{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-08-19","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1924-08-29","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401669\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" UPP2\nIV I A I\npu I 6\nForeign Tennis\nSTARS BITE DUST\nSee Page 7\nVOL. 23\nNELSON. B. C, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\nNO. Ill\nORTS ARE FILLED WITH BATTERED SHIPS\niOPOLD PLANS\nBAND AT\nIIS TAKING OFF\nistribute    Hard    Punch\n|Before Farewell; \"Supreme Shock\"\n)EB WOULD SHINE\nIN  JAIL  BASEBALL\ndge Caverly Wants Ten\n)ays to Study Two Thousand Typed Pages\npCICAOO, HI, Auff, It- While thfl\nblip Is Rhowtnc itself unusually\nterested in thp quest in A of ihe\nnalty to bo nici..i oul to Rlchurd\n>eb and N'sthnu Leop >ld, the ttro\nho ihould be most concerned main-\nIn tho blase, bored air thai has\n.aractprized I hem since the bop;iring of the trial.\nIn    their    colli   in    the    county    jail\nnight     \"Babe\"    and     \"Dicky\"     were\ncheerful aa if ihey had heen taking\nrt   In   a   campus   social   affair.\nThe   former   even   joked   about    the\nisslbllity   of   being   handed.\nA Rar-i Occasion\n\"If    I    am     tanged,\"      Leopold\nsaid,   \"It   will   be  a   rare   occasion.\nClarence  Harrow's 'Roman holiday'\n\u25a0Will    be   completely    eclipsed.      I\nwill arrange  to have  a   good jazz\nband on  hand, arid  plenty of hard\npunch.      1   am   pfenning    the   last\nsupreme   shock   for   Ihe   world,   in\nthe   form   of  my   farewell   speech.\nI   may   he   overrating   myself,   hut\nI really think 1 can make it worth\nanyone's   while  who   is   fortunate\n'W\"IK,t   '\"   \",,,ili\"   in   Invitation.\"\nI-Ocb said:\n\"1 am glad tha trial Is over. I\n111 have more opportunity to make\nname for myself in the jail base-\nill   league.\"\nJudge Caverly said he considered\n0 days about ihe proper lime in\n*hich to consider his finding, be-\nause he had \"practically 2000 pages\nf exhibits to study,\" and said he\n\u2022ould   give judgment  September  10.\nlarkSTI pay\nvisit to west\nCanadian   High    Commissioner Will Visit All\nWestern Trade Centers\n| TOl.ONTO. Aug. 2H.-\u2014I'. C. I__ir-\nn, Canad an high commissioner\nEngland, whn is back in Toronto\ni a short stay, said today that at\ne request of Ibe Canadian gOV-\nnment he would probably make a\nlp to tbe Pacific coast, going on\nrailway, ard coming back on\ne other. It is his intention to\nsit all the centers, and fam.liarlze\nmself with trade matters and\nmdition:-. Ha expects to leave\nmada lor England abuut OctO-\nr    15.\n'Trade between Canada and Brit\"\ni ls growing steadily,\" said Mr.\narkin, \"and the increase in our\ncports and imports, which amount-\nover 1110,000,.00 in 1.122,\n\u25a0ew aga n in 1U23 to another f 1*T>0,-\n10,000 ami the activities this y.\nive shown an increase wet lh.\nores of about  $7'>,t>Ol),000.\"\ntventy-eighi Boards\nAsked For Under Act;\nThirteen Established\nOTTAWA, Au?. 28.\u2014According t>\ne latest statistics of tht I,alm\nnette,    28    applications    for    board\nconciliation were received under\nie Industrial Disputes Investigation\nt in the year preceding A_arch 31\n124. Thirteen hoards were est ah\n-tied.\nthese,    thru*    affected    railways\nstreet   railway:.,   two   shipping   anil\n,'o   light   and    power   industries.\nouble Liability\nShareholders Have\nthe Sheriff Coming\nTORONTO, Aug. 28.\u2014Writs of\neeution were obtained at Osgoode\nill today hy the solicitors for th\nluidators of thp Home bank against\nrtaln Toronto shareholders, win\ne aaid to havp ignored the liquid\nt'b double liabilities demands\n- writs will be handed to thi\nriff    for    execution    tomorrow.\nillion Wouldn't\nAttract MacLaren;\nThat Ist Urdess-\nABKATOON, Sask., Aug, 28.\u2014A\nlllon dollars would not entice Maj,\nBtuart MacLaren, British a via lor,\n-gain attemp: a flight around the\nbe. But if the American aviators\nI, which he does not think they\n1, he will immediately commence\npa rat ion s for am>ther trip. Thli\ntold an interviewer today during!\nbrief atop In Baskatoon while on i\nwai* east. \u2022 j\nWill Welcome Prince\nto the United States\nf &*#Ws>\n\u00bb_\u00bb____     _:_____t'^\nJ.   BUTLER   WRIGHT\nAssistant eecretet* et af*ti tor ih.\nUtsltei sii,...s. will he ii.M I.i W.l-\n.'orn.' lh.- PriOM ..I Wee lee wl.cn In\ni'.-:ii!.i's Arn.rii'.ilt .calces ,e..e.;ir,[ ill.\nBerenKariu at noon lo,l;ey.\nAIRPLANE MAY\nRESCUE CREW\nOF KINDERSLEY\nTrapped Steamer Appeals\nto Ottawa; Patrician as\nCarrier\nVANCOUVKR, Aug. :-_X.\u2014 An appeal\nthat help may lie sent them hy an airplane has come from the arctic by\nwireless   from   the   men   of   the   Lady\nKindersley. Hudson's Bay schooner\ntrapped in an ice field north of Point\nBarrow.    Alaska. This   appeal    has\nbeen forwarded to Oli:iwn, and the\nQUOt-lOf] of dispatching help is under  adviwpment.\nTho plan suggested is lhal the\nCanadian destroyer Patrician should\npick up a plane at Ihe .lerirho air\nstat ion here, and rush il north until\nthe Itaychlnio, steaming to the relief\nof tbe 1\/uly Kindersley. is overtaken.\nThe Payrhimo would Ihcn take the\nplane lo Ihe tdgt of the ice. whence\nit would make the flis-ht Ifl Ihe Kindersley, and bring out her |i ne-u lu\na   '-cries of   nips.\nHold Patrician   in   Readiness\nThe   patrician   is   bofng   held   at\nl.s<|uimnH until Ottawa decides\nwhether Ihe. airplane rescue is feasible.\nThere is sufficient lumber aboard\nthe Kindersley io build a landing\nplatform for a plane, in tin* opinion\nid   some   experts.\nSquadron Leader A. E. Oodfrey, officer commanding ihe Vancouver unit\nol\" the Boy a I Canadian Aair force,\nhas a plane in readiness to ship n-.rth\nif   hea.hiiun'lei's   grants    Ibe    tppUrft-\nlion of ihe Hudson's lay company.\nWhile 'al firsl inclined to tbhik\nihat such h venture would he entirely a long simi proposition, the\nVancouver air man now believes there\nis a good chance of success. If men\nIrOBI H'c Kindersley COUld ele.ir a\nlai'Ke are;i of ire surface to make\na landing field, the flight might he\npossible.\n\"nf course, we would have lo wait\nCor favorable weather,\" he declared\n\"P Is huposMble lo tell just him' h:ol\ntiie fogs are  in  lhal   vicinlly.\"\nNo Decision Yet\nOTTAWA, Aug. II.\u2014..O nnl.-rs have\nbeen issued by tin* Royal Canadian Air\nforce yel for thf NUof Of Ihe crew\nof the Hudson's Hay company ship\nLady Kindersley reporled caught in\nIhe ice off Puint Barrow. The nial-\ntrr is being investigated by air force\nheadquarters, and a definite decision\nwill    he    given    within   a    short    lime.\nAussie Breaks Lights\nSo Hell Be Deported,\nbut Only Makes Jail\nVANCO-TvER, Aug. 28. \u2014 When\nJohn McDonald, who says he\ncomes from Australia, became\nhomesick, lie decided that something* just ought to be done; so,\nIn order to be departed, he opened\na campaign on street lights, with\ntho result that within a hour\nlesldentlal blocks were a veritable\nbandits' heaven. lie was getting\nhia bearings on another ceries of\nlamps   when   arrested.\nBrit he ls mat as far as ever\nfrom Australia, for today he was\nsentenced   t\u25a0 \u25a0   two   months.\nSMITH, HYLAN\nGREETINGS WIU\nREACH PRINCE\nAfter     Radio     Messages,\nState Department Will\nTake Charge of Him\nTEN MINUTES FOR\nPRESS INTERVIEWS\nThen Heir to Throne Will\nBe Whisked by Yacht\nto Friend's Home\nnfft-\nNI_\\V YORK, Auk. -lS \u2014\nci.il welcome lo the I'rince ef Wales,\nwhi'i.e second visit tu (he Pnited\nKiaUs will he in tbe main of |\nholiday nature, will begin ahout nnon\n(oinorrow when Hip liner Berengaria\nis within .A miles id' lower New\nYork   hay.\nSitting in his suite on the ship\nthe prince will put to his ears a\nradio receiving apparatus, lie will\nbear ibe welcome speeches of Governor Smith and Mayor Hylan; but\nthe voice will be that of Maj, William N. Hensley, romniandant of\nMitchell field, who will read the\nwords of welcome from the cockpit\nof an airplane flying several thousand     feel     above     tin-     liner.\nTbe secoml part ef Ihe official\nwelcome will take place at ipiaran-\ntine, where ,1. B. Wright, third assistant secretary of state, will re-\nCtlVfl the royal * isltnr on behalf of\nthe    foi ie ral    government.\nReporters and Camera Hen\nThese r,,rniallllfH over. Hie prince\nwill meel a group of newspaper correspondents. Officially he is scheduled io allow from r> to 111 minutes\nIn wliich to he Interviewed ami photographed, hut as this meeting is on\nthe border line between the official\nand the unofficial divisions of hts\nactivity he may cverstep that time\nlimit.\nBefore the Berengaria lifts anchor\nat Quarantine to proceed to her doek\n'i miles nway the prince and his\nparty will be transferred to a yacht,\nwhich will lake I hem to tile move.\nen the north shore of Long Island,\nnear which is the home of James A.\nBurden at Hyoset, where the prince\nwill stay for about two weeks. Thence\nlie will go to Washington Saturday\nto lake luncheon with ihe president\nPolo   and   Dancing-   His   Prog-ram\nAfter that his nfficia! duties will\nhe over, and he lie. pes lu spend the\nrest of tbe lime Wholly at play.\nThe play will consist id' sume pob>\npractice, visits lo ilie international\nPOlO malches a! Mendowbruok ami\ndinners    and    dances    al     LoBg     Island\ncountry   hoat**\nMaj. Oscar N. Solbarl, an American friend, who has made plans for\nthe prince's contact with society,\nsaid     today    he    did     not     know     how\nmany   port Im   tht   prince   would   at\ntend,   but   opportunity    will    imi    be\nnuggeOeIl\nis confirmed\nat the coast\nBritish Capitalists Said to\nHave Option at Price of\nHalf a Million\nMillionaire Socialist\nMay Turn Ambassador\nLEON    BLUM\nMillie.,,.',]..'   .Socialist   deputy   In   tho\nI'Vcnrh   cl,ai.il.ci'.    in   menliiened   us   a\npimlMei usseceeeet be Conite Se I'oau-\nf.ert   .1.' SI.   .A.unlet' i.H   I''r.'n.h  anihiis-\n.sador   to   Oreat   Hritaln.\nOLIVER CABINET\nSHUFFLES DECK\nOF PORTFOLIOS\nMacLean Shoulders Finance,\nand Sutherland the Railways; Hart Is Out\nVICTORIA, Auk. ^8.\u2014First fitepfi\nin a reorganization of the provincial\ncabinet was made today when Premier John Oliver announced the appointment of Hon. .1. l>. MHCl^ean as\nminister of finance, to succeed lLnn,\nJohn Hart, resigned. Hon. \\V. H.\nSutherland, miniate- of public works.\nuIbq ,ta_ies the poi'ift-ltfll stt railways,\nrel:ni|ttished  by   Dr.   Macl.ean,\nIn addition to hli duft U minister\nof finance, Mr .\\hicl_ean will oon-\npn*vinei.nl secretary.\nthe     department     ol\nliniie   to   act\nand     adminlst\neducation.\nMr. Hart Intimated to the premier\nsome months ago his intention tn\nrenign   to   go   inlo   private   huMnens.\nThere will he other changes In Ihe\ncabinet, it was intimated, bul nol\nbefore    next    tlionlh.\nThe reorg.'inizalioii just announced\nreduces ihe cabinet membership from\neit;hi   to   seven.\ngermansTecome\nbritons by act\nFrench Flier Breaks\nRecord That Italian\nHang Up  Tuesday\nPARIS. Ang*. 28.\u2014Jean I_apfirte,\nWrench aviator, today rroched an\naltitU-U of 5100 meters ln a hydro-\nplans loaded with &00 kilogram-,\nbreaking- the world's record of 4550\nmeters made by Centurlone, Italy,\nTuesday.\nSWEDE BREAKS ONE, TOO\nSTOCKHOLM, SueiUn, Ang. 28.\u2014\nLie men ant. Frock, Swedish army\naviator, has set a new world's altitude mark for a hydroplane carrying* a load of 250 kilog-rftms, reaching* 5690 meters, exceeding- the\nmark set on Tuesday hy Bacola\nof   Italy   hy   190   metiers.\nVAXCid'Vl'-I-. Auk. liS.\u2014The sale\nof (he HaUOl mine and Ihe Mother\nI-ode claims, Sheep creek, to Hritish\nca pita lists is confirmed In a statement today by James li. Noble, solicitor for Ihe purchasers. The vendors\nare the Selkiiks Mining company of\nthis eity.\nC,    D,    Wilkinson,    mining   entfineer\nof    Whitehaven,    England,    has   been\nmaking  an   examination   of  the   Sheep\ncreek   property   referred   lo,   and   fy\nshortly   expected   back   from   Ihe   cast\nfor a  further examination, it was sahl\nin   Xelson   mining   circles   last    night.\nThe    Impression    here    was    that    the\nHritish     interesl.-*    in    finest ion    were\nprepared   lo put some  money  inlo the\ncompany,   but   a    published    report   at\nIlie   eoasl    has   it    thai    an   option   has\nI been   ohtained,   at   $500,000.\n|      Though   projected   a   couple of years\nJ ago,    the    SelkirkH    Mining    company\ni did not actually Incorporate till about\ni four   months ,ago.     It   took   mr   the\n| properties    mentioned     from     Nugget\nj H'2:.,    Unified,    the    hist    syndicate    in\nj control.      The    properties    include    the\nI old    NllKKet,    the    old     Mother     Lode.\n! long ago Joined with the Nugget, and\nthe  east   extension,   acquired   a   couple\nI of years ago from a   group of Nugget\nshareholders   called    Ihe   Sheep   creek\nsyndicate.\nThis famous gold property, extensively worked at depth through the\nMother I-tide tunnel since the war.\nhaa been idle for the greater pnrt\nof a year.\nCitizens of German Southwest Africa Becomes\nBritish Unless Object\nCAPI-TOWN. South Africa, Aug.\n2S. \u2014 I Canad,.'aii Press Cable, via.\n1 teuters.)\u2014Wholesale naturalization\nof Germans lo British eitiienship is\nbeing effected under a hill which is\npassing the final stages in the union\nhouse of assembly. The bill relates to the mandated area formely\nknown as (iermati Southwest Africa,\nand stipulates that every male adult\nwho is a I-iiropean and a subject\nof a former enemy power domiciled\nin the territory, automatically becomes Hritish, unless he ,s!gns a\ndeclaration within six months disavowing   British   naturalization.\nOnly in Ihe event of his return to\n(Iermany will his original citizenship\nhe   revived.\nFOUR KILLERS\nWERE TO QUIT\nDEATH CELLS\nTwo Bordeaux Guards Are\nCharged With Aid to\nSerafini Gang\nSIX OTHERS ARE\nSUSPENDED NOW\nPrisoner Reported Unusual\nNight Shadows; Serafini\nin Pigsty\nMOXTRFlAI.. Auk. 'JS.\u2014 Liberation\nfrom Bordeaux Jail of four of Ihe\nsix hantlltH who hel.l up Ihe Banque\n(le'Hoi-helaga ...lle.Hon oar in April\nlast, looted it of .142.288, and killed\nIts chauffeur. Henri Oleroux, was the\nreal aim of the plot whieh waff\nKmaehed when Giuseppe Serafini was\n.'.elected making hl\u00ab way out of the\nprison early Monday morning.\nHamlfleatie.ns of the plot have been\nlaid bare by the investigation ordered\nby the provincial government. Reliable information is to Ihe effect\nthat had Ihe get-away plans su>'-\neeedeel. l-ouls Morel. Frank Oam-\nblno nnd Leo Davis would have followed Serafini to freedom from\n\"Death row.\" where they are awaiting execution October 21. The trio,\nit is understood, have been confined\nwith Serafini in adjoining cells of\none   wing   of   the   prison.\nFr\u00bbnk   and   Valentino   Eluwhara\nTony Frank and Mike Valentino\nare   in   another  wing.\nSo far, two Jail guards are under\narrest and charged with conspiracy.\nwhile six more are under suspension\nuntil further notice. Jean Oharpentier\nand Edmund Paul are the pair accused of having conspired from July\n25 to August 25 to aid Serafini In\nescaping   from   the   Jail.\nBoth pleaded not guilty when arraigned, and wef* remanded until\nSeptember 3 f\u00ab.r ene|i,etle. Charpen-\nter waa held without hail, and Paul\nwas allowed  bail of 1200(1.\nNo. 13 played Us part io wrecking\nIhe plot. A, B. Forge't. then uniting\ntrial before the Juvenile court, was\npacing Cell Nee. 13 just aftee- tniel-\nnight Monday, emd dise.evcied the\nescape of Serafini. He seiys he noticed sha.leews that seemed unnatural,\nanel then banged on the door of bis\ncell lee atlrae't the attention of the\nguard.\n* A few minutes li.ter Serafini was\nfOUOd in a pig sty. covcicl will,\nstraw.\nYankee Fliers\nPostpone a Day;\nIcetickle Word\nON    BOARD    I'NITED    STATES\nSHIP RICHMOND, Xcetlc'jlft, Labrador, Ang*. 29.\u2014Postponement of\nthe niffht of the United States\narmy wcrhl _ller_ from Xviglut,\nCti-Miiland, to Indian Harbor, Lab-\nrniUr, until Saturday, waa definitely decided today because of\nthe    unfavorable    weather.\nMinister's Wife,\nOut of Asylum,\nHangs Herself\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Awg 2_3.\u2014\nMrs. C. N. Baker, Stony Beach,\nwife of the Presbyterian minister\nthere, suicided by han*flnf herself ln a barn today. The woman\nwas ln delicate health, and had\njust returned from treatment tn\nthe   Weyburn   mental   hospital.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nWMl rhulUi. at Hetl Vurk, from\nllnmtuirg.\nMrtiiganm, at Glasgow, from Quebec\n-.linncflosa, ut aoulhnmpton, frnm\nMontreal.\nrut-mania, at Liverpool, from Montreal.\nVeterans' Weekly\nProbe Still On;\nOne Warrant Out\nVANCOUVSR Aug. _s\u2014The inves-\nIlegation Into the ilefum-t \u2022Veteran;*'\nWeekly football eonUst. which drew\n|MHM with money from all over\nthe province, i\u00bb -.till under way, and\narrests may yet lie made, areordins-\ntt) the police. A warrant waa Issued\nfor a man named Mil.eod, who has\nleft Canada.\nREICHSTAG GIVES\nTHIRD READING;\nFINAL TO COME\nGovernment Making Deal\nWith Nationalists for\nNeeded Votes\nHe Addressed the\nTypos' Convention\nJAMES   M.   LYNCH\n.New president <.f the International\nTy|,.,gra|.hi.'al union, ail.le.1 \"wpighl\"\nto  the   recent   Toronto  KatherinK.\nprincTbeats\ntime for his\nvocal quartet\nAdopts Left Jab Recommended by Instructor and\nHits Britton\nof\nM.KL1N. Auk. 2S.\u2014Seven hoill\nacrimonious and partisan di-hnle In\nthe rfichstnB coneludefl the Ihlnl\nreading of the hills rein tin*,' to the\nLondon n1 para tions agreement today.\nafter whieh ix was decided to lake\nthe   final   vote   at   noon    tomorrow.\nThe government is assured of the\nordinary majority for the banking\nand Industrial debenture bills which\nsufflcf-s for both (bene measures, and\nit Im believed that the necessary\ntwo-thirds majority for the railway\nbill Is also assured. .Significant conferences have been in progress to\nthis .nd throughout the day betw-fn\nForeign Minister IStreseniann and \"the\nlead-TS of the tJerman Nationalist\nparly, Mlnch, It is rumored in relchstag circles, haa been promised admission Into the present government\nIn return for the mipport needed to\nratify   the   London   agreement.\nIt was observed that these negotiations were carried on In the chancellory instead of the conventional\ncommittee rooms lu the relchstag\nbuilding\nWith th.> approach of the decisive\nballoting the Nationalists today exhibited only solid opposition to the\nDawes laws; and there is likely to\nbe a sharp division In the vote cast\nby lis delegation, whereby the government will be vouchsafed the two-\nthirds majority needed to puss the\nrailway   bill.\nSeven Killed When\nTrain Strikes Auto\nTOLEDO, Ohio. Auff. 28.\u2014Seven\npersons were killed nnd one child\nserious injured tonight when a Baltimore H Ohio railway train struck\nan automobile on n grade crossing at\nthe southern limits of Kerrysburgh,\na. village in Wood county, 12 miles\nfrom ths city, on the Dixie highway.\nON BOARD S.S. BERENC-ARIA.\nAug. _S. -The Prince of Wales thla\nmorning, after he had had his exercise tn the Berengarla's gymnasium,\nmade a tour of Inspection of the\nengine and boiler rooms of the\nsteamer which is taking him on the\nfirst stages of his holiday in the\nI'nited States and  -Canada.\nDuring his inspection the prtnre\nlooked at the huge boilers, the giant\nengines, anil showed particular interest in the apparatus for spraying fuel\noil intn the furnaces. lie chatted\nwith many of the men who were\nhard at work beneath decks, asking\nthem many finest ions. The ptiMCi\nwas drwd in overalls during his\ntour.\nThere was a boxing exhibition on\ndeck during the afternoon, but the\nprime was M busy with his preparations fi.r landing in New York tomorrow afternoon that he took only\n_ passing look at several of the\nbouts.\nWantt   tht   Por,ie\u00bb\nThe heir to the throne is welcoming the prospect of reaching New\nYork and getting tmt to Long island\nfor the polo, lie also Is looking forward to his nu'othu,- with President\nCoolidge, and the consummation of\nhis holiday ideal In the freedom of\nhis   Calgary   ranch.\nLast night, during an impromptu\nconcert by a band of singers on deck,\nWales beat the time for a quartet\nIn Which hf JolOtd, Ht also took\nhis talking machine on deck, and\nplayed   the   machine.\nIt was learned today that the prince\nhad profited considerably by the urging of Mason, who is in charge of\n,<the ship's gymnasium, that the prince\nuse his left hand in boxing. Mason\nhas urged snappy lefts to the head.\nToday the prim1!' i arrie.l out his Instructions, and taught Mason napping, cutting the lip of the professional with a good left which had\nconsiderable voltage behind it. When\na slight trickle of Mood was MM,\nthe prince Immediately lowered his\nhands,   and   apologized   to   Mason.\nNEW HURRICANE\nCOMING NORTH;\nLINERS IN PERIL\nFreighter Nordfarer, With\nSkipper   Lost,   Hit   by\nWave Fifty Feet High\nLIGHTSHIP SNATCHED\nFROM    HER    STATION\nSchooner Doricas, Mastless,\nIs Towed to Port With\nNine Survivors\nChinese Teller\nGets Five Years;\nHorses, Woman\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 38. \u2014 Five\nycaii ln jail wai the ..enteuce\nImposed today on Tyson Ooon,\nteller cf th* Chinai\u00bb department\nof the Bank of Montreal, \u00bbho\npleaded grainy to the thtft of\n3500. Tho evidence Bhowtd Goon\nwaa a heavy better on hone rwcaa\nhnd, ln addition, had become entangled with a white woman\nthough he hat a Chlneee wife and\nchildren.\nMENINGITIS   EPIDEMIC\nSPREADS   TO   TOTTORI\nTOKYO, Aug. IL\u2014Aa epidemic of\nmeningitis, whieh has already claimed\n800 victims, has spread tu Tottorio,\nwhere 231 cases have heen reported,\nWith  102 deaths resulting.\nAmmonia Explosion\nKills One and Puts\nTwelve Under Care\nDES MOINES. Xowa, Ang. 28.\u2014\nOne man was killed and 12 persons injured, several perhaps fatally, when an ammonia tank exploded ln a grocery here today.\nEverett Axmel, a truck driver for\nthe   grocery   was   killed.\nThe Injured were precipitated to\nthe basement when the explosion\nripped out the first floor of the\nbuilding.\n .__M_\t\nHighway Tenders\nWill Be In When\nthe House Meets\nVICTORIA. Aug. _s.-Hon. \\V, H,\nSutherland, minister of public works,\nannounces tenders fur tht* transpro-\nvincial hiKhwuy wiH he on hand\nwhen the legislature opens, so all the\nmembers   may   secure   information.\nNEW' YORK, Aug. 28.\u2014As a half-\nscore gale-battered snips made port\ntoday with the storm-wean' passengers and crews, wireless messages\nwere warning all ships in this part\nof the Atlantic to be on the lookout\nfor nnother hurricane which, from\npresent Indications, threatens to blow\nup a lusty sen. similar to that which\nrecently wrought such heavy havoc\non   shipping.\n\"Tropical disturbance of considerable intensity Is now central 60 miles\nsouthwest of St. Kittj island, in the\nWest Indies, and is moving rapidly\nwest-northwestwnrd,\" read a weather\nbureau storm warning. -Further advices were promised for early tomorrow.\nEight Liners In l:a Path\nShipping officials, Iheir minds relieved by the passage of the Sunday-\nto-Tuesday hurricane, which Is now\nlashing nut its fury aomewhere near\nthe arctic seas, fear that a number\nof big liners now in the central and\nnorth Atlantic sea lanes may run\ntheir noses squarely into the new\nstorm giant gathering its strength\nln the south Atlantic. Among the\nships several days out of this port\nare the Leviathan, Majestic, Cedrtc,\nXInited States, American Banker. Or-\nduna, Ohio and President Roosevelt.\nFrom South American ports still\nothers much smaller, and therefore,\nin greater danger, are on their way.\nOf the half-score ships to make\nport today, the Danish freighter Nordfarer was the worst sufferer. Her\ncaptain was swept overboard by a\nWeVf brenking high over the vessel's\nd.fit SO feet above Ihe water. The\n'mat was h;,(]ly battered in her 36-\nh.i.ir fight v\/ith the gale off Hatteras.\n;\u2022 litfht wh ch many times had the\nboat's flecks under tons of water.\nSh \u25a0 cam* into port with her flags\nhalf nu.ilul.\nToday's arrival brought the total\nnumber of ships to feel the storm's\nfury to a score. Others are expected   tomorrow.\nLightship    Torn    From    8hoal\nNantucket lightship, beacon guardian of the Nantucket South shoals,\n'\u25a0n much dreaded hy navigators, parted\nher anchor cable in the terrific storm\nof Tuesday, anil was forced to leave\ntier station unguarded for 24 hours,\naccording to word received at Boston\ntonight.\nThe steel ship, one of the most\nmodern in the service, snapped tho\n1 .fc-inoh chain which tethers her to\nI mammoth anchor. Onder her own\npower she made the shelter of Vineyard Haven, and waited there until\nIhe   tender   Anemone   brought   out   a\nresumed\nmiles\nBchoon-\n\u25a0vith    her\nnew    cable.     The    lightship\nher   station   tin   the   shoals,\nfrom'  Nantucket,   yesterday.\nA   Helpless   Hulk\nA helpless hulk, the fishing\ner Porieas of Olnuccster. .\ncaptain missing and with both masts,\nher dories, rails anil all loose gear\ncarried away by the storm that swept\nthe coast Tuesday, arrived at the\nport Of Oloucester, Mass., today in\ntow of the Provlncetown schooner\nFunchal. The nine remaining members of her crew brought with them\na tale of being buffeted hy wind and\nsea from Tuesday morning until early\nyesterday, after the craft had been\nstripped and disabled hy the gale.\nTbe Doricas was lying-to fin\nGeorge's hanks, r>0 miles off the coast.\nawaiting the sturni, when she waa\nstruck by the first h<*-avy sea. Capt.\nJoseph F, Silveiia of Gloucester was\nswept overboard, ant; was not seen\nftf-ftin. Domingo Nun!';* of Gloucester\nand Joseph Brown of Boston, members of the CfweTt WWI carried overboard hy ihe same wave, but were\nIf-ftnMntMri    **>n    Timr-A   8)\n87\n70\n82\nThe Weather\nThe temperatures below arc for th*\n24 hours ending y.sterday afternoon\nat   li   o'clock.\nVICTORIA, Aug. !8._-Nelaon and\nvicinity:    Continutnl   .ine   and   hot.\nMln.   Max.\nNELSON      52\nVictoria     4g\nVancouver   5.\nKamloops    -  52\nl'arkorvllle  \u00bbi\nPrince   Rupert     9*\nEstevan     _  54\nDawson    _  *i\nCulKary     j2\nWinnipeg   53\nPortland     -  54\nSan   Francisco     5J\n\u25a0\u2022HtH  _.  68\nPenticton  54\nOrand   Forks  (,,\nCranhrook  4ft\nKaslo      f,|\nEdmonton     4g\nPrince Albert  _.... 42\nn\n54\n9i\n78\n78\n64\n70\n87\n83\n84\n8fi\ndo\n64\n ._.\n\u25a0^.-----^\n' \\Vt_t Two \"\u2022\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\nLeading Hotels of the West\nKay Be Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior   .\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES  \u00bb3.DO  to  |5.M\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters  for   all Travelling  Men,   Mining  Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN    HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY  DINNER $1.00\nTHE   M08T   COMFORTABLE   ROTUNDA   IN   THE   CITY.\nHUME\u2014Mm. W. A. Vfuri, ProctiT;\nMIhs Annto Campbell, Procter; Mr.\nit,id Mrs. S. Stonehouwe Dundas, Ont,;\nfL J. C.  Smith.   V'iit6ria;   Mr. and  Me.\n<\\ A. 1'ull.T. I'enlitlon; S. G. Ilaenel\nle'ernle; S. H. Jar..l.y, Toronto; tl'.\nMarrhhank. Victoria; Michae-I J.rtmont.\nIli'MeKville-\nEUROPEAN   PLAN\nDaylight Sample  Rooms for\nCommercial    Mon,\nHotel Strathcona\nOnce You Get Acquainted With the Strathcona\nYOU WILL STOP AT NO OTHER\nFirst-Claw   Lunch   Roorn   in   Connection.     All   White   Help.\n5avo$ Tbotcl\nNewly Remodelled\nCompletely    Furnished    wltb   the   beat   of   everything\nFor Your Comfort\nJ.  A.   KERR. Corner cf Baker and Falls St\nProprietor. 2  Blocks  from   Depot.\n-LET'S  STAT  at   the   SAVOT-\nsteam   Heated\u2014Hot   and   Old   Running   Water\u2014European   Plan.\nPRINCE TO LAND\nAT NOON TODAY\nTomorrow a Special Train\nWill Take Him to Washington for Lunch\nl WASHINGTON, Aug. 28.- The itinerary for the visit of the Prince of\nWales to Washington from London\nwas made available here today. According to the announcement, the\npiiin.' will land in New York from\nthe Berengaria ahout noon tomorrow, and will go directly to Glen-\ncove. He will leave New York on\nhis special train Saturday morning.\n\u2022'Hid      ;iiiiv.'     m      WUHb-ftOB      abOUt\nIn the White House, luncheon,\ndescribed tin \"very informal.\" will be\nheld, only the members of the Coolidge family, and a few officials\nfrom  the embassy,   being present.\nThe prince will return to Glen-\ncove on ji Bpeclal train Saturday\naiteinoon.\nLONDON, Aug. 2*.\u2014The Canadinn\nNational railways have opened an\noffice  in  I.elfast   to ffc-CiUtate paaeen-\ngiT   traffic   between   I'lster  and   Canada.\nFREE RADIO SET\nGUESS ),e,\u201e  many r.,llar Buttons\nARE  ie,i   lii.|il,,v   j,,  (j,,,.  \\Vin,l\u201e\u00ab\\\nWE  Intended  to  pm  n,i*\nCONTEST on during <l\"'''t times\nIN   Summer,   but   w<-   !,...!\nNO   quiet    times;    se,   we   have\nDECIDED  to  rive   Ihe   Touni  Kolk\nA CHANCE While Getting  i:..,.tv\nFOR  .School.    Guess  Up, Boys!\nNelson's Best Cafes\nTHE GRILL\nIs Closed  for a Short\nVacation\nSAVOY\u2014Mrs.    T.    It.    Sw\nim    ami , It. sshuitl:\nU.\nLe\nH.\nfamily, _*_9T.    Mrs.    T.    McNeil*. I 'i^\u00a3^\u2122l0f, %^\\\u00a3_'T'j,\nMurry McNclsh,    Mrs     Morley,    Monte   ute.kes   and   wile.   Calgary;   Lars   Hal-\nMorlev O.   S.   Henderson.   Sleecan   City; ! l.rist,    J.    J.'1.listen,    A.    l.oeemer,    \\';.n-\nH.    H.' l'erkins,    Kaslo;    Jaik    Rofsn, j vouve-r.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam   Heated    Throughout\nMl   rooms   with   hot   and    ---old\nrunning   water.\nIn   center   of   business   dlstrW*\nOur motto is \"We aim to please..\"\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n715   Vernon   Street   East.\nSteam    heated.      Hot   nnd   cold\nwater.\nWe are  here to serve you\nP.  H.   BUSH,  Prop.\nQUEENS \u2014 C BrldCS, \\Va_terville,\nWash.; Mrs. S. Wailey and family,\nTrail; Mrs. (). Frimcen and family.\nTrail;   T.   Gordon,   Calgary.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT    MADDEN,    Prop\nit-*-**- -neated    Rooma   by   the   Day\nW.-en   er   Month.\nEvery     Consideration     fthowr    tc\nGuests.\nCor. Bakar and Ward Sta., Nelson\nSHERBROOKE  HOTEL\nNear   C.P.R.   Station.\nRooms   at   Iteasonal.le   Rat<_\nH.    DUNK,    Proprietor.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic  Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevails\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nLuncheon,    11:30   to   2 86c\nSpecial   Ijlnners,   5:30   to   8    35c\nWe   Specialize   in   Chop   Suey\nund  Noodles.\nHER BEAUTY CAUGHT THE JUDGES' EYE\nMISS   CHRISTINA   MARCH\nWai judged tn he the prettiest Kir I at  the  Danforth  huHtness men's  pienii\nin Vv'ithrow ?purK*, Toronto.    The  prize  was  a  f 10 gold  piece. ,\nBEAVERBROOK BOYS TO BE CANUCKS\nAcco-ftp\u00a3t-_ing Lord Beaverbrook on hts late canauian trip w*-'ru tut iwn\n.ion.\".,  Max,  tli'' yining' si, on   ill.' left, and   Prior.   fftlOTC  red   hair   tin-   r.'inicru\n.io.\". not show.   They fn afad ii ami i_ peaN rtepaothaly., tad arc teH\nIn he expert nelfcrs tor thfir ffkfn.    Lord   I.e;i\\ efiini'iU is bringing   Hum   up\nus  Canadians.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   B.C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30  to   2:30,   Special   Lunch..35c\n6:30  to  8:00   p.m.,   Supper 36c\nPhone 154\nSummer Resorts\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant In the\ncity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, eoda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe   cater   to   private   parties.\nin   Wa|\u00ab\nchanvea\n\u25a0h   will res\nlal.'ly   tf    per   cent\nw inle.   tht   Cana-\naphs is aaklng tor\nr  ri'iil   iu   salaries,\nForking    conditions\nSINGLE BOARD\nTO CONCILIATE\nTELEGRAPHERS NEW HURRICAN\nSchool Hose\nBOYS'   AND   GIRLS'\u2014Strong   Black   Cotton.    Per\npair   25^\nNew Skirts\u2014\nCombination  Box  and  Knife   pleat.     All-wool.\nCrepe Armure  $4.75\nFrench   Crepe       $7.50\nThis is a second shipment.\nNew Hats and Coats\u2014\nAre much admired.    See them.\nSports Flannels\u2014\n56 inches.    All-wool.   '\nPlain  colors, yard  $2.25\nFancy Checks, yard * ....$3.25\nNelsonDryGoodsCo.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nKING DECLARES\nTIDE IS TURNED\nMajority of Canadians Recently Gone to States\nHave Returned Again\nPBT-DRBOBO,    Ont.,    Auk.    |8.\u2014Ad-\ndrenlOf ta audience here tuni-ydi.\nintimated at 18,6-1- people Rt. Hon.\nMackenzie KIhk ImprMM- upon his.\nlearer.i that he eotiM net wee \"how\nttlf citizen ol t Cbfhttj -avared\na.s thin I-nm in Ion is siljovr- any ntVer\n.\u25a0ninid'y in Hi.- WorHI e.m he Mher\nlliaa an oiitiinist. We liave heatily\nnnd wraith, and nnisl make the |)Ml\u00abt\nOf    it    by    niakiiiK    the    must    el'    uur-\nish Columbia Hospital asffoeiattl\nwhich opened here liis mornll\nIllness prevented President Chatf\n<ir.ih.un from attending, and fieol\nHadden, first vice-president of vJ\neouver,   called   the   meeting:   to   ortfl\nIn  addition  to  th- presidential\ndress,   the  meeting received a  nil\"\nher   of   reporte,   and   made   an\nmentM    for   if^   program   dtiring   i\nmeeting.\nIntercsiiiiK    details   of    the\nanc*  giveM   by  the  women's auxil\nlies      tO      their     respective     hosplt\nwere   received,   and   the   work   of\norgan iza tions    were    approved.\nand\nntry\nUefer\ning t.. iiiHnigi'ati.iii the premier Mid the present !;evernincnt\nrmiml all the immigration maerinei y\n\u25a0I a .-'landstill when it as.niii..l of.\ni ic*. K was impossible t.. aceomidish\nmuch in | -.ear. \"Like the .\u25a0..\u25a0e.l ymi\nsaw,   it   Kikes   time.\"'\nStates Looked Attractive\nPointing out ihat the Vniled States\nexperiene,'!. ;, i;re;it hi.oin after the\nw:ir and Limited hv legishitimi inimi-\ngratinn except from Canada and Mexico, tht: speaki r niiKirked that at a\ntime when the Dominion labor markets were ov-Tfilled it was only natural that there should be a temporary\nmigration I., the United States. There\nhud always hen that flow, moir or\nless.\nThe    figures    of    tli.-    th p;irt inrtit    of\nImmigration    indicated    thai    out - ot\neverv    inn   Canadian!   goinV   l\"   ni'' I\nUnited States <;a came hack, and that \\\nduring the month:, of April. May, !\nJune and July more than IS, 000 returned to ihis country. That -^s I\njust tiie period since the ilia iifriira- '\ntion of the tariff changes alleged tfl\nhave     caused     people     to     go     on\nFIRST   IN   THE   SUMMER\nchamberlain'\nCOLIC and DIARRHOEA REME\nInvalnahh' for luMttO and i\npalm in stomach and howol.**, cram\ndiarrhoea. When needed-worth\ntimes   the   cost    for   single   dose\nClear The Pores\nOf Impurities With\nCuticura Soap\nSoap, OinlmiT-nt. Talcum wtlJ avanrwhara.\nUnions on Roth Systems\nChoose Simpson; Roth\nCompanies, Phippin\n< iiy Canadian\nCOMING NORTH; \\\u2122_*_\n1MB IN PERIL FormerPreBim\nMADDEN'\u2014A.    C.    Grant.    M.    John-\n.on,     Kelowna;     D.     Holllnger,     Kim-\nWHERE  THE   FISHING   13 GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER,   B.C\nPlihlng    Boating,   Bat-Oaf,   Vol*\nTennle     Courts\nPletalng    Taokle   Bnppliad.     OTooerr\nStore    to    Connection\npun       rveiu\u00ab nm,      u.      noi un^ei,      jy.i..- .\nberlcy;   T.   B.   Horan.   fcitilmo;   V.   Mc- W.   A,\nCicker,     Slocan     City;     J.     S.     Nixon, I Day, S3;  \".\nTrail;  V>.  Mcl'hee,  I'rocter;  Omar .lem- I\nKoss'   Spur;  J.   Mullihon,   <lrand  Forku; V\nfipi .\nw. P. Riddall, Grand Forks; S. T.\nl-unke.rman, Spokane; K. G. Wells,\n\"Waneta; C. Madden, Rhoreacrps; A.\nIjcwln, Vancouver; W. Wallace, North-\nport.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs, Mallette A Son, Proprietor*\nNice, warm, comfortable rooms at\nreaaonable   rates.     Open   day   and\nnight.\nCorner    Hall   and   Vernon   8treeta-\nWARD,   FroprUtOl.\nWeek, 917 to 919     \u25a0peolal\nMonthly   Bates.\nELECTRIC CAFE\nS07   Baker   St.,   Nelson,   B.C.\nOpen   D.,y  and   Night.\nExicllint   Meals,   Quick   Service\nEverything cooked  by electricity.\nLuncheon, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 35c\nSupper,   &:__   p.m.   to   8   p.m.,   85c\nSpecial Sunday Turkey Ennner, 60c\nplate. Phone 460\nOTTAWA,  *\u00ab\u00bb.  II,\u2014 Hi.v  I\nPress)\u2014James    Sim|\u201e<.ii    eef   Te.te.nl..!\nHtl   heen   nominated   i>y   n.\"   Com- (Continued  trea\nmerclnl TeleBh.'H'he e's ol both the C\u00ab-Iiwep(   i,.,,-!;  aboard nic crnll   ley ine\n lian  I'aclfic and the Ciinadlan  N:,- | n,.xt  s,.;,.\ntlemal   Telegraph   rompanles,   e.s   Iheir \u00a7 Water  Oelug.s   Hold\nreprcHenteith'.' rm the lee.ard of con-j' ].;.M]y l\u201e,t(i maitl mete stia|.p.il off,\n.\u2022iliiiti.in which will investhTeile tli\"i;ii] t)M, Dorlcee* boats, fishin\u00ab Jear\ndispute   l.etwe.ll   Ul\u00ab   teleBi'eil.hcrs   eitiil    ,nli|   ].,|j]!.   ,..,,.,|,,|   .,\u201e- y    |l(,,.   .,uxiliary\nihe eompuiM | enflne   dtaabted   by   tin   daluce   <>r\nThe   twe,   nompanlei   have   lelected   water   inl,,   ]\u201e.,.   hol.l.  anil   her   rudder\n!\u25a0'.   If.   Phlppen,  K.C. eel..,,  nf   Toronto.    ,.,.,\u201e,,,,.\u201e,,   \u201e_],.,,,     |.-,\u201ei,i   11:30   Tens-\nLeague Delegates\nPARIB,    Aug.\neablno.  today appi\nchief    delegates    to\nK.tnlely    of    the    U\nArisiide Brtand, fo\n.\u2014'I'lie Pronch\ntoil as Prince's\nlie- coining as-\ne !    Nations,\nier Premier i.c\nKOKANEE\nKOOTENAY'S\nFLOATING   HOTEL\nand\nSUMMER   CAMP\nD-anahaven,   B.C.\nDining    Boom    Open    to    Non-\nReflldenta.\nRates $2-*->0 a day up.   Write for\nparticulars\nPARIS CAFE\nWill     Open     for     Business    on\nMonday,    August    4.\nNext to Trrinont  Hotel.\nMeal** 35c. Draakfwt 6 to 12 a.m.\nTHE\nMaple Leaf Confectionery\n608   BAKER   ST.\nWaffle    Shop    in    Connection.\nJ.   ANDERSON,   Prop.\nof Toronto,\nns their represenlnth'\u2022.\nThe   nvo   h.ianls.   tb0C\u00abfore,   will   he\niJ.Mith.il in perioimel, liwotar ai n'p-\nretemteAtve*   o_   iha   etnploycri   and\nemplojeep nre loneerued. Mr. I'hip-\nVien niul Mr, limpton l ill ruttf't* to\nMeet | chalrm;in. hut H' Ihey fail to\nagree the minister of labor will tUtStt\nthe   appoiiitu.(.nt.\nAsk   Forty-live   Per   Cent   Raise\nThe   ii.-man.i_   o(   tiu-   commardtJ\nteleyapht rn .'inphne.! by lhe Cana-\nilian I'aclfie may be 'uimmariz'1.! uu-\n'l.'i* (our  liea.l.-', et  fallow.1*:\n1.     ICijiial   fffgtf   f'n*   Morse  an.l   :ui-\ntpmnfic   teleKraphi'i's.\n_.   fl-4n_tan-.___.-_on   ol   pprcentageil\nrmtlnai \"ver \\\\u- tattre qrctMB ra\nbasis outline.! In a prOpOttl mad\ntu   thf   n.mpany.\nI. Stan.lanli-.aliun uf rhri.al WA|\nsfile on the bull outlined in a pfe\nPOHU   ma.le   by   the   ..[.eralnrs   to   tl\nduy moi'iiii-K' i\n\u25a0tctm until th\n|he  '-arly  hour.\ndrlfted   bef.)\nthe\nwinil   had    abat-.t    in\nUl   WfilnrHilay   nuiin-\nAt   I   nvini'k   WYiinesday   morntn\u00ab\nmember.*, of the RW Of the I'tinchal\nheard the (Of Imrn whi'h the erew\nof the DDrfdtl .vas suunilinX as a\nsignal for hilp, PutXlnf tihout, Cai>t.\nI_Ouls Sears piil.ed up th.' wrecknl\n'crnft.      The    trip    was    lo    have    been\nthe  last   nt  tht imon   tar   Optata\nBUvarla.\nliourgpoii.. forintr president of the\ne.uiiK-il ft ihe league, and J'aul r.on-\nconr, dapUty an.l Woe a list h-adi'i*.\nLouis Lnit.h.'r. Hrnri ftf Jouvenel,\nand Senator ,Maurie.' llarraul. all\nformer niinist.'rs were appointed as\nilUrnative* Laon Jouhaux, president Ot tha l''nnch Ked-\u2022ration of\nI_;iljor. Deputy (leorges Bonnet, anil\nK T. Cashin. seeietary of the federal Union of War Veterans, were\nnamed   U   assistant    delegates.\nhospTfaiXmeet\nFifteen Witnesses\nin Housemaid Probe;\nBody Now Exhumed\nVANCOUVE\nwiine'ss.'s  are\nwhen the leiileli\nft. .ll\n\u25a0I.      K.ri.ffnitieen     \u201er    111\n\u25a0sl.'ilili,slini,.|il  ..(  llee' un\nnl\nlo  be calM   Tueeday,\nHe Inquiry into thadeatli\nOf   .lieii.l    Sinilli,    I'.iinl    Cr.y    niirsc-\n11,;, i.i,    ri.im.l    ,1, ,1,1    In    lh..    r.-siilcn.-..\n,ef tf, a. Baiter, i.e ie  be opened,   tot\nll.eely   W.1S   .'Slllllll.'ll   leell.iy.\nTwenty - five     Institutions\nAre    Represented    at\nVictoria Gathering\nVICTORIA,    A.II-'.    UK. \u2014llnri.    limn\nSO    el.'l.'Keile^^,    I'.'IHVM fl.tillK    llliOlll     _f,\ni.f Hi.' i.r.'si'tit  hospitals in thr province,   tv   of   whirl!   are'   nioinli.,rs   of\ntho aaeefiilallon.  are  tailing  part   in\nihe. annual conrentlon ..r u...  Brtt-I\nFLY-TOX\nKills\nMospitoes\nAlso Plica, Moths, Bed Bafa,\nHouse An-i. etc. Harmleil to btt>\nm.inii and anim'ils. Pleasant odor.\nWon't stain wallpaper and fabrici.\nEasy to use. No tint or dust. -<>\n8 Oi  .50    ..2 On 11.25\nic Ob, .7..    i_r o_ 4 tin\nMouth  Sprayer  FREE\nImprovrd   Hand   Sprayer   .fl\nSold   by   Grocers,   Druggists,    I.r\npaitaient Stores and Hardware\nDealen.\nManufactured   by\nW.   R.   Boaty  & Co.   Ltd.\nVancouver.  B.  C.\nDeveloped at Mellon Inatltuta of\nIndustrial Research by He* Fellowship. A\nMoney V*-->>^   1    ^\nR_K.lt    \\f x-_ >-.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA    C.   TOWNER,   Proprietor.\nTbe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty  roc-ms  of solid  comfort.\nWe   aerve   the   best   meala   in\nNelson       lfi    th\u00ab    cook.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nC1I    Vw-noi.    8L,    East\nOnly brick hotel In city. Steam\nheated, hot and cold water.\nEuropean  and   American  plana.\nNEW OHAND-fl. Nth-wlnkf*. lalmo;\n_-Iahl(* Loom, Spokane; A. W. Anthony, Meadows; A. Hmlth; P. Anrt.r-\n'aon, Trail; P. S. Anderson, Trail;\nMlas A. G. Nichols, Argoyne, Scotland; Mm. S. Waters, Vancouver; Mrs.\nWaiter Townpend; J. Sheldon, Creston;   W.   Loughren,   Vancouver.\nTHE   GUMPS-SWEET   DREAMS\n^   LDMG\n\u25a0\"vf-ncu about\nNo\\) in *\\Hrs\n*.A*.li_-_     J\n\\  KNOW \\ .-  F_OM NOW OmA\nR *-J'u. Ui-x ^ \\woRL**> \\w^\nTO  CHOV.T>  MM  NW^.t DTF    J\n*Tvl-\u00a3   FSONT   1?M,*=- j\n\\    _V)-- _ NOV) Vol _ _ V__.\\. KlNtS OF\n*>-*;0.**i   \"_*TNV\\*J\\N(_ *5H  MS s\\\"*>E \\H *THE\nVMv-vi-TEv'OUSe  ft,C-\\VVM<_ *.v-.*_ r0RE\\yH\niM\u00ab\u00abSWWS  W***> Tf*t\\.a SunTc\"*  \\M\\1M\nVICTURt   E.tRlM T\\M\\-   IWHtnfte, HANINfcj\nV.O-*L\u00ab NAME **>(*.._\"\u2022, ATTE*- *10\\) Av^ SEN^lNb\nNO- **;u'-\u00ab*'S'S T-01_ TH\\NHSo\\.lt.(j T*AM - . HW.\nTo  ItsVhsA VWtM 1 \"MINK O*^  *Hcv>R. *=ATV\\ER TEUlNt>\n^01) NOT TO MMtJN Mt- Ut WA_ *TVMiMb Tn SLAM\n*TVE ____<***& OF rA_At\u00bbSt  IH---r_^iV_-_r\u00bb-*^\n' -yr(Si\u00a3^t%aJa\n1 \\ tmy   \\\nVNANT   \"TO\nC1\u00abC0\\)RA6E\nNOM ItfT\nMAM-t MW\nV-IV,- W . \u00ab-\nEX*iC*T*c.\"C>-\nA REMARK t\\KE \"WAT   IS   A\nt?EFVECT\\ON OH TWE <__oo\u00a3> SENSE\nOF   \"TWE   AMERICAN ?E.O*\"_E - \\ HAVt   I\nPRVVATE  RETORTS SHOWINti   I.VMILL     I\nCA_:RS  THE  SOUft SOUTH, EAST AM-     I\n\\WEST- V   KNOW MN OVTOHtviTS\nTvliNK \"IVIES MA.E  BUILT U? STK0N<ay\n?0UT-CAU fENCES   SUT\nEEECTVON \"SA\"i VJI\\.E. SvlOVM   \/ -SH,      _>X>\n\\MWAT WATPENS  WHEt.  .. ^     \\9\\ ms^S\nb,N AVAUANCWE  MVT-\/'.-\"-vj ] -\".^ ,-\nA VOUTICAE-fENCE-  \/'-\/\n-_____\u25a0\n ~~\n5G3\\ cofp^\nW\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\nPage THres'\"\nSLANDER\nBy HAZEL DETO BATCHELOB\nCopyright, 19J4, by Public Ledger Company.\nMiriam Kolwell. a young husl-\nnegfi woman, has an episode in\nher life which, although innocent, has caused scandal. She\nJh.**fl almost forgotten It when a\n.year later ahe becomes engaged\ntR) Anthony Ilreen, and then out\n\"of the past comes a woman who\nknown all about the episode und\nin in metal to make trouble. Anthony believes the worst, but offer* to marrv her anywav, Mi-\nMfcm, with her dream of love\n\u2022Ver, refuses and, although Anthony tries to get in touch wilh\nher later, nhe succeeds in avoiding him. She has accepted an\noffer from her firm to go to\nMurope, and on the -.teaim-i* meets\nWarren Holmes, the man who is\nreowponsible   for    everything.\nCHAPTER   XliVI.\n\"\/ Loved Yon\"\n\"1\\ J HY   dlfl   he   look   that   way?   It\n\" . was not an expression of anger, rather ono of intense hurt, and\nhis face was so white that it terrified   her.\n\"I loved you,\" he said finally. I\nthink I must have loved you from\nthe first, but I knew that you didn't\ncare for me that Way. You were always unaware nf me. l could not\nrt-ich you, and that night when I\nstaked you to marry mo, it was not\nto save you from a sorry predicament; it was because I wanted you.\nDo you remember that I told you\neo   then?\"\n\"Yes, but I didn't believe you,\"\n\u25a0Miriam    whispered    the    words.\n\"Well, it was true. Then you ran\naway, and I came tfl the city and\nsearched for you, but I couldn't\nfind you. That's all, excepting that\nI didn't think of that night at the\ninn as a serious thing. 1 thought\nyou attached too much importance\nto it. It wasn't until we reached\nthe Pine Notch hotel, ;,nd I saw\nthe way people trei.l.-.l you, that\n1 realized how you wouhl HttflT.\nlie was silent, and Miriam, whose\nanger hud died away, sat very sllll\nthinking. Then, all of | sudden.\nshe burst out laughing. The situation    was   funny,   tragically   funny.\n\"Why do you laugh F lie asked\ntensely.\n\"Why.   Oh,   because    I\ning  how   funny   it   would   have\nif  i had carta  tor you.\"\n\"Funny,    why'.'\"\n\"Don't you see? I!' 1 had\nand we had been thrown to\nthat way. how foolish 1 would have\nbeen not Ifl have taken advantage\nof Ihe situalion. It Wouldn't have\nmattered, 'people believed the worst\nanyway. As it is, I'm paying tor\nsomething   thai   never   happened.\"\n\"You don't mean that You're just\nhurt,    bitter.\"\n\"Perhaps you're right. lint al\nleast U'| over now, and I'm going\nto   try   to   forget   all   about    it.\"\nShe cxtrieated herself from her\nsteamer     rug     and     stood     up,     and\nthink-\ne   been\ned,\nether\nHolmes, too, rose to his feet. For\njust a moment they stood facing\neach other, and then Miriam bold\nout her   hand.\n\"Please don't feel that I am not\nappreciative of what you have told\nme. You sec I didn't know that you\ncared.\"\nHis fingers closed over hers, hut\nas he looked down Into her face\nhe could not read what was goin*?\non in her thoughts. There was\nsomething about her attitude that\ndismissed him, gav him the feeling that this was the end, that\nshe  did   not  want  to  sco  him  again.\nShe confirmed h __ thought by her\nnext   words.\n\"This is good-by. There is nothing that we two can bring euch\nother,   you   know.\"\nAnd he did not aifgue with her.\nHe merely bowed over her hand,\nand then turned on his heel and left\nher, But he did not despair, not\nl>y any means. Fate had thrown\nthem together in a strange fashion\nand this could not be the end. Of\ncourse, she had mistaken his meaning. She had taken for granted the\nfact that, although he had once\ncared for her, he did not love her\nnow. What a chid she was still,\nso young and so embittered*. \\nd\nwhat kind of a man had been loved\nby her? lie must have been rather\n\u25a0 poor specimen to have had the\nright to hold her in his arms, to\nknow the touch of her lips, and then\nnot love her In spile of anything\nshe   might   have  done.\n\"Even If she had told me of a\nreal episode in her past,\" ran his\nthoughts, \"it wouldn't have made\nany difference in my feeing for\nher. She la ft rare woman, the kind\nof g woman men never forget. I'd\nlike to meet him. I'd like to see the\nman who could love her and give\nbftT up. Perhaps I'll have that good\nfortune   some   day.\nFRESH SURVEY\nCHURCH UNION\nFOR KOOTENAY\nPresbytery Meeting at Nelson Makes New Recommendations\nEvery 10c\nPacket of\n(   WILSONS\n(FLY FADS\n0*111 KILL MOPE Fl.'tS THAN,'\n-i.0-0WORTI' OF ANY   '\n\\_ TICKY Fl \/ CATCHER\/7\nf Tomorrow\u2014 Building  Anew.)\nAttend Yahk Dance;\nLater, Police Court;\nThree Men Pay Up\nHeine,r.i Kelly. Kit,I Chamhrrs nnd\nWilli;,n, l.uum all atlcnele'.l | ,lam-r\nut thp mill hall at Yahk on August 17.\nami all appeared before Justiee nf\nthe  I'l'iiee   10.  ...  LylliBiee  next  morn-\nlilK.\nKiluai'il Kelly all,I .Veil chamber,.\nv.'er.' i'h.'.rK,',l by the l.rmlnehil |\u201e,lire\nuith being inti.xhate.1 in \u25a0 pgbHa\nI'leeee. anil had heen MTMttd in the\npublic reead near the hall hy I'on-\nHtahle W. A. Walker. They pleaded\nK.iilly. ;,nd mn fined .__ and rust..\nnr 11 days' hard lal.iei'. lie,tli men\npaid    Ihe   fines.\n\"Willi:, ni l.num was arrested fnr\n'UlsiiiK a elisturhanre ill a pul.Ii.\nblare l.y using obscene language and\nswearing.\nHe eilsi. appeared before Mr, l.yth-\ngoe, August IS, iliurged under Sec-\ntin.. HI of the Criminal Code of Can-\nada. and pleaded guilty. lie received\nthe same Hi'iiti'iiri'. and elect.-.1 to pay\nlh\" fine of $_,.   anil  costs.\nASK ALL CHURCHES\nTO REPORT  VIEWS\nJubilee Plans for Celebration Next June Are\nAlso Discussed\nJUDGE GRANTS\nAPPUCAT10NS\nOrder for Sale of Land for\nMrs. Morrison; Letters\nProbate  Issued\nClean to handle.   Sold by al)\nDruggists, Grocers and\n(Jeneral Stores\nIceland Tremors\nAre Followed by\na Big Tidal Wave\nLONpON, A tiff. II,\u2014A violent\nearth tremor of two seconds' <liir;t-\nUM .PM folt in Iceland Tuesday\noven ng, according to a -lavas news\nagency dinpatch from Copenhagen.\nThe shock was especially strong at\nReykjavik and Hornafjord, and was\nfollow.'d  by  a tidal wave.\nWhen the Kootenay prewbytery\nmet in St. Paul's chureh yesterday\nafternoon under iModerutor Hev. B.\nW. Maokay of Cranbrook, two Important recommendations dealing\nwith church union were passed\nunatninously, and reports of the\ngeneral assembly held at Owen Sound\nIn   June   were   heard.\nThe first recommendation was\nthat all churches in the union should\nbe allowed to appeal to the presbytery for assistance or guidance;\nthe second, that the cooperating\ncommittees of I'resbyterian and\nMethodist churches throughout the\nunon should take a fresh survey\nof ;ill the fields, and report their\nview of the general situation as far\nas the union wns concerned to the\npresbytery. The churches will be\nprivileged, according to the terms\nof the Church Union act, to decide\nwhether or not they will come into\nunion between the dates of Decern\nber  10,   1924, and June   10,   19_!5.\nThe report of the general assembly commissioners, by Dr. J. fl.\nShearer, Ottawa, Hev. K. W. Mc-\nKuy, anil .1. .1. Hell, Ottawa, was\nread ;il the meeting. Th s report\ndealt, in part, with the plans of the\nassembly to commemorate the jubilee year of the Presbyterian chureh\nin Canada next June, In tho various\nchurches. It stated that a commit lee was appointed at the meeting of tlM assenilily to gather the\nfacts in connection with the church's\n50   years,   into   a   publication.\nA   home  missions  report   was  read\nby   Itev.   It   C.   Campbell   of   Kaslo.\nTko   Mn use*.   Asked\nTwo new manses are to be built\nin the near future, the application\nfor funds having gone forward to\nToronto headquarters through tbe\npresbytery yesterday. One of these\nwill be in the Waldo district, probably at l.lko, and the second in the\nOreenwood district, ;i nd it I.s expected this will be built at Oreenwood.\nThe convenor reported on the bud\ngtt for 11)2-, anil also on allocations\nto the various congregations for the\nbudget   of   1925.\nThe question of the status of\ndeaconesses in the church was discussed, but a decision deferred for\nthe   present.\nAnother <j nest ion discussed was\nthat of Lord's Day observation, and\na deliverance upon It was also postponed  for  the'present.\nThose present at yesterday's meeting were the moderator, Hev. ... M.\nMacKay, Cranbrook; Itev. J. T.\nFerguson, D.D., Calgary, superintendent of missions; Kev. !\u2022'. H, <;.\nDivdtfe. .Nelson; (Lev. II. VV. Stevin-\n\u25a000, New Denver; Itev. W. I<\\ Burns,\nFernie; Itev. W. It. Walk-\ninshaw, Oreenwood; Hev. A. Wilson,\nTrail, and Itev. M. C. Campbell,\nKaslo.\nThe next meeting of the presbytery   will   likely  be   held   in   October.\nIlISE SAHBORMS\nCi.6lCEilBLENpSjj|i:\nj-iliiT^n, !,MAKE|lil,','^Ll;(i|!''|\n\u25a0    _\\A \u2022 Hull? Ii\nMOSt DEUCI<MJS\n___tm\njm -*\u2022*?\nPay Cash for Cash\nClassified Adverising\nIf you are InMrtMg a Classified Ad for one week\nyou should pay for it, cash in advance. The cash\nrate in such a case*- is one cent per word per insertion. If you do not pay cash, the rate is V,_ cents\nper word per insertion.\nIt means a saving of 50 per cent.\nTo Insert a Classified Advertisement, Phone 144\n(Two Lines), Call or Write\nThe Daily News Classified Dept.\nII\nFORD OPTIMIST\nOPON DOMINI\nOF THE FUTURE\nWhite Coal Age Is Coming;\nCanada Will Stop Import\nof Fuels\nWhen .Midge J. R. Hrown of Grand\nForks held supreme eourt chambers\nhere Tuesday, he heard two applications. The first, made by J.\nO'Shea of O'Shea __ Irving, was for\nan order of convenance of lands,\nunder the Intents act, In the matter\nof tho estate \u00abf the late Di. V. B.\nMorrison. This application was made\non behalf of Mrs. F. E, Morrison, in\n.order that she might sell some land\nat ( nlumbla (iardens, belonglio,' to\nthe estate.\nThe second application, teiadc by\nl.rie I', Dawson of Brown & Dawson,\nwus for letters probate in the estate\nof John - HJ.H-trd Wereley of Xew\nDenver. The executors are Wereley\nRupert and Anthony Khilland, New-\nDenver.\nDoth apt-lieat-*_wi were granted by\nJudge <i_r_wn.     \u00ab (Kt,.,t\nPOPfllNTS\nCALGARY BISHOP\nHAMILTON SEE\nBishop McNally Prince Edward Islander; Distinguished Career\nKOMI., Atifi, 28.\u2014The pope has ap-\n\u25a0lointed Jchn Thomas MeNally, bishnr\nof Oale-iry. to succei'd the lata Ut\nHev.   Thomas   Joseph    Dnwling   in   the\nb'shoprie    of    __ami1t.m.\nCALOAKY, Auk. 2S -Ut. Kev. John\nthvmet MrNally. blihop of Calgary\nWho succeed*- the late Itt. Hev. Thomaf\nJeeespf Howling in tht bishopric of\nHamilton, was born Juno 24. Lift, at\nHope Itiver, Prince Kdward Inland\nIn his early childhend hia parent?\nniovert to Summer^hb'. In 1N96\neompletefl his hi\u00abh school studies\nthat town, winning a scholarship and\nthe Rowrnor-ffeneral's silver medal\ntlu- first prize for lefMMfll profl-\nfieiwy. This scholarship entitled him\ntO t CQUTM in I'rinei' of Wiijes eel*\nlOfO, I 'harlot tl town, frum which he\ngraduated In J SHU with an honor diploma, | first-class teacher's licence\nand the frfivernor-Keneral's silver\nmodal. In lN!t_ he won the degree of\nI-acheb.r of arts ami licentiate In\nphilosophy at tbe UnKersity of Ottawa,\nStudied at Bonifl\nlb' was s- nt In the Canadian college, Home, in October ef the same\nyear, by tho late Archbishop !>u-\nhamel, to study for the priesthood at*\na subject oT the diocese (1f Ottawa\nThere, studying at the schools of\npropaganda,    he    secured    in     1892    the\nHegrtt of floctor of philosophy ami  in\ntill that Ol doctor of theology, II.\n\\y.iH ordained to the priesthood bv\nthe      late     Canlinal     OftMWta      in     thi\narehbasilica    of    St.    John    Lateral!    on\nApril   -i.   [Ill,\nOn hi,' return hORU he served for\nmore than two years as curute in\nSt. Patrick's chufOh. Ottawa. Ill\nhealth, however, compelled him to\n.e. k a milder climate, and in February, I'HiO. he went tr. Portland,\nOre., where, as secretary to Archbishop Christie anil pastor of the\ncathedral. he remained until the\nautumn of l!io;:, when he returned\nt\" Home for a further period of\nstudy.\nIn hec.'inber. tfttf, bis health bolnf\nfully restored, he returned from Home\ntf) Ottawa, and was appointed to\nthe parish of Old Chelsea, Que.\nWhile there he was. in Sept ember\nIM9, called to Quebec to ait as\nnotary to the first plenary council\nheld    hy    the    chureh    in    Canada.\nI n Msi y, 1911. he MI t ra nsf erreil\nto Hi. -Mary's church, Almonte, Out.,\nwhere he was still laboring when, tin\nApril A, J9U, he was named first\nbishop of the newly cteated diocese\nof Calgary, Un Dlfl first of the\n''ollnwing June he received episcopal\nconsecration in the chapel of the\nCanadian college, Home, at the hand.'\nof lhe late Cardinal Falcnnlo, assisted\nby Hlshop I.manl of Valleyfiehl Que,,\nnew A reh bit-hop of Ottawa, arid the\nlate Hishop I'Yaser of Dunkeld, Scotland, and on July 27 took pos'icsslon\nnl     hit    see.\nST.  CATHARINES,   OttL,   Aug,   II\n\u2014 Henry Ford, passing through thi:\ncity on the Welland canal aboard hi:\nyacht, gave a lengthy Interview here\ntoday.\nMl*. Ford declared that wiib the in\ncoining population there could be iv\nholding hack Canada, and dire tiling\nwould never happen on this con\nlinent because the basic stock of th'\npopulation was \"the best in the\nworld.\"\n\"The time is coming,\" be said\n\"when Canada will no longer import\ncoal from the Pnited States. The\nwhite coal age is coming rapidl*.\nKven the water falling over tbOf\nl pointing to the canal waste water\nshould be utilized for power dove]\nopment.\"\nWelland   Power   First   Step\nMr. Ford also expressed a stron\nopinion that the new Welland shi\n\u25a0canal would be the natural forerun\nner of the developnienl of the S\nLawrence, and Canada would not de\nrive the full advantage of the new\ncanal unless the St. I*iwrence water\nway was made passable for larger\ncraft,\n\"The price of wheat is fictitious.\"\nhe declared. \"If there waa a short\nage of wheat in the world the largi\naccumulation at Montreal would\nquickly be in transit. Gambling operations are the cause of the present price, not an actual world shortage.\"\nMr\n\u25a0rd was optimistic M tO tlu\nbusiness outlook nn tjie continent\nand staled that his firm would atlopl\nthe policy ler the winter, of steadv\nproduction. \"if the ' industrialist;-\nkeep sane they will do the same thing\noptimism just now is good  business'\nA man never reallneB how old-\nfashioned his clothes are until he\nbeholds   his   son's   glad   rags   oo   hit)\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNll'T-.;, Aug. 2*.--Hoceipts, l.'.fUl\nentile, l.'.O calves, llllll hogs and ljfl\nsheep,\nHteers\u2014Choice. $.. to $171; good,\nII    to    $1.7;..\nButcher heifers\u2014choice. $4 to |t.fi;\ngood, *;:  to ?.. i.i.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice, $2.75 to J3;\ngood,   tt.tt   lo  ll.fK\nHull.;\u2014OflOd,    $2    to    (2..10.\nOxen\u2014Oood,   $:j   to   lUfc\nStocker steers-Choice. |3 to J3.50;\ngood,    II   to    12 75.\nStecker heifers\u2014Choice, J2.25 to\n$2.75;   good.   $1.50   to   $2.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice. Il.ll to |_!\ngood.     $2.50     to    S3.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice,   $5   to   J5...0,\nHogs\u2014Select     bacon \u2014SO 90.\nLambs\u2014(Jood,   $S    to   $9.50.\nCalgary    Receipt h\nCALOAHV. Aug. \u00ab.\u2014Receipts today\nwen 259 cattle. 115 calves, 173 hogs\nand    no    sheep.\nCows\u2014Fair   tn   good.   $2.65   to   S3.\nCalves\u2014flood.   $4   to   $4.25.\nFeeder    steers-Fair,    Ulfl    to    S-'UO.\nSt.oekcr   steers\u2014Fair,    $2.75    to   $3.25.\nHogs\u2014Thick   smooth.   $9,25,\nDetectives Appeal\nto Commissioners\nFrom Chief's Ruling\nVANCOI'VFH. Am.. II.-\u2014 Detectives\nShirley and Km... appealed to the\npolice commission today against the\nfinding of the police chief which\nMainefl them for negligence in the\ndrug store holdup fiasco where two\nmen held as suspects were proven at\ntrial by two customers in the store\nat the time not to have been the\nbandits concerned. The chief ruled\nthat Ihe detectives should have known\nthe evidence possessed by these witnesses before making the arrests and\nbringing    the    ease    to    court.\nThe eommisaiozi left the matter\nover   until   affidavits   are   secured.\nThe White Indians brought from\nPanama to N>w York have been\nshipped to their discoverer'!* farm.\n\u25a0fcumt! bv the native, wild aatlatone.\nPRINCE'S PARTY USES CANADIAN CARS\nAt the opening of th\u00ab new dry dni-k ul Sonihiimptien. (!,'\u25a0 PrlDeM et White us,,.I glut <islie.w;i-l,ui]t ceirs to\ntransport himself an.l party. This is the first lime lli.el any hut I.,]';li.h ean have' M*H BMd by Hritish royalty\nin Kngland.\nAIRPLANES IN FLIGHT PICK UP MESSAGE BAGS\nKngllsh avieil.ii.s are BOV practi'itiK at Fan.l...ie.uyh a ni'W .'er.i.e: method of speeding up ri.ieimunieatlons,\ne,y picking up message !,_.,_ from the ground. The' \u201e>...\u25a0,,. pi  ..Pons an airplane. Jml after pleklni up a message  hag suspen.ieei   hetween  iwo  posts  ....  ihe.  ground.   Th\" bag wan picked i i   ;e  hook dangling from the\nairplane itself.\nBritish Engine Men\nMay Organize Wives\nis  conaiderlng  the   eatabltohmenl   of ployera,   an   understanding  hody   of\nan   eeeixiii..ry  _e,ciei\\   tier  the   irlvea  ., n   can   i>e'   e.f   tramandoua  as-\n;i.i(i daughteri of the member*. See. g| tance,\"   he'   aaid.\nCj.        \u25a0*         rotary Jamea Bromley maintain! thai \nanadian Lines aueh organlsal a have been ... ex-\nTHE Goodyear Selected Dealer\noffers you all the choice you could\npossibly want in tires. He represents\nthe complete Goodyear line. No matter what price you want to pay\u2014\nwhether you want the world-famous\nAll-Weather Cord with its long mileage and supreme road-grip, or the Wingfoot Cord second\nonly to the All-Weather in road-grip but lower in price,\nor if you want to invest still less in your car and use\nfabric tires\u2014the Goodyear Selected Dealer offers you\nGoodyear quality and Goodyear value in a complete range.\nHe is one of 2500 dealers selected from the 10,000 in Canada as best able to sell tires at a small margin of profit\nand yet give valuable service.   Get to know him.\nGoodyear means Good Wear\nGOOD\nttjs> tiLcr\nMADF to^lN   CANADA\nR\nI\nNELSON TRANSFER CO,, Limited\nIs the Goodyear Selected Dealer for Nelson and District\nCOR.   VERNON   AND  STANLEY  STREETS.        RHONE ....\nUNION GARAGE\nD. PRI0RE, Prop.\nTRAIL.   B.C.\nSelected    GooHyw_r    Dealer\nGOODYEAR TIRES ARE HANDLED IN SALMO AND DISTRICT BY ,\nM. C. Donaldson, Salmo, B. C.\n \t\n\t\n\t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING\/SUGUST 29,\" 19.3\n-fl\nTHE DAILY  NEWS\nPotrilehed erery mornlnf except Bun-\ntoy by The Nawe Publiahlng company.\nMalted.   Nelaon.   B.C.\nBuaineae lettera ahould be addreaeed\n\u25a0ad eaeekj) and money orders made\n\u2022arable ;to The Newa Publishing com-\nWeMf, limited, and In no case to individual  member,   of  the  etaff.\nAdrertliini rate carda and ABC\n-KatementB of circulation mailed or\nreqoeat, or may be eeen at the offtc\n*f eny adTertlalng agency reooRniic\nby the Canadian  Preaa association\nSUBSCRIPTION    RAT^S\nMy   mall   (country)   per   month     .}     \u00abi\nPer   year          _ m\n\u00aby   mall   (city)   per   year       13,0'\nOutalde   Canada,   per   month    ... 7\nPer  year          i &.\n\u2022MMrered.    per   week      \u2022*\nPer   year       .         i B n\n Payable   In    Advance\nAndlt    Bureau   of   Clreulati.>\nPREMIER'S DAUGHTER MAY WED EX-PREMIER'S SON\nFRIDAY,   AUGUST   H,   1021\nMacDonald's Attitude on\nDisarmament Is\nReassuring\nRamsay MacDonald's rieclai a-\ntion on disarmament is reassuring.\nGreat Britain has carried out\nits duties under the Washinp-\nton agreement, but it does not\nintend to go any further unless\nother nations will go with it.\nTo take any other position\nwould be lunacy, but it is nevertheless reassuring that Mr\nMacDonald should have scotched\nthe disquieting rumors which\nhad been current concerning\nhis government's attitude at\nGeneva._\t\nThe Cherry Crop a Winner\nIt is too early to make pre\ndictions concerning the probable market and prices for the\napple crop, but fruit grower\nof Kootenay have had the be-1\ncherry season for years.\nThe crop was somewhat\nsmaller than normal, but the\nprices which have been realized\nhave been exceptionally favorable.\nFinal returns are not yet\navailable, but both the aggregate sum involved in the cherry\ncrop and the average price per\ncrate will probably astonish\nthose who have not been in\nclose touch with shipping and\nmarketing conditions.\nKootenay's late cherry crop\nis usually a winner.\nThe Necessity for Logic\nG. K. Chesterton, that versatile writer on so many topics,\nbelieves that there is no good\nreason why people should not\nbe taught philosophy, or, at any\nrate, logic. If they read the\ndaily papers, he says, or hear\nthe ordinary political speech,\nthe thing that strikes one most\nis the perpetual breakdown of\nthe reasoning faculty, the confusion of ideas and the contradiction at the end of what was\nsaid in the beginning. There\nare the ordinary obvious fal-\nacies that everybody who has\nread anything about logic ought\nto see through. \"If,\" says Mr.\nChesterton, \"they can have a\nreligious and moral education,\nas they ought to have, they\nmight also have an intellectual\neducation that would enable\npeople to find out the truth of\nphilosophy and religion by-\nusing their brains.\"\nI      The Lighter Side\nReaders of The paily News con-\ntrlbute many of the beat items to\nthis COlmun. -lust sicn your name\nor Initials or nom-d<*-plumr, and\nBend In your brightest ideas.\u2014Editor,   Lighter   Side-\nOftee fright made* hair .stand on\nend; now It's curl papcr-i Of something, ij. \u2022___._., _4\nAlas! One tiling you __U_1\nBet vaccina trd aw hut ls the\nItch  to   pass   the  other car.\nWell, wc are progressing. Wo\nthink up morn impressive words\nto  call   alienists.\nAbout the only proof thai friends\nlove you for yourself alone is an\n\u25a0mnpty\n. r.r*a___i_;:_w\nss_&\nMISS   IS! IBEL   MacDONAI I*   AND   OLIVER   BALDWIN\nFARRINGTON ON\nRUTTIEDGE HEELS\nCentral Park Pen Now Is\nWithin Six Eggs of the\nSardis Group\nThe   University   of   British   Columbia\nIs    tin     owner    nf    the    pen    having    a\nlead    of     -r'    eggs    at    tii\"    *'Ild    ti    th\" I\n|t\u00bbd     VMft     la     th\u00ab-     HritMi     <\u25a0\u25a0.Inn.I.la  '\negg    laying    contest    heing    carried    ef j\nby    th.-    DemtolOB    experimental    farm I\nfit     Agassiz.       The     university'*     total j-\nIs      2103,      and      M.      II       ltuttl.dge     nf\nSardis.      win.      hav     heen      hading     up j\nlo    th..     pff-M\u2014I      NBa    s.enn.l,     with\nMM   eggs   tfl    thr   eredit    uf   his   pen, ,;\n('nmp-li'nrs     ereeplnK      up     mi      the \u25a0\nleaders     an-     Farrington     Brothers,     nl' j ing   --.nitre.\nContral   1'ark,   with   -0r._.  and   Ituinp  A        Twenty    yea\nKendall,   nf   Sp.'i'liiu,'.   With   WU. , thought    that\nftfjat\nof\nJpourg\n\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb \/.\nW.   Harlots.  M.D,\nRemoving the Cause\nRafktand   in   ueorduM  win,   the\nCopyright  iu-i.)\nII    kU   MM    interesting   to   follow\nli,.   Mad   i.f   11 \u25a0 \u2022    physicians   and   !'\u25a0\u25a0-\n(\u25a0arch  men  wine  lea.e  I..'.-n   llive'ielii-ie',-\n11,1     We'e'Kly\n1,1     le.\n.late\nTho  aiinoun'-emont   is   Htpoc\nei.ie'Doiiai.i, etenu Brlttafe i\"\nnr,e minister.\numl   Oliver  ISul.lu,\ntahbol   \"I\n.el    Slanley\n\u25a0 ial.1.    ,l:i\nllaldwin,    1,\nnl\"    Kani.ay\nonseivatlvo\nEfficient\n)useke\nfiuns A-KlpKmo\u00bb\u00bb\nMAKIXQ TOUR own TOIIATO I'.vrsri\n11,1      e\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nPineapple   I.oflovers\nCopal\nOriddlo CakM,   Maple  Hvrup\nr.eff.v Tee.lSt\nLuncheon\nSoup Iron  Leftover Boaeu\nWkola   Wheal    Bread\nCocoa Celery Preserves\nDinn pr\nKamtrari  Meal   Balla\nHailed  I'ntiiii.,.. Carrote\nQtWn   Pi 'iii.. \u25a0!\u25a0-, .-in, en   Bated\nCoftee -Hewed   Prunea\ndry    mustard    and    one-halt    cup    of\nhorourad sh   nmi.   Ball  this   ulxtara\ntor Ma leener. Ihe.n add In l( ent\n,|,i;u\\ eel' vinegar anel lei similar fee\n\"lie' hour longer. Turn inle. hot,\nIterl ize.l     Lollies     (that     is,     hottles\nwhieh  have  i n   i...lie.i.  empty,  la\n.lea.    water    fo?    1\".    minutes)    and\n...iii   al    oti.-e,    ,1 i i>|,i ]>_-:    lln ko.l\nnnd, oi the bottle int.. hoi, melted\nparaffin,,   wax   I.,   _.,,.,1   airtight   over\nlh.\nihioned    Tomato    Catsup\u2014\nquarte ot r'.pe toraatoee nn\npress  Ihrotigli ee   sieve.   He-\nBY LENOXX\nW\n;it   house\nin\nill\nof\nl\\v,\ndeed, thera are many woman who\nhold that tha varieties bottled by tha\nmanufacturers are mure tli leetablc\nthan any they can pal up al home,\nVet whan one has h surptua of t.i-\nmatops in th\u00ab sarden it is only thrifty\nto  um  snini'  ol   i bam   for  thla   pur-\nl.nse.      The    fallowing    P_   tpflfl    Will    be\nPound  | i;\nSouthern Tomato Cat gup \u25a0 Wash one\n,!,._   then   remove   bag   of   iplcee,   bottle,\nIn     i  w*l  te above dire,led.\nu ;,,, Teinaln    C;,t--ii|i-     I'.uil   one    perk    nl\nrip.- tnrnaUM's in salted water Ml] (it,\ni kin beg ii to loosen, then drain and\nriih   nil   skins   \\\\ il h   th.'   linger.*..   Cut\n(he vegetable email and  put  it   bach\nin\") the preserving kettle with nil.\npllll Ol Vluegar small and pul il\nnrie pint nl vin-'gitr, one-third ru|\nbach  Into the  preaervlni kettle win\nnl    iMUt,    nii.'-luill'   BUp   nl'   sugar   an<\none  tubleepoon   each  ot  nitty  salt\nW*   nI   rlP\u00ab   tonv.tues   mi'l   sine   Ih.'lli    |ir(lU|1    ,sli,.,.     ,. ,,\u201e., \u201e,,,\u201e    .,,.,,    who))\ninto    the   preservini;    kettle;    let    mrne . ,;|(IV(,,;    t](.(]     jt|     ;|     !);1(r      TJt|j,     [lir01\nto \u25a0   boll   \u25a0\u25a0ii.d   simmer  till   'nil   \u25a0 inui^h    ),olll.s     remnve    spi\ntn be preaaed through fl  wide-meahed   bottlaa and  s-\".)   it\n\u25a0leve.     (Many   hou.tewlvea   use   one .     Tomorrow\u2014 Suoce\nnf the lu'.-ivy   wlr.e  uinl*  Rtralnera  for   ^\nthis purpose.)    Now pul   the at rained\ntomato hack Into tha preaervlng kettle\nand   add   to   it   .six   raw,   p.. h'd   onions\nwhich have heen put through the Eood\n\"hopper, (our large red aweet peppers which have also heen put thrniieli\nthe gr uder isecks previously\nremoved!, two pounds of (,'ra nulale.l\nsupar. one-thinl cup of salt, one\ntablespoon each of ground mace and\nground    cloves.   ci*_hl    tablespoons   of\nfill    li-.i\na 1 inquiries atfdreeaed to Miss Kirk*\nnUC in charce of \"l.fticient Hcuse-\nket-[itng\" depart meal will b\u00ab answered\nIn these column.s in their turn Thla\nreOlllrea considerable time, hnwevr,\nowlag    to    the    great    number    received.\n|a\u00ab if a peraonal or nuteker reply la\nlesired.   a   atamped   and   fielf-address.-.l\n\u2022nviuopa   must   be   ancdaaad   vita   the\nquoi'tion. Be sure lo use your full\nname, -street number, nnd the name of\nyour   city    and    provine.-\nTIIE  EDITOR\nthat   it   doesn't   l\nconvict on    from\nIt would ba i\nantfl to move m\npaying for i tto\n. m   able    tfl   keep   :,     the    main\nslipping    put, the   flow\n>\u2014 ' power.\nIce custom for ten- |\n1a.sk.    as    lhe\nll    water    will\n<)*\u25a0: t|   and   Adress\nAnconics\nOrant,  W.   m.  Mmonda\nfallen,    V    lv,    U'hmmnek    .\nWhite Loffhornt\nBolivar    W,I*    l'-irm.    Clo-\nverdule     \t\nHrnwn. It.. I'itt Meadows .\nI \u00bboin.     Kxpeninenul    l-'arni.\nlnvt'limre   \t\nparrtagtoa   Brothere,  Central   Park   \t\nArn.iuhl.   .1,   Sardii\t\nBruce,   W.I),   I'itt  Meadows\nKluwcrdew,   10,   S,,   ('oghlan\nt'rahanie,    It     11.     Lanpley\nI'rairle   ... '\t\nHoaaa -_ Twamluw, t'ogh-\nW'eek     Total\nilways   due   lo   t.i.i\nIrinklng water.\nThla  had   been  tl\nage these men\nenlai*g\"ment waa\nmuch lime in  the\npro*\nill;\n.1\nmanufacture of theae  poisons by ra*]\nmoving the cause.\nTSitfe.t0--.tff on a Great IndugUry]}\nTOPSAIL\nPREVIOUS\nESTIMATES\nPAYROLL     CF     FOREST     INDUSTRIES   IN   1923  NOW   SHOWN\nTO    BE   $60,000,000\nIan     . .\nKennedy\nBrothers\nNe\nKershaw.   .1    H .    Ham y    .\nMains,     Alex.     New     West\nminster    \t\n_7\nMetcalfe. C, P., Ilammnnd 11\nMufford.    .1.     H-,    &    Sons,\nMilner            II\nUaine'a       Poultry       Farm,\n.Surrey      tl\nReadey.   .I.W.,   I'hilliwiiek   . tt\nRump   .*_    Sendall,   Sperling 17\nFtilttledRe. M. fl., Sardis . UN\nSchofield.      A.      W.,      \\ew\nWestminster       11\nSimpson & M.dhuiii, Haney M\nToz.r, W. i I'\". M., Milner IS\nrniversity    of    Hritish   C.i-\nlutnbia.   \\'anenuver     M\nrnsworth,   A..  Sardla     M\nWobHtcr.  .1. Th   Robson   . . . Hi\nWhite   Wyandottcs\nHridge.   T..   Vancouver     12\nDam,   bperlneataJ   hno,\nSumn\nCurrie,\nrl.'.n\nis\nDam.   BhtparlmentaJ   i-'ann,\nSumnicrlati'l  II I\nSingle  Comb   Rhode  Island   Rods\nRussell,   I>,   .luhilee      II l\nSweat man,   If.,   Agassis*.   ... .1 !\nBnued   Rocks\nHcAlplne  D.,  Createn     4_ I\nWilkinson.   H\u201e   Jubilee   .... Ill 1\n1 )oni.     I..'_periinent;il    I'.irm,\nAgassi?.      || l\nDam,   Bsperlmental   Parra<\nAgassiz  H 1\n.1100\nopm-\nlt   was\nffgg ' ilisi overi-.l   later   thai    iodine   '\"-terna!-\nly.    and    biter.    In email\/,    seemed    to\niciluee   the   s::a-   of   the   sWellittC.\nl-'i mn ibis ni-->v; the idea that the\nDating of sea lisli would bfl tif benefit,\nan.l it w.is sh.iwn that people who\npiaetieally |j\\e.l mi sea loud were\nfree frum gnitri'.\nThen ii was noticed that aoma pei.\n]ile wilh | gOltrOUfl euilditloii had\nother eoiulitioi.s of the i'ody tlmt\nwere not normal, pari ieiilariy the\nheart. The hear! was betilini; many\nextra beats tn the minute uud was\nsometime.. irregular. Accompafctnt\ntlii.'i i\\;i\" | tremor o: the muscles, and\na   bulKbig  o|   tbe eyes.\nTlien. for \u25a0 while. goHM -HM\nblamed f\u00abr the condition Of the\nheart, because the thyroid gJaOfll it g\nregulator of different function'*, uf Un\nbody. The removal of a par; of the\n(\u25a0land helped many ei:.es. Hut re-\nsear.'h men have gone evf:i furtlmr\nnow,   and   stale   that   j:ist   as   pol-*<illuUS\nauhftaocafl Qi_-auCastured In the terth.\ntonsils, and mire are causing Joint\nan.l muscular iti.-turhanoe.s, so also\ndo 'hey affect tbe gland* and other\norgans ol the body, and that when\nlliis poisniimis suhslaiu !fl gatl into\ntbe cir.'iilali.m it intet'leres Willi the\nseiieiinii ,,f ;he thyroid and changes\n(he   structure.\n, That is, that Hie same Poisonous\ncondition that affects the hear, affects the thyroid  gland  alao.\nIt is tor this reason that often !\nwh'Te tha physician was doing every-!\nthittg lo help the general condition I\nOf   a    goi-TOQI    patient    with    a    hadly\nacting heart, that the rothoval of\nhad   teeth   ami   tmisiis.   the  clearing\nup nf IO|]M chronic nose or ear condition, or H sluggish liver and intestine, lie has bad the great satisfaction of getting a eoiuplele .lire\nof   the   MaUi   and   goitre   condition.\nlt is a great idea to get all Midi\npoisons .ml Of tha system by ha\",hs,\nperspiratiun. and Hie cleatisiu;; ol the\nintestine.\nit is a greater idea to prevent thfl\nSurprising  Vast ness of  Amount   Dem\no nitrates     A11 -1mportance\ntjf Lumbering\nrarawT\n1  \u00bb  shi.iv    tl\nlt;i>l\n1761\nHIS\nis^l\n048-I\n\/'\nim.'k   altogether   Individual   In   ofleel\nand V:'t within Hie requirements laid\ndown    by     faslnon.     is     illustrated     in\nthfl   present   sketch,     n   la   no   men\nnor    less    Hi.-a    an    ordinary     chemise\nfoundation treated wiiii aquaria ol\nnarrow alaahad panels which reveal\ni- contrasting color in the slip underneath But thfl lr.uk is straight, it\nis    .'lender:    find     lor    all     thfl    patiflfll\nwort 'vi.icii th_ Jeelgti really demandi\nii..     ultima.-    affect    la    m rertheleaa\noffk'lat invcsti*;ationH\nhow that the industrial payfoll\nof tha Forest Industrie.1, of llrltlah\nColumhia for H'_;t waa far greater\nthan  the original estimate.\nIt has now been ascertained that\nthe sum actually paid out in wages\nlast year to the workers In the woods.\nIn lumber manufacturing and reman*\nuTa-t in .nr. plants ami in pulp and\npaper mills exceeded the truly incredible   turn   of   $56,301,0 0.\nIt must be remembered that thla\nfigure docs not include wage payments to of lice and administrative\n\u25a0taffa and to persons employed in\"\nithe sah1 and distribution of the finished article, nor does it take Into\naccount the t ransportalion forces exclusively engaged In handling the\nproduct   mi   land   and   water.\n$60,C30,00O Disbursed\nWhen nil these are Included il Is\nsafe to assert that in till the amount\nof money disbursed iii wages by the\nforest iml ust r ies of B.C. approximated   H.   100,000,000.\nI\u00a3*rery day fresh evidence comes to\nhand demonstrating tbe extent to\nwhich   Hritish   Columbia   la   dependent\n\u25a0 n   the   unhampered   working   of   its\ngrant   hasie   industry.\nBorne idea nf the magnitude of the\nlumbermen's payroll may be gathered\nfrom thfl fact that in IMS il was\nmore than three limes as great as\nthe total   revenue of the  province.\nThi;< scries of articles communicated by the Timber Industries   Council   of   British\nColumbia.\nBy placing q silver dollar iii lln\npay envelope of employees at Washington, tbe government began to pm\nin circulation again Ibe old-fash-\nioiie.l -'cart wheel\" silver dollar.\nThere are about 30,(100,(10(1 available   for  ininuHi:ate  circulation.\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. -Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial   John Burns & Son\nrh\nllwy li.\nIf Is \\f-iy rclivshii,!; :,. (lines\nI,, fill,, rhilllrf.il I, lu, ,_,>!)'. BBTe,\nnvt  llirlr iwirenls   in   |n,l\u00bbM<\\\nFr\nilliili, \u2022   PI\nilun.\nnpli:\nMon\nA \"center of culture:;\" is ;. plan,\nwhere one can .lo I lie necessary\nlawn   mowing   with   the   scissors.\n.la\nl.l\nII\nTen Years Ago\n'i n.\nluni.i\nin\n im\n' which\nTouring   is   a   pleasn\na.   ilil.'li   haiuly   when\nof   these   houses   on   wl\nWhen ll\"' hie Loss k,,''l's look'nE\ntt his watch, he mayhe worrying\nabout outpul. hul il is more probable he  is  IhinkiiiE about golf.\nWo still haye people who \"can't\nafford it.\" but Ihat doesn't seem to\ncramp   their   style.\nThere it little difference. In cheap\nhotele you listen to the \u00bboup and\nIn the ewell ones you listen to the\ncelery.\nThe objection to an open mind is\nFriends\nthink you\nMike.\"\nlocked\n.'    .pieer\naid lake\n.,   if   there   I.\neeii   iii.e.t   on.\neels,\npeople     win\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News. A..p.. :'.\nT. II. Kaiikiii, pTMld.nl\ntra.ks and I , I.. ,,\u25a0 eeeiiueal, lu\nmonkey, anel a .lap.eoo\nlie Will eilllliil Ilie monkey, an\nthe leull.l,If that was blown up II.\nother   day,   al   the   fall    fair.\n,f\n'ei   lhal\nll   th.   valuable,   on   exhibits\nr.   being   made   l.y   the   gov-\n\" I ci'iimciil  at   llee  Vancouver,   l'anama-\nr.lll.) j Pacific   uml   oilier   large   exhibitions,\nhave   been   shipped   to\n. From Th, Daily News, Aug   1\nlb'.   .1.   T.    Ferguson,   superintend-   The\ncat   of   bo,ue   missions   ot   the   Pres-    Vane leaver,\nbytcri.',!)     cbuicb.     was    in     Nelson I \u2022    \u2022     *\npail   of   Ibis   week. Arrowhead,     flalcna      Bay.     t'rnn-\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022 j berry   creek.   P.g   creek,   Iteaton   anil\nIGdWard Peters, the local mining ('uuiaplix are the scenes of hush\n'nan. has colic led lf,fM, pounds: fires, but no damage has been done\nof oi'e samplis (rem milling by any of Ihe blazes as yet, it is\nin \"i.e.riles    in     Lh.    ilb.li'ie i    around \\ reported.\nof      loose,\nsi reels     a I j\nThere    are    a     number\nhorses     lhal      loam     the\nnight,   making a ilistntban\nting    on    the    sidewalks.\nthe.     poillldkccper?\nA special liic .hug ol Ibe odd\nI'Vlleiws ami leelii's ,e.lo, in, n,| n,\njoin the Pel,,.kali li.elg.'. wh'ch is In\nlie lonncil ill t ins, ,'ily .Vedm.silay.\nwill be held ill the Odd Fellows'\nhall    tonight.\n\u2022     I     .\nlinpl'ovciii.eiils have been commenced to increase Ihe capacity of\nthe W'eBt Kootenay Power & Light\nfalls,   .'baling   the   channel   will   be\nNTER\nIS COMING\nly  Install   that   Ilcat-\nii   been   thinking about\nNow   is   lhe   Ila\nhiK plant pan ba.\npo   1-niK.\nWa have the FAMOUS ROUND OAK\nI'll).' nnd I'liifloss Kuiiuu*i.'a, all Hiaos;\nCtiaiaiitecd to save rnont fuii and give\nKt*r;itest _-.itiafactlon.\nLot   Ua  Figurt   With   You   Now\nNelson Hardware Co.\nNELSON\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nB.C.\nA clear, level-\nheaded track to\nhealth is Kellogg's\ncrispy corn flakes.\nIm   It  \u2022atufifl*       Q        JTh.iB       Q 1    Aiwa\nSI -nd   tut-      (UllO aunny-      Ol Cl   r*at-y\ntaint, yet does not brown flakes are\ntax the stomach or crisp and < run. hy,\ndigestive tract like with   a   full,   deli-\n\u2022 heavy meal. ciout flavor.\ny\u00ab\nuse. No cooking.\nNo sticky dishes to\nwash. Just pour\nout and kerve.\ntftlfafP\nCORN FLAKES\nOvaie'fraah always\n \t\nqa%\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\nPage Five\n, \u00bb\u25a0' _**\ntin\nlie\nStout Shoes\nfor School Days\nSpeciali for School Opening\naw*' Stntt All-Leather School  Boots,  1 to\nSame in YoiltVte , ,, .    ,n\n...      , ' ' 1. to 13 \t\nMisses  Sizes, 11 to 2 ....\n?3.55\n$3.35\n$2.85, $3.50 and $4.50\n'.\u00ab\nR. ANDREWT <*- Co-\nEIGHT RAIDS\nPULLED OFF IN\nProvincial Dry Squad and\nLocal Police Surprise Two\nOffenders\nItOS!'-T-ANI>, BC, Aug. 28.\u2014Tuesday\nniRbt It war* kHFned Ihat Rossland\nhud ont orta inui two m*mber\u00ab ot the\nprovincial liquor police \u00bbquad since\nSunday. The fact first became known\nwhen, at about 7 o'clock, eight hotel\nand restaurants were, raided\nseiirchefl hy the provincial\naided   by  tbe   city  police.\nOn    only     iwo     premises\nilii flinging   evidence   found\nand\nofficers,\nII \u2014\nto\t\nde***-\nM\nEvercady Flashlights\nand Batteries\nNew Stock Just to Hand.\nNickelled Flashlights, 2 and I\nFiber    Flashlights,    2   and   3\nFlat  Batteries,  ,'i  Sizes.\nUnits, 935, Units B60.\nBulbs, 2.5 and  2.8.\nCell.\nCell.\nAsk to see the New Focusing Searchlight, 500-ft. range.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\nPHONE  497\nP.O.   BOX   414\nLook  for the   Red  Hardware  Store\nFrank Nac-\nflned for a hreacli\nof the act last week, and Nick La-\nface, appeared before H. W. tirlgor\nvesterd.iy morning charged with Infractions of the act. Both pleaded\nguilty, and each contributed J110 iu\nthe citv treasury. This makes up\ni total af \u25a0*\u00ab\u25a0><> collected from liquor\nfines in Kossland this month.\nThree Men *;\u00bbturallsed\nJudge .1. H. Brown 9? tjrand Porks\nheard several ftpplfeifttloM in county\ncuirl rhanihers ye\"tenlay morning.\nThr?*' apnllcationa fnr natural) gat inn\nwere made, and all were thfxrowt-\nThe applicunts were i-dwln Milo Utiles\nof Train American: .lohnn)^lb^ ,f,7||tn\nof Sheep < reek. ..top, Merman.\nNipkow o.r.1011 of lh\" Kootenay .Tire\n. ..\u25a0Pi.,'. Manufacturing com puny vs.\nHlnenuin. C. p. R. ptncott. acting for\nhe judgment dehtor. Mr. Hleeman\npplie.l for the (jayment out of court\nii his client of ver tain moneys paid\nii m a remilr of gfirnlflhee proceed-\ntug?- Donahl Maellonnld of Trail iin-\nl.eared for the phiintiff This appti-\ncaf I'm    war.   adjourned    by    Ilie   consent\net   both   pante.\n* The nmlter of the fttm ft trial\naf the action of Itobert JjIoviI and\nMrs K Lloyd again;1! tbe I'jiy of\nti.n'-ninmt    was   ai___n    \u25a0MktM    10   bv\nrr.-fir   and    Mr.    Pin\ns\n\u00a9\noctal nappenmgs\nIn Nelson\n\u00a9\nTula oolumn la being conducted\nfy Mrs. M. J. Vlfftieux. Alt aewa\nof \u00ab social nature, Including recap*\nlone, private entefulnments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nfare.   Vigneux.\nMr\nand     Mr\nJ.\natreet. returned\nfrom a vacation\nnagan    district.\nW. dlK'sctay\nspent    in    I\nSih\nh:\nber\n...,l\nrgi\nBUILD BRIDGE IN\nHAMILL CANYON\nHauling Road Being Made\nto St Patrick; New Strike\non Glacier Creek\n2S, \u2014 Mr,\nNn    well\nthrough\nahout i\n.    hav    ,i\nPatrick's\nAK'H-NTA, B.C., Aug.\nHr.K'hier is (retting ill on ft\nwith bis hriiige-l.iiilding\nI In mill t'reek canyon. In\nHlOlrtb's time he expects t\ngood hauling road to the St\nmine.\nThe   Lavinn   is going  full  swing.\nMr Hmitb has located | claim of\nrieh ore .m (Jiaeier creek. Me IK*\npeer-'    to    lie    shipping    soon.\nMrs. Balfour, with her son and\ndaughter, returned to Trail after |\ntwo weeks' visit at Mr. and Mrs.\nColeman's.\nJohnnie ihilas returned from Hamill\ncreek  .Saturday  with  !!5   trout.\nWilliam Sawszuk took a motor trip\nto    Kaslo. ,.\nJohn Galas Sr. and Charles Beguin\nare helping with construction work\non   the   Hum ill   creek   h ridges.\nMpi\nbottl,\nwith\nMi si\nVnlle\\\nSt. .1\n.erin.\nVallf-i\nW.     A.     W'Hrd\nProcter,    is   In    Hi\nfriends\n1 Sinionn.. Bourg.\n\\ who has been\nuseph's     academy\nity\nlillinlljitf' \u25a0\u25a0 fn I WITT\nw_i_*i_nrT yesterday.\nif   Creseent\nstudent   at\nthe    past\nthe   Kettle\nr   normal.\nT.a y\nthe     home\nRobinson.\nAnnie     Campbell     of\nsp.-nt    v .-si.fiii. \u25a0.     in    low n    an.l    I raves\nthis   afternoon   for   her   home.\nMrs Bruce-Warden, with her daughters. Miss Helen and Betty, of Trail.\nwho have heen summering al Creseent BR7, were city visitor- yesterday (ind left later in the day\nfor    their    home.\nMr. and 1\nihirard are In ll\ntaken up residenc\nstreet    for    lhe    win'\nJ.    T-.    Tho\n210     Kobson\nMrs.\nisltor\nMiliman\nyestenhu\nIpM Hnchaiiati of Trail, who,\ni' fi. m 11 y. is summering in\n\u2022ns cottage at Willow Point,\n\u25a0terdaj*   shopping   in   town.\nMrs,    Harry   Scnti-L,\nof   Q11\nslier   yesterday.\nPeiey     Knight     of     Winnipeg     spent\nyesterday    with    friends   in    Nelson.\nhas    heen    In    Trail\nI turned\nfor     the     past     month,     I\nDoyle. superintendent of the\nNorthern railway with head's    in    Spokane,    spent    last    rve-\nMr.\nand     Mrs.\nvho\notor.\nRobert    Olh\nin\nthe\nWednesday, returned last evening\ncoin pa 11 ieil by Mrs. Alt'rod Clarke of\nTrail and her youngest daughter,\nMiss Betty Clarke, who have heen\nvisiting with Mr and Mrs, Ceorge\nClnrke. Cedar street, for lhe past few-\ndays,\n\u2022 * \u2022\nMiss Myrtle (Irani of Procter arrived in the city hy the morning\nboat yesterday and leaves this morning by the Oreat Northern for San\nmtKUeo, where she will reside in\nfuture. In Spokane she will Join her\nfather, who will go to California\nwith   ber,\nMrs. C B, Wilson, Ward street,\nreturned Wednesday evening hy the\nArrow bikes front I few weeks spent\nat   .Jasper   Park   and   Revelstoke.\nH. Perkins of Kasl\nspending bis vacatlot\nMta there, arrived in today and will leave this n\nmotor for Ymir. where h\nsume    bis    duties   as   sehool\nMaj      Turner     Lee\n\u25a0\u25a0pent   Wednesday   ln   t\nwho   has\nvith    his\nbee I\nester-\nig  by\nnf     Bonnington\nMiss\na     guest\nMrs.    M\nMuriel    Ai\nat     the\nStevens.\nhome    of\nJosephin.\nYmir    i\nMr.    an\nstreet.\nsir   j.   Bardie\nEardtey-Wllmnt,\ncity    visitors,\nand\nCreel\nFresh Mustard\nMixed in aMomenf\nSharpens the appetite. Neutral^8\nthe richness of fat foods and\nmakes  them easier to\ndigest.\nbulitntastbeColmn's\nAwakens\nOLD\nMemories\n\u00bbwith its world\nfamous quality\nOLD CROW\nBOURBON WHISKEY\nBOTTLED UNDER FEDERAL\nGOVERNMENT SUPERVISION\n\u25a0KS\nThis .BdyerfcisemeAt ia not published or displayed  by the\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the 'Government of B.C.\nSHIP CORD WOOD\nAT PERRY SIDING\nPERRY'S SIDING, RC, Aug. 2..\u2014\nJ, Harrison shipped a carload of\nrordw.tod last ween, and two earn of\nties   will   shortly  be  sent   out.\nMiss V, <' u m m i n g s and tbe little\nMisses ..oncaster, of Nelson, who have\nbeen visiting here for two weeks,\nreturned home Kridav. when Mr. Don-\ni-aster 'motored   out   for   them.\nMr. I la i risen, who arrived from the\nold country a short time ago. has\nmoved his- family to Nelson, where\nhe    will    reside.\nK. Worlh's mother has arrived from\nFernle and will reside with him on\nhis ranch here. Mr. Worth tl a\nrecent   arrival   in   Perry's.\nAnglican Service\nat Willow Point\nAug.    28 \u2014\nArchdeacon\nWILLOW POINT, B,(\n.Sunday morning Ven\nP. H Craliam held service in St.\nAndrew's-hy-t he-Lake. Mr, Reynolds,\nprincipal of Procter school presided\nat    the   organ.\nMrs. c. V. flugnon of Nelson is\nspending   a   holiday   here.\nMiss Winnie Thompson and Miss\nBeatrice West gave a bonfire pn.rty\nPriday   evening.\nMr. and Mrs. Joe Thompson have\nas their guests Mr, and Mrs. J. P\nThompson of Oerrard, who are going\nto   make   their  home   tn   Nelson.\nSunday School\nat Appledale\nHas Its Picnic\nAPPLEDAI-K. B.C., Aug. 28.\u2014The\nAppledale Pnlon Sunday school held\nits annual picnic last week. (James,\nraces and other sports filled the\nafternoon, and I delightful camp tea\nwas served, after which the party\ndlsjMTsed.\nMiss Wynne entertained a few\nguests at her home on n. rerent\n\"Ven ing. The party was given in\nhonor af Miss t'anl nnd W. Pant,\nwho were home on a short visit.\nThe evening was spent in games.\nmusic and songs, and a dainty supper\nwas served. Those present were Miss\nPowell. Miss Cant. Mrs, Crawford,\nMr. and Mrs, R, f. Good, Mr. uml\nMrs. P. W. Knpccki, ,f. H. Good.\nA. Chapman. W. Brandon and the\nhost and hostess, P. Wynne and Miss\nWynne.\nkaslo'notes\nKASLO.     B.C.    Aug.\nMrs.    A,    J,    Klder    and\ninlh*-r.\nMr-*.\nare    -,-ue\nt|,\u2014-Mr.     and\ntwo    children,\nif   Mr.    Klder's\nCall In Qf Vancouver, who\nhas Man the guest of her mother,\nMrs.   I.hler,   has   returned   to   the   coast,\nMr. and Mrs. VV. H. Burgess MM\nKelson visitors guests of Dr. and\nMrs    W.   B.   Steed.\nO. O. Buchanan of New Westminster was \u25a0' renewing acquaintances In\ntlio    imty    last    week.\nMiss Muft'ord nf Milner ls the guest\nOf   M_M   Pdith   Oreen,\nMr, ' flml Mrs. P. T. Abey and\nMiss Olive Abey returned to Kaslo\nafter several weeks' holidays spent\nin    Spokane,   Seattle   and   other   points.\nGerhard nnd Stanley l.udkln of\nSandon were visitors for a few davs\nwith    Mrs    Pat ter.sr.ii. -\nMr. and Mrs. C. Harrison and family, of Naluisp, have taken up residence   In   Kaslo.\nMiss Nookie Hamilton, daughter of\nDr. Hamilton of Revelstoke, is the\nhouse Kuest of Dp, and Mrs. Douglas\nBarclay.\nRossland Charmers\nGive Parting Dance\nROSSLANI..    B.C.,    Aug     28 .-An   enjoyable   dance  was  given   in   the   Velvets\nhall    Tuesday    night     bf'   the    Missed\nAdelaide   Atkinson   and   Molly   John-\nMrs.   S.\nesterday\nMerryfleld   ot   Proete\nin    town.\nLome     A       Gamphol!     of\nleft    yesterday   morning   for   his\nafter   spending   Wednesday   in   th.\nRossland\nme\nty.\nMrs.   J.   R    Stewart.\nis    her    guest    Mrs    .\n\u25a0hildren,   of   Boswell.\nHall   street,  ha*\nCoupl-ind    anc\nMiss R Clcndennlng, Falrview, lef\nlast evening by thr Kettle Valle:\nfdr Victoria, where she will ente\nnormal    school,\n*    \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Rodell of Vic\ntnrta. who with Miss Jean Robinson\nhave been touring California for th>\npast year, arrived In the eftv Wednes\nday evening by the Kettle Vallev oi\ntheir    way    to    Belford.    where    they\n1'-   \u25a0V-.rgy'ui.-i.   PI).,   of   Cal-\nlerly    pastor    ..I'    St      Paul's\n'reshyterian   chureh   fata,   was   \u25a0   city\n.\u25a0fsitor    yesterday.\nPDH Id Painter Newman nf Seattle,\n\u25a0vho has heen the guest of his\noiisln. L. K Larsen. Carbonate street,\nor the past couple of weeks, left\n\u00bb\u25a0 the Great Northern yesterday morn-\nhome.\nIf   to\nMrs. T J.\nf the late\npal pioneer\nIng    a     few\nt   the  home\nI'VHheringhain\nMrs.     Then\nCity    was   a\nMrs.   J,   B.   Ci\nDuncan of Waneta. wife\nf'aptafn Duncan and a\nof this city, is speml-\ndays in town, a guest\nof   Mr.   and   Mrs,    William\n..[(\u25a0Wish\n\u25a0    visitor\nfew\nDon;,!\nho\ndays\nafternoon    bos\nyesterday    for\nMr.\nSuinle\n.Mrs,   W\nfter    spending    the    past     n-lx\n.vith     her    i*trciiis.     Mr.     and\nPitts.   Third   street,    Pairview.\nMr.   and   Mrs,\nwho    have    beer\non    ihe    north\nhome   hy   motor\nP.   L.   Tyson   of  Trail,\nspending    the    season\nshore.    left    for    their\nyesterday.\nJ.\nPay\nHenderson-Clelland    n\n\u2022pent   yesterdav   in   Ni\nawford\nMr,\nhave\nand Mrs. Simpson of Trail, who\nbeen at Procter for the past\nmonth, returned to town hv th.. morning boar yesterday aad left for their\nhome    in    the    afternoon.\nMiss Adeline Choquette, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs J ft. Cho.|iiette.\nStanley street left last evening bv\nthe Kettle Vallev to attend normal\n\u00abchool    in    Victoria.\nMrs. ft A. Wilbur of Willow Point\nand her two small sons, expect to\nleave Monday by the Crow hoat for\nLcwiston, Me., where they will ttpend\nthe next six or eighl months with\nMrs. Wilbur's parents, Mr. and Mrs\nP.    H.    Reynolds.\nMr.\nview.\nnnd    Mrs,\nhave   returned   tt\nMr. and Mrs, H.\nRohson street, have\nMr. Townsend's sister,\nof Vancouver, who int.\nlatter part of Ihe wet\nKngland.\nJ,   C,   Kennedy,   Fair\nbeen   on   un   extended\n(High     the     Okanagan\nthe   city.\nR, Townsend,\nns their guest\nMrs,   A.   Turner\nMrs.    It     A\ni    s [\u00bbend ing\nStimmel of Trail, wl\n\u2022ho summer at Wtllo\n\u25a0ity   shopper   yesterday.\nJ. M McKenzie has retun\nthis city after a two weeks\nspent   at   Halcyon   Hot   Springs\nMrs,   S,\nCal..    is\nNoseworthy   of   Santa   Maria\nhe    guest    of    her    uncle,    B\nstone. This was In the najure of |\na farewell party, as both these popular young ladies are leaving Rossland.\nMiss Johnstone left last night for\nKimberley, where she has taken a\ntlositlon as teacher, while Miss Atkinson leaves hi a few days for Vancouver to enter the t'niversitv of\nBritish   Columbia.\nSTAIN ROOF OF\nPERRY'S SCHOOL\nPERRY'S HIDING. B.C., Aug. 28.\u2014\nThe school trustees are having a\nttflU of paint put on the roof of\nthe   school.\nJ. and Mrs. Hlghfield of Lethbridge\nare having a two weeks' holiday on\ntheir ranch here Mr. Hlghfield is\ncharmed with the surroundings of\nPerry's and expects to move here\npermanently   In   the   near   future.\nMiss _t CummiiiKs, who has been\n(visiting Miss P. Wood tu Prie for\n.t   week   or   so.   has   returned   home.\nver. Mrs. talBWj nf Spokane: Miss\nAnnie Norman. Miss Norma MoOreeor.\nMiss Spies. Miss It Olegerfi'h, Miss\nWilson, Miss Plaine Calvert. Miss\nKdlth Green, Miss Clarice Calvert.\nMiss Mufford of Milner. Miss Lily\nBurkett. Miss Helen Burkett and Miss\nH.    Burkett.\nKASLO SUMMER\nVISITORS FUT\nRepair Log Chute\nat Argenta Wharf\nARCKNTA.   B.C.,   Aug.  fl.\u2014The   old\nchute at Argenla wharf is being repaired by Mr. Johnson. He expects\nin   a   few   days   to   put   down   .100   cedar\npoles.\nMr.\npaid\nstruct\nMr.\nColeman   am\nMr.    Brochii\nfamily\nd    Mrs.\nvisit    l.\ncant p.\nid Mrs. Severns and daughter, ot Cooper Creek, paid ;i visit\nto Argenta accompanied by Mrs. Ford-\nhani    and    daughter.\nMr. and Mrs. VV L Smith were\nover the Lardeau picking elderberries,\nreturning   wilh   ahout   200   pounds.\nCanadian National\nEarnings Decrease,\nBoth Gross and Net\nMONTRKAL, Aug. 28, \u2014 Operating\nresults for the month of July. III-!,\nissued today by the Canadian National railways, show a decrease in\ngross earnings of JS..7,7;t8, or 4 per\ncent, as compared with July, 1923.\noperating expenses increased |8I,II1.\nThe resultant decrease in net earnings    wet    $893,539.\nThe aggregate gross earnings for\nthe seven months show a falllng-off\nof $l,S89.731 aH compared witr the\nsame period in 1923. Operating expenses during the seven months were\nreduced |V.fl..4.26f.. Net earnings for\nthe period were $...214.fi\u00abl, an Improvement of $14 4.5.1. over the, first\nseven   months   of   1921.\nSHOWER IS HELD\nFOR KASLO MAID\nKASLO, B.G, Aug. 28\u2014Hiss Clarice\nCalvert and Miss Hazel Burkett were\nrecently hostesses at a miscellaneous\nshower at the home of Miss Burkett\nIn honor of Miss Annie Norman,\nwhose marriage to Frederick James\nWalton of Vancouver takes place\n^September 3. The guests Included\n41 rs. Norman, Mrs, Jones of Spokane,\nMrs John Green, Mrs, fl. H. Green,\nMrs. Newton, Mrs. Bunt, Mrs, H\nCftlvert, Mrs. Burkett, Mrs Cyril Mer-\nvyn,   Mrs.   Howard  Green   _\u00a3   Vancou-\nKASLO, H.C, Aug. ?8.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs, Chester Staples and family, of\nCranbrook irhn have spent several\nWPekR holidaying in the city, have\nreturned   h une,\n^ Charles Archer has left for Toronto\nto resume his studies at Toronto university.\nMrs. Johnson and son, Orland, who\nspent 'he summer as guests of Mr\nnnd Mrs. Logan MePhep, left for\ntheir   home    in    Boston,   Mass.\nMiss Rlsie Robinson, who has spent\n\u25a0lhe summer with Mr nnd Mrs. F. _JL\nArcher, left for her home in Toronto.\nFred Firirland of Silverton spent ..\nfew  day\u00ab   visiting   friends   in   the   citv\nDan McLellan and Alex Sutherland\nwere   in    Nelson.\nMrs. W. L. Ritlings left Frfdav\nmorning for Vsncnuver accompanied\nhv Mrs, C. H Pllis and Miss Mable\nEllis,\nA.    McQueen   and   daughter.   Queen ie,\nvisitors,     going     on     to\ntin\nAm\nlak\nMrs, Montague Aldous. n daughter\nof tho bite Sir Henry Unto of Ottawa, (Led nt Winnipeg, where she\nhad   resided   for   -12   years.\nWrist Watches\nIn   several   of   the  new   rectangular shapes.. Some are set  with\ndiamonds    and    sapphires.      In\ngreen    and    white    gold.\nS18  H  S75\nA. T. NOXON\nYour   Jeweler\nSlocan   High   School\nWinter term begins September 2. Parents wishing for information should\napply to J. H. Pinchbeck,\nSecretary.\n611 Baker Street. Phone 200\nNew Fall Coats\nAt $25 to $125\nEach\nEvery   day   brings   new   shipments   of   FALL\nCOATS, made oi finest of FABRICS, such as:\nMarvella,    Zibeline,   Suedine,    Bolivia,\n0u Duvetyn,   Fawnskin,   and   other   plain\nVVHL       and fancy materials.\nB ^_?\"?CjTf\niM~*(%'& COLORS  are  Chestnut,   Bunny,   Rein-\n|c\"^#       deer, Russet, Sepia, Brown, Greys, Navy\nand  Black.\nSTYLES are mostly slim and straight,\nwith FANCY NEW SLEEVES, and\nin many cast's Irimmings of Furs. Coat\nstyles never wen handsomer than this\nseason.\nSIZE.*'  lfi\n44,\n\u00bbL PRICES   ft~*et,   $.55.00,   i(t50.00,\n\u2122 $75.00 tu $120.00 each.\nNEW FALL YARD GOODS\nConsisting of FLANNELS, HOMESPUN and WOOL CREPES, in all\nwanted shades of Taupe, Sand, Beige\nand Greys. At $1.95, $2.25, $2.95\nto $3.50 vard.\nNew \"Trefousse\" GLOVES\nat $3.50 to $5.00 Pair\nNew Gauntlet (.loves, in very handsome Fall styles, and all the newest\ncolors. At $3.50, $4.50 and $5.00\npair.\nChildren's FALL GOLF HOSE\nat 85c to $1.00 Pair\nA new shipment of Lisle Golf Hose, in very pretty\ntones of Brown. All sizes from 6V-> to 9V_. Specially\npriced at 85*\\ 95< and $1.00 pair.\nSPECIAL FARES\nNew Westminster and Return\nAccount Provincial Exhibition, September 8-13\nFARE AND ONE-THIRD RETURN\nFrom All Stations in British Columbia.\nON SALE SEPTEMBER 6-12\nRETURN LIMIT, SEPTEMBER 15\nFares apply via  Midway and  Hope.   Through  Service,\nvia Kettle Valley  Railway.\nTICKETS and Berth  Reservations from  any  Agent or\nPurser Kootenay Steamers.\nJ. S. CARTER. D.P.A., Nelson\nWhile They Last\nFresh Killed Fowl, per lb. ...   22c\nLots of Fresh Killed Young Chicken\nCold Meat for the\nHot Weather\nWE HAVE A GOOD  ASSORTMENT\nCooked Ham\nJellied Tongue\nVeal Loaf\nRoast Ham\nHead Cheese\nBologna\nand Weiners\nSTORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY\nQUALITY\u2014CLEANLINESS\u2014SERVICE\nOUR MOTTO\nP. Burns & Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 50\nNELSON, B.C.\n\u25a0r\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\n Tagc Six\"\nTHE NELSON DX-IY NEWS. FRIDAY MORNINC, AUGUST 29, 1923\nBRITISH NEWSPAPER MAGNATE\nWILL RESIDE IN CANADA AGAIN\nPAYMENTS FOR\nCHERRIES NOW\nIs paying\ni   hurried\nIs paying\ni   htini.'i\n\u25a0as   taken   in\nTor.,nite\nCeiled\nI  inl.'.l\nThis   plot\nThi, -t\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nFerguson New Zealand  -Noveriior\nLondon.   Aug. ' 14,\u2014General   sir\nCharles Ferguson has been appointed governor-general oi' New Zealand,\nsucceeding Admiral Viscount J .Hi -\ncoe,   who   is   retiring   shortly.\nwill s\nti. whil\ns    will\non behalf of\nthe allies and\nie     represented\nibaaaadora and\nCampbell   Predicts   Prices\nSatisfactory When Pools\nFinally Closed\nadvisement  today the  penalty which   men    wilt    be    shipped    Sunday    to 1\nhe  must  decide  for  Nathan   Lepold j -Moo.se   Jaw,   Weyburn  and   Shaune-\nand   Richard   Loet.,   confessed   kid*   von.      Saturday    tbe    service    w111\nnapers    and    murderers    of    Robert   start   on   its   order  of   60   men   daily I\nFranks.     The  judge   will   render   hi*! for   Lethbridge.\ndecision    September    10. To    date    between    2000    and    8000 j\n  I harvesters    have    left    the    province j\nTokyo   Menlngltes    Spreads           j for    pra rle    points.    These    are    all\nTOKYO,  Aug.   US.\u2014-An epidemic of; men   who   have   been   written   for   hy\nmeningitis,        which        has       already   prairie     farmers,     and     assured     of\nclaimed    300    victims,    has    l|)Had    to ' Work.\nTottorl,   prefecture,   where   _.'.\u25a0! 1   cases I  \u2014    am\nr,.~n \"\u25a0\"\"\"'\"' \"\"\" in \"\":\"\"\"]Mrs. Hutchins Is\nBARTLETT PEARS\nSaskatchewan Asks\nCoast Harvesters\nToronto Champion\nBAKtYOUR OWN BREAD\nROYAL\nYEAST\nCAKES\nSTANDARD OF QUALITY FDR OVER 50 YEARS,\nQME-BAKEQ BREAD IS BEST OFAL!\nTORONTO.   Aug.   28.\u2014Mrs.   H.    G. \\\nHu'rhins.    Winn peg.   today   won   the j   \u2014,\u2014\u2014 \u2014 \u2014\n . ladies'   i'it v   and    district   golf   cfiam- <\nVANCOCVKII.   Aug.   II.\u2014An   order   pionship.     wiin     III     for     72     holes    CAIffj TRKMAIXE -V*.T.hI.   tonight   .had   a   slight   the\nBEING     PACKED!.\u2122 eTSFJr TtJTaTSS.    ^  ___\"__^____ ___\"**   TAYK>R   4r    ***   W-.    or   Terr,\n| vestei    hands   for   Saskatchewan.   The        '\"algary   sehool   hoard   has   decided        OLE VPI.AN J),     Ohio.     Aug.     2R,\u2014    '\"'V.   in   a   fas.    | o _,\nGrowers Ship Cars of Early\nApples, Pears,  Plums,\nCrabs From Harrop\nFrench   Will   tut    to   lx-vy\nPARIS.      Aug.      II.\u2014-Tin-      I'ri'ii.'l\ncabinet today dee .led upon a. rad\nical overhauling of government expenses   with   a   view    toward   Btrlctl\nbalancing the hnd get, and it w.i\nagreed that Premier Harriot an\nFinance Minisler Clemen.el shoot\nbegin on September I lhe elmiiiut\ning of ail unnecessary expenses froi\nthe budgets of the various ininistrie;\nSign  I.mihI.iii part Tomorrow\nLONDON,    Aug.     2S.     The    formal\nsigning   of   lhe    pact    to    make   el'['relive     the     Dawes     reparation     plan,\nconcluded ai  the recent  International\nconference. Will take place at the\nforeign office in Downing street\nat noon Saturday. Sir Eyre Crowe,\npermanent      undersecretary     for     for-\nWarH-ilpH Rush to Shanghai\nSIIANCIIAI,    Aug.    2X.~- The    Brit\nish  and   United  Rtataa  warships are\npi needing here from Chefoo and\n.Veihaiwei    in    eonneeliun    with    the\n\u25a0elm re by Tuaehuna of tha Cheklani\nand K angeii pi ovine.-s, of different\nse'lions      Of      tha       Peking-Nanking\nOonumunleta   Break   lp  session\nBERLIN,   Aug.   St.\u2014Final   balloting    in    tba    reii hslag    on    lhe    hills\nneceeaary   to   carry   out     Oermany's\n|i;ul of lh.' Dawes reparation pro-\ng ra in has beafl postponed until tomorrow, because of the prolonged\nin ternij \u00bbt ions   from    the    coinmun .ate.\nPrince   Won't    Slay    Tor   Third    fla IIM\nNI.W     ViiIlK,    Aug.    II,\u2014Nothing\nwill be allow.'d lo Interfer*\nplan Bf UM Pr nee of Wah'S lo\nleave the I'nited Slates for Canada,  September   14. according to  an\nRound Trip\nRates to\nSpokane\nfor Interstate Fair\nDates of Sale, Aug. 30 to Sept. 6\nROUND TRIP FARES\nFrom  Mo\nKi\nYr\nFrom   Sain\nProm   Wan\nAgents\n$10.20\n88.65\n-88.75\n$.\u00bb.so\nllel.etS.\n\"A payment has been made on account of ihe Royal Anne, ping and\nLamhert   cherries   shipped   from   this\ndistrict this Hummer,\" said J. .1.\nCnniphelJ, managing director for\nthe Associated (.rowers for Nelson\nsubeenirul, which includes the dis-\ntr ct east of Orand Forks and west\nOf Creston, ns well sis the Kootenay\nand   Arrow   lakes.\nHe added ihat I further disbursement of payment on account of till\nolher cherries would he made wilh-\nin   a   few   days.\n\"While ihe pools for cherries ean\nnot he finally closed unlit all adjustments are made,\" he said, \"it is\nquite clear the prices will he very\nsatisfactory. Hut unfortunately there\nare   slilt   a   certain   number   ft   cherry\nItbwera  who  ship   independently.\n\"Ah a rule Iheir eh.Tries were Mn-\nsign fil, and in many eases lo retailers, which is | ney undesirable\nSlale of nlfaits. 11 is hoped that\nIhe returns ihis year will lend to\nlh.se growers combining with their\nl-Toi her growers in send .tig their\ncherries through one channel, and\nthus helping to stabilize the market.\"\nMr. Camphell said yesterday that\nthe shipments of apples to date\nbad heen made up of Early Transparent,   lied   Astrachans   and   Dnch-\n'7 V hough Ihese varieties, and!\nTranscendent crab apples, attain\nalmost perfection in this district,\nit is very advisable that growers\nshould topwork all these varieties.\"\nhe said. \"Our season of ripening is\njust enough later than the Okanagan to mean thai the prairie markets are well supplied with U'ealthies\nand Hyslop crabs by the time we\nean ship out these early varieties,\nWhich are accordingly not wanted.\nTherefore they ean be sold only at\nlower prices than they have realized\ntwo or three weeks earlier, and much\nlower    than    Wealth>s.\"\nPeaches for I-oenl Markets\nWhile peaches of excellent (\u25a0unl-\nity were grown in the district, particularly at Deer Park and Renatn,\n,Mr. Campbell stated, there were\nnot enough lo be of much commercial importance, and those sold\nwere nearly all absorbed by the markets of Nelson, Trail and Kossland.\nThere would he a few more KL\nhertas and Crawfords, he said, which\nwould be packed where they were\ngrown, and shipped into the local\nmarkets.\nBartlett pears are being packed\nthis week in the packing shed al\nNelson, and ii s expected the packing of Wealthy apples would begin\nsome   time   next   week.\nAssembled al Harrop\nth the I'p to lhe present lime, the ears\nof fruit that have been assembled\nlocally have be, u assembled at Harrop. most of the fruit shipped coming from thai point and Sunshine\nPay. These shipments included\nearly apples, pears, plums and\nTranscendent   crabs.\nPut from this time on it is\nplanned to send most of the fruit\nfrom Nelson, and to assemble it al\nthe packing shed on the (iranite road,\nbuilt by Ihe Nelson Cooperative\nOrowers'   association   last   year.\nMr. Campbell explained that this\nbuilding, built last year by the\nNelson local, had since then been\ntaken over by the Associated (.rowers, which now has offices in it, Part\nhas been renled to ihe local for its\n(lacking operations, and for assembling small fruit.-, from all over lhe\ndistrict into carload lots. The situation is a vary convenient one, as\nthe building faces the (Iranite road\nand has a railway spur for freight\ncars  at  its   rear   doors.\nround   contest,\nport   writers,\nForest rnng-r. spends\nright, I'pper left; MafB\nout   on   peak  of Mount   C\n9001   feel    nh0v\nSAM     DISEMONE\nIfl    lhe    pea      V    of    Mo\n. ac.\nE. L. BUCHANAN\nDistrict    Frcioh;    and    Passenger    Agent\nBUTTER WRAPPERS\nPrinted with the words \"Choice Dairy Batter\"\nloo  $1.00\n250   91.50\n500  9^.50\n1000  94.50\nSpecially Printed: 500, 94.50; 1000, 97.25\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPT.\nPrinting    Ruling    Bookbinding\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)        NELSON, B.C.\nannouncement by Major Oscar N.\nSol bert, honorary aide-de-camp to\nthe prince during his slay on this\ns dt.   of   the   border.   The   prince   will\nleave for Canada on the date set,\neven If there is another polo game,\nIhe third to decide tbe winner of the\nntematlonal    cup.\nPrince   Has   Aihlctir   ftny\nON   BOARD   THB   S.   S.   P.EPEN-\nOARJA.     Aug.     II,\u2014 The     prince    of\nWales was up early today working\nout strenuously in the Perengaria's\ngymnasium, and showing that he\nbad not been fatigue.! by his long\nround of activities yesterday, when\nhe began with participating in various\nathletic competitions, continued with\nseveral appearances on the dunce\nfloor, and terminated with a. plunge\nin   the   swimming   pool.\n(ihastly   Russian   Train   Wreck\nODESSA, Aug. _8. \u2014 Forty passengers were killed, and a larger\nnumber were Injured, when the express from Odessa to Moscow, which\nleft here last night, was derailed\n200 miles from here. The accident\nwas caused by a break in the track,\nwhich apparently had heen purposely torn from Us bed by unknown\npersons.\nCaverly Strikes Out Crowe CommentH\nOIIIPAO.O, Aug. 28.\u2014After portions of the clos ng argument of\nHubert E. Crowe, state's attorney,\nhad been stricken out by Judge\nJohn R. Caverly, as I \"cowardly,\ndastardly -attack upon the Integrity\nof this court, and an attempt to Intimidate,'      the     court    took     under\nThis  advertisement ia not  published or  displayed  hy   the LIQUOK CONTROL BOAKD or the Government of B.C.\n____________________________________________\n ._\n~mmu\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\n\t\nPag. Seven\nSENATORS TAKE\n[ADERSHIP IN\n[THE AMERICAN\nBRITISH POLO PHILLIES, COBS\nTEAM'S PONIES WIN TWICE IN\nIN GOOD HANDS THE NATIONAL\nSight Runs in Eighth In- Jimmie    Faulkner,    Aged Former Take Fast Double-\nning Defeat Panics After\nRuth Homers\nAMERICAN   LKAGtTK STANDING\nWon    Lout    Pet.\nVashington       72       54 .571\n-ew York    70      ||        .r.69\nDetroit     67\nLouIh      67\nCleveland      G8\nPhiladelphia     56\nBoston     57\n\u25a0Chicago     53\n68\n1-lglilh     I nn inn     I>im*s    H\nNEW   YOl-K,   Aug.   It,\u2014Wushing-\nItott   took   tho   lead   from   tlic   Yanks\nhere  today an a  result  or a  Hpfrited\nI eighth-Inning   rally   in  which   Wash-\nI lngton   t-eorcd   eight   run.1*,   six   after\n1 two   were   out.     Washington   won   11\nI to    6.      Ruth   hit    his    42nd    homer\nj and    apparently    had    piled    up    a\n\u25a0Bate  lead for  New   York,  when   ['en-\nnock  weakened  in the eighth.  Score.\nft,    H.    K.\nWashington     11     18      0\nNow   York        6    12      _\nBatteries\u2014Zachary, ItuBsell, Mar-\nheiry and Ruel; Pennocl*, Gaston,\nJones,   Mainaux  and   Schang.\nIloston  TriiiiM  M_u*k   Men Twice\nBOSTON, Aug. 28.\u2014Boston defeated    Philadelphia   twice   today    6    to\nand 8 to 7. After the Red Sox had\nmade several runs in the first inning of tho second game, Philadelphia came from liehind und tied the\nacoro. Boone hit a homer in the\neighth   to   win   the   game.   Score.\nFirst   game\u2014 R.   II.   R\nPhiladelphia       3       8       2\nBoston         ii      8      1\nBatteries\u2014 11 e; mach,      11,\nGray   and   Perkins,   Gihsun;\nton   and   Picinieli.\nSecond    game\u2014 R.\nPhfladelphia       7\nBoh ton         8\nRati cries\u2014i'lnps, -.Meeker,\nand Perkins; Winters, ftn*\nPiclnieh,   O'Neill.\nllurri\nPull*\ntutor\n.     and\nII.\n13\nSih\nIndians and   While Sox Split\n-'LKVKL-ANT., Aug. 18.\u2014-Cleveland\nand Chicago broke even today after\nCleveland won the tint 7 tn 0, CHI*\ncago took the second in 10 innings\n7 to 6. Cleveland tied the score in\nthe ninth and had the buM filled\nwith only one out hut cnuld not put\nthe   winning   run   over.     Score.\nFirst   game\u2014 U\nChicago        0\nCleveland         7\nBatteries\u2014Thurston and Schalk;\nSmith   and   Myatt.\nSecond   game\u2014 R.    H.    K.\nChicago          7     12       1\nCleveland          6     14       2\nBatteries\u2014-C vei Vr0!*\u00bb> Blankenshp\nand Schalk; Wuynel.org, Metevier,\nFdwards,    Messenger   and    Myatt,\nLINIMENT FOUND Tfl BE\nPOWERFUL GERMICIDE\nOriginally, Absorbine Jr. was wild\nonly as a pain reliever and an embrocation. Jt was quickly discovered that\nthe liniment was positive death to all\nforms of germ life, and it is now used as\n\u25a0 mouth wash, for wound dressing and\nfor all disinfecting purposes.\nAnother- surprise was vet in store.\nA Wm. Pratt of Springfield, Mass.,\napplied Absorbine Jr. to a varicose vein\nto relieve the intense pain. Not only\ndid the pain leave, bat he noticeilevery\nday the swollen vein becoming smaller.\nThe treatment was kept up and, today,\nMr. Pralt's legs, though he has never\nUsed anything else on them, are an\n\u2022mooth as when he waa a boy. It haa\nnow been proved that Absorbine Jr.\nis an actual specific for varicose veins,\nleg ulcers, boils, pyorrhoea and a number\nof other ailment? and injuries besides\nthat for which it was first prepared.\nNothing serves so many every day purposes and nothing is better entitled\nto its place in every home. When it\nis needed, it will be needed in a hurry.\nDon't wait for someone to be hurt.\nGet it at youi druggist's today, {1.25\neverywhere.\nSeventy,   Bosses   Them;\nDaddy of Thirty-one\nNEW YOUR. Aug.   _\u00ab.\u2014M.y  Canadian Press.)\u2014Polo experts are agreed\nthat   the  outcome  of  tho  contest  be-\n| tween  Great  Britain  and  tho United\n; States    for    the    fumous    inertia I lonal\nchallenge   cup   at   the   Meadowhrook\nclub,  September I,   1\"  and   tl,  hinges\ni on   the   excellence   and    condition   of\n' the   opposing   ponies.\nj      If   the    British   lose,   it   will   not   be\n! the   fault   of   .Inimie   Faulkner,   who\n, lias charge of th*e ponies  frcm  overseas,     .liminio   wus   In   dirge   ft   the\nBritish   ponies   when   the   Hritish   won\nin    llli,      Simc    his   arrival    in    the\nI'nited   States   this   summer   he    Iihs\n\u25a0MM     both     teams     tn     action,     and\nwhen   asked   what   he   thought   of  the\nBr tish   chance   said:\n\"We shall give I hem | good\nrough-up.''\nIt    is   doubtful    whether    polo    can\nboast   of   a    more    rental ka hie   character  than  Jimmie.     Ho   is  seventy\u2014\n\"turned     seveifty\"\u2014and     a     smiling\nlittle   fellow   with   spindly   legs   and\nI considerable    of    a    paunch.      lt    is\neasier   to   believe   him   seventy   when\nyou    leurn   that   lie   is   the   father   of\n' 31     children.       .limine     will     resent\n1 any  inference that  that   ls  too  many\n1 children   and   will   tell   you   that   hia\n; fiither,   who  is   If   today  and   \"doing\n! pretty   fair\"   had    ,!7.   .Ilnimio   is   tho\n1 oldest   of   lliein.\nA    Pony-UlM.\"    Family\nIt    has   been   a   pony-wise    family.\n1 ,11 m rue's     father     whoso     name     is\n, John   Faulkner,   is   one   of   the   most\n, famous of  Croat   Britain's  old   school\n1 of   jockeys.     Ho   won   a   steeplechase\n\u25a0at   seven   years   of  age.   One   of   Jim-j\nI mic's sons   Lester   Faulkner is one  of\nGreat   Britain's   crack   jockeys.   Five\n; others    of    his    sons    lie    burled     in\nj France    to    prove    that     tho    family\nlacked   nothing   in   patriotism. |\nFor   many   years   now   Jimmie   has\nbeen   with   Lord   Wlnihnurno   at    his\nestate   in    Ireland   ami    his   homo   in\nRugby.      Jimmie   is   the   studgroom\n\u25a0Ad    has   complete    Cfcargi    of    Lord'\n, Wimborne's    stables.       Most    of    tho j\n' ponies   thut    the   British    w 11   use   in\nI the  coining contest   conic   from   these.\n' stables.       JImnile    brought    over    38 I\nponies  in   llU'l,  und   this year  he   has]\nI 46,    exclusive    of    the    eight    owned j\nI by   the   Prince  of   Wales.     His  ponies\n'his year are a much better lot thaoj\nJ those he brought over in 1H1I, he\nsays. lie is reticent when asked\nj about their good points, Askoil\n; abonl any one of t Im stars in the\nI string, he will invariably reply,\n\"She   is  a   very,   very  good   pony.\"\nAmong the more notable ponies iu\nthe British string nre Quoeiiie, Bubbles H., Fairy Story ami Lady Bird,\ntjueenie is a chestnut mare, aged,\nof Irish ancestry, with stout shoulders and long lags, fast ;iml brave.\nBubbles II. is Britain's best No. 1\npony, considered priceless by her\nowner. She is ;i hay thoroughbred\nbuib like a race horse, und with the\nah'Iily to \"turn on fi dime.\" Fairy\nStory is \u25a0 swift graceful hay mare.\nBubbles II., while no relation to\nBubbles I., bus many of the la tier's\nI cliaracieristics. Lady Bird is a\nchestnut   mare.\nThey are Jimniie'N pride, uiul\nwhen the line string of ponies which\nthe I'nited States will have to call\nupon is considered, it re 1 on Ins very\nmuch Qp to Jjinmie Faulkner, so far\nas British chances of success are\nconcerned.\nHeader    Froin    Braves;\nLatter Beat Cards\nNATIONAL    LEAGUE   STANDING\nWon    Lost    P-t\nNov.   York   .\nPittsburgh\nBrooklyn\nChicago ...\nCincinnati   .\nSt. Louis . .\n) 'hiladelphia\nBoston   ....\n.6\n51\n17\n.I\nPirates   Drop One\nI'lTTSi'BIKCII. Aug, IL- Cinciu-\nnuti defeated Pittsburgh *i to | In\nday by knocking Cooper out of the\nbox in the second inning, scoring four\nrrns   cn   five   hits. K.   II,   1_.\nCin. iun.'ti       I    10\nP.ttsbnr.h      t      >.\\      1\nButteries\u2014Mays and Jhr grave:\nCooper,   Kremer   and   Cooch,\nBraves    Have   Hard    Luck\nl'lilL\\i;FLI'II!.\\,       Aim.       js\u2014-Tlu\nBoston Braves dropped both ends\nof a fast double-header with Philadelphia today by 1 to (I and !\u00bb to 3.\nHomers by Cy Williams and Gibson\nof the Braves reunited in 11 ;! In .,\ntie |..r ilie first six innings of the\nscon.I fame, tWl in Ul* seventh\n('hiladelphia hit Uenewich I'm* five\nstraight   tallies.\nFirst    game\u2014 1,   H.   I.\nBoston        0      .\".      ('\nPhiladelphia       1       I      it\nBaltei ies- Barnes, Cooney and\nO'Neill;   tilazner and   Wil\nSecond  game\nn. h. f\nBoston      3      t;\nPhiladelphia '  !)    II      1\nBatteries- Gone.vieh ami Cibson:\nBells   and   llciline.\nCubs Take   Both   Ends\nCHICAGO, .\\ug. II.\u2014Tha rubs defeated St. Louis in both games of ;\u25a0\ndouble-header here today .. to I ami\ns to ;;.\nFirst    gume \u2014 H.   II.   F\nSt.    I.ouis        2      X       I\ni'b.\nBatteries-   Bell.   Fnwl-r.   Slicrd-l ami\nGonzales,    Nlfbergall;    Aldridfi   am\nHartnett,\nSecond   game\u2014 B.   ll.   E\nSI.    Louis        3      0\nCbloago     s   IS     1\nBa. iter tea- Dyer.   Bell.  tUMrdel and\nCtemona;   Jacobs   and   it'Farrell.\n\u2022'OBI-ST    HILLH,     Aug.     28.\u2014An-\nother young tennis alar roue to heroic\nheights  of   international   triumph   toil a;y    when    John    Hennessey    of    In-\nillanapolis accomplished  the downfall\nof   Jean    Borotra.   champion   of    Europe,    und    captain    of   the    French\nvis   cup   forces.,   in   a   spectacular\nbattle    featuring   the   third   day   of\n\u2022    national    singles    championship.\nHennessey    not     only    scored     the\nosi   startling   upset' yet   recorded   in\ntournament  already   marked   by  an\ntouishing      number      of      reversals\n. jiong   favorites,   but   eliminated   his\nfamous    opponent,     winner    of    th s\n. 'ear's    Wimbledon   championship,    ln\ndecisive     fashion.     The      13-year-old\nschool    boy    played    11    dashing    ng-\nssive    game,    withstood    tho    most\nfiery net  attacks of Borotra, and conquered   the   Frenchman   in   four  sets.\nS-ti,   7-:..   3-fi.   _-\u25a0_.\nSotlHtek For Fircign Klar.H\nHennessey's brilliant victory was\nthe climax of another day of setbacks for fore gn stars. At the\nnd of tho day's [day, nine United\nStates players and four invaders remained In the running for the title\nheld by William T. Tilden. Of these\n13, three had reached tho fifth round,\nwhile in others, including Jack\nWright of Montreal were in the\nthe bracket before the semi-finals.\nfourlli    round.\nT .Itlen heads the ranks of surviving I'nited States players, which\nalso include William (Little Bill)\nJohnston, ami Vincent Richards,\nyoung Olympic champion, and George\nLott    of    Chicago,    Canadian    chain-\nTbe elimination of Japan's two\nremaining stars, M. Fukuda and S.\nokamoto, was not so much of un\nupset us wus the decisiveness with\nwhich defeat was meted out. Dean\nMulbey, veteran New* Yorker, disposed of Fukuda ai. ti-4, 6-0, 0-1,\nwhile Elmer Griffin of San Francisco, another \"dark horse,\" pul\nout   Okamoto,   0-2,   G-8,   0-4.\nAmalgamation Is\nPopular With the\nFans, Says Patrick\nVANC.N CVI-K, Aug. _...\u2014The news\nof the amalgamation of the Pacific\nCoast Hockey association and the\nWestern Canada Hockey league has\nbeen cordially received by the fans,\nand one large circuit will make a\nmuch -greater appeal to tho public\nthan did the two-league system, said\nFrank Patrick, former president of\nthe coast organization, on his arrival\nhome   today   from   Calgary.\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nTho   Alo   with   the   r?al   flavor.   $2.20   doz.     Order   through\nGOVERNMENT    LIQUOR    STORE.\nFREE   DELIVERY   DIRECT   FROM   BREWERY.\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\n(Tills   arivertlwinent   Is   mil   I'liMi. lied   nr   displayed   l.y   thr   Li.|\nControl   Board or by tho Government   of  lirillsh  Columbia.I\nWILLOW POINT\nTENNIS SHARPS\nREPEL INVASION\nHome Talent Wins Major\nity of Matches With Nel\nson Tennis Cluh\nWILLOW    I'OINT,    H.C,   Aug.   II.\n\" in  Sundav  a   return   nu'tcli   wns   plavnl\nhere   l.y   Hie    Nelson   Tennis   club.     Th'\nlilnyers   motored   out   from   Nelson,   aim\nniay bet** \"t   i  I'm.    Over 10 playeri\nan.l     si\" it m. i rs     were     pfeeeill Tea\nwas   aervef   from   ..    to   I   ..'clock.   Mrs\ninn  Campbell  betm   In  eh*u?e of  thi\nie.   table.\nMwny ..f Mi.- matches we.' ven\nkeenly . \u25a0; ,ti t r;.(prl. including llir .-ingles\nbetween Miss P Church nnd Mrs. B\nTewnsliPiid which lasted two liours\nHie     rirst     set     t.einK     (leci.lc.l     in     Mrs\nTo.vnsiieii.rs   fever  itt   ii-il:.\nTi...   Willow   p..int   club   iron   1   out\nOf   19   naHdics,   the   I Ith   being  a  draw,\ntha   buiit   being    toe   bed   Lo   finish.\nTli\"     I. -lilts    were    BM    relloWH!\nM-tf.v singles- a. Bldrldg- defeat) d\nI!.  Thomnon.  \u00ab--.   1-3;   ft   Towneheni]\n.lefeiiteil    It.    \\V.    Dawson.    *..-_.   M,   x-fi\nLadles-    Mingles\u2014MlM.     II.    Tow tislicn.l\ndefeated Mine ciiur.li.  H\u00abI, 6-_;  Mrs\nRichard Mil    defeated     Miss    T.nvn.send\nMei;\n-..\nMes\u2014J.     Shims..n    and    It\ns. Towgood, defeated R. Tbflmpnon eet\nA. Uilrny. ti-4. fi-l; H. TowtlHliend and\nT. West defeated ft \\V. Dawsun und\nA.   KldrldKC.   7-..,   .'!-fi.   1-1,\n-Mixed doubles\u2014Mm, Huylev and A\nOllmy defeated Mins Mansfield rii.1\nJ Ink. fi-4. (1-3: Mrs, Tuvb.r and U\nThompson defeated Mi.ss Church ami\nT. 1'. Delaney. 7-.'.. fi-2; Mlft Harvey\nand T, West defeated Mi.ss Carrie\nand I', Trail \"-\".. fi-0; Miss (baric\nand 10. T, Croves defeated Miss We.st\nand c. Taylor, ,.-\u00bbi. fi-7. fi-2: Miss\nTownsend and Mr. Coles drew will\nMiss West nnd T. West, .-fi, i-_ (to<\ndurl*   to   finish).\nr'rlday afternoon an American tour,\nnament was played Twelve couples\nentered. The winners were Mrs. T.\nTownshend and Mrs. Itichardson. Aft\nernoon   tea   was   nerved\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nVernon   4.   Krnlll.,   7.\nSilll    J.ek..   3.    Mem    .'..un-lx.\nOakland   S,   l'r.rllan.l   4.\n.Saornmi'iitie   11.   I.,,s   AiikcIi.\nBRIER\nINDIANA YOUTH\nRETIRES FRENCH\nTEAMJAPTAIN\nJapan's Last Two Stars\nFade; Only Four Invaders Are Left\nCUTH8ERTW1NS\nMANITOBA OPEN\nIn Fourth Place at Noon,\nHe Leads on the Afternoon   Round\nHlNMI'Ki;, Aiir. 28\u2014Jack Cuthbert (if Winnipeg, western Canada\namateur bo If champ on, today won\nthe Manitoba open championship,\nwith a Hcore of SO 3 for the 72\nhole-.. In fourth place at noon\ntoday he made the last round in 74,\nand flninhed one up on (JeorB*1\nDaniel, recent winner of western\nCanada open and profesnional championships.\nDaniel was the leader at noon with\n224 but an u n fort una te HO on the\nufternoon round lost him the honors. Daniel Ih profess ona 1 at the\nAssinlboine   cluh   here.\n.loe _A\\mW\\ professional at KirkfleUI\nl'ark club, was third, with 205, und\nKrnest Penfold, professional at the\nWinnipeg club where the tournament was held, was fourth, with\n3!.!j. Willie Kldd of ,M nneapolis.\nlast year's champion, was well down\non  the   list.\nMess Kit Is Second\nto Lawrence Manning\nVAJ-COWEft,    Auk.    2S\u2014Fot-BiuB\nto the front shortly after the start,\nI.awrence Manning showed f (Mean\npah* of hoofs to Mess Kit in the tb rd\nrace over six furiongs ut Lun:1-\ndowne park this afternoon, and won\ncomfortably. Mess Kit drew ;t lot\nof play from the good sized crowd,\nbut Cromwell, the horse which fin-\nislvd third, was backed off tb.'\nboard.\nLawrence Manning paid $a.,15\nstraight and $8.Of. place. Kentucky\nSmiles rom pfd home in the first\nrace, ami paid $;i.r..ir. across l Inboard.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nI'alii p.  <e.  Toronto\nRaiding   s.   i.ieite'l,.  ;i\nNi-wnrli   '_.   llnrlii'sl.T  il.\nJ.TM.'y   City   _.   Myracll.s\nTENNIS TOURNEY\nOPES TOMORROW\nDRAWS POSTEO\nThirty-five Matches Will Be\nPlayed on the Six Courts\nHere\nI'lay in the Kootenay tennis tourney a l Nelson over the week-end\nopens tomorrow ut both Ihe upper\nami    lower   courts.\nThe draw for tiie upper courts Ifl\nus follows, the par for No, 1 court\nbeing named first in each play\ngroup, nnd the others ln numericul\norder:\nl'|>|MT     Courts\nl;|Q a tu.\u2014C. \\V. Appleyard vs.\nDr. Fergie; C. Miirmy v... R, I,.\nDewdney;     A.     T      Codfrey     v:i.     (1.\nUmpson,\n10:10 a.m.- K. Metcalfe vs. 0.\ntJotlfrey; Mrs. Ma-'ters vs. Mrs. Hab\nb'l ; .). [). Veatmaii ami Murray vs.\n\u25a0McNaughtnn   and   Norman.\nI1;|0 a.m. \u2014 Westwood ami Dck\nson vs. Apple>ard and Townshend.\nO, \\V. Ilaire v_U \u00bb'. Hamilton; H. (i.\nUitehie   vs.   C.   Atwood.\n12:30 a.m.\u2014M. Henderson vs. Norman; Padgett vs. McNaughton; Mrs.\nJto.sbng and -Mrs. Halle | vs. Miss\nChurch   nnd   Miss   Gregory.\nI |i.ni.\u2014,1. S. MacKersy vs. Paul\nKsllng; winner of Atwood and Atkinson vs. winner of Alwood and\nRitchie; Dr. Fergie and G. Simpson   vs.    Fldridfie   and   Hamilton.\n4 p.m.\u2014MacKersey and Mrs. Kich-\nardson vs. G. H. Godfrey and Mrs. H.\nTownshend; Jackson and Mrs. Louis\nvs. Mrs. Buxtone and Dr. Fergie;\nDr. Fergie and G. Simpson vs. Eld-\nridge  and   Hamilton.\nFor the lower courts the draw,\nwith   the  pairing  In  numerical  order\n:30\nDaws\n\u25a0mn nnd .Mrs.\nIt.   Townsnent\n-Eyton     vs.     Jackson;\neuton;   Mrs.   Kichanj-\n1J. Townshend vs.  Mrs.\nH.   Townsfiend   and   Miss   H.   Townshend.\nt_.:M a.m.\u20141_. Simpson vs, Watson; M ss MacMynn vs. Miss Applewhaite; Mrs. Lakes nnd Mlsa Col-\ngrave vs. Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. Bay-\nley.\n11:,.<> a.m.\u20141_. Atwood vs. Atkinson; Mrs. I.ouis vs. Mrs, B. Townshend; Miss H. Townshend vs. MiHS\nWest.\n2 p.m.\u2014iMrs. H. Townshend vs.\nMrs. Taylor; Dea ney vs. Lee; Thaino\nvs.    West.\n3 p.m.\u2014J. Ink vs. Greer; Mrs.\nLakes vs, Miss Gregory; Mrs. Bay-\nley und ll. W. Dawson vs. Miss\nFlnglund   and   G.   Fyton.\n4 p.m.\u2014Winner of Padgee and McNaughton vs. winner of Henderson\nand Norman; Wbitrield vs. A. Gil-\nroy;    Bartindale   vs    Thompson.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis   ,..    Kansas   City    4.\nColumbus   7,   Indiannpolls   3.\nToledo   13,   Louisville   6.\n(>nly   three.\nCORINTHIANS LOSE\nTO LAKEHEAD TEAM\nHe Picked the American\nInternational Polo Team\nHARRY    PAYNE    WHITNEY\nADVANCE DATE\nFOR MATTHEWS\nDiscover One Charge Must\nBe at Assizes; October\nDate Set\nTORONTO, Ang. 28. \u2014 Trial of\nChmtiee Uestthmwe Jr., former deputy\nl.rovlnt-lal (reaaurer, ha.'. i.e>w b\u00ab*n\nfixed for Monday. October 13, when\nthe criminal jury asalze court opena\nfor the fall Hitting. Thla waa decided when the prisoner waa arraigned before Judge I>ent\u00abn today\nan.l application waa made for bell\non   hia   behalf.\nA'.siHtant Crown Attorney McRuer\npointed ...i that one of the charges.\ntiie,.11 uleiele ll.c accuaed lia.l been\nce.minillcd by Magistrate Junes waa\nlaid under section 160 of th* act and\ntherefore could be tried only at the\nassiies. This charge waa \"that, being\na public ..llicer, lie .lid commit a\nfraud of the public.\" The discovery\n..f this point lias made necessary a\nchange of plans, as It had been the\neerlgtnal intention ..I the crown to\nhave the case come before the forth-\ncoming sltiiitKs .,r lhe sessions jury\non   .September  II   in xl.\nThe    next    stage    In    the\nhail     will     I.i      before     tl\ncllinut.t'rs     eel     I Isg.jexl\nm ..ruing\nl.altle for\nthe Ju.lge-in-\nhall    Tuesday\nScotch Economist\nAdvises Canada to\nBan Raw Exports\n.Mlllieenaiic . |..trlsniaii, whee is i li.iir-\nlllan of Hie ...].','to.n .\u25a0..minitte.. Ulelt\nll.lS jliSl pirkcil Ilie- leeini Wllieil will\ntefSimeai Ilie .' ttlt.-.l Sl.lles ill the\nliil'Tiniliieiial peelei iieueees .i'. .Met.low-\nlei'ee.ik .lull ill Sept I'liilee.r. which the I\nI'lill.e   ,.f   Wales   uill   all, 11.1. I      V.NrtH'VKU.     .\\\u201eB.     2\u00bb._Ael.lress-\n  Una   III.'   Native   Sons   ,,I  Canada.   Br.\nWilliam    I'.iM...   (K.liliea!   etm e.iellsl    of\nALrleleen,    S.i.llacil.    ele. laic.l    Canada\n[\u2022keOld    seek    an    ill. i. -lien.!, mi    .nUKus\n, u.ll.ii.    Hi,'    Kinpiri'   a:cl    shoulel    ban\nfor Seawanhakal*1\" '\"' ;'\" \"\u2022* \"\"\"\"\u2022\"\"\u2022\u25a0\nScottish Yacht\nBeats Norwegian\nCI.ASCI.U'. S.e.itlallet. Aug. _S.\u2014 I\nTli.' fir. of lire races for Hit.!\nSi'.iw.'iMlie.ka    rip    on     III,-    Frill    of i\nCl\\,le    Was    won    In.leiy    l.y    lhe    ya.'llll      BABKATOOM\nC'ila    III ,    leist    year's    winner.    Thel '   ' '     '  '\" '\nviciorious   i\",!.i   defeated   11,,.   Nor\nBODY   CF   DROWNED\nGIRL  IS  RECOVERED\nU.'.In,\"..h\nweigiun  ehallenier,   I'm.   which\nilctl\nllee-  uell-known   Norwegian I\nDeer rive\nl.eue.el    llli\nk .   Anc.   -S.  -Till'\ne.i   l'i...i.   uii.e   drowned\nI after* i  in Um iu-i\nI.i hell...   Aile...   was\nlleiiiii.in.       The    linelv    oi\ncht  .lesigner,  Anker,   l.y   Iwo  ini.i- ! '\"'r   '\"\"''\" ''   '\"'*   \"_'   \u25a0'\"'   '\"'\"'   f\"\"1\"1'\nSpalla Defeats\nMartin Barhe in\nNewspaper Verdict \u25a0 l\"\",',',1;'^'\"'\nlllll lilt     i'l  M.IIA IM.\niki.nds   oi>i:\\   TODAY\nNew Ontario Eleven Puts\nOut Britishers by Only\nGoal of Game\nPORT    WILLIAM.    AelK.     'IK.     Su\nIN,    .v.\nPATTERS\nw'igiii  pnyi\nf.ale.l    .Man\nllcavywciglll.    in     I\nopinion    of    n,'us].:\n\\iii_.      L'S. -\ncli;ini|.i..n      h.av\\--\nnl     llalv.    I.illislil    ,le\nlllll'k..,     New    illlean.\nHindi   in   Die\nI5DMONTON,   Aug.   It.\u2014The  iiual-\nl.nig    iniinil    of    lhe    Alherla    golf\nwill     slart     toinorriiw\nI     II     n'e'locl,',     wilen     123\ncoinpetitors     w II     I .if     at     the\ne'li.eisi' ,ei   Hi,' M;,\\f.,ir goU club here.\n'I'lie'        Women's       e lln 111 piniiship       will\nm:iii  .ni  Uonda]\ni;i>m<>\\TON   MILLS\n.SI.'NK   AM)   HM,\nWILLIAMS CAPTAIN\nEDMONTON,     Aug.      H.\u2014Kenny\nof davis cuppers h::,lk::yz,;;:i,::,;;:^i,,\"a,::::;,,:e:-i,;,h:\n  !s;il.'   ol'   \"Bpuak\"   Sparrow   nini   (io.il-\niierior   *\\\u00ab>-<\\   inui   Hi,,   magnificent!     NKW    VORkf,    Aug,    ti   -R,    .\\,   keeper   n.il   VITtBkler  to  thii Calfary\nK<iiilkee|iin-    i.r    Kerry,     won     th..   Wllllnrru  .i   I'bHudelphla.     ai   been   <\u2022   ror  :>  eash  oowUiUFHton.\nKanie    .itf.iirn-l     llir    < 'mini lii.iiis    Ilii--. j \"-elected    UN    IKH1 -plttj   iik     Cftptl\nrvfiiin^,  for iiio New Ontario  team,  the   Lolled   Rtt.te*   team   which   will\nBRirroN oriroix is\nl.i.ko.l     f'rorn     (li,.     Lost     pla\/tl'l    of\ni''nri   Wiiii.'iin   and   Port   Arthur,   by\nl      |o     0.       Tiie     winn iik     fOtti     w.is\nkicked   from   ;,   Krlmmace   in   front\nof   lhe   i 'orinllii.ins'   net.   MTCB   niin-\nnios iftar pl.iy started, and the\nvisiiors   wero   unable   to   orra   tho\nMore, Ihonsh for I time limine tilt\nfirst ball it w.is only tin- homier-\nfill work of Ciirrii' whieh saved the\nhomo   players.\nAfter half time tho home team\nhad all (he best of (he play, making\ntheir offense (he host defeJWOi iiioi\nliashmar, tiie Cornlliians' goalie, did\n\u25a0On\u00ab pretly work. Tlio visitors\nKhnweil     the    effeetM    of    their    eon-\n.stant playing, lacking ipeod, while\nbewta,  their center,  was  hurt  early\nin    the    gams    and    sent    to    niilside\nright, belm lame aii through tho\ngame,\nTho lasl Hi minutes of lhe play\nwas    mostly    in    the   Corinthian    end.\nVI Kill <\nAM)   ONTARIO   I\ni:a,;ii:\nQue \u25a0,\nHI.    I'.oynl..    1.\nUllly   e.l\n\u25a0  game s.'hednle.l.\nLITTLE LESSONS  IN\nGolf\nJLOMG\nroot\n\u00abOVSV*KT\nIf All. TVIESE ARE CORBECT\nTHCr,  7V.ERH   ,3 NO LOST\nMOTION.\nPONT u,T tSOPY HlCMr\nAfves \/vw taws.\neiell.l     ill,      I.\neel\nround   al   I'liil\n\\i;\u00ab .hum:.   BOXER\nNBWAIIK     .\\..l ,    Aug.    :1S -.lack\nBritton.   rormer   K-elterwelffti.   eiieiin-\nleei.ii  ci   iin' world,  ion i^iei outpointed    .l.eel.     ll..|.|e.Ml     of    S..uill    ..range.\nin 10 rounds, according to ii'wspaper\nmen ...  the rlnifiilde.\nJuslSay-TGIMM\nJust vSay \"Gimme\"\nis the buy-slogan for\nthousands of men\nwho  know   good\n,   cigarette quality and\nv^j JO for 15-; insist upon getting\n\u2022_5<or3^i it.\n' WfcrVo.   Just Say \"GuO\"MM\nJ0Ofor5J_9 and try them!\nHow do you manage to f;et HUch\nionK   driyes?\nAn. trend    hv\nBOB    MacDONALD\nWinner    of    the    Metropolitan    open\nchampionship,   1921   and   1923.    Ono  of\nthe    longest    drivers    in      the      game\nthough using only a 12'\/2-ounca driver.\nHitting the hull rorreclly and with\ngreat apeed allows the player lo md\neverything i\"t\" his shot and with tin\nlost movement. Independent mo\\ c-\ntnents of the hands and arms, swinging from the shoulders, plus the foot\n\u00bbnd knee movement tliat turns the\nhody. \u00abive one the speed that is required to drive a long hull, instead\nof the hody moving the anus and\nlegs, as is so common among poor\nplayers.\n(Copyright,   ucm,   kumdfhei   Kditors.\nin.nrpornteil.)\nTHE     GARETTE WITH THE OPIGIHAL FLAVOR\n _-^~j\n*w;i\nAccount\nCANADIAN\n^PACIFIC;\nRAILWAY\nINTERSTATE Fl\nSPOKANE, SEPT. 3 TO 8\nExcursion Rate\nFARE AND 0NE-THIRD RETURN\nTickets on Sale Aug. 30 to Sept. 6\nReturn Limit, Sept. 8\nKl'lllll     Slltii'tlH      ill      lll'iti.ll     Ceellellllliil,      ,\\| I, | w  I |      .'|||<l      ___\nAim    en,in    mUll WW!    eenit    I 'ol, I. in ll.    Aliei\n.Vi'i'eiulienil   iiiiil   Si.ulli.   Fenue.   li.r.   1111,1   Wei.1.\nDelails    Inn;,    ;uiy     AKt'til,    ..r    I'ufHe.'    Kui.tetiuy    -.ttetmer     Kieulea,\nor    write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson\n PegeHgSI\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\nWeekly Clearings\nWlNSIt'KG, AuS 2* (Hy CaiwHan\nJ-rww)\u2014The following arc lh_ Canadian hunk clearings (or the week\nending     today     and     for     Ihe     corre-\n. j ,..nihil;:      wee!*      last     yet_r\nSTOCK MARKET\nBECOMES DULL\nEarly Firm Tone Turns to\nReactionary; Many Operators   Absent\nNKW YORK. Aug. _8. \u2014 lCxtrem.\ndullness chAractt fifed today's stock\nmarket, which opened with a firm\n'one anil then turned reactionary, re-\nI'JecMiiK tlw absence ftf many Urg'*\n\u2022.\u25a0Iterators  over   the   Labor  day  holiday.\nKpeculators for thr decline succeed t;fl in unco ter ing a number of\n\"Weak spots among the specialties.\nAmerican Ice broke S points to Tl.\nmaking   a   loss   of   nearly   20   points.\nSelling pressure ft gainst .'uyainci\nFruit caused that stock to touch a\nnew low fnr the year at t%%. International Telephone, which was bid up\nbriskly yesterday, fell back __ points nn\nbrofft-UklAC. Union Tank far, American Waler Works and All-American\nCables dropped I to l points. I'nited\nStates 8-leel common, selliiiK ex-dividend, touched HlK'-i. hut slipped hack\nto 10fi%. a Ions f.f %. al the ClM\nAmerican     Can     was     in     rather     free\nsupidy, claeiem \u25a0'! points tower at\n128V HaUlwin showed a net los.-\nof   a   point   at 191$.\n-C__eellent buying developed in Ibe\nchain .store issues In response to\nreports of an increase in retail trade\nKresRc spurt ed 10 points to 410 and\nthen   dropped    to   4-U...\nKails failed to respond to reports\nthat car loadings for the week ending AiiKUsi 11 wero tp.- highest mt\nany week this year. Holland pn-\nf erred was an outstanding strong\nHOt, touching ii new high al [>*.%.\nPittsburgh ft West Virginia came\nwithin a small frail ion of the year's\nlop.\nCanadian exchange Mild at ;i slight\npremium   for   Lhe   Hret   time  since   1922\nTotn!   sab-: .    Ml 700   shares.\nClosing   Quotation*\nALL GRAINS AT\nHIGHER AVERAGE\nen.\nUultfsx     <\nSt.     .I,,.!\t\n| Monet on     \t\n' yil.-l.cr      \t\nShe e len\u201e.,(.\n;Mi,:,'i,-l\nr,tiiiw.e\n[ K'niceton\nI , i, i'l., i.,\n1 Toronto   .\nHi..1.lllllll\nnn\nLM1I.1H\n2,9liMf!l\n,t. \u25a0...._\n.. :.s.t.*.,..;\n:.;;! i_u\nMl 1. '.' 161\n5,11 5\u00ab\n_t_,tl_\nr,:,i ;.._\n:,t .-ee.. ]\u00bb_\n.\u25a0,.:,, ...I\"\nn   ... .    ., .             kT                 j Hamilton     tt,aie.,nr\u00bb\nBullish Foreign News and i-,..,,...,,i   8\u00ab\u00ab..\u00abo\n,T   _             ,,     i.           r,   ,. London      __i,7.i\nUnfavorable Corn Belt\nNews the Reasons\ni Kltohenet\nW.ii.Is.,i'\nI'llll'ACI.. Aut,'. _K Al! grains eev-\nitail.'l lei-lee.,' in pri.',' 'h.'l'.' tbday,\nduo to the LiutllHl, fe.i.lefii news and\n.'..ntliiii,>.l unf-.vo.al.l.' erou ii'iieiris\nfrom tht- domestic torn bolt At the\nfinish wheat was u|) \\lAf lo 2,'.\nwith ...\u25a0i.t.inl.'.'r |1.__^ to $1 2_;l4 em.)\nDesoemlwr JI.27-% t.. 11.28. Corn\nscored a net gain of l'\/ic.to 2_c:\nonts rose fttc Co !7\u00abc. ami in.ni-\ns ems   advanced   l_i,fcc   ((>   gr,c\n.1   Williani    ..\nWinnipeg    \t\nHran.lon     \t\nIt.'S'i..,.     \t\nHaskateieen    \t\nMooM  .law   \t\nI'j-lno..   Allien    . .\n.'.Is-eeiy    \t\nI.dinoiiton   \t\nI.ellllertelge      \t\nMe .Heine    Hnt    . .\nNew    Westln'stel-\nVaneouver     \t\nVict, i'itt     \t\n\u25a0,..0,701.\nMMi\n.24,311\n_tt.4S ,.fi_t\nr,::_,or,n\n3,111,179\nI.4H.M9\nl.l. J3.7l,2\n227..M\n' '.s'J. 11 7\n3,171,1*9\n!,!,\u00bb,sn\n8_|..l_\n172.1,IIB\n13.467,,216\n1.354,185\n1921\n!.IH .'\u25a0 e\n2 123. .177\n813.506\n5.069.481\n751.622\ns\u00ab ..or..:.--.-.\n5.737.441 I\n642.879 i\n542.879 I\nS9 163,965 I\n4.563,121\n7:i2.8',.\"\n2.377.322\n734,450\n3.313.467\n660,403\n411.526.252\n602.482\n2.428.809\n1.314,81.1\n994,271\n251,316\nl.|.;\"e.7T7\n3.665,094\n447,218\nUm_ Article.\nReal Estate\nRpumi\nBo&rd\nTo Rent\nBoat- nd\nAutomobiles\nCLASSIFIED\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost aad Found\nLi.e Stock\nMacaawfT\nFarm Prodace\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlocal __l_| \u00bb\u00bbtlM\u00bb -3c per word\nea.-le Insertion, ln blackface or mi-\n(flllne eapitaU 4<_ per word. Blackface\ncapitals 6c a word; 25 per cent discount If run dally without change of\ncopy for one month or more. Where\n211382 I advertisement ls set out In short lines\n:,:;,; :,IM ! the   charge   Is   15,-   a   lltee   for   Hotnan\n14,165\n1.618,347\nSterling Exchange\nNKW YukK, Auj; US.\u2014BUrllDI cx-\nhaiiRe m_9 tt Ml_4 for 80-ilay\nIlls   anil   at   $4. .S ^    I'or  ficinanil.\n-.Steady    at    -    per    cetil\nItalian\nKleiiel\nNelM'\n$4.4S.\nfr   rent,\nin   dollars\u2014$1.00   1-22.\nlire     I'ciiunif],    1.41V'\n1'ianes - hi niaml.    '..VJc.\ni   in: rks\u2014Itemand,   per  trlllif\nMetal Markets\nLONDON,   Auk.\nCornier\u2014Standard,\ntares   Ui\nfutures    HI,\nTin \u2014 Spot\nLti\nil \u2014\n[32\n-Quotations   :ir--:\npet    Efi,.    r.s,    fu-\nleetn.lyllf, Kpot  \u00a367   IDs\nfuture\nfuture\nfuture\ntn\n17\nfid,\nfid,\nCanada Bonds\nunion   wa\nHeel,\nI.eeiV\nt'lt.se\nr.i'i:\t\n.   149'.\nMia\n141, *-\nl'M.*Sll'\t\nH%\n15'.\n15 U\nl.em.ral   Motor.\n15\n1 4.\";,\n14',\nInt.   Marin.-   \t\nIII\nInt.  Nickel   \t\nIf..;\n107'-,\nl n T >,\nMo.   Pae\t\n.     19'_\nii s\n1|U\nMo.   Par.   pfd.   , .\nrr\"^\n51 ..\n61%\nHef.ek   Island   ....\n.     31%\n30 Vi\n3614\nistu.lebakei-   \t\n'   108>J\n38 H\n3 8 B\n\u2022U.S.   Steel   \t\n106 \",\n106',\n\u2022 Kx-dividend\nwinmi'!:i;, Autr- !l\nissiir   prif's:\nWar    loans     Iffltf,    .Kni.tiH    l.iil.    $101\n\u25a0^Vrtt;    fftl,   IT--.I.   bid;    I'.'-IT.    .10^.10\nfiefunfihi*.    Ioiihs\u2014i;i\u00bbs.    tiiHi.i;.   bill, j W!\\\u21221\nttffM ai-ke.l;   int.  |102.5fi  bid,  $t0-!.S0l     _\\\nitktd j    ;;,;\nWar      loui      renewals\u2014ll*:?.      J101.S0\naKi'efl;   \\W2.   (ii.,..:ni  i.hi.\nVt ory      Iran***\u2014 US4,      IM4.il     liitl.\n.\u00ablnni*n a^lted: in^:, *ie_;r>n hid   *io2.f;r,\na-i<ed;   I9S...   |-\u00bbV4B  hid,   $t(T,.rln   Mk-td*\n1H34.    $104.'in   hid.   $101...:,   asked\n$107,IB   hid,    $107.im   asl.cd.\nZlnr \u2014 Sput     \u00a33!\n\u00a332   15m.\nAl   New    York \u2014\nliar   silver\u2014Foreign,   fi\u00ab \\_r.\nCopper \u2014 Steatly;    electrolyl\n13-to   to   lfWc.   futures   ll^C   t\nTin    Steady;  spnt ami  fulure\nlri>n\u2014Stoailv;    uiiehaiiKnl.\nt.-ad-steady; npot ;s ie $\n7,in< -sii'iniv; tXna\\ St. I,mi\n|4 \u25a0\u2022::.  fniiiifM  is.fl  'o $fi.2...\nAnttniiiiiv   -Sp'il    |I0, ll.\n.:tr-ie\nlfil.IT.\ntype, 20o\" for blut^kface, and 2bc foi\nblackface capitals. Minimum -5o, If\ncharR-pd   60c.\nWant and Olasslfl-d AdTertlsing\u2014\nOne and a half centi par word per Insertion. If paid In advance fdx cents\nper word per week, or 22^0 per word\nper month. Tran.-uent ads, accepted\nonly on a cash-in-advance hauls. Kach\ninitial, flffure, dollar ftlfp, etc.. count?\nas one word. Minimum, 25c, If\n-TharRPd   60c.\nBirths. Marriage*. Death! and In-\nM\u00bbmorlam Cardsd 50c per ln.\u00ab\u00ab'rtion up\nto    33    wordR.      Addii tonal    words    1 %c\nLtitf of Weciding Preienti anrt\nFloral TrlbatM at Fnniraii 10c pei\nline.\nMale Help Wanted\nMKN,    Women\n\u00ab while, learning; to.,1\nl.ici.A   free\non^^e^lllB;   paid\nHupplled.    Cata-\ner   College,   Vancou-\n(7,756)\nWlK-flFIC   OHAIM  qnOTATIOMS\nHlBle\n| OatR\n126e\n133'\n1-S\nM.l\n1.:.\n1 So Vi\n14 S\nl,e.V.\n126.1\n123...\n138\nClOKl-\n128'\u00ab\n125-,\n1301,\n57'*,\n1937.\nEgg Markets\nS.\u2014Queta\nspeeilils\nextras\nOTTAWA,   Aut   3\nT-oronn\u00bb\u2014 Jobbing.\ntttm   43c.\nMontreal \u2014 .lobbi n K.\n*3c.    firsts    36c    to    ;iTc.\nWinnipeg\u2014Pay inp    country    hhlpppr.s\ndell, ered,   extra*   80c,   firsts   '_I7c\nAlbertta\u2014Ketailing,  extras   Hie,  firals\n35c.\nVaneouver\u2014Retailing,      extras      4r>c,\nfii-Hls   4fl_   to   41c.\nCI-lcaRfi   \u2014   December     refrigerators\n3 3 % e\nM      Yerk   \u2014   l-efrieerators,     extra\nfirms   3&i*e,    firsts   33l*c.\nToronto Board\nTORONTO, Aug. 2X.~A bet'er tlem- |\nnnstraiion fif streiiKih anil a smml ,\nincrease in activity was noticed today!\nen the exchange. The musl Impressive\nadvance was in Shredded Wheat cum- |\nmon.   up   |U   to   H|,\nToronto Hallway was the im>st active\nat 11%, Canada Bread common was\ncarried to another new high at 62.\nCity Dairy common was gpOfftHr ;it j\n!\u00bb8*4- Congumers' tJas moved up '-\nt'i 147. and Hell Telephone closed firm ;\nat    134%.\nThe  pulp  anil  papers  were  i\nAbitibi   was   a   slrong   leader\nSituations Wanted Male\n'Ot'Nt!    WAN\u2014En I\nknowie.lge Gei it\nlypewriting. g> n>\nslioi'tbanfl. show\ngeneral trade\nlumber   buFlnf\ngro\nt'on.\n\u25a0it v\n\\Vrl\n1'rench,     fair\nbookkeeping,\noffice     work\n,    experienced\nsix    months.\nconsider   posl-\nv.     office     or\nOertli,   V?e*e\n(G04II)\nPrtiiltrt    \u00abnH   Rjr?8\nWANTKD\nmonths   f\nLanding\npullets.    .\nff.0.i;)\nMontreal Produce\nund\n(eel.\nCkma\n17\nVancouver Stocks\nOonnoltdalf-l\nConk -l'r ovine- \u25a0\nDouglas   ....\nEldorado   ...\nIndian Alines\nInt. Coal ...\nMoOltllvray\nSilver Crest\nSilversmith\nSurf    Inlet    .\nSuoloch   Mini\nSpartan   Oil\nTrojan   Oil    .\nMontreal List\n.ding\nj    of\nMONTH!.Al\u201e       Aug.       JS\npicked    ,lp   Hllghtlv    f.n    the\nket    today,    bat    at     the    i\nvalues   f'unled.\nK pan ish common, following tho an\nnual re por;. was the active leader\nOpening firm at 111. it nhadfti. a\nthe. rinse to 11(1, a loss of i\/^. Th-\npreferrefl. much less active, lost ',a\nI'riee Brothers was second, up Vi n\n4 4'4.\nThe big gain was in Hake of tin\nWoods, up _ at DC.. Hrnvinclal I'ajje\nwas the weak spot, down 4 points a\nthe   new    low   of   8'i.\nThree    h uml red    shares   of    SmelleT:\nold.    lhe   closing   price   being   a\n(I,   off\n' \"osing prices: A bit ihi. fil ;\nerles, 57; Hrompton, 339i ; !\nprefer re fi. 1 1'.' *_\u25a0 ; Spanish com hi i\nSmelters, 4L_. Montr-al How. i,\nQuebec I'ower, MM; Tojttlle,\nSteel   of   C;uiada,    75 ,\u201e.\nVANCOUVI.R    WHEAT\nUS.\u2014 Met\nMINNEAPOLIS, Au\nGrain\ns._Quoti,li\nIlie    hiKllel\nHiltte-l--_N\n6\u00bb,ie;    Nn     .    .-.\nITU\n17\n|.;ts;i.ui-izi-'l\ne.l. IV,   55e-   I\n\u25a0     ...    3iy,0.\n1,\u2014 l-lxt-as,   42c:   fie\nle'leeur\u20141'neliange-e]   t\n|.,|ll it, \u00bb7 it. a hem\nBran--J25.\nWleeeet,     Nee      1     \u201ei ir theni\u2014? 1.2 6 .\nJ13.ie_:   September,   ll.tSH;   Decemb\n$1.29>4;   May.  *1.3Hi.\nCorn \u2014  No.     3     yellow,     J1.15'i\n.1  15\",.\nData \u2014No.    3    white.   I'le,.-   ,.,   1.1%,\nl-'leix-No.    I,   II.9.U    t,,   5_:it;ee,.\nInfantile Paralysis\nEpiiemir. in Detroit\nI'rev.e\nhi     I.e-\neef      til,\n1   1\".. i\nMachinery for Sale\nlOltTAItl.R SAWMILLS \u2014 American\noeetl tnlnlotf eqnli.menl till kinds\nrel.eeilt; boiler\" (-.eiiipressor,. lopKlny\n-\u2022laeliiliery See,el      fur     stock      list\nNational    Machinery   Co..   Ltd..   Van\neouver. 157531\nRoom and Board\nl-'I'UNIslll'l.  ROOMS\nlly,      fee,      StudelllS\nthei,i...lv.-:..      AlM-ly,\nNews.\nROOM  . jKfelt)    l.eeAUl\n.   nail'\n(5376\nBoats and Automobiles\ni,i-:\\ i:i,anii   TOi'Ul-NO   CAR\u2014Com-\nVletelv  overhauled.    l.e-i.Hiu.atile  ltrlce\nand  terrns.    Will   take  light  ear  as\npart   payment.      Willio   PIhii..   S,..tf\n(0103)\nCity Property for Sale\nl-'OIt    SAl.lC-_.Mew    McLaughlin    Four, |\njr.titi ea-le   balani't-  J9H.65  peer  monlh:\nNew    MeLnughllii    Masl.-r    Klx.    1700\ncash.      balance      f! 09      per      month.\nNelson   Transfer   Company.   Nelson.\n(60761\nWANTKO^Lali. model Kurd Car or\nlight truck, cheap Tor OUh, He.x\n6069.   Dally    Hosts. _!__!_--.'.\nSTAlt MI'lvClAL l)i..noiistr:it.,r. run\nOlousMd miles Kee thla If you\nwant bargain. ('ash or terms.\nKienienav   (lii.-ag.-.   Nelson. (60531\n,.--.,..I. ,     l<'oiir-*flilety\np'(.it   sai.i-: -\nTouring car,\ngood running\nson's   Assay\neerder.\nOffice.\nrrhauled.\nApply. Wl.l.li.w-\n16060)\n(.'etui-til   Foundation.\nGarden   Lots.\n*30l)0.     .500   Cacm.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nInsurance City Proporty_\nINVESTilENTS\nISunyulow,\nlots,   fruit\nmod-\n\u00bbD00\nLive Stock for Sale\nK1VE VOl-NO AY USUI UK COWS\u2014\nMilkiiiH, fifty dollars each; one Just\nfreshened, fifty-five dollars. Lt*\npage,   icrullvali __    (60911)\n[**(1R HAM.\u2014 Registered '.v.Wk poat. jusl\nfle^henerl; also one which friishened\nlast    April,      Willis    Piano    Store.\n(6054)\nKOR SALK\u2014 Two cows, milking: eleht\n\u25a0MM; twent v-four eliiekens. B\u00abr-\n\u25a0mln for cash. Apply, Rox .068.\nDaily   News.   _ (Ii068)\nKOR HAM;\u2014 Oentle Jersey milk cow,\nfi years old, a first-c.ass milk and\nbutler cow. COW and 2-months-old\nheifer calf. Ill the two. Apply.\nMrs,   O.   Davldf*.   Wynndel,   B.C\n(_07n\nONE OR TWO I,TOUT HORSKS,\nharness aiol sprinc wacon for sale -\nOr will exrhaofre for hMW ' nrics\nor cows      Dominion   f-airv,   Nelson\n4R012J\nYORKSHIRK      1'ICH    -~    $1 TiO      (?**ch.\nRootbby,   Edgewood. (5S06)\n\u25a0^LASHIPTRP   nds   hnnK~rft\u00bbultH   nulck-\nlv  and   economifallv.     1'.r    .   word\nROOM    AND\neetet  bete*\nHUARD\u2014(foi\nHfix   HU#,\nBOMB\nRakei\nTOR\n..JS\ndent,   in\nv   News,\n(108%.\nPOT    NTt'DI.N'TS\u2014Mrs\nMill   Btrwt Oi0_.'l)\nFor Rent Unfurnished\nFOR     RKN'T\ni.u-r     Onll;\nmoii'h\nThe Consolidated Ining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice   Smelting   snd   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper,  Pit;  Lead and  Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nMiscell;ineou\u00abi Wanted\nFor Sale or Rent\nVANCOUVER,    A.ik.\nexchange     wheat    priced\n. Iilpin.nl   from   prairie   |.\nNn.   1   northern\u2014 Hl.l,   I\n11 33 T\u00ab.\nInls:\nOn\u2014.\nim.eisl.\nii.   U'l;\nrliants'\nprompt\nnHkcil,\nMoney\nAT WORK\nBrief      but      Important      Leanona     lo\nrinance.   Markets,   Btooka,   Bond*   aad\nln.es tments\ncr     \t\nAS STEEL GOES\nSO GOES BUSINESS,\nQhariof\nSteeJBusiaesj\n!\u25a0\u25a0 I  Biamvssdurt\n'   OECAUSC THE STEEL\nBUSIMESS 15 A\n8A5IC INDUSTRY   IN\nTHIS e_OUMTRV\n0P6 lylL\nSHORT SeaTrip\nSpend moderately on your pass- I\nage and yel get the maximum in\ncomfort and service. Sail from\nMontreal or Old Quebec \u2014two\ndays down the picturesque St.\nLawrence\u2014only 4 days open sea.\nAristocratic s_ri*(cf at\ndemocratic   fares  on\nCanadian Pacific\nONE CLASS SHIPS\ntAWADIAN    PACIFIC    AGENT*     EVCI_V W M E CTE\nJ.   S.   CARTER,\nDistrict   Passenger   Agm.,    Nelson,   B.C.\nKm:   SAI.I-:.   ItKXT  on   HXCHANOK\nIni|ir.ivi-I    nieie-li,    s He    for    .le.ir,\netmK   vi-K.-talili.-i   anil   fruit       VS'li.i\noffera.     li'.x   6010.   Dally   ..<\u25a0\u00ab\u201e\n(11070\nU'ANTKI.     !\u25a0\nfn.el       ,-ee,.-\nHouses Wanted\nI    IhmikhImw,\nfi.uttd'-lif.ii.\nDaily    New-1\n(fiUSS)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nW>R  sai.!':- Lm*i   wWttf lmcKy,  al-\nmoct    iu-w.     Wilson,    _20   Silic*.\n_ inosfi)\nVJNTIHR BOUS-BHOLD\" FOR SALE.\nprtvittfy\u2014Fiirnitiire. in jTiiod condition ; pin m>. hods, drrssf-rs, baby\ncotiii. rockors., buffet, dinlnK room\ntable, chnirs, ranpe, j;as plute, bleh\neliaii, flislii's. li'iiil jiirs, tubs,\nwriniri'i'. garrtrn ttini^, Iuimp, the\nOlbrr    Bf-itC-M.     M\u00ab_     Port!     TonriiHJ;.\na. it. ii.tkIi, in  Lctiowr.       -tiii'ir.)\nP__AY\u00a3B   PIANO   -Vftv   sliirbtlv    Dttt.\nin     ii.rt.'i'i     i-onililion-       This     is     a\n;    r<-at   hai'iriiin.      Terms    to   suit.      Oaf\ndoxtn    mils    fi-p..       Mason    &    Riwh.\nKimite.l,    Nelson.    IU'. <(5'il0)\n$1400-\nern;\nCBMh.\njl 400\u20144 -roomed    Hungaluw,   mod-\nfrn;   1   lot,  Fairview.    $800  cash.\n$161.0\u20145 - roomed   Bungalow,   mod -\ncm;    4   lots,   fruit   trees.     M0\ncash.\n$_J..0O\u2014.. -roomed    House,    modern;\n3   lotw,   fruit   irees.     Half   cash.\na. t. McMillan\nRoom   1   (next   to   Dm.   I-minett   and\nEaton), 601  Baker  St.    Phone  601.\n(GIU3>\nFOR RENT\nHouse,   Hoover\n7-roomed   mod\nstreet.     $23.00.\nFOR SALE\n6-rt,omi''l    m.nl.'1-n    U.iuteo,    Front\nHtreet.    Splendid   buy   ot   $11100.00.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nFire\u2014Life\u2014Automobile   and   Accident\nInsurance.\n(607:,)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSION At\nD.RECTOK*\n. <Oonffa\u00bb-\u00ab)\nElectrical\nHOWE   BtECT\u00bbIO  OO^-\nI'ower,   Light  and  Radio  Inatallal\ntions.    Battery  Service  Station.\nera in Electrical  Ruppllee.\nOpera   Home   Block.\nP. O. Box 938. -.hoar]\t\n|581\u00bb|\nRepairing\nH\nR.   XXTTO,     unnsmlt-t   \u2014  Teaol^\nRackets   ReHtrullff   aod   Repair,\nBicycle Dealer.    Machine Works.    (5850fl\nChimney Cleaning\nWP*.   rowtsa,\n\u00bb*      Cleaner.\nWa\n(5\u00bbH)|\nShoe Repairing\nPbal BBOa KBraixi_ra, no 1\nson's   Bay.    C.    Romano,   manatnw.l\nPrinting\nTHB DAILY HBW3\u2014Quality PrlotlBf.\nKuliiiK,   Loose   Leaf   Forma,   Ledser\nSheets   and   Binders   always   In   stock.\nPiano Tuners\nI   Hove   Pome   Very\nVictor    Record,,\u2014Remember,    wc    litivt:\nth.   .\".lv   Pull   i.i..-   ,.r   Record,   in\nII.\"     lib-trill.       MASON     ft     BISCK.\nLIMITL'D.   Hox   Iii...   ,\\_i:-on,   B.C.\n1500.)\ni-'..it\"s.\\i.i-:~\n!\u25a0'.   ii   .-\nORGANS\nis. Trail\nS1h-liTl\"T\"~m\nBart\nHI'\ne'ti    S-    Hisch.\nind,   us   Enoi   a.-\n\u25a0e.-n. tarnta te, sent.\nI.lniiti-d,   Box   IU,\n(.0111\n|.'i.i:   sai.i:\u2014Boauouse.\n(iellanl.er.\nJ1.10.\n.1     W\nBARRKLB-\nNoleon.\nMacDonald\nJam   Comnwnv,\nIB012)\n\\\\'AN\"l'i:i,     Sii-eill    l.u.iKiil'iW.    Kernel\nelitle.n      slnne-     tietin.lal line.     clos.\nLost and Found\nPIPE AND FITTINGS, ETC.\n.'.mil.lot.- lino Pipe anil l''lttinB\u00ab.\noil llies. S|e.-.-liil, I -iit. ti Pipe, To\npor f....t. RboflBI rat, f -ply.\n11.60; L'-ply, .^.00; .'1-pl.v, $2.10 por\nIt.II.    l-:\\tr:i   bMVy   ll-ply   Mltienil-\niZeel       \u00bbUrt\u00abCe,       00       Ues.       BOB       ri.il,\n\u25a0paclal.   J3.00.     M-inoh   Air   Hose.\n\u25a0ultablfl for i-'unions. la por font.\nMllOd  Win   Nails,   II.N   por   ki-K.\nWin- Iteilie-, t'an.as, LoflfflU Setii-\npll'.-s    tniei    all    IdnilH    ...Hilprnont.\nI!.(\\ JUNK  <'<>.\n135 Powoll St. \\'anoouver, B.C.\n(5004)\nTRLL   your   war.tH   tt.r.iatm   Ttie   Dail,\nWw\"   elaasjflod   columns\nFor Itent\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL  ACT\nI Form    V )\nCertificate  of  Zmprovaraents\nNOTICE\nMil\nnral\n(*ia\n,iluat<\nMining   Dlvia\nof    ' tsuj i>o_.    ptftTlQt,      Wliere    lo-\ncalfil:      (in    Xf>rth-1'\"ast    slope    ol\ntlffhtninl   f'f\u00bbi<   MetmUtn.\nTAKE  ttOTICB  that   I,   A.   II.  (.teen\nHCtinft    as    Agent     fur    Tlios.     Hayer,\nFree   Miner's   Certificate   No.    l_r....-('.\nIntend,     sixty     days     from     the     -late\nheifcif,       tu      apply       to      the       Mining\nReconier   for a  Certificate  i*r   Improv-:-\nments.   for   the   purpose   of   obifl-lnlQjf\na   Crown   \u25a0 irant   of   lhe   above   claim.\nANI> KCRTIIMH TAKI. NOTICF\nthut uctifin, untler nertifm 37, munt\nbe coin me need before the issuance ot\nam-h   Cerlifieate   if    I in proven en ts.\nlAATl.I.) thia 18 th duy of June.\n11*24,   Al). (5371)\nBusiness Opportunities\nIn Neflsom\non my list. Prices from |160M_\nto JtilUHl.UII. Fruit Itjinches anfl\nMixeil Karmiiif, from JI200.IH) tfl\n$1 .,000.01).\nD.  A.   McFARLAND\nJfcal  Kstale \u2014llfllcviie Co\u00bbl - Insuranrf\nRoom 8, K.W.C. Block,    Telephonfl 4:\n(r.itoii\n1-\\>H SALK\u2014 [\u25a0'ive-roonieil modern lmn-\ngalow. with flower K'Uflen; $250\ncash, bn|ance $20 a month. Hox\ntlOIiti,    Dally    News. (MM)\nown\" your 6wn~home\nS_00 C;iHh\u2014Kunsalow, modern,\nfii-eplace in livitm POCRfl. I b'vel\nlots;   outbuildings.   Hahim-c an rent.\n$300 Cash\u2014House, modern; 3\nbedrooms;   central   location.\n$500\u2014I-ungalow, 0 rooms; fully\nmodern; I lots. This is a new\nbuiiK'ilow. I-aliiine  $-$  per month.\nH_-D___-T w. m_i-TDBi.__, Bxptrt\u2014 Jf.\nurio,-, Flayer Flanoa, Organs.    P 111\n(60\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR.\nDAWSOlf\u2014\n\u2022  Rfl..l    Estate,   Insurance,   Rentals.\nAnnable Blk.  P.  O   Box 7S3. Phone  111.\n (B7M)\nn\u00bb    i>ti,r.    jnsnKAWcB,   raj\n\u2022     AND   CITT   PBOPEKTT.\ne.on   Ward  street.                  Nelson, B.O\n I 60.1)\nMonuments\nCAMPBBLI.\nH1HTAL   CO.\u2014P.  O\nft\n30.-\ni-l.-ph.\nBITCKZS      MOHTJ.\nBox !\u00ab5,  Hel-\n(5760)\nPainters and Decorators\nMURPHY    BROS\u2014\nAntes Painted\nDealers ln Wall Paper\nStore\u2014 Auto  Shop\u2014\n701    Bilker   St. 4H   Hall   St.\n  (0761)\nAccounting\nBAMES   P\nAnd\nBox   1191\nHTJItTBR\u2014\nyj     Auditor, McDonald Jam  Bnlldlnf.\nNelson,   BC,\nFlorists\n'' UIZSRLr.tlH    Q RBEWHOUSB,    K\u00ab>\nV_ son. Cut flowers and Flower desltena\n(076S)\nw\n. s. jon_fso_- \u2014\nPhon*-     .4t       *^ut    rioi\n\u25a0 and   Plonl  Knibicms.\nrnrteux\n(C05S)\ni\\  A.  WHITPUELP,\n,10   Stanley   St. Opposite   the   Ua\nlnsurunce\u2014Kentals\u2014 City   1'roiierty\n(607\nMiscellaneous\nANYONK      ItKgftltlNtJ\nh<\ncan    hi\ntill     March     IC.       Is\npurpose   horse:   useful\nlong    drives    or    light\nH.   Chanter.    111!     l.\nfor   ilo\nranch\nPRINTVX) stationery   or all  kl ids. The\n[)nllv     New-'     PrintlM     DAM' tin ent\nWORKINO        I'AKTM'T,\nWith   about   |SM   cash,\n(nlrre.'.t    |Q   goiiu;   ;.i\u00ab i\nt'oUiitihin.    <rthcr  nwr\neiiRiiii'.'i'.    Mui   \\-, ne*\non    hue    of   <*.]'.II       T\nifl\ncily\nil    1.000\nwants\nSplrn.ll'\nI|j      pel-\nnil\nWANTED  \u25a0\nto take liHlf-\n>ill in Hritish\n\u25a0r la li.-'tici.l\nKtul Ifl right\nBbtr clow to\nis cnodttlotifl.\nOay, timber\nii ami E 0,000\ni poles. Si iiior\n\u2022tire, account ef\nporliinity. ,1. li.\n!. (lOll)\nHOTEL MENUS\nW\u00ab print Hotel Menus, either\nWith complete menu* or with\nthe different heeding* and\nblank spaces for typing In th*\nbill   of   far*.\nJob\nThe\nDaily   Newt\nDepartment\nTha Home of Good Printing\nNels.n.   B,   C.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nMis.\n.-.;. I\niMeeii... .\nhospital.\nIO U 8 B K E\nIIS    Slli. \u25a0-,.\nKoi t.-itiiy   I,\nIP 1 Nl\n-M.pl.\nI'riix'isiiKii tiiiucr-nooMEp SI rn-;\nOver sttti-iiiii.i    Bm .mis, Pai\nM\u00abs-\nI'll-\nw.\nRAMSDEN, (Vmetery Rd.\nCut  Flowers.  Floral  Emblems and\nlials.     I'he.ne  3261.2..       (6028)\nH.    MAWEH\u2014Hardy    Perennial\nPlant Crewel'. Nelson. H.C.     (5775)\nWholesale\nAKACDONAI.D St CO.\u2014\n\u2022 Wholesale Croeers nnd Provision\nMerchants. Importers e,f Teas, Coffeea,\nKplees. Hrled Kreilts, Staple and Fani.T\nCro.eries.      Nelson.    H.C. (T.784^\nEngineers\nGtee* B'01\" Bur*. c^\nNELSON,   B.O.\nCIVIl.     AND     MINING     B WO ITf __\u00ab__.\u00bb\nB.    C-.    Alberta    and    Doinlnloa\nLand   Surveyor*.\nCrown arant Agent*.        Blue rrlntlnr\n(5755)\nH7\nJ.     DAWSON,     1-fiort     Surveyor,\nMining:  and  Civil Bngloier,\nB I \u25a0 \u25a0 1.760)\ni;nv\n(\u2022(.MKtUiTAHI.i: I'TliMSIIKIi HOOM\n--- VurnUOfl heiiteil, on UnkiT Street.\nHox   Milt   U.iily   News,   i,l-  plioue   HI,\n_  t604r\u00bb)\n{SUiTI-S    Volt    RBNT \u2014 At    Ashman\nApiirLineiits,   71,.    HaluT   Street.\n(6021)\nPOR KENT\u2014One single room, one\ntwo-roomeil suite, one three- roomed\nsuite.     Annable   liloek, (5757)\nT~Un-\nKerr\n(6161)\nFURNISHED tftJIT-ES\u2014\u2022 Also a\nfurnldlied Five-Hoomed Suite.\nApartments.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nTransfer\nA7\nTKINSON\nidge   Coal.   I'hone\nTBAJfSFSX\n421\nLeth-\n(5723)\nAssayers\nE.\nW. WIDDOWSON, Hox A1108 Nela*\nson, B.C. Standard western charges.\nAuctioneers\nw.,\nllllll \u25a0\u25a0\nQootls Sold Privately ana at anotloa\nNelson   Auction   Marl,    Vernon   StreeL\nFuneral Directors\nDj.  BOBEKTSoir,  r.D.D.  k  a.\u2014\n\u2022 S01    Victoria    street.      Phone    291.\nNight    Phone,    157T-. (5789)\nj\" \"itS VRiW\nStandard   Pornlcnr*\nCo.\u2014    Undertakers,\nFuneral     Director*,\nAuto  hearse,   up-to_\ndate    chape*.     M\nV,*   eervlcee.     F r 1 o \u2022 \u25a0\n\"-' rutOMbU.      (5770)\nPRINTED  stationery  oi  airiilnds.  Th\u00bb\nly  and  eeonomfeally.    1 lie a   word.\nBRINGING  UP  FATHER        -:\n\u2014 \u2014:\u2014 Bv George McManus\nWhy 1* th* motto, \"Am \u00ab_*\u2022! tr\u00a9**\n\u00bbo fo\u00ab* bu*ln*\u00bb\u00bb,\" a food motto for\nthe   average   man   to   follow?\n'\u25a0 The categorical answer to this question Is that the slogan Ih a good one\nto follow because It works out. The\nreal  question  is,  why -does  It work?\nPrimarilv, becauet the steel Industry Is one of the mo*. ba**c indus-\ntries In the coyntry. Rome consider\nIt even more basic than agriculture\nbecause we can Import food from other\nplaces but wo cannot import enough\nSteel   Ut   keep   us  #eiBK-\n.    present   Industrial   age   demands\n~SUgJ    nnd     \u00ableei     products     for    malt)\n\"iwes,   and    In    this   way    the   business\nof     the     steel     eompnny    affects    the\nbusiness  o(   tbe   whole   continent.\nI  WANT  \\OU TO C^LU ON  MR\n^MlTr-V  IT YOU WATCH HIM AND\nTRV TO ACT  AND TALK   LIKE HIM\nI^VlTLL OO >TGU cOQD\n \u25a0**\u25a0\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\u25a0\n<?#>\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29. 1924\nFags Nina\nFREAK AIRPLANE SOLVES PROBLEhfOF VERTICAL FLIGHT\nAci-fad*fflrtilM arw \u00ab_tpec(ii_r, n. atwrlltnj atiw>u_J-en_*-it tbaf: a h\u00abUcf)pter \"has bi-en bulk in th* rnited States\nwhich will fly. The strange machine was built hy Henry A. Berliner of Washington, D.C, at Collar* park,\nnearby. It resembles a tr plane in shape. The propellnra. however, are loeated above the wing**.. OaefQattOIl\ni.s said to have been overcome. The helicopter had never heen tried foi altitude or distance, it [| said. Her-\nHner built the mfichine a;, his own expense, and took the matter up with the United States air service. Lieutenant Harold R. Harris fi McCook field went tn Washington and made some secret trials. A conference followed immediately at McCook field, In which Berliner participated. Then the cloak of secrecy was drawn\nabout the entire matter, which inspires the belief that perhap.. Berliner has solved the problem of verticil\nflight.\nCOMMISSIONER\nREADS THE RIOT\nACT TCI CHIEF\nDeclares Vancouver Is Running Wide Open; Arrests\n1   License Bail Jumpers\nBADEN TOWNS ARE EVACUATED\nVANCOUVER,       Aug,\n1 imc    is   ripe   for   |    con\n-Tin\n>lete\ntu\nover in Vancouver, Police Commissioner Robert Mcl'herson told the\npolice commission today. The city\nis running wide open, he assorted\nand although it cannot ht made\nlike a Sunday school, people would\nnot stand for present conditions\nmuch longer. He handed over a\nnumber of addresses of suspected\nplaces to the chief of police for investigation.\nMayor Owen stated that the police were acting instantly on any\ninformation regarding gambling or\nbootlegging joints, and if any complaints were turned over to thom,\naction    would    be   taken.\nHepresentations are to lv? made to\nthe provincial government by the\npolice commission, protesting against\nthe long season of racing permitted\nin the Vancouver district, necessitating a large amount of work for\nthe police which the force should\nnot   be   called   upon   to   perform.\nArrest and Rearrest\nYANCOrvl-U. Auk. 11\u2014A rod-hot\nindictment of the police w.is uttered\ntOtfay by Robert McPherson, the\nnewly appointed police commissioner.\nHe ili'clai'es lhe city i.-; vide open,\niihd that lln- people will nol stand\nthe situation much longer. A tetter\nfrom the Native Sons of Hritish Columbia    aiked    that     the    mi ml pit    of\npatrolmen   Im   increased.\nMt*. MoP-l-TVOn asl-oil ihe chief\npoint-blank why hr was not .getting\nresults.\nThe chief claimed he ffilt getting\nlesults and making scores at arrests,\nto which Mr. McPherson replied thai\nScores    of    them     wer<>    also    jumping\ntheir ball.   Making arreeta waa merely\na process to enable them ti carry on\nas licenced individuals. If warrants\ncould not he issued for tr,cs<* gain -\nbling ami booze -.selling individuals,\nthey should be arrested six or seven\ntimes   a    night    if   necessary.\nThe commissioner gave the elref\nn long list of eomplainls h\" had received regarding disorderly houses\nand   bootleggers.\n\"I am behind you to gel results.\"\nhe said tO th\u00ab chief, \"hut don't go too\nslowly. Arrest and reaireat, Othor-\ntritf th\" policing f>f the cily will bo\ntaken    out    of    vour    hands,'\n\\    LAAfS\nV*   , .\n,_ j \\   Zantr..j\n\\*r_ S^\\k~'\\\n**> C \\\n__ .        7\n\/\n\u2022 _\u00bb \/\n*r9    strasbourqc\n'. _y     t\net.\nEp.nal\nTOV\/\/V3\nUhtO(KllMO\nSVACUATCD\nBY FftCHCH\nn    f^\u00a3!t_____\ni ________ .,\n^ A XJ      *\n4\" * v*     a\nU it|   ,        ,\nAr s     \"'^-;.\nF       .\n, vr\nOA.V\nf\\*e>*s_ot*,m\\S*\n<_   3V\/ITZ_R-AND\nTli\nhave\ndesire\ntwo Hade;, towns, Oftmbuff eiti'l Appvaw-Mf, fron whieh the Kreneh\nusl witheleuwn their lump;, ns ;i j,',slur.' .if good will anil an earnest\nte,  see-  the1   iietfl   eef  I.ein.lnn   opei-alive,   are   shown   on   thp  ahuve   mat..\nONE ISSUE IN\nMONTREAL FIGHT\nMeighen Asks St. Antoine\nto Declare Against Commercial Surrender\nM'>\\TR.__.I.,      Aim.      _-., \u2014  \"Let     im i\nissue    in    tic   St.    Ant\u00abiiii\"   divert    you j\nfrom tin. om great laaue,\" Rt. Hon.\nArthur   Uetghea,   coaaarvatfva   leader., i\nto lil    an    a ml it rice    of    electors    of    the j\nflivi; ioa   hero   tonight.\n\"To allow the government to con-\nliTiii.' mi its liriNi'iil fiscal policy; J\nfor St. Ant oi ne to glW I mandate\nto    Mr,    Kin;.',    which    won hi   mean    thnt\ntela   great   esommerciai   elty   approvea\nhis policy, Would mean commercial\nsurrenilcr,\" Mr. Ml ighi'ii continued,\n\"an.l      commercial       siirrerifler.      befOtt\nmany    ftere,    neana    natlona]    wr-\nHuBt   Maintain   Commer<cial   Life\nHe    deehire.l    that    I     preiectlv.'    pol-j\nley     was    all    in    all    I'or    Cana.la,    and j\nhe     pointed     out     that     ther*     was    Bl\nether country which (tha Canada bad\nto    matntatn    iis    eonMneretal    entity\nagainst    the    opposition    of    (he    most,\npowerful    commercial    country    in    the\nBOXER IS FIFTEEN\nMILES FROM SHIP\nIs Reported Getting Ready\nfor Dash Through Ice\nif Necessary\nXOMI., Alaska. A Of. 2S.-The position of the steamer lioxer, Cnited\nlUtea bun au o( education vessel,\nwas reported today to be lfi milos\nfrom the gasoline schooner Lady Kin-\ndorsley. drifting in the Ice with a\nere* of 1,'i, i',Q miles from I'oint Harrow,\nThe [.oxer was said to bo ready to\nmalic   a    dash    through    the   ice,    when\ncondition! permit, to rescue tha crew\nOt   the    Lady    Kinilei'slcy.\nWord also was received today that\nsome of the crew of the schooner\nAnlic, which Is stuck in the ice, will\narrive hero tomorrow .aboard the\nsteamer Teddy Hear, commanded by\nCapt. Joe Hernani. The Teddy Hear\npicked up some of the crow members\nen mute to \\onio from near Point\nHarrow.\nW\nId.\nMr\nthe\nI'eggy Joyce's lack of success in\npicking out her husbands suggests\nihat she wouldn't ho any belter [ban\n-anyone else when it comes to cantaloupe.\nEurope is now making a treat d\ncovory    in    the    field    of   psyhoi\nnam. ly.   lhal   fervid  oratory  has   |\n,lically   no   effect    on   B   nioneylen.l\nMetghaa   bettered   it   should   ho |\njeet    ft   Canadian    policy    espe-\nI eially    to    build    up    trade    with    othei i\nportions    of    tho    Empire    anil    particularly    with     those    parts    of    it    which I\n[ are    consumers    of    goods    Canada    can j\nj supply.     That   was   the   kind   ol\"   rooi-\n| preoity    Canadians    should    lonk    for.      I\n\"Alter-    M    years    Pf    failure    to    gel \\\nreciprocity,     I    believe    that,    instead    of j\npunning   that   policy   further,   aa   tt j\nthe    pledga   ol   the   govetMtant,    we i\nsin ni Ul re i race our steps, and retrace j\nthem luitil we are .aire thnt these\nIndustries that compote with British '\nindustries have adequate protection I\nin    this   Dominion,\"   he   declared\ngy\nBeing Married\nSaves Burglar\nFrom the Lash\nYAXCCrVKK. Auk, 2S\u2014 \"If you\nwere not a married man with | family, I would nive you a whipping\"\ndeclared Judge Cayley today, in sentencing to\u00bbffve yoars In Jail .lack Ord,\n1'0-yoar-olil confessed burglar, guilty\nof onteritiK six houses anil of having\nsnatched   a   woman's    purse.\nA lVtroit man has complained U\nlhe poUoa that sotn.d.o.ly caterofl hli\nkitidien  and   caifioil   away   the   ran*,*.'\nOne who knows practically noth-\njn\u00ab* about tho matter is sometimes\nmoved to wonder whether all these\ngattdy flies on sale are made In hook\nfish or fishermen.\nCONDENSED 'WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each space. Enclose money order\nor check   and   mail   direct to  The   Daily   News,   Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for price of four\nwhen cash accompan es order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar sinns, etc., count es one\nword.     No   charge  less  than   50  cents.\nPlease   publish   the   advertisement   below     times, for  which  I   enclose $ _\nIf  desired,   replica may  be  addressed  to  box   numbers   at   The   Daily   News   Office,      If   replies   are\nto be mailed, enclose 10c extra to cover cost of post age  and  allow  fivo  words  extra   for   box   number.\n*-*\u2022*-* v\u00bb\u2014***e \u25a0*\u25a0 \u25a0 w->\u25a0_ -\n\u00bb. *>**\u2022\nDON'T FORGET That to Make Up the $20 Limit\nYou Can Include Dry Goods, Boots, or Any Other\nMerchandise We Carry.\nREMEMBER All Goods Are Fresh, Clean, and up to\nthe Hudson's Bay Co. Standard and All Honest Weight.\nCut This Out for Reference and Hang in Your Kitchen.\nMonday Being a Holiday Please Give Us an Extra Day\nto Dispatch.\nFlour, Feed and Sugar in 100 lb. Sacks Add 15c Extra for\nFreight.\nBiscuits\nOur stock is fresh, shipped to us in\nsealed '.ins. We carry a larqe assortment\nof Christie's and Huntley & Palmer's, to\nthat   you   are  sure   of   a   oood   selection.\nChristie's Fancy niscuit.-*, assorted, lh. 50_*\nOhiWle's  (Iraham   Wafer.*.,   tin       75<i\n(.hriatie'.s     Keecption     Wafers,     united,     per\nW    80\u00ab-\nCM__-W*I   \"'ream   Hnd.iK,   tin    50\u00ab*\nChristie'^ HodA?*, family curton   85***\nJtumany's Cream Sifdas. carton. alMiut I\nl\"*'  81.00\nBaking Powder, Etc.\nIludRorfs  Hay Co.'.s  ttUUrtf Pou-rter.  li-ofc\nthl   t 25<*\nHudson's   I.ny   t*o,'s   I.akins    F'owder,   Mfc\nlin  85^\nHudson's   Bay   Co.'s    {taking:   Powder,   ;.-lt>.\ntln      S1.25\nMagic   llukinK  I'owdPr,   12-oz.   tin    35^\n,M\u00abBio BuklriK powder. t<lt-tta. tin      91.00\nEgg-(. HakinK Powilur, 1'2-oz. tin 35^\nDr. Ptirc's PakinK Powflcr. ]_.,.7. tin 55<^\nllr.    Prtre's    HnkinK    Piewelee-.     _'_-]l..\n\u2022\" -* \u00bb1.75\nOlllMt'R  Cream  ,.f  Tartar.   M-IL.   |.kK. 30<.\n'iiiictt'a Create. \u201er Tartar, H-lb, pkg 35C\nIlaklnB    Soda.    (\"<,w    Brand,     1-11..    pkB,\n2  \u2022*  25..\nConfectionery\nII.    It.   Co.'h    I'nre   Candv,   asmrtment,   per\nlb 30.*\nII.  B.  Co.'s Pure  Candv,  special  a.ssorlment,\nlh 40\u00ab*\nII.    it,    Co.'s    T.uxura    Chocolates,    ansorted,\n\u00bb 60*\nII.    H.    t'n.'.s    Chocolates,    1-11,.    I.oxes.\n75*. S1.00 m- 81.25\nBeef Extracts\nB-VrU, 2-11-. l.ottle   40*\nBovril, 4-oz. bottle  - 75\u00a3\nIlov.il. S-oz.  l.ottle       81.35\nBovrll,   16-oz.   I.oltle    82.50\nJohnston's Fluid  Beef,  10-oz. I.otilc 81.15\nC)\\n  Cubes.   .   cubes,   tin    IO*\nOx,.   Cubes.   10   rubes,   tin       25*\nCanned Pineapple\nNew Season's' Pack Just Arrived\nat Lower Prices\nLlbby's Pineapple Slices, No. 1. flat\n,ln    - 25*\nI.ibby's Pineapple Slices, N\u201e. 1, flat\n\"\"\u2022 3 \u2022*  65*\nI.ibby's    Pineapple    Slices,    Xo.     _,    tall\nlln    35*\nI.ibby's   Pineapple,   Crushed.   No.    1.   flat\nlin    \u201e 20*\nI.ibby's   Pineapple,   Crushed.   No.   _,   tall\n__*  30*\nIlapi.y     Vale     Pineapple,     Broken     Sll, e. .\n\u2022No- \u00ab, w   30*\nLibhys Fruit Salad, No. 2, tall tin 4_}-\nGrnpe   Fruit,   Hearts   and   SUK.lr.   No.   2,\ni\"\u00bb   'in 45^\nDried Fruit\nSunmaid Seedless Raisins, l..-t>z. pkt,. 15^*-\nSun ma Id Seeded Kalslns, lf.-o?,, pkt. 15^\nMahiKu  ('luster  Raisins,   1-lh.   pkf.      25^\nHallowi   riatea,   per   lb 15^\nWhile CooWnt Kins, choice. 2 Ihs. for WR\nWhite CookiiiK Pips, fancy, 2 Ihs. for 35<**\nPiunes,   medium   size,   _>   lbs.   for 25<*\nPruiit's.   extra   large,   per  lh        25j*\nCurranls,  (\"leaned,   hulk,  lb     20<*\nPreserved   (linger.   Dry,   lb.     50\u00abt\nJam-New\nBuy Before the Price Advances\nNelknn  nrahd, StitiwlM-rry, 4-ll>,  tin  .   90*\nNedsem  Brand,  Raapberry,   4-lb.   tin   .   90*\nNelson  Brand. Apricot,  4-lb.  tin     90*\nNelson  Brand, Black Currant,   .-Hi. lin 90*\nMarmalade\nKeiUcr's    Orane;,.    M.irmalaele,    4-lb.\nU\"    -     81.00\nKeillor's    l.lttle    Chip    .Marmalade,    class\n**  30*\nlli.lncs' (-ran\u201ec Marmalade. 1-lb. tin 85<*\nIlaine.- Ora&fo Marmalade. Klass .la. 3f><*\nIluines'    c.inp,.    l-'ruil    .Marmalade,    4-lh\n_  - OO*\nNelson   Brand   orant;,,   Marmalade.    1-[|\u00bb.\n\"\"  85*\nCanned Fish\nNew Season's Pack at Lower\nPrices\nSalmon.    Horseshoe,    i\u00a3s\nSalmon,    Horseshoe,     ls,\nK.i.ke.v,\nlin    .\nSockeyc\nlin\nCohoe   Salmon.   Bed,   1-lb.   tall   tin\nSalmon,   Pink.   1-lh.   tall.  :l  tins   .\nPilehai'ils,   Vis.   flat   tin   \t\nPilchards,   Is,   tall   tin  \t\n..nrwi-Kian     Sardine's,     Neerceenner\nTuna   Pith,   While  .Meat,   IH\nhie\nflat\n20*\ntall\n35*\n20r\n50*\n10*\n15*\nIrand.\n35*\n40*\nCanned Meats\nCorned   Beef,   N,e,   1   tin   \t\nFuitlish   Brawn.   Nn.   1   tin    ,\nBee!'   Steak   and   Onion. No.   1   tl\nBoast   Peef.   No,   1   lin   \t\n.'..mbri.lK'e   Sausage,   No.   1   tin\nI.imeh    Te.hpue,    No.    '.,    tin\nPunch   Ton\u00abue,  No.   1   tin   \t\nOx   Tonsue.   No,   1%   tin   \t\nA'eal   Is.af.  No.   14   tin  \t\nBeef Ham  I.oaf,  No.   s_   tin  \t\nDevilled    Me'ats.    Ham,    Toi.Kue.\n:l   tins \t\n'r'.ss,.    _     Black.vc\nKlass     \t\nI's     Polted     .Me\n25*\n35*\n35*\n30*\n35*\n40*\nSO*\n81.75\n20*\n2oe\nV.e.l,     .\u201es.\n25*\n25*\nSmoked Meats\nPrices Subject to Change\nCottage  Boll  Ham. about   a  lbs,,  lb.      25*\nKmpire   Ham,  about   12   lh\u00ab.,   lb       3_-Sf*\nPremium   Ham, about  12  lb*.,   Ib  3#*\nBreakfast   Bacon,   8  to  10  lbs.,   Ih. 35*\nPremium   Bacon,  s   to  10  lbs.,   lb     'l5\u00abr*\nSwift's Silver Leaf Lard. ..-lb. tin 70<*\nSwift's Silver Leeif I_ard. r.-lh. lin 81,15\nSwlfl's Silve'i- Leaf Lard, 10-lb. lin $2.25\nl.'rlwo.  3-lh.   lin   ,    90*\n''<\u25a0'\"\u00ab\u25a0\"\u25a0 '-\u00bb'\u25a0 M n        81.75\nSugar and Syrup\nSubject to Change\nRC.    Cranulated    Siiffar,     10-lb.\ncotton\nsack       .    ...             \t\n81.10\nP..C.    C.ranulated    Sugar,    L'U-Ih.\ncotton\n.\u00abaek   \t\n$2.15\nRC.    Granulated    Sugar,    JOO-lh.\ncotton\nsack   \t\nsio.oo\nH.C.   Yellow   Sugar,   10   lbs\t\ns 1.00\nB.C.   Icing  Sugar,  _-lb.  pkg   \t\n30*\nB.C.   Lump   Sugar,   _-lb.   pkg\t\n35*\nJ-ogers'  Golden  Syrup,   2-]h.  tin\n25*\nHogers'   (loklen   Syrup,   f>-lb.   tin\n55*\nRogers' Golden  Syrup,   10-lh. tin\n81.00\nMolasses.   Cooking,   Xo.   l!   lin   ....\n20*\nMnliaeaa, cooking. \\o. 5 tin ....\n50*\nMolasses,   Cooking,   Xo.   10   tin\n90*\nMolasses,   Domoleo,   Xo.   \u2022>   lin   ...\n35*\nMolasses.   iJomolco,   Xo.   0   lin   ...\n85*\nPickling Spices and Vinegar\nWhole    Mtved    PleklinB   Spice*,    \",-lh.\ni.ki - 15*\nWhole  Mixed   Pickling Spices,  bulk, lb.   SO*\nEnglish  .Malt  Vinegar,  gallon   $1.25\nHeln\u201e  White  Pickling  Vinegtir, gal.. $1.25\nl-geill..n    .Lei.    c_lra,   50_\nHouse Cleaning Wants\nAfter the Holidays\nBrooms,     finest     quality    Corn     and     extra\nfinish.     Made   in   B.C.\nPfrfeetiuri    llroom,    .--.tring    85\u00ab**\nPeerless   Broom,    ---*tiiug   extra    JM)-*\n.lanitor Special   Groom, li-Ntiing $1.00\nDnehi'sj* llroom, -.-wiring. heHl made JX.10\nHair    I'riioiriH,    I.link,    12-inch,    with\nhandle      _.        $1.25\nHair    Uronms,    Black,    14-inch,    with\nhandle      $1.75\nO-Cedar   Mop,   large   size $2.00\nSelf-Wringing   Mop      (M)*^\nCotton   Mop   Cloths,   each    SOf*\nScruh  Hrushes    15^,   25*_.   ;,11'i   350\nSupremn Polish, grcaseles.s, 8-oz. hot 25*?\nSuprema Polish, greanelei-.s.   16-ox.  Imh.,301^\n(\u25a0-Cedar   Polish,   12-oa.   bottle SO**\nC-Cedar   Pollah,   quarl   tin $1.50\nChan  Kionrwax,  1-11.. tin 75*^\nJira.s.s.1,   metal   polish,   tin   .   25-tf   ;,,,(1   5,0*?\nSoap,   Sunlight,    .-bar   pkg.    25*?\nSoap,   Royal   Crown,   ,\"-bar   pkg, .  25c4\nSoap,   Crystal   White,   7    bars    50^\nSoap,   l-'ela-Xaptha,   10-Iiar  carton      ..   JfOf*\n()]<!   Dutch   Cleanser,   :t   tins    35<*\nAmmonia.     Snowflake,     powdered.     2     pl<gs.\nf\"r       25?\nAmmonia, Liquid, bottle    30*\nTanglcf.,..! Ply, Paper, :i double .sheets XOti\nWast, l.'ly   Panel.  _  inches l.i.K.el. :1 for  JOj*\nFlour and Cereals\nSeal ,ef tjnallly I'l.eur, l:i-]l,. sa.k 82.35\nSeal of Quality I-'lour, UK-lb. sa.-k $4,60\nOraham Flour, 111-11,. \u00bbck (JO*\nWhole   Wheat   Flour,   10-lh.   sack    60\u00ab.\nPastry Floor, ce.hi Drop, 10-lh. rark-.-AM\nKe.lleel   Dais.   ..-II,.    sae'k          _Q+\nItolle,!    Otle,    L'Clb.    saek $1.15\nT.llow   I',,, iini.nl.   10-lh.   seok        @0*\nWheallets   (Flittl,   It-lb.   senii (JO*\nFruit Jars\nKconomy Jars, pints, do?.  $1.70\nKconomy   Jam, quarts, doz  $1.05\n\"Wide-Mouth     Mason     Jara,     plnta,     |>er\n''\"*       81.70\nWiei.'-Mi'iiih   Hum   Jar.,   qturta.    em\n,u\u00bb      $1.95\nM'i.lcMouth     Mason    Jens,    l-quarl      per\n\u20221\u2122          82.50\nHegular Mason .lars. pints, .loz. 81.35.\nP.egular Meison Jara, quarts, do*.      $1.60\nPerfect   Seal  Jars,  quarts,  iloz. $1.75\nJelly   Tii.nl.let-.,   tin   top,   '4-pint,   d<a,.iggj{\n(Tiler \\nn- I.ids for ICii.niiiny. Mason and\nPerl.'.'I    Se.e!   Jars.\nTea, Coffee and Canned Milk prices the\nsame   as   August   list.\nWe will be qlad to quote prices on any\ngoods  not  on   this   list.\nShelled Nuts\nShelled   Walnuts,   halves.   White   Meal,   per\n\u00bb' 60*\nShelled   .Umonds,   large,  It, (}()<<>\nPeanul     Puller,     Sieliirc]     P.r.ind,     No.     1\ntin    25^\nPCeneut     Puller.    Squirrel     Prand.    S-lb.\n\u2022'\"       81.15\nCustard Powders, Jellies\nUlrd's   Custard   Powder,   pkg 20*\nCorel.,,s Custard   Powder,  pkg 15^\nHolhrook's Custard Powder, large lln 40*\nJell-O,   assoned.   II   pkRH  55(1\nHudson's EaU ^dttipanu\n_iit_.'-.___SS___\ntemm- J\n Page len ^\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY \"MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1924\nThe Ark SPORTS, MUSIC,\nDANCING, MAKE\nA UNIQUE PICNIC\nWetxtt to remind you that they hare\nsome extra values ln Hosiery for the\n\u2022Girls and Boys starting School, from\n__-__\u00bb\u00ab> lo 7t\\*t >mlr- Bobbed Hair\nCombs, 2&\u00a3. Hair Kibhon. 15^,\n2044 Per y\u00abrd. Bloomer Elastic.\n10*t P*r vartl* ladles' Silk Hose,\n75*, $1.00 Palr- ^\"ff8- Einoteum,\nFurniture, Range*..\nJ. W. HOLMES\nWtsoss*   831 \u00aboe   Vti-m   (treet\nBand, Orchestra, Pipes,\nSongs, Sail Make Music\nLovers' Picnic Gala One\nYourChild!\nIs School a Hardship to\nHim?\nDoes He Fail in Exams?\nMany a bright child fulls ln\nschool due to faulty vision.\nThey are probably unaware of\nIt, but it ia telling in their\nwork.\nNow is the time to have those\nev.-, examined. Muke sure, so\nthat your child is not handicapped.     Y.oi   owe   IL   to   them.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST end OPTICIAN\nION SALE\nCOR.    INNIS    AND    STANLEY\nSTS.,    SATURDAY,     AUG.    30.\n2   o'CIock    Sharp\nIII..i.i,;      ir.ei.e.l      i II Ml I 1 lei i. .11\u00ab\nI'reeln   Me.   P.   C,   Ill-nun.   I    ..ill\nnicer iii   i.ni.ii.. auction nit  ins\nlinn.ell,il.l flood!, eii.isie.lilu; ,,!\nilie follmvihfr: I Invenpe'ii. ..:ik\nllllll lenther f.'.sy ellilil'. ii.lll\nehnir. library lalile. wleke.' I \u25a0hair.\ninmk .helves, lu.nks. reeding\nlamp, new Home Hwlng ni.i-\n.hiiie, Raynii.n.i (niiehine, ..*\u25a0--\neonilte piano in good condition,\nextension table, \u00bbi lining eliairs.\nehina   eiii.in.aiil.   sielei.uarel.   ,eak\n.nl.ies.   white   enamelled   itnclo\nllllll dOUllle heels, eleethes .lip-\nIn.i.r.I, kiiehell lliellsils. eliairs.\ntable, garden anel carpenters'\ntools, runnel nak heater, innuer.\n'-'areleil h.ise. (I.i.k.'ry. simIi,-s.\netr. lin \\ ie\\V liloriiillK \"f sale..\nTerms -Cash.\nW.  CUTLER,  Auctioneer.\n-Kirsl,    .lie.'\nl.lll.\nHi     uniler.-\n\u2022 latiet   KiK-\nBUY ADVERTISED GO00S\nBest, Safest. Cheapest\nFURS\nfi. Olaser begs to advise his\nnumerous customers that he has\nopened a. business In Vancouver,\nand, in solkiting their further\nesteemed patronage, he will endeavor to give the same satisfaction as attended his work in\nNelson.\nG. GLASER, Furrier\n2603   Granville   St.   S.\nVANCOUVER\nWhen the music lovers of Nelson\nand their friends held a picnic to\nProcter and the main lake on\nWednesday, an elaborate musical\nprogram by the Nelson city band,\nthe Nelson Symphony orchestra, the\nKootenay Kilties and various artists,\nand sports on the lawn at the Outlet hotel, were among the great attractions of the day.\nThe Nelson city band played on\nthe trip from Nelson to Procter, and\nthe Kootenay Kilties band headed\nthe procession from the Nasookin\nto  the   picnic   grounds.\nSports    I'opulnr\nThe sports were in the hands of\na eomm ttec headed l.y T. W. ]_.cd-\ninKlmm, and were watched not only\nl.y tiie :uni pick nicker*., but also a\nlarge number of Procter residents.\nThe events were   won   as   follows:\nApple race, hoys under 15.\u2014First.\n(.union Kerry*,, second, I'au! Iliulille-\ntnii;    third,    Pr.illip    Dill.\nFlat race, \u00abirls 11 and under.\u2014\nl'\"i]si. Annie McKinnon; second, Alice\nK mpson;    third,    Dorothy    P.igby.\nCenlepetle race, l.oys-\nlliin.len,    seeun.t    Phillip\nPlat race, girls li a\n(\u25a0'irsl. Ivy room; second,\nhqr;   third,   Mary   t'nmpbeli.\nApple* QUI of water race, boys---\nPirsl, Qor-dOB I'.crry; second, Phillip    Hill;    third.    Paul    Ilnddleston.\nFlat race, hoys | ami under\nFirst, lletlaru McKinnon; second,\nFred*..raves; third, Fred Ferguson.\nCentepede race, backwards, men\u2014\nFirst, F. H. McHardy; second, A.\nMaild son;   third.   (',   If,   Stark.\nFlat race, married ladies\u2014First,\nMrs. McPherson; second. Mrs.* It.\nSmith;   third,   Mrs.   Hynett.\nFlat race, single ladies\u2014I*irHt,\n, Marquis; second Miss Mc-\n; third, Miss Truscott.\nll.arrow race, men\u2014First, U.\nDuller, T. Nnrman; second, F. H.\nMcHardy. F. M. Stark; third, A B.\nCousins,   T.   Maddison.\nDur ng the itfiernoon the Nelson\ncity hand play.-.i ihe following program, from the vera n dail of the\nh.ilcl, under the leadership of\nPandmuster Fred L. Irwin: March,\n\"The i'an ton inn\"; selection, \"Fchoes\nFrom the Metropolitan Opera\"; cornet solo, \"The World Is Waiting for\nthe Sunrise,\" by Bandmaster Fred\nL Irwin and I'.andsman John\nI'.rown; selection from the opera\n\"Norma\":        selection,\nThis was followed l.y a program\nhy ihe Kootenay Kilties, which con-\nsIs.imI of: Selections, \"The Camp-\nkn ll's Are Cnniin_r\"; \"The MacKenzie Highlanders\": \"Parreu llocks\":\n\"7!Mh Farewell to f lihraltcr\"; \"Cock\nof lh.- North\"; strathspeys. \"The\nMarquis of Huntley\"; 'Drtimmond of\nPerth\", reels, Friskie Nancie'\n\"Sleepy    Maggie.-'\nI p   to   Alnsworili\nAhout I o'clock the excursion hoi\nleft fur a sail on tlic main lak\nfirst go ng east to meet the Kusk;\nnook   and   accompanying   her   to   ll\nMiss    1\nKinnon\nWhet\n\"Woodland\nIT'S    TIME    TO    ORDER\nPRESERVING PEACHES\n$2.15    Per    Box.\nFLEMING'S STORE,\n FAIRVIEW\t\nTo Advertisers\nIf you Wish to obtain the\nmaximum results from your\nClassified advertisement, be sure\nto insert your nam, and address.\nA telephone number only Is\nnot sufficient for out-of-town\nreaders. They, in most cases,\ncannot communicate with you by\ntelephone. If you do not wish\nto have your name and address\npublished use one of our boxei\nfor repllen\nCLIP\nFor More Milk Profits\nHundreds of farmers say that\nclipping    cows    swells    milk\nprofits.\n\"4 to 9 lbs. more milk per cow\na Jay,\" says Harry Davis, of\nDunkirk,  Ohio.\n\"Cow*   trtruga   6   lbs.,   more\nmilk per day ninca clipping,\"\n\u2022ay*   Baker   Farm    Company,\nSpooner,   Wis.\nSTEWART No. 1\nCLIPPING\nMACHINE\nJi tha bast ev-\nor mada. Ball\nbt-urintf. Xiaiy\nto handle and\noperate. Clip*\n_\"_.\u2022_\u2014 ataya\n\u25a0harp. __\u00bb_-\u25a0\n$_ lifetime.\nQnarasteed\n\u25a0btlefactlon or\nmoney     back.\nPrice $17.50\nFor Sale by\nWOOD-VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO., LTD.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nPayne Pays Ten for\nExceeding Speed Limit\nAlong Baker Street\nFor   exceeding   the   speed   limit   on\nBaker   street,  F.  F.   Payne  was   fined j\n$10   yesterday   morning.\nStipendiary Magistrate J. Cartmel\ncomplimented the police on the efforts which were being made to prevent speeding. He declared he could\nsee no excuBe for exceeding the legnl\nlimit of 15 miles an hour.\nCRANBROOK MEN\nREGRET SWORE\nAT POLICEMAN\nHouligan, Tierney and Jeffries Are Behind Bars\nAfter Cafe Crawl\nBULL BATS ARE\nPROTECTED ALL\nYEAR ROUND\nSwans,     Cranes,     Curlew\nHave  Closed  Season  as\nMigratory Birds\nLOCAL OFFICIALS\nRECEIVE SUMMARY\nWhen Mike Hnulipan, leaning against\nthe count fr in thi- Montana fete,\nt'ranhrook. mi. at ('.instabh- John\nWH    .,|'    lhe    eity    iinllir.    who    was    in\nuniform,   in*  MvM   nol   tave   rewind\nhe was \u25a0 Ktiirtiiifi a train nf events\nihat wmiM hunl him and liiiss.l\nTierney in Nelson jail tn serve Hit''-.'\nmonths' hard lai.nr, and James Jef-\nI'trics in tin. I'ranhn.nk jail ror 30\n,|;iys.        HoiiliKan     and     Tierney      f~f\n-staffed  with tjnfcirMbif, and  Jeffertet\nwilh . blltruel inK. an afftCftf Ol Hi'1\npence    while    In'    was    r*n*rai;ed    in    tin'\nexecution   af   his  dni-M.\nAccordant   to  Cotiol    \\v    a    WfXhet\not    Yaiik.    whn    was    in    t 'raiihrn.-k    on\n,inn \u25a0   U,   he   Iml   fosM   along   hehrt\n.-ir.'.'i with Constable Jobiuton, ami\nthey had been beckoned to the Won-\nnina eafe by \u25a0 CMnaman thai*,   When\nthey wi'ni in liny luiin.l Hi., llinr\nmentioned in the \u00bbfe, and EiOttUfUl,\nftfet askiuv, OtUlMg-de .l.'hnsini wftftrt\nlit' wa.*- Kuitig, bivniiH' very alnisive\nand   swore   al   liini.\nTha eonauble  tin-i.  placed   !_oul_g_n.\niiii.h'r air.st and i-ndca vmv.l [fl t:ike\nhim tfl the luckii]), bUl tht latt.-r\nn-slsl.-\u00abl vioUntly anil attnnpted tu\nstrlk.. r.-nstahle Johnson, Then Houlihan, who is rejinrtid lo bl \u25a0 bit*;\nhusky liiniherjaek. caught the (''instable by the thrimt with both hands,\nami in the ensuing etFttgCit an urni-\nrhair w;is hroki'ii In-furc i 'on sta hit'\nWalkir I'niih) eat eh Hnuligan's arm\n\u25a0mil    freth    his    Imh!.\nFriands Interfere\nTlernej and  Jefferlea oaina  forward\nat this niinuti', fonstal.h' Walker\nsaiil, anil ih'niand.il IImil iKan's n--\n!i'.'i,.i'. The off-Mil ivtus.i.1 this ami\nail\\ isi'd   the   nn 11   to go   to   iheir  room J*\nbefore th. y u<<i  lata troubla tor totar-\nPerlDg with Lhe poliri- in the pa*\nlni'in.ini'i'    of    their    duty.\nWhen tha offtoeri attemptad ta pat\neHoaltgan, still raatatUtg violently, lata\na  cir oiitsidr,  they w.'iv atiai'ki'd from\ntha   ii-ar   Ly   the   other   man;   and   it\nwns only after some trouble and assistance from the driver of the ear\nthat Houlihan was taken to the\nlockup.\nLater. Tierney and Jefferle.'- were\narretMed. and, aft-r trial in t'ran-\ntirnok. HmiliKiin nnd Tierm-y are now\nin    the   Nelson    jail,    while    .lefl'eries   is\n\u25a0pending   M   .dayi   bi   tha   Cranbrook\nlockup.\nChief     Of     I'oliee      n.      Halcrow     of\nCranbrook  proaaaated and  the aaesaad\nWert     OOl     represented     hy     I'olinsel.       (.'.\nLarrister     of     I'ranhrook,\nGame  .Water-Fowl    Have\nUsual Open Seasons in\n(he Kootenays\nLoi\ncted\ntlu\nU WII\n\\'icimt>'\nXolsn (\npiiiyin*,'\nAinsworth,\nIty\n11\ntht\nhand    and\nKM'ompany   lift*,   I\nthe   Nasookin.\np  Ivick   tO  Nelson\nboth    ifct\nthe     Kiltie\npetition waltz was held, resulting in\n\u25a0\u2022Il WellaCh and Miss Macl'onald\nw ning first, and Mr. and Mrs. .1.\nHooker the seeond. Miss Mary Bar-\n.'lay delighted the audimice with fl\nmiple   t>f   Nctitch    solo   dances.\nThe Nelson Symphony orchestra,\nunder I he leadership of Koss Fleming,  gtva the  following program:\nMarch, \"I'reparedncss,\" orchestra;\nseieelion, \"Hawaiian Melodies,\" orchestra; song. \"Cathleen Mavoureen,\"\nby Mrs. Milroy; selection, \"The\nCondoliers,\" orchestra; snug, \"Life\nHas Sent Me Many Hoses.\" and\nencore. \"The Little Irish Maid,\" by\nMrs. .1. T. Andrews; characteristic\nIntarttaaao, \"In g Monastery (larden.\"\noreh-'stra; vocal duet. \"The Knchant-\ni'd Clade,\" by Mr, and Mrs. Hedley\nRandall J song, \"My Ain Folk,\" and\noheniv, \"HiJ Me To Love.\" hy Mrs.\n.1. Hook in; seleetion, \"Chu Chin\nI'hmv.\";   \"Hod   Save   the   King.\"\nTho ladies' auxiliary of the boy\nscouts sold refreshments on the\nNasookin, and declared themselves\npleased    with    the    results    of    th.-\nthi\nThe committee In char*.\nsocieties under whose auspices the\nouting was arranged cons sts of\nRoss Fleming, chairman; (Jeorge\nHorstead, secretary-treasurer; .). C.\n1,'arter, A. A. I'errier, Carl Hainsden,\nSamuel Fawcett, T, W. Ledingham\nand  W.   H. Thomson.\nAs the ontlng was such I success\nthose who attended hope that it will\nhe   repealed   next  summer.\nFX-OWEKS   AT   FUNERAL\nOF    THOMAS    r&OST\nHis loving wife, anchor; (i.W.V.A.,\nwn-nlli; \\\\ NielHills. spray; Mrs. Allen\nand family, spray; Mrs. McU_iiy and\nHerald, cross; K. Marshall, spray; Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Williams, wreath; Ilr\nand Mrs. M.icK.'nzie. wreath; Mr. and\nMrs V. A. (iraves and familv, spray;\nMr. and Mrs VV. H. J< fls anil family,\nsoray; Mr, and Mrs, William He war,\nHpruy; Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Hall,\nspray; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Iteiiwick,\nspray; Mrs. C.reenway, spray; Mr. and\nMrs. D. Hnin and Charles, wreath;\nMr and Mrs, W. H. J. Hhaw, spray;\nMr. and Mrs. D, Stl.eniM. spray; Mr.\nand Mrs. U. W. Guy, spray; Mr. and\nMrs. Milroy, cross; Commander und\nMrs. Hallett, spray; Mv and Mrs.\nW. E. Cutler, spray; Mr. and Mrs.\nW. (J. Mills, spray; Mr and Mrs,\nA Wilson. I'.road water, sprav; Mr.\nand lira. A I\". Wilson and family,\nwreath; Mr. and Mrs. A, Spelrs,\nspray; Andrew and Margaret SpHrs,\ncross: Mr. and Mrs. It. Wallace.\nspray; Liberty Lodge, No. 401. Loyal\nTrue Hlue. cross; Mr. and Mrs.\nPerdue and family, wreath; Mr. and\nMm. M. It II. Maber, spray; Mr.\nand Mrs, J. Holland, wreath; Miss\nBessie Young' and Jennie r.ilhieli\ncross; Mr, and Mrs, J, Young and\nfamily, wrp.itti; Mr. ond Mrs. L. D.\nKerr, spray; Mr. anil Mrs W. J.\nBalding,  u,i;,.   Capt.   u.  K_  Ai-hby\nPERE MARQUETTE\nAPPROVES MERGER\nMakes Possible Great Nickel Plate Billion Dollar\nConsolidation\n1 same and fish-ry officials\nhave received a new summary of the\nMigratory Birds Convention act, based\nupon the treaty with the United\nStates which gives open seasons for\nhirds in Hritish Columhia. and a list\nft those Rllgnctorf hirds for which\nthe   season   is   closed.\nIn lhe n.iMhern and eastern districts af British Columhia, ducks,\ni\/eese. Plant or rails may he shot\nFron Seplemher || lo ll.'Cetnher ,1t\u00bb.\nIn the western dislrlcl ,-ollth of I he\nllrd parallel of latitude ducks aad\nrails may be shnr from October IT.\nin January I'll. tlecse ;iml brant\nmay !.\u25a0\u25a0 slnd in the \u00abeatern disirict\nseiith of the Ifrd par.'illel of lati-\nnid.    from   .November I  lo  February  _:!.\nWilson     or     jack -uipe.     Idack-bellied\n\u25a0wi   gohbn   plovers   -Hid   tha   greater\n.Hid lesser yellovi'-le'.s ba\\ be shot\nin Mu northern eastern districts ol\n: be province from Seplemher la to\nI leeemher tf, in lhe We-lem ilis-\nir:el iioi'lb of tha tftfd parallel, September     II     la     llecember     :S_     ;uid     in\nihe    ireatarn    disirict,    south'   of    tha\n..:'nl parallel. Oelnher 1 lo January   IS,\nTbe   act   also   states:\n\"There is a closed season in British\nColumbia on swans, wood duck, eider\nduck, cranes, curlew, willet, god wits,\nupland plover, a voce Is. dowitchers,\nknots. oyster-catchers,        pli a la ropes,\nstilts,     sur Thirds,     I urns tones    and     all\nthe   shore   hirds   not   provided   with   an\nopen   season   in   above   schedule.\nNongamo   Bints\n'.There is a closed Season throughout\ntha year on the following n on game\nbirds: Auks, auklels, bitterns, fulmar's.       Kannets.       g relics,       guillemots.\nj-iills,    herons,    jaegers,    I is,    murres.\npetrels, shearwaters and terns; and\nthan is B closed season throughout\nthe year mi Ihe follow inn insectivorous birds: Bobolinks, calhirds, chickadees, cuckoos, flicker:1. flycatchers,\ngrosbeaks, humming birds, kinglets,\ninariins, meadow lark, night hawks\nOT bull hat... nuthatches, orioles,\nrobins. shrikes, swallows, swifts,\ntanagers, tit mice. thrushes, vireos,\nwarblers. wax\\vln\u00abs, whippoorwilb.,\nwoodpeckers and wrens, and all other\nperching birds which feed entirely or\nchiefly    on    insects.\n\"No person shall kill, capture, In-\njine. take nr molest migratory game\nhirds. Sale of ih.se birds is forbidden.\n\"The killing, capturing, taking, Injuring or molesting of migratory insectivorous     and     migratory     nongame\nbirds   is   prohibited.\n\"Kvery      penOfl     who     violates     any\nprovision of this act or any regulation shall lor each offence be liable\nupon Mimniary conviciion to a fine\nof nol more than >,.0U and not less\nthan |M, gr to imprisonment for a\n|   six   months,   or   to\n>th\nid\ntit.'\nCLEVELAND,   Aug    II    A   greate\nNickel    Plate    railway    ayatem,    wltl\n,'iihii)   miles   of   roadwav   connecting   tide\nwater  and   i Iraal   Lakes  ami   reachlni\ninto   CnnaiV   and   \u00bb     far   sonihwi st   a\nBt     Louis,    was    made    possible    tOda\nby   approval   of   tha   Pere    Marquetl\ni ailwav   director.-   of   Hie   merger   wil\n.Nickel   Plate   and   affiliated   lines      Tli\nJack Miller, celebrated bird man\nof Kingsviile, (int., has added to his\naccomplishments by turning out by\nfar the heaviest crop of grain of\nh's section of the country. Mr. Miner\nsowed 10 acres of wheat last fall,\nand on threshing it was rewarded\nwith 40 bushels per acre, says the\nI Windsor Star, The average yield\n(in ffinatl county is from LI to __,.\nbushels of wheat per acre, and residents are pointing out that, as Mr.\nMiner has such a heavy crop, lt ia\nevident that the birds of the sanctuary do not harm tl\ncoin.\n-.-d\nPi\n,i i \u25a0\u25a0\nstin\n<d\nf   |1,OI1,000 une\nThis. tin- s I large consolidation effected by 0, P. ami m j. van\nBwertngen     of    Cleveland     since     they\nacquired control of the Nickel Mate\nm   till,   is   the   first   greal   grouping\nof rail lines to approach ihe scope\nof such systems as ha ve been suggested under the pecotntnendationa of\nthe Transportation act of |g<g0_ It\nconsul ii tes the greatest realignment\nOf railroads in more than two decades,   according   to   Co.   Van   Sweringen\nTlu\nnalge\nof   lb\nPi\nMai\nfollow\ntar   action   by   tht   Brie,   and   pro\nfor   i   lyatetn   ef   total   trackage,\neluding      sidings,       of       !_,_\u2022\u00ab       mil\nThrough     the     Pere     Hnj-quettf     t\ngreater   svslem    will   ...tend    ||.    mi\ninto   Canada.\nIde\nDECLARES OLIVER\nAS DULY ELECTED\nReturning Officer Fawcett\nHolds Official Count;\nNo Change in Figures\nNo\nde\ni from the byelection\nreturns iu Xelson as previously nil-\nnoil need were made by the official\neottffl of (he ballols made by llelurn-\ning Officer Samuel Pawi ott, at the\ncourt house Tuesday. He declared\nPremier <diver duiy elected member\nfor this riding.\nThe vote, as alrea.l\nP rem i e r Oliv\nLiberal   \t\nHarry llousto\nCitizens' par\ncandidate\nCity.\n,.~\ncported, wns:\noirview. Total\nir.ii\nTsil\nMajority for Oliver              Ml\nThose plcselit al llo' c'Uttlting Were\nMr, rf-WC\u00abtt. WIHUm I louche, agent\nfor Mr. Houston, ami (J, (J. McLaren,\nelection clerk. Mr. Houston was present   for   a    few   minutes.\nWhat is stated to be the largest\nsapphire jewel in the world arrived\nin lhe Indian pavillinn at Wembley.\nThe jewel is Worth many thousands\nof pounds und its possession Is said\nto embrace prosperity and glory to\nI its owner.     It   in IMC carats  in  weight.\n!and is in the form of a plucked\nflower, with a few leaves around Its\nstem.\nowing\nNelson News of the Day\nKerr's  Jitney.     I'hone  491. <__70)\nJ.   Burgess,   Carpenter,   Phone   SSORS.\nCUMMINS   TAXI.      I'HONE\n(CdlJT)\nrate\nPermanent     waving,     summer\nLatest      bobs     anil      shingles.        Acton\nllairdressing    Parlors. (fiS.7)\nThree\nt hm.       V\nAppleyai\nhu.igaluws     under     const ruc-\nir    plans    and    prices    apply,\ni. t&y;i__)\nTEN DOLLARS MONTHLY BUYS\nVOCALION PHOHOtiRAPK UNEXCELLED FOR REPRODUCTION.\nHEAR   IT   AT   SUTCLIFFE'8.      (6050)\nh..\nM. St.-.\nteaching\n.    Victori;\n.1    will     resume    plano-\nMomluv.    SepU-mber    S.\nHtreet. (G0G1)\nLast outdoor dance of the season,\nlutlet Hotel, Procter, ,.0th. Admis-\ni.m,   r.'l   cents       Refreshments.      (11081)\nAUTOMOBILE   CLUB\nA meeling, tonighl. at Hume Hotel\nt   Sp in       K ver voile   alteml.      Important.\n(\u2022Ht]\n *\nBIG   DANCE   OF   THE   SEASON\nClu\n-\u25a0laml,    |    p.\ni   glvea   last   dance   of   Maine    Pink,   Labor   Hav   eve-\nnber   i.    Augmented  Oyre\nRefreahmanta.    Tickets, 11,\n(6105)\nrt,   tonight.   Ver ihi n   Street\nI. (tiWM\nMr\nkind   friei\nI..T.H     la\nFrost desires to thank the\nIs, and H.W.V.A and Liberty\nIge mi, for all their kindness and words of sympathy; also\nfor Floral offerings sent, in tills time\nof gnat sorrow in the death of a\nloving    husband. (0100)\nfton't forget the Metropolita\nholders* picnic. Sports com mi\no'clock,    Krlday.   August    \"ill.\nPoll\nNELSON   BUSINESS   COLLEGE\nThe College will be open from 10:110\na.m. to 12a0 noon on Saturday morning, August .'10, for thp enrollment of\nnew Students for the Fall Term. At\nthere an- n large number of \"out-of-\ntown\" applications and our room Is\nlimited, II is advisable lo register\nearly (0101)\nST.   JOSEPH'S   ACADEMY\nHoarding and Hay School (.rammar.\na en dem ic and, commercial depfirlnients.\n<'las#.   reopen   Hrptcmber   2. (t.018)\nAncient Order of Foresters' annual\npicnic to r'erndale, Saturday, 30th.\nAdults,   f>u   cents,   children,   2_   cents\n(\u25a0107)\n6-Day Suit Sale\nStarting Saturday, August 30\nto Saturday, September 6\n\"\\ X J E HAVE purposely left our Suit  Sale until now, and are giving prices that\nV V     no man can afford to overlook.   M en who have been discriminating in values\nhave learned through years of experience  that this Sale offers the most for the least.\nFour Great Groups of Suits\n$18.50      $22.50      $29.50 ,    $37.50\nThe' suits in ihis \u00abTOUP VAIlIM Up U> \"\"2.50. Quality In every point\u2014 Fit-Reform Hnd Society\n\u25a0n t.'Miliir IM.M to \\v,\u201e\u201e,(.,ia. Twee.la ond me.li\", finish, fabric and Brand clothes. None\n.-...no   valuta,  and   were\nI'hcvie.ls,     in     plain     or    gtyle,     Hernial- veelties lip     better.      Kit    guaranteed,\nne  .Mini. Vabic\u00bb to K.O.IIO.\nK.....I     vain,\nl'i'\nat   pallcniH.     All   size:\nWe do mil claim ti always quota the lowest prices that appear in the paper.\nWhat wo do claim is that we're giving greater value, dollar for dollar, than any\nstore in town.    That should mean a lot to  you.\nYOUR   MONEY'S  WORTH\nOR\nYOUR   MONEY    BACK\nWE    HAVE    BUILT   OUR\nBUSINESS    WITH\nSATISFIED   CUSTOMERS\nli\/\/\nSuccess Beckons to Those\nBusiness College Trained\nTrained men and women are always in demand.    The cost of training and time involved   is  very  small   in  comparison  with   the results you may achieve.\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nIndividual Tuition. Commence Any Time.\nNew Term Commences Tuesday, September 2, 1924\nP.O.    BOX   14\nPHONE  603\nBASEBALL\nSUNDAY, AUG. 30, 2:30 P.M.\nColville, Wash., vs. Nelson\nLABOR    DAY,    MONDAY,   SEPT.   1,   3:00   P.M.\nColville Vs. Picked Team from  Nelson  and  Metaline  Fails,  Wash.\nNt't    Proceeds   oC   .Series   floes   to   (iyro   Phiytfi numl    Kuixl.\nDon't    Miss    These   (.nines -They'll    Bl    OOOdl\nHave\nThe Daily News\nSent  to You While\nOn Your Holidays\nJust phone the office and the paper will be mailed\nto your holiday address all the time you are away.\nThe Daily News\nPHONE 144 (TWO LINES)\nB.C.   PLUMBING  &\nHEATING  CO.\nAgentu  for\nALBERTA    CLAY    PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE and  DRAIN TILE\nTonight, 7 and 9\nTHE\nHunchback\nOF\nNotre Dame\nThe screen's greatest dramatic achievement.\nADMISSION PRICES\nEvenings:\nAdults, 50c; Children, 25c.\nSaturday Matinee:\nAdults, 35c; Children, 10c.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1924_08_29","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0401669","@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":"1924-08-29 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1924-08-29 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\/1.0401669"}