{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0397030":{"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":"2021-04-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1921-07-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0397030\/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":" Keep Abreast\nWITH MARKET NEWS'\nRead Page 6\nv_.\nExciting\nTENNIS AT TORONTO\nSee Page 7\nVOL. 20.\nNELSON, B. 0, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 15,1921.\nNO. 65.\nin\n[Snipers   Start   Trouble\nMorning; Military Forced\nto Take Hand.\nARMORED CARS PROVE \u25a0\nVIRTUALLY POWERLESS\nClose Street Traffic; Suspend Tramways; Ambulances Busy.\nBELFAST, July 14.\u2014The rioting\nhere ceased suddenly at the'curfew\nhour tonight. An infantry regiment\nstationed at Holy wood, near Belfast,\nis to be. transferred to the city tomorrow to help in dealing with anji\nfurther, disorders.\nA gun duel was fought ln the York\nStreet and North Queen street areas\nj tonight.     Sniping,   which   began  this\ni morning,   continued  almost  throughout the entire day, developing early\nJ this  evening into sharp   fighting,  In\n; which  the police  and  military were\n; obliged to take a hand.    Several clv\u201e-\n'_ iliatis-;were wounded,\ni.    After 7  o'clock tonight  tho police\nj and military, iiv armored  cars, were\nvirtually powerless to cope with thc\nshooting., Streets were closed to the\ntraffic, tramway    service    was    suspended  and  only  motor  cars carry-\nj lng people on most  urgent business\n! ventured on1 the streets.\nP' Ambulance porkers were kept busy\nI taking wounded persons to hospitals.\n; Among  those  wounded   wus  William\nj Grant,  Labor member  of  the house\n{'\u2022'\u25a0for North Belfast, who wns shot In\nj the chest, \u201e\nAppoint Truco Officer.\nBELFAST,      July      14.\u2014Alderman\nMichael . Staines,    mtmber    of    the\nBritish house Oi commons for Dublin,   who. was  released   from  Mount\ni Joy prison on June  30,  has.arrived\nI in Galway.   As a commander In the\n1 Irish Republican army Staines hand\ned   Divisional   Commander .CruiBe   i\ndpcument   from    the    authorities in\nDublin Castle, authorizing him to act\nas officer to insure observance of the\n:\u25a0 ..truce. .,    ......'_,..\nSir  James  Craig,   the   Ulster  pre-\n! mier, still is in Belfast.    It was reported lust night that he hnd started\n.for London.\n\\\nBuilding Dams May Affect\n-..  Spring   and  Fall  Water\nLevels. .\nMONTREAL, July 14.\u2014That lho\ndevelopment ol Montreal during tho\npast 10 years was one of the strongest .arguments In support of the St.\nl.awrer,c.e deep waterway project,\nand thati tho people o\u00a3 Montreal were\nwilling .to put their shoulders to tho\nwheel 'in order, to solve this proh-\nleth,: was stated by W. O. Ross,\nchairman of the Montreal harbor\ncommission at the luncheon today to\nthe delegates frotn the Great Lakes:\nSt. Lawrence TideWter association;\naboard the steamship Megahtic. Mr!\n(Rolls' stated he would welcome the\nday the great work was started.\n') -A more ;<Jkfltlous view\" was ex-\npressed by Colonel W. 1. bear of the\nRobert Reford company and. chairman of the Montreal shipping board.\nColonel Gear argued that ocean going vessels might; not use the canals\ntp the interior and that the economical side of transportation could be\nbest' served by bringing the freight\ndown to\" the seaboard in lake boats\nand transshipping to  ocean vessels.\nOne question that required study\ninvolved the effect the building of\ndams would have on the Water levels\nat Montreal, especially in the-spring,\nand  fall.\nDuring the afternoon the delegates\nwere the'guests of the city- of Montreal.\n\u2022French Cruiser Salutes\nMONTREAL, July 14.\u2014Twenty-mio\nguns were fired at noon today by\ntho French cruiser : VUIe D'Ys in\nfrlendlp-salu'tc 'to** the party of 110\nsenators, congressmen and leading\nmen nf tho Vitttei States representing tho Great . Lakes-St. Lawrei'co\nfldewater association. ; who visits\nMontreal to.. Inspect the\/port and\ntako conglzahee of its equipment and\nits problems.- ^\n. The   party  was   welcomed  on  the,\n; wharf by a -reception committee composed of the .harbor commission end\nJtopresentatlves   ot   important   bodies.\n| bf the city. .At 11 o'clock tonight the\nvisitors   hoarded,  the   Capo   Eternity\n, and sailed for Quebec.\nLOCK OUT  TAILORS\n\u2022WINNIPEG, July 14.\u2014A lockout\nIn the JOCal tailoring industry was\nprecipitated tonight'as a 'result of\nth'e workors' decision to definitely\nreject a 10 per cent wage ceduotion\n6rdered by tho majority of master\ntailors. About 175 employees will\nbe affected. Those master talluvs\nwho are not attempting, to enforce r\nj^age reBrictlon .will continue, to dper-\n' ftg, .it :ffa&. stated- by-union .'officials.\nReported Betrothed to\nPrincess Mary of England\n\u00abw,1,\"*yWrtffl.VA1lH.fill. MW VtWH   ^\nLORD   ALGERNON   APSLEY\nPersistent  rumors state  thnt Prln\ncess Mary, the only daughter of King\nGeorge, will marry Lord Allen Alger\nnon Apsley, oldest son of the Earl of\nBathurst.     Queen   Mary   Is   said   to\nhighly approve the match.   Lord Apsley' Is a typical young English aristocrat,   a  tali,   scholarly  young  man,\nwho In worthy to he consort  tn  tbe\nonly   daughter   nf- the     royal     house,\nLord   Apsley's  mother   Is   the   owner\nof th'e Morning Post, the organ of the\nBritish aristocracy.\nNebraska Town Takes Frantic Measures to Prevent\nInundation.\nALLIANCE, Neb., July 14.\u2014Thou\nsands of head of livestock have been\nlost nnd many homes and other\nbuildings swept away in and near\nAndrews, a village near Crawford,\nNeb., by a cloudburst which deluged\nthe White River canyon today, One\nwoman, Mrs. John Barrett, living on\n^ small farm near the town, was\nswept frpm her bod while asleep and\ndrowned.\nOthers are dead, according to\nnieager reports reaching Crawford,\nCrawford, on the White River, tonight Is making frantic efforts to\nprevent inundation of a portion of\nthe qlty when a l*4-l'opt wall of wa\nter which Is,running down the river\narrives.\nThe   first   flood     waters     reached\nOrn,wford at 5 p. in., and some damage-was done in the lowlands.\nBridges  Washed Away.\nFive ' bridges were washed out on\nthe Chicago #\u25a0 Northwestern railway\nbetween Crawford and Andrews, re-,\nports said.\nTrnjjns- are heing held. Several\nfarm housea. and outbuildings were\nswept into the torrent, a number\nhaving passed Crawford tonight. Telephone and telegraph wires for miles\naround are down along the northwestern road.\nBffonts were being made tonight\nby citizens to take relief into the\nflooded district, several automobile\nparties having met at Crawford. .\nALLIANCE, Neb., July 14.\u2014Craw-'\nford, on the White river, late tonight\nwas frantically taking measures to\nprevent inundation of a portion of\nthe city whon a 14-foot wall of water, which Is rushing clown tne White\nriver canyon from the inundated district arrives,\nSeveral persons are reported to have\nperished, one is known to have been\nkilled, thousands of head of live stock\nhave been lost, scores of ranch homes\nand other buildings in and near Andrews, a village 17 miles west . of\nCrawford, ; have been destroyed and\nfields have, been devastated by cloudbursts which deluged the White river\ncanyon country today.\nAndrews is practically  inundnted.\nAWARDS DEGREE TO\nSIR GEORGE FOSTER\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014Sir George\nFoster, acting prime minister and\nminister of trado and commerce, has\nbeen .notified that he is today being\nawarded the degree of .LL. D. in\nabsentia by .t he-Edinburgh university.\nSir Gorg Is one of the few\/notables\nwho have^ been honored by the presentation of degrees, in absentia by\nthis . institution. The acting, premier\nwas- a- student at Edinburgn university and also at Heidelberg afte-\nhe left the -University of New Brunswick. *.,.-.\nNAVAL MINISTER\nTO VISIT COAST\nOTTAWA, July 14\u2014O. S. Desbar-\nrats, deputy minister for 'naval* affairs, left tonight for Victoria, B.C.\nHe will be absent about a rtionth\non a trip of inspection of the naval\ndockyard at Esquimalt. the naval j\ncollege and .tlie chain of Wireless '\nsta.tjons a.i JUe, coajiti, _-'._!_\u00a3 .1\nWill \/Discuss Disarmament,\nBut Not General Far East-\nem Subjects.\nALTERNATIVE IS TO\nARRANGE QUESTIONS\nUnited States Argues Limitations Can Be Fixed Afterwards.\nGARAGE BLAZES\nDIGBY, N. S-, Jirty 14.\u2014Losses by\nfire estimated at $40^000 resulted\nfrom a hlftze which . started early\nthis morning in the Universal garnge.\nBIG FIGURES IN IRISH AFFAIRS\nWASHING-TON, July 14,\u2014Japan Is\nready to enter the disarmament conference, but withholds assent to an\nunrestricted .discussion of Far Eastern questions as a part of it.\nThe viewpoint of the United States\nis that a solution o fthe Far Eastern\nquestions Js a necessary -accompaniment to any disarmament program.\nThis develops the first hitch, If a\nhitch 'it turns out to be, ln President .'Harding's plan to remove the\ncauses for horevy armaments and t'.ien\nthe armaments themselves.\nUnited' States officials, however,\nare optimistic that a way will be\nfound for a satisfactory conference,\n^to --fohich Japan will bo a party ahd\nfor a program pf armaments reduction acceptable to all.\nTokio   Is   Cautious.\n. The Japanese reply to tho pre-.\nIlmlnary ' question of whether sue\nwould receive an invitation to such\na conference oafne to the state department through the United Stages,\nembassy at Tokio. Its text Was not\nmade public and department officials\ndeclined to reveal its contents except to say that it expressed approval of the disarmament discussion but did not agree to a consideration of Pacific problems. During\nthe day, however, It became known\nthat the attitude of the Japanese\ngovernment wns known to the government here.\nTho alternative, in the belief of\nJapanese statesmen, would be to\nagree beforehand on exactly what\nquestions will form the subject matter of the diseussiqns.\n\u25a0To' this la opposed the opinion of\ntho United States, that If all,the nations first agreed to come into the\nconference whatever limitations appeared udvisable could bo fixed liy\nassent afterwards.\n'Next Move Uncertain\nJust what will be the next move\nof the president and his advisers did\nnot appear* tonight. China having;\naccepeed the invitation unconditionally during the day, however, all of\nthe Invited powers were on record\nas agreeing at least to disarmament.\nft is not impossible that the course\nadopted will include elements of both\nplans of procedure. There is a feeling here that Japan scarcely will\ndecide in the end to stand out by\nherself among the powers when confronted with the actual choice of .accepting or -declining a formal invito tioru\nLloyd   George   Hopeful\nLONDON, July 14.\u2014Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge, at the meeting of overseas\npremiers, alludfcd to the \"remarkable\ninvitation issued by the president of\nthe United States to discuss issueu\ninvolved in, the Paricif problem on\nwhich the future peace of the world\ndepends.'.'\nHe went on to say:\n\"I am hopeful that it will result\nin a pact of peace that will mako\nthe Pacific a real pacific ocean. I\ntrust that it will lead to a useful discussion of the .problems of disarmament, upon which so much depends\nfor the future of our race, beonuse\nIt matters not .what treaties are\nsigned,, what pacts are entered luto\nbetween nations; it makes no dif-\nference whnt leagues or associations\nthey may found, if nations arm\nagainst each other for war, war will\nensue in the end,\n'Resolutions Not Enough\nTherefor*, no treaty Is of value\nunless lt leads to nn understanding\nnmopg nations that they will not.\nutllijfR their resources, their wealth\nand strength for .the purpose of d.;.\nwdoping - the mechanism of human\nslaughter amongst themselves, I am\nvery hopeful that when that conference ls held It \u25a0 Will lead ' to something beyond mere resolutions in.\nfavor of disarmament and will lead\nto on understanding and a real arrangement Involving the keeping of\nthese armaments within certain\nlimits.\" .\nSir Hamar Greenwood, chief secretary for Ireland, said he believed\nthat a permanent settlement would\nbo the ultimate result of tlie Irish\nconference.\nExpect Preliminary.\nLONDON, July .14.\u2014Opinion in\nauthoritative quarters here is that,\nthere will be a conference in London\npreliminary to ftie conference \u2022\" at\nWashington on limitation of armaments. This suggestion la founded\non the. idea ol tho adyisablty tit* taking the \"overseas premiers. into the\ndisbussion. Such a preliminary conference .necessarily wiuld be held\nearly In August, before the premiers'\nleave England. It Is understood that\nnothing yet has been definitely nettled, shut    that communications are\nsin\n-     PRIME ACTORS  IN HISTORIC DRAMA.\nMen who took part In  the Irish conference^-From left to right: General Macready, commander of the British\nforces in Ireland, who was cheered in the streets of Dublin;  Earl Mtddletdn, leader of the Southern Unionists;  Arthur Griffith, leader of the Sinn Fein; Eamonn De Valera, the so-called president, and Lawrence O'Neil, lord mayor\nof Dublin. fc .\nSuffers Severe Relapse;\nPhysician Holds No Hope\nfor Recovery.\nLINDSAY Ont^July 14\u2014Suffering\na severe relapse early last evening,\nthe condition of General Sir Sam\nHughes, former.* minister of militia,\nwas reported at '1:30 this morning\nto 'be very serious and any hopes\nentertained during the last few days\n-for his recovery hava been given\nup. Interviewed by \/the Canadian\nPress early this morning, Dr.. J. A.\nMcCallum, Sir Sam's physician, stated that the intense heat was mainly\nresponsible for the critical\" turn in\nthe ex-minister's illness. He was\nworse yesterday morning, but during\nthe evening 'his : condition\" became\nvery serious and,, ho Is sinking\npidly.\nSir Sam is delirious. The former\nminister of militia has suffered for\n] some months from pernicious anaemia\nnnd heart weakness which has brought\nhim to his present critical condi\ntion.\nForest Fires Threaten\nVillage in Nova Scotia\nUnless Wind Changes\nOXFORD, N. S., July-14.\u2014The village of Thompson, seven niUes from\nOxford, was. reported early, this afternoon threatened with destruction\nfrom approaching forest^ fires, and\nunless the fires were .brought under\ncontrol or tbe wind changed Oxford\nitself was said to be in danger. Men\nwomen and children were fighting\nthe fire.\nCommittee to Supervise\nBonis ot Swift Current\nSWIFT CURRENT, Sask., July 34.\nBond holders have .named W. R.\nMcConnell, Regina; L. A. Winter, Toronto, nnd J. H. Gundy, Toronto, as\ntheir representatives on a committee\nof five which will' supervise Swift\nCurrent's municipal affairs for the\nnext fivo years. ,\nUnited States Balloon Adventurers Let Off Without\nCensure.\nWASHINGTON, July 14.\u2014Naval\nSecretary Denby today made public\nthe report of court of Inquiry which\nInquired into the romantic 'story of\nInst December, when a navy balloon\nleft Rockaway,* Long Island, carrying Lieutenant Louis A. Kloor, Lieu\ntenant Farrell and Lieutenant, Hinton, who subsequently landed In the\nwilds of northern Ontario and\nreached safety only after hardships.\nThe three men were nbt censured,\nthe report stating that the journey\nwas authorized by the commanding\nofficer, although crossing the Canadian border was never contemplated.\nThe personal altercation between\nLieutenants Farrell and Hinton nfter\nthe trio arrived at Matlce, Ont., is\nascribed by the report to Farrell's\nhighly excited, nervous and exhaust\ned condition, due to exposure. Tho\nreport adds that the difference was\nlater adjusted in a \"manly way\" by\nthe giving and accepting of an apology.\nStrenuously Combat Flames\nJTALIFAX, July 14.\u2014Despite the\nefforts of over 100 men who strenuously comhatted the advance of\nthe flamed in the face of a strong\nsouthwest wind today and tonight,\nforest fires in the vicinity of Oxford, Cumberland county, threaten\nthe settlements of Birchwood and\nHandford. A slight shift in the direction of the wind and efficient fire\nfighting diverted the .flames which\nthis morning swept toward Thompson\nbefore any damage had been done to\nhouses or buildings there. Burning\nthrough thick wood with great rapidity; the flames were' reported in\nbe advancing in tho direction of\nHandford and to have already readied  tho outskirts of that village.\nAnother fire which threateno-l\nGlenville, in the same district, this\nmorning wns said to be. under comrb]\ntonight.\nWOOLEN MILLS\nSHOW ACTIVITY\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014-Canadian mills\nare showing greater activity in the\nmanufacture oi woolen goods and as\na result there is a strong demand\nfor Canadian wool,' but without any\nadvance in price, according to the\nDominion wool market report for the\nweek ending July 12, issued today.\nSales of eastern domestic wools\ncontinue to be made at l\u00bb9.to 21\ncents for medium. _Westerh wools\nare under process of grading, and\nseveral options have already been taken on certain lots,   , .-\nVeterans Ask Clemency\n(or Convicted Murderer\nTORONTO, July 14\u2014The Q. W. V.\nA. is making- a plea (for clemency in\nthe case of William McFadden, sentenced with Roy Hotrum, to be\nhanged on. August 31 for ,the murder\nof E. 'Sabine, a Toronto druggist.\nThe members of the G. \"W, V. A.\nare not, however,.! a unit in asking\nfor commutation of the; sentence.\n\"My position is that neither soldiers' organizations nor . any other\nshould interfere with. the administration of justice,\" said J..H. Craig,\n... member of ,thq G. W. .V.'A, .and\npassing between. Lloyd George ond' acting, secretary of th'e proposed Ca~\nWuahlhtfog.'o!^ihe gutfject,\"'l'ttj._.' nadlfift Legion,       \u2022    \u25a0\"\" '\u25a0-.\":' \\  ,\nDeclares Prohibition\nof Sunday Amusements\nto Be Unconstitutional\nLOS ANGELES, Cal., July 14.\u2014;An\nordinance of the city of Pomona,\nnear here, prohibiting Sunday amusements for which an admission fee\nwas charged, is held unconstitutional by Judge Journell. The Judge declared the draft was class legislation because it allowed churches to\ntake up a collection, which, he said,\nwas virtually an admission' fee, at\nSunday services.\nTEN YEARS FOR\nCHICKEN THIEF\nMONTREAL, July 14.\u2014Emlle Lapointe was today sentenced to 10\nyears' penal servitude for attempting to inflict bodily injury on I*er-\nreal Bernard, D. Gaulin and others\nof St. Mark, while being arrested\nfor stealing chickens. Lapointe was\nalso sentenced to another lp years\nfor stealing 400  chickens.\nEMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014A checking of the upward\ntrend in employment waa shown,by\nthe reports of 5238 firms; employing\n613,486 workers, to the department\nof labor for the week ending June\n11th.\nThe previous week's* payroll had\nIncluded 615,330 employees, making\nthe decrease about one-third of 1\nper cent. ; The index number of Employment, compared' with the bttse\nweek of January, 1920, was 88,1. For\nthe previous week it was 87.8 and\nfor the. corresponding week of 1920\nIt was 107.00.\nFifteen industrial groups recorded\nincreases over the< previous week,\naggregating less than 3000 employees, while 15 reported decreases\"-\"aggregating about 4600 employees.\nFirms in the Iron and steel industry\nreported reductions. Other outstanding contractions were in loggthg and\nwater transportation.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS.\npip!\nPasses Civil Service Exam\nas Stenographer With High\nPercentages.\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014A striking example of perseverance against the\nphysical disability of blindness is\nfurnished by James H. Rawlinsoii,\nex-Canadian soldier, blinded in action, who has Just left Ottawa on\nthe first part of his journey to London, England, where he Is to assume\nthe duties o'H clerk-stenographer in\nthe London office of the department\nof immigration and colonization.\nDuring the past two and half years\nRawlinson, who was trained at St.\nDunstah's shool in England, was one\nof the most efficient and accurate\nstenographers on the staff on the department of soldiers' civil reestab-\nlishment in Toronto. Rawlinson spent\n1G months In learning the Braille\nsystem of shorthand and the use of\nthe typewriter. Despite his handicap he passed the civil service ex\nnmination for clerk-stenographer and\nnot only passed, but obtained a per\ncentage of 80.3 on the test. He is\nthe first blind applicant known , to\nhave tried and passed a civil service\ntest.\nTbe blind veteran maintains there\nis nothing marvelous about his accomplishment. His only complaint,\nwhile in Ottawa, was that commercial firms would not consider the\nappointment of a blind stenographer,\nsome o*f them expressing incredulity\nthat a sightless person could be\ntrained   to  do  such  work   efficiently.\nRawlinson is thc author of\n\"Through St. Dunstan's to Light,\"\nwhich hns been widely read in Canada,\nPEACE ill\nLloyd George and De Valera\nHave Three-Hoar Conference; Prime Minister Will\nNot Spoil Opportunity by\nInjudicious or Premature\nTalk I ioth Doing Utmost\nto P1 note Real Peace.\nNATl\/- INDEBTED\nli TO HIS MAJESTY\nPrenr Pays, Tribute to\nK f 's Interest and Atti-\nt! - .; Crowds Greet Irish\nLeader; Women Recite\nRosary; Sinn Fein Demonstrations Fail to Rouse Resentment; Occasion Solemn.\nFLASHES BY WIRE.\nCaptain Dies Suddenly\nWUNDSOR,  Out.,  July   14.\u2014Captain\nW. T. Cj'ossley of the w. R.  Grace\nsteamer line, New York, died suddenly hero today.\nSanctions Conciliation Board\nOTTAWA, July 14.\u2014The city council of Hull has sanctioned tho appointment of a board of conciliation\nto decide the wages of the civic\nfiremen.\n. Ontario Still Sweltering\nTORONTO, July ' 14.\u2014With the\ndownpour of rain today and tho forecast of scattPivd showers and somewhat cooler weather tomorrow Ontario may safely anticiupate a few\ndays' relief from old sol's barrage.\nWith the exception of the two hbu,-s'\nrain last week cartd tbe substantial\ndownpour of this; afternoon Ontario\nhas had close to=a month of hot and\ndry weather.\nToday's rain caused  a drop of the\n^temperature from 01! to 97 in Toronto   and    this   situation    is    fairly\n(general over the province. The storm\nwas worth millions to the famishing\ncrops, especially in the southern part\nfof Ontario.   \u25a0\nONTARIO GOVERNMENT\nPLANS TRADE REVIVAL\nSaxonla,  at Halifax from London.\nRyndam,  at Rotterdam from  New\nYork.\nCassandra, ot Glasgow from Montreal.\nOrbita, at Southampton from New\nX<*?v.\/    ._. .\u201e_.!_. .. ..___,__;-\nTORONTO, July 14.-~Thc Globe\nstates today lt learns unofficially\nthat the Drury government contemplates thc appointment of a special\ncommission to look into the industrial and commercial conditions in\nOntario with a view to forming\npractical plans for a, general revival.\nThe commission will probably Include representatives of boards of\ntrade,  manufacturers  and  farmers.\nGRAIN BUYERS ATTEND\nCONVENTION AT REGINA\nREGINA, July 14.~-WIth 200 dogates in attendance from the three\nprairie provinces, the fifth annual\nconvention of the grain buyers' association of Canada opened here today. At the initial session little business wns done, the discussion being\nlargely of an Informal nature preparatory to the main work of the\nconvention.\nAmong the questions to be considered will be the grain commission,\nshortage on bonds, record of weights\nand invisible profits and wages.\nLONDON, July. 14.\u2014Mr. Lloyd -\nGeorge held a council of ministers at\nthe house of commons tonight to\ndiscuss his meeting with De Valera.\nLater he proceeded to a dinner o'f\nthe Liberal Coalitionists, where he\nreceived a, great ovation. Apologizing for his late appearance, he said\nhe had been engaged ln important\ntasks during the day and after discharging them had to meet his colleagues and report to King George,\nwho, he declared, was taking a very\nkeen and close Interest In. the proceedings and to whose intervention\nso much was attributable.\n\"We owe him,\" added the premier,\n\"a deep debt of gratitude for this,\none of the greatest services he has\nrendered.\"\nThis was greeted with loud applause.\nWith reference to Ireland, Mr.\nLloyd George besought his audience\nnot to tempt him into an indiscretion.\nIndiscreet to Say More.\n\"The less said the better at thl*\nstage,\" declared the prime minister,\n\"but there is the great fact that Mr.\nDe Valera, chieftain of ythe vast majority in South Ireland, has been in\nconference for nearly three hours\nwith the prime minister of this country, discussing various methods and\nsuggestions for the settlement of this\nlong, long controversy, an old bitter,\nwasteful feud; a 'feud in which there\nhas been for ages long a number of\ndisastrous blunders and endless opportunities lost.\n\"Let us trust that this one will not\nbe   lost.     I   can   only   say,   after   the\nlong Yliscu-ssion, that I am certain we .\nboth   did   our  best  to  secure  peace.\n(Loud  cheers.)\n\"Beyond that it would be not wise\nfor me to go further at this moment\nbecause you do not have our difficulties  to  deal  with.\nLONDON.       July     14.\u2014Mr.     Lloyd\nCeorge  and Eamnnn  De Valera,  Irish\nRepublican- leader,   had   a   conference\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nTHE WEATHER\nA drop of six-tenths of a foot In\nthe lake at Nelson was registered\nduring the 48 hours ending at 4 o'clock\nyesterday afternoon, when tho gauge\nread 12.3 f\u00ab\u00ab,J- above 'mv water mark..\nnnmie\nVICTORIA, July 14.--Victoria and\nvicinity: Fresh to strong westerly\nWinds; continued fine; not much\nchange   in   temperature,\nLower mainland:     Fresh   to  strong-\nwesterly  winds;   continued   fine;   njt\nmuch change in temperature.\n\u2022   NelSon and vicinity:    Fine and hot.\nMin.   Max.\nNELSON     B0.       $8\nVictoria     50       63\nVancouver         R2       70\nKamloops          54       94\nBarkerville     40       72-\nPrince   Rupert        48       60\nAtlin         4ft       6fi\nCalgary         40.     -82\nWinnipeg         56       80\nPortland    54       ;.    .\nSan Francisco     50       ..\nSeattle    ;     52   ,   ..\nGrand   Forks   ....,     49       94\nKaRslo        49       79\nCranbrook .\u2022,    40       02\nNew. Jift-eltsm ._iii:t:r\u00ab;  48     _S ,\n__________________\n r\u2014\nmaa-mme\u2014im\u2014mm\n\"\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 15,1921.\nLeading Hotels of theWest\nWh\u00abrt  tht  Travelling   Public   May   Obtain   8upirl*r   Accom.d.tl.n\nTHE      I\nPremier Hotel\n01 the Interior\n\u2022v\u00ab.\n*\u25a0*<&.\nW\n',' SERVICE   UNEXCELLED v<\nA la Carta Tabla D'Hata\nSPECIAL    SUNDAY   DINNER   (1.00\nINCOMPARABLY   THE   FINEST  TEA   ROOM   IN   B.   C.\nOpan  Dally 10 a. m. to  Midnight Muslo and   Danelnf\nTha Latflst Sundaes, Ice Cold Drink, and Icea\nAfternoon   Tea   (2   p.m.  ta   6   p.m.),   26c.\nHaadquartert   far   All   Travelling   Men,   Mining   Men   and' Teurleta\nEUROPEAN   PLAN      \u2014 *\u2014      ROOMS,   J1.00   up\nHUME\u2014 Mr: ami Mrs. J. Irwin and\nXatn.ly, Npw Denver; N. 11. Hoffg, Vancouver; A. C, Qallup, Proclor; R V.\nJohnston, Hall; A. T. Larson, Spokane;\nAustin Forbes, victoria-; John M. Bbhtii\nJ. B. C'l.-ipp. Mr.n-as; V. It. Wolff- Spo-\nkan.; J. 1. W. Shirley, Spokane:  M. C.\nKldd, CmiRlngle, Alia.; W. E. Hess,\nToronto; K s. nieksun tuhv. Toronto;\nJamea Benton, D.-lfnst, Ireland; (let).\n1'. Stnitli, Vancouver; I'. 1-1. Ulgh, Vancouver; John tlKlh-.v,,V:ilii.\"inv;r; .1. A\nKennedy, Cascade; A. C, Moslcor, Mltl-\nI way.\nWell Lighted Sample Rooms\nAmerican Plan\nHO\nTEL STRATHCONA\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTEL\nA Home for Those Away From Home\nSpecial attention to Traveling Public.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner, $1.00\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616   VERNON    ST.    EAST\nComfortable  Rooms,   Hot and  Cold\nWater.    Dining    Room   in\nConnection\nRates  $1   and   up.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean'  and   American    Plan\nSteam  Heat in   Every   Room\nA, LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nQUKKN'K\u2014A. Brcmner, Salmo; J. B,\nBremner. Yinir; It. 1'n I in. Yniir; Tom\nYork, Human; Mr. anil Mrs. A. tl. Hal-\nlam, Lethbridge, Alta ; Mrs, J.uml and\ndaughter, AI. K. Lund, l_awreiice I-uhd.\nHenry Lund, Forestburg, Alia.; F. M\nHufty,   Vancouver.\nHoliday Resorts\nBelow are announcements of hotels\nlocated at resorts in Kootenay-Boun-\ndary where enjoyable vacations may\nbe  spent.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nNOW  UNDER  MANAGEMENT\nOF D. A. MACDONALD\nEvery   Consideration   8hown   to\nGuests.\nCor.  Bakor and  Ward   Sts.r   Nelson\nH.   W.   8HORE,   Prop.\nH.  E. SCANLAN,  Mgr.\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW    LAKES,   B.   C.\nUnder   entirely    new    management\nKenowned throughout the west\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urinic Conditions,   Metallic   Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nin a most  beautiful  climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools\nAmerican    plan,    (3.60    and    up\nper   day.   **.24   per   week.\nFor rates apply   Stratheona  Hotel,\nNelson,  or   Halcyon   Hotel\nMADDEN\u2014J. B. Mcintosh, Medicine\nHat; ]x J. McAlptno, Spokane; \\V.\nC;ossir-11. city; Mrs M, C Lees, 1 >eer\nPark; Mrs, A. C. Jeffers, Cascadei Wallace McLeod, Rloean City; W. Cunning;\n(mm! Slocan City; . .;. Younp. Blocati\nCitv; E. Biiyloss, Coleman; T. Hnrley,\nCalgary.\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF, NILSON, Proprietor.\nBAKER   STREET\nFurnishnH    Rooms   by    Day,   Week\nor Month.\nWHERE THE  FISHING   IS  GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishing,    Boating,     Bathing,    Golf,\nTennis. Courts\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied.    Grocery\nStore   in   Connection\nW.  A.  WARD,  Prop.\nRates  Reasonable Good  Meals\nTRHMONT\u2014J.     E.     FergUBOrii     Vancouver.\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL|\nMm.   Mallette,   Proprietress\nA horn* for the world at reasonable\nrates.\nOpon    night   and    day.    First-\n'clast  dining-room.  Comfortable\nrooms.\n316 Vernon  St. \"   Near  Post  Office\nKOOTENAY\u2014C.   Hall,   Trail;   A.   Mc\nBpugall, city.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned nnd  run   by- Canadians.- No\nalien labor employed.\nRoom and board, per momh....$45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\n ^\n-Kootenay Falls Hotel\nSouth Slocan,  B. C,\nClose In famous  Fishing  Pool and'\nBonnington   Falls.     Afterpeon   re-\nfreahmentH for auto  parties served\non    Cool    verandah.\nStrawberries   and   Cream\nES\nSlliliSEiEE\n(Continued from Page 1)\ntogether In the prime minister's offi-\neial residence in Downing street this\nafternoon and spent more than two\nhours and a haft making clear lo each\nither the circumstances under which\nthey thought Great Britain and ihe\nDall Rlrennn might bo willing to seat\ndelegates at a conference table wilh\nrepresentatives of Ulster In an effort to compose the difficulties between the three parlies and settle\nthe Irish r-ueslion.\nWhat many Knglish people not long\nsince would have considered impossible, has happened, this meeting of\nthe British premier and the man\nwhose supporters .designate as \"president   nf  ihe. Irish   Republic.\"\nFervent   Prayers   for   Success.\nThe extreme length of lhe private\n\u25a0onversation, the fact thai il is said lo\nhave ended ''amicably\" ami lhat an\nagreement'was arrived at to issue a\njoint eommuni(|iie, is interpreted lis\nt good augury. That Die prayers of\nboth peoples for In'- success of the\n\u2022onferencp- were fervent, was shown\nby ihe kneeling of Irish men ami\n.vomen in Downing street reciting tlie\nrosary and singing hymns, -while the\nirehhishop of t'anierbm-y, presiding al\ni meeting In the national assembly\nif the Church of England, reminded\nhe assembly lhat Lhe eniilVroneoo\nves mepting ami Invited all present\no stand for a few moments in sileiil\n-,rayn\\\nTbe Initial paei between the two\nleaders, the \u25a0 preliminary nature of\nvhfeli was emphasized by both sides,\niad al lensl one earmark in com-\nnoii with momentous gatherings of\ndatemen in recent 'years, for a I Us\n'orielusion lbe only word wlii'-h was\n.\u2022otichsafed the public was a joini\n\u25a0ommunirpte, containing llie bare an-.\nlouneement lhat thorn bail been a.\nfree exchange of views in which\nheir  relative   positions  were   defhifld.\nSubstantial    Grounds   for    Hope.\nFrom both sides, however, ii. is\ngleaned thai, ihe long conversation\n-vas marked by the utmost cordiality,\nnot in the least marred by the can-\nlor with which the two viewpoints\nwere presented, and left lhe participants satisfied ami aide to assure\n'.heir colleagues that tljere wen- substantial, grounds for hope nf an ulli-\nmatc  settlement.\nI>ea.nse of Mr. De Valera's ne.\neountability lo lhe Dail Kironim for\n\"'wnminmenis made in behiilf of\n-southern Ireland, it is learned Lhal\nie was unable he give unqualified\nreplies lo snmo of lhe prime minis-\n'< r's propositionM Hut. both were\nkeen io scent danger Mien the lall;\nlOrdered on issues regarded as irre-\nonclliable, and there was. eonse-|iienU\ny, no time when a rupture was imminent.\nLONDON, duly 14,-\u2014The crowds in\ndowning street, mostly women, who\nvavert the Sinn Frill colors, sang\n\u25a0inngs and devoiedly knelt   in   the streets\nclH\n111\nunder as he entered, tho prime minis-\ner's residence, iheit endured a loaf\nvatt in ihe m!n before Lhfcy wero 1-e\nivnrded by seeing De Valera's smile\nhe sight of bis apparently contemn\nace bringing redoubled cheers.\nThe    prime    minister   and    Mr-    D<\nOld People\nUitro-P'hospha<[fi -feeds the nerves\nind old people need it to make them\nreel and look younger. H's lhe one\nbest, nerve builder for weak, nerve;\nexhausted men and women and. that\n\u25a0is why the Canada Drltg &, liook Co.\n,'uarantees  it.\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   Grandville   Stroet\nCosy,    bright    rooms.    Juat    thp\nplace   for    your    vacation.    Rates\nmoderate.    Write    for    nartlculara.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate of   Royal   Hotel.  Granville  St.\nTRY    A     CLASSIFIED     AD.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   13.   C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n12   to    2:30,    Special    Lunch,    40c\nPhone 154\nCLASSIFIED   ADS   WILL   BRING\nRESULTS    EVERY    TIME\nHotel Menus\nWa print Hotel M\u00abmu\u00ab. tltko.\nwit* complete menus or -with\nthp different headings and blank\napaoen tot trplnf tn th_ WU af\nfar*.\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nTV Heme at Good Printing\nNtlHit, B. O.\nawm*~~\nPRINTED\nENVELOPES\nThe Dall> Newe Jiib Depnrt-\nment carries the largest stock\nof envelopes In the Interior of\nBritish  Columbia.\nIt cnn supply them ln any\nquantity from 250 up to 100,000.\npruited  or'plain;\nThe envelope with address, or\nname and addresf, In the corner,\nIb good advertising and gives a\nbetter Impression than a plain\nenvelope.\nLet us send you samples and\nprtetm\nThe  Daily  News\nJob Department\nThe Home of Good Printing.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nnmQm\nThen use 2aua-BuU. There is\nnothing bo soothioif for trader,\naching or blistered feet, lt will\nend the burning, draw out the\nsoreness, prevent blistering and\ngive you perfect foot comfort.\nAlso there is nothittg so good\nas Zam-Buk for kuuburn, heat\nrashes, blistered bauds, aching\nmuscles, mosqtuLu and insect\nbites, cuts, bruises, burns and\nall skin injuries and ailments.\n50c. all druggists aud stores. t\nIS  SOOTHING'\nValera will again he alone together\nwhen the discussion is renewed tomorrow. -.        i    .\nSignificant ,evidence of the hopefulness existing on emli side is the\nsummoning 'to* L.nndr*n of Sir James\nCraig, ihe UlsU-r premier. Up left\nDHfriRt.   tonight.\nLONDON, July 14.\u2014(By Grattan\nO'Leary, Cunadinn Press staff correspondent.)\u2014The Irish peace confer-\nonce at' the British premier's official\nresidence today crowded out the\ncoiifererfCG of Dominion premiers.\nAs a consequence, there were merely meetings of the committees dealing wilh reparations,' shipping and\nImperial communications, which are\ntn report to the main conference\nwithin lho next i.'ew days. It is understood that a basis for a division\nof reparations among the various\nportions bf.the Empire has heen\nagreed upon and that it is likely to\nhe s\/itisfnctofy to  Canada.\nThere is not, however, a great deal\nof enthusiasm over the matter, British statesmen having apparently long\nsince concluded that, no substantial\namount can  be got out of Oermany.\nPremier Meighen of Canada did\nnot attend today's committee meetings, lie spent the forenoon preparing the speech which he will deliver tomorrow, when he receives the\nfreedom, of-the cliy of London, nnd\nin the afternoon motored out to visit\nlhe Canadian team at Hisley Camp.\nSooncs Rvtninrdlnury.\n' Meanwhile, scenes extraordinary\nto a Canadian had been enacted at\nDowning street. Eamonn do Valera's\nrecaption as he drove through Whiie-\nhall was that of a coiuiiiering hero.\nMure than 10,000 people swarmed\naround Lloyd George's residence,\nmo:.I of them J wen ring rebel colors,\n.md ns-the' HImi Fein loader, a tall,\nslender and almost ungainly figure\ndressed in b'aolc and wearing his famous spectacles, stepped from his,\nmotor ear'lie was almost borne down\nhy Ihe Ihrong whieh swarmed around\nhim.\nGM'Is  Beclto  Rosary.\n11 .was. typically an Irish crowd\nwilh pretty, green colors predominating, butjjfi goodly sprinkling of unmistakable Saxons and its enthusiasm knew no bounds, lienea'.h it,\nhowever, there was a note oif solemnity and there was something\nstirring in the spectacle of hundreds\nof men standing bareheaded and\nsinging Davis' half martial, half melancholy ballad, \"A Natloft Once\nAgain,\", and then re'apsing into silence as girls and women recited the\nrosary .for the' success of the conference'.' \"De Valera was immensely\npleased witli lbe reception accorded\nhim. He wnved bis hand again and\nagain to tho crowd, while hla face\nbeamed with smiles as he sprang\nlightly up the steps of No. 10 Downing street to greet Premier Lloyd\nGeorge, who was awaiting him within.\nAs the afternoon wore away and\nilie conference continued the crowd\ngrew lo great proportions, blocking\nthe traffic and demanding the attention of scores of policemen. A noteworthy feature C'- it all and certainly\none most impressive to a Canadian\nwas the to'eranec and good humor\nshown  by everybody.\nNo Slg-n of IV'-sentmeni.\nlOnglisb traffiu was blocked, English pedestrians' were compelled to\nmake a tremendous detour to get to\ntheir destiriiitions, und English officers saw the strange green, white\nand orange' \"Irish Republican\" flag\nfloating in the breeze, while the\ncrowd fairly roared out songs of the\nSinn Fein, yet ono looked in vain\nfor any sign of resentment. A What is\nto be the outcome of it all fow here\ntoday predict. Those in a position lo\nknow what is transpiring behind the\nscenes are not. overly confident. They\nknow how great are lhe dllVicnlties\nto be faced and how great Is tho\ngulf of suspicion and fear to be\nbridged before settlement Is posslb'e,\nand always there is the position of\nIMsti r. Nevertheless, lbe fact that\nifiduy's meeting apparently is lo be\nfollowed by a fuller, conference is regarded us a hopeful sign. Even the\nmqsl con firmed of' pessimists ad mil-\nt.-d tnjilght thai al leas! ll might be\nihe dawn.\nDoc1<v.\"rkcrs Hope for Peace\nABERpKENi Scotland; July ll.-\nThe ibdegales In the British find\nIrish dncl*; workers' congress repr<v\nseining 80,000 dock workers hi Greal\nBritain hnd |trelnnd, in private aes-\nsions here Loilay, sen I telegrams to\nW]r. fjloyd Georgo and Eamonn de\nVaNi-ji. Hi-. Irish Republican leader,\nexpressing .hope that tbe -conference\nJetwoen lho two leaders will result\nin a lusting and honorable peace.\nHealthy Digestion\nmeans easy digestion, Even\npersons with sp-ong digestions '\noften suffer f ronreffects of irreg- '\nularities. An ideal agent for\nmany derangements of stomach,\nliver, kidneys and bowels, _ a\ncorrective antl cleanser is\nAdministration Costs of Canada Five Times Greater\nThan Sister Dominion.\nSold everywhere\niu Canada.\nIn boxca, 25c. SOc.\nWILSONS\nFLY I PADS\nKill them all, and the\ngerms too. 10c apacket\nat Druggists, Grocers\nand General Stores.\nFRANCE CELEBRATES\nJULIETTE QUAT0RZE\nI'AItlK, July 1|.\u2014The anniversary\nnf the fall of tbe l'.astiHe, France's\nnational holiday, was celebrated tn-\n<lay witli the, simplicity which mnr'i-\ni-d   tho  ceremonies   before  the  war.\n.Marshal Petaln reviewed a. n-o;',-\nineiil of lilue Devils at Pershing\nStacllUili. ibis afternoon. Parisians'\nhada military review after all, although it was not on the scale ol\nthe celebration of previous years\n'If was provided for by a. Senegalese\nregiment, of the French army at It a\nown   request,\nDane ng was the main feature of\nthe restiylUes,\nPresident Millerand enteratined at\nnoun all the marshals of France and\nIhe admirals of the fleet,\nProm early morning thero were\nlong' lines of persons awaiting the.\nVpen'ing of the operas, where free\nperformances were given.\nInsists Daughter Was\nIII Treated at Convent\nMONTBEAL, July 14.\u2014Not satisfied with the verdict returned by\nCoroner McMahon today to the effect-that her daughter, Marie Reinne,\nhad died of natural causes, iMrs. P.\nHuard has announced her intention\nof appealing to the attorney general\nfor a fill' investigation of the cir-\ncumslances of the girl's death. Mrs.\nHuard insists that her daughter had\nbeen \"il-trcated\" while living at a.\nlocal convent. An autopsy performed this morning on the body of\nthe girl showed that while she may\nhave been ill treated prior to her\ndeath It had no direct cause with\nher death, *\nWASHINGTON, July 14.\u2014(By Cio-\nndian Press).\u2014It requires about- five\ntlmefl ns much money each year^ to\nadminister ihe Dominion of 'Canada\nis Is needeil to manage the Union\nof South Africa, according to statistics of the South African budget\nfor 1921-22 contained Iri a return re-\nontly made by the United States\nconsid at Capetown to his goyernment\nhere. The total estimated expenditure of the South African Union\nfor Ihe current fiscal year is 2!t,r)43,-\nS2ii pounds, or *12f\u00bb,fiiil,273.2fi. placing the pound sterling ot $4.25 Canadian monoy. Estimated public expenditure for Canada for the year\niri'2i\"-22     is    ?r>;\")2,237,212.fl0.\nAccordiuK to the same nuthority\ntbe South African government is\nhaving considerable difficulty 'balancing lis accounts. During the ' fis-\neal year ending .March HI, 1921, there\nwas a deflet of 250,000 pounds,, while\nfor the current year fhe estimated\nrevenue is ii,700,000 pounds, less than\nthe estimated expenditure. This\ndefieh is io bo met wilh economies\nIn various governmental departments\nlo lbe oxteni of '4,057,000 pounds.\n\u00bbvhlle now taxation is expect cd to\nyield 2,425,000 pounds, leaving a de-\nich.   of   224,000   pounds.\nCompailsou between various South\nAfrican budget itpms and correspnnd-\nlloms in the Canadian budget\nare interesting. In practically every\nthe Canadian expenditure is\nhigher. Even the governor-general\nin the Dominion cost's mom than the\nhe governor-general of South Africa.\nThe locum tenons at the Clovernment\nHouse Ottawa represents 'an expenditure of $148,881,66 annually, Including salaries and expenses. In the\nSouth African budget the sum of\n$11,370.7*5 covers lhe viceregal cost. Jn\nthis Instance, as in other items, the\npound  Is placed al   $4.25  Canadian.    '\nTh o Sou lh A f rlcan Sena t e i s sol\ndown in the estimates as costing\n$121,41)0,50. \"The Upper House In\nCanada charges ibe people for Its\n1'    legislative      efforts      $142f>00.\nThe House of Assembly at Cape-'\nluwn is set down in ihe \u25a0budgel as.\n\u25a0nsiing $:tlH-,t(03.riO.\u00ab The House or\nCommons nf Canada, according lo'the\nis! i mates tabled during the past\nsession   of   Parliament,   costs  $504,777.\nHeavy Debt Interest\n' When it comes to such features\nof the budget as interest\" on public\ndebt and pons'ons, the disparity between Canadian and South African\nexpenditures becomes more apparent. Due to lirr heavier war 'burdens. Canada pays more in interest on her public debt alone than\nSouth Africa spends in her entire\nbudget. Against South . Africa's in-\nterfst payment of $32,651,981), on public debt, the Dominion expends nn-\nib>r ibis heading $142,281,057.51. In\npensions Canada expends anntif-lly\n$37 070 485.57. aKainst South Africa's\n$fi..S29.750.\nAnother fact that makes Canadian\nexpend! lure loom largo beside that\nof Sou lb Africa is lho government\nrailway policy |of the Dominion.\nSouth Africa does not, as yej niaii-\nige lis railways; Canada this yoar\nwill spend morn on its railways and\ncanals than South Africa will have\ntn spend on its entire administration.\nThe estimate for 1921-22 at Ottawa\nplaces income expenditure on railways\nmd canals at $lti8,O0tl,71IO.72 and-rap-\nMai expenditure at $.10,477,750 a total\nof   $198,^7,540.72.\nSouth    African    Police    Cost    More\nPolice activities in Soaih Africa\nmake up a heavy item in the annual' expenditures. It costs nearly four limes as much tn police tbe\nI'm\"\" ns 1! costs io maintain tbe\nf-'dn-al police system in Canada. The\nfigures i,v>-_ Soulb Africa, $12,300,435;\nCanada,    ,$:(,527.570.7r).-\nDespite.the large native population\nin South Africa, native affairs 'in\nthe Union arc administered at a\nlower cost than Indian affairs in\nCanada. '-. Where South Africa expends $1,848,257. yearly on\"Vhe ohnri-.\nMines, the nonunion this yoar sol. aside\n?2,7f)0,c:iii. to look after its Indian\nwa rds.\nPublic works is an infinitely larger\n*pepdirig< department In Canada than\njn Soltth Africa. While the Union\nthis year will spend $3 101,432.50 on\npublic works, the Dominion for the\n;ame purpose will s'pend $11,115,283.42\nout of ilu- income account, and $20-\n141,365.48 on capital account, :rt total    of    $10,15f.,li4S.9O.\nMilitia and Defense, in Canada is\ntwice as heavy in expenditure as in\ndquth Africa. In ihe'Dominion this\nvear lbe department of Militia and\nDefence c-uis for un -expenditure of\nSI 1,890.000, whiu, |\u201e south Africa the\nsum or $5,fi!l5,208,25 has been appro\n;iriated for lhe purpose.\nIu order lo cope with lis def'lcil the\nUnion of south Africa imposed new\ntaxation this year,- the new taxes\ncoming Into effect June 1. Posttge\nwas increased to 2d per ounce for\nletters within South Africa, with news\npapers in bulk placed at I-2d. fo:\nI ounces. Increases were made in\nstandi duties, duties on bioscope films,\nspirits ami beer customs and excis*5,\ntobacco excise, Income and companies\ntaxes. Duties on wheat, and flour\nwere   alsn   roimposod.\nAn ancient boll, the largestiuti^\ncathedral of Berlin, was broken white\ntolling for the funeral of Kalserin\nAuguste Victoria, it has just been\nlearned. The bell had one of the\nmost beautiful,tones of any bell in all\nGermany, n was cast In 1471 and\nweighed 8000 pounds. It is six feet\nin diameter, it was placed by Frederick the Croat in 1747 in tbe tower\nof a cathedra', which then stood In\nthe Dustgarden, near the royal palace\nin Berlin. It was installed in the\npresent cathedral when that structure\nwas completed seventeen years ago.\nStranger\u2014Do ynu ever think I\nhave  tho  gout,  doefnr?\nPhysican\u2014Hem! What's your' income?\nStranger\u2014Ninety   dollars *,   month.\nPhysician\u2014No you have a sore toe.\nBlouses\nSpecially Offered\nDelightful   Models   at\nAmazingly Low Prices.\nGeorgette Crepe and Crepe'de Chine in popular shades\n\u2014every one is a prizR *v\n, For Summer Weight Fabrics\nYou will find splendid buying from our fresh and up-\nto-date stock|\nVoiles, Muslins, Crepes, Ginghams, Prints, etc.\nyO\u00a37    WILL   FIND\nOUR   P RI C.E S   LOW\nSmillie & Wei:\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\n| Needed at Dances j\nand the Sea Shore \u2022 |)\n\u00bb\u2014 _; : _jij\n(AidiS to Beauty)\nHere Is*4 a home treatment for re-1\nmoving hairs that is quirk, painless\nand inexpensive: With some powdered!\ndels I ono and water ^ake enough,\npaste to fhlckly cover the ohjection-j\na hie ha Irs, a pply aud after 2 or '\u2022> i\nminutes rub off, wash the sltln and]\nit will be left soft, clear nnd hair-\nloss. This treatment will not mar the.\nskin, hilt lo avoid disappointment be'\ncareful to get rea 1 dela tone. Mix\nfresh  as  jvftnted.    .\nTake Steps to Affiliate\nAmerican Veterans With\nDominion G. IV. V. A.\nOTTAWA, July - 11.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014Officers of the Dominion\ncommand, (!, W. V. A., have beau\nnotified of the passing of a resolution by the national council of the\nBritish Great War Veterans of\nAmerica to provide, for affiliation\nwith the G. W- V.. A. of Canada, and\n4he necessary steps nre now belog\ntaken by the national hoadepmn -rs\nof two organizations. The American organization includes a grett\nnumber who fought with the\" Canadian overseas force and the affiliation now under way will provide a\nmeans whereby members of the Canadian association domie'led in the\nUnited Stales can continue their\nmembership.\nANIMALS AS ACTOHS.\nIn discussing lhe forthcoming release by the Kinoto company of a series of moliout pictures entitled\n\".Modern Truths From Old Fablea,\"\n'Charles Urban told why he considers\nthem   exceptional.\n\"It is not ai all generally realized,\"\nMr. Urban said, \"what remarkable\nactors animals can be. Students who\nknow the animal world are familiar\nWih this, but paturally the general\nrpub*ic. does not know It, When *we\ndistribute 'Modern .Truths From-Old\nPables' everybody -will know It, how-\nover. \u25a0\n\u2022 \"In (ho animal world one finds,\nai-iors and athletes, gossips and bullies and weaklings and all the types\nthat one finds in the hunum family.\nSome have Intellect\u2014'brains' as the\ncommon saying has lt\u2014and some ore\nsi upid. Thero ia every variety tho\nsame as there is among men.\n'These qualities, properly handled,\ncan be mado extraordinarily Interest-\nrig. There are not many men in the\nworld who know enough about an*\nimals and about motion picture photography at the same time to utilize\nthem.    Probably' the  man who  has\nOur Special Value Shoe\nSale Still On.\n75 Pairs Boys' Shoos, Jn Button aiid lace, brown or black,\nat,   per   pair    83.95\nDon't forget our $2.J>5 !in^\n$2.45 Indies' Bargain Tables.\nChildren's   Table   of   Shoes\n\u25a0'\" $1.16\nC. Romano\nRepairs   Taken,   Work\nGuaranteed.\nthese combined talents and kno'\nedge best developed is Dr. Raymc\nIj, Ditmars of the New york Z<\nlogical society., and it is Dr. Ditmi\nwho is filming thc series. Twei\nof the choiest fables from the gr\ncollection of Da Fontaine are in t\nscries and all the actors in' the\nbles are  anfma's.\n\"We have tbe choice bf two alt\nnatives; we could film these fab\nas we aro doing or we could empl\nanimated cartoons. The latter is t\nmethod we would have had to adc\nIf we had not been so fortunate\nto find a man who knew enou.\nabout animals to direct them as 5\ntors and who understood motion p\nture photography. Between the t'\nthere is no comparison for resul\nfilming the animals themselves Is ;\ncomparably finer, than using anipi\nted drawings.\"\nCANNED     DANGER.\nIri February of this year a worn\nIn Seattle died frpm ealing th\u00bb\nsmall bites of canned beans,\nknew that the beans showed signs\nspoilage, hut sho \"tasted! them\" w\nfatal results. Referring to this c\ntho United States public health\npartment says that it is dangere\nto eat any canned food that sho\n\"the slightest unnatural odor, unn;\nUral color, swelling of the contain\nsigns of gas, or any evidence of c\ncomposition whatever.\" Such fo\nmay contain the bacilli of \"botulisr\nwhich engenders one of the most da\ngerous of  known organic poisons.\n; \"Mention   the   name  of   some\nknown Greek,\" said the teacher of\njuvenile class  in history. '\n\"George,\" spoke up the curly^hah\nlittle hoy.\n\"Georgo  who?\"\n\"I don't know the rest of his nan\nma'am.     lie   comes   around   to\nhouso every  Thursday  with  banar\nand oranges.\"\nii     cb      m      ba     \" \"      a    .\u25a0\u00bbin~-=g\nu\nPlaytimes Echo\nr\n6\nThe answer is ready instantly\nJK heaping bowl of\nwith cream or Milk\u2014\nand childish appetite\ncould ask nothing more\ndelicious or satisfying\nPostToasties are the toasted\nperfection of selected white corn\nOrder by name to get the\nbest of all corn flakes\nAt Grocers Everywhere!\nMade by Canadian Postum Cereal Co.,ltd.\nWindsor, Ontario.\n'\"   -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n=__\niu.     III1,\n___\n idA\n\\mMZ$^%^'WR%> FRIJUY MORNING, JtJ^Y 15,4921.\nMUST RENEW ALL\nLICENSES TODAY\nAll wholesale, retail, boarding\nhouse, rooming house, theatrical,\nauctioneers, and over a dozen other\nkinds of licenses- for the city of\nNelson expired at midnight last nighjt\nand fees for renewals are payable at\nthe city offices'today.\nThe renewals noAv to-be made will\ncarry through tho-liccnse holders for\ntho balance Of '11)21.\nVSmith\" Is tho family name of three\nEnglish peers, sly baronets, 37 knights\nand 200 companions of various orders. ' **\u2022*\u2022-    \/\nFamous Russian Violinist\nLegal Notices\nLAND REGISTRY  AOT.\n(Section 337.)\n\u25a0In thu Mutter of Application No.\n10208-1;\nand\nIn thu Mutter of Lot li, Block il, of\nLot 9(i,' Orodp 1, Map _iH, Kootenay\nDistrict.\nTAKK NOTICiMhut thc above application has been made to register Jumca\n. Lunelle as owner in fee of the above\nlands, and for tho issue to the said\nJumes bundle, of a Certificate of Indefeasible Titlo thereto, and that m support of-such application there has beeh\nproduced a conveyance.dated 13th November,, 1Q-0,' from' Aniiio Ldndle. the\n! registered owner of said lands under\nconveyance' dated a 1st January, 1912,\nfrom Thomas Telfer Middleton, the\noatd Thomas Telfer Middleton luiviug\nacquired the said lands under conveyance, dated 22nd February, 1907, from\nAlfred Treglllus, tho said Alfred Treglllus having acquired the said- lands\n\"undervcouveyaiice dated 2Sth August.\n1902, from John J. Maloue under tne\npower of sale contained in a certain\nt'nprtgage dated 2nd May, I HIM), wherein\n\u25a0you, Geonre O. Ross, were moitpagor\nand the said John J. Maloiu: -was mortgagee.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that\nregistration will be effected in pursu-\na nee of t he a hove a ppl icat lou a ml a\nCertificate o\\. Indefeasible Title lo the\nHaid lands, issued to the said James\nLundlc after (lie lapse of thirty days\n-from lhe service upon you of this notice (which may be effected by nub-\nllcatioii hereof as hereunder directed).\nunless you shall take and prosecute the\nproper nruccedhigs to establish your\n' claim, if, any, to the said lands or to\nprevent sucn proposed action on my\npart.\nDATED at tho Lund Regislrv Oft .d\nNelson, B. C, thta 7th day ot Jun\u00ab\nA.   D.   192.1.  \u2022 \u2022 \u25a0\nE.  a.V^TOKHH,\n. v Registrar,\nlo George O.   Ross.\n1   direct service of  this   uolice   to   I,\ninado   by   publicatlCHi.  thereol'   once\nweek   for   two   weeks    in   n   newsjiapor\nclreulathiR  in   Nelson.   H.  C.\n-     E. S. STOKES,\nOHin- Itegistrar\nHiS ACT OF FOLLY\nDiminutive and Youthful\nPrisoner Will Be Sentenced Today; Good Traits.\nPleading guilty to ' the charge of\n\"assault with intent to commit an\nindictable offence, to-wit: to steal\nmoney,\" Peter Caldwell, the youthful\nlooking assailant of Mrs. J. \"L. McGee, of Lake street, made a full admission of his offence .in police court\nyesterday forenoon and was remanded by Police Magistrate William\nBrown for sentence th's morning. A\nsigned confession also figured In the\ncase. ,\nMrs. McGee, whose story of the\nassault gave rise to the case, was an\namazon in appearance beside tbe\nboyish looking prisoner. She slated\nto. Chief of Police Thomas H. Long,\nwho prosecuted, that she had never\nmet Peter before the date of the assault, but this statement conflicted\nflatly' with that df the diminutive\naccused. .   (   '\nCaldwell, who was wounded at\nPasschendaelo near Exert Farm, being then in his teens, failed to mention his military career, but gaye a\nfrank account' of his acts. Fully intending to leave for Saskatchewan\nthc previous evening, ho diad me*\nan old acquaintance and postponed\nhis leaving a day or two, so as to\ntravel with him. Knowing that,Mrs.\nMcGee had. money, as she had\nchanged somo for, him, and knowing\nwliCvc she kept it, ho rea,ched the\ndecision about four o'clock thai\nafternoon to try to get it. She Ind\na very thick coiffure, and he gave\nher a light tap on the topknot,, expecting to see her fall, but unlnjiu'-\ned. The blow merely frightened Iter,\nand he repeated the blow, hitting her\nwith the fishplate on the arm. Thc\nwoman's screams were so lusty that\nhe abandoned  the -fob aud ran aw-ay.\n, In the court room wus R. V. Ven-\nttbles. secretary of the Trail G. W.\nV. A., of which Caldwell was a\nmember. The young fellow is known\nin Veterans' circles in Trail as \"the\nkid,\" and it is related thut his meager\nincome was shared in equal portions\nwith two\" less fortunate companions throughout the past winter. His\nTrail friends attribute Caldwell's act\nof folly to an irresponsible whim,\nborii  of  his   war hardships.\nChief Long states lhat Caldwell is\na model prisoner, obedient and lightr\nUearted, with an Irrepressible habit\nof joking at himself. The prisoner's\nfinger prints, were taken yesterday,\nand  also   his   signature.\nMWRI#*-T-\u00abW\u00bbTQhl \\fnt-fio.t*fi*.v\nT08CHASEIDEL,\nWho made- his .first appearance in\nEngland'at Ctueen'a Hall. He scored an immediate 'success and an\nenthusiastic reception was given\nhim.'    .'\"   ,       \/\n-\"Yn;*;\".\nGOVERNMENT IIOUSETviCTOKiA.\nJune 25th, 1921\nPresent:\nHIS    HONOUR    THE . L1EUTENANT-\nGOVERNOK4N COUNCIL.\nWHEREAS, by \"An Act respecting\nPound Districts\" it is enacted that the\nLieutenant-Governor in Council may, by\nOrder in Council made public by notice\nin the British Columbia Gazette, con-\natitute-any part of the Province of British Columbia not within tbe limits of a\nmunicipality into a pound district.\nAND WHEREAS, under the provisions of this Act application has been\nnmde by proprietors of land in that\npart of tht Kaslo Electoral, district in\nthe Province of, British Columbia at\nGray Creek as comprised within the following boundaries: All that area In\nWest Kootenay Included in Lot 1489,\nand wi Sublots 10, 20, 2$, 32, 33, VZ, 56,\n50, 79, 81. 83, 91, !)g, 117, 114 la Lot\n4595;\nANIVWHEREAa, notice of intention\nto constitute such district a pound district was given in accordance with the\nrequirements of the Act, and no objection has been mtitle by any proprietor\nwithin the proposed pound district.\nOn the recommendation of thc Honourable the Minister of Agriculture, and\nunder the provisions of the \"Pound\nDistrict Act,\" His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia, by\nand with the advice of bis Executive\nCouncil, has been pleased to order, and\nIt Is hereby ordered, that the above district at Gray Creek. British Columbia,\nbo constituted a pound district.\n\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0       J. D. MACLEAN,\ntr, .    .     \u201eCIerk Executive Council.\nVictoria, B. C\u201e June 37,4921.    (3896)\n\"POUND DISTRICT ACT.\"\nPursuant to the provisions of Section\n11 of tbjs Act, notice is hereby given of\nthe appointment of A. W.  Lymbery of\nGray  Creek,  B.  C\u201e  as  pouhilkeepcr  of\nthe pound   established   at   Gray Creek\nwithhLthe \"Kaslo Electoral division. The\nlocation  of  the   pound   premises   is  on\nBlock 5, Lot 1489. Gray Creek, B. C.\nE, D. BARROW,\nMinister of Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture, .Victoria, B.\nO., June 2Gth, 1921. (3895)\nPRINCESSES   AT  WORK.\nIt Is nothing unusual in Riga tu\nhave a Russian noblewoman ub youi\nstenographer, writes a correspondent\nA business mail can acquire the services uf a countess in that capacity.\nAlmost every diplomatic or consular\nmission iii Riga has at least one\nprincess or countess working as a\ntypist. ,\/\nIf the supply uf princesses and\ncountesses falls, there remains a\nlarge number uf t.ther well educated\npeople, irost of them uiaeeustoincO.\nto -work, but now anxious to do ah\/-\nthing to save themselves trim starvation.\nMen who have been general managers, of big Russian factories aro\nglad to take any kind of honorable\nemployment. The condition of these\nrefugees who have found shelter ia\nthe infant Baltic states shows how\nffomplele has been the financial downfall   of   the  Russian   nobility.\nIn Riga, Reval and other BaUic\ncities, princes, barons, counts and\ntheir families, accustomed for decades\nin Russia t,o lives of luxury, arc living a hand-to-mouth existence. The\npossessions which they once-had and\nwhich escaped confiscation liy the\nBolsheviki Clutter up the shelves of\nsecond-hand dealers., in thWfeo cities.\nDiamonds, other jewels, fino '-.vfios-\ntries and tlie countless costly . trifles\nof a luxurious civilization have been\nsold by the refugees to get bread.\nA 'correspondent was present 'i ifpw\nWeeks ago at an onlerlainineutfur the\nbenefit of some of these refugees\u2014\nall members of tlie Russian or \"Baltic\nnobility. Some, of the more fortunate had saved their evening clollioii.\nThey wore in sharp contrast to those\nwho had not done so. Here und there\nwere men In coats of one color, trousers of another and tan shoes or high\nboots. They danced with women as\nvariously clad\u2014some chic in the'latest modes, some in shirtwaists and\nskirts; .still others in frocks obviously homemade or remade.\n. The correspondent advertised in a\nRiga newspaper; for a translator able\ntu read,.write and speak fluently English, Russian and German and with\nsoipc knowledge of Lettish. He received fifty-one replies by mail. Tbe\ncorridor liefore his room in the hotel\nwas filled with men and women seeking to apply personally for thc position. Mosts of them were so well educated that they speak and write all\nfour Jangiiugcs. fluently. All were of\ntho   oil   Russian   urtistocracy,\nti\nIk\nV-\n__    T)\nWATER NOTICE\n(Diversion and Use.)\nTAKE1 NOTICE that Deanshaven Development Co., Ltd., whose address is\nRlondel, B. C\u201e will apply for a license\nto take and use two cubic feet, per\nuccond of water out of Sherraden Creek,\nwhich flows in a Westerly direction\nand drains into Kootenay Lake about\none-third of a mtlo North of the Deanshaven Wharf. Thc water will be diverted from the stream at a point\nabout twenty yards more or less below\n\u25a0where the Bluebell, Kootenay Bay Trail\ncrosses the Croek, and will be used tor\nPower purposes upon the land described aS Sub Lot 3, 14a, 15, 16, of\nLot 4595. This-notice, was posted on\nthe ground, on the: 20th day of June,\n1921. A copy of this notice and an\napplication pursuant thereto and to the\n\"Water Act, 1914,\" will be-Jiled hi\nthe Office of the Water Recorder at\nKaslp, B. C. Objections to the applica-\ntioirnuiy be filed with the said Water\nRecorder or with the Comptroller of\nWater Rights, Parliament Buildings,\nVictlria, B.C., within thirty days, after\nthe first appearance of this hotlca itt a:\nlocal newspaper. Tho date of the,first\nlublicatlon  of  this  notice Is  Jtine   24,\nDEANSHAVEN   DEVELOPMENT   OO.,\nLTD., Applicant. v-      #.\nBy- J. H, Beley, Secrets^ *\u00bb\u00ab\"*\nVim.     i\"_\u00bbi     mi \u25a0 li-,.\u00ab-_-M\u2014   wVVj\nNelson Men Find Rich Ore\nBody and Stope Vertically\nfor Forty-five Feet.     #\nVertical stuping to a height of 45\nfeet, on a rich quartz vein within one\nmile of. Nelson, lias been carried\non the past winter in a quiet mannei\",\nand when Fred A. Starkey. commissioner of the Associated Boards of\nTrade, paid a visit on Wednesday to\nthe -Silver Reel' group on Anderson\ncreek, he was simply astounded el\nwhat lie sa\u00ab. This property is owned by W. .1. Richards, known as \"The\nBosun,\" VV. K. Symonds. and R. Barron, and while -Mr- Richards has attended lo the commissariat, end, his\nassociates, both practical miners*\nhave beon making great progress behind the curtain  of secrecy.\nThis group has been worked at\ndifferent 'times by different companies or syndicates, whu wero * aware\nof two parallel quart\/, veins, The\nlate it. A. Stewart, and Pat Perkins'\nwere among those interested at various times. The must recent operator, Harry Parks, covered up with\nsluiced debris the mouth of ibe principal tunnel, whose completion to thy\nve'n by the present owners litis suddenly revealed the Silver Reef as\npossessed of the elements of a producer.\nRich   Ore   Disclosed\nThe lour claims lie for a dis tance\nof 3000 feet along the ;Qreat Northern track, and Ihe Uvn parallel veins\narc approximately too feet apart.\nThe No. J tunnel on the main vein,\na drift, is now in 2H5' foot, and when\nthe ore' shoot was reached, the 45-\nfoot vertical stope was begun. Thij\ntunnel is* now being resumed. Hero\nthere  is 130 feet of0 backs at least.\nAssays show ore from the stringer\nin the main vein to run 52 ounces of\nsilver, .$23,00 in gold and 44 per cent\nlead. Some of this golena is on ejc-t\nhibition in tbe window of the Rutherford Drug company. _,\nEarlier work on this property,\nthough unproductive, was veil done.\nThe original timbering in lhe No. 1\ntunnel is good yet. '.\nThere is now a comfortable bunk-\nhuusu, and a blacksmith shop. Thero\nis an ideal location for a tram from\ntho mine to Lhe Great Northern, and\nthere ia water in abundance for every\nrequiremenl, either mining or power.\nThere Is also, of course,. timber for\nall purposes.\n\"It is simply wonderful that such\na. property as the Silver Rcttf- as now\nseen to be could have remained hld'-\nden aud dormant so long,\" said Mr.\nStarkey in describing his irtspecti^n.\nSlide Is Godsend.\nA totally new discovery, apart from\nthe. discovery that thc Silver Reef is\na real mine, resulted from the landslide that dammed up Anderson\ncreek this past spring and partly\ncarried away the Cre\/il Northern\ntrestle. When the erest of the hill\nslid down it revealed a clearly\nmarked quart;; lead that traces down\nthe mountain, and up tlio opposite\none.to an older outcrop. There-is a\nfine showing in this lead, which is 12\nfeet'wide for the most part.\nBAPTISTS ENLABS.\nTHE ORGANIZATION\nWill Form Association in Territorial Divisions; Mr. Tyner Reports.\nThat a Baptist association would\nbe formed of the Baptist churches\nIn- -the Kootenay, with associations\nalso respectively for, the Sduth Okanagan and the North Okanagan, and\nfor other territorial divisions of tho*\nprovince, .was the Interesting an-\nnounccmeul made last night by Rev.\n.1. E.--Tyner, pastor of the Nelson\nBaptist church, in presenting his report upor^ the recent provincial convention, fsX Vancouver, which be attended. It is the intentl.on in September to. assemble in' Nelson\"tlele-\ngates from all the Baptist churches\nbetween Grand Forks and Pernio t\norganize thc association for the. Koote\nnay.       ,\nThis departure in organization will\nbring the British Columbia convention into lin,e with the older conven\ntions of the east, In which the asso\nciations have been emplbyed front\ntime immemorial. The associations\nhave conference functions, but tho\nconvention will still retain the legisJ\nlatlve and administration functions,\nA striking home mission repcu't\nwas given by Rev! J. W- Idteh, general missionary Five old Baptist\nchurches had been opened up during the year, having been force.d to\nclose during tho war on account of\nhaving no pastors, Three .churches\npreviously receiving help from the\nmission board, declared themselves\nself-supporting, Several moro churches\nasked for reduced amounts from the\nboard towards the pastor's salary,\nThere were 100\u00abmore baptisms during the last 12 rhonths than during\nthe year previous in the province.\nFive young men members uf the\nMount Pleasant Baptfst church, Vancouver, had become pastors of small\nBritish Columbia churches? Other statistics of growth'given by Mr. Litch\nto tin*\/ convention were as satisfai\nlory.\nMr.     Spofforth     of    Victoria,     w,\nelected    president    of1   the     womer\nboard,   and   Mrs.   N.   Wolverton   way\nelected   one   of   tho   vice-presidents.\nIn the course of his very encourag\nfug report uf foreign missions. Mr.\nStihyoll, the secretary of the forego\nmission board, stated that -a number\nuf Indian soldiers, who had left th'\ntowns and villages, some uf Uifefai\nmany miles inland, and gone to the\ndifferent fronts during the war, had\nwritten home to India and told their\nfriends what they had seen, and that\nthis had made the native people Inquire uf things outside India and\nhad helped tbe missionaries and helped to pave the way for the form of\nself-govern ment that the British government was giving to India.\nMISS   F.-L. STEVENSON\nSecretary\u25a0' of Lloyd Georgo, has\nwritten \"hi: book.entitled .\"Makers. o% a\nNew World,\"' being ii series of per*\nsoiml 'Sketched, of leaders at. the Peace\ncottferehce.'\u2022'\u25a0'\u2022' '   .  -    '\u25a0\nBACK;DRAFT CAUSP\nALARM TO BE RUNG\nA baek draft from the furoae'b\nthe provincial jail, which caused\nsmoke to puff Into thc rooms thruugl\nthe stovepipes, resulted in a call foi\ntbe fire department about il:30\no'clock yesterday afternoon. \\\\Vrden\nW R. Jarvis wns relieved to, find\nthat he had overestimated the dan\nger.\nTHE   ONLY   WAY.\nShe\u2014Do yon renlly think I si\never succeed in making an iuipr\nslun with my  vuice?\nHe\u2014Unduubtedly,   if  you  sing\na  phonograph.\nEXES -THAT PON'T SEE.\nFew of us realize that'in seeitig th&\neyes *pjay tnily a. secpndary part. Actually U is tht? mind th.at seesXhrougii\ntly) mediun? of the eyes. Wta*t we see\nis not necessarily that upon wWch pur\neyes are fixed, but that to which Yfe\nturn *>ur -attention.- Two persohft of\nequal power of vision may look at tHe\nsame things yet each see a wholly different scene. U a sailor and an artist\nwere to watch the shipping ^t Dov$r,\nthe vessels and their ch^racteFisti-qe\nwould figntv, largely Iii the mind of\none, while the other would m& harmonies, color effects and a- general\nimpression of which ships and boats\nwould be only a part. We see, broa.d-\nly, the things we took for. G^ten,; *\u00bb-\ndeed, when we are deep in'thought\nwe see nothli\/g of.what lies before\nus, though our eyeH are wide open.\nAnd udtll we have cultivated bur power of observation, learned the art of\nseeing, we must always he oblivious\nto the greater part of what i\u00bb going\non before our. eyes. The power fit\nsight is largely a matter of will, Thus\nwhen many semi-blind presons have\nbeen p.ut into; the hypnotic state an*fl\n\"ordered\" to see* they have, completely recovered the power of sight. .Actually; though they never knew it,\nonly some oblique trick of the mind\nhad hitherto prevented therefrom tit-\nJoying perfect vision.\n \u2014_\u25a0 ;\t\nWORLD'S GAMiBLWQ |RE$PRT -\nMonte Carlo, the world's' most no*-\ntorlous gambling center,' . with Its\ncostly Casino, is located'hi the In-'\ndependeSt principality of Monaco ou\nthe Mediterranean coast of France.\nWinter resorts are maintained on it\nmagnificent scald The spjendpr g,f\nthc gambling halls, together With' the\nfascination for the game- of chance,\nhaH gained for Monte Carlo a world\nreputation. Large sums of money\naro lost there continually,, and jewela\nand estates are mortgaged to satisfy\nthe demands of the godde.-M of\nchance. Suieide is not uneomm\u00bb1. A\nsyndicate pays so,- huavlly^ ta. ttyj\nPrince of Monaco for its license to '\ngamble  that no   tax  for  the.support\nfor   Mr.   Insinger,   while   Hamilton   &   of \u2022 the\" government   Is   placed   upon\nWifagge  appeared   for   Mr.   Cunning-j the    people.     Tbe    principality   was\nham anil  als\ntreal.\nSpokane Banker Recovers\nFrom Clarence Cunningham, Bui Not From Bank.\nJudgments In the, two big mining\nsuits in the supreme court in Nelsoa\nIn May have. been handed down at\nthc coast by Mr. Justice Murphy.\nRobert Insinger of Spokane wftinhi!|\nhis' actlop agalnsj Clarence Cunning-,\nhani, the big Slocan m.'ne operator,\nbut losing his action against the\nBank   of   Montreal.\nIn tho first suit M. Insinger, whu\nacted for his association as-well, including M. S. -Davys, sought to recover some %\\ 1,000, lhe amount of a\ncheck* deposited'at the New Denver\nbranch of: the. Bank of Montreal hy\nMr. Cunningham, on the \u25a0 day preceding lhe date for a payment on\ntlie Hewitt mine of that amount, and\nalso. $783, the amount of a further\ncheck, for interest, as well as general ' damages. Mr. Cunningham'*\ncontention was that the check van\nnjot returned for payment tn Mr.\nInsinger, but was deposited with the\ncondition that it be held till he gave\nfurther   Instructions   regarding   it.'\nIn the second actio, Mr.\"inslnger\nsought to recover the amount of tho\ntwo checks from the Bank of Montreal, alleging that there had been a\nbreach of trust on the bank's part in\nnot notifying him of tho deposit; of\ntbe checks.\nBoth cases arose ' through a deal\nbetween the parties for the operation\nof thc Hewitt mine by Mr. Curinlrig-\nliam in conjunction with the Van\nRoi,'  coming   to  an   end.\nIt Is said there.is a strong probability that both judgments Will be\nappealed.\nR. S. Lennie, of Vancouver, with\nFred C.  M|ofEalt,  of Nelson, appeared\nfor  the Bank of   Mon-\nBlack     rats    were    Introduced     in\nAmerica   from   Uuropo  in   1544,   but\ninlo | were exterminated hy brown rats; introduced in 1775.  '..  '\nceded td the auceHlors of f^r.nce;\nMonaco by Kmberor Otho I, founder\nof the Holy Roman Empire. Tlu*\ntown of Monte Carlo was foujuled in\n1S0G, y,nd hap bpen a gambling resort\never-since. The ch.tof games! played\na,re   roulette   aud   trente-et-qiiaranle.\nLsGAb Notices\n.       WATER NOTICE\n(Diversion and Use)\nTAKE NOTICE that The Deanshaven\nDevelopment Co., Ltd., whose address\nIs Riondel, B. C. will apply for, a license to take apd use one cubic foot\nper second of water ou* of Sherraden\nCreek, which flows In a Westerly direction ciid drains Into Kootenay Lake\nabout one-third of a mile North of the\nDeanshaven Wharf. The water will be\ndiverted from the stream at a point\nabopt one , hundred feet more or less\nbelow,, the eastern boundary of Sub\nLot 3, aud will be used for Irriga*\ntion purposes upon the laud described\nas Sub Lot 3, 14a, 16, 16 offL6t 4595.\nThis notice was posted on tiie ground\non the 2\"0th day of June, 192L A,, copy\nof this notice and ah , application pursuant thereto and to the VWator Act,\n1914-^111 be filed in, tlie office'of the\nWiter Recorder at Kaslo, B. C- Objections to the application may be filed\nwith the said Water Recorder or with\nthe Comptroller of Water Rights, Parliament Buildings, Victoria. B.C., within-thirty days after the first appearance of this notico In a local newspaper.\nThe date of the first publication of\nthis notice Is June 24, 1921.\nDEANSHAVEN DEVELOPMENT CO.,\nLTD, Applicant.\nBy J.  H. Beley, ftecrt-tury.  Agent.\n\u25a0^_l__-._-.^ _\u00bb \u201e,-]^-s_..4-&_i\u00bb\nIt was married men's night at the\nrevival meeting..\n\"Lot all you husbands who havo\ntroubles on your minds stand up!\"\nshouted the preacher.\nInstantly every men in the church\narose except, one. \"Ah!\" exclaimed\nthe pre\/icher, peering ont at this lone\nindividual, who occupied a chair near\nthe door. \"You are ono in a milium'! .\n\"It ain't thai,\" piped baok this ono\nhelplessly as the rest of thc.congregation gazed suspiciously at him. \"I\ncan't get up\u2014I'm paralyzed.\"\nVendor Hume and His Staff\nFill Big Rush Orders on\nOpening Day.\nNominally in force on .fiine 1. Uie\nnew Liquor act really came into full\neffect In Nelson . yesterday, win,.\nat II o'clock in the forenoon, ,1. Kreil\nHume, government liquor vendor,\nopened the doors of tho government\nliquor store, and placed liquor hi\nsealed packages on sale to holders \"C\npermits.\nAt varldus times during tho day\nthe premises were crowded^ with\nother customers waiting outside, I in\nat other times temporarily the store\nwas empty. .At such Intervals- the\nstaff would open mere cases, a:i 1\nreplenish lhe. stock oil the shelves.    .\nBeing still without Instruction.'\nfrum the liquor control board. Mi'.\nHume has. provided himself with a\ntemporary staff, consisting of O. \u25a0>'\u2022\nGilchrist, A.- C, Dee and M. Sutherland. He has .also secured a-portJo:i\nof the stock of permits In the possession of John Cartmel, government\nagent, including thja temporary permit >for  an  individual  purchase.\nMr. Hume accepted no' checks, till\ntransactions being concluded with\nactual money. Beer orders were\nfilled direct from the Nelson Brew-t\nery, but orders for spirits were filled from the shelves, or by .case lots.\nThere are also a few shelves of\nliquors for use by doctors in filling\nprescriptions.\nSeveral automobiles carried away\nsamples ol' the distiller's art in case\nlots.\nThe store will be open from tl la.\n12 o'clock, and from  1 to 7 o'clock-\nCAT ENTITLED TO USE CLAWS.\nThe supreme court has Upheld the\nright .of a cat to use its claws and\nteeth as a means of protection against\npersons who seek to interfere in\ncat and dog fight. Prudenco, the\neourt held, in el recent ease should\nprompt a person to* leave a strange\ncat alone under such circumstances-\nThe opinion, prepared by Chief Justice Rugg, sustained a low'or court\nfinding for the defendant In a suit\nbrought by a woman ' lo recover\ndamages for injuries received when\nshe sought to protect her pet dog\nfrom a cat.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED _\nOfflc\u00bb,  Smelting  anil Refining  DepirtrMM\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF   OOLD,  8ILVER,  COPPER  AND  LEAD  ORES\nPreduetn at Qeld. Silver, Copper,   Blueetanev  PI*\nTADANAC TRAIL\n1\n5 Special\n\"His Master's Voice\" Records\nOut to-day\n\u25a0%.\nThis mid-month lis*; releases ten of thc ver}\n\u2022 latest and most popular selections, effectively fen-   '\ndered by famous orchestras and well known artists.\nDANCE NUMBERS\nPoor Mfr-FosTrot the Melody Men:\nDroonlnJ\u2014Intr. \"Love Me\" Fos Trot 1216291 \u2022\u2014  -\nThe Melody Men)\nDaisv Days\u2014Fox Trot The Melodv Menu.. ,\u00ab\u00bb\nSwUnee Rose\u2014One Step The Melody Men\/\nInn Boat (For Two)- Fos Trot\n(Smite Coleman's and His Castles by the Sea Orch.I,..\u2122,\nTea Leaves\u2014Fox Trot I*1\"*\"\nLmile Coleman's and His Casilcs bv the Sea Orch,)\n,2!62S9\n\"      VOCAL SELECTIONS\n''atoUna1 Lullaby Charles Hamson'\n-\"\u25a0'-The Last Little Mile is the Longest        Lcwih Jamrs\/^\nGherle\u2014Fox Trot Song Arthur Fieldaii.^on\n-:   'I'm Nobody's Baby Arthur VkMsf'1*^9\nAll on W-inrh 'DoHbltsidrd Records X\/.CTJ '\nAsk to hear them played on the\nVictrola\nat any \"His Master's Voice\" dealers\nManufactured by Berliner Gram-o-plwni Company, Limited, Montreal    j\nHEAR THESE UNDISTURBED IN ONE OF OUR SOUND PROOF\nVENTILATED DEMONSTRATION ROOMS\nPIANOS, LTD.\n304 Baker St. (The New Store)\nHEAR THE LATEST VICTOR RECORDS AT\nMASON & RISCH, Ltd.\n... __ \u00ab,\u2022>\u00bb,- Hi Wsme ol the Vktiola\nmjwai*iBBu_\u00a7_a_m_~^-f- \u201e _______:\n^asiaaHi^araj\n *\"&\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,'   PRIDAY'MO*P.inNC-,.JtTLY 13,1321.\n_JljE^LY NEWS_\nPublished every morning except But,,\nday by tho News 1'ubllshlttg Company,\nLimited,  Nelson,   B. C, Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nmnd checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and In no case to individual membors of the stafu\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C\n\u25a0tatements of circulation mailed on request or may be seen \u00bbt the office of\nany advertising agency recognized by\nthe Canadian Press Association.\n. Subscription rates: By mail (country), 60 cents per month; $6 per year.\nOutside Canada, a month, 75c; a year,\n17.50. i Delivered, 75c per. month; t4\nfor six months; 17.50 per year, payable\nm advance.\nMnnbw  Andit  Bur.au   of   oiionlr.tlon\nlte>\nFRIDAY,    JULY    15,     1921\nA Sign of Growth\nOne of the signs of development and progress which are\nvisible at many points in Kootenay and Boundary is the construction of new schools.\n. At many points at which\nschool meetings are being held\nthe taxpayers found it necessary\ntr? authorize the construction of\nenlarged  school  buildings.\nThere is no better evidence of\nincreasing population in the ru-\nral sections of the district.\n\"j*1.\nImperial Communication.\nEfficient\nhu$ekeepm<\nLaura. A. KirKman\nHELPFUL HINTS FliO.M   ItEADEP.S\nJI.   c\u2014\"On   May   31.   a   reader   of\nyour column who signed herself 'Young\nWile' complained that ller pie crust\nwould rlBe while It was being bttkort\nbefore the fillinij. was put In. Here is\nmy way of obviating this trouble: I\nnut dry white beans into the crust lie-\nfore baking It; then, when ll ts (lone.\nI simply take out tile beans ami fill\nthe, crust, Tho beans weight down the\npastry no that  It cannot  rise.\".\nK. F.\u2014\"I was 'interested In the query\nti'uiu one of your rentiers about making light wheat bread with cornmeal\nadded to it During the war my mother made tlie besl bread liy cooking\nabout three cups of common' uml Iheii\n\u25a0ul'ling this when cool lo tiie sponge ill\nf mixing  lhe  bread  stiff.  Kile\nsed about\nOi1   eight\nnother   hi\nGrass   S\nnt;\nno .in\na\\es\nrt of i\nof\nbread,\nbe\nneal\nHe\neeil from\nvnite linen skirts by putting lard ou\nhe slain aud rubbing ln clear, cold\nvater. Grass stains oil white canvas\nihoes can  be  removed   in   this  way.\nBrown Eyes\u2014\"Here is a very eco-\nlomical fruit cake recipe, as il contains\nleitlier eggs, butter nor milk and vet\ns really very good: -1 eups flour. I\nmji raisins, 1 eup dried currants, 1\n\u25a0up water,   1   cup sugar,   i^   cup lard,   1\nspin,I\nLSPOon soils '\/, t\neverything together\nmil sqdn, thon let co,\n'he soils anil flour si\nwell, then add ;\/, tei\ntract.      Hake for one\n\u25a0lie\naspt\nion   cln\nsail.   Iloil\nhour in\ni inoder.\nhusband\nThe subject of imperial com\nmunication which was before\nthe imperial conference on Wednesday .is one which has been\nunder discussion in one form\nor another ever since the Empire started to grow.\ni Centuries ago it depended entirely upon the navy. The navy-\nhad to keep free the seas for\nthe ocean Commerce of the\nmotherland and its colonies.\nWe today have a more varied\nproblem. Communication still\nhas as its vital foundation. the\nsafety ;of tho ocean highways,\nbut tp this is added the wireless, the\" cable and the railways,\nwhich have become of great\nimportance with the development of great continents over\nlarge parts of which the Union\nJack flies. ,<,\nCommunication is necessary\nnot only for commerce and as\na matter of safety in event of\nwar, but also for the conveyance, promptly and accurately,\nof news and opinion of imperial\naffairs.\nThere is much which-remains\nto be accomplished in the devel\nopment of news communication\nbetween the various parts of .the\nEmpire. There is, for example,\nstill no; organized news service\nbetween Canada and Australia,\nor between Canada and tho Union of South Africa.\n'     House     Owner\u2014\"My\nrecently bough a  house and I\nnlshlng it.     When l found how much\nmensuring   I   had   to   do\u2014for   rugs,   for\ncurtains   and   lo   see   what    wiilth   furniture I would   need   for  certain   nooks\nahd   crannies\u2014 I   went    to   a   hardware\nstore and  priced   tiie  five-foot and   ten-\nfliot  Inpe  measures.  I   found  that   these\nlong   measures   cost   u   gpotl   deal,   and    --\nyet  I  felt  that  I  must  havo one  that   question.\u2014The   Editor.\nwns longer lhan a yard, for ;u longer\none would save me from bending over\na great many times when 1 wlsneil lu\nmeasure across an entire room etcetera. So this is how I saved money yet\nhad a long tape measure: 1 bought\nfour short, fivecent, yellow muslin tape\nmeasures .such as are used in sewing\nbaskets, ami I sewed these together; I\n(bought other women who had long\nspaces lo measure, would  like to linow\nHon\ner hot\njusl   It\n\u25a0onoiny.\n\u2014\"Next   time\nBY LENORE\nOne may take an optimistic view about\nthe hottest, days of summer when sheer\nphi-striped dimity is used lor a frock,\nwith an Interesting aiT;inK<,m*'nt of the\nStripes that does away with all necessity\nof   trimming.\nOnly-\nbit   of   pleated\n\u2022 \u25a0Mil\ndli-\nla\n\u25a0 nf I\n.-loves into\nform the\nmire. The\neaten but\nsplclness.\"\nvon\nh a sli<\nfour whole\nion so as 1\ni perfect s.\ncloves a re, o f eou rse, not\nthoy (jive the tea a delielou*-\nItride\u2014A'I dreaded having my Husband's relatives Inspect and sample my\nrake because I just couldn't make P\nboiled ifcinff which would stand up.\nAline always was watery arid run rlgh!\noff the eake! Sn this is what I do\nnow. to get around tli is mortification:\n1 make thc boiled IclliK in the ordinary\nway, then stir into it, while still hjn.\njust before spree dint: it on' the cake,\nchopped-up marshmallows; (lie marsh-\nmallows melt and make a Rood, stiff\nicing. If the cake, must -he served at\nonce, .sprinkle :i little powdered suRar\non top this marshmallow iciiiR. or it\nw.li be sticky to cat. Any cook book\nwill Rive nil an exact recipe for this\nMai'MhnilUlpw rcltlg. anil I believe this\nkilid of ie.iiiR is the only kind for :i\nbride to serve to old lionsekeeps! It\nmakes n high Icing.\"\nTomorrow\u2014-Wtivs nf K<>rvuiR the Summer   Worries\nAll inquiries addressed to Mi^s Kirk-\nman in care of the \"Efficient Housekeeping department will he answered\nIn t.hesa columns in their turn. This\n|ie(iuires consider;! I>!c time, however,\nowing to tlie great number received.\nSo if a personal or quicker reply is\ndesired, a slumped and self-addressed\nenvelope    must    l-e   enclosed    with    the\nerous accomplishments. ' These\nare said sto include mastery of\numbrellas tq the point of remembering to take his off a\ntrain and ability to get it down\npromptly on entering a street\ncar.\nPremier Massey took the precaution to be born in the County Berry. Nature and New^Zea-\nlarid have done the rest.\nOnce again logic is worsted.\nThe variations are too variable.\nThe philosopher must fall back\non the maxim that there is always room at the top, albeit\nhe may recall Opie's reply to\nthe question as to how he mixed\nhis colors:   \"With brains, sir!\"\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nt>-\nInnocent and Yet Suspected\nLight on ;iti uiipleasfint possibility\n\u25a0uf married life is cast by a \"lost and\nfound\" advertisement that appears\nin-the Chesterton (Ind) Tribune. Tlie\nadvertiser is a finder, apt a Ictsci?,\nbut evidently he is iii .trouble, for\nlie says that the owner of a handbag put, (wo weeks ago in his park-\ned anil unoccupied car can get it on\napplication nnd by paying for the-notice. Then be says; \"If she will explain  to my wife that  I hud nothing\nDally Recipe\nRICE   PANCAKES\nOne eup of cold boiled rice, one\negg, two table-spoons sugar, one cupful milk, one leaspoonful cream tartar, half teaspoon soda, a pinch of\nsjalt,   flour   to  make a  nice  batten.\nwith   its   being .fin\nWhat  Is  the  Explanation?\n. What is (he price of. admission to the seats reserved for\nthe mighty, is a.problem which\nhas excised philosophers since\nmankind* first climbed down\n\u25a0from his tree and commenced\nmeasuring his brow. The problem has been complicated in\nmany ways, including discussion\nas to.who were the mighty and\nwhere were the seats. If the\nspot light is any criterion then\nthe five men met at thc London\n. conference qualify.\nDefinition, however, is still\nfar from easy. Is it study of\nlaw that paves the way, asks\nthe Winnipeg Free Press. Four\nof the., five, Lloyd George,\nMeighen, Smtlta and Hughes\nmight 'support this theory.  >\nHas jWelsh blood anything to\ndo with it? (This is a joke\npositively guaranteed appre-\nhendable by Scotsmen). Hughes\nand Lloyd George-both hail from\nthe land where no eight hour\nday is observed for the alphabet.\nIs. it being brought up far\nfrom the great white way? Premier Lloyd George, as has been\nrepeatedly emphasized, is the\nson of a village school master\nand the wrard of his uncle, a\nvillage shoemaker. What he\nhas done!, aU the world knows;\nwhat he ought to do the London Times knows; what he will\ndo\u2014next\u2014only heaven knows.\nGeneral Smuts is the son of\na farmer, a product of the\nveldt. His record shows that he\nescaped all primary education,\nentering school at the age of\ntwelve. Later he graduated\nfrom Cambridge with a double\nfirst in law. He fought against\nthe British Empire in the Boer\nwarY and for the British Empire ever since.\nIn the list of hardening pro-\ncessesfe-entered up opposite Premier Iffeighen's name arc, born\n.on an Ontario farm, went\nthrough Toronto university,\ntaught school - in Manitoba and\nbecame a lawyer. Prer\/iier\nHughes of Australia, emigrated\nlfrom Wales as a youth and\nmerely added law to his num-\ntd.\nwill   pa\nysi'lt'.'\nAnd would ihe '\nf   the   advertiser\nicung o:\nerioiis,\nassun\nag merely explam-\nbo in the car? Ex-\nisily supplied; to\n\u25a0ing is the difficult\nind   this   seemingly\nit\nIn\nstake. No longer shall we accept\nsettlements made, by Old World diplomats as settlements for us.' \"We\nknow our own inftu'csts and are\nprepared to def ond them.\"\u2014Okanogan\nCommoner.\nA Larger Alliance\nTiie objection of Mr. Meighen to\nlhe renpwaUoC the treaty with Japan\nis evidently not due to thc terms of\nthe treaty itself, or to, the fear that\nCanada could not protect herself in\nmatters of immigration, or to any\nstrain in Canadian relations with\nJap'-ui. , The Premier looks beyond\nthe relations between the two em\npires. An-engagement which might\nbe harmless and even 'beneficial\nitself may be injurious if it stands\nin tlio way of a better tiling, liritlsii\nstatesmen \u25a0 do not know positively\nf lhe compact would\n\u00bb lhe United States,\nthai iin agreement\nt lions might Impair\na larger and more\nmerit of three or\n[uding Japan. It. is\ncut proposition thai\nrecmenl. should be\nihe   possibilities   of\n| Twenty Years Ago Today |\n\u00ab . $\n(From the Tribune, July 15, 1901) \u2022'\u25a0\nThe -R-fevelatuke Herald Is as densely ignorant of mining and the lafB\nthat relate .to it aa Js the Rossland\nAl fner.\nE; Pollard, an Aliiswdrfli man, was\nbrought to Nelson on Saturday\nehal-ged with ' assaulting Itory McLeod.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nJacob Dover and Patenaude Bros,,\nthe manufacturing jeweleers in Nelson, have decided to keep their stores\nopen all day on Mondays hereafter\nand give their employees a half holiday on  Saturdays. \u2014\n* *   *\nHenry Itoy,' managing director uf\nthe London ' Consolidated company\noperating the-* Silver' Hill and Rieh-\nei'eu properties in the Crawford Bay\nd istrict, passed through Nelson yesterday from Montreal on his - way\nhome to Rossiand. lt is expected\nthat work on the company's tramway  will  be  started at once.\n* *   f\nTwo boy babies are the newest,\nthings in town. One came to the\nhome of Alan Fleck on Hoover street,\nand- tho other to thc home of Louis\nKlorl,\nAccording to the Greenwood Miner\nISO.-KiS tons of ore have been shipped\nfrom (lie mines at Phoenix, Greenwood and Summit since January 1.\nAt a . low vatuat'on, the oro was\nworth   $1,500,000.     .\nTen Years Ago Today\nlace is lifted to finis]-\n;i floating sash .of tli\ngive the frock a look\nmet*.\nRod  and white,  g.ree\nnnd white, and laveude\nos are features iu im]\nfine  hairline   stripes\nleast   conspicuous.\njf\naterial to\nand sum-\nnd white, blue\nid given strip.\nnnly\nbii\n;d\nIn:   bod.O\nnbroiderles are nol 1\nses, but these are re:\nind organdie modi-Is.\n<<\u25a0 organdie chemiti\nof\nnl.\n''bin.';\nre.-Bcb.\nid\nhi\nProm The Bally News of July 15, 1911\nE, L\n'(men\nlater\ndepa\niRoyi of the geoloctal survey\nt at Ottawa, stated last night\n\u25a0 this season lie would com-\ntopographical and geological\nmap of- the mines of the''Nelson district, He came In last night from\nNew Denver where-a* party Us at work\nunder A. T. C. Sheppard completing the\ntopographical map of the Slocan which\nwas commenced last year and delayed by forest fires. C. W, Drysdale.\nanother 'member of the department is\ncompleting a geological map of of tin\nt'Vanklin camp oil the north fork ol\nlid L. lUdiieeke it\n\"es to a ma]\nthe Kettle\nHchofield is working\nlOast   Kootenay.\ni-iiiiiniiri      viini|>     yrii      ii\".      \"\u00ab\u00bb\nlite Kettle river, and L. I\nmilling the finishing touchoi\not'Ttiie  Beaverdell  camp on\nit.\nTeviotdale.\ni-rctary-tre\nof straw berry\nPATTERN NO.\nera for the nhov\nbe obtain\nby\nMill\nto\nB.  C.,\nof   tills   patb\ni,     and     25     i?i\nBe   sure   lo\nslipping   of   tin\nmodel\narn\nThe Lighter Side\n,'isii,;\n(hot  a r\nbe   displ\nThey can see\nbetween two,\nLhe prospects i\nimporta'nt agn\nmore stales, ii\na; safe  and   pri\nthe smaller I\nposlponed ii'nli\ntlie larger pfai\nplored. Thai \u25a0\nas a desire ft*\nthe intimate re\nIsted In ilia\nwhether tht' tri\nmay be rbgardc\nii, good thing ai\ncouver  Pruviuet\nUnited   States   Makes   Peace\nThe  United  Slates has declared\nift'irming  that\nth\nbat\nmill\ndii\n\u25a0Liy\nitish  (bivernm\nat,\niu   eonnecflo'li   with\nDtamia and the Mid-\n\u2022emmenls or the  Do-\nkept thoroughly and\nall   questions\ntin\nDominic\ni wh(\nJilted.\nlird,  that  lhe Brit\nthl. enter   into   no\nalliances without <\n., and the advice of,\n, and Unit all smrh till entered inlo, sliould\no lhe approval of tlv\nlament;'. *\nuntil, that upon all ui|t\n(ioveriimenl\nilies or spe-\nconsullalion\nthe Domin-\nreaties, even\n-ui.\nDotni\ninfi*\nand\nmin\ned\nThe\nMeigh\netne\nida\ntli\nlhe\nadv\nnt. mu\nU\nsi botv\nled Stales\n'ic'..'1'uing ti\nTreaty of\ntin\niimtries tit  peace\ns.'s thai  the  IJui\nrve all  Ihe rights\nVrmisUce and the\nand acquired by\nieipalinn    oE    the\nbut the propps-\n.nns to ihe Presl-\nercise of his proud   more   or   less\nopt-\nS    fl\nal.\nposition taken by Premier\nbefore the Imperial conference is surely the position any Canadian cilizeft must assume. Time\nwas. and not so long ago, when the\nDominions were considered by official\nEngland us convenient pawns to be\nplayed on the diplomatic table in\nthe Interest of the power behind the\nthrone; sort of dumping grounds for\ntho \"hlgher-up,\" where .anything was\ngood enough for the native colonials.\nThese ideas have been dead in Canada\nsoiiie lime, and it begins to look as\nIf they are rapidly dying 'h the\nOld Land. Premier Meighen Is completing the process. What he says in\neffect is just this: \"Little Mother,\nEngland, we love you; we have grown\nto manhood under your care and\ntraining; now we are men, prepared\nto take a man's place in the world\nand must have a man's say In all\nmatters   where   our   birthright   is .at\nVersailles,\nthe par,\ncountry iu the war,\nals are only suggest:\ndent, who, in tin- ex\nrogative, may dema\nthan   Congress  advises.\nThe method of making peace is, of\ncourse, vehemently criticized by Democrats and others who desired the\nratiEielation of the Treaty of Versailles. Thoy ,predict that it. will\nlead to difficulties and complications\ncompared with which the Versailles\nTreaty is simplicity itself. Tbe New\nYork World says it will bring\" not\npeace, but strife. The World fore-\n*^pes conflict in the home courts over\nGerman property, conflict with Germany over the terms of a new treaty,\n.and conflict iu the Senale when th\nnew aggreements with Germany and\nother countries onqe allied with her\nare presented for approval, Tin\nSpringfield liepu hitman says it h\ntbe strangest way of effecting peace\nespecially by a victorious power\nknown in history.\nIt seems that the United States\nwould have spared itself a vast, deal\nof Inconvenience by accepting the\nTreaty of Versailles, even with reservations. It. must now begin where\nthe other Allied nations left off at\nParis. The Unfolding 'of the President's foreign policy is awaited with\nthe keenest interest, and he is being\nurged by influential Republicans to\nlose no time in bringing forward his\nplan for an Association - of Nations\nto replace the existing League.\u2014Toronto   Globe.\nA True Prophet\nA month ago, or moro, Sir Oliver\nLodge predicted that the sunspot erup\ntlons would result in extra foot\nweather. Ho seems to bo right\nabout this, whatever else he may -be\nwrong about.- Cleveland Plain Dealer.\nng tiling .\nlat   other\nonly   Ihrilling   expo\nold   p:\nlil-'ali:-!\nIII!!  Will   0\npea wiiii\nivorlcl gqi\nount  lit'\n-cli.il:.,-   bill   you   tltm't\nIs trying to.trick you\norr.\nid'\nVendor   Hume's   lie\\\nlio'i\none\nin   tho   pocket  t\nlose   most   of   our\nat the lop.\nthrough\nmoney\nForget and forgive is a good adagi\nbut some folk are ajways forgcltin\nami never forgiving.\nmarble   .quarries\nwill be opei\"\" '\nnext week \\\ni   last   night\narv of the ct\nMARKETS AND FINANCE\n(ConUnued   from  Page   Six)\nFORM COMPANY FOR\nWOODEN FAM1 SILOS\nVICTORIA, July 14.\u2014H'o supply-\nCanada, lho United Statew ahd later\nAustralia and' New Zealairid, witli tlie\nlatest type of wooden farm silos, the\nHoard company has beiin formed\nwith headquarters at ACbomi,\" i hy\nClaretice Hoard, owner of the Bain-\nbridge Lumber company and formerly prosident of the Victoria Shipowners, limited. The new company\nwill receive a dominion charter\n\"within the next few weeks and manufacture, of silos will commence at.\nAlberni sdme time this munth, Mr.\nHoard announced today.\nWINNIPEG  GRAIN  QUOTATION^\nDECLARE GRAIN POOfc\nIS OPEN AS THE DAY\n.  .[,\nCHICAGO, July 14\u2014The cantlpa'gn\nof the Grain Dealers' National association against the grain pooling plan\nof the United Status grain growers\nis as open as the day and any information congress might want will\n-be speedily forthcoming, R- t\nMansfield, chairman of \\ht, asHOc'a-\ntion's executive committee, said today. His announcement was In connection with a resolution introduced\nin the United Slates senate tills week\nby Senator Kenyon of loVva, calUtiff\nfor an investigat'on.\nFIX EXCHANGE RATE\nOTTAWA. July U;\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014Tne board of railroad commissioners announces that, in accordance with the *}udgment arid1 order ol\nthe board, dated January 14, 1021. the\nfate of exchange in connection\nsh'pnu'iits of freight in Canada and\nthe United Stales from July 2-T, to\n31, Inclusive, will be 14 per cent\nand the rate of surcharge of the sa_d\ntraffic  will  be eight per cent.\nTno rate of surclmrge on interuj-n-\ntional passenger business will bo\nbased   on   14   per   cent   exchange.\nOpc\nn   Hlg\ni   Low\nClose\nWheat-\nJuly     17S\n1112\n17H14\n181%\nOct. 149\n1'64 %_\nutv.\n154\nOata\u2014\nJuly    ...... 49%\nM'k\n49%\n51%\nOct 4\u00bb%\n150\n4*%\n49%\nBarley\u2014\nluly      SI Vs\n82\n81%\n\u2022 82\nOct r 74%\n7H    \u25a0\u25a0\n74%\n76'\/i\nFlax\u2014\nluly      184%\nIHi'M\n188%\n184 VJ\nOct -..188$\n189',i-\n187\n188%\nKycA- .\nluly     \t\n141\nOct\t\n124\nIRE\nADVENTURES\nOF A SAPPH\nThe '$4(M,000 sapphire stolen by tj\npickpocket three years ago in War\u25a0\nsaw. was fttund in Paris, cut into\nsmall parts. The Jewel was stolei\nthree years ago in Warsaw. It be\nlonged to Count Xavier Branicki\nwhose mother bought it in 1X40 ii\nFrankfort.* It was on exhibition 1\nVienna-nnd Paris in 18G7 and 187\nrespectivolyi. Jn 1SI18 in a crowde\n\"Warsaw street, a pickpocket too'\nthe precious jewel, from the owner'.\nIiocket, and nothing further j wa\nheard until the Paris police found\nl'n the hands of a Paris dealer ir\nthe Rue Lafayette, who said he hai\npurchased it from a Lithuanian mer\nchant, and had decided to have lt\n\u25a0cut  into   nine   stones.\nThe    man    who\nshut   never has to\nSince 1857,\nhas raised more\nMbies than all\nother prepared\nfoods combined*\n\\ocrdmd\nEAGLE BRAND\nCondensed Milk\n.UKI'H.'INK   MAT\nMcMillan, liquidiitot\n\u25a0lining cninpiuiy, in-\ninn   Assoqiu'ted   Press\nhas hi-eii provision'\nwith   lhe  CoiiHolHlat-\nal i\n\u25a0 of\nII. Hlcwai'l, if\nilian Con'solidated company, over\nIomk distunee teuiphone last flight\nTitled Jhe report of the ac'quTsi-\no'f -the t,e itol mine tit Rossland,\nsaid that he had not yet received\nolTicktl iiotlficatlQU. Mr. (Stewart\nnut in ;i position to give any tle-\nnf thu plan of development of\nnine proposed by llie Consolidated\nrOKONTO\u2014Nothing   Ulie\nnil\n\u25a0   tiatiinate   of   tlie   vietii\na\nll\nHIutii   1'iroK   is   po'sslblu  u\nS    V\nIt,    1\n\u25a0eiuly    l\\\u201e:   list   of   those\nnil\n.id   exceeds   100,\ntit\nlan<u'.\\<;i; or doksktsiukk\nHere is lhe text of a message sent\nto -King George by the Society of the\nIhigllsh county of Dorset men in 'London, in their local patois at their annul)! dinner. It was signed by the\npresident of the society, who is tho\nKarl of Shaftesbury'and a high com t\nofficial:\nTu Ills Majesty  King .large,\n\"Hire\u2014Dree hundred loyal men\nvroin Dursel. voregather'd at th' Con-\nnaught Rooma, Kingsway, on their\nyearly Veast Day, be mindvul o' yer\nflraslius Mnjestu, an' wl' vult hearts\nde send eo. tho dootivul an' loyal af-\nfeeshuns o' lit' Society o' Darset -[Men\niu Liin-on, In starm or sunshtfeii the\nca'st alius rely on our v.Ull heart*d\nsympathy an' suppwort. Zo wiout any\nmore liam-chamniy we ttgean raise\nou'r cyder sups lo ee, wi' th' pious\npniy'r on our lips that Heaven ull\nprosper ee, ah' we assure eo that Darset. Men ull ever seen as oone o' th'\nbright Jobls in yer Crown.\n\"I b'dide, az avoretime, nv, vol' all\nUtiic.    Thy Vaithful Servant?\n(Signed) \"Shaftesbury, (President o\nDarset Men in'Lim'on)\"\nKing George replied in English.\nJust a Reminder\nWe have still op hand a\nfair assortment of Plows'\nHarrows and Wagons.\nAlso Wheeled Cultivators, Mowers, Iltikes,\nScythes, Snaths, Forks,\nScythe Stones, etc.\nGET PRICES BEFORE BUYING.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBOX 1050\nNELSON, B. G.\nREDUCTION  IN   PRICE\nTaking Effect July First\nJohn Burns & Son\nCOMMEMORATE ARICA BATTLE\nLIMA. Peru, July H\u2014Ceremonies have jusl been held here in com-'\nhi o'mO ration nf the anniversary of\nthe battle of Ariea, between the Peruvians and Chileans. . A memorial\nwas presented to President Leguia In\nwhich ho was asked to grant parliamentary representation to Peruvians\nfrom the- \"unredeemed\" provinces of\nTacna and Ariea. The provinces\n\u25a0u-e nruv under Chilean administration. ' _ ?\nThe President promised tq ' give\nthe   petition   careful  consideration.\nFor the \"Lean Season'-\nFor the time of retrenchment, when the\npurse strings must be\nheld tightly to meet\nnew industrial condi-.\ntions, eat\nfor breakfast with milk, for lunch\nwith green vegetables, for dinner\nwith sliced bananas, berries or\nother fruits. Try this diet for a few\ndays and you will be ahead in purse,\nin health and in strength. Shredded Wheat is 100 per cent whole\nwheat, prepared in digestible form.\nTRISCUIT is the shredded wheat\ncracker, a crisp whole-wheat toast,\neaten with butter or soft cheese.\nMADE IN CANADA\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 15,1921.\n-r\nW\nThis  cut.   ilJiiHlrali-s  one   of   the\nmany  bargains  wo are  showing\nat   our\nBIG\n' \u2022H'^s^vsj&ly.'-'\nAnnual Sale\nleu's   Calf   Blucher,   (go  nr\nwell,   slip  snle  al.... JBO.OU\nMen's   Cull'   Bluchet\nwell, slip-\nSame   in   Mahogany   Calf   in\neither   Bluehor   nr' Lace.    Also\nblack ciiir lacei\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders  in Foot  Fashion\nAvoid Consignments\nIf You Havo\nCHERRIES   TO   SELL\nWrite us. We are mnncetcd\nwilth. the strongest and most\neffective sellinp force on tho\nprairies. Agents in every im-.\nport ft nt town sen that shipmenls\nget proper attention and prompt\npnyment.\nKOOTENAY FRUIT GROWERS\nUNION,   LTD.\nPhone   180 Nelson\nNEW   TIMOTHY   AND\nALFALFA\nWilier    mixed    nr    Plrt.il'    .sleek\nenreil.\nOur   Irrigated  hay  is rfno   iliis\nyear.J       Government graded.\nQuality     guaranteed liy     the\n.Growers'   company,\nFARM PRODUCTS, Ltd.\nLethbridge   and   Coaldale.\nAlso   straw,    oats    aiid    alfalfa\nmeal.\nWrite  or  Wire.\n,    PROMPT   SHIPMENT\nellings usually\nmean inflamed tissue.\nAbsorbine, Jr. gently\nrubbed ontheswollen\np\u00a3trt^ will\", quickly reduce the inflammation,\nand the swelling with\nit.\nThough   powerful,  Absorbine,  Jr.   is   absolutely-\nharmless, and cun he used\nwith   safety   and   comfort.\nIt is a dependable antiseptic and germicide.\nKeep it handy.\nti,2S n boulc\nnt mosl rtniggbti'\nW. F. YOUNG. Inc.\n344 51, Paul St., MontrcM\nI Skin Troubles\nI    \"\u2014*- toothed    ,\n(With Cuticura\ni       lu'oaij Omlmcril.TBletim, Mrt each. 8old-Vefywlll'rii\n'       t' 'i.ii  l\u00bb.-piM . Ij.'fl&w. MmltH, Bt PMlBt,Montr0,\n-\nWindow\nEnvelopes\nAddress Themselves\nMade of hlghgrado whltn wove\nBtoek and with a window of\ndear transparent quality.\nTHEY 6AVE HOURS OF\nVALUABLE TIM6\nwhon (lending oul Invoice*, bill*\nor letters.\nWrite for sample* mud quota\nUoni.\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nTh\u00bb Homo of Good Printing\nNELSON, B. C.\nGet-Together Members  Reelect     Officers;    School\n. Population Grows.\nKII.VLRTON, July 1.1,\u2014 Tho senium-\niiual iiiecllns of tlie (Jet Together club\nwas held In tlie memorial liull Tuesday\nevening. The report of tho'Secretary,\nJ. IJ. King, showed mat the directors\nin charge for the past half year had\ndone excellent work and hi conseduence\nthey were all unanimously reelected\nMra. Q. 1\\ Ironsides, Mr. A-. Erickson;\nW,   10.   .Marshall   and   A    H.   MacAUlay\ntho directors in the arrangement' of\nentertainments, etc.. during the next\nhalt year.' The, directors are Waller\nTattrle, T. Brown, ,1. K. King, Auditors\nare W. E. .Marshall and ,1. T. Kelly.\nThomas Bur'Joy is1 manager *f the\nwhist   drives. ,\nW. I','. Marshall roliirneif'huiiu: I'om\nVancouver a few days ago where he lufs\nboon taking a postgraduate, course in\noptometry:\nTlio annual sohool meel.ng or the\nSilverton seljool was held on July II.\nThe secretary's report showed lhe\nschool lo he iu excellent standing.\nThe nunilHT of pupils showing all increase of last year. Tin; last term's\nteaching staff is returning next year\nWilli the exception of .Miss M. I). Armstrong. A. K. .MacAUlay was elected\ntrustee in place of A. Wallace, whose\nterm   lists   expired.\nJack llnlzel formerly road foreman\n\u25a0 li this district, is . ill, tile Shlvorluii\nhospital under the care oaf Doctor\nropllffe. He Is suffering from in-\nflnniutory   rheumatism.\nCharles Hill who litis heen spending\nlite past week itt .Silverton returned to\nthu  Van  Jiol on  Monduy.\nAirs. .1. S. Catlden of Knslo spent\nMonday in Silverton, lhe guest of Mrs.\nVV. Ill, Marshall.\nNurse Gertrude James, who has recently graduated; has taken a position\nill the Silverton hospital.\n\u25a0Miss It. I. ford kit on .lulvl for\nn visit lo her home in Ireland; visiting\nfriends   la   Trail   en   route.\nI'rofossor ilnv Mackern of the Roy.\n,il Academy and College of .Music of\nLondon was In Silverton on Tuesday\nJuly 12 examining the pupils of Mrs.\nA. s.  MiteAiiluy.      Blovon  pupils  were\nHelen\nHazel    Mar-\nIrene   llolds-\nessful    were:        Fir\nilinock-;   iciully    nit\nhall.   Mtlrigrs    Bnio\nHire,      Nelly      I Inldsoiirv\nIII III\" senior grade Marjory (.aliens.\ner lost by. the small margin ot five\nitirks and liidinco Erickson lost by\neven marks from the passing total\nlarks. This is tlie first time Hull\nlie music examinations have been held\nn the Slocan. Professor Mnekern left\nn  Wednesday for Kus-.o.\nCONSIDER CAMPING\nSITES FOR TOURISTS\n_ Ti:.\\ll\u201e July   11.\u2014-The  iii-mlh\n'   ;   ol'   the   Trull    I'.oeni   -\u00bbf  Tr\nhi in tie- dry Hull mi Tuesd\n;\u25a0   wilh.  I'renldellt   Mills   in    t\nil  -,\\   Inrge  number  ol\"  membi\nWakefield to Drive Tunnel;\nGordon and Thompson\nLeave for Le Pas.\nSll,Vi;r.T()N. Au\\v M.\u2014The. i-Joofars\n;it the Vim Roi mine have recently .'li-\nKHged It. Trevor ;\u25a0\u25a0* mill foreman. Mr.\nTrnvor will have tin: mill in operation\nthin wed;.\nNeil - Mel.um.'iId find piiriui'r or Sim-\nMon havti I:iken a contract 'o drivi'\n250 feel of tunnel on the Wakefield\nproperty.\nGeorgo Gordon of Sflvortori aeeom-\niiitnli'd hv Jncfc Thompson ami Clare\nCaiiieren of Now Denver left \u25a0 her.'\nyesterday via Nelson en rente to Le\nPas, Manitoba where they will spend\nsoma months prospecting '.n thn recent gold strike-'.iJOrie. Mr. Gordon\nhas been mill foreman in this <lls-\ntrlct for many years. For :i time he\nwas with the Van Hoi Mining company\numl of Into- years he bus bpon in charge\nof tlu- Stiunliinl Silver Load1 Mining's\ncompany m.ll. Mr. Thompson Is also ;in old tlim-r here. Por -souk- years\nhe was In charge of the Kqlio mining\n[irouerly and of lute years has boen\ndeveloping his own property.\nTRAIL SECURES \"\nMUSICAL HONORS\nTRAIL,' ,lulv 11.-Trull Is ;is usual\nshowing up very well in regard to\nthe annual Associated Board oxamjn-\natfdus fit music pupils, sixtiu-n local\ncandidates having .successfully pass.d.\nwilh credit to t.lmmselve.s and their\nlynchers.\nTin'  successful  pupils  were:\nPupils of Mrs.  Edith Anthony, JJ\\ K. A'.\nM.\nHig-lier     Division\nMary    Galdlcott.\nLower Division\nMarjorie' Mlngay, Maxine Cbupiliiitl.\nElemeutary   Division\nHehdi   libiyloi-k,   Marie   Chapman.\nPrimary  Diviaion\nK.-iiiii.Tii Rfngfry. -\n.Mrs     K,    Kniser   Tregoiilng's    Pupils.\nlutenuctliate   Locial   Centre\nifivelyii   Hopper.\nHttflie. Division School Exams\nalfo<\nI!.,i\nLower Division\nEloniontaiy\niftli.\nI'IIHhou.    Ann;r   Diilnfel.,    Miranda   Laurlentc,   Gwendolyn   Laurleiite,\nPrimary\n. Kathleen .Tolmston.   Frederick Morris.\nCELEBRAfE^ORANGE\nDAY, WITH CONCERT\nTHAIL,   July   M.-   The    local     LoVal\nOrder   of   Orangemen,    Lpdga' No.   2773\nCKlcbritlcd   their  annual   event   Tmwtay\n.\"tvuliiug   in   Dolun'H   hell.       P.   li.   Mac-\nUoiiald oceuplrd tie- ehsiir,      Otir.lug the\nevening  \u25a0\u25a0   splendid   progrnni   was   rend-\ner6d    nnd  'Inward    th-    close   a' sprend\nwns   pl-o'.iderl   which   carried   Ihe   eyioi-\niiiKs   eilloynienl    well    Into    the    ninlit.\nFollowing   is   ihe   progrnni:\nHt-lectlon,    Oreheslrai     Kong,     K.     I'.\n..,\u201e\u201e,..      .he ens-   Qiiiivtnltc;   Violin   Solo.   Mr.   Anderson;\n.'-,\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0 'i,J    i li      I     of    li.'iidiug,     Mrs.     KiTiruson;     Song,     Mr.\nT, <i d,. li.r- wiih tli- ,lr ii I i M.-n 'dtl lejoh.i: I'lnim Solo. I'oiotliy Voung;\nof he cfr'-t^Northern 111. \u2022 in to Hoss-I H.-nlnl ion, |.j. Cook: it-eilat ion, W.\nluu'd  wns  endorsed. '     Sl\/oonbr.; ^election,   Orchestra;   KeelL-\nNoble    Hiutis    reported    in   behalf   of \\\\ '\nthe    l-glshitlvf \u25a0o.nimltr...-    with    nd'er-! .\nlo   ilu>   T-n-lff   nifiiiori'il   nreseutiMl t Qunrti-lu\\   I mno  Piicl,   M,.^.^,..   ,. ,,..,\nl.v rtilM hr.-nrl'i in Hi,- oiiiii<l er of fl-GladyS IliHirl.'l; Duet, Misses lioig;\n'^   \"!-     '\u25a0*'\u25a0\"''           nii^iM' i   oi_i i   ;Uii- iaiiU   ,,iiir   ,lF,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201ei1. c\u00abi^   At.-   i.in.lu-\nA voluntary scheme ol whuat iniirkcl-\ning, operated by a speeinllv cheated\norganization dfrectly responsible to its\nfarmer patrons, provided sui'fieieiit demand lor voluntary pooling exists and\npruvirling tiie governan-nt in desirous\nof accwling to that demand*, is the recommendation Contained iri the report\non wheat market ing prepared hy .lames\nStewart and F. W. itlddell, of the\nCanadian wheal board. ;ii the request\nof tiie Saskatchewan government, aud\nnow made public\nThe report sugg\u00bb*is that ii voluntary\npool should he conducted on an experiment:! 1 seale, rather than all attempt\nmade to eipbark on a full fledged\nscheme,\n\"In ibe first plan- wc believe that\nthe most perfeet form of a centralized\nwln-al marketing agi-ncy at the present\ntime can be Created only under the\ncontrol of a national organization,\"\nsays the report. \"And, second, we believe that in considering any form ol'\nwheat marketing pool, involving less\nthan complete national control, one bas-\nud on voluntary co-operative effort on\nthe part of the producer, is preferable\nto one hound by the provisions of a\nlegal   eoiiiraet.-*\nDepends on Support\nDialing with the principle of any\nform .of pool the coiiimission emphasized that success or failure depended ou\nthe degree of Ktipuorl given by the\nproducers. While     federal     control\nthrough such an agency as tlie (.'anadlan\nWheat board provided distinct advantages to the producer it was worth\nmentioning that a voluntary poor or a\nnon minimum contract pool successfully\noperated  with  h  comparatively  limited\npatrOUagC might be aide to exercise. ,Hii*f-\n\u25a0tdeieut regulative influence over the\nI'lnietiees to reduce to a minimum any\ndisadvantages which the present .system   may imve  developed.\nObject,oris were voiced' hi the report to a contract pool in view of the\nconditions wiilch might arise \"under\nwhich either party lo t.lie contract\nwould find the provisions onerous, ,to\nsay   the   least\/!.\nDealing with the possibility of operating a voluntary pool on an experimental  rfculo.  tbe  commission  says:\n\"The general principle of a voluntary\npool involves Centralized selling, initial\nadvances, and equal distribution of\nproceeds of saleM according to grade.\nfhe plan of opei-aiion would be a voluntary pool, win-re tbe producer may deliver lo the pooling organizjitlon without a contract, tlie whole or any portion of his wheat, but where there arc\nno optional marketing 'channels at the\ndisposal of the. patron within lhe pooling orgauii-.iitioii, all (lie wheal would\nbe pooled. The pooling organization\nwould have complain control of the\nwheat after receipt of documents\u2014siieh\nas   bills   of   lading   or   storage   tickets\nwould be made'for taking delivery of\nIcs-s than carload lots hy means of\nstorage tickets ami foe carload lots by\nconsignment. This would apply lo\nwheal handled by any licensed elovatoi\nand might also include, cars shipped\nover the platform. On receipt of bills\nuf lading covering consignment or of\nslorage   tickets   COVeiillg   I\ni>is\nMorris;   IU\nDoubt;    Speech,    .[.    Weir;    Song.    S\\.    V\ntC\" v .is1';! be!;;;'jE\"^.!!^' \u00a31,[r\u00abul.-te0ta:Mr: ut \u25a0\ntariff   inei\nIlSiMEj'r1\" r'1\"' ,;:;!;'Hhold\" moonlight\nt,^,\"^^,,;:'^,::;^;\";'!,,;;;;.!.1^ %\\ dance at trail\nliolittdft   ileiUiiiK   with   'litilailitcs   aiMili-\n' rl\"li<- question \u00abl' Dt't>vl''lllilS eainn ultra i 'ft:.Ml,. Jutv 11. -Mf\u00bb, t: It Tliiiiiip-\nI'rir   iiittuiiiciliili.   tourists   was  .lirouKlit   win   was   tin-   linsti'ss ,nl   ti   ijfllgltttul\nati   anil    nnili't'    Ihis   .1.    A     Mttt'KIt i   lawn   tini'lv  ttivt'ii  al   !nT  homo  at   Taii-\nhiikk\u2014l.\u00abd     thnl     .\u25a0I'l'.irls    In-    tnailii    Ip lunar     on'   Tilrnilny     .\u2022vrniliK. Kil'l.v\nInKSII tha (Irani Nurtlianl HfiilKn al !'\/jii,.k1s wira invs.ul anil imiIiuciI Ilia\nNiirllili.irl   anil    lilank    Sana'    lor   ulllo-I nool    out-of-tloOrs    .\u2022vanliiK    iinnnna.i-ly.\nmobllii  lial'l'ia.       A   i niiillai-   v.as  ll|i-   Tha   Inwn.  which   is  ot I'   Ilia   Inrfinsl\n[lolntetl lo (Ion! Willi this mutter. N. hit Or mnir Trail, was nraltilv tlaaol-nlail\nHinns, W. 10. H. Miinyiiaiiny ninl W. J. la nil was I'astnmiail Willi Chinese Inn-\nWilllttlnS    lii-inK   ii|i|iolnlril. turns,   wlilcli.   Willi   Ilia   lirltlil    monn-\n *\u2014 IliKhl.    8nve.lt    vary    riiiaalilia    a] ar-\nanaa   In   tha   \u00bbnaiials.\nTha Roasts iilnvnil LnuiW ilnrini; Ilia\ninrliar |\u00ab,i'l nf Ilia avnnlnu. anil hilar\nailjnvail tl a,n(nl |iarlnil of iliitiaian. fnr\nwhich   Ilia   Inwn   was   wall   SlliH-ll.\nIlafraslltaanls     ware     sol'Vail     Oil     Ilia\nlawii, after  which  ilaaaint,'  was  ra.-ntiu-'\nIlia     a .Is     finally     ilc|.arl inK     in     a\nhnni.y   inoi.il   nl'lcr   tin-   vary   alijoyiihla\ncastlegar notes.\nt'AHTI.IOHAK.    .Inly    I I. \u2014It.    li.\n.Mrs. Wkinnar anil son. frnni Nel.\nsun arrtvc.l .in Cusllcirnr Ihls morii-\nItiK In visit har claiiKhl'T Mm. .lohn\nl.awson.\nMrs. Ilrnwti of Trail, is vlsifllU! Mrs.\nW.   Iltirvcy   far  n   few   (lays.\nSirs   .lank   line  aial   family of  Trail\nslntillail    off    Iterc    fur    a    law   ilay.s    to\nvisit   har   sister   Mrs.   John    .Mc\"\nninl   family   hol'oM\nttary   where   they   arc   going\nthnlr   llotun.\nMr.   Aslr.vnrlli.   school   teacher i\nCaslli'Ktir   sVlioul   I'm-   tin-   a lng\nis   in   town    loDltlhg   over   Ilia   fc\"\nanil   mulling   liralmral Ions   fur   his\nBOSWELL NOTES.\nMrs. \u00ab'.. Walinslav Blietll Minalay in\n'['rail mi lilts.ncss. She e.xtiacl.s to go\ntllei gain   on   I'riiltiy.\nMiss llafiirc iiinl Melville: Defae nf\nTrnll lira spcliillliK Ilia holidays here\nas the guests of Miss Tracy ttntl .Vnah\nDefile.\nMiss Ailelaiile I'liiatllelle nf Nelson\nis siieiiiling Hi\" weeli hfiro. lhe guesl of\n.Mi\u00abs Irene HclicllL She will' return\nhome  nest   Monduy,\nMany campers from Trail are lie-\nsilin.ng lo appear In Ihls. distriel I\"\nSpend the summer holidays on the\nsatitly   behclies   of   tile   Columbia   River.\nELECTTRUSTEE FOR .\nSCHOOL AT BOSWELL\nItl'SIVKU.   .Iiilv    I I \u25a0   Mr.    I    .Mrs.\nI'tllilwell    nf    liiilulnn,    1'Jligln nil.    life    lhe\nguests nf  Mrs.  A.   Kennedy,   who  truv-\nOleil    lip    lo    OreSKll neel    lilelll    last\nilin    McKniuiai    1,'riilay.     Mr.   anil    Mrs    Clintwell    hiivo\nlitllulicwnii a'ail may possibly pro'oooii\nnl Aastrallii. where Mr, C.Tnlwell has\nfariuing   liilorosls.\n\u25a0 Miss ]'. Ilolaiiger of Cruilbruok nr-\nrlved on Salunlay evening, null is tlio\nguest   nf Mrs.  (1.   11.   Hartley.\nMiss Jessie I'iiill of Nelson is assisting with (ho I'ruil picking nl the Hart\".\nJolinslone   ranch.\nThe' raspberry crop Is turning mil\nvery poor, the early blossom lliiv.ng\napparently been caught hv a. Initeh nf\ni'rpst null lulling In come In liinturilc\nThe showing of blossom was vol\",\nheavy   luileeil.\nI'.iiSWKl.l.. Jnli II.\u2014The minimi\nmeeting for the election ol a school\ntrustee look place on July 11, Willi a\nverv representative atleinlanoo. .lamas\nI'liaiilaail was In'lho chair. Tlio financial statement, which sluiwnil a wuh-\nslaaiinl  balance  ill  hand,   was adopted.\nThe retiring trustee, Harry Jolinslone, who bus also anion as secretary\nnf tho linnril of Irtisli-i, was reelected\nto  office.\nH. J. Ciitniniugs WUS appointed tl 11-\nllltor after a ball..! between- K. Will-\nline ninl hiinsoK  for lho position'.\nA onto of thanks was passed lo Mr.\nMaol'alliiiii for his able conduct of til\"\nschool   during   lho   past   six months;\nThe trustees were aiilhoril-.eil to arrange for n better system of. venule-\nlinn fur the school and also In have\nnew  window  Illinois supplied.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES.\n*   SOUTH   SLOCAN;. July   1 I.\u2014Mr.   ami\nMrs. W. P. Melneruck ami family, who\nhave been reshlenis here for 15 years,\nhave b-rt lo make fbe;r iioine in Nelson. Mli. Melueruek siill has bis position   in   lhe   ('.    P.    \\l.   ami   will   be   In\nNc\nids.\nMrs. K Watts entertaliieii lbe nurses\nof Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nNelson, on Tuesday afternoon. Thev\ncame out bv motor ami bujoyetl a turn\nai cherry nicking ami visiting the\ncanyon,   returning   .11   th-   cool   of   the\n,1. !>.' V'-atinaii. Colonel Murray ami\n10. Watts- motored lo Slocan City yt;s-\nterday and .-.pent Hie  dav.\nMiss Agnes r*ftCS of Vancouver, who\nhas been vislf.itig Mrs, Vealninn al\nH'raeside for the past two weeks, returned  on   Haturdav  e\\en|ug.\nMrs. Bennett, W. Bennett and Cordon* Bennett were vmilors her- on\nTuesday.\nMrs. Sprnck of Shon-ncivs visited\nfriends here on  Monduy.\nA certain innl~o|*. chcan motor car\nIs called -Lenine and Trotsky\" In\nCiiL'lumt-\u2014 two cranks and  a   revolution,\nEFFERVESCENT   m\n.  m\n&mm\nrelieve* Headaches and Pain in the Back \u2014\ncorrects Bilious Attacks, Constipation and\nIndigestion\u2014keeps the Kidneys Active and\nthe Nerves Steady.\nm\n\\niii-As\nPROPOSES GIANT\nPOOLJH WHEAT\nMembers of Canada Wheat\nBoard Outline Plan for\nSaskatchewan Government\nulv\nfori   Wlllllilri.\nAvnilalJlo  to rarmei-B\nlliiiler tills synlom Uie Caiiiulu, tlnilii\nnet tiiw nt lirosi-iu, wmilil render nil\noinmtrv uloVtttora ninl lovinlnnls* fnoil-\nItloa   nvnilnljlii   for   lho   imriioau   of   lho\nsolioiiie.      Tliis K.vsl   ivnulil  ho avnll-\nnlilo tn fnriners nt ov: rv Mhipphi^ imint\nivhellier 11 omintry tliivatof wiis'locn-\ntoil   llie.ro   nr   not.\n\"Willi  roem-il  lo fiiiiiiiolliK, n 1100H111;\nnrrniiKei il    Mhnulil    le'    nn   nllraollvo\niirbtiOiTittoll to the Imnlno In view of\ntin: fact linn lho initial ailvanoo wonhl\nlie billy n eonwervnt ivo, porColllaKO of\nf tho wheal |ioi,l\nnhl\ntin\nwonhl   Invfiriihly  ooiisiiio\nKllllellle   Oil 'II.S  OWI1   IIIOI'IIS    lllis   I R\nol'fect what thev Roliorally (In no\nIImoiikIi nilvanoi-s kivoii Ihelr elicit\nlhe.    lii'llln     ei S. If,     howole\n'l'l'l'i|l|i''wl'l'll> llie\"|i\"l'ri'i'!\"l*lio'   (1,'i'vl'ri'iii.i\nllKh\n\u201e[i|,.\nIlelne   olierntlVe    III\n\"nine   dollvory   of   the   wheal   at    I\nInula   coin I il.   a   i-erli loroo\ne  of   lhe   whoa.l,   of  course,   wonhl\nnvirleil     Into     ensh     fl him\nlie.   anil   lo' thai   ostein   necessity\nwill0. would   he   roiiiilri.nl.\"\nSOUTH SLOCAN SCHOOL\nBOARD TRUSTEES MEET\nSlll\"l'l.l   SI.III'AX,   July   il.   -The   on-\n I   me,,lint;.of   llm   rnloliayers   ot   I lie\nSoutli Slootlii sohool ilistrioi was held\n\u25a0ti the hall on Saturday oveainu lost',\nwilh a very ronresonlntlvo allomlnlice.\n.1. II ','\u2022;,linaa was a|i|n.lai;il In lho\n\u25a0hair.\n,'dri.. tl Walls, sorrel;,rv of Iho\nlinnril. nine lhe Iruslees' ivnorl. whien\nshowed thai a |ii|iclesa I'urilttoo had\nheen Installed; a lurgo man or Camilla\nnail heen |.ul'i'hasi>(. .n addition -ouho\ncabinet; nnd lho Mi'ouiiils had boon V'i-\nelcaed wilh a fine wire I'onoe. The \\is.\nI    for   this    year   lias   heen   Ve.\n10 allow   (\n\"(I. VV'!'lliin'ilihrv win\nIriislee after lKlvlllK ft\nhoard   since   the   school\nlOll.       HleullCl'lilllll    lho    li\nnl\n1111 iin, position,\n''oliiiie,wooil Gray waa-reelected aa\ndltor.\nA vote was taken In favor of oimsoli\nihllioin Tho uiiiiulos were rend ant\nailo|,l,,,l.\nCJITTLE    TEAFFIC    KEVIVAL\nAs   a    onliiiiensatliiB   \u00bbct-oi'l'   aKiiins\ni'h'i,   pori   of   .Mi.'nlre'al   Is   heglnti'lilS   li\nlioneni    hi'   a    I will   of    the   octlvlt!\n\u25a0n   tho   inullor   of   entile   truffle   10   tin\nUnited   Kiiicdn ad   thp coiltlncul   o\nKiiropo. Tho traffic died down dur\nIns the war, and-Is only beKlnnini; ti\nrevive. Since the oiioiiinn of lho nnv\nBallon Ihls year al.oul ll.lillll head o\n\"alllo. all from Western Canada, hnv\nhoell sliipiieil OVi-I'HeUS, the lr;tl'f'.o ho\nhnv divided so far ho.tweon the H'ul'liesi\nWllliv   Cimipany,    tho    While    Klar-|io\nlib.\nid\nlie way lhe traffic\n's liehiE eiiconrnBod hy lhe sllorlaei\nof other I're.iuhts; for a year and Iwo\nveai's 11B0, when cattle shlpmeiils were\ndiscussed, it was staled that the steamship lines wero not inclined to bo oul\nof their way lo cultivate II owing lo\nIho fuel thai other and moro regular rrelgllts were ii, he,hail and ll\nwas not therefore worth while In\n\u25a0nliijil ships to tlio needs of cattle. II\nwas staled l.v .1110 stnitnislp.p mail that\n\u2022Inline :ihe    war   the   old   ships   whh'h\nhad    1 11     used     for    oallle    Iraiispnl'ls\nwero used fnr other purposes, and\nmost of them wen, sent down hy snh-\nI    when    Iln,   ;i\nI hi\nidntli\nclu\nthine as a oallle\n'except Unit nrdiii-\nliormaiioiilly   filled\n\"Then\nship,\". II.\nary   slea\nup for lhe carrying of cnllln, and\noallle wore mil forthcoming*! those fll-\nMiiB-s could he easily dismantled so ns\nto  carry  general   cargo.\"\nII wns said hy one shipping man llial\nlhe last shipment of euftlo lo Great\nr.rlliim was In 11112. and lhat stiimnenls\nlo Krnno.i, censed nt lhe end or llll I;\nbut just ill'ter lhe war there wero one\n,-,,- two occasional shipments in Bel-\ngium.\ntil former iln vs.'cattle used lo be\nbrought down from lho Groat Lakes\nl.y barges and Iraushlppoil Inlo ocean\nfreighters1, hut nl the present dav\nthev come by mill and are either\ntransferred from the cars or kept\nin special noiis at lho Montreal stock\nyards  or   nl   the   C.   P.   R.   cuttle   sheds\non thc harbor. ,,\nThe cattle which aro now being\nshipped overseas are slaughtered at\nlhe .uorf of arrival, within ton days of\nreaching lhat side, as the vexed embargo   Is   still   in   operation,   the   e.\nC learai_.ee\nWarm Weather Goods at Reduced Prices     ?:\nWOMEN'S VOILE BLOUSES,\n$1.95 Each\nKino voile Blouses, iii plain tailored and Jumper\nstylos. .Sizes :m in .111. Regular values 1,1\n\u00ab2.r.ii.    JULY  SALE (p-|   njr\nPRICE  J&1.M\/D\nWOMEN'S   ALL\nWOOL BATHING\nSUITS\n$7.50 Each\nSpU'iidi-d quality ;ill\nwon! yariFr in a t'fthge\nnf pretty stylos and\nt'olm-K. Sixes lo IL'.\nValues       to       $12..ri0.\nI'iiici*; S\u00bb\/\u00ab-)U\nWOMEN'S VOILE\nDRESSES \" .\n$12.56 Each\nLiRhL colored Voile\nDroKses in a ilnnse bt\npretty, styles and eolor.s.\nSizes Hi   to   20.   Values\n $12.50\nCHILDREN'S VESTS, 3 lor $1.00\nFilliJ  rihbeil  cotton   Vests, ' made   sleeveless  style.\n^ sale: price, $L00\nThe Store lor Styl\n611\nBaker St.\nto  $25.00 JULY  SALE\niirlco  X\t\nNOVELTY COTTON VOILES\nAt $1.39 the Yard\nPretty designs on  various colored1 grounds. These\nline Voiles come  112  inches  wide and are ex-\nti-ji values at, tho\n,    yard     ;\t\n$1.39\nWOMEN'S WHITE UNDERSKIRTS\nSale Price, $1.75\nA well made Underskirt, of good quality cotton.,\nwilh deep embroidery flounce. 32 to fl>-| fjjr\n311 lengths.    JULY SALE PRICE  3)1. I D\nWASH SKIRTS, $7.50 Each\nSkirls of ihu better soil, made of line cotlnn\nGabardine, with large pearl button triniininjr\nami  finished  with  holts and  pockets.    Sizes 20.\nIn   III)   v.-uist.      Values   to   ,$1.1.SO.\n\u25a0II'I.V   SALE   PRICE   \t\n$7.50\nFine Cotton Hose\n50c the pair.\nSeamless Cotton Hose in While, Brown or Black.\nSizes Mi In in.   \u25a0\n,11'l.Y' SALK   PRlCis,   the   pair\t\n50c\nPhone\n200\nThe Store for Quality\nTO   DI\u00bb   OUT   OLD   BI3I.E   CITY\nThe Holy Land has been the. Iialllo\nground ofinany civilizations, and hat\nboen a  prime  object   of study  and   ex\nplication   l.v   historians   ami   al'cl ol\nugists. Now 11 is planned to na\ncover ono i.r I'alosliiio's mosl Import\nant cities of tlio past, a spot over whirl\nno loss lhan nine separate elvillza\nlions   have   lived   and   struggled.\nThe   Museum'of   lho   University   o\nPennsylvania has  i iced official   per\nmission from lhe I'aleslino tlovorumcnlI\nlo excavate Holsan, lho lloth-abaii ol'i\nlh,,    llible.   situated    In    Hie    Valley   of\nJezi I.     lhe     nari'invesl     pniul     in     lhe;\ngreat Ktralegioul centre lit-IWoeu Jl,s-\nOl.oliiinln and  Hgypl.\nWllhiii slghl  of Ihls cliy more great\nl.nlilos   hnv en   waged   lhan   mi   any ,\noilier spot  known  lo  lhe  world., accord\nlug   Iii   some   aulliorllh's.       l'i'    Ho\nlime   id'   Abraham,   II;\nPREMIER'S SON WEDS\nAb\n111'\nl'i\nwn\nPI,\nNapoleon and All' nhv have I\nii.Ml.nl io f'hrlsllaiis aial .low\nll'.dv    Land.\nClareiiee   S.    I'i-li.c\ntho   past   file  yours   I\nlug   tho  bullion  of  the   I'huraoh   of   Ho\nBxinliis.   has   bronghl   Inm   inlo   pronil\nmill in,tiee, will I\"- III Chal'go of 111.\nwork. 'I'lllS will bo the first 1'nll. .\nKliifes expedition t\" Un: Meal'East sine\nBlight,    of    OBlllallll    Tlll'lls\nlli'-tll-shnii   Is   wllhiii   a   few   miles   ,,\nihe   Minim   of   TralisfiBuriilloli.   '   Wh)\nleft\nIroddeli\nlleli      lo\nheld ll  for longer in\nNfeiy    Bast,        Then    there\niliVniillltlloii,    IP.inan   ooc.UPilH\neenllirles,     mid.     I'iuallv.     Ar\nwh'ch    was    i minted    fin\nceiilnry when   lhe Crusnilor's\nKiiuidom   of   Jerusalem\nll   cnn   he   seen   llial    here\nMAJOR  G,  LLOYD  GEORGE\nMajor  \u25a0;    Lloyd   (leoi'so,  I'ldesi   s,\nfill l.v ia   I'itiglai    Miss isllrii.i  .1,0\nut   thai   ailrael\"!   Bin-sis   from  al!\nMISS   EDNA   JONES\n'llie   British   preu.iier,   was   marrieil\nI' ''annni'i'ii.    '['he Wodding  was an\ns   of   llie   llrili.-h   Isles\nof   lu\nhied.\nIn\nknown\n11 pi\nicli of\nly   Ihrough   dlgg-I hi\nHONEY     IS    OF    VAUIOUS     SHADES I Lie   Aliglo'Saxoll   name  of  honey.       Olui\nvarh'tj    of    mead    was    made    liy    1'cr-\nI ;    is   o I    lie'    hum.iii    f Is I i ting     Ihpuir     oblainotl    bv    hoiliug\nieh   iias  I,,'a,   well   r, nal'deil   h,\\   111 in-   I \\eniiil. in wale\n,1     Sine-    llie    heBillillllg    Of    llie     I'aco,    1 1\"     hops     Uiul\n1    lis   presold    outisuniptioli    Is   'tuilo r\".Molheglln\"   wis\noral    llirouglioul    lhe   world More ; hops'   and. yeast,   .t'linueer   lolls   nl    a\nids   ol   honev  esisl   lhan   a   man   who 'drink \u25a0 called   \"clan,,,\"   which   was   mud-\ni    mil     pursued ' the . suhjeel     niigllt ' ol   wine,   honey    I   spie.-s,   and   'if all-\niglne        There   is   honey   van ing   iu Jollier   drink   called   \"brackol\",   made   of\nide froin clenr while, through nil' tho   ale   and    honey.       The    K.unaHs   drank\n;>\u25a0\";; I degrees  of ye'lnw  lo  lirown. \"niiilsuui.\"   which   was   wine   and   lion-\n'\"    thi\u00ab\"Mnl'   fhe'\"'lirob'll'.'ilUy    l*i\"tbal   'llnv    P*i'\"S\"l'Va live add   when  the allc'ion'lu  had'\ns   In   do  in,I   know  thai  [here Is  | j    \u201e i,.,,.i,    such   pero-hahl,     llnuas   us   hud's   eggs\nck\ntin\nol;  lh\nIn\n\u25a0s   tin\nWilh\nLg.SI-\nnze   tablets,   ami   those   wr\n:     a    cmiolform    ohnractor\nmi Ion   of   lllhlioal   n rds   si,\nill\n\"Whore   witch  of  Eiutor  I-ivsr\n11\nol\nUn\nMil\nPICTURES    AND    TRAMINO\nIll-\nnl\n,u o.ii'lv lusinry nl Israel ns a\nigdnin 11 was near llelu-shau thnl.\n.   witch   ot   Biiilor   lived,   ,s\u00abio   whom\n! le'.'.' 1,'ll'ried lielieilVh I lie .'plain, Willi\nfew of lho monuments SHU visible.\n,i   cita.jol.   which   will   ho   excavated,\nin.I    llial   work   will\n\u25a0nsy.        II\nnoiiso    ro.\nI ibis is due lo lho\nwalls lane boon coned     upward. ,    Wlioll-\n, l.iiol of Idossoms   I\nlliee.s   I'eoii.oll.        I,mill   llolley   i.s   gather\nfrom clover, apple, locust nnd oilier! ,,,,\u201e ., ,> ,\u25a0.,,:,\u201e,. Mimsler of Agrlcol\nas ,u\\ \"froT'lhi ' lllo'soins of buck\" !'I'1''* \u25a0'''''' \"\"' |,|\"v1!\"\" \"r 'Mohoo, win.\nwheal, ooldi iirnil and oilier aul iiniii ; r.di.'.d' Sli.p-s potllis, pickoll up several\nllnwer.-        Hone',   also   vai us    n   coloi , valuable suum slions .for the benefit   of\nand   flavor   will,   ihe   I,r\u201ee,l   \u201ei   ,1,..    s.   ,,,s   ,|,,,.,,., ,\u201e |\u201e   , dervlow   he\nIn    Brazil    lives   a    wasp    which    pro-    said:   .\nduces rid  hone;   which   Is described as      \"The n. ssity of soon ha-.lng iiu.viii'K'\nheing    iiolsiinou ,    Ihniigh    very    swoel   , picliues   |,,   helo   lecturers   of   llie   De-\nItiniev ol.i iii  In   nees   from   lhe   bios-    purliuoiil  of Agfcukiir i  their tours,\nsoius* Of while elovei Is usuullv nroeii- was oloarh deuu'iislra'ed lo ,,io aiPllie\nisli yellow lu color, nnd Ihls is nc-I ileparl iiuiil of agriotill ore In Baltimore.\noouin'ed    ;\u25a0-    oxceliclll    lioncy. In    lhe \u2022 ThesO   |iliil ureS   show   all   modern   luotb-\nBi.llsh   Isluniis  liiuiei   ohlnitioil   lo   hoes   oils   of   ciitivallon   in   vartous   ilis'riols\nfroin   lhe   hlossiiins  of  heather   is   i-iiik- I 1     are .' iirraliged    in   he   nf   benefit\n,,,l high ill Iln- honey scale. The oo- I ' Ihor... si'.-eing them. I have nul made\nor of [hat holioy. is a dark, rich yol-laoy definite arrungeiueiits regurdliig\nlow; I lhe   lease   lit'   such    films   III   litis   prov-\nHenay   from   Orange   Btonnouis ', 'nee,   I  il    I   oiay   stale   lhat   next\nul'lurul   ilislrlel,   *    Thorn\nul   lhe   diggllil\nii li   piol;   \t\nI,     proee.o.d     Ull\nThe    huge   api\nliropoido)   known\ned, \"jirohnl.lv owing to the difficulty\ndu    Clialllu.    their   illsuoveror,    e.iporl-\neno, i    I'lniminiioiiig    Malays.    Orang\nmeans   a   man,   and   ( ing   a.   .loin,   :;,,\ndebt,' But llie Malay wirt'il outtiu moans\nforest, so that, orang outau means man\nof the forest, In ' dlsluot ion to lining\ndosnii. man of llie village, civilized\nnum.\nThe Connim for hook Is \"hitch\", lh\"\nsuine word also meaning \"beech.*' When\nbooks wore .first Invented they were\nrriade uf two beechon hoards, fastened\ntogether and lh\" Anglo-Saxons' unlledf\nthem \"boo\" and ihe Germans \"liuch\".\nholh words meaning beech. Tlie names\nhave    persisted    although    the    Kngllsh\nole\n111\n11  hi\nvh*\nlow    en.S    llie   I'liild   Sillies\ndill   flowers   end   of  good  ijlUllttJ.    Irom    govelllluenl   will   allow   us   In   use   some\nulier   kinds   of   rlowers.       u f   lhe, of   Hi\" h.plablo   In   conditions   exisl-\naiiinus   Miri, lies  of  h V   :s   llial   call-line lore,   which  should he ,'if great   beu-\nd \"Ma.llese.\" lieoauso prodlleoil  ill  Malt- |, I'll   In\n' U:\nIk\ntill\nId' \"hi\nal in\nmirkoS   are   indusiries   llial    have   boi\nlurried  on-   by     11.'\u25a0     man     from   I'eino\ndavs- am\ney  has. I\n'I'iie 1.1.\nhoney ;i\nline  was\n\"h\nhi\nd\n\u25a0ssily    for   us   lo   use   llieni\nand Uie proviiiclal government will cor\nhelping    farmers'.\"\nAll\ntin\npasl    relg     in    Brllalll   died   on    SnJ\nurdavs.    and     Iwo    In    lho    month    fu\nThe     first.\nmo. The     da\neorg\" on Huh .ll , 1727: the Seoul ou Ufith October, 17110: lhe third;\nilh .Innilary, ISSO: and George IV\ni  Saturday,   20th   Juno.   1830.\nrs\nF^isjoF^^^ \u00ab\u201e?to\u00ab ffitti* -\nRoyal Bxport Beer\nGOVERNMENT  STANDARD Can   now   bo   ordered   al   Ilia\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nDcliioty   made  diroel   from   the   Brewery,     All   orders   placed   lief,,re   S\nTHE NELSON'BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\n_\u00a3_**\n___\n .ffHEf NELSON TfAU-\u00a5 NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY] 15,192L\nPractically Stagnant; Oils\nand Industrials Fluctuate\nUnder Profession! Pressure\nNEJW YORK, July M.\u2014BuaineHs on\nthe stock exchange today registered\nthe low ebb of summer apathy, as\nindicated by the valume of transactions which hardly aggregated 350,-\n000  shares.\nPrice changes among standard\nstocks were In keeping with tbea'j\nstagnation conditions, holding within narrow limits, but speculative issues,, equipment, oil, motor and utility group were subjected to wider\nfluctuations under professional pressure.\n\u25a0 Mexican Petroleum again asserted\nits leadership., both In activity and\nirregularity of movement. Its extreme range of about five points\nculminated In a net loss of 5^3 V0*11*1*5-\nOils and the general list wer.e at\nlowest levels in the latter dealings.\nSpecific instances of weakness included Western Union Telegraph at-\na net loss of 5H points; also Crucible. Bethlehem and United States\nSteel, General Electric, Chandler Motor and Sumantra Tobacco. Railj\nof the better \u2022 type moyed within a\n'small area, but eased at the close.\nThe money market repeated\" its\ncourse of yesterday, call loans holding at 6 pfcr cent until the final\nhour, when 6% per cent was paid.\nHTne six per cent vate for time loans\n\u25a0was shaded to ?>\u2022%, with Liberty\nbonds as collateral, but time accommodations were limited to short pdv-\niods.\nDealers reported very light operations in foreign exchange, London\nand the continent again reacting in\nlavor of this market- The proposed\nGerman credit by United State1*;\nbankers for purchases of foodstuffs\nand other raw materials effected no\nmaterial change in German- or\nAmerican rates.\nThe feature of tlie bond market\nwas the ready sweep of the new\nstftte *of Michigan liO-year S\\4 per\ncent issue. Liberty issues tfere firm\nto strong, hut rails and industrials\nagain lacked a definite trend. United\nKingdom 5V_\u00ab ami Belgian 8\u00ab4s featured the improved tone of foreign\nbunds.\nTotal sales. $10,775,000.\nClosing   Quotations\nHigh   Low   Close\nNEW  YORK,  July   14.\u2014Silver,   domestic,  99^4;   foreign,  60%..\nLONDON. July 14.~Si!vi\/r, 37;ftd,\nCANADA* BONDS.\n\"War loans\u20141925, 94.5(1: 1931, 92.50;\n1937, 97.\nVictory loans\u20141923, 99; 1923. 97.75;\n1927, 97*75; 1983, '97.15; 1937, 99.10;\n1924  97.60;   193-1.  94.60.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE.\nNEW YORK, July 14.\u2014Canadian\ndollars,   87.76-\nFrancs\u2014Demand. 7.83: cables',; 7.85.\n\u2022 Lire\u2014Demand, 4,61; cables, 4.63.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW \\-OIUC, ' July 14.\u2014Sterling\nexchange heavy at J3.85% for fiO-day\nbills\"and $3.03'4   fur demand.\nNELSO'N, July 14.^-Currerit counter\nexchange  for sterling,  $4.28.\nMETAL MARKET. .\nNEW    YORK,    July    .14.\u2014Copper\nsteady. i\nElectrolytic\u2014Sliut and nearby, 128\nto 13;   third  quarter.  13  to  13%.\nTin\u2014Steady;   spot   and  nearby anil\nfutures,   28.26.\nIron\u2014Unchanged.\nLead\u2014Quiet;   spot,   4.40.\nZinc-Steady;  spot, 4.25 to 4-35.\nAntimony\u2014Spot.\" 4.65.\nAt London\u2014Standard copper, spot,\n\u00a371   15s:   futures.   \u00a371   17s' '3d.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot,    \u00a376    10s;    futures,  \u00a377 10s.\nTin\u2014Spot,    \u00a3161!    7s    lid;*\"  futures,\n\u00a3168   7s   64.\nLead\u2014Spot.   \u00a323  5s:   tutu res.\n2s  (id. ,\nZinc\u2014Sput,, \u00a3211   10s;   futures,\n\u00a32\nTORONTO BOARD.\nI\nwttm\nIflour MoneyWheriGHravellitig\nITHE (complete services of this Bank at\n. honne and its connections abroad\nenable' it to give the maximum of assistance to travellers. By making arrangements at any branch the traveller may\nhave his .funds paid to him in any \u25a0.\ncountry. Travellers' Cheques and Letters\nof Credit, negotiable throughout the\nworld, are issued at nominal cost,\nWhen Sending Money\nuse the MoneyOrders issued by this Bank.\nThey are safe^convenieixt and.inexpensive.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nEstablished Over J00 Years\nTotal Assets iji.excess ofi$500,id(IO,0(lO\n1\niigi\n\u25a0hgd__ 'a\/\/-\nBranches in London (England), Paris\n(France), Newt Yort, Chicago, San\nFhnciaco, Spokane, Mciico City, and\nNewfoundlaad.rfCorrespondcnts everywhere.\nT\nC. P..R.   \t\n.109\n108\n108%\nC. M. & St. .P.  .\n20%\nInt.   Marimi   ....\n11\nStudebakcr\n.. 801t\n78%\n79%\nPierce Arrow ...\n.. 18>,4\n17%\n1794\nMo. Pac.   cb\/.m.\n\u25a0\u2022 10%\n19%\n19%'\nMo.   Pac.'pW...\n.. 39.\n38\n37%\nU. ti. Sled, com.\n.. 1'V.\n73\n73\nU. \u00ab. Steel, pl'd.\n108%\nWillya-O.verland\n\u25a0    7\n714\n7''\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK.\nTORONTO, July , 14.\u2014Tho present\nerratic cliaractei' ot the Ktock market was again illustrated today, whon,\nafter the rally of yesterday, there\nwas a return of weakness, offset,\nhowever, by an, improvement just before thc close. As a result of thu\nturn, sumo of tlie stocks stiffened\nfrom the low of today and closed\nwith an advance. Thle ehantfe sa\\ cd\nBrazilian, tlie most detive stock of\ntlitf day, from showing a loss, for it\nmoved up from a low of 25 to 251\/*,,\nmaking a net gain of %.: Another\nactive traction was Toronto Railway\nwhich at first weakened, then rallied to close with a gain of lk\npoint. \\\nCanadian Pacific was another stock\nto rally al the closj'. making a gain\nof % from the low and from thc\nprevious close. Papers played little\npart in the local turnover, but wore\nsomewhat heavy.\nVictory iMHues were in good demand.\nWINNIPEG, JUly R\u2014Offerings in\nthe yards yesterday wero 147 calves,\n39(1 cattle, 507 hogs and 410 sheep\nund lambs, while receipts ni> to 9\na. m. today were 54 cattle and liUO\nhogs.\nSteers\u2014Choice,' JG.00 to $ti.50; fair\nto good. 51.50 to $5.75; common, $2.50\nto $3.00.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, $5-75 to\n$0.25;  fair to good, $4.00 to $5.50.\nButcher cows- Choice. $5.00 to\n$5.50; fair to good, $3.25 to $4.75;\ncanners aud cutters, 75c to $1.50.\nBulls\u2014yood, $2.50 to $3.00;. common, $1.50 to $2.00.\nOxen\u2014Good, $4.00 to $4.00; medium,\n$3.00 to $3,50; common. $2.00 to $2.50.\n, Stocker steers\u2014Choice, $3.75 to\n$4.00;   fair to good, $2.25  to $300.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3.00 to\n33.50;  fair to good, $2.25 to; $2.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $7.50 to. $8.50; good.\n35.50 to $7.00;  common, $3.00' to $5.00.\nSheep aiil lambs\u2014Good-sheep, $4.50\nto $0.00; commun, $3.00 to $4.00;\ngood *umbs. $9.00 to $12.00; common   lambs,   $5.00   lo   $7-00.\nHugs\u2014Selects, $11.50; heaves,\n88.50 to $10.50; lights, $11.50 to $1200;\nsows, $5.50 to $7.50; stags, $4.50 to\n$5.50.\nr TORONTO. July 14.\u2014Cattle receipts, 439. Closed with a tendency\ntoward easier prices. Common bulls,\nsteady.\nCalf receipts, 25.    Top,  10>_   ccnU.\nSheep receipts, 250. Top, .13^  cents.\nHog receipts, 15IT-T cents fed and\n\u25a0watered.\nDOMINION TRADE.\nEGG MARKET.\nEGG  MARKET   ...\t\n,OTTAWA. July 14\u2014Egg receiptr\ncontinue fairly light and contain a\n\u25a0heavy percentage of the lower grades.\nToronto dealers paying 25 to 20 cents,\ncountry points.\nMontreal\u2014Firm; prices unchanged.\nTrade buying at 28 cents f.o.b. country points.\n- Winnipeg\u201421 io 24 cent-, current\nreceipts, delivered, eases included.\nOther prairie province markets unchanged,\nOTTAWA, \u25a0 July 14.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014Further decreases in Canada's trade are shown by ihe department of customs' summary of Canadian, trade covering the mpnth of\nJune and J,hree months ending June\n30, as compared witli the corresponding periods of 1920. Tho decrease in the grand total for June,\n1921, as compared with the same\nmonth last year was $125,851,171, and\nfor the three months tlie decrease\nwas $325,328,854, as compared' lyith\nlast year's total. Merchandise, domestic, exported during June, 1921,\nfell in value lo $58,576,299, as compared with ?10(i,537,S35 In June, 1920,\na decrease oi\" $47,9J1,536, \u25a0\nDuring the month of June, 1920.\ngoods to the value of $134,092,314\nwere entered for consumption in Canada us compared with $57,643,058 in\nJune,   1921,  a decrease  of  $77,048,(580.\nMerchandise entered for consumption in the three-month period ending June, 1920, was valued at $346\n303,778, of which goods to the value\nok $229,005,489 were dutiable and the\nduty collected on these was $56,184.-\n248. ln tho corresponding period of\n192.1, the imports totalled ' $191,255\n572, of which $131,596,878 was dutiable kooUs, and paid duty to the ex-\n\u2022tent uf $29,331,495. Dutiable goods\nimported during June, 1930, were\nvalued ut $89,131,496, and a total uf\n$18,938,045 in duty wx \u25a0 collected. In\nthe corresponding,month of the present year the value of dutiable goods\nimported fell to $37,1 ol 449, and the\nduty collected to $9,067,478.\nMerchandise, domestic, exported\nduring tho three months', period ending June, 1920, was valued- at $237,-\n236,799, as against $161,409,920 in the\ncorresponding period of \"this'year.\nMONTREAL LIST-\nMONTREAL, July 14.'\u2014The stock\nmarket was\" again an exceedingly\ndull affair today in which losses\nwere more numerous than gahis,\n-though neither exceeded more than\nl^ points. The major loss of lf_\npoints was scored by Lou re n tide,\n\u25a0which was dowji that amount, n t\nliy*. at the close.\nThe other papers were weak.\nThe utilities'were firm and Brazilian Was oiiu of tlie ieas\\ Inactive\nstocks of'the day. It. opened % tip\nand closed unchanged. ( '\n. Other strong issues took in Canada Cement preferred, up 1 at 82-.\nTotal   salva\u2014Listed, * 2830;    Wmtta,\nJ20_3)05()_\nCHICAGO, July 14.\u2014Wheat made\na fresh advance in^price today, stimulated by word of black rust in\nManitoba and of irreparable damage\nin the spring crop belt. Tlie market\nclosed strong, 314 to 4 % cents net\nhigher, with September $1.3114 \u25a0 to\n$1.32yn and December, $1.35 to\n$1.35%. Corn, lost 1 to 1%\\ cents;\noats finished at % cent decline to a\nlike advance, and provisions 10 cents\noff to 7% cents up.\nWHOLESALE MARKET.\nThe following aro Nelson wholesale\nprices on the various commodities\nnarried:\nButtcrfat:\nSweet.     $ .38\nNo.  1   sour      36\nNo. 2 sour 34\nBerries for janj:\nStrawberries    08\nBlack   currants 07\nRed   Currants    , .05\nSweet   Cherries    06\nDressed ghrcasscs:\nSteers     .11%\nCows    \u2022 10 J\u00a3\nCalves    13\nMutton 17\nLambs 20\nHogs     19%\nFowls     T. 28\nNo. 1 creamery butter:\nIn   cartons 40\n'In   parchment 39\n56s,   solid    38\n14s,   solid    \/. 38%\nNo.   1  dairy  butter,  lb.   .30 to    .35\nEggs, per .dozen      .40\nTablo berries:\nStrawberries,   fancy,   choice.,\nhand-pickod    and    graded,\nper   crate  3.25\nStrawberries, No. 1, crate ..   2.75\nRaspberries,    fancy,    choice\nper crate  4.5ft\nRaspberries,   No-   1,   crate,,   4.Q0\nCherries:\nRoyal Anne, per box 15\nBings and Lamberts .....;.*   .20\nGovernor  Woods     05\nPotatoes,   now   crop:\nClean and of good Bizo, per\n100. pounds  5.00\nSmalls   .......  4.00\nBANK JtEARINGS.\nWINNIPEG, Ma'.i., July 14.\u2014(Cairn-\ndlan Press)\u2014Tlio following are the\nbank clearings fo\/V tho principal cities\nof the Dominion , for the -week ending\ntoday, compared \u25a0with the corresponding week last ytjcuv:\n1021 11120\niiioi,mm $170,114,423\n.    S4,M1i,9liS      105,686,76(1\n. .\u201e..    30,160\n.    1:1,61)3,057\n11,333,85,',\n.      5,331,106\nl\".,884,58ll\n5,610,482\n., 4.204,015\n., 3,473,273\n.      2.800.157\n;i,023,030\n., 3,628,101,\n..     2,498,4411\n1,839,829\n., 4,032,519\n.'\"*-' J.357,040\n..      1.198,039\n1,006,744\nMontreal\nToronto\ntfVinnipcg   .,...,\nVancouver    ..\nOttawa   \t\nCalgary   .......\nHamilton\nQuebec     \t\nEdmonton   ....\nHalifax   ........\nLondon    .....\nRegina   \t\nSt. .John ,. .* .1\nVictoria ,u. \u2022 \u201e\nJSaskatoon   ...\nWindsor,    ,\nMoose Juw ..\nBruntfoi'd\nSherbrooke ..\nKitchener ...\nBrandon\nFt. Wllliam.V\nLethbridge . .\u25a0\nMedicine Hat-.\nNew Westm'sUr\n701,315\n840,218\n366,428\n383,138\n44,880,312\n20,534,731\n8,045,223\n6,588,063\n7,805,490\n7,544,4s;;\n4,738,\u00ab57\n6,270,796\n3,679,328\n\u20221,244,650\n:\/,514,34C\n4,899,84!\n2,181,522\n3,523,723\n1,649,211\n1,434,580\n1,119,479\n1,349,081\n804,488\nS43.12S\n1145,831:\n143,191\n878.68S\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN.\nMINNEAPOLIS, July 14.\u2014Flour\nshipments,   50.&69  barrels.\nBran\u2014$13.00.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 Northern, $1.53 to\nJl.flO.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 Yellow, 53 to 54 cents.\nOats\u2014No. 3 White, 35 to 35% cents.\nFlax\u2014No. 1,  $1.91%   to  $1.92%.       '\nMONTREAL PRODUCE.\nMONTREAL, July 14,\u2014Eggs,' fair;\npotatoes, alow; butter and cheese\nactive.\nCheese\u2014Finest easterns, 23 to 23 \\{\ncents.\nButter\u2014 Choicest, creairtery, 39 to\n40  cents.\nEggs\u2014Selected, ,42 to 43 cents.\nPotaeoes\u2014Per bag, carlots, 45 cents.\nJ Additional   Markets  on   Pago  Four)\nBreathing through tlie mouth, instead of the nose\u2014a .source of disease\u2014is a fault with about 80 per\ncent of our population.\nIf the Way Is Long or *i*L\nthe Time Short fl(p:3-\nYOUR banking can be done by mail\nif it is inconvenient for vou to come,\nto put office.\nDeposits will be acknowledged or remit*\ntances made to you promptly. \u2022&}_,\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nBranches In 'KoO|tenay and Boundary at Nelson, Fernle,  Gratis\nbrook, Creston, Gr&id Forks, Greenwood. Nakusp, Trail.\nNELSON  BRANCH, F. C. WHITEHOUSE, Manager,\nUsed Articles\nRed Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats ant\nAutomobiles\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\n10   MdeHelp W\u00bbntei\nWANT man with portable mil! tiT'saw\nlumber by the thousand. Apply Box\n_4101, Dally News. (4101)\nBRICKLAYERS wanted immediately \u00bbl\ntho packing iiouse. Grand Korku, B. C.\nApply J. B. McDonald, Contractor.\nGrand Forks,   B.   C. (4088)\n\"WANTED\u2014Hotel porior.\"  Apply Strath*\ncona hotel. (409f\u00ab)\nWANTED\u2014A      llrst-class      blacksmith\nand    horseshocr.    a    Opsahl,    Trail,\n-J?__c- 1 (4 OS 3)\nWANTED   AT   ONCE\u2014Capable shipper\n. to take position as shipper and yard\nforeman.     Reply   stating   experience\nand wages   in   the   first instance  to\nBox 4009, Daily News. (____)\nnj^mJeJWpJVantei^\nEXPERIENCED waitress.   Apply-Grand\nhotel. (1023)\nWANTED\u2014A tearoom glri'at once.   ApI\nPly Humo hotel         (401ft)\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nEXPERIENCED laily cook anil son 17\ndesire work. Apply Box 4110. Dully\nN\"\"'\". .      (4115)\n51\u2122ArticIesJfanted.^\nWANT to buy car elj?ht-inch ~toj*T 40-\nfpot poles. Apply Box 4102. Daily\nNows. '      (410-_)\nNOTICE\u2014Wanted, eirawnerry crates\nand cups. Growers having surplus\nof strawberry crates and cups can\ndispose of same at good pricw by\naddressing tho Cooperative Fruit\nGro-ffera\" Ass'n of Wynndel, B, C.\n  (3970)\nI*, is profitable to pay in advance\nfor classified advertising, as you then\nget six intjcrtionB for.thc price of four.\n20   Livestock For Sale\n\u25a0SEVERAL cows, milking, to fexohan'ge\n\u25a0for yearling heifers. W.   InneK, breed-\n1 -er and deali-r, _Van.ican._R C. (lOlifi)\nFOR SALR\u2014Thre'e youiig JeiKev-Ayr-\n,shire cows to choose from, price SS5\neuch.    P. O.   Box 1094: (4117)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two ponies drive, ride or\npack; double set of harness, express\nwagon, light sleigh, pack saddle. H.\nJones,   Box  845,   Nelson. (4040)\nSubscribe to The Daily ftews, (U)\ncents a month or $6 a year, by mail\nto any placo In Canada,\n33 Fruits and Vegetables\nLUSCIOUS Royal Anne cherries can he\nshipped you or direct to your prairie\niriendH for $2 per 20-pound crate, cash\nwith order. Express ciiargns extra.\nMlaolemasB Bros., Rock Island, Arrow Lakes, B. C. (4082)\n29   ; Lost and Found\nLOST\u2014-In'NeVsoii in March of 1820 n\ngent's small leather purse, containing gold pennant and coins. Name,\nLonst., j. o.muhart.\" inscribed\nthereon. Reward offered. Apply Mux\n4100,   Daily   News, '    (4100)\nLOST OR STRAYED-Upstanding dark\n\"apple gray  horse,  clipped itiane and\nforelock; weight MOO; last seen wearing small bell.    Phono or write A   E\n^Imrches,. Waneta,  B.  C. (.|q'x|)'\n22      Miscellaneous\nSAFETY razor blades reslianieneil, hollow ground, velvet edge, 3fic per dozen.    Enclose fee    B, C. Razor Sharpening Co., Box 97, Victoria-B' C.    (39.33)\nSomewhere In your House Is a used\narticle which you do not need. You\ncan find a buyer for it by advertising\nin theso columns. Sixteen words for a\nweek for one dollar if cash accompanies order.\n23    PropertyFor Sale\nSacrifice Sale.\n\/ 425 acres, over one mile lako frontage, near Proctor. Price for immediate\nsale. ?4 per acre, $1700.   <\nH. E. DILL\n508 Ward St., next to Canada Drug* Store\n y ^  | (404-)\nVICTORIA   STREET\u20145-roomod   modern\nhouso.     ljuh'.k   salo,   $SO0.\nA.   T.   McAllLLAN,   B?4   Baker  Street.\n Phone liOh (4114)\nIMPROVED RANCH\u201440 acres, fi>\/j\nacres cleared. Good bottom land, no\nrock; good timber; .'f-rooined house;\ngood district, close to railway, school,\netc. Price $2f\u00bb00, on terms. R. 430.\nIMPROVED FRUIT RANCH\u20145\nflftrns, 'close to town; 10K fruit trees\nnearly 200\/1 sets raspberries, 500\nstrawUerry plants, water piped, fi-\nroomed house plastered, stone foundation, chicken house, etc. Price\n$1000. on terms.    R.  283.\nHUGH   W.   ROBERTSON.\nWard Street. Phone 68. Nelson,  B. G.\n(41 Oil)\nFOR SALE\u2014Se-\/en-roomed Iiouse, best\nview and situation Kaslo; e.ght lots,\ncity light and water. Particulars ap-\nply Miss Hamilton, Kaslo. (4080)\nSEVEN acres of lana at Fairview,\nframe building 22x28, shed 16x16 and\none 12x40. Will be sold cheap. Apply to A. Lapointe, Queen's hotel.\n-  (3072)\n45    Property Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To rent or take care or for\nthe winter months, small lakes.de\nproperty in the Kootenays, few acres\naud small Iiouse, with possible view\nto purchase later, P. H, Gentleman,\nGlolch.n,   Alta. (4109)\n18 Miscellaneous for Sale\nGOOD piano for salo. $200 cash. CaU\nat 315 Victoria or phone Mr. F.\nWheeler, 285L. (4116)\nFOR SALE\u2014Cows, heiiers, refrigerator,\ndump cart, road scraper, brush\nplough, rot|B for silo, two telephones,\none wagon brake, new.    J. J. Campoll,\n_\u00a3\u2022 it-if.No,  L Tel. 462L3. {4057)\nFOR SALE\u2014Piano. caSdi or terms', to\nreponsible party. Box 4050, Daily\nNews. ? (4050)\nFOR     SALE\u2014Houseboat.      Apply     513\nVernon street. (3955)\nSPIRELLA    corsets.    Mrs. T. Kennedy.\nPhone   364R2. (3853)\nSHINGLES\u2014Buy thorn now from Nakusp Shingle Mill, Box 1, Nakusp,\nB. C. , (3909)\nUso printed stationery. It is good\nadvertising, because it impresses the\npeoplo with whom you deal with tlio\nstability and permanency of your business.\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR  RENT\u20146-room houso  and  one  3-\nroom suite.    ,T. E. Amiable.     -    (3971)\nlgjOULTRYANDEGG^\nFOR   SALE\u2014Five   \"'w'ii'ite '   ducks,    one\ndrake,     also     pair     mallards.     Some\nyoung   ducks   and   chickens.     Apply\nMrs.   Lammodoe,   605   Latimer  street.\n\u2022 _^_ <4li:t)\nClassified Advts.\nBring Results\n48\nPersonal\nTHE grenl; object In life is the Se\nof Happiness. Send your birth (\nmonth, year nnd one dollar to Ja\n\u2022 -Dunslone, Private Box 100, Vai\\\nver, B. C. Answer sent by regisP\nmail.  (3\n28 Miscellaneous Wanted\nA FAMILY living oil Lower Arrow\nwould like to hear of a boarder.. >\nfishing     and      tennis.       Comfort\nhmuTc witli everv\nBox   4055. .Ne!.so\nconvenience.    A\nNews. (4\nBusiness and trotessiom\nDirectory\nH.  It. XITTO,\nGun,   Look,   Cycle   and   General   Roi\nWork.    -112  Ward  Street,  NelBon\n(38\nLodges\nNELSON LODGffl *%to. ,6, B. P. O.\nMeets 4111 % Baker St., first and tt\nThursday. (39\nAccountants.\nJ.   H.   LAWRENCE,\n, Accountant-Auditor.\nBooltkeeplnp;,      Financial      Slaterna\netc.    Phone 20, McDonald Jain- Bl\nBox 1030.       ' (39\nW.   _.   FAMING,\nChartered   Accountant.\nBank, of Montreal Chambers.\nBosaland. B, C, (30\nBoots & Shoes\nlEE   ZEE   Ss   CO.\nBoots and shoes Made to Order.\nliniriiiri,    ma  FRONT ST. (30\nFlorists\nGltrZZTCLLE'S  GREENHOUSE, \"Nell\nOtit flowers and floral designs.\n(30\nAssayers\nE,  W.  WIDDOWSON,  Bo* A110S,  \u00bb\nson, B. C.   Standard western char,\n     (39\nSecond Hand Dealers\nTHE ARK pays, cash for second-ht\nfurnlturo, Btoves. S0G Vernon. Phi\n6111, (391\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD Sc CO., WHOLESA1\nGrocers and Provision Merchan\nImporters of Tens, Coffees, Bplo\nDried Frillts Staple and Fanoy Gl\ncuries,     NELSON.   B. C. (308\nArchitects\nH. EMMS BEAD, M. B. O. 0. A.\nARCHITECT.\nBay Avenue. Trail, B.\n(.198\nEngineers\n=\n-.  T).  DAWSON,  D.  O. Te.  tl.\nCivil and  Mining; ZlnffiniM\nICASX.O, II. C. (11011\n^coBros.,1?^\nA\nNEtson, B. 0.\ncivil,  ahd  mimna engineebi\nS. 0., Alberta  a**A nomlnlon\nLAND  SUBV-X0B8\nCrown Grant Agents.       Blue Prlntln\n(308\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Unfrlneer\nProvincial  Land Surveyox\nBaker St., Nelson, B. C.\nAuctii\nioneers\n,i' W.  OOM.EB\n Atiotloueer,  Appraiser, Volualu*\n<f,\",?'\\!tr \"?'','.. l\"'lv\u00bb'\u00bbly   or   at  Auotlo\n211)  Ward Street.        , Phone '\n(307\nBarristers\n,    B. 0, MATTHEW       _\nBoi 1078, Alan. Block; Nelson. Ph!s(\n(3*081\nFuneral Directors\nD.  J.  ROBERTSON,  F.D.D; _ D\u201e   III\nVictoria   Street.     Phone   292;   Nigl\nI'homi 1S7.I.      . (3079\nBRINGING UP, FATHER\n=F\nSTANDARD FURNITURE\nCOMPANY\nfiw~p7*w*,*'iB \u2022   Ttr- - - -\nC. .T. Carlson, Undertaker, Undo\ntakers and Embalmers and Funert\nDirectors. Tho finest and most up-tt\ndare undertaking _narlors and chapel I\nInterior B. C. Lady attendant Io\nwomen  and  children.    Day phone  81\nNight phone  U&2 and 04. (3976\nSORf^f - LADT - BUT\nS-bU CMS'T COME\nOUT IM   THAT, r-\nST-YLE  BATHING   \\\n.   V SUIT-   ,\u2014-t\u2014\u2014'\nBy Georee McMuw\nOlilCi-b- TOO\ncome\/back\n1 - here: <_-->\nSWELL\nCHAMCE.\n\\   i\n \u25a0-.\"\u2022\nm\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 15, 1921.\nrsT\nVancouver Man Could Hardly\nClimb on His Car; Is Now\nFeeling: Fine..\n\"I am feeling like a brand-new\nman these dnys, thanks to Tanlac,\"\nsaid William Wilhy, 145 Twelfth avenue west, Vancouver, B.C., a well known\nconductor on the British Columbia\nRailway.\n\"For years I was bothered with'\nmy kid-neys' and n had pain in my\nback and, to make matters worse,\nabout two years ago I had an attack of flue. It looked like I would\nnever regain by strength after this,\nfor my appetite was so poor that the\nHttle I ate bloated me up with gas\nand isnured on my stomach. I was\nrestless day nnd night and didn't get\nenough sleep to do me much good.\nMy back hurt me so hnd that I could\nhardly stand the vibration of my car,\nand every time I got off my car and\nhad to climb back again I simply\nsuffered   agony    *\n\"Tanlac was not long in .doing, just\nwhat I wanted.    It fixed me up fine,\ngave   me   nn   appetite   and   put   my\nstomai h in first class condition. Nothing   disagrees   with   me   now   and   I\nI sleep  like'a log nil night and get up\n)' feeling ns happy and active as a boy,\n,: I   hnve   gained   twenty     pounds     in\na weight,    too.     Tanlac   is   great,    and\nL.whenever 1 hear a  man  complaining\n, I   tell  him  tn  take  it nnd   get   well,\n. Tanlac   is  sold   in   Nelson   by   Can\nnda   Drfig and  Book Co,\nIK OF IliS\nAthletics Score Off Tig\u00ab\nrs;\nSenators\nGo\nDown\nto\nWhite Sox\nAMERICAN   hi*\nAGUE.\nWon\nLost.\nP.O.\nCleveland   \t\n... S3\n20\n.640\nNew  York \\ ..'..\n.. .40\n40\n.651\nWashington\n..'.46\n41\n.620\nDetroit  \t\n...42\n42\n.600\nBoston\t\n. ..37\n43\n.463\n47\n47\n.427\n.420\n47\n.406\nSPECTATORS RILE\nBASEBALL PLAYER\nWINNIPEG, July 14. \u2014C.\nSpratoger, hcooihI bttHcman of iho\nReglna baseball club, was flued\n$13 and costs In thc pallet; court\ntoday for using rowdy language.\nAccording lo the evidence,\nSprangcr became riled by shouting In the bleachers and used Indecent language toward the spectators, in defense he said that\nhe hnd always heen heckled by\nWinnipeg baseball fans, and that\nlast Monday a pop bottle had\nbeen  thrown at hint.\nTWILIGHT LEAGUE.\nMOOSE JAW, July 14.\u2014Saskatoon\nQuakers won their fourth straight\ngame from the Moose Jaw Millers\nhere today,  fi  lo J,    Score:\nH.   H.   E.\nSaskatoon     5     11       0\n. Moose  Jaw    3      7       1\nBatteries\u2014Roman, Beer and Grn-\nhowski;  Huser and Leake.\nWINNI PEG, July' 14.\u2014Regina\nmnde it three**flut of four by taking\ntho last game of the series from the\nMaroons here tonight, 2 io 1. Score:\n* R.   H.   K.\nRegina     \u25a0_       6      2\nWinnipeg  1       4       3\nBatteries\u2014 7,.nek and Snyder; Lane\nand Nelson.\nCALGARY, July 14.\u2014The Calgary\nBronks defeated Edmonton here tonight,  12  to 2.    Score:      '  It.   H.   13.\nEdmonton    ..   ., \u2022    2     12      4\nCa'gary    12    12       1\nBatteries\u2014Liblce and Watson; Gillespie and  Sullivnn.\nCHICAGO, -luly 14.\u2014Faber stopped\nWashington's winning streak today\nwhen Chicago won from the Senators,  3 to 1.    Score: R,   H.   E.\nWashington    '... 1      3      1-\nChlcago    ;.3      5      0-\nBatteries\u2014Mogridge, Schncht and\nGharrii.y;   i'a her  and   Schalk.*    '\nCLEVELAND, July 11.\u2014Boston\nbroke, its losing streak nnd put an\nend tn Cleve'nnd's winning streak today wlun it  won, 5  to 2.    Score:\nR.   H.   E.\nBoston     5       U       0\nCleveland     2     10       2\nBatteries\u2014JonPS and Rnel; Morton,  Uhle and  Nunamaker.\nDETROIT, July 14.\u2014The Philadelphia. Americans, won from Detroit\ntoday,  ti to 4.    Score: R.   11. , 10.\nPhiladelphia   ......' ti    io      l\nDetroit    \u2022 -4      fi      2\nBatteries\u2014Harris, . Rommell and\nPerkins;   Ehmke and Bassler.\nBRAVES RALLY\nIMTHE NINJH\nReds Break Dodgers' Winning Streak; Pirates Just\nBeat  Phiilies.\nXATIONAl, LEAGUE.\nWon.\nLost.\nP. ('.\nPittsburg   64\n27\n.667\nNow   York    60\n211\n.633\nBoHton     ..-.;.\u2022. . 4 6\n32\n.684\nBrooklyn    ...42\n111\n.512\nSI. Louis   40\n411\n.600\nCllleilgn    33\n4 4\n.4211\nC'lrip'nhatl    20\n411\n.372\nI'liilailel|i1iiii    r.v... .22\n64\n.200\nPropose to Import\nScotch Footballers to\nDevelop Canada\nMONTREAL, Juiy 14.\u2014Efforts will\nbe made to bring a picked team of\nScott'sh junior soccer players to Canada next season, according to a writer in the Star. These men, he\nadded, will he asked to sett'e here\nand help develop football in Canada.\nIn pther words, this undertaking\nmay, in a sense, jic called colonization work for Canada,. Just ns Canada brought farmers from Scotland\nand' Ire'and, the idea, is to bring\nfoothallcr,i to Cannda.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE.\nPortland 8, Vernon 0-    ,\nLos Angeles 3, Salt Lake 1.\nSan   Francisco   0,   Sacramento   ii.\nSeattle  2,  Oakland  (1.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nLouisville   16,  iMllwaukee   10.\nToledo  7,   Minneapolis  11.\nOthers not scheduled.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\n. Newark   4,  Toronto   7.\nBaltimore  0-7,  Syracuse\nJersey City 7,  Buffalo 4.\nReading 5,  Rochester G.\nPACIFIC INTERNATIONAL.\nVictoria G-4, Vancouver 3-1.\nYakima 2, Tacoma 6.\nThe gentry of Hunan, China, aro\ntalking Oif having an electric rai'way\nbuilt from Sangtan to Changshn, a\n\u25a0distance of 30 miles.\nTobacco is the least harmful of\nthe \"four socal poisons,\" tea, ejffoo,\ntobacco and alcohol, according to H r\nJames Cantlin, eminent surgcoo,\nspeaking at London, Eng. \"Sni'oke\nthe sa'rne amount of tobacco every\nday,\" said Sir James, \"and the Vail\nwilt become accustomed to a co.'i.ihi\namount. If one smokes less one day\nthan Aho\/ther, he feels the offe. i. as\nmuch as if he had smoked m'.re.\"\nHe said throe days' absence from\nsmoking, would enllre'y free th*) s; intern of nicotine- Sir James condemned  the cigarette.\nNEW YORK, July 14.\u2014New'York\nwon its third successive victory of\nthe series with  Si.  Louis today  in a\n10-inn.ug contest.  4   lo  3.    Score:\nr.  n.  r,\nSt.  Louis     3      6      1\nNew  York .4    14      3\nBatteries\u2014Bailey and Di'ihoefer;\nRyan and Snyder.\nPHILADELPHIA, July 14.\u2014Doubles by Schmidt and Robertson gave\nPittsburg a 10-Inning victory over\nPhiladelphia today, 5 to 4. Score:\nR.   H.   E.\nPittsburg    &       0.      0\nPhiladelphia    '      *      2\nHaileries- Carlson.' and Sehmidl;\nRing and Bruggy. _    '\nBOSTON, July 14.\u2014Boston went\ninto the ninth inning with Chicago\nleading 2 to 0. but the Braves made\nthree runs nnd won the game before\na man hnd In en put out.- it was\nBoston's eighth straight win. Score:\nR.   H.   E.\nChicago   .......   . . -, 2      fi      l\nBoston      .3       H       2\nha'tteries\u2014Pender and Daly: W:it-\nsoil   and   O'Neill.\nBROOKLYN.      July      14.\u2014Grimes'\nwinning   streak    wns    broken    t(oday\nwhen Cincinnati won,  8 to  1.    Score:\nR.   H.   E.\nOjncinnnti   ....*. fi    12       1\nBrooklyn           5 - . 8       1\n|     Bntterfes\u2014Eller, Rixey and Wingo;\n' Gr'mes, Smith,  MItcher, Schiipp and\nMiller,\nSURE    OF   TENDER    TREATMENT.\n'Reginald was trembling, but he\nknew the music must. bo faced.\ni'Shall I-ask your fnt*her for His consent   tonight,   darling'.-\"'   lie   ehniiire'd*\n'\u2022Vou liad 1-etle:*-,\" spoke up tin-\nsmall brother, unexpectedly, from\nbehind the mitt. \"Pa's in Ids stoeU-\n!ng   feel.\"\nSTERLING TENNIS\nPLM\u00a3pm\nLevy, California*!, and Bates,\nCleveland, Put Up Best\nFight of Day.\nTORONTO, JUly 1-1.\u2014Thorn wan .'I\nscrien o\u00a3 very I'lne matches in Hid\nDominion Mingles tennis ehiimpinn-\nsh'ps Ktday: Holmes of Winnipeg,\ndefeated Foulkes, KiiiKmon, :h\nstraight sets, Rhodes, of Vancouver\nplaying.a fine net gnme, won his\n\u2022match from Ronnie, the Ontario\n'.champion,   in   iwo   closely   contested\nLiner ln llic afternoon Holmes mid\nAndrews met, Hie victory lining to\nthe Winnipeg player, who played very\nheady and'Cine tennis.\nBennett, Ihe present holder nf lhe\n('.'innd'ati championship, defeated Mc-\nKinley and then won from Milne, of\nVancouver, wlio had earlier lu Hie\nliny' pnl Roherl Baird mil of the\nrunning. [\/.nfrnnliplfle, llie Quehee\nelianiplnii, put llnrlnw mil lu straight\nsets, and then was beaten by.tho\"\nCttUfornlan Levy. limes of California; defeated Mm-in of Hamilton, inu}\nthen beat Hnriei nl Clevoelanfl in n\nmuch harder gnme, lho second so!\n! going in 11-9. linnet made n\n[iiiieliy uphill recover)1 when llie\nsei wus &,-:! against ilieni.\ni Car'ran   Aggressive\ni     The   besl   ninleli   of, tlie   day   was\ntelween      Levy,;    Of      I'nl.l',1'llill,     nnd\n( iu-riin   nf  tjleveluild.      In   lhe   lii'si\nI si-i, Cumin playing very asfgres-\nsive   tennis,   made   sonic   v\/ondoi'ti'l\nkills  in   tho  net d   won   -,-';\u25a0      In\nthe second set, a nip and tuck contest  look   place,  Curriin   having   l.e  V\n} ill nut' t me ll-.', nnd within one\npoint of the match, .l.eyy' was very\ngood in i Klit spots iind eventually\npulled  ihe: set oul,  the large gallery\nI present applauding li-s plucky effort.\nI In  lhe   third   set,   Carraii   run   away\nI villi lhe first three mimes, but be\np.ujed himself oul ami l.uvy limit tbe\nnasi   six  games.       I.vy   plays   Holmes,\nI nl'   Winnipeg   tomorrow . arid     (lutes\nI meets   H.nmu.\n! Mrs.  Bickle  in.  Form\nMiss   Orove*.    the   American    playel.\nI defeated Miss Best, uf Toronto, lu the\nluilies' singles. in llie other semi-\nlinn,s,     Mrs.     Wright,     Uie   Ontario\nagainst   .Mrs.   Ilaivy   lliekle,   carry'Hg\nlbe first  sei   7  In 0.      from  then  nn.\n\u25a0 Mrs.     lliekle.     won     Without       li.slni\n! another   game.      Mrs.     Bickle    and\nI.VHss   llest    won   in   a    close   innl.li\nI frum   .Mrs.   Waring   and   Mi's,   linn,\nI'file  American  lail.es  look  ibe seco.li.1\nj set, Mrs. Hiekle's splendid work winning  lhe  third   set   for  tlie. I'anadim:\n! pair.       Mr.     and   Mrs,' \\ Wrlffht,   cf\nOttiiwa,    wnn   a    good    match    from\nI Miss   .McGilllvray   and   Ijuaiu   in   the\nmixed   doubles.\nResults   of   Play\n.Men's      Open      singles -I lenrge      1),\nlio'mes,  Winnipeg,    defeated    .T.    K.\nt'oulkes, of kliigslou, ii-8, i'i-ii.\nA. Milne nf Vancouver, defeated\n11.   Blair, Tbronio,  ll-Ji,  3-0   (ilcfauitj.\nI'.     I enneii.     Winniiies.     ilefel I\n.1.   II.   Mi'Kinle.v.  nilalva,   II-I,   li-L'.\nI'..   .V   Rhodes.   Vancouver,  defeat,,l\nl.eniy   llainey, Tol'oril i, li-4; lib\nrenin-ll.  Wlhnepeg,  beal   Milne.   Van\nSUSPEND BASEBALL\nPLAYER FOR LIFE\nmiNon:  albert,  July  14.\u2014\nThe Prince Albert baseball leiigue'\nexecutive ha.ve taken drastic action against Charles F. Woodeocic,\na player, who, beiiiK dissatisfied\nwilh the umpire's decision in a\nleague fixture on Tuesday evening,\nkiiticked thai official insensible,\n^'oodcock has been suspended\nfor life as far as i'rince Albert\nbaseball is concerned, and the ex:\neoutive is taking action to extend this penally tn other sports\nand to'ihe whole province.\nSPECIALS\nFo^BIG Men\nThe small sized people had their innings at the beginning of the week. Today the big men have a chance\nFIG4TT FILMS\nOntario Board Refuses Public Exhibition oi Carpen-\ntier-Dtmpsey Bout.\nTORONTO, July H.\u2014The film depicting lb\u00ab l>eifipsey.-Crrtrpent.ier fight\nhas arrived in tbe city, but has not\nheen ptisHffd hy the board of censors\nand is not likely to he, nnd therefore no public exhibition o*:' the pictures can be mado.\nA memo of iho Ontario board of\ncensors said it hnd been the practice lo. har fight pictures and he did\nnot think an exception would be\nmade in Uie present instance. . Tie\nml.led, however, thai the hnnitl could\nnol prevent ihe pictures behig shown\nprivately.\n\u2022 Men's White Shirts, soft bosom,\nstiff cuff, n QKi*\nand   17ii   only   OuC\nMen's Combinations, athletic\nstyle, short slceven and knee\nstyles Sizes up to QC^\n\u25a014.     The   suit    I\/Dl\nMen's Dress Suspenders, good\nelastic,   leather  ends,  40  inch\n];;T...'z.:'i 50c\nWork Shirts, big roomy sizes,\ndark, pick and pick elot'li.\nStrongly made of good strong\nmaterial. Sizes up m-| wr\nin    i.x.     Ehch     3)JLit)\nXo men have big feet, hut some\nlinn  have to buy a  large size\n.    boot.    Here's a few good ones;\nMen's Urown Mahogany tUiee\nBool,   welted,   sizes   only   HVj\nz:iu,:ml:': $5.95\n.Men's llla.l; dun Metal Calf\nlibeller style, welted, Kizcs 11,\nii'i  nncOO  only,    rtjr nr\nR'KilIni;   $11.1111 .I'm-.. tOU.UO\nNow'a yniii' chance. .Mea'a Whllo\nI'.'.nvas    Bals   ami  .Oxfords,\nsizes   a,   nvi   anil   11).   Only  11\npairs   in   lbe   lot.\n1'n\n$2.50\nIt's good to see some empty\nshelvt s and this week enft will\nsee   sonic   moro,\nPrices have been combed over,\nodd lots tigain concerttriited and\nnt'fered at  renl savings.\nWe   w;ini   ihe  room.\nWhite and Colored Bath Towels,\nregular to 45c each. OQ\/*\nSalo price, each  thiVv\nCream Madras Curtain Muslin,\n\u25a0with colored flowers in pink,\nsky and gold shades, scalloped\nedge; 45 inches wide11; regular to\nit!ie yard     Sale price,      PQ^\nye'r   yard   .._ tit\/C\nPure  silk  Georgette  and  Crepe\ntie   Chene.,  a,  good  assortment\n\u2022 of shades to choose from:   40\ninches    wide.       Special  \u25a0 Sale\nPrice,   per <j*\u00bb\"|   CQ\nyard    ;....'. -  u)XtUt7\nOur Remnant Table has been\nreplenished   for 1 today's   selling.\nMany useful  lengths have been\nmeasured and  marked  at  prices\nthat   will   sell    them    at    sight.\nCome and look them over early\nPure   White   Canton     Flannel,\nEnglish   make,   gpoij   quality,-;\ni!H   inches   wide;   regular  59c.;\nyard;    Kale Prle\nper   ya'rd   \t\nOur entire stock of Silks and\nSatins, plain and fancy, clear-\n39c\nyard\n$2.95\nColored Dress Linen, Irish manufacture, reseda, mauve, grey,1\nCopen, tan ami rose, 45 in.\nwide;  regular ?l;4fi yard. Sale\nColored Cotton Crepe, splendid\nwashing rpinlily, mauve, grey,\nsky and brown: 40 inches\nwide,  regular $1.1(5 \u25a0vhrd.   Sale\nprice,\nP\u00ab\n98c\nsplendid\ne, grey,\ninches\nrd.   Sale\n69c\nSpeedy Five Aside Game to\nBe Tried Out Todijy; May\nPlay Series.\nSpmeUilnB distinctly new and novel\ni \"\n;H'-\n^Hu(\nhmis)\nSatjtfc\nm\\\\m\\x\nih\n2l -&b\nw\"   _J\n_J,\n=-A!?_r5.w?_ CORRECT iUEHI!\nSUP\u2122\nWiih the high school tenr\nlse;ilti-red, nnd Us members on vacation', ihe senior soccer club has almost decided t,\u00bb postpone Icngui\nmatehi s until the High School tenn\nagain nets tuto notion following .tin\n[commencement of the ftill school term\notherwise, * (he L'hree other tPahif\nvvoiild enmplele their fixtiires win\nihe -_xce.ptfon of Ue- matches will;\nthe i-Iigh School icitm within tin\nnext iwo or three weeks.\nThe new idea is a five a side ganie,\nthai   they   were   indeed   a.   most   vto-\n| lent    people.     They   are,   be   said,   fa-   \u2022\nI nalU'fiily     Moh;imm-dan    and      would  |\nkill  ther  men  and  women  for smo.K-\n' ing    even    ;i    cigarette.      The       way\nthey   correct   their   women   is   to   tlo\n!\u25a0 tin tn   up  in  bags  anil  beat, them  un-\nI mercifully \u25a0 with   Jtalin   canes.   *\nI     Bach   man  has  three   wives.  Should\nA, r\\ ..ALT'L   I tiny   of   thorn   go   out.   of   doors,   the\nAustere  Desert Arab  tribe ,,,;,\u201e ;i,lmv.H hi\u201e, ,\u201e m,ve h,..- ,.ut to\nGets Subsidy to Kotp the|,|!]';l|'\nPeace.     :\"';\u2022.' j \u25a0\u25a0*\"\nTills   is   because   they   belicvo\nmy other man looks at hoc\nshe is cootamlnatcd nnd llial if a\nu'oinah goes outside, her home she is\nilia\nLOXDON,      .Tulv      .1 S.-(As.so.'ialed   \"'''\u25a0''\u25a0\"\".'\"  \u00ab\u00b0  wf\u00b0n*:.\nnn,,..,.   in   s.,ei',.,'.;l.ress,-.\\  le.v.'H  vvnrkiiiK a.'i'ai.Kenieni I     Wearing a sill: dress    or any coMly\nbanillis   luo   ]\nllinlia\nWl\nn'.\nSOME BASEBALL STATISTICS\nBy Wood Cowan\nAPRIL   tHA-i    jjone I JjuWl JAijn toll[0CT\nJhe Base ball seasom if placed end\nto end. would reach from atril\nto octo&eb.-\nii\u00bb\nub:\n-Tb\nell\n.Me\n: ALL THE EMM CHE-CK.S  IS-iUEtJ^HOULr)\nBE i-AIE> IM ASTRA.IGHT LIMe   END \"rotMB,\n\u00bbT  WOULD BE TUE \u25a0SHO-n-EVT DISTANCE\nBETSNEfeN   TWO  POINTS\u2014\u2022\nQSfALL ALL \"THE  SP0K.T DOPESTEGlS\nTCXSETHEli IN A CDNFLATi AND\nTUtM   VNOULt, All.   feEFECi-^O\n3\u00ab# BASE ASTH_'HE>($T0NE-;6\u00abfc\nlllllllie.-.    WlnnlpcK.    de!',\nanil   U'n.ilgh,   U'iiin'pes-,   0-3,   'l-u.\n1'eaeb    anil     Todd,     Auslrnlia.    it \u2022\nlei I    llenibi'sen   ninl    lliekle,   Toi\nran,i, 6*W  ''\u2022-\u2022\nAnderson, a.ail llawkes, Australia,\nilelenlel I'liallii's ami Andrew?, Kinc-\nHlnn, 6-1, ll-|.\nMen's handicap: Waugll, Winni-\npee, defeated Fnley, Toronto, (i-^, 6-,l.\nEDMONTON RACES.\na   whl.li   niie  man\niib.ns.   Play   is   no   ih,.   iwliii   basis;' bus been  entered  inio.by  lbe  Brltl\u00bbli:|\"'\"\neiinni'   couiil'lnB   one   point,  a   gonl  governlnenl   with  Hie\" U'ababi, a   |io\\i\nlll'ee    ami    a     enrnei verleil     inln | erl'nl   Arabian   ib-Sei'l    ll ill.-.     Tho   Wl\ngoal four     Tbe K.'iiim is  reputed  In ha hi   are   nomads   anil   belong'   l\"\ne exli'iin-ly last, develops llie short, sect   whieli   Colonial   Secretary   Wii\nd tricky  di'ibhling, ami I sum Churchill described  in  Hie Inn\na  n, limber  up  the  i\np   I Ii.ii-   helloivs   in    csecllcnl    con.-. 'In Hill nlhodox   Islam   as   the   <\ninn.     Ii   is   sii   strenuous   thnt  the  mil\n\u25a0in.Is   are    nnly    1,1    minutes    lung. Uiiw   ,      \t\ni Many  taxpayers' would 'prefer to see\n, lhe   eii,I   nl'   ell   Ilrilish   ennimitmenls\nfinery,   precious   straies   nr   metals,   ls\npenal offense.\na. sense an', they a decadent\n.Booi'iic,',' j\/olbnel Lawreilca enneluded.\n\u25a0\"I'lmy are virile and as austere ns\nIbey are bloodthirsty and brave. \"It\n\"biiitl.l  be cheap al    L'lin.Ollll a year to\n.inn   uiii...    ui nun,, is,   .iit'iisinn   i  ......nn.   i.es.-i n\u201e-,i   in   tne   in,u^,- , .... , ...\nlimb,,'   up   lb-   players a ' commons as- \u2022\u2022hearing Ihe same re-I >\"'N- 'l'\"\"* \u00aba<\"} will and  to keep them\n'I\nCalvinism   woula i    Tlie  latter view,  however, docs not\none   In   tli-   fiereesi ! meet     wiib     universal      acceptation\nlimes   nl'   lhe   religi.\nnf    sue),    gal\n1,1 1,1\nill   be]\n111,   well   armed   ami   bb.n.llllirsly  and\nSlcsi a\nIII\n11\n '*''\", '\u25a0\"''\"\u25a0\u25a0'\"Holy    \"   Ibey reglual II  as an arllcio o( duty as i K7JI I     DI  \u00bbV   I  AfROSSF\nicie   mulches   r.'.'i.in. I tt.,.,| .,.,,,!\u2022 f.,,,,, ,,, kin ,,,, ,vhn lln ,\u201e,,   YULL   TLAI   i_H^K.UOi3t   \u25a0\n!*-\u25a0\u25a0\" \">\"\"-\u2022 \u00bb\"\u25a0-\"\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0 m RETURN AT TRAIL\nat l>: Ito!\nTall.,\nMoreover,  thoy |\niln- holy-cities\nloflv   H'ill    In-    lli-rninl    vs.    Tall.,.!, j ,\u201e-   j,,.,.,,,   ,,\u201e,,   i,,\u201e,i;,.,.   ,,\u201e,]   ,,\u201e.   ,vh'\u201e|,,\n<*   ''\u25a0'* V    lineups    beini:: instil lit inn    ic   pilgrimage.\nll.raar.l -T.     Mlddh-lon,    goal    ami'\n\u25a01;; ;C. I'.rnar.l.   ball'  baek:   II.   Har-\niinl, \u25a0 liglu   wing;   ill   Morris, coaler;. ,\n-\u2022Iftreii   grievously,, by   the   in\nTin- nuances of the Shei'eei of Me\na,   win.   .-ii'iiys     Ilrilish1    prntecllr\n'l-;HM(l.\\TO.N'. .Iii'y 1-1.\u2014 Getaway\nday at Min exhibition races produced\noo surprises except in the farmers'\nfive furlongs, when Fanny, a horse\nHint was le. an.re unknown lhan all\nibe others in ibe event! Clinic home\na   winner an I  paid  m.llf.   for  V-.\nSummary:\nRunning rare, six .furlongs, SHHO'--\nHnssaiur liny won, Uuinni.'i second.\nYnkamine   third.     Time,   1:17 1-5.\nfive furlongs, $2511\u2014.Stevedore\nWells wnn, Doctor Fare second, Mnj\ni.ady  Ibir.l.     Time,   I :ij2 1-5.\n\u25a0Six furlongs, \u00bb2.r,o--Vork Road\nwon, Hill Uitebiniin second, Sir Rob-\nrrl   third.    Time,   1:18 1-5.\nFive       furlongs.       (25(1\u2014Yorkshire\nRelish woo, Chantross second.  Echo\n[hlrd;    Time,   l:(ni.\nFive furlongs,' farmers' raee- Fanny wnn, Belle Arras second. Flora\nthird.    Time,   1:05 1-5.\nCANADIANS SHOOT\nWELL AT BISLEY\nrtlHi.KV (*A.MI\\, July M.\u2014The\nPrince of Wales prize competition\nwas slioi today with most of the Gti-\nnmlijin.s inking parti but tho prUe list\nwns not nvallahlo tonight, Tho shoot-.\nIpg was ou the 300 and 1100-yai'il\nranges, 10 shots each. One competitor scored !i7 out of a possihlo 100 and\nthere was one !)[> seore. a,uit four\nwith t).l, .     *\nl.ieut. S. A. Annand, *nulprary, scored 45 un the tiOO-yardz-rangiv his\napgre't'ate Ijelng \u00ab7-. lyMvale V, N.\nAllen, Toronto, 48J witli' an aggro-\ngate of Sfi; Private -A. IT. Caplin,\nVancouver, 43, aggregate ill; Major\nC. Crowe, fluelph, <yi, aggregate !)3;\nSergeant W. A l|rtwkins, 4iJ, aggregate :i4; Sergeant1\/ Me(\\itlum, 'Truro,-\nN. S., 47; aggrega|'\/i Sfi; Major George\nMortimer. Ottawa;\/^, aggregate 85;\nMajor F. Hieh:n:dson, 42, aggregate\nf!2; -Majoi' N'luihover, Winnipeg, 45;\naggregate  SO.\nMajor Crowe made seven bulls\neyes and three inners on the 000-\nyard range.\nVn.nvri\/'   r    ' u',,iY\"w ,m        rrn-i'l    \"mil I i\u00bb''\"''ii|i:iipn   of   (he   pilgrimages:   Thel'i\n*l'lle\"l       \u2022'\u25a0        \",ln ''' n'.MI .inn.   .  .   ,,     ,.[,\u201e    ,.\u201e.ii.'!\u201e,.     IT.,--.,\niiacUT X.   !'..   (Bradley,     hall'   back;   |.| lu;\\\\ \".',\nKplers, right   wing;   C,  Titlhnl,  '*\":\"\nIf   wtmlir,  feft   win\u00ab.;.\nL  liitn  and   King   Hus.-ji\nthe' iledjii\/., who has heen  in con,-;\nU'nu!     warf:ii-e     witli     the     \"Arahfan\n\u25a0alvinisls,\"   Die   latter   are   to   reccivO\nCfiO.OOD fii.sh aunually,* so long as they\nThe   wife.  laid    lUnvvr   the   evening\nnnpt'i*.  Ii-iii;...|  aeross ilie  t;ili)e tii   her j-Tpfraln from annoying then- nelghln\nhi;  i,.i -:.l    ami\nVKMliyi   di\nI tie not  interfere: with the eandi-\nsrtmc   of    itie   iliings) <'af,y   of   Hussein's  son,   llie   lanii-   l-,ei-\nse. in  almost   Incredible,   AT-   sul, for ilie'rulei-ship of tlio m-w Mrs-\niin  half  .u'   iiie  worlii  (l(iJnri't.|_\"P\"'am_lnn   stale,\nv   the   otli.-i-   half   lives.\u25a0' I        Death, for   Smoking   Cigarette.\nniiiel\"    said     ill\"    hruiPi    of j      CuIoUel     Lawrenih.    of   -the    colonial\ntl    \"tlltlt's   eeriainly    llo   CKijlt   office,  who  has  lived  among  thev  \\Va-\ndariing.\" ,    t 'i;i1''   ''\"'   Vears,   told   an   int.ervie*wr*r\nWilli a second return match with\nthe Kosshind-Trail lacrosse team\nhooked io take place in Trail on July\n\u25a0_a, ihe local jiierosse. artists are taking 'advantage of every opportunity-\noffered to MtagC' practice gamon lot\nthe coming e\\i'u(. which they an*\nconfident liu-y wilt be ah'e to con-\nte-st victoriously. Another practice\nvs called for this evening at pllfi\no'elm;k   at   the   recreation   grounds.\nBOTH   SATISFIED.\nolih    \\\\':,s   iheir   divorce   salisfai\nWebb- Ves. Siie was awarded thti\nchildren and he gt?ts l.he [;ey to tho\nwine   eellnr.       .\nut Brier\nMore Tobacco for the Money\nmm.\nCanada'^ best bijy~\nthe ECONOMY Package\nriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiitiii\n_-_\ntac3r_^^\nmm\n **\u00bb-**fr -\u25a0\u2022**\nTHE NEESON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 15,16*21.\nTHE ARK\nThe. camping season haa arrived.\n~'e have tents in all sizes at tihe\n:Wght prices. Also all kinds ot toenails*, cutlery, cots, dishes, bedding,\nfcnosquito netting, staple; dry goods, 7\noz Duck, 35<k yard. 8 oz. Duck,\n404 yard. Bleached White Cotton,\n25\u00a3 yard. \"Ladles' good Hose, 404\npair. Silk Hose, black, 754 pair.\nMen's Work Shirts, $1.75- Overalls, very heavy. SS2.75 pair,.Curtain Scrim, 36-inch bordered, 254\nJara,    Good   Towelling,   X54   Vara.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 634 600 Vern'an St\nSportingGoods\nReduced\nAre you looking for bargains in Tennis Racquets,\nGolf Sticks, Lacrosse\nSticks and Baseball Goods?\nIf so, call nn us.\n. ****>*>\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nV\nMall Orders Filled Promptly\nPhone 81. P. O. Box 1087\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY   GRANITE   AND\nMONUMENTAL     COMPANY,\n*        LIMITED\nPrint   8t,   Naltatf\nOPTICS\nI have spent many years in\njthe  -study of  eya troubles and\ncan fit you with glasses which\n;W-I1 remedy your eye weakness,\nCall   for   examination,\n1 J. WALKER\nJeweler, Optician and  Engraver\nIR   YOU   WANT   RESULTS   TRY\nA   CLASSIFIED   AD.\nBUY AT HOME\nSurety these hot dayB should in-\nduce you to Trade at Your Neighborhood store where you can secure better and quicker service\nand avaid \"Dressing Up!\"\nGIVE   US  A  TRIAL,\nFleming's Store\nGroceries, Drygoods, Etc,\nSt. Charles Milk\nThe    Old    Standby\nFamily  size,  6  for    81.00\nPHONE 10\nEverything for your preserving\nrequirements kept in stock. \u201eA\nfull line of Sealers, Economy,\nPerfect Seal, Wide Mouth Ma-\neona and regular Masona Let\nus have your orders for fruit so\nthat we can arrange for same,\nRaspberries how on the market. Book your orders for Apricots now. Many were too late\n\u25a0last year.\nFresh  Fruits and Vegetables  in\nSeason,   Fresh  Dally.\nTry our Gold' Seal Tea, lb-05^\nMILK\nBorden's Evaporated\nTall   size,   each    \u25a0'-\u25a020#\n4-Doxen Case $9.00\nDozen   $2.30\nELIEP PROM :\nEyestrain, pain and\nheadaches can he .secured by the wearing of proper gloss-\nAnd p ro p c r\nglasses are ascev-\n\u25a0tainled positively with\nthe objective method of iniro-\nspection, by the expert examiner. \"We are fortunately flltod\nup for such special examination.\n.M.ilce your appointment. ITpuve:\n9:00   to    11:30,     1:00   to   4:30. \u25a0\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician.\nYour Watch Repairs\nPromptly,    Perfectly    and    Accurately  Done.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nWatchmaker and Jeweler.\nHIGH-CLASS FURS\n10   FEB  CENT  BEDUCTION   TO\nTHE END OF AUGUST.\nAny article made to order from\nbest selected skins. Customers' own\nfurs made Into any article desired,\n\u25a0with best work at moderate price.-\nOld furs repaired and rem ml tiled\ninto newest shapes.\nG. GLASER\nMAHUrACTUBINO  JFUB\u2014IEB\nPHOME 106. F. O. BOX 767\nNELSON, B. 0.\nKerr's Jitney\nNEW NASH CAR.\nAt your service day and night. Phone\n491.  Guaranteed  to  please you.   Baggage and Express.\nJust to   Let You  Know\nA. D. Papazian\nExpert   Watchmaker,   Jeweler   and\nGraduate   Optometrist.\nHarry Carey\n\"THE\nWALLOP\"\n\\ai,.i ...   \u2014.   \u2014   : \"~- \u25a0\u25a0\"\u2014\nCentury  Comedy.\n\"The Dog Doctor\"\nrs, \"King of the Circus' m\nThomas A. Lawson\nCarpenter and Joiner.\nWe do your -work promptly and well.\nFactory,   409   Hall   Streot.\nTAKE   ADVANTAGE   OF   THE\nSaturday Special\nOf Hand Rolled   .\nChocolates\nShipment 3i\u00bbs arrived from   the\nJ.  JT.  Tabor  Candy  Co.,   Ltd ,\nmakers of\nCANADA'S BEST\n60c A POUND\nC. It Bean\nIce Cream sFruits\nWARD  STREET\nFOREST FIRES BREAK OUT IN\nMen of Slocan City Fight Big Blaze in Locality^of Lemon\nCreek; Rangers Go Out From Nelson With Pump; Also\nBig Fire Near Northport Across International Boundary;\nSituation Will Be Dangerous if High Winds Rise,   y\nA' big forest fire in tho Slocan valley, in proximity to. Slocan City, fought by aii the male population of that community,\nand a fire of indeterminate proportion across the international\nboundary   line   are   the   outstanding *\u2022 ....,..   - \u2014\nf Paul res of the  Koolenay  fir.* silun-\ntiofi today.'\nWith the lire hazard nt a peak in\nconsequence of prolonged dry weather and intense heat, fires are starting\nip   at   various   points   over   this   tor-\nRECREATION COMMITTEE\nBRISTLES    WITH    IDEAS\nA   special  program  of drills  and\nrllory,   and .a   condition     is    coming\nj,   lot   of   now   gnmes  has   heen   drawn\nup hy Griffith Morris, the city sporuu\nand recreation supervisor, for i*U-\nyoungsters urho vis.t Lakeside jjark\nthis all.Tnoon. In addition, the\nsenior hoys' life saving corps goirijj\nthrough their examination for medallions, will he siarled out in tho'r\ncourse   of   life  saving .Instruction.\nSuch was the information given\n.nit ai * th*> meeting of the Civic\nSports and Recn-ation committee lasv\nnight, when a. number of reconi-\nmi'ndaiiuns   for   improving   the   com-\nuhuiit-ihat will he dangerous in tin\nextreme' should the wind rise. The\nsmoke haze has made its appearance,\nand irnlcss great vigilance is\" exercised by campers and others each\n\u25a0 lay will add * new hazards to tlmse\nalready loo prevalent.\nI.i'innn   Creek    Itla\/.e.\nThe big fire in the Slocan valley,\nn*nl* Lemon creek, was first noticed\nabout 2:3(1 o'clock yesterday afternoon, and shortly after every avail-\nllde man in the section was engaged\n.n combating the flames, under the I munity recreation i(lwi. were mar!--,\ndirection of Assistant, Ranger Arthur | n was deo'ded to have the play ap'-\nI. (ienefle, The fire, which is about paratns al the Central school re-\n100 yards from the C*. P. K. track, [moved to Lakeside pari;, and pb\u00ab-\nevnbraces in its range th*6 railway Lsibly how ihe wooden sliding shufe\nl>ridge, and the C. IV 11. sent out an converted into a water sltnte for the\nurgent call ,to Nelson Ifor asslstum*'. youngsters' gambols,\nwhich was answered by Ranger J. iVenmmendntions were made to. lbe\nB. Conway and Assistant liauger O. city eouncli lhat a rowboat' oe\nC I'aletliorpe, who took out one of Liiiier loaned or donated, and sta-\nIhe forestry pumps with them. Thn ,ionet| ;,t i^lcesldo park as an emen;-\nranches of Walter Anderson and R. ' \u201etll.v ,((i;i, rov swimmers, and that a\np. Kennedy were also menaced. litV  hrt1   nt1n_h'e'd  to a  pole  be also\nThere was no particular wind al\ntlie*scene of flhe fire, it was stated\n'ast night, and the pttmp should he\naide   lo   lake  can-   id'   it.\nIn the ease of the fire across the\nline many reports are current, I nit\nit is stated that, the blaze is of large\ndimensions. Though some djstnnee\naway, it is contributing a good voltaic to  the  smoke  haze.\nLessor''Wres are reported from various points, h.ut without extensive\n[.'image so far ensuing. A change of\nipndltions in wind, however, might\npiickly  alter  the situation.\nHow Well Do You See?\nIf yon find yoursolf frowning or\nsquinting ut your work, It is an\nindication that you. ara strainlntr\nyour eyns. Such it strain, if not\ncorrected, will seriously Impair your\nsight. Wouldn't ft be wise and\nsensible to correct this error NOW.\nAn appointment witli me will save\nyour e>es and give you proper vision and comfort.\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\nExclusive    Optoinetrfse,\nK.W.C.   Blocli,   Nolson,   B.C.\nSogers   Building,   Vancouver,,   B.C.\nPlumbers' Brass Goods,\nFixtures and Supplies,\nTile    and    Sewer    Pipe\nB. C. Plumbing and Heating Company\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nI'lii'.'fil   mmr llu\nhone\n1  :u\nHip  pur!-.\n11    IV0S   KI1KKPSH\ni, ilm\nllic\nWrongful\nus., or iim.v such\nI'linTf\n,-ncy\nnnpo nn ns\neo'ulrl lio mdito i\nlinlslu\nliln li\n\u25a0 ii sev 'ie\nline. Another rernmtnondnlinn was\nthat the e.:ty award large budges to\nI bose whti have irassed their lire-\nsuving examinations, the badges in\nbo very conspicuous when worn on\nbathing suits. Tbe idea was that\nmembers nf the life-saving classes,\nwho are likely lo he frequently at\nthe beach would also h> a sort of\nvolunteer corps in case i.r emergen cy.\nThose present ai the meeting wer\"\nR. Smillie. .1. Morris, \\V. '1'. Tati-tJ,lr^'\nlli;gh   Ross and (irifl'illi   Morris.\nBoard Hears Report on Convention of British Columbia Hospitals' Association.\nTwo appointments to the staff of\nKootenay Lake General Hospital aid\na comprehensive report on the convention of the British Columbia Hospitals association, held in KamloQps\non July C, 7 and 8, which was submitted' by the matron, Miss A. McArthur, featured the meeting of thy\nhoard of directors on Tuesday  night.\nMiss K. Kman, late of Vancouver\nGeneral hospital, was appointed niglu\nsupervisor, the appointment to take,\neffect from August 15. The appointment of Miss liryben. .lack, also of\nthe Vancouver General hospital, \u25a0 to\nlie position of head nurse, has since\nbeen nullfied. Miss Jack wired th-?\nboard yesterday that she would he\nunable to accept the position. It is\nnow being offered to another applicant.\nIn her report on the convention,\n.Miss McArthur stated the more important problems taken up included\nimnttors pertaining to standardization pf financial, medical and statistical records in hospitals. The authorities in charge of tho work now\nJiaVe instituted sta-ndnrdiaation in\nhospitals of 100 beds. This year\nhospitals of 50 hod* will receive tho\nsame attention. i\n' The difficulties of finance wer-i\ndiscussed .and a recommendation Jo\nthe government that the capital\ngrants be doubled was made. An-\nother recommendation was that the\ngovernment be asked to provide <;\nuniversal basis of taxation for adequate financing (.'omijiitieos were\nappointed to lake these matters up\nwith  tho government; *\nThoso attending--the meeting weco:\nflonrge l-1. Motion, G. X, Gilchrist, S.\nKaweetl. 'W. Irvine, \\Y. I{. McLt'J'.l,\nL. IC, Larson, \\V, j. Meagher ni>d\nSecret dry George Johnstone,\nNEW    BALTIC   AL1ANCE\nRIGA. July M- (Associated! Press).\n\u2014Rapid steps toward the formation\nof a new La Hie triple alliance embracing Latvia, Ksihonoia and Lithuania, which may later take in Finland, are expected by political leaders here to result from the formation of a new Lettish coalition .cabinet headed by Sigmund Meyerovilch\nas Premier and Minister for Foreign\nAffairs, which latter post he held\nmpler   the   old   government.\nThe new real it ion includes almost\nall the numerous Lettish parties ex'-\ncept'-the* mo,st   radical   left   wings.\nIs. I'lmanis, formerly an instructor\nat the I'nivershy of Nebraska; .who\nheaded the old regime, is left out.\nas is also A. Rerg, whose prosectt-\ntio'lis; of tbi' I'lininninisi and Socialist elements as Minister of tlie Interior led' to tin* downfall of the old\ncabinet. Rerg    has    been     succeed\ned' by A. Qliesis of the 'Farmers'\nI'nion, Which forms part of lbe\nMoyeroviteh   party.\n\"Terribly rough,\" said the stranger\non   JioaVcl the  ocean   liner.\n\"Well.\" said the farmer, \"it* wouldn't\nbe near so rough if Ihe captain would\nonly   keep   in   the   furi'OWS.\"\n\"SPOKTITET\nA few squirts of Spoktite into the cracks at the hubs and\nfelloes\n\u2022   * THE-WOOD SWELLS\nThe squeaks stop and the wheels are as safe as ever and\nthe repair is permanent;\n, Large size can ,.,.T.......\u00bb.,.,.\u00ab.....c.T.-....f.T.rir.rT\u00bbpT'5^\"'^5\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.\niAItER \u00bbTRE_T\nME-*OM, -, O,\nTourists, Summer Campers,\nExcursionists and Picnickers   '\nThe City of. Nelson invites you to see and enjoy the\nbeauties of the city and surrounding country.\nMany delightful drives may be taken along the Lake\nand River.\nAccommodation supplied free to Automobile Camping\nparties and Lakeside Park affords ample facilities for picnic or excursion parties.\nThe Kootenay Country is Worth While\nSEE   IT    FIRST\nD*y Kindling Wood Fos? Sale\nWe are now taking orders for wood. Once you try It you will use\nno other. .\nNo chopping, no dirt (as it is nice, clean, white, pine blocks two\ninches thick, two and one-half inches- wide and from four to fourteen\ninches long.)\nBest summer wood you can get for stove or any small fire. We\nguarantee  entire satisfaction.\nPine,  delivered and  hi woodshed, north  of Latimer street $7.00\nPine, delivered and in woodshed,  south  of  Latimer street ST.25\nLoad consists of approximately ono cord.\nPrice for half loads \u201e... $4.00\nW. W. POWELL COMPANY, Ltd.,\nphone orders to 176.   Manufacturer of Match Blocks\n_f _\nI\nSix room fully modern house in Al condition on Front\nStreet. Good cellar and washroom in basement. Sleeping\nporch.\nA good buy at $2700.00\n4M-4\nCharles F. McHardy\nInsurance Phone 135 Real Estate\nAPPOINT HOSPlTftL\n\u25a0THOUGHT TIl.YNHFKUKNCi:.\nDr. Stenson Hooker, a well-known\nEnglish nerve and chief specialist, relates the following remarkable'in-\nstanees of thought transference:\n\"On one occasion,\" he said, \"I was\na mile from home when I saw in my\nmind's eyo a, telegfam awaiting me at\nmy Iiouse. 1 'sensed' a message that\nT was wanted in some distant town. I\nhastened hack and found a telegram\nfrom my wife, who was away, asking\nme to join her and hrlng her back.\n\"Another ease occurred when I was\nmaking arrangements to visit a patient   3d   miles  out  of  London.     The\nvalid's* nrother explained the case\nand gave me the address but no description of the home. Just after the\nbrother hud left I had a mental vision\nof the patient's bedroom.\n\"On going to the home I found that\nal' was Its I had seen ltinmymind's\neye. While.the brother was talking\nto me his own mind had heen focused\non the sick room, and my' mind, in\nsympathy with his, hail received the\nimpression.\n\"I was talking to a widow, and she\ntold me she had never heen thc same\nsince she had lost her husband. At\nthat moment I saw her husband so\nplainly thai 1 was able lo describe\nhim io his wife, she stated that the\ndescription was correct, although I\nhad never seen him when he was\nalive. Again the thought-df him conjured up in her brain had impressed\nitself on mine.\n\"Cases in which a dying person appears to a near relative are innumerable, and 1 can vouch ''for at least one\nin my own family. Tlie man to whom\nthe vision occurred did not helieve in\ntelepathy. He was trirvelTirig in Germany hefore the war. Sitting one\nday in his hotel, he was amazed at a\nvisionary appearance of his father.\n\"Later a telegram reached him con-\nvi-yinglhe news o'f his father's death.\nHe was actually dying at the moment\nhis image appenredHo his son.\"\nICE CREAM SALT!\nHalf Ground\nCoarse Salt for Hay and Cattle. Fine Dairy Salt for Butted\nCompressed Salt Bricks, Rock Salt.\nTHE BRACKMAN-KER MILLING CO LTDl\nThe Birth of a New Star\nBETTY        -\nCOMPSON\nThe Miracle Maid of \"The Miracle Man\"\n. \u2014|n\u2014    \u2022\n\" Prisoners\nOf Love\"\nThe Screen's Most Enthralling Love Story\nTw\u00bb Heel comedy\n'What Could Be Sweeter'\nChester\nOuting\nA reader at Grand Palls, Newfoundland, says that a lobster was caught\nin Newfoundland waters with a curious front left claw, lt was a perfect\nform pf a man's head ahd face. The\neyes, nose and mouth were very dis-\ntince; nlso the curling waves of hair\nand a small pointed beard. If viewed\nfrom a different angle the claw represents the features of a laughing\ngirl. The- length of .\\tbcj head, is\nabout   two   inches.\nACT   OF   CHARITY.\nKeeper\u2014Are ynu aware thai this\nwater Is private and that you are not\nallowed to fish from it?\nAngler (who has had nothing hut\nnibbles all day)\u2014Heaven! I'm not\ntaking your fish.    I'm  feeding 'enil\nSocial and Personal\nW. M. Melneruk lias moved to Nelsoji\nwith bis family from Slocan City.\nA. Q, GaVlUp, the C. 1'. U. lineman,\ncame   In   from   1'roetor  yest_rdny,\ni J.   Ti   Tlppinu,   owner   of   the   Black\nPrince  mine,   is   In   from  Stocan  City.\nJ. 13. Annable nituriUMl Wednesday\nhight from a business trip to Coleman,\nAlta.\nE. B, Prowd, district forester, is on\n,the Arrow lakes on departmental  husl-\ntH'SH.\nM. B. Green of Calgary, manager iu\nthe Calgary dlslrict for the Imperial\nOil company, who Is on an inapectloual\ntrip of the company's stores, left for\nRossland yesterday. He will revisit\nNelson  in a day or two\/\nC. Cnrmichacl, first vice president of\nthe British Columbia command of the\nG. W.' V. A., and Walter Drinnan. British Columhia secretary-treasurer, who\nare returning from \"the Port Arthur\nconference, left Nelson yesterday by\nthe noon train for Trail, to meet tbe\nTrail branch for a short conference.\nIt was their intention to catch the\nKettle Valley trnin at CaBtlegnr and\nmake no further stops, proceeding direct  to Vancouver.\nPortland is at present tbe livcst cltv\non the Pacific coast .in the opinion of\nWilliam Lunglanda. who, with his family, has ' just returned from seven\nmonths there. While there Is lots doing in Portland. Mr. Langlamt states.\n-nly United States citizens need noDly\n?jr work, ii|| the bifr porporntinns\ndrawing a hard and fa#t rule ou the\nsubject. AH applicants for work are\nrequired 1o sign cards giving fnl) particulars, of their United States citizen-\nShip, _,     .\nYOU CAN SHAMPOO\nOUR PERMANENT WAVE\nTbe bathing giri need never fear\nof losing her curl. Water, rain or\nperspiration only \u2022 make Nestle\n\"Waved    Hair   curlier.\nFor two neeks now before summer vacation we will give\n8 Curlers across the front for..$10\n12    Curlers    across the front for..fl515i\nThe Nestle Process Is Harm-\n. less and Lasting\nHAIR DYEING\nWe use only IN'HCTO RAPID\nwhich has -far outclassed all other\nhair dyes, 1NECTO RAPID never\nrubs off, or washes off, never discolors linen, hat linings, or brushes.\nIt  is a gierfeet   hair coloring.\nThe Acton Hair pompanj)\nWigs, Switches, Bobs, Ear Puffs, Curls, Transformations, Toupees.\n506|\/_   BAKER   STREET\n-M-a_-_i\nPHONE  535\nty.\nNelson News oi tbe Day.\nTONIGHT, DANCER TONIGHT.\nBlue   Diamond   Pavilion  al   eight-tlllr-\ncar   at   Vi  o'clock. t411S)\nClan' McLeary So. I will meet in\nthe Eagle hall tonight at 7::t0. Social\nevening for clansmen. All player* of\nMcLeary football team are requested\nto  attend  at 8:45. (4099)\nODD FELLOWS, ATTENTION!\nAll Odd Fellows and Sister Rebekabs\nare requested lo meet at the Odd Fellows' temple at six o'clock sharp Sunday evening, July 17. from whence\nthey will parade to the cemetery,\nwhere appropriate .services will he held\nIn commemoration of deceased brethren\nand for decoration of the graves. The\nparade will leave the' temple at six-\nthirty   o'clock.     By  order\nR   NICHOLLS,   N.   G.\nA.   G1BB10RT,   N.   G.\nJuly-If),   1031.       , t    (4110)\nCome and bear Francis Alda's latest,\n\"An Open Secret.\" Victor record department,   Willis   Piano  Store.       (410S)\nJoint basket picnic Clan McLeary\nand Daughters of Scotia . Wednesday\nafternoon, July _dtb, at the park by\n,the   shipyards. (411^)\nWILLOW       POINT      TENNIS      CLXJU\n\\ DANCE.\nFerudalo Park, 8 p, in., Saturday,\nJuly 1G. Tickets 50 ceiitt*. Buffet\nsupper.    Tree ferry 12:30. (4108)\nTbe monthly meeting of the Worn-\n, u's Institute will be held on Friday\n^fterhbon, July __, in K. P. hall,  (41(17)\nComo and hear Francis Alda's latest,\n\"Am open Secret.\" Victor Record department,   Willis  Piano  Store,       t 41011)\nWanted\u2014Raspberries.  Al .Donald  .Tarn\nCo. (4049)\nClan McLeary No. 1 will meet iu\nthe Eagle bull Friday evening at 7:30.\nSsclul evening for clansmen and all\nplayers of McLeary football team are\nrequested to attend at  8:4,0. (4099)\nWanted\u2014Blackberries. McDonald Jam\nOo. (4048)\nA meeting of the Kokanee Mountaineering club wilt be held Friday evening\nat S o'clock in tbe city ball to decide on\nthis year's annual outing. We expect\nall the old members and especially invite any one interested in having the\nbest time'of their lives to be there to\nhelp in planning the trip.   . (4092)\n\u25a0 Wanted\u201410,000 pounds cherries without stalkB.   McDonald Jam Co.      (4068)\nPAIBVIEW FUEI. SUPPLY &  TEAMING COMPANY\nHave opened up a coal and wood yard\nin Falrview,. and will be able to .supply\ntbe public with tbe beM grade i of ddal\nand wood at reasonable prices. Phone\n475L1. \u25a0 (4041)\nWanted\u2014Black currants, McDonald\n; Jam CO. (4047)\nHe (thoughtfully)\u2014Now the girl\nthat I shall marry must be. in direct\ncontrast *to me.'\nShe\u2014Well, don't get discouraged;\nt.htn;e am still plenty of bright, and1\nintelligent  girla  around.\nJOHN DALY\nCABINET CIGAR STORl\nMAIL   ORDERS   ATTENDED   TO\nPROMPTLY\nSmoking Tobacco, Snuff, Pipes one\nFull   Stock   of   Cifjari,   Cinarottoi\nOthar Smokera' Suppllo\n-\n=\nTake a Swim\nEvery Day\nYou won't huve to stay long in t\nwater to feel retreshed for the who\njjny. One ot these Bathins Suits n\nhelp you enjoy every minute you a\nln. You can slip it on in a mlnu\nand it gives all the necessary freedo\nfor swimming.\nCotton Bathing JSuits $1.5\nEach.\nAll Wool Bathing Suits, nei\nstripes, fast colors,\n$5.75 EacH      *\nEmory & Walle\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_1921_07_15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0397030","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"}]}}