{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0396302":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-03-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1920-07-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0396302\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" m\nRs      \"\n> : m\niVOL. 19\n\u00abhlJ\u00a3P? .\u00bb\u00ab*\"!\u25a0 tli o#r tally J\nCM&bte.   Xuli   imMT^*^  rtmi\nof CanadUh ha, liWltto.\n|       THEWEATHB\n\u2666    Nelson and vicinity\u2014Continued fine J\nland hot.\n*\u00bb\"\u2666 ' '\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u00ab\nNELSON, B. C,  THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1920\nI\nMINISTER IS\nAPPROVED!\nLiberals Protest Against Appointment But Motion Lost\non Division\nI\nCANADA NEEDS\nREPRESENTATION\nSays Premier Borden in De\nfending Estimates, Citing\nTrade Mission\nh\nImprisoned Under\nCarranza Regime\nNow liberated\nMEXICO CITY, June SO-\u2014All persons now under confinement who\nrcharKPd with rebellion before\n7, when- the Carranza regime\ncollapsed, have been liberated, according to the Heruldo today. .The\norder was issued by the attorney-\ngeneral's   office.\n\u25a0\nOTTAWA, June 30.\u2014The house\nstrove vainlly to conclude the business of the session by 10 o'clock,\ntonight In order to have his excellency Ihe governor general attend at\nthat hour for the formal ceremony\nH)v t\u00bbf    prorogation.\nWhen 10 o'clock was reached,\nhowever, there remained many esti\n\\ mates to he voted, and prorogation\nstood over until 2.3ft o'clock to-\ni mdfroW afternoon, with the hope\nthat the entire business of the session would be concluded before adjournment -at night.\nOn the Item in the estimates to\nprovide $80,000 for a Canadian minister at Washington, Hon. Mac-\nKenzie King led the Liberal opposition in a determined fight. He\nmoved to reduce the item by $30,000,\nStating that this was the Liberal\nprotest against Mending a minister\nto Washington to take over oper-\nafon of the British embassy when\n\u2666he ambassador was absent.\nThis was* defented on'a standing\nvote by 57 to 32. The vote of $80,-\n,000 carried on the same division,\ni It is said that the government eau-\n\u00bbons arranged for tomorrow morning\n\u25a0will  be   delayed  until   Friday.\nRlr Robert Borden emphasised the\nfact that situations were dully arising which demanded that Canada\nhave compel An representation in the\nUnited States capital. During the\nlast few weeks Mr. Mahoney, the\nlast remaining member of the trade\nmission there, had been able to\nrender service in respect to the coal\nshortage, and would have been able\nto do better, had he had wider\npowers. The Liberals could not\nclaim that they had no warning of\nthe vote, for an item of $50,000\nfor the same purpose had passed\nlast   year.\nHon. W. S. Fielding objected to\nsending a man to alt at a desk \"in\nthe British embassy with practically\nnothing to do.\" He saw no reason\nfor changing the present system,\nwhereby, when anything arose affecting Canada, a minister would go\ndown from Ottawa.\nHon. Mackenzie King said it was\ntime that bureaucratic methods were\ndropped in such a matter as this.\nAfternoon and evening, the greater\npart of the time was spent in parsing estimates of the various departments. Militia estimates, which\nwere take up at 10 o'clock, gave rise\nto a storm of criticism from the\nLiberals.\nMilitia 1'Mlm.itrs\nOn the Hem of $6,600,000 for the\npermanent militia force, Hon. Mac\nKenzie King tried to cut off\n$1,000,000. This was defeated by\n49 to 25. Other militia estimates\npassed..\nOn the vote of $1,005,000 for the\nair board, Mr. King moved t\nduce the total -to $850,000, the\namount for civil air work cutting off\nentirely the militia section. This was\ndefeated bf 48 to 26.\nHon. MacKenzie King moved that\nan amount of $400,000 to provide\nfor a barracks for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Ottawa be\nstruck out. This amount was a part\nof an item of $500,000, the remain -\nihg $100,000 to he used in Vancouver. Mr. King's motion was lost,\nthe vote standing\u2014for 16; against 19\n\u2014a majority of three for the government.\nVictoria Dry Docks\nMr. Lemleux protested against the\nsubsidizing of dry docks by ths\ngovernment under present financial\nconditions. He intimated that the\nelection of Dr. Tolmle after his appointment as minister agriculture\nwas due to a degree, to the promising of a dry dock to Victoria. The\ngovernment 'was subsidising a dry.\ndock a t Va ncouver. Why should\nthere be another at Victoria. The\ndiscussion arose on an item of $450,-\n000 for a new dry dock at Esquimau, B.C. *\nPost office Appointments\nWhen the post office salary estimate of $1,000,677, ' and $105,000\ncontingencies came up, H. A. Mackie,\nEdmonton, complained that In the\nfilling of a vacancy In the Edmonton\npost office, the civil service commission had allowed itself to be influenced hy the deputy postmaster\ngeneral and inspector of poat offices.\nThe Civil Service act had been clear-\nJy   Violated   and   the   circumetanoea\nRailwaymen Walk Off Irish\nTrains as Police and\nTroops Enter\nCORK, June 30.\u2014The railwaymen\nat Lame, Ballyclare, 'Coleralns and\nother northern cities, have passed\na resolution to support the government by handling munitions and mil-\nitary traffic.\nHold Up Train\nDUBLIN, June 3D.\u2014A freight train\nwas held up today near Mulllngar\nFive carloadB of petrol destined for\nthe   military   were   destroyed.\nA mixed body of police and soldiers\nwith the usual equipment appeared\nat Kings 'bridge terminus of the\nOreat Southern line today ,and entrained. The drivers declined to move\nthe train, but remained at the terminus and offered themselves for every train  made up.\nAs soldiers entered each of the\ntrains,  the   trainmen   left it.\nToday's events are regarded as a\ndecisive test hy the government,\nwhich can similarly dislocate any\nterminus In the south of Ireland.\nThe companies say they have been\nable In the provinces to obtain men\nto run trains with troops aboard,\nbut this is denied by the railroaders\nand  Sinn Feiners.\nM'ADOO NOMINATION WED\nWITH HINDS APPLAUSE AT\nTHE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION\nHAYTIAN CAPITAL.\nRAWED BY BANDITS\nLEADERS ARE KILLED\nKINGSTON. Jamaica, June 30.\u2014\nBandits have raided Port au Prince,\nthe Haptian capital, according to\npassengers arriving from that city. \\\nSeveral buildings' were set on fire\nby the attacking parties, but United\nStates marines restored order after\n[\u25a0killing the loaders of the raiders. It\nIs reported that a secret effort to\noverthrow the president of the Haytl\nRepublic is being directed from\nabroad.\nIntroduced in Shortest Speech on Record; Wet and Dry\nFight Wages Outside; Trinity Platform of Prohibition,\nLeague and Ireland Pass Committee on Tentative Agreement Only; Slightly Moist Administration Plank\nExpected\nU\nl\u00bb\nMail   Bags  Seized\ni;ork,   June \u25a0 30.\u2014Thq    Weyford-\nCork  mail  train  was   held   up   today\nat  a small   station  by  10  men,  who\nseized the mail bags.\nBarracks   Bombed\nCORK, June 30.\u2014The King's street\npolice barracks was partly shattered\nby a bomb .today The explosion\ndid more ..damage to an adjoining\nresidence than to the barracks. The\nmilitary, with armored cars .dispersed  the crowd.\n* ZZZ 1 f\u00ae\nTHE DAY IN\nPARLIAMENT\nOTTAWA, June 30.\u2014In the house:\nSenate -amendment to comrnons bill\namending the Railway act granting\nadded powers to the railway commission for dealing with the fue\nsituation concurred in.\nEstimates of -several departments\nconsidered   and   carried.\nA motion to reduce the vote for\nCanadian representation at Washington from $80,000 to $50,000 was\ndefeated on a standing vote of ft 7\nto 83.\nIn the senate:\nMotion urging the government to\nenter negotiations to conclude a new\ntreaty or temporary agreement with\nFrance which would protect and\nstimulate trade hetween the two\ncountries, carried.\nMembers   voiced   objections   to   the\npractice  of  asking  Judges  to  sit\narbitration   commissions.\nWINNIPEG TRIBUNE\nCHANGES CONTROL\nWINNIPSG, June 30.\u2014R. L. Rich\nardson, . M.P., announced editorially\ntoday In the Winnipeg Tribune, that\nhe Is relinquishing contrnl which he\nhas held from the first Issue of the\npaper nearly  31  years ago.\nHe states: \"I have felt for some\ntime that the work incident to the\nadministration \"of the paper was an\nundue burden, and for some time\nhave been anxious to be at least partially relieved.\n\"Recently I had the opportunity of\nrealizing this object and at the same\ntime of transferring the control of\nthe paper to people who will, I am\nfully confident, keep faith wkh the\npublic.\"\nM\". Nichols, the new managing di\nrector, will take over the manage\nment  tomorrow.\nTHE WEATHER\nVICTORIA,   June   SO\u2014 Nelson and\nvicinity\u2014Continued fine and hot.\nMin. Max.\nNelion     '-49 92\nVictoria          80 ' \u00ab9\nVancouver    ....'.     56 78\nKamloops         82 94\nPrince Rupert      60' 06\nCalgary       ,_..   50 86\nWinnipeg       66 \u00ab6\nPortland       \u00a3\u00bb 84\nSan Francisco      66 68\nPort   Arthur        62 70\nPenticton        64 \u00bb6\nGrand  Forks     64 92\nCranbrook        48 92\nKaslo        64 it\nTWO BUS\nDAMAGES\nAWARDED\nPremier Gains Nominal Victory in Libel Action\nAgainst Elliott\nVICTORIA, ..Wne 30.\u2014The Jury to-\nday, in the ifrtver-Elliott libel sur.\nfound for Oliver, with 25 cents damages. Argument on costs will rake\nnext Wednesday.\nblfi crowd this muming thronged the supreme eonrt, to hear the\nopening of the li'\"' SOU 'n which\nHon. John Oliver sought 160,000\ndamage* for libel against R. T. Elliott, K.C. There was a big array\nof counsel present as Mr. Justice\nMacdonald went on the bench. Mr.\nM. B. Jackson,- K.C, was lending\ncounsel for the premier and Mr. H.\nA.   MncLean,   K.C,   for   the  defence.\nThe case arose out of some sensational happening In the legislature\nHit- the clour *of lust .iH:<-ii(>n. Mr\nfilllott had been counsel for a syndicate of Chicago millionaires who\nformerly owned the Dolly Varden\nand was not only objecting strenuously to the passage of any more\nlegislation in British Columbia favoring local shareholders who had\ntaken over the mine, but was endeavoring to secure disallowance from\nOttawa of ;in act passed In British\nColumbia more than a year ago..\nTwo    Dispatches\nStung at his failure to indue.' the\nlegislature to .follow his wishes, Mr.\nElliott lent two teleKrairis to Victoria. The first was to lion. John\nOliver direct- The second he addressed similarly, but also sent a\ncopy In Mr. .1. ft Cuwpei, M.L.A.,\nfrom whom Or. Mcintosh, M.L.A., obtained it and read it to* the house.\nIn thus causing i: to be \"published\nabroad,\" Elliott is charged by the\npremier with having libelled him.\nWhat  Parties Plead\nThe premier's charge was that the\ncomments contained in the telegrams\nsent by Mr. Elliott went beyond the\nhounds of permissible criticism. The\nJury were asked -to say that these\ncomments or charges constitute a\nlibel against his public reputation\nand   private   character- k\nMr. Eliott's defence, on the other\nhand, was that the comments were\nmade oti an occasion of qualified privilege, that, they were in substance\ntruthful. MiA that they Contain no\nlawful cause of action against him\nby the premier.\nThe trial occasioned a tremendous\namount of interest all over the province. The premier, since the legislature prorogued, has maintained\nthat there was absolutely no truth\nin t he charges\u2014charges which if\ncorrect, would no doubt seriously\naffect his position as chief executive\nof the province. ,\nThe telegram, which was publish*\ned in full at the time, deals with\nmany subjects. besides the Dolly\nVarden. It is on one of the side\nissues\u2014the lands of Messrs. Petley\nand Keith\u2014that the suit is expected\npartly to turn. \/\nPENSION SCHEME\n\u2022 \u25a0'\u2022  FOR CONSTABLES\nMONCTON. N. B.. June 30\u2014At thii\nmorning's session of the convention\nof the chief constables of Canada,\nChief Martin Bruton, of Regina, submitted his report for the year. He\nadvocated a pension scheme so that\npolice work ''be made a profession\nnot a makeshift.\" His report was\nadopted.\nBRITISH MISSION\nLEAVES ARMENIA\nBATUM, Trans Causucasla, June\n30.\u2014 (Associated Press)-The British\nmlsston left Ertvan, Armenia, on\nJune 17. This move appears to have\nproduced a bad effect on the situation here as there is evident danger\n!of a awing to Bolshevism,\nBAN FRANCISCO. June 3.\u2014 After\nhearing 10 candidates placed In\nnomination for the presidency, the\nDemocratic National convention, after\nan eight hour session today, recessed\nuntil   11   o'clock  tomorrow.\nJohn W, Davies, ambassador to\nOreat Britain, was the only man on\nthe list of those for whom nominating speeches wera to be made, who\nwas not reached on the days program.\nThe candidates placed OB the\nnominal ion were Senator Owen,\nOklahoma; Attorney General Palmer;\nSenator Hilchenck, Nebraska; Homer\nS. Cummings, chairman of the Democratic National convention, Wm. G.\nMcAdoo: Governor .Smith, New York;\nGovernor Edwards, New Jersey;\nSecretary Meredith, Gov. Cox, Ohio,\nand James \\V. Gerard, former ambassador   to   Germany.\nThe big demonstration of the day\ncame with the presentation of Palmer.\nCox and McAdoo. although there was\na spontaneous outburst with the\npresentation of Governor Smith,\nInterest  Centers   on   McAdoo\nThe Cox and Palmer demonstrations were fully expected and looked\nfor. but the McAdoo nomination,\ncoming after days of uncertainty as\nto whether as nomination speech was\nto be mats for him or not, added\nau element of interest and surprise.\nIt was easily the loudest, longest and\nmost tumultuous one. and kept the\nconvention in an uproar for the best\npart   of an hour.\nDr. Burrls Jenkins, of Kansas City,\nwho was ready to place the former\nsecretary of the treasury In nomination, finally decided to yield to the\nwishes of Mr. McAdoo and not make\na   nominating speech for him.\nIfc simply explained the situation\nto the convention in one of the\nshortest speech**! ''nam record, and\nmerely announced that he placed Mr.\nMcAdoo in nomination fully assured\nthat if \"defeated for the service of\nthe nation,\" he would not refuse the\nnomination.\nFrom lime to time file convention\ngot echoes of the wet ami dry fight\nbetfcf waged on, the outside, behind\nclosed, doors of the platform committee, but it devoted itself wholly,\nso far tis the organized program was\nconcerned, with getting the nomination speech out of the way, and\nclearing   the  decks   for   tomorrow.\nIt wns expected that till the nominating speeches would be made today,  and   that,   when  an   adjournment\nMexican Aviators Declined\nCarranza's Orders to Repeat German Barbarities\nMEXICO CITY, June 30.\u2014(Associated\nprPSj,)_By ordering the bombardment\nof defenseless towns held by the\nSonora revolutionists, President ^Carranza lost 40 of his 50 aviators, according to Lieutenant Luis Preciado\nde 1.1 Torre, adjutant of the First\nFlotilla   of   the   Mexican   air   service.\n\"Captain Dlez Martinez and I issued a manifesto til Mexico City, declaring that we would not ohey such\norders, which would mean the re-\np\u20ac>tition of the aerial barbarities practiced by Germany upon the towns\nof Belgium.\" Lieutenant de is Torre\nsaid  today.\n\"The towns we were ordered to\nbombard, were Cuernavaca and\nCuautla, Morelos, and other places\nin that region. Some of us, including\nmyself did fly Over the places indicated, but we -dropped our bombs\nwhere we knew ihey would do no\nharm.\"\nThe air strength of the Mexican\narmy consists of about ttO planes. In\naddition the service has about r>5\nmotors, to be used in planes of\nMexican manufacture. A shipload of\n'160-horsepower Italian machines are\nen route to Mexico, according to\nLietttenant de la Torre.\nTe Mexican aviation school, closed\nby Carranza about two months ago,\nwill reopen shortly, according to the\nLieutenant. Seven thousand applications for enrollment have already\n\\ been received, despite the fact that\nrigid entrance requirements, tending\nto make aviation a professional\ncareer,   have   been   established.\nIndependence of\nAlbania Is to Be\nRecognized\nROME. June 30.\u2014Premier Oiollttl,\nspeaking In the chamber yesterday\nreiterated his determination to\nrecognize the i ndependence of AI -\nbanla. A Socialist motion, de?\nrnanding the withdrawal of Italian\ntroops from Albanian territory, was\nrejected.\nwas taken until tomorrow afternoon\nat 1 o'clock, the convention would\nhave a clenr track to begin consideration of the platform, with its sure I\nfight on the wet and dry issue, and\npossibly   some  other   planks.\nBattle on Trinity of Subjects\nThe platform was confined to three\nsubjects: Prohibition, the League of\nNations, and the Trish question.\nVigorous warfare on this trinity, In\nthe committee, faced the Democratic\nleaders, and probably will do so at\nthe convention.\nThe sub-committee, while the full\ncommittee was In recess, worked at\ntop speed all day to finish its tentative draft for the entire committees'\nconsideration   tonight.\nFinally, in order to save time, and\nrealizing that the issues would have\nto be fought out by t,he whole committee, the sub-committee decided to\npass along the three principal problems with only tentative agreement\non the proposed planks.\nProhibition   Mandate\nIn the liquor fight, indications tonight were for exclusion of any pronounced wet declaration, and incorporation of some pronouncement sustaining   the eighteenth  amendment.\nAdministration forces were reported endeavoring to build a situation where an \"administration plank\"\nwould rally a majority. Administration leaders declared the plank would\nhe regarded as \"slightly moist,\"\nthrough a clause criticizing vexatious\nand unnecessary restrictions of personal liberty in prohibition enforcement, coupled with approval of\nPresident Wilson's veto of the Vol-\nsted  law.\nWm. J. Bryan and other \"drys\"\nwent into tonight's meeting, however, girdled to battle for a square\ntoed prohibition mandate. A strong\n'movement to keep all mention of the\nliquor quest ion from the platform\nalso   was  on   foot.\nBitter  Fight\nA long and bitter platform fight\ntonight confronted the resolutions\ncommittee of the Democratic National\nconvention.-when it assembled at 7:30\nto take up the tentative platform\ndraft of Ihe sub-committee of nine,\n\u25a0 headed by Senator Glass, Virginian,\nchairman.\nThe full committee was prepared\nro sit well into the night In the hope\nof reporting the platform to the convention tomorrow afte'rnoon and final\naction being taken In time for balloting oif candidates on Friday.\nof\nthe\nRiddle of Norris Government Support Awaits Winnipeg Returns Solution\nWINNIPEG, June 30.\u2014Belated returns from the constituencies tonight\nhave made no changes whatever in\nthe standing of the political parties\nin the Manitoba elections, and it\nwould seem that Winnipeg returns\nalone can settle the actual resuli.\nThat will he in abeyance for some\ntime   yet.\nThe Liberals continue to assert\nthat their party Jr 10 aheid in the\nsummary, hut they are counting niv-\ntlmistlcally.\nMeantime there are all sorts of\nconjectures of what may Happen on\nthe way of coalitions, but the Nov-\nris government says nothing This:\nparty is being strongly urged to carrv\non until it comes to a vote of confidence in the chamber, and that\nseems to be the most probable COW'S\nIn order to solve the riddle of who\nwill or will not. support the Norris\ngovernment In the coming legislature.\nMeantime tonight all the talk is\nconjecture, and largely based on speculation of the final result In the\ncity, of which there are many interpretations, but nothing tangible\nin  the  way  of offiical  figures\nID IRE\nCATHOLIC BISHOP\nTO TOUR THE WEST\nQURBEC. June .10.\u2014His Orftce'\nMonsignior Mathieu leaves tomorrow\nfor Regina. On his* way he will\nstop tn Montreal till day Friday and\nSaturday and on Sunday the bishop\nwill remain In Ottawa where he is\nto meet delegates and possibly the\ngovernor general. From Ottawa his\ngrace proceeds west, and at Gravel\nfours next week he is to preside over\na meeting of French I'anadians from\nall   parts of  Saskatchewan,\nPoliteness Is the Rule Eeven\nAmong the Roughest of\nSoldiery\nMEXICO CITY, June 30.\u2014(Associated Press)\u2014Courtesy is1 a common\ncommodity In Mexico. No Mexican is\ntoo poor to afford it.\nThe roughest soldier will not pass\none in a narrow corridor without\nsaying \"Con permiso\" or \"dlspen-\nseme\", which are Spanish expressions equivalent to \"exctfse me\".\nThe same phrase is invariably used\nwhen one peson takes leave of another, to which the answer Is \"Pase\nVd\"\nUpon giving a new acquaintance\none's address, it is customery to say\n''At   number street   Is   your   home\ntor office)\" the implication being\nthat the new friend Is to consider\none's home hie own.\nPersons introduced to each other,\nwhen their respective names ar\u00ab pronounced, say: \"Your servant, sir,\"\nor \"Juan Garcia, for the purpose of\nserving  you  sir.\"\nWhen   taking   leave   of   each   other,\nformal    acquaintances   who   wish    to\ncontinue    relations   with   each   other\nsay:    \"1   remain  at   (or  1  offer  my\nself   to   your   service.\"\nObservance, of   these   forms,   which\na    Mexican    rarely    diregards.    is\nvaluable    aid\"   to    \u00bb    stranger    who\nwishes   to   establish   profitable   com\nmercial   or   pleasant   social relations\nin   Mexico.\nCHINESE JOIN BOLSHIES\nAGAINST THE JAPANESE\nHONOLULU, June 30\u2014Siberian\nRussians, arriving at Alexanderovsk,\nSagjialien. say that Chinese and\nKureans ia considerable numbers\nhave joined the Bolshevik forces at\nNikolaev.sk, against which Japanese\ntroops now are operating, acording to\na Toklo cable to the Nlppu JIJI,\nJapanese language paper here. The\ndispatch added that the Chinese and\nKoreans fought with the Bolshevik!\nagainst the Japanese in the two\nday battle tttat raged there several\nweeks ago and that Chinese warships supplied the Soviet forces with\nammunition.\nVILLA BLOWS UP\nMEXICAN TRAIN\nIN CHIHUAHUA\nMEXICO CITY, June 30.\u2014A mixed\npassenger and freight train was\nblown up by Villa forces yesterday,\nbetween ArmdWiz and Las Delictus,\nin the state of Chihuahua, according to newspaper advices received\ntoday. Several persons were killed\nv\\\\d others injured, it was reportel.\nOPPOSES JUDGES\nON ARBITRATION\nOTTAWA. .Tune 30.\u2014During the\nsenate sitting this afternoon Senator\nBelcourt. objected to the practice\nof asking judges to sit on arbitration commissions, complaining that.\n60 per cent of the people of Canada would fall to be satisfied with\nthe judgment rendered hi the Grand\nTrunk arbitration cases, as they had\n\u25a0been dissatisfied with that rendered\nin  the Canadian  Northern.\nHe felt that, no matter how (.'air.\nor just might be the verdict, there\nwould always be a strong suspicion\nthat some members of the commls-.\nsion had acted under some influence\nor other in arriving at their inclusions.\nSenator Proudfoot, while not agreeing that the prestige of Judges had\nsuffered as a result of the sitting\non commissions, stated that the Ontario situation now gave good\ngrounds for contending that Judges\nshould   not   be   arbitrators.\nTwo Judges were now sitting as\narbitrators for the Ontario government, and had been for three weeVrn\nThere was B vacancy on the bench\nand  another  judge  was  111.\nConsequently the ordinary duti-'s\nof four Judges were not being attended   to. '\nKRASS1N GOES\nBACK TO MOSCOW\nLONDON. June 20.\u2014The London\nTimes announces that Krassin, the\nSoviet minister of trade and commerce, will leave London for Moscow\n'tomorrow, in order to consult with\nhis government. The Times advances the opinion that the departure of Krassin indicates a rfipture\nin the negotiations which 'he has\nbeen carrying on, looking to a resumption of trade relations with\nSoviet Russia.\nHAWAIIAN SUGAR\"\nPRICE ADVANCES\nEmpress    Had   Hatred\nDuma and Fear   of\nMonk Rasputin\nWAS JEALOUS OF\n.  THEJttAND DUKE\nSaw Royal Lives Continuous\nStruggle Against Implacable Foes\nLONDt >N. J one 30 \u2014The Manchester Guardian will tomorrow anit\nFriday publish extracts from a\nseries of about IfiO letters written\nby the Russian Empress to the Kra-\nperor during the course of the year\n1916. These, 11 is asserted, were\ncopied from the originals tn ihe\narohlves at Moscow. The Guardian's\ncorrespondent, who was recently in\nRussia, and who obtained, the copies,\ndescribes the general impression of\nthe letters as those of a person desperately attacked, seeing her life ar.4\nthat of her husband as a continuous\nstruggle   against   implacable   foes.\nThree main threats run throgh th*\nletters, nesires an almost hysterical\naffection for the emperor, namely,\nfear of exposure of Rasputin, the\n\"Mystic Monk.\" who was finally assassinated, hatred of the Duma and\neverything democratic In Russia, and.\nwild Jealousy of Grand Duke Nicholas, t\nThe letters show that the dominating personality at Tsarskoe Selo\nwas not the emperor, hut the empress.\nIS CENTER FOR\nHONOLULU. June.30.\u2014With fields\nof sugar cane stretching for miles\nacross the island from the outskirts\nof the city, Honolulu likely will be\npaying 26 cents a pound for its retail sugar In the near future, say\nthe   grocers.\nThe dealers say they have been\nbuying sugar at 24.25 cents a pound\nand they are allowed two cents\nprofit by the United States attorney-genera r a  order.\nBucharest  Destined  to Become Hub of Wireless and.\nAirplane\nPUCHARRST. June 30\u2014vAssociated\nPress by matt)\u2014 This city will be:\ncomes a huge communication center\nfor south Europe, both for wireless\nand aviation, if present French pltthsf\nare carried out. The Marconi Company has offered to build a huge\nwireless station in Roumania. which\nwould handle business from the\nEast as well as local ^business to the\nwest, but it appears likely that the\nRumanians will either continue their\nown wireless service in connection,\nwith Kifel Tower and other stations*\nin France, or else permit the French\nto establish  such a  station.\nBoth British and French firms\nbacked up by their governments, are\nB11 em pt ing t o a rra n ge a complete\nairplane service. The French propose ro connect Paris, Vienna, Budapest, Bucharest, and Constantinople,\nin a general way. with branch services including Serbia. Bulgaria and\nGreece, (t is hoped later to extend this service into  Russia.\nFrench army aviators began last\nsummer tn establish a tentative post\nservice between Constantinople and\nBucharest, Connecting with the express train to Pari*. This service\nis being now developed, but owing to\nits great cost, it Is felt necessary to\nhave each of the governments over\nwhose territory the airplane service\nwill be conducted, tn contribute a\npro-ratS share to maintain the service. It is estimated that the cost\naverages $100 par each hour fht>\nmachine is kept   in the air.\nIn view of tti\u00ab- poor conditions oC\nthe railway systems in south Europe.\nbusiness men have generally given\ntheir   support    to   these   plans.\nDue to the mountains of Central\nand Southern Europe and waters of\nHi*- Black Se^ the Adriatic and the\nMediterranean, pwctfcaJ aviation is\nconstantly severely tested.\nFlying into Russia does not pre-\nsenl the same difficulties. Since the\narmistice hugh Herman machines\ncarrying passengers and contraband\nmoney and other articles of a speculative natur*-. have made frequent\ntrips hetween Moscow and Berlin.\nNow and then, these machines conle\ndown but it is generally because o't\nmnt in t ion hi*-. During the Bolshevik\nregime in Hungary, frequent trip*)\nwere made to Mo&cow, though tote\nav.i iters had to cross the Carpathian,\nmountains   from    Budapest.\nProm a passengers' point of view,\nsuch trips do not present any difficulty, .once the passenger has overcome the ordinary apprerienslons of\ndanger. This apprehension is much.\ndiminished by the new limousine type\nof machine, where the passenger\nsuffers neither from cold nor win4\nnor motor noise.\nThe establishment of these wireles*\nand airplane nimnuniicatlons are a>\ncontinuance of the I rench policy of.\nkeeping Eastern and Western Europe\nconnected, it is due to the French\nthat since the armistace, express\ntrains have been run hefween Paris\nand Warsaw, passing the intervening cities of Prague and Vienna, and\nalso hetween Paris and Bucharest,\nand finally between Paris and Constantinople These three which ara\nKnown as the Warsaw. Rlmplon and\nOrient expresses, were firsr under\nFrench army control, and are now\nunder commercial control of the In*\nternational Sleeping Car Company,    A\n fFaSi S\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEW9, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1920\n      *\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhaw ths Travalllaa Pupils May Obtain aupsrlsr Accammsestlsa\n\u2022 ERVtCI   UNEXCELLED\nCarta T.bl. D'H*ta\n\u2022PECIAL  SUNDAY   DINNER  (1J(\n\\\nINCOMPARABLY THE FINEST TEA ROOM IN B.C.\nOpsn   Dsfly 11 a.m. t*  Midnight Musis and   Dsnefnf\nThs Latsst Eundsas. los Cstd Drinks snd loss\nAflsrnssn Tsa  (t p.m. is 6  p.m.), Us\nDEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES\nAppeal to Women lor Oklahoma Man; Cherry Pleads for\nLate Ambassador to Germany; Pennsylvania Attorney\nGeneral Held Up as Champion of Americanism\nHsadquarttrt  Fer All Travelling  Men, Mining Msn snd  Tourists\nEUROPEAN  PLAN -        -        ROOMS, Il-Og  UP\nHTJMB-H.  Black    Victoria;\n-r\u2014 _._,        Rich\nards, Victoria; D. 6. T. Roohfort. Lt.-\nCol. -J. W. Warden, Fred J. Erskine.\nJulius King, 0. H. Haakin, Vancouver;\nRobert Bfhns, R. Bloin, Noble Blnnfl\nand wife, Miss F. J. Blnns, Trail;\n8. R. Moore, New Denver; W. O. Alexander, Mrs. Nell Tattrle. Mt\u00abf> Marv\nBantin. Handon; K. O rah am, William\nHicks and son, George Wright and\n\u25a0on, Slocan; Mrs. R. D. Shrotn, Ymlr;\nA. J. Ronneberg, Boulder Mill; A. J.\nKrapple, Medicine Hat; W. R. Long,\nW. A. Hall, N, Telford, C. Maxwell, S.\nTing. A. Bruce, H. Bathle, K. Oewar, 0.\nHmbree. B. flklvlngton, H. Pttnne, T>.\nDewar. Creston; E. H. Bice, V. H. McLean,   Balfour;   F.   T.   Ferguson,   8.   Q.\nHill, Miss Hill, Calgary; E. F. Johnston. Hall; C. E. Severns, J. M. Me\nVey, Slocan City; Mrs. C. I. Archibald,\nSybil Archibald, Phyllis Archibald,\nEsther Ogden, Salmo; Miriam Frash,\nBernardlne Holdredge,, Helen Shepherd, Burnell R. Ford, E. F. French,\nLeona Hume, Chautauqua; T. Lloyd\nDavies, Salmo; W. M. Hurrt, Tom Wagner, Chewelah, Wash.; A. A. Webb, N.\nE. Webb, SUverton; Norman Cralgte,\nEric Cralgle, Creaton; M. M. Ingram\nand wife, Spokane; H. W. Chittenden,\nNew York City; M. Butorac, Miss Bu-\ntorac, C. F. Relmann, Trail; Eddie\nFrlgaist, Winnipeg; Jules Levlne, Win\nnipeg; Mrs. A. V. Carlson; W. P. Cal\nhoun,    Nakusp.\nSubstantial progress was made\nIn putting forward candidates, and\ntheir    sponsors'    summaried    respect-\n<\u25a0 merits In trenchant introductions,\nthe principle of which are given\nhereunder;\nWsll   Llghtad    Sampla   Roama\nAmerican    Plan\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNelsons Leading Hotel\nW.   H.   SHORE,   Propriater\nA Home for Those Away From Horn*\nMost  Comfortably  Furnished Rotunda in the  Interior\nOUR   COZY   TEA   ROOM   NOW '\"\n_0PEN FROM 10 A.M. TO 12 P.M. m\nMusic and  Dancing  Saturday  Night 9  to  12\nEverybody Welcome\nOWEN OF OKLAHOMA\nSAN FRANCISCOO, June 30.\u2014Described as a man whose record would\nappeal to the women voters, the business interests, the farmer, the laboring men, and to all lovers of\npopular government, Senator Robert\nL, Owen, of Oklahoma, was placed\nin nomination today before the Democratic National convention by D.\nHaden   Linebaugh   of   Muskogee.\nMr. Linebaugh declared that \"party\nlines were binding more loosely\" and\nthat the need of the hour was \"a\ncandidate whose record and whose\ncharacter will inspire the confidence\nof progressive-thinking, forward-\nlooking men and woman, without regard  to  past  party  affiliations.\"\nWe  offer a man,\"  he  said,  'who\nIn'three great campaigns has shown\nSTRATHCONA\u2014MiSB  W.   H.   Hunt, Bessie   Forin,  Edmonton;   W.   A.   Pear-\n-   \u2014    ._._     .,._ .   \u00a3    j\u00a3_   Cartwrlght,   Vancouver;   Thos.   S.   H.   Hlncott\nStanfield,   Mrs.   G.    Htanfield\\   Grand    Forks;    H.\ncy,  Grand   Prairie,   Alta..\nand   wife,  Winnipeg;   Miss J.\nana  wue,   \"iinii|i.h.   *.._, _.    __.\nKns.be,   Deer   Park;   Jessie   L..   Rich,   Grat \"Falls;    Sarah    F.    Dickinson,   Great\nFalls,   Mont.;   Geo.   Pratt,   Spokane;   A.   J.   Dunne tt,   * \"    \"\"     ---*\nson,  Regina;  Alex   McNeil,   Moose   Jaw;   Joe Deprette\nFalls,   Mon\nson,   Reglr\nEdmonton\nDunnett,   Kaslo;   J.   H.   Haslam   and\n\"   Micone;  Dr. A.  Forin,\nmeasure. His speeches In support\nof thS Peace treaty of our great\npresident, Woodrow Wilson, were un\nsurpassed in  the senate chamber.\nOklahoma presents you a man\nwho would be acceptable to the business men of the country ThV~bus-\nlness men and' bankers accord him\nthe credit above all of her men In\nAmerica for the great benefits of\nthe   Federal   Reserve   act.\n\"We present you a man acceptable\nto the farmers of our land. The\nfarmers know he put through the\nsenate the great Farm Loan act\ngiving1 the farmers access to money\non long time. He worked for the\nGood Roads act, for the Agricultural\nExtension act, for the Extension of\nthe Parcel Post, the Rural Routes,\nand the Postal Saving? Banks.\nFriend of Labor\n\"We present you a well known\nfriend of labor, whom the working\nmen would strongly support. His\nauthorship of the child labor law and\nactive support of all progressive labor   legislation   shows   his  intelligent\nhimself    capable    of    attracting    fhe tappreclatlon   of   the   problems   of   la-\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\n>    \u2014 \u25a0\u25a0\nEuropean and  American PUa\nKm* Heat In Every Boom\nA. liAPOtNTK, Proprietor.\nQUEENS\u2014Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Oliver,\nTrail; R. Grey, Trail; Mac Main, city;\nR. Bell, Crescent Valley: Roy\" Harris,\nTrail; John Prlng, Taghum; W. L.\nHall, Spokane; J, Graham, Sqwma,\nWash.; W. E. Fltzsfmmons. Spokane;\nF. Ecke, C. White, SUverton, H. J.\nBrauer, Hall; J. May, Taghum; J.\nDaniels, Parks Siding; Frank Chat-\nwell, Boulder Mill; J. Standridge, Salmo; Fred Johnson. Spokane; Mr, and\nMrs. R. Lake and family. Benton Siding; Mrs, A. Bremner and children,\nSalmo.\nThe Standard Cafe\nMO Baker Street, Nelson, B. 0.\nOPEN DAT AMD NK1IIT\nII   to   l:M,  Special   Loach,   Me\n1M\nNew Grand Hotel\n\u2022It VERNON ST. EAST   ...\nOaifortable Room*, Hot and Cold\nWater.    Dining  Room  la\nConnection.\nRates   11   and   Up\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ.  A. ERIOKSON,  Prop.\nOppnalte Poat Office\nEoropeaa and American plaa.\nBOOMS   SOo   OP\nOccidental Hotel\nRon hy Canadians, All White help.\nRoom and board, per month $40;\nweek (10; day (1.&0. Meals SOo,\n\u25a0erred family style. Beds 60c. AU\nyon can eat and a good, clean bed\nto sleep In. Give us a trial. Auto\n\u25a0seels all trains and boat*.\nED.  KERR,   Proprietor,\nWhere to Spend a Holiday\nENJOY   A   VACATION   AT  THE\nHOTEL GRAND\nNAKUSP\nFrank Hughes & Sen. Preps.\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lakes.\nSplendid fishing and boating. Nice\nrooms, good meals, pleasant surroundings. Splendid sample room\nfor travellers.\nsupport of progressive men and worn\nen who are not affiliated with the\nDemocratic party\nAppeal to Women\n\"We present you a canc^\/ate who\nwill appeal with extraordinary power\nto the eighteen million women voters\nIn the United States. Who, when\nall other candidates were silent, Indifferent or opposed to woman suffrage, was their valiant champion\nand the chosen leader of the woman\nsuffrage forces in his state. We\npresent you a man who has always\nheen for those things which women\ndeeply desire. If there he a man In\nAmerica who is entitled to the support of the women of America, that\nman  l\/Senator Owen.\n\"Oklahoma presents you a man\nwho without bigotry has been the\nfaithful champion of prohibition in\nhis own state and throughout the\nnation. One who can be relied on\nto faithfully executive the Eighteenth\namendment.\n\"We present you a man who has\nproven beyond doubt his achievement\nand fidelity to sound principles of\ngovernment, and who has for years\nstrenuously and successfully labored to promote the peace, happiness\na*nd prosperity of our people ty\nmaking our government, and all of\nits agenices, truly responsive to the\npeople's   will.\nSupporter of Democracy\n\"We present you a man who has\nbeen a faithful leader and supporter\nof the great legislative program of\nDemocracy. Senator Owen has supported every Democratic policy, every   progressive   act   and   every  war\nbor,  and his earnest, desire  to  solve\nthem   wisely.\nWe offer you a great Democrat,\nan old Virginia Democrat, born and\nreared In the Old Dominion. A\nWestern Democrat who for thirty\nyears has been the acknowledged\nleader of the Democracy of Oklahoma. A man whose thoughts,\nwords and acts, have helped to give\nstability to capital; have strengthened and steadied the arm of labor; protected children; brought\nwomen Into their rightful heritage;\nmade the nation sober and brought\nthe government nearer to the fireside of the citizen; a man who would\nmake    a   people's    president\"\nGRAND   CENTRAL   \u2014   H.   M.   Beef,\nCrescent Valley; James R. McDonald,\nBenton Siding; R. C. Bell, Crescent\nVallev; R. McDonald, city; Tu Ling;\nJ. Dee), Ferguson; C. C. Picklie, Grand\nForks; I. Dlngen, Vancouver; Ben Sal \u2022\ninonson, Hall; Wm. Jacob, Donnelly,\nAlta.; W. E. Stembatt, Rossland; C. L.\nHall; L. Thompson; P. D. -Vk-Naughton,\nYmlr; J. .Stanflrige, Salmo; D., Johnson,\nErlckson; J. Legoboka, Crescent Valley; Geo. McPherson: John Lang,, Can-\ntlegar; J. A. HarknesS? Vancouver; E.\nL. Darrah. W. Bathurst, J. McHardv,\nM. Boldie, W. Lemieux; *'W. McLellan\nJohn Hoffstad. Hall.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nM.   *.   MADDEN,   Proprietress\n(TEAM   HEATED\nOnr. Baker and Ward 8ts\u201e Nelsoa\n\\ Kootenay Falls Hotel\nSOUTH  SLOCAN, B.C.\nI Near famous trout Ashing\npool and Bonnlngton Falls.\n| Within easy reach  by automo-\niblle or train from Nelson, Trail\nand Kossland via Brilliant Cutoff. Stop-over from coast train\nto Slocan points.\nWHERE THE FISHING 13 GOOD\nOUTLET  HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishing,   Boating.   Bathing,  Qalf,\nTannis   Csurtt\nFishing   Tackla8 Suppliad.   Oraeary\nStort in Connection\nW. A. WARD. Pr.p.\nRstsa Rassonabls   .       Qsad Msala\nMADDEN\u2014Tom Ballk; N. Doiry; J\nMcDonald, Creston; J. R. Curran: H.\nF. Whldden; G. P .Dickenson, Cran-\nbrook; J, M. Scott, Trail; James H.\nRyley, Noel H. Ryley, Queens Bay;\nW. Stewart, North Port: C. McPeak,\nTrail; W. Wllford; C. de Sadelee,\nBoulder Creek; W. Fraser, Ymlr; C.\nCaton, Salmo; P. Smith, California\nmine;   A,   McLeod   and   wife,   Trail.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\naOU.    MA1J.ETTE,    Proprietress.\nA Hums for ths World at 11.(0 a\nDay.     Mrst-clsas   Dlnln*   Room.\nComfortable Boom*.\n(It Veraoa at.    Near Post Offlos\nf\nPaul Sylvester. Benton; John Wolhl,\nHowser: Sid Burns; J. P. Brouilette.\nYmlr: B. A. Fielding, Trout Lake; J.\nM. Scott. Trail.\nTREM0NT HOTEL\nF. NILSON, Prsp.\nBAKER   STREET\nFurnish****   Rooms   by   Day,\nWeek sr Month\nTBJBMONT\u2014N. Caruk; Brie Fors,\nRowland; J. Lundberg, California mine;\n. , Constantino, Ymlr; Carl Llbuk,\ngHHflr Spur; G. Anderson, Boulder\nMill; O. W. Oberg, Erie; Mik Conatan-\nIUW.   Aspas, 1\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel'\nARROW   LAKES,  B. C.\nUnder   entirely    new    management\nRenowned throughout the west\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urinlc Conditions,   Metallic   Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nIn  a  most beautiful climates.\nLarge hot water Bwlmming; pools\nEnglish   chef   and   staff\nAmerican plan, $3.50 and up per\nday, $24 per week.\nH. A.  HEFFER,  Manager\n\u2014   Mill.lr.l'l\nLiniment\nhas   given\nMtitfaction\nfor  three\ngenera tioni..\nIt quickly relieve* sore\nthroat.bronchitls, neu r-\nahjia, sciatica and any\nkind of pain.;\nAn Old Reliable Remedy\nMrt.S. Fawcett, Hamilton St., Colllngwowf,\nOut., writes,\u2014Minard's Liniment surely is an\nold reliable remedy. 1 always keep a bottle\nin the house and have recommended it to\nquite a number of my friends, to whom it gave\ngreat relief. In most caaei it wa* used ,is a\ncure for rheumatism,\nMiiY&ut'cTs\nLiiunvoiYf\n....Yarmouth     NovaScoiia,\nGERARD'S CAREER  REVIEWED\nSAN FRANCISCO, June 80.\u2014\nPraising President Wilson's attitude\non the Peace treaty and terming\nSenator Lodge's keynote speech at\nthe Republican convention at Chicago \"a mere hymn of hate,\" U S.\nG. Cherry today placed the name of\nformer Ambassador1 James W. Gerard In nomination for the presidency\nbefore the Democratic National convention  In  session   here.\nMr. Cherry pleaded for the nomination of a safe and sane man, a quiet\nman, but one of clear vision; a man\nwho has been tried in the great furnace of the times, and he cleamed\nthat James W. Gerard had all these\nqualities.\nMr, Cherry's  address follows;\nAmerica's War Effort\n\"Things have been going on in this\nworld, during the last six years,\"\nsaid Mr. Cherry; \"very different from\nthe things which had occurred be'\nfore. Some thirty-five or forty mil\nllona of men were hurled in deadly\nconflict Battle fronts were organized sufficient to reach across this\ncontinent from ocean to ocean. The\nmen in the trenches, in the reserves,\nand in the training camps, were the\nmost ca pable, the most active, and\nthe most fit for civil pursuits, possessed some thirty nations, engaged\nIn the appalling conflict.. These nations quickly i u rned away from\nthe processes and purposes of peace,\nthrew all their physical, all their\neconomic, and all their moral powers\nand resources Into the most stupendous combat of alt time. The great\nwar   was   in   Europe.     It    extended\nHotel Menus\nWs print Hotel Menus, sttatr\nwith complete menus or with\nthe different headings and blank\nspaces tor typlui In th* bill of\nCar*. \/     A   tm\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nThs Horns of Qooo Prlatlaa\nNslasa, p-C\nWell considered criticism Is wholesome and commendable But\u2014don't\nbe a growler\u2014 Orlllla  Packst.\nAnoint Irritations With\nSoothing Cuticura\nFirst bathe with Cuticura Soap and\nhot water. These super-creamy\nemollients not only soothe, but in\nmost cases heal annoying rashes,\nirritations, eczemas, etc. Nothing\nso insures a clear skin and good hair\nas making Cuticura Soap and Ointment your every-day toilet preparations.\nSaa\u00bb ahawaa wkh\u2014l an,\nWhen Folks\nQuit Coffee\nbecause of cost to\nhealth or purse, they\nnaturally drink\nInstant\nPostum\n\"There's a Reason\nTo Make a Tart Salad Jell\nJiffy-Jell is for salads as well sa\ndesserts Get the \u2022lime-fruit flavor\nand it will make you a tart, frees\nsalad jell. Mint flavor makes s\nmint jell.\nThe fruit flavors in Jiffy-Jell art\nfruit-juice essences in vials\u2014a bottle in each package They are real\nfruit, and the flavor is abundant.\nNo artificial flavors-\u2014no saccharine.\nTrv loganberry or pineapple fls-\nvor for a dessert, and learn what\ndelicious dainties Jiffy-Jell brings\nto your tsble. A package will servs\nsix people.\nJiffy-Tell with its natural fn*\nflavor costs much lass than jam or\nmarmalade.\nquickly to the continents of Asia,\nAfrica, of Australia, of North American and of South America, Every\ngreat nation on earth waa a belligerent. Sometimes, In every truth, it\nseemed that western civilization, and\neastern civilization as well, waa being wiped out. There was doubt and\ndiscouragement, but yet despair, In\nthe faces of stout hearted men and\nwomen everywhere. Then this world\nconvulsion subsided. \u00a3'he armistice\nwas signed. The stupendous conflict\nended And then the nations, and\nthe men and women within the nations, began the re-organlzatlon of\norder; and began the organizotion\nter civilization, than the one that has\nso suddenly and so ruthlessly been\ntorn apart and out of which this\nworld disaster had Issued.\nCivilization Undsrmindsd *\nThe   price   which  had   been   paid\nwa  appallng.     Ten   millions   of   the\nbeat lives were gone.    Forty billions\nof   national   debts,   resting  upon   the\nbelligerent   nations   before   the   war\nbegan,   had   leaped   to   two   hundred\nbillions  of  debts.    Property  destruction  beyond  the  estimate of experts\nhad been sustained by Individuals, by\ncommunities and nations alike. Waste\nand   destruction   had   been   piled   up\nlike  mountain  upon  mountain.    Lit*\nerally,  not figuratively, thousands  of\nvillages   and    hundreds    upon   hundreds of cities and towns had gone\nout of existence as to their inhabitants, as  to their places  of business,\nand as   to their  home.    A  pint   of\nwastefulness,    of   extravagance,   and\nof recklessness had     perforce, taken\nold of the  human mind  everywhere\nThe economic, the moral, and the religious  world   had  received   a   shock\nbeyond any present-day power of understanding.    The  customs  and   processes of highly civilized and organ-\nizezd life, had been largely changed.\nGreat nations, even Russia with her\nhundred and thirty million souls, and\nthe four autocratic nations, composing Middle  Europe,  with  their hundred  and  seventy-five   million   souls,\nbegan   to   totter,  and   to  fall,   Prov-\nerty,   sickness,   disease,   helplessness,\nstarvation,    chaos,    was    abroad    in\ngreat, areas,  formerly a part  of nations  possessed  of   the  highest  civilization. *\nA strange doctrine of government,\nsometimes and in some places called\none thing;, some times  and  in some\nplaces,   called   another   thing,   began\nto  take   hold   of  the  minds  of men\nand women, in the these places where\nsorrow,  mourning, suffering, and despair   prevailed.     The   followers    of\nthis doctrine,   as  it  more  and  more\ntook form, fell In behind the leader\nship.of a few fanatical and danger\ns  men  who  advocated,  and  today\nare   advocating,   that   all   our   governments,   all   our   institutions,   and\nall our clvllzation as now constituted\nmust   be   overthrown,   and   that   an\nInternationa Soviet system must rule\nthe world, and with these few men,\nas new found autocrats, at the head\nof It all.    And this doctrine, like an\nepidemic, has been spreading through*\nout   villages   and   counfrysides   and\ntowns,   and    great   cities,   and   has\ntaken possession of great  nations as\nwell.\nVersailles Peace Treaty\n\"But  sfrong  men  and  women  did\nnot    despair.      Great    nations,   like\nAmerica,   Great   Britain,   France,   It\naly,   Japan,   and     some     thirty-odd\nsmaller   nations   were   no  tdlsmayed.\nA   treaty   of   peace   between   all   the\nbelligerent  nations, so drafted as  to\nultimately    include    all    the    neutral\nnations   as   well,   was   drawn   up   In\nfive   months   of   conference   at   Ver-\nsalles,   and   was  solemnly  signed   by\nall the belligerents, and many of the\nneutrals\u2014forty-odd   nations   in \"all\u2014\nand  has   been  accepted  and ratified\nby  nearly   all   of  them,   except  this\nnation\u2014thirty-eight    nations    In    all.\nAnd  the  basic  principle  upon which\nthis greatest of all human documents\nIs  builded.   the  motive   and  purpose\nthat  runs  through  It all,  the  thing\nthat makes it *mick with life and vl-\ntalty, the heart of and south, of It all\nis, that this sort of thing shall never\noccur again;   that war shall be die\npensed with so far as human Institutions   can   so   provide;   that   all  future   international   disputes   shall   be\nsettled  and adjusted by processes of\npeace   and   upon   principles   of   justice,   and   reason,   rather   than    by\nforce.    This   document,  greater  than\nMagna  Charta;   this   document,  carrying   Into   the   relations   of  nations\nthe principles of the  Declaration of\nIndependence;  this document, extending and applying to all the nations\nof the world the fundamental  principles of our Constitution;   this document,  extending  to all hemispheres\nthe principles of the Monroe Doctrtne,\nfirst  applied  by  this  nation  to   ths\nWestern hemisphere, solemnly signed\nby   all   these     nations     assembled\naround  the   council   table,   was   laid\nby  the  president  before  the  senate,\nFor   ten. months  that  body  debated\nit,   quarreled   over  minor   detail   re\nlating   to   its   application,   and   then\nformally   rejected   it     And   at   the\nChicago  convention   of our  opposing\nnational   political   party,   In   a   so-\ncalled keynote speech,  but which  in\ntruth and in fact was a mere hymn\nof   hate,   Senator   Lodge   boastfully\nsaid:     \"We   have   stopped   Mr.   Wilson's   treaty,  and  the  question  goes\nto  the  people,'  unaware  of,   or  oblivious  to  the  stupendous  tact'that\nthis   Is   not  the   treaty  of  any   one\nman, or of any one nation;  that it\nis the treaty of heroic France;  that\nit  is   Belgium's   treaty*   that   it   Is\nItaly's treaty;  that It is Great Britain's    treaty;    that    It    Is    Japan's\ntreaty;   that it Is the  treaty  of all\nthe   forward-looking   nations   of   the\nworld,   both   great   and   small.    Mr.\nLodge,   and   bis   co-conspirators   had\nDOMINION DAY\nSTORE CLOSED ALL DAY\nSmillie & Weir\nLadles' Wear Specialist*\ntheir way In the convention of their\nown party.   But their way is not our\nway.     Humanity   has   a   new   hope,\na  new aspiration.    Not In vain was\nall thla suffering endured, and these\nsacrifices made.    A new aera In the\naffairs  of men   and   of  nations  has\ndawned.   The moral leadership of the\nworld,  so recently  held  by_ America,\nso   ruthlessly   thrown   down   by   the\nsenate, will soon be taken up again.\nAlms   for   Ideals\nSuch   are   the    times   and    conditions;   this   the   state   nf   ffl*ts:   nnd\nthese,   the   relations.     personal.,   notional    and    international,    in    which\nour puny is here and m>w assembled,\nto utate its plans  and  purposes,  and\nto select ijs candidates.    Those tlmen\nand   these   condition   have   been   calling  for.  and   do   now   call   for,   the\nezerclse of the   highest   purposes and\nmotives by men,  by women, and] by\nnations, all alike     Not Isolation, not\ngreed,   not   profit,    not   mere    party\nadvantage, not personal ambition, not\npetty   politics,   must   be   the   motive\nof the times.   A broad vision, a high\npurpose,   and    commendable    aspirations  must  control.    The   chief   aim\nand  purpose  of   it  all  must  be the\nre-organization    and    the    re-adjustment of all our affairs, personal, national,   and   international,       upon   a\nhigher and   better   plane,   than   ever\nbefore  existed.     This   must   be,   this\nIs,   the motive   of  the  hour.\nMeet Problems 'With Courage\nOld political issues are no more.\nNew problems and purposes issuing\nout of the new order of things are\nat hand. Our party, with more than\nbIx score years of achievement, written in Its record, and none mora illustrious, than the seven years covered by the administrations of President Wilson, Is looking to the future, Is courageously meeting every\nproblem of the present. It clearly\nsees and understands the duty of\nthe hour. It has already in this convention drawn up and stated the\ndeclaration of its alms and purposes.\nIts platform does not equivocate,\nmauds a safe and sane man, a quiet\ndoes not dodge any vital Issue; Is\nnot' afraid;   does   not compromise.\n\"And now who shall be chosen?\nWhat manner of man shall be selected to lead tn the great campaign before. i us, and to serve, not\nonly his party, but the nation and\nhumanity itself, after the fourth\nday of next March? America de-\nraan, but a man of clear vision, or\nsteady aim, and of resolute purpose\nIt demands a man of tried and\nproven ability; a man who has been\ntested in the great furnace of the\ntimes, and has been tempered, like\nsteel. Of such men we have more\nthan one; nay, we have many. Lei\nus put one of them at the top of\nour ticket, and one of them at the\nbottom of our ticket, and then let us\nhold up our platform, so that he who\n;*uhs may read; and the men and\nwomen of America will do the rest,\n\"And who, of all our candidates,\nmoat richly possesses these qualifications? The answer is: That\nman who lives in the great state\nof New York; that man whose wide\nbusiness experience makes him at\nhome in any state in our Union; Chat\nself-made man; that man of clean\nlife and of splendid character; that\nquiet man, but man of tried and\nundaunted courage; that student,\nscholar, statesman, lawyer, judge\nof , the supreme court of the state\nof New York; for four years am -\nbassador to Germany, at a time and\nunder  conditions   more   trying,   more\nLADIES' WHITE CANVAS\nSHOES\nWhite  Canvas  Oxfords.   In   low   and\ni,ouis heel* $3. 84. 87.50\nWhile   Cnnvns   Pumps,   white   metal\nbuckle       84.25\nWhite Canvas Boots,  low and Louis\n>>\u00ab\u00bbis   84.50 to 89.50\nChildren's Canvas  Mary Janes,  sises\n5 to 1%   81.50\nSlses 8 to n<i    $1.95\nsizes n to 2 82.65\nC. ROMANO\nTHB IHOt MAM\nseverely testing the temper and the\ntalent of men, than ever before occurred. He administered at Berlin\nwithout a flaw, without a fault, with\ngreat common sense, with high courage, the affairs of this nation, and '\nof Great Britain, and of others of\nour allies, committed to his keeping,\nafter the war began,\nHeld   as    Hostage\n\"When   diplomatic    relations   were\nfinally   broken   off   between   America\nand  Germany;   when this  same ambassador   was   made   a   prisoner   of\nGermany,  an  unheard   of  piDceeding\namong civilized nations; when he was\ncut   off  from   cable,   from   wireless,\nand   from   mall   communication   with\nhis   own  government;   when  he  was\nnotified  that  he   was  being held  as\na hostage for  the safety  of  treacherous   Von   Bernstorf,   and   for   the   !\nsafe return of  certain  German merchant  Bhips   to   German   ports,   then\nheld   in   American    ports;    when   a\ndraft  of a  proposed   treaty  between\nthe   United   States   and   the   German\nimperial government was laid before\nhim, wherein all these demands were\nto  be acceded to;   and finally, when\nhe   was   told   to   sign   tor   America;\nagain, quietly, without noise or bluster,   but  plainly,   and    courageously,\nhis   answer   was:     'Prisoners   under\nduress  cannot  make  valid   contracts.\nAmbassadors who have been recalled\nby   their  governments   havo   no   authority to sign treaties.    But even if,\nas   a   prisoner,   I   would   enter   into\nalid  contracts  for   my   government;\nand even if my power as ambassador\nhad not already ended I would stay\nas \u25a0 prisoner in  Berlin until  Hades\ncovered  with   Ice  before  I  would\nsign that, or any other similar instrument with  your government.'\nLet us choose such A man as our\n(Continued on Page Four.)\nShow Cases\nBANK, STORE and\nOFFICE FIXTURES\nARCHITECTURAL    WOODWORK\nChalmers Cabinet Works\n1424-1434  Charls,  Strsst,\nVANCOUVER,   B.C.\nWrits For Estimatss\n\"The Ittit ad. you ran for us netted\nFifty-Eight Replies\n(Signed) RIGGS & WILDER,\nBoulder Mill, B.C.\nThis is the kind ol testimony to the value of\nDaily News Want Ads.\n'which we receive by nearly every mail.\nIf you want help, or a position or have\nsomething to sell use the\nCLASSIFIED COLUMNS\n r\n\u2014\nm\nQ\nTHJJ KELSON DAILY, WSWS,  THUF.S5AY MOBNING, JULY 1, 1920\nw\u00bbn\nLegal Notices\n\u00bbOTXO\u00bb\n'kbi'loe 't\u00bb hsreby given that In accordance with an amendment to the\n\"Townsite Proportionate Allotment\nA$t,\" passed at the last session of the\nLegislature, any person holding an\nagreement, for sale from the Crown\ntn respect to the purchase at Auction\n0| Town or City lota or lands within\ntSe site or suburb of a town, payment'\nfpr which has not been, made In full\n\" who wishes to obtain a proportion-\nallotment of such land in consld-\nlon of the monies already paid,\nJt file application in that respect\n_ or before the lat day of September,\n\u25a0UL on which date tho privilege of\ntaining a proportionate allotment\n\u25a0U cease and any person in arrears\npayment under an agreement of\n_    as. aforesaid    failing    to    make\n3'plication as stipulated will there-\ntor t>e debarred from taking advan-\ntatt** \u00b0r suc'h privileges and will be\n\u2022robjert to the fulfilment of the Urms\nof the sale and the provisions of the\n\"Land Act'* governing overdue purchase money in connection with which\napocial attention ,is drawn to the\nnotice appearing In the current Issues\nof this paper. _\nGEO.  R- NADEN,\n,   Deputy   Minister   of   Lands.\nVioAort'a.   B.C.. , ,,aa^\nMining and Markets\nSILVER EASES     E\nE\nNEW   YORK,   Juno  30-\nmestic,  99 H;   foreign. 91-.\nLONDON.   Juns  30.\u2014Si]\nINDEPENDENCE\nCELEBRATIONS\nNEW YORK, June 30.\u2014The stock\nexchange will he closed Saturday\nand Monday over the fourth of July,\nthe board of governors an nounced\ntoday.    '\nLAND BBOXBTBY ACT\n(Section   134)\nIB tho Matter of Application Ho. \u20ac876-1\nand in the Matter of Koto 6, 6, 7 and\n8, Block 12, Addition A, Helton City,\nProvince of British Columbia, Map\n349.\nTake potice that the above application has been made to register James\nHenry Jones as owner in fee of the\nabove lands, and for the issue to the\nsaid James Henry Jones of a Certificate Of Indefeasible Title thereto, and\nthat In support of such application\nthere has been produced a conveyance\ndated 28th January, 1920, from Ashley\nBtubW the said Ashley Stubbs having\nacquired the said lands under conveyance dated 6th January, 1910, from\nJohn  E.  Amiable,  whose  title  was  de-\nJlved under a tax sale deed dated\nlstpeceinber, 1906, from The Corporation  of  tho  City of  Nelson.\nAnd on investigating the title it\nappears that prior to the 12th day\nof July 190G (the date on which the\n\u25a0aid laofcls w\u00abra sold for overdue\ntaxes) yhu were1' the registered aud\nassessed   owner   thereof. ''\nAnd further take notice that registration will he effected In pursuance\nof he above application and a Certificate of Indefeasible Title to the said\nlauds, Issued to the said James Honry\nJones after the lapse of 45 days from\nthe Service upon you of this notice\n(which may be effected hy publication\nhereof as hereunder .directed), unless\nyou shall take and prosecute the proper\nf.roceedings to establish your claim,\nf any, to the said lands, or to prevent such proposed action on my part.\n. Dated at the Lund Registry Office,\nNelson, B.C., this 10th day of February,   A.D.,   1920.\nE.   S.   STOKES,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nTo Frederick C.  Innes.\nI direct service of this notice to\nbe made by publication thereof, twice\na week for two weeks in a newspaper\ncirculating   In   NcIboii,   B.   C.\n, E.   S. STOKES,\nDistrict   Registrar  of  Titles.\n(8528)\nWINNIPEG     GRAIN    QUOTATIONS\nOpen   High   Low   Closo\nOats-\nJuly\nOct.\nDec.\nBarley-\nJuly\nOct.\nFlux\u2014\nJuly\nOct.\nMONTREAL., June. 30.-13gjgs firm,\npotatoes steady, butter unchanged,\ncheese  easier.\nCheese\u2014Finest.   28^. .\nButter\u2014Choicest    creamery.    M    1 o\n7- ' J\nEggs\u2014Fresh,   55 \u00bb\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag. car lots, %AM\nto   $4.75.\nLAND   BEGIHTBJT   ACT    .\n(Section, 13T)\nla the Matter of Application Ho. 7347-1\nand la the Matter of Lots 1, 2, 3, 4\nand 6, Block 63, Addition \"A\", Nelson\nCity,' Province of British Columbia,\nMap 349.\nTake notice'that the above application has been made to, register Elizabeth Smith as owner In fee of the\nabove lands, and for the issue tp the\nsaid Elizabeth Smith of a Certificate\nof Indefeasible Title thereto, and that\nIn support of such application there\nhas been produced a conveyance dated\n25th March, 1920, from Clara St.\nLawrence, the registered owner of\nsaid lands by virtue of a conveyance\ndated 18th August, 1914, from Frank\nNealon McLean, the said Frank Nealon\nMcLean having acquired\" the said\nlands under conveyance dated 22 nd\nJuly, 1914, from The Corporation of\nthe City of Nelson, the said Corpor\nation having derived title under a tax\nsale held on the 7th September, 1910.\nAnd on investigating title it appears\nthat prior to the 7h day of September,\n1B10 (the date on which said lands\nwere sold for overdue tuxes), you were\nthe registered and assessed owner\nthereof.\nAnd further take notice that regis.\ntratlon will be effected In pursuance\nof the aboVc application and a Cer\ntlflcate of Indefeasible Title to the\nsaid lands. Issued to the said Elizabeth Smith after the lapse of 45 days\nfrom the service upon you of this\nnotice    (which    may    be    effected    by\nfubllcation hereof, twice a week for\nwo weeks, in a newspaper circulating\nin Nelson, B.C.), unless you shall\ntake and prosecute the proper proceedings to establish your claim, If any,\nto the said lands, or to prevent such\nproposed   action   on   my   part.\nDated at the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B.C., tli is 16th day of June,\nA.D..   1920.\nE.   8.   STOKES.\nDistrict   Registrar   of  Titles.\nTo  Frederick C   limes. (8527)\n.122%\n.100%\n.   94%\nIf\n.147\u00bb4\n.402\n.406\n124\n101\n94%\n164\n148\n402\n406\n122%\nn\nn\n160\n145%\n399\n402\n123*\n99%\n93 tt\n160%\n146\n40}\n403\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nJimmy Wilde ha* fought hla way\ninto Ihe ranks of the very bent\npeople.\u2014Hamilton  Times.\nLegal Notices\nLAHD   ACT\nKelson   Land   District,   District   of\nKootenay.\nTake notice that (!. A. Potter, of\nNelson, H.C., lumberman, intends to\napply for permission to lease the following   described   lands:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. W. corner of T. L. S0H85., Thence\nten chains north; thence ten chains\nwest; thence ten chahiM nouth; thence\nten chains east to point of commencement.\nGLENN   ALLEN  POTTER.\nMav  7.   1920. (7821)\nWATBB    HOTXCB\nDiversion   and   Uso\nTake notice that (J. 'V Pool in. whose\naddress Is !'. O. Box 264, Nelson, RO,\nwill apply for a license to take, and\nuse 10 c.t'.a. of water out of Evans\nCrftek, nucf 5 c.f.s. from* the North\nFork of Evans Creek, which flows\nsoutheasterly and drains into Slocan\nLake about four miles above Slocan\nCity. '\nThe water will be diverted from the\nstream at a point about (see sketch),\nand will be* used for fluming and\npower purpose upon the land described as appurtenant to lumbering operation   of   the  applicant.\nThis notice was posted on the ground\non   the   22nd   day   of   June,   1920.\nA copy of this notice, and an application pursuant thereto mid to the\n\"Water Act, 1914,\" will be filed in\nthe office of the Wuttpr Recorder at\nNelson,   B.C.\nObject Ions to the application may\nhe filed with the said Water Recorder\nor with the Comptroller of Water\nRights, Parliament Buildings, Victoria,\nB.C., within thirty days after the first\nippearance of this notice in a local\nnewspaper.\nOU1LLAUM CHARLES I'OCLIN,\nApplicant.\nThe date of the first publication of\nthis   notice   is   June   21. (8599)\nNEW YORK, June 30.\u2014 Belief that\nmoriVtary conditions,are likely to improve within the next six months,\nand reports that several European\ngovernments expect early reduction\nof their obligations to the United\n\u25a0Hates government, rendered a degree of stability to the stock market\ntoday\nThis more hopeful feollng found\ndepression In the day'o broader operations, although the volume of business was not appreciably in excess\nof the week\" low records.\nConservatit* brokers and commission houses, for the first time In\nseveral weeks, sounded a note of encouragement, supporting their change\nof altltudo with liberal -purchase of\nBclected  stocks.\nEquipments and steels 4^'ere most\nfavored, oil and chemicals and shippings also advanced, together with\ndiverse spcicaHies at extreme gains\nof 1 to 5 points. Ralls and utilities as represented by tho Express\ncompanies made the most substantial advances.\nProfit taking and the steady advance of call loans from their opening rato of nine per cent to 15\nper oent just before the finish, served to reduce many gains to minor\nproportions. Holes amounted to 325,-\n000 Hhares.\nRailroad utilities, and Industrials\neased variably, but Liberty and international issues wero steady on\nsipahVr dealings! * Total sales par\nvalue,   $11,500,000-\nOld U. S. bonds wore unchanged\non  call!\nClosing   Quotations\nHigh   Low   Close\n93'A      92%       92%\n1920\nMontreal     9102,213,539\nToronto          79,350,471\nWinnipeg   ....:     $3,W7,775\nVancouver         14,962,871\nOttawa      i.     6,300,005\nCalgary          5,469,833\nHamilton     ,      5,227,062\nQuebec           4,846,502\nEdmonton            3.444,247\nHalifax          4.104,357\n1-omlon          3,084,925\nRegina\t\nBt   John          2,637,264\nVictoria           2.2J9.404\nSiiHknloon    ...\nMoose    Jaw\nBrandon   \t\nRrantford\nPort  William\nU, S  Hteet Com.'..\nChlno Copper     29\nUtah   Copper      6li%\nC.  P.  R H2U\nWillys Overland   ..19\nStudebaker      71%\nGeneral  Motors   ...  25%\nPierce Arrow    51 %\nI.   M   Marine     31 %\n28%\n18%\n70%\n24\n51\n30%\n29   '\n66%\n112>4\n18%\n70%\n24%\n51%\n81%\nCANADA BONDS\n\u00bb'ie\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT\n(Section   134)\nIn ths Matter of Application Ho. 7351-1\nand in tho Manor of Lot 13, Block\n,'D\", Addition \"A\", Helson City, Fro-\nvinco of British Columbia, Map 349B.\nTake notice that*the above application lias, been' made to register James\nRichard Humphrrs as owner tn fee\nof the above lands, and for the Issue\nto the said James Richard Huinphris\nof a Certificate of Indefeasible Title\nthereto, and that in support of suck\napplication there has been produced\na conveyance dated 20th October, 1919,\nfrom George Scott, the registered\nowner of the said lands by virtue of\na conveyance dated 20th February,\n1914, from Harry Richardson, the Bald\nHarry Richardson having acquired the\nsaid lands under a conveyance dated\nIftth October, 1913, from The Corporation of the City of Nelson, the\nsaid Corporation having derived title\nunder a tax sale held on the 27th\nJune,   1910.\nAnd. on investigating the title it\nappears that prior to tho 27th day of\nJune, 1919 (the date on which the said\nlands were sold for overdue taxes),\nyou were the registered and assessed\nowner   thereof.\nAnd furthr take notice that registration will be effected in pursuance\nof th\u00bb above application and a, Certificate of Indefeasible Title to the\nsaid lands. Issued to tho said James\nRichard Humphrls af^er the lapse of\n45 days from tho service upon you of\nthis, notice (which may he effected\n~\\y \u25a0ubllcatlon hereof, twice a week\nor two weeks in a newspaper circuiting In Nelson, B.C.), unless you\ntall take and prosecute the proper\nnroceedlngs to establish your .claim,\nif any, to. the said lauds, or to prevent such proposed action on my p\u00bbrt\n, Dated at the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B.C.,'this lSth day of June,\nA.0.,  1*20.\nE.   S.   STOKES,\n,District   Registrar   of Titles,\nto Frederick C   limes. (8626)\nMINERAL   ACT\nCertificate   of  Improvements\nNOTICE\nDictator\" mineral claim, situate ,tn\nGreenwood ' Mining Division of\nOsoyoos, district, on a tributary of\nKettle River, about three miles west\nof \u2022 the Rampolo mineral claim on\nLightning   Peak.\nTake notice that 1, A. H. Green, acting as agent for John Glover, Kree\nMiner's Certificate No. 16554-C, intend,\n\u25a0sixly days from the date hereof, to\nHpply to the Mining Recorder for a\n*Cert:lficate of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining a Crown Grant\nOf the above  claim.\nAnd  further  take notice  that  action.\nider section 88, must be commenced\nbefore the Issuance of such Certificate\nof   improvements.\nDated this 25rd iluy of April, A.D.,\n1920\nnam a. h. green.\nHi\n1\nloor:\nTHE COUHTY COURT OP WEST\n-\u2022EN AY, XOLDBH AT NELSON\nHick Wolrk, Plaintiff, and Inland Mining Company, Limited, Defendant.\nUnder and by virtue of a Warrant\nof Execution, issued out of the above\nCourt, dated the 24th day of June,\n1*20, and to me directed, I have this\nd&y seised the' following goods and\nchattels, and will offer for sale, a t\nfay office, Court House, Nelson, B.C.,\non Friday, the Snd day of July, 1920,\nat  the  hour  of   noon.\nTerms   of   sale,   CASH.\n, Machinery,   Tools,   Goods   and   Chat-\n(els   on   mining   property,    150    cords\nwood, etc., etc. - , t\n. (List can be seen at bherlff's Off lev\nNelson, B.C.)\nDated at Paulson, B.C., this 25th day\nOf  June,   1920.\nJAMES  H.   DOYLE.\nSheriff of Sotitft Kootoiia\/.\nLAHD   ACT\nNelson   Land   District,   District    of\nKootenay.\nTake Notice that Alexander Leitli\nand Herman Ernest Dill, of Nelson,\nB.C., occupation, accountants, intend\nto apply for permission to lease the\nfollowing  described  land:\nCommencing at a post planted- or\nthe north shore of the West Arm ot\nKootenay Lnke, 350 feet south of the\nN.W. oornor of sub-lot 4, D.L. 4780,\nG.l, West Kootenay District, H.C\u00bb,\nthence south two hundred, feet, into\nthe West Arm of Root enn y I .ake\nthence east five hundred and seventy\nfeet; thence N. 27 foot 10 inches; W.\ntwo hundred and sixty feet, to the\nsouth corner of said sub-lot 4; thence\nfallowing the shore linn of the said\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake in\nwesterly direction to the point of\ncommencement, and containing t\nand .eighty-seven hundredths acres, nlore\nor  less.\nALEXANDER LEITH.\nHERMAN    ERNEST    DILL.\nPer H.  E.   Ditf.\nDate.    May   8th.   1920. (R2H1I)\nMONNTREAL.   June   30\u2014The   fol\nlowing   were   the   asked    prices    lor\nbonds   at   tho   close   of   the   market\ntoday:\nWar loans\u20141925, 94%: 1931, 92%;\n1987.   H%. %\nVictory\u20141922, ,98: 1927, USVai 18,37.\nW0; 1923. 98; 1933, 91 Wl 1924, 98;\n1934,   95.\nCHICAGO CORN\nCHICAOO. Jun* SO\u2014Month end\nliquidation hrought about decided\nweakness In grain prices today. Corn\nclosed heavy Hi to 1(4 cent net lower, with July 172% to 173 and September 168% to 161 Oats lost % to\n1%. cents and Provisions 12% to\n14.\nBANK CLEARINGS\nW1NNIPEO. June 30\u2014The following are the bank clearing\" for the\nprincipal titles of the Dominion for week ending and month ending\ntoday; .\nWeek    Ended   June   30 Month Ended June 30\n1,831,387\n1.383,045\n569,014\n1.119.908\n661,357\n1919\nHM.7tt,149\n71,479,825\n29,603.959\n10,045,247\n7.551,380\n6,390.472\n5,768,759\n5.(40,479\n2,409,588\n5,079,816\n3,162,983\n3,301,668\n2.501,150\n2,408,078\n1.S7J.656\n1,341,822\n563,357\n690.136\n620.852\n1920\n(612,104,118\n4\u00ab9,!84,720\n182.749,256\n73,870,344\n46,680,127\n30.214,716\n22.859,435\n32.315,236\n21,742,949\n, 24,586.070\n\u2022 19.K7.708\n18,746,168-\nMjftjM\n12,478,128\n9.626,882\n7.298,373\n3,390,494\n6,480,618\n3,984,840\n1919\nS549.038.173\n344,708,342\n161,400,638\n44,846,525\n89,889,758\n25.642,734\n24,774,871\n23,178,314\n16,070,379\n20,358,844\n13,113,791\n16,326,886\n13,422,502\n9.540,496\n8.369,371\n6.567,372\n2,547,912\n3,157,066\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, June 10\u2014T&e totals\noffered for sale In the yards yesterday amounted In 392 cattle, 413\nhogs and 141 sheep. Disposition of\nstock was as follows: Local packers\nabsorbed 24 calves, 90 cattle, 402\nhogs and 31 sheep. Local butchers\nncounted for 53 calves, 62 cattle, 97\nhogs and  S3  Hlicep.\nSteers\u2014Choice. 11400 to 115.50;\nfair  to  good,   110.00   to   S13.00.\nButcher heifors- Choice, $11.00 to\nS12 00;   fall-   to   good,   i860   to   310.00.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice, $10.50 to\n$11.50; fair to' good. $8.50 to $10.00;\nmedium, $7.00 lo $98.00; dinners' and\ncutters,  $3.50  to  $5.00.\nBulls\u2014Good. $6.60 to $7.50; common,   $5.00   to   $6.00.\nOxen\u2014$8.00 to\"$9.00; medium, $6.00\nto  $7.00..\nFeeders\u2014Choleej $1175 to $10.25;\nfair to good,  $8.00  to $9.50.\nStockers (steers and hellers)\u2014\nChoice, $7.50 to $850; fair to good^\n$6.00   to   $7.26.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $13.00 to \u00bb16 00;\nKood. $9.00 lo $12,(111, common, $6.00\nlo $8.00.\nSheep and lambs- Good lambs,\n$11.00 lo $16.50; good sheep, $1100\nlo $12.50; common sheep. $7.00 lo\n$8.00.\nHogs\u2014Heleets, $I85\u00ab, lie.ivles.\n$16,50 In $1700; sows. $1450 lo\n$15.50;    stags,    $12.50.\nTORONTO, June :lll- Cattle r\u00bb-\nei'lpts 16H Market slow and draggy\nwith butcher steels weaker by\" 25\ncents.\nCalves\u2014Receipts, 826, market slow\nand draggy,  with  lops around  $17.50.\nSheep\u2014Receipts, 1157; sheep and\nLambs piarkel held stondy, yomiings\n$10.00' In $12.50.\nHogs\u2014Receipts, 2186; market holding   steady.\nI\nAnother Unit Being Installed; Mine Crew of Sixty\nMen Is Employed\nAcennlins to word hrought in from\nPrinceHH creek, tho Florence mine\nIs operating full blast, and the raan-\nugctnen t ha h comme n red the con -\nstructinn of another unit for Jhc power plant.\nA tqta] crew of about 60 men Is\nemployed, the mine operating two\nshifts and the concentrator one\nshift. About 150 tons of myifeed Is\ncoming down daily, and it is expected the mill will ho able to ship\n300  tons of concentrates  a month.\nIn the workings, it is said, there is\nabundance of ore in sight, and both\nthe Fisher and Replacement veins\narc looking splendid.\nPUNTAS ARENAS\nHAS PROHIBITION\nBUENOS AIRES. June 25 (Amc-\niated Press)\u2014From, Punta Arenas,\nwhich Is at the bottom of the world,\nwhere ships eall In weathering the\nStraits of Magellan to leave supplies\nfor the 35,000 Inhabitants, cornea a\ndispatch, saying that the maritime\nworkers of the port have resolved\nthat In the future, they will not\nunload any liquor containing alcohol.\nThe antecedents of this prohibition\nmovement are not disclosed, but the\ndispatch aays 1 \"This resolution has\ncaused serious damage on account\nor having been taken without warning the liquor of- merchants.\"\nSAYS BRITISH NAVY\nMUST BE SUPREME\nWELLINGTON. N.Z.., June 24.\u2014\n(By Associated Press.)\u2014Premier\nWilliam F. Massey declared In a\nspeech at an intertainment given by\nthe Savage Club for the Prince of\nWales, that the British Navy \"must\nbe  supreme at all  costs\"\n.\"I was one of those who at Paris\nthought the League of Nations would\nin a fc*v years be strong enough to\nexercise a profound influence in preventing war,\" he continued, \"I must\nadmit now that the League of Nations Is a fgreat disappointment\nWe look around and see two great\npowers, Japan and tho United States,\nbuilding bigger and more powerful\nship than ever. These.powers clearly\ndo not believe that the League of\nNations ran end war.\n\"It would be calaminous If when\nwar comes other nations shmild possess more numerous and more powerful ships than Great Britain, whose\nEmpire  depends  on  her  sea  power.\"\nINSURANCE\n\u2022TOCK8 J   RENTAL*\nREAL   ESTATE\nD. ST. DENIS\nPHONE   !\u2022 80S   WARD   ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nCP\nlUROPtf\nFrom Quebec To\nVictorian   July f> Liverpool '\nEmp, France  July 14   Liverpool\nI'r. Fred, Wm. July 28 Liverpool\nFrom   Montreal To\nI'retorlan   July 9 Glasgow\nTunisian   July 9  Havre-London\nMetagaroa   July. 10.. .Liverpool\nCorstcan  July 1? Liverpool\nScandinavian    July 23    Southampton-Antwerp\nMellta   July 24 Liverpool\nPreparations Being Made to\nUnwater Workings; Con-\n. nect Tunnel and Shaft\nTORONTO BOARD\nI\nIt AND   ACT\nNelson fcand District,, District of West\nKootenay.\nTake notice that I. Wiebe, of Re-\naata, B.C., lumberman, intends to apply for permission to lease the following  desortbod   foreshore;\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe North East corner of Blook \"O\"\nof the subdivision of Lot 5547, as\nshown on plan deposited In tho land\nregistry office at Nelson, B.C., and\nthere numbered 758. Thenpe Basterly,\nlu a line with the Northerly bound-\nry of the said Block \"d\" a distance\nof ten chains. Thence Southerly,-parallel to the Easterly boundary qf Lot\n(647 a distance ef fifteen chains more\nor less. Thence Westerly, a distance\nof ten chains to the South East corner\nBlock .\"E\" of said- Lot GG47. Thence\nNortherly, along the Easterly boundary of Lot 61)47 a distance of fifteen\nchains' more or less to point com\noiencement Containing fifteen acres,\noe   the  same   more or  less.\nISAAC  WIEBE.\nMa,)   i, J&ffl, \\imt\ndB0wi>>i*i* - ft* ^^dJ\u00abJSPh>\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK, June 30.\u2014Sterling exchange M $3 89% for 110 day bills and\n$3.94%   for demand.\nBar silver domestic. \u00bb9',4 foreign 91.\nCanadian dollars  87.00,\nBelgian francs 9*3-\nFrench francs 9.43.\nlta|lan lire 6.8H.       .     .\nMETAL MARKET\nNEW YORK. Juno 30\u2014 Copper\ndull: electrolytic, spot, June and\nJuly, 19; August and September, 19\nto 19i4. Iron steady, prices unchanged. Tin easier; spot, 48.50;\nJune, 4S.35; July, 47.50. Antimony,\n7.75 \"\n. Metal exchange (|tiote.s lead nominal; spot offered at 8.00. Zinc,\nquiet; East St. Louis delivery, spot,\n7.26   bid.\nLondon\u2014Spot copper, \u00a386 Us; futures, \u00a389 lie; electrolytic, \u00a399; futures. \u00a3105. Tin, spot, \u00a3?46 5b; futures, \u00a32C1 5s. Load, spol, \u00a338^\nfutures, \u00a334 5s. Zinc, spot, \u00a340\n10s;   futures,   \u00a342  10s.\nMONTREArUST\nMONTHEAL, Juno 30.\u2014National\nBreweries with a turnover of 2ti,803\nshares, furnished the speclucular part\nof today's trading ou the Montreal\nstock   Hxchange.\nIt Is hollered that interests are\n.sacking control of llm stock, and are\nin the market to purchase, hence\nIhe Issue went up il'^ points to a\nnew high record of H7|\u00a3, after which\nactive profit taking brought the\nprice to 66, representing a net gain\nfor the \\lay of 9 points.. The preferred moved in tho opposite direction,  losing  2%   points   at  92.\nAtlantic Sugar opened strong, and\nmovtMl up to a new high of 138,\nfrom which price there was roac-\nUtfn lo 133 unchanged The preferred also was higher and held its\ngain   better\nSpanish River issues were strong\nat tho opening. h#t closed .weaker\nwith the common ikiwn a shift!I fraction at 101%. and Ihe preferred, from\nwhich the stock dividend ul 42 per\ncent came off, selling at 103 % to\n106* with the close at 104, representing a net loss of 14 point. Total\ntrading\u2014Listed. 36.392 shares,   bond%\nTORONTO, .rune 30.\u2014Uoth Canadian stock exchanges surrendered in\nlarge measures yesterday to the boom\nIrt national breweries, but none so\ndominating an this stock have had\niipasmodlc   movements   of   late.\nOn a' turnover of several thousand\nshares here it swept forward all day,\nuntil 1105 shares changed hands,\nmostly in 25-share lots. Opening at\nIt sold soon afterwards aa low\n571\/!. and then commenced to\nmount, going up to 65.\nAt one time there was an advance\nof lour points between two sales on\nthis markel. The close was at 85Hi\nIhtiy making, a net gain of >4 point\nhere\nTrading was scattered othefWhw,\nwith   a,  renewed   tendency   lo   firm-\nSALVATION MAJOR\nCOMES TO THE WEST\nOperations on the Evening Star\nproperty on Dayton creek, near Slocan City, which were suspend'J in\n.the Winter when the crosscut to gi\\e\ndepth bad reached an advanced ftagft\nhave been resumed, by Manager Wi'-\nMam Moore. A few men were placed\nat work at the end of the week, and\nMr. Moore took out additional crew\nycslerdaji from Nelson. Andrew\nSutherland, provincial boiler inspoJ-\ntor, went out with the party, to In-.,\nspect the boiler that will ^eaarate\nthe steam for pumping out the\nshaft.\nThe face of Hie iTUSsent is now\nsdmevihere near the line of tho shaft,\nand below It, and as the r.\u00bbik Is\nvery soft, it is considered desirable\nto unwater the workings before attempting to connect the tunnel and\nshaft. The workings radiating from\nthe shaft* are unite extensive, and\nthe task of unwatering Hiem Will\nconsume  time,\nHugh Sutherland, of Winnipeg, for-\nmorly' executive agent of the Canadian Northern, is the 0 vuer of '.he\nEvening Star, and also of t\\li bejfih-\nboring Silver Nugget, wluci is also\nslated   for   development.\nWINNIPEG, Juhfl 211\u2014 Major Peacock, who has been acting editor of\nthe Canada West edition of th\u00bb- War\nCry since it commenced publication,\nhas been appointed territorial secretary of tho western states for the\nyoung peoples department, with headquarters In Chicago. Major Peacock\nhas been a resident of Winnipeg for\neight years and Is well known\nthroughout the west In connection\nwith the work of the Salvation\nArmy.\nBOHEMIAN TASTE\nSURVIVES THE WAR\nFLORENCE,   Jum\nPreasl-^Franvi   Leha\nPuccini    sayjug    tlM\npresentation    simc\n\"Boheme\" at Vienna\nW    (Associated\nhas  written   to\nt    the   first   re-\nthe    war   of    his\nlias been one of\nhis greatest successes.\nThe jiudlences are the largest that\nhave ever packed the theatre ami\nIhe  profits are destined  to charity.\nThe\nbest way to overcome cowardice is to do something daring, Ask\nthe grocer for a nickel's worth of\nsomething.\u2014Kingston   Whig.\nThe NELSON IRON WORKS, Ltd.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nMining, Sawmill and General\nMachinery, New and\nSecond HandH\nSEND USJfOUR INQUIRIES\nSlocan Mines Declared\nFair\nNOTICE\nThe nndemigned Mining Companies propoie remmlng work on their\nraipeotlve properties on May leth\nunder a wage scale agreed upon\nbetween themaolvee and the Slocan\n^ranches of the International Union\nof Mine, Mill ft Smelter Workers,\nWhich wage scale provides for an\nIncrease of 75 centa per day la\nwagea and an Increased deduction\nof 25 cents per day for hoard at\nthe boarding houiea of the companies.\nFor particular* respecting ached-\\\nnle of wages and conditions of em- t\nployment, apply to representatives\nof the International Union of Mine,\nMill & Smelter Workers, or to the\nrepresentatives of the said Mining\nCompanies.\nThe Bosebery Surprise Mining\nCompany.\nThe Hmuhler-Cariboo Mining Company.\nThe Noble Five Mining Company.\n.The   Cunningham   Properties.\nThe   McAllister   Mining   Company.\nThe   Carnation   Mine.\nThe   Lincoln   Mine.\nThe Standard Silver-Lead Mining\nCompany.\n(Signed)   A.   8H1LLAKD,\nOn   huh all   of   the   International\nUnion of Mine, Mill & Smelter  Workers.\nMine\nOperators!\nTake  Advantage of  Snaps\nOffered at Greenwood, B. C. \u25a0\nThere is still available\nPUMPS, CRUSHERS,\nCOMPRESSORS,   HOISTS\/\nCARS,  LOCOMOTIVES,\nMOTORS,  CONVEYORS,\nELEVATORS,\nMiscellaneous Equipment\nRepresentatives    at    Greenwood   authorized   to   transact\nbusiness.\nGet our list. We may have\njust what you need and the\nprice will be right. Call\nGreenwood on the phone for\niniormation or price.\nCanada Copper\nCorporation\nLIMltED\nSales Dept.   -   -   Allenby, B.C.\nLocal Office - Greenwood, B.C.\nMM>\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOf Canada, Limited\nOfflM*, (malting  anj  Riflnlng   D.portm.nt.\nTRAIL,   BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPMAtHMBM OF OOLD, 8ILVM, COPPER AND LEAD ORES\nPr<\u00abu..r. .\u00ab Gold. Silv.r. Copp\u00bbr. Blu\u00ab.ton\u00ab, Pig L..d and Zlm\nT*r>\u00bbN*c BRAND\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither With Your Name or\nWith the Words\nDairy Butter\nAccording to the Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers who epll butter\neither to stores or prl-\nVRtely are required to have\nk properly covered in a\nwrapper on which MUST\nappear in prominent letters\nthe words\n\"DAIRY    BUTTER\"\nThe faet is rIso emphasized\nthat all butter in such\npackages must be of the full\nnet weight of sixteen ounces\nand in detViult'of name a fine\nOf from $10 tn $30 for each\noffen.se in imposed. Whey\nbutter must he so labelled\neven when mixed with dairy\nbutter tod dairy butter he\ntaina Ita label ev#n though u\nbe mixed with the creamery\nproduct)\nIf you have your own name or\nbrand on- your wrappers you gain\nyaluable advertising for your butter. It causes*people to ask for\n'the   same   brand   again.\nPrices\n$2.50\nPRINTED     WITH     NAME     OF\nFARMER  OR   BRAND  NAME\n200. Paper nnd\nPrinting  ....'....\n600,   Paper  and (PQ fTA\nprinting \u2022 ^  \u00ab50.l)U\n1000, Paper and d\u00bbC \/W\\\nPrinting     UkJ.UV\/\nPRINTED   WITH   WORDS\n\"DAIRY    BUTTER*\n100\ntor   .\n260\nfor    .\n6(10\ntpt\n1000\nfor    .\n60c\n$1.25\n$2.00\n$3.50\nWE   CAN   SHIP   IMMEDIATELY   ON   RF.CtlPT   OF   ORDER\n\/\/ wrappers are to be mailed include postage when\nsending money orders\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE  HOME  OF  GOOD  PRINTING\nBAKER STREET NELSON, B.C.\n Fftgil\nCht gailtj Sfetos\nPsMUhM rr.rr morning newt Sundij bT Th. N.ws PublUhlng Cora-\nmr.  Limltid,   N.lson.  B.  C\u201e Cauda.\n\u25a0mala*** letter, should b. addressed and check, and money ordsr* mad.\n(anal, to Th. Nam Publlahlng Companr. Limited, and In no out to Indl-\nTldaal  m\u00abnb.r> of tho  euff.\nA\u00ab*\u00abrtlalng rata carda and ABC. sut.m.nts of circulation mailed\n\u2022a rsatnat or mar b. aeen at th. offloa of any adTartlatng agencr racog-\n\u2022M V th. Canadian Press Aaooclatlon.\n\u25a0umuilutton   rates:     By   mall   (country), SO cents per month; IB per year.\nOutsld* Canada, a month,  76c; a year, $7.50.     Delivered.   76c  per   month:\nfor ate months; 17.50 per year, pay-able In advance. _^\n\u00bbt\nabmbsr  Audit  hnn  of  OlrcmUUo*.\nTHURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1920\nThe Dominion of Canada, 18674920\nCanada today celebrates its 53rd birthday as a Dominion\nnow the most powerful and populous of the daughter.nations\nWhich with the mother country make up the British Empire.\nHalf a century is a short time in history, but it has been\n\u2022 period of remarkable development for Canada. Before confederation British North America was divided into provinces,\neach a separate colony, if we except the make-shift union of\nUpper and Lower Canada, each with its own tariff, its own\nsystem of criminal and civil laws, its own postal service, its\nown telegraph service\u2014each divided from its fellow British\ncolonies by almost the same commercial and political barriers\nas divide foreign countries. Yet all were British, all possessed\ninterests in the main identical, none could well progress without\nthe others, none could suffer without harm to the others.\nBut in spite of the enormous advantages to be gained by\nconfederation, great difficulties had to be surmounted before the\ncame almost entirely from thinkers and farsighted statesmen,\nunion could be brought about. The impetus to confederation\nwho labored against the apatjiy and in some cases the active\nopposition of the electorate, In fact, it was not until confederation was practically accomplished that general public support\nwas obtained. To John A. Macdonald and George Brown in\nOntario, Sir George Etienne Cartier and Sir Alexander Gait\nin Quebec and Dr. Tupper in Nova Scotia does Canada owe\nparticularly the accomplishment of confederation in 1867. But\nfor the foresight, the statesmanship, the unselfishness in sink,\ning personal differences, and the optimism of these men union\nmust have been postponed until it had been literally forced on\nthe country by events.\nIt was in truly prophetic vein that Sir John A. Macdonald\n\u2022poke during the fight for confederation when he said:\n\"When this union takes place we shall be at the. outset\nno inconsiderable people. And a rapidly increasing population\u2014\nfor I am satisfied that under this union our population will\nincrease to a still greater ratio than ever before\u2014with increased credit\u2014with a higher position in the eyes of Europe,\nwith the increased security we can offer to emigrants, who\nwould naturally prefer to seek a new home in what is known\nto. them as a great country, than in one little colony or another\u2014with all this I am satisfied that great as has been our\nprogress in the last 25 years since the union between Upper\nand Lower Canada, our future progress, during the next quarter of a century, will be even greater.\n\"And when, by means of this rapid increase, we become a\nnation of eight or nine million inhabitants, our alliance will be\nworthy of being sought by the great nations of the earth.\"\nBritish Columbia did not enter confederation until July\n20, 1871, when it became a part of the Dominion of Canada as\na result of the agreement made by Sir John A. Macdonald\nunder which a railway was to be constructed to connect eastern\nCanada with the Pacific seaboard. That railroad was the\nCanadian Pacific, the construction of which not only provided\nthe only means under which a true union of all Canada could\nhave been effected but also brought about the initial development of the interior of this province.\nToday Canada has become all and more than the Fathers\nof Confederation foresaw.   Bound to the mother country by\nties, far stronger than steel, which Macdonald, Brown,\nCartier, Tupper and their confreres recognized as fundamental\nfib the future growth, prosperity and security of federated\n^Canada, this Dominion has developed into a great nation, with\nrtormous industries, possessing the respect of the world.\nTWfcNTY YEARS AOO TODAY j\n(From the Tribune, July 1, 1\u00bb00)\nFor the first lime in the history\nlot Kaslo a woman has been elected\nKhuol   trustee.    The   new   trustee   is\n|Jars.   Livingstone.\n...\nCaptain   Gore   has   returned   front\nNakusp   whiter   he    tvent   to    take\narge of the steamship service dur-\ntbe excessive high water.\n...\nJ.  W.   Stewart  will   start  work at\nlohce    on    the    construction    of    the\nP. It. line between here and Five\ntfile   point.\nTEN YEARS AGO' TODAY      I\n|tFrom the Daily News, July 2, 1910)\nB.   F.  Mcintosh,   of Fernie,  is  a\nguest at the7 Hume today.\n...\nThe water has declined two Inches\n- the 48 houru ending last evening.\n...\nThe Daily News has now extended\n| iu circulation to Fort George.\nBIRTHS EXCEED  DEATHS\nBirths in the registration area of\nthe United States, which covers about\nM per cent of the country's estimated population, during the year\n1*11 exceeded deaths by S4.4 per\nStatistics for that year just\nby the census bureau,\n\u2022daw a total of 1,161,641 births IB\nthe territory included in the registration area, which la a small de-\noompared to 1117, while the\n1,018,520 show a alight In-\naimuw. Of every lot infant* born\nduring mi, the figures show ten\ndied _ before reaching the age of one\nHear. A factional decrease over\nHIT. Mortality rates among male Infant* was It per sent greater than\nthat for female Infanta. The birth\nof 111: pain of twin* and 147 sets\n* triplet* wire reported,\nYAQUI TOM-TOMS\nWORRY MEXICO\nMCXICO CITY, June 30.\u2014Once more\nthe monotonous but ominous \"tomtom-torn\" of the Yaqul Indians is being heard outside the uoulines of\ntiouoruu.\nUenerul iJlutarco Eliuu Culles, provisional secretary of war and marine\nlor the new revolution, la taking with\nhim more tnan a thousand ot \"80-\nnora's linear1 on his ItillU-mile trip\nfrom Agua I'rieta to Mexico City to\nassume the duties of his new uttice.\nIhe strumming of the Yaqui drums\nhas long been a cause ot uneasiness\namong many of Mexico's other soldiers. Bearing the reputation of being a fearless and ferocious fighter,\nuie lauul has frequently been said\nto be able to put his enemy to flight\nby the mere sound of his burro-sKin\n\u2022tambor.\"\nThere Is another and less sinister\nside, however, to the life of a\nYaqut soldier. He carries his home\nlife with him to the battlefield. His\nwife, his children, his birds, all form\npart of his Impedimenta.\nWhen not In action, the Yaqui\nwarriors do nut present formidable\nfigures. They may be dlstlnguisheu\ntrim, other tribes chiefly by a peculiar copper hue, and the band of\nbright red they wear around their\nhats. ' The routine of their camp\nlite is quiet and orderly.\nThe Yaqul Aid Is reared in an atmosphere to wat. Should his father\nfall in battle, the boy picks up the\nancestral rifle and begins the realization  of  his martial destiny.\nCHINESE MEDAL FOR\nCHICAGO COLONEL\nPEKING, June 26 (Associated\nPre**)\u2014In recognition of his service* aa the head of the Inter-Allied\ntechnical board, President Hsu Shih-\nchang has decorated Colonel John\nF. Stevens, of Chicago, with the\nfirst daaa Wen-hu or Literary Tiger\nMedal.\nAn  acre will  produce  about MM\npound* of indigo.\n*HB NELSON; DAILY XEW3, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1,192IJ\n**P\"\nTRIBUTE TO\nfCot>tlnu*<1 from Pac* f>\nnominee for the first place on the\nticket, and then another such man\nas our nominee for the second place\non our ticket, arid through 'them, and\nthrough our platform, throw down\nthe challenge to the opposing political party. With such nominees upon such a \"platform we are\nready  for the fray.\n'In behalf of the great state of\nSouth Dakota and In pursuance of\nthe Democratic presidential primary\nIn \u25a0 that state, I nominate for president of the United States, James\nW Gerard of New. York. Nomli.au\nhim, and America will finish the\nJob.\"\nPAUMEU FOR AMERICANISM\nSAN FRANCISCO, June 30.\u2014Hailed as a \"new Navarre; his lance that\nof jaw; his shield that of justice,\"\nAttorney-General A. 'Mitchell Palmer\nwaa formally nominated today for\nthe Democratic presidential candidacy\nby John H. Blgelow of Hazelton,\nPennsylvania.\nTrue Americanism must be on\nguard,\" - Mr. Blgelow said. \"No foe\nwithin and no enemy without must\nimpair It or diminish It\nWorld Menace Subdued\n\"The hosts that we sent abroad in\nthe years of our great confllt performed their prodigies of valor and\nwrought their noble conquests to the\neternal glory of the country. By their\nforce and by their prowess the\nmightiest menace to the world's democracy was subdued. The militant\nspirits brooding over the bloody battlefields of France and Flanders were\nconquered, But the menaces to free\ngovernment were not banished. They\nstill rear the hydra-head of anarchy\nand revolution. Some gather In the\nsilence of the night within the gates\nof secrecy, pthers take up the venal\npen or by the art of speech ,spr<Md\ntheir pernicious doctrines. They\nprey upon Ignorance and long established hatred of every form of\ngovernment. ,\nNot Mere Mouthpiece\nThe dangers are not distant; the\nfears are not mere fancy. They are\nliving, breathing things and alwa>\u00bb\npregnant with disaster. Therefore\nyour candidate must be more than*\nthe mere mouthpiece of your policies.\nHe must be the embodiment of your\nfreedom and the exemplar of your liberties. He must be the intrepid defender Of your Institutions, a courageous crusader In the cause of liw\nand order. Above all, he mutt be\nthe ardent advocate of Americanism;\nand the Democracy of Pennsylvania\nhas commanded me to present to you\nhis  candidacy\nIn the exciting time through\nwhich we have passed in recent jK-ars\nhe has shown all ot the qualities of\nleadership.\nRepublican  Corruption\n\"In Pennsylvania when a powerful\npolitical organization under tho leadership ot the present high prleut of\nthe Republican party\u2014the Invfs.be\npower that dominate the recent convention at Chicago\u2014had tempted even\nthe leaders of our own party to betray her Interests, It was he that\nentered Into the conflict and rescued\nDemocracy from her faithless leaders\nand from her shame. It was he that\nfearlessly exposed the crimson record\nof Republican corruption and regenerated his parly so that now It may\nhold high Us head In the pursuit of\nthose lofty Ideals and pure purposes that are the pride of tho nation's  Democracy.\n\"In the balls of congress ot the\nnation in MOM and mi when the\nregime of autocracy threatened Lo\ncrush the genius of democratic government, it was he that stood steadfast with that magnificent array of\nour leaders that routed the old order of absolutelsm, abolished Can-\nnonism and opened the doors for the\nopportunities that the ensuing years\nshowered upon  our  party,\n\"When finally the people ot the\nnation entrusted the charter of pow\ner to Democracy and placed her\nrepresentatives In charge of our legislative halls It was he that stood\nupon the floor of congress and rendered valiant service alongside of\nClark, and Underwood in the great\nconstructive work that marked the\ninitial steps of Democracy's re-as-\ncendence, j\nand ominous clouds of industrial unrest gathered round, when Hnes of\ncleavage were tightly drawn between\ncapital and labor, when mighty combinations of wealth arose upon the\none side to menace It, and the feudalism of force on the other hand to\nthreaten It, It was that stood the\nunrelenting foe of tyranny of all\nkinds\u2014whether that tyranny be the\ntyranny of money or the tyranny of\nmen.\n\u25a0When during the past session'of\ncongress\u2014now dead but not forgotten, nor forgiven\u2014a partisan\neffort was conceived to alienate from\nour party America's adopted sons;\nwhen prejudices were appealed to\nand the .true status ot our alien\nImmigrants was tn question it was\nhe that set forth the true doctrine\nof Americanism at the Jackson Day\nbanquet when he said: 'But we Insist that those who . come to our\nshores shall come in the right spirit\nand with the right purpose; that\nthose who remain shall stay with Intent to become Americans In every\nsense, lie must let tho spreading\nlight from the figure which beckons\nto htm on Bedloe's Island, shine\nonly upoi a countenance which shell\nlook foieier tu the West. lie must\nTea.1^2 that hie revolution has Iten\nfought and won when he sets his\nfeet upon American soil.'\nAmericanism the (Shibboleth\nMr. Chairman, no party could\nsurvive today that did. not write Into\nits platform the tnagio word 'Americanism'. That power which agitated\nmonarchies, crumbled thrones and\nbrought new-born nations Into being\nwill be the shibboleth of every political party. U will be seined upon\nby every demagogue and mountebank that appeals for suffrage to\nour people. Every party will claim\nU-every candidate will profess It-\naye, even though t'hey steal the\nlivery of Heaven to serve the devil\nIn'. But the people care not for\ntheir professions or pretensions; they\njudge  them by their  performance.\n'Tried in the crucible of danger\nand menaced by Aire peril, the attorney genera) of the United States\nnot merely professed, but he\nhas proven, his true Americanism,\ncall history for my witness and\nher annuls for my proof. Th?re they\nstand without impeachment\u2014mute,\neloquent and convincing. While his\ndetractors were strutting through the\nland with malign attack, there he\nstood at the capital of the nation,\nbravely facing her enemies In defence ot the ashes of our fathers and\nthe temples of our gods.'\nF*Swlcss Against IUprlsnJh\nWhile the violent voice of agitation was being raised against him\nfor restraining feudal force from\npalsying the hand of Industry, there\nhe stood fearlessly vindicating the\ntaw, unmoved by the clamor and\ntumult that threatened against him\nall forms of reprisal. When more\ndangerous -toes asserted themselves\u2014\nthe assassin, the anarchist and the\ncommunist, there he stood panoplied\nin the armor of a Vulcan, striking\nwith all the might and majesty of\nthe nation, confusing the columns of\nsedition and scattering the serried\nranks of reds.\n'Mr. Chairman, I. profess no gift\nof prophecy. No human prescience\ncan divine the event of November,\nBut we can, guided by the lights of\nexperience, perceive the happenings\nof the future. And, if you select\nyour leader for that conflict the\nman of our choice, you will have an\ninspiration and a cause far beyond\nthe platitudes of a platform.\nCandidacy Unpolluted\n\"I see arrayed against him the\nenemies of government. . In their\nranks the hyphenate and revolutionist will fraternise. The men who\nhold class and creed above equality\nwill, there _be found. The malcontent and the criminal will join with\nthem. The echo of the voices \u25a0 on\nthe Ark of the Soviet will mingle\nwith the voices of the enemies of\nthe government and their master\nminds, now expiating their crimes\nIn southern prisons. As I look upon\nthis array how my heart rejoices.\nThey are not of us, not of our party,\nnot of our following. Our leader\nhas eliminated them in the lofty\ndischarge of his duties. His candidacy is not polluted by their presence or by proffers of their support.\nSuccess Attondsd Efforts\n\"When, less than four years ago,\nthe nation resorted to arms to vindicate her sovereignty, to repel and\nresent repeated insults to her cit-\nlsenry, It was \u2022 he that by fearless\nadministration of his trust,as custodian enriched our war resources by\n11,000,000,000 and directed that power\nagainst the foe from whom it was\ntaken. ,\n'No task assigned.to layman or official f has ever been performed, in\nthe history of this government, with\nsuch measure of success that has attended his administration as alien\nproperty custodian.\n\"When, during the war and succeeding it, the Insidious evils sf anarchy and her lawless Utter arose,\nit was he that stood valiantly against\nthe protests of parlor bolshevlsts,\nagainst ths thrusts of venal pen and\nslanderous tongue, and deported and\nimprisoned the defamers ot the nation\u2014aye. even at the threat of the\nterrorists' bombs.\n^\"Wften, within the year, the dark]\nWe admire him for himself and we\npraise him for' his virtues; but oh,\nMr. Chairman, how we revere and\nhow we love him because his one*\nmles are the enemies of our government  and   his   foes  are   hers.\n'But behind him I see a solid phalanx of true Americanism that knows\ndivided allegiance. I see ths\nhumble citizens who worship their\ngovernment. I see the worthy sons\nof   those   noble   sires   that   sleep   In\nhundred battlefields hallowed by\ntheir blood. I see the grim determination that pervades them aa they\nresolve that this nation shall not\nperish. I see them following a shining helmet emblazoned with the light\nbf liberty and adorned by the orl-\nflamme of right. A new Navarre is\nupon the field. His lance is that of\nlaw; his shield is that ot justice;\nand Democracy again triumphs led\nAnd Inspired by Pennsylvania's noblest product, whom I name for the\npresident of the United States, A.\nMitchell Palmer.\"\nHITCHCOCK FOLLOWS WILSON\nSAN FRANCISCO, June 30.\u2014The\nname of United States Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska, was\nplaced before the convention as a\ncandidate for nomination by A. C.\nShallehberger, in'a speech In which\nhe  said:\n'Under the leadership of Woodrow\nWilson America has experienced a\nperiod of prosperity and national\nglory such as she has never known\nbefore and the Democratic party\nrnust stand or fall upon the record\n<made by the Wilson administration.\nWe have no other political asset.\nWithout it we are bankrupt.\nThat    administration     waged     a\nworld   war,   arid   won   It   gloriously,\nand  when  the   president  signed   the\n(Continued on Page Five)\nServing a Bigger\nPurpose\nA fresh Idea is taking hold tn\nregard to silverware. Instead\nof being locked away and never\nused as in former times It Is\nbeing brought into service regularly.\nAnd why not? Silverware is\nmade for use. It is wonderfully durable\u2014will last for a\nI* lifetime\u2014and who does not find\npleasure In Its beautiful lines\nand chaste workmanship?\nBuy silverware for utility as\nwell as for ornament-4t will\nyield pleasure  tenfold.\nALL THE LATEST FEATURES\nAt WELL AS PERFECT\nWORKMANSHIP MAKE THE\nWILLIS   \"CANADA'S    \u25a0MT.ff\nThese instrument\nhsva been ths flnsl\nchoice of those whs\nknow, for nearly\nfifty years.\nYOUR OLD FIANO TAKEN IN\nEXCHANGE\nWillis  Pianos\nLIMITED\n*M  lAKER  STREET\nBIRKS'\nVANCOUVER.   \u25a0.   C.\nHAYING TOOLS\nWe have  just received  another carload  of  Farm\nMachinery, including\nMOWERS and RAKES\n3%-foot one-horse Mowers, each \u2022. .880.00\n4-foot one-horse Mowers, each    $90.00\n414-foot two-horse Mowers, each  $91.00\n5-foot two-horse Mowers, each  $92.00\nii\n8-foot Hay Rake, each :., $56.00\n9-foot Hay Rake $57.00\n10-foot Hay Rake .' $60.00\nHay Tedders, each $75.00\nAll manufactured by the Cockshutt Plow Co.\nWe also have a full stock of hand Hay Rakes, Forks,\netc.   Order early. 1\nNelson Hardware Go.\nBOX 1050\nNELSON, B. C.\nJohn Burns & Sons ^SK*1\nSASH AND  BOOH  FACTOR! NELSON   PLANING   MILLS\nVernon Street, Nelson, B. 0.\nEVERT DESCRIPTION OF BUILDING  MATERIAL  REIT  IN   STOCK\nMm\u2014fr* Glvoa on Stone, Brick, Generate and Frame Rullrlinrn\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO\n*. O. BOX t\u00bbS rman* (if\n4 Want Ad. Is both cheap and efficient. Irv it\nj\\ Business of, High Character Needs\nPRINTING\nOf a High Character\nLET US DO YOUR WORK FOR YOU\nA business is judged to a large extent by its stationery.\nGood stationeiy builds business. It creates a good impression.\nBecause we do good printing and give customers the kind of\nservice they want we are doing more and more printing. It pays\nus as well as our customers. Good work brings in the repeat\norders.\nCan we print any of the following for you!\nLETTERHEADS\nNOTEHEADS\nBILLHEADS\nTAGS\nGUMMED  LABELS\nLOOSE LEAF SHEETS\nOF ALL KINDS\nMEMORIAL  CARDS\nDANCE  PROGRAMS\nVISITING   CARDS\nWEDDING    INVITATIONS\nWEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS\nENVELOPE  \"STUFFER8\"\nENVELOPES\nSTATEMENTS\nINVOICE  FORMS\nTICKETS        \t\nLEDGER  SHEETS\nHOTEL MENUS\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nBUSINESS   CARDS\nWEDDING,CAKE   BOXES\nPAMPHLETS\nPOSTERS\nRULED FORMS OF ALL KINDS MADE\nUP TO SUIT YOUR OWN PAR-\nTICULAR PURPOSE   '\nVOUCHERS\nVOUCHER CHECKS\nPAMPHLETS\nFOLDERS\nORDINARY   CHECKS\nBUTTER WRAPPERS\nDODGERS\nBOOKLETS\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS  JOB  DEPARTMENT  WILL PRINT  ANY  OF  THESE  ARTICLES  FOR   YOU\nAND PRINT THEM WELL AND QUICKLY\nDally News Job Department\n\"THE   HOME  OF   GOOD   PRINTING'\nNELSON,  B.   C.\n THS NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1, I960\nFaffl)\nKootenay and Boundary\nootwear\n\\o  Go  With  Your\nJulg Apparel\n[This beautiful white Beech-\nrood Southern tie will fit th\n|ith your Summer frocks and\n*.lken Hosiery.\nFull   Louis   XV.   heel   and\nand turn sole.\nTwo Units (or New Plant\nUnloaded; Three Still to\nCome\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHONE  10\nJULY 1st\nDOMINION DAY\nCLOSED ALL DAY\nM h H I\nSPRING   snd   SUMMER   is  ths  time\nto     get     your\nPlumbing and Painting\ndona.   Ws stock the goods.\nCslt  or write\nTHE G. T. STORE\nNEW   DENVER,   B.C.\nP.O. Box 4 *      Prion* 22\nKing's Quality Flour\nGUARANTEED    ABSOLUTELY\nManufactured by the Hedley-Shaw\nMilling  Co.,   Ltd.,  Medicine\nHat, Alberta.\nWrite  us   for   prices  on   car   lota.\nFLOUR   AND  FEED\nT.   R.   CLARK,   Rep.\nP. 0. Box 660 Nelson.  B. C.\nTRAIL, June 30.\u2014Two of the new\n\u2022pumping units for the newly constructed pumping station of the smelter company, have arrived, and have\nbeen unloaded at the warehouse. As\nthe pumps weigh about eight tons\neach, without the motors, It will be\nquite an'undertaking to get them from\ntheir present location to their positions in the pumping station about a\nmile   up   the   river.\nThree more units are still due to\narrive.\nROSSLAlfo TRAP\"\nSHOOT POSTPONED\nROSSLAND, June 36. \u2014 Miss Nina\nFraser, who recently graduated from\nat. Joseph hospital, Bell Ingham, has\nJuat been notified that she has passed\nwith honors the Washington state\nboard examination for a registered\nnurse.\nThe annual trap shoot of the Ross-\nland Rod and Oun club, which was to\nhave been held on July 1, has been\npostponed until July 11, owing to\nTrail trapshotters not being able to\nattend on  that  date.\nMrs.. Fred Parker and son Reggie\nare expected to arrive (his week from\nan   extended   visit   to   England.\nMiss Beatrice West Is In the city\nfrom   Nelson.\n>BJi- S. Shannon spent the weekend\nat  Proctor.\nP. A. O'Farrell, who has been visiting In the city for several days,\nleft  for  Montreal   last  evening.\nWilliam Webb Is visiting In the city\nfrom   Seattle.\nTRAIL, June SO.-\u2014It Is reported that\na returned soldier named O'Orady, In\na fit of despondency, made an attempt\nto end his troubles by the Columbia\nriver route, but was rescued and\nbrought back to the city by some motorists, who happened to be passing\njust at  that time.\nQuite a number of the younger boys\nare patronizing the shallow water at\nSand Island these days, the warm\nweather being conducive to swimming\neven In the cold waters of the Columbia   river.\nENTERTAIN AT\nWANETA SCHOOL\n-The      closing\n>ol\nWANETA,    June     30\nexercises of the Nine Mile Creek school\ntook place on Friday, when the children gave a very pleasing entertainment. Mrs. H. M. Adams, teacher,\nhae gone to Grand Forks for the\nholidays.\nKitty Lang was up In Nelson for\neight days for the high school entrance examination.\nOn the ranches, green rye Is already cut and put away for hay. Most\nof the first cut of alfalfa has also\nbeen put away. Crops of all kinds\nare looking Well In consequence of the\nwarm,  favorable  weather.\nA bear was seen In the school\ngrounds   one   day   last  week.\nR. A, Aldersmith, local customs officer,  visited Nelson on Wednesday.\nA. E. Churches went Into Trail\non Friday.\nSH0REACRES PUPILS\nGIVE CLOSING TREAT\nThe   most   exquisite  Table   oil\nAprOl\nfor salads, good but not cbeap.\nL. & L. Slip-On\nTransmission\nfor Fords\nInsert This One Piece\nBand Yourself\nThe result Is a saving In time\nand money. Just 30 minutes\nto Install, compared with three\nto five hours hy the old way.\nNo bolts or nuts, no special adjustments. Remove transmission top plate and insert. Wears\nlonger than  the ordinary  kind.\nMall orders receive prompt\nattention.\nCanadian Auto &\nElectrical Supply Co.\n306 BAKER 8T.\nSHOREACRES. June 30.\u2014Miss M.\nSmythe, the school teachej, entertained\nthe children on Thursday to Ice cream\nand a motor ride as a treat for the\nclosing of the midsummer term. Miss\nSmythe left for her home in Nelson\non   Friday.\nMrs. John Oliver and little daughter,\nof Calgary, left for' Vancouver on\nMonday evening, after spending a\nfew days as the guest of Mrs. Robert\nOliver.\nThe government school at Grade\nclosed on Friday, and the teacher,\nMiss P. Bekker, left on Friday evening to spend the vacation at her home\nin  Victoria.\nR0BS0N NOTES\nROBSON, June 30.\u2014Miss Ncrlle,\nteacher at Proctor school, Is home\nfor   the   holidays.\nMrs. A. Floyd and daughter of Nelson, who spent the week end at\nrtobson, have returned to that city.\nA. D. Clyde returned from Fruit-\nvale on Monday, where he has been\non business In connection with the\nadvisory board of the department of\nagriculture.\nA car of feed and flour arrived on\nMonday night for the settlers.       I\nThe hay crop, which is 'good this\nyear, Is being out this week. A good\ncrop of gooseberries also Is being\ngathered for the Nelson Jam factory\nand prairie towns.\nTRAIL VETERANS\nFILL VACANCIES\nTRAIL, June 30.\u2014At a special meeting of the O.W.V.A., held on Monday\nevening, W. R. Williams, delegate to\nthe recent provincial convention at\nFertile, made his report, at the close\nof which he was tendered a vote of\nthanks for the able manner id which\nhe had   fulfilled   his duties.\nAn election to fill vacancies in\noffice* was then held, Mr. Williams\nbeing elected to the office of vice-\npresident, and J. B. Gray to that of\nsecond   vice-president.\nCOLUMBIA RIVER\nFALLING AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, June JO.\u2014The waterln the\nColumbia has been dropping for the\npast four days, and at the fruit fair\nbuilding has gone down about 16\ninches.\nM. D. Cosgrlff, of the Consolidated\nassay department, spent the weekend\nhis home  In Rossland,\nThe Misses Mary Madden, Henrietta\nSturgeon and Violet Irving were visitors to Rossland over the weekend,\nreturning home on Monday.\nJ. Puree!!, of the Consolidated staff,\nspent  the  weekend  In Rossland.\nMiss Byrne, of the Consolidated General office, returned from a week's\ntrip visiting friends along the Arrow\nlakes and at  Revelstoke.\nROBSON TEACHER\nRECEIVES PRESENT\nROBSON, June 30. \u2014 Miss Olive\nRooke, who has resigned from the local\nschool, was presented by her pupils\nwith a photo frame on the closing day\nOf the term. She left for home at\nGrand Forks  Monday night.\nThe following Is the promotion list\nfor the school, with the marks obtained   by   the   successful   pupils.\nTo entrance\u2014Ruby Harvey, 86;\nJames Fowler, 62; recommended for\nentrance\u2014Eleanor   Squires.\nTo Junior fourth\u2014Don McDiarmid,\n66;   Marjorle   Lundy,   65.\nTo  senior   third\u2014Evelyn  Quance,  53.\nTo Junior third\u2014Jean McDiarmid,\n86; Robert Harvey, 60; Gwendolyn\nHartrord,   55.\nTo senior reader\u2014Ernest Hartford,\nRalph  Quance.\nTo first reader\u2014Norman Lundy, Ross\nOborne,   Leila   Quance.\nI   To   first     primer\u2014Edgar     Webster,\nFrank   Webster.\nThe total enrolment Is 34, and four\nwrote on  the  entrance examinations.\nTRIBUTE TO\nQUAKER\nBRAND\nTHE OLD TIME FLAVOR\nBaked Beans, such as we got at home, especially\nif we come from the east, are a pleasant memory\nof younger days. *\n\\ Quaker Brand Baked Beans are like the ones\nwe remember at home. We follow the same\nrecipe and add the old-fashioned tomato catsup\nthat gives them zest and flavor.\nTry them on your outing\nPut  up by\nDOMINION   CANNERS  B. \u25a0 C.   LIMITED\nHead Office, Vancouver, B. C.\n(Continued from Page Four)\npeace treaty  at  Paris, America \u00abhad\nstepped   into   the   leadership   of   the\nworld.\n\"American diplomacy was triumphant. Its edicts were accepted as\nthe   law   of   nations.\n\"But the Republican senate has\nlost for us all that the statesmanship\nof the president achieved, and that\nthe soldiers won for us on tho field\nof battle. The world wants peace\nand I believe America demands a\nleague of nations that will make\nthat peace permanent. There If anywhere,  must  Democracy  triumph.\n\"Whether the politicians desire\nIt or not, w eare going to have a\ngreat referendum at tho next election, to decide whether the American people are with Woodrow Wilson, or with the Republican senate.\n\"President Wilson would be the\nlogical leader In the coming campaign but since another must head\nthe hosts of democracy, Nebraska\noffers as a substitute;the man who\nhas. stood like a stone wall behind\nthe president throughout the long\nstruggle for the ratification of the\nthe treaty of peace. He has been\nfighting for the president while the\npresident has been unable to fight\nfor himself. He has been valiantly\nbattling for  the  treaty of peace,\n\"The man who occupies the presidency-for the next four years must\nface a tremendous task, but our man\nIs big enough for the Job. Whether\nas congressman, United States senator, or as a publisher of a great\nnewspaper, he has always made\ngood. He has ability, he has courage, he has experience at his command, and a wide vision as to America's needs, ns well aa a thorough\nunderstanding of International affairs.\n\"I am authorized* by the Democrats of Nebraska to present as our\ncandidate Gilbert M. Hitchcock, Of\nNebraska.\"\nIS\nAPPROVED\n(Continued from Face One.)\nshowed the commission to be capable\nof   being  Influenced.\nHon. N. W Rowell said the appointment had been made within the\nprovisions of the act.\nProrogation Today\nDespite the changed arrangements\nbecause of the miscarriage of plans\nfor prorogation at 10 o'clock, the\nbig caucus of Unionist member* of\nboth houses takes place at 10.30 tomorrow  morning  as  arranged.\nIt has been intimated at this\ngathering there will be a series of\nImportant announcements from Sir\nRobert Borden as to his plans, and\nalso as to the future construction of\nthe Unionist  party.\nThe western Unionists and also\nthe Liberal Unionists plan to gather\nfor a heart to heart talk tomorrow\nalso.\nThese meetings will be held separately, and will probably follow the\ngeneral gathering, for the announcements to be made at the main caucus will have a great bearing on\nwhat will be discussed at the smaller\nmeetings. 4\nAs matters stand tonight it Is\nproposed to carry out the ceremony\nof prorogation at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon.\nSTORY OF   ABBOT'S  CUR8E\nA story is going around In London\nto the effect that during the building\nof one of the principal hotels in the\nmetropolis a series of accidents oc-\ncured, and for some time after the\nopening everything seemed to go\nwrong. One of the directors. Inclined to be superstitious, cast about to\nsee if there could be any occult\nreason for the long series of catastrophes and found that the Bite occupied by the hotel had once belonged to a monastic order, and that\nwhen the monks were expelled at\nthe Reformation the abbot had\nsolemnly cursed the ground forever\nafter.\nThe directors Immediately sought\nout the head of the order In England\nand with some difficulty persuaded\nhim to go through the ceremony of\nundoing the curse. Since then the\nhotel has flourished exceedingly.\nAnyhow, that's the story, for the\ntruth of which this paper refuses to\nbe the voucher.\u2014London Times.\nSAVING SAUCEPANS\nELECTORS WARNED\nIn order to vote on the forthcoming Prohibition Plebiscite and in\nProvincial or Dominion General Elections\nYOU MUST REGISTER .\nAll previous lists of voters have been cancelled. The fact that\nyour name was on the list last year does not count. Neither can\nyou vote as a property owner without registering.\nMAKE YOUR DECLARATION NOW\nbefore the Registrar or an 'Election Commissioner, Postmaster, Justice\nof the Peace, Magistrate, Constable or before Officials at apy Government Office.\nREGISTRATION CLOSES ON JULY FIFTEENTH NEXT\nREGISTER iTODAY\nBy Or der\nPROVINCIAL SECRETARY.\nPRODUCTION OF OIL IS\nHAMPERED IN RUMANIA\n.BUCHAREST, June 30.\u2014-Despite the\nheavy speculation In oil land and oil\nproperty now going on in Rumania,\nexpert oil men say that It will take\nat least five years for this country\nto properly develop such prospects.\nThe speculators are merely selling\nprospects to each other rather than\ndeveloping   the   property.\nThe oil production in 1919 was 917,-\n999 tons which was less, than 60\nper cent of the pre-war production of\nthe oil fields. The amount of oil\nshipped out of Rumania in March,\n1920, for example was 5278 tons,\nWhich Indicate* the difficulty of getting the oil transported.\nThere is one small pipe line which\nruns from the oil fields to Con\nstanza. There are about 2000 tank\ncars which might be operated. It\ntakes two years to drill a well, It\ncosts ten times as much now as be\nfore the war, the oil transportation\nIs bad, and (he government puts\nmany restrictions on the export of\noil.\nSaucepans being very expensive\nJust now, it is well worth a little\ncare and attention, to preserve those\nwe have. Many a saucepan ,whlch Is\nthrpwn away might haVf* been saved,\nand the money spent on a new one\nkept for \u25a0 tfthe'r purposes In these\ndays when money does not go far,\nhad the owner been in possession of\na few  simple  hints.\nThe most common way of spoiling saucepans is by burning them.\nSaucepans which have been burnt\nshould never be filled with soda, as,\nalthough it does remove the burn, It\nalso makes the saucepan liable to\nburn again  next  time it is used.\nDominion Dap\nlYThis^Store Will be Closed\n\u25a0 All Dag\n\u2022*mmmmBmmm*wamm~n*<.i\\n\\jmn,      4i^ii\u00bb, i\u2014 i *\u00bbwmi\nSEE  OUR ADVERTISEMENT IN TOMORROWS\nPAPER FOR \"JULY CLEARANCE\" BARGAINS\nh h h h h n\nTHE  STORI FOR   STYLE\n611 Baker Street\nTHE  STORE  FOR  QUAiltfT\nPhone 200\nto propose 30 or 35 year leases to\nthose desirous of engaging in the\nmanufacture   of   pulp wood.\nThe Tongass national forest, comprising about 15,000,000* acres, approximately one-sixth of which Is\nheavily timbered and abundantly\nsupplied with mill site and water,\nIs the subject of many inquiries.\nThose who have closely observed\nthe awakening of interest in the\npulpwood industry In Alaska are of\nthe belief that the elimination of\nthe \"cash In advance\" and \"year\nto year\" system of leasing timber\nlands will result in the development\nof a great paper making industry\nwhich, they are confident, Is bound\nto attract attention to other natural\nresources of Alaska which have long\nawaited  the  touch of capital.\nA  .WOODEN    RAILWAY\nTIZ HELPS\nTIRED; MIC FEET\nInstant    lictii-r    for   Sore,    Swollen,\nTender,  Calloused  Feet\nand Corns.\nYou're fool sick! Your feet feel\ntired, puffed up, chafed, aching,\nsweaty, anil  they need   \"Tl*.\"\n'Tl*\/' makes feet remarkably\nfresh and sore-proof. \"Tla\" takes the\npain and burn right out of corns,\ncallouses and bunlous. \"Tlz'* Is the\ngrandest foot-gladdener the world\nhas ever known.\nGet a box of \"Ttx\" at any drug\nstore and end foot torture for a\nwhole year. Never have tired, aching\nsweaty, smelly feet; your shoes will\nfit fine and you'll only wlah you had\ntried \"Tls\" sooner. Accept no substitute.       \u25a0'\u25a0- I.\nO. P. Gaustad, of Fairbanks, Alas\nka, operates one of the \"farthest\nnorth\" railways. His \"system\" con.\nsists of fifteen miles of wooden rails\nthat stretch between tho head of\nnavigation on the Tolovana River\nand the rich placer mines above, some\nseventy-five miles overland from\nFairbanks. The motive power of his\nrailroad is a motor car, and it has\ndone heroic work for the last two\nseasons In imitating a genuine steam\nlocomotive. Mr. Gaustad went to\nAlaska in the big rush of '118.\n\"I have a sawmill half way between\nthe Tolovana placers and the head\nof naviagation on the river,'' he said\nrecently in Los Angeles. \"For two\nyears I have operated the railroad\nto haul logs to my mill, and from\nthere sawed lumber to the mines.\nThe track is fifteen miles long and\nis of wooden rails. The motor car\nis, of course, equipped with flanged\nwheels, and hauls a little train of\nthree cars behind it,\n\"In this fashion I have hauled loads\na* high as six tons. In addition to\nthe lumber I haul all supplies from\ntho head of navigation on the river\nto the mines, and get $\u00ab60 a ton for\ntransporting them. Sometimes I\nmake eight or nine tripa a day, and\nthis year the car covered over six\nthousand miles In the course of the\nseason.\" s\nTHE SILENCE  OF  MARS\nTAHITI EARTHQUAKES\nORIGINATE IN OCEAN\nPAPEETE, Tahiti, June 30.\u2014\nEarthquakes which have shaken the\nislands of Tahiti, Moorea and Me~\nhetia without more than a week or\ntwo intervals since the autumn of\n1918, still continue and have increased in frequency and strength.\nOf late there have been on an average of two or thre a day, usually\nIn the early hours before dawn.\nA recent but unconfirmed report\naffirms that the island of Tubuai,\nabout 400 miles to the south of\nTahiti,   Is   also   shaking.\nThis, It Is held, would tend to\nconfirm the theory that the source\nof the disturbance Is a sub-marine\noutbreak somewhere to the south\nand west, in that part of the Pacific where surface indications would\nnever   he   seen.\nPUNS AT FERNIE\nFOR DOMINION DAY\nFERNIE. June 30.\u2014Everything is\nnow InreadiiiesH for the big Dominion\nDay celebration and the attractions\nfor the occasion undoubtedly will\nmake the affair one of the greatest\never held in this city. Baseball\nteams froin Wycliffe, Wardner,\nBay ties Lake, Blairmore, Michel and\nFernle have entered. Football teams\nfrom Michel, Fernie, Coleman, Cran-\nhrook and Coal Creek assured, with\nTrail having telegraphed its entry.\nThe banner attraction will be the\nboxing contests comprised of three\nevents.\nGeneral Wood says: \"The American people are as sound as a nut.\"\nWaddyamean, .sound as a \"nut.\"\u2014\nPeoria   Transcript.\nThe wireless experts listen for a\nmessage from Mars. None comes.\nThis, indeed, is the beatitude of science: \"Blessed are they who expect nothing, for verily they shall\nnot be disappointed.\" The men of\nscience \"listened In\" on an inflnites-\nirnaily small chance\u2014the chance, that,\nif there were Jiving and Intelligent\nbeing on Mars, they would have\nthat particular kind of intelligence,\nor that particular sort of life, that\nwouiu enable them to get off some\nsort of \"waves\" In our direction, or\ncould apprehend our xaves. They\n\"listen In,\" and slgnaJ\u2014^htLno response comes. The skies are \"*4mpty,\nas ever they have been.\u2014Boston\nTranscript.\nINTEREST AWAKENS\nIN ALASKA PULPWOOD\nJUNEAU, Alaska, June 30.\u2014Requests for information are being received by the Alaska bureau of publicity from capitalists In all parts\nof the country who are Interested in\npulpwood Umber, miil sites and water power, presumably as a ..result\nof the recent Intimation that . the\ndepartment   of   agriculture   is   about   irritation\nIt has been discovered in Hamilton\nthat the caretaker of a certain school\nwas receiving more money than the\nprincipal. Does education pay? Not\nunless it has to \u2014Manitoba Free\nPress.\nSAY \"DIAMOND DYES\"\nDon't streak or ruin your material m a\npoor dye. Insist on \"Diamond Dyes.\"\nEasy directions in package.\n\"FREEZONE\"\nLift Off Corns I    No Pain I\nDoesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little\n\"Freeaone\" on an aching corn, ih-\nstantly that corn stops hurting, then\nshortly you lift it right off with\nfingers.   Truly!\nYour druggist sells a tiny bottle of\n\"Freefone\" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft\ncorn, or corn between the toes, and\nthe    calluses,    without    soreness    or\n1679\nm New ToA City clone frcr.i kid-\niey trouble Lst ;cci Dw * allow\n\/ourself to L-COOJ a victim\njy neglect'.-*; pi-'Jic vA aches,\niuard ag&iast trouMe ' ' takir.g\nGQLDM'&fti.  \u2022\nim world's; standard remedy fcr kidney,\nivcr, tladder and uric acid t ouble*.\nHolland's national remedy since 1691.\nMl druggists, 5Cc. a bo*. Guaranteed.\nLook for the name Cold Medal oo o\u00bbe.\u00ab\nboa and accept do imitation\nTHE ONLY\nLOCAL\nMILK\nThere   is   only   one   milk   now\ncanned west of Ontario.    That.\nis PACIFIC MILK.\nIt is the milk from the  famous\nLadner   District   put   up   fresh\nevery day.\nWe reduce it to the, consistency\nof cream by evaporating it In a\nvacuum.\nAdd water and it returns to the\nuriginal   consistency.\nHundreds  of cooks tell  us it is,\nbetter   than   fresh   milk   for  all\nkinds  of cooking and  baking.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLimited\nVancouver,  B.C.\nFactory   at   Ladner,   B.C.\n| BURNS'\nFertilizer\niplies Crops\nTHIS IS PROVEN and\nbeyond question.\nIt . improves grade of\nproduction, whether\nfruit, vegetables or cer-\n. eals, and prevents impoverishment of soil.\nHundreds of prize winners at the leading exhibitions can furnish\nproof that\nBURNS' FERTILIZER\nassures the quality that\nwins out.\nFor lawns or land that\nis acid use\nBURNS' BONE MEAL\nwhich contains the\nsweetening sulphate of\nlime and three per cent\nof that greatly needed\nessential, a free phosphorus.\"\nBURN'S expert will help\nyou.   Write us.\nBarns' Fertilizer Multiplies Crops\nThat's our slogan and\nwe stand behind it to\nprove.\nLocal Distributors\nP. BURNS & CO., LTD.\nNELSON\nCalgary,    Edmonton,   Vancouver\n i_\n\t\n__\u2014\n PeVW  8\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1920\nGeneral News of the City\nPUBLICITY GETS\nAfter Two Insertions, Com*\npany Restricts Its Call to\nPiece-makers\nTwo insertions of a half page\nadvertisement In The Daily News,\ncalling for lumber workers, were\nsufficient to find the Lindsley Bros.\nCanadian company the bulk of the\nlarge force they require for their\nbig nolf operations on the Caribou\nlimits near Meadows, in spite of a\nban placed on the company's CHmpg\nby   the   One   Big   I'nion   last   week.\nIn the two advertisements referred\nto the company stated it had accommodations tor 11*0 men. and advertised: \"Lumbermen Wanted\u2014\nPole and Pint makers, sawyers, axemen, hookmen, flume imilders, carpenters,   swampers.\"\nToday the company advertises:\n\"Lumbermen Wanted\u2014We are now\nfairly well supplied with day men,\nbul can place about 35 piece makers.\"\nThe company reiterates Its declaration of policy; \"We want no O\nR I': me'H'anil will not have'< afty,\nhut we want' real men and' lumbeV-\nmen   who   know   iheir   business**'\nOn tha part of the O. B. i:.\"it li\nadvertised that a strike Is on at\nLindsley's   camp,   Meadows.\nALL READY FOR\nDIAMOND BATTLE\nLIBRARY RECEIVES\nSOME NEW BOOKS\nAn appreciative leader has presented Ihe following ' books to the\nmunicipal   library:\n\u2022'Bulldog Carney.'\" W. A. Kiascr;\n\u25a0'Great Impersonation,\" E. P Oppen-\nlieim; \"Oirl of tho O. K. Valley.\"\nRobert Watson: \"My Brave, and Gallant Gentleman.\" RolKrrt Watson:\n\"Moon and Sixpence,\" W. 6, Maugham: \"Mist of Morning.\" P. K. Mae-\nkay:   'I'neasy  Street,\"   A.  S.  Rocke.\nRecent purchases are: \"Theotlute\nKuosevell's Letters to His Children;\"\n\"Labor in Ihe. Changing World.\" R\nVf. Maclvcr; \"I'uddin'head Wilson,\"\nMark   Twain.\nOFFICE\nID BEpilED\nCombined Representations of\nVarious Bodies to Settlement Board Effective\nPrimed for a hard match the\nCreston senior ..bull te.un arrived in\nthe city last night for the Dorrtinlon\nday ball game with the local senior*\nThe match will commence this afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Recreation\ngrounds.\nWhile nothing is known of th*\nprowess on the diamond of the (\"ret\/-\nton boys, this la-ing the first contest\nof the season arranged between\nCreston and Nelson, the local seniors have a good strong lineup, and\nwill go to bat faptaincd by E. C.\nHunt.\nThe batting order of the Creston\nteam will be: W. Long, 1st base;\nW. Hall, 3rd base; , C. Maxwell,\npitcher: H. Telford (Capt.t, catcher;\nA. Bruce, 2nd base; Steve Ting, left\nfield: C Embree. right field; Billy\nSkivlngtou, shortstop; Harry Bat-\ntrie, senter field. Spares\u2014H. Dunn,\npitcher;    K.    Dewnr,    catcher.\nThe Nelson batting order will Lo:\nH. O'Neil. E. O'Nell. E. C. Mont\n(Capl.). .1. Notman, H McPeak. R.\nMaurcr, P. Lucia. E. l.anglll, H.\nSvoboda; spare. H. Pickering. W.\nI_>.   Btii'lingham   will   umpire.\nOPEN AIR CONCERT\nATTRACTS THRONGS\nback, J. Wolverton; right back, E\nTalberi; left half, J. Ball; center\nhalf, J. .Morris; right half, I. Spetr*;\noutside left, .A. Speirs; Inside left,\nA. Davidson; center,, Vic Graves:\nInside right, C. Barnard; outside\nright,   A.   Rowley.\nThrongs of citizens made Vernon\nand Wnrd streets populous last night,\non   the   occasion   of   the   opening   lund\nconcert of the BMurtra by ihe Q, W.\nV. A band, the function being a\nsplendid    success.\nFlHnnels. .sports shirts, smiws and\nlight    dresses    with    brilliant    colored\nwere\nfor\nof the  i\nthe\nswealerette\nftromenader\ning.\nThe   program,   under   the   direction\nof Bandmaster  F,   Warner Smith, wan\ncomposed    of    a    variety      of      pieces\nranging   from    ihe   lightest    ..]\"   ulira\nmodern  music   to  gems  selected   from\nstandard    comic    opera,    as    follows'.\nGeneral   Pershing.\"   march;   \"Nights\nf   Gladness.\"   waltz;    \"By   the   Light\nf    (lie    Moon.\"       fantasy:       \"Colonel\nB*\u00bbgte\"    march;-     \"Boheratttfl       Girl\/\n>verture.   and   \"Steadfast    and   True.\"\nmarch.\nTRAIL VS. NELSON\nFOOTBALL TODAY\nAs a result of wires sent to W. .1.\nBlack, chairman of the soldier settlement board at Ottawa, and ft- F.\nGreen. M.P., by the NpIhou board of\nirade, the city council and the\nNelson and\" Proctor branches of the\nG.W.V.A.. protesting agaii^t , the*\nHouints of the Nelson office of Hi\nsoldier settlement board, set for tomorrow. Capl. B. G. B. Rennie,\n'epresentative of the board, was yesterday advised by Lieut.-Col. C. G.\nJohnson, district superintendent for\nIhe interior at Vernon, that Ottawa\nhad grin tod authority for the retention   of   the   Nelson   office.\nThe four organizaions that took\nconcerted action last Saturday to secure retention of the Kootenay office\nall were advised by wire yesterda\n<ff tin- board's decision, Mayor J. A.\nMcDonald receiving a wire for the\ncity, and the G.W.V.A. here and at\nProctor also being directly advised.\nThe wires were signed by W. J.\nBlack, chairman of the soldier settlement  board.\nIn his message to the Uoard of\ntfadp, Chairman Black stated be\nhad wired Vernon Unit authority was\n\u25a0jpranted lo retain the Information\nbureau and supervision center at Nelson, subject to uuarters being available at a low rental, and had asked\nthe superintendent at Vernon to\nconfer with rhe board.\n. While the board of trade and the\ncity council made their representations direct to the soldiers settlement\nboard and to Mr. Green.) the G.W.\nV-A. executives also enlisted the help\nof tbe provincial and Dominion commands, so that the matter was presented to ihe board from several unrelated quarters, with successful\ncumulative   effect.\n\"ftxceHent service has been rendered by Ihe Nelson office,\" said the\nwire of the proctor branch, which\nurged the retention on the ground\nthat (he Interests <<f the soldier\nseiners \"f Ihe distrid nrgenlly de\nmended tt, substantially the same\nground as was urged hy the Nelson\nbranch\n'That this retention of the office in\nNelson will he a great satisfaction\nM soldier HAttlorw throughout the\nterritory, was thr opinion in local\n*1.W V A.   circles   last   night\nu exhibition football game will\nplayed today at :. o'clock between Trail seniors and the local\neniors at the Recreation ^rutinds\n,s a part ot the r>ominlnn day\nports program drawn up by the\nNelson Athletic association. Wlmi\nthe Nelson boys will be up against\nIs not known as yet, the Trail hoys\nbeing due to arriye this morning.\nThe* probable positions of tha local\nteam   will   be.     Goal.  .1.  Lundie;   left\nManager Starkey Urges Cooperation in Big District\nExhibit\nKred ,A. SKlarkey, sccrclaiy inin-\nOJJW of ihe third international mining\nconvent Ion at Nelson, is endeavoring to gel  in  touch with  prospectors,\nilh a view* to assuring a representative collection of Kootenay ores,\nfor exh-ibii during the sessions of the\nbig   gathering\nThis   convention   affords   the   pros-\n;ctor\u00ab   their  great   opportunity,   Mr.\nStarkey    states.      for      securing    ad-\nnlageoiis   puhlicily   for   their   wares,\n|n  the  shape  of  pruspeV-ts,   and  none\nthou Id   let   the  opportunity   phss,\nAll mine owners and prosieclots\ndiotild arrange to send In their ores\nis early ;is possible, for staging to\nbe best advantage, Mr. Starkey\ndates.\nThe prospect! for a creditable rX-\nhibil of mining machinery an1 also\nexcellent   .\nTRAPSHOOTERS TO\nCOMPETE TODAY\nNOTICE\nChange in advertising rates\neffective July 1, 1920\nWwt ud Classified AdT\u00abrtiiing\u2014\nOne and a half cents per. word per\ninsertion. Six cents per word per\nweek, or tt%v per word per month,\nrash In advance. If charged 1 %c a\nword straight. Transient ads accepted bnly on a cashdn-advance basis.\nEach initial, figure, dollar sign, etc.,\ncounts as one wore, Minimum 25c,\nif rharged :,0r. Display type double\nabove   rate*.\nLocal BMdlag ltotlces\u2014 3c per word\neach     i linen ton. In    black    face    or\nmachine capitals 1c per word. Black\nface capl till* 5C a word. 86 p.c. discount if run daily without change of\ncopy for one month nr mure. Where\nadvertisement Is set out in short line*\nIhe charge Is lUVjC a line for Roman\ntype,   Ih  for black   race, and   'iOc for\nblack     face    capitals. Minimum    35c,\nIf   charged   60c.\nBlack   face   capital   headline   25c.\nHottcss\u2014Hinli of Marriage Notices,\nDeath Notice*, Funeral Notices* Card\nof Thanks, 3c a word. Minimum *Wc.\nList off Wedding Presents or Floral\nOfferings.   Iflc  a   line.\nProtar-aional Cards and Lodge Notices\n-|1.\u00abfl per line per month. Minimum\nspace   2   lines.\nWEDDINGS\nCOLLIS-NETTLETON\nAt Ihe Presbyterian manse, yesterday, Douglas Percy ('ollls of San-\ndon and Miss Ida Nettleton, also of,\nSamlon. Were married by Rev. D. T.\nMcClintork. Miss <lara Arnold and\nMrs.   McClintock   were   the   witnesses.\nChautauqua\nOpens Today\nThe Program:\nriRST   DAY\u2014July   1\nMorning\u2014Owrfmiatlon of Junior riistu-\ntjuiqua   and   Knperviseri   Play.\nAfternoon,  2  o'clock       Concert   Knler-\nI      tainment. ..   The old   KashWiutvl  tjlrh\nAdmission  50c\niiIiik.    H    o'clock   -CoMcert    I'relude. .\n    The  Old   Fasbiom'd  Oirh\nWith   trapwhooters   present   from all\nthe coiiiiguoua district.  Including  the j\nSloi-an    and   the   main    lake   suction,,\nand   with   more  due   to   arrive   by   Ihoj^'\nmorning   boat, all anxious   lo  make  a\nkilling and carrv off a trophy pf the! Electricity Scientific- Lecture \u2014 En-\ndays    sport    from   the    big    prize    list] tcrlaimnent         Hurnell   Ford\navailable, today's shoot at the CP.Jt. I Children's and other ticketH can he\nflat, which starts at II) o'clock this oburiiied. M'^jSootb \u25a0'\",.. lhl? -grounds\nmornjng   and   will   be   resumed   at    2\no'clock this afternoon, promises t<i bi\nthe   big   shoot   of   the   season.\nIn addition to a number of cash Y.\nprizes, the amounts of which will be\ndecided today, eight other prizes,\ndonated by the city merchants, will\nhe awarded. The first and second\nprizes will be safety razors, the\nthird a box' of Kldnra cigars; fourth,\na gold h>nil pencil; fifth. a leather\nctfHt- vase, six til. a silk necktie;\nseventh, a cut tflass salt and pepper\nset;   eighth,  a   pair of silk   suspenders.\nThe    shoot    is    being    held    hy    tho\nNelson    ami    Hist.nct     Rod    and    Htm\nmil\nof    I H.oi-n   <l,.,'sn'\nInter,\nsi    u*\niiiir a,\n\u25a0DO    1''\nmuch  *\u25a0  Hill  \"\net   Pre**,\nFJr\u00ab.-\nI -< i n -\nI it si   so,   wc  all   learn   by   expert-\ncc. ,  A    man   never   wakens   up   his\nsecond   baby   to  see   it   laugh     Kings-\nWhig.\nAfterm-oi;     proKraui    will    be    over    in\npb-iity   of   time   for-ball   game.\nAdliils:\n$1.00\nn\nCuticura Soap\n\u2014\u2014 AND OINTMENT \u2014\u00ab-^\nClear the Skin\nfleM\u00bbJ>lBtaMBt.T*ri*\u00ab,***.\u25a0*>(*. B*>14***>n.|\u00abC\npoultry Supplies\nBEST\nMADE\nlowest\nFounts, Feeders, Dry Mash 1\nHoppers,    bhell   and   Grit\nBoxes, Feed Troughs and\nOat  Sprouters.    Anything\n, in   Metal made  to order.\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse this blank on which to write out your eond ensed ad., on* word In eaoh spsoe.    Inolou money\norder or aback and mail direct to Tha Daily Newt,   Nelson, B.C.   ^\nRate:   One cent  a  word  eaoh  Insertion,  sin con \u2022acutiva  Ineertinns   ehargeri   as  lour,    laoh   initial,\nflours, dollar eign, etc, count \u25a0\u25a0 one word.    No eh argo lets than Sfi aente.\n'Bankers are rHacuBslna; the strain\nd% credit, but what most people\nworry about is the tug on their cash\n\u2014Providence   journal.\n\"Wiiat do you think of a man\nwho constantly deceives his wife?\nThink of him' 1 think he's a won-\ndvi     New   Vert*  Uft;\ni i \u25a0\u25a0        .\nd ' ^   .\n ;. I J.        J     |   ,      .\t\npublleh th. above advertleamant ..\nNam*  -..\naa-llreaa   \u201e\u201e\t\ntlmaa, for whioh ( .nolo,, \u00bb..\nII H..lr..(. r.pllaa may b. addreaiwl to  \u2022<>\u00ab  Numkara at Th* Daily Newe Ofti...    |f raplln *r* <\u2022 I\nmailed anoloM* 10o extra to eovor ooat of *o*ta|o and allow  live  worda oxtra for box  number.\nSmall Ads That Bring Quick Returns\n56\nBirths\nof this city, a daughter, ax ape\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nTueeilay,   Jnn\u00bb   ::\u25a0 ,   (868j)\nSt\n10   Male Help Wanteti\nMINERS WANTED\nOne hundred miners and one\nhundred miners' helpers wanted. Apply Pacific Coast Coat\nMines, South Wellington, or\nMetropolitan Block, Victoria,\nB. C.\nFOR SALS\u2014A flll-roomed house. 51\nminutes irom Baker street. Snap\nand easy terms. Apply owner, box\n8642   Daily  News.       \u25a0_ .(Hit)\nWANTKP\u2014A first-class  porter.    Appll\nHtrathcoiiH.   Hotel. (8690]\nWANTKD-fCxDerieneed dishwasher at\nonbe. Wuses $!\u00bbo.fio and board. ' If\nnot first class at the huslnees do\nnot waste your time and mine. Write,\ncall or phone RIrrs & WUder, Boul-\n.ler Mill, B.C. t < 8689)\nWANTKi)\u2014At once, ,cook and helper\nand two wa,ltresses for Qerrard.\nApply llerrard-Lardo Lumber Mills,\nA unable   Block,   or   Phone   328L2,\n^        (86.S4)\nWANTKIi Due six horse teamster,\nwnges fi per day, Kootenay tihtngle\nCo., Ud., Salrrio, B. V. tsfi82)\nWANTBJV-|flil~nande, graders, tally-\nmnn. Apply Gerrar4*Lajrdo Ijumber\nMills,   Annable   Block,   Nelson.   (S677)\nWANTKI)--Engineer holding- B.C. third\n\u2022 htss papers. Apply Max Haskln, Nelson,   B.C.,. Phone   440ft. (8659\nWANTED \u2014 Strong hoy. Apply McDonald Jam Co., Nelson,  B.C.     (S(iJ'J)\nW A NTED\u2014Night t ire~mun, 4th. class\npapers; wagts f6. Apply forest\nMills   of   B.C.,   Cascade. (8542)\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nFOR     KENT\u2014Furnished\nrooms over Pool a Drug.\nKEBR'^AETMEWTt.\nhousekeeping\n(8508)\nrfwij)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnished    house-keeping\nrooms.     Annable   Block. (8215)\nFURNISHED   ROOMS\u2014Clean,   comfortable, steam heat, shower bathe, $2.25\n?or week, |9.00 and JIO.OO per month.\n'.M.C.A. (821.)\n54     Articles Wanted\nW~ATQr^D^^oond^\nInch.    I inch   and    1V.    Inch.      A.    H.\ncare Poet Office, BoswHI, B.C.  (SIJ75)\n13 Situations Wanted Male\nwTLLK^uT^clivc   boy,   age   13,  desires\nwork   for summer months   In or  near\ntown.     Apply   Box   Ufl,   Nelson,   B.C.\n(8670)\nYOUNfJ man desires work as fruit\npicker for the mouths of July and\nAugust.  Box H(i6I   Daily  News.   (8661)\nMARRIED couple want position as\ncooks, camp preferred. Would consider wife to cook and man to work\noutside. (First class cooks). References.    Box P610  Dally   News.\n  (8610)\nWANTKD\u2014Lumber haul tog contracts,\nmotor truck equipment. Nothing\ntoo blfc. Write J. R. Mdrris, Dorr.\nH.C. (8595)\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWANTKD   -      A \"good   capahel   w.pman\nas   housekeeper.     Apply   Mrs.   Neilan,\n(86g7)\nHume Hotel.\n (96-17)\nctoria  Street.\nWANTKD--Cpstalrs b'irl.\nW A NT lOD\u2014Tea    room\nHume   Hotel.\nat    once.\n(8648)\nWANTED  -Girl  or   woman   for   housework.    Apply  Box  HOfi city.      (8643)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced      legal      stenographer, salary $90 per month. Hamilton  & Wragge.   (8250)\n18     Articles for Sale . ,\nHOATH''>t'SKTrfi'J(22!   weir*fix22, in good\ncondition,  for  $110.     Box   8-669   News.\n(S669)\nFOR SAI-K-,Cheap, new Perfection oil\ncook stove, No. 2, with single oven,\ngood condition. E. Wlllett, Wlnlaw,\nB.C. (8657)\nOCR gas saving device for gasoline\nengines adds miles to every gallon.\nEliminates carbon, (luaranteed. Write\nP, F. *Kixe. -226, 8th Avenue East,\nCalgary. tS639)\nFOR SALE\u2014Kord ton truck, in first\nclass running order, complete with\nbox and top. Apply Crescent Valley\nstore. (8652)\n__t._j!_\nFOR SALF.\u2014-Strong, new 'rig, light\ndriving sleigh, implements, 2 sets\nharness, rarpenter's, blacksmith's and\nfarm tools, new and in good repair.\nApply   A.   G.   Lang,   Waneta,   B.C,\n. (8606)\nFOR SALE\u2014Choice dairy butter at\nfifty-five cents per lb. Apply Box\n92, Creston, B.C. ' (846*)\n80-TON silo, ensilage cutter and elevator, 40 h.p. tractor, mowing mtv-\nchlno, horse rake, hay tedder, automatic loader and rake, sulky plow,\nhand p%>wg cultivators, seeders,\ngraders, etc.. for sale on easy terms.\nApply Box 83116 Nelson   NcwS.   (8396)\nGOPHER Death Tablets\u2014Kill them\nquick; Currie Gopher Cartridge: Fly\nSkoot for Cattle; Red Mite Killer;\nPoultry Lice Powder;' Zenoleum;\nMosquito Oil; Fly Paper; Garden\nSeeds, big variety Mangel, Carrot,\nTurnip, Field Reeds; Dry Lime Sulphur, Rose Tree Spray; Thermos\nBottles, Stewart's Phonographs. Mall\nOrders filled promptly. Rutherford\nDrug  Co.,   Nelson.   EC (8209)\n37 BoatiftncTAaU^\nCaT'^V^3^\n2 Hi h.p. engine In perfect running\norder, a simp; must be sold, owner\nleaving city. Apply \u2022\"Launch,\" P.O.\nBox   762   Nelson. (8667)\nFOR HALE\u2014Second hand ro wheat, 15Vj\nfeet. $25 cash. Address Box 677\nNelaon. <8\u00ab60)\nWANTKD\u2014Rowboat. second-hand. In\nSgood \" shape. James J. Wright,\nBrowse,   B.C. (8658)\n23   Property for Sale\nGeneral Insurance. Loans\nand Rentals\nC. W. Appieyard\n\u2022 410 Baker Street\nBox  626 NELSON,   B.C.\nTelephone 260 (8586)\nFOR SALE\u2014Arrow takes, between\nBurton and Arrow Park, lake front,\n12 \\<>    acres,    3    acres    slashed.    log\n'house. $650 gets title. P. O. Box\n618.   Nelson. (8678)\nLESS Steele's summer camp site for\nsal*-,      partly     furnished.      Kitchen,\n1 living room and bedroom, large verandah, chicken house and run. Cheap,\n$150 cash. Phone 373R2, or Box Mu.\n(8644)\nADVERTISING in these columns pays\nwell. That is why so many people\nuse Classified Ads.\nFOR SALE\u2014179 acres land In Salmon\nValley. Lots of wood and water.\n$3000. Easy terms. J. W. Gallagher,\nNelson. (8621)\nFOR SALE\u20149-roomed house, 2 lota,\ncorner, bearing fruit trees and small\nfruits. Garage and chicken house.\nA snap.    Box 8612 Dally News. (8612)\nFOR SALE\u2014Property on Victoria St.,\nNelson, adjoining fitrathcona Hotel.\nThree lots and two modern cottages,\ncompletely furnished, bring In fifty\ndollars a month rent, never vacant.\nA snap at $4500. Thle is $2000 below value. Apply to owner, It. t).\nMcDonald,   Trail,   B.C. .(8fi31)\n17     Houses Wanted\nWANTED to rent, small house, close\nIn, furnished or unfurnished.. Box\n8620   Daily  News. .(8620)\nWANTED\u2014Small furnished cdttuge'for\nmonth or longer, Immediate possession. ..^}Ojie  217L. <?\u00a3\u00a3$>\n20    Livestock for Sale\nGOOD milk cow for sale, second calf,\ngives 18 quarts,, healthy and,, sound\nin every respect. G. Farc.iholtz,\nGranite   Road,   Nelson. (8680)\nSEVERAL grade Shorthorn and Ayr-\nshire cows, Just freshened, for sale,\nat Beaver Meadows Farm  P. O., Erie,\n,   B.C. (8676)\nFOR SALE\u2014One registered Shorthorn\nhull. One pure-bred Ayrshire hetfer,\nyearling. Six choice yearling heifers.\nTwelve calves. This is all choice\ndairy stock. Apply Wm. Grutch-\nfleld,   Salmo,   B.C. (8654)\nRABBITS   FOR   SALE,   cheap.    .Apply\n221    Robson   St.,   city. (8638)\nFOR SALE\u2014Young\" pigs, six weeks\nold, $8 each. F. Anderson, South\nSlocan. 18651)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Good Yorkshire pigs.\nReady now, $0 each and freight. J.\nDoscnberger,   Proctor,   B.C. (8628)\nGOOD ranch horse.    Price $125.    Apply\nCooke-Hurle,  Harrop,   B.C. (8630)\nFOR SALE\u2014Pedigreed Yorkshire boar,\n14 months old. Apply Andrew\nSchnaebele,  Trail,  B.C. (8616)\nSIX   weeks  old  pigs,   a cross \/between*\nChester    White    and Duroc    Jersey.\n$7.50    each.      A.    F. Adams,     f.o-h.\nKaslo. (8623)\nFOR SALE\u2014Heifer calf, 5 months old.\nW.  Croisdale, Cor.   Gore & Cedar  St.\n21    Livestock Wanted\nWANTED\u2014One collie dog, must be a\ngood dog for cows. Apply J. Kos-\n.earue.  Crescent Valley,  B.C.       (8617)\n34    Teachers Wanted ,\nEXPER1ENCKD teacher required. Apply Secretary Perry Siding School\nBoard,   Perry   Siding,   B.C. (8674)\nWANTED\u2014Two teachers for Wycllffc\nschool, salaries $115 and $125 per\nmonth. Apply Secretary, Wycliffe,\nstating   qualifications. (8615)\nWANTED\u2014Principal for Frultvale two\nroom school. Apply stating salary\nrequired,  to secretary. (8482)\n29__JLo\u00abtjindl^onnJ_\nSTRAYED\u2014Bay mare, small , white\nspot on forehead and right shoulder,\none white foot, single footer. Finder\nWill receive reward on returning to\nB.   C.   Meat   Market,   Trail.   B.C.\n42\nMatrimony\nlonely. Many wealthy ladles wish\nto marry. Free to ladles. Enclose\nstamped addressed envelope to C.\nIsherwood,   Isherwood   P.O.,   Out.\n.  . (8505)\nLONELY? Cheer up. Join our Club.\nKey to happiness and delight. Correspond for pastime, instruction or\nfriendship. List of ladles and gentlemen .that want to correspond with\nyou for 25 cents. Particulars for\nstamp> . Toronto Correspondence\nClub, . Dept. C, 779 Dupont St.,\nToronto^ (8834)\nSecond Hand Dealers\nTHE! ARK pays eaaD for esoottd\nfurniture, stoves; \u00ab0I  Vernon,  Phot\n651, (8211\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR   RENT   \u2014   Unfurnished   7-rooes|\nhouse,   large  grounds-   Will   rent\nresponsible  party for year or  lonrt\nApply   P.O.   Box 954, iselson.     (860|\nTO   RENT\u2014Ofncejv on   upper\n*PU    \"\nw.   c.   block.\nMaodi\nBusiness and Protessio\nDirectory\n^\u2022dgejlotfce^\nB.   P.    O.    E.   Meets   In    MafrllO   B\nlat & 3rd Thursday.     .(Ml\nMachinery, Etc\nlaw   and   Shingle   Mill   and   at\nMachinery,   Tallow  Strand Wir*\nLeather and Rubber Belting and\nlng;    Acme   Shingle   Band*    and\nStrapping.    B.    C.    Agent*    Mom\nOtis and  Greases.  Buy  and   Ball\nRalls  and  Machinery.\n858-60   Gambia   It.   TaaooaTU\nM\nBoots & Shoes\nMSB XXB A OOMTABTT\nBoot* as Shoes Had. to Order. aW\nBlltt   FBOHT   IT.       ?77,7|\nBusiness Colleges\nN B L S.O N     BUSINESS     COLLBqS\nDay    and    night    class**.    Compl*\nbusiness   course.   Apply   F.   O.   *k_\n754.          (\u00bbai\u00ab|\nFlorists\nQRTZZKLLE'B GREENHOUSE, Nel\nson. Gut flower, and floral \u201e\nsigns.          \u00abmi|\nAssajers\nI.    W.    WIDDOWSON,    Boa    A-ll*\nNelson,    B.    C.    Standard    w*et*r__\nCharges.   , (Hlljl\nWholesale\nA. MACDOWALD ft CO., WHOM]\nQrrfcers and Provision Merchant*. Im\u00abl\nporters of Teas, Coffees, Splce*. Drlafl\nFruits,  Staple and Fanoy  Grooarl**,!\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Egga. <2o*i\nand Packing House Product*.    Offl<\nand Warehouse, corner of Froat.an\nHall   streets.    P.O.  Boa   10.H;   Tel*-|\nPhones 28 and 23. (8214)1\nCommission Merchants\nRANCHERS'   PRODUCE eold  dp  oo\nmission.     O.   W.   Bartlett,   Willlamal\nSiding.   \u25a0 (8*18) I\nADVERTISING In thase column* pay* i\nwall.    That Is why so many p*opI\u00bb I\nline  riaaatflad   id*\nArchitects\nB.    BMatS^BBAD,    \u00bb\nARCHITECT\nBay  Arena*.\n\" KaaJl,   \u00bb.   a ]\n(8288)\nAccountants\n.1. X. JaaJtTUUICB    -..,..\nAccountant\u2014Auditor\nRooliUeeplnp, Financial Statement*, etc.\nPhone 39. McDonald Jam Bldg. Box 1030\nW.  H.   FAT.DIB-Q,\nPublic   Accountant  BanK  of  Montr**!\nChambers, Rossland,  B. 0.\n(8J10)\nEngineers\n.. B. O.\nDAWSON\nB.    C.    LAND   SUnVBTOIt\t\nCIVIL   AND   MINING   ENGINEER j\n(8210)\n^eeTvBro\u00bb.,BUrd<a,0b:\nNelson, B. &        *,;\nOIVIL   AMD   MIBIHO   BB8HTBBBB\nB.   0.,   Alberta   and   Domlaloa\nI.AHD   StrnVBYOM    \u2022 '\nOrowa   Oraat   Agent*.   Bin*   \u25a0\"\"'^f*\na. i.. Moonuoox.\nHyranlio Engineer\nVroTlBOlal laud  trarvayol\nBaker  St  Nelaon  B.  C.\n(8287) -\na. o. sabs,\nMining Engineer -Si\nConsultations,    Exploration*    D*y*loa\u00bb.\nment Reports\nRoom   I,   Royal   Bank   Bldg..   MHMJ\n(sf311\nAuctioneers\nMARRT: Many rich, rart.cuiara free.\nP. .Morrison. L-3058 w. Holden St.,\nSeattle.   WaBh. * (82) <n\nMany Urgent Needs\nDally News Want Ad. Columns- <\nreflect the modt urgent needs of11\n'hundreds of businesses and house-'1\nholds\u2014they outline the most sought'\nfor essentials that are necessary\nfor the success and welfare of'1\nmany   interests.\nIn an emergency one of the first\"\nthings thought of Is, \"Let's send a\nWant Ad.\" When the skilled work-!\nor leaves the business or factory,'^\nwhen a helper In the household1^\ngoes, when It is necessary to get ^\nin Immediate communication with ,\n^somebody, to do a. particular kind of,,\nwork, Dally New.s Want ..Ads are,,\ncalled upon to accomplish what Is.,\nmost   desired.\nNelson Dally News Want Ads are,,\nalways at your service, prompt in..\n.fii'.t ton and most Inexpensive In cost, i >\nasMMH**..*\n\u00ab.,   CUTLEB\n..Auctioneer,     Appraiser,      TsJualor\nGoods   sold   privately   or   \u00bbt   Auetloi\n319 Ward Strut **%\u201e?!\n(S220 1\nW. MATTHEWS  ft. OO.\nAucttonerrs\nOfflos   608  Ward  St.   ff\u00abL   IBS  *  \u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\n(822.1)\nBarristers*\n\u25a0.  O.  MATTHEW\nBarrister, \u25a0olloltov, JToUrr,* \u00ab*o.\nBox   1078.   Alan Block,   Nelson.   Ph. 544\n(8226)\nFuneral Directors\nD.   J.   ROBERTSON,   F.D.D. t% HJ.,   1M\nVlcortla   Street,   Phone    t\u00bbt; ,?\u00bb\u00bb\"\nPhone   157,J. (8222)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE! COMPANY-*\nC. J. Carlson, Undertaker. Undertakers\nand Embalmers and Funeral DlreetorSi\nThe Finest and most up-to-date under*\ntaking parlors and chapel In Interior\nB. C. Lady attendant for women and\nchildren. Day Phone M, Night PhonJ\n252 and 64. (8221) |\n\u25a0jij a\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nOf COLt-f -I'M bO\nHUNCRH ICOOUO\nEVEN EAT WHKT\n1\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab!E COOK* \u25a0\n^ORRt tilR -1 DONT\nEA.THERE-1 ONUV\nWORK\nBy George McManus\n\u25a0Mto    ..j*- ' (;.>'>li\u00bb\u00bbtu\ntjsmgsMwmgkMui^myfo^ t\n TH1 NELSON DXILT NEWS,  THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1920\nP**e m\nNews of Sport\nIERICAN ASSOCIATION\n.{[\"\u25a0as  City\n))umhua-8t.    Louis, ' rain.\nanapolls          0\nR.   H.\n, neapolls       5      1\n>waukee         4      1\nSecond game called end fifth).\n\u2022At San  Francisco\u2014 R.\nIt  Lake        \u2022\n; i   Francisco -     1\n] Batteries   \u2014    Stroud    and    Byler;\n*uch.   Love,   McQtiatd   and   Agnew.\nAC1FIC INTERNATIONAL\nictorla    29\n1 kirn;,    :  29\ncoma     29\n,okane     28\n- neouver      26\nkittle      10\nWon   Lost   P.C.\n21\n21\n21\n23\n24\ntl\n.586\n.566\n.586\n.581\n.520\n.204\nIt.\nJAt Victoria\u2014    '\"\notorla    ,     6\n1 coma    ..,.  12\n; Batteriea \u2014  Kllleen,   Brakke  and\nevens; Lawaon, Young and Cuh-\n'\u2022tgham.\n! At Vancouver\u2014 R.\n\u25a0attle        2\ntncouver    ;.,    6\nBatteries\u2014Washington    and    Boel-\nK   Johnson   and   Patterson.\nAt  Spokane\u2014 n.\nakima         1\npokane          9\n. Batteries\u2014Hill and Cadman; Lam-\nart and Fisher.\n^DODDS n\nKIDNEY\n7, PILLS a\nlLKlDNEt>,\/\nOteHTToi*ffti\u00bb\u00abffl\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nWon Lost P.C.\nCincinnati      S5 26 .574\nChicago      14 10 .til\nSt. Louis     14 11 .521\nBrooklyn      tl 80 .524\nBoston    21 It .SOO\nPittsburg      19 10 .492\nNew   York     .81 84 .477\nPhiladelphia  it 27 .411\nNEW YORK, June 10.\u2014Brooklyn\nwoo both games of a double header\nfrom the Oiants today 7 to 9 and\n1 to 1. In the first game Mitchell\nheld th* Oiants safe throughout,\nwhile Wheat's hitting figured largely In the Dodgers' runs. The second game was a pitchers' duel between Grimes and Toney.\nFirst Game\u2014 R.   H.   K.\nBrooklyn          7      I      0\nNew   York        t     \u2022      1\nBatteries \u2014 Mitchell and Elliott;\nBarnes, Winters, Hubhell and Snyder.\nSecond Game\u2014 It-   H.   K.\nBrooklyn    t     I      0\nNew York     1      5      0\nBatteries \u2014 'Grimes and Miller;\nToney, Hubbell and Smith.\nCINCINNATI, June 80.\u2014Reuther\nand Haines staged a pitchers' duel\nin the last game of the Reds- Cardinals aeries today, the former being\ngiven better support, and Cincinnati\nwon   2  to 0. R.   H.   B,\nSt.   Louis         0      7      2\nCincinnati        2     4      0\nBatteries\u2014Haines and Dllhoefer;\nRuther and Allen.\nCHICAGO, June S0*-Vaughn held\nPittsburg to one hit tn a pitchers'\nduel with Pender, and Chicago shut\nout 'the visitors In the final game of\nthe series 1 to 0. R.   H.   E.\nPittsburg    ,     0      1      1\nChicago        1      5      1\nBatteries\u2014Pender and Haeffner;\nVaughn and O'Farrell.\nscheduled.\nNo   other   National   league   games\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nAt   Seattle\u2014 R.\nVernon         7\nSeattle     X\nBatteries\u2014Houck and Devermor;\nSetbold.   Zamlock   and   Baldwin.\nAt Los Angeles\u2014 R.\nSacramento         \"l\nLos  Angeles  ,       6\nBatteries\u2014Penner and cook; Keating and Basaler.\nAt Portland\u2014, R.\nOakland           5\nPortland     2\nBatteries \u2014 Kremer and Mltze;\nGlasier,   Juney  and  Tobln.\nwiucWleague\nAt    Saskatoon   \u2014 R.   H.   E.\nMooae   Jaw     14    18      1\nSaskatoon     0      I      t\nBatteries \u2014 Liefer and Marshall;\nHann, Roman and Bachant and C.\nOlson.\nAt  Regina\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nCalgary         0     6      1\nRegina         1      6      2\nBatterle*\u2014Mack and Wlrta; Zwel-\nful and Whaling.\nAt   Edmonton\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nWinnipeg       7      6      1\nEdmonton          2      I      6\nBatteries \u2014 Schaack and Dixon;\nDumovich. Reppy and Ritchie.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nR.\nSyracuse        if.\nReading        It\nRochester         2\nAkron         4\nBuffalo         6\nToronto        8\nBaltimore-Jersey    City,    postponed,\nrain.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWon Lost P.C.\nCleveland     43 21 .672\nNew York    44 21 .667\nChicago     18 26 .594\nWashington     32 28 .531\nBoston       30 31 .482\nSt. Louis  ... .<  81 34 .470\nDetroit      21 43 .328\nPhiladelphia      17 49 .258\nDETROIT, June 30. \u2014 Pounding\nthree Detroit pitchers for 18 hits,\nwhile Faber held the Tigers to five\nscattered hits, Chicago won Its third\nstraight game in the series here,\n14 to 0. R.   H.   E.\nChicago      14    18      0\nDetroit     0      6      1\nBatteries\u2014Faber and Schalk; Leonard, Allen, Coombs and Woodall.\nBOSTON, June 30.\u2014Boston won\nthe first game of a double header\nhere today 4 to 3 In 10 innings,\nbut lost the second 5 to 2 to Washington.\nFirst   Game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nWashington           3    11      2\nBoston          4    IS      2\nBatteries \u2014 Shaw and Gharrity;\nBush  and   Walters.\nSecond   Game\u2014 R.. H.   E.\nWashington         5      8      1\nBoston         2      9      3\nBatteries\u2014Zachary and Gharrity;\nPennock and Walters.\nPHILADELPHIA, June 30. \u2014 Four\nhome runs featured today's double\nheader between New York and Philadelphia, the visitors winning both\ngames 6 to 5 and 10 to 6. Ruth's\ntwenty-third home run of the season scored the winning run in the\nfirst game .while his 24th circuit\ndrive broke a 1 to 1 tie In the fourth\ninning of the second contest.\nFirst   Game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nNew York    ;..     6    14       I\nPhiladelphia          6    15      1\nBatteries\u2014Quinn and Reull; Nay-\nlor Blgbee and  Perkins.\nSecond    Game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nNew   York    10    13      1\nPhiladelphia         6    10      3\nBatterle* \u2014 Collins  and   Hannah;\nPerry,   Peasley  and   Perkins.\nST.   LOUIS,.   June   30\u2014St.   Louis\nand Cleveland Indulged in a  slugfest\nbut the locals bunched their hlls to\nbetter  advantage  and   won   10   to .8.\nR.   H.   E.\nCleveland         8    14      2\nSt.   Louis      10    II      1\nBatteries\u2014Bagby, Uhle, Niehaus,\nFaeth and O'Neill; Davis, Sothorn\nand  Severold.\nBRITISH GOLF\nDEAL, Eng.. June 160.\u2014The tint\ntwo of four rounds of medal play\nfor the British open golf championship were played today on the links\nhere under a clear sky.\nThe best scores for the first round\nwere turned In by Alexander Herd,\nCoombshlll. and Edward Ray, of Ox-\nley, both making the round In 72.\nOther scores were\u2014Abe Mitchell, 74;\nHarry Varden and J. H. Taylor, 78;\nRltchey J. Barnes (American), and\nJames Braid, 79; George Duncan, 80;\nA. Massey, of Nivllle, 81; Walter\nHagen   (American),  82.\nMitchell completed the two rounds\nin 147; he and Barnes were even\nwith 153. Other scores were: Taylor, 157; Wilson (Holland), and A.\nG.'Havers (West Lancashire), 158;\nVarden, 159; Duncan, 160; Hagen\n166.\nCALGARY ENJOYS\nSPORT OF KINGS\nCALGARY, June 29.\u2014Admirers of\nthe sport of kings were treated to\nanother excellent card of races at\nthe exhibition grounds this afternoon. Romala, world's champion\npacer over Ice, won the 2:17 pace In\nstraight heats. Mildred Direct set\nthe pace in the 2:09 pace in the first\nheat, but HI Ho grabbed the next\ntwo heats. The running events were\nkeenly contested and the parl-\nmutuels  did a rushing business.\nRESOLUTE FAVORED\nFOR AMERICA CUP\nSANDY HOOK, June 30.\u2014rachts-\nmen who watched the Shamrock IV.\nrace yesterday against the 23 meter\nShamrock, in the atiffest breeze she\nhag yet enjoyed, decided that the\nchallenger for the America cup is\nbetter as a light weather than heavy\nweather  boat.\nWhereas last week Sir Thomas\nLlpton's entry walked away from her\ntrial horse, In light breezes, yesterday she made an actual gain of only\nthree minutes and seven seconds in a\n15%  mile race.\nHer elated time was 1:23:35 and\nthat  of  the  23  meter boat  1:26:42.\nWall street is displacing great Interest In the forthcoming races. The\nResolute Is the favorite, odds of 2\nto 1 in favor Its winning being given.\nCANADIAN GOLF\nCHAMPIONSHIPS\ni BEACONSFIELD, P.Q., June JO\n(Canadian Press).\u2014By their victories\nin the fourth round of the Canadian\nAmateur Golf championships this\nafternoon, T. S. Gillespie, Calgary;\nC. B. Grler and G. H. Turpln. Royal\nMontreal, and J. H. McCulloch, Bea-\nconsfleld, enter the semi-finals to\nbe played on Friday. A summary\nof the fourth round results follows:\nT. S. Gillespie beat S. Lyons, Lamb-\nton, 5 and 4. G. H. Turpln beat C.\n. Hague, Calgary, S and 2. C. B.\nGrler beat Frank Thompson, allssis-\nsaugua, 1 up. J. H. McCulloeh beat\nF.   Martin,   Hamilton,   3  and   2.\nBEACONSFIELD, Que., June 30.\u2014\n(Canadian Press.)\u2014Sterling, and at\ntimes, remarkable golf, marked the\nstruggles In the first and second\nrounds of the Canadian amateur\nchampionship, which were played this\nmorning and afternoon, The outstanding feature was the performances of George S. Lyon, the (12-\nyear-old  Lambton  veteran.\nMr. Lyon defeated the Maryland\nplayer, D. C. Cockran, In the forenoon, and In the afternoon last year's\nchampion, William McLuckle, of\nMontreal. During the day the re-\n\u25a0maining players from the United\nwere   defeated.\nThe playing of T. Gillespie, ot Calgary, the Alberta champion, marked\nhim as a dangerous rival for anybody. In the afternoon he defeated\nMr. Hancock.\nj Another westerner who Is playing\n| with certainty is J. T. Cuthbert, of\nWinnipeg.\nThe draw for the third round to\nbe played tomorrow, includes the\nfollowing:\nF. G. Hohlilzel, Sarnla, vs. T. Gillespie, Calgary.\nJ. T, Cuthbert, Winnipeg, vs. C.\nR.   Grler,   Royal,   Montreal.\nM. Greer, Grandmere, vs. C. W.\nHague,  Calgary.\nBEACONSFIELD, June 20.\u2014Winnipeg Will be the venue for, the 1921\nchampionship of the Royal Canadian\nGolf association. This waH decided\ntonight when the meeting of the association was held. Paul J. Miller, Hamilton golf club, was chosen\npresident for the coming year. Vice-\npresident are C. B. Wilson, K.C, Winnipeg; Geo. S. Lyon, Lambton, and\nT.   B.   Relth,   Beaconsfield.\nMy  1st\n \u2014......  .,,,.. ,,\u201e, \u2014.\nDOMINION DAY\nStore Closed\nM (Thr Hudson's Bay i[tmm M\nANGLING COMPETITION\nTO CONTINUE ALL DAY\nINTERNATIONAL   ENTRIES\nFOR  OLYMPIC   YACHT  RACES\nANTWERP, June 30. \u2014 France,\nEngland, Holland, Norway, Sweden\nand Belgium will compete in the\nOlympic yacht races to be held off\nOsteiid from July 7 to 10. The entries for the regatta were announced\ntoday.\nLABOR CANDIDATES\nWIN ONTARIO SEAT\nLONDON, June 30.\u2014(By Canadian\nAssociated Press)\u2014'The result of the\nNelson and Colnes election Is a victory for labor, Robinson Graham, Labor candidate, being elected by 14,134\nvotes. The Coalition-Unionist candidate, F..N. Wainwright, comes next\nwith 8775 votes, and W. R Rae, Independent-Liberal, is at the foot of\nthe   poll  with  680   votes.\nThe vacancy arose, through the res-\nfgatlon on account of Illness of Capt.\nAlbert  Smith,  the   Labor whip.\nToledo. Ohio, has a union depot for\nmotor  trucks.\nBetween daylight and dark today\nnumerous anglers will be out along\nthe Main lake the West Arm, and\nKootenay river as far as Castlegar,\nanxious to bring In the biggest salmon or the biggest trout of the day\nand to corral one of the prizes offered in the fishing competition being\nstaged by the Nelson and District\nRod and Gun club to celebrate Dominion Day.\nNo definite hours are set in the\ncompetition, but the fiBh must be\nweighed tonight. One prize will be\ngiven for the largest salmon and one\nfor the largest trout caught In the\narea from Proctor wharf to Lardo,\nand tn Kootenny Landing, and one\nprize will be given for the largest\ntrout caught between Proctor wharf\nand Castlegar. The competition will\nbe open to all members of the Nelson and District Rod and Gun club,\nand the junior Rod and Gun club,\nand to the wives and sisters of the\nmembers. All fish must be caught\nwith a rod and reel. The official\nweighers will be Proctor, W- A.\nWard; Nelson, Howard Bush; South\nSlocan, O. W. Humphrey; Castlegar,\nW. J. Farmer.\nSUNSHINE CHEERS UP\nMADRID BREAD QUEUES\nMADRID, June 30.\u2014The sun prevented what threatened to be a\nserious outbreak in Madrid during\nthe recent bakers' strike. The first\ntwo days of the bread scarcity were\ndull and threatening and the hungry\npoor were so affected by the lowering skies and the lack of food that\nthey   paraded   the   streets   in   groups\nuttering shouts and menacing storekeepers who kept their establishments\nopen.\nOn the third days the sun Bhone\nand although still hungry and compelled to wait Indefinitely hours for\nthe loaves to be doled out, the people\ndid so patiently and even cheerily.\nAll kinds of laws and police regulations were broken by the men,\nwomen and children forming the almost endless breadlines, but the authorities took a lenient view of what\noccurred.\nWhen an old man brought a camp\nbedstead, set It up on the sidewalk and stretched himself on it, a\npoliceman arrested him and led htm\nto the station house with his bed.\nThe police captain first looked grave,\nthen began to laugh when the offender explained he knew he might\nhave to wait anything from 12 to 20\nhours for his bread and had merely\nprovided against fatigue. He was\nreleased and returned to his place\nin the line with his bed amid the\napplause of the crowd.\nAnother group hired a barrel organ whose owner played popular\nmedolies while the people waiting\nwith growing appetites and hollow\nstomachs danced merrily. On tho\nCalle de la Magdalene a cobbler ar-\nrevide carrying a stool, his tools\nand a pair of shoes, which he was\nable to sole and heel before his\nturn came to obtain a loaf.\nSimilar Bcenes were enacted day\nafter day amid general hilarity until\nthe municipal authorities decided to\nbreak up the big breadlines by distributing from a larger number of\ncenters.        The      danger    was    then\nTHREE KILLED IN\nAIRPLANE CRASH\nSAN FRANCISCO, June 30.\u2014Three\npersons, one of them believed to be\na Democratic convention delegate,\nwere killed In an aeroplane accident\nat  the'Marine   flying  field  here   to-\nLindsley Bros. Canadian Co., Ltd.\nof Nelson ate operating on Caribou Limits at Meadows, B. C. and we can give\nemployment to Lumbermen as follows:\nLUMBERMEN  WANTED\nWe are now fairly well supplied with day men but can\nplace about 35 Piece Makers\nat the very Highest Wages paid.in the Kootenay District to men who\nknow'their work\nBest of Accommodation and Meals\nWE ARE EQUIPPED TO ACCOMMODATE ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY MEN WITH THE VERY LATEST\nAND UP-TO-DATE METHODS, WITH SHOWER BATH, SPRINGS AND MATTRESSES, AND AS GOOD A TABLE\nAS IN ANY HOTEL OR RESTAURANT IN CANADA, AT $1.50 A DAY.\nWE WANT NO 0. B. U. MEN, AND WILL NOT HAVE ANY, BUT WE WANT REAL MEN AND LUMBER-\n'    MEN WHO KNOW THEIR BUSINESS.\nINQUIRE AT NEL SON OR MEADOWS\n\u2014\n 1\nBBJB^B^BHBJI\n>*Fip8\nm msw wacr news, Thursday morning, july i, 1920\n\u25a0     ' \u2022   in i-  \u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0\nran \u00abmnAU uw\nTHE\n9. \u25a0>. TIERNEY, O.n.r.1 tot** Atwit\nN.lson,  B.C.\nOar*  supplied  t.  all   railway  paint.\nNA-DRU40. HAIR\nTONIC AND DRESSING\nAn effective tonic for\nthe scalp. Prevents the\nhair from falling out, and\nalso acts as a dressing.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nPRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY\nCOMPOUNDED\nPhone  81 P.  0. Bex  1067\nCongoleum Ruga, HxlOH, 821:  9*\n12,   824:   Linoleum.     $1.20     and\n,40 P**r yard; steel clad Galatea,\nyard; Bedroom Rugs, 7%x9,\n50; Ladles' Corsets. $1.75\npalf: 911k Hose, 75et P*>\u00bb\"; heavy\nbleached Sheeting, 90*f) yard; large\nTurkish Bath Towels, $1.25 nair^\nCoates' Thread, 200-yard spools, two\nfor 25e?: ,n*'\"'* good Bocks, 4Q<\u00a3\npair; ladle'e Combinations, $1,25\nsuit; Laces, J^e* to lf>#* yard; Boys'\nHercules Hose, 9  to 10H, $54   pair.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPHONE ML Me VERNON  \u00abT.\nTo Those Having Eye\nTrouble\nMr. Patenaude will be back the\nfirst of  the  week.\nDuring his absence of a month,\nhe has attended the 24th annual Convention and Exhibition of the\nAmerican Optometric Association,\nheld at St. l.mus, Mo. While away,\nMr. Patenaude haB had the opportunity of attending a Post Graduate\nCoarse, given hy the leading men In\nthe profession, at St. Louis, and he\nbrings the Wst and the latest to\nyou. Everyone having trouble will\nbe given every attention by Mr.\nPatenaude   himself.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician\nTHE BEST IN THE WORLD\nIs a claim we are not afraid to make\nfor V'urlew Ice CreaJfi, Its distinctive\nflavor, its velvety smoothness, its\nabsolute purity, put It In a class by\nitself at the very top, We would\nlike you lo try this cream. Then\nyou'll know there can be \"a best\not all   cream\"   and   Curlew  Is  It.\nCURLEW CREAMERY CO.,\nNelton,   B.C\nLIMITED\nGrand  Fork*,  B.C.\nNOTICE  TO   SUBSCRIBERS\nSubscriber* notifying the circulation department of The Dally News\nof change of address, must glye old\nas well as new address to ensure\npromDf   attention,        (6314)\nJITNEYS\nfor Nelson Golf and\nCountry Oub\nwill leave Hudson Bay corner  on  Dominion  Day   at\n10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.\nFare 25c each way.\n\u00a3EM\nThirst Quenching, and\nSatisfying\nSUMMER DRINKS\nGrape J nice. Armour's, Just the\npure juice of Concord grapes,\nper  bottle    55<\u00a3\nLime Juice\u2014The pure juice of\nWest India Limes. It's unsweetened.    Per  bottle..55^\nRaspberry   Vinegar \u2014 The   real\n. .old fashioned summer drink,\nper  bottle  .j 75<f\nPLEASE NOTE\u2014We are open\nall 'lay Wednesday and closed\nall day Thursday, July I.\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nDominion Day Program\n9:30   s.m.\u2014Children's   Chautauqua,\nRecreation   ground*.\n10 *.m,\u2014Trap  shoot,  C.P.R.  \u00ab\u2022*.\n2 p.m.\u2014Chautauqua ooneort, Recreation   ground*.\n8 p-m.\u2014Tr*o  shoot, C.P.R. fl\u00abt.\n3 p.m.\u2014BaMball match, Crwton\nvs.   Nelson.\nS p.m.\u2014Foo4b*ll match, Trail vs.\nNelson. \\\n8 p.m.\u2014Chautauqua musical prelude,   and   lecture   on   electricity.\nAll day\u2014Rod *V Gun club fishing\ncompetition. Main lake, W**t\nArm   and   Kootenay   river.\nbut no private person* were allowed\ntn be present. This is the way the\nBolshevist* organised the tr*\u00ab1-\nromedy of Ihe communistic paradise\nin order to dfcreive the English visitors aa to the real state of Soviet\n,'Russis.\nCHAUTAUQUA IS\nI\nPL\nPALESTINE IDEALS\nZionists of* America to Lay\nAdvanced Schemes Before\nWorld Conference\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany\nExpert   Repairs\nHeating    and    Plumbing    Contractors\nJuniors in Morning Adults\nin Afternoon; Splendid\nPrograms to Last Six Days\nAt !);30 o'clock this morning the big\nbrown tent tnftt ls t0 \"loiter Nelson's third annual Chautauqua\", -will\nhe placed In service, for a tour of\nduty of six clays, of concerts, dra\nmatlc and scientific entertainments,\nand (-lectures.\nThe big marquee is pitched at the\nwestern end of the Recreation\ngrounds, to leave the playing field\nfree, tha entrance being at the south\nside of the marquee.\nAll the artists for the first day's\nprogram* are now In the city, having\njtrrlved last night \u2022 from Chewelah,\nWash.\nIn the morning, the jniour Chautauqua, for the Utile folks, will hold\nit first session, with supervised play,\nunder the superintendence of Miss\nLeona Hume.\nThe Chautauqua proper will open\nat 2 o'clock, probably with Mayor J.\nA. McDonald doing the honors, and\nthe program will consist of & concert program by the Old-Fashioned\nGirls.\nIn the evening the program will\nhave two features. At 8 o'clock the\nOld-Fashioned Girls will give a concert prelude, and this wwllL be followed by a Scientific lecture on electricity, by Burned Ford, who wilt\nexhibit   many   appliances.\nThe advances sale of season tickets\nhas been highly satisfactory, and the\nchildren's tickets, in particular, have\nbeen about'cleaned up, and the students nearly so.\nHolders* of senson tickets will pay\nthe theatre tux of 10 per cent the\nfirst time they present the ticket.\nPersons buying ordinary tickets at\n'the gate pay the Inx at each purchase,      #\nA.S.Horswill&Co.\nPHONE   121\nHothouse Tomatoes, lb 5Q*\u00a3\nNew' Cabbage, lb 10i\nLettuce,  lb 35Jfc\nBermuda Oinions. 2 lbs 254\nNew Turnips, lb ll.*>\nDromedary   Dates,   pkt 304\nApples, 3 lbs 254\nOranges from, dot 004\nNorwegian   Sardines,  tin 254\n\"Water QIasa,  tin..Q*& and  35*|k\nPhone 121\nHale Hamilton\nI In another of his inimitable comedy-dramas\nAfter His Own\nHeart\nSecond Episode of\nBound and Gagged\nThe serial that is different\nK1N0GRAMS\nLADIES' SUITS\nAND COATS\nCleaned or Dyed\nH.K.Foot\nHigh-Chun   Dyer   *  Cleaner\nPAIIIVIKW   \u2014   NELBON,   B.O.\nOF\nSOU RUSSIA\nMoscow Camouflaged With\nGaiety to Impress English\nLabor Delegates\nFOR SALE\n1920 Maxwell Touring Car, price\n$1830 including license *and spare tire.\nThis car' has -been run 700 miles\nfor demonstrating. $1(100 takes the\ncar, which Is better thap new, with\nthe same guarantee that, goes with\na new  car.\nKERR'S JITNEY\nPhone 491.     Box 1090, NELSON, B.C.\nAgent   for   Nash   and   Maxwell   Cars\nand  Jackson  Trailers.\nFRUIT\nStrawberries, Raspberries,\nBlack Currants, Red Currants,\nLoganberries,  Blackberries,\nPlums, Cherries (Bings, white)\nGreengages, Crabapples,\nPeaches, Apricots,\nApples\nMcdonald jam co.\nNelson. B.C.\nLONDON, .Tune 80.\u2014An attempt to\nmnke Moscow look a busy and prosperous city during the visit to that\ncity of the English labor delegates\nis told by the lavish information\nbureau, whose press bureau at Riga,\nhas a special correspondent attached\nto the peace delegation in Moscow.\n\"The various institutions in Soviet\nRussia had for a long time been\nbusy In making preparations for the\nreception of the English labor dele\ngates, In order to show them Russia\nIn attractive colors,\" says the corre\nspondent. In Petrograd, where as a\nrule almost no people are to be\nseen In the streets, all the officials\nwere ordered to take part in the\nreception. Theatrical representation*\nand grandiose banquets were\nganized with the participation of\nactresses from the Mariinskl and\nAlexandrovski theatres. The delegates were tnkeh to Moscow in a\nspecial tra^n, accompanied by Tcher-\nkess soldiets in  bright  uniforms.\nIn Moscow, i he d:. y before the\narrival of ihe Q&gUffn \u25a0! -let,\"'tea, all\nthe papers published strict orders\nissued by the military and civil commissaries, setting out whtat everybody\nhad to do and how to behave. On\nMny 17 the tramway services in the\ncity was suspended, all the cars\n'being taken to the neighborhood of\nihe Nikolaskl station, where gaily\ndecorated, they moved to and fro,\ntrying to convey to tho visitors the\n1 idea of busy traffic.\nTn the station all the motor cars\nfrom Moscow were mobilized even the\nhighest commissaries having to walk.\nOn  May   18 a  parade  was  organized\nLONDON,  June   30\u2014Public   owner\nship   of   land,   a   cooperative   com\nmonwealth,   and   equal   rights  for all,\nwere   advocated   here   today   as   the\nthree leading principles In  the solcal\nprogram    American    Zionists    desire\nincorporated   in   the   project   for\nJewish   Homeland   in   Palestine,   by\nJacob   dd   Haas,   executive\" secretary\nof the Zionist  organization of America.\nMr. de Haas arrived tn London\nrecently With United States, Supreme\nJustice Louis D. Brandels, honorary\npresident of the Zionist organization\nof America; Judge Julian W. Mack,\npresident; Nathan Straus, Mrs Mary\nFels, Professor Felix Frankfurter,\nCaptain Abraham Tujin, David Ros-\nenbloom and Louis Lipsky, organization secretary. These are the advance guard of the 39 delegates of\nAmerican ZionlHts to the World\nZionist oonventioti convening in London July 4. *\nAmerican Zionists will make a unl-\ned effort to ha ve the Pittsburgh\nprogram, which they adopted In\n1918 as the guiding social principles\nfor the Jewish I lomeland, approved\nby the World conference, in the program It will formulate for the policy\nto be carried out in Palestine, Mr.\nde Haas in the statement he gave\nout fin the eve of what is considered\nthe most significant Jewish world\nconference ever held, stressed the\nVrogresslve tenets ot the Pittsburgh\nprogram,   declaring:\nThe Zionists ure not going to\nbe satisfied with a Palestine or land\nof Israel, which will be a mere\nduplicate of the numerous small\nstales of Europe or South America\nThey believe that the 2000 years of\nuffering arid mnrtyrflom of the wandering Jew ha* given to our race a\nwealth of experience which, added\nto the anlcent heritage of the Jew,\ncan be made fruitful in the creation\nof ii model setlemem In the land of\nour   forefathers.\n\"The Pittsburgh plattorm may l\u00bbe\nsummarized as follows: (1) Public\nownership of land; (2) the cooperative commonwealth; (3) equal rights.\nThe first is expressed, in the phrase\nthat the land of Palestine shall be\nowned or controlled for the benefit\nof the people of Palestine as a\nwhole. The Zionists of America have\nresolved that the benefits which\ncome through increasing land values\nspeculators, but will always remain\n\u2022community values,' which will go\nInto   the   public   treasury.\n\"The second principle indicates\nthat the Zionists are resolved to en-\njcourage cooperative enterprise to the\nlargest extent possible,- so_r that a\ncooperative commonwealth may be\ngradually evolved, without, however,\ncrushing Individual initiative. There\nis no simple formula by which the\ncooperative commonwealth can, be\nachleved\u2014^It must be a development\nthrough struggle and experimentation -Jn any event, we have set the\ngoal.\n\"The third principle la one with\nwhich all Americans are familiar\u2014\nat least in theory, though we may\nfall short in actual practice. Whereas, we confine our program of\n'equal rights' to the narrow field, of\npolitics, the Zionists of America\nwould apply It to all of Palestinian\nlife\u2014to politics find economics, to\nand industry, iu man, and woman,\nto every  sect and  every  creed.\"\n! ALFALFA\nWe Tiave just unload\nof old crop alfalfa, and\nceive a car of new\nby the end of the weekJ\nstraw and oat straw inj\nThe BRACKMM\nMILLING C0.,i\nwould mean the retail price would\nbe at least 34 cents The latest\nadvance brings advances since January 1 to 22 cents. But the price\nadvances for oil products were not\nconfined solely to gasoline. Prices\non virtually all oil products continued to rinse in various sections,\nbased on an extension of the long\nsustained demand. An authority in\nthe oil trade was quoted In effect\nas declaring that the present domestic supply \u25a0 of all oils Is far below demand and that the requirements of motor cars and trucks in\nparts of the United States call for\nabout 86 per cent of present pro-\nluctlon. '\nPRINCE88   REQUESTED\nSIMPLE   FUNERAL\nQIEATR;\nThursday, Friday and Saturday\nPAULINE FREDERiq\n\u2014IN\u2014\nBONDS OF LOVE\nLLOYD COMEDY and OUTING PICTURE\ndocument written by Crown\nPrincess Oustave Adolph of Sweden\nin 1914 contains detailed, instructions\nfor her funeral, which took place\nAscension day. May 13, The\nCrown Princess, who before her marriage was Princess Margaret of Con-\nnaught, died on May 1. She directed\nthat her coffin be placed in an open\ncarriage as Is the custom In the\ncase of peasants of Sweden and that\n,the carriage be covered with greens\ninstead of mourning. She asked thnt\n[^special places at her funeral 6e\ngiven to relatives and friends without regard to rank. The document\nrequests that there be no sermon,\nmerely Scriptural reading In English, snd stipulates that burial be\nin the open instead of in the Bid-\ndarbolms church, where the tombs\nof the royal family are located.\nThe kings of Denmark and Norway\nand representatives of the Princess'\nfamily attended   the obsequies,\nMUST PROTECT SHIPPING\nFor Sale\nBeautiful home, Fruitvale, B; C.\nTwenty acres, *slx in apples, eleven\ncleared, balance willow; small fruits;\nalfalfa. Seven roomed house, fireplace, plastered inside, full cement\nbasemant, furnace, soft water, furnished. Poultry, horse and implements, outbuilding; going concern.\nLovely  views.    $12,000,  terms.\nD. A. McFARLAND\nInsurance, Greenhill Coal, Real Estate\nRoom 6 K.W.C. Blk.        Phone 49\nWhat measures the government\nhas proposed to take to protect\nBritish industries and shipping in\nview of the serious competition with\nhich British ship owners and merchants are threatened by the Shipping bill before the American congress was the subject of a query by\nMr. R. P. Houston, Unionist, in the\nBritish house of commons Mr.\nHouston, who Is head of a well\nknown firm of steamship owners and\nmerchants, wanted to know whether\nthe government was aware that determined efforts were being made\nin the United States to create a\ngreat merchant marine for the purpose of carrying the whole of the\noverseas trade to the United States\nand by protective legation and\ncustoms duties. to d,lacr'minale\nagainst British and other foreign\nowned vessels, Mr. Bonar Law replied that the BrltiBh ambassador at\nWashington hau been instructed to\nsend copies of the bill to London.\nUntil these were received it was impossible  to deal  with  the  mailer.\ning a few days with nil brother, William Barker, Vernon street. Mr. Barker is on his way to attend , the\nShriners'   convention   at   Portland,   Ore.\nMr. and Mrs. Noble BInns, Miss V,\nJ. Binns, Uohert BInns, and Ft. Blols,\nmotored over .from Trail yesterday\nafternoon, registering at the Hume.\nThey will make the return trip to*\nday.\nMrs. Robert Brett and Miss 'Grace\nBrett, i who have been spending i.\ncouple of weeks' holiday at Proctor,\nreturned to the city Tuesday and left\nlast evening for Vancouver, where they\nwill make their home with Harold\nBrett,   Mrs.   Brett's   son.\ngasoline\"goes up\nMotorists are the latest victims of\nadvancing prices The Standard Oil\ncompany of New York announced\nthat the price' of gasoline lo garages\nwould be raised to thirty cents a\ngallon, an increase of one and one-\nhalf cents, while Independents were\nreported to be quoting \"gas\" as\nhigh as 32 cents.    This,  It was said,\nTHE  PLEASURE OF  READING\n, Reading is a habit' as easily cultivated as dancing and hodls In a\nthrall as strong when once acquired.\nBooks are now all that governesses\nused to be (though It's too bad for\ngovernesses have gone out). They\nare companions, mentors and entertainers They can show < youth more\nof life than any pair of eyes can\nsee on theJ great highway itself, and\nthe view leaves no images to distort\nthe maturer vision. Let's punch up\nthe cushions In the window seat and\ncall back the glory of the old sunlit\nscenes. It will be strange if the young\nfolk don't forget all about the door.\n\u2014Kansas City Star.\nNelson News oi the Day\nOn behalf of the patients of tho\npatients of the Balfour sanatorium,\nDr. R. J. Collins, medical superintendent, acknowledges the receipt of\n$52 cash, and a box of tobacco,\ncigarettes, gum and sox, from the\nSUverton Ladies Patriotic society per\nMrs.   R.   A.> Hilton,\nCANNED Fl\nYou can buy it cheaper tha\nWe   have   some   stock\nfore   the   present  high   pi\nonly:\nSliced Peaches, per tin...\nBartlett Pears, per tin ...\nFleming's Si\nFAIRVIEW\nDRY    GOODS    SROCERIt\nFURS\nHIGH class rums made\niected   skins,  kept   In   stock\nto   order.    Customers'   fore\nremodelled  and   repaired.    10\ndiscount during  summer.\nG. GLASER\nPhona 106.   418 Ward St., at\nFor the fifth consecutive day the\nwater In the West Arm at Nelson was\nrecorded yesterday afternoon as standing at 13.8 feet above low water\nmark.\nTuning, polishing and repair work\ndone. Work thoroughly guaranteed.\nAsk for Mr. Tweedie, at Mason &\nRlsch, Ltd., Ward St.,  Phone 41.     .\n<8174)\nSTRIKE   ON!\nLindsay's Camp, Meadows. Working men are requested to keep away.\nIt.   Barrow,   Secretary,   O.B.TJ.       (8072)\nClan   Johnstone   and   the   Daughters\nGive Ue Your Order\nDry Wood, Li\nand Nat Gait\nAlso for Your\nFURNITURE and PIANO MC\nOrders   Promptly   Attend\nMacDonald Cartag\nFuel Co.\nof Scotia will hold a basket\non July 1st, at the old city part]\nstart at 11.15 a.m.\nThe   victor   July   Records\non   sale   at    the   Willis   Plaji\nThey   form  an  exceptionally\ntlon.\nThe   Maccabees  will   meet\n8  o'clock.    Initiation.\nDuring  Chautauqua   week\nshank  will   run  his  jitney  caf\u00a7\non   the   7   o'clock   ferry   and\nat   11   p.m.\nA garden party will he held\nG. A. \u25a0 Hunter's,- across the i\nJuly- 14th. Afternoon tea anil\nsupper will be served, by the _\nClub of St. Saviour's, In alj__\\\nMemorial  Hall.\nNEW   1920   MODEL\nCHEVROLET CARS\nThree only left \u00bbat the old price.\nNelson Transfer\nPHONE   35\nLAWN MOWERS\nIf you want the most satisfactory Lawn Mower made\nin Canada, buy a\nWOODY\/VTT High Wheel\nWe carry this make in 14, 16 and 18 inch\nWood Vallance Hardware Co.\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON, B. O.\nDOMINION DAY SPORTS\nBaseball-3:00 p.m.\nCRESTON vs. NELSON\nFootball--5:00 p.m.\nTRAIL vs. NELSON\nFOB SALE\nEjight-roomed House on Vernon Street,' in onfe of the\nmost desirable residential blocks in Nelson, fully modern,\nfurnace, stone foundation, two and a half lots. All in\nfirst-class condition.\n. Charles F. MoHardy\nINSURAJSCfi *?honei.3\u00a7 BfiAL fiaiAlfi\nSocial and Personal\nW. Hicks, of Slocan, arrived In the\ncity   last  night.\n\"A. J, Dunnett, of Kafdo, waa a city\nvisitor yesterday.\nW. P; Calhoun, of Nakusp, la registered  at the Hume'.\nT. L. Davies, of Salmo, waa among\narrivals   last   ntght.\nA. tCnabe, of Deer Park, la registered at the Strathcona.\n8. R. Moore, of New Denver, is\nregiatered  at  the  Hume.\nW, J. Parmer, the Castlegar postmaster,  was  in  the  city  yesterday.\nDr. R Tl. Hiue, of the Balfour sanatorium, was among arrivals last evening.\nHarry Wasslck, of Hull, la spending   a   few   days   in   the   etty.\nA.     K.    Watts,    the    lumberman,\narrived  from South  Slocttn  last  night\nMr. and Mrs. T. A. Page will leave\nfor Spokane this morning, for a visit\nof  ftfur or five days.\nMiss Hazel Dlmock left yesterday\nmorning for her home tn .SUverton,\nafter spendhrg t h<\u00bb pa at week as *\nguest   of   Miss   Mary   Moore.\nRege Hull, of the' Canadian Bank of\nCommerce stiff, Iwrves this morning\nfor his, holidays, which .he will spend\nat his homi*  In  Orand   Forks.\nCi O. Itodgers, manager of the Canyon\n\u25a0Nelson to pay his\" provincial taxes,\nCity Lumber company, who has been in\nreturns   this   morning   to   Creston.\nMiss Bella Lamont, who wan formerly employed by the local branch of the\nHudson's Bay Company, la at present\nwith the same company  In Calgary,\ng, Barker, of Butt*, Moat., $\u2022 spend-\nSell Your\nRags\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment will pay\n5 cents a pound for\nclean cotton rags.\n-   Dominion Day\nSTOREXILOSED ALL Da\nEmory & Walk]\n11  \u25a0\u25a0   .      r    \u25a0\u25a0 ____ __t\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1920_07_01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0396302","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}