 9715,\nDaily   News.     Reward. (9715)\nLOST \u2014 Bunch of keys, on 7:30 a.m.\nstreet car. about two weeks ago.\nFinder please return to Dally News.\nReward.  '9670)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\n417\n696)\nFURNISHED    front    suite    over    Star-\nland.     See   Mrs.   Pnpazian. (9707)\nFUTfNTRTIED- ROOM  w\"fth  board.\nCarbonate   street.\t\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms over\nPoole  Drug. \u25a0    - (9688)\nSUITE:\u2014Campbell's   Studio.\n(9747)\nFOB RENT \u2014 Three-roomed furnished\nsuite.     Annable   Block. (9748)\nFr\/RTUflKTID   BUITBS\nXEK*    APABTMXNX8\nPoultry and Eggg\nFOR    BALK\u2014White    Wyandotte    yearling   hens;   laying;    $1.50   each   f.o.b.\n,    Riondel.     John   Sutcllffe. (9770)\nBoats and Automobilei\nFOR  HALE\u2014Farm  dump  cart;   Masse;\nHarris.     What   offers?     C.\ngpns.   Boswell.\n*R.   HIk\n(9766\nROWBOAT, equipped wllh lH hyn\npower motor and pair of oa\nPrice   $75.    P.O.   Box  U3,   Nelson.\n19768\nFOR SALI'J \u2014 Ford Touring Car, lat\nest model, Al condition; foot ac\ncelerator; oil gauge Find other Im\nprovements; looks good as new\nPhone   597L1. after   S   p.m.        (9739\nFOR SALE\u2014One Majtwell truck (oi\nand half tons), In good condition\nfor sale cheap. Apply Ike McLeo*\nTrail.  B.  C.  (9703\nFORD  CAR   for   sale;   cheap   for   cash\nApply  William  Dovey.  Trail,   B,C.\n_______ (9704\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nRED MITE KILLER \u2014 Every poular;\nhouso needs this. Bed Bug Poisoi\n,In 50c bottles. Insect Powder. Fl\nPoison. Rutherford Drug Co., _\nson. (9763\nFOR SALE\u2014Willis piano, practically\nnew; chenp for cash. A. Derby\nWaldo, B.C. (9724\nPERSIAN     KITTENS     (neuterj.    alax\nfemales,  thoroughbred, for e\nStewart-Dodd,   Vernon,   B.C.\nale. Mn\n(MM\nTHREE hundred empty potato sac!\n$2.50 per hundred f.o.b. Nelson. P.\nW.   Orocerterla,   Nelson,   B.C.     (9679\nSHINGLE BOLT cutters\u2014tliree-twen\nty-five per cord. McQueen, Silver\nton. -     (MM\nFOR   SHINGLES   write   McQueen,   Sll\nverton. .(___\nFarm and Dairy Produce\nFINE   Burbank   plums   for   sale,   chea,\nHamblln, Deer  Park. (9729\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTO\nInsurance and Real Estai\ntat\nR.\nDAWSOW\u2014\nR.al   I.t.t.,   Zn.nr.no.,\nAnnable Blk,   F.O. Box 733.\nntat\nPhone 1\u00bb\nMonuments\nCAMPBEH      K      KITCHIB      KOTO\nMENTAL  CO\u20141'.  <).   Box  865.  Nel\nson.   BO.     Telephone   1S4. XVIS1\nPainters and Decorators\nMUBPHY BBOS.\u2014\nAnto.  Painted\nDealer. In Well Pap.r.\nStore\u2014 Auto Shop\u2014\n413 Josephine St. 411 Hall til\n(9752\nAccounting\nCHARLES  P. HUKTBB\u2014\nAndltor, McDonald Jam Balldlnff, {\nBox 1191. Nelson. B. C\n(9758'\nFlorists\nGBIZZEELB'S  onsBirnouSBS,  Net\nson. Cut Flowers and floral deslirm\n(9764\nWM- \u00bb\u25a0 JOHNSON\u2014\nr\u2122   Phone 342.    Cut  Flowera,  Potte-\nplants   ;<nil   Flornl   KmMrmH. (9fi24\nWholesale\nA    MACDONALD   ft  CO.\u2014\n. Wholesale Orocers    and    Provlala\nMerchants.   Importers ef Teas. Coffeei\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fano\nCrocerle?^ Nelson.   B.C. (9755\nEngineers\nCteeti Bros., Bm-,\/eo Jl\nNBLBON. B.C.\nCIVIL AND  MINING  BETQUrBIB*\nB. C, Alberta and Dominion\nLand   Surveyor*.\nCrown Grant Agents.       Bint Brlnti\n i (\u00bb7\nHD. DAWEON,  B.C.L.S.\u2014\n\u2022             Engineer and. Surveyor.\nKaslo,   W.V.. (975\ns{\nAssayers\nE.\nW. WISDOWSOIT, Box AU0S, N\u00bb)\nBon, B.C. Standard western charge\n       ' (975\u00bb\nAuctioneers\nWOTJTLBB\u2014\n\u00ab   Goods Bold Privately or at Anotlo\nOpera House Blk.   Phone 71.   Box 47>\n ; ; \u2022'\u2022 (975!\nFuneral Directors\nD. ?,\nNifht\nROBERTSOlf,  T.DJ),  ft B\u2014 Z\n<1  Victoria street.   - Phone    SI\nPhone   157L. (97*\nStandard Fnrnltn\nOn. Undertaker\nFuneral Director\nAuto hearse, up-iV\ndiite chapel. Be\neervlce. Price\nreasonable.   (876;\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McMam\nIM  ^>ORE 1 MEARO\nTO C,ET IN THF\nfront door:\"\n__%&_ti.1*-2\nwintry\nKi;V- ve-*.T>\nTHAT fbts'T A N\\A,ts\nWHAT DO XOU MtAN\nBX COM1NC IN A,T\nTHi<b HOUR?\n\"I MET THACT MOVIN PICTURE\nDirector fr.ie:no of ouR'b ^N\nHE ^<bK\u00a3o NE. IF I'D HELP\nHIM OUT-HE v\/UZ.\nREHEAR'blN NOtJR>f\nJjCENE TH^T I\nWOT, IN \u2022\nint'l rxATjns Snviec Inc.'\nANOTHE JUR'Y  COULDN'T\n*\\CREE \u25a0 *bO WE- HAD TO\n'bTA.V OUT ALU NICHT;\n TERRIFIC NET\nBATTLE GOES\nTOM YANKS\nFirst Two Sett in Davis Cup\nDoubles Set Duration\nRecord : ' *\nI\nFOREST HILLS, N. Y\u201e Sept. 2.\u2014\nfolding a commanding lead of two\nmatches to one In defence of the\n.Davis cup, the United States will\n.play ita two \"aces,\" William T.\nmiden and William M. Johnston, to-\njmorrow afternoon against the Australian challengers in two singles\n(matches that will conclude the international championship series.\n\u25a0 Victory in but one of the matches\nwill clinch possession of the historic trophy for another year. Tennis\njeritlcs look for \"Little Bll\" Johnston, despite the spectacular set-\nhack he receiver1 Friday at tho\n{hands of James Anderson, to settta\nThe Issue when he faces J. B.\n[Haw'kes In the first encounter. Tll-\n'den will oppose Anderson In the\nfinal engagement.\nHawkes yesterday proved himself\nfi far, better doubles than singles\nplayer, when Anderson and Hawkes\nforced Tilden and R. M. Williams to\nlive terrific Bets before tho United\nStates team won in a set that made\nBavls cup history.\n! The Americans, by a remarkable\nfinish, pulled ft' out after a tense\n{struggle lasting nearly three hours,\nhy   scores   of   17-15,   11-13,   3-fi,   6-3.\nI 8-2.\ni i   The  match   set a  new  Davis  cup\nt jrecord for duration.\nTEAMS TO\nPLAY TRAIL\nootball and Lacrosse Squads\nTake Part in Labor Day\nCelebration\nTrail is today celebrating Labor\nday with the annual sport activities.\n[!\" ln which Ne'son wilt take part. The\nNelson senior football squad will\nplay the Trail Team ln a West\nKootenay   league   game,   while   the\n! Nelson . Intermediate lacrosses team\nwill meet the Trail team in a league\ngame.\nThe lacrosse gome will be played\nin the morning, and the footba:i In\nthe afternoon. Easeball and field\nsports  will  also  b\u00ab  on   the   big  pro-\nII gram, which has In the past proven\ni ,one of the most successful sport\nI meets   held   ln   the   interior.\nBROWNS MAKE\nSTRINGTHREE\nDefeat Tigers Third Straight\nWith Aid of Williams'\nTwenty-sixth Homer\nHomer Wins in Third\nST. LOUIS, Sept. Z.\u2014Ken Williams' twenty-sixth home run of the\nseason, with the two men on bases,\nIn the third inning, enabled St. Louis\nto win its third straight game from\nDetroit   4   to   3   today. R.   H.   R\nDetroit    #3     ti      l\nSt.    Louis       4      8      0\nBatteries\u2014Johnson    and      Ba.ssler;\nShocker   and   Collins.\nSenators Hit Bush\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 2.\u2014Washington hit Bush today nnd defeated\nNew York 7 to 2. Ruth fai ed to\nget a hit, and struck out on his\nfinal turn at bat. He drove one\nover the right field wall, which was\nfoul   by   inches. R.   If.   E.\nNew    York  _     7     0\nWashington      7    11)     4\nBatteries\u2014Bush      and       Hoffman;\nMogrldge   and   Oharrity.\nCleveland -Chicago,    w>et    grounds.\nSENlSli\nOLD-TIMERS\nScore at End of Ninth Is,\nHowever, Close; Richardson Poles Homer\nSKILFUL PLAY\nMARKS TENNIS\nCOMPETITIONS\nMurray   and   Blaylock   of\nTrail, Holders of Cup, Still\nWell Up in Doubles\nCOAST STAR LOSES TO\nOPPONENT FROM TRAIL\n| AMER1CAN_ASS0CIATI0N\nSaturday\n|    Columbus,   2;   Toledo,   7.\nLouisville,   6;    lrdianapolls.   4.\nJ       Kansas City,  7;  Milwaukee,  6.\n\u2122        Minneapolis,   3;   St.   Paul,   3.\nSunday\nLouisville,  0-8;   Indianapolis,   9-4.\nKansas   City,   ft:   Milwaukee,   fi.\nSt.   Paul,   ll\".;   -Minneapolis,   8.\nColumbus,   9;    Toledo,    6.\ntl\nBaseball fans were treated to a\ngood exhibition yesterday afternoon,\nwhen the Old-Timers and the local\nfcenior nine met in an exhibition\ngame, the seniors winning out by\nthe  score of  11   to  9.\nThe large score does not in any\nway Interpret the play, which was\nfast throughout, the nine innings\nbeing   p.ayed   in   fast   time.\nHarry Pitts, well known to local\nfans, who formerly hurled and played in and around the third sack\nfor the old Nelson nine some few\nyears ago, was on the mound for the\nOld-Timers and sent a lot of the\nseniors to the bench via the strikeout route. He was at times touched\nfor a few hits. Dutch Richardson\npicked a high one and sent the\nball over the center field for a\nhomo run, thc first scored by this\nroute In the field this summer.\nHitting by the Old-Timers was not\nslack by any means, Langill, Klrby\nand Pitts cracking out some splendid   hits.\nHarry Wright umpired the game.\nThe   teams:\nNe'son seniors\u2014Brennan, catcher;\nMcDanlels, pitcher; Bush, first base;\nScanlan, second base and pitcher;\nHedt'ord, shortstop; Notman, third\nbase; Richardson, right field; Marquis, center field, and Parker, left\nfield.    .\nOld-Timers\u2014Curran, catcher; Pitts,\npitcher; Langill, first base; Passe-\ncreta, second base; Klrby, shortstop;\nHartwig, third base; Hufty, right\nfield; Ionian, center field, and Carlson,   left   field.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffic. Smelting and  Refining   Dep.rtm.it\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore*\nProducers of Gold. Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nKootenay Bitter Ale\nTh*   Al.   with   tha   rail   flavor, $2.20 doz.    Order through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nFREE    DELIVERY    DIRECT    FROM    BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\n\"This   advertisement   Is   not   published or displayed by the Liquor Control  Board  or by tha Government   of   British   Columbia.\"\nCalgary Entrant Defeated in\nEarly Singles by Vancouver\nMan; Nelson Does Well\nKeen p!ay marked practically all\nof the contests in the Kootenay\nTennis club tournament over the\nweek-end and tha finals (with a\nfew semi-finals) will be watched\nwith  keen   interest   today.\nFavored with excellent weather,\nthough a little warm, the schedule\nprogressed, thanks to the hard work\nof energetic officio Is, without a\nhitch. The gallery throughout both\nSaturday and yesterday waa large\nand remarkable In a number of the\nmatches was well acknowledged.\nDefeats   Coast   Star\nA real surprise came i,n the men's\nsingles, when K. D. McBean of\nTrail proved victorious over T.\nMatthew.son, a Vancouver player of\nmuch note at the coast. The score\nwas 6-2, 6-0, 6-2, and both players\nshowed some remarkable tennis. The\nTrail representative, however, appeared to be In fine condition and\nhe handled the fast delivery of his\ncoast opponent In splendid style.\nOutsiders    Do   Well\nSo far It has been a great tournament for the out-of-town competitors, practically oil of whom have\ndone   well.\nF. V. Stuart, the Calgary contender, was, however, eliminated In the\nmen's open singles by V. West-\nwood of Vancouver. Mr. and Mrs.\nB. Townshend of Wl'low Point are\nstill in the doubles. Mrs. W. Thompson and Miss Beatrice West, both\nof Willow Point, are to meet in the\nladies'   finals  class  today.\nTrail stock keeps up\u2014for S. O.\nBlaylock and George Murray of the\nsmelter city, holders of the cup\nfor the men's doubles title, were up\nto last night still undefeated.\n\"Veteran\"   Is  Surprise\nThe Veterans' events brought out\nsome play that showed a number\nof the contenders were veterans in\nname only. Outstanding partlcu'arly\nwas the popular C. F. Pincott of\nOrand Forks, who appeared on the\nlocal courts for the first time in\nseveral years and played a truly remarkable game, which won him a\nwel'-earned ovation from the gallery. \"It may be that he lacks\nsome of his old-time speed,\" stated\na tennis sharp who was a spectator, \"but if he does he makes it\nup In a rattling fine display of\nlightning    judgment.\"\nPincott plays off with K. Metcalfe\nof Wl'low Point at 3 o'clock today.\nAt the close of the events last\nevening It was found that F. V.\nStuart of Calgary, who has been\n'playing a fine game and has made\nhis way with K. Metcilfe of Grand\nForki Into the semi-finals of the\nmen's doubles, had sustained a\nsprained ankle. As a' result he was\nforced to retire, and he left for Calgary   last   night.\nGood   Play   in   Doubles\nThe defeat of C. W. Appleyard\nand W. Harrison of Westwood and\nMatthewson brought forth some particularly clever play, the former winning  a   victory   by   6-4,   6-2.\nP!ay\\all through drew much applause, Applevard In particular showing great skill In several returns\nthat were regarded as being impossible. The winners won an ovation\nat   the  finish.\nMiniature  Whirlwind\nA peculiar Incident gave the players in the men's doubles yesterday\nafternoon a momentary Impression\nthat through the stress of the game\nthey were seeing things. A miniature whirlwind started in one corner of the courts and swept rapidly\nstraight across, sifting sand widely\nas It did so. Fortunately it was\nall over In a few seconds and was\nnot   repeated.\nOn   Lower   Courts\nIn order to keep up the time sched-\nu'e. the ladies' doubles Mm! -finals\nwhich were played off yesterday afternoon were transferred to the iower\ncourts.\nThe slmt-flnals and finals start\nthis   morning  at   i)   o'clock.     All   the\ngames   today  will  be   played  at   the\nupper courtB.\nSingle*   Is   Real   Contest\nNe'son Was three players battling It\nout for the honors ln the men's\nsingles, B class, against two from\nUm New Denver, one from Cranbrook, one from Grand Forks, and\none fmm South Slocan. The men\nare C. Eyton, R. W. Dawson and\nA. T. Godfrey; New Denver, G.\nBuilder and T. G. Hebron; Grand\nForks, E. S. Attwood; Cranbrook, Dr.\nKtrgie, and South Slocan, H.\nHvight.\nThe results In the tournament up\nto   last   night  are:\nMen's    Singles,    B    Class'\nG. K. Eyton defeated J. 1* Bartln-\nda e,   6-2,   6-0.\n' F.    Boulin    defeated    T.    Reynolds,\n6-0.  -0-4.\nM. Padgett defeated C. Yolland,\n6-2.   6-4.\nR. W. Dawson defeated F. F. Payne,\n6-1,   6-4.\nG. Builder defeated O. A. E. Jackson,   6-3,    3-7.\nH. C. Mclnnls defeated M. Henderson.    6-4.    7-5.\nA. T. Godfrey defeated D. Fotheringham,    6-4,    8-6. .\nO. W. Haire defeated J. O. C. Atwood,   6-3.   6--0.\nE. 8. Atwood defeated E. G. Scovil, 6-0,  6-1.\nD. Calvert defeated J. D. Yeatman.\n4-fl,   6-1.   6-3,\nDr.   Fergie  defeated E.  Poulin,   6-2,\nVo.\nK. W. Dawson defeated M. Padgett,\n4-6,   6-1.   6-3.\nG. Builder defeated H. C. Mclnnls,\n,6-2,   M,\n!      A.    T.    Godfrey    defeated      O.      W,\n' Hnire.   6-3,   6-7.\nE. S. Atwood defeated D. Calvert,\n6-1,   6-2.\nT. G. Hebron defeated II. S. Bel-\nVher,   6-1,   6-2.\nH. Hvight won from F, Hardy, hy\ndefault.\nThis leaves the semi-finals today:\nEyton   vs.   Dr.   Fergie,   Dawson   vs.\nBuilder,    Godfrey    vs.    Atwood,    and\nHebron  vs.   Hvight.\n    Ladles'   Doubles   \t\nMiss Robertson and Mrs. G. S.\nGodfrey defeated Miss B-. West and\nMiss W. Thompson, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3.\nMrs. IT. A. Masters and Miss Lee\ndefeated Miss Church and Miss H.\nTownsend,    6-1,    0-6,   6-2.\nMrs. G- Hallett and Mrs. H. Rosllng defeated Mrs. E. H. Lord and\nMrs.   Caldicott,   6-3,   6-4.\nMiss Robertson and Mrs. Godfrey\ndefeated Mrs. Masters and Miss\nLee,   6-1.   6-1.\nMrs. Hallett and Mrs. Rosllng defeated Mrs. H. Lakes and Miss Cos-\ngrave,   8-6,   1-1.\nFinals' today: Miss Robertson and\nMrs, Godfrey vs. Mrs. Hallett and\nMrs.   RoBllng.\nLadies' Singles A\nMiss W. Thompson defeated Mrs.\nH.  A.  Masters,  7-6,   6-4.\nMrs. B. West defeated Miss Dorrls\nLee,   6-3,   4-6,   10-8.\nMiss Thompson and Miss Lee meet\nthis afternoon  at 2 o'clock.\n'  Veterans' Singles\nK, Metcalfe defeated A. C. Major,  6-0,   8--2.\nC. F. Pincott defeated N. A. Wallinger,   6-4,   6-2.\nK. Metcalfe defeated FlslJ Yolland,  \u00ab-k   6-1.\nMetcalfe and Pincott meet in the\nfinals  at   3  o'clock   today.\nMen's   Open   Doubles\nM. Harrison and C. F. Pincott defeated Dr. Fergie and T. Reynolds,\n6-4.   5-7,   6-1.\nG. Murray nnd S. G. Blaylock defeated Jackson and Fotheringham,\nfi-2.   6-6.\nW.  Harrison  nnd  C.  W.  Appleyard\ndefeated  C. Attwood and E. Attwood,\n\/\u00ab-l.   6-1. j\nI     Westwood   and   Mathewson   defeat-,\ned  Townsend  and  Dewdney,  3-6,  6-1,\n'6-2.\nIt'   Miens    and       Mcrersey       defeated\nI'llazelwood and Wade. 2-6, 6-4,  6-3.\nWallinger and McBean defeated\nEyton  and Calvert,  6-1,  6-2.\nMurray and Blaylock defeaetd M.\nHarrison   and   Pincott,   6-4,   7-5.\nW. Harrison and C. W. Appleyard\ndefeated Westwood and Matthew-\nson,  6-4, *6-2.\nMetcalfe and Stuart defeated Henderson   and  Padgett,   6-1,   6-3.\nMahood and Mcllwaine defeated\nYeatman   and    Hvght.   6-3,    6-u.\nA. Wallinger and Simpson defeated   Hebron   and   Haire,   6-4,   6-1.\nIdiens and Mcrersey defeated God-\nire\" and  Godfrey,  6-1.  6-3.\nMahood and Mcllwaine defeated\nV Wallinger and Simpson, 4-6, 6-1,\n6-3.\nMen's   Open   Singles\nV. Westwood defeated B. Townshend,   6-3.   6-3.\nI). Hinks defeated N. Wallinger,\n6-1,   6-1.\nF. V. Stuart defeated A. C. Major,   -6-4,   6-1.\nK. D. McBean defeated K. Met-\nca fe,   3-6,    7-5.   7-5.\nMMthewson defeated O. S. Godfrey,   6-0,   6-3.\nH. Mcllwaine defeated L. S.:'Mac-\nrerj-ey.   8-6,   7-9.   6-2. ,v        j\nIdiens defeated Dewdney, 4-6, 6-0,\n6-2.\nWestwood defeated G. P. Simpson\n6-0,  6-4\nGIANTS LOSE\nTHRO ROW\nAfter Two Defeats by Dodgers They Go Down Before\nBraves in Tenth\nBrowns Win in Tenth\nNEW YORK, Sept. .\u2014The New\nYork Giants went down to defeat\ntoday by Boston, who won in the\ntenth inning 3 to 2. It was the\nGiarits' third lose. Nixon's single\nwith O'Neill on base scored the\nwinning   run   for   Boston.     R.   H.   E.\nBoston       3   10     0\nNew   York -  2     9     0\nBatteries\u2014Genewich, Oeschger and\nO'Neill;    Nehf,    Barnes   and   Snyder.\nCards Trim Ciney\nCINCINNATI, Sept. 2.\u2014Haines\npitched effectively today while Don-\n'ohue was hit freely and St, Louis\ndefeated Cincinnati 4 to 1. The\nReds dodged a shutout ln the sixth\nwhen Burns took a walk and a\nsingle   by   Harper. R,   H.   E.\nSt.   Louis      4   11      1\nCincinnati     1     6     1\nBateries\u2014Harris and McCMrdy;\nDonohue, Harris, McQuillan and\nHargrave.\nPirates  Win   in   Eleven\nCHICAGO, Sept.        2.\u2014Rawllngs\nbroke up an eleven-inning game today with a two-base hit which sent\ntwo runs across the plate and gave\nPittsburgh an 8 to 6 victory over\nChicago. Kaufmann was unable to\nhold his lead, the visitors bunching\nhits when the Chicago pitcher became    unsteady. R.   H.   E.\nPittsbiVgh     ..JL   8    11      3\nChicago       6    13     2\nBatteries\u2014Hamilton, Meadows and\nGooch;   Kaufmann  and  O'Farrell.\nPhillies   Wallop   Dodgers\nBROOKLYN, Sept. 2.\u2014After two\nstraight wins from the world champions the Brooklyn Dodgers fell down\nhard before the Phillies today, 13\nto   3. R.   H.   E.\nPhiladelphia      ,12    14      1\nBrooklyn       3   13     2\nBatteries\u2014Behan and Henllne;\nDickerman, Alnsmith, Decatur,\nSchreiber   and    Taylor.|\nLABOR DAY\nSeptember 3rd.\nTHIS STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY.\nCommencing Tomorrow (Tuesday, Sept 4th)\nwe shall revert to our old hours of business\u2014\nOpen 8:30 a.m., Closing at 6 o'clock p.m.\nPlease Note.\nLittle Lessons in\nBig Sports\nTENNIS\nVOLLEYING\n :->-Q\nCORRECT POSITION\nSTOPVOutY\nWhat is the correct position\nfor volleying?\nAn9Wete<T   by\nMANUEL ALONSO\nFamous Spanish player, easily tho\nsensation of the 1923 tennis season.\n\"Best European player today, possible\nworld champion ln 1924,\" says Tilden.\nDefeated Tilden in Illinois state championship match ln July. Runner-up to\nTilden ln numerous 1933 matches, Including\" national clay court champion-\nship.\n. About six feet from the net is\nthe ideal position. Don't rush ln\nlike a mad man and stand over the\nnet, giving your opponent a chance\nto pais or lob over you. Meet the\nball, when you volley, higher than\nthe net, if possible, and try always\nto make your stroke finish the point.\nThe deeper you volley the better fn\nmost cases, but don't try to volley\nfrom farther back than your own\nservice line, unless you are exceptionally   skilful  at   it,  as  it   is  very\ndifficult to do. A \"half-volley\" Is\nused only as a defensive stroke and a\n\"stop-volley\"\u2014executed as a bunt\nin baseball\u2014Is a fine attacking\nstroke, but if not done well, Is liable\nto   lose   the   point '\n(Are   these   lessons   helping   you   to\nimprove  your   tennis?     Mors   of   them\nare   coming   this   week.)\n(Copyright,  1923,  Associated   Editors)\nCalgary Trotter\nEquals the Track\nMark in Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 2.\u2014Equalling the\ntrack tectbrd, VVelnSand, carrying\nthe colors of Mrs. Small, Calgary,\nwon the seventh race of one mile,\nat the opening of the fall race meet\nVesterday from a large field in\n1:45. The victory paid $49.20 on a\n$2   ticket.\nA Winnipeg entry, Hary of the\nNorth, won the feature race, six\nfurlongs.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSunday\nToronto,  6;   Buffalo,  15.\nRochester,   8;   Syracuse,   6.\nJersey   City,   0;    Reading,    8.\nBaltimore,   8;    Newark,    6.\nSaturday\nNewark,    12-1;    Toronto,    8-4.\nI;eading,   8-2;    Rochester,   7-6.\nBaltimore,   8:    Syracuse,   2.\nJersey  City, 2-3;   Buffalo,  6-12.\nCrowd   Loses   Game\nSYRACUSE, Sept. 2.\u2014The second\ngame yesterday waB forfeited to\nBaltimore on account of the crowd\nrushing on the field In the seventh\nInning.\nPACIFIC COAStIeAGUE\nSaturday\nSa't   Lake,   ti;   Portland,   1.\nOakland,   9;   Vernon,   6.\nLos   Angeles,   3;   San   Francisco,   4.\nSacramento,   6-4;   Seattle,   2-5.\n\u2022Sunday\nSacramento,   6;   Seattle,   3.\nOakland,   6-4;    Vernon,   4-15.\nSalt   Lake,   6-6;   Portland,   7-3.\nLos   Angeles,   7-5;   San   Francisco,\nYou  can  always  count   upon  your\ni friends\u2014as   long   as   you    have    the\nprice.\nSCORING LIGHT IN\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nLONDON\".   Sept.   2.\u2014-League   soccer\ngames   played   in   the   United   Kingdom   yesterday   resulted   as   follows:\nENGLISH   LEAGUE\nFirst   Division\nAston Villa,  0;  Birmingham, 0.   .\nBolton   W.,   2;   Cardiff   City,   2.\nBurnley,   1;    Notts   County,   1.\nChelsea,   2;   Blackburn   R.,   0.\nLiverpool,  0;   West   Bromwlch,  0.\nMiddlesbrough,   2;    Huddersfield,   0.\nNewcastle  United,   1;   Arsenal,   0,\nNottingham   F.,   1;    Bverton,   0.\nPreston   N.E.,   2;   Tottenham   H,   2.\nSheffield   V.,   3;   Manchester.   0.\nWest  Ham   IT.,  0;   Sunderland,  1.\nSecond   Division\nBarnsley,   1;   Coventry,   1.\nBradford,   4;   Wednesday,   1.\nClapton   Orient,   5;   Nelson,   1.\nLeeds   United,  0;   Stoke,   0.\nLeicester   C,   1;   Hull   City,   1.\nManchester,   2;   Bristol  City,   1.\nOldham   A.,   1;   Blackpool,   1.\nPort   Vale,   3;   Crystal   Palace,   4.\nSouthampton,   3;    Bury,   0.\nSouth   Shields,   1;   Fulham,   0.\nStockport  C,   0;   Derby   C,   0.\nThird    Division,   Southern    Section\nAberdare-Charlton    A.    (missing).\nBournemouth  U.,  0;   Swindon T\u201e 0.\nBrentford,   0;   Queen's   Park   R.,   L\nBrighton,    2;     Northampton,    0.\nBristol   Rovers,   2;   Gillingham,   0.\nExeter   City,   5;    Newport   C,   0.\nLuton   Town,   1;   Swansea  Town,  2.\nMillwall,   2;    Norwich   City;   1.\nPortsmouth.   2:    Plymouth   A.,   1.\nReading,   1;   Watford,   1.\nSouthend   U.,   3;   Merthyr   T.,   1.\nNorthern   Section\nAecrington,   2;   Darlington,   0.\nAshington, 0;   Wrexham,   2.\nCrewe  A..  1;   Southpart,   1.\nDurham C,  0;   Rochdale,  0.\nGrimsby.   0;   Tranmere,   0.\nHalifax,   1;   Lincoln   C,   0.\nHartlepool,   1;   Barrow,   0.\nNew   Brighton,   1;    Bradford,   0.\nWalsall,   1;   Rotherham,   1.\nWigan,    1;    Doncaster,    0.\nWolverhampton,   2;   Chesterfield,   1.\nScottish    League,    First    Division\nAberdeen,  0;   Dundee,  0.\nAirdrieonfans,   4;    Ayr   United,   0.\nCeltic,   1;   Partlck   Thistle,   2.\nHearts,  4;   Hamilton* A.,  0.\nKilmarnock,   2;   Hibernians,   1.\nMotherwell.   3;   Morton,   1.\nRaith  Rovers,   1;   Clydebank,  0.\nG-3\nCONDENSED 'WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word In each space. Enclose money\norder or chesk and  mail direct to  The   Daily   Nsws, Nelson, B. C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each Insertion, six consecutive insertions for price of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar signs, etc., count aa one\nword.   No  charge  less than  50 centa.\nPlease publish the advertisement below times, for which I enclose |.\nI\na)\nV\n\/\n\/\n|.\nIf daalrad, rapliaa rtfy ba addre.eed to box numbara   at Tha   Daily   Nawa   Offica.   If   rapliaa   ar*\nte b* m.il.d ancloaa 10c axtra U oovar ooat af pottage and allow fiva worda axtra for box numbar.\nStuart    defeated    Hinks,    4-6,    6-1.\n3.\nMcBean ' defeated Matthewson, 6-3,\n6-0.   6-2.\nD. Mahood defeated M. Harrison,\nj-3.  6-3.\nC. W. Applevard defeated O. Wal-\nllneer,   6-1.   6-2.\nW. Harrison defeated C. F. Pincott.\n6-1.   6-1.\nMiens defeated Mcllwaine, 4-6, 6-1,\n7-5.\nWestwood, defeated Stuart, 6-1,\n6-3. .\nMcBean defeated Mahood, 1-*S, 9-7,\n6-3.\nIdiens meets Westwood and Mc-\nRean plays Harrison at 9 o'clock\nthis   morning.\nLadies'   Singles   A\nMrs. G. S. Godfrey defeated Miss\nH.   Townsend,   6-1,   6-3.\nMrs. H. R. Townsend defeated\nMrs.  H.  Lakes, 6-2. 6-1.\nMrs. E. K. Lord defeated Mrs.\nB.   Townshend,   6-4,   6-1.\nMrs. Q. Hallett defeated Mrs. Godfrey, 6-4.  6-0.\nMrs. H. Rosllng defeated Mrs. H.\n*R.   Townsend,   6-2,   5-7,   6-3.\nMrs. H. C. Caldicott defeated Mrs.\nW.   M-  Louis.   -1,   -1,\nThe semi-finals between Mrs. Lord\nand Mrs. Hallett are being played at\n9 o'clock today and between Mrs.\nRosling and Mrs. Caldicott at 10\no'clock.\nMixed   Doubles\nC. W. Appleyard and Mrs. G.\nHallett defeated _., L Dewdney and\nMiss  Robertson,   6-4,  6-3.\nF, W. Stuart and Miss Church defeated R. W. Dawson and Mrs. H.\nTownsend,  6-2, 6-3.\nV.    Westwood    and    Mrs.    Rosllng\ndefeated C. Coates and Mrs. H. Lakes,\n6-1,   6-3.        '\nJ[i^_& Townshend ^and^Mrs. Townshend\ndefeated    T.    Matthewson   and Miss\nColgrave,    6-1,    6-3,\nC. T. Townsend and Miss Marlett\ndefeated G. Eyton and Miss H.\nTownshend,   6-4,   6-1.\nD. Hinks and Mrs. Caldicott de\nfeated K. 1). McBean and Mrs. Lord,\n6-1,   7-5.\nC. W. Appleyard and Mrs. Marlatt\ndefeated G. Builder and Miss Lee,\n6-0,   6-2.\nV. Westwood and Mrs. Rosling defeated F. W. Stuart and Miss ChurcH,\n11-9, -d-4.\nB. Townshend and Mrs. Townshend defeated C. T. Townsend and\nMiss   MaKett,   6-2,   6-2.\nC. F. Pincott and Mrs. Godfrey defeated  D.   Hinks   and   Mrs.   Caldicott.\nB. Townshend and Mrs. Townshend\ndefeated C. F. Pincott and Mrs. Godfrey,   6-1,   6-2.\nTim*  Table  for Today\nThe time table for today (all\n-games being played at the upper\ncourts)   will   be:\nAt 9 a. m., court No. 1, Idiens vs.\nWestwood; court No. 2, Mrs. Lord\nvs. Mrs. Marlett; court No. 3, Harrison   vs.   McBean.\nAt lti a. m\u201e court No. 1, Eyton vs.\nFergie; court No. 3, Westwood and\nMrs. Rosllng vs. Appleyard and Mrs,\nHallett.\nAt 11 a. m., court No. l, Murray\nand Blaylock vs. Wallinger and\nMcBean; court No. 2, Mrs. Rosling\nand Mrs. Caldicott; court No. 3.\nwinner of Attwood and Godfrey vs.\nwinner  Hebron   and   Hvight.\nNoon, court No. 1, seml-flnalB,\nmen's doub!e\u00bb, lower half; court No.\n3, winner of Eyton vs. and Fergie\nv\u00ab.   winner   Dawson   and   Builder.\nAt 1 p. m., court No. 2, finals ladieB'\nB class singles; court No. 3, semifinals men's  doubles,  upper half.\nAt 2 p. m., court No. 1, finals men's\nsingles A class; court No. 2, finals\nladies'  singlea   A.\nAt 3 p. m., court No. 2, veterans'\nfinals; court No. 3, singles, finals\nB class.\nAt 4 p. m\u201e court No. 1, finals,\nmen's doubles; court No. 2, finals,\nladies'   doubles. I\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither With Your Name\nor with the words\nDairy Butte*\nAccording te tha Dominion\ngovernment refutation* all\ntarmera who aell butter\neither to atorea or privately\nare required to have lt properly covered in a wrapper on\nwhich MUST appear ln\nprominent  letter* th*  worda\n\u2022DAIRY BUTTER-\nT*je fact ie alao emphaalsed\nthat all butter ln *uch\npackage* must be of tho full\nnet weight of alxteen ouncea\nand In default of aama a fine\nof from tie to IN for each\noffense Ie Impoaed. Whey\nbutter muit be ao labelled,\neven when mixed with darly\nbutter and dairy butter retain* It* label even though lt\nbe mixed with ttie creamery\nproduct\nPrices\nPRINTED   WITH    NAME   OF\nFARMER  OR   BRAND   NAM!\nIf you have your own\nbrand on your wrapper* you gal*\nvaluable advertising for your bat*\nter. It cauaea people to a*k tar\nthe aame bread again.\n\u202200, Paper and\nPrinting    \t\nKOO, Paper and\nPrinting\t\nPRINTED   WITH   WORD*\n\"DAIRY   BUTTER*\nIt*\nUO\nfor  \t\n100\nfor\t\n1000\nfor\t\n$4.25\n.$7.00\n$1.00\n$1.50\n$2.50\n$4.50\nWE CAN SHIP IMMEDIATELY ON RECEIPT OF ORDU\n\/\/ mappers are to be mailed include postage wlws\nsending money orders\nDaily News Job Department\nTHI HOME OF OOOD PRINTING\nBAKER (TICT NELSON, B. &\n Page EigM\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3, 1923\nTHE ARK\n\u2022O-inch U-ot White Duck, $1.50\nyard; Gre\u00abn ana White Awning\nStrip*. 60<* yirA: Ladles' Silk\nHosa, all color., J)0^ \u00bbnd 31.00\npair; Dresa Gingham, __*i to 50\u00a3\nyard; Children'.' Short Hon, 35\u00a3\npair. Ladiea* Vesta and Bloomer.,\nStaple Dry Goods, a large stock\naecond-hand   Stovea and  Furniture.\nPhone   634\nJ. W. HOLMES\n600   Vernon   8t\nSchool\nOpening\nPUBLIC  AND   HIGH   SCHOOL\nTEXT   BO0K8\nJuat   Arrived.\nOrder   Early.\n. Values  in\nEXERCISE   BOOKS,\nPENCILS,   PENS,    Etc,\nCan't Be Beat.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nLimited\nNELSON,   B.C,\nHAS IT\nNo Less\nAn Important part ln tht prescribing of glasses Is the spectacle mount, or frame. The\nbest correction In lenses possible\nfor you, might not give any\nsatisfaction If not In a frame\nof correct size and sngles with\nthe face. It Is a delicate matter, and one which we are very\nparticular about. It is the\nflnerse of a good examination.\nNext time your spectacle frame\nbreaks or needs straightening,\nbring It in, and let us attend\nto   It.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptist  end  Optician\nSPECIAL SALE OF\nRegular     Domestio    Irons,     complete\nwith   Cord    _ \u2014.JM.ftK\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\n*_ 6*0   Opera Some Blk.   F.0 Bo. nt\nHe Should Worry\nThe happy man will be he who\nhad ordered hia Coal during the\nsummer months, for he will have\ntnKen care of one of the greatest\nproblems winter holds. No need\nto worry if you call lis up today\nand give un your order for Immediate delivery.\nMacDonald Cartage &\nFuel Co.\n'\nhomi or'\nCapitol\nLi\\[erto.ii\\mei\\t\n*T7~~ !\n\u2014SHORT FEATURES\u2014\n\"COLD CHILLS\"\nA comedy loaded to the guards with chuckles, laughs\nand roars.\nTopics of the Day\nLET US HELP YOU TO\nMake Preserving Easy\nWe have a great variety of Kitchen Utensils for the\nHousewife at this season.\nLADLE8\nDIPPERS\nKETTLES\nSTRAINERS\nCANNING RACKS\nCHERRY STONERS\nHOUSEHOLD SCALES\nCONSERVO COOKERS\nEtc., etc\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLKALI\nNELSON,  B.C.\nRETAIL\nSENSATIONAL\nFINISHES MARK\nGOLF CONTESTS\n*   * \u2022\u25a0 1. j\nTournament   Has   Now\nReached Finals and Semi-\nFinals Stage\nLADIES' CHAMPIONSHIP\nHAS REACHED FINALS\nPlay Keenly Contested; Men\nPlayers Go Twenty-\none Holes\nWith a large entry list, with close\n(Tames, sensational finishes and with\nthe course ln the best of condition,\nnolfera from all parts of the Kootenays are taking part ln the annual\nirolf tournament of the Nelson Golf\nnnd Country club. The tournament\nhas now reached the final and semifinal  rounds.\nPlay over the week-end was keenly\ncontented, and several matches were\nforced to go additional holes before\na decision could be reached, In the\nsecond round for the men's championship. Hiffginbotham beat Archibald after playing 21 holes. In the\nmen's first flight, Blnckwood and\nBrnson were forced to 20 holes before\nthe former was declared a winner. In\nthe ladles' championship series. Miss\nMarlon Blackwood and Mrs. Cartmel\nwent to the twentieth hole before a\nwinner  was  declared.\nOnly one section of the tournament\nhas reached the final stage. Mrs. Benson and Miss Marion Blackwood having qualified to contest for the ladles'\nchampionship.\nThe  piny,  ns far as  it hss gone  in\nthe various flights, Is as follows:\nKen'a  Championship.\nFirst round\u2014Hardie beat M. Harrison, Wilson beat Allison, Bunyan beat\nHardie, Potter beat Blackwood, Hig-\nRlnbotham beat Benson, Archibald beat\nCartmel,  Forin beat Buchanan,  Rogers\nAuction\nSale\n313 LATIMER ST.\nWEDNESDAY, SEPT. Sth,\nat 2 o'Clock\nI have- received Instructions\nfrom Mrs. James Mclvor, 813\nLatimer street, to sell at Public\nAuction all of her Household\nGoods,   consisting  of:\nPathe Phonograph, White Rotary Sewing Machine (new)\nHound Oak Chief Range, Queen\nHeater, 2-Jet Oas Stove; Brass\nBedstead, Spring and Mattress;\nturtalns. Blinds and Fittings;\nBureau, Carpet, Floor Oilcloth,\nLinoleum Square, Bedroom Kugs\nDlnlng-Room Suite, small Fancy\nTable, Refrigerator, Book Stand\nwith Drawers, Divanette, Pictures\nassorted Chairs including Rockers,\nMirror and Curio Stand, Kitchen\nTable. Dinner Set, Kerr-Mason\nEconomy Jars (1-quart size),\nGarden Implements, and other\nKitchen  Utensils.\nT.rm.\u2014Cash.\nGooda   on   View   Morning   of   Sale.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer.\nheat   McBrlde,   Lewis   beat   Mclntyre,\nWilson  beat  Smyth.\nBecond round\u2014Potter beat Bunyan,\nHlgginbctham beat Archibald (game\nwaa decided on the 21st hole), Wilson\nbest  Lewis.\nKsn's Pirst Plight\nFirst round\u2014Allison beat M. Harrison (extra game), Allison beat Buchanan, Cartmel beat McBrlde, Mclntyre beat Benson (game was decided\non  the 20th hole).\nMan's Ssooad night\nFirst round\u2014Ritchie beat Whimster,\nMcKenzIe      beat      Pincott      (default),\nRitchie beat Leith, Walker beat White-\nhouse,   Fingland   beat   H,   Lakes   (de-\nfsult),  McKeniie   beat  Thorn.\nMan's  Third  Plight\nFirst  round\u2014Haidwood  beat  Cloode.\n(extra game)  HaselWood beat DeVeber,\nRobertson   beat   Fraser,   Wragge   beat\nKlnnear,   Gibson   beat  Gray   (default).\nSecond   round\u2014Wragge   beat   Gibson.\nX*Ales   'Championship.\nFirst    round\u2014Miss    Marion    Blackwood   heat   Mrs.   Leith,   Mrs.   Benson\nheat     Mrs.      Blackwood,     Miss     Babe\nBlackwood   beat   Mrs.   Robertson.\nSecond round \u2014 Miss Marlon Blackwood beat Mrs. Cartmel (game decided\non 19th hole), Mrs. Benson beat Miss\nBabe   Blackwood.\ntadles' Pint Plight\nFirst   round  \u2014   Miss  Cameron   beat\nMrs. Bunyan,  (extra game)  Miss Cameron  beat   Miss   Glvtn,   Mrs.   Appleyard\nheat  Miss Muriel Smyth.\nMixed Ponrsomss.\nFirst round \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. H.\nRobertson beat Kinhear and Mrs.\nHazelwood, McBrlde and Mrs, Leith\nbeat Rogers and Mrs. Appleyard, Mclntyre and Miss Thorn beat Dr, and\nMrs. Smyth. Whimster and Miss\nMuriel Smyth beat Archibald and Miss\nCummins.\nSecond    round\u2014McBrlde    and    Mrs.\nLeith beat Mr.  and Mrs. H.  Robertson,\nMr. and Mrs. Bunyan beat Ritchie and\nMiss  Givin,   Wilson  and  Miss  Marlon\nBlackwood    beat    Hlgglnbothams,    Mr.\nand    Mrs.    Blackwood   beat   Buchanan\nand Mrs. Thorn, Mr, and Mrs. Cartmel\nbeat   Mr.  end   Mrs.  Gibson,  Lewis  and\nMiss Babe Blackwood heat Whitehouse\nand    Mrs.    McGregor,    Mr.    and    Mrs.\nBenson   beat   Allison   and   Miss   Cameron,   Whimster   snd   Miss   Smyth   beat\nMclntyre  and   Miss Thorn.\nToday's Draws.\nDraws for  the course  today, as  officially announced by  the match committee, are as follows, all games being\nlr.   the   morning  hours:\n8:00\u2014Forin    vs.    Rogers.\n8:30\u2014Wllnon   and   partner  vs.   Black-\nwoods.\n8:37\u2014-Cartmels   vs.   Lewis   and   partner.\n(1:44\u2014Benson*     vs.     Whimster     and\npartner.\n8:51\u2014Bunyans vs.  McBride and partner.\n9:00\u2014Hatelwood vs.  Robertson.\n9:07\u2014Ritchie   vs.   Walker.\n9:14\u2014Fingland   vs.   McKechnle.\n9:21\u2014Potter   vs.   Hlgglnbotham.\n10:45\u2014Blackwood vs.  Mclntyre.\n10:52\u2014Cartmel   vs.   Allison.\n11:00\u2014Wilson    vs.    winner   of    Forln-\nRogers  game.\n11:10\u2014Mrs. Benson vs. Miss M. Blackwood    (final   In   ladles'   championship).\nVein on Golden Age\nProperty Widens; Ore\nFound Is Attractive\nThe vein being uncovered on the\nGolden Age property at Wiley's spur,\nnear Hall, has reached a width of\nfive feet. Ed Toman and his brother,\nwho have -been. developing the property, arrived In the city on Friday\nnight with some fine samples of gold\nsilver   ore.\nThey report that gold and silver\nin native form is found over the\nentire width of the vein. A chunk\nof the ore broken up shows quite\nprominently    on    the    smaller    pieces.\nArrangements are now being made\nto have a railway spur built into\nthe property, and it Is hoped before\nlong   to  commence' shipping.\nFamous Fifteenth\nCentury Bible Is\n:   Sold to Italian\nLONDON\u2014The famous Bible of\nthe Borso d'Este, valued at $250,000\nand belonging at one time to the\nlate Emperor Karl of Austria, has\nbeen purchased by a rich Milan\nmanufacturer, who outbid an American   banker   for   it.\nThe Bible is illuminated by artists\nof the 15th century and Is regarded\nhy antiquarians as the fineBt specimen of its kind in existence. During his stay in Switzerland Karl,\nbeing: short of money, sold the rare\nbook to a London antiquary, who ln\nturn disposed of it to its present\nowner  in   Italy,\nt With the avaltlon service so good,\nanybody can shoot a letter Into the\nair and It wilt fall to earth at Its\ndesignated  destination.\nNotice\nTo All Whom It May Concern:\nTAKE NOTICE that John W. Sherbinin, member\nof the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood,\nLtd., and Manager of Salmon Valley Lumber and Pole\nCompany is no longer connected with our Company,\nand we will not be responsible for any of his business\ntransactions.\nCHRISTIAN COMMUNITY OF\nUNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD, LTD.,\nSALMON   VALLEY  LUMBER\n& POLE COMPANY,\nPETER VERIGIN,\n.   . President\nJ  \\m\nFOR SALE\n6-Room   House   (lot   60x120)   In   Fairvlew.   ln   first-class   condition.\nSplendid   garden.     Chicken   house  and   garage  12100.00\n\u2022 -Room   Modern   House   on   Victoria   Street   \u201e\u2014...\n..$1300.00\nl-Rooro Modern House, tn good condition.    Good washroom In basement.      Front    Street \u201e \u201e_ \u201e  $2000.00\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL  ISTATE Authorliad TruitM In Bankruptcy BONDS\nINSl'fi'.NCE-r.^,   Aceidanf,   Lift PHONE   139\nTENNIS CLUB\nANNUAL HELD\nNelson Selected for Next\nTournament; Officers Are\nChosen\nAt the tnnual meeting of the Kootenay Tennis club, held In tha Hume\nhotel laKt nl?ht, lt was decided that\nnext yefii-'s tournament will be held\nIn   Nelson.\nAt the meeting, the visitors spoke\nhighly of the tournament. W. P.\nDickson of Willow Point was elected\nhonornry president; C. W. Appleyard,\nriosldent; E. L. Dewdney, Rossland,\nftrst vice-president; T. Y. Hebron,\nNew Denver, second vice-president;\nand  G.  S.  Godfrey,  (secretary-treasurer.\nRepresentatives of the various clubs\nv\/ere chosen as follows: Rossland, H.\nJ. 8. Reynolds; Trail Rmelter, K, D.\nMcBean; Trail city, H. Wade; Cranbrook, Dr. Fergle; New Denver, J. J.\nJrwln; Willow Point, K. Metcalfe; and\nGrand   Forks,   C.   F.   Pincott.\n\/\nWe\nhave   received\nthe   required\n8chool\nBooks\nfor   Hume   School.\nMake\nsure   ef\nyour\ncopies.\nFLEMING'S\nSTORE, Fairview\nB C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO..\nAgent,   for\nALBERTA   CLAY   PRODUCT*\nSEWER PIPE and DRAIN TILE\nNelson News of the Day\nJItnev to Oolf Club today leaves\nHume Hotel 8:30 a.m.. 9:80 a.m., 10:30\na.m. 2 p m. and 3 p.m. Will leave\nCmb,   returning,  at about  6   p.m.\n(9777)\nEVERY   SAT,   TN   EVERY    WAY,\nSCATTER    SUNSHINE\u2014\nIT   WILL   PAY.\n.See\n\"THE   SUNSHINE   TRAIL,\"\nSTARLAND,   TONIOBTT.\n9776)\nOllvo  Campbell,   I..   Mus., teacher   of\nPianoforte     and     Theory. Beginners'\nclass   com men res   Saturday, September\nSth;   fee.   $1.60   per   month. Room   6,\nGilker Block. (9771)\nRons find Daughters nnd Maids of\nEngland will hold their annual picnic\nat Femdale, Monday, September 3.\nMotors leave the Ferry every half-\nhour  from   10  a.m.   to  1   p.m.     Adults\n50   cents. (9737)\nNELSON  BUSINESS  COLLEGE.\nINDIVIDUAL       TUITION. COM\nMENCE   ANY  TIME.    New   term  commences   Tuesday,   September   4th.\n(9726)\nMiss Minnie E. Fletcher will resume\nlessons in music, September 4; 405\nFalls   and   Vernon. (9705)\nPhone   G21R.\n(9407)\nJ.   Burgess,  Carpenter.\nHousewives\u2014Mcuon aid's\nstrawberry 5am is ready,\nyour grocer's.\nnew    pack\nGet  it  \u00abt\n(9769)\nSons    of    England    meet   tonight   at\nK   P. Hall, 8 o'clock. (9765)\nMcDonald   Jam\n(9668)\nWanted\nCo.\nTONIGHT.      SPECIAL    DANCE    AT\nARMORY, 9 till 1. Seven-piece\norchestra. Latest music. Admission\n50c. (9778)\nScatter   sunshine   on   yonr   way,\nDoing  some thing good each day.\nSee\nSUNSHINE   TRAIL,   STARLAND,    tonight. (9774)\nTonight, Daughters of Scotia Dance,\nEagle Hall, 8:30 p m. Johnson's\norchestra.    Admission   75   oents.   (9776)\nNelson schools will open tomorrow.\nNew pupils (those who have not previously attended school In Nelson)\nshould assemble at the Central school\nBt 9 o'clock. Other Central school\npunlls should present themselves at\n1:30  o'clock.\nEyes! Eyes! Eyes!\nOptica) weakness often causes\nserious illness through derange-,\nment of the nerves and other\ntroubles. An examination will\nnhow If you need glasses. Please\nmake  an appointment.\nJ. J. WALKER\nOptlolaa and Optomatrlst,\nNelson\nSteam Laundry\nPhone   146\nP.O.   Box   48\nFirat-Class Laundry Work done\nat moderate prices.\nFrench Dry Cleaning and Dyeing\nWorks.   Steam Carpet  Cleaning.\nfit_9n*y   at   Trail,   B.C.\nC. Franien (Barber Shop) Agent\nA SPECIAL\nLIGHTNING OPENER\nTOBACCO   POUCHES\nJust     arrived     from     England,\ntn   4s,   5s   and   6s.\nEa<* 81.50. 81.75. 82.00\nan\"   33.00\nH. BUSH\nCorner B.k.r and Ward At*.\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nBest, Safest, Cheapest\nFALL UNDEF\nCOMB    men    wear '\n^-' underwear     late :\nFall.       Others     chang\nheavier   weight   with I\ncool   days.     Here   is I\nsort  of  underwear If\nsuch   a   change.     It\nenough   to   keep   out\nof early  Fall  days.\nFROM $3,E\nFUR;\nG.   GLASER\nManufacturer   Fu\nGuaranteed   Hlgh-Cla\nNice Selection kept tn\nMade   toi Order   from\nSkins.\nCustomers' Fura Ma\nRemodelled and Repair\nPressed and Mounted al\nable Prices.\n416 WARD ST., Hfill\nPhone   106.\nTRY  A  CLASSIFIED  AD\nNelson Oit Compai\nTHE Nelson Sunburst Oil Company, Limited,\nlocal company.   All the Directors are Nelson I\nness and professional men.    When you buy shares|\nthis company you know your interests will be Ioq\nafter by men in your own district, men who have rr\na success of their own business and are able to\nafter the business of this company.\nThe company owns and has paid for a 40-acre\nin the center of the Northern Montana Oil Field. T|\nare producing wells on all sides. Last week the q\npany let a contract for their first well, and will kl\nin a short time what kind of a well they have. I<\nis a good oil producer, shares in this company will';\nworth many times what they are selling for tocr\nRemember, the investors who are willing to take M\nchance are always the ones who make the big monjB\nnot the ones who come along afterwards and hav\u00ab\u00bb\npay five or ten cents a share for stock that can I \u25a0\nbought at the commencement for one cent per shafl\nWhen this well comes in, your chance may be goiM,\nA few dollars invested now may be a big thing to \u00ab\u25a0\nwhen the first well comes in. You never can tell. T.\nmay be a thousand barrels per day, which would pfl\nyou three or four times what you invest every year ai\na dividend.\nRemember, the company is drilling a well now, and\nin a few days you may be too late.\nI have $1500 worth of this stock which can aj|\nbe secured at the original price of lc per share, fu\npaid up, and non-assessable.\n|10   will   buy     1000 shares.\nJS0   will   'buy     5000  shares.\nJ100   will   buy 10,000  shares.\nWrit,   today\nfor   what   you\nwant.\nJ. E. ANNABLE. Nelson, B.C.\nEVERYBODY FOLLOW\nTHE\nounsnine   Irail\nTO\nSTARLAND   TONIGHT\nf\\ Typical, Zipical DOUGLAS MA CLEAN Picture\u2014and that mean*\nACTION\u2014SPEED-THRILLS\u2014LAUGHTER\u2014ROMANCE\u2014and a dash\nof MYSTERY that will keep you guessing.\nTHERE'S A SMILE ALL THE   WHILE ALONG THIS TRAIL\nPATHE\nNEWS\nOTHER ATTRACTIONS TONIGHT ARE\nLARRY SEMON\nand\nIn . 1-ihI sia.-Bpiitt.ini comedy,\n\"The Sportsman\"\nRemember, If You See It at STARLAND-IT'S GOOD!\nTHIS IS A FAMILY F UN FEAST FOR ALL\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1923_09_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0401151","@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":"1923-09-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1923-09-03 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\/1.0401151"}