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', _mmm;~~~!i^__:\nVOL. 24\n\u2022**\u00bb6\u00bbi*e\u00bb.t t'BDA\n\u2022UJOHIA   |  j\n\u00bbtT\u00ab\" 'I\n,>3\n&#\ngas\nDistrict School\nSTUDENTS PASS EXAMS\nSee Page 6\n1\nNELSON, B. C, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\n.ONSERVATIVES\nBERALS WIN THREE SEATS; ARMSTRONG LOSES\nnrsniT\nernment   Resigns   No\nloodshed; Fusilade Is\nHarmless at Athens\nTIMATUMS CAME\nAT AN EARLY HOUR\neral Pangalos Assumes\nevolution Leadership;\nTroops Protect\nTOM, Jwm 28\u2014-Ths Greek\naramaa.% nader tht premiership\nKich\u00bbl*_toponlot.s hM been dead aad a s*w fOTornment un-\nSUUUUT    Mat**    Install id    at\nam. Tha r-vot\u00bbtion*rj lnove-\nit started at \u00abiva whin anti-\nuwatBt   foroti,   after   *   brief\nharmless fasllUde, nlit4 th*\ngraph office* aad out oom-\n-Icatloiw.\nhe military movement haa bee*\nweea for aevenu day*, bat *p\nt\u00bb* U*t mlnatt tb* rortinmont\n, -\u2022clsrsd Itself matter of tb*\nutloa, aad. wa* absolutely cou-\n\u00bbi at th* loyalty of th* troop*.\nCi o'clock thi* morning Genernl\n\u2022las, who was former general -\no of the Greek urmy and held the\nof minister of war. with a num-\nf officers occupied the barracks\n' rtigltnunt uf engineers and forth-\nIssued an ultimatum lo the bov-\nnt dsmandlng fu resignation ind\nis the government responsible\nny bluodMhed. At the same, thn*\nfiuktuin waa humeri by Admiral\nklrlakon, former mlnlater of\n\u00bb, who wm aboard the warship\nf. and by the commander of thi\ni at Salonlki.\nvdWd^^Ketwd'''\"\u25a0*\"'\nwhole or, the Allien* garrison\not at firki - rinciarH lit favor or\no olution, fftitf; premier M (chela-\nlouk and MR wblnot remained In\nn |i the parliament building.\ned by loyal troop*.\nthe afternoon Otnnrat IVngalns\nil* staff tOO_ up quartern at thi\nIntstry, where he h.nnuiiihI ih.\nde of leader of the revolution\n_\u00bbued.order* sccordlnuly. In thi\nthe government resigned,\nthe provisional president of tin\nlie, Admiral Coundourlotis. sent\nurgent summon* to the purlin\nry leadnrs. He Invited-tbe form\nniler. M. Papains.union, to or\na cabinet, but In pull!Icu 1 circle*\ngenerally believed that Pangalos\nJesigns on the preml.-r*hlp. aud\nnot   likely   he   Willing   to   serve\nr.l|l.lli;..:-t\u201enii||l.\n\u25a0lank Cartridges Used\nml HadJIklrlnfcos assumed com-\nof the fleet nnrl Is e* pec ted hi\nininlsier uf marine. It Is un-\nthat Admiral Coundourtott*\nled to resign Ihe presldence, but\nlasuaded.\nugh there were possibilities of a\nserious situation hail a colli-\nictwecn the troops of the two\noccurred, the revolution, from\nary standpoint, was \u00bb mild af-\nd. except for ii few blank cart-\nfired, nothing that seemed like\njipjwned. Revolutionary t mop*\n0 tec ting public buildings and\nPangalos    received    an    offer\nShepherd's Fate\nNears Jury Hands\nWILLIAM   OARLING  SHEPHIRD\nSENKLER GIVES\nPUBLIC LITTER\nCASE\nDeclares Jackson Was in\nTfuch With Abductions\n% ff W<i Won*\nLETTER WAS TO\nCHINESE CONSUL\nLetter Asked Wong to Tell\nAll He Knew of Janet\nSmith\nVAXCOUVBp, June 2l\u2014Answering\nIn reply of M. B. 'Jackson, who\ncharged thut he hud offered to take\nJ. H. Benklcr, counsel for Wong\nCharged with the murder of his fiin\u00ab\"- t0 lne -d\u00bbe\u00bb wnerc the hotise-\nmllllonalre footer son. Hi) v Merlin- boy was held prisoner, was a per-\ntock, by the use of typhoid germ*, version of (acts. Mr. Senkler todny\nulleged to hu\\e been supplied by Dr. made public the letter which, he\nKuin.un of Chicago. Tbe case goes declared, Jackson had endeavored to\nto the Jury todav, and a verdict have the Chinese consul sign ao that\nshould    result    late    this    afternoon.   It could be produced to Wong.    The\nShepherd's counsel yeaterday concluded a lengthy pleu for U \"Nol\nguilty\"   verdU t.\nCHINESE CRY\nWAR AGAINST\nTHEJGLISH\nNo Further Disturbances;\nFrench ftniWotft China;\nChinese Troops Busy\nIjOV&ON.   June    \u00ab5.\u2014Agcwy\ndispatches rrom Peking say 20,-\n000     mtutb'iils,     merchant*     awl\nworkmen    pai-wlcd    the    Htrcetf\ntoday    with    banner*    livtcrlbcd:\n\"Declare  wn_-  on   England\"\u2014the\nfll*|mtch   say   the   Uemon-ttrators\nshouted   \"death   lo   the   Kngllsh\nliilgiind*.\"    Itut that  there were\nno   sUcns  of  further disturbances\nand   ilwi    less   einliusbiMn    was\nsIioum liKlay ilmn during previous\nChinese    demonstrations.\nMany   Chinese   troops   and    police\nguarded    foreign   houses   and   shops\nand   nil    entrances   to    the    legation\nquarter were  kept  under observance.\nVictory for the\nWhole People, Says\nConservative Leader\nJuat 35.\u2014-Uturntag\nto KaUfaT ehortly alter midnight,\nMoa. st. V. *hod*e, leader of th*\nvlctorloaa party, gave cut the following:\nv \"Th* magaiflcf at viotory achieved br th* forces ef th* opposition\nia today's coateet _ do not regard\na* a victory for th* Ocaeervtttoa\nparty alon*, bat rather a victory\nof th* whole p*op'*\u2014Liberal, Oom-\nssrvattvs, Lake*, farmer end Xa-\ndep' adent\u2014whe hat* risen ln their\nmight to wi^ie oat * go? era-ment\nwhloh, throagh loaf tenure of, offlco, haa rerardod it**'f sj all-\npc w*rf\u00abl, aad la ooaseqaenc* hw\nloet tcuoh with th* y*oy.\u00bbt. \u2022\u2022\u25a0'\n\"Th* vtidict maaxM the rwtpn-\ntlcn of reeponslbl* govennte^t te\noar proTlaee, whieh ha* alwaye\nprided lteclf oa th* fact thb'r we\nwm* the first of th. SMtUh\ncoloal** ia Worth America to secure the rt^ht of rep. .lehtailon.\nwhich   led   to   responsible   gorein-\nWONG CONFIRMS\nHIS STORY IN\nTHEWITNESSBOX\nWas Beaten, Half Hanged\nby Abductors in Point\nGrey\nletter read's\n\"The police say that they have no\ndoubt but that the girl wus murdered, and that Ihey can prove this to\nbe so. If they are wrong, we do not\nask you t$ tell anything that Is not\ntrue, but we do want you to tell\neverything, even If it implicates you\nor anyone else whatever, and if you\ndo truthfully and fully tell every -\nthing qnd If anyone else had anything to do with the crime, then no\nharm Or punishment will fall on you\nfrum your telling, and you will be\nfree frum aU [ear from the police.\"\nI Senkler .thus returns the charge\n. lhat Jackson was in touch with the\nj aliiluctur* and knew where Wong waa\nbeing held, but although acting as a\nfcpccbil    Investigator   ot   tbe   province\nfo Vnfor'ce* Ww, he took no step* to\nsecitra Wong'* release or to arrest\nthe Rbdiieto.'s\\        '\nABLE TO HEAR ONLY\nWITH HIS ONE EAR\nKitiicIi Ihin.iml Apology\nCKKlNti, June Ifc,\u2014The French\nminister today hunded a note to the\nChinese foreign office, prol\nagainst the murder of* a French mer\nchant, E. 1-ixquiet. who wa* killed\nby Chinese rioters in Canton Tuesday. The note reserved the right\nto   claim   indemnity.\nMARBLE CROSS\nTOPPLES TO WALK\nj Lightning Strikes Two New\nYork Buildings; Granite Ball Shattered\nNKW  YOIIK. Junr 2.: -- Lightning\nstruck, two of New York* fttinou*\nbi.-lldlngs during a nncclacular thunder\n\u25a0torn) late this afternoon, which fol-\nlewed upon a day of unususl humid-\niiy.\nAn arm of a l8t*JMVHd marble crn*s\n\u2022testing \u2022armOBItthil \"ne of the Ktceplc* of\nSt. Patricks cathedral wu* *liuttcred\nand fell to thu pavement in fragment*. At the time of the crush nm\nparaoM were In the cathedra), but no\nfa* was hurt by the plaster which fell\nI rom   the   roof and   wall*,\nLightning also struck the museum\nrl natural history on Central Purk\nw<Nt. A three-ton granite bull fell\nfiom the to\\*\/er and broke into fragment\" less ihnn :':\u2022 feet from nn entrance jalier*  50 employer*  were  wait*\nHalouikl that troops\nthe capital If he no\nwas   not   necoHsary.\nwould\ndesired.\nHUN CONFESSES\nTROTZKY PLOT\nlarchist Society Planned\ndeaths French Army\nStaff\nSCOW. June 25. \u2014 Max Von Dlt-\none of tlio. three Oermuns on lri.il\ned with plotting against the lives\neon   Trotiky.   M.    8t.    Alin    and\nbolshevik leader*, created a sen-\ni Ht today's session of the trial\nlafcssing guilt to every count In\nid let ment against hlm.\n\u00ab Dltmar gave * fU|| Reeuuut of\n\u2022L-tlvltfes and related In detail the\nizotfon   and   work   of   the   Herman\nchl*t    society    known    as    'Con-\nHy less sensational wa* a rev-\nby   a   Oermun   witness,   named\nnn. alias Vfrtl. Who said as a\n\u2022cr or the \"coneul\" he had parllc-\nI In u plot of tho organisation to\nHate Ihe whole of the general\nof the French army of occupation\n\u25a0en in  1911. I\nIng for tho storm lo stop.\nTension  I* Kpenl\nCANTON. June 26,\u2014Many Chinese\ntroops arc gathering In positions in\nthe Chinese city opposite Shatnecn,\nthe foreign settlement, where the firing between Chinese demonstrators\nand IlrUiwh and Frenotl marines\ntook plaae ln*t Tuesday. There has i\nbeen no yirlng but tha tension is\ngreat.        \\\nStrict orlleis have been given by I\nthf senior luval officer in command ,\nof the defence force ro concentrate\nthe  firing on   buildings  occupied  by i\ntho Chinese  troops should  the   latter,.'     WINNIPUQ,   June   Z\nwho   have  quick  firing  guns,  attack, j Premier    Bracken    of\nOwing to the exposed position of\nthe fronts of the buildings occupied by foreigners, holes have been\nbroken through the rear of the\nwalls to afford a men ns of escape\nshould   this   become   necessary.\nINDIA THINKS\nJAPANESE ARE\nONWARPATH\n\u2014 -   -'   T-\nPurchases of Cotton Leads\nto Belief of Chinese War;\nBuy Manganese\n 1\nLONDON, June Z&j \u2014 OlspaU-he*\nfrom- Bombay to the Dully Mull and\nthe Dally Telegraph assert thut the\nbelief prevails In Bombay that\nJapan Is preparing for wnr with\nChi nn. The belief is bused mainly\non the unusual dealings in the cot-\ntun market, .lapimesp exporters, it\nIs asserted, ure buying cotton very\nextensively. \u2022 and the woctt** \"which\nwere plentiful a moMh ago, consequently   are   dwindling.\nThe fact that Japan I* reported\nalso as making large purchases in\nthe United Stntes strengthens the belief of her warlike intentions, while\na further statement that Japan is\nsteadily buying manganese Is held to\nshow that she contemplate* the manufacture   of  considerable  munitions.\nScottish Societies\nHonor Her Birthday\nBOOTLEGGER'S 'KIDS'\nCRY FOR FATHERS\nCanadian Authors\nWelcomed Winnipeg\n\u25a0\u25a0  hy Premier Bracken\n\u2014Welcomed by\nMiinitol.il. the\nfourth annual convention of the Canadian Author*' association opened here\ntoday with   70   members present.\nIn his welcoming address. Premier\nI.iiicken declared tlmt such convention*\nwould help to remove sectionall*m and\nKid the fostering of ranadlanlsm. which\nwas  so   much   needed.\nMayor Ralph H. Webb of Winnipeg\nadvocated a stricter censorship on\nCnited Htates literature or the kind\nthat United States people themselves\ncondemned, but which Canadians did\nnot.\nTHREE KILLED IN\nRUNAWAY TROLLEY\nForty-one   Injured   When\nOne-Man Car Crashes\nAnother in Jersey\n.U.I.8KV CITU. June _&,\u2014\u2022Two men\n(ind a woman Were killed nnd 11 Injured when a onc-nmn trolley car out\nnf control ran down \u25a0 *teep bill and\ntrashed into the rear of another ear.\nThe accident occurred during the\nlush hour, and both of the trolleys of\nthe one-man type were crowded. The\nfirst car waa sIhiu' to round a turn\non a steep hill when the car behind It\ngot out of control .md ran wild down\nIthe   hill.\nI The force nf the .ollislou 1ele*eopei1\nI the rear platform <>i the flr*l ear\n'and the front platform at tbe second\nJ Both were derailed ami crashed into\ni a  rock wall.\nMost of the pHMengef* were young\nfactory workers go ins to their homes\nin  the  lower part of the city.\nThe accident was the second trolley\nciush of the day in the metropolitan\narea, eight persons having been Injured in Brooklyn when a trolley ran\nwild on Manhattan l>ridg\u00abf carlles- In\nthe day.\nRobertson's  Counsel  Says\nHe's Not Going to Jail\nfor Six Others\nVANCOUVKK. June IB, \u2014 A Mol*\ncourt *e**!on hearing In the abduction\ncbuarges agsln*t the Point Orajp police\nchief and commissioners, two private\nditectlves and prominent members of\nHcoltlsh Pocletle*. with J. \u00bb. Cowper,\neditor .of a local weekly. 11 in all.\noccupied today with the testimony of\nWong Sing, tbe iiliducted victim. Wong\ntold subslsnliallv the same story a*\nwu* rccintly detailed In The Dally\nNew* ubout hi* beating*; therata culminating le hi* hall hunglng on an Improvised .scaffold, nil designed to force\nfrom blm a confession thut hr either\nslew Miss Janet Smith ur knew who\ndid.\nSurprise wn* sprung when Wong\nnM that be had been told by his ah-\ndectors that a man from Victoria\nwould l.e there to wo him uk well as\nlis  employer.     Neither eame..\nWhen the Chinese house boy told\nhow a man. presumably a doctor, who\nwas examining him after the half\nbanging, hud told the gang that Wong\nmight die. a number of women In the\nc urt   tittered   loudly.\nWong's Es\u00ab Deaf .\nWhen the counsel was uddrsaslng\nWong, lo hsd to shift, \u00abround to th\nother Hide, as Wong Is totally deaf in\none ear as u result of u Mow received\nf'vring   his   abduction.\nAn additional beating wii\u00bb told\nwin-re n gang undressed Wong and all\nJoined in threshing hlm until hi* nosi\nbird nnd one eye wss clowed. Tho>\nwore white hoods with holes fur thi\nt:yes.\nThree times thev took him into the\nparlor and took hla plot*!*. Tlie n:\nV. B. Jackson was brought into the\n<a*e frequently. Joseph Oliver, coun'\nse; for Osejir Kobinson. detective, re\nr.arked that \"one man wa* not going\n\\> Jail for what ill did.\" and ii.sse.rted\nthat the document* *eixed In Robin-\naoO'a office, especially the bu*lness\ncard of M ft Juckson, were not to he\nproduced   in  court,\nA constable stated, however, that\nwhen searching the office. KobiiiHon\ngsvc him an envelope, but the con-\ntints were not dhulgcd. lu \u00bb wallet,\nhowever, had been t.iuiid .Inekson's\nci.td. also * statement of receipts and\nexpenditures. Under thlx head the\npinilltur.s totaled 117*11, r\u00bbD*lptl llttl.\na balance wh* marked due. Theae expense statements were signed by P, G.\nand J. S (*.. ant either J J, Patterson\nor L>r. Patterson. Tlie wages pule*\nwere lo three nun referred to as\nWillie, Norton and Ashe, The receipts\nalao tallied exactly with the payim-ntis\nttatad to have been mude by the Point\nOtey  police   commission.\n' *_a3w_H\nmp_ __6^_-S_p____^^__r 'hB\n___E__i\n-, _ __HI\nMISS   JANET   SMITH\nr,\ni\u201e\nScotch housemaid at the\nBaker home in Vaneouver. who was\nfound dead in the Buker house __*\u2022\u2022\nmint on July -R. l\u00bb-4. Two Inquests\nwere held over her body, ami in th''\nlast, on September lit, 1924, a verdic,\nof murder was returned. Wong Sing.\nChinese  houaoboy at  the  Itakei   home,\ncently liberated after an ftbdttCtloii,\nIs now chnrged with her murder. Hun\nMiss Kmilh lived, sh-- would have\nbeen   'i'.i  years  old   yestrrd-iy.\nFORTY-THREE\nYEARSRULE\nIS SMASHED\nMost   Overwhelming   Victory in Canada Since\n'Sixty-seven'\nRHODES WILL BE\nNEW PREMIER\nLabor Candidates Lose Deposits; Majorities Unprecedented\nMAN SUCCUMBS\nTO HEAT WAVE\nAT VANCOUVER\nTemperatures on Pacific\nCoast High; Sacramento\nHundred and Eleven\nVANCOL'VBB, Junfl 23\u2014 Thi' lu-.l\nMVf thai f\u00bbr th'' l\u00ab\"t *** nr iwn\nhit. tit-en hfivMln. civiT PttlfM\ncount i-tutea. OtWltf*. It\" sweltn'iim\nrayn over British Columbia toilny\nwith nrurft .hinp temiirnituri'w. In\nVancouver tin1 iiiaxlnnim lamptf\u00abtur\u00ab\n\u25a0 hirlna iho ie* en* M te\u00bb*ee within\na Itmillon of \u00ab Seme* \"t tl\u00bb' wium-\nmX day In any year slni- ip.nr.la\n\u00bb,.,.,   ki-1>!      At   K\u00abW   Wi'\u00bbtminat,.r th.'\nu.\u201ei|..raiini' ptM to IT Sem*e m\nr, n m tin' wanncHt ilay rnr t^\nmat' II vi-nrs. In Vh'torla. un\nVancoutar 1\u20141\u2014>\u25a0*\u00ab. th.- mercury hit \u00bb\u2022\u2022\nittteen, lha hl\u00bbh\u2122i Hit rcc.ir.l.-l\n, -,1 yeara. M Pflaca ftrnx-rt the\nnaximum lor *\u2022 *\u2022\u00bb \u00bb\" \u00bb\u00bb J\"'\"\"')\np_|nU    also    ti'lt     th-     warmth.\nKamloopi it wua '.'\u00bb.\nMcl.ort   II,   Cranlini..k   M\nami   Pentlcton   Hi.\nHoUM Day al VIcWJJj\nVKTOIIIA.    Mine.   ;:,.\u2014Tocluv\nthe   lintteut   tiny   In   Victoria\nyeHra.    Thut   is  a\u00bb   fur\nrecofils   of   the   t'.onaul.\n...\u25a0   en       i ii,1    \"\nii ml\ni n.l  Forks\nVernon\nwaa\nror 51\nhack us the\n,   Meteorolo-\nBut They're Only  Rented\n\"Kids\"; Say Toronto\nOfficials\nPtnonal Opinions\n\u2014. . _\u2014^,\nJohn   Ball,   Selaon\u2014A   citv\nltr,   with   a   council   to   check\nIh the bait ayatem of elty\niianent. \u25a0 A ctty council cannot\n- a city afflclantly.\ntmustor V. P. Kane, Kalao\u2014\nKaalo ft Dlatrlct 1600 club haa\nf waltinj Hat, _nd new membera\nilected on a rUla basis.\nJohn W. Htuwart. Vatieouvet\u2014\neee In  tha country  ta good.    If\nare  exception*  to   thla,   let   ua\nso. anyway. Optimism will get\nrthar   than   pesltmlsm.\nA. War*, Prootit\u2014The need\nt hour la a Saturday boat on\nttslo ru\u00ab.       .    ,   -   .     .\t\nTORONTO, June II.\u2014Tlie |inir.\ntlce of renting children to weep for\nlimit lettKeis Is claimed to have heen\nbrought to light In the office of\nthe attorney-general of Ontario.\nWhen ti bootlegger has beon found\nguilty and Is unable to pay the\nfine. It hns been the custom, according to the Toronto Evening Telegram, fur the wife lo Interview the\nthe attorney-general and endeavor to\nsecure executive clemency. For the\npurpose of this visit, if the lady's\nfamily of young children Is not sufficiently large, neighbor's children\nare \"rented\" und the whole pitiable\ntroop Is parked In Attorney-General\nNlckle's office Instructed to cry\nfor their \"daddy\" It Is claimed, and\nmake such noiaes and manifestations\nof distress as might be pity-provoking.  .\nTBAJJE TREATY  BII.I,   READ\nOTTAWA, June 28.\u2014(Canadian\nPraas.)\u2014Bill giving effect to the\nCanadian-Australia trade treaty waa\ngiven second reading in the senate\ntonight. It will come up before tha\nupper houae for third reading on\nFriday morning.\nEDMONTON POLICE\nCHIEF SUSPENDED\ndim.wil   to   l-.l   b_\u00abwe_n   l\no'clock emoHhinK alt r\u00bbcoro\u00ab.\nHU-drtd  and  Eleven\nS.U'UAMKNTO.    C\u00abl ^  Jon*\nli.-at    nconl\nBuonunsnto\n1-      i ..nr.     :ll_\u00abi       WPK      Mllalttt'll-'l\nl.t.ro-  in\nMllKT\nVhen   t'1*'   mrrcury\nrrtino _w\u00ablt-ri\nKKHSNO. C-L.\niiiiuin   valU-y   W\nii ot no iatra\ntpni|)i'ratuif\nichtd\nPetersen's Body\nArrives London;\nFlags Half-Mast\n1.0XUON, June 25.\u2014(Canadian\nrrc_\u00bb Cable.)\u2014Tho uteamer Melita,\ncdiivcj UiK the remains of the late\nSir William Peter-rn, shipping magnate, who died luddenly at Ottawa,\nCanada, on June 12, arrived at\nSouthampton today with flags at\nhalf mast. The casket containing the\nremains wns placed on the deck and\ndraped   with   the   Union   Jack.\nThe body wu taken charge of on\nits arrival by Luclen Pacaud, secretary of the Canadian high commissioner, who arranged transportation to Waterloo station, where the\nflags   were   at   half   mapt.\nBOY MURDERER IS\nPUTjNAHOME\n\"Menace   to   Community\";\nAdmitted Drowning an\n18-Months-01d Girl\nnoon. This Ih the highest\nperature* recorded here since\ntu.   Illl.\n\u25a0cattle   Baccrds   Broken\nSKATTI.l-:.   .lull.-   2\",. All\necordc In the H years ol the\nweather I.lire\ncruel.\nTwo Sea Lion Pups\nPresented Vancouver\nhy Cruiser Crew\nVANCOUVBr! June 26.\u2014Two ma\nTon pupa have been presented to the\nlocal too by ihe crew of the Canadian\ncruiser tlivenohy. which has Just returned after llftylng IMS eea lions la\ntbe north ta protect the fish.\nrAMRI.II.H-K.     HM\u00bb..     tunc\nCharacterised    by    alien Intn    as\nprimitive,   and   a   nn MC*   tn   the   community.\"   John   Vara*,   n   yfgn  'Ud,   of\nLowell,    youngest     manslaughter    defendant   In   the   history   of   the   Middle-j\nsfx   county   courts,   was   ordered   con-,\nfined   to  the   Lyman   school   fuf  boys ,\nafter   he   pleaded   guilty   today   to   nmn- ]\nHlitutfhter In  conneelinii   with  the death ^\nof   18-niontlm-old   Vivian   M.   Husmm of\nLowell,\nThe boy admitted siring the llttl*-\ngirl, stripping her at clothlnu and\nthrowing her Into the Merrimack river\nin Lowell. He aald every time h.i\nlead appeared above \u00abater he stuiied\nIt   until ahe sank.\nFailed Inform Commission\nof Beer Licence Application ; |\nEpMONTo.W   .lune   26.\u2014Chief   of j\nPolice   Shut*   was   suspended   todny i\nby   Mayor   Rlalchford   for   fulling  I-\n! Inform   the   police   commissioner   of!\nI the   up|i)icittlou   for   a   beer   licence |\n! for   the   Shiloh   club,   colored,    until j ift today when I tempers\n1 after   the   licence   had   been   grunted. | ttjr I stored     at     4     p.m,\nTt   Is claimed   by   tho   mayor  thut   M\u00ab|p*evloUl   temperature   re\njgotlations   for   the   licence   have   bMftjen   June  s.   !!\"):[\nI curried   on   since  June   1ft,   and   that \u2014    \u00ab*\nI there   should   be   no   additions   tu   thn j i     \u25a0\u2022 l\/'\/l   -_,   _.\u00ab\nI number   or   club   licences   here. JnOrOH   Village   On\n|     The  city  council  after  receiving  a ,\nreport   from   the   mayot   decided   to'\nhave  u fpeclal  comniltte  investigate. !\nInspector  .1.  .1.   Shnw   Ih  temporarlly\nIn   charge   of   the   force.\nThe Ban\noutdid its rec\nyesterday   with\n[.     Ml       devrees\nock   this   after-\nNOVA   SCOTIA   ELECTIONS\nAT   A   GLANCE\nForty    Conservatives   returned.\nThree   Liberals win  seats.\nPremier   Armstrong   defeated.\nChishotm, minister of mines, reelected.\nConservative popular vote, five\nto  three.\nLabor candidates defeated in mining area.\nHALIFAX, June 25.\u2014Nova\nScotia today rejected the Liberal government which has been\nin power for the past 43 years,\nand decided with unmistakable\nemphasis to afford the Conservative party, under Hon. E. N.\nRhodes, an opportunity of administering her affairs.\nAt a late hour tonight, indications were that the final\ncount would snow 40 Conservatives elected, as against a Lib-\neral opposition of three. Premier Armstrong and his ministers, save Hon. William Chlsholm. minister of mines, were\ndefruled, the altorney-n*neral. Hon.\nW. .1. * 'Ileum, .ratlin* the Llb'T.il\nticket   in   Halifax.\nUnprecedented mutorite-i arart recorded in many of the t-o_wtttm\u00bbncl_s,\nend ii was i-Htini.itr-l lhat the popular \\ot\u00bb> would run fiv\u00ab- to three In\nfinur of the Conservatives fur th*\nprovince m \u25a0  whole.\nif was the moat overwhelming victory   achieved   by   a   pottUcaJ   party\nin   the   history  of   provincial   elections\nsince  the  Conservative*   were   routed\nIn   IHl   on   lhe   repeal   It_VT    imir.e\nd lately  following Confederratlon.\nArmstrong Says   Nothing\nTinnier Armstrong would make im\nstatement tonight as to lhe general\nlesnt or us to when h\u00ab would realga.\nHon. K. N FUimles, who will hu.-.p-iI\nas premier, emleavured la rrach Hal\nifax. following the rloalni bf the potte\nin Hunts county, whera ho waa elect\nad by ;i safe majority, hm hla sup-\npnitcrs insisted on his bcfnit the re-\ncipient of an ovation in Windsor and\nhe was perforce obliged tu remain\nover.\nThe issue raised by Premier Arm \u2022\nstrong    for    tariff    reform    was    sub \u25a0\nmerged In the popular demand f<n \u25a0>.\nI'bania, and it may ba  aaid  thai  iwi\ngrave   issue  of   puhlle   policy   was  d>\nrifled   by   the   ronlest.     The   in\u00ab\"ii. iu:\ngovernment   stands  committed   tn  .in\nIndependent   uudit   of   the   tin \u2022\u25a0- \u2022\u25a0''\nthe province nnd s  complete inve.mi\npi tion  of   the   Industrial   altuallim  iti ,\nL'ape  Breton.    An  interesting feature\nof the results was the dnfeut of lhe\nLabor   candidates   by   the   ConservM\nUvea   m   the   mining   eonstltuen.v   .tt\nUre ton,    The   remaining   eight\nContinued on  Pa\u00aba Two.i\ntem-\nJuly\nL'atted\nlur.-   were   brok-\nur\u00ab nf us was\nTbe     lllgll\n.,riled    was\nCape\nTh'\ni'. a ter\nshowi i\ntli\nu\n\u25a0st   Alto   Is   -till\nqI   an   Inch   ut\nending   J-'d\nck,   when   it\nThe prevlo.t\nThe Weather     i\nlanttwraluPH h\u00abi'iw ar. fa* i^a\nr\u00bb p.mlliiB yiial.nlay tllimH a\u00bb\nVancouver Island\nDestroyed by Fire\nAlleged 'Hammer'\nMurderer Takes His\nThousand Guests\nVisit King and Queen\nBuckingham Court\nSaONDQK. -lu'tie II.\u2014One thuua- j\nanil Kur-NiM tnnlKht uttenileJ tin- court !\nat r.iirkliiKlinii' palace anil weFe\npiaai'iilril l\" King tlanrga lino\nQuern Mary. King Oeoigv wore\nan Informal Koyul Horae Ouardl'\nhlua uniform. Queen Mary w*a\n.renaed In it gown of pure gold brocade   with   n   Pale   blue   train.\nThe Royal circle was smaller than\numial. but otherwise the brilliant\nfunnlon followed the customary\nroutine.\nVIOTOJIIA, Juno \u00a35.\u2014Twenty-\nHue- Itonim and the CathcUi:\nchnich st Um Indian v'.tlazo of\nClayeiao*. west const of Vancouver ts-nd, havo -cm destroyed by\n(li-,, accctdl\u00bb\" tc n t.leiram received tonight bv W 2. Ditdlborn.\nIndian ccmlulsstontr. from E.\nrrost, Indian agent for ths west\nocast dlsirlct,  frtm Ttoflno.\nSo tar aa Is known there has\nbeen no loss ef Ufe, the nMsssffe\nsaid.\nTb\n: I, In\n.,   o'clock\nni:i.siin\nVictoria\n\\':il tvi-r\nKantliiops\nllarkervllte\nI'lllllT      llll|l,l\nfalgary   ...\nWliinliici;\nI'ortUnii\nMn    Kriincls.\n\u25a0tmkane\nt-CHttl,.        .    .\nIVnlletoii\nNalw\nnml   In\nI,\n't I\nStand Unconcerned Report of Soviet's\nOffsetting Allied\nFact Is Unfounded\nWINNIPKO. June SS\u2014-With? na I\napparent lack of Intcreat ln the pro. J\ncodlings. John Stanton, brought back\nfrom an Indiana prison, today stood 1\nin the dock at the city police court\nand waa charged with the \"hammer\"\nmurder of 70-yaar-nld John Penny,\nhere December lt. 1_2. >l Ua Waa\nremanded  for ona waek.\nBKKI.IN. June 21: \u2014 A ,'i-port published In Parle that Hovlet Russia bad\nproposed tn offset the allied pact\nwith Germany Is officially declare- to\nbs  without foundation. i   >\n5a.feat.on Lady\nKilled When Car\nStruck by Train\nMrs. I'hslks\nwas     tnstnntly\nMrs. ilr-tin\nJohn 11.i\\ii.i^.\nAnallcaii minister nr Klstnw. Mask.,\nwas seriously Injured tmlay when tin\nOiinadlan I'aclflc railway Wlnnlpeg-\nfcslmonton train crashed Intn an automobile In which they were rhllni, al a\ncrossing Just east of Klsluw. Mrs.\nHaynes sustained three broken ribs, a\nbroken collar bone and a badly Injured hip.\nVernon\nIII and\nKa\u00abl\u00bb\nKorks\nrtaaelton\nKilliMintnn\nSASKAT\"\na iN\nS:i\nhe\nIfe\nJune  U\nCralM\nkilled\nHayni\nof\nami\ns,    w\nskaloon\nr    sinter\nof    Rev.\nhi\nfor       three\nhumidity  ut  Ne\ndnnaer  petal  part  ol  l\nHumidity    wus   down\nstlctesfliiH\npassed    Ihn\nh day\nlu 31 nt \"\u25a0\nuYl.K-k yesterday uftirniMin. ilniurer\npoint licinK Hi. yet the humltllty wua\ngreater than an Wcilnesilay. when It\nwas Js nl i ami Tiusiluy. wluii il\nwas 20 at the name time. Yestenlay\nm.uiiliig. according to lureilr.v branch\nInstruments. I\\ registered as 531 al H\nand at 2 In the afternoon It was 31.\nSaturation  point la taken as  101).\n.\ni\n\u25a0_!__\n-\u2022--wiifir^-'--*' __\n___\n_-J\n 'Page TwoH\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    FRiDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES, J3.50  TO   $5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE   MOST  COMFORTABLE   ROTUNDA   IN   THE   CITY\nMl Mi: - W. II. MacBi'th. .1. W. | Cainlihril, Toi.mt.i; r W, M.\nSI, wan. II H Stewart, D, Stt-wart. M. | luhliTe; A. C Meewrr. Mt,\nS. Dubson, Mr. ;,n(l Mra. Cumpbell, W. Ki.la rls, S Murrtpon, fill\ntl. Scott, 'Vaneouver; I). WilktiiHOn, I Cop?t_na, Winnipeg; Mr. ami\nCommon: Ht, T. F. l.\u00abm. Trnil; CM. I.eailiolil. Deer I'ark; Mr.\nHalralnl K. H. McLaughlin. Vernon; I E. V. I't'tee and daughter,\nft. N.  Kuss,  Park; U. S.  Jaquit,  A.  Q. I Howe, Spokane.\nCOSY ROOMS\nHotel\nStrathcona\nEuropean Plan\n\"A  Home for Those  Away\nFrmn Home\"\nTOURIST   HEADQUARTERS\nUNEXCELLED SERVICE\nMembers Return\nto Work; Bonus\nPARIS,\nice lui on\nJune   25.\u2014An   unanimous\nwan    reached    tonight    by\nlhe Postal federation that lta members, who went on strike today for\nthe payment of a bonus due by th3\ngovernment, should return to work\nmorrow.\nThe French government tonight\npromised the mail carriers who went\ntin strike today, that they would be\n(i.i id   their   overdue   bonus.\nThe mall carriers had shown the\nlimit tension of the 100,000 postal,\nttlegraph and telphone employees\nover the delay in receiving their\npayments when they invaded the\nmain post office today, drove out\nthe public and barricaded themselves\ninside  for  two   hours.\nNew Grand Hotel\n616 VERNON STREET EAST\nS. E. Mills, Proprietor\nOnly brick hotel in the city.   Sleam healed; hot and\ncold water in every room.\nw.   .1\nM.ihvaj\nQueen. Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water ln every room.\nBteam  beated.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\n\u25a0;ns\nA\nHal\nsfiilli. r.     V\u00abin'\"t\nmn.   Prank   Alk\nfl.   Inpom. Cnleii\nMil,-;!\n$M0\u00abL\nBAKER ST.'! HELS0H B.C.\n2 BLOCKS FROfl DEPOT\n.'.'\u25a0; steak HEATED \u25a0\nWiflr '..C01D MNMHO WAT\u00ab\n;. p:jij$tys7.:y ,;..\nJ.KfMKIt, \u25a0 '.:       l-*_><w*mt\u00bb\u00ab.\n\u25a0 rr-.'-:..' \u25a0\u25a0\u2022.*.:..\u25a0.. '.(;, ;i\\__.;..: \u25a0 *.'-.\nAN INACTIVE UVER\nIS THE CAUSE OF\nCONSTIPATION\nWhen your liver gets sluggish and\nInactive your whole health suffers.\nTour bowela become constipated;\nvou have sick and bilious headaches:\nyuur tongue coated and furry: your\nbreath bad: specks float before your\neyes, and often you feel ns if you\nrtere going to faint, especially If ln\na crowded place where there is little\nor no ventilation,\nWhen In this condition there Is only\nune thing to do, and that la to take\nMILBURN'S\nLAXA-LIVER PILLS\nThey will stimulate the sluggish\niher so that lt will regulate the flow\nof bile to act properly on the bowels.\nand thus clear away all the poisonous\nmatter that Is responsible lor aU\nyour  liver  troubles.\nKor sale at all druggists and dealers; put up only by The T. Mllburn\nCo.,  Limited,   Toronto,   Ont.\n=W=e\nBANK BILL ARE\nNOT INSISTED\nSenate and Commons Conference Result Read in\nMorning Hours\nTWO CHANGES\nIN THE BILL\nReport Read bv Hon. Mr.\nGraham, Tabled Without Action\nHorses Still     ,\u25a0\nin Power L\nfor Farm Work\nWASHINGTON, June , 25.\u2014Oreat\nopportunities exist to reduce farm\noperation costs through reduction in\nlabor requirements and better power\napplication, the department of agriculture declared ln announcing the\nresults of a recent study of farm\npower by Its division of agriculture\nand  engineering.\n1 Power and labor together account\nfor about 60 per cent flf the total\ncost of farming, the department\nfound.\nThe reports estimated that horses\nprovide 15,916,000 of the power units\nnow used In the United States on\nfarms; mules 4,654,000;. tractors.\n450.000; stationary engines, 2,500,-\n000; electric Installations, 500,000;\nwindmills, 1,000,000 and automobiles.\n4,500,000.'   ,<\u2022\u25a0'; '\nNelson's Best Cafes\nWhin   at   Nelson,   Ell   tl   th*\nGolden Gate Cafe\nOpen  Day and   Nirjht\nOur   motto   Is   Cleanliness,   Quality\nand Service.    All Whit*  Help.\nMeals.  80c  and  Up\nOTTAWA. June 2fi. \u2014 The report or\nthe conference betwi-en the senate and\ntiu house of commons In regard to the\nHeme bank legislation which was read\nin the senate earlier In the evening,\nwas read ln the house tonight hy Hun\n(i. P. Graham Just hefore the house\nrose at 2:30 a.m. The report was\ntabled,   but   no  action- was   taken.\nThe managers appointed by the senate to confer with the commons in respect to amendments to the Home\nbrnk reimbursement bill, recommended\nto the upper house tonight that the\nsenate do not Insist to the premahle\nto the bill which made the grant to\ndepositors one of compassion.\nOne Other Change\nThe only other change marie in th'\nhill, as amended by the senate, wa\nto add the phriun* \"or tn straightened\ncircumstances'' to the elnuse whleli\nwould require depositors having mort\nthan $500 In the bank at the time of\nthe failure  to prove  special need.\nThe report was adopted by tbe sen\nnte, and a message sent to the commons stating the willingness of the\nsenate to aeoept the bill as altered by\nllie   conference.\nTho bill as amended by the senate\nr.-sirfcted outright .Iii per cent rata.\nbursement to depositors having $.r>00\nor less in the bank at the time of th\nfailure, and referred to the president\nof the exchequer court of I'unada\nclaimant* havlnn luiuer sums on deposit. The entire amount t\u00bb he devoted tu reimbursement is |t,6H,M4\nInstead of fS,4S0,t0fl as passed hy the\ncommons. Kellgious, charitable, labor\nand all organizations, as well as provincial government s, municipalities,\nmembers of the federal parliament ami\nsenators are ex- nipt from the benefits\nof  the bill.\nMOTHERS\nAND THEIR CHILDREN\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2t',\nBlocks  Esst of Post Offic*\nBt)\nam   heated.     Hot  and   cold\nwa\nter.   Rooms by day or week.\nAlso  Furnished  Suites.\nP.  H.  BUSH, Prop.\nH .Muir.\nton; W\nBarbells.\n>Vin\u00bbt:.nl'\nUvLrllan.\n;nind   F.\n,.l.   I'orlUtnd;   Fr*.\nl>:iti!..l    VVIIw.\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nN.ar  C.P.R. Station.\nRooms   at   Reasonable   Ratea.\nH.  DUNK,  Proprieter\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-healed   Rooms   by  tha  Day,\nWeek, or   Month.\nEvery   consideration   shown   to\nguests.\nCor.  Baker  and   Ward   SJs.   Nelnon\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nDress. Eat, Live Better\nVisiting Cards\nFor  Ladies  or\nGentlemen\nWc can give you\nprompt delivery of personal visiting card s.\nHighest grade printing\nantl materials.\nThe Daily News\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic    Restaurant\nRefinement  and   Delicacy   Prevails\nOPEN    DAY   AND    NIQHT\nLuncheon,  11:30  to  t     15c\nSpecial   Dinners,  5:30   to   8 ....35c\nWe  Specialize  in  Chop  Suey\nand Noodles.\nPHONE   182\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant In the\nrlty. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe  Cater  to   Private   Parties.\nAustralia May\nForbid Landing\nof Undesirables\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n820 Bakar Street, Nelaon, B.C.\nOPEN   DAY AND  NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch ......35o\n6:30 to 8:00 p.m., Supper  35o\nPhona 154\nMKLBOntXE.    June    2.r..\u2014(Cuna-\ndian   IVess.   via.   Ueiiters.)\u2014With   the\nobject   nf   Ktrenfthetng   the   Kovern-\nnient, Premier Stanley M. Bruce today Introduced in  the house or rep.\nterieiitativcs n meuuri amending the\nImmigration  net.     it   provide*  thst\nundesirables    may    he    forhidden    to\nland    ln    Australia    and    enahles   the\ngovernment   in   the   event   of   serious\nindustrial   disturbance*   Lo    issue   a\nproclamation    wherehy   persons   not\nhorn in Australia who arc responsible\nfor   ihe   obstruction    of   transport a -\nj tion   may   he  deported.\nI     The   hill   also   empowers   the   gov-\nI eminent   to   deport   persons n\u00bbt   horn\nin  Australia   who  may  he convicted\nI Of  offences  against   the   laws  of   the\n! commonwealth   relation   to   trade,   It\nlal\u00bb0 provides for the total or partial\n1 prohibitum cf aliens of any national-\n\u25a0 ity   fiom   entering  the   country.\nTUBERCULOSIS\nDANGERS NOT\nSOGREATNOW\nKnown as Curable Disease;\nRadium for Cancer Is a\nGreat Help\nKKCSINA. June 2!\".. -- Tuheivulosis,\ncommonly referred to as thn \"white\nl.iague.\" , was nut nearly such n menace to clvtllsutlon us wa* popularl>\nimaffined, Dr. Stewart Pritchard of\nBattle ('reck. -Mich., told the distinguished audience. Tuberculosis Is now\nl;nown to he a curuhle disease, and the\n('.angers of infection from contact were\nconsiderably exuberated with respect\nlc the adult. Children, however, he\nsaid,   wore  more  suhject   to Infection.\n\"You cannot always Judge tuberculosis by appearances.\" Dr. Pritchard\nsnid. \"The dramatic types which\n;ilar mthe public seldom have the disease In the hist unmistakable staj;_s.\nBe more chart table to the tubercular\n\\ictltn.\" lie urged, \"for Its danger Is\nnot so great as the social diseases\nahout which Iho general public knows\nso   little.\"\nDr, Pritchard. who Is regarded ab\none of the leading tuberculosis specialists on tho continent, is p. graduate of\nthe   1'nlversity   of   Toronto.\nTree Dancer In Three Tears\nX-ray and radium (r.-ati.ient after\noperation for cancer gave a patient a\n_5 per e<nt better chance of a per-\nt< unent cgfi than where the treatment\nwas not applied, according to (I. ...\nRichards, department of radiology, Toronto (hneral hospital.\nAs the result of tlie treatment bv\nIr. Hlchanls of \\u cases, more than\nMt por cent wen- now free from cancer\nftor throe  years'  treatment.     Statistic\nf   surgical   operations   alone,   he   said.\nhowed  that an average \u00ab,r 3Ti por cent\nnly  remained alive and   free  fnmi the\nurrotpondlng   period\nHOMEMADE   PUPPST   SHOW\n(ine  Mother says:\nWe have found the making of a puppet show a great adventure for our\nchildren and the source of much pleas\nure for days afterward. Clothespins\nmako excellent puppets and a medium-\nsised packing box is a good stage. A\noe\\er child or a helpful mother can\neasily decorate the clothespins with\nthe necessary faces and clothes, and\nwires on strings attached make the\nmanipulation of them possible and\nefisy. Lot the puppets aet out the old\nMother CiooKe stories and then see how\n.\u25a0ulckly the children invent stories of\ntheir own for the dolls to act out on\nthe  miniature stage.\n\u25a0*\nOCCIDENTAL    MOTEL\nA.  C.  TOWNtfl.   Prnpniter\nTho  home  of   plenty.\nTlfty   moms   of   solid   .\u25a0.mfv.rt.\nWa  lerv iho   I.i   t  niejla in Neleon.\nIt's the cook.\nSummer Resorts\nCombinations a *\nB.V.D.Style-JIJ\nWc mentioned that our .stock was selling fast. A\ngentleman replied, \"One more day like this and you will\nsell Jots more.\"\nOur Dollar Value is equal to most $1,50 makes,\nis no idle statement\u2014Wc Bought Kight.\ntie\nanient,\nor\nTh-\ndld not prove a factor In the contest.\nHon. R. N. Rhodes, who will be\ncalled upon to form the. new government, Avon his scat with a safe margin In Hants.\nOne member who sat In the laat\nhouse as n Labor ito was returned\nin Cumberland county, where he ran\nunder Conservative Indorsation. No\nother Labor candidates Were ncur\nthe winners.\nRhode* Win Surprise\nHon. 1_. N. Rhodes was elected\nwith a good majority In Haute county.\nThe result was ;i complete surprise\nto many, the popular belief having\nbeen that while the government might\nhe defeated, it would be by a small\nmargin.\nVictoria county, an old-time Liberal stronghold, returned mc Liberal\nby a scant majoilty, while Antigoulsh\nreturned  two.\nThe vote was fairly heavy, and In\nevery county carried hy the Conservatives their majorities were\nheavy.\n\\V. L. Hall, former lender of the\nConservative party ln Nova Scotia,\nMl elected In Queens, along with\nPrank   U.   D.   Barn jum.\nHalifax, 5.\u2014Kred Fra3er. majority\n71fir\u00bb; Alex Montgomtry, 7137; J. F.\nMuhoney, 7008; .1. A. Walker, 6721;\n\\V. D. Pierccy, 6838.\n(.Juyflborough, 2.\u2014Simon Gliffon, majority 302; H. A. Rice, lt_. (One\nsmall poll to hear from will not materially affect result.)\nPlctou, 3.\u2014Robert A. Douglas, majority 3425; ,T. Doull. 3873; H. A.\nMacQUariic. majority 2511.\nnverness, 2.\u2014M. Mackey. majority\n4M; Hubert Aiuxiin, P'i (wiih mls-\nslnfT polls.)\nLingerie\nIn Silk, Mull, Dimity,\nso dainty and nev*.  i\nSLIPS    FOR    SUMME\nDRESSES, all shades.\nBLOOMERS,\nSTEP-INS,      !-\nCOMBINATIONS,\nGOWNS,\n\u2022   PAJAMAS   ,,.  j \u25a0.\nThe New Summer Ha\nAre taking- fine.    Spec,\norders taken.\nNelson Dry Goods C\nLadles\/  Wear  Specialists\nIIurrlnRton.   majority   3881;\nDonald, majority 38(12.\nVictoria,    l._Phlllp    McLeod,\nJorlty 56.\nKlnfa, 2.\u2014O. e. Nowlan, ma,\n3r-\u201e; Kcgioald T. Caldwell, ma\nM.\n *m\t\nSENATE  PASSES   ON\nPENSIONS ACT CHA\ncure-itl!\"\nremedies lenermlly\n%.re extremely danteroum ofteo roa>\ntalnlai narcotic, ami other habit-fono-\nInb drusa, *\\e\u00bb lu the orpspnt era\n'i enlightenment, people placed faith\nit. the oriain charms and trinkets\naad actually believed these acenele.\narr..riled   them   Immunity   fr, amy\nailments.      He   RUMaotnd    thai    all    lr-\nicBuiar  practitioners  be  compelled   to\npass   an   examination   before   IjchlK   allowed to practice,\nVictoria   m\u00bbeti   Meeting\nHr. W. H. Uctluffln \u201ef Calgary \u00ab;,\u00ab\nchosen   aa   prealdsnl   of   the  t'anadlan\nRadiological   society   al   Ihe   business\n'\/'\"\"\"'.'H    \"r          society    here     today.\ni>r.  i.   W.   Prosrd   of  Vancouver  was\nelected    first    vice-president     Hr     l\nRitchie   nf   Ottawa   (-ootid   vice-president    Dr,  B, c.   Brooks of  Montreal\nwill  continue  in   the  offic..  of  seen.\nanother year.\nwns    eio.se\nVictoria. 1\nenur for tli\ni.clety.\nth\nnext   convention   of   the\nFORTY-THREE\nYEARS RULE\nIS SMASHED\n(I'oniinueil Krom Pag\u00ab One.)\nLalHirit-* offerinc In thr eontt\n\\om   Ihrlr fonoffftA,\nMembers   Buried\nThe    immler    psrawmHy    euffe\nilofeai in Nhelliuriif., jiml a( !t O*rlork\nonly two ini'n of hi* mlri.lnistnttk.n\nwere Voncerlecl n chance of eloi tion,\nThe altorncy-ccnenil, lion. U\". J,\nO'Hearn, was hu.ieil hcne;ith an avalanche  Of vuich   in   Halifax,   and   Hon.\n.1. J, Kinley iiml Hon. T. .1. Tory or\nMonireal. membera <\u00bbf rh'1 evernment\nwithout portfolio, were IrulliiiK their\ni 'niiHcrvittive   o)i|.tmentM,\nIt   wiih   the  firat   lime   in   41   yeara\nlhat    the    Cniinervativen    ha.l    a\nRichmond Weft, Cape pre^on. 2. \u2014\nDr. B- A. Leblnnc. majority 5150:\nDr. J.  MacDonald, mnjorlty  IM.\nLunrnhurfr. 2.\u2014Dr. W. X. FlehfuBP.\nmajority 2M3; W. H. Smith, majority\n1181, (One small pott to hen- from\nwill    not    materially   clianeje   result.)\nShelboume\u2014tomphte returns give\nHon. E. II. ArmstronR, Liberal. 200S\nVottli Irwin, Liberal, 1970 votes:\nDIckei'son, CnnFervati-.e. KH votes;\nSmith, Conservative.  J .08  vote*.\nyiieeiiK\u2014Coir' plot i ret urns: Mo-\nLoarn. Liberal. 173fi votes; Smith.\nLibera 1, 17.1 votes; Harnlum. Conservative, 1D7 votes; HatI, Conservative,  11>31  voted.\nElection  Results\nHALIFAX, ,;.;ne' IC\u2014The foUuwin?\nLiberals were elected;\nAn:lKunlsh. 2.\u2014Hon. William Chlsholm. majority fH: Dr. .1. h. Mc*\nUsac,    majority.    218.\nContcrvatives   Elected\nColchester. 2.\u2014W. R Armstrong,\nmajority 4091; F. StanfieU, majority\n3&00.\nCumberland, 3.\u2014P. C. Black, r\/-\ntority 40D6; ' D. O. MoKenhfe. majority 1347; A. Terrls, majority. ITM.\n'McKenzie sat ln last honre as Farmer and was leader of the opposition.\nTerrls sot  In last  house as  Libor.)\nAnnapolis, 2\u2014 O. V. (Joncher, majority 4092; D. \u00ab. McKenzle. mn-\nioiity .6fi. Complete returns give\nCroWtU. L'l'eral, 308\u00ab votes; Elliott,\nLiberal. 316.ri votes; Coueher. Cbn-\n\u2022ervutlve. 43\u00ab1 votes; MacKenzle,\nCmise.-vatlve    |l,si    votes.\nHan's. 2.\u2014 Afl;ort Parsons, majority\n1741; lion. r:. N. IthudrH. majority\nl_f>7.\nDlRby. m. .1. L. P. Unbiehrau. ina-\nioritv 13'-'2; W. II. Faruham. mn-\nJorPy   IftM.\nShelburne, 2.\u201410. R. Nickerson. ma-\nfurlty MT) Captain NT. Hmlih, man-It y \u25a010ft. Il'icinlcr Armstrong was\ndefeated   In  this   constituency.)\nYarmnn\"h, 2.\u2014Cope .1. Caban, ma-\nJorllv (593; R D. ISntrcmont. ma-\njorltv   320.\nCape -ireton. VmH, 2. \u2014 J. C.\nDouKlas. mafotitv 2713;  Alex o'llund-\ny.  majoi-Hy  2735.\nCape   Bre:on   Center,   2.--C)!.   C.   8.\nOTTAWA,   June    25.\u2014The    s\nwill  not insist upon two of Its\namend men.8   to    the    Pensions\nwhich   were   rejected   by   the   )\nof   commons. The   aenate\nagreed to Insist only upon\namendment which it made tc\nPensions net prohibiting the t\ning of the pension in cases }\na disability wus traced to ml\nduct.\n\u25a0  Packer of\nWILSON\" S\nFLY PADS\n,WiLl*IU MORE FLICS fhAi\n\"$_\u00b0-WORTH  OF  ANY\nSTICKY. FLY CATCHER\nClean to handle.   Sold by\nI)rupitfsts. Grocers and\nGeneral Stores\nPSORIASIS?\nThe cause of this disease Is or\nhe mysteries of medicine. The\nihn' icfentlfl.\" treatment la Chry\ntin    Ointment    and    Arsenic.\nf 30 year?;' itandlOff positively\niy a special  treatment  for this\n\u2022ase.   Write fot advice.   J. H.\nDpcoltliet), 3\/E. Roxton Rd.. Tor\n3nt.\nWhen You Want\nPainless Dentistry\nThink of Spokane'\nRecognized Painles\nOffice\nAny PftfrlfcN patirnt will rM\nly tell you about tht: wonder!\"\nresults given by my painless N\nva thesis -inula' Inquiry ainoi\nyour friends. I want you to\ntln.ioufrlily mitisfled, for that\nthe principle which has ma>\nthis (Spokane's lnrRest dental a\nflee.   Ask   for  Dr. Cohen.\nAll Work Guaranteed\n15 Years\nPalnl.as   .xtrnctlon   by\n!>ovnl litala. mMho.\nSIK-K<SB  KT   STEW   tOCA\nT10>, Or-.ll TKB OWL\n3&fif&_$5&\nQEMSIS\nBooms    SOT-1-. -10.11 -11,    -\nrioor.   Ismlsson   anl__f.   Or\ntin Owl, Wall aad BrnraMa,\n\u25a0ro\u2014uia, wint\n \u25a0_\u25a0\nfettf\nTHE NELSON DAIL?\nFRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\nPOiTEuaf\nf\n'ROAD TO LOVE'\ngy ELENORE MEHERImi\n=\n^\n\u25a0^s\nin_.4_,CHAIWIB__,CVII, _\nMI9'Toylor'H JabruiJt nntiotinoement\nhacked him an though who said. \"Mine\njpwU Is d*m1.\" '\nHhe,'had cwn Joan. Theh Joan wag\npre }n the city nnd khowlng alt the\nnigedy that had come to them. said\nword\u2014not own lo Katy who1 loved\n; hot bo much am', \"Whftt a rtinme!\nh. Tm 8u sorry.\"\nlie, felt    oe   'though    colli,    heavy\ninds flattened \"hlm  against a wall,\nesMt'tl the voice out. of him.\n\"Oh, 'yon saw hv?     Where in 'aha\norking npw?\"\n\"Well, I don't know.     She wns Jtiat\nftting   oh   lhe   car.     I   ran,   but   'I\nmldh .  make It.    So I didn't get 0\n\u25a0lianco to speak to her.\"\n\" \"You didn't speak to her1?\"\nN\u00a3, she was getting on the Genry\ntreet c\\r. It \u2022 wajj gone when I\ncached the curb. Hut .\"11 run across\ner again.\" ' > .\nHis spirit rose with a*eurge of re- j\nef.    Blanche  Tnylor  was   mistaken.   '\n'ouldn't    have    been    Jon n\u2014couldn't\nnve heen.\n\"Oh.    H    wns    her,    ;,||    v\\RM.    Mr.\ntrooks.    She Ifwed to me!\"\nThe news left a crushing weight of\nincertalnty   lodging1   in   his   thought,\nA'hy   should   Joan   be   silent?     What\nVutd  he have done?\n\u25a0 Thai,    t! .<[iimdent     tr liming    11 f ter\nhe   enco \/(ier   with   the   farmers   lu*\nad   sent   her  a   wire   telling   her   he\ntil   leaving;   he   would   see   her   iln\n;ilday.    Friday when be arrived there\nJag no trace of Joan.\nJ Why had she acted so to him?\n.\/Uncertainty    quickened    to    alarm,\nuddenly   I    slckiniog   fear   arrowed\n\"fn.    Could  Joan   have  believed   hlm\nIII y ?     111   remembered   t he   f la tne\nher   speech,    the   divam    in    her\nes   when   she   pftjd   nt   the   time   llie\nm    hroke,    \"Oh,    ^\u25a0ou*_l    not    v|iilt!\nyou!     It's  your job.\"\nfiltered   into   the   spirit   of\nn   infinite   trust    that    he,\n,e  was he,  mtttt   win.\nDid   Fhe   think   now   thu I\niirown  up tlie  great  work\nhi\nher\nShe had\nit with\nbecause\nhe hud\nAnd  M\nterrible\nleft,    fearing\norn  of him?\nNo. Joan wopjdn't Judge him so.\nhe never would\u2014\nBut   she   was    hero    In    the    city.\nlanche   Taylor   had   seen   her.     And\nie remained silent. A passion of\nmi rest sent htm racing along, nil\nis previous (Mr as nothing to ihe\nart, the resentment, ibe furious\naffbment this knowledge bivnght\niim\u2014Joan here and avoiding hlm.\ntie saw himself meeting her, grilling her by the shoulders, deinunding\nhrough shut teeth, \"Why in the\nome of Qod did  yon  do  thia. Joan!\"\nWhin his heart hud emptied ItiwM\nf reproaches, tawxtm entered.\nJomething behind it\u2014must-be. Ab-\nuptly   it   ocearrcil   to   him   that   she\nid just returned.      Perhaps she had\nmt her address to the old boarding\nnine.\nlie went there. The thin, meek\nIt tie maid he had given the $5 bill\niponed the door, She remembered\ndm. No \u2014 there was no address.\nilfss   Lewis   lad   not   returned.\nremaps she had culled nt the of-\nlee for tier wall? .r\u00abrUapa hIu- had\nriven -Her fofWUTdhi'R iidilnuw to  tie\nImr itenoj\\ .pher. ,:\nDenny hud not seen Donlap since\nte night be had rfiited nt his home,\ninnliip might be at the office. At\nio thought a hot linger swept over\nim. He kept saying to himself,\nJHI get that fellow yet! I'll smash\nim  up!\"\nUut the lawyer was not at Ibe\n\u25a0ff.co Miaa Ma Hudiis rMrtod her\nl.ng. thin fingers on the typewriter.\n\u25a0urnttf ber long, thin nose toward\niVnny.\n1 \"Why, no. Miss Lewis hasn t keen\nere nt all\" \"\"\n\"Hhe didn't com* for tier mail.\n\"Xo.     We   huve   two   hi his,   but   1\non .    know    where    to    send    them^\nlave  you  her  address?\"        \u25a0'   '\n1 Denny  evaded   wiih.  \"I   undn*>tand\nhe   lei\"*   her   address   hti'e*\nThe girl   shook  here   head.\nAs   Denny  went   down   the  corridor\n10   flung    headlong   against    Jo me*\nmnlap.   who   stopped   bach   with   a\nDr itosj) is la *\\'ew Vork studying\nllvanced methods in t*va'.np eolohlc\nlid ructal (Ugeaseg. Walt fur his re-\nlirn.\nrKAKK   ROSE,   M.D.\nil    Belg-tr   Bolldlng,    corner    Howard\nand  BIT tr lid*,  Spokane\n*a_po\". l\"Why,   _4r.   BrooKa...  .Qood\n(iftornoofl:\" *:.\nHe stepped ankle, J^enny blocked\nhffn. Dpnlap' rubbed his handa to-\n\u00bb0en Ml_s lrfwlg? 1 presume you're\nseen Mtits Lewis? 1\u00bb presume you're\ncofn-tneefl now that 1 Wldn't Kidnap\nthe yourtg lad*??'*\n\u2022tm not milta ready to .tell you\nmy conVlctlons,\" Denhy answered\ncoldly. \"Are you in a hurry to hear\nthem?\" \u201e\u201e  .\nThe (mte eyelashes quivered, filled\nDenny with a contempt. He walked\noff'as Dunlap whispered, \"Amulng,\nmofct amazing. But then 1 under-\ngtand your porttIon. Mr. Brooks.\nRather   trying,   of  course.\"\nA reaction from the hot Intensity\nof feeling left hlm depressed whh a\nsense of futility; of fallufl. He\ncould think of no move 'that he\nmight make; nothing* that would\nLsolve  the   hankering  problems.\n'I've got to drop this,\" he\nthought. \"I'm through with 1-.. If\nthey want to pin it on me, let\nthem!\"\nBut he couldn't drop It. By mer\u00bb\nthinking and wishing he couldn't\njmt the damage suit* out oi' exist -\nence. The farmers fought against\na change of venue. They want-ad to\ntry the case where the tragedy hsd\nhappened. They wanted Denny to\npay the ghastly evil they hud sul-\nfered. They were going to clean him\nto the bone . . . leave him With*\nout a cent.\nThen if Chlsborough didn't get\nhim his new project?! Denny's\nheart (pinlied before this poHsimil-\nity. He'd get It all tight. Cood\nLord,   he'd   have   to  get   it.\nHadn't he told Katy? What cou'd\nhe do for her; whnt In the world\ncould he do It if this failed '\nIn these moods tie walehed her\nwitli an aching tenderness, iiungiii-\nIng she wns quiet; she was pale,\ndoing \u25a0 hundred little things thai\nbfought a mocking joyfulness to her\nfnce. She would say: \"I'm so\nspoiled, now, Denny, that an angel\nfrom Heaven won't serve me enough\nwhen you get tired. Stop looking\nat me! I have Lady Englantlne\nStare.    That's enough!\"\nHe thought now: \"Well, I won't\ntell   her  about  Joan.    She'll   worry,\nBut ns always he did tell her,\nfor she was too quick and caught\nthe   shadow   on  his  face.\n\"Can you beat that for queerness.\nKaty-kid? I wonder if she's lost\nher  mind?\"\n\"it cochin*t have been Joan. 1\nknow\u2014why I know it wasn't Joan.\"\nThat was all Knty could say. \"But\nhere's something good for you,\nBenny.\"\nIt W-i a telegram from Stephen:\n\".lust got back to camp. Have\nKatie's .atia?. Is your money all\ntied up? There's |1IM of mine\nloose. It's yours. Fight to tbe last\nditch.    I'll  be  up soon.  STBVK.\"\nThere was a letter for Katy\u2014\nshort\u2014full of heart:\n\"Kate. Sweel Old Dear\u2014Tough\nwhat- they've done to our lord. Den,\nisn't it? But he'll come out on top.\nffs in (he stars for him. He's\nnever said die yet and he won't now.\nBut keep the glud heart in him,\nKate, ns you* always done for tho\ntwo of us. I'.ll be tip to give you\n11 cheer. - Bememher, Knte. that you\ntried to disown me once and it didn't get hy. Jtenu-mber, also that if\nthe mule kicits one 111:111 of the funi-\nly you've got (he foundling to call\nm und he's ready to answer now\nand -always. '\n\"STKI'HKN.\"\n\"Hasn't   ho   always   been   11   comfort   lo us,   Denny?\"\n\"Oil, yes\u2014auch u prop In our\nold   ago!\"\n\"I'd take anything from Stephen.\nDenny. It we want ihe money\nWe can , use il.\"\n\"\u2022We ihavc'+wmc  left  yet.\"\n\"If    you    had    this    money    you\noould\" find    out   about    Joan?\"\n\"What can you find out about a\nperson that's here aud won't see\nyou?\"\n\"It that's true, Denny \u2014 well \u2014\nwell if alosn is here\u2014there's something awful  about  it \"\nThey   argued   all   dinner  about   It.\nDenny     kspt     repeating:     \"Dunlap\nknows' she's  here.    Why did  he ny\nto  me:   '1   suppose  you've  seen   Miss\nl*ewls_\"\nHe went to the irrigation office\nthe next day intending to ask very\noaJaily that Dunlap give him Jnnn's\naddress. As lie opened the door he\nheard the lawyer at the phone. A\nname struck him with panic. \"Blve\nme M(r, Anson, please.\"\nEhmttep   swung   around   as   Denny\nentered,  clapped   the   receiver  on   the\nhook,   his face  white as  paper.\ntTo  He Continued,)\nmWANlS~MEET AT\n    MONTREAL NEXT\nST. PAUL, Minn.. June It, \u25a0 Mojtfr\nreal was chosert for the lfl_6 convention of the Kiwanis international at\nthe closing session of that body's convent ioh here today. The Canadian\nmetropolis was also u warded the\n\"gold i>i*tae\"\" of the lnternnilonn),\nwhich is emblematic of the Kiwanis\nclub  leading in community service.\nJ. Walter Taylor of Montreal was\nelected vee-president of the International and J. H. Moss, of Milwaukee,    wag   elcted   president.\n(WORK CERTIFICATES\n__' ISSUED DAILY\n_\nBuildings Being Rushed Reports       General\nStewart\nDAVYS STARTS HIS\nPLANT ON TAILINGS\nSenator Green Is Paying a\nVisit       to       Silver\nBell\nBack from looking at \"the deepest\nre yet found in the Slocan,\" General\nJ. W. Stewurt of Vancouver, president of Whitewater Mines, limited, at\nthe Hume I.i hi night, described the\ndevelopment plans of the company,\nslated that mine bidding* are now\nbeing erected, and r?|iorted the re-\nfnint.ptIon of development work on the\nbig strike.\nT. H. Waters & Co. of Nelson\nhnve the contract for bunkhouses and\nother buildings, totalling In the\nneighborhood of $10,000, on which\nthey started work n week or more\nAgo.\nAfter being idle for ,11 years, the\nWhitewater compressor Is working\nIn good order, supplying air to two\ndrills that started Wednesday to develop the strike made in the sprlhg.\non which only a few days' work was\ndone before water forced u fuspen-\nslon of the work. Bight feet of very\ngOCtf) milling ore wus t.ippe.l by tlie\nmrikc. mni ihe development amounted\nto only 10 ar -\u25a0\u2022 l-'H prior lo Wednes\n(Jay's remuupiion.\nIn Absolutely -New Ground\n\"The significance of the strike.\"\nlaid General Slewart, \"is. that it has\ndisclosed the deeprst ore .vet found In\nthe Slocan. being ' SOO feet deeper\nthiui the lowest in the Silversmith at\nSandon. which has ore at 1100 feet,\nand that it Is in a pnrt of the\nWhitewater ground never before\ntouched. A tunnel driven In from\nthe surfnee nenrly 2000 feet failed to\nfind an ore body, and then U. H.\nStewart, awr consulting engineer, advised iii verging a HI tie. A tunnel\nHO feet .^.ove the main tunnel re-\ntlled in the discovery. While the\nextent of the 'ire body has yet lo be\ntnined, if it turns oui to be n\nconsiderable one. we might expect\nto Im* able to eome In under It from\ntlie-niuln tunnel, There Is ItM feet\nof ground to the surface, with, of\ncourse, the posslhib|> lhat the ore\nmay go up.\n\"In a month's time the new buildings und facilities generally will hi\nready, and then Munnger \\\\\\ H. Hnr-\ngess will put on a full force, prohahly\namounting to H men. The compressor ll good tor five drills.\nA Mill If Needed\n\"There may be a great deal of\nore, and there mny be comparatively\nlittle. No time will be lost in developing the strike fully. If It turns\nout that we have a large hody of\nmilling ore, a mill will bo built, to\nfonecntrale it. If wc w:inl a mill.\nI should say wc will want il in a\nyear.\"\nGeneral Stewart reported that M.\nS. Davys, manager of ihe ftetals\nRecovery    eompany,    was    to    have\nstarted Up \\vsterduy -the mill he recently ownpleted, for Ihe treatment\nof the old Whitewater lAltyiga, with\nwhich   five   years   operation    i*    In\nsight  for the plant.\nHe   said   Mr.   Davys   had   a   loud   of\nfuiiiogs ready for the mill's first run.\nwhan he wus at Whitewater. The\nDavys plant  Is within a quarter of a\nmile   ot   lhe   Whitewater   mine.\nOenir.il Btewurl traveled from New\nDenver 10 Whitewater in company\nof   Peiiator   R.   (\u25a0*.   Oreen,   who   was\non his wuy to Knslo. After his visit\n(o the Whitewater he saw lhe senator\nIn Knslo, and heard from him he\nexpected     to     visit      the     Silver     Bell\nproperty, which he owns, yesterday.\nHunts   Ontario   Canal   Contract\nCanal and railway contracts arc engaging Stewart * Welch at present,\nGeneral Stewart said, the firm being\nengaged, in naaodatlon with the\nNorthern ConetrUi Hon company, on\nu 17-090,004) contract, on the Welland\neunal.\nThis Is the first visit to this section\nin    15   years.     He   leaves   todny   for\nhis home ut  Vancouver.\nAcent'Aftessmettte.' Rec-\ncorded Make a Large\nList at Office\nMany certificates of work don*\" on\nrlneral claims In Nelson mining district are being issued by John Cartmel,\nmining recorder. In the court house,\ndally. Some of-'those issued lately\nwere   to\nR. Barron, for the Hover, the Silver\nH.efe. Butte City anil I^eroy. all OO\nAnderson  creek.\nW. J. Richards, for the Blue Jay.\nAnderson  creek.  .\nRobert gua. for the Silver Bell and*\nthe  Hawk.   Kawn  ireek,\nCarl iM. Mohr. for Hie |:.(\\ the l\\B.,\ntlie I., and 1>., the International, the\nInternational No. I, ull nine miles\nwest of  Nelson.\nJ. ('. Hansen, for the Darling, Kawn\ncrfek.\nB, Balllnger. for Ihe Pioneer, Salon  river.\nJohn K. Harbottle. for the May\nbloeeom   and   the   Klectric,   hoth   on\nee   Silver   mountnin.\nM. Murphy, lur tii.- Midnight Fraction.  .Sheep  creek.\nJohn gmallwoeri, for the King George\nV.,  on   Bird  creek.\nHarry   Ulppin,   for the   I'eurl   and   tho\nPearl Fraction, Sandy creek\n(Jus Nchwlnke, for the 'l.ucky (Joy\nand the Lucky Boy Kniciiun, Sheep\ncreek.\nTRAVELERS TO\nSTAGE A uVO-\nDAYCARNIVAL\nFair Building Acquiring a\nDance Floor; Vaudeville\nStunts\nThe Nelson local No. 3. o\nloclated Canadian Travel\n\u25a0verythlng   in   readiness  -fo\nthi\nlhe As-\ns, has\nits big\ncarnival to he held in the fair building, Friday and Saturday nights *nnd\nSaturday afternoon. July - und 4.\nEvery avallahle \u25a0pact in the building\nwill   be   used.      -\nA special dance floor Is being Installed, around whieh tables will\nplaced nnd refreshments serv\nsame as the cabaret* In the larger\ncities. The dancing will be operated\nsimilar to the jitney dunce at the\nlast year's fall fair, which proved\none of the most popular attractions.\nSpecial   decoration\"   will   be   used   In\nadding to the ntli ncllveness of the\nwhole affair. The Nelson city bund\nwill give a concert in the building\nboth   nights.\nThe Travelers are arranging far\nsome vaudeville stunts out of the\nordinary, which will be intersperced\nwith     the     dancing,     and     some     o*\nI Nelson's juvenile performers aro now\nrehearsing for one of the acts.\nAnother novel feature will be the\nInetulllng of the shooting gallery, and\nthe competition for the championahlp\nshooting.\nThe midway, such as found on the\ngrounds at the fall fair, is to he one\nof the largest* undertaken by a local\norganization, and a large Quantity of\ncarnival noveHiea are being brought\nin. The executive of the Travelers\nstatea that the entire net proceeds\nare to be used for worthy causes, a\ncertain percentage for local community service work, and a percentage for the Travelers' local funds,\nwhieh are t\/ed for similar purposes.\nIt is expected that many tourists\nwill come here and attend tho ear-\nnival.\nHouse Votes Sum       >   \u25a0\nCover Deficiency in\nGovernment Marine\nOTTAWA. June 25\u2014The houaa if\ncommon* tonight voted a aum of\nllWis.itoo to cover deficiency ln opera-\ntloria and capital expenditure on tho\nCanadian government merchant\nmurine  for the  present  flaoal  y._f.\n'Radio Thieves' Tune\nIn;  Get Thousands\nof New Radio Tubes\nItaly hus demanded an apology\nreparation   far   the  execution   oi\nItuliuTi  engineer hy the govcrnuie\nAfghanistan.\nNEWARK! N.I., June SH. \u2014 81*\nlit-ves hound and gagged two wateh-\nu.ri at the Ihlited Radio company\nihortly after 2 o'clock thU morning\nind escaped wiih fit),ono radio tun*s\n'allied   at   tSg\u00bbM|ti\nWALKS WITH\nNO SUPPORTS\nFIRST HE\nGeorge Leno of Nelson,\nCripple From Birth, Now-\nCured\nTo be pronounced cured, and to be\nt.U to walk without Iron supports,\nBTOtefcM or a stick, nfter nearly 21\nv. ars of gala and partial helplessness.\n;- the experience of Oeorge Leno. son\n: Mr, sad Mm w, C. Lean of \u00abi\".\nReheon etreet, who returned from\nhat promisee to be a flnl trip to u\n\\uiu ver doetor.  Wcdiiesdny Right.\nrtiit Operation aa a Baby\nAccording to Mrs. LfBO, her son was\norn witli a foot twisted completely\nround, and the first of u series of\nperalion to right this took place\nihen he wus oniy 17 wpekl old. In the\ntuinous Nt. Thomas* hospital of Lon-\nKnglund. As the op, r.it ion wus\nsuccessful, und the hoy was dail-\nhis parents brought him to Con-\ne.da when he was is months old. hep.\ning   the   change   would   he   henefielal.\nThey went to Vancouver, where his\nsecond * operation took place when ha\nwas 2 years old, and was again uu-\nsteceaaful,\nA Year In Oasts\nMr. Leno, an employee of the C.P.\nIt., was moved to Nelson II yeurs ago,\nind in 1H14. on the advice of Dr. W.\nt'. Rose, Mrs. Leno ttsik her soli back\nio si. Thomas'. In London, where he\ni\" in a year and lour months fu plaster of pails easts In spite of this\nwhen he eame back to Nelson he hnd\nto wetir Irons on his leg unit'go about\noi.     eiut cites,     ihis     continuing     until\nvac\nHave You a\nRoom to Kent\nIf vou have a room td rent and de..re a 'tenant,\nplace a Classified Advertisement in The Daily News.\nNicely furnished rooms are constantly being sought,\nand a Classified Advertisement will assist jioii. materially in obtaining* tenant, il :\u25a0. bi I i \u25a0.:.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\n\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0 ,        (I      iii\nFo Insert a Classified Advertisement, Phone 144\n(Two Lines), Call At or Write\nThe Daily News\nNEL60N,' B.C.\n1 <\nNEW STORE GOES\nN   UP AFTER FIRST\nBurns'* Will Tear Down the\nBuildings on Overwhaite\nTea Site\ntearlnn don\n(reel  which\nthe buildings\nccupy the lead\nnftei\nsua\nWork\nor   11:1k!\n(.ought    hy   the   liver\npaly,   llmlieii.   for   its   new   stor\niwecn the fjinadhin Hunk of Con\nand the U IV eufe, will begin\nJaly I. John Hums, eon i met of\nyesterday. These buildings h\npiesent    occupied   by   CfcarlM   Hunson,\ntobacconist,  and   T.   Orannuge,   barber,\nAs   soon   as   these   are   down,   const rue-\ntion of the  new store  will  begin.\nThe bUlIdIf, Which Will hv of cent\nand one story high, will have about\nLet frootage on Baker street, and\nwill be 720 feet deep. Moat of\nfrom Will he Inken up hy plate gl\nwindows, and the building plana t\nfur a mil-size beseweat\nBRANDON, CAWLEY\nARECOMMIHED\nTransiehte Will Bfe Tried\nfor Alleged Theft of\n1   ' '      Shoes\nAlbert Brandon and John On winy\nwere commuted hy Stipendiary Magistrate Oarlniel for trial when their\npreliminary hearing continued In the\nprovincial ^police court yesterday\nmorning.\nThe MM-ston wns short ns (hern was\nonly one witness to testify. Bill\nHoyee, clerk In the Watson Hh<\ncompany's store, testified as to the\nInvoice fo rthe shoes which the\nchage alleges had heen opened by\nthe accused, In a freight car\nroute between Kootenay Landing and\nNelson.\n511.\nIn    thut    >v\nami   !\nenny\ndown\nI.TSOI\ntion.\nHe\nnl   thr.\n.nke    0<\nRose's\n.   Vuiic.\nnml Im.\n\u2022   he    was\ne   moaihs\nno r.i J    hoi\nadvice,\neriously ill\n1 the Koot-\ntal. AK-iln.\nwas taken\nl-'rank Pat-\nnuns  opera\nreturned\ni although h'\nelal   boot,   ii\nration,    his\n.tenon\nut change\no   Nelson   after\nHtill wore Irons\nwas better tut\nother    said.      Bll\nthis,\nand n\n\u25a0   thie\nnot  very hopeful '\nfor  the  better.\nDiscards  His  Irons\nHowever, the doctor continued his\ni cut men is,  and   when   Oeorge   arrived\n1 '   Wednesday   night,   after   going\nown to the coasi (Saturday, he an-\nouneeil the doctor had been amused\n\u2022 tiie Improvement, nnd had told\nmi he could wear ordinary boots and\niaaard   his   irons   from   this  time  on\nhut   he   wns.   In   fnet. cured.\nOeorge has in en employed nl The\ntally News for severe] mouths.\nWILL HAVE NAME\nINSCRIBED ON CUP\nGyro  Trophy  to   Be   Displayed Month About in\nTwo Schools\nThe school ho\nver trophy pre)\nniris- relay tea\nbribed with tin\nput   on   display\nautumn,    This i\ngirls    from    Oer\nfrom the Hume,\net,\nTrail.  Rossland\nnnd  tlie  trophy.\nVidua!    prices,    was    present\ngirls at   a   r.cent   Oyro   nice\nIt     will     be\nmonth alternate\nI ear, beginning\nCentral and  Hut\nThe Kirls win\nscribed mi Nell\nnedy   and    Ellen\nCentral school. .\nthe   Hume\nI will hove the silted to the Nelson\nby ihe (Jyros. In-\nnames before It if\nthe schools In thr\nwas won by thnn\nil |school ami ont\nthe recent Intercity\nwhich teams from\nd Nelson competed\nI   Well   us   four   indi-\ntli,\n'played,    month    by\nthrough    the   school\nxi  September, in Lhe\nRChoOlS. t\nnames will be ia-\nKerush. Vivian Ken-\nlacOonald   from   the\nHoi-otliy   Vyse   from\nTHERMOMETER UP\nTOJNETY-ONE\nJust    Under    Saturday's\nMark; Rain on Thirteen\nDays in June\nYnaterduy wus within a fraction\nof n dcgrK> ot lidng the hottest day\nof the year to (lute, when the maximum temperature waa 91.1. Th,.\nhottest day was last Raturday, when\nII was 91.2. The minimum yesterday wns 48 degrees. Wednesday's\ntemperatures   were   G9  and   88.\nAr-ronllng to .1. S. Colliding, local\nmeteorologist, 1.72 Inch of rain hns\nfallen so fnr In June. Thla wns\nmnde up of: June 2,' .22; S\u201e .02; tl.\n.Ul; 1, .13; 8, .22; 10, 11; n. 14; 12,\n.27; IS, .18; 14, .03; If, .1; 17, .19,\nand  18, .07.\nThla totals ll daya on which rain\n'\u2022\u00bb. __...-, .-\t\nWest Transfer\nCompany\nDealers in .\nCOAL AND WOOD\nBa.gaee\nGeneral   Tea nun a   and\nHandled.\nAgents.   Imperial   Oil,\nPHONE 33.\nLtd.\nCHECK\nTHIS LIST OF SALE PRICE ARTICLES\nI'mv silk Hate  :: ..: - 81.50\n!..,   Dear  Mualln   ['nitorwear '\u25a0\u2022     81.68\nI se nrwwa   S1.05\nltnillil. Inth   Spoil   Drw*M  $4.95\nOOBd  LlBle Hosiery  ...-89*\nl.mlliV  Summ.T   V_ta .....  '.    39*\nCortelettee,  s. lal   Value 81.45\nPrlncMa  Slips - 81.95\nHathlni dps 30* Up\nBathing Soils. All-Wool         .'.  $3.95\nBmaaliTea \u00ab9t\n^ _ji_UEn_m_____m-*\nPHONE U3.  WE WILL SEE THAT YOU GET VALUE.\n__-\nuaker\nFlakes\ngive zest to\njaded appetites\nTKc Qu-\\tar Oats Comptny\nPETERBOROUGH     SASKATOON\nSo fpmptinpr, bo crisp, Quaker Com\nFlakes Impart a zest ko even jaded appetites.\nThe subtle flavour is preserved by the\nwaxed wrapper which keeps out tainta,\ndust and moisture. Quaker Corn Flakea\nare made crisp and keep crisp.\nSee  that  tht\nand tlie familii\npackage bears the name\nr Quaker figure.\nCoupon* in the cartons are exchangeable for useful articlea\u2014illustrated cat**\nlogue mailed on request.\nerboroggh won\nAU sold ln tli.\nOrange - CKU-K\nBottle \u2014 your\nguarantee ol\nhealth    beverage*.\nAfter Play\nHow greatefui to the youngsters is a generous drink ol\ndelicious Orange-CRUSH! When little folks come trooping home, tired and flushed, that's when mother gives\nIhem all they like. .Sparkling, pure and healthful it's\ngood for them.\nAnd mothers- here's a tip. Put ice cream in a glass.\nPour in a bottle of their favorite CRUSH Orange, Lemon\nof Lime. Stir thoroughly to make it creamy and watch\ntheir delight.\nThe CRUSHES are nationally advertised sold everywhere. Order a case of 24 bottles from your dealer\u2014\nthe handy way.   Look for the Orange-CRUSH Label.\nOinnrt-CBUSH    ia\nSnpi.inely    Dolicloa*.\nHrra'a   Why\u2014\n1.\u2014Tha natural fruit\noil of orangaa.\n2.\u2014Tho natural fru.lt\naclda   of   tlio   citrna\nfruita (orantfaa, ionium,,   limes).\n3\u2014Oranite-julca.\n4.\u2014Pur,    ctrbonatt.\nwatar.\n!).\u2014Cartlfla. food\ncolor.\n6 Para c.iua  augar.\nAlso 0-C Ginger Ale and 0-C Grape\niti-i-i-b-M-iiB\na-\u2014\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u25a0 '-'-,-\nPeg. Fonf*\nTHE NELSON DSILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26,1925\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sun-\nby The New Publlshln\nlimited.   Nelson,   p.C.\nday\nThe Near Publishing company,\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The Newa Publishing com*\npany, limited, and In do case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\nof any advertising agency recognised\nby  the Canadian  Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\n87 mall (country), per month \u2014I   .11\nPer rear  ___..   ff.01\ngy mall (city), par year .-.., \u201e., , 11.00\nOutside Canada, par month  -     .75\nPar yaar   , T.60\nDelivered, par week      .IB\nMr yaar ___ ll.uv\n__ Payable la Advance\n\u25a0bar Audit  Bnreaa   of  Olrenlatloa\nFIUDAY.    Jl'XT.\nReaders ot The Dally News contribute many of the beat Items to\nthis column. Just sign your name\nor Initiate, or nom-de-plume, and\n\u25a0and ln your brlghteat Idea*\u2014Ddl-\ntor. Lighter -ids.\nAUNT HET\nNova Scotia Liberals\nEngulfed\nSomething like a tidal wave\nengulfed the Liberal government of Nova Scotia yesterday,\nand as this is written, on the\nI asm of the 9 o,'cloek returns,\nVardly a survivor from the cabinet is in sight. The Conservative majority at the same hour\nis put at \"anywhere from 30\ntip,\" In a house of 43 members.\nThe defeat of the Armstrong\nI'Overnment is no doubt the\njoint product of several causes.\n\"It is time for a change,\"\nwas a cry with some perti-\nnanfy, when the party complexion of the government had i an(.\nlieen unchanged for 43 years. I \u00bbmouiii\nBut this cry should have been\nequally good any time this last\n30 years.\nMaritime discontent with the\nLiberals, most of it of federal\norigin, probably played the\nmajor part.\nThen there was a new and\nyoung premier\u2014new and young\nby Nova Scotia standards. Hon.\nE. H. Armstrong took office\n18 months ago, while before\nhim Hon. George H. Murray\nadministered the affairs of the\nprovince for 26'\/. years, and\nbefore him, Hon. W. S. Fielding held the reins for 12 years.\nHon. W. T. Pipes began the\nseries of consecutive Liberal\nadministrations with a two-\nyear term.\nAltogether Conservative ad-\nministiations have governed\nNova Scotia all of four years\n(\u25a0ince Confederation\u2014four years\nrf Conservatives in office, 54\nyears of Liberals in office, for\nthe consecutive Liberal administrations go back before the\nbrief Holmes-Thompson era.\nHon. S. H. Holmes held office\nthree years and seven months;\nHon. S. D. Thompson held office four brief months.\nHon. Edgar N. Rhodes, for-1 p\u00ab\u00ab u\nmerely speaker of the house of\ncommons, who was appointed\nConservative leader about a\nmonth ago, perhaps had something to do with crystallizing\na determination already formed,\nto put the government out. Cer-\ntainlv he could not swing the\nprovince over in a month's\ncampaign.\nMr. Rhodes now has a chance\nto teach the Bluenoses to think\nConservatively at fairer intervals. He is the latest of a\nlong succession of Conservative\nleaders, some of them very able,\nmost of whom were defeated in\ntheir own ridings at the elections following their elevation.\nRe is a brilliant public man,\nit wealthy business man and a\nlawyer, and if his administration does not introduce a C'on-\nfervative era of fair duration,\nit will be somewhat surprising.\nJVo Dominion Election on This\nMany Ottawa dispatches in\nthe month or so since the Saskatchewan election, which confirmed in office the Dunning\nLiberal administration, have\nhad as their theme the proposition that the Mackenzie King\ngovernment would go to the\npolls this fall IF\nNova Scotia went Liberal.\nNew Brunswick went Liberal.\nThe extent to which Nova\nScotia went Liberal yesterday\n\u2014some three or four seats, by\navailable figures, in a house of\n43\u2014does not promise that the\nKing government will call a\nsudden election so as to benefit\nby the reflected popularity of j\nLiberal governments in the\nmaritime*.\t\n\"John was the only one n' my\nhoyn thHt (Crowed a moustache.\nHn' he waa too bashful to klaa\nthe  girls anyway.\"\nAnither very annoying place to live\nll  Jum beyond your Income.\nKi.VOIUNOK OF TIIK LAW IK NO\nI.XI'IISE NKITIIKR \u2014 ALAS! \u2014 IS\nLAW'S lUNnitANPR.\nall,    slovenly    sneeeh    Is   food\nii express tbat kind or ideas.\nOn* sm\u2014l Jack ow lift e Mr,\nbnt lt t.k.i \u00bb lot ot Juk to ktos\nIt up.\nWar methods are ateadlly refined,\nlut the causes remain aa primitive as\never.\nIt Isn't polite to talk ahout the\nwratier\u2014not If you use adequate Ian-\nguaa>.\nlaoha a. \u00abi___:a_\nCANNINO   1'OUR   CORN\nTOMORROW'S MKNIT\nBrenkfast\nApple  Sauo\nCereal\nPoached  KKKs Tonst\nCoffee\nl.uiH'hcim\nVegetable   Soup\nWhole Wheat  Ulead\nPennut   Butter\nLeft-Over    Prunes\nCookies Iced  Tea\nDinner\nVeal  Cutleta\nPotatoea  Steamed   in   Hklns\nString    Beans\nLettuce    Kabul\nKerry   Shortcake Coffee\nThat Body,\nof Yours\nBy ;__1I W. BABTOV, MA\nWc often wonder if the Jum band\ndiiector really Riven the signals for\ntl e r\u00bbl\u00bbyer_ to act  that  way,\nA BACHKLOIt  LO-M A LOT.    HE\nHASN'T ANYBODY TO START A\nQl'AllHKI. WITH VYHI.N HB QBTfl\nLOFlKD,\nScab   Im   nhqwing   up   In   many\norchards north of   an many\n(\u25a0rowers did not spray during\nthe pi nk stuff? on nccount of the\nlitfht rrop In view, bat huve been\nblliy during the punt week.\u2014\nKrom report of ;i Kootenny horticultural    official.\nWe did not spray\npink;\nliffht   crop    wan\nthouffht.\nno    one    told    the\nKink!\n\u25a0pray   now   whlli\nhot.\nwhile buds fmshed\nMm\nWe\nthat\nkiller!\nInterval   during   \\*hieh\nami   tin-   vlctlmi   \u00abr<*\nNobody   lias  any   pep  in   hot   weathe\nThere   hasn't    been   all   MRMVllUtloa    I\nI ulitarit  thla  week,\n'Torwai-a with Ood,\" aayi Hin-\ndtnburg. Wouldn't \"Forward toward Ood\" be a little Uia pre-\nmimptivt?\nThe housewife who haa n kitchen\ngarden boasting nf corn will want to\nput up at leaat 1 few jura of thia\ndelicious   vegetable.\nUnited States government experts\nadvlae the uae of a steam pressure\ncanner of this vegetahle as follows:\nCut the corn kernel* off the cob\nwithout precooklng and place them\nin a saucepan in boiling water to\ncover, and let kernels heat thorough-\n]y (oft the range). Now fill sterilized qua it-size glass jars with the\nhot kernels, add one teaspoon of\nsalt und one tablespoon of sugar\nto each Jar (and more boiling water\nif necesaary to fill Jut* to within\none-fourth inch of top); put on fresh\nrubber, cover, and place top wire up\nbut do not preaa down side wire.\nPut Jar in this way in your pressure\ncanner, proceas for fMt minutes at IB\npounda pressure, or 250 degrees\nFahrenheit. Then remove, press\ndown  side  wire,   label  nnd  store.\nCorn Canned In the Water Bath\nOutfit\u2014Many housewives have, in\nother years, had excellent success by\ncanning their corn either in a commercial water-bath outfit, or hy using their clothes boiler filled with\na wire rack In the bottom. If\nyou do not possess the steam pressure outfit, and cannot afford one,\nsimply proceed as above, directed until you reach the stage of pitting the\ntop wire up and not pressing down\nthe side wire; after this, simply stand\nthe Jar in boiling water to cover it,\non the rack in your holler nnd after\nthe water has recommenced to boil,\nkeep truck of the time. It ahould\nremain In the boiling water for one\nhour, then it should be taken out,\nand the side wire pressed down. Let\nJar stand In ordinary room temperature overnight. In the morning,\nraise the side wire again, nnd once\nmore aland the jar In boiling water\nIn your holler, for another hour of\nprocessing\u2014exactly as you did hefore. Completely seal, let stand overnight, and on the third morning\nstilt again raise the side wire, process the Jar In the same way for\nan hour in your clothes boiler and\nwhen you press down the side wire\nthis time  the work  Is done.\nThis la called the \"Intermittent or\nThree-Day Processing Method,\" It is\nsafer than the old One-Period\nMethod of processing. Housewives\nwho used to pack their vegetables\nInto the can cold, will note that in\nup-to-date canning directions, although \"blanching*' (that is, dipping\ninto hot water) Is often advised before placing fruit or vegetables In\nthe jar. the old \"cold dippng\" has\nbeen  abandoned.\nTomorrow\u2014Duties Your Family\nWill  Enjoy.\nAddress   Inquiries   to   Mlas   Klrkman,\nind   Inclose stamped-addressed envelope I\nfor   reply.\u2014editor.\nPLAN TRACING \u25a0\nORIGIN INDIAN\nROCKMRVING\nVancouver Island's Curio\nGrounds Being: Defaced\nby Tourists\nVANCOUVER. June 25.\u2014Vancouver Island's prehistoric carvings,\nwhich for years have baffled archaeologists, nre In danger of being\nseriously defaced nr absolutely destroyed aa a result of the depruda-\ntlons of tourists, and steps are\nbeing taken to effect their preservation.\nThe carvings are on rocks near\nComox, at the mouth of the .Nanaimo\nriver, at Sproat lake and at Oreat\nCentral lake and are supposed by\nscientists to be Indicative of an\nancient civilisation of a far higher\ndegree of culture than any of the\naboriginal races known to the history\nof the northwest. Harlan I. Smith,\nnoted Canadian archaeologist, and\nseveral others have sought a solution of the mytsery surrounding the\norigin nf the petroglyphs. but so far\nwithout   success.\nHistory   Clu_    Elusive $\nThe ancient memorials are among\nthe flneat ever discovered ln thla\nport of the North American conj\ntlnent. They antedate the traditions\nof present-day Indians and their\nform la so different from any others\nthat a clue to their history is singularly elusive. Al Yellow island, near\nComox, there is a very large surface\ncovered with rock pictures, several\nof which were unfortunately destroyed by blasting when the light\nhi.line was built there. So far as can\nbe made out. the figures represent\nthe huh, stars, whales and fishes,\nbirds ami various supernatural beings\nhaving a vague general resemblance\nto   ihe   human   form.\nThe rock carvings at Sproat and\nOreat   Central   lakes   have   a   general\nDaily News Cross-Word Puzzle\nBlood Pressure and Lung\na*t Capacity\nIn the examination of university\nstudents it haa been found that a\ncertain percentage <had a low hlood\npressure ' notwithstanding that they\nappeared to be In fair health, with no\nhistory of anemia or other Illness.\nHowever, further inveatlgatlon\nshowed that they were not of the\nrugged type, that they did not indulge In athletics tp any extent, that\nthey were under the normal weight\nfor their height and age.\nNow we have perhaps an explanation of this from the work research\nmen are doing at the school of aviation medicine. Theae men atate that\na normal person will have a lowering\nof the b'ood pressure the higher In\nthe air he goes, owing to the oxygen\nIn the uir becoming less the higher\nthey ascend. \/\nFurther investigation has shown\nthat In any Illness involving the\nbreathing apparatus, the blood pressure  becomes  lower.\nTherefore an Individual who is not\naick, but has an Insufficient lung capacity, will likely have a low blood\npressure   normally.\nOne Investigator had described\nthese people us being \"undersized,\nnoriuthleUe, narrow nostrils, nurrnw\nchests, slender bodies, drooping\nshoulders, with poorly developed, lax\nmuscles.\"\nTherefore, if you find yourself In\nthis class you muy expect in have\nit   low   h ood    pressure.\nCan   you   increase   It?     Yes,   it   can\nhe   Iucreamed,   and   il   is   Important   to\ndo so.     With   u  uoi'mal   pressure   you\nnot   only    Will    be    able    to    Keep    free J\nfrom   the   petty   annoyances   of   cold\nhands   and   feet,   frequent   colds   and '\nso forth, but in Uie event of any ull- '\nment  you  will  ge(  better in a   much .\nshorter time.    Theae ailments will not 1 similarity and  have been  studied and\n\"hang  on\"   so   long. written  about  by  various  scientists\u2014\nAnd    X)    acquire    a    higher   blood   Harlan Smith, I>r. Franz Boa* of Co-\npressure.   Just   remember   what   these l\nInvestigators   tell   us:   \"(These   people\nwith   low   pressure   are   of   the   non\nathletic   type.\"     This   doesn't    mean ; f,.om\nthat you muat be an athlete, nor even\ngo   In   for   vigorous   athletics.     What\nit  does  jnean   is  that   you  must   In- ]\n\\ lumhla  university,  the  late  Dr.  C.   F.\n: Newcombe    and    others.      Those    at\n' I fireat   Central   lake   are   three   miles\ncrease your lung capacity, und\nstrengthen your circulation. Not by\nmedicine, but bv the eating of good\nfood, and the burning up of this food\nby plenty of oxygen, secured by open-\nair exercise, such as walking, golf or\nmore   vigorous  games.\nHigh   blood   pressure   \\\u00bb   dangerous\nhead of the lake and a\ncurious and obviously very ancient\nhieroglyphic inscription, deeply graven\nIs included   in   the  work.    Suggestions\nami\nwhen    you    get    older,\npressure  is  u   liability\nl.ower   bio\nany time.\nGYRO CONVENTION\nAN OPEN AIR ONE\nHORIZONTAL\n1\u2014Superficial   wound\nT\u2014Keep account  of\nt\u2014Raise\n12\u2014Jury.\nIS\u2014More mature\n14\u2014Obstruction\nU-T-Make   broader\n17\u2014Formerly   existed\nIf\u2014Scent\n2t\u2014Farm animal\n12\u2014HeligiouB   organization\n-Fruit\n<':i...iiMi.\niti\u2014Corrupt\n.7\u2014Ant\n30 \u2014Watery\nVi\u2014Acid\n34\u2014I'l edge\nSi,\u2014Northern\nIT\u2014Product\n.:_ \u2014rheriislict\n4\u00bb\u2014Young g<\n41 \u2014Implied\n4:>\u2014Fastener\n4t\u2014Thin sto\n4fi--rtun do\u00bb\n4,'_ Suil,len   i\nVEXTICAL\n-Descendant\n2\u2014Ship's company\n?,\u2014Memento\nI\u2014Hurled\n\u20225\u2014Convert   into  money\n6\u2014Truncated   roof\n7\u2014Implement   for  digging\nj\u2014Xo   move   In   glancing   manner\nHi-Duet\n11 -Track\nj 14    Most   courageous\ni lh    Fancv  df*M_ costumes\nj it\u2014Prepared by steaming\nI _,(l    Wanderer\ni *_\u2014_>_*_   nf   progress\nportion  of blood\nM \u2014Ml of  small   insect\nI*\u2014\/Thoroughfares   tabbr.)\n18\u2014 Ditches\nFuropean\nIt -Ptrtatnlng   to  wail\ndistilled   from   coal\n\"1 \u2014Collected   together\nd\nIS\u2014Harmony\noat\nU \u2014 !.x preys tons   of   choice                          ,\nH- -More  evil\nit\u2014Ml*   with    teeth\n>ne\n_'j\u2014Aspect                          ,\n\u25a0n\n41'\u2014Ill-bred  fellow\nattack\n44\u2014Old   soldier   tcolloq.)\nVancouver's   International\nMeeting Will Be Interesting; Visit to Camp\nANSWER TO YESTFRD AY'S\nCROSSWORD  PUZZLE\nVANCOUVER, June 25.\u2014 Kor more\nthan a year members oi the Vancouver (lyro club have been preparing for the hig International convention that ia to bring tlyro del-\neRUteH here from a.I parts ol* the\ncontinent on July 10. and continuing\nuntil July 13. Plans are being made\nto have It nn \"open-tilr convention.\"\nfor everything on the program with\ntbe exception of the business sessions\nwill be held out of doors, and ln\nthis particular will set a precedent\nfor conferences of this kind in the\nnorthwest.\nOne of the features of the delegates' stay here will be a visit to\none of the big modern logging camps\na tul sawmills of the district, where\nihey will see huge timbers brought\nout of (he forest and converted into\ndreaaad  lumber.\nTwo days nf the convention w.il he\nS[\u00bbent In Victoria, where an opportunity will be presented for visiting\nthe new ('rysi a I < lurdens and sn It\nwatff swimming tanks, and the beautiful Saani h peninsula. Many other\n< nt ert a lament features are also\nplanned.\nHowe .VV. Holland of Vancouver,\npresident of the Vancouver Oyro\nclub and president of (lyro Interna-\ntiuiia', will preside over the conven-\nlion   sessions.\nhave been hazarded of music\n| fish and trees, symbolic log:\nj seven - bra nched ca nd le st Ick in er-\nratlc and mystifying combination.\nAt Fort Rupert there are also shallow rock carvings but these are of\ncomparatively modern origin, the\nIndians knowing about them and\nIpMklni of them quite freely. They\nare believed to represent the can-\nnlbnl spirit long venerated by the\ntilbe.\nMythical   Snake   on   Rock\n\" >f   the   tour   groups   the   most    interesting   are   those   at   Sproat   lake,\nnear  the  summer  home  of  Cornelius\nVanderbilt    jr.,    the    publisher.      One\nof   the   figures   in   this    set   has   a\nclose    resemblance    to   the    mythical\nI snake  constantly associated   with   the\nthunder   bird   ln   the   minds   of   the\ni native   west   coast   folk.      It   Is   called\n; Hnl-et-Mk   by   the   Clnynquut    Indians\n: nnd   Uae-k-toak   by   the   Neah    Ray\nI tribe of  Washington  state.    It   Is  re-\ni counted    In    legends    that    when    the\nj thunder  bird   wishes  to   kill  a   whale\nhe   hurls   the   hai-et-lik.   at   It.   as   a\nI harpoon.       The     popular     theory     of\nscientists as to these carvings is thai\nthey   had   something   to   do   with   the\nprolonged      periods      of      probation\nI through  which candidates  for  admission    into   the   great    secret    societies\nof the ancient   west coast  nations had\nto    pass    during    which     they    had\n\\ sometimes  to depict,  as   well  as they\nwere ahle. ihe spirits with which they\nheld   communion.\nThe   Natural   History   society   and\nother    organizations    are    petitioning\nthe   'government    to    set     aside     the\nI areas    in    which    the    carvings    are\nI found as parks, and  In the meantime\nefforts    to    trace    the    origin    of    the\ni wor!;  are   being   renewed   and   the   re-\n1 suit    may   lead   io   the   development\n| of   un   entirely   new   theory   regarding\nthe   early   cl\\ illzatlon   of   the   north\nwest.\nAn orchestra without a condluctor\nwas one of the strange discoveries\nwhich Herman Abendroth, director\n| genernl of the Cologne opera, made\n! during a recent trip to Russia. This\n[ unusual orchestra was^ organized in\nMoscow by members of the State\n| Opera orchestra und other musicians.\nA philosopher is one whose\nplacid mind dwells upon the\nthought that so many people\nhaven't  shot  anybody yet.\nDon't worry. Home day In the United\nSlates there may he un amendment to\njaichlhlt   ptstfHi.\nNo man ever Is as liuix.rtunt us he\nfetls the first time anybody asks hts\nat* vice.\n'The good die young\" was written\nlong Hgo. Now* those who flivver on\nSunday   go   first.\nCorrect    this    sentence;     \"ThHt   chap\novt'f   there   who   looks   so   important.''\nsbld   the   man   at    the   summer   resort,\nreally is,\"\nCanadians, perhaps because we know\nthe American newspapers so well\nand depend on the republic to th-i\nso'ith for much of our news, are\nfairly familiar with the geography\nof the States. We may go further\nand say very familiar, compared\nwith the knowledge of the average\nAmerican of our environs.\u2014Kamloops\nSentinel.\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nRUMANIAN KING\nTAKES REST CURE\nBUCHAREST, Kumnnia, June 25.\n\u2014King Ferdinand is leaving tomorrow to take u cure at a French rt-\nsort.\nPADEREWSKl IS\nHONORED BY KING\nLONDON, Inn 25.\u2014King (i.nrue\ntoday conferred on iKnace Jan l'ad-\nrreWHkl, Polish plnniit, the order of\nKnight (irand CroM of the HritlHh\nEmpire at a  private  audience.\nper   lb.\nBKOOD    FOUNDATION,\nFKAMK8,   per  cwt\t\nEXCMtriRRH\u2014Zinc.     Each\t\nEXCLUDERS\u2014 Wire.    Each \t\nSmokers, Velll. Knives.  Hive T oolft.\nber Gloves, Container,., Extractors,   etc.\nav\nBee Supplies\nWe Are Headquarter* for Bee\nSupplies of Every Description,\nIncluding\n   75^\n S6.50\n70*\n -  *1.00\nWire. Swarm Catchers, Rub-\nPRICES  L0WE8T.\nNelson' Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON\nB. C\n%r all washing and cleaning\nyou cant beat this soap -\nsays Mrs. Experience, who chooses\nsoap for its economy and labour-\nsaving value.\n\"Sunlight puts the sunshine of deanliness into the\nhome! For washing clothes, dishes, wood-work, lino-\nleums, in fact, for anything that can be cleaned with\nsoap and water\u2014I all on Sunlight. And Sunlight\ndoes iu work so well'and leaves everything sweet and clean.\n\"Sunlight really is economical, too! You see, every bit\nof it is pure, cleansing soap, containing no filling or hardening\nmaterials, which are only waste as far as we women are\ncuncerned.\n\"You get greater cleaning value out of a pure laundry\n\u2022oap\u2014and so I say, 'Always keep a good supply of Sunlight\non hand'.   It really improves with age.   And because of its\npurity, Sunlight is kind to your _ands and keeps them smuoth\nand  comfortable.\"   Sunlight .is made by  Lever  Brothers\nLimited, Toronto.\ns-so\nSunlight Soap\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumlieir a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nTHIS CANADA OF OURS\u2014Carrier Visits With Donnacona\n\u2014By J. S. Morrison and Maud Morrison Stone\nVlMt  Loyalty\nr.rhapf some of the ohjfctori\nto n Canadian flag will explain why\nthe propoxul In disloyal In thi** Dominion when every other dominion\nhas lt\u00bb distinctive emblem\u2014Toronto\n(.lobe.\nComparative Ifcnoranrrt*\nIt frequently puulei Canadians\nwho travel, the vait amount of\ntffnorance they encounter both In\ntha United mate* and Britain ait\nlo the geography of (he Dominion.\nWhether to blame the one morf\nthan the other ie the question. O.i\nthe one hand the American Ilvrn\ncloeer to un; he might be expected to take a reanonable Interact  In  our aurroundlngi.    After  all.  Telegram,\nHrparatlHt Propaganda\nThe \u00bbent Iment which hai to be\ndiscouraged in Canada in the eentl-\nment which would separate Canada\nfrom the Empire. The Globle will\nnot have far to go to find that an\nlrmldlouH propaganda to decry things\nBrltlah has been at work for years.\nDuring the war It had a check. It\nwas not healthy to be engaged In\nsuch propaganda while national sen\ntlment was aroused. The old prop\naicanda is on Its Way again.\u2014Toronto\nyWihWi BIRCH (WW CrViS\" FlUID with\nRf:pSMIN>, WWC UM BY CAfiTlER mo MtS\nCKew in The EARLY \/Wing, bv Tht of ftR\nOf GIFTS, IHE   INDIAN*  WERE  LUfttO Ofl\nBoard the ship, they thought thc\nWWlfc   \/MH   WfclU   VISITORS  FROM\nMOTHER   STHtftf-\nwottpEKroL picture cahdeh SAW'\nThe avwHTy cuff guarpiwc THe\nNOBiE ffiveff,  WHae Beiovv CLUiTEfliV\nTHE  W.OWAM5   of DONNACOti\/)'i ciTY,\n5MDACOnfi<-\/iKW THe  ROtn BWi-T C|TY\nOf OW-BCC.\n -\n .\n\t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MOHNINGTJtWE S6, l\u00a3_Sf\nJi      \u00bb..'     .f*U     t, \u2022    * J.        .     ,   ft\n,,;v!\n,    it'   \u00a3.:.\u00abfi*        '\u2666I'Vil  *      if:fV*       *\na \"i I    '\nm\ni  !.   H   -    f\nSaturday, the First Day of Meagher's Season-End Stock Reduction Sale\n-.Jiff\nTomorrow is the first day of onr Month-Long Regular Seasonal Clean-Up., Its aims and purposes are\nknown. This is the Season's Greatest Savings Event\u2014the greatest month of alt for you to make every dollar\nstretch the furthest. You have every reason to expect far. out of the ordinary values\u2014and we say knowingly\nthat you won't be disappointed. Impressive as the reductions are, you will be surprised with the wonderful\nvariety from which you can make your selections. Remember this offering not merely as a sale among\nsales, but an event that is an institution at this store. \"fS?^S*??^|^_^^|\u00a7S-__^_f^_SS i\n.\nNo Goods On Approval\nTerms Strictly Cash\n\u2022 Si\n*\nTAILORED SUITS\n_* At $25.00 Eaeh\nIn most cases less than\nhalf price. Well-tailored\nSuits of All-Wool Poiret or\nTricotine. Coats silk-lined\nand Skirts plain-tailored.\nSizes 16 to 40. Values to\n$50.00. SALE PRICE,\n925.00.\nWINNIE WINKLE\nSKIRTS, $6.95 Each\nThe season's popular skirt\nat a very low price. They\nare made of All-Wool\nCrepe or Broadella Flannel in a range of colors\nand sices.     Values to $10.00.     SALE\nPRICE, S6.95.\nPULLOVER SWEATERS, $2.25 Each\nP\u00abre Wool Pullovers in wanted colors.\nSiies 36 to 42. Regular values $3.00.\nSALE PRICE, $2.25.\nWASH DRESSES, at $3.95 Each\nFive Dozen Dresses, consisting of Voiles,\nCrepes and Striped Broadcloths. A splendid range of styles to select from. Values\nto $5.95.   SALE PRICE, $3.95.\nMISSES' AND WOMEN'S\nCOATS, $14.95\nA wonderful Coat value for\nMisses and Small Women.\nThere are 25 only in the lot.\nMostly lined throughout, and\nmany are fur-trimmed. Sizes\n13, 15, 16, 17 to 20. Values\nto $29.00. SALE PRICE,\n914.95.\nBIG   REDUCTIONS   ON\nALL, HIGHER-PRICED\nCOATS\nREDUCTIONS ON WOMEN'S\nBLOUSES\nWomen^s Silk and Broadcloth Blouses,\nmany lines of which have just arrived\nAll sizes.   REDUCED 20'\/.\nWOMEN'S SILK HOSE, 98c the Pair\nGood quality Rayon Silk Hose, in all the\nnew colors, including Black. Sizes 81\/,\nto 10. Regular values $1.25. SALE\nPRICE, 98*. \/\nJULY SALE OF\nCORSETS\nWomen's Front and\nBack Lace Corsets.\nWrap-around and Cor-\nselettes, from the leading manufacturers, at\n25% Off.\nWOMEN'S UNDERWEAR REDUCED\nAll lines of Women's and Children's\nVests, Bloomers and Combinations reduced during this sale.   20% Off.\nv^i\nfi\n.    %\ni \u25a0.\u00ab f;,\u00ab\nMILLINERY\nAt Half Price\nTrimmed Hats and Pattern Hats, showing the\nseason's best models.\nAll on display at HALF\nPRICE.\nCHILDREN'S DRESSES at 95c Each\nChildren's Gingham Dresses, in sizes 4\nto 12 years. Values to $1.50. SALE\nPRICE, 85* each. '\nWOMEN'S COVERALLS\nSuitable for Ranch work. Made of good\nquality Denim. Sizes 36 to 42. .Values\nto $4.75.   SALE PRICE, ?2.95.\nWOMEN'S NECKWEAR\nClearing at 20 Per Cent Oil\nWomen's Lace Collars, Fancy Fronts,\nTailored Collars and Crepe de Chene\nTies, All the season's latest novelties.\nRegular values $1.25 to $5.00, CLEARING AT 20% DISCOUNT.\nSAVE ON CHILDREN'S HOSE\nChildren's full-length and three-quHrter\nHose, with plain or fancy top. Sizes\n5V. to 10. Regular values 60c to $1.25,\nCLEARING AT 20% DISCOUNT.\nFUGl SILK at 98c the Yard\nAll colors in Fugi Silks. 30 inches wide,\nGood quality.   SALE PRICE, 98\u00ab*.\n36-INCH SPONGE SILK,'$1.29\nOdd lines of 36-inch Sponge Silk and\ncolored Shantung. Odd lines. Values to\n$1.75.   CLEARING AT $1.29.\nNEW FRENCH CREPE\nAt 20 Per Cent Off\nAll colors in French Crepe, in plain colors or overchecks. 38 inches wide. Regular values $1.75 to $1.85. SALE PRICE,\n20% OFFj ,^,\n\"*   \u25a0\nJAPANESE CREPE, 25c the Yard\nAH colors, in good quality Jap Crepe. -30\ninches wide.   JULY SALE PRICE, 25<.\nPOTTER'S ENGLISH PRINTS\n3 Yards lor $1.00\nLight and Dark Prints. All fast colors.\n31 inches wide. Famous Potter's Prints.\nSALE PRICE, 3 yards for fl.OO.\nENGLISH ROMPER CLOTH\n4 Yards for $1.00\nPlain or Striped Romper Cloths. 30\ninches wide.   SALE PRICE, 4 yards for\n?i.oo.\nPURE LINEN DAMASK\n\u25a0   $1.69 the Yard\nBrown's Irish l&iens, it, ' good heavy\nweight. 2'-yards wide. Regular $2.25.\nSALE PRICE, S-.69.     ~~\nHemstitched\nfiimw sups\n4 lot $1.09\nAnother Shipment of these\nSlips has just arrived, and are\nbetter, if possible,   than   the\nlast.   All sizes,   gALE PRICE, 4 for\nfl.OO.\nJULY SALE OF WASH GOODS\nFANCY RATINES, 59c the Yard\nPlaid Ratine, 36 Inches wide. Good\nrange of colors to select from. Regular\nprice 85c,   SALE PRICE,' 59<.\nFANCY RATINES, at 89c the Yard\nGood quality Ratine, in assorted colors,\n38 inches wide. Regular $1.25, SALE\nPRICE, 89<, . . .\nSPONGE CLOTH at $1.25\nSelf Check Sponge Cloth, in all the new\nshades. 38 inches wide. Regular price\n$1.75.   SALE PRICE, ?1.25.\nENGLISH VOILES, 79c the Yard\nFlowered and Bedora Voiles, in light and\ndark colors. 36 inches wide. Values to\n$1.25.   SALE PRICE, 79\u00bb*\nSPECIAL CLEARING OF FRENCH\nFLANNELS\nNew Flannels in Novelty Checks and\nStripes. 45 to 54 inches wide. Regular\nvalues $1.05 to $3.95. CLEARING AT\n25% DISCOUNT.\nPLAIN OR STRIPED SERGES, BROADCLOTHS AND FANCY DRESSGOODS\nClearing at 25% OFF.\nBUY TOWELS NOW AND SAVE\nLinen and Cotton Huck Towels, in full\nsizes. Hemmed ends. Regular values\n60c to $2.00. CLEARING AT 20%\nDISCOUNT.\nBROWN'S IRISH\nUNENS IN THE JULY\nSALE\nJohn S. Brown's Pure\nIrish Linen Table Covers and Napkins, in 2-\nyBrd and 2|,_-yard\nlengths. Regular values\n$7.50 to $25.00. CLEARING AT 20',,, DISCOUNT.\nSAVE ON YOUR SHEETING\nFull-bleached English or Canadian Sheeting. 2 yards to 2' -_ yards wide. All\nthe best quality. Regular 75c to $1.25.\nJULY SALE PRICE, 20% DISCOUNT.\n ^\u2122\n'<\u25a0\u25a0--'\"\n\u2014 1\t\n*=\nMfige BhtTI\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\nEnd those\nfoot pains\nI \u2014 relief hercthis week\nr Tired,\u00bbchingfcct;failcnarchcs,\nJ weak ankles; rheumatic-like\nf pains in feet and legs; corns,\n1 callouses or bunions\u2014you need\nI Bot endure these tortures an-\n1' other day..\ni Right here in our store we are\n* oflfering in a special way this\nweek a service to show you the\n1 way to quick and lasting relief.\nDon't let this week go by without getting the relief which you\ncan surely have from every\nfoot ill. Come in and let our\nFoot Comfort Expert show\nyou bow today.\nDiSchoUs\nToot Comfort Week\n\"   June 20th to 27th\nR. Andrew & Co.\n\/k: Leaders in Footfashion\nla .\t\nKootenay and Boundary\nMRS. ANDERSON\nYMIR OLD-TIMER\nWent to Ymir Twenty-eight\nYears Ago; Burial at\nYmir\nTALENTED MUSICIAN\nHEARD AT BURTON\nMrs. Critten of Minneapolis\nDelivers Lecture and Assists Music Students,\nYMIR, .Tune 2ft. \u2014 Ymir lout anothei\nof |tn old-timers In the person of\nIln, Alice H. Anderson, who passed\naway nt the Ymlr (Jeneral hospital,\nMonday,   June,   2_,   1925.\nThe late Mrs. Anderson wis horn\nat Klnmundy, 111., on April IB* ItM\nTogether with her husband she i|ovcd\nto Ymir in April, 1897, and hbs ie-\nsided here conttntntisly ever sine.'.\nTWO   \u25a0oni   Left\nMrs, Anderson leaves to mourn her\nl< ss two sons\u2014 Charles and Oscar of\nYmlr\u2014and a sister, Mrs, M. Hamilton\na Yakima. Wash. Her husband, Edwin Andt-rson, pre d eee used her by one\n>ear and  nine   months.\nMrs. Anderson, by her kindlv innn-\ni.er and helpfulness, has endeared Iter.\nself to the people of the district, and\nber hiss will be keenly l \u25a0!> bv all who\nl.n-'W   her.\nFuneral serviees were held nt lhe\nPresbyterian church at J::,it \\,.m, .lune\n23, J. Mason offtclati.u:. and th- body\nwas conveyed from thOM t-> the local\ncemetery,  where  interment   took place.\nNAKUSP PEOPLE\nWISH YODER WELL\nNAKl'HI', .lune 2ft. \u2014 His many\nft lends in Nakusp. where he lived\nyears apo and still is held affectionately, were distressed to learn of the\nserious accident to A. C. Yoder. near\nNelson, this week. They are jtlad to\nknow   that   hla   condition   Is   improving.\nSCHOOL PASS\nLISTS GIVEN\nSuccessful Students at Columbia Gardens; School\nYear Good -.,\nSocial Happenings\nIn Nelson \u25a0\u25a0]\nJ. B. \"Annable, in- -.nipan'-d -by _\u2022\u00bb*\niVitffhler. Mliyt Viarlotte Annable, has\nleft for Halcyon Hot Springs for th%\nnext  wwk'or  lf> days,   ' . .\nBURTON, June 2ft.\u2014On June 23 the\ninrslc wring portion of the residents\nof Burton and other points along the\nArrow lakes enjoyed a rare treat in\nUM form of a lecture on music by\nMrs. Critten, a celebrated teacher\n\u25a0inftttf and voice culture, of Minneapolis.\nMrs. Critten Ih paying a visit to her\nbrother,   Mr.   Daniels,  who  resides here.\nThe seating accommodation of the\nehurch was fully taxed and the lecturer spoke on various phases of her\nsubject, dealing briefly with the physical structure and functions of the\nvocal organs, their capacity for development, and methods for same, givlnu\nevami -is of correct and incorrect singing, also of standards which ought ti*\ngovern the choice of pieces, mlldiv\ncriticising   lhe  modern   Jazr..\nThe lecliirer concluded what was\nProbably tht best lecture ever delivered in Burton by giving valuable ad-\n\\ .ce to aspiring accompanists .jrener-\n\"iisly offering to give advice and assistance to music students durinit her\nstay   in   Burton.\n(trade\nhad.\nYou'll Welcome This\nWashday Service!!\nIa there anything so tirinjf ns\ntugging over wash tubs or a\nhome washing machine? It's\nI work that saps the strength\nand makes one tired for duys\nafter.\nYou'll like the relief we can\ngive\u2014send ns your entire family\nwashing.\nPhone 1-2-8 and our white\ncar   will   call.\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nQuality,   Price   and   Service\nC. A.  LARSON, Manager\nA June\nWedding\nTreasured for All Time\u2014\nThe Bride's\nPhotograph\nAt  Your  Home or Ihe Studio\nCampbell Art\nGallery\nPhone   46.\n715   Baker   St.\nPROMOTIONS AT\nPROCTER ARE\nANNOUNCED\nJunior and Senior Grade\nPupils Pass Midsummer\nExams\nCOLUMBIA (-ARD-4NH. .lune *_*. \u2014\nThe achool year Just elos.il has been\nmust successful. Following are the\nColumbia Gardens school .examination\nreaultc'\nPromoted from Orade 1 to Orade\nII.\u2014Lucy  t'ontinl.\nPromoted from Orade II. to Orade\n111.-Annie   Konken.   Andrew   \/.uk.\nPromoted from Orade III. to Orade\nIV\u2014Julia  Konkon.\nPromat\u00abd   from   Orade   III\nIV.\u2014Annie   S-uk.\nPromoted from Orade IV. to Orade\nV\u2014Nleh   Zuk.\npromoted from Orade V. to Orade\nVI \u2014Walter   Turner.\nPromoted   from   Grade\nVI. \u2014 Dora   Contlnl.\nPromoted from Grade V. to Orade\nVI. -Harold  Turner\nPromoted   from   Orade   VI.\nVII.\u2014Evelyn   Turner.\nPromoted   from   Orade   VI.\nVII.\u2014Moska   Konken.\nPromoted   from   Grade VII\nVIII.\u2014Lluie   Kurrows.\nPromoted from Grade VII. to Oradi\nVIM\u2014Kas.in.er Zuk.\nAttendant certificate, Llsale Hur-\nn wa.\nOood conduct certificate. Harold Turgor.\nProficiency certificate, Moska Konken.\nJunior writing certificate, Julia Konken.\nIntermediate writing - certificate,\nWalter Turner.\nSenior writing certificate, Harry\nI'take. \u2022\nl.tndc\n:!nidc\nirmle\nJohn Tbye of Crescent \u00abuy\u00bb\np'ng In the clly yesterdny.\n_.*hop\nMrs. J. li.tttinyaii. ltuli Min.* road\nher guest 11 rh. .-Widow !'\u00ab\u2666$\u2022\n11.   K     li.\nslioppiug\n,-vey\" of\nNelse.li\nhas\nson of ttptikane-\nMr. ami Mrs.\nLongbeach wtrp\nyesterday.\nMrs. J. Kennedy, .,\u00bbreplilne s'l-ut.\nhas us her guests her son ami da iga-\nter-in-law. Mr. und Mrs.' f J \u25a0 I'll\"-,\nwho, with the* .mum nun. Hobby, '*\"i\nFrank, Oarnes, motored from thatr\nhome In Dalles. Or>'go\u00ab. Mr. iTt-fc. |\nwho Is In business there, ex\u00bb< et i to\nleave for his home todav \u00bbc -. nipa-n^ 1\nby his sister. Mrs, David Wjitl1. who.\nwith her two children, laumo Huu\nJohn, will proceed there to Vlelorri lo.-\nu  short  holiday   visit.\nSUTHERLAND'S WAS\nACCIDENTAL DEATH\nfew  day;-\nand   Mrs.\nts  tu   th-\nI. O.   Nelson  Is spending\nin   Sandon.\n\u00ab    \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. T. Lenn, Ilia Lttl\nArthur of Trail were inotn\ncity  yesterday.\nMrs Lord and baby. Brttge. wlio h've\nten for souui time the gutst:* of Mr.\nnd Mrs. II. A. Peebles, balmier sired.,\nleft last evening for Vancouver to reside. Mr. Lord having pree.ded thorn\nseveral   weeks  ago.\n* \u2022 - \u2022\n\u25a0 Pullman of Spokane was a city\nvisitor  en  route   to   Sandon.\n\u2022 I    *\nMrs. Tt- A. Scott-Lauder .f QUMtt*-\nHay was shopping In .he city yesterday,\n' *    \u2022    \u2022\nJ C. Kennedy is leavlm; for V e-\nlorla, where he will atttttd the insui \u25a0\nnee   convention. \u25a0\u2022 .-\u2022\u2022    .\nthe   slowness   with   which   tho   ocean j\nreacts to uny such change,      %\nThe change noted' Iii the Jupaty\ncurrent wu* attributed to the Oyashl-\nwo, ordinal Uy u weak current , comparable to the Labrador current ln\nthf Atlantic, which luns down the\nconst of Asia from the north. The\nO'yiishlwo, it was \u00a3uld, had- developed Inrire4j.ed force this year,\n(\u2666obttbly .due Ur, a ..stronger movement of tha waters through Herlng\nsN'ult, and apparently had cut athwart\nthe Japan   current,\nA   similar   situation   la   believed   to\nhn.vc caused the change In  tho  Humboldt current off South; America.    1\u00a31\nN.m\u00bb.  d'dlnarlly a  weak,  warm  current   which   flowa   south   periodically\nfiom     .Panama',    gathered     increased\nforce    this    year   und    overrode    the\nHunibodlt ciiriqiit. Thla quite logically   could   pe(   up  different   air   movements und blng worm,  moist  winds\nto   tho   land   and   so   cause   un   tx-\nceptto\u00bbal  Instance o( precipitation.       ]\n-Evidently there has  been +J1 Mini\ntime  a   fairly   wldo-apread   abnormal I\ncondition   In   ocean '.surface   waters, [\nparticularly   off   Australia,   tha   east !\ncoast' of   South   Africa.* and   tn   the j\nNo th  Atlantic.    There  has been  unusual\"' strength   to '(the   movement   of I\nwaters   from   the   Nctfth. Atlantic   up [\naround   Kpit\/.bergrii,   and   possibly   up\nI!action   to   that,   an   Increased   move- |\nment   of   the   waters   swinging   south j\nthrough   Bering   strait.     Officers   are I\nwatching  <do.*ely   for   reports  pn   the j\nGeorgia   cur.eht.    which    s-wlngs    ftp]\nfrom    lite   Antarctic    about    midway j\nIII   the   South   Atlantic   ocean,   In   the]\nexpectation that an interesting situa- j\ntion   may   be   noted. |\nHut  with the return of solar condl-\nBAKE YOUR OWN\nSRE AD.\nWITI*\nROYAL\nYEAST\nCAKES\nUoim In nurtiuti, it 1\" rtpected ln one\nnr two yours that nil ocean current,)\nwill resume their accustomed pathe.\nI\nThe Original\nUtility Milk Cooler\nThe Household Wonder of the Ajre, 60^.    Pays for Itself\nEvery  Two  Weeks\nBECAUSE\u2014\nMILK protected  by this Cooler STAYS  SWEET\nand retains its FLAVOR.\nBUTTER will become HARD and remain firm if\nplaced within the cooler.\nIt Will Operate Efficiently in Bedroom or Kitchen\n1V0 lce\u2014tSo Running Water\u20141V0 Attention\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\nPHONE  4.7\nP.O.   BOX  414\nLook   f\u00bbr   th*   Rsd   Hardwar*   Stor*\nPROCTOR, June 2t. \u2014 Following U\nthe Hat *f promotkmM mad\u00ab in the\njunior room o( Procter suMrlor sclmni\nat the close of schoid. The nnnirs arc\nin ordor of mciit:\n'Irade I, Jtntlor 1\u00ab> Orade I. senior -\nPobrli Sears, .hinet Rlgby, Isa Mac-\nKinnofi,  riiinies Maurer ofl   trial.\niJiU'lc 1. senior to Orade 11\u2014 Ibdiert\nMeighton,   Olive   MacLean.\n, Qrmde   n.   to  Orade   Mi.  \u2014  Norooa\nT.uinli. Itallani  MacKinnon.   Kva Smith\nQrode in. to Qrade for. _ Hilda\nRmlih, Dorothy Rlgby, i.iiy Helghtoa.\nAlex. Zaiik-.fr. |):iry Renin, hllda.\nHelghton, John Sarlkoft Mary shbii-\nolf   on   trial.\n'imde iv*. to Ormd\u00ab V. \u2014 Meraj\nMacKinnon.   Amy   Smith,   Irix   Crontn.\nOrade    V.   to   tirade    VI.   \u2014   rvirli\nmaru,  Leonard Mauror, William Marrl-\nTiibt.   Louis Bnnaccl. Arthur Helahton.\nPreuntatlona  Maae\n.nllnwlnR a dlupiny nf work of tb.\nHintor flradei und a vote of apprecln\nt \"ii of tlie profrtM made by the\npupils under Hln K. MacKinnon, the\nrollowlm pieseniiilions were made bv\ni p. Rernoida, the principal, baton\ncloalng achool tor th* Hummer vacation.\nRolit of  Honor\nDeportment,   porta   Sears;   rovularlty\npuncluatily. Iris t'rotiio; profto*\n\"\u00bb\">'. morat MacKinnon. fpoolal\njirtoe*: Excel len I work, Hilda Smith:\n\u25a0 '\"itre bonk. I'mis S. ars. Amy Smith:\nexcellent work, Norton Lnmb\nWriting Certlfiomtte\nOrade l\u2014RA*rt Hel\/htoa, olive\n\u25a0MacLean. ,l;im.| Rtfbr. Isa Mni-Kin-\nnnn, Kobert B_ara, Charles Maurer\nOrade li NnKMn Lamb, Bva smith.\norade ill Hilda Bmlth, Lily h.ikIi-\n|'ii. Dary Rapln, John Sartkoft Alex\n\/..iiLnlf,     Orade   IV,\u2014Amy   Smith.   Irin\nJury Not Called;  Nakusp\nPioneer Buried Tuesday\nAfternoon\nNAKUBP, June IS \u2014 Dr. J. E. II. K\u00ab'l-\n, cunorer of Edge wood, arrived on\nTuesdav and made an inquiry Intn the\ndeath oT the late A. \\V. Sutherland,\nwhose body wan found in the lake at\nOrahnm'8 Landing on Sunday, and\nbrought to Nakuap the following day\nIt was decided that an inquest wu*\nunnecessary, and the almple statement\ntbat the deceased wan fniind drowned\nwa* decided upon. The funeral was\nheld nn Tuesday afternoon when quite\na following of old-timers accompanied\nthe  remains  to   tbe  local   cemetery.\nRESIGNING BOARD\nMEMBER SURPRISED\nmd\n\"ii.'ii\nide   V.\u2014I'm\nSear\n9*\nCold Cooked Heats for\nThese Warm Summer\nDays\n'.\"I-''\nCooked Ham\nRoast Ham\nJellied Tongue\nCorned Beef\nVeal Loaf\nPork Pies 5c to 40c\nSweet and Mustard Pickles\n*    Fresh Killed Spring Chickens\nQUALITY-CLEANLINESS\u2014SERVICE\n]?. Burns & Co., Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nSenior Promotion-\nMOIOr rnimi, H. r,\nI. iliia.-.l nn Tuisilav.\ni tho Mil of proniot in\nvii   in ante  viu.\nD,\nReynold,\nTh,.   Inl-\nIf  niiiili-.\n\u2014   bt.ltv\nllntli\nI Hack\nIsllili\nI\nmid    Blackmore,\nii, Aniil., MiuKliiniiii.\nBoll, of Honor\nilininl nml r.Kiilin ity \u2014Rodorlck\nin\",i. nKiilnrity nml punctuality\n;i HiiiIm.ii. proficiency \u2014 'oiuiu\nn. proflctency oommonded \u2014\n.Siiiiih.\nfor nix Mini booka\u2014Shiib\ni. hlKhly conutMlKM \u2014 Unnalil\ntore;     <,iitiititi.in],.,l.-Annli.     Mhc-\niitjrs rm irawlai: in Oradaa vm\nI IX. tin nr|aai will In tlvei to\nI;   pupil  tattlni   tha  hlfheil   mark*\nUle   examination,,   balnf   written   hi\nul.-   VII..\nml.! \u00ablackn\ntre.\nSPECIAL\nCUPS  AND  SAUCERS\nS1.00\nI Ute   laiKliwh\ni'h inn.\ndrsignu.\nA. T. NOXON\nYour   J\u00abwal\u00abr\nMrs. Vipond Recipient of\nFlower Vase From Nakusp Hospital Board\nNAKl'BP. .lunr- _&.\u2014A very pleasing\nl.ttle eereninny took place ;,t (he resl-\n(ience nf Mrs. K. 11. Vlpnnii mi Oolttffl*\nI'iit \u25a0 ven up nn Tuesday even ing when\ntie directors of |lie hitsplCil Imiird sur\npriced Iter und presented lur with n\nheautiful hrast flowAr stand, contributed tn hy eaeh imniher of the hniird.\nIn ruciinRillnn of her fahhful and constant service as president of the\nLadies* Hospilsl auxiliary I i.r sevvrai\n>ear>f past, and finni which pwltiun\nshe   Is  ahout   tn   resign.\nMrs.    Vipond,   who   wan   at    the   time\nf    \u00abilliii!:    attending   anritlier    fitnetloii\n*nd   was  hrounht   home,  ThOIMI  Ahriel.\n[resident   of   die  hoard,   made   thi'   ptma-\nntation  in n   few  happy and appiuprl-\nte   words,   after   whleh   she   protested\nhat   she   had   tint   done   anv   more   I hJin\n.ny   of  the  other   ladles  of   Ihe   anxlli-\niy.      She   was,   however,   soon   purified\nwith     other    kindly     ami-   appreciative\nwords   trom   It.   -Hip,   secretary.   l>r.   P.\nBmerson   the   suin .intendent.   und\nthers\nMiss   Mnyme   I'urrlc\nfew days in Trail on a\nis   \u25a0.*)\u00bb\u25a0\nl.'dida\ndins   ;\nvisit.\nMrs. It. (J. Long of BohititHtton -<pent\n>e\u00bbterday   shopping   In   the  city,\nMrs. % It. HHXendulc l< Trjll. who\nv siimniering lit I'rnctci. was 11 Clly\n\\jsitor  yesterday.\nj. Corey, h minim '\u00bb'!\"' at N.w tvn-\n.*r. In leaving this im.in.i.-t alter *\nunit   visit   in   the   city.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nCommender nnd Mrs. ','. \\ Smith t f\nI niigtieaih   ipeiit   yesterdsy   \u25a0- w\u00bbpi\u00bbioj\n,n   the   city.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\n,1.  .McKay \u00abf  Balfour  wa\u00ab  inmn^  the\nlit-ol'-town shoplMis in the cily ye*i\nterday.\nMrs. It A. Klliott nnd her daUfhtrr,\n.Miss Matid Klliott, motored to Willow\nI oint yesterday, and will l-tnain Ih'tc\n\u2022oi l he coming wcelt. occiipv.r.g tht\nKmory   lakeside   rotiagc.\ns.  s.  Kowler of  Riondel  spent   yen-\nterday   shopping   in   the   city,\nMis. ('. D. Orchard has ret'lffled '<\nthe citv. having spent a few day.* tin\n\u25a0Ue\u00abt o( Mr. and Mrs. K. S. Ueyiiold\n\u25a0 t (jranil   Korks.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   \u00ab'.    F.   McHardy   have\nkad as their guests Mr. and Mrs. .1.\nIt Kdnuinson Hnd Miss Betty of B_j-\nfOW. who arc leaving toiiay for Vancouver, when they will reside in future.\nMis. Kenneth Metculie of Willow\nl'olnt Is spending this week at the\nStrathcona. while her daughter, IHiro-\nthy,  tries examisulloM   J '_ \"       f, --_.. -\u2022\n\u00bb.,!- 1^     t'.t   ' '   \u2022*<'\nJ,   McK.   |!ni'\u00bb\u00bb*\u00ab>r^\u00bbraf\u00bbHjr*\u00abM*'sficirt\n; t sterday in town.\nPROCTER PUPILS\nWRITE IN EXAMS\nEntrance and High School\nPupils Have Busy Week;\nHonor Rolls\nSummer Meats\nChoice   cold   meat,   which   bring\ndown   tha   temperature.\n_=_=\nLea-tar  Artlata   who\nDemand   Quality\n\u25a0\u2022loot   the\nMason & Risch\nPiano\nWhich for over fin years\nhas been noted (or its\nexcellence of tone, its\nli\u00abaull_ul appearance nnd\nlis unequalled durnhil-\nIty. Iirirft purchase an\nferior Instniment when\nthese are offered to you\ndirect\nFrom Factory to\nHome on Very\nEasy Terms\nWrite for  Free\nOetsJofne\nMASON & RISCH\n   LIMITED   \t\nFactory   Crunch\nAMN&IL1     BLOCK\n413 Ward Street\nMniaSOM, B.C.\nr.o. box tio\n\u25a0ay under sttp_Tvli\n; innon\nThe following m\nnations:\nI'rocter   scliu-d   - \u2022\ntwicnce   HalR Smell\n:*(, \u2014entrance   \"\\\nrd    here    Weiaer.\n<i of MIhs  K   Mac\nMilling    the   i-xain\nl-hilip   Kdvcumie\ne.   Kootenny   Sam\nMain\nA. Hunter nnd Iftm\ntoday to their cot\nshore   for  the   (turn\nMr.  and  Mrs.   li.\n.lean are moving\ntage on the north\nCm   months.\nMrs. K. II H. Applewhaite spent >ck-\nI'.rday shopping   in   town.\nW. 0. Miller, division superintemlent\n\u2022 t the c.I'.lt. and his wife and daughter, have left for a few days' visit in\nSpokane. They expect to return to\nthe city at the end of the week.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nW. (J, Uenix. master inechuntc of the\nf'.l'.lt. .ut Vancouver, arrived In the\ncity last night from Oanhrook, where\nhe has\" heen spending the last few\nduys on husitiess. fie will return to\nVancouver   tonight.\nAngus   MacKinnon.  Jame\n-r,   Junta  Siiiiih,  ulila   Ihcksoii\nI'nlfotir     seln-.I Marv     Niiakes,\nLaura   Kraser.   Muter.   .MacKay.\nHarrop     school Jesule     llurrip.\nVtra   Knauf\nHigh   School   Exams\nThe fiist year high school exainina-\ni mil* hegan on Monday alwo. under su-\nI \u25a0 i Melon of Miss MacKinnon. The\nfollowing pupils, all o: Procter school.\n;r\u00ab writing '.lie examinations: Ken\nneth Chandler. Sheila Hudson. Rosn\nSevern. Itohcrt Smith, Roderick MacKinnon.\nEnglish Folk\nPlan Settling\nNakusp Home\nNAKUSP,\n\u25a0 rl   with   his\nJune\nnhert.\nI,am\nfrom\nr.    -Thou\nlater, Miss bai\n> kneeled to arrive this w\n\u25a0nillngli..m. Raeei, Kngland. Thev\nllu Mother am! Sister or the late Mrs\nT How. who died a few months ago.\naBd will slay wilh Mr. How at Glen-\nliutik.\nHail Spoils\nFruit, Gardens\nKaslo People\nKASLO, Jane SS. \u2014 A heavy\nhailstorm about 3 p.m. Monday\nfpolled a great par) of the garden! and fruit of Kaalo. Cherries\nwere ont off In bushels. The enor-\nntoue hailitonte roeeeured an inch\nacroes, end the storm waa sereie.\nThe Lightning, \u25a0tartlng three fires\nnear Xaelo, two near Powder\nTails and one on the \"Bine Bidfe.\"\nThey were not dangerous, howerer.\nChanging of\nCurrents Is\nCause of Rains\nWASIirxClPITiN. June 23. -{Aff\nsocialod t'frss) - RepofU of change^\nIn two lin port iiii t mean curnntH an\nheforo thp navy liydrographlc office,\nwhere h. close watch ia heing kept\nin .inlh-ipi'itIon of _ther' t^milar\nchanges.\nWord thnt tho Humboldt enrrppt,\nwhich swinifs up from the Antarctic\nh-'id 'changed its coityso eome what.,\noff the went 'coast nf South America,\nurttifing rains to arid rt^lund for iltr\nfirst time In the memory of men now\nliving, havo been supplemented by a\nreport from the steamer India Arrow,\nIndicating changes in the Japan ea__f*\nrent almut SOU miles east ot Japan.\nWhile no definite explanation enn\nhe given of the phenomena because\nof insufficient data, officers Incline\nlo the view that It Is a direct result\nof the decrease In solar radiation\nreaching Ihe earth in the past three\nyears. The drop In this radiation whs\nfirst announced hy the Smithsonian\ninstitution, but it Is pointed out that\nalthough the radiation recently returned to nearly normal again. It\ncould logicaly be expected that surface ocean \"waters would not reflect\nthe   change   for   some   time,   due   to\nTMM\nDad knows!\nThe Kellogg\nflavor just\nmakes breakfast for him!\nNothing else\ngives the day^\nsuch a smile\nof  a start!\nKellogg's Corn Flakes flavor\ndelights millions of people\nevery day. Have them ready\nto serve in your home tomorrow. Simply add milk or\ncream. Try them with fresh\nor preserved fruit too. Sold\n,; by all grocers; Served by all,.\n' hotels and restaurants.     '..'\u25a0.\"\nCORN FLAKES\nn.m-lr,.h ALWArs\nK.IIefl . '.lt*t*i i-nti*\ni\u00ab\u00ablfj wilile mrspp-t\nprt**r\u00ab.i   tit   laeer   e\u00bb\u00abt\nkeepi    tie.    felts    iMllj-\nro#p. This 'is m title-\n\u2022in -*Ueff '\u2022\u20ac*\u25a0\u00ab'\nWe challenge the\nWorld!\nTry any ready-to-eat\ncereal. You won't find\nanother that a*\u00abn approaches the marvelous\nflavor found only In\nKellogg's  Corn  Flakes,\nForty Pound\nSalmon Spawn\nGerrard Hatchery\nKAHI.O, June 2ft. \u2014 Bud Thompson\ncame down on Saturday's boat from\nthe Oerard hatchery with a large consignment of finh from the hatcheries\nfor the I'remler luke near Cranbrook.\nKnortuous salmon of in pounds and\nmore have yi... up the river to spawn.\nh\u00bb  Mates,\n&\nELECTRIC RANGE\nyrith Tor-Red (protected) Elements and\nFireless Cooker Oven is\nTHE LEADING  ELECTRIC  RANGE    ,\n7\nie~ \u25a0'        \"V\u00abB__H_H-a_H_R_^_e--aB-_M__H,_IMa|\nKor sale by Electrical Department, City or Nelson, Nelson, B. C, and West Kootenay Power\n& Light Co., Rossland and Trail, B. C.\n'\u25a0*\u25a0    I \u25a0\ni\n ,.   ,1'\n*?\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\n$Uf\nPage Seven\nCARDINALS ARE\nBEATEN; ONLY\ni GAME PLAYED\n'ittsburgh Takes Advantage Dickerman's Poor\nControl in Seventh\nfATIONAI,     IJOAGUF.     STANDING\nWon    IJMt    Pet.\nlew   York    >8      24        .613\n'Ittsburgh     35      .1       .GOS\nBrooklyn\n.35 21\n.32 20\nInclnnatl  31 29\nI. Loula  SO 33\nhlcago   \u00ab\u00bb 34\nhlladelphla     27 33\noston    23 37\n.525\n.517\n.47\".\n.4\u00ab(l\n.4511\n.18.1\nFatal Sr villi li  Frnmr\nST.   LOU18,   Junr   26.\u2014Dlrkrfman\nist   control   in   the   seventh   Innin*\nfid tlir St. I^ulls, Pnrdln.i's were dented   by   I'ltlHlitiruh   tod\".\/   4   to   3.\nickermnn   In  tlie   fatal   MVMtil   ls-\nled two passes with the hut*.- filled.\nma   forcing   in   Ihe   wlnli'nK   run.-,.\n!!.   II.   B.\nIttsburgh          4      7      2\n. Loula    !    3      7      3\nBatterlea\u2014Meadow*     und     Kiniih-\ndlckerman,   RelnhRl-t   and   O'ftuTtll.\nBrooklyn-New York; rain.\nI'hiladeltthla-Boaton; lu'ii.\nOnly  one  game  today.\n'Gang, You Better Go';\nBall Manager Fires\nTeam, Collects 'Mon'\nHATTlESBimo. Miaa., June 2!.\u2014\nTha \"Black Crackers.\" a negro base-\nball team, from Atlanta, defeated the\nHattleaburg \"Black Tigers,\" 17 to 1\nhere yesterday and when the Tigers\nwent to collect their share of the\ngate receipts today their manager\nfired everybody on the team but\nhimself. He explained that he did\nnot dlacharge himself because he\nscored   that   one   run.\nHe is going to organize a new\nteam.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBultimor\u00ab,   7;   Reading.   9.\nSyracuse,   4;   Rochester,   S.\nBuffalo-Toronto;   rain.\nPiovldence-Jersey    Oily;    rain. \u2022\nLEADERS WIN\n\\ IN NATIONAL\n!   LEAGUE RACE\nSenators Win One to Nothing; Athletics Beat Boston; One Homer\nPACIFIC COAST-EAGUE\nPortland,   3;   Vernon,   8.\nSan  Franclico. 7: Salt  Lake,  8.\nSeattle,    1(1;    Onklanrl,    4.\nLos   Angeled,   G;   Sacramento,   7.\nAMF.mrAN\nI.KAfil'H\nSTANDING\nWon\nLost    Pet.\nPhiladelphia\nill         .11114\nWashington\n22         .651\n29         ,ISI\n 30\n33        .473\n SO\n35        Alii\n 37\n34        .443\n 26^\n37         .113\n42        .144\nSENIOR FOOTER\nCLASH TONIGHT\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nSI.   Paul.   2-7;  Toledo.   4*1.\nMilwaukee,   4-0;   Indianapolis,   _-3.\nMinneapolis,   7;   Columbus,    8.\nKanma City, U-.IjouWttlle. 8. (Second game called afier lliird innintf\nLouisville   cat   t.-uin ) '\nMiff SPOILS DAY\nON DORVAL TRACK\nMONTRKAL. June 25.\u2014The Onrval\ntet\u00bb (rack wnn very heavy tod.iy us\nrenult of an all day rain an-i the\ni-ngram wan featureless.\nIn the first race, Alniontsl, owned\nW. T. Treiilmluie of Montreal m\nhadly cm (inwn lhat lu- hud _a \u2022>\u2022\u25a0\n\u2022slroyeil.\nPrillsh    Columbia     fruii     proapti Is\nre    reported    the    poorest    In    mnny\nAustralian Net\nStars Land tt\nVancouver for East\nVICTORIA, June 25.\u2014En route to\n'.'ontreal where thev meet the Canadian Davis cup lenn.'s team. August\n13, J. Hawkes and <!. L. Patterson,\nAustralian net stars, nrrlved here\ntonight from Syndey on the liner\nNiagara.\nAsked why they were not taking\npart in the Canadian championships\nut Vancouver, Hawkes replied that\nhe and his partner were anxious to\nrench Montreal In lime for Ihe llnVls\ncup   play.\nSrnatnn. (let Only Run\nWASHINGTON.    June    26.\u2014Covel-\neskle hud  n slight edge on  Pennock\nin    I    pitchers'    battle    today    and\n| Washington   took   the   odd   gume   of\nthe   series   1    to   l>. It.    II.    K.\nNew   York        II       4       1\nWashington         1       8      0\nlotteries\u2014Pennock and Sohang;\nCoveleskle and   Ituel.\nAilik'tii's Win Again\n11111_ ''.lil.PIIIA. June 26.\u2014Tho\nAthletics made a clean sweep of\nthe three-game series with Boston\nby inking today's final ttHM 3 to 2.\nl-'liigstead   hit  a   homer  In  llie sixth.\nH.  ii.  i:.\nBoston       2      4      1\nPhiladelphia         3      1'      _\nButteries\u2014Homing. EnhniMr nnd\nHevlng; llomhiel, Walbe.c and Cochrane.\n(iiliutto  Wins\nCHICAGO, June 26.\u2014Cvengros let\nCleveland down with five hits today while Chicago pounded it trio\nof visiting pltohera and won the first\ngame of the series 7 to 2. K.    H.   K.\nClevelund             I      5      2\nChicago       7     lfi       1\nBatteries\u2014Bpeece, Kerr. Yoweli\nund   Walters:   Cvengros   mid   Schalk.\nCleveiiind-Chlcngo first game;\npostponed;   ruin.\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nThe   .Ala   with   the   real   flavor,   $-.40   doa.    Order   through\nGOVERNMENT    LIQUOR   8TORE.\nFREE  DELIVERY  DIRECT   FROM  BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY  LIMITED\ntTnla  advertisement   la   nol   published   or   displayed   by   the   Liquor\nControl  Board or by the Government  of  British  Columbia.)\nTiger* Win Seventh In Row\nliKTHOIT. June IS.\u2014lletfcm defeated Hi. Louis here toduy In the\nfirst game of the series 3 to 2, the\nvictory being seventh consecutive\nTiger   victory. B.   H.   K.\nSt.   Louis       2       H       0\nIietroit       3      s      0\nBatteries\u2014Danforth     und     Dixon;\nLeiuianl   und   ltassler.\nIf you lequire receipts for your business we can\nsupply them in any form.\nWe also manufacture Loose-Leaf Binders, Ledgers,\nLedger Leaves, Synoptics, etc., in a wide variety of\nforms and sizes.\nPhone 144 and Oar Representative Will Call\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPT.\nPrintings- Ruling\u2014Bookbinding\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nReduced Rates\nSummer\nVacation  Trips\n$33.05    $37.35    $41.75\nVencouver\nVictoria Beattie\nVia    Kettle   Valley,   returning    same.\n$39.20    $37.60    $44.40\nNilson\nArrow  Lakes\nVancouver\nVictoria\nSeattle\nSpokane\nNelton\nOood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nthe reverse.\nNelton\nKootenay   Landing\nSpokane\nSeattle\nVictoria or Vancouver\nKettle Valley  Ry.\nTo Nelson\nGood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nHip   reverse.\nNelson\nK. V. Ry. to Penticton\nOkanagan   Lako\nVernon,   Vancouver\nSpokane,  Nelson\nVia  Kootenay  Lake\nGood going via\nVancouver, returning\nthrough Spokane, or\nthe reverse,\n$46.20    $44.60     $51.40\nAa above, except\nvia Portland. Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\nAa above, except\nvia Portland, Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\nCircular Tours available from any point on the Circle.\nSold Daily till September 30. Return till October 31.\nGood for stop-over at pleasure within limit. Fares quoted\nthrough Arrow, Okanagan or Windermere Lakes, Calgary,\nBanff, Lake Louise.   Ask any agent for details, or write\n\u2022   J. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nMound Holds\nMany Dangers\nfor Pitchers\nThis afternoon at 6:S0 p.m. the\nCorinthians and the Mc I varies will.\nclash In a scheduled game of the\nCity Senior Football league. Both\nteams are ln the winning section ot\nthe league, and a good game ts assured.\nThe McLearles' lineup wtll be:\nScanlan, Hebenton, Ward, Fraser,\nMutes, Hutchinson, Jeffs, Talbot, Or.\nton, McCrone, Dawes. B. P. Rogers\nwill  referee the game.\nSUZANNElEATS\nMISS RYAN AT\nTENNIS GAMES\nFrench     Woman's     Play\nAmazes Former Califor-\nt   nia Girl; Favorites Win\nWIMBLEDON, June 25.\u2014No great\nupsets featured the day's play In the\nall-England tennis championships\nhere, mo*} of those who were expected to win emerged victorious. J.\nIt, riilhert. England's left-handed\nhope, easily disposed of Charles Garland, of }rlttshurgh. In straight sets\n8-.. 6-1, 6-1.\nA great crowd was parked Into the\nstands of the famous suburban courts\nthis afternoon und play was graced\nhy t he presence of Their Majesties\nKing Oeorge and  Queen  Mary.\nSeveral fairly close calls featured\nthe play, J. O. Anderson, the Australian, finding ln P. D. B. Spence, of\nSouth Africa, a foeman worthy of\nhis  steel.\nThe South African forced the mate*\nto four sets and it was only the\nsuperior knowledge and court generalship of Anderson that put him on\ntop. The match ended 6-3, 8-10;\n6-2 and 6-S.\nSuzanne's  Play Amazon\nThe big contest today was the\ngame hetween Suaanne IJenglen and\nMiss Elizabeth Ryan, former California girl. Miss Ryan fought\npliiekily but was frankly puzzled by\nthe Frenchwomen's amazing pl\/iy and\nsuccumbed 6-2 und C10. Mile. Lenglen was later presented to the roajal\nbox and chatted with the King and\nQueen.\nThe French player, llene Lacoste,\nwas given a warm handling by R,\nLycett, Anderson's old doubles partner, who forced the game to four\nsets before Lacoste finally wore him\n4-6, 7-5 and 6-4.\ndown:      Lacoste's    victory    was    6-3,\nJenn Borotora, who holds the\nWimbledon championship was not\nmenaced to any extent by I* B.\nBailey. He gathered in his match\n6-2.   6-4   nnd   7-5.\nA surprise this afternoon was the\ndefeat of the hard-hitting Italian,\nBaron De Morphurgo, by a South\nAfrican, O. H. Sherwell, 1-6, 6-2.\nT-ft,  2-6,   8-6. \u25a0\nHOW BALL TEAMS\nSTAND IN LEAGUE\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n(Former  Pitcher, N.  Y.  Giants)\nThere U no doubt that the baseballs\ni\u00abpfl today are livelier than they were\neight or ten years ago. The ball-\np.ayers themselves agree on this\npoint, especially the pitchers. Some\nnf them My it was made livelier to\nenable Italic Ruth to hit longer runs\nus an added attraction to the fans,\nand others say that the puhllc demanded more slugging, and were\ntired   of   the   old   pitchers'   battles.\n\"A pitcher la really in danger\nthese days, every time he steps on\nIhe ruhher,\" drover Alexander said\nthe other day. \"Ive been hit by,\nand have dodged more line drivers In\nthe past few years than In ull the\nrest    of    my    entire    career. The\npitchers will soon be protecting\nthemselves with masks and shln-\nriuards. like the catchers, If they\nmake   'em   any   livelier.\"\n\"The chief dlffe-ence T notice ln\nthe halls,\" said Willie Kamm, third\nsacker of the White Sox, \"is the way\nground balls came to me these days.\nVears ago I used to have moHt of\nmy assist* un balls that I had to\ncome in for nn the dead run, and\nIHp the balls to first base. Nowadays the balls all come to the third\nbaseman like a shot. If they are at\nhim. he gets them, but if they are to\neither side, they're base hits. The\nball is past him before he can make\na move to field It.\"\nJINGO, FAVORITE\nAT PEG, IS BEATEN\nWlWUrOQ. June 25.\u2014Yorkshire\nMaid, the T. Martin entry., defeated\nJingo, the favorite, to win 'the feature\nevent, the St. Charles handicap at\nWhittier park today. A heavy raln-\nrtorm made the track a sea of mud.\nTwo horses which reared and\njumped the barrier rail, were barred\nby the stewards from further starts.\nThey were Jessie Boloman and Jim\nML\nSMITH MAKES\nNEW RECORDS\nBRITISH GOLF\nReduces Course Record to\nSixty-nine; Barnes Makes\nIt Seventy\nPRESTWICSC. Scotland, June 15.\u2014\nMacDonald Smith and Jim Barnes\nof the i'nlted States Invaders, were\nin the lead for the British open golf\nchampionship tonight with half of the\n72-hole struggle behind them. Both\nset new records for the Prestwlek\ncourse today, Barm's bringing lt down\ntwo strokes with 70 in the morning\nand Smith reducing it to 69 In the\nafternoon.\nHaving done 76 in his morning\nround, Smith ended the day with a\ntotal of 145. Barnes followed up his\n70 with 77, a total of 147, which put\nhim In second place. Only a dozen\nof the British golfers were within\nstriking distance of Smith and Barnes\ntonight.\nThe leading Briton, Arthur Comps-\nton, of North Manchester, with 151.\nwas six strokes behind Smith. One\nmore stroke down the line, Tom\nFernie, 8. WIngate and W. H. Davies\nwere tied In fourth place with 152.\nThose   who   took    . 53    for   the   36\nholes  are J.  H.   Taylor.  Ab  Mitchell,\nTed Ray and fieorge Murdock.\n8coring   Poor\nExcept for the new course records\nBet. the day's golf produced little\nthat was brilliant. In the first round\nless than half the professionals broke\n80 and the afternoon scoring was not\nso good, taking the field as a whole.\nThe galleries were Immense, Prestwlek living up to Its reputation of\ndrawing the largest crowdB of any\ncourse In the world.\nSmith's second round, like a similar\nround of 69, which he had made two\nyears ago in the championship ut\nTroon was an exhibition of exquisite\nputting, which produced birdies when\nit was not producing pars, since for\nthe most part his driving was long\nand straight and his second shots hit\ntrue to the line.\nA great many of the Britons who\nwere counted upon today among those\nlikely to win the cup back fizzled out\ncompletely, among them the White\ncombs. All the amateurs also did\nbadly.\nIndian Chief Faces\nAssaalt Charge on\nDeath of Young Girl\nMANIWAKT, Qne., June 25.\u2014\nFrank Wabee, Indian chief was\nheld criminally responsible for the\ndeath of Angellne Beaucage, aged 8,\nby a Jury at the inquest. Wabee\nIs held on a charge of assault.\nJ.   Reble  of  Hamilton  waa  elected      Wife of a Ruaalan colonel baa aaan \"\npresident   of   tha    United   Lutheran aentenced  to death  at   Kiev,   Russia, _.\nChurch of Canada at Stratford con- for alleged banditry against tha So-\nventlon. viets.\nCORBYlS\nSPECIAL SELECTED\nCANADIAN RYE WHISKY\nBotlled'in Bona'under Dominion Government supervision\nThe Quality Whisty of Canada-\ngincel859\nc\u00ab\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by tht\nLIQUOR CONTROL, BOARD or the Government ot B.C.\nQ ~7or Real Men\n'   thcliJorld-cAromd\/\nHills &\nUnderwood\nLondon Dry Gin\nDistilled by the famous London\nprocess\u2014the gin you will ask for\nagain. The standard of purity for\nover 160 years.\n|3.50 Per Bottle\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed br tht\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.C.\nThe standing In Ihe West Kootenay International Baseball league Is\nns  follows:\nTeam W,\nRossland    3\nNelson         I\nMetaline   Falls       1\nTrail       0\nPet.\n1.000\n.750\n.333\n.000\nBoll Team Holds\nFinal Practice\nThe senior ball nine last night held\na snappy practice at the ball park.\nThis will be the final practice before\nthe game with Rossland In that city\nSunday. The teams are first and\nsecond In the league, and the Nelson\nteam hopes to come home with Its\nname at the top of the league Sun-\nday.\nSKUNK, MUSKRAT\nBEING DEVELOPED\nBritish* Columbia's   Game\nBoard Recognizes Value\nof These Animals\nVICTORIA, June 25.\u2014This Is the\nage of the skunk and muskrat, according to \u00abfur experts, and British\nColumbia's game board la using its\nbest efforts to not only conserve\nthese species but to develop them so\nthat the province may share tn the\nhigh prices that are now offered\n(or them In the world's fur markets.\n\u25a0Muskrat and skunk, however, are\nnot the only species that are given\nthe   attention    of   the   game   board.\nOne of the reasons why these two\nvarieties of fur have gained such\nprominence Is thnt some of the\nothers have become practically unobtainable and have ceased, consequently, to be a factor in the market.\nEach year British Columbia is becoming more important as a source\nof fur, because of the gradual depletion of the supply In other regions.\nHeavy  Values\nAccording to a census recently\ncompleted, there nre approximately\n725,000 muskrats ln this province at\npresent, the value of the pelts sold\nlast season being $905,000. Tht\nbeaver population is placed at 122.-\n000 with the value of the season's\nfur  takings at $1,764,000.\nPopulation figures for the othel\nfur animals and the value of the\ntakings ara as follows: Fisher, marten, mink, otter, weasel, 289,000,\n13,265,600. coyote, lynx, wild cat,\nwolverine, 43.250, $849,050; bear,\n11,000, $101,570; raccoon and skunk,\n28,000, $106,100; silver, cross and red\nfox,   6200,   $181,026.\nBesides these there are on farms\n665 silver fox, 29 cross. 29 red and\n80 blue foxes; 71 beaver, $2 mink\nand   numerous   other   animats.\nCorpse of bank messenger waa\nfound concealed in a cupboard in the\nhome of Dr. Uougrat, leading Marseilles physician, \t\n7\n_\n\t\n\t\n4\n \u25a0\u2022\"-\u2022\u2022*\u00bb. TIkIjI\nTHI NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\nSkrfcets \u00a3l Finance\nWAII STREET      *\nii PRICES GO UP\nMore Than Score Stacks tile\nHighs; Call Money\nMarked Up\t\nNEW YORK ..lune 35\u20148took prices\nmoved steadily upward today despite\nth\u00ab nmrklng up of the call money rate\nfi'Wij 4|\u00bb. to r> per cent. More than a\nscore or Ntoc\u201en were lifted to new\nU.yhn (or the y\u00bbar, the list Including\nAtlantic fiulf and Went Indies eom-\nnon and preferred, Cnited Cigar Stores,\nTnlmeen 1'rotluets, Hinnnons Company,\nOueral Motor 7 per cent preferred.\ntMlmv c_h Manufacturing, Federal\nWght & Traction and American Type\nFoundry.\n\" Marking up of Ibe call money rate\nwan attributed to the heavy demand\nfnr funds in connection with July 1\ndividend   and   Interest   payments.\nTime money and commercial paper\nunchanged.\nMarket Quotation!\n.\u2014\nHigh\n1-siw\nClose\nAmer.   I.orn.    . ..\n113\nlit.\n112>i\neSkwr. t. & t. ,\nMIS,\nHlVt\n141)4\nAmer.  Tobacco   .\nIt\n9\u00ab\n96\nAnaconda    \t\nrtiu\n3X*\n3\u00bb.\nAtchison   \t\nI17\u00bbi\n117%\n117',,\nHalt   &  (thin   ..\n\u25a0nt.\n7'!*,\n76%\nC.   p.   II\t\nHO.\n14(1%\n1.0%\nMl\n33\".\n33 B\nC.cn.   Motors   ...\n81\nso*\nS0(N\n(lt.  Nor.  pfd   ...\n71%\n70\u00bb,\n70\",\nIntl     Nickel    . . .\n.111*\n29>,i\n20 i..\nInspiration     ....\n2\u00ab'3\n26 8\nM 8\nKennecott     ....\n6\u00bbS,\n50 \u25a0.\nno u\nN.   Y.   Central    .\nllf.J,\n116\n116%\nN.   Pacific   \t\nes\n\u00ab7'i\n67 S\nraeific    \t\nr.R\",\nI'hlUIps     \t\n\u2666IS\nii%\n44-'\u00bb\nRock   Island   . ..\n\u00ab\u00ab\u20ac\n.3.\n43%\nShell     \t\nS    Pacific    \t\n24 L.\n21\n14\nn%\nlis^i\n>\u00ab!\u00bb\nHtan.   oil   cal\ntn,\ni.i,'.\n511 \\\nSinn.   OH   Ind.   .\nec%\n6i;.\u201e\nMan.   Oil   N.   J..\n\u25a0\n.<>>\nStudehuktr   \t\ntip.\nM\n46L.\nTexan    \t\nIH\n111 ii.\nful\nms\nlil\n138\n1      B.   Steel    ....\nllttt\n111.,\n1145,\nUaOlb     \t\nill\nr'- 'v\n\u00bba >...\nSELJJNG SETS\nSrLi I\n\u25a0 MAT BACK\nSetback Goes to Five Cents\nBushel; Close Un-\n1 settled\nOH1CAOO, June 18. \u2014 Aggressive\nspeculative selling gave a sharp set'\n\u25a0back lu wheat prices today, at one tlnu\ni\\y much rs Be a bushel. The wheal\nmarket closed unsettled, 2%c to 4c net\nlower,   July   $1.62   to   Jl.f>2%   nnd   Sep\nUmber $1.49% to $1.49%.\nvarying from le decline\nviMlce. oat a 1 %v to 1 %c\nprovtnsions unchanged  to 2\nwith\nHe\ndown,\n0 off,\nASBESTOS ISSUES\nACTIVE MONTREAL\nCommon (Gains 'Point; Preferred Unchanged; Brazilian Is Steady\nMONTREAL. June 25.\u2014The Asbestos\nIssues   were   the   active   leaders   on\nday's  slock market,     Asbestos common\nwns  the   most  active and closed  at   ?.\">.\na    net    gain   of    1    point.      Second    in\nnlume   of   trnillng  mme  Asbestos   pre-\nerred,  closirm   unchanged   ui    iflis.   Bra-\nMian   closed   unchanged   at   Kft.t   At la tile   Sugar   lost    ;    Hell    Telephone   was\nff   l   point;   B.   C.   ^ishinir.  off   V_;\nOglivie    preferred,    off    2,    and    Trice\nbrothers,   up   %.\nMomn.il  ctoslRff  stocks \u2014 Brazilian.\nRri-weries,     44;     Broui|it<>n.     211'\u25a0\u25a0;\nl.;-urenlide,    fttt;    B.    1..    Steel    s md\npreferred,   7>_;   Spanish   preferred,    IU;\nSpanish  coma ,   hm.   Montreal   l'ower\n1X8%: Smelters. _._*% ; Hteel of Cana.la\n8fi; Atlnntlc Hugar, .'HH,; Textile, \"7\nWiimiiwg Klectric, 47. I', s Steel\n114%: C.l'.R..   N.V.,   lm%%\nMACKAY COMMON\nADVANCES AGAIN\n1931\n.Feature of Toronto Board;\nGilman and Burt Show\nGains\nTORONTO. June 2:.. \u2014 A fuither\nadvance to 130 by Mackay common\nwas the main feature of today*! stock\nmarket. In the morning Markuv ...ronton moved up \u00bb._ further to 130. (lil\ni.an common was one of the few other\nprominent features. This Issue dosed\nunchanged   at   108.\nV. N. Hurt common gained %. to\nr.2%. International Milling first preferred was l point higher at us\nwhile Maple l_enf preferred was down\n1. to 9s; mid Western Canada Flour\ncommon, off  1 % to  1MU\nBrazilian closed unchanged at _(.\nC.P.R.   was   l'_   higher,  ut   NOV\nWINNIPEG.   June   2,r..    \u2014   Dominion\nar issue pricea:\nWar   loans   \u2014   192ft.   $100.20b;\nI'OMfib;   1H37.   $104,401).   $MM.son\nRefundinB \u2014 192S, $-100.ROb, $100.80a-\n1J43,   $102,401.;   1944.   |97.10b.   $.\u00bb7.30a.\nWar loan renewals \u2014 1927, 110140b,\nflOI.KOa;   1982.   $103-40-,   $103.s0a.\nVictory loans \u2014 1927, $102.30h\ntlSMta, 193:!. $io*i.30b. IJ 08.70a: 1934.\n*!04.i0h.     HM.m;      1 .* :rt 7.     flOliftb\n$l09.40n\n-Exchange Seat\nSells for Over\nHundred 'Tkou'\nNEW   TORK,   Jim,-   IS.\u2014Th,-   highest\nprice ever  paid   for a a\u00abl\u201eon   th.-  Nt w\nYork stork exchange ma established\nt\"day when s. [\u25a0'. strclt. nreaidanl of\n11.e stock clearing corporation, disposed\nuf  hi,\nprevious\nicmbcrshlp\ninKh am\n1 wi\nS11\u00ab.\na Si 1\nmin\n\u2022I'll.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA.   June   2ft.  \u2014  Toroni\nbtng   BDMWW,   40c;  extras.   38c;\nsre.\nOntario   \u2014   tSxerta   deliver*\nfirsts. Ite.\nManitoba   nnd   Saskatchewan\nc.ipts very   light.\nAlberta \u2014 I'ncha nged\nViiticouver    \u2014    Jobbing    exlra\nfirsts.   37c;   seconds.   3tc.\nChicago   \u2014    Spot,   30c:    firsts\n32 ^e;   December   refrigerator*,\nNew   York \u2014Kxtra   firms,   Itiie;\n84Cj  Decemher   refrigerators,   .'17\nDominion Live Stock\nWINMIPKO, .lune J5.\u2014RfOMptl l\n,'.ay weto 11OO rattl,., 3(1(1 ralvps. 36\nIiokb and lflfl pherp.\nStcerH \u2014 Cholca. $7 lo 17.30: la\nlo good.  H  to  IU.73.\nHutch\u2014   heifers   _   Choice,   $11.73\nST 50   aoud. M to %%M\nButcher eows \u2014 rhoiee. ,:,; gor.\n)3 73.\nBulls\u2014good, \u00bb:.7r>.\nOxen_<'.oi>d.    $3   lo   $4.\nHtooker  steers \u2014 t'ltoice. $3.7\nS-'.SO   lo   \u00bb3.a0.\nStorker    heifers    \u2014    Choice,\ngood. i:\u201e-,n to \u00bbs.\nKeeder steers \u2014 Choice. 14.7\n53.5(1   lo  $4.50,\nCalves--Chiilce.   \u00bb\u00ab   to   II,\nHogs - Selects. $13.73;\nsmooths.   113.50.\nI_mbs- 'ioi.il.  IIS  to  111,\nHhe|.|^-ll\u201e,,\u00ab.   JO   to   >S\npood.\n$3.23\ngood\nWeekly Clearings\nJl^-rpy ranadh\ni' fne Weekly bai\nWINNIPEG, Jun.\nI'ressl \u2014 Following\nnear In gs for Panada for the wee I\nending June 26. ItSI, im for the. our\nrespond Hig week  last vear:\nWeek l!\u00bb-4 Week 192\n2,ft:t!-.272 $2 2.35141\nl.ttMtt 2.2.MI.74\nT84.8I2 774,:>l\nl(in,4t7 8811,61\n4,780,8$ 1        1,120.at\n10,171444     Ttl.till\nHalifax    .,.\nSaint    John\nMoncton\nSherbrnolte\nQuebec\nMontreal\nKingston     \t\n^'eterboro     \t\nToronto     \t\nUamllton     \t\nKrantford    \t\nl.< ndon\nKitchener      \t\nWindsor     .......\nFcrt    William    ..\nWinnipeg     \t\n1 1 anrlim     \t\nItegina   \t\n\u2022  Moose    Jnw     . . . .\nNaskiuoon     \t\nPrince  Alln^rt\nI 1 Ihbnitge     \t\n' algary      \t\nJ.dnionton    \t\nMedicine   Hat    ..\nW.    Westinlii.sier\n!   Vancouver     \t\nI   Victoria   ........\n\u25a0  Ottawa     \t\nCanada Bonds\nSterling Exchange\nNKW VORK, Jun- 2ft\u2014Sterling ei\nchange steady, nt H.Sl-v, f..r tiO-da\nbills  and  ut   |4J_<K   lor demand.\nBar   silver\u2014Foreign.   Ttfce,\nCanadian   dollar*\u20141 -32   premium.\nFrancs\u2014Demand.  :i 7d'-c\nNelson approximate \"rate sterllnt\n1444%.\nGirl Jumps From Boof Because Parents Refuse\nMarriage; Suitor Flees\nMEXICO CITY, June 25.\u2014Ines Vargas, a lfi-year-nbl iwoorlta. as determined as she is romantic, recently\nxi'ived an ultimatum on her parents to\nthe effect thnt, unless they Rave their\nem aent to her nmrrlage with Isidro\nCuMirubtas within 10 minutes, she\nviuld throw herself from the roof of\n\u2022he four-story apartment building hi\nv li ich the Varga.s family lived. Whereupon she fled upstairs, locked the door\nleading to the roof, and pois_d her-\nsdf on 11 cornice overlooking Nuevo\nMexico street,\nClriaco Vargas, the father, tore his\nhair in desperation for a few seconds\nm- lie reflected that his daughter hii-1\ninherited the firm character of her\nmother, and the latter, he felt sure\nfrom past experience, would never recede trom her stand that Isidro. as a\nson-in-law was impossible. Then ht\ndashed to the nearest police station,\nonly a block away, to -toy disinter*\neslLd   counsel.\nIdfe Mat Bronght\nA few hurried sentences explained\nthe situation to comisarfo. Thut official had an itiepirutjon. .Next to the\nI el ice station were the firemen. He\ncalled out a hook and ladder company\nai d the fire laddien. all dressed up in\n1 i;gc helmets and light blue uniforms,\nc.atigeil to the scene of the impending\ntragedj'. unfurling a life net as the.v\nwent.     Tliey   arrived   Just   about    nln.-\nMarket Dictionary\nh\nTells ai took7\n.14\nt\u00abe_ _' \u2022_\nMARKET OCTIONARY\nBrief ex fianrt'iom \/tt\nor comrnon * -mt *\"'\nv.. 'nines\nissued h\nhunch\nherself\nlively\nmil un\nla\non^ls\nS|K\nalter hies\nis ahoi\nThere\nlUg     between\nlues i>u the roof um) the tiretueii, with\ntheir net, down In the otraat, while a\ngathering crowd cheered and Clriaco\nat.laclied   lhe   locked   door   wilt   an   axe.\nJumped rrom Boof\nJust as the dour gave way.- Ines\n.bought she hud outwitted the nel\nholders and Jumped. ty- \\\\ supreme\neffort ahd overturning u\" couple of\nuiehlns, the firemen managed to interpose enough of the net between lues\nUf 'he pavement to break her fall.\nBut she achieved her purpose, Jor the\nBight Of her daughter whirling through\nthe air destroyed the last of Mamma\n\\nrgas*   opposthm.     Hhe   did   not,   how-\nTKE   KABIt-JT   DICTIONAHY\nFool \u2014 An agreement between two or\nmore concerns or individuals to follow\na   certain   police of buying or selling.\nThe pool may he formed in nn at-\nt.mpi either to raise or lower prices.\nSince it is always confidential, there\nIs no way of enforcing the agreement\nlu case one member wants to back out.\nMelon \u2014 A large extra distribution\nlo stockholders in cash or stock. The\nti rm Is particularly applicable to a\nslock dividend because the effect of\na stock dividend Is similar to cuttinn\na melon\u2014that Is. although the stock\nnnd the melon are both divided into\nmolt pieces by the oetiun. the total of\nIhe pieces  Is still the same.\nForecasting \u2014 Attempting today to\nstate precisely what the market action\nwill be next month or at some other\nspecific time tn the future. Italy the\nKreeuhorns and the newly rich at-\nttinpl to forecast. The old-tlmeiw know\nit   can't h.<   done.\nibe interior, recenily anmninced his\nleadiiiesH to supply a nucleus of ;i\nl,cr,| from the national park nt Witin-\nw-htht. Alta. About 4ou to MM acres\nwould be required as an enclosure for\nthe herd, but tbe chief difficulty,\nprutnoiers of tho scheme declare, will\nIte the financing of the fencing costs,\nll has been suggested to Inaugurate\na <an\"4>aign for ppblic support to the\nproject.\nWhile the location of lhe proposed\npark has not been determined, a vast\nstretch of country near C.ladstone,\n'Van.. Is favored as an ideal grazing\nrange and ani tabic spot from thr\nwin   Isidro.     That   youth   ffcdcd Lstontlnolnt of beauty.\nthe   scene   after   witnessing   his I  <\u25a0>\nsweetheart's    leap.        The    papers       Two tornadoes hit   Minnesotn, doing\nthe   next   dny   as   Mating   property damage estimated al $200,000.\nthat    he   did    not    think    he    possessed   _____________________________________\nenough   uf  the   cave   man   stuff   to   il\\e [ u \u2014~\u2014\u2022- \u25a0        ~*\nlippity   with   such   a    woman   ax   Im\nfl\nhi\nptoted\nI ru\nLh\nMetal Markets\nMYTHICAL TREASURE\nlures mmm\nSought Treasure, Dug Up\nYears Ago by Treasure-\nSeekers\nNEW\nlaadyi\n.v   111\nulytl,\nTin - Rai\nOIL': fuiuivH. ,:\nIron\u2014Stpinlv; i.\nLaad\u2014Gaay; \u00bbr\nRlnc\u2014_.\u00ab)\u2022; K,\nami future*, $l!.!\u00bbK\nSpul,\nlurp*.   1:1-\nannl    nr\nSAN    I'EDIIO,\nlong   inl,.   .\u00bbr   uv'i\nmemhora \u2022\num\nIn\n1.1.mh.\nnndard\n\"l'l\u00bb\n[.':!   17k\n\u2022 Knot,\nnil   rm\nI'll','! I\nfill HI'.,*.\nTin   -\n1I1I.\nI..-K.I\nZma\nWtSNIPCO    G__.1N\nJuly ... 11:11 in,\n' Oct. ... 110* 111\nO.Tl^\u2014\nJuly ... !,.'\u25a0\u25a0 r,\nOct. . . .:.r'\u201e .\u00ab\nParity-\nJuly ... vi m\nOct. ... 7.; Tl\nFlux-\nJuly . . . I'll! i'::i\nUct. ... US . If.\nturn\u2014\nJuly . . . 101 in:\ncr,\nQUOTATIONS\n\\     HIS*,     li'.l',\n'\u25a0  \u00bbxpadltton  that i\n1 in   the   iiur.Jc-Hi'i\nI unaurceaatul  eea\napot   K\"li! bullion ihut\n] Pacific     Mall    1\nOat*, which burnt\n; Rtnlllo. Mexico.\n\"\"     The  Balboa,  which  l.ri\n,.\u201e1  1 i'ptni'110,1   Aluy   27.   batten\n' I vci-c butfctlnca by wlral\nII.\u2014A\nihlcl    by\n-hunting\nrecently\nI   he\nHnlbo\nfur tl,6oo,ooi In\n< aboard the old\nwheeler Ooldeti\nid *aak off Man-\nhere Ma, :\nI   rrom  .se\nmil    I,lie\nOct,\nIII\nlftl'\nHe'\nSPOKANE STOCKS\n(Reported by C. W. Anpleyard)\nHid A \u25a0=!\u2022\u25a0.\u25a0<!\nCork      n:*\"i ,fi^if.\nFlnrenee     01'. ,01U\nNnhob     N .o\u00bbVa\nPremier     t.H 2 IT.\nRichmond     \u00abt >A .02\nSilversmith      2.1 .26\nSuccess     1^ ,14 K\nHypntheek       ,10 .12\nLucky    J lin      Ifi'i M-%\nMcCJilllvray     U .72\nr.rindeer       01 U .01%\n\u2022ladfften          II .'_\u00ab\nMontreal Produce\nMONTTtEAI,,\ninii, itronir; *\nButter N\nlo,   1  criannrv\nRM*\u2014n\n| Several monthi ngo C. a. Curry, n\nrailway nindurtor ..r Loaven worth.\n\u2022 Kan., hail on bin tram u pa\u00bba.nse-\nj who un*. suid to he the only living\n\u25a0 person who knew the exact location\n[of the lunkan treMure. Curry pur-\n!chased from the man charts *>f the\nI treasure ship's loratinn anil formed n\n[syndicate to find the golden hoard\njwhich. It was wild, had lain more\nthan K0 yens on the flour of 1 (,.\nI Pacific ocean.\nPicked Crew\nj A crew to man the Balboa wan'oh-\n1 tnlned here. It included dipt. Clifford Casey, owner of the vessel.\n1 Robert Tinner, .1 cutetiiker of n yacht\ndub; Huns Pohlman, who was skipper of the racing yawl Poipsettia: an\nl engineer, a second mate and Iwn\nj seamen.\nThe remains of the Oolden Gate\njthey lound off MansanUIo without\ndifficulty, Efforti to reach the treasure which lay in eight fathoms of\nrough water proved unsuccessful. ;i-\na high surf ami a heavy ground swell\nrepeatedly upset their small skill,\nhiscouraged. th- expedition put Into\nIfaniMtUo. where they learned from\nthe American consul that other treasure hunters had recovered the bullion\nyears  ago.\nThe expedition then headed for Bmti\nPedro. Their return voyage waa one\nof hardships. They encountered s\ngule that continued for daya. Theli\nfopi and fuel supplier ran short\nSeven hungry, weary and disappointed men stepped off the Balboa when\nit docked here.\niras\n37.\ni'h   firsts\naateurlted,  title,\nill's,   Ite:   fresh   ex-\n34c.\nOTTAWA. .June 25.\u2014A vote nf\n$500,000 for the department of immigration, Empire Settlemont scheme,\ncarried in Ihe house tonight. In all\n$3.0.2.000 for the depariment of\nimmlrtition and colonization pawed\nlhe  house.\n\u2022\u2014\u2014\nThe Bond\nSpecialist\nBonda iln good, helping hoth\nseller and buyer, bul the honiS\nmarket covers a wide area and\nbond buyers deal through a\nbond sp'cclnllsl who has all Information and data and can\nguiiic them always uiMin sound,\nintercut -hearing lines, when' the\nprincipal invested is permanent\nly\ns.a'e.\nPi mlic ton   dt\nSpecialists   ir\nSons   sre\nBonds.\nPEMBERTON & SON\nFinancial   Agenta,\n418   HOWE   STREET,\n'VANCOUVER, B.C.\nAg.nU    Wood.   Cindy\nToronto\nA   Co.,\nMANITOBA ASKS\nBUFFALO PARK\nWINNIPEG, .lune 25.\u2014Old-timers\nIn Manitoba htLvr jo:fled til petitlonlnc\njthe federal authorities for the early\n! establishment of a buffalo park in\n\u25a0 Ihe province.\nj    lion.   Charles   Stewart,   minister   of\nX\nTo Be\nSuccessful\nn Man mpst know his business\nthftrougblv \u00abnd a* poete. ,'W all\nmatters pertaining thereto,\nprices, markets, general business conditions, whether money\nis easv or tight; all have a beur-\nIng oh his business nnd investments. \\Y> S\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 k to supply this\ninformation by publishing a\n\"Monthly Financial News.\" giving informal ion in a handy form\non lhe Bond market ahtj prices,\nbusiness conditions in Canada\nand U. H A., the stock market\nprices, vields and values nnd\nlists of securities in order of\npreferentv, safety, marketability.\nAlso mining shares and notes on\nwork* nnd operations ef various\ncompanies' share prices; Vancouver real estate market conditions\nand transactions, loans nnd rent-\nuls,   etc.\nlent  Free  oa   Application\nWAGHORN, GWYNN\nft. CO.,'LTD..\n\u2014rLocal Broker\u2014\nC. W. Appleyard\nNelson,  B. C.\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\n.\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Claaslfled Advertising- \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per Insertion. If paid In advance, 60 per\nword per week, or 21 M\\c per word per\nmonth. Traniient ada accepted only\non a caah-ln-advanee basis. Kaoh Initial, figure, dollar sign, etc., counts as\none word. Minimum 25c, If charged\n60c.\nLists of Wedding Presents, and\nFloral Trlbntss at Funerals \u2014 Ten\ncents   per   line.\nBirths, Marriages, Deaths aad la-\nmemortum Carda\u2014Fifty cents per Inner tion up to 33 words. Additional\nwords lMtC\nLocal JUadlag Mottoes\u2014Three cents\nper word each insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-\nfive   per   cent   discount   If   run   dally\nithout change of copy for one month\nor more. Where advertisement is set\nout ln short lines the charge ia 15c a\nline for Roman type, 20c for blackface\nand 25c for blackface capitala. Minimum 36c, If charged 60c.\nBirths\nJESTY \u2014 Born on June 20th, to Mr.\nand Mrs. M. .lesty, of Shutty Bench.\nKaslo, at Victoria Hospital, Kasle.\na   daughter. ' ll\u00bb-\u25a0'->\nSituations Wanted Male\nMAN ANU Wtn would like Job\ncamp or on farm; wife good 00\nI'hone  f.t'.M. or  write  .1.   I'hilllps.   N\nCLAfWIFlEn ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    1 %c a word.\nMEN, WOMEN \u2014 To learn barberlng;\npaid while learning; tools supplied.\nCatalogue free. Moler College, Vancouver. (Wl?)\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014 Assttyer: state experience,\nsnlarv required, references fully to\nHox   llMtc.t,   Dully   News. (HUH!')\nFemale Help Wanted\nEXPERIENCED\nApply Grill.\nKITCHEN   helper.   \u2014\n(19111)\nLive   stock   Bells   quickly  when   lt   ia\nadvertised   In   thes*   columns.\t\nLive Stock for Sale\niAIMII.K     POUT\nCity Property fdr~Sali\nN'HW ROOMING HOUSK tor Bale, 21\nrooms, fully euulpp,-. *6000; $2000\ncnnh nml terms. Apply A. E. Antler-\nson.  Trail. (1M50)\nIN FAIUVIRW\u2014Lots one ond two.\ncorner Third and Behnscn strrets.\nTwo hundred dollars tuges the two.\nApply   llox   296,  Nelson. 110204)\nBEST BUY IN CITY\n$1500 cash and a sm_l monthly\npayment will buy thia beautiful\nnine-room home, one of the nicest\nln the city. Lovely living rooms,\ntwo fireplaces, aun room, new furnace, stone basement and all conveniences. Apply F. F. Payna,\nDully News.\n^ (9855)\nFor Sale\nOne of the best, If not the most\nup-to-date summer homes on the\n\"West Arm. Furnace, Fireplace,\nKlectric Range and  Lighting,\nBeautifully furnished with new\nfurniture. New Launch Included\nwiih property. Within 10 minutes'\nreach of Haker Street.\nI'rice on application, but less\nthan half original enst.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\n(1IIIID9)\nBusiness Opportunities\nAt a Bargain\nThe Qrilfl Cafe\nN10LSON\n(M74)\nTeachers Wanted\n\\VANTKI> \u2014 Oood, experienced teiu'h-\net, nutn prel'eiTed. for South Slocall\nachool.        Apply      Secretary,      South\n.*\"\u25a0\"\"\"'\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0''       ' _!___\nBoats and Automobiles\nllayley.   It.It.   I.   Nal-\ntlO'JK.l\nFOB   SAI.K   \u2014   Hon\nwi-iirlit   fifteen   hum\nto   hush   work,\nlour.\nTIRKIRIRK    rn\ndollar-   Clark,\nl!   yitirs   old j\ntl:   accustomed\nAlfred   Bunker.   Bai-\n11021.1)\nweeks.\n('re\n(INK lllloWN HOItHK, 7 vears old.\nwelahl UN Ihs.. price lino. Apply\nK. Martinson, llox a2. Ferula, RC.\n(1020C)\nTKAM M)rt_S^\\Li-~\\\\VUJiu-2700. aire\nI and fi; price. IU0.H. Joe Mason.\nArrowhead.   I i.e. j__l__)\nFOR SALK _ Several (rood, young\nKentle milk cows. I'rices rlfc-hl.\n.Inhn MrOarvev.  Minn.lei. B.C. (10122)\nwm.\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nn\n$\nSecond-Hand Store\n\u25a0 [Too! Bo*^ fuH H Toolsg net hf\nBUi Ksiiiiin I-.ck, I'tic Luite'1.\nI'lionograpii, cheap; large quantity\nof   New   Uattreaaea;   z  ft..   *   ft.\nand 4 ft. (I in. Mattresses; Invalid Chair, Gas Btovea, Coal Oil\nStove, Water Power Waahlng\nMachines.\n(1MB8)\nPOR BALt \u2014 C\nRaoorda,   1st,\nMolohon.   Thin\nsblnet I'll'\nCall   or\nstreet,   1\naofraati and\nphone   J.   I.\n.ilrvlcw.\n(10218)\nFOUR-HOLR elc\nnew,    price    n\nlOtlt,   I\u00bbaily  N\nPIPTT   Iron   tru<\nlow wagons.\n\u25a0trie range, practically\nisonable.      Apply    Hox\nma.                  (10I0I)\nk   wheels,   suitable   for\n.Jl'.   Morgan,  Nelson.\n(111010)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS,\nBARBED  WIRE,  ETC.\nComplete line Pipe and Fittings,\nall sizes; Sperlal 1-inch Pipe, 8c\nper foot. New Galvanized Barbed\nWire, $3.SO per spool. Roofing\nPelt, 1-ply, $1.60; 2-ply, 12.00;\n3-ply, $2.fi5 per roll. Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, .0 Ihs. per\nroll. Special, $3.25. Mixed Wire\nNails, $2.00 per keg. Wire Rope.\nCanvas, Logging Supplies and all\nkinds equipment.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n1_ Powell st.\nVancouver, B. C.\n(9926)\nFOH SAI.K \u2014 Soda fountain, com\nplete. with dishes and silverware, In\nfirst class order. Apply at Hume\nHotel. (9931)\nBARHKLS,\nsacks   \u2014\nNelson.\nKRi.S      AND     EMPTY\nMacDonald   Jam   Company\n(9922)\nCLASSIFIED ada bring results quickly\nand economically.    IHe a word.\nHKIH-CI.ASS   pleasure   launch,   ^cylinder   .-cvcle- angina.     (_mpuna    in\nevery detail. I'erl'.cl condition; carry twelve. Several other launches.\n2' and 4-cvcle entlnra: all less than\nhalt' present values. Masters, Waterfront. ___?__\nWANTED-^A \" Rood niotor-hoat fop\nIHInhlna purposes; medium price. IV\nll.   llox   73. (10197)\nMcl.AI'dlIMN       POUR,       overhauled\n\u2022ood     condillon     throughout,     |4So.\nTerms.      II.   A.    Masters IKI2U7I\nFor Rent\nPIIRNIHHRD    COTTAOR     at      Willow\n.Inl,   on   l.iike   shore,   electric   MkIH\nnl  wat, r. screened.    RoUInt,  I'.ll I\n(1MM)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR*\nAccounting\nCKAXLBS F. KVVTBB\u2014\nAuditor, KacSauald Jam Bulldln\nBox  1191. Nelaon,  Hi\n(9931\nElectrical\nG1BALD B KATKIaT, Aaaoo. A.I.B.\nElectrical Contractor, Telephone 7\nP.O. Box 743, Nelaon, B.C. Rad\nSupplies, Power and Light Install\ntlons. Generators and Motora. Mai\nteuaace   and    Repairs. OD-'\nTransfer\nATXIaTSOH TBABiraa \u2014 Coal a\nWood.   JPhone    421       _     (998\nWILLIAMS'      TBABHBB\u2014Baggag\nCoal and Wood. Phone 108. (IMU\nCarpenter and Joiner\nLAWS.*\u2014Cedar   Cheata,    Hardwoi\nand Panel Board.    Below Mark.\n(\u2022IB\nLife Insurance\nSVtt   LIFB    ASSu\u2014ABCB    Ott.      .\nCANADA^.!.  ('. Kennedy, Diatrl\nItep.   Offices\u2014Oilker BIk., Nelaon, B.\n (992'\nChimney Cleaning\nw\nrOWLBB,    Official    Ohlmn\nCleaner. (993\nInsurance and Real Estat\nRW.   DAWSOB\u2014\na    Baal  Batata,  Inanranca,  Bant*!\nAnnahle   Ulk.,   P.O. Box 733.   Phone 19\n(993\nHB.  DILL,    IBSUBABOB,     TA\n\u00ab AHD   CITY  l_OPBBTY.\n5119   Ward   Slreet. (993\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL     A      BITCHIH      KO\u00bbt\nMENTAL CO.\u2014P. O. Box MS. Ne\nson,   B.C.     Telephone   1C4. ((9933\nChiropractors\nDB. B. B. OBAT\u2014Chiropractor. I-OU\nIir,, lies. r,21T. Oilker bik. Hour,\n10 to 12 a.m.,  2 to fi and 7  to 8 p.m\nexcept   Sundays.     Consultation   free.\n (9934\nALLAH S.  DODDS, D.C\u2014Phone  ns\nOffice hours:  10-12; 1-4 and by a]\npointment.    Aberdeen Block, Nelaon. R\n(9931\nCLASSIFIED sds bring resulla qulckl\nand economically,    l^c a word.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nTf  RBNT        During .lulv Mid  Auauat,\nn   ihree-roooi   innilsluil   flat.     Apply\nBox   1021a.   Daily   News. (108461\nTBLIa your IHMtg inrouKh Tha Dally\nNews  classified   columns.\nSTKNISHKD   ROOMS   to   rent    for   the\nsummer.      Applv    Mrs.    J.    W,    Ford.\nRdgemood.   lt.c. (101411)\nFOlt    RUNT\u2014la    Annahle    Block,    one\nnicely  furnished bedroom, one simile\nr a   for   light   housekeeping,   one\nfurnished   suile. (9319)\nlff:iTi~APA^MEjT?S^ (9920)\nSUITE)  for   rent\u2014Campbell's   Sludlo.\n19921)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Four-roomed rottafa he-\nside lake, at Nelson, for August.\nWrite   Hot   9.   Hlllrrest.   Alia.   11023X1\nFarms Wanted\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 Ranch for\nmixed farming, with option to purchase. Hive particulars In first letter.    Apply  Hox  621.  Trail, B.C.\n(1023.-,)\nRoom and Board\nROOM    AND   BOARD\u2014Laundry   if   desired.    Applv 921  Stanley atreet.\n(102231\nLost and Found\nLOST   \u2014   School   emblem   ring,  on   way\nto   Park.     Return   (Irirf   Morris.   Itox\n,  394. Clly. (I02r>\u00ab)\nTo Out-of-Town\nSubscribers\nOut-of-town subscribers who\nwish to answer classified advertisements In which only tho telephone number of the advertiser\nla given, may send their replies\nto The Dally News, and The Daily\nNews will communicate such replies to toe advertiser.\nFlorists\nGRXISBLLB'S   QREENHOTJSB,   VIZ\nBun.  Cut flowers and Floral deslRii\nami\nW!\nM.   8.   JOHNSON\u2014\nPlinne :i41!.    Cut Flowers, Pntte\nHauls  and   Floral   Fmhlenn\nWholesale\nA MACDONALD ft OO\u2014\n\u2022 Wholesnle (Irocers nnd Prnvlstn\nMerelinnts, Imiiortfrs of Teas, Coffee\nRlilecs, I>ri*>t| Fruits. Staple and Fam-\ntlroreili'H,   N'.-Non,   B.C. (SUB\nEngineers\nGtee\u00ab \u00bb*\u00bb\u2022 Bur^ C.\n>ILSOIT, B.C.\nCIVIL    AMD     MINING     _K_Ilt__\u00bb\nB.C.,   Alberta   and  Dominion\nLand  Surv.yora.\n(99(11\nHD.    DAWSOa,    Land    Sarrayoi\na Mining and Cl-tl Baglnaar.\nKaalo,_B.C.   (9941\nHO. KIMOHOmif\u2014ror.it Bngln..\n. Cranbrook, B.C., P.O. Box 101\nTimber Cruising, Mapping, Surveying;\n (99.2,\nAssayers\nE.\nW. WIDDOWSOB, Boa A1108, Vol\nBon, B.C., Standard western charge)\n (99.3\nAuctioneers\nWCUTLBB\u2014\n\u2022 Oooda Sold Privately and at auotloi\nNelson   Auction   Mart,   Vernon   sir,-.\n(99.1\nFuneral Directors\nD\nI.   BOBBBTSOV,   r.D.D    -   B.-\n\u2022  801   Victoria   Btreet    Phona   29\n  (9941\nNight   Phono,   1S7L.\nStandard Furnltm\nOo. \u2014 Undertaker\nFuneral Director\nAuto hearse, upt>\ndate chapel. Be,\naervlcea. Price\nreasonable.      (9941\n';,;:,,;:.\n(hid,\n,'7.907.\n4,715.3\n70.1.3\n2.1132.(\n776.7\n2.Slid,0\n7119.1,\n52.712.3\n450.1\n227\nI Jit,\n25\u00ab\n409,\nf,.\u00bb32.\n4.0:\n294\n'\u202211\nis.r.fii\n1,7.59\nf..i;oo.\n,1M\n131\n5 76\n129\n363\n112\n7 IS.556\n7S7.10S\nS7.5I6.0S7\n5.240.4s]\nK79.5S6\n3.\u00abr,3.3Sk\n\u2022aa.ea.\n3.595.220\n<\u00abk.496\n38.395.550\n492.456,\n2.919.S2U\n1.0(3.972\n1.3S9.97S\n2X9.939\n475.111\n6.643.2X1\n3.592 70.\n247.600\nOlX.x.tb\nI 4.793.112\nI.S(6,,I,I,\n6,:,;;s im.\nBRINGING V?, FATHER       \u2014:\u2014       \u2014:\u2014       \u2014:\u2014        \u2014:\u2014        \u2014:\u2014        \u2014:\u2014        \u2014:\u2014       \u2014'\u2022\u2014\ni.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMrlWiyLfO-!*: .W\u00bbe ..>,\u00bbiJ \u2022lonr\ntriM'hfltr|apTj.'' Ae* \u2022\u2022...\nBrun_$2\u00ab   to  127\nWheat \u2014 No, 1 northern. 11.(4% to\n\u00bbl.59>. July. 11.12%: -eptember.\nfl.4S_.\nPern\u2014No.  3 yellow, tl   to 11,01.\nOnta-No   t   white.   43Sc  to   42%c\n\"\u2022'    Uu\u2014No. 1.  12.67 _   to  ,2tl%.\nv\u00ab_Ll.-iC(J.\u00ab>\n-rMt c\u00bb,-r i*a\nGOM_\u00ab\u00bbS\u00ab\u00bb\n(COO o\u00bbo\nT\nr\nVEP iT . TOO 64.0\n\u2022wt H*_ TO t-O\".. t\\\nflME   P\u00abi _._, WIHHKa\nL\u00abt THAT\n\u00bbi>JT V<B . u\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab  TO\n,-jmtf. tm_\nBC*3T or\n\u2014:\u2014       By George Mchianm\nAWK'\n  1\u2014.\u2014-\n!\u2022 THE NELSON DAILY Iti_W_CjMtInAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\nSEVEN DAYS\nNOMINATION\n,    ISJARRIEO\nElections Act Amendment\nPasses Much Opposition\n( \u2022      in the House\nORIENTAL CLAUSE\nf MEETS* DEFEAT\nExclusion Oriental Returned\nMen From Voters\nList is Lost\nOTTAWA, June 25.\u2014Reduction In\nthe time between nomination day\nand polling day ln federal elections\nmet with considerable opposition tn\nthe house today. ' The bill to amend\nfhe. Dominion Election act would\nreduce the Interim between nominations and polling from 14 to 7\ndays.\n, H. A. Stewart, Conservative, Leeds\n\u25a0poke at some length urging the\nnecessity for a longer period after\nnomination day. Mr. Stewart tin-\nally moved that the clause be\n\u25a0truck from the bill but his mot len\nwaa. declared out of order.\nQ. Q. Cotte, Progressive, MacLeod, then moved that the word\n\"eeveiT' be struck from the bill\nand the word \"fourteen\" be substituted. The amendment by Mr.\nCotte   was   lost   without   division.\nOn a standing vote, the section\nof the bill reducing the time between nomination and polling from\n14 to seven days, carried by 60\nto   48.\nOriental   Voters\nA. W, Neill, Independent, Comox-\nAlbernl, moved an \u00abmendmcnt which\nwould exclude oriental returneJ soldiers from participating ln Dominion\nfictions. The province of British\nColumbia he said, had placed Itself\non record as being opposed to orientals voting  In  election.\nMr. Neill declared that the amendment proposed by him woulj not\nlead to any friction with Japan,\nwhile on the whole, if oriental returned soldiers were permitted to\nvote ln federal elections It would\nprobably leud to trouble In British\nColumbia. The white man could\nnot vote for the most trivial office\nIn Japan; and the changes proposed\nwould simply put the orientals on\nthe same plane In Canada as white\nmen were in Japan.\nHon. H. 8. Beland, minister of\nhealth and soldiers civil reestablish-\nment, believed that orientals who\njoined the colors and fought in\nthe great war, should not be denied\n(he exercise of Canadian citizenship\nfie thought also that returned men\ngenerally would Interpret such action\nas was proposed by the amendment\nas a restriction upon them; and steps\nto deprive these men of the exercise\nof the franchise might result in\nfriction with Japan.\nJ. 8. Woudsworth, Labor, Winnipeg Center, supported the stand\ntaken   hy  Dr.   Heland.\nT. O. McBride, Progressive. Cariboo, interjected that a Japanese,\nupon assuming Cnnadlan citizenship\ndid not give up his cltixenship in\nJapan. His first duty was to\nthe country  of his  birth.\nMr. Neill declared thnt naturalized\ncitlsens in Japan were not al lowed\nto vote even though they had served\nIn the Japanese army. The question\nwas merly whether the wishes of\nBritish Columbia, aa expressed by\nthe legislature of that province\nwere to prevail in the holding of\nelections.\nL. W. Humphrey, Progressive, West\nKootenay, disagreed with Dr. Beland that the amendment constituted\na reflection on rturned soldiers. The\nreturned soldier members of*the British Columbia legislature had opposed\nthe giving of the franchise to Aslat-\nlOs.\nThe vote of the amendment result-\nad ln Its defeat by 40 to 18. When\nthe result was announced, Mr. Neill\nremarked that he would have to\nappeal to the senate which he understood was supposed to safeguard\nthe   Interests  of  minorities.\nMAROONED IN    <\n,     CANADIAN CITY\nCustoms Authorities Hold\nLady Who Spent Holi-\nDay; On Heavy Bond\nMONTREAL, que., June 25. \u2014 A\nweek-end ncuralon to tinx cily bv\ntt dressmaker of h little Connecticut\ntown wns fraught with ull manner\nof unlooked-for anxieties when the\nlitter t\u00bbas Jum ready to take the\ntrain home. \"We are afraid you\ncan t get to your two children for a\nyear and u half.\" she was informed\n*y United States government officials. And this was three minutes\nbefore the train wus due to start!\nMrs. Mary MacAdam thought ot\nher two fatherless children and her\nbusiness, and went freely, sitting on\na station bench. The elty clerk of\nkcr own town had testified In ;i\nrotter that she. a British-born woman,\nhud lived there several years, but it\nwns found that she had gone to the\n.tales In 1B17 without Inspection\nof payment of head tax. remaining\nthere when ostensibly entering for a\nvisit. Then, thinking lt was ull right.\nshe came buck to Camilla, for a little\nWeek-end  trip.\nIn view df the worthiness of the\nxttlttv It wus to exercise executive\nolemency. and allow Mrs. MacAdam\nto enter under a six months' bond of\n1100. which will enable her to live\nIn the I'nlted States for a period of\nsot more than six months, and It\nshe remains longer than thnt period\nthe bond will be forfeited und de-'\npollution to Canada be curried out.\nIt will probably be found possible\nto provide for her residence in the\nUnited   States   in   this   mnnncr   until\nJ lien time us a Uritish quota Is avuil-\nble.       \t\nDutch Airplane\nFalls; Four Are\nKilled in Crash\n.PARIS, June 26.\u2014The pilot or a\nDutch airplane, and three passengers\nwere killed when the plane fell\nnear the Franco-Belflan border today.        .     .. _\t\nm Bora, r\nWomen on Farms\nVICTORIA, June 26.\u2014Of the 15.-\n887 Canadian women actively Interested In the Industry of agriculture only 1196 are native born,\naccording to the report submitted\nthis afternoon by Mlsa Beardsmore\nof Tofonto, Dominion convenor of\nthe committee on agriculture to the\nfederated women's institutes of Canada, now in session In Victoria.\nThe report dealt with the activities of the instutes by provinces,\nemphasizing the Interest taken ln\nthe agriculture and efforts for Improvement In various branches of\nfarm   work.\nBuy At Homo\nMrs. N. M. Henderson of Duncan,\nB?C, Dominion convenor of the\ncommittee on Canadian Industries,\nin her report stated that If It is\ntrue that 90 per cent of the\nhousehold buying ts done by women and that the prosperity of Canadian farms and factories Is locked\nup between the kitchen doors and\nfront porches of the homes of Canada, It Is very important that the\nwomen of a great organization whose\nmotto Is \"For home and country\"\nshould study tho subject of Canadian\nIndustries. The report also recommended that If It was wished to Insure health of mind and body for\ncoming generations the institutes\nshould bend their united efforts to\nremove,tht drink traffic from Can.\nada.\nPROPAGANDA ON\nHEALTH BEGINS\nSHOW JESUITS\nSuccessful Battles Waged\nAgainst Tuberculosis and\nCancer\ntion of .medical science, tuberculosis\ntoday was welt within tbe bounds of\ncontrol. Preventive propaganda in\nthe interest of public health was beginning to show fruitful results, as\nreflected In the npprcclublo reduction\nof Infectious diseases, organic and\nfunctional disorders, while the\nmortality rate from these causes was\nsteadily dropping.\nAlthough the keynote sounded by\nthe various speakers was primarily\none of optimism, thoy skressed the\nlmp<\u00bb ante of progressing with the\nutmost deliberation and thoroughness.\nImpatience played no part in the\nefforts of llu man working In the\ninterests of scientific advan6ement.\nThey were in agreement that the results of various researches to date\nKave every hope \u2022 of even more remarkable achievements.\nAfter an all-day discussion of th*\nproblem, the Canadian Medical association council, the governing body\nof the organization, decided to prepare complete plans for carrying out\npoat-graduate medical education\nthroughout  the  Dominion.\nThe schem. will be worked out ln\ndetail at a meeting to be held in\nMontreal, with a view to launching\nthe  service  this  autumn.\nLondon Has Its\nChaperons Now;\nThey're No Cameos\nLONDON. England, June 15,\u2014For\nsome reason which nobody can quite\nexplain the chaperone has made a\ndistinct reappearance in London this\nspring. Of course, she Is not a bit\nlike the chaperone of 16 years ago\nwho, in dove-grey and velvet neck-\nbunds used to sit like a cameo on\nthe   edge   of   a   ballroom,   for   today\nWill   Guide   Organization\nUntil Birth of British\n.        Empire Legion\nSIR RICHARD GIVES\n\u201e     HIS ACCEPTANCE\nTuberculosis and Army and\nNavy Vets Still Out;\nResolutions Pass\nOTTAWA, June 25.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014Another step toward the\nunification of Canadian war veterans' organization* was taken by the\nOreat Wnr Veterans' association at\nits annual convention here this afternoon\" when the delegates unanimously elected (Jen. Sir Richard Tur.\nner, V.C., of Quebec, former commander of the first Canadian division, to succeed Major W. <D. Sharpe.\nM. D., of Brampton, Ont., as their\npresident. Sir RIcltard will head the\norganization during the period of\ntransition which is expected to expire in one year with the birth of the\nBritish Empire lenion, embodying all\nother  returned  soldier  organizations.\nSir Richard has accepted the presidency and will be installed In office oil Sunday when he arrives with\nSf. \"phear\"e\u00ab.enml\"1 t0 a d,*cou,,, BRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nAak   Act  K-tenslon '\nThe convention recommended ihnt\nthe eoldlern' settlement board ahoul.l\nhave discretionary powers to relocate\nsoldier settlers found to be locate,\non unsuitable farms.\nThe association also went on record as asking that the Soldiers' Settlement act he extended until December 31, 1B29, so that returned\nsoldiers may take advantage of It.\nand \"at least be given equal rights,\nas to right of application,\" to those\naoeorded Immigrants under the Empire   Settlement   act.\nA definite policy for the purchasing of seed and twine was asked\nof the settlement board, and the necessity of making advances to soldier settlers for seed was especially\nurged.\n\u25a0a,\nToronto Workers\nProtest Troops\nin Strike Area\nTORONTO. June 26.\u2014Vigorous\nprotest against tin1 sending of troops\nto the Nova Scotia mining district\nand an imperative demand of the\nfederal government for their Immediate withdrawal constituted the action taken by a meeting of workers\nhere last night to hear of conditions\nIn  the   strike  area.\nParis Poatnwn strike\nPARIS.   June   25.\u2014Postmen   strike\nfor arrears of pay.\nMacDonald Small, l~-_\u00ab\nTRESTWICK, Scotland, JlIM 26.\n\u2014MaoDonald Smith United States\nrepresentative, takes lead In British golf open championship, when he\nbreaks course   record  with   C\u00bb.\nnlpeg, though in all other r.e*P\u00ab_l\nresembling a John MacKenile ylUa\ncriminal record ta discharge* em\nfraud  charge. -'-    *\nGrace RerolaUoa\nSALONIKA. June 25. \u2014 \"Anfthaf\nrevolution In Greece lUrta when\nlocal garrison rebels. - -*\nSenate Confer. With Comma*\nOTTAWA. June 26.\u2014Senate #'\u00ab*>\nto confer with commons oil \"noma\nbank depositors', relief bill.\nMrs.  Morgan  Better\nNEW YORK, June .\u00bb.\u2014Mra, J. P.\nMorgan, III with sleeping sickness\nrecovers consciousness after' beta? _\nstate  of  coma   since   June   17.\nStudent   Plot   Uncartl-d\n8HANGHAI, June 25.\u2014Police unearth Btudent plot to fire cars and\ndash around international settlement\nthrowing bombs.\nFinger   Prints   Save   Him -\nNEW YORK. June 26\u2014Thanks to      The government of India has abol-\nflnger prints Douglas McKensle, Win. | Ished  the  diarchy  In  Bengal.\nI   1 l    1 \u25a0\nDr. A. Knlk'ht Is the new\nstock commissioner for British\nlunibla.\nhey are as Ja_ mad as any of the I Field Marshall Karl Halg, whose et-\nyoung people they bring. But they ';\u2022\u00ab\" toward promoting unity of\nore chaperones all the same. Canadian  war  veterans  were   largely\nK - __.-!     responsible   t..r   the   decision   of   the\nCuticura\nLoveliness\nA Clear\nHealthy Skin\nInsured br E\u00abM7-d_y\nUm of Cutl.wr* Soap\nREOINA. June 25.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014Public health problems, the\nsuccessfull battle being waged against\nthe scourge of tuberculosis, cancer\nand other malignant diseases, were\namong the scientific subjects which\ntoday commanded the attention uf the\ndelegates attending the annual convention of the Canadian Medical association.   \\\nA number of papers of an educational rharacter both from a clinical\nand practical viewpoint also were\nKiven, while the advances of radiology, with particular regard to the\ntreatment of cancer, were reviewed.\nAccording to these leading members\nof the Canadian Medical profession,\nscience Is gradually liberating mankind from the ravages of disease,\nwhich throughout the nges have taken\na nen|rmous toll of life.\nMortality   Less\nAs    the    result    nf    the    vastly    Im\nQuite a number of young American debuntuntes have \"adopted\" a\nLondon chaperone when their mothers have not been able to come to\nEurope with them, and impoverished\nduchesses and needy countesses are\nthinking it well worth while to take\nan attractive young girl to the opera\nwith them for the sake of a few\nthousand dollars. *\u2022 Introductions, of\ncourse, to a few people well worth\nknowing and a visit or two to the\nsmartest country house parties are\nthrown in  with  the arrangement.\nThe chaperone is really a quaint\nreaction and survival of the intense\nfieedom of the last two or three\nyears, so It is said. To take a\nchaperone to a dance is becoming\nas \"smart\" as It was to take a\nfantastic doll under the M_B ll\nmonths ago. Kven In great public\nballrooms there are signs of the\nchuperone. but oh. not In dove-\ngrey now. Her skirt will probably\njust reach her knees and If her\ncharge asked her to sit out a dance\n;*he would probably be told not to be\nla*y.'\nNi;<.RO MOBBI.l) AND\nSLVOGED TO DEATH\nIilFFALO, N.Y.. June 21.\u2014A n\ngro giving his name ns .Inck Kel\nof   Ittchmond.   Va.,   was  mobbed  aiyl\nproved health laws, a higher standard j slugged    to   dotath    here    last    night\nuf   living  and   the   remarkable   evolu-' after  a   row   in   a   pool   room.\nisponslbl\nOreat War Veterans' association to\nsink its identity in the general cause\nof   unity.\n\"Will   cooperate   In   any   way   for\nunity,\"   Sir   Kichnrrl   said   In   a   telegram  to  the Dominion  executive,\nOther   Bodies   Ntlll   Out\nSo far as Is known the Tuberculosis Veterans' association, Is the\nonly other organization which hus\nfallen in line with lhe idea of the\nOreat War Veterans' association.\nRepresentatives of the Army nnd\nNavy veterans and the Imperial\nVeterans In C'unadu were In conference with Colonel Nagle. Prlot\nto his departure and he pointed out\nto them thut their associations had\nonly until Monday to decided whether ihey were for unity and it wns\nhoped he said, that Cnnsklian War\nveterans would present to their old\ncommandef*ln-chief n united front\nwhen the British Empire Service legion opened its conference _ next\nMonday.\nAsk Reduction Stock  \\ a lues\nThe adoption of several resolutions on land settlement occupied\nmost of the time this afternoon.\nResolutions approved by the parliamentary cohimitlco on soldier*'\nreestablish merit? asked for further\n.reduction in tlie valuation of livestock purchased previous to Octftbt.\n,1. 1921; (hat the period of inieres:\nexemption be lengthened that In the\n<event of any  prepayment   soldier set-\nMother!\u2014\nBobby's Hurt\nHis Finger\nHow   many   times   the   kitchen   door\nopen,   and   a  scared  little   face   announce! a fresh catastrophe.\nMother\u2014reach for the bottle of\nAbsorbine J1\nCuts, sprains and bruises yield\nreadily to its ueatment.\nA tew drov in * cut will destroy\ninfection snd hasten natural healinc\n\u2014while a smull quantity rubbed\nbriskly on a sprain or bruise wilt\nallay the pain, reduce the \u25a0veiling\nand greatly asnist In restoring the\ninjured part to a normal, healthy\ncondition.\nA bottle of ABSORBINE JR. in\nyour medicine cabinet wilt save no\nend   of   pent  and   suffering.\nIi.jj a bottle at most druggists\ntf' sent   po\u00bbptaid   hy\nW. F. Young Inc.      in\nLyman   Building Montreal\nin theAeL\nonly\nD\u00ab*-VoU\n**\u00a3^I&sL\n, that \\\nto n**\u00bb?J\ne_rJ3~ffl*r~ rm\n__-_>_e w *\"\"   \u00ab__<*.\n^^\"TrJm-jiris\nsstc\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany ot Canada, Limited\nOffic* 8m\u00ablting  erti   fUfininj  0\u00abp\u00bbPtm\u00abnt\nTRAIL,   BRITISH  COLUMBIA \t\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver,  Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC.   TRAIL  -,\ni\nSecond Floor\nOfferings\nSuits', Dresses, Coats, etc., offered at  a\nsaving  in  price,  and  all  new  goods  this\nseason.\nSILK PULL-ON SWEATERS\u2014Colored\nstripes. Finished with plain material for\ncollar and tie. Colors: Mauve, rose, canary, black, with bright stripes in contrasting shades. Each   $3.50 and $3.95\nPULL-ON SWEATERS\u2014In a figured Silk,\nwith deep border at bottom. Short\nsleeves. Collar and tie of plain material.\nColors: While trimmed pule blue, sand\ntrimmed  brown.     Each 90.50\nLADIES' BUNGALOW APRONS \u2014 In\ncheck Ginghams. Finished with a binding of white, in a good range of colors.\nEach $1.25\nHOUSE DRESSES\u2014In unbleached factory\nCotton, trimmed colored Crepe. At,\neach    $1.35\nLADIES' STEP-INS\u2014In a fine Dimity,\ntrimmed lace.   Color: Pink only.   At 95<\nDry Goods\nA NEW SHIPMENT OF FLOCK DOT\nVOILES\u2014In some new colors, tangerine,\npeacock, navy, black. 38 inches wide.\nA Special Price of, yard 55.?\nCREPE UNI\u2014A fine French cloth of splendid weight and appearance. The colors\nare extremely Frcnchy. being the pastel\ncolors so much used by the French people.\nColors are salmon, mauve, saxe, rose,\ngrey and white. 38 inches wide. Per\nyard  9100\nFINE QUALITY NAINSOOK\u2014Suitable\nfor lingerie. 40 inches wide. Colors:\nLavender, maize, pink, sky and white.\nAl  5<X\nNAINSOOK\u2014In butterfly and bird designs.\nColors of pink, sky, maize. 40 inches\nwide.   At    75^\nShopping News That Makes\na Visit to This Store Today\nWorth While\nBoys' Wear\nLADIES' MERCURY RIBBED LISLE\nHOSE\u2014Garter tops. Colors: Fawn,\nmouso, sponge, black, white and brown.\nPair- 91.00\nPENMANS ARTIFICIAL SILK HOSE\u2014\nGarter top. Colors: Black, white, fog.\nSizes 8V_, !*. 0'\/_ and 10 inch. Por\npair |1.85\nLADIES' HOSE SUPPORTS\u2014Rubber\nclips.    White.    Pair         .'.0<*-\nLAEIE8' AND CHILDREN'S HOSE SUPPORTERS\u2014With clips. Colon: Black\nand while.    Pair      40\u00a3\nCHILDREN'S FANCV GARTERS\u2014White\nonly.    Pair   15^\nFANCY SILK GARTER ELASTIC\u2014All\nshades.   Yard. 50t? and 05\u00a3\nFootwear Dept\nVacation or Sports Wear finds us witli\nstocks suitable for every pastime.\nWe take a special pride in goods suitable\nfor the warm weather.\nHIGH-GRADE WHITE DUCK SHOES\u2014\nWith best quality Crepe soles and walking-height heels. Also makes a good\ngolf shoe.\nMen's, pair 90.95\nWomen's, pair 95.95\nThis in a cool, comfortable shoe nml much\nused just min'.\nLADIES' WHITE, WHITE WITH BLACK,\nBROWN AND GREY CANVAS OXFORDS\u2014With low or military heels. At,\npair ?2.95\nLADIES' TENNIS OXFORDS \u2014 With\nCrepe soles. White Canvas uppers. At,\npair    91.95\nMEN'S WHITE CANVAS TENNIS OXFORDS\u2014Crepe soles.    At   92.25\nLADIES' TWO-TONE SPORT OXFORDS\n\u2014White Elk, with chocolate Calf trimmings.   Rubber-top heel.    At $5.95\nONE OF THE FAVORITES THIS SEASON IS AN ENGLISH-MADE OXFORD\nOF TAN CALF\u2014With Crepe soles. Idoal\nfor golf or holiday wear. Wc stock these\nfor men and women, at the attractive\nprice of 97.50\nFOR MEN OR WOMEN we have one which\nhas proved a favorite: Fine Quality Canvas Oxford, good solid leather insole,\nGoodyear welt and with two-ply of genuine English Crepe rubber.\nWomen's sizes, pair        95.95\nMen's, pair  9\u00bb>.!>5\nWOMEN'S WILLOW CALF BALMORAL\nOXFORDS\u2014Crepe Rubber soles. At,\npair    .'. 97.50\nFor the School Vacation\nKHAKI PANTS\u2014At 92.00 and 92.25\nKHAKI KNICKERS\u2014Al 91.25 and 91.50\nKHAKI BIB OVERALI.S\u201491.25, 91.50\nKHAKI COMBINATION OVERALLS\u2014\nAt ...     92.75\nKHAKI PLAY SUITS\nKHAKI    WAISTS    AND\neach 91 \u2022\nCOTTON .1ERSEYS\u2014Each\n9150\nSHIRTS\u2014At,\n25 and 91.50\n50*\nWOOL OR COTTON  BATHING SUITS\u2014\nAt      75c and 92.75\nBALBRIGGAN    OR\nBINATIONS\u2014At\nATHLETIC    COM-\n  91.00\nGive liim suitable clothing for vacation\nand the holiday tent be doubly enjoyable.\nHATCHWAY NATURAL MEDIUM-\nWEIGHT RIBBED COMBINATIONS\u2014\nSuit             93.75\nREAL ENGLISH BROGUES FOR BOYS\nAND GIRLS\u2014Wc have a first-class line\nof these in stock at very moderate prices.\nThese Oxfords are ideal for school or\ndress  wear,  and.  being  made  on   wide-\ntoe lastt\nfeet.\nafford full freedom for growing\nSizes\nSizes\nSizes\nII to 11 _, per pair\n2 to 5V4, per pair\nfi, 61\/.\nand 1, per pan'\n93.95\n91.50\n91.95\nStore Hours\n8:30   to   5:30\nW^&M^m\nWed., I o'clock\nSaturday, 9:00\nI tt   \u00abt  a   A   rt       tt  ..  .  . .   .   .\n\u25a0__\n___\n  T\n'Page Ten\nfHE NELSON DAiLT NEWS,   FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1925\nt~\n\u2022piie Ark\nv\u2014Poya' and (lirla' Hose, ail sizes,\nifit '\" -5* p:llr '\u2022allies' Cotton\nHose. 25* I\"1': SUk. 50* P\u00bblf-\nSen's Work Shirts. S1.30; Over.\n*\u00bb. 8\u2014 .25. Flannelette Blanket!,\n\u2022tt, slse, S2.75 l\u00ablr. Ruga,\nSangeo   and   Furniture.\na      J. W. HOLMES\nMono   534 60S   Vernon   8.\nI Don't Neglect the First\nSymptoms of Eye\nTrouble\nIf you are In doubt as to the\n~ exact   condition   of   your   eyes, \u25a0\n_ our   \"expert\"   examination   and\nt advice   will   amply    repay   you\nfor   the  trifling   coat   and   time\nInvolved.\nr      We  never advise  glasses  un-\n* leaa  they  are   necessary.\nWe   guarantee   all   our   work.\n| J. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN\nSENATEFAVORS\nMERGER CANADA\nRAILSYSTEMS\nRwommend. Management\nby Fifteen Directors; Ten\nYears Office\nOTTAWA, .lune 20.\u2014Merging or\nthe Canadian Nn I i\u00abi mil und Cunudlun\nPacific railway systems for purposes\nof administration and operation Is\nrecommended hy a special committee\nof the senate on railways, which\nnuide Its report to the upper house\nthis   afternoon:\n1. That both the Canadian Pacific\nand   the   Cunudlan   National   railways\nGet The Daily\nNews Every\nDay\n\"All the News While It Is\nNews\"\nDelivered to your door\nin Nelson before breakfast\nevery-day for 25c a week.\nBy mail outside Nelson,\n60c a month, $6 a year.\nFull cable, telegraphic\n\" and British Columbia news\nservice.\nAll the best features.\nSubscribe\nToday\nSee Our Special $1.00\nBOX CHOCOLATES\nJust  right for  picnics.\nKANDYLAND\nNelson Business College\nDay   Cla,,\u2014Night   Clan\nINDIVIDUAL   TUITION\nCOMMENCE ANY TIME\nWa Da Not Cloie tha College During\ntha  Summer.\nIdeal\nGrocery\nH.  AMAS, Manager\nThe Home of Good\nGroceries\nWeek-End\nSpecials\nTEA\u2014Two  tii.o.1  Bay.\ncellent    quality.\nKootenay\u2014PtM  flavored\nlircwinK  t'eylon,\nIb\t\nEconomy  Blend nf Ituli.\nCeyliin.  rlchowclonf,\n111\t\nPOTTED MEATS\u2014\n3 for\t\nCLARK'S   PORK   AND\n-Tin       150     3   for\nLIBBY'S   PORK   AND\n-Tin       15\u00ab*    \u00bb for\nCLARK'S     ASSORTED\nLOAVES\u2014\n70c\nin unil\n65c\n25c\nBEANS\n40_-\nBEAN1)\n40*\nMEAT\n20c\nPOWDERED  BERRY  SUGAR\u2014\ncarton     AO\\s\nLIBBY'S    TOMATO    SOUP\u2014\n?\u201e\"\".* 40c\nQUART    JAR    SOUR     MIXED\nPICKLES\u2014\nKur ..    .\nPHONE 265\n50c\nshould bo pJ.ncil under tho management < of tlio board uf .lfi tlireitorH,\nfive tn br named by tin* Canadian\nPacific railway, five to be Mined by\nthe ^government and tne.se two to i\nchoose five capable, proved bu.lnctts\nmen to complete the board. These\nlast five directors to hod offlco for\nto yearn and to be removed only\nfur   cause.\n2. That a recapitalization be made\nof the Canadian National railways\nfrom tho point of view of earning\ncapacity.\nGuarantt*   Dividend\n3. That the Canadian Pacific railway bo guaranteed an agreed dividend on Its stock. That In the event\nof Joint management producing a surplus of dividend at the same rate as\nIh paid to the Canadian Pacific be\npaid to tho government on the capitalisation placed on tho government\nrailways.\ni. That after payment nf these\ndividends any surplus earnings available for distribution be divided between the Canadian Pacific railway\nand Canadian National tn proportion\nto the  valuation  of the two systems.\nThe report says that the addition\no the national obligations through\nhe Canadian National railways has\nfor the hist six years averaged about\n1100,000,000 annually, amounting in\nthe aggregate, according to the government and rallwav reports, to $710,-\nft\u00ab,2.7. or to J.'.!)\",,:i41,.47 In the last\nfive   yeari.\nThere is no assurance that under\ntbe present system this expenditure\nwill materially decrease in the future.\"\nihe  report adds.\n -     li  \u25a0'   \u2014\u25a0   ' ' \u25a0\"\nSlipped on Greasy\nPlanh;  Awarded\nLarge Damages\nVANCOUVER. June 25. \u2014 Because\nn greasy plank was used in loading\nwagons, caused tier to be severely injured In a fall, Mrs. Mury Forbes was\neranted JfioOO and costs and ber bus\nturn!  11300  and  Costs in court  today.\nSEVENTY-ONE\nPOINTS TOLD\nOFKOOTENAYS\nBoard of Trade Sends Pamphlets to England, States\nand Canada\nThe board of trade* has sent 25\nor more copies of Its road map of\nNelson district, a liberal supply of\ntho Illustrated booklet \"C.lorious\nKootenay.\" and copies of the new\nleaflets of views of Nelson and\nKootenay lako to 71 publicity organizations In Canada and the States\nin the last few days. In addition,, a\nlarge supply of all these has been\nforwarded to W. A. McAdam, secretary of the agent-general for British\nColumbia ln Umdon, for distribution\nat   Wembley  this   year.\nThis collection of general Information on the Kootenays has been sent\nto -0 publicity organ ixa tlons In\nBritish Columbia. 14 In1 the state of\nWashington, eight In Oregon. 10 in\nAlberta, two In Manitoba, five in\nIdaho, one In Utah and one In Saskatchewan.\nLOBS\nAYLMEK   MADE\nJUSTICE   OT   PEACE\nA recent  issue of the British Columns  Uatctte   curries  a  notice   that   John\nFrederick   Whit worth,   Lord  Aylmer  of\nQueen's    Buy.    has    been    nppointed\nJustice  nf  tlie  pence.\nWild   horse   bands   in   British\nlumbiu are to be hunted down.\nCo-\nClaOTffEJ\nDynamite Found\non Sydney Track\nAhead Troop Train\nSYDNEY, N.S., June 85.\u2014Attempted vlolcnoe In connection\nwith the miners' strike le re-\nji>rt\u00abd ln tbe placing ln the\nfrog of Uie main switch of the\nSydney A Loulsburg railway at\nDominion of a stick of dynamite.\nTlie explosive was found Just\nbefore the passing of a troti-p\ntrain. Near reserve spikes were\ntaken from a rail bnt U-W also\nwas discovered without any damage  being done.\nCONSERVATIVES\nJOYFUL OVER\nSCOTIA'S VOTE\nThe Biggest\nProgram\nin Years\nJuly 1st Celebration\nAt Nelson Recreation Park\n_,\n9:00 a.m.\u2014Children's Sports\nTWO BIG BASEBALL GAMES\n10:30 a.m.\u2014lone  vs.   Spokane.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Winner Morning Game vs. Nelson.\nLEAGUE FOOTBALL\n.      G:00 p.m.\u2014Trail  vs.  Nelson\u20145:00  p.m.\nSPOKANE MOTOR CYCLE CLUB\nHuces   and    Various   Ridint?   Stunts   Throughout\nProgram.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Dancing at Armoury\n] Overalls\n_ They're here\u2014the Over-\nI alls with the stop-loss\n\u25a0 pockets, in Bibs and\n' Combinations.\n$2.50 to $4.25\nSEVERAL DIE\nIN FIRE AT\nKANSAS SHOW\nExplosion Wrecks a Brick\nBuilding, Burying Many\nin Debris\nKANSAS CITY. Jane 2!1. \u2014 Several\nIwrsonH are believed to have been\nkilled nnd more than a acore were in-\nlured. pcrhapH fatally, when an explosion and fire destroyed the Gillis\nthen ter, a low-priced burlesque house,\nhere tonight while a show waa in\nVmTmMm,\nThirty minute* after the explosion\nthe south wall of the theater caved In\ncrushing adjoining storeroom*. Confusion ensued und flaiuia enveloped\nthe Ktructurc. It wan known one\niiieiniin and one chorus girl were Injured.\nI um Hogan. a fireman, was killed\nwhen a fire truck was wrecked mr the\nway to iliu- Hcene. The west wall of\nthe theater Inter collapsed and ft wus\nbelieved   two   firemen   were   buried.\nAt   midnight   Fire   Chief   Henderson\nId there were \"several\" persons\nburied In the ruins. The fire chief\nsnid this was ascertained by firemen\nwho  were  working  in  the  ruins.\nNext\nSays\nIndicative of Result\nFederal Elections,\nOttawa Report\nOTTAWA. June 26.\u2014Conservative*\nare Jubilant over the sweeping Liberal defeat. In Nova Scotia and are\nsaying that lt Is Indicative of results\nIn the next federal elections. Liberal;\non the whole, take the ground that\nthe defeat of the Armstrong gov\nernment was due to the long lease\nof Liberal power In Nova Scotia and\nto local Issues which would have\nlittle weight In a federal election.\nThere was the keenest fnterost In the\noutcome of the Nova Scotia fight uy\nboth  parties.\nMeant   Later  Federal   Election\nThe    prediction    la    made    tonight\nlhat one  effect of  the  Liberal  defeat\nIn  Nova  Scotia  will  probably  be  de\nferrlng   of   the   federal   general   elec\ntlons.      lt    had    been   commonly    re\nported    that   the    Dominion    govern\nment. If Liberals were again success\nful   In   Nova   Qcotfa   and   also   at   tbe\ncoming   provincial   .lections   ln   New\nBrunswick,     would     dissolve     parliament and hold general election! In the\nfall.    What course the Dominion government    will    now    take    In    regard\nto    federal    elect Um    this    year    remains    for    determination.      In    all\nlikelihood   there   will   not   be   a   decision  until  after the provincial  elections in  New Brunswick.\nBoth Premier King and Rt. Hon.\nArthur Meighen. opposition leader.\ndeclined to make any comment tonight.  .\nMILLIONS SUNK\nIN RUM SYNDICATE\nCargo Valuedlfeff Million\nSeized; Paper* Reveal\nBritish-Frerfch Co.\nBANGOR, Maine., June 26.\u2014A\nrum syndicate, backed by millions\nof dollars at the command of British nnd French financiers and operating ln the United states through\nthe influence of Wealthy United\nStates citizens, Is revealed ln the\nships papers of the schooner Cherie.\nit was disclosed today. The Cherie\nwas seized  off the  Maine coast with\nhalf million dollar curgo of high\ngrade liquors which Is jnow under\nguard In the rum room of the federal   building   here.\nNames of the British and French\nliquor owners arc in the hands of\nthe government official*, It Is\nlearned, as well as proof that the\nhalf million cargo was Intended\nfor the wealthy resident* of Maine\nsummer  resorts. -\nREFRIGERATORS\nSoon Save Their Cost in Food\nWe have a good slock to choose from.\nThree sizes, 921.00 to 946.50.\nWOOD-VALLANCE HARDWARE\nCO., LTD.\n\u2022       NELSON,\nB.   C.\nWholesole\nRetail\nYour   Ynuttiisttr  Want* a\nBROWNIE\nHow much would you give for\nplctttrtl of the things you used to\ndo\u2014your pets, your play, youi- playmates?\nBrownies put picture-making within eusy reach because they're simple\nto work, yet thoroughly capable. And\nthe prices begin at $2.05. Autographic\ngraphic  Brownies, $9-30 up.\nBring    Your   Youngster    In\nto   Seo  tho   Brownie*.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co.\nNELSON, B.C.\nHAS IT\nTEMPERANCE BILL\nGIVEN AN HOIST\nOTTAWA.   Juns   II    Ml   month's\nhoist was given tonight In the senate to a bill amending tho Canada\nTemperance aet to prohibit the lm-\npoltAUOB of Ijipior by private par*\neoni In territory whero there is government sale. The bill has British\nColumbia particularly In view und\nwould abolish export liquor houses.\nThe motion fur the six months' hoist\nwas moved by Senator Held, and was\ncarried   by   15   votes   to   10.\nSir 'ieorge Foster protested against\nthe delay. The Uritish Columbia\ngovernment had determined Its policy and sought to carry It Into effect\nin the legislation before the house.\nAny opposition to the bill was In\nsupport of the lii|iior export houses\nwhose only Interest was to put money\nIn   their  own   pockeis.\nNelson News of the Day\nDr. tl\nBlink.\nTin\n191.\nA. C   Wah.j, Dentist.\niilil reliable Kill's Jltn\u00abr.\nOrlffln\n(9910\nI'hone\n(SHIS)\nIf your Dally News is delivered let,\nphone  H4. \u2022 (lllll\n0. K. BAKERY\n714 Stanley SL Phone 16S\nWHOLESALE ANO RETAIL\nPer  Perfect   Tom!  In  the   Morning,\nVou  Mud  Havo  IL\nMILK\nWo guarantee our milk to keep\n24 hours from delivery If kept ln a\nreasonably   cool   place.\nDOMINION   DAIRY\nPhono  IML2\n-   *.\nlfcDoMlcT- new pecfe strawberry Jam\nIs  ready.    Ask  for it  at  your  grocery.\n* (1H066)\nWanted - Strawberries. Raspberries, Black Currants. Blackberries. Ited\nCurrant*, llooselierrlis. McDonald .lam\nCo..  Nelson. (liiO'ir,)\nKootenay    Tee\n(10237,\nHORSE FLESH FOR\nHOGTCED NOW\nWashington   Ranges   Will\nBe Rid of Thousands\nUseless Nags\nOLYMPIA, Wash., June 25.\u2014(Associated Press.)\u2014The apparent success of un experiment in converting\nhorse flesh Into hog feed has given\nrise to the hope among eastern\nWashington stockmen thut a prac\nticable means has at last been\nfound to rid Washington ranges of\nthousands of worthless wild horses,\ndeclares \"Harold Dobyns, field leader\nfor the biological survey, who returned, recently from a coyote hunting trip in Benton county. Cuttle-\nmen and wool growers have long\nconsidered the horses a menace to\nthe live stock Industry, sine*; the uiil-\nmals, described locally as \"knothead\nCuyuses,\" place an added burden\non the none too abundant range.\nSlaughter Animals\nIn recent months, Mr. Dobyns said,\nnn enterprising individual has established a slaughterhouse und hog\nfeeding plant at Plymouth, on the\nsouthern border of the Horse Heaven\ncounty, long famous as its name Implies as a horse range. The horses\nure purchased at au average price\nof about $3 a head, which while\nlow, enables the owners of tho long\nneglected ponies tn realize u profit\nby rounding Up their otherwise val-\nuelss animals, and the supply ba\"\nso   fur   kept   pace   wiih   the   demund\nThe slaughterhouse Is modern in\nevery respeel, Mr. Dobyns said, und\nnone of the carcass is wasted. The\nflesh Is cooked with corn and oilier\ncereals for hog feed, the hides\nbring %'i each, or nearly the cost\nof the horse, while lhe bones aid\ndisposed of to rertlliy.fr pluntj at a\nprlco suid to average j)5 u ton.\nDie hogs are shipped In, fatlened\nand then reshippH to (he iiurkets.\nApproximately 100 hoga are fed n u\ntime, while there is always a supply\nof horses awaiting slaughter In the\ncorrals. When lhe supply of cheap\nhorse flesh Is exhausted at Plymouth,\nthe slaughterhouse will be dismantled\nand moved to other fields. It was\npointed   out.\nOf    Idler    l*w,\nThe horses are said to be descended partly from old range bunds\nbuilt up by the \"horse kings\" In\nthe duys when light horses could\nbe raised at a profit, und partly\nfrom Indian bands. The stock has\nrun down until very fow of the\nhorses me of uso even as saddle unl-\nmals.\nWhile the hog feeding process\npromises to rid the rang* outside\nthe Indian reservations of worthless\nponies, no such relief is In sight\nfor the areas Inside the reservations.\nPlymouth was chosen as the site\nfor the erection of the plant, largely\nbecause it was adjacent to the Yakima Indian reservation, where It Is\nestimated that over 1(1,000 wild\nponies range, much to the disgust\nof the wool growers who leas* the\nland for gracing purposes. But the\nIndians, through sentimental attachment, absolutely refused to part with\ntheir   ponies.\nJUDGE HEARS\nFINAL PLEAS\nFOR SHEPHERD\n\"Case Overwhelmingly Rotten,\" Counsel Tells Jury;\nJudge's Charge Today\nCHICAGO, June .5\u2014 Mnal picas\nfor William Darling Shepherd were\nmade today. Tomorrow the proBeeu-\nI'lm will present Ite final argument,\nAfter that, the Judge will deliver hie\ni-harge, and tho case will bo given\nto the jury.\nAnxiety   to  hasten   the  end  of  the (\nlong  murder   trial,  whleh   Is   nearlnK I\nthe end of Its  alxth  week,   promised\nat one point today to result In a session   tonight.    Judge  T. J.  Lynch  refused to charge tho Jury at night.\nThe strategy of the defence in concluding its two picas Just at the hour\nnf adjournment gave the Jury another\nnight under lock nnd key to portder\nthe fate of Shepherd with his attorneys' pleu for \"an acquittal in\nrecord  time\"  ringing in  Its ears.\nWilliam Stewart, chief of the defence counsel, finished hla argument\nnrter six hours of speuklng. und left\nan hour of the afternoon session for\nhis partner, W. W. O'Brien.\n\"Give    Shepherd    Hie    Liberty\"\n\"Gentlemen, all you can give to\nShepherd is his liberty,\" Stewart\nbegged, In closing his plea. \"You\ncannot give blm back his good name.\nHe has been ruined in this community, and 1 ask you on what kind\nof evidence.\" .\nHe had prefaced It \u00bbt great length\nwith a denunciation of the slate's\nrhlef witnesses, Charles C. Faiman\nand Dr. llongcttl: Judge Hurry Olson,\nwho Instigated the investigation of\nShepherd and his indictment, for the\nmurder of his millionaire foster son.\nIllllv McCUntock-. A. F. Helchmonn.\nprominent attorney end coguardlan\nof the youth, und the Northern Trust\nnmpany.' which handled the Mc-\n(.'llntock estate.\nLawyer   le   Witty\nFalman's story that he gave Shepherd typhoidi gvrms and\" how to use\nthem to slay Hilly McCUntock. wns\nulled too absurd for belief, coming\nrrom a man too abandoned for belief.\nIf you believe thut story, hang\nShepherd.\" he interjected. \"Hanging\nwould   not  be  good  enough   for  him.\nO'Brien gave vlrtunl'y his entire\nhour to ridicule in ending the pleas\ncnr Shepherd. The crowded court\noom of spectators frequently laughed\naloud   at   his   witticisms.\n'The case Is overwhelmingly rotten \" he pleaded, when suylng It was\na scheme to break Billy McCllntock's\n111 In which he made Shepherd chief\nbeneficiary. \t\nSixteen Years for\nDelivery of Postcard\nto Point in Ontario\nShirts\nCollars\nAttached\nFor Golf or Tennis we have\na' special white, gollar attached\nShirt, made In trre same style\nas    a     combination     suit,     at\nS4.25 \u00ab\"\u2022\u00bb\u2022'     :\/\u2022;;;,'\u25a0\nOther etyles In white, at\nS3.00 and  S3.50.   '.,',;\nrlain    tan   color,    made with\nbutton-down    collar     and \u00bbl\u00bb0\nwithout  the buttons.  Ip \u00bb good\nquality, at $2.50 \u2022at,h' '\nGrey  Broadcloth   at   SR.OO.\nStriped Broadcloth at f$.2$.\nTRY US WITH A MAIL QUOfrl\nTOItO.N'TO. June 86.\u2014Sixteen years\nafter It was mailed In Ballleboro. Ontario, a postcard was delivered a few\ndays ago at the home of Frank Wel-\nlcr.    213   Scaton   street.\nFourteen years ago Mr. Weller\npurchased the house there from Albert Brown. The latter failing In\nhealth, went to California in the\neame  year and  died  shortly  after.\nLaat week the mailman left a picture post-card at Weller's. It carried a one-cent stamp, a date mark\not Ballleboro, February 26. 1909, Ontario, was addressed to Mr. Albert\nBrown. .1. Seaton street, Toronto,\nand   bore   tlie   following   message:\nHullo Dad\u2014Arrived home ull OX.\nand found everybody alive. It b\nvery cold here toduy. lots of Ice. Be\ngood till 1 come back. (Signed)\nYour  old   pal.   Lena   B.\"\nPlumbers' Brass Gooda, Flxturee\nand Supplies, Tile and Sewer Pipe.\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING \u20ac0.\nNELSON, I. C.\n300  Baker St.        Ntlsan, 1. G.\nHpruy  for  Hoses, ,.    .\n\u2022Spiay   fur   ApliU   un   ull   kinds\nur   Tries  und   smaller   Plant*.\nSlimy    fur    I'mil try    lluysw.\n1'ulHon   fur   CnhbuKe   Wurm.\nHellebore   Inspect   Powder.\nI'arin   tlreen. ' ,\nKty  Tox,  Km,  etc.\nMiiH(|uitii   Cream. *\nMail    Ordert    Filled    Promptly\nRutherford Drug Co.\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nThey Must Moka Good\nFor    Ice,    I'l ,.    [194,\n\u25a0\u25a0miner     Fete    \u00abt     outlet     Hotel\nGrouni-H,   Procter,   .Inly   30th.      Procter.\nUulfour,  Queen'M  Buy  Church  Guild.\n\u2022        , (lir_;,|i\nIfiNurunc*. Ih ,, Mf\u00ab, inveetmt-nt.\nNorth Amerloan I _ i f\u00ab. 2-1 Aberdeen\nI .lock,   E.   H    Hanley,   district   nmnaK^r\n110249)\nThose wanting a ear to moeelaad,\nSunder, Phone 44, Cummlna Taxi.\n(1026.)\nAnnuul Alexandra Romh Day will be\nheld on Haturday by I.O.D.K. Proceeds   In   aid   of   local   child   welfare.\n(10254)\nNine Men Convicted\nCrimes to Every One\nWoman in Canada\nTOHONTO, June 2G.~-Judge Dystirt\ni\u00ab Authority for ihe n.u.emont thut\nnine men uie convicted uf erlmo \u00bbu\nevery woman, and t-lnvle men are\nthree times tin prominent on the Itet\nas married. At the annual convention of the Chief CunsUhleu of p\u00bbn-\nada. Judge Dysart pointed out that\nwhen the attention of the hum-j wae\nnot given to tht children, the** experienced harmful freedom in their\nactions. They found urt:oes u,. the\nmovlee and from lurid films gathered\nIdeas which poisoned their minds.\nOver   BOO   Brltlnh-born   cftliens\nVictoria   have   applied   for\nto the Cnited States.\nof\nAdmiral   Hnrthy,  dictator   of   Hun-\nudmisnion Igary,   Is   accused   of   murdering   two\nJournalists and may lose post.\ns\n\u25a0__i\n_tm\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1925_06_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0402242","@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":"1925-06-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1925-06-26 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\/1.0402242"}