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O, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1923\nNo. 82\nQuebec Fires Burn\nCAMPS AND TAKE LIFE\nSee Page 2\nSEVEN NATIONS SIGN PEACE IN NEAR EAST\nBANDITS AND   MESSENGERS BATTLE IN  TORONTO\nAUSTRALIA ASKS\nTO HAVE VOICE\nN REPARATIONS\nRelinquishes Reins\nof Newfoundland\nPremier Bruce Says Empire\nPolicies Should First\nSatisfy Dominions\n\u25a0MUST BE ALLOWED\nMAKE OWN TREATIES\nCommonwealth   Deeply   Interested in the Empire's\nNaval Policy\nMELBOURNE, Australia, July 24.\n\u2014(By Canadian Press Cable, via Reuters.)\u2014Australia should have a voice\nin the reparations question and the\nmatter of the occupation of the Ruhr\nby the French, declared Hon. S.\nM. Bruce, prime minister of the\nAustralian commonwealth, In explaining today to the house of representatives the government's policy\nln regard to the Imperial conference\nwhich opens ln London October next.\nThere should be more frequent\nconferences, not necessarily in Britain. It would be more satisfactory If the dominions were allowed\nViMndorse the British premeir's pol-\nKy before it became an Empire\npolicy.\nReciprocal Empire Trade '\nReferring to the forthcoming economic conference the premier said\nthe time had now arrived for some\ngeneral scheme to put Empire trade\non   a   reciprocity   basis.\nHe declared the question of allowing the dominions to make treaties\non their own behalf with foreign\nnations must be considered.\nThe premier said It was useless\nto declare that Australia was not\nconcerned in British wars overseas.\nAustralia, he added, was prepared\nto contribute toward an Empire\nnaval unit, but would not consent\nto depend entirely on a great central' unit   for   Empire   defence.\nDEATH SUMMONS\nDR. RUTHERFORD\nj Railway,Committioner Fails to  Rally\nI From   Illness;   Waa   Great\nLive   Stock   Figure\nk    OTTAWA,     July     24\u2014Dr.     J.     G.\n'Rutherford, a member of the board\n('of railway commissioners, who was\ntaken ill recently while in British\nfColumbia, died at his home here at\n'7   o'clock  this  morning.\nTolmie Pays Tribute\nVICTORIA, .tuly 24.\u2014Referring to\nJthe death of his friend, Dr. J. Q.\n.-Rutherford, Hon. S. F. Tolmie, former\nyninlster of agriculture, said today:\n, \"Dr. Rutherford rendered Immensely\nvaluable sdrvice to Canada, and his\n^ioss la all the more serious because\n\u25a0>f the fact that his career was cut\n.-.hort while he was at the height of\ntIs   usefulness.\n\"He was one of tho rocks on which\ni, he live stock industry of western\njJanada was founded, and one of -the\ntblest judges of stock this country\niver -has known.\"\nFrankfort Mob\nBeats Communist\nOrator to Death\nSIR  RICHARD SQUIRES\nLaid down the premiership of \"The\nAncient Colony\" Monday, handing\nthe resignation of his government to\nthe governor-general. His minister\nof agriculture had been subjected to\ncriticism.\nFRENCfTPLANE\nSTEERED ONLY\nBYWIRELESS\nDaylight Flight of Two Hundred-fifty Miles Is Almost\nPerfect\n  i\nPARIS, July 24.\u2014A French government airplane today successfully\ncompleted a flight from the Saint\nAssizes wireless station to Tours and\nreturn, a total of about 250 miles,\nsteered only by wireless.\nThe directions were received on\nan apparatus called the radiogoniometer, which, showed the plane's\nposition with relation to the wireless\nstation. The pilot made the journey\nwith an error of only 2 per cent\nin tha outward flight, and with entire\naccuracy   on   the   return.\nThe test was announced as sufficiently proving the practicability of\nsuch methods for night flying.\nTOBA BILL\nDERATION\nGOES M LIES\nGovernment Will Ask Its Indorsement Without Single\nAmendment\nLEGISLATURE  CONVENES\nIN  A  SPECIAL  SESSION\nWinnipeg Hopes Stores Will\nOpen in Two Months;\nHalf-Million Stake\nLAKE HEAD WANTS\nGRAIN FACILITIES\nj FRANKFORT. Jul\/ 24. \u2014 Dr. Hass,\n:the public speaker, waa killed during\n-.\u25a0Communist disturbances here yesterday. He was literally butchered by the\nmob, whose leaders dragged him from\nJits home.\nJ He was first hauled through the\n^streets until he was unconscious.\ni The rioters then stood him against a\nJamp post, where he was beaten across\n.the head and face with Iron rods and\n\u25a0clubs, and pelted with stones until he\n>as dead.\nI   STEAMER ARRIVALS\n\t\nN   Caronia,  at  New  York,   from   Ltver-\n\u2022 pool.\nBerengarla,    at   Southampton,    from\nNew York.\n1   Paris, at Plymouth, from New York.\nThe Weather\nThs   temperature*   below   ar*   for\nba H boura ending yesterday after-\ntoon   at   I   o'clock.\nVICTORIA,   July  24.  \u2014 Nelson  and\nclnity:    Generally    fair   and warm,\nth local thunderstorms.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON         \u00ab7 81\nVictoria'     63 69\nVancouver     66 .   88\nKamloops        80 90\nBarkervllle       4\u00ab 78\nPrince  Rupert        48 64\nCalgary        56 82\nWinnipeg         66 84\nPortland        60 72\nSan   Francisco        54 66\nSeattle    '..    66 64\nGrand Forks        69 96\nKaslo         69 8t\nCranbrook      60 90\nEdmonton     68 80\nPrince Albert *_...   60 80\nOntario   Minister   Claims   It   Is  Waste\nof Money to Give Calgary\nEquipment\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont., July 24.\u2014\nSpeaking tonight at the luncheon of\nthe Port Arthur-Gyro club, Frank H.\nKeefer, K.C, recently * appointed\nundersecretary of lauds, forests and\nmines in the Ontario government, declared that the head of the lakes\nwas being robbed of that business\nto which It is rightly entitled, and\nthat the machinery of the grain\nhandling should be located at Port\nArthur and Fort William, where it\ncould function in the interests of the\nwestern grain growers. \"The natural\npoint df the centralization of the\ngrain business is where it transfers\nfrom rail to steamship,\" said Mr.\nKeefer. \"It will ln time come to\nthis point, but why should there be\nthousands and thousands of dollars\nexpended   needlessly?'*\nShould   Inspect  at   Lakea\nIn his address the speaker referred\nto Calgary, which handles less than\none twenty-fifth of the amount at\nthe head of the lakes, and yet it is\nsupplied with all the machinery of\nmarketing which should rightly bo at\nthis   point.\nMr. Keefer Intimated that the grain\ninterests at the head of the lakes\nand other points should combine in\na demand upon the federal government for a sample market, inspection staff, and survey board in the\ntwo cities, where timo and money\nwould bo saved to the farmer In\nmarketing the grain crops of the\nwestern   provinces.\nFerguson Removes\nAppointee of Drury\nFrom Hydro Board\nTORONTO, July 24.\u2014J. G. Ramsden, member of the hydro-electric\ncommission of Ontario, waa removed\nfrom office this afternoon, under an\norder-ln-council passed by the provincial government. Mr. Ramsden\nwas appointed to the commission last\nyear  by   the   Drury   government.\nPremier Ferguson stated that this\naction had \"been taken to make way\nfor a reorganization of the commission.\t\nEXPECT BIG LOANS\nFOR HOLDING WHEAT\nFarm   Bureau   Federation   Looks    for\nBnooess of Its Flan to Keep Surplus off Market to Boost Price.\nWASHINGTON, July 24.\u2014(By Canadian Press) \u2014 ln spite of various\nstories that the farm loan board Is not\ndisposed to back up the American Farm\nPureau federation plan to make loans\non 200,000,000 bushels of surplus wheat\nin order to keep it off the market, federation officials asserted today they\nhad assurances that liberal loans would\nbe made, and the farm loan bureau\nwould take a liberal view of what constituted adequate warehousing.\nFederation officials declare large\nsums are already being loaned by farm\nloan banks ln the west and southwest,\nand as a result there are marked tendencies to hold Kansas and other southwestern wheat off the market.\nWINNIPEG, July 24.\u2014To give legislative effect to tlie Moderation league\nbill for government control and sale or.\nliquor, indorsed by a large majority of\nthe electors on June 22, a special session of the Manitoba legislature will be\nconvened tomorrow.\nThe government wishes the measure\napproved without any amendments so\nfar as the principles arp concerned, and\ntbe probability is that the bill will become law practically as lt was presented to the electorate at the June\nreferendum.\nWill Be Quick Work.\nGovernment stores In Winnipeg and at\nother points ln tlie province will be\nselling liquor for beverage purposes on\nthe lines laid down In the Moderation\nleague bill in ahout two months, it was\nstated In parliamentary circles tonight.\nThe opinion was expressed that It\nwould be impossible for the commission which will conduct the provincial\nliquor business, and which has still to\nbe appointed, to make all the necessary\narrangements inside of two months,\nwhile the feeling was general that, if\nno time were lost, the preliminary work\nshould be completed ln that time.\nUnofficial Information Is to the effect that the government will recommend that from $600,000 to $600,000 be\nvoted and placed at the disposal of the\ncommission to enable lt to launch out\non  Its business.\nAbout 100 persons will be employed\nby the government to handle the business.\nIndependence of\nArabia His Fiat\nAUTO BANDITS\nGET CLEARING\nHOUSE ROLLS\nSix Robbers Hold Up Messengers in Narrow\nOne-Way Street\nHUNDREDS~OF~PEOPLE\nSEE A BATTLE ROYAL\nCOALITION MINISTRY\nFOR NEWFOUNDLAND\nPremier-Elect    Warren    Meets   Legislature and   Asks   Help of Opposition   in   Government\n\u00abT. JOHN'S, Nfld., July 24.\u2014Hon.\nW. R. Warren, K.C, has accepted\nthe call lo form a new ministry, following the resignation of Premier Kir\nRichard   Squires.\nMi\". Warren met the legislature this\nafternoon, and before asking for an\nadjournment for a few days, rovealed\nthe general political situation in Newfoundland. He intimated that he\nplanned asking the cooperation of the\nopposition In the formation of his\ncabinet. '\nMr, Warren ha\u00ab a following of 21\nin the house of assembly, as against\na total opposition strength of 13.\nLORD MAYOR DINES\nLONDON BANKERS\nPremier Baldwin Saya British Reparation Offer la ln a Spirit to\nWin Success,\nLONDON, July 24. \u2014 Premier Baldwin was the guest tonight of the lord\nmayor, who gave a banquet to London\nhankers and merchants, including the\ndirectors of the Hank of England.\nThe prime minister briefly alluded to\nthe reparations question,\n\"It was made,\" he said, \"In such a\nspirit that I may fairly hope success\nmay ultimately attend our efforts.\"\nMontagu C. Norman, governor of the\nDank of England, in the course of his\nspeech, said the year had been one of\ndisappointments.   ,\n\"We bankers,\" he added, \"feel that\nwe are suffering from ills not of our\nmaking.\"\nHe then referred to the stagnation\nof trade, and the heavy unemployment,\nwhich he attributed to European difficulties, largely due to the clash of the\nspirit of nationalism against internationalism.\nKING   HUSSEIN,\n\"King of the Hedjaz,\" has refused\nto sign the British-Arabian Protocol\nunless Britain agrees to nullify the\nBalfour declaration. Yet it was\nBritain that, during the war, freed\nLhe   Hedjaz   from  the  Turks.\nSHAREHOLDERS\nAUTHORIZE THE\nRHODESIA PACT\nBritish South African Company Accepts Oiler oi\nBritish Government\nLONDON. July 24. \u2014 The meeting\nof shareholders of the British South\nAfrican company, which for many\nyedrs has hold extensive property as\nwell as administrative rights ln\nRhodesia under an Imperial charter,\ntoday unanimously sanctioned the\nagreement reached with the colonial\noffice as to handing over of the\nadministrative facilities on the establishment of responsible government\nIn Rhodesia on October 1, next.\nCompany Relinquiahaa\nUnder the agreement the company gives up its claim to all the\npublic works and buildings In southern Rhodesia, which formed the unsls\nof prolonged negotiations, including\nthe celebrated commission under Lord\nCave, which assessed the value of\nthese works und buildings at over\n\u00a34,1)00.000.\nIn northern Rhodesia, which comes\nunder Imperial administration ln\nApril next, the company abandons\nIts claims to deficits caused in\nthe administration of the territory\namounting to \u00a3100,000 yearly, and\nalso Its claim to monopoly rights,\nincluding the exclusivo right to\nbuild railways and the exclusive\nright to own land in northern Rhodesia.\nHaa   Minerals   and    Land\nOn the other hand, the company\nreceives from the Imperial government a cash payment of \u00a33.375,000\non giving up tho administration of\nsouthern Rhodesia, while its important mineral rights ure explicitly\nrecognized by the crown, which also\nrecognizes the company's tltto to\n4,000,000 acres of estates and ranches\nand 4.500.000 acres ot lands in northern Rhodesia, and also a half Interest in the proceeds from the sale\nof land in northwestern Rhodesia\nfor   40   years.\nCreek Casts Up\nBody of Suicide;\nNotes Tell Tale\nMOOSE JAW, July 24. \u2014 Moose Jaw\ncreek this afternoon cast up the body\nof Oswald Watson, travelling credit;\nmanager for the Canadian Fruit company, who intimated in notes found,\nSunday, in his clothing along the banks\nof the creek, that he intended to commit suicide.\nRecover Embezzled\nMoney Under Tree\nTORONTO, July 24.\u2014Developments\nare expected to take place within\nthe next few days In connection with\nthe alleged conspiracy and theft by\nwhich the Standard Chemical company of Montreal and Toronto recently   lost   a   large   sum   of   money.\nUp to today the authorities have\nrecovered the sum of $70,000 of the\n$250,000 alleged to have been taken.\nThe sum of $10,000 In cash was found\nburied, under a tre\u00a7. specially marked.\nROBB DEPRECATES\nCROP INFLATION\nMinister   Saya   Only   Result   of   Unwarranted Forecasts Will  Be to\nLower Price Obtainable\nTORONTO, July 24.\u2014Commenting\nupon western crop prospects tonight,\nHon. J. A. Robb, minister of trade\nand commerce, expressed the view\nthat overoptimlstic forecasts of the\nbumper wheat yield in the prairie\nprovinces were to be regretted, as\nthey might have a depressing effect\non the price obtainable, and were\nfounded   largely   upon   conjecture.\n\"Reports that Canada will produce\n600.000.000 bushels of wheat are appearing In the British nnd United\nStates press.\" said the minister. \"The\nlast crop report issued by tho Dominion bureau of statistics did not\nwarrant any such, statement. During\nthe next few weeks, rust, hot winds\nor oth#r such agencies may cut the\nexpected yield tremendously. These\nstatement have the effect of depressing the price, and I regret to\nsee   them   In   print.\"\nMr. Robb denied any knowledge\nof a movement credited to western\ngrain interests to have recent lake\nfreight legislation suspended.\nTrainman Is Fished\nOut of Inlet While\non Holiday Visit\nVANCOUVKR, July 24. \u2014 W. J.\nCasey, Winnipeg trainman, Is In the\nGeneral hospital here, suffering from\nexhaustion due to an immersion ln\nthe waters of Burrard inlet today,\nwhen, police say, he fell or Jumped\noverboard from the North Vancouver\nferry. Casey had Just arrived in\nVancouver, his baggage still being\nat   the   station.     He   will   recover.\nThe police tonight laid a charge\nof,  attempted   suicide  against  !Ca#ey.\nHe Makes Old Young\nby Gland Transfusion\nRobbers  Escape  With One\nWounded; Two Messengers in Hospital\nTORONTO, July 24. \u2014 Staging\n'one of the most sensational holdups in the annals of crime history in Canada, a gang of auto-\nmobilu bandits invaded the heart\nof Toronto's business section at\na few minutes to 10 this morning, and, after a gun battle in\nwhich three bank messengers and\nanother man who went to their\nassistance were wounded, escaped with $125,000 in currency.\nThe men were still at large at\na late hour tonight, with officers\nof the law putting forth every\neffort to get trace of them. Six\nm-on are believed to have been\nin the gang, one of whom was\nreported to have been wounded\nduring the gun duel.\nHundreds of officers, workers\nand pedestirans watched the robbery and gun fight from nearby\nwindows and doors, but tho police have only meager descriptions   of  the  baindits.\nOne messenger saved a pouch\ncontaining $100-000 in gold by\nfleeing   into   a  nearby   office.\nThe  robbers  made  their escape    |\nin   a   large  car,   which   had   been\nstolen   from   a   resident   Saturday\nnight.\nThe bank msssengers were attacked when on their way from\nth\u00ab clearing house to their several   banks.\nFOUR MEN CLOSE-IN ON\nMESSENGERS- \u25a0 i\nThe intersection of Jordan and\nMelinda streets was the point for\nthe attack. Jordan Is a one-way\nstreet for automohiles and very narrow. It Is believed that an armod\nbandit occupied each corner of the\nintersection. Leading the march of\nthe messengers were the uniformed\nmen of tho Sterling bank and the\nRank of Nova Scotia. The cash\nof the latter bank was contained\nin two bags, while that of the\nSterling was ln one.\nAs they approached the corner the\nmen from the four corners cloned\nin on them. Two of them placed\nsawed-off shotguns against the bodies\nof the two messengers, and at the\nsnmo time grabbed for the bogs.\nThese were thrown by the bandits\nInto their car, which stopped by\nthe   curb.\nOther Messengers Open Fire\nBy this timo the other messengers.,\nriding in a car, approached the intersection, and one of them, James\nHarris, pulled a revolver from a\ncompanion's pneket and opened fire\non the robbers. A robber In, shirt\nsleeves was then noticed standing\nIn the center of the intersection,\ndirecting operations, while another\nstood near the car. AH were armed.\nAfter firing two shots from his car\nHarris leaped to the street and advanced toward the robbers, who\ngrabbed  the  pouches.\nA bandit ordered him back with\nan oath and began shooting at him.\nHarris continued shooting, but soon\nfell when a bullet pierced his stomach. Even after being shot he raised\nhimself on his elbow and emptied\nhis revolver at the bandits.\nA. F. Buck of the Union bank\nwas just getting his revolver out\nfnr action when ho fell from one\nof the bandits' bullets.\nElevator Man Grapples\nAllan Lord, elevator man at the\nMcKinnon building, engaged in 6.\nhand-to-hand struggle with one of\nthe bandits, even after three shots\nwere fired at him. He grappled with\nthe bandit and caught his gun. They\nwrestled in the middle of the street.\nLord finally got the gun and, raising\nit, smashed the bandit on the head,\ndazing him. Tho robber then whipped\na revolver from a aidopocket and\nopened fire. A shot struck Lord in\nthe knoe. He dropped his gun, and\nran ln a zig-zag course from the\nscene. Several shots flew about him.\nand he escaped without further in-\nJury.\nBy this time the bandits had\nmado their way to tho big automobile standing on Jordan street.\nThe leader of the bandits saw all\nhis pals safely in tho automobile\nand then gave the order to \"go..\"\nPolice Distanced\nPolice arrived on the scene Just\nns tho bandits were departing, and\ntook up the chase, but were out -\ndistanced by (he bandits after traveling about two miles. When last\nseen by the police the bandits were\nheading westward, apparently toward   the  Hamilton  highway.\nSpeed officers tried to intercept\na speeding car a short distance from\nthe city on the highway during the\nforenoon, and It is believed it contained  the fleeing bandits.\nA warning wns flashed from Toronto in all directions, and a carload of policemen, armed with rifles,\nwent out from Hamilton to look\nfor the bandits, but they were not\nseen.\nThe wounded bank messengers are\nIn a local hospital, all in a serious\ncondition, but with hope of recovery.\nThey are, Walter S. Buck of the\nUnion bank, J. W. Harris of the\nStandard bank and David Campbel'\nof the Sterling bank. Allen Lord,\ntbeelevator man who went to the\nassistance of the messengers when\nthe shooting began, was shot in the\nknee.\nLoss   Eighth  of   Million\nAccording     to     statements     given\"\niCvalliiued o& Fh* Xwff-1\nDR. SERGE VORONOFF,\nOf  Paris, recently demonstrated  his\nnew   means   of   rejuvenation,    before\nthe international congress of surgeons,\nn  England.\nGIANT DINOSAUR\nINHABITANT OF\nNEBRASKA LAKE\nIs Seventy-live to One Hun-\n|    dred Feet Long; Anglers\nClub to Hunt it\nALLIANCE, Jfeh., July 34. \u2014 A.\nprehistoric monster, between 75\nand 100 feet tn length, with a head\naa tall aa a giraffe's, and which\nhisses like a steam engine, is the\nobject of an expedition of members\nof th\u00ab Alliance Anglers* club that\nplana to invale the lonely Alkali\nlake territory, 36 miles from here.\nThe clnb haa sent to Boston for\na harpoon and a whaling gun, and\nJuat aa soon as these weapons arrive the expedition will get under\nway.\nHIRES FISHERMEN SEE IT.\nAbout two weeka ago a party of\nfour anglers became stranded in\nthe mire near the lake, and were\nforced to spend the night ln. their\nautomobile. In the early morning\ntlley saw the huge reptile emerging from the lake, \"hissing like a\nsteam engine exhanst,\" The men\nfled.\nThe dinoRanr has been seen on\nEevmil other occasions by different\npeople, and the clnb haa become\nconvinced of its existence.\nISMET PASHA\nIS FIRST TO\nWRITE NAME\nSimple   Ceremonies   Take\nPlace in the Hall of the\nUniversity\nLAUSANNE ACCLAIMS\nSIGNING OF TREATY\nConstantinople   Holds  Holiday; Guns Announce\nHistoric Event\nLAUSANNE, July 2\u00ab..\u2014The Treaty\nof Lausanne, reestablishing peace in.\nthe near east, now bears the signatures of Great Britain. France, Italy.\nJapan, Greece.  Rumania and  Turkey.\nSimple ceremonies, marking tho\ntermination of negotiations which\nhave extended many months, wero\ncarried out in the main hall ot\nLausanne university this afternoon,\nand when the representatives ot\nthe various nations, led by Ismet\nPasha, had affixed their signatures,\nPresident Schurer of the Swiss confederation declared the session adjourned, with  the admonition:\n\"Let the closing thought be a\nbenediction.\"\nAn Impressive demonstration, acclaiming the signing of peace, occurred in Lausanne tonight. The\nstreets were crowded with rejoicimc\nmultitudes, many coming In from\ncountry districts to take part.\nYanks  and   Turks   Stay\nThe British delegation left for\nhome tonight. The others will go\ntomorrow, leaving only the United\nStates representatives and the Turks,\nwho uro still engaged in negotlationa\nover   the   Turko-Amerlcan   treaty.\nSteel Workers\nWill Petition\nByng Today\nSYDNEY. N.S., July M.\u2014Events today in the t\"a|)'* BretOI) mining areas,\nwhere men of district No. 26, U.M.W.A.,\nwere recently on strike and in revolt\nagainst the dictates of International\nPresident John L. Lewis, moved rapidly\nand in an orderly manner.\nProvisional President Silhy Barrett\ngave the strikers notice that they must\nrll be back at work by Saturday. July\n2H. The executive offices of district\nNo. i.fi were taken over today by Provisional President Barrett. Documents\nof the executive wen- not nt headquarters, but a part of them were recovered\nfrom the auditors of the district, and\nformer-Secretary J. B. MaeLaehlLin has\nbeen asked for the remainder.\nBig Parade Planned.\nThe Striking steel workers of the\nBritish Empire Steel plant at Sydney\nare planning a demonstration featuring\nthe Union Jack, and a parade of 2500\nmen, for the visit of tho govornor-gei,-\nt-ral. Lord Byng of Vimy,'to Sydney tomorrow. A petition urging the governor-general to use his Influence to end\ntho strike and secure the removal of\ntroops will probably be presented,\nTurk Capital Decorated\nCONSTANTINOPLE. July M.\u2014Today was observed as a 'public holiday ln honor of the signing of the\npeace treaty at Lausanne. Streets\nwere gayly beflagged and shops wero\nclosed.\nA number of guns ^were fired, on\nthe announcement of the signing of\nthe treaty, and ships in the harbor\nblew their whistles for half an hour.\nAt midnight there were torchlight\nprocessions.\nRUSSIANS CLAIM\nWRANGEL ISLAND\nBritish    Officialdom    Is    Cool    Toward\nStefonsson's Flan to Add It to\nCanada.\nLONDON. July 24. \u2014 As a cooling-\nrespite from heated communs debates on\nreparations, disarmament and such,\nsubjects of international moment, British officialdom has been occasionally\noccupied during the unusually torrid\nsummer hearing Villijalmur StefansHon,\nthe Canadian explorer, urge British an*\ni exatlon of Wrangel Island, to which\nGreat Britain, Uussla and the United\nStates have made claims at different\ntimes during tho last century.\nThere is as yet no indication that\nStei'ansson is likely to succeed in his)\nobject.\nThe feeling is extremely reticent on\na decision of possible annexation, tho\nM mi-official statements being limited\nto the declaration that the British government lias not formulated a policy\nregarding the island.\nRussian officials tn London, however, are not so backward. They assert that Wrangel Island Is theirs, and,\nthat the Soviets are well prepared tu.\nprotect  their ianda  from   British terri*\ntort*] ambitions.\nConciliation Board\nGrants Increase to\nNational Operators\nNONTRJDAL, July 24.\u2014Settlement\nof the demand for an increased wage\nby the employees of this Canadian\nNational Telegraph company was arrived at today by the board of conciliation. Which has been sitting here\nsince- July pi. While tho amount to\neach individual is comparatively\nsmall, In the aggregate fur the company it means between. $#0,000 and\n$70,000   a   year.\nGiant Swordfish\nSinks One Boat,   >\nCharges Others\nMONTAL'K. N.V., July 24.\u2014 A giganttd\nswordfish, weighing nearly half a ton.\nthis nfternoon caused a panic in Mon-\ntauk bay, when, maddened by a lancui\nthrust, lt turned on its attackers and,\ndemolished a fishing boat by cutting;\nu.ost of the bottom away, throwing tha\ncrew into the water.\nIgnoring the struggling men, tha\nn onster charged other boats in the\nViOinity, and sent them scampering to\nall parts of the bay.\nFinally, a fisherman pulled out in ...\npower trawler, and succeeded in killing;\nthe fish after 10 minutes of shooting.\nWheat Pool Committee\nHolds First Meeting\nIlHGtNA. July 24.\u2014Meeting through\nthe day, the committee of the prairie\nfarmers' organizations appointed by\nthe gathering yesterday to consider\na form of contract to bo offered to\nthe farmers, adjourned this afternoon\nto meet again at the call of W. J.\nJaekman   of   Alberta,\nNo statement was issued by the\ncommittee, and it is understood that\nIts deliberations were not far enough\nadvanced to warrant any announcement   of  what  it  will   be   possible  to\ngccgajpiish,  .\u201e '\nToronto Committee\nHas Handling of the\nLloyd George Tour\nQUEBEC, July 24.\u2014Through a committee formed in Toronto, arrangements'\nare being made for the visit to Canada\nof the Bt. Hon. David Lloyd George,\nex-premler of England. Information Ms,\nthat effect was contained in a letter\nv. hieh was received here today by\nMayor Samson from Joe McCarthy,\nchairman of the Lloyd George committee.\nPresent arrangements are that Lloyd\nGeorgo would sail from Liverpool on\nthe Empress of Britain on October 3,\nand would land at Quebec either on October 10 or 11.\nThe ex-premier is proposing a brief\ntour through Cnnada. and two or three\ndays in the United States. The committee lias urged upon him that he\nshould land ln Canada, and leave Canada. His trip will be of a national\ncha ranter.\nf\nmm\n. -\n 9.\n' Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 25,\"1923\",\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nC.N.R. CANNOT\nFLOAT BONDS\nFOR NEW LINES\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES 13.60 TO ,5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nTHE\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $1.00\nMOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nRYE HARVEST   FARMERS SAY\nNOW GENERAL  THEY LOSE BY\nIN MANITOBA SHARP TRICKS\nLacks   Authority  to   Secure Ninety Per Cent of Wheat Is Short Weight in Wheat and\nFinances for Branch Lines,1     Headed Out and First Improper    Grading    Are\nCutting Starts\n' ML'MK \u2014 J. A. Fraser. Ethel Fraser.\nGreenwood; W. K. Hawley' 11. Houyer,\nSpokane; P. O. ShallcroHH, J. A. Mills,\nJ. B. Thompson, C. O. Venon, K. L. S.\n-Boyner, Vancouver; K. A H. McPherson.\nOrand Forks; Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Alder-\nwmlth   and   family,   Mias   M.   Kushton, ,\nWaneta:   H.   J.   1'rlttu.   OilRary;   R.   N.\nRoy. Caiimry; c. 0, Clark, w. Ruther-\nford, Winnipeg; Alfred Snydt-r and wife,\nSt. Jacob's, (Int.: Miss E. Urba, Miss E,\n0. Eckari. Siin Francisco; F, A. Haker.\nVernon; Dr. Wilson Herald, Kelowna;\nF. H, white, Toronto.\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nM. W. SHORE, Prop.\nNELSON'8   LEADING   HOTEL\nSpecial attention to Commercial Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN\u201411.00   UP\nAMERICAN   PLAN\u2014$3.00~UP\n.   STRATHCONA \u2014 Mrs. J. Callln, Vancouver;   Q.   (Irlffih,   Grand     Forka;     8.\nlingers, Lethbridge.\nQueen's Hotel\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nSteam Heated Throughout\nHodernly Furnished Rooms.  Special\nWeekly  and   Monthly   Ratea.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Propriete.,\nSummer Resorts\nQUEEIVH   \u2014   1..     Allbone.      Robson;\nJ'arie   FowleH,  tj.  Oborne,  Robson;  Mrs. '\nC   Broyn,   Mrs.   Emsley,   Frultvale;   F.\nTanuka,   Y.   Minato,   Salmo;   J.   Knink,\nfclocan City;   J.   H.   Schafer,   WiunlpeK; |\nMr. and Mrs. Thorn and child, Nanton.\nWHERE THE FISHING  13 GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTEB,\nFlthlnf,   Boating-,   Bathing,   Oolf,\nTennin   CourtB.\n\u25a0Ttablnf    Tackl*    Supplied.      Grocarj\nStora   In   Connection.\nW.   A.   WARD,  Proprietor.\nDay  S3;  Week  $17 *to   $19.    Ipaclal\nMonthly Rate*.\nStates Sir Henry Thornton\nWINNIPEG. July 24. -~ \"After a\nvery Mfcrchlnf conference with the\nvice-presidents of the Camidian National railways I have reluctantly\ncome to the conclusion that tho\ncompany cannot effectively laaue\nbonds in respect of the branch line\nprogram which has been rejected by\nthe  Senate.\"\nThis statement was issued tonight\nby Sir Henry Thornton, president\nand chairman of ihe board of directors of the Canadian National\nrailways, at the conclusion of a series\nof conferences which were held here\ntoday to consider the suggestions\nfrom various sources in western\nCanada that bonds for brunch line\nconstruction   be   issued.\nExpenditure Is  Rub\nThe  stalenient  proceeds;\n\"The  difficulty is not ho much  the |\npower   to   issue   bonds,   us    with   respect   to   the   power   to   expend   the\nproceeds.     1   wish   to   make   it   clear\nto   the   public   that   bonds   can   only\nbe   issued   for   the   construction   of\nsuch    railway    farilities    ure    authorized   by   parliament,   and   the   parliamentary    authority    which    may    be\ngiven     to    the    company     Is    clearly\nrestricted    under    section    23    of    the\nCanadian National Railways Company\nact.    The section reads u\u00ab  follows;\n'\"The company may from time\ntu time construct and operate railway facilities or properties of any\ndescription in respect to the construction whereof respectively parliament may authorize the necessary\nexpenditure or tbe guarantee of the\ncompany's   securities.'\nEntirely Without Power\n\"It will be at once apparent, from\nthe reading of tins' part of tbe act,\nthat the railway company is limited\nto the construction und operation of\nlines, facilities or properties in respect to which parliament has authorized the expenditure or authorized the guarantee ot the company's\nsecurities. Consequently the branch\nlines which it was proposed to\nbuild or complete lie beyond circumstances, under the scopo of the\nact. If parliament authorizes the\nexpenditure or the guarantee of the\ncompany's securities for construction\npurposes, the company may then\nmalic an issue of securities, guaranteed by the crown, und will then\nproceed with the wni'%, The branch\nlines bill was for the purpose of\nauthorizing the Issue and guarantee\ni>f 'the company's securities, and thtB\nbill, having been rejected by the\nsenate, the company is entirely without power antl authority to carry on\nthe contemplated program, either in\nwhole   or   in   part.\"\nALBERTA HARVEST\nCharged Against Officials\nAS81NIKOIA.     Sask.,     July    24.\n' Charges that alleged inefficient inspec-\nMade Improvement\nIQ    AITrilQT   PIR^Ti t,on of Brain at wt,im'b',g *\"*\u00ab causing\nlu  nUuUdl    r ilW 1 I (hem   considerable   financial   losa   were\n \u2022 \u25a0 | made   before   the   royal   grain   Inquiry\nIn       ^acLatrlif-u\/an        fllttiniT ''\u25a0 commission     here   this     afternoon   by\nin       OaSKaiCIieWan,       VUlUllg ] ttirmvrH of th(1 district.    It was claimed\nAhnilt   Fiffof-ntll*    Rami        i ,hat  *rRin   shipped by  bpeclal  bin was\nadoui ruieenin,  mw\u00bb     I ftww l00 hPHvy QockflKe and that often\nInspectors marked cars \"too full for\nInspection\" when that was not th\u00ab case.\nFrank Norh. local fanner, swore that\nat Willows lait fall he had shipped two\ncars of wheat from tho same field, one\nprairie j through the Province Grain company\nand the other through the Saskatchewan Cooperative Elevator company.\nWhen they reached Winnipeg, one car\nwaa docked IM per cent and the other\ncar was docked %% per cent. He did\nr.ot blumo the companies, but he did\nHaniH 1he inspectors. He claimed the\nscales at Fort William cheated him out\nof 31 bushels on one carload. Before\nshipping the grain he had It weighed at\nthe local lumber company's scales, and\nwhen lt reached the lakes it was short\n31   bushels, which amount  he  lost out\nhas\nof the\nIf,   hut\nWINN1PIXJ, July 24.\u2014t By Canadian\nItchh) \u2014 Crop conditions generally are\nMill   favorable   throughout   tli\nt provinces, promising a heavy yield and\ntn early harvest, states the weekly crop\n| report   of   the   Canadian   National   rall-\n| ways,   Issued here today.\nI     Fully   PO   per   cent   of   the   wheat   Is\nheaded out in Manitoba, and cutting has\nstarted at   St. Norbert and   in a couple\ncf   other   places   ln   the   southern   portions  of  the province.    Cutting   generally Is expected to begin  in about two\nor three weeks.    The barley harvest has\nalso been started In southern Manitoba,\nwhile   harvesting     of   rye     Is   general\nthroughout   the     province.     Rust\nmade   its   appearance   In   sol\nsettlements   along   the   Red\nconditions are not setiims.\nSaskatchewan Bumper Yield.\nHarvesting operations are expected to\ncommence in Saskatchewan between\nAugust II and 20. Some SO to 1*0 per\ncmt of the wheat Is in head, and gives\novery indication of a bumper yield.\nVery little damage has been caused hy\nrtoetlt storms, though considerable grain\nwas knocked down by heavy winds and\nrains. In a good many sections the\nrains Improved conditions materially,\nand some* localities report crups us the\nbest ever known. A few districts report\nthe appearance of red rust. Coarse\ngrains also promise good yi-'lus.\nWith wheat nearly all headed out and\nfilling rapidly, some cutting will be\ndone in Alberta about August 1, and\nharvesting generally will be ft week\nearlier than last year.\nIn the district east uf Edmonton it Is\nexpected that wheat will yield from i9\nto 55 bushels to the acre. The Hlajul\nof straw everywhere is good, running\nin some places better than four feet. A\nfew points report local damage front\nhail.\nToday We Offer:\nEnglish Ginghams\u2014\n32 inches.   Fast colors.   Today, 4 yards for  $1.25\nJap Crepes\u2014t\n31 inches.    All colors.    At   33f\nPlain Shades, Ratines\u2014\n'   31   inches.    Per   yard    v $1.20\nPermanent Organdy\u2014\n45 inches.    Per yard o\u00bb<\nHeavy Crash Toweling\u2014\nPer yard  *5f\nTable Linen\u2014    \u25a0 BJ\nPure Linen Damask.   2 yards wide.   Per yard ...?1.85\nChintz\u2014 ,\nSuitable for Curtains  or  House  Dresses.    37  inches.\nAt, yard 35<\n'       A nice range.\nOUR CLEAN-UP OF SPRING AND SUMMER READY-\nTO-WEAR HAS VALUES THAT WILL MAKE\nYOU  THINK  LIVELY!\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nWhen    In    REVEUSTOKE    Stop\nat   the\nROYAL HOTEL\nNewly  renovated.    Close  to  C.P.R.\nDepot and  the Business  District.\nRooms, $1.50\nDining    Room    In    connection.\nROBT.   LAUGHTON.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTIt\nA.   C.   TOWNER,   Manager\nThe   home   of  plenty.\nFifty  rooms of  solid   comfort.\n**> serve the hest meals In Nelson.\nIt's the cook.\nSherbrooke Hotel\nNear C. P. R, Station\nRooms    at    Reasonable    RMea.\nH.   DUNK,  Propri.t...\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nD\u00aby.\n*l rat-elate    Roomi    by    tht\nWttk   or   Month.\ntvery Contidtrition Shown t\u00ab\nGueete,\nCor. Baker and Ward Ste* Nation.\nMADDEN \u2014 Dan HflCttftlt, Mtadow*,\nW. S. HeydwellN. Waneta: Junta Carte-\nton. Mearlown: Mr, and Mr* D. C. Held,\nHardfevllle; P. Rlellor, KlmVii-rley; A.\nV.   Bryan, A.  H.   GrevilU-,   Elko.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic  Restaurant.\nRefinement   and  Delicacy   PreTaili.\nOPEN  DAY  AND  NIGHT\nLuncheon 11:30 to li     85c\nSpecial dinners 5:3n to 8     35c\nWe specialize In Chop Suey and\n. Noodles.\nQUEBEC FIRES\nBURN CAMPS,\nTAKE A LIFE\nAged Settler Is Trapped in\nOne of Fires Raging in\nRimouski County\nQUEBEC,   .tniy   li   \u2014-    ForMl    fires\ncanned by the burn lug of wlash by\nsettlers have reaulUd In the loss of one\nlife and ihe destruction of 10 houses,\nand three campi al St. Valerian, Rlm-\nou.ski county, .\nLouis Hiaupre, aged fiS, a settler, was\ncaught hi tha woods yesterday, and per-\nIfbed   hi   the  flames.\nThe Imprudence of a tattler who set\nfire, to a quantity of slash in Langls\ntoWBahip On tha south shore caused a\nserious outbreak, and 10 houses were\nreduced   to ashes.\nAnother large fire which broke out\niii Ulniouski county yesterday destroyed\nthree large camps,\nCrops   Threatened.\nQuatAVe C  Plena,  Obtaf forester,  who\nretutrned   tonight     from     visiting   the\ncounty    of  Hlniouskl,  slated     that   the\ndrought is threatening not only the for-\n| ests,  but also many of the crops.\non.\nOnly Want Help.\nT. Dunstun, another local farmer, also testified that government inspectors\nat Winnipeg were lax In their methods.\nC. C. Manery complained of grading\nmethods at Winnipeg,\nMr. Manery said he had shipped Durban wheat weighing 65 pounds last December, find it was graded at only 2\nper cent, which he thought was not\nfair, as It was not damaged in any way\nnor was there any spring wheat In it.\nHe had asked for a relnspectlon, but\nwas unable to get it.\n\"Wo would not be hearing so much\nlil.out marketing and transportation\nproblems If we had our financial problem solved,\" Mr. Emery said. \"What\ntbe farmers want Is an even break,.but\nthey are becoming discouraged because\nof their financial burdens. People are\neven leaving this part of the country\nwhich looks so gnod, because they can\nno longrr keep on. They ftd not wan.\nto be given anything, all they want Is\nassistance. The fanners are not to\nblame for their present financial conditio more than thri business men, or\nanybody else. Everybody bit off more\nthan their share, but the fanners have\nnot been aide to overcome their troubles\nas easily as Ihe others.\nDominion Bonds.\n\"1 would suggest a schettm whereby\ngovernment bonds could be used over a\nbug term period as a great many years\nwill be needetl to solve the debt prob>\n1cm of tho farmers. We have a pro>\nvinctal farm loan board, hut it has not\nbeen able to secure sufficient funds lo\ntake care Of the demands of all the\npeople who want to borrow under that\nscheme.\"\nEvidence furnished here Indicated\nthat many of the farmers favor the\ncompulsory   wheat  voard   and   not   the\nvoluntary pool,    ftavara)  farmers ap-\npcaring before the commission testified\nthat they thought the only means of\nmarketing the fanners' wheat so that\neverybody Would participate would be\nby tlie compulsory syutem.\nC. N. W. Emery favored a compulsory\n\u25a0wheat marketing agency. He could understand why the voluntary pool was\nwanted by many of the fanners, because they did not wish to participate,\nbut were forced by economic conditions\nto place their wheat on the market and\nget their returns as soon as possible. A\ncompulsory board would stabilize conditions and would keep creditors away,\nwhereas, on the other hand, a voluntary\npool was an unknown quantity and it\nWM doubtful whether it would get suf-\n.     j fio.lent support.\nMINNEAPOLIS. July 24. \u2014 Member- R. W. Hutton of Limerick, represent-\nhhip campaigns of cooperative wheat Ing the fanners of that district, told of\ngrowers' associations (n ll producing ! losing $StQQ on a car of wheat sold to\nMates are lo be consolidated tn.medt- I tlie agent of tho now defunct Imperial\nately into a country-wide drive under j Elevator company, in 11115. Ills wheat\na national organization committee, ac- graded No. ], but h#, was only paid for\ncording to an announcement here today I No   2\nSEVEN-DOLLAR RATE\nON ALBERTA LIGNITE\nAlberta Coal Missionary Vlslti Toronto\nto  Popularize Wcstorn\nrati\nTORONTO, July It \u2014 With the object of introducing Alberta coal in largo\nquantitlea Into Mnntcj homes, James\nArthur of Winnipeg, , representing the\nDruii'heller and Lethbridge niliics, is at\npresent in  this city.\nThe lignite or domestic coal can be\ntransported to Toronto by arrangements\nJust completed with the railways, at $\"\nper ton, making the prolutble retail\nI rice about }13 per ton. It will come\nfrom the west In a series of 50-car shipments. The average output of the two\nmines represented by Mr, Arthur is\nHi00  tons a day,\nfavored a farm  loan  MMBH extending\nover a period of 30 years.\nDeclaring the country was being\n\"governed to death,\" he said It would\nbenefit the country exceedingly If a lot\nof government expenditures could be reduced and eliminated. He favored a\ncompulsory  wheat board.\nAUTOlAlTS\nGET CLEARING\nHOUSE ROLLS\nthe men, because we have such\npoor description of* them,\" declaret\nGeneral Williams of the provlncla\npo ice.' \"About all the Informatioi\nwe have Is that one of the mei\nwas Uall und they were all tougl\nlooking.\"\nThere  Is  no chance   of  the  band!\ncar   getting   across   the   border.     I:\nwill   be  harder,   though,   to   atop  th\u00bb\ni bandits   themselves.\n\"I hardly' think it is likely tha\u00ab\n| the bandits will go far from th*\n] <-lty. They will have had all thel)\nI p'ana made beforehand and wib\nI just run the car down some bacl\n1 bine or smash it up. Then th*\n1 men can break away,\" declared Oen\nj oral  Williams.\nI The police have a clue, in th-\nform of a sawed-off shotgun whicl\nthe bandits'threw away. This gun\nwhich may have valuable flnge\nprints on it. is of the pattern in\ntrodticed by the Toronto police aom<\ntime ago. and is known as a rlo'\ngun. They also found 17 shellt\nloaded   with   bird   and   buck   sho^f\n(Continued from Page One)\nout by the banks the Hunk of Nova\nScotia lost $71,t'*i0, and the Sterling\nbank, $12,000. but police information\nsent out tonight 'places the loss In\ncurrency at |IN,0M, They say the\nSterling bank pouch contained between   $40,000 and   $60,000.\nSome of the messengers used their\nguns, but their fire was ineffective, j\nalthough spectators who watched the\nbattle from windows and doors de-\nclare one of the bandits was wounded    as   the   others   had   to   help   him \u25a0 oi Yarmouth, N.S , was among the mem\nNova Scotia Lady Is\nDecorated m Greet*\nATHENS, July  2*. \u2014 Sarah Cornlni\ni of the near east relief upon whon\nInto his car.    The exchange of  shots \\ WrR ,\nrr on the rear wlth ^\u00ab*,s^*^?ss\u00ab-fl|\n\"It   will   be   very   hard   to   catch   nfiter-\nCooperative Wheat   '    \"\nDrive Will Become\na National Event\nby   the  American  Wiujat Growers'  ass\nciatlon,   inc.,  sales agency.\nA national advisory committee, H\nInclude represeniatives from bankh.g.\nbusiness and professional organizations,\nll being formed for assistance in ccn-\nilucting  the campaign.\nW. It. Kyle, a farmer of the district,\nraid if free trade was Instituted, it\nwould help the farmer greatly. Eifty\nper cent of the farmers of the district\nVara insolvent, and the fanner who\nmade money had to work himself and\nbis  family   1+ to  16 hours a day.      He\n& Athletes &\nSportsmen\nThe morning glass of water sparkling with a\n\"dash\" of ENO's \"Fruit Salt\" contributes\ndirectly to the maintenance of those clean and\norderly conditions upon which perfect physical\nfitness depends. ENOhasthe pleasant,refreshing,\npurifying properties of fresh, ripe fruit and iff\nequally effective.  Every druggist in Canada selli\nENO'S\nFRUIT SALT\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n416  Vernon   St,   Fart.\nOnly   brick   hotel   In   city.     Steam\nHeated, hot and cold water.   European and American  plana.\nONE OF ONTARIO'S STRONG MEN\nNEW OtiANn \u2014 H H. Avery, l'rlnco-\nlon; R. ft Huffam. Krlinontmi; Mra. H\nl.uck and nun, Hull Hlver; W. Nelson,\nOcll HigRln, Kimberley: F. (.'. McCain\n.-nifi wife. Spokane, Mr. and Mrs. Culla-\ncutt, Rossland.\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nTha only Cafe In town cooklnl\nelectrically. Dinner 11:30 a, m. to\nt p. m. Lunch fi p. m. to 8 p. m.,\nper cover. 35c. Special Sunday\nDinner,  per  covar,  (Qo,\n111  Bakar \u00abt Phane 450.\nMillion Doesn't\nChange Monica;\nOTTAWA. .Inly IM.\u2014Miss Monica I\ni Moiissean, drug clerk, recently fell\nj heiress to a share in a IUIW.WH)\nestate left by her aunt, but she remained loyal to Ktulorde Oubord.\nWilli whom she had mixed soft j\ndrinks   for   years.     She   manb'd   him. !\n5*1*1 \\\\ifirtitnt\u00abt<vei f^r\nWorth Jlmricai\nH * ROT -h F. R ITCH!* 4 CO. .LTD,\n10-18 mccaul it.\nTORONTO\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMra. Mallatta 4 Son, Proprietor*.\nNice, warm, comfortable rooma at\nreaaonable  rates.      Open  4ay  and\nnight\nCarnar   Hall   and   Vernon   Streete.\nTHE  STANDARD CAFE\n12*   Bak.r   Strut,   N.l..n,   B.   C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIQHT\n11 >80 lo 2:30 Spncial  Lunch..3>W#\n1:30   ta   tlOO  p.   m\u201e   Supp.r. .Xr>\u00ab!\nPhon.  1M\n.    LAKEVIEW    \u2014   Q\nSpokane;  T.  Reaume\norge    Galbralth, ]\nClassified Ads.\nBring Results\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nrinaat equipped reetaurint la th*\nelty, OPEN DAT AND NIOHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water and\nhot drlnka. Nice, clean, furnished\nrooms; hot and cold water. We aater\nto private partlee.\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nTHE   tCf   aro   on    a\nHOLIDAY,  and   llioy   wrote   lo\nMOTHER  lo roI   Ihoin  some\nBOYS'   UVar  from   Morris.\nIF   wo   were   ul>le   to\nGIVE   a   better   deal   |o\nONE   more   than   another,\nTHE   Buys   would   get   It.\nA display advt. in The\nDaily News enters into\nMany homes, catches\nmany eyes.\nWilsons\nFLY PADS\nKill them all, and the\ngerms too. 10c a packet\nat Druggists, Grocers\nand General Stores.\nIt's \"Gimme\" this and \"Gimme\" that!\nAnd it's \"Gimme\" all you got!\n. \u2014,-*\u2014 But it's \"Gimme\" only. Strollers\n\u00abJUSt oSjy-V_^    For a G\u00b0od  .moke on the epotl\n\"GIMME*\n__\u00a7_\nnn {ha.,ht\u00bb wTth thi nana naaa\nHON.   W.   P.   NICKLE,   K.C,\nWho is tl*e represented beside his wlte at Government House, Toronto,\nwaa noted for his independence when he was Consrvatlve member for\nKingston In the federal house. As attorney-general it Is conceded In advance ne will hew to the line.\n^TobWQOfjoducti C\u00abrjor*Uonof CaJ\u00bbda, Llmlyd\n 7-Vf\nSWIMMER HAS\nA CLOSE CALL\nI {ourtg   Lad   Rescued   and\n. Given   First   Aid   After\nSinking Three Times\nLakeside park was yesterday morn -\nng Ihe. scene of 'a near drowning\niun R.illy Dalquist. fell into the\niivater over his depth from a raft.\n'Only the efforts of Mr. Bishop, the\n>ardener at the park, and his as-\n|istat't. saved the young lad's life.\nIt appears that along with three\nthers, Billy wns playing on a raft,\nnd while In deep Water the raft\nuddenly lurched and threw the four\nioys into the watfr. Three swam\nshore. Jind young Dalquist did not\nome tcTTlhe surface. An alarm was\naised, and tho gardener and his as-\ntlstant came to the rescue, bringing\n[he lad ashore, after he had gone\n'town for the second time.\n1 First aid was necessary to bring\ndm around, the pair working over\nlim for about five minutes. This is\nhe second near drowning at the park\nhis summer. Yesterday's accident\n.appened     in     the     morning     about\nBRINGING THE BALLOT TO MOOSE FACTORY\nCADETS WILL\nGO INTO CAMP\nNecessary Funds for Establishing Camp Hare Reached the City\nArrangements are being made hy\nthe local cadet Instructor for the\nNelson cadet camp at Mirror lake\nin   the   near   future.\nYesterday the necessary funds\nreached the city, and lhe lads will '.\ngo under canvas as soon as the cnmnj\nequipment   can   bo   brought   together, j\n10:80   o'clock.\nM LICENSES\nI ARE NUMEROUS\nihow   Increase   of, Almost\nHundred    So   Far   This\n;  Summer\nI !  There   are   ln   Nelson   and   Willow\n|whoint  this  summer no less  than .274\n.utos,   according   to   figures   secured\nrom     Provincial     Police    Chief     E.\n\u25a0iammon.-\nJ Licenses of all kinds issued this\nJ'ear total, to date, 475, as compared\nV\/ith   376   last   season.\n'EMAND GRANTED\nIN THEFT CASE\n'       .    --    .\nIrvln Rodnsky of Nakiisp, charged\n, '1th having stolen from a Oreat\njj'orthern train a satchel owned by\n|,V. O.  Monaghan  of Nelson,  was  ar-\ntigned   in   court   yesterday   and   re-\nlanded.for eight  days.\nr< \u2014 m\t\n[loop Intruder\nWins Mackinac Cup\nIt' MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich., July 24.\n-Intruder, a little sloop owned and\nlanned by three brothers, today won\nlie   16th  annual   Mackinac cup  race  of\n. '.11 miles, the longest fresh water yacht\nEpfteit in  the  world, '\nARGARINE   AND   NAPOLEON    III\n\u25a0 In   1869   butter  was scarce  and   cx-\n|f {-\"naive   in   Frunce.     The   poor   man\n,'id no reliable spread for his bread\nid the rich man  was frequently uh-\nme  to  get   any  butter at  any   price,\niapoleon   therefore   offered   a   reward\nfi the   man   who   would   invent   the\n>st   butter  substitute.     Mege-Mouries\n'vented a satisfactory substitute and\n,'-celved   the   reward.     So   succt'sstui\nas   his   invention   that   the   method\nI  the  manufacture  of oleomargarine\n(>d,ay la essentially the same as the\nLefchod  which   Mege-Mouries  used  in\ni6!J,   except   that   the   futs   and   oils\n-e not digested   with  pepsin.    Vege-\ni ;.ble oils  as well as animal fats are\n|.jjw uflt'd ln the manufacture of oleomargarine,   but   the   flavor   of   It   Is\n\u25a0 ill derived  from  cow's milk.     Oleo-\njargarlne   machinery   has   been   de-\nMoped   to   the   point   that   in   many\nrants the human hands touch neither\n,'ae   ingredients \u2022, of   the   product   nor\nM  product   itself.    Mixing,   handling,\n','iur.iing,    cooling,    marking,    salting,\nDrapping   and    packing\u2014everything is\n,'!pn<i   by   machinery.    -\nI\nNeeded at Dances\nAnd the Sea Shore\n\u2022 < (Aids to Beauty)\nHere Is a h^me \"treatment for re\n\\ovlni7 haira that is quick, iialn-\n'\u25a0sb and Inexpensive: With some\n\u2022owriVred 'delatona and water make\nnough past* to thickly cover the ob-\n:>ctlonable [rail's, apply and after 2\nr 3 minutes rul) oft, wash the skin\nind (t will be'Jeft soft, clear and\nairless. This treatment will not mar\nie skin but tn avtrtil disappointment,\na careful to get real delatone. Ml*\n\u25a0esh  as  wanted.\nBIG SALE OF\nSTOCK MADE\nFour Thousand Shares in\nZinc Property Changes\nOwnership\nThere wa.s a big mining transaction in Nelson yesterday, in which\nno less than 4000 shares of mining\nstock changed bands.\nThe sale arises from the fact that\nthe sheriff has received orders to\nsell tho Lucky Jim mine to satisfy\njudgments. Howard Hush held 4000\nshares in the mine, and yesterday\nhe managed to dispose of his stock\nto   Jack   Mulhollaml\u2014for   25   cents,     i\nAnother large shareholder' in the\ncompany\u2014D. fit Denis\u2014offered to sell\nMulhollai'd 300(1 shares more, but In\nview of th6 reported large transaction by Howard Push, he considered\nthe market bullish and asked $1 for\nthe 3000. Mr. Mulholland, however,'\npointed out that this was the first\ntime he had ever purchased mining\nstock and he must have time to consider before going in more deeply. |\n       __\nYmir Pays Tribute\nto Late Mrs. Ross\nOld-Timer of Camp\nYMIR, B.C, July Si,\u2014The funeral\nservices for the late Mrs. S. F. Itoss of\nYmir, who died at her ttont last Tuesday, were conducted by Rev. N. D. B.\nLarmonth of Nelson in the Ymir Presbyterian church, and were very largely\nAttended, the procession following the\nbody to the Oreat Northern station,\nwhere it was taken to Nelson and interred in the Nelson cemetery beside\nher late husband.\nMany beautiful floral offerings were\nsent, snowing the high esteem In which\nthe late Mrs. Kbse was held. Those\nstnding flowers were: Wreath, U. S.\nT. Ross; anchor, Presbyterian Ladies'\nAid and Guild; spray, Mr. nnd Mrs. William Clark; cross, Miss Hessie Clark;\nspray, Mr. and Mrs. P>. Shrum; spray.\nMr. and Mrs. McTsaac; spray. Mr. and\nMrs. H. Stevens; spray, Mr. ami Mrs.\nW. Howling; spray. Mr. and Mrs. Lovell;\nwreath. Mr. and Mrs. Barker; wreath,\nMr. and Mrs. I. Towner; spray, Mr. and\nMrs. D. L. Kerr; spray, Miss Raker;\nspray. Mr. and Mrs. Peek nnd daughter;\nspray, Mrs. Sturgeon and Mrs. Vlgneux,\nThe late Mrs. Ross was born in Leeds\ncounty, Ontario, in 1849, moving to\nHaldfmand county at tlie age of 18.\nwhere she was married to her late\nhusband. J. W. Ross, who predeceased\nher by 19 years. She came out to Ymir\nln '98, where she resided till her death.\nShe always took a keen Interest in all\npublic affairs, nnd was an enthusiastic\nworker in church circles. H\\\\p. leaves\none son. Ulysses. oT California, who has\nbeen with her during the last two\nmonths of her illness.\nMagistrate   Tucker   (in   uniform)   and   Hugh   C.   Tempt In   went   by   sea I\nplane   to   Moose  Factory   on  James  bay,   Ontario,  and  made  a   voters'   list,\nand   opened  a  polling ,booth   for   the   election.     The   plane   used   is   shown\nhere,   also  a typical   Indian  family  on   \"The   Bay.\"\nPRESENTATION TO\nVETERANS' FRIENDS\nAuxiliary    Joins    in    Pleasant    Event\nHold   at   the   Armory,   With\nMusic  and   Dancing\nA pleasing feature of a social held\njo!ntly by the O.W.V.A. ard the\n(l.W.V.A. auxiliary in the Armory\nlast night wus a presentation to\nH. H. Currie, past president of the\nbranch, nnd Miss Annie McDonald,\nan active member of the ladies'\nauxiliary, of a silver tea set and\ntray, tho occasion being of a pre-\nnuptial   nature.\nW. Pascoe, president, made 'the\npresentation, which was a surprise\nto the recipients, Mr. Currie re-\nspotKl'iip. Mm W. IT. Walker, on\nbehalf of the auxiliary, presented\nMiss McOonald with a. handsome\nbouquet.\nThe enjoyable event, which was\nprimarily held to afford opportunity\nfor the presentation, was concluded\nwith a musical program nnd dance.\nTwo solos were well rendered hy\nlint. J. Habegard: piano solos by\nMiss E. Nipou, while Mrs. F. Blakeman and Miss Irene Blakeman contributed a musical duet. W. Coleman)\nrendered both a solo and a mandolin    selection.\nThe whist prizes were won hy\n\\V. Hogarth and Mrs. W. Calbick.\nwith the ennsolaHnn pnzei going tu\nJ.   Turner   and   Miss   B.   Mason.\nThe hall was prettily decorated\nwith flowers for the occasion. The\nevent was under the direction of\n.1\". V*. Craggy, Fred Hart wig, Mrs.\nW. H. Walker, and Mrs. F. Durham, with Fred Hart wig acting as\nmaster   of   ceremonies.\nLady Astor's Bill\nProtecting Minors\nPasses the Lords\nLONDON. July 24 \u2014 The house of\nlords today passed without amendment\nthe third readii.-* of Lady Astor's bill\nprohibiting the sale of intoxicating\nliquors to any person under 18 years\nof age. The measure, which has\npassed the commons, now becomes law,\nprovided the assent of the crown is\ngiven.\nALFRED M'CUNE\nDIESf SOUTH\nMining Engineer Who Was\na Kootenay Pioneer Succumbs to Cancer\nWord has been received In 'the\ncity by Mrs. C.ilbert Stanley, 210\nBaker street, of the death last I\nThursday of A. W. McCune Jr., fa- .\nmiliar in Kootenay mining circles fur\nthe last 30 years. A Salt Lake paper i\ngives the following account of the j\nevent.\n\"Alfr-il W. McCune Jr., aged f.0.\nson of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. McCune, j\nformerly of this city, is dead At\nLm Angeles, according lo informa- I\ntlon received in Salt Lake. Mr. '\nMcCune died Thursday afternoon at I\nthe home of his father.\n\"Mr. McCune was well known in\nSalt Lake. Several years ago he\nwas engineer for the Cerro de Pasco\nMining company of Peruu, a company organized by his father. He\nwas a mining engineer of considerable ability, nnd was interested\nin L'tnh properties. He had been ill\nfor several weeks and his condition\nbecame serious about a month ago.\nHe was operated on several times\nfor cancer, but the treatment proved\nof no avail. He Is survived by his\nwife and three children, Mrs. J. T.\nLynch. Vivian and Marie McCune;\nthree sisters, Mrs. It. C. Naylor of\nSan Francisco, Mrs. J. T. Quealy\n\u00bbf San Francisco and Mrs. Rex\nTower of Lima. Peru; two brothers,\nRay of T-os Angeles and Mark, who\nis in France. His parents also survive   him.\"\nMr. McCune was identified with his\nfather's interests in various -parts of\nthe Kootenay, in the early days\nbeing associated with the Freddie\nLee mine, one of the first Sandon\nshippers. Of recent years he was\nin charge of properties for \u25a0 the\nfamily Interest at Ainsworth and\nSheep   creek.\nAUTOS MEET;\nWOMAN HURT\nMotor Cart Collide on Granite Road Near Horseshoe\nBridge\nIn a collision between two motor\ncars near Horseshoe bridge on the\nGranite road yesterday morning, Mrs.\nL. O. Couzetis nf Vancouver received\nn nasty bruise on the face, and\nweveral persuns had narrow escapes\nfrom   HerioUft   injury.\nThe cars which figured in the\naccident were driven by L. F. Tyson\nof Trail nnd L. O. Couzens of Vancouver coming here from Trail.\nWhen the cars met, Mr. Couzens\nsuffered a broken fender, lamp and\nradiator, and was towed into Nelnon\nfor repairs. The motor of Mr. Tyson\nwas  not  damngt\/.\nIn the coliision, Mrs. Couzens waa\nbadly shaken up. She, with her little\ndaughter, A. W. Htubhs and - Mr.\nCfitueM. were the occupants of the\nauto.\nHOW ABOUT YOURSELF?\nMaxim Corky wrote in his diary,\n\"When I watch how a man behaves\nwhen he Is alone by himself I always\ncome to the conclusion that he Is\nmad.\" He relates how he saw Chekhov, sitting ln his garden, try to\ncatch a sunbeam ln his hat and place\nboth on his head and become irritable\nwhen he failed; how he watched an\nEnglish clown, thinking himself unobserved   ln   the  deserted   passage   of\na circus, take off his top hat and\nbow respectfully to his own. reflection; how be overheard Tolator ask\na lizard, In a low whisper, \"Are you\nhappy?\" and, after peering cautiously\naround, confide to the lizard, *As to\nme\u2014I am not\"; and once he observed\na priest stand his boot in fronf. of\nhimself end say, \"Well, walk!\" and,\nafter an interval, add with dignity,\n\"You seel You can't go anywhere\nwithout me!\" But it is taking life\nloo seriously to find madness ln these\nand other such vagaries.\nWednesday Morning Specials\nMercury Silk Hose\nFull fashioned fl.95\nHouse Dresses\nUp to $5.00  S3.95\nCorsets\nUp to $3.00 S1.95\nLadies' Lisle Vests\nAt 59*\nLadies' Knitted Drawers\nAt  58t*\nAll-Wool Bathing Suits\nAt 83.50 and 84.50\nPhone\nYour\nRequirements\nPhona 151\nLacrosse Team to\nto Play Trail Today]\nOwing to several players being\nunnhle to get away the Junior lacrosse team which leaveB the city\nthis morning via automobile will be\nmore or less weakened. Earlier in\nthe wi.'k it had been anticipated that\na stronger aggregation would invade Trail, but tlie lads will not\ndisappoint the smelter city fans a\nsecond time, and are taking what\nmalerial   Is   available.\nYou need\nMustard\n\u25a0   ^rvderation un-\ndoubtedly aids *8ebg    remember\nSca^dKSe family d-ner\nthe mustard for in\ntable, -\nbut it must be Co^\nCuticura Soapl\n, \u2014\u2014 AND OINTMENT    '\nClear the Skin\n9o*p,01nt*\u00bbnt.T\u00bblciiiT),a-. w<-h  Bold \u2022vanwtw-i.\nMOSLEM'S   SACRED   STONE\nTho \"black atone of. Mecca\" Is\nheld in great veneration by all Moslems. Its traditional and legendary\nhistory is very curious, yet in spite\nof their belief in Its miraculous lore\nMoslems do not regard lt as j\u00bbn\nIdol or a thing to b&- worshipped.\nIn the heart of the city of Mecca\nstands the Kaaba, the sacred shrine\nof the Mohamiiedans, and in the\nnortheast corner of the Kaaba la\nembedded the famous black stone.\nThe stone is an Irregular oval about\n7 inches In diameter und is composted of about a dozen smaller\nstones of different shapes and sizes,\nand is probably of meteoric origin.\nMohammedans believe it to have\nbeen .one of the atones of paradise,\nwhich was brought from heaven by\nthe angel Uabriel and given to\nAbraham when he was building the\nKaaba. It is said to have been\noriginal y a ruby and that It has\nbecome black because of the sins\nof the people. Every Moslem is\nbound at one time in his life to\nundertake a pilgrimage to Mecca, and\nin the rites performed on this occasion are included the \u2022\u25a0 circuit\naround tthe Kaaba and the kissing\nof th* black s|pne(   . ___, ,\t\nPROCTER NOTES\nPROCTER B.C., July 24.\u2014Mr. and\nMra. A. G. Hitchie and son, of Nelson,\narrived here lam Wtftk to mmd a\nmonth's holidays at  the Outlet hotel.\nDonald J. MacKenzie of Scotland\nspent  last  week holidaying here.\nQ. N. Stead of Nelson spent a few\ndays holidaying at the Outk-t hotel\nlast week.\nMr. and Mrs. (J. W. McBrlde of Nelson spent a week's holiday here and\nleft. Sunday, for Spokane.\nMrs. Q, Woodman and family of Cranbrook arrived last week to spend a\nmonth.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Russell ef Medicine\nHat left, Monday morning for the coast,\nafter   spending a  week  here.\nMr. and Mrs. James Itltchle of Lethbridge are spending their holidays at\nthe Outlft  hotel.\nAmong the latest arrivals from Lethbridge to spend tlu-lr holidays here are\nMr. and Mrs. L. Nlvens. A J. Black-\nrum. H Miicarth and L, Lindsay, (\"liven\nBowman  and Jean   Masbeth.\nR Swanson of Nelson spent the weekend here\nJ. L. Kady of Kd-\"\"\"-\"! is spending\nbin holidays at the Outlet.\nKINNAIRDNOTES,     j\nKINNAIRD,   B.C.   July   24.\u2014English\nchurch  service was held by  Rev. C.  E.\nTurner     of     Edgewood     in   the   school I\nhouse on  Saturday evening.\nMrs.   Walter  RAhlstrom and son.   El- j\nmer. spent last Monday at Annable, the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. P. Ostrom.\nJ.   Koscianci   of  Trail   waa   in   Kin-'\nr.aird on business last weajb\nJUDGMENT AGAINST\nMINING^ COMPANY\nTwo applications in chambers, hy\nthe Nelson Hardware company vs.\nthe Yellowstone Mining company of\nSheep creek, on hehalf of two separate \u25a0 accounts, were heard and\ngranted  on  Monday afternooh.\nBlue-jay\nThe simplest way to end a corn\nis Blue-jay. Stops the pain instantly. Then the corn loosens\nand comes out.  Made in clear\nliquid ami in thin plasters. The\naction is the same.\nAt you* drugg\/st.    ^\nOil Shares For Sale\nShares in the NELSON SUNBURST OIL COMPANY, LIMITED, Offered at\n1 Cent per share\nThis is a Nelson company, and is operated and controlled by Nelson business\nmen, who are investing their money in it and are determined to make it a success.\nThey need more money to drill a well, and will eqrwnence drilling as soon as\nthey have sufficient funds on hand.\nThis is not a \"wild cat\" proposition; the property held by the company and\non which they will drill is in the center of the field and surrounded by good producing oil wells, and it will only be a miracle if they do not bring in a good producer.\nThe Waite Oil Company has two good wells a quarter of a mile south; the\nFranklin Oil Company well is a quarter-mile northwest; the Empire's two big wells\nare just over a mile south, and the Pot latch is on the east. All these companies\nare drilling more wells, and the company geologist tells us we are in one of the\nbest parts of the field and he cannot see how we can miss getting good wells.\nWhen the first well comes in as a good producer there will certainly not be any\nmore stock for sale at 1 cent. The subscribers who help to put down the first\nwell will be the stockholders who will get the greatest benefit. And if you will\nrealize this is a straight business proposition I am sure you will send in your application for what shares you can afford, and you help us to get started drilling.\t\nWe have contract prices on building a derrick.   We have the cost of casing. We\nknow the cost of drilling, and we have selected the location on which the first well\nwill be drilled.    We need more shares subscribed before we let these contracts. The\nsooner you send us your application, the sooner we will start on our wells.\nFill in and sign the application below, and mail to me with your remittance,\nand copy of prospectus will be sent you.\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON,\nInvestment Agent, '    (\n414   WAIJD   STREET,   NELSON,   B.C.\nof\nI\ntb\nhereby   subscribe\n' i Nelson   Sunhurst\nat  one   cent   per   share\nOi)   Company,   Limited\nfor         shares\n(Non-Personal   Liability)\nof   th\u00ab   Capital   Stock\nand   enclose   herewith\n\u00bb\n -    In   full\npayment.\nIt\nagree\nhave\nin  understood  tha\nto   accept   the   sh\nreceived, a   copy\nthis  remittance  is an  offer   made   subject\nires   subscribed   for   when   allotted   to   me,\nof   the    Company   pros pectus.\nto  your  acceptance,\nand   I   acknowledge\nand   I\nthat  I\ny\nSharai 1  Cent  Each.\n\u25a0    v    *          Fully   Paid.\nNon>A>itssabl\u00ab.\nOccupation   .\n |_ TPage Fou?\nTHE NELSON BAIL? NEWS, WEDNESDAY HORNING, JULY 25, 1923 1\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The News Publlshng company,\nlimited. Nelson, BC, Canada.\n' Business letters should be addressed and checks and money orders\nmade payable to The News Publishing\ncompany, limited, and In no case to Individual members ot the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on request, or may be seen at the office of\nany advertising agency recogmed by\nthe Canadian  Press Asociatfon.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES.\nBy mall  (country), per month. ...S -60\nPer year     \u00ab 00\nOutside Canada, per month 75\nPer  year    750\nDelivered, per month    71.\nPer six months   4.00\nPer year  7.60\nPayable In Advance.\nAudit   Bureau   of   Circulation,\nWEDNESDAY,   JULY   25,   1923\nEfficient\nbuseh\nl^ui^. A. Kta*m*m\nSOME   OOOD   C HEESE   DISHES\nFantastic Finance\nThe anarchic state of Oerman li-\nnanee Is Increasing with such rapidity that the general public la totally\nunable to follow the fantastic fluctuations of the mark, not from day\nto day, but from hour to hour.\nIn spite of the fact that the bread\n-supply, now again rationed, as ln\nwar time by the issue of bread\ncards to the poorer classes, Is heavily\nsubsidized by the government, the\nprice has just been doubled In 24\nhours, the 4-pound loaf now costing\n10,000 marks.\nAs a result, wages have gone\nsoaring. The striking metal workers\nof Berlin demand 25,000 marks an\nhour, or 1,100,000 marks for a working week of 4* hours. But even\nat this rate the wage In Canadian\nmoney Is only equivalent to 10\ncents an hour. As bread is 10\ncents a loaf and meat and butter 50,-\n000 marks a ppund, even such seemingly colossal wages do not go far\nln providing for a family. Expressed in dollars they represent\nless than $5 a week. As the product of the metal worker's labor Is\nsold abroad for dollars, or their\nequivalent, the profits earned by\nthe great industrial magnates are\nimmense. But, as these are deposited\nln foreign banks, they d(f nothing\nto ease: the 'domestic financial situation.\nThe downward course of the mark\nnaturally upsets all budgetary combinations made hy the minister of\nfinance. The taxation scheme\nIntroduced five months ago now only\nbrings ln one-fiftieth of the estimated revenue. The deficit of 49\nqne-fiftieths Is met by pouring out\na constant stream of treasury bills.\nThese have been Issued to the extent of 7,661,659,000.000 paper marks.\nThe strain upon the banks of the\nhandling of this extraordinary mass\nof inflated paper money Is very\ngreat. The Deutsche bank has had\nto engage 26,000 employees to deal\nwith it. To still further complicate matters the government keeps\npouring forth an endless stream of\nlaws, ordinances and regulations.\nMore than 170 have been issued\nIn the last week or two. An army\nof employees is required to do\nnothing else but study this mass\nof regulations and attempt to apply\nthem   to   current   business.\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nTea\nCereal\nl Dropped\nToast\nLuncheon\nTuna   Baked   Dish\nVegetable   Salad\nWhole  Wheat   Bread\nEggs\nJam\nDinner\nFried  Liver  With  Bacon\nBuked   Potaoes\nPeas Lettuce\nCoffee Apple  Pie\nA reader friend has requested me\nto publish some good cheese dishes.\nIn warm weather it is nn excellent\nplan to use meat substitutes (such\nas eggs, cheese and beans). The\nfollowing   are   all   nourishing   dishes:\nCheese Custurd\u2014Butter a baking\ndish and put in it n layer of bread\nwhich you have cut ln thin slices and\nthen into cubes about an Inch square\n(no crusts). Sprinkle over this layer\nof bread mild American cheese, cut\nwafer-thin, then dust with salt and\npepper. Add another layer of bread\nIn the same way, and again sprinkle\nwith the cheese. Beat two eggs, add\nto them one pint of sweet milk, and\npour this liquid over the cheese\nand bread. Bake for 40 minutes in\na moderate oven. It should look delicate and wavy between the soft,\nspongy bread. (In all, you wilt need\none-half loaf of bread and one-half\npound  of cheese  for  this   recipe.)\nCorn-Cheese Souffle \u2014 Cook one\ntablespoon nf chopped green sweet\npepper in one tablespoon of melted\nbutter for a few minutes. Then\nadd one-fourth cup of flour and two\ncups   of   milk.      Stir   and   cook   till\nsmooth. Now add on\u00ab cup of fine'y-\nchopped milk cheese, remove from\nfire, add one cup of cooked leftover corn, one-h:.lf teaspoon of salt\nand the yolks of three eggs, and fold\nIn the three si if fly-whipped egg\nwhites. Turn the mixture Into a\nbuttered baking dish, and bake for\n3fi or 40 minutes in a moderate\noven.     Serve hot.\nCheese-Tomato Souffle \u2014 Mix together in a sauce pan one pint of\nslewed tomatoes (or a one-pint can\nof tomatoes), two tablespoons of\nbutter, three tablespoons of grated\nmild cheese, three-fourths of a cup\nof cooked macaroni, one-half cup\nof stale bread crumbs and a pinch\nof mustard. I-et boil up once or\ntwice, remove from fire, cool, then\nstir in the yolks of three eggs and\nfold in the. three stiffly-beaten egg\nwhites. Turn the mixture into a\nbuttered baking dish and hake for\n35 minutes in a moderate oven.\nServe   hot.\nCheese-Crab Ramekins \u2014 Make a\nthick cream sauce and add to it\none can of rrab meat lor two cups\nof flaked fresh crab meat previously\ncooked) and turn the mixture into\nbuttered individual baking dishes.\nSprinkle grated mild cheese thinly\nover the top, ndd a layer of stale\nbread crumbs, then add another\nlayer of the graled cheese. Dot with\nbits of butter .and slip into a moderate oven for 15 or 20 minutes,\nto  brown  well.\nTomorrow\u2014The Bead Chain You\nWear.\nAll Inquiries addressed to MIsp\nKIrkman tn 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 eAt-\naddressed envelope must be Inclosed\nwith the question. Be sure to use\nYOUR full name, street number, and\nthe name of your city and province.\u2014\nThe Editor.\nThe Drug Evil\nThe widow of a motion picture\nactor who recently died after an\nunauccesBUfl attempt to break the\ngrip of drug addiction has been\npublishing a series of \"exposures,\nwith the profeRsed Intent to fight\nthe drug evil. Now it is announced\nthat she has received more than\na score of death threats, written\nby  addicts.\nFirst reactions may suggest that\nthe \"death threat\" story is a press\nagent's yarn. However, that may\nbe. it Is worth while to recognize\nthat the attitude of the addict toward anything or anyone threatening to restrict the source of supply\nis one of desperation. It Is not so\ngenerally believed, nevertheless, that\nthe desperation of the narcotic addict Is motivated hy disease, rather\nthan by inherent or acquired criminality.\n- An Interesting discussion of narcotic, addlqtlpn has been written for\nthe last 'number of Current History\nby a medical authority. The point\nmade here is that most of the narcotic addicts have come into their\n\u25a0orry condition as a result of attempts to relieve suffering by medical administratloon. The theory Is\nthat, when considerable quantities\nof' a drug are given to quiet pain,\nthe body builds up a defence against\nthe poison of the drug. When, tn\nturn, the use of the drug Is discontinued, the defence built up by\nthe body becomes In itself an active\nIrritant, causing excruciating physical tortures that can be relieved\nonly by a fresh Intervention of the\noriginal drug. The writer makes\nthe argument that the \"craving\" of\nthe narcotic addict Is not mental,\nbut physical, not something to be\nstilled by his will, and quite beyond  his   control.\nThis is not a pretty picture. It\nseems to call for a new attitude\non the part of many physicians\nand the public generally toward an\nall-too-numerous class of unfortunates1.\nernment has had to borrow at increased\nrates to meet maturing liabilities, while\non the other hand a large sum is set\naside annually toward the repayment\nof previous loans and at the same time\nnew loans sre being raised.\u2014Auckland\nWeekly News.\nThe Danger of the Road.\nBoston is to have a little church on\nwheels. A coroner's Jury patrolling the\ncountryside on Sundays would seem\nto be more appropriate, if accompanied\nby a hospital on wheels. \u2014 Kennebec\nJournal.\nSpecifics of Health.\nIt Is better to keep in health than to\nfly to medicine, as any chemist will\ntell us. Fresh air, exercise, and moderation ln living are the sovereign balms.\nBut while healthy conditions are debarred to so many we must look upon\nthe chemist as one of our most valuable friends.\u2014Daily Herald.\nEtna Is Temperamental.\nTo those who survive her terror Etna\nIs not unkind. Eor the lava which she\npours out so copiously enriches the surrounding earth, and nowhere in Italy\ndocs the vine flourish more than near\nher slopes. And after each tantrum\nmany new varieties of gentle flowers\nrppear, with all kinds of tender and unfamiliar scents. Thus does the passionate Etna reveal the subtle fascination\nof her femininity. \u2014 London Daily\nChronicle.\nSunday   Games.\nOames have now been played in the\nparks on Sundays for a year, and this\nreturn to the joyous Christian spirit of\nolden times has been a great success.\nSunday has become happier and healthier for thousands of people who have\nno day but Sunday and no place but the\nparks for enjoying games in the open\nair. The cause of true religion has not\nsuffered. Kor the London County council to go back on their decision and\nclose the parks to Sunday games would\nbe to deal a blow against the modern\nspirit which public opinion will not tolerate.\u2014London Daily  Mall.\nWhatDoYouThink?\nBY LENQJtE\nYou have often observed, 'no doubt,\nhow few women are really outstanding figures even In an ordinarily\nwell-dressed crowd. They will all\nmeet a certain even level of good\nstyle without claim to unusual distinction. And then suddenly they\nbecome merely a background for\nsome one JbnMn who excites particular   Interest.\nNor Is it neeestsurilv an expensive\noutfit that will do the trick, Usually,\nrather,   it   is   a   clever   bit   of   orig-\ne>-M-\nTkc lighter Side\nAn educated man is one who can\nname _]\\ the popular grievances and\ntell  why.\nThe man who never has time to\nvote is the one who says \"they\"\nare  running   the   country.\nOne safe way to raise a girl Is\nto teach her to tell her mother everything   and   eat   onions.\nFight lovers always rejoice in\nthe line. \"They will make their\nhome   with   the   bridj's   parents.\nIt must be awfully trying to be\na bachelor and have nobody to nag\nat   when  you  have  a   grouch.\nThe old-fashioned man who likes\nclinging-vine women has a son who\nprefers   the   clinging-skirt   kind.\nThe Dally Newa invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public Interest. A non-de-plume may,\nif desired, be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\nas a giarantee of good faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief and\nmust avoid personalities. The\nDally News does not hold Itself, In\nany way, responsible for the views\nof correspondents. Letters which\ncontain advertising matter or propaganda which Is classed aa adver-\ntismn will not be accepted under\nany circumstances.\nMotorboat on Pool;\nTrout Do Not Strike;\nAre Facts Related?\nSouth Slocan. July 24, 1923.\nTo the Editor of The Daily News:\nSir:\u2014Will you kindly give space for\na few remarks about fishing?\nI have been fishing in the South Slocan Pool every month of July since\nIM?, with the exception of the year\n1909. and I have found that when the\nshad flies are hatching we have Invariably had first-eiass fishing, provided weather conditions were favorable.\nLast week the shad flies commenced\nto hatch, the weather has been A-l\nsince last Monday, and w\u00ab* ha\\e a new\nmoon, but we do not seem nble to catch\nmany trout, and most of those caught\nare undersized, so have to be put back.\nIf I was the onlv one unable to catch\nthem, 1 would call it lack of experience, but I find that better fishermen\nthan 1 am are in the same fix.\nI have tlshed a good many trout\nstreams in Norway, one in the Black\nHills, also in the Hig Horn mountains,\nbut In no place have I found the trout\nso sensitive to weather conditions as\nthev are here.\nMay they not he more sensitive to\nr,th<*r disturbances, too?\nOn July 18 a motor boat was running\non the Pool. How often it was out during the we\u00bbk I do not know, but It was\nout again yesterday. I am very likely\nwrong, but I believe the motor boat has\ngot something to do with the poor fish-\nIf I am right, although I am trying\nto make my living renting out boats\nand rowing fishermen. I would say to\nsportsmen:\n\"If you want fair sport, take a fool s\nadvice, and keep elear of the Slocan\nPool till the motor has been quiet a\nweek or so.\" .\nI should like to hear the opinion of\nsportsmerl, especially those acquainted\nwith the waters here, about this ques-\n\u25a0 OXJt  SKATTEBO.\nCfjat\nof\nSour*\nBy Jemet  W. Berletu A\/A\nInallty. The other day at a smart\nbeach resurt just outside of New\nYork, even in the colorful parade\nof such a place, one young woman\nattracted the (it tent ion of most of\nthe others by wearing a turquoise\nlinen coat, embroidered all over\nin white, with a trig upturned hat\nof the same material. Most of the\nother hats present were felt, some\nstraw.\nAnother intriguing accessory to\ngive dash to a summer costume is\nthe brilliant-, yellow and black oriental scarf, knotted under the chin\nus shown in the. sketch. The same\ncoloring is repeated in lhe band on\nthe   black   felt   cloche.\nLike a House\u2014The Storeroom\n(Registered   in   accordance   with   the\nCopyright   act.)\nYou know what the store room\nof a house or flat Is like. It has\nstuff that is too good to throw\naway or that you are not using Just\nat the time. Sometimes there is an\nemergency call for something. a\nspare bed, an extra chair, an extra\nsuit of clothes or underwear. Perhaps even it is something In food\nsupplies that you keep in your\nstoreroom. Now I know you'll\nwonder where the storeroom can\nbe   in   that   body   of   yours.\nWhat particular position? Well\nas a matter of fact It Ib no particular part because, nature has ;\nbetter system of housekeeping than\nwe   have.   \u25a0\nHer storeroom Is In practically\nevery part of the body. That is,\nevery part of the body has a store\nroom of Its own in its ability to\nsupply your emergency needs In\nstantly.\nTake any part of the body. The\nlungs for Instance always have\nabout a hundred cubic inches of\nnearly pure uir to carry you along\nshould you have your \"wind\"\nknocked out, be under water, or\nhave your brealh shut off in any\nway. This surphm will carry you\nalong   for  a   few   minutes.\nYour liver stores up extra sugar,\nso that if there is a sugar famine\nInsofar as your body is concerned,\n\u2014that is if your vegetable supply\nIs cut off\u2014then the liver will supply this extra sugar tu the blood\nuntil you get back to vegetables\nagain.\nThen there is always a little extra bile in the gall bladder if special   need   arise.\nSimilarly your muscles are al-\nwas ready to do your bidding. I\nmean that extra bidding because\nthey have stored up within them\na little extra oxygen for just such\nemergencies.\nSo no matter how essential or\nvaluable the store house Is in your\nhome to the household, the store\nhouse in that body of yours is\neasily more efficient In supplying\nthe   needs   of   that   body.\nsmokestack, 120 feet high, to replace the steel stack now in use\nat the company's smelter at Green*,\nwood.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe police have been instructed\nto put a stop 1\u00b0 lhe practice of\nbathers not In proper bathing suits\ngoing In swimming In the lake at\nclose  proximity  to  the  city   limits.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGus Matthew and John Patterson\nstate that they had a most successful six hours yesterday afternoon,\ncapturing 72 trout. They fly-fished\n\u25a0just  below  the Grohman   rapids.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nGilbert & Sul'lvnn's charming\nopera, \"Mikado.\" will be reproduced\nthrough the efforts of the Nelson\nOperetlc society in September. W.\nA. Jowett and Melville Parry will\nBtage   the   opera.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nHerbert Redpath. brother of the\nCanadian Pacific railway ticket agent\nat Greenwood, met with an accident while attempting to move from\n>one freight car to another. He Is\n'using crutches.\nBAILORS* PATKOH  IAIVT.\nSt. Elmo's fire which is often seen t\nsea or on mountain tops Is an electric |\nphenomenon.    It often appears as a 1\nof  weird  blue light hovering about L\nship's mast or mountain peak,  in slfl\nabout as large as a basketball.    It wij\nmove   along   a   ship's   rigging  with\ncrackling *olse   and   disappear  with I\nfinal burst and splatter.    It takes li\nname from Sant Ermo or St. Erasmu|\na bishop during the reign of Domitla\nof Forinac, Italy.    Sont Ermo, or as t\nwas also called,  St.   Elmo,  was put l\ndeath hy being broken on the wheel '\n304 A.D.    He was patron saint of Medl\nterranean sailors and the Bight of thi\nphosphorescent   ball   playing   about  thi\nrigging of a Bhlp was regarded by sal|\nors as a sign  that their guardian\nkeeping    watch    ovet     them.    Anclenl\nGreeks   were   familiar  with   St.   Elmoi\nfire   and   the   writer   Pliny   says   ths!\nwhen two such lights were seen slmul\ntaneously   the   superstitious   sailors iif\nvoked them as gods and called them bl\nthe   names  of   the  twin  deities,  Castor\nend Pollux.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The  Daily  News,  July  25,   1903)\nTho British Columbia Copper eornT\npany lias let a contract for 4,000,000\nbricks,   for   the   erection   of   a   brick\nWITH THE MASKAL0NGE\nA two-hour catch of \"lunge\" on Sturgeon Lake, Ontario. Three of the\nfish weighed 12 pounds each. On the left Is Harry Reeves of Lindsay,\nL'anadian National railway engineer;, on.  Ihe right,   Inspector  Marshall  Tripp\ndf   the   Toronto   police   department,\ndo all the mosquitoes know where\nthe  lawn   let*,   is  to   be   held?\nA free country Is one in which\n'you can do everything except the\nthings you would like to do if you\nwere absolutely free.\nCorrect 1his sentence: \"My dear,\"\n'said the other woman, \"1 positively\nididn't know it was a made-over\ndress  until  you  told   me.\"\nSelf-control is the quality that\nkeeps you from wearing out your legs\n[putting on imaginary brakes when\nthe   other   fellow   is   driving.\nTen Years Agd\nWkat the Press Is Stying\ndot Tow Coal lm Ye*.\nThe invention of a way to refill while\nUP In the air will be a great benefit\nto the coal consumer when he finds\nhimself in that flk next winter\u2014Baltimore Bun.\nV\u00abw eWaUnd riauics.\nAmong the anomalous results of the\ntwwnt    com pi lea ted    system    is    that\nth*   accumulated   sinking   funds\n\u00bb t\u00bb about  112.00(1,000,   the  gov-\nThere's one conso'atlon. After the\nbirds are all killed off, hunters will\nhave an unlimited supply of insects\nto  try   their   prowess   on.\nThis drug \"scopolamln\" that makes\na man tell the truth should revolutionize things in the weather\nbureau.\nAnother of life's dismal failures\nis the effort of a 14-year-old\ndaughter to correct the grammar\nof   her  parents.\nNow that foreign countries have\nfound a way to get around Uncle\nSam's prohibition law, that seems\nto  make  it  unanimous.\n(The  Daily  News,  July\n1913)\nOddly enough the increase of fllv\nvers In Mexico hasn't jarred the\nseat of government.\nIf there  is  no  system  of com*\nmunlcation  between   insects,  how -\nAlleging that a number of leading\ncitizens of Salmo on Kriday evening\nlast drove him out of that place\nand told him not to return, C. D-\nMoCormfrk, a picket for the Ymir\nminers' union In connection with the\nstrike at the Queen mine, yesterday swore out informations against\n12 Salmo men, among whom are\ntwo justices ot the peace, charging\nthem with assault and with intimidation.\n\u2022 \u25a0 s   e\nDamage to the extent of $100 was\ndone to the launch owned by J. J.\nMalone, when a friend of the owner\ndropped a match Into some gasoline.\nMr. Malone' hands and wrists were\nburned In his attempt to extinguish\nthe   flames.\n\u2022 s>   s\nBorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Murdo\nMcLeod of Fairview, on July 19, a\nson.\n\u2022 i   \u2022\nThe new church at^ Procter was.\nwell filled on Sunday morning, when\nthe \"Ven. Archdeacon H. Beer of\nKaslo took the dedication service,\nassisted by Very Rev. A. J. Doull,\ndean of British Columbia and rector\nof Christ's Church cathedral ot Victoria,         \u2022  \u25a0    {.-:.\nJust ask your\nDressmaker!\nYour dressmaker will tell you,\n\"Yes, 1 use Wiss Shears. These!\nam using now are ideal for cloth\ncutting. They fit your hand conv\nfortably and lie flat against ths\ntable when in use.\n\"They cut easily; and don't\nrequire frequent sharpening.\n'Really, they last for years and\nyears. You ought to get a pair\nfor your home sewing.\"\nFor .ate wherever good cutlery is sold.\nWICCSHEARS\nTTIJJSCISSORS\nNewark.N.J, Since 1848\nNelson Hardware Co*\nWholesale and retail \"quality hardware\"\n..  .' BAKER. STREET        ...       ,.. ..NELSQtf, B.C.' ' _ \u25a0\nprepared from the fresh young leaves of\n3437\nis   the   ideal   drink  for   Summer,\nCool, Refreshing', Delicious \u2014 Try it.\nStreet dust is dangerous  '' ;l\non bare knees\nSafety First!\nThe tiniest scratch or cut may develop serious infection if it is not\nthoroughly cleaned.\nLifebuoy Health Soap provides a\nsafe antiseptic cleansing lather that\nremoves all impurities, goes deep\ninto the pores, and leaves your skin\nvibrant with  health\u2014and safe.\nThe wholesome odour of Lifebuoy\nvanishes in a few  seconds\u2014tht\nprotection remains.\nLI.FEBUO\nHEALTH\nBuilding\nMaterial John Barns & Son\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nALWAYS ASK FOR      y\nEDDYS\nMATCHES\nsold by over\n14,000 General Stores\nand 16,000 Grocers\nON SALE EVERYWHERE\nIN CANADA\n 13)\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1923\nPage Five\nJULY SALE VALUES IN HIKER SHOES\nThe real Shoe for Boys,\nat a big reduction.\nSecure a pair for your\nboy while we have all\nsizes.\nsizes,  11 to 1,\n $4.80\nYouthsj\nat....\nBoys'  sizes,    l'\/a to 6,\nat   85.20\nMen's sizes, 6V2 to 11,\nat   $6.95\nR. Andrew 4 Co.\nLeader,  in   Footfaihion\nMINISTERS' WIVES HAVE AFTERNOON TEA\n^&&\nMrs.   Forbes   Godfrey,   left,   is   the   wife   of   Ontario's   new   minister   of\nhpalth and lahor, and  Mrs,  W.  H.  Price,  is  the wife  of  thp new  provincial\nI   treasurer.\nAPPLEDALE NOTES\nC J. Stainton, and children, arrived\nhere yesterday from Trail.\nW. Cart Jr. Is home from Ainsworth\nfor a few days.\nAt   a   recent   meeting   of   the   Junior\nAPPLEDALE, B.C.. July 21. \u2014 J. H\nSteele,   who   has   spent   the   past   eight i Unfted farmers, Miss I>orolhy Cant was\n_.....i-- i ...i.u ui~ *\u201e\u201e \u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e,\u201e. | elected  sei*retary   in   place of G.   Cant\nmonths here with his son, has returned\nto his home In Nanton, Aita.\nwho Is away for an Indefinite period.\nIt. Wilson left for Argenta, where he\nMrs. W. T. Wynne and daughter, Mrs. ! will take up work In a pole camp.\nPreserve Them\n\u2014by using the right polish\nevery time. \"Nugget\" is best\nfor tht leather, and lengthens\nthe life of your shoes.\n\"HOGGET\"\nShoe Polish\nBLACK\u2014TAN\u2014TONEY   RED\nDARK BROWN AND WHITE\nThe\\ewest\nin Bathroom Fixtures\nSEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY\nTowel Bars, 18, 24 and 30 inches\nBathroom   Hooks\nBath   Seats\nGlass   Shelves\nTie   Holders\nToothbrush   Holders,  for 5  or  3\nbrushes\nPaper   Holders\nSponr-e   and    Soap    Holders\nShaving   Brush   Holders\nWater   Glass   Holders\nBROOM HOLDERS\nThese Goods are guaranteed Solid Brass, Nickel Plated.\nThe Prices are modest. It will pay you to look these over.\nII1PPERS0N HARDWARE CO.\nLook   for   the   Red   Hardware   Store\nPHONE 497\nP.O.   BOX  414\nOld Dutch\n_ tor\nOld Dutch\nCleanser\nMADE\"    IN\nCANADA\nWoift Scratch.\nContain.* no tye\nor acids.\nGoes further.\nDoes better work.\nKootenay and Boundary\nWynndel Berry Cars\nMoved Expeditiously;\nPrecooling Worked\nCRESTON, B.C., July 24. \u2014 R. B.\nBevan, who has been in charge of the\ncarload shipping of strawberries at\nWynndel for the Cooperative Fruit\n(.rowers' association this season, is back\nto Creston. All told, 10 cars of berries\nwere shipped straight far I ond lots, a\npre-cooling plant being In operation,\nand worked so efficiently that on one\noccasion a refrigerator car that did not\nreach Wynndel until 10 a.m. on Tuesday\nwaa iced, refrigerated and loaded with\nberries ready for shipment before 10\na.m. Wednesday.\nA good car service was given, on one\noccasion the Dominion Express company\nbringing an empty refrigerator all the\nway from Calgary attached to the passenger train, In order to avoid any\nshipping disappointments.\nDue to an unusual moisture supply,\nberry shipping from ail valley points\nbrought more grief than usual where\nthe fruit had long distances to go.\nCRAWFORD BAY NOTES\nCRAWFORD HAY, B.C., July 23.\nMiss Thelma Nickelby returned\nPrincess Creek on Thursday, after\nspending a week visaing Miss L. Wool\ngar.\nMiss O. Williams of Nelson is visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. Pelers.\nMrs. Eyton and little daughter, Betty,\nof Nelson, have been In the Hay since\nlast Monday, the guests of Mr. and Mrs,\nE.  Francis.\nMrs. Candy of Vancouver Joined her\nhusband, K. Candy, here on Thursday.\nThey intend spending a couple of weeks\nhere.\nRev. J. S. Mahood held divine service\nhere on Sunday.\nCreston Parts With\nPrincipal of School\nCRESTON, R.C., July 24. \u2014 Creston\nparted company regretfully with th*1\npublic school principal, fleorge P.\nSmith, and Mrs. Smith at the end of\nthe week, Mr. Smith going via Spokane\nto Victoria to attend summer school,\nwhile Mrs. Smith goes to Silverton to\nspend the summer vacation with relatives In the Slocan. Mr, Smith was exceptionally well liked by both parents\nand puplla. The past three years he\nhas resided east of town, where he has\na fine five-acre ranch coming along\nnicely, and which he has leased to\nFred  Klingensmtth  for two years.\nHe was active in the social life of\nthe community, nnd ore of the steady\nbackers of the Chautaur.ua He Intends\ntr.klng a coast school faff the present.\nA new grocery store, trading under\nthe firm name of Jackson's, has just\nheen opened in the F. H, Jackson store\nbuilding on Wilson avi*m;e, which has\nbeen vacant since the closing of the\nArk second-hand stor? some months\nago. F. H. Jackson, who hold out his\nentire business to Mawson Bros, nhou\nfour years ago, ia In charge.\nCRESTON NOTES\nSocial Happenings\nIn Nelson\nCRESTON. BC, July 23. \u2014 With the\ndisappearance of the flood waters off\nthe flats, Creston is experiencing some\nwelcome relief from the. mosquito nuisance, which has prevailed for the past\nmonth.\nMiss Cleveland has returned to Toronto, Ontario, after a month's holiday\nwith her sister, Mrs. W. H. Oobbeit.\nCanute Anderson is home again after\nspending about six weeks on a holiday\nvisit with flrends nt Iivermere,\nMaster Harry Miller, eldest son of\nthe late Mr. and Mrs. Andy Miller, arrived from England on Friday, where\nhe has spent the past two years, and\nwill remain with his grandmother, Mrs\nM. Young.\nMiss Muriel Knott Is away for a\nmonth's visit with friends at Shuswap.\nat which point she taught school a i\ncouple of years ago.\nMiss Godwin and Mlns Wilcox of Toronto, who are en route to Vancouver'\nfor the summer vacation, were guests\nhere over the week-end with the former's sister. Mrs. J. W. Dow.\nMrs. Krigr-r and daughter, Mrs. Lee.\nand Miss Almeda Attridee of Spokane,\nare here for a couple of weeks* vacation at the home of Mr. and Mrs, M.\nIt.   Palmer.\nMrs. Howard MacDonald of Calgary,\nwho have been here for a month's stap\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.\nWebster, left for home on Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. D, Moure of Vancouver,\nwho are visiting with Sirdar friends, :\nspent the week-end here with Mr. ami\nMrs, James Cook. '\nDockyard Commander\nof Halifax Is on\nVisit to Longbeach\nLONOBEACH, B.C. July 24, \u2014 Com\nmander Brabant, It N, superintendent\nOf the dockyard at Halifax, has been\nstaving with his slsler, Mrs. Robert\nHill. Longbeach, on hll way back from\nan official visit to Es.,uiinalt.\nHugh Leggatt spent Monday in the\ncity.\nVenerable Archdeacon On ham Celebrated matins and ho y communion at\nAll Saints' church, Longbeach, on Sunday.\nMrs. Bruce Warden has been visiting\nMrs. Rowland Bourke and Mrs. Cunliffe\nat  Crescent  Bay.\nMiss Mary Caldicntt. who has been\nstaying wilh Mrs. Warden, has left to\nvisit   in Balfour.\nEnergetic Club of\nSlocan. City Holds\nSuccessful Affair\nSl.OCAN CITY, R.C.. July 24. \u2014 The\nsale of ice cream, raspberries and tea\nheld on Friday afterroon and evening,\nami the dance at night, under the auspices of the Energetic club, was a huge\nsuccess, and a goodly sum was realized. Music for the evening was furnished by Mrs. H. C. Nye, piano, the\nMisses Frances and Ruby Nye, violin,\nand John Waldnn. trap drums, and W.\nE. Oraham, saxophone. The hall was\nfilled to its capacity, several people\nfrom the valley being present.\nMiss Nellie Avis of Perry's was the\neuest for the week-eid of the Misses\nDorolhy and Mabel Parker.\nMrs. V. E. Johnson motored In from\nNelson on Sunday with her husband.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN, HC, July 24\u2014Mr.\nnnd Mrs, W. J. Q. Oliver returned on\nSaturday evening from Spokane, where\nthey have been spending their honeymoon,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Potosky nnd the\nMisses Mary. Julia ard Amelia Potosky\nreturned today from Fort William,\nwhere they have been on a visit for the\npast   three   weefcs.\nMiss Edith Sommers of Westbrldge\nIs the\" guest of Mrs J. Dinn for the\nweek.\nMr. nnd Mrs Edward Watts and family and Mr. Horton of Nelson motored\nto Evans Creek on Sunday to spend the\nday.\nMr. and Mrs. W B. Monypenny and\nMiss Geraldine Moiiypenny motored\nfrom Trail on Sunday to spend the day\nat the Pool.\nOther visitors from Trail on Sunday\nwere Mrs. Comar, Mha Florence Comar\nand   Mr.  Cleeve.\nW. A. Rockllffe of Nelson spent Friday here, fishing In the canyon.\nThis column Is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vigneux. AU news of a social\nnature, including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal -Items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear In this\ncolumn.   Telephone   Mrs.   Vigneux.\nMrs. T. H. Caudwell, Oak street,\nFairvlew, entertained a few friends informally at a veranda tea, Monday afternoon, ln compliment to her house\nguest, Mtb. Henry W. Detchon of Winnipeg- Mrs. William Douche and Mra.\nJames O'Shea assisted in serving the\nrefreshments.\n\u2022 \u2022    t\nMrs. Martin Kendrlck of Rossland,\nwho has been spending the past few\nmonths at Rochester, Minn., returned\nto the city via the Oreat Northern last\nevening. She will leave today via the\nnoon  train   for  her  home,\n\u2022 \u2666    \u2022\nMrs. A. T. Eyton, 715 Mill street, who\nhas been Spending the past week with\nMr. and Mrs. E. D. Francis at Craw-\nt'ord Bay, returned to the city yesterday morning via the Kaslo boat.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nC. W. Drayton. Canadian manager of\nvarious British fire Insurance companies, who has been spending the past\ncouple of days In the city on business,\nleft last evening via the Kettle Valley\nfyr Peiftlcton.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMrs. S. C. Miller and daughter. Miss\nMay Kltsley of Vancouver, are spending a few weeks, guestB at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. George Massey, 608 Innes\nstreet.\ni    a     a    a\nMrs. E. J. Smith and son, of Trans-\nccna, Manitoba, are visiting with Mrs.\nSmith's sister, Mrs. Hird, 615 Victoria\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nA. D. McLeod, manager of the Royal\nBank of Canada, has returned from a\nvacation spent In various coast cities.\n\u2022 \u2022     a\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Steel and sons,\nBilly and George, of Grand Forks, have\narrived in the city to spend the next\nfew months, They are guests, while\nhere, at the home of Mr. Steel's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Steel, 1008 Stanley\nstreet. For the present Mr. Steel is\nemployed with the British Columbia\nTelephone company, and will later\nleave with his family for Vancouver,\nwhere they will make their home in\nfuture.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2666\nH. W. Jackson, a Spokane mining\nman, and formerly of Rossland, spent\nMonday in the city.\n$   a   e\nMrs, T. Cornall of Willow Point was\na city visitor yesterdav.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Christina Stewart, who has been\nenjoying a couple of weeks visiting at\nthe coast cities, returned to town Saturday evening via the Kettle Valley.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. A. J. Reynolds of Willow Point\nspent yesterday shopping In the city,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. T. W. Calbick and party\nmotored to Trail, Sunday.   ,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nCaptain Cogle of Procter spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. P. Kinkwell of South\nSlocan were city shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 *    \u00ab\nColonel and Mrs. A. W. Taylor and\nfamily of Willow Point motored to\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. May C. Kerr and Miss Jean W.\nCameron of Edmonton are spending a\nfew days ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00ab\nH. Perry Leake of Balfour was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nA. J. Millen of Vancouver and W. S.\nMcPherson   of  Grand   Forks  arrived  ln\nJ. J. Malone of Princeton and one of\nNelson's pioneers arrived fn town Sunday evening to spend a few days.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. Forbes, a Victoria mining man,\nwho spent the week-end in the city, left\nyesterday morning via the Great Northern for his home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nA. C, Bowness of Cranbrook Is spending a few days In town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. If. P. McNeil of Calgary\narrived in the city, Saturday, and leave\ntonight, via the Arrow lakes' for Vancouver, Mr. McNeil Is fruit inspector\nfor the  province of  Alberta.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. M. Pezeril announces the engagement of her daughter, Hazel May\nMarie, to W. M. Davis of Spokane,\nWash. The marriage will take place\nshortly In Spokane.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss If, Peltman of Calgary will leave\nthis evening via the Arrow lakes for\nRevelstoke, after spending the past few\ndays in the city.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nCapt. E. H Edwards of Willow Point\nmotored   to   town   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2666\nJ. Derbyshire of Crawford Ray was a\ncitv  visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nJ. H. Beley, postmaster at Rlondel,\nspent  yesterday  shopping  in   the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nGeorge Leece of Ymir, who has been\nvisiting with friends at Procter and\nthis city, returned to his home via lhe\nGreat Northern yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Georgia Stewart, agent for the\ngovernment telephone company here,\nleft Monday evening via Ihe Arrow lakes\nfor a vacation to he spent in Edgewood,\nwith Miss McLeod. and in Deer Park\nwith Mrs. E. Bellamy.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJohn,iBaber of Hall Is visiting his\nsister, Mrs, Otis Hawkins, Kerr apartments. *\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nR. W. Hermtston of Deer Park arrived in Nelson the latter part of the\nweek, suffering with an iniured thumb\nwhich   he   Is having   treated.\nMrs. E. Bellamy of Deer Park Is\n\"neiidhur a few days at the home of\nMrs. Jack Si Denis, Ward street.\nJ. C. Ryan, a Spokane mining man, U\nspending a few days in town.\na    \u2022    \u2022\nGeorge Aylnrd of Victoria, one of the\nprincipal shareholders of the Standard\nSilver* Lead company, who has been\nspending the past week at Silverton, arrived in town Monday evening by the\nSlocan trn'n and left yesterday morning\nvia ihe Great Northern for his home\nI   a , a\nMr. nnd Mrs. Henry W Detchon of\nWinnipeg arrived in the city the latter\npart of the week, and are guests at the\nhome of Mr and Mrs. T. H. Caudwell,\nOak   \u2022tract,  Fairvlew,   while  here.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nP. G. Shallcro^s of Vancouver, fire\nInsurance adjuster, left last evening\nvia the Kettle Valley for Penticton.\n\u2022 \u25a0    \u2022\nF. R. Wolfle, the Spokane mining\nman, returned to Kaslo yesterday afternoon, where he has been on mining business.\n\u2022 I    \u2022\nSenator L. G. DeVeber of Ottawa,\nwho has been lhe guest of his brother,\nL. B. DeVeber, 720 Carbonate street,\nfor the past week, leaves this morning\nvia the Crow boat for his home.\n\u00a7   a. \u2022\nW. S. Hawley, a Spokane mining man,\narrived In the city yesterday morning\nfrom Spokane, and leaves this morning\nvia the Crow boat for his home.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss E. Martin of Calgary arrived In\nthe city, Saturday, via the Crow boat\nnnd leaves tonight via the Arrow lakes\nfor Revelstoke, after which she will\nvisit ln the Okanagan.\n\u2022 I    t\nMiss Florence Rutledge of Trail, who\nIs summering on the north shore, entertained a number of friends at the tea\nhour, Monday. The guests were Miss\nB. Newman, Miss D. Finland of Trail,\nJuly Clearance Sale\nHALF-HOLIDAY BARGAINS\nWomen's GINGHAM DRESSES\nat $3.75 Each\nA new lot that just arrived at this\nlow price. Made of good quality\nchecked Gingham, with trimmings\nof White Organdy. Sizes 36 to 42.\nWednesday Bargain at  S3.75\nWomen's WHITE SKIRTS to Clear at $1.50 Each\nJust 2 dozen of these Skirts to clear at this low\nprice. In no case do we get half the original price\nfor them. They are made of excellent quality cotton\nGabardine, all well tailored and finished with belts\nand pockets. Sizes 24 to 27 waist measure only. A\nwonderful bargin at, each  $1.50\nDIMITY BLOUSES at $1.00 Each\nPeter Pan Blouses with colored collar and short\nsleeves. Made of good quality Dimity, and in sizes\nto 42.   Values to $3.00.   Sale Price  $1.00\n611 Baker Street\nThree Dozen CORSETS to\nClear at $1.00\nLight-weight Corsets for summer wear. Made of good quality Coutil. Low bust styles.\nSizes to 27.   Sale Price....S1.00\n100 Yards T0WEUNG to\nClear at 25c a Yard\nHeavy quality Roller Toweling,\nwith colored borders. 16 inches\nwide. A bargain at, yard....25^\nWomen's SILK HOSE at\n95c a Pair\nGood weight Artificial Silk, in\nplain or stripes. Colors Black,\nWhite, Brown, Grey and Sand.\nSizes 8 V-i to 10. Wednesday\nBargain,   a  pair   95^\nPhone 200\nMiss  Muriel    Smyth,    Miss    Freda    B.\nHume,   Miss     Dawn     M.     Hume,   Miss\nNorma Irving, Miss Dorothy DeCew of\nVancouver, Miss Grace Wilkinson, Miss\nJean Turner, Miss Erma Ferguson, Miss\nLottie   Annable,    Miss   Lillian   Hunter,\nMiss  Freda  Hunter,   Miss   Lenore   Hill,\nMiss   Gladys   Stevens     of     Vancouver,\nMiss     Bernlce     Stevens   of   Vancouver,\nMiss Kitty Johnstone,  Miss Alia Johnstone,    Miss   Gwenyth     Vincent,    Miss |\nMarlon   Robinson    of     Ingersoll,   Miss ,\nEileen   Simpson,    Miss   Isabel   Benson, I\nMiss Marjorle Benson, Mrs.   E. A. Hill,'\nMrs.   J.   T.   Andrews,   Mrs.   R.   D.  Hall,\nMrs. W. A- Dakln ol Regina, Mrs. John\nA. Waldle of Castlegar, Mrs. C. Emory.\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nL. Trussell of Trail returned Monday\nevening from a visit to the coast cities.\nWhile here  he  is a guest at  the home\nof W. J. Sheppard,  14U7 Stanley street.\ntee\nMrs. Fred Stevenson of Vancouver arrived in the city via the Kettle Valley\nlast evening to visit with her sisters,\nMrs. C. V. Gagnon and Mrs. Joseph\nSturgeon, 519 Silica street.\nCastlegar People\nSeek Seclusion of\nthe Lake Shores\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., July 24. \u2014 The\ncontinued hot weather is making\nCastlegar residents seek cooler spots.\nSunday, the lake was humming with\nthe music of various launches plying to\nand fro, and hathers nad a delightful\ntime and were loath to leave the water.\nMr. and Mrs. Ross, accompanied by\nMr. and Mrs. McDiarmid of Robson ami\nother friends from Nelson, are enjoying a camping holiday at Shields' Point.\nThey expect to be away 10 days, and\nare swelling the numerous parties already camping in the shady ROOlU on\nthe cool shores of the lake,.\nMrs. J. MacKinnon, with her small\ndaughter Josephine, has gone on a prolonged visit to her sister In Calgary.\nWhilst in Calgary. Mrs. MacKinnon\nhopes to be Joined by her mother and\nyoungest sister, who left Scotland for\nCanada on  Friday.\nMrs. T. Olsen left Nelson yesterday\nand expects to sail on the Montcalm\nfrom Montreal on Friday, to Join her\nrelations  In  the old country.\nMrs. \"R. E. McGauley and the twins\nhave gone on a short visit to Erie.\nMEETING    PLACE    OF    TIDES\nThe    Solent,   which   separates    the\nIsle  of   Wight,   in  the English   channel,  from  the mainland,  Is  the meeting place of five tides,'which ebb nnd\nflow   with   ever-changing   complexity.\nTo   the   landsman   lt   seems   only   a j\nfive-mile   stretch   of   deep   green   sea, I\nhut experienced navigators know that\nwhile  It   may  appear  uniformly  deep,\nyet  in  reality  It  Is  only   so  In  well-\nknown    channels.     There   are   many\nscattered   spots  where  at   low   tide  a\nchild   might   paddle   about,   and   even\nat highest tide the Solent is too narrow   for   deep   navigation.     There   Is\n| no   doubt   that   the   pretty   little   isle\nI with   its   fairy-like  scenery  was  once\na   part    of    the    mainland,    and    resl-\nIdents  of  the coast  realize   that  were\nit not for the powerful dredgers which |\ndaily   leave   Portsmouth   harbor   and I\ndredge   the  fairway   channels as   they I\nsilt  up,   in  a  few  years  it  would   be I\npossible   to   wad\u00ab   comfortably   across J\nSpithead from Southsea to Hyde,    Os- i\nborne,   on   the   Isle  of   Wight,   was  aj\nfavorite   residence   of   Queen   Victoria, i\nwho    died    there.      The    governor    of\nthe   Island   for   many   years   was   ihe\none-armed hero, Gen. Sir Sam Browne,\nafter   whom  the  officer's  belt   he  invented,    ROW   In   use,   was   named.\nNAKUSP NOTES\nNJUCUSF. B.C., July 24. \u2014 Mr. and\nMis. J. H. Vestrup. with Mr. Gisbourne\nof the Canadian Bank of Commerce,\nspent the we^k-end plcknicklng along\nthe   lake  shore.\nA. C. Yoder, manager of the Llndsley\nBros.' Canadian company, siwnt Saturday in town on his way to Vancouver,\npartly on vacation and partly on business.\nMrs. Scott of Arrow Park arrived on\nSaturday's steamer, accompanied by\nMiss   H.   Longbottom   of   East   Arrow\nPun.\nR. L. Gore-Langton and family have\nmoved from their ranch at Crescent\nBay to O. Sa 1st root's residence, which\nthey will occupy for a couple of months\nuntil their residence on Vancouver\nIsland,   recently   purchased,   Is  ready.\nG. Brown and son are already in occupancy of the Gore-Langs ton ranch,\nand are building a commodious house\nto receive the balance of the family\nfrom Wolverhampton. England. A dam\nta being constructed at the creek running through the property, and the electric light and heating plant is already\non   the ground for installation.\nSince custom requires men to wear\ncoats, it Isn't surprising that the\nword is pronounced with the accent   on   the   \"cus.\"\nWRIGLEYS\nPASSMORE NOTES\nPASSMORE. BC, July 24. \u2014 W. H.\nSaunders, secret ary-tn a surer of the\nWest Kootenay Central Farmers' Institute, attended the executive meeting\nheld  fn   Nelson.\nMiss B. Saunders was a visitor to\nNelson, Wednesday.\nMiss E. Flynn was a visitor to Win-\nlaw, Friday.\nR. Wilton and son of Penticton are\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Wilton.\nHaying is nbout over here, nnd some\nfine crops of hay have been gathered.\nMrs. B. Kubla was a visitor to Nelson\nlast week.\nIF   YOUR   PIANO   18   WORTH\nANYTHING    IT    IS   WORTH\nExpert Tuning\nAny   Other   Kind   Will    Ruin   It\nAlvin E. Perkins\na strictly Independent tuner,\nand the best-recommended man\nin Canada, with 35 years of\nvaluable factory and other experience, stands for positively\nthe best in the profession of\ntuning and repairing of pianos.\nHonesty of purpose and conscientious workmanship, and\nstrongly indorsed by the best\nauthority ln Canada \u2014 piano\nmanufacturers who are positively particular where they\nput  their signature,  as  follows:\nMorris   &   Karn   Co.\nHeintEman    &   Co.\ntlourlay   Piano    Co.\nDominion    Piano   Co.\nN'cwcombe   Piano   Co.\nFletcher   Bros.\nGerhard   HelnUman   House,\nVancouver.\nTrof.   J.   D.   A\u201e   Tripp,\nVancouver.\nMason   &   Rlsch   Co.\nAnd others.\nMr.   Parking  will   ba   in   Nelson\nin   a   few   days,   and   will   make\nhit    regular    calls.\nm  Sealed for you If\n=      Wrlaley's is made of =5\n\u2014    pure chicle and other \u2014\ningredients of highest =\nquality obtainable. =\nBut it is no use to EE\nmake U\/RIGLEY'S 100% =S\nin quality and then reach =\nyou in poor condition. ~~\nSo we put it In tbe wax<\nwrapped package and\nSealed It Tight\nto keep it fiood\n-tor you.\nAids dilution\n-keeps teeth\nwhite \u2014 helps\nappetite.\nWrkley's Doublemlnt\nIs peppermint flavor\nId double strength.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n \"\"     \u25a0\n Page Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1923'\nSHORT SELLING      !\nDEPRESSES LIST!\nLack   of   Buying   Support   Encourages\nShorts to Mak* Demonstration, and\nTons Heavy.\nNEW YORK, July 24.\u2014Lack of buying support In the early hours today\n\u2022encouraged short selling in a wide assortment of stocks' and gave today's\nstock market a distinctly heavy tone.\nThe result was recesslns of from 1\nto nearly S points over a large portion\nof the list. Great Northern preferred\ndipped to 81 %, a new low record for the\nyear, and more thsn a dozen rails were\noff a point or more.\nSteels and equipments came in for a\nlarge share of the selling, Baldwin\ndropping 3%, Crucible 2%, Bethlehem\n8. IT. S. Steel 1 Yi, and American Locomotive \\%. American Car closed ly%\npoints off on the day.\n' The Pan-Americans led the decline\nIn oils, the A stock falling off 2%, and\nthe B 1%. Associated Oil moved 2\npoints lower, and California Petroleum\n1%.\nCall money ruled at i% per cent\nthroughout the day.\nThe time money market was quiet,\nWith brokers bidding freely at 5 per\ncent and tenders holding out for 5%\nGerman marks sank to $2.15 for one\nmillion.\nTotal sales were 461.000 shares.\nClosing Quotations.\n,\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nC   P. R\t\n146%\n145%\n144\nC. M. ft St. P.  .\n18%\n13%\nHit\n18%\nOen.   Motors   ...\n18%\n13%\nInt.   Nlcke.1   \t\nISH\n13\nIS\nMo.  Pac.  Mm.   .\n12\n11%\n11%\nMo. Pac. pfd,   ..\n33 .\n32\n32\nRock   Inland   ...\n26\n16\n25\nStudebaker   \t\n106(4\n104%\n-04%\nV.  S. Steel com.\n91%\n90%\n\u25a090V4\nWillys   \t\n\u25a01%\nDominion Live Stock\nWirmTPEG, July 24. \u2014 Receipts at\nthe yards up to 9 a.m. today were 836\ncattle and calves, 40b hogs and 67\naheep.\nSteer* \u2014 Choice, $6 to |6.50; fair to\ngood, $5 to $5.75.\nButcher heifers \u2014 Choice, $5.75 to\n$6; fair to good, $4 to $5.50.\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice, $4 to $4.25;\nfair to good, $3 to $3.75.\nBulls\u2014Good,   $2 to $2.25.\nv Oxen\u2014Good, $2.75 to $3.25.\nBlocker Bteers \u2014 Choice, $3.25 to\n$3.50; fair to good, $2.50 to $3.\nStocker heifers \u2014 Choice, $3 to $3.25,\nfair to good, $2 to $2.75.\nFeeder steers \u2014 Choice, $4.25 to\n$4.50; fair to good, $3 to $4.\nCalves \u2014 Choice, $5.50 to $6.50; good,\n$4. to $6.\nHogs \u2014 Select bacon. $9,62 H; thick\nsmooth, $8.75; heavies, $7.75; lights and\nfeeders, $8.75.\n.Lambs \u2014 Fair to good, $9 to $11.\n\u00ab Sheep\u2014Fair to good, $4.50 to $6.\nToronto Kacalpta.\nTORONTO, July 24. \u2014 Cattle receipts .970; trade slow; heavy beef\nsteers,   $7.50.\nCalf receipts 526; choice, $11.\n.Sheep receipts, 633; lambs, $13.50.\n'Hog receipts  1718; fed and watered,\n$1W.\nWHEAT DECLINES\nON STOCK DROP\nPilot*   Fall   to   Within   a   Fraction  of\nLowest of tha  Year\nto Data.\nCHICAAiO, July 24. \u2014 Wheat dropped\nin price today to within a fraction of\nthe lowest price reached thus far by\nthe lit 2 3 crop. Wen lute mh of the New\nYork stock market had much to do\nwllh the in we ring of values here.\nWheat closed unsettled at l%c to 2c\nnet. decline, with .September )4*t|C to\n97c, and December $1 to $1,110*4. Corn\nfinished at a range varying from %c\noff to a shade advance. Gain, He to\n%c down, and provisions unchanged to\na setback of 15c.\nSILVER DECLINES\nTHREE-QUARTERS\nNEW YORK, July 24\u2014 Silver, C3%c\nLONDON,   July   24.   \u2014   Silver,   rpot,\n30  15-16d;  futures,  30%d.\nCanada Bonds\nCRIPPLED BY\nBegan to Improve After\nTaking \"Fruit-a-tives\"\nThe Medicine Made From Fruit\nVou can g-et rid of Rheumatism.\nYou can lie free Of pate\u2014of swollen\nha mis And feet\u2014 of aching arms, legs\nand hack.\n''T'nul-a-tivps\" will drive tlie cause\nOf Rheumatism out of the system and\ngive you permanent relief.\n'\"For over three years, I- waa\neon lined to bed with Itheumatism.\nFinally I decided to try \"1'ruii-a.\nlives\". Before, usiny half ti box, I\nnolieed improvement. I continued\ntaking \" Kruit a-tives\" improving all\nthe time. I can now walk about two\nmiles and do choresaround lhe place\".\nALEX. MU.VRO, Lome, Ont.\n50c. a box,8 for Si' -SO, I rial size 25c.\nAt dealers or from Fruit a lives\nLimited, Ottawa, Out.\nmm\nUsed Articles\nReal E*UU\nRoomi\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAatomobflc*\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Ratet\nlocal BaidlnflT Motlcta\u20143c per word\neach Insertion. In blackface or machine\nI capitals 4c per word. lil.tckfaco capl-\n! tain 6c a word; 'ib per eaat discount\n! If run dally without chanKH of copy\nI for one month or more. Wher\u00bb ad-\n1 vertlaement la Bet put in short linen\ni the charge Ib U\"*jo a line for Roman\n| type, l&o for blackface, and 20c for\nblackface capital*. Minimum 86c, If\n1 charged  60c.\nMale Help Wanted\nEgg Markets\nWINNII'EO. July 24. \u2014 Dominion\nwar Issues prices: '       '\nWar loans \u2014 1925, $]f)O.F,0 bid,\n,100.SO nuked; 1931. |1\u00bb!.\u00ab!> hid. 1101.51)\nasked;   1937. J102.S0 bid,  S1U2.S5  asked.\nWar loan renewals \u2014 1927. $101.50\nbid, ,101.75 nsked; 1932, ,10245 bid,\n1102.55 asked.\nVictory loans \u2014 1923. ,100.(0 bid.\n,100.50 asked; 1921, $100.65 bid, $100 SO\nnaked: 1927, $103 10 bid; 1933. $105.35\nbid, $105.15 asked; 1934. $103.30 bid,\n$10340 asked; 1937, $107.75 bid, $107 85\nasked.\nForeign Money\nNEW YORK, July 24. \u2014 Bar silver\u2014!\nForeign,  63 %c.\nCanadian dollars ~- 2 17-32 per cent (\ndiscount.\nFrancs \u2014  Demand,   l.9S*3.\nLira \u2014 Demand, 4.37M.C\nMarks \u2014 Demand, ItWSltO; cables.;\n,000214c.\nOTTAWA, July 23.\u2014Toronto receipts\nlighter; jobbing extitm, 34c to 36c l\nfirms.  27c to I9c.\nMontreal \u2014- I'licliang- d; dressed poultry steady;   turkeys, 33c; limllt-rs, 31c.    j\nSaskatchewan   unchanged.\nEdmonton   \u2014  Jobbing     extras.     30c; 1\nfirsts,   Mo.\nBritish   Columbia--Unchanged.\nl'rince     Edward     Island   \u2014   Country\npolnta,   straight   gathered,   I6e   to   21c; I\nretail.  Cliarlottetown,  2.\"c.\nNew'  Urytmwiek    \u2014   Country   points.\nstraight    gathered, . J&c;    jobbing,    St. '\nJohn,  extra*.   ||( to  We;   firsts,  28c  to\nt$Q.\nBritish cables \u2014 Price* shillings per\nH)   dOMfl-\nLondon \u2014 Little change; English. ]ls\nto 13s; Danish. 11h to 13s; Duteh. Us\nto Ills; French, Hiy,n to ):ts: Irish,\nlO'.us to 12s; Chinese, l%* In ts%s.\nWANTED    -\nQueen's  Hi\n- Night p\nMl.\nrler.\nApply\n(9236)\nWANTED \u2014\nJohnetone'*\nBoys for pit\nrancb.    Pnc\nkinK .berries,\nlie   477L2.    \u25a0\n19213)\nBELLBOY -\nApply Hum\n. Hotel\n19193)\nWANTED \u2014   First-Class\nwttKes.   Apply Tim Ploy\npainter\n\u2022r. Box\n;  Rood\n558.\n19176)\nLive Stock for Sale\nPURE-BRED cocker spaniel pups for\nsate. Barents A l bird dogs. H. C.\nCouch,   Box  74,  Nelson. (9232)\nTEAM\nol   bay\nmares\nfor   H8\nla;\nwagon,\nharness  and\n1\neigne\nAgt\ns V\nand   8\nyears\nWeig\nIt\nabou\n1800\nIhs\nPrice\nJ 3 Ml.\nApply\nH\nE. 1\nlpper,\nKingsgate,\nB.C.\n(9148)\nMAKE\u2014About twelve hundred pounds,\n(\u25a0ood worker. No vices. Rankin,\nBonnington. (i>146)\nEOrt SALE \u2014 Four teams, 4 to 7 years\nold; weight from 2S0O to 3000 Ihs.;\ngood condition; working. Apply McGill A Levine,  Meadows.  B.C.     (9097)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nWANTED-Married man for dairy and\nfarm work it Boundary Falls, B.C.\nSixty dollars per -month. Partly furnished bouse, fuel, garden, ate. Near\nschool and post office. No butter\nmaking.    J. C. Cruse,  Lardo, B.C.\n(9165)\nMEN, women to learn barber ing; paid\nwhile learning; tools supplied. Catalogue, free, Moler College, Vancouver. IS912)\nFemale Help Wanted\nSterling Exchange\nNEW YORK, July 24. \u2014 Steriine e:.-\nehanfie easy at J4.r.7 1-16 for 60-day\nbills and $4.69 7-16 for demand.\nNelson     counter    rate     on     sterling, !\n14.71*.\ni WANTED \u2014 Experienced  waitress.  Apply at iniee, Hume Hoi el. (9234)\nWANTED   --   llirl   for   general   bouse-\nwork,    Apjily Mrs. A. N.  Wlnlaw. 719\nCarbonate street. (9233)\nHOUSEKEEPING SUITE for rent. Ap\nply Mrs. Williamson, K.W.C. Block.\n (9131\nSUITE\u2014Campbell's  Studio. (8931\nCity Property for Sale\nA Home Ready to Walk'\nin to-\nFurnished\n1\u2014On the ground floor, there\nare 2 Bedrooms, a Dining room,\na Living room. Kitchen and\nlarge Pantry; A splendid Bathroom, with white Tub and good\nFixtures; , Garden Lot situated\non Robson Street. Price Furnished   $1600.00.   Terms  arranged.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhone   21.9. Box   628\n(9164)\nFOR RENT \u2014 Thr\u00ab\u00ab-roomed  furnished I\naulte.    Annable Block. \u25a0 (8H1C) I\nPTJRNISHED   BTJITBS\nXEH*    AI'ABTMENTfl\nTELL   your,   wants  througb   Th\u00bb   Dalit 1\nSituations Wanted Female\nWANTED\u2014 Position a*1 hookkeeper by\nyoung worn fin; !> years' experience;\nknowledge o' shorthand and typewriting;    low   ratary.      Box    H108,   Tfiiilv\nNews. \u25a0 [_V>X)\nMisccllancou s for Sale\nPIANO \u2014 A good practice piano at\n1110,60, Smalt payments. Mason &\nRisen Ltd.. til Ward street, Nelson.\nPhone 2T>7.    Hox  61fi. (ttUOV)\nSPRAY for Aphis tn Hoses and\nShrubs. Spray for. Caterpillars.\nRed Mite Killer for poultry houses.\nLouse       Powder,      ate. Rutherford\nDrug   Co. (8952)\nPLATER.pJAMO \u2022\u25a0- Juat think, a good\nplayer,    88    note,    with    20    rolls,    f<,r\n1725.00.      Small    payments. Mason\nA   Rlsch   Ltd..   r.13   Ward   street.  Nelson.    Phone 311.    Box 615. (9208)\nBUNGALOW\nBright living rooms. Beam celling; fireplace. Newly decorated.\n2 level lots; fruit trees; good\ngarden In first-class shape. Owner\nwill sell for the remarkably low\nfigure of $1500.00 on very easy\nterms.\nH. W.  ROBERTSON\n414   WARD   STREET.\n(9225)\nEdit   SALE\u2014P.owbonf    In   good   condition.    Apply Hox ;ir.2. Nelson, R C.\n.  (9215)\nMetal Markets\nMontreal Produce\n' MONTREAL, July 24. \u2014 Eggs up;\nbutter strong; cheese firm.\nCheese \u2014- Finest easterns, lS^c to\n18HC.\nButter \u2014 Choicest creamery, 31c to\n31 He.\nEggs\u2014Selected. 32c.\nPotatoes\u2014Per hag, car lots. $1.20 to\n$1,25.     \t\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 24. \u2014 Flour 10c\nlower, at $fi to $6.20. Shipments, 42,-\n810   barrels.\nBran \u2014 Unchanged at $20.50 to $21.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern, $1.03% to\n$1.10%.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow, 82c to 83c.\nOats \u2014 No. 3 white, 34Hc to 35VaQ-\nFlax\u2014No. 1. $2.70 to $2.7fi.\nToronto Board\nTORONTO, July 24. \u2014 Today's session of the stock exchange wns a dull\nand Irregular affair, with price changes\nrarely extended beyond a fraction of a\npoint.\nLake of the Woods sold at 167, down\n% for the day and IB points under the\nhigh of the year; Braiilian recovered\nH> tn <nw.   \u25a0\nBell Telephone sold at 122%; Canada\nSteamships, common was firmer at 14.\nAn easier tone appeared among bank\nstocks, Commerce, Hamilton and Imperial Belling at lower levels.\nMutual Oil sold at 101 and Britif.ii\nAmerican at 33, the former down %\nand the latter up 1 point.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid Asked\nCoalmont  .;  M-M\nCork   Province     .08%\nInt.   Coal           .13'-a -17\nSheep   Creek     00% .01%\nTloundarv Bay Oil  .00%\nEmpire  Oil    01% .01%\nSpartan    01 .01%\nTrojan   Oil       .03% -04%\nSMOKERS BEWARE\nWhen and how much can one\nsmoke? An old divine uaed to\nsay, \"People who smoke now, will\namok* hereafter.\" Lord Leverhulme,\nthe aucceasful proprietor of Hunllght\nsoap, aaya that a man who smokes\nhefora 11 o'clock will not do a\nquarter of a day'a work. Medlclal\n.opinion declares that peoples' nerves\nore not normal since the war, and\nthey are too ready to eeek nerve\nrelief. Alcohol, tea and tobacco are\nall, to some extent, poisons. In\nsmall, dosen and at the proper season\nthey may be beneficial, In excess\nand out Of season they will have\na directly opposite effect. Admitting\nthe necessity for some nerve relief It .must be emphasized that\nin a halihy, efflcienetly-working body\nthere- should be no need for tobacco In the early part of the day,\nIn the morning the body and mind\nare freiih from their long rest, the\nwear and tear of the previous day\nhave disappeared during sleep and\nthe Individual should be \"as a giant\nrefreshed\" and ready to face unaided the strain of the day. It\nis an entirely different story when\nthe Jar and Jangle of the working\nhours have taken their I'M of\nnerve power. At this time the quiet\npipe or mediatlve clgaret may pro\nduce just that effect of restful\nness whb-h will insure the gentle\nslipping    into    sleep.\nThe -ftTry- -prwhtrMy\u2014irwiWn't \"rait\nIt   murder    when   the   man    at    the\nnext   de\u00bbb.   begins   his   third   hour   of\njm    \"fas,   We   Have   No   Ba.-\nNEW YORK. July 24.\u2014Copper steady\nelectrolytic, spot and futures.   HI4C.\nTin\u2014Easy; spot, and nenrby. |M.76\nfutares,   ?30.f.2..\nIron\u2014Steady and unchanged.\nLead\u2014Steady;   spot,   $fi.2r\u00bb.\nZinc\u2014Steady; Kpot and   nearby,  $fi.lo. I\nAntimony\u2014Spot. $7 to $7,20. j\nAt   London \u2014 Standard   copper, spot,,'\n\u00a366;     futures.     t\"66     15s.     Electrolytic,\nspot, \u00a372  ISa; futures.  \u00a373.\nTin \u2014 Spot, f 1S7 2s fid; futures, \u00a31S7\n17s 6d.\nLoad\u2014Spot, \u00a324 Its \u00abd; futures. \u00a321\n7s fid.\nZinc\u2014Spot,  \u00a330  ISa;  futures,   f30  10*.\nof Absorbine Jr., to\nan ounce of water, makes a\nMouth Wash that will free\nthe teeth of injurious germs.\nUsed morning and night, it will\narrest Pyorrhea end Sinus\u2014and\nchange white, spongy, bleeding\ngums into firm, pink, healthy gums.\nCountry Property\nPOIt IAL1 \u2014 Few choice lots In Pal-\nfour Townsite, water front; reasonable prlc\u00abs.    H. Perry Leake, Procter.\n  <&977)\nOKI flat-ti.p desk, fi drawers; solid oak\nwash stand; double brass bedstead;\nsingle enamel bedstead; Morris chair;\n2 wood rockers; extension couch; oil\nstove; wishing machine. til Mill\nstreet      Phone  430L, (9204)\nFOR   SAl.!0~^-~Wicker   bUKgy.\nmdll\n, Absorb 1 neJr\n9\nis pleasantly aromaticand leaves the\nmouth feeling clean, cool and fresh.\nOnly a few drop*, rempmber\u2014 io the bottle\nwill lust a long, long lime. 9J .25 \u2014at muit\ndruggist! or \u00bbent postpaid by lu5\nW. F. YOUNG  INC\nt.Tman Ru.ldinff        -      . Monir-ral\nTeachers Wanted\nI'ARROW  PARK  WWW K.D   requires an\nexperienced   teacher,   not lower  than\nsecond class. Must be capalde of exercising effective con.rol.! Teacher's\nresidence 00 school uruuuds. Address\nJ. A. Clarke, Arrow Park, ftC.    (S22C)\nPhone   438X1.\nOood\nftltaj\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL, July 24\u2014 The slock\nninrkft wns aKnin an cxtri'm.'ly dull\naffair today. Many substantial declines\nwere recorded from a fraction to F>\npoints. The trading wns featured hy\nsome linuldatlon in Quebec Railway,\nwhich was the least Inactive stock, and\nwhich declined 1 Vi  points, to 2H\\.\nBromiiton was seconrl in activity and\nwas off Mi, lo 3h'4. Hherwln Williams\nwas third, and was the strong spot of\nthe day with a net gain of 2 points, to\n111.\nTota-1 stiles were 2196 listed; frown\nReserve,  1100; bonds. $70,400.\nCon.olltlat.d Share..\nMONTREAL.   July    24.\u2014Consolidated\nMining & Smelling. 25 bid; 2M4  asked.\n        a.\nWIBNIPBO  OBAIH   QUOTATIONS.\nWheat-\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nDec\t\nOats\u2014   ,\nJuly    \t\nOct\t\nDeo\t\nHurley\u2014\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nFlax-\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nDec\t\nRye-\nJuly   \t\nOut.    ....\nOpin    High\nItffU\n66%\n107 V,\n!o'.-i\n44%\nS7\n223 ti\n191'j\n68\n\u00ab\u00ab%\n44 tt\n39%\n3 7y4\nt.0%\n51%\n226 Vfe\n195\n1S3\n6314\nM \\\nLow\n106*\nni\n4 4%\n.39%\nurn\n49 Vi\n50\n223 4,\n193\n1S2%\n63\n65 Mi\nClose\n106'*\n95 %\n93\n44%\nII tt\n49%\n50%\n223'*\n19311.\nlS24i\n6314\nMOVING A PIANO\nisn't su<h hard work for us. We\nhave every facility for handling them\neasily and carefully without injury\ntu   the   'cose   or   mechanism.\nTAXI SERVICE\nDay    and    Night\u2014Careful    Driver\nCITY CAB\nPhona 18\nWANTED \u2014; Asatetanl principal for\nMichel public school; nalarv $1350 per\nf.nnurr. Dutlaa copiintet.ci- September\n4th. Apply to Jamaa Walsh, secre-\ntary,   Nstal.   P.C. (it^lfl)\nFOR SALE\u2014Pure-bred cocker spaniel\npups. Apply Pox 533, Greenwood\nPC (9123-\nVO It KALE\u2014Portable Victrola\u2014Kolds\nup like s'tltQiise; never UHed. Regular\nprice 'US Ilk Will Hike J45, \u00abaah or\ntejrnS. Wjllls T'ianu Store .(next\nItdiiertson FurnlU'.re Company).\n(9206;\nTELL   your   want!   ttircutu    fu\u00ab   Li*ilj\nNews  oluBBiried  column*\nWANTED \u2014 Teacher for Klunaird\nschool. Lady experienced and capable\nof teaching music preferred. J, A. i\nKillough, secretary of board. Cawtle- I\ngar P.O. \u2022 tyiCT) l\nFOR   SHINGLES   write   McQueen,   Silverton. (8997)\nPHONOGRAPH \u2014 Victor, Portable, for\ncamp or home, solid quartered oak;\n\"metal bound edges,\" for J02.fi0. Small\ntanas. Mason & Rlseh Ltd.. 513 Ward\nstreet, Nelson. Phone ||t. Pox 61f\u00bb,\n(9209)\nMiscellaneous\nTELL   your   wants   through   Tho   Daily'\nNews classified columns.\nFor Rent\nFOR   RENT   \u2014  Mason   &   Rlsch   piano\nSplendid condition..     Phone  BUR.\n(9174)\nLive stock   s. lis   qulakty   whe\nadvertised  in tht se columns.\nLegal Notices\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOfflca Smelting and  Refining   Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Orea.\nProducer! of Gold,  Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and  Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\n464\u201420\nIK THE  SUPREME  COURT OF  BRITISH COLUMBIA\nBetween\nESTELLA   M.   SEWARD,   Executrix   of\nthe   Last   Will   and   Testament   of\nWalter M. Seward, Plaintiff,\nAND\nF.   B.   ARCHER   and   D.   K.   MAY,   IV-\nfendants.\nUnder and hy virtue of a writ of fieri\nfacias issued out of the Supreme Court\nof   British  Columbia,   Vancouver Registry,  in the. above cause, dated the 2f.th\nday   Ol   June,  A.D.   1923.   and   to   me  directed,  1 hav<: thin day se.iz*-d all right, i\ntitle and Interest of D. K. May, one of\"\nthe above  named defendants,  in  the following Mineral Claims:\n\"Wlnthrop\"     Mineral     Claim     recorded\nSeptember 11, IBM;\n'\u2022Pute'*   Mineral   Claim,    recorded   September  11. 11*05;      _.-. \u201e,        .   ..\n\"Jennlo\"   Mineral   Claim,   recorded   October 13th. 1915;\n\"Ida\" Mineral Claim, recorded February\n25th,   Iftlfi;\n\"Oxide\"   Mineral   Claim,   recorded   February 25th. 191S;\n'\u25a0Francs\"   Mineral   claim,   recorded  October  13,   1915;\n\"Spokam-\"      Mineral      Claim,      recorded\nAugust L'tith, 191fi.\ni-ll situate in tbe Ainsworth Mining\nDivision of Ihe Province of British Co-\nlumbln; and will offer Same for sale at\nmy office at the Court House at the\nCity of Nelnon, on the Hi st day of July,\nA.D. IMSt at the hour of twelve o'cIock\nnoon.\nTerms of Sale\u2014Cash.\nDATED   this   n*t   day   of   July,   A.D.\n1C2J. '.'\u2022\u25a0*\nJAMES   H-  DOYLE,\n(WIT) Sheriff .otf South Kootenay.\nTELL   your   warns   tnrougo   Tha   Dalb\nNewa classified oolumna.\n\u2022I      WHY OPERATE?\nWhen HEPATOI.A removfts GALL\nSTONES in 24 hours without pain,\nind relieves APPENDICITIS, mom-\n*ch and liver troubles. Contains no\npoison.    Not   sold   hy   druggiuts.\nMrs. Geo. S. Almas\nSol.   Manufacturer\n230 Fourth Ava, So., Sa.katoon, Sask.\nPries,  $6.50 Phon, 4855\n'    (81110)\nMourning\nStationery\n\u2014AND\u2014\nMemorial Cards\nFor neat work and highest\ngrade stock call or writs\nThe   Daily   News   Job\nDepartment.\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nALL GOOD BUYS\n?1,400\u2014A nice 4-roomed Bungalow\nIn Kalrview, on 1 lot. Terms,\n$800   cash.\n$1600\u2014A 5-roomed Bungalow on\n2 lots, fruit trees. Termn, $500\ncash.\n$ 1 ilOO\u2014A 6-roomed House on\nStanley etreet, close in; good\ncondition.      Terms,   half   cash.\n$2300\u2014On Latimer street, a well-\nfin ishfd 6-roomed House, on\n1H   lots.    .Terms,   $760   cash.\n$3000\u2014A corner location on Robson street, 7-roomed House,\nstone foundation, 3 lots, fruit\n,     tret-s.      Terms,   $750   cash.\nHOTEL AT BARGAIN\nPRICE\nThis Is situated in,a lively little\ntown,' and can be\" purchased\nfor $4500, with 25 rooms fully\nfurnished, nnd $1000 will handle.\nIf you are In the market for a\ngood paying proposition, don't\nmiss this chance.\na. t. McMillan\nPhone   601 P.   O.  Box   61\nRoom 12, Gilker Block, 510 Baker St.\nHea. Phone 358L2\n(922ft)\nFor Sale Cheap\nSmall Ranch at Longbeach, handy\nto Wharf, on Government Road\nto Balfour. Rural Mall Delivery.\nAbout three acres, one and half\nof which are cleared and planted with well-bearing Apple, Pear\nftnd Plum trees, Raspberries,\nBlackberries and Strawberries. A\nnice Log boUM, Livingroom,\nKitchen, Bathroom and bedroom\ndownstairs, one large Bedroom\nupstairs. Hot and cold water\nlaid on, an unlimited supply of\ngood water. \"Water rights on two\ncreekn go with place. For price\nand   terms   apply\nD. A. McFarland\nP.   O.   Box   24,   K.   W.   C.   Block\nTelephone   (9,\n(80S9)\nPIU.TTY, modern bungalow, five\nrooms, situated on three corner lots\non car line; view unexcelled. Splendid home at reasonalje price. Owner\n902 Hoover street. Nelson. 19186)\nPRINTED \u00abtattonerT ot all klnoa. Tb.\nnail.    News   Prlnttnr  T>.n\u00abrtm\u00abnr\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Small refrigerator.   Phone\n5li6\"-  (9175)\nWANTED  \u2014  Clean  cotton   rags;  five\ncente  per  pound.    The  Dally   News,\n (8630)\nCOW HIDES, five cents pound; calf,\neight cents. J. P. Morgan, Nelson.\nB-R-  (8909)\nC1.ADUIKIED ada.  bring result, quick\nly   and   economically    t\u00bb4c   .   word\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Saturday morning, between post\noffice and Meagher's slore, silver earring. Kinder, please leave at\nMeagher's.    Reward. (9227)\nTo Let\nTO     LET    \u2014    Thoroughly    renovated\nthree-room     furnished     housekeeping\napartments.   Apply  608 Baker street.\n(8950)\nMininjr, Timber, Lumber\nM1N1NO    LEASES\u2014Best    silver    lead I\nproposition in British Columbia (high \\\ngrade),   four   gravsroot   showings   of |\nshipping     ore     more     than     wages,\nsplendid opportunity for big fortune;\nreasonable    terms,    honorable    treat- [\nment; quick action necessary.    Inter- I\nview owner and Inspect property.    If j\nyou    discovered   'any     showing    like I\nthese  in  the wildest wild you would\nbe    crazy    about    them.    Come,    see j\nthem.      Joseph     Brandon,     Canadian\nGroup, near Sandon. (9201)\nBoats and Automobiles\nTENDERS wanted for 3-ton Dayton\ntruck. 1917 model. Write Box 58,\nMidway, B.C. (ttlll\nFOR SALE\u2014One Dodge Touring Car,\n1B20, in first-class mechanical condition; five good tires. One 490 Chevrolet. This car hns only run 2000\nmiles and i.i A-l condition. Smedley'H*\nGarage. (9219)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nShow Card Writers\nShow Cards. Price Tickets, Expert work.\nK. S. Watson, Romano's Shoe Store.\nI919D)\nCarpenter\nHEDLEY FASXEB, 913 Baker Stmt,\nCarpenter  and   Repair  Work.     Automobile Woodwork a Specialty.\n       . (8904)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nB.   W.   DAWSOtT,\nBaal Batata, Iniureaee, Battel*\ninnable Blk. P.O. Box 733. Phone 117\n        (8921)\nMonuments\nOempb.U   ft   Bltchle   MonnmantM   Oo.\nP.O.   Box   866.   Nelson,   B.C.\nTelephone 164. (8922)\nPainters and Decora tori\nAntes Paint.A\nMtlBPHY   BBOS.\nD.al.ra la Well Pape*.\nHtora\u2014 Auto Shop\u2014\n411 Josephine Bt.   \"*\u25a0 111  Hall SI\n , (8923)\nAccounting\nOHAB1.ES   P.   rrtJHIEB,\nAuditor,  HoDonald  'em Bulldtnf,\nBox 1191 Nelson. BO\n(8914)\nH. J. BEWIAY, A.S.A.A.,\nAudits.   Cost   Accounts,   Hystema.\nIncome Tax.\nBox 9150, News. N.lson, B.O.\n _^ (916(1)\nFlorists\nORIZZEI.LEB     GREKNHOU8B.     Nel.\neon.   Cut flowers and floral desttma\n  (8926)\nWU   S.   JOHMSOB.\nPhone     342.       Cut      Flowers.     Potted\nPlants and Floral Emblems.\nWholesale\n... MACDONALD ft CO., WHOLESALE\nOrocers and Provision Merchant*.\nImnorters of Tess, Coffees, Fjploeft\nPried- Fruits, Staple and Fnnoy\n\u25a0 groceries.   Nelson.  BO. (8927)\nEngineers\nm\nB.   D. DAWSOW.   B.O.I.S.,\nEnplneer and Rurveyor,\nKaslo. B.C. (8908V '\nGteen Bros., Burdeit \u00a3\nNELSOH, B.O.\nCIVIL  AND   MINING)   ENOINEEBS\nB. C, Alberta, and Dominion\nLand Surveyors.\nCrown Orant Af.nts.        Blue Printing-.\n  '        ' (S929)\nAssayers\nB. W. WIDDOWBON   Box A110J, Nel.\nsou, B.C.    Standard western charxea\nAuctioneers\nw. outuib\nGoods Sold Privately or at Aaotlom.\nBox 474     Opera House Block     Phone 71\n\u25a0 (8931)\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERTSON, F. D. D. ft\nVictoria   street.     Phone   111.\nPhone  167L.\nB\u201e 80]\nNlKht\n(8931),\n_M__~\nStandard Purnltur*\nCo., Undertakers,\nFuneral Directors,\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nBervice. Prices reasonable. (SD33)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nMV- I V\/ORKEO HARO\nTODA.V \u2022. I>l ^>0 TIRED\nAJSD \\^EA.K, -1 CAN\n\u2022 1AHQCX WOLO my\nw    HEA.O   U\u00ab\nIT THW \\t\nTHE. C^E \u2022\nI'LL HA.VE HO\nTROUBLE. IN\nC1TTIN \u201e,ouT-\nWHCTt THE\nlOE^? WHV\nTHE HW\noh'. i'm qohsc oot\n\"too later;\nBy George McManus\nvoo'll \u00aboe:e.me   n\nRICHT tSOVv-- COME.\nBACK   HERE. -     r~->\n\\KS  vr Un FaATuest Smvicc, Ikc.\n*\n\u25a0\n 757\nTEE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1923\nPage Seven\"\nRailrdad Man Amazed\nAt Unexpected Speed\n1RANDT DECLARES THAT WITHIN TWO WEEKS AFTER HE STARTED\nON TANLAC HE WA8 FEELING FINE\u2014EFFECTS OF FLU ENTIRELY   OVERCOME   .\n\"Tanlac did for me Just what I*\n[ranted It to do after getting out of\nfpe-d fromithe flu. \u00ab*id quite naturally\n. strongly recommend tt at every\n*ipportunlty,\" waa the statement made\nRecently try W. Brandt, 2231 Gal-\nagher avenue, Winnipeg, Man., Canute, railroad shop man with the\nI Canadian Pacific Rallwav company.\n\u25a0; \"After the flu I didn't have any\n'tppetite, felt weak and achey all\n\u2022\u00bbver, would have shaky, dizzy spells,\nfind was out of sorts generally. II\njcnew I couldn't get back my strength\ninless I could go to eating again,\nind when I read ln the papers how\nTanlac \u25a0built folks up so quickly and\nhoroughly, I decided to try lt.\n\"Well, sir, ln just a week  or two\nafter starting In on the Tanlac treatment I was eating aa hearty as I\never had, and the weak, achey, tired\nfeeling was gone completely. My old-\ntime strength and energy came back\nso quickly I waa really astonished,\nand now ii am on the job all the\ntime, and am so strong and well that\neven working overtime does not\nworry   me.\"\nTanlac\n|   News of Sport\nIb for sale by all\ndruggists. Take no substitute.\n37 million bottles sold.\ngood\nOver\nTanlac Vegetable I'liis are Nature's\nown remedy for constipation. For\nsale everywhere.\ntoy Jockey Pilots\nHome Rank Outsider\nin Driving Finish\nSASKATOON, July 24. \u2014 Featuring the opening day'a horse racing\nprogram here today ln connection\niVlth the local exhibition was the\nispectacular victory of Grandora, a\nirank outsider, m the five-eighths of\na mile running race. Jocky Jay\niCowan,   a   youngster   of   16   years.\nrode his first race and pilot ted the\nlittle b'ack to a driving finish and\nwin aver The Hheik, Caprllano and\nMiss Fllss, favorites'. Four lucky\nones played Grandora \"on tHe noHe\"\nand reaped $9?.40 for a \\%\\ ticket,\nfor one of the biggest killings ever\nrecorded   here.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nREDS WIN LAST\nOF THESER.ES\nDefeat Cardinal! Easily;\nCaveney Bats Thousand\nfor the Day\nCINCINNATI, July 24.^Clnclnnatl\nwon the last game of the aeries\nfrom St. Louis, 7 to 4. Caveney had\na perfect day at bat, with four\n(Untight hits, and Hargrave hit his\nninth Jiomer of the season off Stuart\nin  the  eighth   Inning.      B.     H.    E.\nSt.  Louis     4     12       3\nCincinnati  7     1-       1\n.Batteries \u2014 Doak. Stuart, Sherdel\nand Ainsmlth;   Benton and Hargrave.\nOakland,   3;   Los  Ange'es,   0.\nSeattle. 0;   Portland,  4.\nVernon,  7;   San  Francisco,  9.\nSacramento,  3-8;   Salt  Lake,  11-2.\nCareer\nJhtBeerMoutaPetr\nThe Home Beverage\n\u2014an ever welcome\nfriend in the home.\n\u2014SATISFIES THIRST\n\u2014ENCOURAGES APPETITE\n\u2014AIDS DIGESTION\n-PROMOTES GOOD CHEER\nBottled at the brewery and\nsealed in light-tight, sterilized\nbottles, it is alway in fine\ncondition  when you  open  it.\nDemand 'Cascade Beer1\n\u2014all   Government\nVendors supply it.\nOrder a case today.\nVANCOUVER BREWERIES\nLIMITED\nLittle Lessons in\nBig Sports\nGOLF\nA GOOD\nMASNIE-\nt\nSLIGHTLY\nCONCAVE\nFACE\nff\n\/\/ STIFF\n\/ SHAFT\n\/\/    SUITABLE\n~ HEAVY\nWORK .\n(W-\u2014 WEIGHT\nGRAND FORKS\nLatter and Midway Must\nPlay Off for Right ta Meet\nLeague Leader\nBOUlfDABY   LEAGUE   STAJHHNG.\nW. L. Pet.\nCurlew           \u00bb 8 751*\n(irand   Forks          1 5 -584\nMidway          T 5 584\nKepublic          1 11 M\nCURLEW, Wash, July 24.\u2014-Curlew\nhad all the better uf & swatfest staged\nhere, Bunday, with Grand Forks, the\nlocals gettlmj to the visitors' three\npitchers for 22 hits and willing the\ngame 20-10.\nThis completes the Boundary league\nschedule, and as a result (Irand Forkn\nand Midway are obliged to play next\nSunday to decide which team meets\nCurlew in  the championship series.\nR.   H.   E.\n(Irand  Forks        10    14      7\nCurlew         20    22      3\nBatteries\u2014Crowe, Leonard and Henderson;  Bellew and  Face.\nCrocker Twists Knee\nin a Practice Game;\nJaps Have a Workout\nMONTREAL. July 24. \u2014 W. R.\n, Crocker, member of Canada's Davis\ncup tennis team, twisted his knee\nwhile engaged in practice with his\nteammates here today, and was forced\nto quit for the day. It is expected that he will be in shape for\nthe Davis cup matches, which begin\non   Thursday,   however.\nThe three Japanese, Shimidzu,\nKasha and Fukuda, who are to represent the far east, had a hard\npractice today, under the eyes of\nan observant and admiring gallery,\nR. M. Watt, m charge of the mactheB,\nplayed with the visitors.\nTIGERS TAKE\nBOWES\nDefeat White Sox Twice in\nLatter'i Park; Wildneii\nLoses\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by tbe\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nOrdinarily which is better, a\nheavy or light mashief Should\nit have any whip in the shaftt\nAnswered by\nPHIL GAUD1N\nMedalist, British open championship;\ncaptain of British Internattonel golf\nt\u00abam; membtr of that titm for sight\nconsecutive years. Winner of numerous foreign tournaments, includlaf\nManchester  Ouarolan trophy.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\n\u25a0 The mashle has\" some very heavy\nwork to do, and should be strong\nenough to perform it. A club with\nweight ln its head, and with -a good\nstiff shaft, is best. It Is almost\nInipoBsfble to stop the ball when a\nlight  mashle Is used.\nA   mashle   should   have   a   slightly\nconcave   face   to   enable   the   player\nto get plenty of stop on the ball.\n(Copyright    1\u00bb2S,   Assnclaied    Editors.)\nLasker Wins First\nin Europe Tourney\n,. PRAGUE,. July &f \u2014, Emmanuel\nLasker, today was awarded first\nprize In the.European chess tournament which was played at Mahrisch-\nOstrau. It is believed he wilt now\nissue a challenge for a return match\nwith Jose R. Capablanca of Cuba,\nthe world's champion, who dethroned\nhim  at   the   Havana   tournament.\nRll jrotir pipe\nwitk_\nCUT\nPLUG\nItScdisfks\"\nIf you\nroll your\nown,\nask for\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE STANDING\nTeam W. L.\nNew  York    <I0 28\nCleveland     50 43\nSt.   Louis       16 44\nDetroit    43 44\nChicago     43 45\nPhiladelphia     42 48\nWashington      17 50\nBoston     12 53\nHeilmin Get. Thirteenth\nCHICAGO.   July    24\u2014Detroit\nPet.\n.682\n.538\n.511\n.494\n.483\n.477\n.425\n.376\nwun\nCRIQUI AND DUNDEE\nWINDUPJRAIN1NG\nNEW POUK, July 24. \u2014 Eugene\nCriqui of France, featherwteght champion of the world, and Johnny Dundee, his United States challenger,\nfinished training today for their\n15-round title match Thursday at the\nPolo grounds. Both will do Just\nenough exercising from now until the\nfight  to  keep on _edge.\nAlberta Entry Is Out\nof Mainland Singles\nVANCOUVER, July 24. \u2014 In the\nsecond day's play of the British\nColumbia mainland tennis championships here today Dr. Dunsworth of\n-Alberta was eliminated from the\nmen's singles by C. MacDonnel of\nVancouver.   The score was 6-0, 6-0.\n<)oth games of a double-header from\nChicago today, 4 to 1 and 9 to 6.\nHeilman cracked out his 13th home\nrun of the season In the first game.\n'The second game was a pitching duel\nbetween Robertson and Cole, in\nwhich the former's wildness cost\nhim   the  game.\nFirst Game\u2014 R.     H.    E.\nDetroit     4       6       1\nChicago     1       8      0\nBatteries \u2014 Pillette and Bassler;\nBlankenship,    Lyons   and    Schalk.\nSecond   Game\u2014 R.     H.    E>\nDetroit  9      11        0\nChicago      6       9       0\nBatteries \u2014 Collins, Holloway, Cole\nand Woodall; Thurston, Robertson\nand   Graham.\nIndia* and  Browns Split\nST. LOUIS, July 24. \u2014 Cleveland\nand St. Louis divided a double-\nheader which was featured by two\nhome runs here today, in the first,\nBrower and Tobin lilt home runs.\nJamieson's four-base hit In the 13th\nwon the second contest for the\nIndians. Myatt and Tobln also\ncracked out circuit drives during\nthe   game.\nFirst Game\u2014 R.\nCleveland     1\nSt.  Louis   \".  3\nBatteries   \u2014   Boons    and\nVan   Gilder  and   Collin3.\nSecond   Game\u2014 R.\nCleveland      3\nSt.  Louis  ..'. 2\nBatteries \u2014 Edwards and Myatt;\nrJbrp  aha'^eVereia.\nRuth Gets Twenty-third\nPHILADELPHIA, July 24. \u2014 New\nYork staged a batting rally in the\neighth inning of today's game, winning, 9 to '\u00a3. In the ninth Inning,\nwith two on bases, Babe Ruth hit\nhis 23rd home run of the season,\ntying   the   mark   of   Cy   Williams.\nR.     H.    E. I\nNew York   9     12      o'\nPhiladelphia      2      \u00ab       1\nBatteries \u2014 Mays and Hoffman,\nSchang; Rommel, Walberg and\nBruggy.*\nQuinn Stingy to Senators\nBOSTON,, July 24. \u2014 Quinn, held\nWashington to three hits' today,\nwhile Boston hit Mitchell hard. The\nscore was 6 to 1, Ihe single Washington run coming when Gosling\nknocked a home run ln the seventh.\nR.     H.    E.\nWashington     1      3       1\nBoston  \u00ab     11       1\nBatteries \u2014 Mitchell, Sedgwick and\nRuel;   Quinn and Ph-liitch.\nH.\nR\n8\n1\n3\n0\nO'Neill;\ntt\nE.\nI\n0\ni\n0\nSET DATES FOR THE\nDAVIS CUP MATCHES\nNEW YORK, July 24. \u2014 The first\nDavis cup matches in the United\nStates zone will be started -on Friday\nat the Orange Lawn Tennis . club.\nOrange, N. J., it was announced\ntoday. The play, of four singles\nand two doubles matches between\nthe teams of Australia and Hawaii,\nwill   extend   over   three   days.\nANNOUNCEMENT TODAY\nUPON    DEMPSEY-FIRPO\nNEW YORK, JULY 24.\u2014Negotiations for a heavyweight title match\nbetween Jack Dempsey and Luis\nFirpo, cloaked in myBtery for the\npast 10 days, reached such a stage\ntoday that Promoter Tex Rickard\ndeclared he probably would have a\ndefinite announcement to make at\n3  o'clock   to  morrow  afternoon.\nThe promoter indicated that the\nsite and date of the proposed match\nstill were uncertain, but the general\nbelief prevailed that he was endeavoring to effect an agreement to use\nthe P.ojo^groundj*; f^r. yje *fl^J>U VB-\nLabor\" day  or  September-22.\nCONACHER WON'T BE\nCOACH  FOR YANKEES\nOTTAWA, July 24.\u2014\"Contrary to\nreports appearing ln the press I have\nno present intention of leaving Canada, and I expect to be in the lineup\nwith the Toronto . Argonauts this\nfall.\" Such was the statement made\nhere today by Lionel Conacher, athletic superman and premier footballer   for   the   Argonauts.\nSweetzer Wins the\nQualification Medal\non His Early Lead\nCLEVELAND, July 24.\u2014Although\nhe finished in tenth place of today's\nplay, and slumped seven strokes\nfrom the first round, Jesse Sweetzer\nof New York, national amateur golf\nchampion, with 75, won the gold\nmedal ln the qualification of the\nwestern amateur title .play, because\nof the lead his record gave him In\nthe first round.    His score was  143.\nChick Evans, the defending champion, has scored 148. He is ln fourth\nplace. _\nGAMES  POSTPONED\nAll Internatlonanl and American\nAssociation games, scheduled for yesterday, wero postponed. \/\n\/GENE TUNNEY  WILL\nFIGHT   DAN   O'DOWD\nNEW YORK, July 24. \u2014 Gene\nTunney, United States light-heavyweight champion, has been matched\nwith Dan O'Dowd of Boston for a\n12-round contest Tuesday night.\nTunney's title will he at stake, as\nboth have deposltel forfeits to make\n,175 pounds ringside. ,\nSTONES   AND   SUPERSTITIONS\nThe blarney stone and the stone\nof scone are not the only stones\nwhich had a superstitious value in\nthe olden dayB. At Glamls castle,\nancestral home of the duchess of\nYork, in St. Orlando'8 stone, which\nwas reputed to have the power of\nprophesying future events. Girls frequented the spot to discover their\ndestiny, and many a lover \u201ewcnt\nthere to plight his troth. According\nto tradition, some stones, called\n\"speaking stones,\" call out when a\ndead body is placed upon them, and\nraise a sound to contradict anyone\nguilty of swearing falsely by them.\nThe Llechafar,* or speaking stone\nat St. David's cathedral, Berved as\na bridge across the River Alyn, and\nIt was unlawful to carry a dead\nbody over It. Whi?n such a crime\noccurred, the stone is declared to\nhave raised Its voice In protest and\nsplit in two. aghast nt the Indignity.\nThere are stones that are supposed\nto travel from one place to another\nwithout human aid. The dancing\nstones of Stockpool, in Pembrokeshire, are a well-known exnmple.\nOn a certain day these stones are\nsaid to meet and travel together to\na .certntn spot. They dance and,\nafter the revel, return- and resume\ntheir usual placei. Superstitions\n.concerning healing stones were\nfnrmerlv very common. In Carmar-\nt-h*\u00bbn rhW '*Sre\"*8till traces of a\nWhite, soffe stone that was reputed to cure hydrophobia. At lona\nan upright stone is said to confer\nthe power of good steering upon any\nsailor who will stretch his arm\nalong   It.\nCEYLON'S WEALTH AND SORROW.\nTo the presence In their lovely Island\nof the fragrant cinnamon tree, the natives of Ceylon owe much suffering and\nmisfortune. For 2D0 years nations\nwaged war upon onp another for possession of the Isle of spice. When the\nland fell to the lot of Portugal, their\nPortuguese rulers were accused of so\ncruelly treating the natives that these\nr.ppealed to the Dutch, with whom they\nwere on friendly terns, to come to their\naid. At least so the acute Hollanders\nclaimed. For seven months the Dutch\nlaid siege to the Island, carrying on a\nfierce warfare in which many persons\nperished. When tlie Dutch In their\nturn became possessors of the land,\nthey were hardly less cruel to the natives than their former rulers. They\ntried to keep the monopoly of the cinnamon trade of the world. No cinnamon\nplant was allowed to be exported. In\norder to keep the price of the spice up,\nany surplus crop was either burned or\nthrown into the sea. Cinnamon Is now\ngrown in many tropical countries, and\nmuch improved by cultivation. The\nCeylonese under British rule are apparently happy and well treated.\nNAKUSP NOTES\nNAKUSP, BC. July 24. \u2014 Dr. and\nMrs. E. H. 8. McLean left on Monday'*\nsteamer for Trail, where Dr. McLean\nwill ha In consultation' with Dr.\nCouRhlan of that city.\nMiss Dorothy Oordan of Vancouver,\nwho Is on the teaching staff at Cnqutt-\nlam, Is spending part of her vacation\nwith her old school chum, Mrs. F. H.\nJordan, having arrived Jurg Friday,\nClosing Today at 12:30\nDuring the process of preparing for Inventory, many oddments and short lengths are\nunearthed.\nThese, being too small to advertise individually, are placed on counters for quick sale,\nand yesterday we found many such numbers,\nwhich will be found on our counters this\nmorning.\nReady-to- Wear\nHERE'S A LINE WHICH\" EVERY MOTHER WILL\nBE IN A HURRY TO GET\nGIRLS' WHITE MIDDIES\u2014Regulation style, with\ndetachable navy serge collars. Sizes 6, 8, 10, 12\nand 14,years.   Regular $1.75. (J\u00bb-|   nr\nNew Price  <pX**\u00a3u\nGIRLS' BALKAN STYLE MIDDIES\u2014In white,\nbutcher blue and navy. Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and\n18 years.     Regular $3.50. <1\u00bb-|   AC\nNew Price  \u00abDX\u00bbVO\nA  WEDNESDAY MORNING OFFERING OF\nINTEREST TO ALL THRIFTY SHOPPERS\nLADIES' SUMMER KNIT DRAWERS\u2014In pink or\nwhite.    Sizes 36, 38, 40. F\\Q\/\u00bb\nNew Price    0\u00bb\/C\nLADIES' WHITE COTTON CAMISOLES\u2014Nicely\ntrimmed lace and embroidery. f\\Q\/\u00bb\nNew Price    01\/C\nCHILDREN'S WASH DRESSES\u2014In colors of pink\nor blue. Also sortie in white Pique. d\u00bb-| QQ\nNew Price *PJ..O*\/\nMonthly Accounts\nThe 31st of July is the end of our financial half-year, and all accounts as rendered at June SO are now due, and we\nshall greatly appreciate a payment before the end of this week to assist us\nin closing our books.\nHudson's TB.?iJ (Ea,!)?l,ar,y\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither With Your Name\nor with the words\nDairy Butte*\nAccording t# th* Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers wtio sell butter\neither to \u25a0tores or privately\nare required to have tt properly covered In a wrapper on\nwhich MUST appear in\nprominent  letter* the words\n\u25a0DAIRY BUTTER\"\nThe fact Is also emphasized\nthat all butter In such\npackages must be of the full\nnet weight of sixteen ounces\nand In default of same a fine\nof. from $10 to 130 for each\noffense ts Imposed. Whey\nbutter must be so labelled,\neven when mixed with dariy\nbutter and dairy butter retains Its label even though It\nbe mixed with the creamery\nproduct.\nPrices\nPRINTED   WITH    NAME    OF\nFARMER  OR   BRAND  NAM!\nIf you have your own nam. or\nbrand on your wrapper* you gala\nvaluable advertising for your better. It cause, people to aak for\nthe same brand again.\n500.  Paper and\nPrinting    _ \t\n1000. Paper and\nPrinting  \t\nPRINTED   WITH   WORD*\n\"DAIRY    BUTTER\"\n10*\nfor   _ - \u2014\n260\nfor    \u2014\n100\nfor   \t\n1000\nfor  \t\n$4.25\n$7.00\n$1.00\n$1.50\n$2.50\n$4.50\n\u25a0\nWE CAN SHIP IMMEDIATELY ON RECEIPT OF ORDER\nIf wrappers are to be mailed include postage when\nsending money orders\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE HOME OF GOOD PRINTING\nBAKER STEET NELSON, B. C\nKootenay Bitter Ale\nTha   Ala  with  the  real   flavor, %ZSO doi.   Order through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nFREE    DELIVERY    DIRECT    FROM    BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY. LIMITED\n\u2022This  advertisement  Is  not   published or displayed by tht Liquor Control Board or by the Government  of  British  Columbia.\"\t\n 'fagts ElgEI\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1923\nTHE ARK\ni\n84-lnc* Table Oilcloth, 70^ jrard;\n46-lnch Table Oilcloth, SO** y^\u00ab\\\n1-0%. White Duck, 35*^ yard: Green\nand White Awning Duck, OOtf yart:\nAluminum Coffee Fercolatora,\nfil.50 Double Roasters, gl.75;\nI'le Plates, 35^; Children's Silk\nBocka, 35<k to 45^ per pair:\nCooking Utensils, Campers' Tenta\nand Supplies. Ruga and Linoleums,\nFurniture  and  Stoves.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPliant (34 -        609 Vernon  81\nDeveloping\nand Printing\nComplete the Btory of your\nholiday with your Kodak by\nhaving us develop and print\nyour films with our special\nprocess of Finishing. Each\nfilm Is given professional attention and service. Films left\nbefore 9 a.m. aro finished by\n5 p.m.\nWe are Kodak service dealers.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nLimited\nNELSON,   B.C.,\nHAS IT\nThat Eye\nTrouble\nDon't put It off. Don't endure\nthe headache, pains, discomforts\nand poor vision, when easy relief\ncan be obtained. You must havu\na normal use of your eyes to get\nalong, ho why take unnecessary\nchances? Don't drive the life\nout of your eyes. Have them examined \u2014 know their condition.\nCome in and see us about them.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\n0PTI8T AMD  OPTICIAJf.\nFURS\nSummer discount haa com*\nmenced on all roods and work,\nexcepting dressing and mounting of skins.\nLarge selection of CHOKERS\nat  all  prices.\nQ. GLASER\nMsnffl.   Furrier\nP. 0. 767 Phone 10%\nNEL80N,   B.   C.\nBuy   Your\nElectrical Appliances\nFrom sn  Electric Shop.   it Pays You\nHOT-POINT    IRONS.    GRILLS,    Etc.\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\nPh. 530   Opara Horn. BUt.   P.O.Box 928\nSunburst Oil Wells\nDo you want to have an interest\nin our Oil Wells?\nWe expect to be In a position to\nlet a contract for the first well next\nweek.\nWhen we bought our 40-acre tract\nIn the Sunburst Oil fields three\nmonths ago there were then 51 wells\nproducing oil; now there are 92\nwells producing oil in this field, and\n55   drills   working  un   new   wells.\nOur 40-acre tract is now In the\nmidst  of  oil  wells.\nThe two Empire wells are quite\nclose tu our ground, and they are\niKith   big  producers.\nSend me your subscription for\nshares, we will take any amount from\nlit'00 up for a few days. $10.00\nwill get you 1000 shares. Telephone or wire me and I will send\nyou full particulars and application\nforms.\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNELSON,   B.C.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nPhone 140. P. O. Box 44.\nFirst-class Laundry Work dons\nat  moderate prices\n.Trench Dry Cleaning and Dyeing\nWorks.   Steam Carpet Cleaning.\nAgency st Trail, B. C.\nC. Fransen (Barber Shop) Agent\nRAINFALL IN\nSHORT PERIOD\nSETSRECORD\nNearly Two Inches Is Registered in Yesterday's\nDownpour\nBASEMENfs~0F MANY\nHOUSES ARE FLOODED\nto\nTUER0S CIGARS\nThe    best    domestic    Havana\nClgur.     Try   them.\n3   'or    50\u00a3\nH. BUSH\nCorner Baker and Ward Ste.\nICE    CREAM    TODAY\nHave   Some   for   Dessert\nFLEMING'S   STORE,  Feirvisw\nStorm   Causes   Damage\nRoads and Gardens\nin District\nThe heaviest fa'I of rain since\nweather recording was started in\nN'elson, about three years ago, fell\nyesterday afternoon, when almost 2\ninches of rain descended between ?.\no'clock and 5:30, according to the\nrecords of A. S. Goulding, meteorologist. To be exact. 1.99 of an inch\nit   rain   fell   in   that   period.\nWhile last night no serious damage to gardens was reported, it is\nnot unlikely that not a little standing\nproduce has suffered, the heavy rainfall beating It down to the ground.\nLights   All   YVont   Out\nA freak of the Htorm occurred\nwhen it was at its hffght; it threw\noff. for Just a few seconds, all the\nlights In the court house. Oddly\nenough, at the name time, a number\nof the telephones started ringing In\nchorus.\nReports of flooded basements began to reach the city offices earlv\nlast evening. Near the W. W. Powell\nrompany'H plant a city sewer, overloaded with the downpour, sen^\nfor some time 3 feet of water into'\nthe  air,  and   flooded  a  Inrge  urea.\nHume creek overflowed, and several   residents   nearby   secured,   suf-\n\"Mudc Its Way by tho Way It's\nMade\"\nr(apitol\nBetty Compson\nAND\nConway Tearle\nIn the gorgeous Paramount\nproduction\n'THE RUSTLE OF SILK'\n\"Pardon My  Glove\"\nTopics of the Day\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\nEyesight\nSpeciali.t\nNELSON,    B.   C\nB..1    In   Optical\nWork\na*\nie Should Worry\nThe happy-man will be be who\nhad ordertd his Coal during the\nsummer months, fnr he will have\ntaken care of one of the greatest\nproblems winter holds. No need\nto worry tf you call us up today\nand give us your order for Immediate  delivery.\nMacDonald Cartage &\nFuel Co.\nTOMORROW, FRIDAY and SATURDAY\nf Quincy Adams Sawyer\nThe crowning achievement in the comedy-drama field,\nwith the most imposing array ot stars ever seen in one\nproduction.\nExterior scenes filmed at or near Marcus, Wash.,\non the Columbia and Kettle rivers.\n\u2014USUAL PRICES-\nKEEP YOUR LAWNS GREEN  AND INCREASE\nYOUR CROPS BY USING\nThe Busy Sprinkler\nPRICES $1.25 AND $1.75\nExtra Blake Heads at 50 Cents\n  WE CAN ALSO SUPPLY\nTHE CALIFORNIA SPRINKLER\n12 Inches High at $3.50.      21 Inches High at $i.00\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON,  B.C.\nRETAIL\nFor Occasions!\nCurlew\nBrick Ice Cream!\n\\\\7 HEN you've guests ln the\n\u00bb 1 home or you've a party\n\u2022 or the family Is together,\nor at meal time, CURLEW\nBrick Ice Cream is the ideal\nrefreshment!\nWe've  many  special   kinds with\ncrushed  fruit and  nut  mixtures.\nIced  fillings and  flavorings!\nCall    up   your   dealer.\nCurlew Creamery\nCo., Ltd.\n\"The    Home    of    Quality    Ice\nCream\"\nficlent moisture, both inside and outside of their houses, to do for the\nremainder ot the summer.\nCannot  Blsme City   Cither\nAid- rman Ross t'lemlng thought\nIt was bed enough when his bass-\nment In Fairvlew was flodtled, but,\nwhen the eaveatroughs carrying the\nwater from the roof of his building\nproved too small to carry the rainfall and started to shoot it down\nInto, his bathroom, he thought the\nlimit wns reached, and spent a busy\nhalf hour Inducing the water to\ndescend  by  the outside  route.\nOn Silica street the water from\nseveral cross-streets Joined in carnival and was nearly 2 feet deep ln\nBorne places, as it tore down along\nto  the  lower  levels.\nNo   Rain   at   Bonnington\nAn odd feature of the storm is\nthat not a drop of rain fell at\nBonnington, the downpour apparently\nbeing   centered   over   Nelson.\nThis, if it IS borne out, will be\ngood newa to the gangs on the\nYmir road, as the. heavy rain yesterday, if it extended to the new\nhighway, would add hundreds of\ndollars to the .cost, as they would\nwash out much newly-placed filling,\naccording to Engineer William Ham-\nsay,   in   charge  of   the   work.\nTo find a foot of water In his\ncellar and his wood floating around\nmerrily, was the experience of R.\nTarllng of 624 Latimer street, who\nhad thought that he would have\nlltt's trouble from the flpods as he\nwas \"up the hill.\" The road, however, at that point is considerably\nhigher   than   houses   alongside.\nThe lightning strurk a tree, high\non the hill. Just beyond the Bealby\nranch at Three-Mile point.\nNELSONPORt\nFOR A TIME\nFolks Across the Boundary\nLine Inquire Into Opening\nof New Highway\nFred h. Wolf of Metulene Falls\nhas written to C. F. McHardy, asking for Information as to the arrangements made for the ceremony\nat the opening of the new road\nsouth   to   the   boundary   shortly.\nMr. Wolf states that he has received many Inquiries regarding the\nnature of the opening and the cele-\nbraton at the line. He asked that\nhe be kept posted on any new plans\nfor the ceremony. He also asked\nln what way the citizpns from across\ntho boundary could take part, outside   of   being   in   attendance.\nIn regard to the establishment of\na customs house at tho border, Mr.\nWolf asked where it would be stationed, and if not completed at the\nopening where the first port of entry\nwould  be on  this  Bide.\nMr. McHardy,, in his reply to Mr.\nWolf stated that arrangements were\nrapidly going ahead for the celebration and that he would keep him in\ntouch with any further developments.\nIn regard to the customs house, Mr.\nMcHardy. after making Inquiries,\nstated that Nelson would be the\nport of entry for the time being,\nuntil a building was erected at the\n\"boundary\/\nB C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nAgents   for\nALBERTA    CLAY    PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE and DRAIN TILE\nHARD ON EYES\nModern  conditions   are  bad  for\neyesight   That is one mm u\nmany people tteea glasses. Never\nIn history have eyes Dean more\nscientifically aided by glass, h\nthan at lhe present time. Wa\nwill    be    glad    to    examine    your\nJ. J. WALKER\nOptician end Optometrist.\nDeluged With Inquiries\nFrom Daily News Ad.\nLardo, B.C., July 21, 1923.\n\"I enclose Dominion Express order for $3.35 to\ncover attached bill. The, Daily News is a great\nmedium for advertising,\u2014 I~am~deiu()ed icith applicants already.\nJ. C. CRUSE.\"\nThe above letter speaks for itself. It is one of\nmany which tell of the good results from advertising\nin The Daily News.\nRate t_V4 cent a word for each insertion. Six\ninsertions for the price of four when cash accompanies order.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNELSON, B.C.\nA STORY IN THREE PARTS\nPuri   Ml,   .Yesterday  and   the  day   before  you   read   Parts   I  and   II.\nToday you  get the final  chapter.   Should  the  unexpected  happen  in\nthe  near  future,  in  which  class of  the  three   would  you   be  found?\nFace  the   facts  and   be  true  to  those  depending   on   you.\nOUT OF   EVERY   100 *ESTATES   OF   MEN\n82   leave nothing.\n16  leave small   amounts.\n3  leave $10,000.00   or   over,   mostly   Life   Insurance.\nTO   WHICH  CLASS  WILL  YOU   BELONG?\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL ESTATE Authorized Truatea   in  Sankruptay BONDS\nIHSURANCE-Flr*    Accident,    Ufa. PHONE IM\nFIFTY-DOLLAR\nFINE FOR ALL\nSPEEDERS NOW\nMagistrate W. Brown Makes\nan Announcement (or\nAutoists\nSEVERAL MOTORISTS\nAPPEAR IN COURT\nThree Plead Guilty and Pay\nFines;  One Case Is '\nHeard at Length\nSpeeding an auto in Nelson will\nIn future cost just ' $50, according\nto an announcement made by Magistrate \\V. Brown In police court yesterday morning, when about to render\nJudgment in the case of Gaston\nJohnson, who pleaded guilty to having driven a car at 35 miles an\nhour on Vernon street one morning\nrecent'y. Johnson pleaded that the\nspeeding had occurred at 5 o'clock\nln the morning, when there was nobody around, and, tn view of the\nfact that he had admitted his guilt,\nthe magistrate set his fine at $35,\nor seven days in Jail. He promptly\npaid  the   Tine.\n\"You happen to be the first\nspeeder to appear,\" stated the magistrate, \"and I wish to make it\nrjuite clear, now that, while you will\nbe fined $35, the next speeder and\nall others are going to be fined $50.\"\nCut Corners Too Short\nIt was, In all, a somewhat annoying day for local autoists\u2014the culmination of a campaign the police\nhave been quiettly conducting in un\neffort to have the traftic bylaws\ntu ly   regarded.\nThree\u2014 S. G. Foreman. D. R.\nHinton and C. W. Appleyard\u2014pleaded\nguilty to having been a little short\nIn regard fur the silent policemen\nat street corners, and contributed\n$10 each. On similar charges, Axel\nLeaf had his case remanded until\nSaturday and Henry Norris will appear today, most likely with several   others.\nStranger  in   Strange City\nA. I* Malacord, a traveler from\nVancouver, charged with driving past\na standing street car, felt himself\na victim Off circumstances. He had.\nhe stated, become accustomed to\ndriving on the coast, where the\ni street, cars discharge their passengers\non one side only, and It la, consequently, quite all right to pass a\ncar on that side when going in the\nopposite direction. Hence, he had\npaused tbe street car on Baker street\nunwittingly,\nBut  He   Did   Not  Stop\n\"But. when you saw that passengers got off on that particular side,\"\nasked the magistrate, \"did you stop\nthen?\" Malacord admitted that he\nhad not, though he claimed that\nhe had had his car under perfect\ncontrol.     He   paid   $10.\nDenies  Charge\nNot so easily disposed of was the\ncase of Louis Drake, who is charged\nwith having passed a standing street\ncar with his auto at the corner\nof Baker and Ward streets. He\npleaded not guilty, and elected to\nprove the charge false, arguing hla\nown  case.\nWitnesses called by the police\nstated that the street car had been\nstopped 10 or 15 seconds and that\nWHUM had passed lt. It was alleged furt her t hat a boy who had\ncome around behind the street car\n\u2014apparently having disembarked\nfrom it\u2014had found Drake's auto\nbetween him and the sidewalk, and.\nas a result, hud been forced to run\nback around the street car again.\nJudgment Today\nSeveral wltnessesB called ,by the\ndefendant swore that the street car\nhad not stopped, though It had\nslowed down; that Drake had slowed\ndown his auto, and that the boy\nmust have jumped off the street\ncar   while   it   was   in   motion.\nWhen the story of the boy running back to the street car was\nrelated, Magistrate Brown remarked,\n\"Just as though pedestrians had no\nrights   nt   all.\"\nThe hearing of witnesses was\nfinished, and Judgment reserved until\nthis  morning.\nSnag Proof\nKhaki Pants\nWE HAVE just received another shipment of Head-i\nlight Snag-Proof Pants.   Guaranteed to outwear \\\ntwo pairs of any other Khaki Pants ever made.   The price)\nis still the same\u2014$3.75.  ,   .\nOTHERS AT $2.50 AND $3.25\nVOUR\nMONEY'S\nWORTH\nOR\nYOUR\nMONEY\nBACK\nLAND DEALERS\nSEE\nTwo Visitors From Oregon\nHere Negotiating With\nDoukhobor Leader\nPeter Verigin, leader of all the\nDoukhobors, it Is, learned. Is conducting negotiations regarding the\npurchase of land ln Oregon for the\nDoukhobors of British Columbia,\nA few days ago Edward Graf\nand E. J. Perkins, real estate men\nof Oregon, arrived in Nelson to interview Verigin. The latter, however,\nwas over at the Outlook eotonv\nnear Grand Forks, and the visitors\nwent  over   there.\nThere they were met by' the\nDoukhobor leader, who expected them\nand were taken to Outlook, where\nthey   are   remaining.\nIn the meanwhile H. W. Casakoff.\nvice-president of the community, waa\ncalled from Brilliant, and he, tab,\nhas gone to Grand Forks to take\npart   In   the   discussions.\nSaints to Play\nProcter Team at\nToday's Outing\nProcter and St. Saviour's football\nteams will meet In the outlet settlement this afternoon, In a game being\nrun in conjunction with the St.\nSaviour's Sunday school and church\npicnic.\nW. Bamber. who is manager of\nthe local squad, stated that the\nlineup    would    as    follows: Goal\nBaton; backs, Bradley and Wilson;\nhalfbacks, Slnt>son, Horswill nnd\nRoynon; forwards, Warner. Bolton,\nStDenis,  Johnson  and   Elliott.\nThe game will take place at 4\n\u2022o'clock ln the afternoon, directly\nafter the arrival of the afternoon\nboat.\nMAY OPERATE\nSTAGE ON ROAD\nMetaline Falls Man Writes\nAsking Possibilities Over\nNew Ymir Road\nThe possibiltles of an ,auto stage\nbetween Nelson and Metaline Falls\nwhen the Ymir road is completed Is\nmuch in evidence, according to a\ncommunication received by C. F.\nMcHardy from Bert Masten of Meta-\nlene   Falls,\nMr. Masten stutes that he has\nIn mind the idea of opening up an\nauto stage between the falls and this\ncity. He , asked what the necessary regulations require and from\nwhom he could procure first-hand\nauthority as to starling in the business of transportation across the\nboundary   line.\nMr. McHardy, in his rep^v, stated\nthat such a plan should work out\nsplendidly, both for passengers and\nbaggage express. He told of the license fee, etc., and referred Mr.\nMasten to Chief of Provincial Police\nE.   Gammon   for   further   information.\nTOOlSYFOR\nCOURT CASE\nBut Tei Lee Must Nevertheless   Accommodate   the\nMagistrate\nTel l>e, who lives on the C. P. R,\nf'ats. Is a busy man\u2014so busy, the\npolice allege, that he haa not had\ntime to keep his horse from prowling   around   loose.\nTei proved ev\u00abn busier when he\nappeared in police court yesterday\nmorning. He could not speak English and, to Becure un interpreter,\nan    adjournment    was    necessary.\n\"What day can you come best?\"\nasked IfngbU-ato w. Crown. \"Sunday,\" replied Tei. But the case will\nbe  heard Saturday,  instead.\nSkinners-Brewers\nGame Called Off\nOwing to the Brewers being unable\ntu field a team tonight, the baseball\ngame between the Skinners and\nBrewers has been postponed till\nsome later date, to be announced in\nthe   future.\nSENATOR GREEN'S SIGNATURE\nBy inadvertence, the signature of\n\u25a0Senator ft F. GrTMl Was omitted\nfrom Its proper place at the bottom\nof the letter by Senator Green and\nSenator G. H. Barnard replying to\nAttorney-General A. M. Manson, as\nprinted  yesterday.\nSILVER HOARD MINE\nIS MAKING PROGREi\nGood progress in development\nreported by W. S. Hawley, one ,\nthe owners of the Silver Hotl\nmine at Ainsworth, who wa.s j\nNelson yesterday. Mr. Hawley spd\nmost optimistically of conditions\nthe property.\nNelson News of the\nBANn  CONCERT  AT  LAYE\nFAXX TON IGHT. COMB S ABZ.Y.\n(92311\nx. or p.\nAH Knights and Pythian   Misters ai\nrequested to be at Prcshyterlnn r,hurc\nnt   5   p.m.    to   attend   funeral    of   la*\nArthur Hlmn.s.    H.  D. Kenny, CO\nLaughton. K. of R. and 8. (9231\nThe funeral of the Inte Arthur Slmor\nwill takr nlace on Wednesd^v afternnfl\nnt 5 o'clock from the PresbyW*\nchurch. (9211\nDaughters  of  Scotia  will   not\ntonight. (922-j\nPegatta danc. Willow Point, 2\u00bbth, t\n8 3ft Funds for Tennis and Crv\u00abt)\nclubs.    Free ferry, 1 o'clock. (922|\nBAPTIST STJKT.AY SCHOOL Fid\nNIC IS POSTPONED. NEW BATE V\nBE ARRANGED. (9L'30\nCherrle*. 6c per Ib. Pick them youi\nself. Mrs. Grondln, top of Stanle\nstreet.\nPICNIC.\nAll aboard for Porcter, Wednesda;\nJuly 25. Annual congregational\nSunday school of Rt. Saviour's Churo\nand Fairvlew Mission. All member\nboth schools free. Outside children. $\nAdults, ft Bout leaves city whsrf i\n9 a.m. and 2 p.m. (9203\nBr. Wilson Herald, par, nose an\nthroat specialist, will arrive In Nelso\nJuly 25th or 26th, and can be consult?\nat the General Hospital. (3211\nHousewives\u2014Mcuonald's\nstrawberry Jam is ready,\nyour grocer's.\nne'\npac\nGet  It  \u2122\n(8948\nPOB TAXI PHONE 44.\nFor pure, fresh milk and cream fror\nT.B. tested cows, phone Kootenay Val\nley Milk Co-op, 611R1. (9152\nWanted. \u2014 Black Currants, Blac\nCherries,  Raspberries and Gooseberrle\nWe will not accept any further shij\nments   of   Red   Currant.!,   Strawberri*\nand White Cherries.   McDonald Jam C\nCliff\nRose Chnpter, O E.8.. picnic, arrange\nfor Wednesday. July 25th, Is postpone\nuntil further notice. (9222\nTONIGHT \u2014 G.W.V.A. WILITAJt\nWhist Drive and Dance, Armory, 8 p.r\nsharp. Dancing, 10 to 12. Admlsslo\n35 cents. (9237\nDodge Brothers*\nMOTOR CARS\nWE HAVE JUST TWO TOURING CARS LEFT\nSMEDLEY'S GARAGE\nMary Pickford\nI\n\u2014LAST SHOWING TODAY\u2014\n'DADDY LONG LEGS*\nMary's Best Picture\nTODAY\nMATINEE-2:30   |    | EVENING-7 end 9\nTHIS IS VERY SPECIAL\u2014DON'T MISS IT!\nAt Usual Prices]\nComing T0M0RR0W{\nAt .Uanal Trie**\nLADY    DIANA    MANNERS\nEurope's Most Beautiful Woman,  in\n\"THE GLORIOUS ADVENTURE\"\n7 Wonderful Reels HAND COLORED '\nGorgeous Gowns Beautiful Settings\nAn Extraordinary Photoplay\nYou  have never  seen anything so  beautiful\n_mmsmsmsmmsmsmmmmmsssmmstssmsamssmssmmaaasm\nRemember-H You See It at STARLAND-It'* Good!\n\u25a0M\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1923_07_25","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0401184","@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":"1923-07-25 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1923-07-25 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\/1.0401184"}