{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0397082":{"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":"1921-08-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0397082\/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":" 1\n\"7fe3\nLatest\nSPORTING NEWS\nSee Page 7\nRead the\nCLASSIFIED ADS\n. Page 6\n\"Vol. 20.\n.m\nNELSON, B. C, SATURDAY MORNING^ AJJGUST 13, 1921.\nNO. 90.\nFORMATION\nGreenfield Takes Triple Office; Invites Ross tp Public\nWorks Portfolio.\n, EDMONTON, Aug. 12.-\u2014Friday afternoon Premier Herbert Greenfield\nannounced that Lieutenant Governor\nBrett had\u201e officially called upon him\n\u25a0 to form a government. Mr. Greon-\nflew was sworn in as premier by his\nhonor Vnd at once announced, the\npersonnel of his new cabinet, as follows:\nHerbert Greenfield, premier, pro-\n\" Vlncial treasurer and provincial secretary; John Edward4 Brownlee, attorney general; Georgo Hoadley,\nminister ' of agriculture; Richard\nGavin. Reed, minister of municipalities and public health; Perrin Baker, minister of education; Vernon\n' \"Wirtfleld: Smith, . minister of, railways\nand. telephones; Mary Irene Parlb*y,\n'minister without portfolio. Prepiler\nGreenfield, then e plained that it was\nnot his Intention to permanently hold\nthe portfolios of provincial treasurer\nand provincial secretary, but, in\n.view of tho importance of these\nportfolios and the fact that he\n\u25a0wished to carefully consider certain\nPlans which, if adopted, might have!\nan important and far reaching effect on the organization of tho de-.J\npartment, he did not think it art-\n' vl(3able to make appointments at the\npresent  time.\nThe premier stated that he had extended   an   invitation   to   Alex   Ro-\u00bbs\nif Calgary to accept the portfolio of\npublic works, and is awaiting his ac-\n' oeptahce,'\nEDMONTON, Aug. 12.\u2014At 1:30\no'clock Friday afternoon the Stewart, gpvernment formally .relinquished\nControl of affairs In Alberta, the res-\nignatlpn of Hon, Charles Stewart being handefl to his honor, Lieutenant\nGovernor Dr. Brett, at that hour,\n, The resignation, of course, carried\nwith it 'the resignation of all other\nmembefs' of the provincial executive\ncouncil, these being Hon. J. R. Boyle,\n.attbrnoy general; Hon. George P\n(Smith, minister of education; Hon.\n.Duncan Marshall, minister of agriculture; Hon. C. R. Mitchell, provincial tre^sUr^r; and minister of municipal affair* and health; Hon. A. J,\nMcLean^ minister of* public works,\na,ttd J. l\/_ Cote\/ provincial secretary.\nFollowing the resignation of Hon\n. Mr. Stewart, which carried with it\na recommendation that Mr. Herbert\nGreenfield was the logical man upon\nwhom to call for the formation of a\nnew government, the lieutenant govr-\nernor made preparations, for sum-'\nmoning,of Mr.. Greenfield to consider\nthe matter, and. It is .probable, that\nMr* G*reenfield wilt he swon in as,\njprd'hiier before noon Saturday.\n.*c Personnel of Cabinet.\n\u2022No -member of AlbertaJs new government .wfis born in the province-,\nbut all, the tminlaters, have lived ln\nthe province many , years. Three . of\nthem were born In Canada\u2014J. 12.\nBrownlee, in Lambton county,\nOnt.; Perrin. Banker, in Blenheim,\n\u25a0Ont.,  and   V.  .\"ty.. Smith,   in   Prlnco\n\u25a0 -Edward Island. Three others camo\nfrom England, these being the 6ro-\nmler,    George    Hoadley    and    Mrs.\n\" fttrltfy.\n. Two are natives of Scotland\u2014Alex\nRoss and R. G. need.\n\/Attorney General Brownlee is thi\nyoungest member*'of the new cabinet,, at 38; Mr. Smith, 57, is the\noldest,\/\/Premier'Greenfield is B2. Mr.\nBrownlee. is a., graduate of Toronto\n-University and has been general\ncounsel totV. F. A.\nMr,-. Baker is  baohelor of  arts  ih\n..McMaster.university, Alex itoss is\nlabor member1fo^. Calgary and headed the poll in .t^iat,'City at the election.\" He is a stonenjason by trade.\n'George Haodley sat-in the last legislature as a Conservative and for a\ntime was house leader of. the Conservatives. He was .elected aa a\nFarmer. candidate.\nSecond  Cabinet Woman.\nMtB.   Irene   Parlby   is   the   second\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0woman :in Canada to achieve cabinet\n\u2022distinction,   Mrs.   , .Ralph     Smith   of\ni Vancouver having preceded her by a\nfew month's.    She has  lived  in Al-\n* bertii since 18% and has been associated closely with many public\nmovements. She is a farmer's wife.\nAll of the ministers, with the exception of Messrs. Brownlee \"and Ross,\nare actively ongaged in farming or\nare associated closely with the agriculture industry. The premier himself works a section at West lock.\nPremier Greenfield and Mr. Brown-\nlee were not candidates at the recent\n-election's, ahd seats In the legislature\n\u2022will have to bo found for them.\nCONSIDER CANADIAN EDUCATION\n.pPflCERS Of ;T\u00a3A0HER^fetff RATION t '      .\n\u25a0Photo shows, left to right:' H. \"W. Huntley, vice-president, . of   Winnipeg;   Miss   Helen. Arbuthnot,   secretary-\ntreasurer, of Toronto, and Harry Charlesworth, president, of Victoria, B. C.\nProvides Duties on Goods\nOffered at Less Than United Kingdom Production\nCosts. \\\nLONDON, Aug. 12.\u2014The government's Safeguarding of Industries\nbill was passed on third .reading In\nthe houso of commons by a vote of\n17fi to 4. The .vote was taken aftur\nformer Premier Asqulth, in introducing a motion1 for its rejection, had\ndescribed it as \"a half-hearted at-;\ntempt to introduce a tariff without\ncalling in one.\"\nThe bill was certified by the speaker, since the house of lords is powerless to, amend it becauso of its\nbeing a money bill.\nThe bill is the embodiment of two\nresolutions introduced in the commons last March by Sir Robert\nHome.. chancellor of the exchequer,\nwho said at that time they w'oa'.l\nform the basis for the government's\nproposed customs legislation. One of\nthese resolutions provides for the\nlevying'of a customs dutyof331-3\nper cent ad valorem on importations\nentering the-United Kingdom on optical glasses, optical instruments, scientific glassware, porcelain instruments, magnetos, tungsten and Its\nproducts, synthetic and organic\nchemicals, except dye stuffs, colors,\ncoloring matters and fine chemicals.\nThe other resolution provides for\ncustom duties oii any' articles not\nmentioned in the; first resolution,\nwhich the board of trade, under the\nact, will have power to peclfy, on\nthe ground that the articles are being sold or offered in the United\nKingdom at prices below what they\ncan profitably be produced In Great\nBritain.\nLONDON, Aug. 12.\u2014By Canadian\nPress cable.)\u2014Figures given out this\nweek on the unemployment situation\nshow a falling pf fof 42,000 in tho\nnumber of people unemployed.\nAUSTRALIA CANS FISH.\nLONDON, . Aug. 12.\u2014(CartadHn\nPress cable.)\u2014A Reuter cable from\n\u00a7ydney, N. S. W., sitys the government has extended, its operations to\n*Ieh canning and has already placed\na. variety of fish foods on the market several hundred per cent cheaper\nthan priyate enterprise.\nP_\\CP   6lRE.CtiQR  RESI'GNG.\n,, VANCOUVER. Aug. 12.\u2014S. H. Gar-\nrfgan, who tot. the last eight months,\nfollowing the resignation of Sir\nGeorge.Bury as president, has heen\n.directing operations of the Whalen\nIHiip and rfaper company, has resigned and is leaving shortly for the\n^\u25a0'__\u201e.\u201e._-.\u201e.\u201e -,--^\nRoyal Bachelor of Arts\nCALGARY, Aug. 12,\u2014Arrested at\nfar south of Calgary, in the guise of\na farm laborer, Dr. Brumfleld, wanted\nin Roseburg, Ore., on the charge of\nhaving murdered a woman and under\nsuspicion of having been responsible\nfor tho death of a man, ls. In custody in the city police cells here\ntonight. He was placed urtfler arrest\nby Detective Inspector Richardson of\nthe city police and Detective Waugh\nof the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Brumfleld was working under\nthe name of Norman Whitney,\nFirst trace _ of his whereabouts was\nobtained by tho mounted police, in\nresponse to a wire to the city pollco\nfrom Portland, saying that an express package had heen sent from\n.Lake Louise, Alta., to.Mrs. Norman\nWliitney, Roseburg,, Ore., and the\npolice suspocted that the sender waa\nDr. Brumfleld, wanted for murder.\nThe mouptod pollco picked up the\nman's trail at Banff, and followed it\nto Calgary, thence to a farm 30\nmilCB south of here, whore Brum-\nfield hnd taken a job as a farm\nlaborer. Ho wns arrested at noon\ntoday just as ho returned from the\nfiold where he had boen plowing all\nmorning. When accosted as Dr.\nBrumfleld he turned whito, .then\nwithout a word allowed the handcuffs to bo placed on him. \"I have\nno statement to make,\" he said then\nto -Tho officer.\nAdmits   Identity.\nLater, in the police cells, Whitney\nadmittedto \"his real name of Dr.\nBrumfiold, A letter was found in\nhis possession ovldently written by\nhimself ond which he Intended to\nmall, which told of a ride he took\nnoar Roseburg, with another man in\na car. The car was wrecked and\nthe othor man killed. \\ Then Brumfleld changod clothoa with him and\nsays that tho wreck caught fire.,\nBvumfield then made his escape ont\nof the country. He will be taken\nback south us soon as officers arrive.\nIdentifies Wrong Body.\nPORTLAND, Ore.., Aug. .12.\u2014On tlio\nmorning of July 14, thc wrecked and\npartially burned automobile of Dr.\nR. M. Brumfleld, a Roseburg (Ore.)\ndentist, was found a short distance\nfrom Roseburg, where the ear apparently had crashed down an embank\nment. Beneath the automobile WSh\na mutilated and burned body, which\na coroner's jury later identified as\nthat of Dennis Russel, a laborer,\nwhom Dr. Brumfield was alleged to\nhaye engaged to' blow out .stumps.\nThe head was missing, having been\nblown from the body by dynamite\nwhich the doctor was known to have\npurchased for blasting stumps. Dr.\nBrumfield's wife positively Identified\ntho body as that of her- husband,\nbut Sheriff W. Starmer stuck to the\ntheory that Russel was the victim\nand has since, maintained an' active\nsearch for Brumfleld.\nWife   Refuser,  to   Believe.\nROSEBURG, Ore.. Aug. 12.\u2014\"I do\nnot believe it is. true,\" said Mrs, R.\nM. Brumfield this afternpon when\ntold her husband, Dr. R. M. Brumfield, wanted on a charge of murdering Dennis Russel, had been reported captured in Calgary. \u2022 Then\nin  a  bewildered   voice she added:\n\"I have never ceased to believe, him\ninnocent of the charge and I will\nnever believe him, guilty until ho\ntells me so with his own'Ups. Then\nI will  say ho Is insaive.\n\"I will say, however, that \u2022 your\nmessage' seems to  be authentic.\"\nSUPREME COUNCIL REFERS UPPER\n:S1AN PROBLEMS FOR L\nOF NATIONS TO\nINTEREST INCREASES\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12.\u2014Moro than 41)0\nentries have heen received for the\nannual shoot of the Dosrtinlon Rlfjo\nassociation, whieh opens at the Connaught ranges on Monday and will\ncontinue for five days. I^ast year's\nentries totalled only about 275, so\nthat gradually there is a renewed\ninterest in rifle shooting making itself  felt. \u2022    \u25a0\nThis year's competitions are tha\nfirst to be held\" on the hew ranges\nand considerably better facilities aro\nnow available for the consestants\nthan In any previous shoot.\nGrand Forks Liberal Member Disgusted With Apathy\nOn Irrigation.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 12.\u2014E. C. Hennlger, Liberal member 'for Grand\nForks, may resign, or at least cease\nto* support the Oliver government\nbecause he is opposed to the treatment received by his constituency\nat the hands of the administration,\nhe Intimates this morning, following a conference with Premier Oliver.\n\"The people of my constituency\nundoubtedly will demand my resignation on account of the government's decision not to go ahead with\nthe. Grand Forks irrigation project\nthis summer,\". Mr. Hennlger said\nafter he had interviewed iMr. Oliver.    Asked if he would tender his\nAvoid Appearance of Arbitration by Inviting League's\nRecommendation; British,and French Premiers Pledged\nto Accept Advice of League of Nations \/Vmany and\nPoland Admonished to Remain Quiet ^ :_\\ing Settlement; Effect Is to Delay Settlement Sr *;' 4_ Months.\nPjVRIS, Aug. 12.\u2014The disposition of hardly    maAf\nunder three\/'\nAdnr   '\nthe rich regions of Upper ^llesla,\nWhich has disturbed the peace of mind\nof Europe since the signing of the\ntreaty of Versailles, is postponed for\nseveral months by the action of the\n;inter-allled supreme council today\nIn requesting the council of the league\nof nations, to study the subject and\nadvise on the fjjting of a line sep*\naratlng   Germany   and  Poland.\nThe text of the resolution asking\nthe council of the league to aid in\nsettling thc question, was drawn so\nas to avoid the appearance of ari-\nbitration which is not provided for\nin the treaty .of Versailles. The resolution, follows:\nRefers Question to League.\n\"The supreme council before rendering its decision upon the Upper Silesian frontier between Germany and\nPoland, conformably with Article 88\nof the treaty of Versailles, decides,\npursuant to Article II, Paragraph -2,\nof the covenant^ of the league of nations, to submit to the council of the\nleague the difficulties attending the\nfixing of the frontier and to invite\nthe recommendation of the council\nas to the lino that the principal allied\nand associated powers should lay\ndown.       . -\n\"The council of the league of nations ls requested to regard the matter as one of great urgency, in view\nof the situation in Upper Silesia.\"   \u25a0\nThe resolution was drawn so *that\nthe council of tho league may not\ndecide the question at Issue between\nLloyd George and M. - Briand, respectively, tho British and French\npremiers, who pledged themselves\nin the supremo council meeting today to accept the advice of the league\nof   nations.\nj?    recommendation\n\u00a3t months.\nIri anotf ,Jf Resolution, Oermany\nand PoWi1 fi admonishedrbyi the\nsupreme\/iffcr jU to remain quiet\nperilling l\/^c ,\/tIement of the ifisue.\nThe decision-means,. In , effect,, that\nthe governments of Great Britain,\nFrance, Italy and Japan, being .un-\nable to agree as to the boundary\nnow submitted to the council <xt the\nleague of nations which consists of\nrepresentatives of the four countries\nin addition to representatives;of Brazil, Belgium, China and Spaing the\neight members of the league'.; council, are requested to report -back\ntheir findings to the four members\nof the supreme council for '.'final\njudgment.\nFriends of the league of. nations\nexpressed delight tonight over., the\nreference of what is deemed the. most\ndifficult and dangerous question in\nEuropean politics to the league Of nations a fortnight before the assembly of the league ih Geneva, .^Ji-d at\nthe three principal powers of Europe\nthus recognizing the high authority\nof the league. Others with less 'con- '\nfklence In the league doubt thc probability of tho council of the league\nbeing able to agree upon a boundary\nline any more than the prime ministers.\nThe last session of the supreme\ncouncil will be held tomorrow morning. It is expected to last orily a\nfew hours. Lord Curzon, with the\nremainder of the British delegation\nwill   leave  Paris  shortly  after  noon.\nThe inter-allied military commission which is sitting at. Versailles\nunder the chairmanship of Marshal\nFoch, reported today to the supreme\ncouncil   that   much   still   remains   to\nresignation   if   he   were   pressed   to  __, ,, ,    ,   ,   .\ndo so by his constituents, Mr. Hen-  \u00b0f  \u2122U?\"%'. Xt %a\"  \"W^,,*\u00bb*\u00ab*-  ho done as regards the disarmament\nninger   replied   that   \"that   will   de-  \u2122\"y   m     le-  f'Preme   council   that \u25a0 of Germany,   and   that  control.inuw*\npend   upon   how  strong  pressure   is,the'   C0Uncl1    ot    the    leasut!    eouI(t < -be   continued.\nbrought to bear\"\n\"The government,\" he added, \"has\nlost the Grand Forks seat already.\nIt could not elect a member there\nat  another   election   now.\"\nFLASHES BY WIRE.\nROSEBURG, Ore, Aug. 12.\u2014Officers \u2022 here who have worked on\nthe Brumfield- Russel case were at\na loss toiiight to explain why Dr.\nBrumfield was so anxious to recover\na package which he had expressed\nfrom Myrtle Creek, Ore., on the day\npreceding Russet's murder, to Seattle, addressed to \"Mrs. Norman\nWhitney\" that he would hazard discovery to obtain it. The package,\nwhich was returned to offices here\nby. the express company some, time\nago, contained only a few articles\no;\u00a3 women's wearing apparel and\nsome  scraps  of  cloth   material.\nAnother action of Brumfield's\nwhich came to light today and for\nwhich no plausible explanation could\nbei advanced by the officers was a\nbottle messago signed by Brumfield\nand telling of his flight up to July\n16, which was picked up in the\nriver, near Portland and returned to\nthe officers here. The handwriting\nwas positively identified by Brumfield's banker here I as that of the\nmissing dentist.\nBallnntyne  Denies   Report\nOTTAWA,   Aug,   12.-^Hon.   C.   C.\n\"I may not bo down to the fall ' Ballantyne, minister of marine and\nsession at all,\" Mr. Hennlger re- fisheries, on his- return to Ottawa\nmarked significantly, and later he today, denied there was any foun-\nadded: \"Anyway, they can move dation for the rumor that he was\nmy desk over from the govern- to succeed Sir George Periey as Can-\nment to. tho opposition side of tho adian high commissioner in London,\nhouse,        '-, I \u2014\t\n\"I am certainly not going on the!       Cold  Blooded Bank  Robbers\nP. O. E. excursion,\" the Grand Forks!     MONTREAL,    Aug.    12.\u2014With    a\nmember  declared. \u2022 \\ policeman   across   the .street   and   a\n\"It is the P. O..E. which is eat- ! doztm P\u00b0\u00b0Ple Passi\"S, two young\ning up the revenue of' the province men Willktitl *\u00bbto the branch of the\narid while benefitting only a few Moltsonfl bar>k, Mount Royal avenue\npeople up north, is keeping the rest ca3t and Bo^\u2122'X street, this after-\nof British Columbia from getting mion aml with revolvers in hand\nwhat it needs. It was a mistake lu',(l u*} tho two clerks in charge ut\nin the first place and is just being .fhe time and walked off with $1500\nperpetuated.\" . \\in ,blli3,\n ____mk  A crowd  of  people  gathered,  and\na policeman was seen across the\nI street, but the two bandits calmly\nI got into a waiting automobile. In\nI their hurry, however, one of them\ndropped a parcel containing about\n$400. No trace of them has been\nfound.\nCivic Authorities and Great\nWar Veterans Present Address of Welcome.\nEDUCATE ALIENS\nAS NEW CANADIANS\nCOry\"ICHT_HIVl-OH't V1IW.CO\n,   CROWN   PRINCE   OLAF\nOf Norway. A, new , photograph of\nthe young prince, who has just passed his eighteenth birthday. The\nprince has just obtained the degree of\nBachelor of Arts at the university\nv:)iicjt he iu attending.\nTORONTO, Aug.. 12.\u2014Dr. Thorn\nton, minister of education for Man\nitoba, addressing the Imperial\nTeachers' conference today on tho\nschool   and,  tbe  nation,   stated;\n\"The biggest problem which faces\nCanadian education today is the\nbuiiding up of human strength, human intelligence and-, human character\/'\nDr. Thornton told of one teacher's\nwork in a foreign district. In 15\nmonths his pupilp could read Tng-\nlish and gave proof of their iloyalty\nand love for Canada in a school\nyelr. . '\n\"These are not 'foreigners; don't\ncall them that,\" said Dr. Thornton,\n\"they are inew Canadians, unitod' to\ntheir birthright, and we want them\nto be considered as such from the\nfirst.\"\nIn accordance with a resolution\nadopted by tho \u25a0 convention? today,\nthe provinces'* of the Dominion will\nbe asked for financial assistance\nfor the work\" of the league of, empire.\nThanks were extended, to the\nRhodes trustees for 'tlieir financial\nassistance. The, conference agreed\nthat teachers making exchanges for\na limited period should be., given\ncredit at home . in .-the calculation\nof their salaries for tho period in\nquestion. .These periods of. exchange\nshould alsp, in J their opinion, be\ncounted in reckoning pensions. Mutual   recognition   of   certificates   by\nHas Informal Conversations\n'With Irish Leaders; Nothing Definite Known.\nLONDON, Aug. .12.\u2014Premier Lloyd\nGeorge .returned to London from\nParis tonight. He was met by Sir\nHamar Greenwood, \/chief secretary\nfor Ireland, and others,, with whom\nhe had informal conversations^ What\nwas discussed -is. not known, but\nthere'is little doubt that Eamonn de\nValera's reply to * the government's\npeace proposals was brought into ''.he\ndiscussion.\nPreviously, Viscount Fitzalan, tho\nlord lieutenant and governor general\nof Ireland, and General Sir Neville\nMacready, military .commander in\nIreland, hnd a conference with Austen Chamberlain. It is generally\nsupposed that the viceroy and General Macready will remain in Eon-\ndon for a, time so as to be available\nshould the ; prime minister need to\nconsult with them on the new status\nof the-Irish peace, negotiations..\nSTEAMERARR1VALS.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12.\u2014Residents of\nthe capital accorded Lord Byng of\nVimy a warm welcome when he arrived with Lady Byng and suite at\n2:15 this afternoon.\nAt the station Lord Byng was\ngreeted by the prime minister and\nother members of tho cabinet. At\nParliament Hill tho reception was in\nthe hands of civic authorities and\naddresses were presented by Mayor\nPlant and R.-B. Maxwell, Dominion\npresident of the G, W. V. A.\nUpward of 20,000 covered the\nlawns in front of the parliament\nbuildings, while on a platform erected on the steps leading to the buildings were government representatives, civic officials, officers in army,\nnavy and air force uniforms and\nmany ladies, including Mrs. Meighon,\nwife of the premier of Canada, Lady\nLaurier and a number, of wives of\ncabinet ministers.\nInspects Veterans.\nThe guard* of honor was composed\nof men from tho governor general's\nFoot Guards, while the 38th battalion wero drawn up along the side\nof the walk leading to the buildings,\nand more than 10o veterans, with\ntwo bands, were behind tho 3^th\nbattalion, and these were inspected\nby Lord Byng. Boy Scouts and Girl\nGuides were Inspected by their excellencies.\n' The main streets were gay. with\nflags and bunting. The state carriage was escorted by a mounted\ndetachment of the Royal Canadian\nMounted Police, with pennants flying, and the arrival of the vice regal\ntrain was the signal for a salute of\n10 guns, fired hy the mattery of 18-\npounders stationed on Nepean point.\nFollowing the reception on Parliament Hill their excellencies drive\nto  Rideau   Hall,   their   official   'esl-\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 12.\u2014Prenatal\ninfluences will be discussed in public\nfor tho first time in this part of\nthe world, when John Osborn^ Po-\nlak, M.D., of Brooklyn, N. Y., will\nlecture in Vancouver on August\n22, on that subject. Dr. Pollak will\nbe a delegate to tho clinical conJ\ngress of . the American College of\nSurgeons, of which the secretary\ngeneral, Dr. Franklin H. Martin, of\nChicago, also will address the public\nmeeting  hero.\nBEGGING PAYS.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 12.\u2014Thete aie\nmany poorer occupations than begging, in the opinion of the policeman who yesterday arrested Mrs,\nMaria Elopoulou.j aged 64, on a\ncharge of begging without a license.\nWhen she was searched by a police\nmatron a bag containing $1834 was\nfound tied about her waist. Mrs.\nElopoulou had touched hearts nnd\njiocketbooks of Brookiynites for Several days, sitting crouched in a subway entrance.\nWHALE  ON   -SULLS\u00a3Y\u00a3S,\n' WAKEFIELD, . Mass., Aug. 12. -\nSergeant W. Jones ,of the marine\ncm-pa established what was claimed\nas a new World's record when he\nscored 1__ consecutive bullseyea 'in a\nliOO-yard slow fire iiKUeh in a service tournament lure Luduy. a regulation army rifle wus  used.\nTHE WEATHER.\nAdriatic,   at Southampton . from\nthe     various     dominions     and   the New  York.\nmother   country  was   accepted .as  a1    Mongolia, .at Hamburg from New   flence,   through . streets   which   were\nprinoiple   tp   be   adopted* '   yorks ^  \u25a0 line^  by  cheeking crowds, \u25a0\nBOOALUSA, , La., Aug. 12.\u2014Billy\nand Jack Adams, twins of ,Mr. and\nMrs. William Adams, aro believed\nby local doctors to be the smallest\nfolk, extant. Billy weighed eleven\nouriicos at birth and Jack seventeen.\nMrs. Adams' six other children are\nnf normal size. Tne midgets appear\nto   be   tn   perfect  health.\nProsecution Loses Charge\nAgainst Ex-Overseas Mechanics Club of Victoria.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 12.\u2014John Gam-\nmlo, steward of the Ex-Overseas Mechanics' club was acquitted on . a\ncharge of Illegally selling, liquor and\ntho prosecution withdrew a charge\nagainst tho club itself of having liquor\nfor sale In the police court today.\n\u2022 Detectives failed to prove that the\nliquor which they saw Gammie dispensing was alcoholic within the\nmeaning of the Moderation act. This\nis the first club case which the dry\nsquad has .Inst in tho local courts\nsince the act came into force.\nQUEBEC, Aug. 12.\u2014The sixty-\nsixth annual convention of the International Typographical union was\nformally dosed here this afternoon. The session was devoted entirely to routine business.\nVICTORIA. Aug. 12.\u2014Forests:\nVictoria and vicinity\u2014Fresh to strong\nwesterly winds, fine and cooler.\nLower mainland\u2014Continued iflne\nand   warm.\nNelson     and     vicinity\u2014Fine     and\nvarm.\nMhv\nita*.\nNelson   \t\n 44\n90\nVictoria\t\n 50\n70\nVancouver    \t\n 54\n80\nKamloops   \t\n 56\n, \u25a0\u00ab\u00bb\nPrince -Rupert   ...\n 60\n(18\nAtlln    \t\n 44\n8\u00ab\nDawaon    \t\n.......48\nM\nCalgary   \t\n 48\niff\n\"Winnipeg    \t\n.......48\n7*\n40\nfi4\n.M\nGrand Forks   \t\n.......51\nKasio   \t\n.....\".44\n* \u00abl\nCranbrook   \t\n ..45\n43\n---_\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1921.\nLeading Hotels of theWest\nWhtra  th*  Truvoiling   Publlo   May   Obtain   Superior   Accomtd.tltH\nTable  d'Hote\nA  la   Carte\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER,  $1.00\nService Unexcelled.\nINCOMPARABLY   THE   FINEST  TEA   ROOM   IN   B.   C.\nOpen Daily 10 a. m. to Midnight. Music and Dancing\nThe  Latest  Sundaes,   Ice  Cold   Drinks  and   Ices\nAfternoon Tea  (2 p. m. to 5 p. m.) 25c\nHeadquarters for  All  Traveling   Men,   Mining   Men   and  Tourists\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nROOMS, $1.00 UP\nRETURNED SOLDIERS P1SPECTI\n:E\n(Wm. Thomlinson' New Denver, B. C.)\nAccording to iho minister of mine.\"\nreport for 1920, past, isst, twerity-'fiv,\nreturned  soldiers'  prospecting parti.'\nBDME-H, W. Stevens and wife,\nCascade: Q, S. Horn, Ttbnson.. Miss\nKlsing, Victoria; W. Melnardes, San.\ndon; Mis.s A. S. Price, Winnipeff; Mvn.\nE. V. Morel, Ited Deer; Mrs. M. lleau\nand son, ftpokane. H. Beer, Kaslo; (J,\nCJlasgow, Mrs. Glasgow, Uhatliaih, Ont.;\nOeo.   Plnkney,   Montl'eal;   K.   A.   Tom.\nkins,    Ottawa;    S.    A.    Toniltlns,    Oak\nPark.   Ill;  .1.   p..  Mel sail   Rossland;\nM.   a.  ],*.   Mac-ionnon, Trail;   Mr.  and\nMrs.   Paul   Melt    Miss  Stortnn,   10.   V.\nButler. Waneta; Edgar IV, l.owe, Spokane; C, s. Cowan.' Victoria; .1. D.\nCmlK. Ottawa; James II- Van Myrum,\nWashington, II. C; .1. A. Price, Lethbridge.\nWELL LIGHTED SAMPLE ROOMS\nAMERICAN  PLAN\nHotel Strathcona\nNelson's Leading Hotel\nU_A   HOME   FOR   THOSE   AWAY   FROM   HOME.\n4\u00a3 SPECIAL ATTENTION TO TRAVELING PUBLIC.\nSPECIAL  SUNDAY   DINNER,  $1.00\nH. W. SHORE\nProprietor\nFRECKLE-FACE\nSun and. Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots.\nHow to  Remove  Easily.\nHere's a chance, Miss Freckle-face,\nto try a remedy for freckles with the\nguarantee of a reliable concern that\nIt will not eost you a penny unless It\nremoves the freckles; while if It due.'**\ngive you a clear complexion the expense is trifling.\nSl\/nply get 'an ounce of Othine\u2014\ndouble strength\u2014from any druggist\nand a few applications should . show\nyou luiw easy It Is to rid yourself of\nthe homely freckles and get a, beautiful complexion. 'Rarely Ms more than\none ounce needed for the worst case.\n13e sure to ask the druggist for\nthe double strength Othine as this\nstrength is sold under guarantee of\nmoney back IT it fails (0 remove\nfreckles.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean   and   American   Plan\nSteam   Heat in   Every   Room\nA, LAPOINTE, Proprlotar\nQUEENS\u2014--Eugene Houle, Spokane;\nEd J, < J runt, i_. K. Grunt, Margaret\nGrant, Slocan; P. Mills. Hulrao; Mr.\nand Mrs. 10, Howard and children, Fort\nSteele; Mr. and Mrs, l_d. Johnstone\nand son, Hartford, Wash.; A E, Green,\nA. Robertson, Vancouver; Hector L6-\nzoan, Birehbank; Jos. Begen, T. Paris,\nBeiydey;   H.   Hannah,   Cranhrook,\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616,  VERNON    ST.    EAST\nComfortablo Rooms,  Hot and Cold\nWater*.   Dining   Room   in\nConnection\nRatea  $1   and   up.\nHoliday Resorts\nBelow the announcements of reports In Kwji.may-Boundary whore\nenjoyable vacations may be spent.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nMRS.    MADDEN,    Prop.\nFirst    Class    Rooms    by   the    Day,\nWeek  or   Month.\nEvery   Consideration   Shown  ta\nGuests.\nCor.   Baker  and Ward   Sts.,   Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014J. Beaumont arid wife;\nG. Furnpr und wife,\" LeUibridge;\nAdam Scala; G. Cose, Harrop; D.\nDolan. Vancouver; s. M. Kay, Trail;\nJohn Gordon, Silverton; It. G McLeod,\nVivian McLeod, Wallace -A1i-r.euil, Le-\nmdnbrak; Mrs. J. Kdwards, Miss G.\nEdwards, Klldonon; F. Kust, Erlck-\nson.\nH.   W,  SHORE,  Prop.\nH. E. SCANLAN,  Mgr.\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW   LAKES,   B.   C.\nUnder   entirely   new   management\nRenowned throughout the west\nfor the water'sPwonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urlnlc Conditions,  Metallic   Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nIn a most beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools.\nAmerican    plan,    J3.G0    and    up\nper   day.   ^24   pcr   week.\nFor rates apply Strathcona Hotel,\nNelson,  or  Halcyon  Hotel\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\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF\u201e NILSbN, Proprietor.\nBAKER   STREET\n(furnished   Rooms   by   Day,   Weak\nor Month.\nTREMONT\u2014Fete Janson, Harrop.\nPaul Nystrom, Tom Morison, Castlegar; Cusley Johnson. Orustdn; T.\nYoung. Wat tSburg; Joe . Gillman,\nKIrchbank; Henry Humphrey, Nine-\nMile.\ni THE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nI        Mra.   Mallette,   Proprietress\n, A heme for the world at reasonable\nrates.\nOpon    night   and   day.    First-\nclass dining-room. Comfortable\nrooms.\n316 Vernon 8t*      Near Post Office\nKOOTENAY\u2014Bill Erickson, .Boater\nSiding; G. Foss', Spoltane; Q. Beekman,\nGrariIte;Ntck Lawrow. Tall; Jess Gro-\nVer. Rossland; C. B. Brondy, Deer\nPark.\nTourists, Summer Campers and Picnickers\nCome see and enjoy the beauties of the famous Wild Horse\nplacer fields. Good motor road\nto the gold bearing grounds.\nFree camping grounds at .Port\nSteele -town.\nSee  Wild  Horse  First\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   Grandvtlle   Street\nCosy,   bright   rooms.   Just   the\nplace    for   your   vacation.   Ratea\nmoderate.   Write   for   particulars,\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate of  Royal   Hotel,  Granville  St.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned and, run  hy  Canadians,  No\nalien labor employed.\nRoom and board, per month....$45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\nStirling Hotel\n711 Vernon St. Two blocks and\na half ' east of tbe post office.\nNewly opened. Light and cheerful\nrooms with hot and cold water,\nsteam heat. Also 2 and 3 room\nhousekeeping apartments.\nF. H. BUSH, Prop,\nJHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   Street,   Nelaon,   B.   C,\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n12   to   2:30,   Special    Lunch,   40o\nPhone 154\nKootenay Falls Hotel\nSouth Slocan, O. C.\nClose  lo famous Fishing  Pool arid\nBonnington   Falls,     Afternoon   refreshments for auto' pin-lies served\non   cool   verandah,\n-Strawberries  and   Cream\nStraight  line  coats witli  side soft\nness,  wide bottoms and  large sleeves\nare   forecasted   as   the   thing   of   thi\ncoming scasun.\nHotel Menus\nWe print Hotel Mtraua, elt-et\nwit- cnmplote menu, or with\nthe different headings and blank\n\u2022pace, for trplnc ln tha hill af\ntaw.\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\n. Tha Homa of Good Printing\nNalaan, \u25a0\u2022 ft\nwere sent'out to various parts of the\nprovince   duriri-sf   the   season.\nEach party consisted <>f two men,\none man selected on, account of pre>-\nvimis experience us ;i prospector,\nund one (jr,Q\u00bbh man as a helper and\npupil..   '\u25a0.:-.\nTo mineral survey district No. fi,\nthe lower coast and Vancouver Islif\u00bb*1\npart df the province, was allotted 15\nparties, and the rest of ihe province\nfurnished   file   other   10  parties.\nTho part leg when made up were\nallowed lo' choose tlielr own fields\nfur prospecling, and were dlstrlbuietj\nto various p&hits'-in (hu province.\nReports by various engineers and\ngovernment agents give particulars\nregarding . the work of H of these\nparties, hut particulars as to \u25a0 the\nwork of,tbe other ll parties are not\ngivifli In lb\" minl-er ol' mines' report.\nWhat   the    Engineers    Report.\nTh\" rosideni engineer of dlstric.l\nNo. I sinks} \"The work was fairly\nstk-ci-ssfiiUnnd abom 50 per cent of\nlbe nun took a real Interest in the\nwoi-l<.'*\nOf the Nve parties which prospected in disii-ii't No. 2, Hi\" resident engineer   reports:*   \"One   party   in   the\nNothing Else is Aspirin\nWarning! Unless you see the name \"Bayer\" on tablets,\nyou are not getting Aspirin at, all.\nAccept only an \"unbroken package\" of \"Bayer Tablets of\nAspirin,\" which contains directions and dose worked out by\nphysicians during 21 years and proved safe by millions for\nHeadache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism,\nNeuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally.   Made in Canada.\nHandy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a lew coats\u2014Large, package*.\nArplrln Ib thn trade mark (rcgistorefl In c-mimln) of Tiavfr'Miinur.'icm\u2122 ft Mono\naci'tloacltlPKlpr of Snlicylicftcid; Willie ll la wi'll Itnoivn that ABPIrln in._ns naye\nmaniifaruirc, lo aaalat llio public nrnlnf1! Imhalloua. tho Talilata of Bayrv Complin:\nwill be ulriiniii-,1  wlUi llielr KPneral Irn.le mark, tlio \"Bayer Cross.\"\nlayer\nipany\nBe Forehanded\nwith a\nPipe or One-Register\n(PIPELESS)\nThe best time of the year to instal a furnace is when it is not needed to work.\n\u25a0 Don't leave the installation of your new\nfurnace till the cold weather is cn you.\nEvery furnace man is busy when the first\ncold snap comes, and sometimes delays\nwith discomfort and annoyance are entailed.\nYou can be forehanded by seeing the\nMcClary's dealer right away. Have him\nlook over your house. He will tell you\n\u25a0whether a Sunshine, Pipe or One-Register\n(pipeless) will be suitable for your house\u2014\nhe will know the size required and the proper location in which to place it.\nThat service costs you nothing. It is part\nof the McClary's system of making and selling Sunshine Furnaces. By that system\nMcClary's guarantee every Sunshine Furnace, which they instal to warm your house\n\u2014every room\u2014satisfactorily.\nWrite for booklet, or call on the nearest\nMcClary's dealer.\nMcCIary's\nLondon* Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver,\nSt. John, N.B\u201e Hamilton, Calgary,\nSaskatoon, Edmonton..\nMcClary's\u2014Makers oi those \"good stoves and\ncooking utensils\".\nPeace river mining division reported\nfinding some promising coal fleama;\nbut no great sucess rewarded any o(\nthe other  parties.\"\nThree parties prospected In the\nRevelstoke and Golden mining divisions, and slaked seven claims during the season; but no particulars us\nto the nature or prospective value of\nsueh   claims are given.\nTwo parties operated in the I_.il-\nIooet ruining division, and the government agent states that \"no particularly interesting discoveries were\nreported, although some claims wore\nstaked.\"\nFour parties working at various\npoints In district No. IJ located four\nclalrris; but no Information as to the\nkind of ore found or the prospective\nvalues of the claims located is given\nin the report,\nHowever, the resilient engineer of\ndistrict No. C states \"that' results as\nto locating claims may be considered\nfairly satist'aciory, while much valuable information was brought1 bad;\nby tin- respective parlies as to the\nfields where they bad booh prosp.c-i-\nhig.\"\n1'Yom ihe particulars given in the\nreport, the results from the grubstaking of the 25 parties, fiO men,\nappears to be somewhat disappointing; but, still, there nto certain indirect benefits from tbe work which\nshould l.e Considered.\nThe 2.r, inexperienced men who\nwere sent out with the selected prospectors must, have aeipilred a certain amount of elementary knowledge of minerals and of prospecting\nmethods, aii'd this training may have\nresults at some future time.\n' Il would, however, be Interesting\nand instructive to have a loll detailed report covering1 ail items as\nto. costs-, llelds ul' operations, iiiiiii-\nh_v ol' claims staked, nature <<( ores\nfounds prospective value of claims\nstaked, and a short report from qwsU\nparty to lhe tic-Ids In which they\nbad done exploration wurk, Much a\nreport would have considerable value\nfor reference and other purposes.\nTransporlal ion and other, expenses\nfor tli.' _\\\", parties mi.st have heen\nnot 1'ess than $,SCmi() or $lu,t)t)(i; jjj-O.)\nably much-more; aiid, generally, ihe\nplan appears to have been a somewhat disappointing and costly experiment.\nSuggests   Instructional   Classes;\nAs a means of obtaining a corps of\n(rained purspeetors, a more effective\nand loss costly plan would be to follow the methods used in the province\nof Ontario, and in many of the mining state of the south, by forming\nInstrucllonal classes during tho winter moot lis in tho various mining\ncenters of the 'province;\nThese classes should be held for a\nperiod of al lea.HI two months, say\nfrom January Hi to March 10, and*,\nwhere practicable, each class should\nhave Its own instructor (not necessarily a mining engineer), and shomd\nalso have the use of a set of mineral\nspecimens covering all of the principal economic Ores and subsianecs;\nalso. a. set of specimens of tbe -jom-\nmoner rocks, especially the igneous\nrocks ouch as granite, syenite, diorite,\nandesile, diabase, basalt, gabbro, py-\nrnxenile  and   peridotite.\nClasses should be formed at pla 'os\nsuch as Cranbrook; Nelson, 'Trail,\nGreenwood, Prlhcetoii, Kamloops,\nVancouver, Victoria, Prince Rupert,\nStewart and ,Ha:.eJton. Tbe expenses\nconnected with, say, a dozen of sueh\nclasses should nol exceed about\nfOOQO per season and It would be\nmoney well spent; for in a. 13\\v\nseasons\" the province would have a\nreal knowledge or all ordinary ,:*.'o-\nnomlc  ores' and  substances.\nThe province will never get a\ncorps, of trained men by relying on\ncasual     lectures     and        instruction--.!\nClearing Away The\nSummer Goods\nOur prices today on all lines of hot weather needs are\nfixed to move out the goods.\"   .\nDRESSES,   SUITS.   SKIRTS,\nBLOUSES,     MIDDIES,   \u25a0 UNDERWEAR,   HOSIERY,   MILLINERY, ETC.\nOur Small Wares and Notions Departments are always well stocked in good variety of' thoso little things\nyou always need.\nSmillie & Weir\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nsection, and Jack Tiern'ey is in\ncharge of one end of it, and camps\nare scattered all along it. Mr. Ticr-\nnoy   expects   to   be   through   with   ll\n\"Tl\nnber,\"   continued  -tlie    vet- '\naniercial   man, !\nhighway starts \u25a0 to ell u'\u00bb\nir Christian lake, ond goes -rp j\n\u25a0r Ihe rrioitmn'ri. When the rintl I\nalining link of the road Is built |\nly next year, ' tlie tourists will I\niainly   got   their  money's  worth.\" i\nMil BOARD SUITES\nENERAL POLICY\nWill Assist Development of\nFlying, But Will Not Subsidize Service.\nDARK      '\nBROWN CALF\nGOODYEAR\nWELT SHOES\nJll_t     tll3     fihOO\nfor tho smart,\ndrossy boy. In\nn rocetliiit)  too.\nSizes 2  lf_   !>',;.\nSpecial   \t\n$6.50\nC. Romano\nHll.ll'\nIji\nll.\n.'Ill\nlarge dint\nr'icts  to attend   to  iu  a  pro\nt'ess.'onai\nway,    and    they    have    n.l\nline*   I'lin\nigli   to   do   really   effective\nwork   |Yjr\nthe Inatriictton of men  ,vlm\nWOjlId    hi*\n\u25a0min-   prospectors.\nNot  All\nEngineers   Good   Lecturers.\nl''e\\v,   if\nany,  of  the  engineers  like\nthe work,\nand some are not naturally\nUitali^ed\nto   teac!h   ordinary    miners\nand   pros\njectors, as  ihey  arc  so  apt\nto lorfcel\nthat terms such as igneous,\nmetamor]\ncast:iterit.\nand   hu   on,    are    literally\ntircek    ai\nd    Latin    lo   the    plain    but\nhusky nn\nn  who desire an  elementary\nliiiowledtl\n*   of   rocks   and   minerals   to\naid them\nin  their strenuous  bm   rude\nmethods\no,f   t'iiid.n;:   nature's   tivn.s-\nThe. |ect.lires delivered by some of\nthe res deni engineers ara certainly\nInstructive; and are fully appreciated liy the miner.., prospeetbrs 'ind\nthe general public; but, one or 'wo\nlectures per year, at any given point,\nand covering such large subjects as\neconomic geology or economic mineralogy, are not going fo \/ba of much\nservice to the men who desire to get\na <piiek and fairly full knowledge\nof subjects which will enable them\nto follow ibe wbrkofactive prospect,\ning.\nnow,\none   of    tbe   mala\nprovince;   yet   it   i\nI always will ho,\ndustrles of this\nboost impossible\nto get. thc farmers, lumbermen, fish\ncanners and lawyers who handle our\npublic affairs to realize that this\ngreat industry, which last ye\\ir produced over ?'8G,b00,dOb of new Wealth,\ndeserves and requires ample funds\nand a broad, progrcsive policy to insure its further\" development, and the\nwelfare of the various c'assea nf Citizens engaged in  the  industry.\nII SCENIC SECTIfl\nTrans-Provincial Highway in\nBoundary Gives Striking\nViews, Says Carruthers.\n\"When the 15-milfc section of\nthe tnms-provincial highway at Cns-\ncado Is completed, the touring public\nwin be charmed with the views\nto be obtained from this natural\nscenic route,\" declared J. C. Car--\nruthera last night, while taking the\nair from fhe bench in front of the\nDugout. Capt. Carruthers has just\narrived   frOm   the   BoundaTy.\n\"Wf   \u00a3_   Tlerney   is   building   this\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress)\u2014Steps proposed by the gov--\nernment of. Canada for encouragement <\/.' the developments of aviation in the Dominion, arc outlined in\na report oh development issued by\nthe secretary of the air board, the\nbody of which has control, of aircraft flying in all parts of the dominion.\n'The view of the Canadian government,\" says the report, \"lias been\nthat commercial aviation, can for\nthe present be be'st encouraged anil\ndeveloped by ndmlnistativo assist-\nie and the provision and im-\npruvemeui, where necessary... of\nground equipment, not, however, lading terminal air harbors serving urban centers. , There is a probi\nihiiity that, as time goes ou, so\nnaiiy of these may bo required that\nfor the government to undertake\ndie provision of some of them would\nliave the effect of stifling local effort and thus hinder* rather than\nIvance general development.\"\nThe policy of the government,\nthrough thc air board, for the development of civil flying, is set forth\nas   follows:\n(1) Tho regulation of civil flying, the inspection and registration of machines, , certification of\npersonnel, and the inspection and\nlicensing of air harbors, on the\nprinciples laid down by the convention 'for International Air Navigation.\n(2) The establishment of a technical branch under tho air board,\nthe services of which are freely\nplaced at the disposal of promoters\nof   air   undertakings.\nt'.'.) The survey of air routes\nand the provision on recognized air\nroutes of emergency landing grounds,\nwhere necessary, between urban centers along any route.\n(I) The establishment of an operations branch Which confines itself\nto the carrying out of such flying\noperations with ' hea.vier-than-a*ir\nmachines as are required for the\nvarious 'departments of government\nin re'ation to forests; fisheries, surveys, customs, eic, anl to scientific\nexperimental   work.\n(fi) The. loan (.'' airships and\nliglUer-lhnn-air equipment to commercial companies.\n. The Canadian government, the\nstatement, points out, has not undertaken to subsidize directly any commercial air service. The view taken\nhas been that such Services were not.\nat present Ikely to he profitable in\nCanada if operated independently of\nthe existing railway and steamboat\ncompanies, Tiie railway and steamboat connections between large centers in Canada are efficient and an\n-air competition, if it involved the\nmaintenance   of   expensive   ad minis-\nRELIEF FROM k\nPAINING FEET\nNew   treatment    keeps   feet    in\n\u25a0 perfect  condition\n. People all over tha country are\nfinding an easy aud effective way\nto   end   foot   troubles.\nBlue-jay Foot Treatment is composed of three essential articles for\nkeeping the feet in prime condition:\nBlue-jay Foot Soap, Blue-jay Foot\nRelief (a massage) and Blue-Jay\nFoot Powder.\nAll who suffer from the nervous\nstrain and constant irritation *of\naching tender feet should try Blue-\nJay Foot Treatment. At all druggists.\n\"Write for, free booklet\u2014\"The\nProper Care of the Feet\"\u2014to Bauer\n& Black, Limited, Toronto.    ,\ntrative' and auxiliary departments,\nhas been thought likely to he un-'\nprofitable. iOxisting transportation\ncompanies have, on the other hand,.\nnot shown any desire to establish\ntheir own air services. There is.\nmoreover, un , independent field for\nair operations in the sparsely settled and undeveloped portions of\nCanada in which at present com-.\nmunlcationS are inadequate. Ex-.\nploration aud communication ser-\"\nvices by aircraft in these areas depend chiefly upon t-h*Mr.timber, mlri--:\ning or like enterprises, which, it\nadequately 'financed, can., with lhe\nttsB'stdnco of the technical' and oper-:\nlitlohs branches of the air ' board\noperate advantageously and profitably. Such individual interests . do\nni-i, however, justly * direct assistance ou puh'.lc grounds,\nGIRLS! WHITEN''__wT\nWITH LEMON JUICE\nSqueeze the juice of two Wmons\nInto a bottle containing three ounces\nof Orchard White, which any drug\nstore will supply for' a few cents,,\nshake well, and you have a quarter\npint of harmless and delightful lemon\nbleach. Massago this sweetie fra-,\ngrant lotion into the face, neck, arms\nand hands each day, then Shortly'\nnote the beauty and whiteness of\nyour skin.\nFamous stage beauties use this\nlemon lotion to hleach and bring\nthat soft, clear, rosy-whlto complex-\nIon, also as ft freckle, sunburn, and\ntan bleach because it doesn't irri-.l\ntate.\niWcrrtlmi\nST-CH\/VFTL^S\n! EVAPORATED\nBetter\nyeswlis-\nconvemerae\u00a9\nand economy\ncome from\nyuae\nmill*-\nWo: '    ..\nCr<_itm lieft-'-i'S\nBlue-Jay\nFOOT    TREATMENT\nKeeps foot feeling fine\nCuticura Girls Are\nSweet and Dainty\nNo'.hinB so insures a healthy, clear complexion, soft, while lu.nds, and glossy,\nluxuriant hair aa Cuticura Soup, assistei!\nbv Cuticura Ointment when necessary\nCuticura Talcum is delicate, delightful\niii:.im-iinr*. It imparts to the person a\ncharm incomparable and peculiar tu Itself.\n5o_,p25e. OIntm\u00abnt25on_50t. T_!_v._i25c. Sold\nthroughout the l)omiition. Canadian [>pot-\ntymMu. Limited, 344 ^Paul St., W*., Monl\u00ab_l.\nSWCuii.ura Soup eliavei without ntpg.\n :\nii\nIM\nTHE NEISm \"EQfflT NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1921\nrfr\nanese Diplomat\n^**^j_t____iiBiy.*T<>**' __-____*\u25a0*>_ 1'yy*\nVISCOUNT   UCHIDA,\n|3apancso foreign minister, who figures\nso prominently in all discussions by\n\u25a0Japan on lier altitude \"toward the\ndisarmament conference, and the proposed Pacific conference.\n! 4\u2014 .\t\nOBITUARY\nMAGMO\n', The funeral, of the late. Eugenia\nMaglio. wii'e of Charles Maglio, took\nplace Thuxsday forenoon, 'from tho\njChurch ofi Mary Immaculate*. Rev.\n.W. B. McKenzie, assisted by the\nchoir, sang requiem high mass, and\n.there wore many floral tributes and\n'.Spiritual offerings. The pallbearers\nWere A. Peheretta, G. Santon, T.\nMaglio, G. Do Girolamo, F. Cal-\nigure and _. Defero. Interment\nffias In  the  city  cemetery.\nPowell Company Has Thirty-\nfive Hands on Payroll;\nRuns One Shift.\nTurning out a carload of match\nblocks per day, the recently completed plant of the W. W. Powell\ncompany, on the: waterfront, j8 now\noperating practically at capacity for\nday shift operation. Employing but\none shift it is estimated the plant\nin a year's operation will use from\n6,OO0;OO0 to 8,000,000 feet of dry\nwhite'pine,     *\nThlrty-frve hands, 12 o'f whom\nare women, are on tho payroll.\nA radius of 100 miles from Nelson includes all the territory from\nwhich the company win look for its\nraw- material, which consists of seasoned two-inch white pine planks.\nAny sawmill largo or small can turn\nout the material required for the\nmatch block plant, and pretty nearly\nlog run can be utilized, but the size\nmust be exact. , The Arrow lakes\ndistrict is the company's principal\nsource of supply at present.\nMatch blocks are a commodity\nfor which nearly all match manufacturers aro. In the market, and in\nthe case of the Nelson plant, the\nproduct goes to eastern match factories, to be converted into splints,\nas the matches are called before\nthey are dipped.\nFOSTER'S WEEKLY\nWEATHER BULLETIN\nL\nCHURCHES\nBAPTIST CHURCH\nPASTOR, BEV. J. JI. TYNEH.\nEoBldonco, corner Josophine  ana\nliatlmer Street.\nSunday     School     and     Bible\nCrosses ut 0:45;\nMorning service at  11:00.\nBr.  N.  Wolverton will preach.\nOn  account of  the  paster being  wi   his   vacation   thero   will\nbe no evening service.    ,.\n\u201e*. Thursday    evening    a.t    8:00,\nPrayer Meeting.\n!'\nSt. Paul's\nPresbyterian Church\nRev.   J.   Barr   Stirling,   Minister\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 14'\nUnited service Methodist and\nPresbyterian. . Morning, 11\no'clock.    Evening,   7:30   o'clock.\n,' Trinity Methodist Sunday\nSchool in tho Methodist Church\nat .11 a.  m,\nPresbyterian Buudaj' School at\nThe Christian\nScienceSociety\nHold   8orvlco>  In  tha\nKnights of\nPythias Hall\nOn Sunday at tl ri, m.\n-WASHINGTON, .Aug. 13.\u2014Highest\ntemperatures of August are expected\nduring the week centering on 18 west\nof meridian 90, on 19 bctweisn ItO and\nthe Atlantic coast and on 20 in the\nAtlantic States. Moisture will con-\ntrnue to como from the central north\nAthinic ocean and therefore eastern\nsections will continue to get the most\ndisagreeable effects of tho damp atmosphere, called humidity. But the\nhumidity for August will not be so\nintense\u2014will not evaporate so much\nmoisture from tlib ocean. Probably\nAug. temperatures will average nearly\nas high as they did for July, hut\nwill not go to such great extremes\nand will not lie so disagreeable. Following this high point of August\nthe Loin par turcs will go down more\nrapidly than usual. Not much rain\nduring August; September rain will\nbe much hotter. All this will be favorable to nowhig winter grain. T an:\nexpecting above average Winter grain\ncrops for 1922, but small yield for\nquite a lame part of the winter grain\nsections. Winter grain Is produced in\nnearly all the states and provinces, but\nlargest average yields are In tho middle ^latitudes of the great central valleys   of  America.\nIndividual predictions are being published that a very cold, severe winter\nIs just before us. I do not sec tt\nthai way. I expect an average while\nThe cold anrl warm winters, cool and\nhot summers are caused by the location of the evaporations. During the\nsummer of 1921 the evaporations came\nfi-om the Gulf Stream that flows\nnortheastward over tho north Atlantic,\nhence the hot and disagreeable sum\niner. Whon evaporations come from\nthe icy dold waters .then we get the\ncold winters. Evaporations for No*\nVembcr will come from the middle\nPacific; not much evaporation for December; for January from Gulf of\nMexico; February from middlo -Atlantic near the equator, comparatively\ncool waters; March from Pacific wept\nof Central America, moderately cool\nwaters.\nThe Ui S. weather bureau people\nseem not to know anything about tm\nlocations, nor the effects of the evaporations. Thnv havo repeatedly stated,\nhowever, that the humidity of the atmosphere has beon very great during\nthis summer In eastern  sections.\nFollowing the storms due on meridian 90 near Aug. 19, the trend of\ntemperatures will he more rapidly\ndownward than usual, but I see no indication of August frosts in Canada.\nThese August frosts are caused by\nsevere storms and I have none of\ntheso in the August forecasts; the\nmonth promises to be sluggish with\na shortage of rain east of Groat Lakes.\nT see no hope of a breaking of the\nEuropean drouch before October, and\nnot much relief to tlio drouth sections\non   this   continent   before   that   time.\nPome sections of tbe cotton states\nand   of   the   Canadian    provinces   are\n'Baby's Own Soap'\nA Sanitary wash\nA Soft healthy skin\nA lingering fragrance\n1 'Its Best for Baby\ntind Best for You.\"\nAlbert 8oaps Limit*1, Ufri., Montretl.       320\nLegal Notices\nlu I matter of the estate of tho lato\nJohn- Michael, deceased.\n'IV.i.aia will ho received, by the un-\n\u25a0de,rh\\5nod, Until noon of August iiOth,\nV._\\, for thc purchase of Lots 3, ., G\nand (1 of Block I and of Lot I. and 2.\nA frame house with stone basement\nIs .said' to be op thu premises.\nA number of hearing fruit  trees,  on\nthe  properly.\nTerms,   Cash.\nDated   at   Nolson,    JJ.    C,    this    11th\nday  of  August,   1921.\nt\\f        JAMES   II.   DOYLE.\nOfficial    Administrator    of '  op**\ntale,   of    late    John    Michael  \u25a0\nMupan, deceased.\nFIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST\nNhLSON, B. C, . '\nCor, Kootenay mid Vlotorl* Stradi\nSunday aervlce- 11 a. m. and 7:80 p. m.\n-f.flncsrjay evening, Testimonial Meeting, 8 o'clock.\n\u2022      Sunday School, 0:45 a. m. \\\nReading Room and Free Circulating Library In Church building\nwpen I to I p. in. dally except Sundays,  and  publlo  holidays.\nMinister From Bolivia\nPremier\nI criticized an not fully conforming to\nof Czecho-Slovakia: \u2022*'\u00ab age m winch __e action of the\n~-t-._.    w\u2014\u2014aA     I.. :. I  . . .     H.     w, ,,-.:,,     i ,i<j . t h u \u25a0 -\n%\u00ab!_T__y__*__w!__-J9M_lM^^\n\"DffTADOLFO  BALLfviAN...\nNewly appointed minister from Bo\nIivlm to the United States, who has\narrived in Washington and been received by the president. Dr. Balllvian\nwas formerly minister to'England\nwell adapted to winter grain and\nshould give it more attention than\nheretofore. Tho great decrease in\ncotton this year and drouth in some\nsections of Canada increases the interest LP sowing winter grain the coming fan and therefore I am giving\nparticular attention to that subject.\nWinter grain is an important item\nfor   1822   agriculture.\n _o_. .\nNelson News ol the Day.\nThere will be a special meeting of\nthe Nelson and district Auto Club in\nthe Hume Hotel, Monday, August Kith,\nat 3:30.   <.1G24)\nTen dollars reward will bo given\nfor information leading to conviction\nof person or persons who stole hose\npipe from garden corner of Observatory, and Kootenay. J. V. Itamsdon.\n(4495)\nWANTED\u2014-Yellow Transparent apples.    McDonald Jam Company.   (1310)\nWe.clean or dye soiled or faded garments, houscfurnlshliigs. etc. Let us\nmail you price list. Permanent Dye\nWorks, Limited, 1G41 4th AV-l, W.. Vancouver,   B.   C. (1141)\nWanted\u2014Raspberries. McDonald Jam\nCo. (4382)\nLocal fresh killed lamb from the\nNelson Coif Links; fresh Hilled veal\nandl beef,  also  large  supply  ot  spring\neh tokens. Marsden's Stall, Saturday\nMarket.  - (-10OS)\nWanted\u2014Black Currants. McDonald\nJam   Co.. ,. (4384)\n\"Little Crumbs of Happiness\" *s.ong\nia a sympathetic stylo, hy Charles\nHarrison.     Willis   Piano   Storo.    (4517)\nWanted\u201410,000 pounds chorrics without stalks.    McDonald Jam Co.    (4381)\nS. W. \"Blackmore and Goo Chiang\nhave leased tho Queen Restaurant in\ntho Quoens Hotel and will conduct' it\nas a first class restaurant. Open fi\na. m. to 2 p. m. and 5 p. m. to 8 p. tn.\nShort orders a specialty. Regular meals\nat 50 cents The now- proprietors will\nopen for business' Sunday morning.\n\u25a0    _ (4G0C)\nSocial and Personal\nG. S\u00bb Horn, the Robson apiarist, i.s\n\u25a0a city  visitor.\n13. S. Crearey, tlie Harrop rancher,\nwas in the  city  yesterday.   .\nRoland Ellis of Boswell returned\nlast, night  from  a trip  to  tho  coast.\nA. C. Dee, first assfltant to J. Fred\nHume, liquor vendor, is at the coast,\nhaving his  eyes .treated.\n\u25a0Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Carlson and son\nand daughter left last night for their\nhome   at   Nakusp.\nMiss Helen Sloan of Grand Eorks\nis visiting her sister, Miss Pauline\nSloan,   of  Victoria  stroet.\nE. L. Buchanan, tho Great Northern\nrailway agent, leaves this morning\nfor   spokatle   ou   business.\nL, A. Campbell and J. S. Deschamps\nreturned to Rossland last night from\na  trip to tho Simllkaincea.\nPurdy Milly. of Salmo, .spoilt yesterday in the city on business, and returns   this   morning   to   his   home.\nMr. Carmine Maglio wishes to convey his deep thanks for sympathy extended  to him  In  liis  bereavement.\n(4G21)\nContractor Wi Pascoe lias the frame\nof tho new curling rluk up, and all\ntold,   4000   feet  of   lumber   \"in   place.\"\nMrs. E. V. Jarvls will leave this\nmorning lor a short visit to her\nmother at Lothpridge, who has been\nseriously    ill.\nJ. W. Fox, the Cemetery road poul-\ntrynmn. is accepting an Invitation to\nbe present at the annual poultry show\nof   South   Vancouver.\nArw. McCune or Los Angeles and\nhis son. A. W. McCune, Jr.. left yesterday for Spokane, after about a fortnight  in the district.\nJudge J. A. Forin and his son, I'.\nMcL. Forin, who are having a holiday\nat Proctor, are reported to Ito doing\nsome great angling. His honor hooked a salmon .Thursday morning that\nbroke   his   rod   in   two.\nStanley Hoi'-swill, who has recently\nagain taken up his residence iu Nolson, after two years in tho Simllka-\nmeeit valley, has decided tn open ;i\n\"cash and carry\" business here. He\nWas o'.i-rseas with the \"Canadian\nScottish\" under Lieut.-Col. Cy. P^ck.\nV.C., for upwards of four and a half\nyears.\nilER RISES\nMr. Gibson Becomes Joint\nCommissioner of Hudson's\nBay Co.; Calgary Banquet\nHigh honors have boen attained\nby j. M. Gibson, formerly manager\nof the Hudson's Bay cori*u>an$''s Nelson branch, and his elevation to the\npost of joint commissioner of the\ncompany was made thc occasion of a\nstriking farewell banquet to*him'In\nCalgary last Friday. This event\nwas described by thc Calgary Al-\nbertan as follows:\n\"A large measure of the appreciation of the citizenship of J. _il. Gibson, recently promoted to Joint com-\nmisslonership; of the Hudson's Bay\ncompany, anfl at the deep 1-egret felt\nat his remdval from Calgary, waa\nexpressed by Speakers at the farewell luncheon tendered Mr. Gibson\nby tho Calgaty board of trade on\nFriday. ! *  J\n\"The gathering was thoroughly representative of the business ahd professional and other phases of life\/in\nthe city. The two spokesmen for tlio\ngathering w**pro R. B. Bennett. K. C,\nand J. ll. Woojds, both of whom were\nwarm In their eulogies of Mr, Gibson as a business man and as a\nmember of the' community.\n\"Mr. Gibson's promotion hud been\nan honor to tho 'city of Calgary, said\nMr. Woods. 'Calgary is a graduating\nclass for big business men,' he said,\n'and it is interesting to remember tho\nnumber of former residents who ha*\"\"o\nbeen transferred to higher positions.' Mr; Woods spoke of Mr. Gibson's ability as a business man and\nhis worth as a personal friend.\n\"R. B. Bennett said that tlie manager of a large trading establishment must be moro than a keen\nbusiness man; he must also enter\nvery largely into the social life of\ntho community. Mr. Gibson liad established himself In a stronghold of\nfriendship Here, and ho would ba\ngreatly missed, lie had upheld the\ntraditions of the great, company of\nwhich ho was an official, said Mr.\nBennett. It is not an easy thing\nfor a man to'come. into a ami m unity\nand In three short years, not only\ndevelop an increasing business, but\nto enter into the spirit and life of\nthe people, and it \\vii\u00bb to Mr. Gibson's credit that ho had done so\nsuccessfully.' Mr, Gibson, deel ired\nMr, Bennett, had not only given of\ntho best that was in him lu the company' which he represented, bul had\nnever failed to .realize lhe higher\nIdeals   of  citizenship.\nMr. Gibson's Reply.\n\"Replying,. Mr. Gibson said lie\ncould not hope to express in tine\nlanguage all lhat was in his heart*,\nbut would endeavor to express something of tho great regret lie felt\nat leaving Calgary, lie would carry\nwith him, he said, many kind and\npleasant memories of his residence\nhere. There were three chief i\"ri-\nsons for his regret at leaving the\ncity, he said.\n\"'First, I have fofi'nd the social\nstructure embodied not only in the\nbusiness world, (jut in the social life,\nto be of the finest. I have travehd\nin tlie Occident and tlio orient and\nI have yet to find an aggregation of\npeople more pleasant.to live with or\ndeal  with.\n\"'Secondly, I regret having to\nwithdraw from a center of no mean\ncommercial status. No one can do\nother than appreciate that splUl,\ncompact urban center. We here are\nthe recognized commercial and financial city between Winnipeg and the\ncoast, and a city with tremendous\nterritory radiating in all directions.\nWe are situated on tho main railway arteries and there is no reaso i\nwhy Calgary should, not become, in\nthe near future, a second St; Paul\nor Chicago. Wo have business institutions which would be a credit\nto many larger cities and wc havu\nmen In this community that will\nleave no atone unturned to develop\nthis as a largo center.\n\"'My-last regret is that I lYiiist\nremove myself from so salubrious a\ndliniatu. T do not know of any other\nsection of this country or any other\ncountry which can offer so pleasant\na climate, a climate which I feel\ncontribute.*, largely .tp. the buoyant\nspirit which characterizes the people\nwho live here.'\"\nplay was laid many h worse prpduc-\ntion has been witnessed on the Nel\nrfon stage. The. orchestra and vaude\nville  turns were good.\nNELSON ROWING CLUB\nRETURNS FROM KELOWNX\nThough beaten in the main event\nof the Kelowna regatta oil Thursday,\ntho Nelson Kowirig clul) crew made\na fair showing, according to members of thc crew that returned to\ntho city last night. The Nelson boys\nfinished one length behind the Vancouver crew, the N. P. A. O. champions, who in turn finished one\nlength behind the Kelowna crew. A\nstrong wind springing up just prior\nto the start made thc going difficult.\nAll the Nelson boys ware dolighVd\nwith the. regatta, .at whieh prizes to\nthe value of $1500 were offered.\nThey wore well taken care of by\ntheir Kelowna hosts and last night\ncould talk of nothing else than the\ngood time accorded them. Coach f.'.\nT. Den Br I sa.V in particular was vary\nmlich in demand among rowing men\nfrom tho coast, as well as the Okanagan.   -     .   .  ,\nNo.l\nYou need no Government\nPermit to buy wines and\nliquors for home use from\nus. You also can buy the\nhighest quality at cheaper\nprices. Write for price list.\nWe ara shipping every.day.\n(JO \u00a7EAL\nLIMITED\n(Operating Under Dominion.\nCharter)\nCALGARY,\nALTA.\nHead   Office:\n137   Water   Street\nVANCOUVER,  B.  C.\nTRY   A   XLASSIF1ED    AD.<\nDID   HE  SMILE  THEN?\nSir Herbert Tree was accosted by\nn \u00abtranger one day in tlie Haymar-\nfcefc \u25a0    ,     ,\n\"Aren't you Beerbohn Tree?\" asked\nthe stranger.\n\"No,\" replied Tree, anxious to liido\nIlls light under a bushel.\n\"I'm sorry. I thought you wero.\nYou  look Uncommonly like him.\"\n\"I assure you,\" insisted Tree; \"you\nare mistaken.\"'\n\"Well, .T certainly did think you\nlooked like him,\" 'said the stranger.\n\"I'm sorry. I didn't mean to insult\nyou.\" \u2022    i\nOne of file best shades for dure-\nlyn will be a shade between a Pe-\nltin  and  a  royal, -gftVp  a \u2022 New Yorlt\nB iaw4>mi-am'iJ'itiU'.H'll!\"U iHM-ajjuiwj-mjuo^^ tm.w.i.'ivuu9 tn\nj .M&oi'ikYr\nCHECK YOUR\nBOWEL TROUBLES\nBY   UI5ING\nDR. FOWLER'S\nEXTRACT   OF\nWILDJSTRAWBERRY\nWhen you are troubled with diarrhoea, dysentery, colic, cramps and\npains In tho Stomach, cholera, cholera\nmorbus, \u25a0summer complaint, bloody\njjuxes, or any looseness of the bowels,\nbe sure and obtain a bottle of \"pr.\nFowler's\" and seo how quickly it\ngives yuu relief. This wonderful\nemedy has been on tho market tor\nthe past 76 years and we wish to\nwarn- you against accepting a substitute which may be dangerous to\nyour health.\nMr. Samuel Buckler, Tatamagouclie,\nN. S., writes: \"While visiting in western Canada 1 had a severe attack of\ndiarrhoea. After trying many proprietary medicines I go no relief, but\nkept getting worse.\nI was .advised to take Dr. Fowler's\nExtract of Wild Strawberry\" and I\nlost no time in doing so. i cannot\nhesitate in recommending it most\nhighly, for when I hnd not yet taken\nhalf the bottle I was relieved. I must\nsay that If \"Dr. Fowler's\" is given a\nair trial it will show its good qualities.\"\nThe price ot the genuine is title u\nitlle;   put   up  pnly   by   Tjie  T.   Mil-\nPREMIER   EDWARD  BENES\npf Czecho-Slovakia. one of the \"Little Entente,\" -who will meet the premier of Jugo Slavia and foreign\nminister of Kumanian in a conforence\nat Marienbad. Czecho-Slovakia, in\nconnection with the readjustment of\nthe recent offensive and defensive\ntreaty entered into by the threo nations. ,\nUf REOPEN THE\niipoup\nFamous Gold Property Is\nBeing Looked Over by\nSpokane Interests.\nIf reports obtained upon thp Bay\noune. gold mine, Iu the Bay untie caun-\ntry, are satisfaotury, this fainoufi\nproperly may -again bo actively operated, after a quiescence c^tendlijfi\nover a   long |)GrIpd of years.\nStrong, financial interests di! S-ptJ-\nkaile have obtained an option nn the\nproperty from, lhe Bayoniic Gold\nMines, l.ld.. which is owned by Unite\nand New York <;t pit;i liwl m. The\nproperty comprises 1(1 claims, and\noptions have also been obtained upon\nfour adjacent claims that naturally\nbelong in   flic same.group\".\n}'.. V: Sharp, llie Hpokunu mining\nengineer, lias returned1 via Sheet*\ncreek frpjri making a preliminary\noxaminathm nl' lhe old mine. iM'ue-\ntruling beyond thp numerous \"caves\"\nand vi-dlin^ Wfvy point in .Hin\nworkings, which com-prlso aland 2000\nfeel   of   work.\nIiai'ge sums of money were spent\nlippn   iii is   property   many  years  ago,\nday tried tq secure tho building oi\na road up 'Summit creek to lhat\ncamp. Should the mine be reopened\nand turned into a producer, transportation costs will make it essential\nto have a mill on the ground.\nFernie Supreme\nITS BEER HAS NO EQUAL\nIt has been in evidence the past few weeks, as the\nmost popular appetizer of the day.\nWhy swelter in the hot sun, with your throat parched\nfrom thirst?     \u25a0 !\nWE ARE IN A POSITION TO\nSUPPLY YOU\nTHROUGH YOUR VENDOR\nthis decidedly cooling, wholesome ami palatable drink in\nany quantity.\nWe have just bottled a brew of especially hopped beer,\nwhich, has Had our attention for the past three months.\nWo can guarantee this brew to satisfy the palates of those\nwho desire a medium hop flavored beverage. It has all\nthe superior qualities of our other brews, which have stood\nthe tests for so long.\nWhen ordering do not overlook our PORTER IN\nPINT BOTTLES. You need this in your home. It has\nall the nutritious qualities of the greatest body-builder\nknown. We recommend this as an invigorator and tissue\nbuilders.\nPHONE 9(i\u2014DRAWER 1175\n\"UNCLE TOM\" DRAWS\nVERY GOOD HOUSE\n.\\ Bpsiii house RH'Hcil the (ii-oaiie-\ntitJil of* ''Undo Tom's Cabin': mi the\nopent house Inst evening. While\nthe  scenery  nnd  eostumos  mlgnt  be\nIs a wonderful relief\nfor Sunburn,Insect\nBites, etc.,\nTo Europe\n|   MAKE   BESERVATIOHS   NOW.\nMOHTKEAI,    TO   MVEBPOOl\nAuk. 17, mati-m,Oa\u00a3iS.'.Met-_tun_\nAug. 19. Sonf. 16. Out. \u25a0.\u25a0!..Victorian\nAug.    26.    Sept.    23,   Oct.    21.    Melltil\nSept. 2, Sept. 30; Oct. 28,  Minnedosa\nQUEBEC    TO    r.IVEBPOOI.\nAug.  13.  Sept.  3. Sent.  21\t\n   lOmp. of France\nAug 2n, Sept 10, uet -I. Km.  Britain\n-     MOHTBEAI,   TO   OT.ASOOW\nSept. iii, Oct. is  Tunisian\nAug. 3D, Oct. 1, .\\'o\\. S... .Pretorian\nMOHTREAI.-HAPLES.TRIESTE\nSept.   11     Montreal\n\u00abONTBEAI<-HAF-,E'--aENOA\nAug.   21    Cascrla\nCombined service Cftuadlttn  Pacific\nand   Nav;!g;i__i__i_ci____ii__!_;il'i Ualiana.\nMOrTTBEAI.-SOUTHAlHrTOH-\nANTWEBF\nSept.   n.  Oct.   15 \", Corsieaii\nAug. 27, Oct. 1, Nov 4,1 Scandinavian\nFBEIOHT   ONLY\nApproximate Sailing Dato\u00ab\nWOWTREAIi-I,ONDOW\nAug.    13,    Sept.   21     Dutlbrldge\nAug.   21.   Oct.   7     riolillgbrok'r\nApply   to  Agents  everywhere or\nJ.  8.   OAKTEB,   St.   r.   A.,\nNulHon, B. 0.\nCanr.tiluu   Faolflu   Kallw\u00abf\nTralllo Agents. f\nTHE\nFERNIE-FT. STEELE BREWING\nCOMPANY, LTD.\n-ALSO-\nMANUFACTURERS    OF    AERATED    WATERS\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Ce.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOffte*.  Smelting   ond   Refining   DepartmnH\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF   GOLD,   SILVER,   COPPER   AND   LEAD   ORE!\nPr<*di,r.\u00abrj  cf  Gvld,  -liver,  Copper,    BhiaiUnn,    Pit    Lm4    \u00a3!_\u25a0\nTADANAC TRAIL\n\u2014\u2014\u2014a\u2014am_m_w_\u2014\u2014\u2014ma__\u2014_\u2014_\u2014\u2014aa_____mtmmm__Ma*\nGreen Forests arc an  investment  which gives  big  returns.\nTho shareholders include, directly or indirectly, every citizen in the Province.\nDividends are shared directly by every individual who\nresides in British Columbia,\nEach tree is worthy ol' preservation, and means employment to someone, sooner or later.\nNo timber substitute has been found, but timber provides\nsubstitutes for many articles.\nThe Lumber trado is called the barometer of British Columbian prosperity.\nKeep the mark set high; destruction of the forest spells\n\u2022 loss for everybody. ;\u25a0 .-'k i\nPrevent Forest Fires\n\u00bb\n r*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, T?2|,T\nPublished every morning except Bun-\nday by the News Publishing Company,\nLimited, Nelaon, B. C, Canada-\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nhnd checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and In n<> case to Individual members of the stafv.\nAdvertising rate cards ahd A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on request or may be Been at tne office of\n\u00bbny advertising agency recogniied by\ntbe Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates:    By mail (country), 60 cents per month; $6 per year.\nJ Outside Canada, a month, 76c; a year,\n7.60.     Delivered    7nc   per   month;   ti\nor six months; $7.60 per year, payable\nMember   Audit   Bureau   of   OlxoalaUov\nSATURDAY,  AUG.   13,  1U21.\nReconstruction Is Beginning\nReconstruction is beginning,\nas, readjustment nears its end.\nThere is evidence in the improvement in the building situation, in the. plans which are\nbeing made for resuming development of our natural resources and for carrying out\nthe' long-delayed and long overdue schemes of construction.\nReconstruction is getting under way slowly, but there is no\ndisadvantage in that. It will\nprogress all the more surely\nand effectively.\nThe   British   Empire   Exhibition.\nEfficient\nbvsekehpin,\nW   Lnura-A,KipKman\nTHE SUCCESSFUL  HOUSEKEEPER\n\"I wish I were a business woman\ninnteatl of a housekeeper,\" I heard a\nyoung woman any tho other day,\n\"then I'd have' a chance to win success in the world.\" \u25a0 Thc girl who\nwas sppfUcJrig kecpa iiouse for her\nelderly parents. Slut Is an only\ndaughter. They live in a large-\nold-fashioned houso which lias been\nIn   the   family   for   years   and   which,\nm'!;fiU'Sef0f \" Hl0k \u00b0,{ money. Is badly in\nneed of repairs\u2014but the old people\nlove It just as it Is. There is no\nservant in that -house: the daughter\nmust do all. tlie . housework as well\n.is nurse her frail old parents Auntie\ntheir, frequent  \"spells\" of illness\nis Huecessf1!''^  -^ <i0CS not tlllnk *sllc'\n\"My   dear,\"   i   8ilid   to   hep   as -eho\nthe     above     statement   about\nTho British Empire exhibition,\nwhich will be hold at Wembley\nPark, Middlesex, from April to October, 1032, will furnish a unique\nopportunity for a review of the Em-\n\u2022pipeResources and manifold activities\non a scale not hitherto attempted or\neven  possible.\nIt will be the first inter-imperial\nexhibition of a comprehensive character since the Culonial and Indian\nexhibition of 1S8(J, which was held\nat South Kensington. That exhibition appears to have been a fully\nrepresentative one as fnr us the overseas elates wero concerned; all the\nprincipal colonies . and dependencies\ntook part, and appointed special com-'\nmissions lo organize their respective\nexhibits. Products of the United\nKingdom were not, however, included; whereas it is hoped that at thc\nBritish Empire exhibition of 1923, the\n\u25a0resources and manufactures of the\nhome country, as well as of the Indian empire and overseas dominions,\nWill  be  adequately   represented.\nThe period of 35 years, which has\nelapsed sinco the former exhibition,\nhas witnessed an enormous growth\nin the area, population nnd commerce of tho Empire, as is demonstrated by the following figures:\u2014\nArea (Including United Kingdom),\n'1886, fl.OSO.OOO square miles; 1020, 13,-\nC20.000 square miles.\nPopulation- (including United Kingdom), 1S8G, 320,00(1,000; 11120, 450,000,-\n0110.\nExports from United Kingdom to\nother parts of tho ' Empire (U. K.\n40.1; produce and lnahufture), 1886,\n\u00a375,071,-101;   1020,   \u00a3\u00a301,483,760.\nImports from other parts of the\nEmpire into tho United Kingdom, lSSti.\n$$1,994,043;    1920,    J_5flC.731.258.\nTonnage on register In the whole\nof the British Empire, (including\nV. K,), 1880, 11,105,092 Ions; U.'2l),\n20,r.!>2,(>r\u00ab2   tons.\nNo less remarkable is the development of means of communication\nand facilities of transport during the\nperiod in Question, At the date of\nth'e Colonial and Indian exhibition,\ntlie Canadian Pacific railway had\njust been completed. Since then, thc\ndrank Trunk Pacific railway has\nbeen constructed, arid is opening up\nthe country north of the Canadian\nPucifii*- railway, while yet another\n\"trans-continental railway from north\nNorthern, is being constructed. In\nAustralia, the Trans-Australian railway, from Port Augusta, in South\nAustralia, to Kalgooriie, in Western\nAustralia, has been built, and: a\ntarns-continentul railway from north\nto south in under consideration. In\nAfrica, the Uganda railway, connecting the port of Mombasa with lho\nVictoria Nyanza,. Iias been construct'\ned and considerable progress has\nbeen made towards thc cst.-iblish-\ninent of continuous ciimmiiniealion\nbetween  tho Cape and Cairo.\nThe same, period lias witnessed\n\u25a0striking political changes. In 1893,\nKatal was granted responsible government; in 1906 and 1907, the same\nprivilege was extended to the late\nBoer republic; while In 1910 the four\nSouth African self-governing colonies-\u2014Cape Colony, Natal, the Transvaal and the Orange Free State\u2014\nbecame one under tho title of thc\nUnion of South Africa. In 1000, the\nAustralian colonies were confederated\ninto the commonwealth of Australia;\nund in 1907, New Zealand was raised\nto the status of a dominion. During\nthe past year a considerable meas-\n-ure of self-government has been con\nceded tu India; and new capitals\nhave recently been founded both in\nthat  country  and   in   Australia.\nIn view of the time which has\nelapsed since the Colonial and Indian exhibition, and the remarkable\ngrowth and development of the Empire in tho meantime, it might bo\nthought that an Inter-Imperial exhibition was overdue; and, indeed,\nthe present project is not altogether\na now one. It was initiated by Lord\nStrathcona as far back at 1913, but\non the outbreak of war iu August,\n1914,- it naturally fell Into abeyance\nOn the cessation of hostilities, however, tho scheme \u25a0 was revived, and\nat a meeting held at the British Em\npire Club, under the auspices of thc\nBritish Empire league, on May 20,\n1919, attended by ministers, high\ncommissioners and agents-general of\nthe overseas dominions, a unani\nmous resolution was passed ln favor\nof holding in London a great exhibition of the manufactures and prod\nucts of the Empire.\nThe project has received the warm\nsupport of the imperial government,\nWhich has obtained the authority of\nparliament, by a special bill to contribute to the guarantee fund and\nIdas addressed invitations to the\ngovernment of the overseas dominions\ninn-*\nwanting a business career, \"you am\nwinning   silccestj   at   this   moment   just\ntnir ?n r &H th,!. w?'!!an who Is climbing to fame and riches. You are doing something really worth while.\nvn,V,. il,i\u00b0   kp0V,\"ff  II  home   together   for\nt   i   .   r   old   Parents:\"\n1 believe there, nre many other\nhousewives who would look .surprised (as she did. when T gave her mv\nslant on her life), if they were told\nui.u tltey were succer_sfu1 women. Tn\nhS i iS\" T l,,n'n \">\u25a0>* thoughts to this\nhousehold .md tint, I can count\nliterally dozens of women who a\"\nWOCTMful-apd don't know it!\nii-mM _ Ml7?t* A\" lor Instant, who\n\u00a3 i ,\u201e,\".: y,.r l VQ novor tIoilft much\niV ' y Iit\u00ab\u2014OXCOpt keep house for\nHenry.\"      This    childless    couple    have\nforn-,\"1^:e,,1  lri   yc\"'uT  am1   T   S\ntoi ,i fact how much \"Henry\" has\nfvT?^\u2122,',e,in U11\u00b0\" his loafs' little\nSlffi! iVw IV1-0 \u00b0ver-preRent smile has\nsfiyeh hlrn the courage to struggle on\nin a business which was never verv\nnourishing: how her sympathy for\nhim has been the one warm comfort   of  his   life,     if R   isn't   \"suecells\"\nhei\nked   b\nlievo\nll   tin\nin;i!;i\nwhen\ncitlze\nYe?\nlies\nform.'\n\" ?qu -\nkeeper Ai\nduty to Uii\nnnnly\/.t-  our\nlize 'it! Ft\nso much e;\nit's worth\na sink are\ndishes for\nthat washh\nfhiesL thiiu\ndon't- you\nbetween s:i\nwasting on\nsaying to\nour Big <'h\nWn hoi)6\ntoo prone'\ndoesn't get\nworld\nthink}\nTomorrow\nLeft-Overs.\nAll inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman In care of the \"Rffieient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns in tlielr turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number- received\n\u00ab0 if a personal or quicker reply I*-*.\ndesired, a stumped and self-addressed\nenvelope must he enclosed with tht\nquestion.\u2014The   Editor. .   ,\ni! success  that\nin   the   per-\ntask,   is   too\ny    the    house-\nhat   it   is   our\nse   things   and\ni  this worl'd.    If\na   ought   to   rcii-\nI  our   hard   work\nwe   realize,   that\n\u2022,      Greasy    dishes    in\njust   a   lot   of   greasy\n\u25a0 wash\u2014if we realize\ntsu  dishes  Is  the  very\ncould be doing. Oh.\nt's   all   the   difference\nto ourselves, \"We're\ne at tins work\" and\nIves,   \"This   work   is\nirs. as a class, are\nniilH.y.     Ami   humility\nzefil    fo\nfine\nTwo\nand colonies to participate in the\nexhibition. The India office, the colonial office, and board of trade, have\nappointed representatives on the executive council of the. exhibition. The\nKing has accorded his patronage and\nthe Prince of Wales will act as chairman   of   tho   general   committee.\nThe Lighter Side\nThey nlso serve who stand and say:\nAtta    boy.\"\nIt .might   be  worse. The  dear  creatures   are   still   clothed in   mystery.\ntoday   then\non the init;\nlion.\nFor her splendid heroism in .* attempting to save the life of her little\nsister. Viol**!, who died Friday as a\nresult of burns siistainnd on Thurs-\ndav. ah [ittempl is to be made to\nobtain a Royal Humane society medal\nior S-year-old Ivy. ItadclilTe. Rev.\nFred H. Graham will take the matter\nup  in   the  proper  quarter.\nLowr\nLedge,\nill to\nlilt\nOr-\nIvan\nof the\nat   the\nHob.\nytrai\nup  al   Ainsworth,\nWhen\nexcuses,\ntracks.\nail   employee   begins   lo   make\nits    imie   lo    let    him    make\nDaily Recipe\nAll norm,--,  porsbns have five nouses\nnd  a   few   havo  a sixth   sense,   known\nas  common.\nt is easy enough to beat swords\ninto plowshares, but what use can wo\niin a  tor  cloves'.'\nA physician, advises drinkers against\nsurf bathing, is it dangerous to be\npickled    in    brine?\nThe   man   with   a stiff   collar   nnd\na.    heavy    coal    stood sweating    oii    a\ncpHier:     \"Hn,\", salt) he,   \"what   silly\nclothes   the   woinc!i\nEurope is slowly recovering from\nthe belief that our foreign policy\n;s  an  endowment  policy.      f-7\n.Win- should peoplo. trouble God with\nprayers for rain when they can plan\na   picnic   and   get   a   good   one'.'\nTlie most, encouraging sign of the\ntimes is that ono in the window that\nreads:     \"All   goods marked   down.\"\nEducational films might render a\ndistinct service hy showing \\x_ motion pictures of a man making up a\ndeficit.\n.When   a   new   piece   of perfect   road\nIs   opiuied    to    motorists, il    is    for   a\ntime a broad way that leads to destruction.'      .    .\n(Taste   (his   in  your Cook   U<\nIf-HUBAEB  FTO-DINO\nMY LENORB\n\u25a0h-ntcd\nof the dresses for midsoason\now a preference lor side\nt of tbe skirt, in most In-\naceoinplisti.il by slender\npanels applied In .pairs at\ne; or long point drapes and\nrrow fringe . panels alternating\nbfflCk and white, ull hanging itt least\njnclu-s below the skirt.\nIf yott- do not care to flirt along\nwith this yarylng hem leitgth, liow-\nrii. W.ibt a serviceable silk\nif pracLjcat length and lilies\nthoroughly in keeping with the\nbest taste of ifr\u00abv*ftlllng styles, I suggest    the    agreeably    model    illustrated\ntoday, created by a well known New\nVork designer with infinite faith in\nthe smartness of dark colors. The\nmaterial is Canto crepe, and here\nHie sides of tho skirt are emphasized\nbv four two-inch scalloped folds,\nbound with black fire ribbon. The\nfolds are made to si and outward,\ngiving the suggestiiei df width which\nstakabl,\nleast   ti    large\ndresses.\nA    most    bccoil\n<rll*\n.In.\nthe\nGeorgette, wit\nthe cire ribhm\nons. Of coins\nr Is desired, il\nIleal opporltnii\nng   it.\nn   of   tbe   Fall\neckhne   is   ob-\n(*st of pic.oled\ni slender baud\nnd Hnv black\nf a toucli of\nvest offers an\nfor        intro-\nTwenty Years Ago Today |\nFrom  the Tribune, Aug. 1*1, 1001.\nKobert Ewart, who for several years\nwas identified with the development\nof the Poorman mine before it pass-\n'cd into tlie possession of the Duncan\nMmes, was nt the Hume yesterday for\ntho purpose.of making the final payment on the bond which he and A. L.\nDavenport have1 qii tho Keystone\ngroup of claims, tho bill of sale upon\nwhich, passing the title to tho property lo A. L. Davenport, was yesterday recorded, tiie consideration for\nwhich is given at ?20,;i00. Tho Keystone is s.tuated about a mile to the\nright of \u25a0 tho well known Arlington\nproperty.\n* \u2022    *\nC. W. Brown^ the well known Kaslo\nrancher, is a guest in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTiie contractors of the Nelson post-\noffice have discarded the little boiler\nand engine from the merry-go-round\nwhich was installed tho other day for\nthe purpose of working the big derrick.\n\u00bb    *    \u2022\nThe slrlke of tbe trackmen on thc\nKootenay branch of tho C. P. R. is\nnow     virtually    over.\nTIGER   BAD   ASSET.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 12.\u2014One tiger,\nvalued at $500, and a box of tricks\nworth tho sam** amount, are listed\namong the assets fo Horace Goldln,\ntheatrical magician, in a bankruptcy\npetition, filed iti United States court\nhere. Mr. Goldin said tho tiger and\nthe tricks had helped him accumulate debts of ?38,775 in the last two\nyears.\nboiling\nuliarh\nwith\nsmall   pieces   enough   rl;\nthree   cups   nnd   cover\niter,  lei ting  it  stand   len  minimi,  add  a cup of  sugar  ami\nboll   until   tender    but   does   not   hreat*.\ninto   pieces.     Have readv   two 'cups   ol\ntapioca.  I urn   Into a pudding  dish  will'\nthe   rhubarb   and   bake.\n. rATTKHX\nA pattern for the\n2.T1) call im obtain.\n,'IS by sending to Th\nson, R C, your, nan\ncents   in   postage\nno.   :::;i\nabove  model   (No.\nd hi sizes Jl*l, 'M,,\ni Daily News, Nel-\ne, address, and f>0\nmps. He sure to\nkeep this newspaper clipping of the\nsketch and deseripi inn- of the garment.\nto use as a working model when the\npattern roaches \u25a0 .Vou\u2014which will he\nwithin   two   week:.;'   tlmo.\u2014The   Editor.\nA HELPFUL\nSUGGESTION\nSelecting the Engagement Diamond always receives much\nconsideration, and because of\nthe great variety of choice, a\nsuggestion   might   bo   in   order.\nOur two hundred dollar solitaire\ndiamond ring in a daintily pierced and hand-carved all platinum setting is a rare combination   of   value   and   good   taste.\n_\n4hc charm ol\n_*1\u00a3-J_\nis in its unique flavour of rich delicacy. And It\nnever varies. All grocers sell \"Salada\" in\nsealed metal packets only. Be36\n<\u25a0>_.\nV\nhi\n^A\n_XP\nHw\n.   r^,.\n--Lt\n\/\n%\n1)1\nrljnsli\n\u00bb_\nnl\n***\nThe\ndance\nwas\ninrl    silo\nlimped\nto\njeat.\n'Ah,\"\nsho\nsighed\n\"hell    1\nall\nm\nfury\nlike\na\nwoman's\ncorns.\"\nAfter you have mado vain efforts\nto get tlie right number, you wonder\nwhy something isn't done, about our\npublic   futilities.\nA railroad man says the freight\nbusiness is up in tno air. This\nclinches the argument of thoso who\nsaid It would adjust itself to the\nrates.\nIf he says he doesn't understand the\nintricacies of the Irish question, you\ncan't tell whether he Is feeble minded  or just  an   honest  man.\nKossIIh will enter tho country free;\nand that is all right. Tlie way they\ndfess now. tlio collector couldn't tell\n'cm   from   young -girls,   anyway.\nVice-President     Coolidge     tells     the\nUnited .States something must-be'donf;\nto lessen the tax burden. It Is a\nstatemanliko utterance, worthy the respect it has received for threo thousand years.\n-^\nTen Years Ago Today\nFrom  The  Dally Nows.  Aug.  1*1,   1011.\nDuty was paid in Nelson on Saturday on the largest and most modern\nstump puller and land clearing machine .ever imported into Canada. It.\nwas made by the Clyde Iron-Works,\nDuluth, and purchased by Beaton &\nVezina, owners of TiOOO acres of land\nin tho Whalsan valley, Lower Arrow\nlake.\nThat tho tonnage of steamer.s operating on tho Slocan, Kootenay and\nArrow lakes has Increased since 18S0\nfrom less than 100 tons all told to\nover 8000 tons was the statement\nmade at the Strathcona last night by\nJ. A. Thomson of Victoria, Dominion\ngovernment steamboat inspector for\nthis   pro\\ince.\nAnnouncement was made Saturday\nthat the contract for the Cottonwood\ncreek rifle range had heen let to W.\nS. Pearcy. The figure is $20.1100.\nWork Will be rushed to completion, and\n..............    . .(,.\u25a0,..>\u2022\nSomHor\nBiscuit\nVANCOUVER.    8.C,\n^akfc, the great author, would1\nhate beside him a doa_en cups of\ncoffee, and, one after another, he\nwould empty them in rapid\nsuccession. He was possessed of\nan inordinate love for the beverage\nand termed it \"the divine fluid\".\nHe maintained that it was requisite\nlo his logic and choice of words.\nSEAL Brand Coffee  would have\nbeen a veritable delight to Balzac\nAs well as a builder of brain and nerve\nSEALBRAWBXOffEfc*\nis a delicious and satisfying beverage,\npossessing thc body, fragrance and flavor\nsought after by the fastidious Balzac\nand discerning coffee drinkers of today.\nSold sealed in _%, t and 2 Ib. tins. Whole, ground\nor fne ground for Trtcaldtor and percolator we.\nCHASE & SANBORN, Montreal, Que.\nii\nFor folks who want a\nWhite [Soap\nYou'll be satisfied with it\n'No other white soap\u2014Canadian or\nAmerican\u2014has yet been produced\nwhich comes up to the standard set\nby \"WHITE WONDER.\" If you\nwant a good white soap, say White\nWonder to your grocer. A generous\nsized  cake   at  a  reasonable  price.\nROYAL CROWN SOAPS, LIMITED, VANCOUVER\nA WANT AD. IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nIX\nrHENORTH-WES^BISCUITGOMRANYlJ.!\n,'    <   '\\t>WQHi:ati:MT&:> '\"'}'   *\u25a0        -,\nsx-SBEjaraoB\nPREREDUCTIONS\nIn order to clean up the balance of our Summer Goods we\nare offering a reduction of\n!5;Per;Cent\n_\nOn all\nScreen Doors and Windows, Refrigerators, Tents, Lawn\nMowers,   Grass   Catchers,   Lunch   Baskets   and   Garden\nTrowels.\nBUY NOW\nHARDWARE COMPANY\nNELSON, B. C,\nREDUCTION  IN   PRICE\nTaking Effect July First\nJohn Burns & Son\nTone Arm\ner\nHexagonal in Shape; Continuous in\nConstruction ----- Why?\nTHE McLagan Tone Arm is different!    It i\u00bb nol round,\nbut hexagonal in shape\nSix sided!\nThis absolutely prevents thc passing tonal waves from\nwasting or losing their strength by setting up any vibration.\nPlace your finger on some round tone arms when playing)\nand you can feel lhe vibration\u2014useless waste of volume\nand detail.\nPlace your finger on a McLagan Tone Arm, and you Will feel no\nVibration. The _o_n.d waves arc gathering Volume, gaining in\nVelocity\u2014not losing their strength.\nIt has no loose joints.    Nothing to rattle.    No tone leakage.\nIt gives direct passage to the sound waves.    Is free of twists or\n, tortuous turns.    Free opening at the base; no obstructions whatsoever\nto impede the course of the tonal waves, or to detract from their clarity. '\nThe Tone Arm moves smoothly on a ball-bearing base. No\nfriction. No extra strain on needle. No unnecessary wear on\nrecords. But above all, if means reproduction free from surface\nnoises.\nThe adjustable ringweighl at the base ofthe tone arm gives the exact\nweight required for the perfect rendering of any make of disc record.\nWillis Piano Store\n304 Baker St\n --_\u00bb-\nItb\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST .13, 1021.\n\u00a7\nAttractive\n-Prices\nOn White Canvas Boots, Oxfords and Pumps with rubber\nsoles. These goods ure ideal\nsummer  shoes.\nWomen's High Cut White Canvas Lace Boots, rubber sole\nand  heel fogy \/jp\nMisses (same), sizes *fl\u00bb-| mff\n11 to a \u00abbJL. i o\nChild's (same), sizes ti*-t A w\n0 to  10  tDX\u00ab40\nWomen's  White   Canvhs  Pump,\ni_t_. $1.85\n$2.15.\nRubber\nrubber soles (no\nheel)\nSame with\nheel \t\nWomen's White Canvas,\nsole,  canvass coy-   Qrt \/?\u00a3?\nerod heel   \u00abD___i<.UO\nWomen's White Canvas Oxford,\ncanvas   covered\nheel     '.\t\nJbo.JLD\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Foot  Fashion\nKootenay and Boundary\nJohn Barnett, Old Timer,\nIs Killed; Charge Driver\nWith Manslaughter.\nRI ESTATE\nOfTHE HE\nResidence and Ranches\nChange Hands; Add to\nFruit Warehouse.\nFERNIE,     Aug.     3 2.\u2014Joint     Bapnott j     CRESTON,   Aug.   12.\u2014At   their\ndead,    ThoimiH    Mlntin,    uninjured,    fn   ing   last    week    the    directors\ncustody,   charged    with   manslaughter, '\nand   H.   WoodH,' ,T.   Rawlinson   and   E.\nals\nof\nD.\nput\nDOKIES  CELEBRATE\n\u2022ROKSLANI), Aug. 11.\u2014Tiie\nK. K. held their cerein\nlast evening hi the Arm\nabout forty candidates\nthrough. A huge hurribi\nbeta from all over the .1\nPresent, Previous to tin* ceremonial\nin the Armories a street parade of\nmembers and candidates was oo'lVdilCtod\nthrough the main thoroughfares of\nthe olty, headed by the Great War\nA.eleraus'   hand.\nI J. Carter, all of\" this city, are nursling minor injuries and recospfing from\nsevere shakings up, is lhe toll of an\nI Automobile spill about 10:80 Wednes-\nj day hiffht about a mile west of Natal,\nI near thn junction of the main Crow's\nNest pass trunk road with the Elk\n. prairie  highway.\n|    The  party,  with  a  number  of  other\n' motorists,    was    returning   from    Onle-\n; man,   Alberta,   where   thoy   had   attended   the  baseball   game   between   Fernie\n\u2022 and Coleman  teams.\n|    According   to   a   report   by   the   oc-\n'cupants   the   car   was   traveling   homeward   at   a   good    rate,   but   in   taking\n\u25a0 tne sharp turn at the junction  lo pro-\ncoed   to   Fernie,   owing   to   unfivenejis\n, and  loose  gravel  on   thc  road,  the  car\nskidded   and   one   of   the   rear   wh.iels\nlodged   in   a   *rui,   causing   the   ear   lo\ntopple    on    its    side    and    then    rom-\nl pleteiy    turn    turtle,    pinning    Harnett,\nwho    was    in    the    rear    scat,    under-\ni neath.     AH   others   managed    to   get\nclear.        Harnett      was      Immediately\nrushed   to   Michel   hospital,   whero   A\nwas ascertained he was Buffering irom\ninternal   injuries   and   broken   spine.   Ho\nsoon  recovered  consciousness and  was\nquite   rational,   but   the   end   came   suddenly  about   four a.  in.\nHo was resident of this cily .and\ndistrict for the past twenly-flvo y<nu;_\nand a prominent ofd-time charuci'*r.\nHla regular occupation was cook, which\nbe followed continuously in lumber\ncamp:: until a year or so ago. In\nearly days ho worked for G. L>. Mc-\nNab, A. McDou&all, and oilier prominent interior lumbermen, with whom\nhi- was an intimate fnend rather '.ban\nan employee. Recently he disposed\nof some property in an eastern city,\ntho proceeds of which are reported lo\nhave been more Mian ample lo k.a-p\nhim In comfort Tor a lifetime, even\nhad   he  been  younger.\nTie was sixty years of age and Is\nSurvived hy bis wife, who resides ai\nVancouver, und duugtttcr. Mrs. Cornelias   Whplan,   also   of   Vancouver.\nII J life Hint _\u00bb*_.!,_ i,, _-, _, i,  *,*. IUIH Vt. (III.\nr, I Fruit Growers\"  ifnion   arranged   for   llic\n\u25a0..erection   of   a   1,2x80   foot   leanto   ad.li-\nII    I.   A \u201e\u201e,.   ,1.,1.1.. \u201e(' til,. \u25a0.1.1,11,,,ll\nPedro dc Cordoba will play Lane\nlot. In tlie coming Greenwich vill-i\nproduction of \"Lancelot ami  IDJaJnj\ntion on the roadside of the present\nwarehouse. This extra space will\ngreatly facilitate the unloading in bad\nweather of apples that.are hauled in\nfor central   pack   at  Creston.\nThere is still considerable movement iu town real estate. This weej;\nMr. Schade disposed of the Spoers\nresidence, which he purchased a little\nover a year ago, lo C. E. TwIkb. Mr.\nSeliade disposed of his ten-acre ranch\nabout two months ago. antl with his\nfamily will be returning to Rosterhern,\nSask., in a few weelks. A. McMillan,\nof the C. P. R. fire patrol bas just acquired a block of six iots from Mal-\nlaiidaino & Little, and is getting ready\nto erect a residence on ft, and plant\nthe    garden    out    to    raspberries.\nC. B. Twigg, resident horticulturist\ngot baek the latter part of the week.\nlifter almost two months' absence at\nSlocan and Knslo districts, where be\nhas been making a horticultural census of those  areas:\nMrs. Waldie and son, George, ot\nKail-view, were hero this week' on a\nvisit to her daughter, Mrs. P. it,\n\u25a0Truseott. , *    ,\nGeorge Mead, cashier at the Imperial Rank, is away on his usual\ntwo weeks' vacation, which he is\nspending with Fernie and Cranbrook\nfriends. : .\nMr. and Mrs. \\V. It. Revnn anil two\nd&ughters of Estevan, Sask;, aro vis*\nitors here this week, guests of Mr\nand Mrs.  R. s. Bevan.\nMisses   Edltll   and   Marguerite   Craw\nford  arc  visitors  with   friends  m  Nel-.\nson   at   present.\n' Mrs, c. G. Bortnett and two children\nleft oil Wednesday for, Invermere.\nwhere she will spend tue next three\nweeks on a visit to her parents\nMr, aud Mrs. R. B. Mel.eod are\nawav on a twO weeks' holiday with\nold \"friends   at   Trail.\nPlans Little Entente\napples\nTAKE JONE-CU,\nForeign   minister   nf   lliimunia.    wh\nwill   mBct'\"']u_o-Slaviii   unci   Czecho\nSlovakia   ut   Mnrlenbad,   to   form   a\noffensive and defensive treaty.\nINVERMERE NOTES\nlNVI'IK.Ml'llil'l.       Am.'.      II. \u2014An\ntill\n\u25a0 ii.Htri\nI*.   .Mill\n113   youii_.e,sl\nMillion   of  llils |Sni  Jtr.  and  M\n.'[\u2022cd. an   export Maud, \u25a0 Oregon,  Ity car,  w\n(Iren.    They  were  inotorl\nnl    Mini   Spokane  and  stopped   ov-\n: '-'    visit   Mr.   uml    Mrs.\nul   Win\nWl'\na  ill   Hi\nMl'.   Alia\nA FULL\nCASE FREE\nWat are going to give a whole\ncase of largo size tins Pacific\nMilk free to the person wlyi\nwrites the bc.^t letter on why\nthoy like Pacific Milk.\nit is not so much a matter of\nhow the letter is written. Thc\nJudging will be based entirely\non the letter which-* gives thc\nb'est reason. \" Thqsle sho win t;\noriginal ways of using the. mill*:\n\u25a0will receive favorable consideration, though*' it is not art esen-\nLial.\nAll   letters   must   he addressed\nto   P.   O.'  Rox   882,   Vancouver,\nPACIFIC ILK CO.\nLIMITED\nFactorial at Abbotsford  and   tanner,  B. C.\nChina, Crockery,\nGlassware and\nVariety Goods\nWa   mako  a   specialty   af   opan\n\u2022took  patterns.\nDR0NSFIELD BROS.\n303   Baker   St.       -       \u25a0       Nelion\nBranch  at  Panticton\nGraphite\nPenetrating Oil\nDissolves rust, stops tbe squeaks.\nCollect no dust or dirt. Graphite\nyour springsl Releases rusty bolts,\nking pins, etc., making driving a\npleasure.'\nCanadian Auto and Electrical  Supply   Co..   Reid   Block\nThomas  Minton  i\nor  Mr.   and   Mrs.   .1\ncity    ami    was    eonsidc\nlicensed  chauffeur.\nDue   to   many    rejmrl\ninl'jsicaiils     may    havo     played     ..m*h-   ....   ,      ..\npart,   the   failure  of   the   driver   lo   ,m- | )vm,(; V, ,\nmediately     report    accident     and     the   {$*$\"\u25a0&: \u00bb{;rffll\nhasty  removal   of the  vehicle   from   the,-siM'' bHttn-Hon. \t\nscene    thereafter,    searching    InveaLiga-1     Mr-   ^nd    Mrs:. Kdwards   of   Cal,\ntion    In   lieing    Instituted   and    the   aii-.111'*;,\ntifoi'litOfl   have   laid   tho   formal   charge'     '\u2022\nof   maiiHhvughtQr   In   advance   est   the i \",l,:\nitniucst ordered hy Coroiior A. ('.  Murray   to  convene   Friday.\nMail   for   Minton   has   heen   fixed   at\n$8000.\nWilliam   .1.   tocWs   nbwest   itdyal\n\"The   Moiintehanli,\"   has   been drama\ntlsied  by   Ernest   Denny,  and will   bi\nproduced     in     London   wilh Dentil:\nRadio   in   tho   leading  role.\nof the IiniJ.-n.il\n. Hank of Cahudn. Fernie branch, Is\nHpeiuling his holidays with his father\nand    mother.\nMr.    and    Mrs.    Wilson    ol     Nuninio\n(are   making a   short   stay  with   Dr. at\nMrs.'  Coy,   having   motored   down   fro\n(3 Olden.\nMi-, and Mrs. Alfred Alexander of\nSettler, Alberto, are spend-.ng soiin\nlime visit ins their nld-tlmti friends\nMr. and Mrs. ,1. W. Morland and Mr\nand \u25a0 Mrs. Hnllnntyrie; at i'remle\nranch, Windermere.\nCORNS\nLift Off with Fingers\nDoesn't Hurt a bit!    Drop a  little  W\n'Freeaone'*   on   an   aching  corn,   instantly that corn stops hurting, then , jj)\",.^\nshortly   yon    lift   tt   right   off\nROSSLAND NOTES.\nSlurr.  Miss   l-Iillli,  In\ntrili in  Vaneouvur,\n,MI.s.  I I'll'..\n(I    ill    I 1.1    llu\nKilwniil     ti\niHii'.-.Ms   of (his   ,sisle\npoints,\ns    Kallih'Cii    Ore\nu serious o.ieru\nuortud lielilK 11111\ns   Louis;'   Horry\nspfiuliut,'    thu\nof   Miss   Eileen\nUn\nHank of Montreal, '.Vrail, w.ts lime one\nevening  this  week.   *\nIti-iI (Jluipnnin, Trail, was in the\nein   tin-  first of the  iv.-.li.\nWesley J. Owen. Trail, inulorul to\nthe  olty   hist  evening.\nliiirolil BrOwti tnotorufj lierti li.st\neyenlng from Trail;'\nMiss Mvelvn White :s lit I'listlrgiir\nvisiting her aunt,  Mrs.   tCnpt.)   Payhl-\nBorn\u2014To   Mr-   \u25a0\u25a0\n,.,   Angusl    lllll.\nMrs. M\nI.   Wns\nMrs.   Jul\nlauglttpf.\nr anil  (lutiglltel\nMi!\nof\nuf Vol.\nllu    eil.\ncoinpiiiiiucl  l.y  Mrs.   Win\nne Murray of tlio Con-\nun .. Smellllis \u25a0 nnii-\nTiulHima  Is npciitllng tin\nllh   wc\n'       Mrs.   Huvlil   Murray,   ul   Iff\n,       ,       ...Colu'inhla    ewiiue    west.\nTour druggist sells n  tiny bottle of j    .\\nKs   Muy   Louise   Murray\n\"Frec\/.one\"   for  a  fow  conts,  sutflo-1 log a I'uw iluys the guesl  of\nlent to remove every  hard  com, soft ( \"*'*;ll.M!^,l   i'S   !i\"v,.w,,.'e''\neorn.  or  eortl   lielween  lho  toes,   audi,,,.,,   _.[.,.\u201e,;.ne.   ;i    few   (\\uyn   lu\ntho    calluses,    without    soreness    orjg\nIrritation.\nWl\nPk? \u2022CiiREf'J.L'LV %0:;\n&rV>i;F0UliWTHEIi-\/\n-|Jv\u00abACTL^\/\nBest of all Fly Killers I.\/c\npcr Paeltel at all DruKsists,\nGrocers and General Stores\nMade\nin B.C\nHull\nal   ti\nl.uiiBliliiii.      Mr.   Wade   eiimu   lu\nIlllelKl    tiie    li.    (I.    K.    K.    inuulili\nI\".  .1.   idilvus   is   In   llie  olty.\nMr.    nnd    Mrs.    Georgo   Amns\nreturned   after   n   vacation   ut\nand   Kootenay   lake   points.\nMisses Muriel nod Dorothy\n(laughters of Mr. uml Mr.s, I\nW. Hull, ure Bounding a few d.\nSpokane.\n\"Dutch\" Harris, who lies he\nllevlng Cleo. Alias at lho It, O.\nphone company while the lutu\nbeen on his holidays, has retur\nTrail.\nA number of Orangemen of tin\nTrull lodge motored to the city las\nlivening and assisted tile local loilgi\nlu initiating several candidates lull\nthe high degree of the order.\nBklund and Anderson, who have re\neenlly opened up In business here,\nfrom Trail, us general contractors\nund builders, have secured the eon\ntract to  finish  tlie   War Memorial.\nweddingjT\nMACDONAX^-CAHTWRX-aZIT\nCR19STON,  Aug.   12.\u2014Quite  llie   .\u25a0\u2022\u25a0et.\nIlest  wedding   that   the   valley has  wit\nnessed    this    year    was    sol om id zed    a\ntlie   home   of   the   bride's    pa runs.    Ml\nand   Mrs;   George   Cartwrighl,   Ericltson\nat    high     noon    Tuesday,    when    thel\nyoungest   daughter,   Melva   Lueile,   Wa;\nunited   in   marriage   Willi   Dnii*iM   Mm\ndouald' of Cranbrook,   Rev. J.  A.  .James\nofficiating!     The   bride's   cost units   was\nof   white   satin    bordered   with   polti\nwitli   an   overdtt-es   of   while   s,ll<\nlaee,    with    llic'o    veil    caught,    with'   U\nbandeau    of    orange    bios*-*oniN,    and    a\nbouquet  of  carnal ions   and   sweet   peas.\nShe   was   attended   hy   Miss   .lean   Wil\nson   and    Miss    Dorothy    McKoivan    of\nCranbrook,  who  were   frocked  iu  while\norgandie   and   lials   of.'   pale   pink   tulle\"\nwith    shower    bouquets    of   pale    piliii.\nThe   best   man   was   W.   B,   Thomas   of\nthe    local    Hank    of    Commeree    staff,\nand   Mrs.   H.   M.   \"Whinister  played   the\nwedding   march.     After   the   ceremony\nthe   guests   sat   down   to| a.' sumptuous\nhii<h    noon    Iunelieon,   after   whieii   llu*\nhappy    couple    left    on    the   oasthound\ntrain via Kpokane for a honeymoon  trip\nto coast   points,   after   which   they   will\nreside   at   Cranbrook,   where   the   groom\nis   accountant   at    the   Bank   of   Commerce.\n10th at 2 o'cloek, at \"liuena Vista,\"'\nLlic summer Home of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. D. lOmory, when Kev. .1. P. West-\nman, Nelson, united iu marriage Arthur Clyde Enua-y, son of Mr. aiul\nMrs. ISmory, and Miss Vera Allot\nSluhbs, daughter' of Mv. and Mrs. .1\nW. Htuhbs oE Nelson, recently ot\nLeduc, Alta. The .bride, who was\ngiven in marriage by her father, wa:\nverv becomingly attired   In a gown  o\nvory charmeuse sul-.ii. witli eustomar;\nveil ami orange blossoms, t-^lm car\nrled, a shower bouquet ol white Car\nnations and maidenhair leni, lb-\n.oUsIri, Miss Irene l\/H tr, -actod a.\nIn-idesmaid. charmingly gowned n\norchid    organdie      with     a   pink   goor\nelte picture hat and carried a bouqiiv\nf   pink  and   while   sweet   pons.  . Utll\nilliu GenoVievO Wailt-y, dressed in pal\nblue   organdie,   and   little   UltiH   Jfttlie\nI'huorv, in pink organdie; with hat\ntu mutch, carrying sweet peas, acted a\nflower girls. The bridegroom wa\nsupported by his cousin, Clayton Wal\nley.     They   were   i.nth   machine   gur\nnJrs   In  the   lD-Otli   Western   I'niversii ie\nBoston Man Buys Graven-i\nsteins by Carload; Says\nQuality the Best.\nCREKTON,    Aug.    1^.\u2014Although    up\ntill   the   present   Creston   valley   apple*-.\nhave   always    found   a   ready    sale   at\nprairie    points    no    further    east    than !\nBrahdoh,   Man.,   knowledge   of   the   excellence   of   tbe   local   orchard .product !\nhas by no means been confined  to the ;\nprairie    provinc-s   and    Hriti^li    Coin in- i\nbia.      Last    fall    D.   .1.   Dewar   of   the |\n| Wynndel    Mercantile    Co.,    Ltd..    Wynn-\n! del.  supplied a  friend at  Hoslon.   Mass,!\nwith   some - seventy   boxes   of   Graven-|\nI steins.     <\u00bbn   receipt   of 'them   his   bean- I\neating    friends     commented     favorably I\nupon  them  except  as to the   inferior- i\nIty  of. the   pack as compared  with   tin* I\nfruit   coming   from    tlie   Pacific   coast I\nstales.     Last   month,   however.   Mr.   De- j\nwar  was  quite   agreeably  surprised   to\nget a wire  from the .-lame party asking\nfor   an   f.o.b.    Boston   price-^a   a   ear-\nload of Un- same variety or ajjtyles, and\nin   a    letter   since   ree-ivdd   confirming\nthe   wire   the   prospective   carload   Iniy-\ner   slates   that   thi;   Dravcnsteins   were\nquite    the   best    apple   of   any   variety\nthat   Uie   Hoston   man   had   bandied   last\nreason,    hence    the   anxiety    to    secure\nthe  increased  supply  for this  year.\nreally  taking  an   interest  In  the un,-.\nemployment  situation.\n\"Tin*      present     situation      can    be\nsummed   up   in   Ibis  way.\n\"The statement was made at the\nreplacement basis ami while it was\nnot stated in jn^i as clear language the inference ;ill_ through was\nlhat those who control industries |\ncould not and would not produce lie-\ncause thoy in turn could not market j\ngoods produced at lhe present cos\nof   piodneliuji.\n\"Wo   shall   meet,   representatives   e\nand   later   two   officials   of   llie   di'\nparlmoni  ol' labor will -a-' *<> f'ttavv;\noa unemployment', called by the fed\noral  minister  of .labor.\"\nThe Store for Style\nThe Store for Quality\nAUGUST\nSale\nEverything in DRYGOODS and WEARING APPAREL\nON SALE at less in many cases than manufacturers'\nprices. Such an opportunity does not often .come, and\nit Would be advisable to supply your present and future\nneeds at these prices.\nWOMEN'S UNDERSKIRTS at $1.25.\nndorsklrts  with  flounces  trimmed\nd'-AN-l'l'  PRICE,\nUNDERSKIRTS at $2.95\nGood   Cambric Underskirts wl'^ flotuiiies trimmed with narrow lace.\nAll lengths.   ri.iCAX-l'l' 1'HK'i;,\neach    : \u201e\t\n'I'o Operate  in Canada\n'London,.   Aug.   112\u2014cbai\n'nss  cubic)\u2014it  is  unders '\nTI'\ninroftdltfg   cedar   trees   i:\nr the liciiiiiifiil lawn Horv\nii bower I'm- tin- ceremony.   Tlio\nroom anil \\eraiiiln were uinti'I'nl!:\norntod Willi lllult ami white\nliens, where a IiiifTcl lnni.-Ii.oii\nserved. The bride's - irnv. I,in: en\nwas a iinvv bine Irieotlnd suit\nblaclt lial ' ivlnniiisl with while\nbraid.\nMr. and Mrs- Kmovj' are n\n1 lour ol' llie eoiist cities. Tlie\nreside ,11 Nelson, \"ll Victoria s\npacking: Elonse\nJohn Burns Se Son are erect\nHacking shell 25 hy 4(1 feet. 1(\nWillow I'oliit Fruit drawers'\nIt  Is  located nt  111.   end of lho\nEMPTY    1IOUSH     EUBHF.\nIKIS.SI.ANIi.    Am:.'     II.    A     Iii\nstemlilit\n\u25a0ale im\nlent   me\nl,nli'|.hl\n\u25a0I   Wll.\n1831.\nVflltc\nSOME   DATES\nllic\nil    llial I\nid'    lhe\nn   tt   large\n,il plum-\nand (Irenl\nlhe   enlir-\nb)\nCovered hy  l-ic.hi\not    iead    were\n,-ClllllC  was   I'irsl\n-ll\n111-\niCI'ltl,   III III.\n-Mriihul   ivij\nTiESH-lESIl\nleentl\n|    Tin\nI    'l'i,\nA  piirlieiiliiriy k^ikI  Skirt,  niailu oE  extra tjunlity  cambric,  with deep\nflounce nf Lire ot em broidery,   Lengtliis 32 to 30 inches.\nRegular   price,   $3.75.     CLIOvW-l'I*   PltlCB\t\n$1.25\nwith deep\n$2.95\nENVELOPE CHEMISES at $1.39\ninn  and  liimmeil with\n\u25a0gular \u00a52.00    AM   QA\nWell mad\nla ie i.r\nembroidery.  Regu\ngarments.   GI.EAX-U1\n\"DOVE\" CHEMISES at $2.95\nalso some nf Crepe in\nsizes'* Values <1>r) QP\n* run.'!-;  iD\u2014.UO\nl-'iin>  Hull  chimises.\nwhit \u25a0 llesh.    All\nto  15,00.  Cl.l-.'A.N'-l'l\nCOTTON BLOOMERS at 95c\nHcgulm\nr'iucE\nCI.KAX-l'l'\nKNITTED COMBINATIONS at 95c\n95c\nwilh   lu\\v\n95c\nBETTER COMBINATIONS at $1.75\nit!  arms, round\n1 $1.75\nsleeveless   sl_\nIIi-Kiilar lirl-\nline KgyjiUan Cotton, nicely taped at i\nceks nnd light knees.   All   sizes,    Hegul.\nri.i-:.\\.\\-ii'  t'ltu'is \t\nVMe\nWOMEN'S COTTON HOSE at SOc\nI   i-allinil   he   illi|di.-all-il.     Made   Of   I\nrmvii.   Ill-M-I;   and    White\ncu-.-AX-rr I'UH.'i-:, pii\nlll.'ilily yarns, wilh\noea -.Sizes li. in; and 10.\nIh-gnlar   price,-\n50c\n611 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nlu i ui..,. ii. -\nMaiHifact\u00ab\u00ab-rs Say Cannot\nP<!arket Goodg at Present\nProduction Cost.\nVICTORIA,\niiuh-   of   Hi'\nLowulil tin' ue\none id\" iiuiuii\nplained   I mill y\nDRUM   AS TELEGRAPH.\nIheir   dinniT   and   ilighl\nI,-   ni-M   village   by   n   il\nThe   villugel'S   used\n.   i'liisial,  telegraph  -in i\nec   -anil    ihire    are . n\nEuropean  the rhyliiin\nui Id\n.Mr.      Oliver\nIlls\nlie\nli'inl and   in\ncouver   earl.\n'}>>\u25a0 jdi'i'l'ul sys'teni\nthe   in,;,. i\u201e vllhiffl\n\u25a0 il   II.\nd.-iiin.\nri.I  Al'i\nhi\nwhole\n' Tliiii\nid\nvhliill in\n;  knowi\ndeeds\nMulled\nsituation;\nThe    pii\n:im ieii\ni ii'iinl;. w-illi tin- ends\nI ' n nu-ssiiei- may Ir\n\u25a0   miles in a mil., mine\nHotel\nRegisters\nHtrongly    bound    Hotel   Registers     In     two     sizes.     Neatly\nruled   and   printed\nSmall    -  S3.75\nMedium    84.50\nTHE\nDaily News Job Dept.  .\nNELSON,   B.C.\nWILLOW   POINT   NOTES,\n\u25a0\\VTLLOW VOINT, Autf. 12.\u2014A very\npretty ontdbor weflrlinn wns solemn*.\n\\iV}_.-..sn\\\u2014.Wednesday . afternoon,   AutJ.'\nVALUE\n1*51 f\u00ab*   la^s^t \u2022 *\/-\u00bb. (ttwJ* Vo\n I   r_f\nf i*THE NELSON DAIEY NEWS,      SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST IS; mt,'.\n_L\nMarkets and Finance\nT STILL\nBear Movement Continues;\nIndustrials Suffer; Standard Rails Steady.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 12.\u2014Selling\nof stocks was resumed today :nul\nfor a time the decline made further\nheadway. The movement waa\nchecked, however, beforp it attained\nwide proportions, and in the later\ndealings the market stiffened, -vlth\ntho close steady,\nSales wel'c 430,01)0  shares.\nAs bus been tho case recently,\npressure was directed against thu\nindustrials and thc standard rails\nwere fairly steady. In the early decline Bethlehem Steel, General Electric, Royal Dutch, SearsTRoebuek\nand various other Issues were\nmarked   down a  point  qt* morc,\nA tentative drive at the coppers\n, and motors In the afternoon gavo\ntemporary results, -but the last hour\nbrought a moderate recovery, Rails,\noils, equipments aud shipping wore\nin demand on the late rise. American Writing Paper preferred dropped\nto 20%, the lowest since 1918. Central Leather common and preferred\nyielded about 4 points each, and\nthese issues, together with Utah\nCopper, Continental CaCn and United States Alcohol reached new low\n\u25a0points,\nHeaviness again predominated !n\nthe bond-. market. Central Leather\nfls, Chile Coppir fls, Mercantile Marino Os and Oregon Short Line refunding 4s declined l to 1^ points.\n, Foreign exchange rates were irregular. Cull loans were carried >ver\nuntil next week at fi per cent.\nTotal   sales,   J7.8QS.000.\nClosing   Quotations.\nHigh.   Low.   Close.\nChlno             ... 22\nC.  1?.  K 113\nC, f>t &  St.  I'.... I'll\nInter.  Marine  ....   \\}%\nMo.  Pac.   com  Ill\ndo   pfd     3!l\nPierce Arrow   .,.. 1-Hi\nStudebaker      li-%\nV. S. Stuel com... 7.\nWillys        tl%\nPacific  Oil  und  Pasco  nul   quoted.\n111! Mi\nVA\n33%\n72%\n. n\\_\n1121,\/.\n25%\n18\n3S\nM%\nw;_\n74\nSILVER STATIONARY\nNEW YORK, Aug.  12\u2014Silver,\nmestlc,   DllMc;   foreign,   GO'\/fcc.\nLONDON,   Aug.   12\u2014Silver,   37*._<1.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE.\nNEW   YOBK,   Aug. 12.\u2014Canadian\ndollars. S0.12.\nFranca\u2014Demand  7.81.',  cables 7.82'_.\nLire\u2014Demand  4.38, cables \u2022US'\/..\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW yortlC, Aug. 12.\u2014Sterling\nexchange Irregular at $3.52 fQr (today bills and at }3.6G_,  for demand.\nNELSON, Atig. 12,\u2014Current counter   exchange   for   sterling,   $4,05%.\nCANADA BONDS.\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 12.\u2014Bid prices\nfor  Dominion  war   loans:\nWar      loans\u2014JU25,      $94.50\n$92.30;   1934, '$95.75.\nVictory loans\u2014192, $98.75;' 1923.\n$97.80; 1927, $97.80,; 1933, $97.75;\n1937, $99.25;   1924, (MIG.GO;   1934, $94.00,\n1931.\nDOMINION TRADE.\nWINNJPEC. Aug. 12.\u2014(Canadian\nI'resHO\u2014Lattle change in the husi-\niiesn situation haa taken place during the past few week's, states the\nweekly-trade report of the Canadian\nCredit men's Trust association, issued\ntoday. Quebec and Montreal advises\ntrade quiet. Wholesalers, however,\nare. feeling a distinct movement mid\norders coming in from outside points)\nindicate a fall better than waa expected.\nRetail, trado in lh.> lurger centers\nhas, on the whole, improved, but is\nquiet in the smaller towns owing Lo\nfarmers being on the land.\nToronlu reports state that manufacturers ami wholesalers are quiet,\n\u2022oxcepling in dry goods, ladles' and\ngents' wear and hoots and shoes, in\nall of which au Improvement is manifesting itself. Retail trade is quiet\nwith the exception of dry goods, but\nimproving with a resumption to '*ior-\nmal   conditiuns  after   the   holidays.\nWinnipeg wholesaler*^ find improvement maintained in drygoods,\nboots and shoes and drugs, and indications that trade will improve be-*\nfore the fall are many. Additions\nand improvements to many industrial plants and warehouses iu and\naround Winnipeg shows moro than\noptimism fji the future, Retail trado\nquiet during the summer months, is\ngetting   back   to   normal.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK.\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 12.\u2014Arrivals ,\"t\nthe stockyards 'up tu 9 o'clock today were 750 cut! le, .470 hogs and 110\nsheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice. $.\",.311 to $11.00; fair\nto good, $'1.25 to $5.25; common, $3.00\nto  $3.50.\nButcher heil'.TS\u2014Choice, $5.00 to\n$3.50;   fair   to   good,   $3.75   to   $4.76.\nButcher (Jows-r-Chdlce. $4,50 to\n$5.00; fair to good, $3.25 to $4.25;\ncanners and cutlers, $1.00 to $2.00.\nBulls\u2014Good, $3i00 to $3.60; common,  $2.00   to   $2.50.       . j\nOxen\u2014Good,   $1.00   to   $4.50;    me-\n\u25a0 dlum,   $3.00   to  $3.50;   common,   $1.50\nto $2.50. \u2022\u00bb _\nFeeder     steers\u2014Choice,     $4.25\n$4.75;  fair to good, $3.00  to $4.00.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice. $3.25 to\n$3.75;   fair   to  good,   $2.50   to  $3.00.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3.00 to\n$3.50;  fair to good, $2,26 to $2.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $7.00 to $8.00; goud,\n$5.0o'to $0.00; common. $3.00 to $4.00.\nSheep\u2014Good, $5.00 to $6.50; common,   $3.00   to  $4.00.\nLambs\u2014Good, $7.50 to $11.00; common,   $5.0(1   to  $0.00.\nHogs\u2014Selects. $14.25; heavies,\n$11.25 to $1325; lights, $14.00 lo\n$14.50; sows. $8.20 lo $10.25; slags.\n$5.00   to  $7.00.\nMONTREAL LIST.\nMONTREAL, Aug, 12.\u2014Kxcept in\nHie eases of three or four stocks\nbusiness on the local slock exchange\ntoday Was dull.\nAbititi was the most active stock\nof the day, but despfte the,fact that\n154Q shares came out, the price held\nup very well, lt lost only ono point\nto  Zi%.    JUiurentide  closed  \\,1%,\nWayagmack closed at 28*^; Spanish River closed with a 2 point gain,\nthe common also advancing to 61.\nAn order for the purchase of 1000\nshares of British Empire Steel camo\ninto tho market and the price advanced to a new lowe level at 12%a.\nDominion Steel gained %, while\n.\u25a0Ontario Steel held steady at 47. as\nHid ulsy Wteei-of Canada at 47^,\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN.\nMINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 12.\u2014Flour\nunchanged to 25c higher at $8.20 to\n$8.50 a barrel. Shipments, 51.4G5 barrels.\nBran\u2014$15.00\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern, $1^1114 to\n$1.46_i.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow, 40c  to Flue.\nOats\u2014No.  3   white,  30',f.c  to 3114c.\nFlax\u2014No.  1,  $2.00   to  $2.08.\n.43\n.4.1\n39\n.07\n.06\n.OS\nWHOLESALE MARKET.\nThe following are Nelson ..wholesale\nprices   on   the, various   commodities\nnamed!\nButterfat:.\nSweet    $\nNo.  1  sour   \t\nNo '2 sour  \t\nFruit  for jam:\nRaspberries    ,\t\nBit ick  currants   \t\nRed   Currants   \t\nSv .'eet   Cherries   \t\n\"VJolIow    Transparent    apples   ,\nper   ton  20.00\nBrtessed Carcases:\n\"Steers    11%\nCows    10%\nCalves    .' ;.    .13\nMutton   ...v, 17\nLambs  20\nHogs     ,     .19%\nFowls 28\nNo. 1 creamery butter.\nIn   cartons\t\nIn   parchment   \t\n66s. solid\t\n14s,   solid     !.\nl*Jo. 1 dairy butter ...\nEggs, per doz 60\nTable berries:\nRaspborrles.    fancy,    choice,\n\u25a0    per crate  8.00\nPotatoes,  new   cropi\nClean and of good size,  per\n100 pounds     2.76\n.45\n.41\n.41\nM_\n.40\nday in Amiens and are now visiting\nParis. The party is being conducted\nby Major Fred Ney, secretary general of the Canadian National education committee. An ali day visit\nwas  paid  Versailles.\nAfter tho visitors Jiave seen all the\nmost interesting spots iu and around\nParis, they will tour the battlefront,\nvisiting Verdun, Bhclms, Arras and\nLille.\nREGINA, Aug. 12.\u2014Richard Caha-\nvan of Slecmans, Ont., was found\nlying dead on tho C. p. R. main lino\ntills morning, liis right toot mangled\nand the back o'f his head severed\nand .left arm entirely crushed.\nIt is believed lhat he was standing\non the step of a train, had fallen off\nand had been dragged under tho\ntrain in an effort to regain his footing.\nln ills possession 'was a harvester\nexcursion ticket from Ottawa to\nDunkirk, Sask., where it is learned\nhe has a married daughter, Mrs.\nStevens. Ho is also survived, hy a\nbrother.-Joseph Canavan of Sloe-\nmans. An inquest will be held tomorrow Jn Regina;\nSmoke\nMONTREAL PRODUCE.\nMONTREAL,      Aug.     12.\u2014Produce\nmarket steddy.\n.   -Cheese\u2014Finest   easterns,    22 -%c.\nButter\u2014Choicest   creamery,   41c   to\n42c.\nEggs\u2014Fresh.   4(!c  to  48c.\nPotatoes\u2014Per   bag,   car-lots,   $3.00\nto ?3^5.\nDISMISS ATHEIST.\nLOWER\n\u2022Bearish crop\nand Canada\ndepress    the\nPrices   closed\nCHICAGO. Aug. 12.-\neslimatcs from France\ntended somewhat ' to\nwheat market today,\nunsettled, _c to 2c net lower, witli\nSeptember $1.23% to $I.23:S1 and December $1.25   to  $1.25%.\nCorn  lost   %c  to   lc and   oats   %c\nto lc.    ,\n'In   provisions   (he   outcome   variod\nfrom 40c decline to a rise of 2a\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN   QUOTATIONS.\nWho\nOct\t\nDec.   .....\nNov.    .. .\nOats\u2014\nOct. *....\nDec\t\nBarley-\nOct. ....\nDec\t\nFlax\u2014\nOct\t\nNov.\nRye\u2014\nOct.   ....\nDbc\t\nOpen.   High.   Low.   Close.\n.161%\n.143%\n.140%\n\u25a0 48%\n.147\n161%\n144 Vi\n140%\n40%\n148%\n141%\n145')i\n411\n401,4\n.200 1-3 209%    200%\n122?i     1211,;,\n140\n141=4\n3*i5->4\n40%\n40%\n77'\/.,\n73 \u25a0_\n208\n20SIJ.\n118\nEGG MARKET.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 12.\u2014The egg trade\nin eastern Canada will find it necessary to look for supplies that will\ngrade extras.  \u2022\nAt Ontario country points, straight\nreceipts,  are   3i>c   to  37c.\nToronto market firm, extras jobbing 4Gc  to 47c.\nMontreal  firm  and   unchanged.\nWinnipeg and Saskatoon markets\nunchanged.\nCalgary unsettled, supplies coming\nin freely, quality poor. Trade ire\nquoting   $8.75  per  case  delivered.\nBritish   Columbia   unchanged..\nTORONTO BOARD.\nTORONTO. Aug. 12,\u2014Tlie volutno\nof trading in listed stocks on tho\nlocal exchange today was only slightly over 1000 shares.\nBritish Empire, Steel closed 1\npoint higher for the common at 12;\nWayagamack closed higher at 2S;\nSpanish .River gained V__ points;\nRiordon %',* while I_.iurentide mov^d\nup to 08. Abltjbi and Uronipton\nlost % point.\n. Tbe heaviest gain was shown in\na three-share sale of Lake of the\nWoods, the price going up 4% to\n1Z4%.\nGains were shown by Royal,\nStandard nnd Hamilton in the bank\nstocks,\nThe tone in the Victory bonds was\nirregular.\nWASHINGTON,*^'. 12.\u2014Presi-\ndent Harding has definitely designated Secretary Hughes to head the\nUnited States delegation at the disarmament conference and has placed\nin his hands the task of arranging\nall remaining details of the meeting, Other members of the delegation   have  not  been   selected.\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 12.\u2014W. D. Bay-\nHe, Labor member for Asslniboia In\nthe Manitoba legislature and a teacher in the employ of lhe St. Boniface school board, was dismissed by\nthe board tonight because of remarks\nconsidered to be of an athestical nature made by him at a labor church\nmeeting last  Sunday night.\n\u25a0After reaching thc decision to dispense with Mr. Bayley's services the\nboard announced he would bo given\ntwo months' salary in lieu  of notice,\nMr. Bayley, who. was principal of\nthe King Georgo school, attended tho\nmeeting and -claimed tho board did\nnot have thc legal power to dismiss\nhim for religious beliefs unless such\nbeliefs had been promulgated in the\nschool, contrary to the act. He submitted a written statement to tbe\nschool buard in which ho respectfully\ndeclined to answer any inquiries\nabout his \"religious views.\"\nHe also announced that \"ho would\nappeal to a special board of ft oncll-\niation which was appointed by the\nlegislature to hear and deal with all\ndisputes 'between school boards and\ntheir employees.\nTEACHERS  VISIT  PARIS.\nLONDON, Aug. 12.\u2014(Canadian \"Associated Press Cable)\u2014A Router dispatch from Paris says that 150 Ca*-\nnadian women school teachers who\naro   now   visiting   Franco,    spent   a\nT&B\n*\u25a0*\nDistinctive in flavor\n\u2022 and aroma\nMEN and\"%womer*^^\nto travel and appoint local representatives, $21 a week and expenses\nguaranteed, with good chance to\nmake SCO a week ami expenses.\nState age and qualifications. Expe-'\nrience unnecessary. Winston Co.,\nDept. G, Toronto. -   (4.42C)\nOPPORTUNITY for men or women,\nstudents, teachers and others, to earn\n$10 per day or more for hundred\ndays or longer guarantee covers necessary expenses; spare time or full\ntime; experience unnecessary. Write\nfor  particulars.    Winston   Co.,   Dept.\n48\nPersonal\nCUT THIS OUT FOIt LUCK\u2014Solid\nbirthdato and 10c for wonderful\nhoroscope of your entire life. Prot.\nRaphael. 04 Grand Central St. New\nYork.\t\n(41)07)\n22       Miscellaneous\nOPERATIONS\nUNNECESSARY\nHEPATOMA removal) dall Stones,\ncorrects Appendlcitlo in S4 hours\nwithout pain. Begisteratt minor\nPure Pood and Drwr Acts. $6.50.\nNot sold hy druggists,.\nSOLE   tlAHUPACTUBEB\nMRS. GEO. S. ALMAS\n230 4th Ave. 6.  Saskatoon, Sank.\nBOX  1073.\n(4353)\nHEMSTITCHING and plcotlng attach\ninent, fits on any sowing machine\nprice $2.50; personal checks 10c ox\ntra. Mrs. L. BrldBinan, Box '\" \u2022\"\nCatharines,  Ont.\nSt.\n(1421)\nUsed Article.\nRed Estate\nRooms\nBoard,\nTo Rent\nBoats anl\nAutomobiles\nSM<*\/>_->!-_P!_*v_4\nHelp Wanted\nfJrl<t<tl   IPfl\nPositions Wanted\nVH-lltJOll Ivil\nLost and Found\nAffi\/orficiri\nLivestock\nQ    Machinery\nAlUVvl llollli\n4^   Farm Produce\nw    Timber and Mines\n13 Situation* Wanted\u2014Male\nRETURNED  MAN  wants situation   as\norrico    clerk,    or    fn   warehouse    or\nstore.     Honest   and   reliable.     Apply\nBox   878,   Nelson,   B.   C.\n('477)\nP.   O.\n!!J!!*kiteJj? J^s^L_\nYOun opportunity is nore. Train yourself for it. Get into the coming foremost industry in the world and place\nyourself in line for bigger money.\nQuit laboring and buiid a future for\nyourself fn auto and gas engineering.\nWhat  others have  done so can you.\n. Learn by the only system 'in the\nworld that saves you tlmo and\nmoney. Call or write for free information to the Hemphill Motor School,\nat 228  8th ave., E., Calgary, Alta.\n____, ; t-iMO)\nENERGETIC MAN of good education\nand appearance to take up canvass-\ning and salesmanship Previous selling experience not essential, but one\nwith business training preferred.\nPermanent job and good prospects.\n\u25a0Mate iige and previous occupa\ntion.     Box   _iri6,   Daily   News.\n-  <44fifi)\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014A capable woman io organize aiid manage an office in\nNelson. One who can train and\nsupervise agents for one of Canada's leading life Insurance companies. Developed personality and\nintense  ambition   nre  essential   qual-\n, locations. Salary nnd commission\nwill be proportionately high. 'Apply\nBox    .SIS,   Daily    News. (.513)\nWANTED\u2014Old    country     woman     ns\nworking      houj.e keeper.        Generous\noutings.     Must   be   good   plain   cook.\nApply     Mrs.      Doncaster,    518    Mill\n. street. 1^_, (-H86)\nWANTED\u2014ftuliy qualified maternity\nnurso for end of October. Apply\n' *\" ,(  \"    Deanshaven,   Riondcl,   P.   o.\nB.   C.\n(4463)\nWANTED\u2014Two experienced waitresses\nat_once.__Apply Hume_hotel.   (4417)\nWANTED\u2014Girl \"for\" gcneral^houso-\nwork.   Apply 904 Silica street,\nmm_mm \u2022 (444D\n23    Property For Sale\nSee that your car is fully covered\nno matter who is driving It, for pub\nlie lalbility, property damage, colli\nsion, fire and transportation. Policies\nwritten on shortest notice, at lowest\ncost with strong, reliable company.\nH. E.DILL\nPhone 180 4457\nDON'T PAT BENT FOR YEARS\nand havo nothing to show for it, when\nowner (leaving) will sacrif.co modern\nplastered house,- 5 . rooms and bath, in\nexcellent etmdition, and free of architectural shellshock, and vermin. See\nthis place and make ntT, offer. Some\none will get a ' bargain efthor as a\nhome   or   investment,     Phono   137-K.\nVl*1-i9)\n$T50~^ic'toria street, s roomed\nfully modern  house.    Cash.\n$1000~Chatham street, 4 roomed\ncottage,  on   2- lots.    Terms.\n$1000\u2014;I\"nes street, 4 roomed cottage   un' 2   lots,   'Terms.* s\n$l275~Viincouvei* street, 4 roomed\ncottage,  on  3 lots.    Terms.\n9S1500-innes street, 4 roomed cottage   on   2   lots.     Terms.\n$1600\u2014Union street, ti roomed\niiouse on 1 lot.    Terms.\n$1600\u2014Ml\" street. 5 roomed house\non   1   lot.    Terms.\n$2200\u2014 1-Sehnsen street, 6 roomed\nhouso   on   4   lots.     Terms.\n$3000\u2014Edgewood avenue, 7 roomed   house   on   1__ Jots.     Terms.\n$3800\u2014 Cemetery Koad, 7 roomed\nhouse on 2 acres.'  Terms.\nA. T. M'MILLAN\nREAL   ESTATE\n624   Baker  Street Phone  601\n18 Miscellaneous for Sale\nFOR  SAI..E\u2014Violin   over  ge  hundred\nvears old.    Price lor easnT ?375. Apply P. O. Box  U, Nakusp, B.  C.        -\n ' (4499\/\nFOR HAM.\u2014Cheap for cash, one 6-\nhole Stewart range, almost new;\nona sea \u25a0 grass arm' cha.r, and a\nquantity of fruit sealers, Apply-\nP.   O.   Box   1047,   or   phone   TM.\n(4497)\nFOR SALE\u2014Peach crates, eleven centa\neach; apple boxes. 16 cents. Re-\nsawn from dry lumber. Apply Box\n4470,    Daily    News.' __  (4470) \u2022\nFOR SALE\u2014Sideboard,    bedstead~and\nmattresses,  linoleum.    SIS  Carbonate\n(4464)\n.Bell piano cased organ, handdomo\nmahogany case; fine tone. A bargain,\ncash or terms.    Willis Piano Store, 30*\nBakej^street (4438)\nFOR SALE\u2014D. B. 20-gauge H.\" Less\nejector gun by Leeson. England, In\ncase; 30 sporting rifle, by Ross,\nspeefally sighted 100-30(1 yards; leaf\nand peep si^htM to 1000. . Sold only\nowing to loss of sight of right eye,\nApply V- Harington, Edgewood, B. C\n(4502)\nFOR KALIO\u2014Gramaphone, Patlie, oalc\ncabinet, nearly new, and 40 , records.\nOwner leaving town. Phono 358X2.\n. __J__  (4505)\nFRUIT growers, look here. If you\nwant to buy your apple boxes at s%\nreduction price send your order to\nthe Renata Lumber Co., Renata, B.\nC. (4432)\nAPPLES are moving. Middlemass\nBros., Rock Island. Arrow Lakes,\nB. C; are now taking orders for\nTotofsky, Yellow Trahsparent or\nDuchess, , $1.20 per 40-lb. box.\nFreight extra. Orders filled in rotation.   Cash with order. (4434)\nJACK~LAUGHTON~offers for salo~by\nAugust 22nd his complete drum-i\noutfits. .(4442)\nSHINGLES\u2014Buy them now from Nakusp Shingle Mill, Box 1, Nakusp,\nB.   C, (4387)\n45    Property Wanted\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nWAN1ED\u2014Housework i?j competent\nwoman by lhe day. hour or week.\nApply   Box   -1171,   Daily   News.\n  (4171)\nYOUNG LADY wilh several years' experience or fancy leather goods,\nstationery, books, etc., desires situation.     Phone   ;M1L1,   Nelson.\n.  (4S0P)\n42        Matrimony\nBACHELOR,   32,   -\nwife.     SI.   Hox\nOhio.\nLcagu\nwants\n'filed.i.\n(\u25a0IMP.)\n=**\/-\nOur Service to Wage Earners\nNo matt.r how small may be the amount which the\nwage earner is able to set aside out of his earnings,\nhe should remember that the Savings Department\nof this Bank extends him every encouragement and\naccommodation.\nThe smallest account is afforded the same careful\nattention as the largest, and every depositor is assured the same prompt and courteous service characterized in every one of our 218 branches throughout Canada. ,.,\nIMPERIAL BANK\nMERCHANT, 35, worth (.40,000, will\nninny,   r, Hox 325, Cluh, Ft. Wayhof\n.__.i\u00bbl-_  _(451G)\nLADY L<*ArtM_lt, worlh.$6'0,006. wjilltH\nJt    husband.      N.    Hox    1134,    Loatfiic\n Detroit,___VOch.    __ ('151(1)\nWealthy willow. 33,. woulil marry\nagain, F, Uox 132, Loumio, Coluni-\nDUB, ^Ollio, U51G)\nMATRIMONIAL and friendship circlo\nDescription booklet of wealthy members, 25c, sliver. llemailed sealed.\nBox   1,   Isherwood.   Ont ___[__)\nNELSON BRANCH,\nCRANBROOK BRANCH,\nCRESTON BRANCH, \u00bb\nOF CANAHA\nJ. It D. BENSON, Manager.\nW. K, CRUBBE, Marker,\nC. W. ALLEN, AcSing Manage,\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED  1869\n.CAPITAL  PAID  UP    8 20,000,000\nRESERVE    ...-. \u2022 ,....,',     20,000,000\nTOTAL   ASSETS  521,O00,O0o'\nTOTAL   NUMBER   OF   BRANCHES     729\nHEAD   OFFICE,  MONTREAL\nSIR H. S. HOLT, president;  E. It. PEASE, Vice-President and\nManaging Director; C. E. NEILL, General Manager.\nCuba, Porto Rico, Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Haiti, Colombia,\nFrench West Indies, Antigua. Bahamas, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada\nVenezuela, Jamaica, Trinidad, British Guiana, British Honduras, and\nat Barcelona, Spain; London, England; and Now York city.\nKOOTENAY   DISTRICT   BRANCHES\nNelson\u2014 Cranbrook\u2014\nA. D. McLeod, Manager, a. F. Marsh, Manager.\nRossland\u2014 Grand Forks\u2014\nE.  J.  Vanderwater,  Manager. G. A.  Spink, Manager.\nBUSINESS   ACCOUNTS   CARRIED   UPON   FAVORABLE   TERMS\nSAVINGS   DEPARTMENT  AT  ALL   BRANCHES\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nFOR RENT\u2014Olio ' or tvt\u201et furnished\nrooms, near Lakeside park. Phone\n\u25a0\"5Y2.  _J1413)\nTO RENT\u2014 Clenn, airy rooms, under\nnew   management.    K.   W.   C.   block,\n (433G)\n54    Articles Wanted.\nWANTED\u2014Ifpnvy fluty g;iHolIne\"o-i\u00ab:ii](>\nnot   tn   excel!.!   S   h.p.     Silo.   Mower\nand   chopper.     V.   O.   Box   109*1,\n ^ (-1491)\nFILING  cabinet,    also    safe    -wanted\nWillis   Piano   Store,   304   Baiter   St\n___ (4-137)\nWANTED\u2014Twelve hundred and fifty\ndollars to Invest in sound business concern returning . twenty-five\nto thirty per cent. Box 4480, 'Daily\nNews.  (44SQ)\nWANTED   AT   ONCE\u2014100   feet  of~'\/--\nineh    pining   for   water   line.     Slafe\nprice.*   P,  F.   Hughes,   Naltusp, 1...   C.\n.  f-IHitQ\nA   SMALL   ltANCH   or   Mode   of   land\nnear   city,    with    small    house.      Must\nhave,    water    and     price    reasonable.\nApply    Box    4*523,    Dally    News.\n ; '   HG23)\n20   Livestock For Sale\n29      Lost and Foond\nIN CITY OV ROSSLAND POUND\u2014\nBay mare, star on face, one whito\nhind foot, brand \"CO\"; about 1200\npounds,  (4445)\nBtfiifitfj uni ?rotemoim\\\nDirectory\nFOB SALE--A  nuinbor of aholco  n\nisleied   Holsteln   heifers   and   calv\ntwo    very    fine    young    bulls,     bred\nrlghl    and   priced   right. , H.   H.   Mc-\nCUuue.   Wycliffe. (4514)\nTHE SAFE WAY to woinl money Dy\nmall Ih by Dominion Exprosa Money\nOrders,\nFOIt SALE\u2014One .lersev licit'er 11!\nmonths, .~,i); L' Yorkshire .sows, 13\nmonths old. $40 each, or $75 the\ntwo.     12.   F,   ,J;u'Vik_   Ffirry   Landing,\n Nelson.    _ (4520)\nFOIt  ftAiJO\"-(!oo(in\"am;irhorHer~weIgiU\n151)0  pounds.    Apply Box 4511,   Dally\n__News. (4\/>ll)\nFOU SALE\u2014Well bred Poland China\npigs U weeks old; fine, healthy\nstoclt,     ?7    apicco.      Apply    _      _Vlc-\n Culloeh.   Edgewood,   B,   C. (4473)\nIFOR SALE\u2014Ono good young cow.\nPrice   moderate.     Hamilton.     Perrvw,\n_b. c.       (ufr>)\nFOIt SALE\u2014Delivery horse,\" SllO.inX\nRiff and harness, -100,(10. Soil separate or together. T. Roynon, Nel-\nso\u00bb-  (447S)\nBEND a  Dominion Express  Money  Order.     Thoy   are   payable   anywli^re.\ngood    ranch\nProctor.\n (44J13)\n-Thoroughbred      Cocker\nbred   from   the   best\nFOP,    SALE\u2014    A    mare;\nh'jrse.    J.   Dosenberger,\nFOR       SLE-\nspaniel   pupjdes,\nhunting stool;, 8 weeks old.    Address\nBox  533,   Greenwood, B,  C.        (4416)\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u2014Cosy, six-roomed cottage\non lako front at. Balfour for summer.    A.  V. Allsebrook, Kaslo, B.  C.\n (4470)\nBUY your out-of-town supplies with\nDominion. Express Money Orders.\nFive   Dollars   costs   three   cents.\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished or unfiWbdied\nMiree-room suite, two-room suite,\nsingle room and a (i-room Iiouse.\nJ.   E.    Annable. (440*1)\n16    Room and Board\nSTRONG COUNTRY BOY, who will\nattend high school, wishes board\nand room for sen Ices after school\nand Saturdays. Apply Box 4500, Daily\n... News. (45QQ)\n19 POULTRY AND EGGS\nFOR SAMJANIne\nOne yenr old,\n501.\n34    Teachers Wanted\nWANTKIJ\u2014Teacher i'or Cascade seliool.\nSalary -.1320 por annum, teacher to\nprovide I'or janitor work. Apply In\nown handwritlngi giv.ng age, neiglit\nand religion. Must ho experienced\nand have not less than seeond class\ncertificate.      R.    a.    Ritchie,    Secre-\n_lary.   (1188)\nVVANT10D\u2014Toucher for Cooper Crceli\nseliool. One willing tn hutch. Apply   Secretary,   Lardo.   B.   C.     (HB2)\nEXPBnjBNCED teacher wanted, male\npreferred; small school. Furnished\nfcaelierage, ?12')0 salary. Apply\nSecretary Marysville School Board,\nMarysville,   B.   C. (1133)\nTJSACHEn for Glcnlily school,\nwidow with family preferred.\nman or\nApply\nSecretary,   Yahk,\n(1377)\nL.\nB'_c-_\nWANTED\u2014Teachor for Columbia Gardens assisted school; state qualifications. Apply C. B. Archibald, secretary school board, Columbia ^Gardens,\nB. C,  (13.')il)\n37 Boats nnd Automobile)]\n.'i?-1*\"b?:>T  eel,iu   cruiser launch,   2fi-li.   p.\neng,ne.     Furnished   for  sleeping  and\ncooking.       Good     running   condition\nand bargain  price,    h.  B. De Veber.\n(1116)\nFOR  SALE\u2014\nBall,   East\ni-10  Avery   tractor.     C   S.\nArrow   l'ark,   B.   C.\n>   (1C01)\nFOR SALE\u2014Cash only, ono Chevrolet\n5-passcnger car nearly new, 1320\nmodel, with r. new tires and bumper.   \"\"Will    sell   at   a   bargain   cash\nFOUI.TItV-Kelli,,K-off^i\u00a5-WhTiT\"l*5\"-l     '\"\u00b0\"\u00b0y'    Al\"\"y Nalttl-   B'   C'*,-B?j,ffi\n\u25a0 horns    and    cross    pullets,    hatched,1 \u2014; ,-'\u2014: t_t_]___l\nApril    and    lUnv.    $21.00.        A    snail \u25a0 \"**ou' SALE\u2014Launch,   30-foot,   suitable\nSome   worth   $1.00.     Also   20   White      for   passengers,   freight   or   towing.\nWh.le Leghorn hens.\nAll    laying.     Phone i\n     11S03) I\nLeghorns^\nnearly all\nlo   clear.\nHull'\none year\nWallace,\nOrpington   hen\nold,   $1.50.  Cash\nTarrys,   B.   C.\n(1515)\nFirst-class\nHouso.\nengine.      Halo's     Boat\n ; (4439)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Ono   4*10   Chevrolet   1920.\nApply Box 1136, Dally News.   (1436)\nH. B. XITTO,\nGun,  Lock, Cycle and  General  Repair\nWork.   412 Ward Stroet, Nelson.\n (3816)\nLodges\nNELSON LODOI*] No. B, B. P. O. B.,\nMeets 41014 Baker St., first and third\nThursday._  (4389)\nAccountants.\nW.   U.   FAMING,\nO-flrterad Acoonntant.\nBank of Montreal Chamber*.\nRossland, B. C. 'ffl'O\nBoots & Shoes\nMSB   KBE   fe  00.\nBoots and  shoes  Made to Order,    tin.\npairing,    013   FRONT ST, (4301)\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLE'S  GREENHOUSE,  N\u00abl\u00bb*\nCut flowers and floral deslgna.\n (4382)\nAssayers\n1. VT. WIDDOWSON, Bo_ A1108, Nelson, B. C. Standard western charge.\n (4353)\nWholesale\nA. MACDONAtD & CO., WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchant*.\n\u25a0Importers of Teas, Coffees, spices,\nDried Fruits Staple and Fanoy Groceries.     NELSON,   B.   C. (4394)\nArchitects\n>. EMMS BEAD, M. B. O. \u00bb. A,\nARCHITECT.\nBar Avenue. Trail, B. C\n  (431)5)\nEngineers\nK. li. DAWSOjr, B. C, Ii, B.\nCivil  and  mining Engineer.\nKASI.O, B. C. (4386)\nGieea\nBros., B\\\n*m{\n_____ NEI.SOK, B. O.\nCivil   AHD   MINIHO   BtraiHBBM\nB, C, Alberta and Dominion\n&AHD BUBTETOBS\nCrown Grant Agents,       Blue I'rlulliiR.\n(4397)\nA. X,. HoCUUOCB\nHyilraulio  Engineer  '\nProvincial  _,nnd  Survoroi\nBaker Bt., Nelson, B. C.\n(4398)\nAuctioneers\n~.   CTJTI.EB\nA_otion.tr, Appraiser, v\u00bbltt_to_\nS*  \u00bb\u00bbW. Privately or' nt Auction.\n219 Ward Btroet. Phone 11\n  (4399)\nFuneral Directors\nD.J.  ROBERTSON.   F.D.D.  ft  D\u201e   IM\nVictoria  Street.    Phone  IM;   Night\nPhono   157J. (4400)\n am\n%l\u00bb\nTHE NELSON BAlT^ilEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, AUfiUST 13, 192J.\nTP\nTHEDAILYM1SERY\nOF ILL-HEALTH\nThree Yeari of Suffering Quickly\nRelieved by\n\"FRUIT-A-TIVES'**\n.*'*'...'\u25a0: ; | '\nK*\n;        '\" V\n;,;\/\u2022;\u2022\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0::\u25a0\nw*| ^MBHffil\n\\,-..\n.V\n>.:\\          '      :\nWf> *\n\"      '  .            \u2022':\"' '\u2022.,\u25a0:\niii\n,   .'\nJ\n* ?\n;\n'_!____\n1\nMR. fiASPARD DUBORD\n159 Avenue Pius IX, Montreal,\n\"For three years, I was a terrible\nsufferer from, Dyspepsia and my general\nhealth was very bad. I consulted a\nphysician and took his medicine and\nfaithfully carried out his instructions;\nbut I did not improve and finally the\ndoctor told me I could not he cured.\nAt this time, a friend advised me\nto try 'Fmit-a-tive-' and I did so.\nAfter taking two boxes of 'Fruit-a.\ntiucs\\ I was greatly relieved; aud\ngradually this marvelous fruit\nmedicine-made me completely well.\nMy digestion and general health\nare spleiidid--ali of which I owe to\n\"Fruit-a-tives\".\nGASPARD DUBORD.\n60c. a box,6 for $'J,50, trial size, 26c.\nAt, all dealers or sent postpaid by\nFruit-a-Uves Limited, Ottawa, Out,\nRed is good, as are also its bar-\ntiering shades in garnet, pplnsette,\npillar box and varied more or less\nbrilliant shades, wilh a prefex'diicfl\nshown   for   the   more   vivid   ones.\nPittsburg's Find\nC Of, MtllT.-U Y.TOM.   VlfVI  tO, 1,1V.  Y<ili,_\n' piTCHER~GLAZNER. 7\nPrevious to 192] the 'name Chi'\/\nner meant nothing to iho baseball\nfail, but it docs mean something\nnow' nnd whether it thrills or -'chilis\ndt-pends upon whether you nre ri\nPittsburg \"fan'' or otherwise. Spending his i'irsl season aft a reffula'r\nunder the \"big tent\" alazner is already rated as one nf the best EHng-\ners in the' game.    Me is one of J'itls-\nBRAVES' 111'\nGiants Lose to Dodgers; Pirates and Reds Both Make\nit Three Straight.\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE.\n\u25a0 Won. I.'tHt. I*. C.\nPUlsbu'rg     68 UK .512\nNew    y'dvk     05 44 .36\nBoston      58 45 .563\nBrooklyn      68 52 527\nSt.   Louis 54 53 .505\nCincinnati 48 iii .110\nChlcugo     11 63 ,894\nPhiladelphia n 72 .314\nBOSTON', Aug. I2.\"l'liil;ulcl|.hiu\nhit Boftton'n pennant chances hy\nwinning both gurn.GH 'if a double-\nheader todus,. 10 lo r> on.I I to 0.\n.Score:\nFirst   gumo\u2014    ' R.   II.  IC\nPhiladelphia.'    10   11     1\nBoston       5    11     3\nUatteries\u2014 Smith, Beits antl Peters! Scott, Watson, Filllngim, Coon-\ney,   Morgan   and' elusion.\nSecond   garni-- It.   II. ii:.\nPhiladelphia 4    '3     2\nBoston     o    12     2\nBatteries\u2014Smilii ami ItenHhej\nScott,   Bl'uxton   and  Gowdy,   O'Neil.\nburg's \"big three.'\nstring\" honors with\nAdams   audi Copper;\nsharing\n[ii\nvete\n\u2022'first\niins,\nAlway3\nIMakes\n\u25a0TICKLES your taste from your\nlips clear back behind your ears\nand puts you on your toes for work\nor frolic. Sold i:i tough generous\nsized plugs that always keep moist.\nLargeplug20c Baby Bat 3 for 25c\n(Rm*^*-&W6\u00ab&^\naiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiEnisiiiaiisi .' : ii!,:: : i::!' \u25a0' i i ^:'' '-\" -'!!:;: i ^ !\u25a0;': i''\":: ^ *' '!-:;:\"\nI     CADILLAC      f^AlDQ NASH\n1     HUDSON        V^\/\\I\\0 ESSEX\nNATIONAL    and    REPUBLIC    TRUCKS,\n-     TRACTORS and TRAILERS \"\nBEGG MOTOR COMPANY, Ltd.\n;     VANCOUVER, B. C.        ,      . \u2022 DISTRIBUTORS\nSMEDLEY'S GARAGE, Local Dealer.\nuiiiiiiii mi   Illltlll:* '\u25a0'-'\"'\u25a0 ''''|M: \"\u25a0'\"\u25a0am'- :\u00abK'fflini \u00bba i\u00bb\u00ab\nNEW -ORK. Aug.\nlost more gnnind' in\n1'lllshlirg liy dropi\ngame   ot   tin-   series\ntoday, 2 t\nrTl-AOlllj.il      \t\nNew    VurU     \t\nBalteries\u2014Grirni\nNchf,'   Sal lee   uml\nScore:\n12. -New   Vol'k\ntlie  pursuit cling    lhe   third\nwith    Brooklyn\nft.   II.   Ft.\n.'A\nSnyder.\nI'ITTSBL'Rg, Aug. 12.\u2014Pittsluirg\nmade it three straight from Chicago\nliy winning todny, 12 to 0.    Score:\ni;. a. a\nChicago     a    13     I\nPlttsbiirg 12    21     2\nBatteries\u2014Cheovos, York. .Tones\nand   o'Kurrell; - Cooper   and   Broltem.\nRegains  Title.\nCOPVn.OHT KIVtTONI VI IW to , I\nPETE   HERMAN,\nWho reeoverecl the\nboxing ehampinnshi]\nloe Lynch on pn\nrounds.\nh:int<imwel*jhl\nhy ' defeating\nis    iii    fifteen\n'-J.'   i.:tl|j\nMurray and Herd Put Up\nDesperate Fight Against\nAnderson and Westbrook\nst.    l.oris.    Aug,    12.-\n\u00bbn   their   third   Htraight\n.   Loula   today,   *l   to   i.\nMAO AHA OX THE LAKE, Ont.,\nAug. 12.\u2014Probably the most exciting\nand hardest fought doubles finals\nthat have taken place on the Queen's\nRoyal courts was the ono between\nLindley Murray of Niagara Falls and\nClifford Herd of Chicago, who beat\nKiunk Anderson of Slow Y6rk an 1\nWalter Westhrool. of Detroit, after\nThe Herts tour desperately Fouglit sets in the\ngame from\nScore: siiiiia. with scores of D- -7, l\u2014U, IU\u20148\nIt,   II.   13,\n.ill       0\nCincinnati     ......      ..\nSt.    Louis 2      7      (\u2022\nLatteries\u2014Marijuurd, Lin-tie and\nWingo, Hargmvcs; I'eriica, Sherdol,\nRiviere and liilllim-iVr, Ciombhs,\nAinsmith.\nPACIFIC COAST  LEAGUE\nleatlle   li.\nSalt   Lake\nOakland 4;\nl.os Alige'e\nSacramento\n3, San  l''ranei;\nS,   Portland (1.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\n         ,     \\\nSyracuse  ,'!,   Jersey   city   7.    '\ntlooh'e'stef s. [leading I,\n-, BulTalo  -,,   Newark   I.\nToronto-Baltimore   game    forfeil'etl\nto   B.iliimoi-e.\ntwilightTeague.\nSASKATOON',   Auk.    111.\u2014 Fairhiink's\nmasterly pitehihg\nlies hi re 1\nlOdmonlno    .. .... II\nlilts    and    Cil\nanilii.','.    post)\nAll tour men were. ' in splendid\nform and the volleying was the finest\nseen here tor years. II is difficult\nto  pick any  particular star from  the\nIn ita- Kcmi'fi'n'al or lhe singles\nHerd won from Knink Anderson\nafter three sots or very last term's\nand thus uualifies lo meel, l.indley\nMurray 'in-lhe  finals,\nC. I). Henderson won -the all-C.inl-\ncllan championship from It. A. Mae-\nivenzie in two hard fought sets, in\nDoth of which' the winner had to\ncome   from   behind;,\nToday's   Results.'\nMen's open s.ngles semi-final\u2014O.\nHerd, Chicago, lieu,! |,\\ AndeWii,\nNew  York, ii\u20141.  1\u2014li', li\u20143.\n.Men's open douhlos fhiii.l\u2014 Murray\nand   Ileril   hem   Anderson and   West-\nSI,\nTD\nE\nIndians Again Take  Lead;\n.   Athletics   Lower   Yanks'\nColors; Babe Hits Homer.\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE.\nWon. Lost. P. C.\nCleveland 07 -11 .1121\nNew- York     Ill 40 .11111\nSt.   Louis    52 fit .101\nWashington     50 52 .-110\nDetroit     51 58 .168\nBoston     ill 5-3 .107\nChicago    iii 01 .410\nPhiladelphia ...11 07 .'ISO\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 12\u2014 Olc.velru]\ntoday defeated Chicago in lhe opening game of the series, fl to J.\nScore: R.  IT. E.\nChicago     l      7      2\nClevleland    fl    III\nBatteries\u2014Faber, Hodge _nd\nSehafk;   Covoleskie   ami   O'Neil.\nI'HILADFJ.PillA, Aug. 12,\u2014Timely\nhitting liy Witt and Dllgaii gavn\nPhiladelphia an 8 to fl victory over\nNew Yo'rk loday and evened the series.-    Ruth   hit  liis   44tli  home  run.\nScore: R.  IT.   13.\nNew   York    .....II    lu      1\nPhiladelphia s    12     2\nBatteries\u2014I'-orguson, lloyt \u25a0 and\nSchang: Musty, Naylor and Perkins,\nMyatl.\nDETROIT, Aug, 12. -VniiKllder\nliel.l Ui-irnit io \u201eix- hits loday and\nSt.   Louis   won,  2   to   1.    Score:\nIt.   IT.   E*\nSt.   Louis    :i    13      |\nDetroit 1      fl     o\nBatteries\u2014A\/angHder and Severol1.;\nLeonard, -Middleton   and   Bassler.\nOnly   three   games   scheduled.\npacific international,\nVancouver 0,  Victoria fl.\nYakima 1, Tacoma 2.\n'il'tli   game\n.  fl  lo  II.'\n\u25a0lies gave\n' the sell. If. 10.\nII     II       ii\n\u2014I.\nAll-Cliliailini\nHenderson, To\n;lea   filial\u2014C.\nlu-al  li.  K.   M\n'iiuil-M\n\u25a0IV\n.lu\n,101'\ns   Mini\ninal\u2014('.\n.:| Batteries\u2014l-'airii:\niiZl.nll and Xi-lsiin.\n]|    Calgary    al     W\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nToledo 7. Indlanaivilis 3.\nColumbus 2, Louisville 1\nSt. Paul 11-3, Kansa\ninly  three games sal\nCil.\nDAVIS   CUP   TEAM.\nNEW YORK, Aug. I2.tTIh- United\nElates Davis cup defending team will\nconsist of William T. Tilden, 2nd:\nWilliam Johnston, P. Norris Williams\nand William Washburn, the United\nStales Lawn Tennis association announced tonight. The challenge round\nwill he played at Porcsl Hills, N. Y\u201e\nSeptember  2.  3 and  5.\nTinoiiln, beat Wlekersham, ll-i\nMixed doubles semMinals\nMacbpuald; Toronto, and 11. I\nCleveland, beat Miss Baviilsol\nronto,   and    11.    Taylor,    New\nPes\nI,   Ti\nYork,\nII-\n\\lj;\nMnepotinld and Pulton beat\nM.   Brock   aiul   l_   Murray,  II\u20143,   8\u2014\u25a0_\n.Miss Best and C. Herd heat Miss\n1.. Cox and P. Anderson, li\u20143, il\u20144.\nMen's hiindlcnp. P. W. lliekle, To.\nrnntu.   heat   w.   Jarvls,   Toronto,   ii -\u25a0 '\nCONSIDER FATE OF\nTWILIGHT LEAGUE\nSASKATOON, Aug. 12.\u2014The fat\nof the. Western Canada Baseball\nleague as far as its Immediate fu\nlure is concerned, will he decided her\ntomorrow afternoon when representatives of Calgary, Edmonton, Wi:\npeg and Snsltalonn ball clubs meel\nhere.\nCaptain Pearson and Dr. Birsh,\npr, sidenl of the Calgary cluh, left\nCalgary tonight to attend the mi\ning, while Charlie Moll left Winnipeg\nto represent the Maroons. Edmonton\nwill ho represented hy llie club president, Gordon Winkler, who is traveling with [he leani and who is hero\nat present. .1. P. Cairns will repi-esent\nthe  Quakers. ' -\nTin- sudden shifting of the scene\nof activity from Calgary to Saskatoon and the readiness witli which all\nclubs have agreed to a conference,\nis regarded as a good sign by local\nofficials, and it appears that if the\nclubs arc ready to make certain concessions to each oilier, tin agreement\nwhereby ihe league will complete its\nPlaying season   will  be  reached.\nTbe local niaiiagi-ineiii stilted lasl\nnight   that  Ihey  were quite  ready   l\u201e\nmeet . any       half   way,    but    they\nwould   Insist   on   the   Reglna   players\nsigning   with   tiny   team   thoy   wished.\nNoney Savers\nFor You Today\nSPECIAL PRICES ON A FEW LEFT OVERS\nTwo Only\nFigured Voiles Dresses\nUp  to the  minute  in  stylo.\nSize 40\nfor   \t\nSize   38\nfor    ....\n$8.50\n$12.50\nW\/nrth more than double lhe\nprice aHked.\nWhite Voile Blouses\n,-ith an e:\n$1.35\nEvery-lady can  do with  an  extra one these days.\nEru-h\t\nChildren's Wash Dresses\nAge  C   to  14  years.  Now each,\n$1.45, $1.95,\n$2.50, $3.25\n$3.95\nEvery one  worth  considerably\nmore money.   It wJU pay you to\nbuy    now,    ready    for    school\n' opening.\n' Have Another White\nSkirt and Middy\nWhite   Gabardine   Skirts   in   all\nthe   now   styles.\n_L* {O to Ido\u00abD!)\nThese an- now marlied away\ndown to make a clearance. Vou\nwill he surprised what, a neat\nskirt you can buy for so little\nmoney.\nMiddies   (o ,*match,\nup   from   \t\nTlie rooler evening: require a\nlittle warmer clothing, especially.nn  the lake.'   Take a\n$1.75\nWool Sweater\nWith   vim.   We   nre   offering  a\n^::i.i $7,50\n* Bath Towels\nWhite   and   colored,   also   white\nbuck   towels,   all   useful   sizes.\nRegular to C9c each.\nAll one price, each ..\n45c\nJust    Arrived\u2014A    Shipment    of\nTent Canvas\n\u25a0 \u25a0   Direct   from    the   mill.   Best\n'quality,  VS inches  wide.-\ne:;:\/:: : 22M*\n10 oz..  per\nyard-\t\n25c\n.27V2C\n30c\n35c\nWhite Turkish Towelling\nAlan red bordered Crash Towelling, 10 inches wide. 9A\u00ab\nSpecial,  per  yard    OUC\nWhite Nainsook Covered\nDress Shields\nPer pair OC\/,\nSilk and Nainsook cov- FA.\nered, per pair '. \u2014..Ov\\s\nBoys' Ribbed Black Cotton Stockings\nMade   to   .itnnd   lots   of   wear.\nLarge   sizes.     Per\npoll'   \u2014\t\nNew Sweater Yarns\nAll tho lntest shades; 2-ply\nFloss, per one oz.    001\/,\/\u00bb\n4-p]y Yarn,  per   2  oz.       AKp\nFancy Colored  Polonia\nVelour\nFor Children's  Dressing  Gowns\nand Bath  Robes;   27    Inches\nwide'   per\nyard\t\n59c\n45c\nGuarnteed   Best   Waterproof\nFinish\nTulle\nEast   dye, * bright     and firm,\nshades   of   Mole,   Pink, Hose,\nCherry,    Black,    Paris, Sky,\nPaddy,   Salmon,     Saxe, Jade\nand White; :tii in.\nwide,    per   yard!\t\nB. C. Grown\nWe offer today 8 pounds new\nPotatoes, first class No. 1\nquality,   S   pounds\n50c\n25c\nB. C. Ripe Tomatoes\nl'\"*\"ul ^ ;    50c\nfor\n0  Pound liasket\nfor    :\t\nCucumbers, all lornl,\nlargo   oius,   i ach\n75c\n5c\nB. C. Peaches, Freestone\n70c\nml conditio\ni-rvinK.     II;\nTRANSPARENT APPLES\n\u2022I   His.   f\nAll    lhe\n25c\nKellogg's   Corn   Flakes\n*\u25a0_\u00a3\u00a3_. ; 35c\nTry a sliced peach with above\nand you will have a lovely diah.\nVICTORIAMCING.\nVK'TOKIA,\nAug\n12.\u2014Willows\nm\n>Hitd $<m$ Iktj (Tompatiftv m\nMlK'l.l\nthird.\nit race\u2014Qtllnam, won; TJallotc.tr,\nd; Blazer, third, Time, :r,y 2-5.\nund rai-i\u2014Cal Churn, won; Min\n'ml,   8-COml;    Un,-      De     (lu\nNELSON ACCEPTS\nL\nI-,.\nne lieu i  c.\nM.\nTRAIL AND NELSON\nCOMPETE AT TENNIS jf\nI    Third\n!- I Waldo,   >\nfourth\nOrh,  sect\nFifth   r\nNo li\nBill\nd.\n-fh-rlruilc.    won:\nil;   '.rmittinn,   thir\n.*\u2014Magician,   won;    .Miss\nJohn Jr.. third\n-Shenandoah,   won:   Call\nCToorgo     Muehleuach\nCut Brier\nMore Tobacco for the\nPackages 15*\ny_\\b1\\nsQ5*\n%d^M\niUHiiiUIIHlHIIillN\nToday at th,. Nelsnti oiiurls Trail\nT. unis cluh will Meek revenge r.r\nIheir narrow defeat a fortnight ago.\nThis time thero arc many changes\nin the iieraonnel of the defenders.\n'With-tin identical lirogram of ovents\nthc Nelson team will lie as follows:\nMen's   Doubles,\n(i. I!. K. Townshend ami I-'. ('. Ir.\nvine, L. li. de V'clier and C, \\V. Al>-\nPieyanl.      '\nMixed   Doubles.\nMrs. J. 11. I). Benson ami C. W.\nAppleyard, Mr. and Mrs. |l. O. n.\nTownshend.\nLadies'   Doubles.\n.Mrs. J. II, li. Rcnson ami Mrs. 11.\nG. p.. Towhshorid.\nMen's   Singles.\nli. ti. It. Townshend, p*. q, Irvine,\nit.  .Mestiin  and   G.  Redpath.\nPIRATES DEFEAT REDS\nIN JUNIOR BALL SERIES\nTbe Pirates won their seeond game\nIn the city junior ball league series\nyesterday nfternoon by defeating the\nReels, 14 to 9, In a nine-inning game.\nHunched hits in the first and fifth\naccounted for the I'irates' lend.\nCoach  J.  Ryan   was the umpire.\nThe   hatting   order  was:\nPh-atcs-.!. Ctabh, ss.; ]_. Waldie,\n3b.; W. Pv'tgelly, ef,; \\y. Bradshaw.\nP.; C. Pasocreta, lb.: S. Carlson, 2b,j\nC. liurgoss, c; (J. Long, If.; A. Kit-\nto.   tt\nReds\u2014O. Schofield.,..Sb.; .A. Noxan,\ne.; J. Kinahan, p.; J. MntUlen, If.;\nB, Whitfield, lh.: .1. Young, 2b.; T).\nRenwick, cf.; j. Welsh,, ss.; C, St.\nDenis,  rf.\nThe square armholo of dee]\nhas been adopted for sport wl\nthe costumes of heavy tabrica,\nI Sixth race -Trulan.', won; Camlili\nMidler,   secund;   Vorlt   Lassie,   third,\n! Seventh race\u2014Cafeteria, wnn; Corli\nsec-oiid;   Toka'lton March, ihh-d.\nawards Same on forfeit.\nP.AL'IVMORIO, Aug, 12.\u2014Umpire\nStockdale forfeited the Ha.lt Unore-\nTprohto New International |c*igir<;\ngame to lhe former, [I to 0, in the\nfourth inning witli tlie visitors at\nthe hat. Stockdale had ordered Jess\nAltenliurg, right fielder, Toronto, out\nof the game, hut. the player was\nsi ill on Hi\" bench at the expiration\nof five minutes. Jle had made no\neffort to leave si. far as could he\nseen.\nThe dispute between the umpire\nand player came when the third\nstrike   was   called.\nRECpRD   RIFLE   SCORE.\nLYONS, France, Aug. 12.\u2014American marksmen havo won tho team\nchampionship of the world in the international rifle shooting tournament\nhehl here this week. \\V. R. Stokes\nof Washington, D. C.,* won the individual championship of the world!\nhis score of 10,7,. breaking tho previous world's record.\nNo Urilish marksmen were entered.\nBASEBALL   CHANGES.\nST. PAUL, Aug. 12.\u2014Pitcher Alo\nDuff and Infiehler Mark Koenig of\nthe Moose Jaw club of the Western\nCanada league will join the St.\nPaul club of the American association: next week, it was announced )-*y\nclub   officials   today.\nPeacock feathers dyed to match\nthe hat and frock are being seen in\nParis.\nPlay Rossland Here Wednesday for Five Hundred Dollar Side Bet\nThe big hall game here of the season bus been arranged. Rossland\nand lh \u25a0 N'elson nine are'due to play\noff ore game ou Ihe Nelson diamond\non Wednesday afternoon for a side\nI.ei of jfiOO. Sueh was tlie information'\u25a0given out by ID. U Uii'.'hana.n.\nsecretary of the Nelson club, who\ncompleted arrangements for the\nmatch   with   liossland   yesterday.\nSupporters anil memli-ers of the\nRossland team suggested the match\nwhile in ihe cily on Wednesday last,\nasserting that Rossland support er.t\nwere ready to put up their money.\nThe . conditions were that none but\ntheir regular players should find a\nposition on 'the lineup of the respective  teams.    No date was set.\nThe matter was taken up in earnest here yesterday. Within two\nhours supporlers of the local . nine\nhad agreed to back their faith in the\nNelson   team   to   the   extent  of   $5tR\nRossland was advised last night\nlhat the game was on for Wednesday afternoon and that tho Nelson\nmoney   would  be  posted today.\nWaller Shackleton, proposed as thy\nNelson umpire, was accepted by\nRossland. The Nelson lineup will be:\nLindstrom, c; Edwards, p; Moddr\u00abll,\nlb; Curran, 2b; Maurer, ss; P.\nWhitehead, 3b; Desireau, rf; O'Neil,\ncf; Notman, If. Utility, B. Whitehead  and   Langill.\nTAXI  FARES   HIGHER.\nVIENNA, Aug. 12.\u2014Taxioab fares\nwero doubled in Vienna recetvlly and\nnow one pays sixty times the number of crowns registered on* the me-.\nter. House-drawn vehicles have removed the meters and fares are -a\nmatter uf bargaining wilh the individual.\nLittle  dorlis  in   foodstuffs,\nprops    in   clothes    ond   shoos,\n(live   ihe  grasping   profile.-rs\nAwful   fits   of   blues.\nSmoke\nT&B\nFor  enjoyment, fill\na yoar pipe with T&B\nLong-haired furs continue to bo\nfavored in neckpieces, and fox in all\nshades is wanted for fall.\nAntelope brown is to lie a favored\nshade for fall blouses; says a New\nYork buyer;\nClassified Advts.\nBring Results\nYOU CANT CUT OUT !,KK\nuut you can clean iliem off promptly with\n* ' '\u25a0 %f\u2014 MABV BC.uSitor.OFf.\nand you work the horse same time.\nDees not blister or remove the\nhair 52.50 per bottle, delivered.\nWill tell you more if you write.\nBook 4 R free. ABSORBINE, JR.,\nthe antiseptic liniment for mankind,\nreduces Varicose  Veins, Ruptured\nM-ielemr ..leamenli. En|_i*u_U Gl\u00bbndi. W\u00abni\nC>ni.  Alti-fi p\u00bbin Qulckt-f. price il.2S\u00bbWtilo\nat ttni.giiit or -cUmed.\nW, F. YOUNG he, .45 Lyr__r,_ Bid-., M__lr\u00abl. Un.\nAbsorbine ind Absorbing it., ire nude Io Cinidi.\nH. W.EDWARDS\nTaxidermist\nGame Heads, Bear and all\nkinds of Animal Rugs\nMounted\nRev-l.toka, B.C.      P.O. Box 804\n r#\nr_tm NEESON ,WlIt NfifS,  Mt|Jfe|>AY,M6-ftNjN(_,.AO(_tl^ %'$0_*\nTHE ARK\nJumping season has arrived. Tent\n8_12_2_; ft. wall, J17.00. Larger or\n\u2022mailer ones In stooic. Ladles' fine\nHosiery, 8 pairs for (l.OO. Dress\nGinghams, while they last, 40c per\nyard. Awning stripe, 60c per yard. 8-\n02. \"White Duck, 40c per yard, 7-oz.\nWhite Duck, 36c per yard. 11-4 Flannelette Blankets, $3.00 pair. Good\nBleached Cotton, 25c per yard. Good\ndies' fine White Hose, 40o pair.\nBoys' Hose, large sizes, 65o pair.\nNational   CaBh  Register  for sale.     r\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone  534 60S  Vorn.n   8t\nFilms\nFilms\nFilms\n.We carry a good assortment. Do not forifet the\nfilms . for tomorrow's picnic.\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nMail Orders Filled Promptly\nPhono  01 P.  O,  Box  1037\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL  &   RITCHIE   MONU-\n* MENTAL   COMPANY\nSuccessors    to    Kootenay*  Granite\nand  Monumental  Co.\nSTILL   SELLING\nBATHING  SUITS\nFor Everybody\nFLEMING'S STORE\nGroceries,   Dryoooda,  Eto,\nSt. Charles Milk\nThe    Old   Standby\nFamily  size,  6  for   ......$1.00\nPLEASE NOTE\nThe summer discount on\nFurs and remodelling same '\nwill cease the end of August Take advantage of it.\nG. GLASER\nHANtJPAOTTJEINO PUBBIEB\t\nPHOHE  106. P. O. BOX\"'707\nHE!SOH, B. 0.\nmm\nMatinee, 2:30\nBLACK\nBEAUlY\nThe   Sweetest  Story   Ever  Told\nEDDIE POLO\n\"King of the Circus\"\nAfternoon\nAdults     '.. 35\u00abS\nChildren 15<ft\nj Evening\n[Adults    50\u00ab*\n\"Children      25\u00abi\nPHONE 10\nFresh  Tomatoes,  2  lhs 35^'\nBasket    75^\nPeaohes, hasket ...- 75^\nPears. 2 Jhs 35^\nWatermelon, sliced to  suit.\npound    10&\nApples,     Canteloupes,     OrangC9 .\nGreen Beans, rresh,  lb 10$\nWax    Beans,    Corn,    Vegetable\nMarrow,  Green. Onions,   Carrots,\nI Beets,  etc.\nMILK ;\nBorden's Evaporated\nTall  alze,  each 20$\n4-Doxen Case S9.00\nDozen  __.\n-82.30,\nAWARD SALVAGE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 12.\u2014Salvise\nof ?5Q00 eadh* has bc?n awarded to\nHenry Bell Irving, P. .S. C Van-,\ncouver,   and   t_ioiitehd.nl   .1.   Watson\nCHGOL\nTIME\n-AND  GOOD   EYESIGHT\nIt is during school time that\nmany Injurious defects creep in.\nDuring a term of hard study,\nglasses for school purposes will\nfaciiitafe study, relieve eyestrain and prevent serious complications.\nNow is a good time to have:\nthe   children's   eyes   seen   io,\n.Two eye specialists at your\nservice.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician.\nYour Watch Repairs\nPromptly,    Perfectly    and    Accurately   Done.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nWatchmaker and Jeweler.\nBig\nAnd Stationery Sale\nBig Bath Soap, cake....l6^\n9 Different kinds,  full\ndozens   $1.75\nPalm Olive Soap,\n10 for $ 1.00\nWoodbury Facial Soap,\n5 for  $1.00\nCuticura Soap, cake...,25^\nJergen's  Glycerine,   clear,,\ncake 15^\nCastile Soap, bar  40tf\nStationery List\nTomorrow\nRutherford    Drug    Co.\nNELSON,   B.   C\nANNOUNCEMENT\nI have purchased the\nbusiness of Mrs. McCar-.\nthy, 315 Baker street. Ice\ncream, soft drinks on ice,\ncandy and nuts for sale..\nAgency for the Spokesman-1\nReview.\nMRS. LAMMEDEE\nOffice,   Madden   Block,   Ward   St.\nP. 0. Box 1099.\nMINNIS FUEL AND\nTRANSFER GO.\nGALT   COAL,       DRY   WOOD.\nGENERAL    TEAMING\nPrompt   Attention    to   Orders.\nPhone 39\nHammock Time!\nNow is the time to enjoy a Hammock on your veranda *\nor in the garden or summer camp.\nWe have an fine stock to choose from, ranging in price j\nfrom $3.25 to $11.00. j\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.\nBAKER 8TREET HEUON, B, Ci\nSugar Bowl\n. Have yo.u tried the,new store,\nwnere' groceries nre  cheaper?    ,\n\"We  will  appreciate your  business.\nPhone   110\nTHE SUGAR BOWL\nMill and Josephine\nand of $2000 to James Latta, a cook's\nboy, for salving the steamer Ernes-\nton, ln the English channel while\nserving, on the Dover patrol in 1916,\naccording to word from the. British\nadmiralty today. The abandoned\nErnfeKton was drifting toward Goodwin sands In a heavy sea when the\nthree men boarded her. When the\nwejiTher moderated the vessel, with\n16 t'-3(.-t. of water in her bold, was *.ar\nken   into   port.\nRMERUROOKK. Aug. 12.\u2014H. A\nSirols, bod of Dr. Alex Sirols of\nThetford' Mines, is on:- of the pas-\n.senc-rrs missing from the ill fated\nsteamer Alaska, which Hank off the\ncoast of northern California on Saturday. * Mr. Sirols, who was practicing law in Quebec city and who\nserved overseas, was taking a trip\nabout western Canada and thc Pn-\u00bb\nciic coast and-expected to meet his\nmother in Duluth.\nSUMMEREATS\nA1\"  * ?!\nThe Ideal Gash Grocery\nTHE HOME OF GOOD   GROCERIES\n. Prices that make fhe Cost qf\nLiving Cheap\nTOMATOES-SATURDAY SPECIAL\nHOT  HOl'.SE.   solecleil Trillti\npound     . * :\t\ncut poor*, mon i;rr*i:.\nH'.'j-.pnifiiil   l.:isl;p\u00bb'     \t\nOr por pnunfl\nfor     ;\t\nCUCUMBERS\u2014SELECTED\nTWn Ibi'kp, 3 for ,-, n.f(s...\nMorjinm, il  for  OS^\nNino   Hi\/.,..   :i   for  ;   ;,;JO<*\nGREEN  OR  WAX  BEAN1\n3 Itmiwls   ':Se\\y(*\nGREEN   PEAS\n*> pnunilri     ;\u201e.\u00a35i!\nGREEN    CORN\nOrder early.    Supply will  nol\nmcr-t   dcm.'inilH.\nWatermelon Special\nH-pound   cuts    SS*>^'\n(U'pmintl   cuts    ...'4-S^.\nT.af'so mi'lon. pound f_\nRASPBERRIES\nN'I'M' ]n(  nf late IipitIos arrive\n\u25a0Infliiy.\n25c\n,40c\n15c\nPeaches\nOkfthngnn   Triumph,  baskets\nfro*  40*\nPears\nCprUrtl, pniinil\n15c*-\nTasly, Eats lor Hot Days\ni'.iliirh   To'iiB.ir-    InrEo   tlM-.'-GO**-\nflo.'isl   IVnC   prr\nru'\"' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0SGt, 4M, 7.5tf\nCorned Beef! pr>r\nnn 30*. 45C-, 65c*-\nv\u2122i i.o:ir. iin go*\nSpecial in Sardines\nDainty fl.sll. in  pure olive oil,\n2'fpi'  35*\nCorn   Flakes,    Quaker\nQuakies, Post Toasties\n.:!    I'.'ii'UaitfR 25*\ni Tesf\u2014Our Kootenay\nBlend\nBack  to  pre-war value.  We  are\nnot knocking other brands,  but\nthis value'-is In a class by Itself.    4\\  delielous blend  of. India and f.-ylon Teas, Ib-GO*^\n.     B   l'>s   .... $2.75\nTo the Citizens of Nelson and Kootenay\n...AIHES  AND OENTI.KMKX:\nTHE -NELSON CASH AND CARRY GROCERY will open an\nup-to-date Grocery store on the corner of Josephine and Silica streets\nopposite - the Methodist Church, on \\Vednrsd:Ty. August 17th, 1921,.\nThe management of the store will be vested in Mr. Stanley Horswill,\nwho is well known in Nelson and District, and who. after serving\nfor over four years with tbe Canadian forces at. the ..front, has now\nsevered other connections nnd decided in enter the above narked\nbusiness of his own.\n; Mr, llorswill is fully qualified and prepared to render the utmost\nin prompt, court eon* and efficient, service. He will sell the best\n.goods obtainable, based on prices heretofore unknown in tlio city' of\nNelson, and will guarantee all fronds .sold to .please, or gladly refund\nthe purchase price.\nWe especially solicit country mail orders, which will be securely\npacked   and    promptly    shipped.    Send   ns a  trial  order.\nTo our Nelson citizens we hope to render prompt and courteous\nservice and to merit your appreciation and patronage.\n\"We invite you to call and let   us   show   hew   we  cnn   save   you\n* many dollars, in your month's purchases.\nRespectfully yours Cor bettor prices,\nA. STANLEY HORSWILL,\nManager.\na\nJust in.   We still have a few tons of old crop\nWASHINGTON -TIMOTHY\nEllison Milling and Elevator Co.\nLIMITED\nFOR RENT\n,    Seven-roomed house\u2014modern.   803 Tjictom,Street.   3\nF0R.RENT\nSAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES.\nSmall Box, per .year -. ...~: ,..$3.00 j\nLarge Box, per year     $5.00i\nINSURANCE OF ALL KINDS j\n\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 --\u25a0   \u25a0    \u25a0   \u25a0  -\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0 **- : \"_.\"_\",   .*' \u25a0 , ,\nCharles F. McHardy    j\nRealEstate. Phone 135!\nA. S Horswill & Co.\nP.  O.   Box. 64\nPhone 121\n.Quality and Service\n83.00\n83.00\n85.95\n.;;..3w\n\u25a0-.-\u25a0\u202225,\n-\u25a0;-20\u00ab*-,\n....;,._50j.\n81.10\n...:...,.;8\u00ab*>\nOranges, Lemons, Bananas, New\nVegetables.\nOur Best Flour, 40 lb-.\nQuaker Flour, 49 lhs\t\nOur Best Flour, !)8 lbs.\n.lllpe Tomatoes, 2 lbs....\nApples,   5  lbs.  for ...v...\nPeaches,   per   lb.   \t\nP.Ulris,   per   lb\t\nStrawberry Jam, 4'lbB.\nWatermelon, lh\t\nHE NEEDS ONE\nAll the Year Round\nTheEIectricIron\nIs necessary in every home\nbut particularly in il required during\n,.jHot  Days\nHowe Electric Co.\nOpera   House   Clock\nPhone   530\nORDER NOW\nPut In ^our coal now while It Is\nto be bad.\nThe rush of orders will soon be\non and cars scarce, as they will be\nrequired for the transportation of\ngrain, consequently a shortage of\nCoal  when you  will  most need it.\nWe handle only tiie best of Domestic Coals from the Lethbridge\ndistrict and Furnace Coal from the\nCrows  Nest Mines.\nWe have also a large stock of tho\nbest of dry wood all lengths, also\ndry cedar and slabs for summer use.\nORDERS PROMPTLY AND\nCOURTEOUSLY ATTENDED TO.\nMcDonald Cartage & Fuel\nCompany\nCoal, Wood ancl General  Tunming*.\nBread\nIS   YOUR\nBest Food\nESPECIALLY\nMothers Bread\nMade. Only  by\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nCandies        Cakes Ice  Cream\nNelson Opera House\nTODAY MATINEE AND NIGHT\nAugust 13\nBARNUM\u00b0F THEM ALL\nSTC15QN$\u00bb8ftic\nvSp*ectacui.aiC\nCABIN\nPRESENTED BTACOMPANY\nOF PICKED ARTISTS\nCOLORED JUBILEE SINGERS\nBAND AND\nxODOIESTRd\nHGSTREE1\nPAMDE\n\/dimwr\n40 PEOPLS\t\nPrices..,$1,10,; :85_\\., 55\u00ab*-.'\n(Includes tax.)  j.\nSeat   Sale   at   City. Drug   Store.'\nK \"Makes more\nI\n- and better bread'\npumiy, Ftpui;\nI\nNotice\nI am pleased tonnnoiinp\" rh.'n mv\nopticul practice' had*, increased to\nsuch an extent au to aecesuitate\nmore accommodation. I have leased\nthe suited of--rooma recently \"occu-\njijed by Mr. E. A. Crease, where \\>\nwill he pleased to attend to your\nrequirements, , Tour .eyesight requires the best. My knowledge,\ncare-fulpesa and odmpjete'- modern\noptical equipment 'guarantees' you\npoaitive, accurate service. I will be\ndelighted to serve you, .' My; sole\nbusfnesB l\u00bb to look after your eyes.\nA. HIGGINBOTHAM\nOpto:netrlst, Nolson.\nHow parlors ndjolulnif _%%. Btooa &\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   Gaiisuor.   * \u25a0 .*\u25a0'   \u25a0'\u00bb\nDRY   KINDLING\nWOOD FOR SALE\nWe are now taking orders for\nwood. Once you try it you will uhq\nno other; *\u25a0   '\nNo chopping, no dirt (as lt Is\nnice, clean, white pine hlocks two\ninches thick, two and one-half\ninches wide and from four to fourteen   inches   long).\nBest summer wood you can get\nfor stove or any sh\\all fire. We,\nguarantee entire satisfaction. . \":'\nPine,   delivered   and   in   woodshed,\nnorth of Latimer street.... .87.00\nPine,    delivered    and    in    woodshed.\nsouth of Latimer street 87.35*7\nLoad consists of 'approximately,\none cord.\nPrice  for  half  loads $4.00\nW. W. POWELL COMPANY, Ltd.,\nManufacturer of Match  Blocks\n(-     mono  Orders, to 176.\nFor DYEING\nand\nGLEANING\n1L K. FOOT\nHigh Clacs Dyer and Cleaner\nFairview, Nelion, B..C.\nKeif's Jitney\nNEW NASH CAR.\nAt your service day and night. Phone\n491.  Guaranteed  to  please you.   Bay\naaao and Express.\nTRY    A    CLASSIFIED     AD.\nMatinee 2:30\nJames Oliver Curwood'i\n-TARRING    HOUSE    PETERS\nand JANENOVAK\nA  romance that takus you  into\nthe ha>ren: wastes of the North-\n\\ land.\n. Two-Reel   Comedy,\n'Torchy Comes Through'\nBISCUIT SPECIAL\nTo stimulate trade with a seasonable line, nnd 'at the same\ntime   offer   the   publlo   a\nReal Bargain\nWo  Will  Sell\nFor T\u00b0<tay. 'Only\n\/\n3 CA8ES  CHRISTIE'S  SOCIAL\n. TEA BISCUITS;\nRegular  price,  EOc  Ib.      yl _[*!_\u00bb\nAt,    per   pound .:.TIv^\nThis   is   tho   Ideal    Biscuit   for\nAfternoon   Tea   and   Lujicjieoris.\nTHIS     OFFER,. WILL  . POSITIVELY not appear Again;\nST. CHARLES CREAM\nFamily Size\n2   Tins\nPer   dozGn   \u2014.\t\nPer 4-donou case\n35_;\n-S1.9!\n-87,61\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nA. G. Lambert Co.. Ltd.\nManufacturers of and; Dealers In\nAll kinds oi Lumber and Building Material, Shingles,\nLath, Mouldings, Windows and Doors and; Beaver.\nBoard.\nDRAWER 10CO\nNELSON.   B.C,\nNelson Business College\nLEARN to EARN\nNEW TERM COMMENCES AUGUST 29th, 1921!\nComplete Commercial Course in Shorthand, Typewriting .'\nBookkeeping,  Penmanship,  Spelling,   Rapid  Calculation,\nCommercial English, Commercial Law.\nDAY AND NIGHT CLASSES\nFOR   PARTICULARS  APPLY   P.   0.   BOX   14.\nPHONE 603 NELSON, B.   _\nThomas A. Lawson\nCarpenter and Joiner.\nWe do your wnrh prom-ptly and well\nFactory., 406^ Hall  Rtroat.\nVelvet brocaded ehiff^ii in Hhndrs\nof brown or IiPiinii Jones and raFo\nau lalt and cocoa colors are smar^\nfor fall gowna,\nSHIRTS\nWe   have   some   exceptionally   choice\npatterns included in a late shipment\n\u25a0of Arrow, Shirts.    We have a more\n, complete shirt stock nowthan we have\nbeen able to get, for the1 past'-, eighteen\nmonths and at prices that ar, -very-\nreasonable.        \u25a0 \u25a0 :\n$2.25, $2.50, $2.75, $3.00,\n$3,50      ,\nARROW 'SHIRTS\u2014BE^T\nMADE IflCANADA\nEMORY.& \\VAi-UBt\\Y\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_08_13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0397082","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"}]}}