{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0401067":{"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":"2021-07-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1923-06-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401067\/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":" Trail Sells Fire Bond\nISSUE AT GOOD PRICE\nSee Page 5\nA I 55       UPP24\nPRO\"\/    I I 8n*H I AN\nVICTORIA    B   C\nb\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1923\nNo. 53\nCork-Province\nCUTS EAST ORE BODY\nSee Page 5\nWAHABIS BLOT OUT KARIATILMITH GARRISON\nFIRES BLOT OUT\nNEW BRUNSWICK\nLUMBERJAiET\nForest Fire Situation in Quebec Is Summed Up as\nVery Bad\n! NOREMBEGAREFUGEES\nGOINGJTOj;OCHRANE\nChange of Wind in Porcupine\nDistrict Has Beneficial\nEffect\nAs Lord Aylmer\nUsed to Appear\nCAMPBELLLTON,   N.  B\u201e  June  20.\nI \"The village of Upsalquitch, 15 miles\nI from  here  on  the   International  railway,   wan  swept   by  fire   this   morn-\ni ing.     The   station   and   all   dwellings\nwere' destroyed,  atj  well aa the eaw-\n; mill  of  Reid;   Smith   &   Milton.    Al-\nj  though   small,   the   village   was   the\n| center   of  a   large   lumber   business,\n1 and    It   Is   -believed    that   a   great\nquantity  of  lumber  was  destroyed.\n\"Bad Day\" in Quebec\nQUEBEC,   June   20.\u2014The   day   bas\nbeen a  bad  one,  was the statement\n. Issued   by  Gustavo   Pelch,  chief  for-\ni ester of  the  province  of Quebec,  in\nJ eumming up the forest fire situation\ntonight.    Very few reporta had been\nj received   during   the    day   and    this\n[was   explained   by   the   fact   that   in\n] many   districts    the    telephone   and\ntelegraph   lines  have  been   destroyed\n[ by the bush fires. \u00abJ\nRefugees Taken  Care of\nNORTH   BAY,   Ont.,   June   20.\u2014No\nj further    developments    Jn    the    bush\nfire situation have toeon reported\n[ since the news that refugees from\n| the village of Norembega were \u25a0being\nsent to Cochrane. The fires at Tim-\n! mins are now reported to be under\n[ .control.\nForestry officials here emphasize\n[ the danger that exists this year due\n; to the scattered nature of the fires.\nj They   seem   to   be   .springing   up   Jn\nevery direction and from no apparent\ncause. The extreme drought which\n' has lasted for more than a month\n' now is having Its effect In the farm\nIng areas.\n\u25a0 \u25a0-  \"      Porcupine   la   Normal\nTIMMIINS.   Ont.,   June   2-3.\u2014Normal\n' conditions  prevail once  more ln the\n' Porcupine \" district.     The   fife   Bltua\ni iion  is  more   tranquil   than   at  any\ntime In the  past.\nA   beneficial   change   In   the   wind\n, took  place   this   morning,   the   direc\n| tlon   veering   around   to   the   north\n, west.\nONTARIO, QUEBEC\nSWELTER IN HEAT\nNinety-Five   Degrees   at   London   and\nNinety-three  at   Toronto;   Citizens Shed Their Coats\nToronto, June 20. \u2014 om sol\nIfOeussed his ray on central Canada\nI today, with the result that Ontario\nland Quebec sweltered ln a temper-\nlature of 93 degrees, with 79 de-\nj grees of humidity. Yesterday's tnax-\nI Imum was beaten by several de-\n[ grees, and for the first time this\ni summer Mr. Common Citizen car-\npried his coat and looked distressed.\nLondon 'took tbe blue ribbon,\n1 wfth a score of 95, while Ottawa\n\\ was a close second, with a high\n[temperature of 84, followed by To-\nkronto, with 93 as the maximum.\nY'Bob\" Maxwell Will\nAttend Service Body\nOTTAWA, June 20.\u2014Robert Max-\nS well, late president of the Dominion\n(Command, G.W.V.A. Is leaving for\nJjEngland early ln July to attend the\nf British Empire Service league In Lon-\njdon, July IB.\nBritish Princess\nIs to Be Married\nPRINCESS   MAUD\nDaughter  of   the .duchess   of  Fife\nid cousin of the urlnce of Wales, is\nmarry Lord  Carnegie,   eldest son\nthe earl of Southeast\nDELORME GRINS\nMOCKINGLY AT\nLATECOUNSEL\nBut Objects When Described\nas Incurably Insane in\nPlea for New Probe\nDistinguished soldier who died at\nbis ranch at Queen's Bay, and now\nlies ln the Nelson cemetery, was for\nmany years a national figure, toeing\nInspector-general of the Canadian\nforces and In command of them after\nLord Dundonald's return to England.\nCPOP OUTLOOK\nJUSTjPLENDID\n\"Decidedly Healthy\/' Is\nModerate Language Used\nby Union Bank Report\nWINNIPEG, June 20.\u2014\"Taken in\nIts entirety and considering the Immense . territory covered, the crop\nsituation in western Canada is decidedly healthy,\" states a crop report Issued by the Union Bank of\n(Canada here today.\nThe crop Is well advanced, despite\nlate seeding in Manitoba, and prospects ln the province for this time of\nthe year were probably, never better.\nSaskatchewan reports rapid growth,\nand wheat on summer fallow Is particularly good. Southern Saskatchewan has had a week of rapid advancement  and  heavy  growth.\nTha report indicates that Alberta's\nposition la particularly cheering. Recent rains have been of inestimable\nvalue, and many points report sufficient moisture to laBt until July.\nWheat Is now 10 to 12 inches high,\n'and other grains are coming along\nwell. ,\nMUNCHES PINK AND\nWHITE PEPPERMINTS\nJudge Orders Trial to Proceed; Jury Chosen After\nHours of Challenging\nMONTREAL, June 20.\u2014Eight hours\nof strenuous argument in a swelter\ning court room -brought the preliminaries to the trial of Adelard Delorme, Indicted of fratricide, to \u00ab\nclosed today and cleared tbe *tage\nfor the actual bearing of evidence\ntomorrow. I\nThe morning session, which v\nspread over three hours, was devoted exclusively ,to the argument\nby Oustave Monette, representing the\npriest's curator, that fresh Insanity\nproceedings be held before the murder trial should proceed. The plan\nwas labelled by Chief Justice Le-\nmieux, who is hearing the case,\n\"plausible to any person not knowing   the   law.\"\nThe trial was then ordered to proceed.\nThe selection of the Jury required\nfour hours to complete, and was\nfeatured by wholesale rejections on\nthe grounds of prejudice as a result\nof newspaper articles on the case.\nPriest   W ate he*   Proceedings   Closely\nThroughout the day, beyond showing the effects of the torrid atmosphere, Delorme focussed entire attention upon the proceedings. He\nmunched pink and white pepper*\nmints steadily, and, as Mr. Monette\nat one juncture emphasized his\nplea that Delorme be not committed,\nan he was incurably insane, the priest\ncried aloud from the dock,\n\"No,  No.\"\nAt other times he grinned mockingly at his former attorney, who\nnow   represents   the   trustee.\nEIGHTH OF MILLION\nMARKS FOR A DOLLAR\nCLAIMS BRITISH\nARE IMPRISONED'\nMember   of   British    House   Protests\nAgainst    Conditions   on    Ellis\nIsland;' Nationalities Herded\nLONDON, June 20\u2014Ellis Island\nreceived severe criticism in the house\nof commons today, and the suggest\nIon was advanced that Great Britain\nought to retaliate if the United States\ngovernment does not change the\nmethods of detaining British sub\njects   there.\nThe subject arose when Harry\nBecker, Independent Conservative \"for\nRichmond, asked the undersecretary\nof foreign affairs( Ronald McNeill,\nhow many British men and women\nwere \"incarcerated\" on Ellis Island\nowing to the British quota of immigrants .being filled. Mr. Becker also\nasked if the undersecretary's \"attention has 'been called to the fact\nthat sometimes es many aa 160\nwomen and children of all nationalities and colors are placed in one\nroom to sleep; will be make representations to the United States government protesting against this prison-like treatment of British subjects,\nand, in the event of continuance of\nthis practice, will he consider taking\nmeasures   of   retaliation?\"\nMr. McNeill replied: \"I cannot say\nexactly how many British subjects\nare at present detained on Ellis\nIsland. The attention of his majesty's government has been repeatedly called to the conditions prevailing\nthere, and no opportunity has been\nlost of pressing the United States to\neffect an improvement.\"\nThere are very great difficulties In\ntbe way of effecting different arrangements, he added.\nKeno Hill \/*$. Scene\nof Neto Silver Strike\nDAWSON, T. T., June 20.\u2014Several\nrich new Bilver claims have been\nstruck at Keno Hill since the snow\ndisappeared.\nOne vein of high grade ore has\nbeen found on the western slope of\nthe hill, near the Tre'idwell-Alaska\nLode, which is one of the heaviest\nproducers at present. Some good\nveins have been struck on South Hill,\nopposite   Keno   Hill.\nIt is understood that a number of\nnew companies will send representatives   into   this   field   this  year.\n\u2014 \u2014      m\nSnatched From Grave,\nMan Dies After All\nBRIER CREST, Sask., June 20. \u2014\nJohn Dickinson, aged 56, after being*\nresuscitated Sunday, when pulled out\nof the creek here,, died of the shock\nMonday morning and was burled today. He had gone to bathe Sunday\nmorning, and it is believed took\ncramp. He was pulled out, and after\nan hour's work brought back to\nconsciousness. Tbe shock proved too\ngreat for him.\nGerman   Currency   Unit   Haa  Violent\nFluctuations  on  Berlin  Bourse;\nNo Ndw York News\nBERLIN, June 20. \u2014 The financial reports from New York were\nabout 10 . hours late in reaching\nBerlin tonight, and the delay contributed greatly to a nerve-racking\nday on the Bourse. . There was a\nmad rush to cove on stock tradings, as tbe mark opened at 123,000\nto dollar, and rallied to 101,000,\nonly to slip back late in the afternoon to 117,000.\nWhile the brokers were feverishly\ntrying to reduce their losses down\nln the financial district, Chancellor\nCur.o sat in his office, surrounded\nby the best financial talent available, trying to find some means\nstrong enough to stem the tide of\nthe mark's depreciation. It is re-\n'ported that no final conclusions\nwere reached and that the conference will continue to morrow.\nSTATES SEEKS\nBEST CRUISER\nINJTHE LIMIT\nEight War Vessels to Be of\nMaximum Efficiency\nWithin Type\nSUBMARINES TO EXCEL\nANY OF PRESENT DAY\nNo Destroyers Are on Pro-\ngram, as Country Ahead\nof Ratio in That Gass\n* WASHINGTON, June 20. \u2014 Following the announcement that- the\nnaval building program will consist\nof eight cruisers, four river gunboats and three cruiser submarines,\nSecretary of the Navy Denby says\nthat since the four-power naval\ntreaty limits cruiser tonnage to\n10,000 tons the general board has\nbeen Instructed to consider plans\nwhich will give the United States\nnavy the most efficient vessel of\nthe cruiser type within this limitation. It was said, however, the\neight new ships would follow closely\nthe design of the Detroit class now\nin   progress   of   delivery.\nGunboats   for   Chinese   Rivers\nThe four gunboats will be for the\nChinese river patrol. Recent inspection of tlte old Vessels now\nengaged ln that patrol, Secretary\nDenby said, indicated that they must\nbe   replaced   as   quickly   as   possible.\nThe three cruiser submarines to\nbe asked for are also in tho hands\nof the planning section of the general board. lt is considered certain, however, that they will surpass ln tonnage any submarine boat\nnow In use by any power.\nThe absence in the program announced today of any recommendation for destroyers was in line with\nthe unanimous opinion of navy experts that the United States was\n\u2666ahead of her local ratio position\nin   this  class.\nCANADIANS DON'T\nNEED WATCHING\nSigned Decrees as\n*   if Knew About Them\nFIERY MASSES\nYET ROLL DOWN\nE\nFiume  and Other  Districts\nHeave and Rumble Beneath the Feet\nKING   BORI9\nOf Bulgaria, tlie dispatches said,\nsigned the first decrees of the Zankoff ministry without question, leading to tho conjecture that he knew\nof the plot, lt was said he had been\n\"terrorized\" by I'remier Stamboulsky,\nwho was killed In a fight a few days\nafter tho coup that deposed him.\nSLAYER WILL ENJOY\nBROTHER'S INSURANCE\nCourt Authorizes  Adelard  DeIorme*s\nBroth'Y to Sue on Raoul's\nTwo Policies\nMONTREAL. June 20.\u2014Mr. Justice\nBruneau authorized Adelard Tetrault,\ncurator of \"Abbe\" Adelard Delorme,\nthis afternoon, In superior court, to\nproceed against the Sauvegaurd insurance company and the London\nGuaranty & Accident Insurance company, in the collection of two insurance policies on the life of Raoul Delorme.\nThe counsel for Mr- Tetrault urged\nthat the court allow time to sue the\nSuaveguard for $25,000 and the other\ncompany for 93000. It was necessary\nto-obtain legal permission to sue, because the 12 months allowed by law\nIn which to proceed in actions of this\nkind had elapsed.\nBoth cofnpanies contested the request on the ground that the action\nwas proscribed.\nROTARIANS PLAY\nAT MANY SPORTS\nEntertainment Over Shadows Business\nat Big  International  Gathering\nat St. Louis\nST. LOUIS, June 20. \u2014 Entertainments and sports today overshadowed business for the thousands\nof Rotarlans attending the international  convention.\nThe various country clubs, Scott\nfield, near Belleville, where an elaborate program was staged by aviators and parachute experts, and\nSportsman park, scene of a baseball game between Giants and Cardinals, all drew many of the visitors.\nA special Rotary golf tournament\nwas held at the Glen Echo Country\nclub.\nNearly all the delegates and visitors tonight attended the president's\nball, the one annual social function  of Rotarian   international.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nFrance, at Plymouth, from New\nYork.\nEmpress of Scotland, at New York,\nfrom Hamburg.\nLaconla, at Hamburg, from New\nYork.\nAmerican, at New York, from\nBremen,\nEmpress of Australia, at Shanghai,\nfrom Vancouver,\nLieutenant-Governor Tells  Saskatchewan   Municipalities   Too   Many\nPolice  Forces\nYORKTON, Sask., Juno 20. \u2014 Declaring that he did not think Canadians were such bad people as to\nneed three police forces, and one of\nthe big things for the convention to\ndeal with was the expense to which\nthe people of the Dominion are being\nsubjected in the malntena uce of these\nforces, L'leut.-Gov. W. Newlunds formally opened the meeting of the\nSaskatchewan Union of municipalities\nhere   this   afternoon.\nWe have three kinds of police\nforces\u2014mounted, provincial and town\npolice\u2014and if these wero consolidated the people would be Just as\nwell looked after, with considf-rable\nless  expense.\"  he declared.\nOn hundred delegates are in attendance at thc convention, which\nwill continue till Friday.\nONTARIO CAMPAIGN\nIN TORRID WEATHER\nNinety Degrees Temperature and Outdoor   Meetings    Feature   Last\nDays of Campaign\nTORONTO, June 20. \u2014 The political campaign throughout Ontario\nwas conducted in torrid weather today, the temperature being above\nthe 90 mark. Outdoor meetings and\npicnics were favored by the electors,\nin many cases gatherings in halls\nbeing   poorly   attended.\nThe leaders of the three parties\nwere again away from their own\nconstituencies. premier Drury; concluding his second western Ontario\ntour, spoke at Petrolia and Dresden,\nwhile Wellington Hay, Liberal leader,\npaid a flying visit to Peterboro. G.\nH. Ferguson carried the Conservative\nbattle   into   Barrle.\nSir Adam Beck, who is running\nin London, is slightly indisposed as\na result of his election activities\nand has been ordered to take a\ncomplete rest for  a day or two.\nFROZEN ASSETS\nLEAD TO HUGE\nSTOCKFAILURE\nZimmerman & Forshay Go\nto Wall; Other Firms Are\nRumored Shaky\nNEW YORK, June 20. \u2014 Caught\nin the maelstrom of rumors with\nwhich Wall street has seethed for\nthe past few days, the firm of\nZimmerman & Fotshay, .one. of the\noldest and best-known members of\nthe New York Stock exchange, was\nforced  to  the  wall   today.\nPresident Cromwell, In an Interview this afternoon, declared he was\nready to repeat his statement of\nyesterday that exchange officials\nknew of no member of his house\nthat was in trouble. He admitted,\nhowever, that \"any statement as to\nthe condition of a brokerage firm\nis the statement of a moment, and\nis   not   a   prophecy.\"\nHe would not hazard a prediction\nthat none of the eight or nine\nfirms concerning which rumors have\nbeen floated would not fail tomorrow.\nLoan Nearly Negotiated\nNo less than six firms this morning, he said, had received reports\nthat tho firm of Zimmerman &\nForshav was on the verge of .arranging a loan on the basis of it claims\nagainst tbe alien property custodian\nfor monevs impounded during tlie\n\u2022war. But the negotiations Ml\nthrough, and the firm closed its\ndoors shortlv after nnnn. Filing of\nan involuntary petition In bankruptcy quickly followed, and Gordon\nAuchinoloss was appointed receiver in\n$50,000 bond.\nThe firm announced through its\ncounsel tint Its liabilities were approximately ST.rtO-t.fiOft. nnd that it\nhnd assets of W.800.0W. Inahility\nto realize quickly on the assets,\nhowever, mado it impossible for the\nfirm to meet the run. The firm\nhad heen subject to a run since\nMonday.\nHandicapped bv thc frozen condition of more than $1,000,000 ln assets\nimpounded by the alien property\ncustodian during the war, the firm\ntried to negotiate a loan on the\nbasis of that claim, but failed.\nKING VICTOR VISITS\nSTRICKEN SECTION\nMussolini   Cancels   Engagements to Visit -Land of\nthe Bubbling Lava\nCATANIA. June 20.\u2014The mulling,\nfruitful and thickly populated slopes\nof Mount Aetna and the surrounding\ncountry, as the correspondent of the\nAssociated Press saw them in the\npast, have now become with ghastly\nsuddenness \"the land of dreadful\nnight\".\nCrimson filow in the Rlnckne\u00ab\u00ab\nThrough the thick darkness, which,\ncan almost be felt, glows the crimson\nof the lava fire flowing from the\nbroken lips of the craters, extending\nfor miles, nnd gradually growing\ndarker aa the molten mass cools and\nhardens, until cracks and crevices appear on the surface, through which\ncab be seen bubbling up the boiling\nlava.\nThe fields of Fiume, Freddo, Diana\nand Calatabiann, once green and\nbeautiful , now covered with heavy\ndeposits of dust and eindem  tremble\nfnd heave beneath the feet, while.the\noaring sounds accompanying the\neruption mingles with the rumblings\nof 'lorries through the darkness carrying away the refugees and their possessions  from the doomed  villages.\nApproaching the volcano, masses of\nfiery material thrown up from      the\nsmaller   craters   can   be   seen.     They\nroll   slowly   down   the   mountainside,\nand  above them are dense clouds of\nsmoke and vapor.\nVineyard,***. Thrived ns Molten Flow\nApproaches\nOne by one, the splendid homes and\nvillas   are   overborne   and   destroyed.\nVineyards and gardens have been consumed in the intense hcn.t long before\nthe lava reaches them, throwing    off\nmyriads of sparks, and finally smould\ncr down into grim blackness.\nAt Castigone, the Inhabitants linger\nfn their houses, collecting and packing their possessions, though doubtless most of these must be abandoned\nalong the road.\nThe visit of King Victor Rmmanuel\nwas the outstanding event of the day-\nTho King, wherever he appeared, was\nthe object of intense enthusiasm, the I the poijcet\nwomen especially crowding around '\nthe royal motor, holding up\ntheir children, and telling them\nlook on the royal    deliverer.\nWAHABI ARMY\nON WARPATH\nBEYONDJORDAN\nGovernment   of   Trans-Jor-\ndania Asks Benisacher\nTribe for Help\nUTTER DECLINE TO\nUNDERTAKE IT ALONE\nDispatches     Say     Twenty\nThousand Warriors Blot\nOut a Garrison\nJERUSALEM, June 20.\u2014It\nis now reported that 20,000\nWahabi warriors have attacked and annihilated the garrison\nat Kariatilmilh.\nDispatches received here say\nthe trans-Jordanian government requested the Benisacher\ntribe to attack the Wahabis,\nbut that the tribesmen refused\nto act unless the government\nforces  cooperated with them.\nROYAlls\u2122\nIS DISCOVERED\nBYKUpiANS\n\"Petoefy Guards\" Plan Overthrow of Bethlen and\nSetting Up of Throne\nAIM TO PLACE\nOTTO ON THRONE\nArrests at Budapest Number\nTwenty and Include Army\nand Police\nBUDAPEST, June 20.\u2014A    royalist\nconspiracy haa been discovered      by\nThe  conspirators      aro\nmembers of a' secret society known aa\nthe   \"Petoefy  guards\".     It  la  alleged\ncrying: [ they had plotted to overthrow Count\nMeighen for St. Louis\nto Address Rotarians\nOTTAWA, June 20. \u2014 nt. Hon.\nArthur Meighen, Conservative leader,\nleaves tonicht for St. Louis, where\nhe will speak at the international\nconvention of the Rotary clubs. He\nis expected to return on Monday.\nSTRANGLED GIRL WHO REFUSED HIM\nEulogia Lozade, Filipino (right), haa confessed to strangling Miss\nBlossom Beeley Martin (left), a New Tork nurse, to death, because she\nrefused to marry him. He wa3 arrested while attempting to dispose of the\n(body at -Staten Island ferry.\nAll Forest Travel\nin New Brunswick\nIs Now Prohibited\nFREDERTCTON, X. E.. June 20.\u2014\nThe prohibition of forest travel in\nNew Prunswick, which was put into\nforce In the eight northern counties\nby a proclamation of Hon. C. \\V.\nRobinson, minister of lands and\nmines, during the week-end, was\nextended to the entire province hy\nanother proclamation issued here this\nevening.\nExtension of prohibition of forest\ntravel to the whole province also\nillustrates the growing seriousness\nof the fire hazard. The mn.st intense heat that was ever known hart\nthoroughly   torched   New   Brunswick.\nStephen Bethlen, and proclaim a\nmonarchy, with Prince Otto, son of\nthe late king Charles, aa ruler.\nWorld's Swimming Champion Head\nIt is charged that the leader of thu\nplotters is Zollah de-Halmay a world\nrecord holder at \"Swimming, who enrolled   a   number   of   university   stu-\nPremior Friederich. Among the con-\niplraton are two police officials and\nseveral army officers.\nAbout 20 persons have been arrested In connection with the plot.\nThe Weather\n'Long live the king;  he will see that\n,ve have all we need\"\nKinsr is Deeply Moved\nVictor Kmmanuel was deeply moved by the horrors of the situation, and\nexpressed tenderest sympathy for all\nhis people.\nIn one dismal procession of refugees, a vj'.ing man in a shabby old military uniform staggered along with an;d\"nt^   telling them he was acting: aa\nd man on his back, almost    worn)lllp confidential agent of Prince Lud-\nout   by the  burden     he   had     carried Iwi*     Windisch-Graetz.     and     former\nthrough the suffocating atmosphere.\nThe king applauded thp young soldier's devotion to his \"father\".\nThe young man, saluting, replied\nthat the aged man was not his father\nbut that he himself was on orphan\nwho had lost every member of his\nfamily in the great eathquake at Messina. He had been adopted and cared for by the aid man, who was a\nsoldier.\nThe king asked the name of the\nsoldier's foster father, and promised\nthe youth employment, saying that\nsuch devotion deserved to be\nrewarded.\nNews of Mussolini Thrills\nThe news of Premier \u25a0Mussolini's\ndeparture for the scene of the disaster soon spread today, and thrilled the\npeople, who were informed that the\npremier had thrown up all engagements In order to mingle with tho.se\nso terribly stricken hy misfortune,\nnnd observe for himslf conditions,\nand what the people most need.\nThe women of the stricken countryside, hearing of the king's arrival,\nsaid wistfully: \"is not our queen\ncoming to comfort lis- as she did before?\"\nQueen Helen's loving- sympathy,\npractical help and competency as a\nnurse during the Messina catastrophe\nmade an indelible impression on the\nhearts of .southern   Italians.\nJF THE PEOPLE OF\nTH.i COUNTRY ARC\nTSOT GET-TlN-VeNY-\nwtAERErnsNcrr\nBECr-NU-aE TrtEY DOt-iT'l\nSPENb ENou&H TAMCf\nOM THE ROAD.\nAmundsen Quits\non Pole Flight;\nFrenchman to Try\nPARIS, June. 20. \u2014 A French\nex-army officer intends to make\nan attempt to reach the north\npole by airplane, now that Roald\nAmundsen ha, abandoned hii\nscheme, the nowspapers announced today. The, prospective\nadventurer's nam, it withheld.\nThe temperatures below are for\nthe 24 hours ending yesterday afternoon   at   6   o'clock.\nVICTORIA, June 20.\u2014Nelson    and\nvicinity;     Mostly cloudy with show*\ners:\nMin, Max,\nVictoria     60 68\nVancouver   64 8s\nKamloops   62 80\nBarkerville     44 64    '\nPrince Rupert ...,.,. 48 66    '\nGrand Forks   61 li    '\nNELSON     60 66    '\nKaslo  62 66\nCranbrook  45 62    '\nKdmonton  46 64\nBattleford    ,  46 66    '\nTrlnce Albert  42 (I\nCalsary     42 70\nWinnipeg    41 80    '\nPortland   \u201e.... 64 64   I\nSeattle     62 \u00ab2    !\nVancouver  ......... 64 *,_   )\n Tags T~o\nTHE NELSON DULY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JTJNE 21, 1923\nLeading Hotels of theWest\nWhat Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nvm\u00a3\\\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES $3.60 TO $5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling l\\Ien, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $1.00\nTHE    MOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nWILL CONFISCATE\nRUHR INDUSTRY\nDECREE COMMONS GIVES\nBANK REVISION\nTHIRD P.EADING\nFrench   and   Belgians   Will\nTake Over AH Works\nand Operate Them\nGERMANS WILL BE\nFORCED TO WORK\nHUME. \u2014 I. H. Munshaw, Mrs. P.\nBlaeke Sr., Mra. P. Ulnck\u00ab Jr., Winnipeg; Joseph Henby, Wyandotte; H.\nG. Wilcox, S. P. Markny, J. R. Payne.\nVancouver;   W. A.  Cameron,  New  XVri\nver;  J.  _f.  Guimont, Cranbrook;   James    cugo, 111.\nH. Hague, Edmonton; Henry John,\nWaneta.; P. Punkerly, Victoria; James\nSmith, London; Mary Gray, Alex.\nGray, Mrs. lsjors, Minn Elliott,\nSyringa    Creek;    tiraee    E.    Neil,    Chi-\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNELSON'S  LEADING    HOTEL\nTIRST-CLASS SAMPLE ROOMS\nThe Home of the Commercial and Mining Man and\nof the Tourist.\nAMERICAN   PLAN 13 TO IS PER DAV\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nSTRATHCONA.   \u2014   Angus   L.    Hay.    Cranbrook;    W.    Maw.    LethbrldKe;    L.\nD.  Oruno.v,  Winnipeg.\nQueen's Hotel\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nSteam Heated Throughout\nModernly Furnished Roomi.  Special\nWeekly   and   Monthly   Ratea.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Propri.t.r.\nSherbrooke Hotel\nNear  C.  P.   R. Station *\nRoomi   at   Reasonable 'Rata*.\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor.\nQUEEN'S. \u2014 H. C. Dinsmore, Rossland; Victor (Jlroux, Kalmo; Tom Cok-\nman. Sandon; MrH. C. Robinson, Salmo;\nA. W. Werrtieck, W. Matera, J. Wer\u00bb-\nbeck, D. Obrlgwisc, William O. Flaherty.\nNelson s Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nClasklo   XeitiiuraBt.\n\u2022fteflaement and Delicacy PtvtkDa\nOPEN  DAY  AMD  NIOHT\nLuncheon 11:30 to 2     llo\nBpeolal dinners 6:30 to 8        Ib\u00ab\nWe   iDeolallse   In   Chop   Busy   and\nNoodles,\nOccupying  Authorities  Will\nHave Right to Leave Plants\nIf They So Desire\nDUSSELDORF, June 20. \u2014 A decree providing for confiscation of all\nRuhr valley Industries, ihe products\nof which are applicable to the reparations accounts, and forced operation\nof the plants hy the Germans, Is being prepared by General de Goutte,\ncommander* of the occupation forces,\nit   was  announced   today.\nArrangement s for promulgat Ion of\nthe decree are going forward as rapidly\nas possible, but owing to the wide\nscope of its measures, and the executive character of. the Industries affected, it WM said the French and\nBelgian authorities would require several days more ln which to work out\nihe details hefore putting the plan\nInto   operation. *\nThe decree will give the military authorities absolute power to take over\nall metal, iron and steel plants, mines,\ncoke ovens, and alt private industries In the Ruhr.\nSever*   Penalties.\nIn the event of the Germans refusing to operate the plants, after the\nrequisition, the decree provides jail\nsentences up to 15 years, and in addition heavy fines for the directors\nof the companies or others responsible\nl'or the resistance.\nIn cases of sabotage to hinder the\nwork at any of the plants after requisition, those responsible will be\ntried by court-martial, and upon conviction will be subject to the death\npenalty.\nThe decree will be most sweeping,\ngiving the military .authorities, in\ncollaboration with the French civil\ncommission, the right to exploit the\nindustries themselves, or to lease the\nplants to concessionaires, if this is\ndeemed better to the interests of the\noccupation authorities hi their plan to\nobtain reparations.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTtL\nJ. A. Kerr. Manager\nThe  home  of  plenty.\nFifty   rooma  of  solid  comfort\nWe serve the best meals ln Nelaon.\nIt's the cook.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nFirst-data    Rooma    by    tha    Day.\nWeak   or   Month.\nEvery Conaideration Shown t*\nGueata.\nCor.  Bakar  and  Ward  Ste., Nelson.\ni MADDEN. \u2014 H. McDonald. It. Robinson, Ainsworth; D. A. McDonald,\nSalmo; Charles file sea eke, Fernie; Mrs.\nI'. Haywood, Regina; A. Vique, F,\nFii.wci.-U.   R.   Fawcett and family.\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nThe onlj Cafa fn town cooklni\nelectrically. Dinner 11:30 a. m. to\n2 p. m. Lunch 6 p. m. to 8 p. m.,\nper cover, 85c Special Sunday\nDinner, per cover,  60c\n611 Bakar <t\nPhana WO\nTHE  STANDARD  CAFE\n320\nBaker   Street,   N.l.on,   B.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special  Lunch..35^\n6:30  to  8:00  p.   m\u201e   Supp.r. .__i\nPhona 1M\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616  Varnon   St.,   Eaat.\nUnly   bri-'k   hotel   In   city.     Steair\nheated, hot and cold water.   European  and  American  plana.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFlout equipped restaurant tn the\ncity. OPEN DAT AND NIGHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water and\nhot drlnke. Nice, clean, furnished\nrooms; hot and cold water We cater\nto private partlea\nSummer Resorts\nNEW   ORAND. \u2014 J.   -Simmons,   city;\nW. A. Rrockway, R. A. Warren, Hpo-\nJ'atie; Mrs. T. O, Armstrong, Slocan\nTjrty;  R.   E. Wlllford. Winlaw; Mrs. A.\nft  State,  Leone  State,  Cards ton.   Altn.;\nA'.  Olbb\u00ab.   Vancouver;  O   A.   Bush.   Kn-\nderby;  O.   M.   Smith,   Castlegar;   C.   W.\nDaniels,    Burton;    L.    A.    Marshall,    J.\nSimmons,   Winnipeg.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMet, Mallette e\\ Son, Proprietors.\nNice, warm, comfortable rooma at\nreasonable  rates.      Open day  and\nnight\nCorner   Hall   and   Vernon   Streets.\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nA   dealer's   reputation   in\nWORTH  a lot;  but you\nARE not charged with lt\nWHEN   buying   nien'a and\nBOYS' Wear from us,\nIT'S   part   of  our  service.\nFour    Progressive    Amendments and One Labor Are\nFirst Formally Voted Dow\nUNDER CONSIDERATION\nOVER THREE MONTHS\nAltogether Thirteen Amendments Offered Only One\nFirst Voted Down\nThe Sale Closes in Three Days\n**,\nSo far it has met a wonderful response\u2014not only from the city, but all over the\ndistrict.    We hope to g've the last three days the Crowning Values of the Sale.\nHalf Price Specials\nWill This\nOne Do?\nWHERE THE FISHINQ IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nFttOCTEB\nPishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Golf,\nTennis   Courts.\nriahing    Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nStore   ln   Connectloa.\nW.   A.   WARD,  Proprietor,\nBay  $3:  Week $17  to 919.     Special\nMonthly Batea.\nTJUCnVIKW. \u2014 O. Yosranak, City;\nWilliam Ovell, Crpston; A. Stephen.\nTrail; F. J. Harm\u2122, Rosshuid; K.\nWags,   Northport,   Wash.\nClassified Ads.\nBring Results\nROYAL HOTEL\nREVELSTOKE, B. C.\nWill be opened on or about June\n18th to the traveling public. All\nrooma newly renovated. Close ^o\nC. P. R. depot. Rooms $1.00 and\nup.    Dining room   in  connection,\nROBERT'LAUGHTON\n'     81GNS  OF   GOOD   HEALTH\nStrong,' Healthy Organs, that function\nFlegularly and Freely, without Pain\nor   Delay\u2014\nDR. MARTEL'8 FEMALE PILLS\nHave helped THOUSANDS LAST\nHAX.P CENTURY., Sealed tin package only.. One Period Treatment 12.00\nDruggists, or direct by mail. Knickerbocker Remedy Co., 71 K. Front St.,\nrornntn.\n\u2022   \"IIOIOI\nAdvertising is the Motive]\nPower of Business.   ,\nMra. H. T. J. Smythe asks If we\nhave a recipe, for white Baucfe\nwhich is easy to make. If tills\ndoes not meet her approval we\nshall be glad to submit others,\nThough this Is the easiest to make:\nHeat 2 Vi tablespoons of butter\nuntil It Is bubbling. Add quarter\ncup of corn starch, quarter teaspoon of salt and a little pepper.\nDilute half cup Pacific Milk with\nan equal amount of water and\npour Into the first mixture while\nstirring constantly. Bring it to\nboiling point and boll two min-'\nutes. This is a very smooth sauce\nand quite rich.\nPacific Milk Co.\nLIMITED\nFactorial   at La-duet  and  Abbot* ford.\nAFTER-EATING DISTRESS\nand all forms of stomach trouble such\nas gas pains, acid, sour burning stomach are relieved In two minutes by\ntaking Jo-To. Jo-To is sold by all\nDruggists.\nCuticura Quickly Relieves\nIrritated Skins\nBathe with Cuticura Soap and hoi\nwater to free the pores of impurities,\ndry lightly, and apply Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal. Cuticura\nTalcum ia ideal for powdering and\nperfuming.\n5u\u00bb2Se. Obtnnt IS \u00bbJ S*t. Talcra 2St. Sold\nthroughout the Dominion. Canadian Depot:\nI t-.m Limits, 144 Si. PhI St., W.. K.itr.-J.\nfeSaW'Cuticura Soap aba*** without mug.\nOTTAWA, June 20.\u2014The bill to\nfive the Hank act of Cana<Zt its\ndecennial revision has passed the\nhouse of commons. It was introduced shortly after the middle of\nMarch, and went to the banking and\ncommerce committee before Easter.\nIt reemerped' form that committee\nthe middle of last week, and waB\ntaken up In the house on Monday.\nNow. after 20-odd hours of debate\nthis week, during which a banker's\ndozen amendments were moved by\nProgressive members, it has got third\nreading.\nFive of these amendments were\nmqved when third reading of the bill\nwas under consideration, and -divisions  were   taken  on   four   of  them.\nThe other pight were moved while\nthe bill was in committee, and only\none was accepted by the government. This one exception was a\nproposal by D. F, Kellner, Progressive,\nKdmonton, to exempt from seizure\nby a bank as security, personal property which Is exempt from seizure\nhy process of execution under provincial  law.\nOne-Year Motion Lose*\nThe first division ln the third\nreading proceedings was on a motion by W. C. Good, Progressive,\nBrant, for extension of the bank\ncharters for a year only, instead of\n10 years. This was defeated by 95\nto 48. T'he majority was composed\nof liberals and Conservatives with\nA. W. Keill,, Independent, Comox-\nAlbernl, arid f. G. McBride, Progressive, Cari'boo. In the minority voted\nthe Progressives and Laborites with\n\\V. F. MacLean, Conservative, South\nYork.\nTlie'second division was on a motion by J. T. Shaw to allow a borrower to recover Interest paid In\nexcess of 7 per cent. This was declared lost on the same division;\nbut the names were ordered put In\nthe record.\nC. G. Coote, Progressive, Macleod,\nmoved the third amendment. It wasl\nto the same effect as Mr. Shaw's,\nexcept tbat the rate of interest wns\nfixed at & rter cent. This amendment was voted flown by 89 to 46.1\nOn this vote, A. \\V. Neill and T. G.\nMcBride. W, F. MacLean and E. J.\nMcMurray of Winnipeg North voted\nfor the amendment.\nWant Inquiry on Merchants' Collapge\nThe fourth called for an Investigation of the collapse of the Merchants' band, and its merger with\nthe Hank of Montreal, and was\nmoved by T. W. Bird, Progressive,\nNelson. This was defeated by 92\nto 4f\u00bb. W. F. MacLean and A, W.\nNeill voted for the amendment, and\nT.   (..   McBride   against    it.\nIt was this amendment which led\ntn the chief debate of the dav. J. T.\nShaw declared that the collapse of\nthe Merchants' back hud been shrouded in mystery and that the effect\nhad been to shake public confidence\nin the 'banks.\nThe fifth and last amendment was\nproposed bv J S. Woodsworth, Labor,\nWinnipeg Center, and sought to place\nin * the Bank act a declaration that\nbank clerks had the right of* \"as-\nsoeiation for nil lawful purposes.'\nIt* was voted down by 79 to 4fi.' Lib\nernls who voted for it were McMur\nray, Winnipeg; Power, Quebec; Rin\nfret, Montreal; ^Archambault, Cham-\nbly-Vercheres; Martel), Hants; Den-\nnls, Montreal; IVAnjau, Rimouskl;\nso did Hocken and W. F. MacLean\nfrom among the Conservatives, and\nNeill,   Independent,   Comox-Alberni.\nHon. Jacques Bureau asked the minister of finance If there was any\nprovision in the Bank act to prevent clerks from associating for liiw-\nful purposes. Mr. Fielding replied\nthat   there  was  no  such   provision.\nThe bill passed the third reading\nwithout division.\nAgainst. Concentration\nIn the debate on the Banking act.\nR. J. Garland, Progressive, Bow River. \u00abald the public was not watisfled\nwith the concentration of capital in\nthe hands of a few Individuals not\nactuated hy the puhlie interest of\nthe country but rather bv commercial\nInterests.   The danger was obvious.\nWilliam Irvine, Labor, Calgary, did\nnot think mergers could be stopped.\nThey were h passing phase of the economic situation, \"I myself,\" said\nMr. Irvine, \"look to the time when\nthere will be one hank in Canada, and\none financial institution on the\nthrone.\"\nHon. A. K. MacLean, Liberal, Halifax, wild that the government did not\napprove of mergers simply because\nthey were mergers.\nDiscourage Merging Says Meighen\nRt Hon. Arthur Meighen -said the\nattitude of the government toward\nthe merging of bfl-nks-should b*. -While*\nnot antagonistic, as islflM as possible\nto antagonism. He did not think it\nright that every bank fearing insolvency should able to merge. In some\ncases insolvency would be a better\nprocess. The fewer the mergers and\nthe more adverse the attitude of the\nminister of finance, the better for\nthe country, added Mr. Meighen.\nHon- W. S. Fielding thought it rather a strong statement to say that\nbanks should not merge until they\nwere near Insolvency.\nII IM Is Reported\nAfter the discussion on bank mergers,  69 clauses,    and    the schedules,\nwere  passed,  without  discussion, and\nthe bill was reported,\n\\V. S. Good. Progressive, Brant,\nasked the government when third\nreading of the bill would be moved.\nMr. Fielding stated that members\nof the Progressive party had faced\nihe passage of the bill through ecm-\nmlttee^m the understanding that they\nwould move four amendments on\nthird rending. He Understood that\nthese amendments would not be de-\nhated at length, but it, was decided\nto place the house on record regarding them.\nMr. Meighen suggested that they\nshould go on with the bill at once,\nand this course was adopted by unanimous consent of the house.\nMr.   Shaw   said   tlie   appalling  In-\nFancy Flowered Muslins\u2014\nFor Children's Dresses....HALF PRICE\nBlouses\u2014\nVoile und Georgette .....HALF PRICE\nMiddys\u2014\nStrong Drill  HALF PRICE\nCombinations\u2014\nIn fine -Lisle  HALF PRICE\n*\nLadies' Knitted Sport Suits and Skirts\nAt  HALF PRICE\nWhile Embroidery Flouncing\u2014\nFor Underskirts and  Infants'\nPresses HALF PRICE\nLadies' Fancy Collars\u2014\nA*  l HALF PRICE\nBoys' Heavy Cotton Hose\u2014\nAt .HALF PRICE\nCoat and Suit Special\u2014\nChoice Models\u2014Bought Cheap\u2014At\nLess Than Manufacturers' Prices.\nThey are all to the good.\nNELSON DRY GOODS CO.\nLadies' Wear Specialists\nsufficiency ot security held by the\nbank in connection with two big\nloans, called for a stronger phrase\nthan \"adventurous banking,\" as it\nwas called by the president of the\nBank of Montreal. The effect of\nthe drama had been to shake puhllc\nconfidence In the much-vaunted banking system. The facts had been\n\"shrouded In mystery, and the public\nheld divergent views on what was\nthe truth.\" Many people thought\nthat a small section of the directors had yielded to the directors of\nthe Bank of Montreal in a moment\nof panic, without exercising their\njudgment.\nThe   \"Weakest   Reason\"\nHon. W. S. Fielding said that of\nall the reasons given for delaying\nthe revision of the Bank act, this\nlast one, calling for an Investigation of the' Merchants' bank, was\nthe weakest. There was no connection between the Merchants' bank\nfailure  and   the   Bank  act.\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen failed\nto see that members supporting the\namendment had given the committee\nany arguments which would wer-\nrant holding up the revision of the-\nBank act in order to wait for an\ninvestigation into the Merchants' bank\nfailure.\nReclamation Director\nRetires From Health\nOTTAWA,    June    20\u2014 Edward    F.\nDrake, director of the Dominion gov\nernment   reclamation  service,  has  r\ntired   on   account   of  ill   health.   It\nannounced  today,    J. B.  Challles,\nrector   of   water   power   for   Canad\nwill assume  control  of  both  depar|\nment*,\nVeteran Canadian\nPaMisJier Passes\nC.    BLACKETT\nVeteran   publisher,\nrecently,   aged   86.\nROBINSON\ncied at  Ottawa\n\u25a0iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiittiii\nEDDYS\nMATCHES\nThe leading hotels.clubs\nrestaurants,railroads\nand steamships use EDDY\nMatches.because of their\nefficiency and economy\nALWAYS ASK FOR THEM BY NAME\nllillllillllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllli\nWhen You Btiij a New Car\nLOOK AT THE BATTERY\nTHE majority of Canadian-built\nautomobiles have Prest-O-Lite\nas standard battery equipment.\nThese manufacturers know that\nPrest-O-Lite Batteries give a steady\nflow of current to engine and lights,\nand an extra fund of reserve cower\nwhen it is needed.\nThe owner of a Prest-O-Lite Battery\nis sure of longer life from his battery, and of prompt, expert service\nanywhere in Canada.\nIf your car is not now so equipped,\nbe sure that your next battery is a\nPrest-O-Lite. A thousand Prest-O-\nLite Service Stations in Canada are\nmaking storage batteries last longer\nand give mavimum service.\nPREST-O-LITE COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\nMONTREAL TORONTO . WINNIPEG\nfimtOJhe Storage Battery\n-right tor every car,\nBENNETT'S, LTD., 306 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\n\u25a0\n (k?3\/\nTHE *NELSON i>AILT-WSWS, THURSDAY 'MORNING, JUNE 21, 1925\nPage *toie*\nMASONS FLOURISH\nIN SASKATCHEWAN\nMOOSE    JAW,    June    20.\u2014Reports\nfurhmittori   today  at   th\u00ab  op-ontnp   eng-\naloti  of the seventeenth  annual  com-\nj   municatlon   of   the   grand    lodge   of\nSaskatchewan, A. F. & A. Rt. showed\nKthat Maeonry Is In a flourishing condition In the province, both with re-\nKard to membership and financial\n\u2022conditions.\nApproximately 300 delegates from\nell districts in the province register-\n\u2022ed.     Tonight   delegates   were   enter-\nIned at a \u25a0banquet. Tomorrow officers   will   be   elected   for   the   year,\nid  business  brought   to an end.\nWEAK, RUN DOWN\nAIP-ING\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-\npound Brought belief When\nOther Medj-tine* Failed\nPort Mum, B. \u2022g.-'-itooklaydU E.\nPinkham sVeg\u00bb\/,b]eCompoundbec\u00abUM\nI w\u00ab\u00ab tired and rundown. I had headaches and no appetite and was troubled\nfor two years with\nsleeplessness. I tried\nmany medicines, but\nnothing did me any\nreal good. While 1\nwas living in Washington I was recom-\nble Compound.\nmended byastranger\nto take Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegeta-\n_ I am stronger and feel\n\u2022fine Bince then and am able to do my\nhousework. I am willing tor you to\niuse thesefactsasatestimonial.\"-Mrs.\nJ. C. Greaves, Port Mann, B. C\nFeelt New Life and Strength\nKeene.N. H.-\"I waa weak and rundown and had backache and all sorts of\ntroubles which women have. I found\ngreat relief when taking Lydia E. Pink-\nnam'a Vegetable Compound and I also\nused Lydia E. Pinkham'a Sanative\nWash. I am able to do my work and feel\nnew life and strength from the Vegetable Compound. I am doing all I ran to\nadvertise it.\"-Mrs. A. F. Hammond,\n72 Carpenter Street, Keene, N.H.\nSick and ailing women everywhere\nin the Dominion should try Lvdia E.\nPinkham'a Vegetable Compound.       c\nINDIGESTION\nrelieved   in   two   minutes   with\nJO-TO.\n(Gas, acid, sour, burning stomach all\nquickly relieved with Jo-To. Drug\nStores.\nSUMMER SAILINGS\n8T.   LAWRENCE   PORTS\nMONTREAL.QUEBEC\nTo Europe\nCherbourg\nJuly   7\u2014Emp. of Scotland Southampton\nHamburg\nJuly 13\u2014Montlaurier     Liverpool\nCherbourg\nJuly 18\u2014Melita     Southampton\nAntwerp\nJuly 19\u2014Marburn      Belfast\nGlasgow\nJuly 20\u2014Montclare     Liverpool\nCherbourg\nJuly 21\u2014Emp.   of   France.Southampton\nHamburg\n.July 27\u2014Montcalm Liverpool\nCherbourg\n[July 28\u2014Emp. of Britain   .Southampton\nHambnurg\n\u2022 Cherbourg\nAug.   1\u2014Minnedosa      Southampton\nAntwerp\nAug.   3\u2014Montrose      Liverpool\n[Aug.   4\u2014Metagama      Belfast\nGlasgow\nCherbourg\nAug-   4\u2014Emp. of Scotland.Southampton\nHamburg\n(Aug.10\u2014Montlaurier      Liverpool\nCherbourg\n'Aug. 15\u2014Melita    Southampton\nAntwerp\nAug. 16\u2014Marburn      ..... Belfast\nGlasgow\nAug. 17\u2014Montclare      Liverpool\nCherbourg\nAug. 18\u2014Einp. of France.-Southampton\nHamburg\nAug. 23\u2014Marloch  .Belfast\nGlasgow\nj Aug. 24\u2014Montcalm     Liverpool\nBerthing' Bheeti open for above pall-\n' 'r.fcw.    Xlake   your   reietvattoni.    Apply\nbrotigh   local   agent!   everywhere,   or\n1 vrlte\nJ. 0. CASTES,\nHist. Fais-rr. Agent, Nel ion, B.O.\nMEGANTIC\nThe Only First Class\nSteamer from Montreal\nWhen travelling to Europe cm\nthe luxurious Megantic you wil!\nexperience the greatest possible\ncomfort and satisfaction \u2014 tho\ncost is very reasonable \u2014 tbe\naccommodations are unsurpassed\u2014the cuisine and service\nare faultless.\nShe combines the\nexclusiveness of\nthe best club with\nthe luxury of the\nfinest hotel. Ask\nfor booklet and\nrates.\nC.   P.   Sargent, 81\u00bb\n.Snd   Ave.,   Seattle,\nWash.,    or    Local\n\u25a0Agenti.\nM\nREMODEL VOTE\nPROVISION ON\nIMPORTATION\nSenate Makes Progress With\nBill Amending the Canada\nTemperance Act\nOTTAWA, June 20. \u2014 In the senate today, when the Canada Temperance act was again dtBeuseed In committee, Sir Oeorge E. Foster questioned\nthe authority of the lleutenant-govcr-\nnor-ln-councll to take a plebiscite, as\nin British Columbia. He also drew\nattention to the situation which would\narise In Manitoba In event of that\nprovince declaring for government control.\nSenator Beaublen contended that the\nproposed bill would create an extraordinary situation ln Manitoba, and\nthat the people should have the same\nopportunity of declaring on the right\nof private importation as In any other\nprovince.\nSenator Belque declared that It\nwould be n-*ces\u00bbary to call the legislature tn British Columbia before a\nplebiscite .could   be   taken. '\nSenator Taylor arguetf that this\nwould create no hardship In British\nColumbia, that the legislature was due\nto meet  this autumn  In any case.\nIt was agreed to remodel the amendment calling for a plebiscite In Brit\nish Columbia on the right of private\nImportation.\nBapervlie Liquor Xiport.\nSir George Jester proposed\namendment to the Canada Temperance\nact by which \"If Khali be unlawful to\nexport any Intoxicating liquor to any\nforeign country until a consular or\nproper offfcer of such foreign country\nhas been l\u00abnued a certificate - to the\ncustoms office at the port at which lt\nIs proposed to export such intoxicating liquor, certifying that such Intoxicating liquor may, under the laws\nIn forco ln such foreign country, be\nlawfully   Imported   thereinto.\"\nHe urged that no obstacle should\nbe put In the way of the United\nStates in carrying out their prohibition law, and that Canada (should not\nallow any facilities that would make\nCanada a base for lawlessness la another   country.\nSenator Dandurand said the \"object\"\nof the legislation was to protect the1\nUnited States againet imports of\nliquor from Canada. This was unnecessary, as no one could legally Import  liquor  Into  the United  States.\nSenator Griesbaoh drew attention to\nthe fact that all goods over the value\nof |100 exported to the United States\nhad to have a consular certificate,\nand that the present proposal was no\nstronger than  what was In effect.\nSir James Lougheed sAld that Canada legalized the manufacture and export of liquor, and Sir George Foster's\nproposal was to handicap this Industry.\nThe amendment was defeated.\nSir George Foster moved another\namendment which had as Its object\nthe forfeiture of their license of any\ndistilleries who had been twice convicted of violation of any law of Canada relating to the prohibition and\ncontrol of liquor, al\u00abo making i lt unlawful to export liquor ln any vessel\nwhich had previously been used for\ntbla purpose without a certificate that\nlie former cargo had reached its port\nof  destination.\nHe strongly urged that these regulations should be given effect to,\nand quoted from a letter from Mr.\nHales of tbe Ontario liquor commission that largo quantities of\nliquor were loaded at Belleville\nand billed for Cuba and Mexico,\nwhen lhey v**ere really for the\nUnited States or to be smuggled\nback  into   Ontario.\nThe Ontario liquor commission had\napplied for the cancellation of the\nlicenses of three brewers who had\npersistently violated the law, but\nho action had been taken by the\ngovernment at OUawa.\nThis   amendment   was  also   lost.\nSOVIET RELEASES-\nSCHOONER FOR TRIP\nEIGHTEEN DIE\nFROM HEAT IN\nSTATE OF OHIO\nBoston Reports Three Deaths\nand Numerous Prostrations\nFrom Hot Wave\nCOLUMBUS, Ohio, June 20.\u2014Pros-\npects of relief from sweltering' weather which has enveloped Ohio for the\nlust 72 hours, causing tht: deaths\neither directly or indirectly of at least\n18 persons, is not forecast for. the\nremainder of this week, according .to\nobserver W. H. Alexander, of the loc-\nit bureau.\nBOSTON, June 2(1\u2014Three deaths\nRelieved to be directly attributable to\n'.he excessive heat, and numerous\n> rostra tions in various parts, resulted\nfrom tho second day of the present\ntent wave.\nHARDING PARDONS\nON EYE OF TOUR\nActs   in    More   Than . Hundrtd -and\nFifty  Cases  Before Setting Out\nfor Pacific Coast\nWASHINGTON. Juiy\u00bb 20.\u2014-President - Harding, accompanied by Mrs.\nHarding and a party of government\nofficials, left Washington this afternoon on a special train for a trip\nto tho Pacific coast and Alaska. The\npresident will speak In several cities,\nboth on the w-ay to Alaska and during the return trip. A visit to Van\ncouver is scheduled during the return  journey.\nImmediate release of more than a\nscore of federal prisoners, convicted\nof violating war laws, but with continued detention of almost as many\nmore, was ordered today by the\npresident before leaving on his western   trj^p.\nThe president acted In 158 pardon\nand commutation cases, a record-\nbreaking number In tho opinion of\nthe department of Justice officials.\nHo granted 3t) conditional and 14 un\nconditional commutations, one full\npardon, restored civil rights to \u2022 27\nformer prisoners, and denied 84 applications for pardons or commutations. He also ordered remission\njot fines lir two cases.\nThe president denied applications\n21 cases, including a group of 20\nalleged members of the Industrial\nWorkers of tho World, convicted at\nSacramento, Cul. Two convicted\nthere, however, had their sentences\ncommuted conditionally on their de\nportatlort. .        ; \u2022.\nGENUINE STOICS,\nTHESE PREMIERS\nCurries    So* let    Guards    Aboard    to\nAssure*. Koturn of Vessel for\nTrial at East Cape\nNOME, June 20\u2014The trading\nschooner Iskum, of Taeoma, Wash.,\none of four vessels held at East Cape.\nSiberia, on charges of having violated commercial laws of the Soviet\nUuselan government, has been released temporarily. To Insure return of\nthe Iskum to East Cape for a trial\nto be held when u party of Russian\nauthorities arrive from the south,\ntwo Soviet guards are travelling\naboard the vessel\nThe temporary ' freedom granted\nthe Iskum was attributed to the fact\nthat she had important mall for St.\nLawrence Island. This island, which\nIs in Bering sea, 170 mllea south of\nEast Cape, is Amorican territory.\nBOILS\nMADE HIM SICK AND\nMISERABLE\nMr. Richard Zalenzoski, McLean,\nSask., writes:\u2014\"I had been suffering\ncontinuously, with bolls, for three\nyears, and during that time I tried\nmany different remedies without any\nsuccess whatever. In spite of all my\nefforts 1 was compelled to go to the\nhospital. Tlli8 was m tho FaH \u00b0' th*\nyear, and right in the busiest time\nof, the season. Upon my return home\nIt Just took about two weeks until\nmy neck and arms were again occupied by the boils which made me feel\nvery sick and miserable.\nOne day one of my friends advised\nme to try Burdock Blood Bitters, and\nafter I had used less than two bottles\nI was very much surprised . tt the\nresult.\nIt is now over two years since I\ngot in touch with B. B. B., and I\nhave had no bother with bolls since.\n[ will recommend it to all persons\nsuffering from any delect in the\nblood,\" ...   ..   -\u00ab*\u2022 -.\nB. B. B. Is manufactured only by\nThe T, .Miltmru Co., .Limited, Toronto,\nQaU .\t\nDunning   and   Orteofleld   WW   Ors-Ufy\n.Reporters In Winnipeg Witt\nAnno unci ment.\nWINNIPEG, June 20.\u2014The premiers\nof Saskatchewan and Alberta again\nmaintained their stoical silence as to\nanything having developed in connection with the formation of the proposed compulsory wheat board for\ntheir Rrovinces,' this evening, and\nonly relaxed into speech to reiterate\ntheir formula that \"there is nothing\nto   say.\"\nPremier Dunning and Premier Greenfield are, however, remaining in Winnipeg, and expect to continue their\nuisuussions. They have been Joined\nby Hon. A, T. McNab, provincial minister of public works In, Saskatchewan.\nDr. Wolverton Is\nChosen President\nby the Baptists\nCHILLIWACK, June 20.\u2014Dr. Wol-\nverton of Nelson was elected prestd-\n\u25a0nt of tho Baptists of British Columbia at the end of the five-day convention here last night. The next\nconvention will be held iu New Westminster,\nNine Men Hemmed\nby Fire Are Saved\nby Timely Rain\nDULUTH, Mfnn., June 30.\u2014Hemmed\nIn on all sides by a raging bush fire,\nnine men engaged lu fighting - fire\nalong the Loon river iu the vicinity\nof Echo lake, were saved from death\nlate yesterday, by the arrjval of. a\nheavy rainfall, according to a message from the ranger station at Orr\ntonight. The men suffered alight\nburns.\nWinnipeg Booze\nParty Is Fatal\nfor Two Members\nWIN.N'IPEii, Juno 20. \u2014 Two deaths\nIs the toll of a \"canned heat\" party\nheld here Tuesday night. A few hours\nr.fter th* party, Frank Yoxall was\nstricken blind and died ln a short\ntime, while tonight Percy Totten,\naged 49, died in the hospital. Four\nmen attended the '\"party.\" Two are\nheld   by   police.\nMasons Win Strike\nin New York for\nTwelve-Dollar Day\nNEW' YORK. June 20. \u2014 The\nbrfnklayerH' strike, which retarded\nmetropolitan buildinff construction\nInvolving ,176,000,000. ended loday,\nwhen the Mason Builders' associations agreed to the union demand\nfor a wage of $12 a day, on a\ntwo-year   agreement.\nAmundsen's Plane\nDamaged on Trial\nFlight in North\n, CHHISTIANIA, June 20.\u2014Captain\nItoald Amundsen, the explorer, who\nrecently abandoned his \u25a0 proposed\nflight across the north pole by airplane, is returning to the United\nStates 0* tl\u00bbe 'Schooner Holmes, according to a dispatch from Nome,\nAlaska, to the Aftenposten. The\ndispatch , says Anj.undfjei.'s airplane\nwas d^inaffed & a iri&l tySbtt    .\nCRESTON SCHOOLS\nASK TENTOUSAND\nTrustees  Will  Only Aak  For Fnotigh\nFor Banning Sxpensss  and  ror\nOrdinary ftepain.\nCRESTON, B.C., June 20 \u2014 A vote\nof $10,000 Is in prospect for the approval of the ratepayers of Creston\nschool district at the annual meeting\nearly next month,' according to the\nCreston school board, which met Monday night. These figures are from a\nrough estimate of what will -be required and It, Is certain that a sum\nconsiderably In excess of $8300 voted\nlast year will  be required.\nUp to the present there are no\nresignations from the high school\nstaff, but two of the five public school\nteachers have advised that they will\nnot . be returning after midsummer.\nThose quitting are Principal (3. P.\nSmith, who has been at the head of\npubjio school affairs for four years,\nand Miss Creighton, who came last\nyear to take charge of the primary\nroom.\nLet  Mew Accommodation  Walt.\nThe trustees have decided that no\nextra accommodation will be provided\nthis year, but ln order to get awav\nfrom this, certainly every room will\nbe taxed almost beyond regulation capacity, as there is already a beginners' class of 25 to be taken care of,\nwhilst the .number of promotions from\nthe high school will be far less than\nthis number. -In consequence of thiw,\ninquirlers who are already writing In\nfrom points down >the lnke as far as\nHarrpp,. and east to Yahk, for next\nyear high school tuition are'being Informed that it is hardly possible that\nhigher education can be provided other\nthan for a few ln the higher high\nschool classes,\nAt Monday night's meeting the trustees decided to call for tenders for\nkalsominlng and painting and varnishing.the interior woodwork of the nmln\nschool building, and If the funds are\nvoted, other necessary,. improvements\nwill  be undertaken.\nSome considerable increase in school\nrevenues for th*' next year will be\nrequired-to provide for. necessary Increases in salaries.' srhool renovation, and the buying of the usual two-\nyear fuel supply, last year being the\n\"off\" year for wood purchasing. In\naddition the treasurer will have no\nsurplus to carry forward at the end\nof June.\nS. A. Speers. -who has made a very\nefficient secretary-treasurer of the\nboard, ns i we-11 as trustee, complet-s\nhis three-year term this month, and\nIt Is very, doubtful if he will seek reelection. Chairman II. B. Staples Ins\ntwo years more to serve, and F. II\nJackson's term expires  ln   1924.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nNOT PARIS BUYER\nPres Id tit Bt'-atty Dcnlee Rumor tbat\nHallway Is Obtaining Property\non Hue S-rihe\nLONDON, June 20.\u2014Having seen a\nParis dhipatch not of Canadian .Press\norigin, which states the Canadian\nPacific railway, through Morgan's\nbank, had purchased for a large sum\nthe property at the corner of Rue\nScribe and Boulevard Madeleine, and\nalso contemplated buying the building in which the company's Paris office Is now located. President B.W\nBeatty of the Canadian Pacific railway today asked the Canadian Press\nto say there was absolutely no foundation for either statement.\n\"The company has an office In Par-\nIs whfchMs reasonably suitable for its\nrequirements, and does not contemplate making any purchases\"\nMr. Beatty said it appeared to Mm\nthat the report was circulated in order to Justify other purchases In the\nsame district  by Canadian  Interests.\nUnder present conditions tho Canadian Pacific does not consider larger capital Investments in office build-\n.fngs cither necessary or desirable,\"\nconcluded  Mr.  Beatty.\nTUNNEL CAVES;\nMAN SMOTHERS\nof Minnesota, lectured on \"The Dtag-\ni HO.S1H of the Uiiproductivity of Boils\",\nJ and A. J. Peters uf the United States\n[department of agriculture, tspuke on\nForage Crops ih Northern States\".\nPresident L. S- Klinck, of tlie Unf-\nCALOARY, June 20.\u2014Horace I>al*\\\naged 30. was smothered to death when\nthe wall of a tunnel under construction In tho C.P.K. yards caved In\nupon him here this nfternoon. Forty-\nfive minutes was required to dig out\nthe body. An Inquest will be held\ntomorrow.\nCANADIAN FARM\nEXPERTS GATHER'\nAdvanced  Leotnrai Aro    Feature    of\nOjM'iiIng I>ay ut Kankatoon;  ',-viinrk\nAdmires   llonscflfsli\nSASKATOON. June   10.\u2014Advanced\nlectures on soils and forage crops,\nand a live stock show, wero features\nnf this afternoon's program of tho\n\"irst. day of the convention of the\nCanadian society of Technie.il Agriculturists, being held at the Unlver-\ni sity of Saskatchewan.\nDr.  F.  h.  Alwny, of the University\nof horses to be eoMpired *w1#i thO#\u00bb\nshown this afternoon.\"\nTbe large numbers -snd the tyfti\naverage quality of tbe otber Wndii of\nvitoi'k also frnprewed the visitors.\nThe    University   ef i\nversity   of   Briti-sh     Columbia-,,\n\"No college  in  Canada has a\nsaid: I tendered the visitors .a boaq-^et    *W\u00ab\nstring evening.\nMew Steel Trains\nThe Last Word In\nPullman Equipment\nStandard and Touri\u00bbt\non th*\nORIENTAL\nLIMITED\nTaeoma   Seattle-Spokane\nI From Portland \u00bb!\u2022 t. P. *\u00bb.\u00bb\u00bb.I\nTo CHICAGO\nwithout change\n\"\u25a0EST MEALS ON WHEEL!\"\nClub, T.bl. d'hola or a la Carta\nEASTERN EXCURSIONS\nXeWSL \u25a0 1\nVv^\nC. W.  MELDRUM\nA. C. *>. A.\nta.ttla, Waah.\nFare and 1-10 for Round Trip\nPar furtl.fr information, roaorvatiaa* or Dakota,\naall an, talaahana, or write   .\nE.   L.   Buchanan,'City   Freight   and\nPassenger   Agent,   421    Bakar   Street,\nNelson.\nH. E. Douglas, Agent, Fernie, B. t.'\nLowerRatesVia\nGREAT N0K,nv SeeAmrlcartrst\nNEW PERFECTION\nOil Cook Stoves and Ovens  \u25a0\nSATISFY 4.000,000 WOMEN\nIn every tongue, women tell Made in sizes from two to five\nof the never-ending satisfac- burners, the NEW PERFEC-\ntion that has made the famous TION offers quick, economical\nBlue Chimney NEW PER- and dependable cooking ser-\nFECTION the world's most vice to suit the requirements\npopular oil stove. of every family.\nLet your dealer demonstrate NEW PERFECTION'S cooking satisfaction for you.   See the complete line.\nPRICES\niCorriplet. with Warming C.bm.r, ., ,\/\/\u201e.',.'-\u2022'\nTwo-Burner, $35.50; Three-Burner, $42.25: Four-Burner, $54.25; Five-Burner, $76.25\nFive-Burner Ovrn Range, $125.00\nNew Perfection Portable Ovana from $4.25 to $10.50 additional\n,'\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0' , ' l \u25a0..\nPERFECTION STOVE COMPANY LIMITED\nSARNIA      -      ONTARIO\nMontreal, P.Q. \"   \u25a0, Winn!|\u00ab\u00bb. Man.\n.   . eiho makar* of PERFECTION Oil Hautar*\n -\t\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1923\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished -every morning eioept\nS'lnday by Th\u00ab News Publishing com-\np\u00bbny.   limited,   Nelson,   B.C.,   Canada.\nBusiness letters should be ad-\ntressed and checks and money orders\nmads paysbls to Ths News Publlsh-\nlug company, limited, and In no cass\nto  individual  members  of ths  staff.\nAdvertising rate curds and A. B. 0\nStatements of circulation mailed od\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\nef any advertising agency recognised\nby ths Canadian Press Association.\n\" \" SUBSCRIPTION RATES.\nBy  mall   (country),   per  month...I .60\nPer    year      * o\u00ab\nOutside   Canada,   per   month 76\nPer    year      7.R0\nDelivered,   per  month    75\nPer  six  months     4 00\nPsr   year     7.(0\n Payable  In  Advance.\nMember  Audit  Bureau  of   Circulation.\n\u2022  THURSDAY,  JUNE 27,  1923\nCity Against Village in\nBulgaria\nBulgaria's smaller neighbors, if not\nthe great powers, apprehensive of\ndiplomatic and other complications as\na result of the overthrow of the\nStamboullskl government at Sofia.\nThe foreign policies of that government were reassuring and satisfactory to the allies. It had accepted defeat in a chastened spirit,\nhad agreed to pay reparations and\nseemed sincere in its professed desire to maintain friendly relations\nwith  former enemies.\n\"Whether the revolution was due\nin part to discontent ln the army,\nto neglect of the plaints of Macedonian Bulgarians under the rule of\nthe Serbs, and similar factors connected with foreign relations, the\nworld does not certainly know, but\nthere is no doubt that one cause of\nthe upheaval was the revolt of the\ncity population, or the middle classes,\nagainst the peasant-class government, whose economic and social\nprogram was replete with discriminations against the urban dwellers.\nThe much-dlscusased law against\nidlers, whether men or women, was\ndirected against alleged \"parasitic\"\nresidents of cities. The law compelling Communist groups of 10 or\nmore persons to live up to their\nprinciples was a grltn joke, possibly, .*.but It offended the professional and mercantile elements. The\npeasant government was resolutely\nanti-Bolshevik and stanchly individualist, but lt was accused of acting\non the theory that the city 'had no\nrights the rural community was\nbound  to respect.\nShould the revolutionary government, which represents the army\nand the city, uiilertake to retaliate and oppress the peasants, the\nmajority of the Bulgarian people\nwould defeat lt at the first popular\nelection. The sobranje. or national\nassembly, is controlled by the preponderant peasant population. A\njust and enlightened government,\nhowever, should command the support both of city and village in\nBulgaria.\nEARL'S DAUGHTER WEDS WIRELESS OPERATOR\nLady Tleasance Rous, daughter of tho earl of Stradbroke, has just m;irrled a ihlp'i\nshe met on a.voyage. The happy couple are now spending th-ir honeymoon In Ireland.\nMcKenna,    the    groom;    Lady    I'leasance;    Bernard    McKenna,  the groom's- uhlIc,  and   tin\n*rh*eJess opt rutin* whom\nTbe photo shows Owen\nMcKenna  family   horse.\nEfficient\n.usekeepmSM\nL\u00bbur\u00bb.A.WpK\u00bbnen \u25a0  rn\nBY LENOJL\u00a3\n$Qijp\nof\nBounf\nBy Jama W. Barton, M.D%\ninflammation oi the Heart\nCROCHETING   A   WOMAN'S   BWBATER   COAT\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nCodfish   Cakes\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nSpanish Omelet\nCream    &MMS    Sandwiches\nMade With WnOl\u00ab Wheat Toast\nLettuce\nTea Preserves\nDinner\nSalmon,   European   Style\nFried  Potatoes\nSpinach \u2022 Lettuco\nLemon Tarts\nCoffee\nOpen Diplomacy and Open\nRebuffs\nEven at Washington It is conceded\nthat the administration's latest proposal has been \"coldly\" received by\nthe countries to which It was addressed. This is scarcely strange,\nsays the New York Times In discussing the American proposition to\nextend the right of search at sea.\nThe. Times sees in this incident an\nexample of one weakness of so-\ncalled \"open\" diplomacy.\nTlie scheme to allow foreign ships\nto carry liquor under seal In our\nterritorial waters, provided our prohibition inspectors were given the\nright to search and seizure out to\na limit of 12 miles from the shore,\nhad uncertainty stamped all over the\nface of it, continues the New York\npaper. The plan required the negotiation of several treaties. But\nthere was no certainty that the\nsenate would ratify any of them.\nFurthermore, It was highly uncertain whether international law could\n\u25a0 be changed by even a dozen treaties.\nA general conference and a general agreement of the nations would\nseem to bo requlired. At all events,\nsuch Is the foreign view. No one\nshould be surprised\" that this American \u2022 oTTer lias' been enthusiastically\ndeclined without thanks.\n' The whole affair illustrates one\nof the dangers to which the newfangled, wide-open diplomacy is exposed. If a policy Is publicly announced before it is ripe or accepted, the rejection Af it by other\nnations becomes also a matter of\npublic knowledge. This is a mortification which might have been kept\nsecret under the older and more confidential methods of diplomatic exchanges. What the administration\nhad in mind In tbe present instance\nwas admirably suited for a cautious\n\"feeler.\" The other governments\nmight have been quietly sounded out\nbefore any statement was made at\nWashington. Then, If the plan chosen\ndid not succeed, another could have\nbeen tried. But the administration\nchose to proclaim Its purpose from\nthe housetop,- and the inevitable result, the Times concludes, is to\ngive the rebuff which it has received equal  notoriety.\nSeveral of my column readers have\nrequested  the   following   directions:\nLadies' Crocheted Coat Sweater\u2014\nSize 36 to 3S. Materials; Nine hanks\nof old blue, and one-hall! hank of\nwhite knitting worsted, one bone\nCtochat honk, size No. 4.\nWith tbe bine yarn cli. 102 sts.,\n1 s. c, into second ch. from hook,\nyarn over, hook into next st.. draw\nup loop, yarn over, draw through\nall the three loop* on hook, thus\nmaking a slip double (si. d.), 1 s. c.\nInto next st., I si. d. inlo next; repeat to end of row, ending with 1\na. c.   Into   last' st..   1   ch.,   turn.\nSecond Row\u2014 I l. c. over s. r.,\ntaking both kldss ol st.. \u2022 1 si. d.\nover si. d,, t.iking back of st. only.\n1 s. r. over next s. c, taking both\nsides of st. only, 1 s. c. over next\ns. c. taking both sides of st.; repeat from * to the end of row, 1 ch.,\nturn. Repeat Mcond row throughout\nthe work, being careful to keep the\npattern after each in crease or decrease. When work measures 6\nInches,   decreaso   1   st.   at   each   end\nof   work,   every  eighth  row,   until   93\nsts.   remain.     Work   on    this   length\nuntil   work   measures   20   inches,   decrease   3   sts.   at   each   end   for   arm-\nboles,   now  decrease   1   st.   nt   end  of\nevery  row till   81   sts.   remain;   work\nj on   this   length   till   work   measures\n28  inches.\nFront\u2014On   first   27   sts,   work   for\nI right    shoulder    five     rows,     leaving\nI reHt    of   stitches    for    back    of    neck\nand   left   shoulder,   ;i   ch..   turn,    1    s.\nI c.   Into   second   ch.   fl'om   hook,    1   \u00abl.\nd.    into    next    st.;     continue    pattern\n; on   rest   of   row,   1   ch\u201e   turn,   in   this\n'\u25a0 wny   increasing   2  sts.   in   every\ni row toward front  eight  times  or  till\ni 16  sts. ore addend.    Work  eight  rows\nj even, then Increase 1   st, In every row\n! toward armhole till 20 rows arfl mflds.\ni This finishes the armhols    .Vow !:\u00bbep\ni work   even   till   first   narrowing   on\nI underarm   Mm   is   reached,   incnasc\nI 1   st.   In  every   10(h   row   four   Um\u00abb,\nand   work   even   till   underarm   seam\nonfront is same length as back. Work\nleft front In  same  wav,  but  (tarthm\nthe   first   row   by   counting   .back   27\nsts. and reversing the increasing and\ndecreasing. ,\nSleeve-Ch.   10   sts.,   work   pattern\n1   row,   then   increase   1   Hts    at   c\nof   every   row   till   you   have   81   i\nacross.     Work   six   rows   even.     Tl\ndecrease   1   it.   at   each   end   in\nMorning, noon and night\u2014a trio of\ndesigns suitable to meet every occasion of a. day \u00bbt home in town, while\ntraveling,   or  at   a   start   resort   hotel.\nButter yellow linen, with brown\nor navy blue monogram or othei\nmotif accentuating the tiny pockets.\nThe string belt of the same material,\nA cool and lovely frock for mornings.\nBeige, gray, fallow\", or lanviti green\ncrepe   de   chene,   wilh   embroidery   In\nfourth row till H sts. remain.\neven til] sleeve measures 1fi\nI on seant. (Continued totnuri\nI    Tomorrow \u2014 crocheting a \\\\\nj Sweater   Coat,   Continued.\nWi\nI ml\nOW.)\ntn    IfUt\n\"Efficient\nAll Inquiries a<vi rsssed\nKirkman In enre of the\nIlousekeeplnt:\"   department   will   b<\n\u2022wind In these columns in tbefr turn.\nThis rpqulres considerable time, bow-\never, owing to the great numbm* received. So. If a personal or quicker\nreply Is desired, a stamped and self-\naddressed envelope must be Inclosed\nwith the question. Bt sum to use\nYOUR full Qsme, street number, and\nthe name of your cily and province.\u2014\nThe   Editor.\nMexico and  th*\u00bb Other Spanish  repub-    tulles of the continent.     Official  recog- ll\nnltioit   of  the    Mexican    government i \u25a0\u2022\nwould not then wait much  longer. \u2014[ \u2022 \"\"\"\nL'Evenement. }     Fiction\nThe Lighter Side\nWhat the Press Is Sayint\n\u00abh-\u2014\u2014 \u2014 \u25a0\nMexican Rcc-ognithm\nForeign concession-holders cannot\nescape the effects of a measure which\naffects so radically the great Mexican\nlanded proprietors. There Is no doubt\nthat the hour of rapprochements is\nnigh. The mistrust of Latin-Americans for \"Saxon Yankees\" is not productive of good results, nor does It\n1 . business. It is, therefore, opportune, not to say urgent, for Wash-\nio alter  her attitude towards\nSpending the Taxes\nThe country requires a ministry;\nthat will recognize lhat taxation, even!\nfor neeessary purposes. Is a drain up-,\non the community, and that govern- \\\nment can .spend money collected from\nthe people less advantageously thanj\nthe people can spend it If It is left;\nwith them. Those favorable to economy do not complain of tbe money\nspent to pay Interest on war loans.\nIt is a burden, but a niesMry burden. They do object to government\nladling out money extracted from tlie\ntaxpayers as a whole for the benefit\nof Motions,  whether those  beneficed\nare meat producers, sujiar-gruwers, or\nskilled tradesmen looking for highly\npaid and useless yi'oik in .shipyards,\u2014\nThe Australasian.\nThe    hero\nlieutenant,\nImproving   in\n(Registered   In   accordance   with   the\nCopyright   Act)\nI trust that my readers will not\ngrow facetious and say tbat everybody gets this condition sometime\nin   their   lives.\nBut, as a matter of fact, the Inner\nlining of your heart can get inflamed Just . like other parts of\nthe tbody.\nYou see, the blood bathes this\nlining, and if tbe blood Is carrying\naround rn it the poisons of tonsl-\nHMs, rheumatism or scarlet fever,\nthey will naturally be carried to\nthe  heart.\nSo that it can easily happen that\nthe lining of the heart gets inflamed from these, substances, and\nyou have what is called endocarditis, \"ltls\" simply means inflammation of\u2014as appendicitis\u2014inflammation of appendix.\nThus, the products of diseased\ntonsils can find a lodgment upon\nthe valves of the heart, or on the\nlittle strings lhat hold tho valves\nin   place.\nSo. the leaves of a valve that\nshould close an opening in the heart\nperfectly have these little growths\nor vegetations on them, which prevent a complete closure. This allows blood to leak , back\u2014a leaky\nvalve, as you've often heard it\nspoken   of.\nPerhaps the best way to understand it\"1 is to remember that an\n^inflammation such as a burn, for\nInstance, causes scar or flbrou.- tissue, which contracts tbe flesh Thus,\ninstead of a nice, smooth valve\nof flesh you have a vlave whose\nedges are puckeredh by the fibrous\ntissue, just like the scallopped edges\non a pic. You see, the blood flows\nbuck through the little openings\ncaused by the puckers. This causes\nwhat Us known as heart  murmur.\nYou  ask  what good   does  lt do\nlinow all  this?\nJust this much. If, when you or\nyours have an attack of rhou-\nmatism, tonsilitis, scarlet fever\nother acute condition, that you He\nperfectly tsfill \"in bed until the acute\ncondition   is   past.\nShould your heart share in the\ninfection, It might prove very serious.\nSo,    don't    be     impatient    if    the\ndoctor says you have  to stay in bed\nfew   days   longer   than   you   think\nnecessary.   It Is the safe thing to do.\nW n y\ncroud\nThe agitator and the proletariat remind us that the sea would be calm\nexcept   for   the   wind.\nA small army. wi(h Cod's help, may\nwin a war; but il ttlsil a big one to\nenforce  the   peace   treaty.\nshade ^f tho samo material,\nblended  with  black,  or ex-\n\u2022ntirely    in    silver      thread,\nmost   agreeable   scheme   for\nnoon   gown.\n1   for   the   evening,   this\nmak<\nthe\nAn\ndraped   model  of crepe  marie-\nWhatDoYouThink?\nThe DsIIt News (nrltes letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public Interest. A nun-0>-plume may,\n\u25a0If destrad be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\ns* s K lanintee of ftood faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief and\nmust avoid personalities Ths\nDally News does not hold Itself, In\nany way, responsible for the vleWs\nof correspondents. Letters which\nenntsin sdvcrtlslnfr mutter or propaganda which is classed as adver-\nLiaiut, win not im acuupted under\nway circumstances. \u2022   -\nTen Yean Ago\n\u00bb \u00ab * w\nForeigner Is Needed\nMore Than Blue Blood\nAsserts 0*Halloran\nTo the Editor of Ths  Daily News:\nSir:\u2014Permit me a little Wfeew fn\nyour valuable paper to discuss the\nall-Important question of the. foreign\nelement In Canada I have not been\nlong In this country, but long enough\nto have seen splendid work done by\nthe   so-called   foreigner   In   Canada.\nKnowing the hard-working and persevering m,uiii*r of these peoples. I\nwish to \u00a7e_ that we cannot afford\nto exclude them from ths country.\nApart from the pressing need of\nworkers on the land, the good red\nblood, better than blue where pick\nand shovel stare you In the face, Is\nneeded to develop the land and pay\nthe  taxes.\nThese virile men nnd women, landing on our coasts to seek their opportunity, *must not be turned a.way.\nThey compare favorably with the\nyoung people we turn obt of our\nschools todav, and in the years are\nbound to leave their mark of physical\nendurance   on   the   land.\nThe gentleman who remarked that\nhe didn't know where he lived because\nhe was- surrounded by so-called foreigners need not suffer on theft account. He would feel the same In\nmany other spots lu our great world.\nAre wo so exclusive that we must\nhave a fellow Just the UkSROM of ourselves to live across, from us, thut we\nmay   feel   at   home?\nThese foreigners nre Intelligent human beings like ourselves, even should\nthey speak a tongue Mr. Ihilisber la\nnot sufficiently educated to understand. Should they be, as is suggested, of dirty ways and low standards of living, let us rather encourage\nthem, and give them the splendid opportunity to learn the better ways of\nliving   we   profess   to   practice.\nH.    a   O'HALI.ORAN.\n(The   Dally  News,  June  21,   1913.)\nThe     proposed     eight-hour       day\nfound   general   favor   in   the   sessloi\nof   the   royal   cum mission     of     labor\nheld yeaterday  In Nelson-\n\u2022    \u2666    \u2022\n.T. Weir left on the thia morning*\nboat for an extended visit to th\u00ab\nBritish   Isles*\nThe    Dominion    Express      com;\ndecided  to run  a   ventilated fruit c\nfrom   Kootenay   Landing   eastward,\ns    s    a\nA. Willey. superintendent of th<\nWest Kootenay power plant, and H\nOlencross, were struck to the groum\nyesterday when 1600 volts . passer\nthrough thetn from the effects\nan electrical storm on the wires nea\nHeasley.\nOBJECTS TO DRURY\nT.\\KING THE CREDIT\nSouth   Oxford   Member   Asks   Domin\nion  Government  to  Publish Cattle\nEmbargo  Correspondence\n* OTTAWA, June 20\u2014 In the hous\nI his afternoon, Vuncan Sutherlant\nConservative, Oxford South, aske\nj whether It was tht> Intention of th\nigovernment to bring down correspond\nj enee that had pussod between th\nj Canadian and the Krltlsh govern\n| ments in relation to the removt\ni of the Hritish embargo against Ca\nj nadian   cattle.\nThe question, he said. wi\\s prompt\nI ed   by   the   \"reckless   statements\"   'b*\nIng made by  the premier of pntart\nand   others.\nThe prime minister replied th*\nthe British government decided? thE\nlhe correspondence had been\ngarded as confidential. It waul\nhowever, be submitted to tho lead*\nof the opposition, who would use h;\ndiscretion as to its confidential char\nacter.\n-4\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The   Daily  News.   Juno  21\/1'JO?.\nHorn, to Mr. and Mrs. James Robertson,  Water Street,  a daughter.\n\u2022    \u2022     \u2022\nThe Nelson Order nf the Rocky\nMountain Rangers will parade tonight at  8.15  o'clock.\nTold in Rime\nI     IjKAVK\nTHE  WORM) BEHIND\nou\nsul-:.taut\ngette   and\nwhi\na son\u2014ll\nies of\n\u25a0pllce li\ni the young\nw\nIH*<1h <\u00bbr Works?\n\"What of America\" tells how Oeorge Washington, the leading citizen of\nVirginia, elected to the house of burg-\neeeee, was overcome by embarass-\nment in making his first speech to\nthat assembly- so he was unable to\nproceed. Whereupon Speaker Robinson came to his rescue with these\ngraceful words: \"Sit down, Mr. Washington. Your mode,sty Is eipial to\nyour valor, and that surpassess any\nlanguage that I possess.\" Speaker\nRobinson, whom nobody ever heard\nof, was evidently an accomplished\norator, equal to any emergency on his\nfeet. Washington, the ablest man of\nhis generation, could *Ot make a\nspeech. That sort of situation often\nexists today. Rut unfortunately the\nspeech makers are usually the ones\nthe people elect to run their government.\u2014 Kansus City Times.\nThe easiest way to keep a wife\nfrom nagging at you forever\nabout money is to give her some\noccasionally.\nThe primary business of law, however, isn't to punish him for it, but\nto  keep him  from  doing   it.\nt lit* wlngt\nlhe    bark\n\u25a0 remember, which Is\nal than crepe geor-\nh    catlght   on   quickly\ntypical of the best\nfashion this season.\ne is becoming to both\n\u25a0 man ond the matron.\nI effect of the bodice\ni   delightfully   graceful\n1  know a millionaire\nWho's  burdened   down   with  care\nA load Is on his mind\nHe's thinking of the day\nWhen  he must pass away\n1   haven't   any   gold *\nTo leave when  I grow old\nSomehow it passed me by\nI'm   very   poor\u2014but   still 4\nI'll  leave a precious wiN\nWhen  I  must  say  goodbye\nI'll leave the sunshine to the flowers\nJ'll leave the springtime to the trees\nAnd to the old folks I'll have the\nmemory\nOf a baby on,their knees\nI'll  leave the night-time  to the\ndreamers\nI'll  leave the song-birds to tbe blind\nI'll  leave tbe moon above to those\nin   love\nWhen I leave the world behind '\nTo  every  wrinkled   face\nl'Jl  leave a fireplace\nTo  paint their  favorite scene\nWithin  the golden  rays\nSeems of their childhoods' days\nWhen   they   were   swoet-slxteen\nI'll   leave  them  each   a song\nTo sing the whole  day long\nAs toward the end  they plod\nTo every broken heart\nsoftly] With sorrow torn apart\ni ina- j I'll   leave the love of God\nFive-MUe\nsubmerged\nThe railway line at\npoint is now completely\nby   water.\nP. S. Taylor K.C, was yesterday\nchosen as the Liberal candidate by\nthe Liberal association.\n* \u2022     \u2022\nCommencing      today,      the    Nelson\nFort   Sheppard   train   will   only     run\nto   between   Nelson   and.Waneta,   i\ntil   tho Columbia river subsides,\n\u2022 *     *\nWord   lias   been    received   that   Sir\nThomas Upton's yacht, Shamrock\nIII. made a successful trip across\ntho Atlantic, to compete against lhe\nReliance, representing the United\nstates.\n2>n1\nShoe Polishes\nMore and Better\njShincstoiheBox\nNo other\nkind will\ndoforBabij.^\nrratirai\nBORfVTED\nTALCUM\nBest for\n40 yean\nWhen  I  have tbe World bhind\nand universally becoming. As H\nmany of the smartest evening gowns,\nrhinestones to catch up the drapery\nat the side provide a glittering relief\nto   the  black   background.\nRelativity\nProfessor Einstein must be relatively happy today, but only relatively\n.so. The J'anadian astronomers who\nwent to Australia to see the eclips<e of\nthe sun report that the obscuration\nof the sun would reveal a certain displacement of the stars tending to\nconfirm the Einstein theory. The observers at Lick Observatory lu California alsO find, from photographs\nmade at the same place In Australia, that tbe photographic record is\nin exact accord with the requirements of tbe theory. Again \u2022 the\nMtotttlltS of tbe Bureau of Standards at Washington find that teats\nof the weight of topaz and diamond\ncrystals made under certain circumstances bear out conclusions of Einstein wilh regard to the laws of\ngravitation which are at variance\nwith the Newtonian theory, All\nthese conclusions and observations\nare favoral*} e to EHnsteln's conclusions.\u2014Boston   Transcript.\nAn European economist says the\nUnited States Is about to die of its\ngold.   '\"O death, where la thy sting?\"\nIn China a governor Is ;\n\u25a0an hire enough troops\nuiough   taxes   to   pay   the\n. man who\nto collect i\ntroops.\nWhen old Dobbin hit a lively pace\nho was feeling his oafs. W'hcn a\nJit  driver does  he is  feeling  his rye.\nKnowing what Hie traffic laws are\nwon't help you much unless you\nknow what the Other fellow is going\nto do.\nUnder the old scheme of international morality rriight made\nright, but in these enlightened\ntimes nothing seems able to make\nit.\nBAD WARRANT FREES;\nGOOD WARRANT HOLDS\nRegina   Husband   Gets   Out   in   Vancouver  on   Habius  Corpus,  but  Is\nRearrested  at  Once\nVANCOUVER, June 20. \u2014 Although\ngranted his release on habeus corpus\nproceedings Instituted on the ground\nthat his detention on a warrant Issued In Saskatchewan was illegal.\nMorris Smith, wanted in Regina on\na charge of nonsupport. was promptly\nrearrested today on a warrant issued here, and left tonight for Regina in custody of a Saskatchewan\nprovincial  constable. -\nBlue and White\nEnamelled Ware\nWe have just opened up another large consignment of\nthe famous \"Diamond\" Blue and White Enameled Ware,\nconsisting of\nV   . ..\nDISH PANS (Oval and Round)\nSAUCE PANS\nBERLIN KETTLES\nPOTATO POTS\nWATER KETTLES\nDOUBLE   BOILERS,  SOAP   DISHES,   CULLENDARS,\nDIPPERS, TEA AND COFFEE POTS,\nMIXING SPOONS, Etc., Etc.\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nPRICE AND QUALITY RIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nBAKER STREET NELSON, B. C.\nSoap that soaks clothes clean\ndifferent from anything you have ever used before\nRinso  is  an  entirely new kind   of  soap,   evei^\ngranule    made    of    pure    materials     perfectly\ncombined.\nJuat by soaking, in  its big lasting suds,  tho most\nground-in dirt is gently loosened and dissolved.\nOnly the very dirtiest places need to be rubbed\nat all NTrnt i In lwn*mm M ntn tym\ni lo 1 package ol Kinao to a |ub lo .    |\nmake good lucit.   In viry hard-water fi\nyou will need fiom lJto2 pukafM , P\nto a tub to get the big .anting aud*\ntl.at looaenall the dirt.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED\nTORONTO\nPJ04W\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet   us   figure   your   bills   of\nBuilding Material.  Coast Lumber a specialty,\nJohn Burns & Son\n bX\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1923\nFage Five\nBROGUES\nBuy a pair of the celebrated CHURCH Brogues.\nEnglish made.\nNot the cheapest, but the BEST, for men and\nwomen. _\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS    IN    FOOTFASHION\nDESIRE ANOTHER\nPASSMORE SCHOOL\n\"Women'a    Institute    Members    Willing\nto   Raise   Fundi;   Will   Wait\non ths Men. \u2022\nr'ASSMOrtl':, U.C., June 20.\u2014At a\nmeeting of the Bloom Valley Women's\niTistyute, held at Mrs, P. Flynn's,\npl-iim for exhibiting at Slocan City\nfair were dlaeuased. it was decided\nthat all those wishing to contribute\nfor the exhibit should notify the convener of agriculture,  Mrs.  W. Wilton.\nTho question of the school waa also\ncllMcusi-ed. The school, where It Is at\npresent, Ik not central enough. The\nladles agreed they w*ro willing to\nrawe funds to tnlp with the building\ntot a \u25a0QBool.\nA delegation of the ladles Ie to attend th.' next, meeting pf the Slocan\nValley Farmers' institute to find out\ntheir opinion.\nThree new members were enrolled.\nAt the close of the meeting dainty\nrefreshments were served. Mrs. W\nYoung assisting, and a very enjoyable\nafternoon  was spent,\nKitchener Has Four\nStores in Place-of\nOne Just a Year Ago\nCRESTON, B.C., June 20.\u2014Kitchener\nIs having quite a business boom in\nseveral lines this spring, according\nto ti. A. M. Young, who was home for\nthe week-end after spending some\ntime there on timber cruising work\nfor the Naugel Pole company, whleh\nIs about to let contracts for taking\nout a large quantity of ties and poles\nthis   summer  and   fall.\nfrom one store u year ago, the\ntown now has four retail places of\nbusiness, Pong Barney. Cres ton's\nChinese fruit and vegetable magnate,\nhaving Just opened out In the old G.\nA.   Hunt   store.\nWork on the new road from Goat\nriver Into Kitchener will be under\nway fn full force this Wftek, and the\nintention is to have it completed be-.\nfore  the end of  August.\nSilverton Shingle\nMill Begins Sawing\nlILVEhTON,   B.O.   June   20    \u2014   Mr\nMaoQueen, of the Red Mountain Lumber company, has started operating\nhis   shingle   mill.\nMr. and Mrs. Holland Bruin of Slocan City have taken up their residence   In   the   Turner   cottage,\nMr. and .Mrs. Kd. Matthews of\nHandon   have   moved   to  Silv,*rton.\n\u25a0Mrs.   Moss   is  spending a   few   weeks\nholidaying   In    town.\nConsiderable    redeeoratlon    is belsi\ndone    on    St.    Patricks   church. The\nwork is being hastened for the opening service on July l.\n\"DODD'S '%,\nKIDNEY;\n0, PILLS t\n-U<IDNEt-Kr\/\n'\"\u2022NT'S   DlS-f,\nNew Denver Ladies\nArrange Work Sale\nNKW DBNVKR, HC, June \u00bb \u2014\nThe Ladies' aid of the Presbyterian\nchurch m-t Thursday afternoon at the\nhome of Mrs. Harness, when arrange-\nttientS wrwrt discussed for an ice\ncream social aud sale of work which\nwas set for later In July. Refreshments   were   served   at   the   Close.\nMrs. Stedman, who cancelled her\nFriday afternoon Bible class on account of a breakdown, resumed them\nFriday in the Methodist church, the\nsubject   being   -'The   Prophets.\"\nNEW DENVER NOTES\nNEW DENVER, June 2D. \u2014 Mrs.\nClever left Friday for San Pedro, Cal.,\nto visit her mot tier who has been In\nfailing health, Kronn there she will\ngo back to Wyoming to visit R sister\nshe has not seen for many years. She\nwill be absent for three months or\nmore. The Pythian Sisters were at\nthe   wharf   to   see   her   off.\nMr. Jewltt left Friday morning for\nVancouver to attend the Masonic grand\nlo.lKt'.\nEllis Croft has heen very 111 and\nunder the doctor's care for the past\ntwo weeks. Ills sickness Is generally\nattributed  to a  woodtick.\nIIiiklib' Sinclair, who has been suffering from pneumonia and pleurisy,\nhad his lung tapped Thursday afternoon,   and   Is   doing   splendidly.\nHugh Nelson stopped off the bo:it\nFriday, with a beautiful fc -year-old\nmare weighing about IMO pounds, to\nlake die place of tho horse which\ndied on his   farm.\nPASSMORE NOTES\nBURNING   STOMACH\nrelieved   In   two   minutes   wilh'\nJO-TO.\nJo-To relieves gas pains, sold stom\nach, heartburn, after-ealiug dlslres:\nand   all   forms   of   Indigestion   quickly, 1 her\nwithout harm.   All Drug 0tore*.\nPASSMORE, B.C., June ID.\u2014J. Latto\nwent to Nelson. Saturday, to have his\nInjured    foot   attended    to.\nMiss Erma Brown of Nelaon was\/ a\nvlsilor here Saturday, the guest of\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Jf,   Jamleson.\nDuring a. recent storm the corner\nof T. Edgar's barn at Vallican wns\nstruck by lightning. Other than loosening a few boards no. damage was\ndon-.\nMr.  and   Mrs.   S.   Isherg and Mr.  and\nMrs. A. Smith of Slocan  Park motored\nS mi'lay,   and   were   the   guests   of\nMr.  and Mrs.   \\V.  Young.\nReady for Canning Season\nPreserving Kettles, 4 sizes, in Aluminum and Granite* wave;\ncanning Hacks; Jelly Strainers, all*sixes; Wash Boilers In copper,\ntin and  galvanized  ware, and all   accessories.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE COMPANY\na ' Look for tho Red Hardware  Store\nBox  414\nPhone 4\u00bb7\n\"Lei l!ie Clark Kitchen*\nhelp jrau\"\nKootenay and Boundary\nCORK-PROVINCE\nGETS INTO ORE\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nSELLS BONDS\nON NEW LEVEL:'AT GOOD PRICE\nBreaks Through  Into  East'Fire Protection Issue Is Dis-\nOre Body in Lowest Tun-|    posed of to Vancouver\nnel;  Good. Milling Grade j       Firm; Plans Ready\naldermanTohnston\nresigns his seat\nWilliamson  Presses  Matter\nof Proper Inspection of\nMilk Sources\nKASLO, B.C., June 20 \u2014 Tlie Curl;-\nProvince mine, ifp (he south fork of\nKaslo creek, hai today broken into Its\neaet ore body in Its new 400-foot\nlevel While the width Ih still unde- I\nfined, on the 300-foot level this ore I\n\"hoot proved to he 300 root lurifr and\nfour   to   30  feet  wide.\nWhere the ore has been opened up\ntoday, it Is of <r. \"I milling grade,\nand the vein Is even better looking\nthan on the level above, and has all\nthe earmarks of exceeding the former's   production.\nTHREE HUNDRED CARS\nFLETCHER'S ESTIMATE\nPrnlt    Inspector   Holds    That    Creaton\nValley Apple Crop Will Show Gain\nof   Fifth   Over  Year  Ago.\nCRBflTON, RC, June CO.\u2014Dominion\nFruit Inspector A. McL. Fletcher of\nNelson was here a few days nt the\nend of the week over.seelng what\nstrawberry shipping thero Is, and\nmukfng; an inspection of the valley in\nconnection with the monthly report hi\nthe Dominion fruft bulletin Issued\nfrom Ottawa. He Is still of the\nopinion that the valley's apple crop\nwill bo 20 per cent lu excess of, last\nyear, or In the neighborhood of 300\ncarloads.\nThe cherry yield, however, will not\nbe as great as early-season blossom\nIndicated, but Indications art that\npears will be heavier than a year ago.\n* hilst, plums and prunes will not be\nless.\nThe potato nereage is almost cut In\nhalf as compared with Hit, considerable of the old-time spud fields having been set out to orchard. Th*\n\u2022OreMtJ to tomatoes and cucumbers\nalso   is   less   than   last   season.\nIn the apple line the only llfhtn-tM\nis shown In Wealthy MM Northern\nSpy\u2014192S being tho off year for the\ntatter. The superb keeping quality of\nCreston fruit ts shown in the prime\ncondition of the .Spies which T. Maw-\nson is still selling on the C.P.lt. depot\nplatform, although this week will\nlikely ^e all the available apples\nsold.\nWhite of Silverton   \"\nTakes a Lease on\nthe Metallic Mine\nSILVERTON. H.C,, June 20. \u2014 H.\nWhite, who has been leasing at the\nBosun for the past year, has taken\na lease on the Metallic mine, and reports   a   favbrable   showing.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Walton returned\nFriday after paying an extended visit\nto Mrs. Walton's mother. Mrs. Mac-\nVlear   of   Mill   street,   Nelson.\nLocal disciples of laajik Walton report the trout fishing to be exceptionally   go-id   this  season.\nTennis enthusiasts hope to have the\ncourts   ready   for playing   by   July   t\nSYRINGA CREEK NOTES\nSYRINGA CREEK, B.C., Jans ID.\u2014\nMr. (irant of Trail ami parly motored\nthrough on Sunday and Sunt the day\nat   Mr,   and   Mrs.   James   Martin's.\nMr, (iavrflik of Trail has taken the\nSi.'miiiis' . place here for the summer\nand the family is expected to arrive\nthis   week.\nMr. and Mrs. Morrison and party\nof RoMlAQd, Dr. and Mrs. M.-Nolighten and family of Trail, picnicked at\nthe Dstnsbury place on the bay here,\nSunday.\nMrs.    L.    T.    Jones   nnd    Mrs.    James\nConan entertained at an Impromptu\nfathering on* Saturday evenhtf. Dancing passed the time enjoyably until\nmidnight, when a delicious supper \\\nserved. The hosteasea were ass is\nhy Mrs. James Martin and Miss Zenia\nGavrillk nt the tea tables. Music\nwas provided by James Martin and It.\nBerry.\nEDGEWOOD NOTES\nEDGEWOOD, BC. June 2\u00bbJ. \u2014 Miss\nR. Minton spent a few days nt Apple\nGrove, visiting her sister. Mrs. C. W.\nHart laud, returning to her home in\nKdgewood   on   Friday.\nT. N. McLeod has purchased a new\nmotor   car.\nW. J. Banting ta enlarging his house\nand storeroom. V. K. Llttlewood and\nC. W. Hartland are engaged on these\nimprovements.\nW. B. Jowett attended the. cooperative meeting at Needles ou Saturday.\nabend Ing the night as the guest of\nMr. and Mra, G. Craft, returning by\nlaunch   on   Sundav afternoon.\nMrs. H Lake and Mtss Phyllis\nChurch returned to Nelson last week\nfrfter- vlsltm* their mother, -Mrs.*\nChurch   of Kdgewood.\nMade in Canada\nwith Canadian products-\n-drCLMRK'S'\nSOUPS\nfe\nOiicker,  For  a special\nVejet.bi,- trcat Uy Clark's\n\"  Chicken Soup\nit is wonderfully\ndelicious.\ni  Mulligatawny\n\\ Mutton Broth\nJulienne\nScotch\nPes\nTomato\nCelery\nCoosomma\nMock Turtle\nGreen Pea\nOlTail\nAI dealt r. evenpoh.rt\nAll Clark Meat Dishes bear\nthe \"Canada Approoad label,\nVI. CLARK Limited,  MONTREAL\nKSTaBCIOMMBMTO   \u00abT   ajONThfAL,   ....\nOT   omt. .... .1*0 Hannow, omt.   -\n.Off-US\nHUSBAND DIDN'T DARE\nLEAVE HER ALONE\nHEART WAS SO BAD\nThose feelings of faintness, those\ndizzy spells, the all-gone sinking sensations which come on from time* to\ntime Indicate a weakened condition\nof the heart and a disordered state\nof   the   nerves.\nMilburn's\nHeart and Nerve Pills\nhave no equal aa a remedy to\nstrengthen the heart, invigorate the\nnerves and build up the run-down\nsystem.\nMrs. C. 'Vanhorn, Kckville, Alta.,\nwrites:\u2014\"About a year ago I had\nheart troutte. My husband didn't\ndare leave me alone, and often had to\nstay up at night with me. I would\nJuat feel kind of faint and my heart\nwould MOO) to stop beating. I would\nJuat faint away, and lt would sometimes be an hour before (hey could\nbring me b;;ck to life. Someone told\nme about Milburn's Heart and Nerve\nPllla. I got three boxes; I took them\nand felt much better, so continued\nall Winter, and now 1 never feel any\nsuch faintr.eas. 1 aurely do appreciate the good they have done for\nme,\"\nPrice 60c a hor at all dealers or\nmailed direct on receipt of price by\nThe T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,\nOnt ._  \t\nTRAIL, B.C., June 20. --- The citv\ncouncil met in regular session at the\ncity had Monday* evening, when prob-\nebly the most important business dealt\nwith was the sale to the Royal Financial corporation, Vancouver, of $25,000\nworth of bonds, this being the sum\nof money authorized by the ratepayers\ntor fire protection purposes. The\npurchase pries was II.M. which may\nbe considered very satisfactory.\nWon't   Object   to   Chassis.\nIn connection with fire protection, a\ncommunication received from the La\nFrance Fire Kngine company, stated\nthat they had no objection to the\ntype of chassfs upon which their\nequipment   might   be  mounted.\nThe plana of the fire hall are rt ady\nand there Is no doubt that In a short\n\u00bbhile Trull will have a complete and\nup-to-the-minute fire fighting equipment.\nThe resignation of Alderman II, H.\nJohnston on account of his leaving\nthe city, was received, aud accepted\nwith the greatest regret. Alderman\nJohnston was a moat capable and\npractical member of the council, and\nwill be greatly missed. Alderman\n.'ohnston stated that when he took\noffice at the beginning of the year\nhe hnd no. idea he would be leaving\nthe  town. ,\nOrder    Byelection.\nThe city clerk was instructed to\nCall for nominations to fill the vacancy\non   the  council.\nA communication from tho Oood\nRoads league requeatlnc the payment\nof dues for 19.::., amounting to $10.\nMid also making some suggestions* In\nconnection with the convention to ba\nheld    at    Prince    Rupert,    waa    ordered\nfiled:\nThe wafer application of J. Ktatz\nwas referred to the fire, water and\nlight committee to investigate, with\npower to act.\nA request from property owners on\nNelson avenue, asking for the ditch\nto be deepened and improved will be\ninvestigated   in   due   course.\nAlderman DockeriM reported for the\nfinance committee that G. Digby h.id\nbeen engaged to carry on to completion tbe work of assessment from\nwhere It was left off hy ti. Hopper.\nThis action was appruved of by the\ncouncil.\nMr. ICavie will \\._ notified that th\ncouncil finds it impossible at the pres\nent time to open up a road to hi\nlots.\nThe council decided to purchase ai\nAurora type **0.O.\" pump and a typi\n\"Z\" ti-h.p engine, nt a total cost of\n$44.\",.     This   outfit   will   lie   used   as   an\nadditional pump at Violin lake.\nAsk  Itelo Toward Isolation Hoipftal.\nThe city clerk was instructed to\nwrite the provincial secretary regard\ning assistance toward an isolation\nhoapltal.\nAlderman Willtamsnii brought up\nvery strongly the matter of inspection of dairy Imrrls. Me s'ated that\nthe public wa** entitled to every protection  in  this  reapeot\nIt was decided, first of all. to ascertain from the city of Nelson what\nregulations lhey have in connection\nwith dallies, and the Inspection of\nh-rdfl.\nTh* finance committee presented the\nfellow ing account*, which were ordered paid: W&fea list. No. II,\n\u2022,757 W; C.P.R., $20,64; Better Housing\nsaving.s, $lo\u00ab,70; H. L. MacKinnon,\n$97 so; w. M. Duncan. IM.Mi J- P.\nSchofield. $M; Tkv McLeod, $1: Trail\nHew*   911.05;   Consolidated   Mining   &\nSmelting company, Ml.tti Fred N.\nNover,    114.50;    provincial    govern ment,\nll 50;   Union   Oarage  company,   IS8.1T,\nTrail    Mercantile.    |8M.\u00ab?;    K.   C-    Fuel\nft Supply company, 9-H5.71; N. Wllmea,\nsin 75; B C. Telephone company,\n9SI 45.\nThose present were Mayor A. -T.\nMartin,    Aldermen    R   Lerose.   It.    Bell,\nH.   II.   Johnston,   F.   B.   Dockerill,   J.\nWilliamson   and   A.   A.   Mlliigan,\nGOVERNMENT PHONE\nAT CRESTON GAINS\nLineman   Now   Permanently   Stationed,\nWith Both  Car and Launch  Tor\nTho   Speediest  Work.\nCRFSTOaV. B.C., June 20. \u2014 The\nDominion telephone and telegraph system Is making considerable improvements In local equipment in order to\nfacilitate repair work between Nelson\nfind Yihk. Lineman Phillips is now\npermanently statlonetl at Creston, and\nf.lready this year a Ughf delivery has\nbeen supplied him for land operations,\nand this week a new boathouse lias\nbeen launched alongside the wharf at\nKuskanook and a launch brought in\nfrom Nelson to take care of any\ntrouble tliat arises between that point\nnnd Procter. This spring the system\nhas bad a new polo lino put in west\nfrom    Sirdar.\nLong-distance telephone business out\nof Creston has shown a steady Increase every year since connection\nv as established east and west about\nfive year* a-go, Now that there is\neverv likelihood of a school being\neatabll'hed at West Creston .the board\nof trade will revive Its former effort\nof having telephone connection given\nthat point, which is severely isolated\nduring  tin-  period  of high water.\nThis column In conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. All newa of\na nodal nature. Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marrlagea, etc., will\nappear in thla column. Telephone\nMra.   Vlgneux.\nMr. and Mrs. James O'Shea, 301\nSilica slre\u00abt, entertained a number of\nyoung folks Tuesday evening in honor\nof iheir house guest, Walter Hodgson\nof Vancouver. Th\u00ab merry party was\nfirst escorted to the movies, where\n'hey enjoyed a picture. From titwtw\nthey proce\u00abded to the home of the\nhosts, where dancing was Indulged in.\nafter which dainty refreshments were\nserved Among those present were\n.Miss Violet Towgood. Miss Sybil Towgood. Miss Vera Wallev, Miss Freda B.\nHume. Mis* Violet Hamilton, Miss\nLouise Cunliffe, Miss Babe Rtackwood,\nMiss Marlon Blackwood, Miss Helen\n(Jigot, Miss Mohra .McDonald, Miss\nLela Dowswell of Uegina, .Miss Beryl\ntiraham. Miss Nancy Gracey, Charles\nHoar\", Mr. Eldgrln, Farron Archibald,\nR. W. Dawson. E C. Lewis, J. L.\nBartindale,    Tim    Wheatley,    Thomas\nGibson. Geoffrey F,yton, .lack Ink. A.\nW. Miens, Reggie Towgood and Harry\nBolton.\nW. T. Choate, 624 Victoria street.\nreturned to ihe city Sunday evening\nvia the Kettle Valley, after attending\nthe   Odd   Fellows'   convention   at   New\nWestminster.\na   \u2022   a\nMr. and Mrs. J..E, Bedford of Macklin, Sask., have arrived In the city\nto remain permanently. They have\npurcbaaed the residence formerly occupied bv Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Blaek,\nill   Mill  street.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nA very encouraging meeting of the\ncaptains of the coming I.O.D.E. tag,\nwhich takes place Saturday, was held\nat the borne of the regent of the\nchapter, Mrs. W. O. Rose. Vernon\nstreet. Monday evening. Final arrangements were made, and everything\nIs pointing to a moHt successful day.1\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostess.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. C. Linwood and three children,\nof Shirley, were city visitors Monday.\nThey left Tuesday morning by the\nCrow boat for Calgary, wliere they\nwill spend a few months. Mrs. Linwood was accompanied by her mother-\nin-law, Mrs. M. Linwood. as far a*\nRegina. from where she left for Winnipeg, where she will reside in future,\n.T. W. Mulholland arrived In town\nTuesday evening via the Crow boat\nfrom the Iva Fern mine at Cultus\nCieek. He expects to leave t-biS\nmorning for Spokane.\n\u2022 *    *\nMiss Edna Doig, a nurse-ln-tralnlng\nm the Koot'-nay Lake General hospital,\nhas been enjoying her vacation In\nTrail with her parents, who accompanied her to town yesterday by\nmotor.\nMrs. J, Jackson of Cranbrook arrived In town Tuesday evening via\nthe Crow boat to attend the concert\nat the Parish ball, which was produced by the pupils of St. Joseph's\nacademy. She will leave for her home\ntomorrow morning, accompanied bv her\ntwo daughters, Miss Lillian and Miss\nHazel Jackson, who are boarders at\nthe  convent.\nMrs, Edgar Jamison aud little\ndaughter left the Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday morning for\ntheir home   at   i'assmore.\nMrs. S. .T. Mightun of Trail, who has\nMM hi the city with her husband,\nwho is a patient at the Kootenay Lake |\nGeneral     hospital,     spent     Monday     In J\nTrail   and    returned    to   the   city   yes-\nlerday  morning.\nMrs, K. Cryderman was the guesl\nof honor at a luncheon Tuesday at\nlhe pretty summer place, Buena Vista,\nat Willow I'oint, of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nD, Emory. The guests were escorted\nback and forth by launch. During the\nafternoon several rubbers of bridge\nwere enjoyed, after which an exciting\ngame of croquet created much merriment, The luncheon table was most\nc rt let leal ly centered with a huge basket   of   pink   and   white   marguerites,\nThe guests Wen Mrs. W. O. Hose.\nMrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. J. A,\nAnn.ible. Mrs. George Ferguson, Mrs.\nG. B. Matthew. Mrs. Robert Andrew,\nMrs. N. Murphy. Mis. George M.\nClarke, Mrs. W. J. pOUpore of Vancouver, and, of course, Mrs. K, Cry-\nueinian\n\u00abMh4&&\n611 Baker St.       Vhone ZOO\nSummertime Skirts\nThis Season's SKIRTS claim the importance due\nthem, especially since the new Jacquettes and Sweaters are so able to lend new smartness. Pleated Crepe\nSkirts for dressy wear, and Flannel Sports Skirts\nfor other occasions are splendid helps, making for\nvariety in one's wardrobe.\nCream Flannel Skirts\nAt $8.50 to $14.00 Each\nPlain-Tailored and pleated Skirts\nin a variety of styles. These\nSkirts are the smartest we have\nshown for some time. Prices\nfrom, each  $8.50 to $14.00\nNEW PLEATED CREPE SKIRTS\nAt $15.00 to $23.00 Each\nFor dressy wear, and for coolness, these Crepe\nSKIRTS are the newest things. Can be worn with\nany sort of Blouse, Jacquette or Sweater, and look\nvery smart. Colors Black, Sand, Brown and White.\nPrices, each $15.00 to $23.00\nTuxedo Sweater Coats\nAt $10.00 to $20.00 Each\nVery attractive Coats made of\nJersey Cloth or Flannel Suiting\nin Red, White, Brown, Green,\nCopenhagen and Navy. Any of\nthese Coats with a smart Flannel\nSkirt makes a very handsome\nSports Suit. Prices of Tuxedos\nfrom,  each ...$10.0O to  $20.00\nMr:\nAmtn\nott\nI lie\norlh\nMAYO WILL HAVE A\nDAILY NEWSPAPER\nYukon Silver Camp Will Be in Touch\nWith     World    Through    the\nMilitia   Radio\nDAWSON, V. T., June 20.\u2014The\nestablishment of a daily newspaper\nIn tho Mayo sliver camp district\nIs announced by tho publishers of\ntho Dawson Daily and Weekly News,\nwho have shipped complete newspaper and Job printing apparatus\nto  Mayo   city.\nThis Is Mayo's first newspaper,\nmade possible by the fact that the\nfederal government has decided to\nInstall a radio station at tbe silver\ncamp and tbUfl establish direct telegraph comniumcation with the outside  world.\nAdvices from Ottawa state that\nDawson will also got a radio station\nunder the sew rename by which tho\ngovernment Intends to span all\nnorthern Canada by wtreleBa, under\nthe direction -jf the militia department, and bring tho otitslde world\ninto direct touch with all parti of\nthe Gatjadianhir.teelMid.\nM\nrH    ('\nJ.   MrciulKiin\nR!\nk\ntl\nid\nhor\nmothi\nr,    Mrs,\n.1.\nSa\ntl\n\u00ab.\nfirst\npart\nof    tlie\nwe\nk\n(1\nren\nt    N\nrtlirr\nfor    Bpok\nn\ntl\ne.\nwill\nvisit\nfor  soni\nda\nys\nM\nAlice\nHiiKh-s\nol\nbaa as h.*r curst her niece,  Miss\nFerfuaon,   of   London, England,   who\nhas   heen   wintering   In Honolulu.\n\u2022     \u2022    \u2022\nRev. father Cocola, parish priest of\nOrand Korks. Is a gu'-st in the city\nat ihe home f>f Very Kev. J Alihoff.\nV.O.,  8111  Ward   str-pt.\nr  atreet,\nter, left\nvia the\n,    where\nSprague,\nWash , who has been attending St.\nJoaeph'a academy there, arrived In on\nthe Qrebt. Northern. Tuesday evening,\nand left yesterd.iy morning for Alain\",\nwhere she went to spend the summer\nholtdays with her grandmother, Mrs.\nflushes.\nThe ways and means committee of\nthe women's institute held a very successful rftfttftft at the home of Mrs.\n.lack Ryan, Annable block, yesterday\nafternoon, wliere .they concluded final\narrangement! lo connection with the\ngarden party to be held at the home\nof Mrs, C,   P,   MeHardy shortly.\nMrs. ft L. Buchanan. IU Mill street.\nleft yesterday morning via the tJreat\nNorthern for Spokane to spend a few\ndays.\n\u25a0    \u2022     \u2022\nMiss Murdoch nf Procter,' who has\nbeen flatting in the city for the past\ncouple of days. left by the afternoon\nboat  yesterday.\nA A. Johnson, rireat Northern agtAt\nat Waneta, left Tuesday morning for\nhis home aft\u00bbr vlaltlng with his family,   who reside   1n   Fairview.\nWalter   Hodfaam,   of   the   \u25a0ask   of\nMontreal staff In Vancouver. Is enjoying a few weeks' vacation, a truest\nat the home of Mr. nnd Mrs. James\nO'Shea,  306 Silica street.\nMrs. H, B. Scully of Shirley was\namong the oot-of-town visitors to attend the pupils of St. Joseph's .academy   concert   Tuesday   evening.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\nMrs. W. Truswell of Trail arrived\nIn the city ou the morning train. Tuesday, to spend a. few days with her\nsisfer-!n-lnw, Mrs. H. H Truswell, at\nthe New Grand hotel. The latter will\nreturn to trail with her and will remain  for a few  days.\nMrs Harold Lake*, Kerr apartments,\nwho has been spending the past week\nvisiting with her mother at Edge-\nwood,   has   returned.\na   \u2022   a\nJ. F. Thompson of Orand Forks was\na city  visitor  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *.\nMr. and Mrs. R Brettell of Vancouver are city visitors.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW. Irvine leaves this morning for\nCranbrook.\nYesterday afternoon the Nelson Ciolf\nand Country club grounds and club\nhouse were the scene of much gaiety,\nthe event being the club's anual field\nday,    with    everything    open    to    the\npublic. Many Interesting contests i\nwere part of the afternoon's amusements. The eitOfffO-tlQ house committee, was Riven much credit fur the\nhospitable preparation.\nA pQtttng contest, which Mrs. .fames!\nO'Shea and Mrs. r, V. Rogari had In |\ncharge,  was won by -Mrs Leaftle Crgu*\nfurd and J. O, Him van. An approach\ncompetition, with Mrs. J. 1{ IV Benson and Mrs. Alexander Leith in\ncharge, was won by Mrs, . Benson and\nA, I). McLeod. First prizes for the\ndriving competition were carried off\nhy Miss Marlon Blackwood and ft C.\nLewis. This was iu charge of Mrs,\nLeslie Craufurd ami Mrs. J. tl. Bunyan.\nplave.\nthem\n.Mrs.\nevlde\nstlc\nte\nills\nnoticed   Mrs.   II.   Towi\nA.    W.    HI,\u25a0(>*,   t*.    \\\\\nAppleyard.   I.,  s.\nllackeray and  Kr.\nMUliard   of   Row*\nAll arteriioi.n th\"\ndtiti linns., veranda\n\u2022nd     llvlnf-roorn '\nvera     comfortably\nfilled.     Durlnf   Hi\"\nhours   of   :i:.tn   to\n4:30.   Mrs.   B.   O,   Bl\nnth   and   Mis,   W.\nJ.    Meagli.'l'    did    til\nhonors,    assisted\nby   Mrs.   11.   W.   Itnl.\nrtaon,   Mrs.  c.  W,\nTnwnslinilil,    Mrs\nAppl.yard,   Mrs.    B.\nB.    J.    Valid.'rwat.r.\nMrs.   <:.   Bpencer\nlodfrey,    Miss   Jaal\nPorta    amj    Miss\nI.ela   Dowswell   t>J   1\niflna.    They  were\nlater  relieved  by  M\ns.  C.   1    Archibald\nand      Mrs      ft     11.\nBlackwood,     who\npoured.     They   were\nassisted   by    Mrs\n1.   A     Olbion,   Mrs\nT    H.   Caudwell,\nMrs. H   ll   MacKenx\ne. Mrs. I,   Borden,\nMrs.  Benjamin McO\nKM  and   Miss   Tat\nCameron.\nProsperity is\nnever safe\nProsperity is never safe unless\nit rests upon protection.\nYour home ia never safe.\nProtect it by insurance. Your\nbusiness is surrounded by risks.\nInsure it. Your valuables are\nalways in danger unless pro*\ntected by insurance. Insure\nyour present prosperity to remain prosperous. WE CAN\nHELP   YOU.\nC. VV. APPLEYARD\nTel. 269      Box 626, Nelson, B.C.\nRepresenting   the\nINSURANCE    COMPA.Vr    OF\nNORTH AMERICA\nFounded   ll._\nRev.\nreturn.''\nshere n\ni'aiillst\nMrs.\nIn    the    eltv\nweek   and   Is   I\nher   laon-in-hiw\nMrs.  C.   W.   Tr\n',     Ha |d 1st     pi\nfrom    Chilli1\n1 llrltlsh Coin\nStachi\nv.'S.   703   Kili.\nMrs.    Pred   Waters   let*\nLake   Oeneral   hoapltal\nyesterday   afternoon.\n\u00bb   Koo\nher\nIt t\u00bb\n-pent   y.\nDonaldson, a Sal\nsterdny   in   town\nand    Mr:\nendinit  ;\nT.   Cram\nfew   days\nFrom Southern\nSeas\nWe   bring   you\nhealth ami beauty\nfur skin and complexion\u2014the pure\nlimpid oi!a of ihn\ncocoanut and the\npalm and the fragrant essences of\nflowers made inlo\nlhat purest and\ndaintiest of toilet\nsoaps\u2014Plantol.\nLever Broitiw. Limited\nToronto\nPlant!\nThe Fruit and Flower Oil'\nToilet Soap\nH\nWWJf\nesDrud^ery\nHave Us Do Your\nSummer  Washing\n1!.Kt use\u2014 It Saves Time\u2014and\ntemper. There's no fun in wash\nil;iy   (lining   MtHUBM   months.\nPhone   1-2-8   and   we'll   call\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nC. A. Larson, Mgr.t Nelaon, B. C\n*h^_\nLaura   Krrkman   saya\nBoiled Salmon\nfor-  tomorrow'e  menu.\nWe have fresh salmon, halibut, cod, fresh herrings and\nthi imps. Also all kinds of\nsmoked   moats.\nP. BURNS & CO., Ltd.\nService        Phone  50       Quality\nNELSON,  B. C,\n 'PafeSk\n-THE'NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MOANING; JUNE-i'tizf\nMarkets s* Finance\nANOTHER FAILURE   FAILURE ALSO\nii TUMBLES STOCKS\nDperatora   Snae\u00bbvor   to   Support  market With   Buylntr  Ortlari, But\nprea-anre Ii Too Great.\nNEW TORK. June 2-5. \u2014 Failure of\nMother etock exchange house demoralized today's stock market and\nsent prices tumbling to their lowest\nlevels of the year. The market\nopened firm and seemed destined for\na good rally, when the suspension of\nthe bankrupt firm was announced.\nSupporting orders were rushed Into\nthe market and the higher prices were\nmaintained for a time after the bad\nnews had been broken. The pressure\nwas too great, however, and quoted\n\\aluea began to crumble all over the\nlist. The selling reached Its climax\nIn the final hour when more than\n450,000  shares changed  hands.\nEighty stocks, including nearly all\nthe leaders, broke below their previous\nlow prices for tho year, net losses of\n1 to 4 points being quite common at\nthe close. Among the stocks to establish new minimum yrlces were United\nStates Steel at 90H. off 2%; Baldwin\nLocomotive at 120*^, off 4 points\nStudebaker, at 1027*, but rallied later\nto 103%. off 3 points; Anacando at\n39-H, off S-U: and U. H. Rubber at\n44 H, off 1 point. Ralls held better\nthan Industrials, but even this group\nBhowed an average loss of l_ points\non   the  day.\nReading, New Tork Central, South-\nTen, Delaware &. Hudson, the Erie\nIssues, Great Northern preferred,\nAtchison and a number of others lost\n1 tn J1*, points, and Lackawanna broke\nnearly 5 points,\nTotal   sales   were   101.036  shares.\nCloalnf  Quotation*.\nHigh     Low     Close\nC.   P.   R     151%    14B%    14\u00bb\nChlno   ..\"       21 17%      n\u00bb4\nC. M. & St. P.  ...      30^4      20 20\nOen.    Motors       14\nInt.   Marine   com.        6%        **\u00a3        \u00ab\"\u00a3\nInt. -Nickel           13%      13*      13-4\nMo.   Pac.   com....       13%      13 13\nMo.    Pac.    pfd       36\nRock   Island          29%      28 28\nStudebaker        107%    102%    1\"2%\nU.   S,   Steel  com..       93%            90%\nAFFECTS WHEAT\nSaptpambar   and    December   SaUrerlea\nTumble to Hew Ir-owe Tor\nthe  SeaaOD.\nCHICAGO, June 20. \u2014 After the announcement of an important failure\non the New York Rtock exchange.\nheavy selling here tumbled September\nand December wheat prices today to a\nnew low record for tlie season. July\nwheat was weaker than September and\nr*cembt>r. but kept above the season's\nlow record for the July delivery,\n$1.01 H,   made   last   Uctober   6.\nToday's close was nevertheless at\n2%c to _c net decline, with July and\nSeptember both at $1.03% to $1.04\nand December $1,064   to $106%.\nCorn lost %o to %c. and oats %c\nto %c to %c. In provisions the outcome varied from unchanged figures\nto 27 centa down.\nSILVER SUPS\nDOWN A\nHALF\nNEW YORK.  Juno 20.\u2014Silver, ts._c\nLONDON,   Juno   20.\nIl%*l   futures,   31*tf,d.\nSliver,   spot,\nForeign Money\nNKW YORK, June 20.\u2014Bar silver-\nForeign,   65 %o.\nCanadian   dollars\u20142   9-V\u00a3   discount.\nFrancs\u2014Demand,   6.27c.\nLire\u2014Demand,    4.57c.\nMarks \u2014 Demand, .0008%e; cable.*-\n.0008 %c.\nSterling Exchange\nNKW YORK. June 20. \u2014 Sterling\nsteady at $4.60 1-16 for 60-day bills\nand at $4.62  1-1H for demand.\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG. June 20. \u2014 Receipts in\nthe yards totalled 600 cattle, 1570\ntogs and 300  sheep.\nHieers __ Choice. $7 to $7.50; fair to\ngood,   $5.75   to   $6.75.\nButcher heifers \u2014 Choice, $6.50 to\n$7; fair to good,   $4 to $4.75.\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice, $4  to $4.75,\nfair to  good,   $4   to   $4.75.\nBulls\u2014Oood,   $2.50   to   $3'.\nOxen\u2014Good,  $3.50  to  $4.\nStocker   steers   \u2014   Choice,    $4 25    to\n$4.75; fair to good.  $3 to $4.\nStocker heifers \u2014 Choice, $3.50 to\n$4: fair to good,  $2.75  to $3.25.\nFeeder steers \u2014 Choice, $5 to $5.50;\nfair  to  good,   $3.75   to  $1.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice,   $6   to   $7.\nHogs   \u2014    Selects,    $9.18 to;    heavies,\n$7.35; lights  and feeders, $8.35.\nLambs\u2014Fair  to  good,   $10   to  $13.50\nSheep^Fair to  good,   $5 to  $7.\nToronto  Recelpte.\nTORONTO, June 20. \u2014 Cattlo receipts 800. \"The market waa well\ncleaned up. Heavy beef steera, $9.25;\nbutcher steers,  choice,  $8.25.\nCalf receipts 500; choice,  $10.\nSheep   receipts   600.     Lambs,   $16.50.\nHog receipts 1500; fed aud watered\nbasis,   thick   smooths,   $8,50.\n\u2022*-.,. i\u2014.      *m     \u2014\u25a0   \"-\u2014\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, June 211\u2014 Flnur unchanged to 10c lower; family patents,\n1630  to  $6 35 a tnirrel.\nBran\u2014$20.50  to  121.\n*v,*heat\u2014No. 1 northern, $1.05% to\n$1.15%: \u25a0 July, tl.ll6'k: September,\n$1.07\\;   December,   11.0914.\nCorn\u2014No.   3   yellow,   7614c   to 77'ic.\nOats\u2014No. J white, 37V.C to 3814c.\nFlai\u2014No.   1.   $2.79   to $2.80.\nMontreal list\nMONTREAL. June 20. \u2014 A decidedly\nweak tone prevailed ln the narrow\nlist of issues that made their appear*-\nance on the stock exchange, today.\nThe paper Issue* were again reactionary.\nLauren tide led ln market activity,\nclosing at 99%, tf>r R nct Joss of 2'^\nMontreal Power closed at 119, dowr\n2 points. Brazilian closed at *i%%. t\nnet loss Of 1%. Interprovlncial Brick\nwas the strong feature of the trading,\nclosing at the new high of 70, a net\ngain of 3 points. Other price changes\ntook in Abitibi, off H to the n**w low\nof 61%. Kt, Maurice Power, off t%.\nHoward -Smith, off 2; and Twin City\noff   y_   point.\nConsolidated   Share*.\nMONTREAL,   June   20.-Confiol.dated\nWining    &.\u25a0   Smelting.     26     bid;     2fiH\nasked. .\t\nVancouver Stocks\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Juno 20. \u2014 Bill prices\nfor  Dominion   Issue*:\nWar loans \u2014 1925, flntl.55; 19.11,\n$101.45;   1937.   $102.55.\nVictory loans \u2014 1923. $1(10.jet 1921.\n$100.80; 1927, $103.10; 1933, $105.50;\n1931,   $103.20;   1937,   $107.Oi.\nMetal Market\nNEW TORK, June 20. \u2014 Copper\nquiet; electrolytic, spot and futures,\n15 He.\nTin \u2014\u25a0 Firmer; upot and nearby,\n$40.87;   futures,   $40.62.\nIron\u2014Steady   nnd   unchanged.\nLead \u2014 Hteady; spot. $7,25.\nZinc \u2014 Spot. East St. Louis, nearby,  $5.90  to  $5.95.\nAntimony\u2014Spot,   $6.75  to  $0.85.\nAt London \u2014 Standard copper, til\n10s; futures. \u00a366 17s 6d; electrolytic.\nspot,   \u00a373;   futures,   \u00a374,\nTin \u2014 Spot, \u00a3190 ll\u00ab M; futures,\n\u00a3191   2s 6d.\nLend \u2014 Spot, \u00a325 2s 6d; futures,\n\u00a324   Ita 0d.\nZinc \u2014 Spot. \u00a329; future,**, ft| 7s tid.\n        ,   _mm \t\nEgg Market\nOTTAWA, June 20, \u2014 Toronto carton extras, 34c; extras, 32c; firsts,\n2Sc  to  29e.\n.Montreal \u2014 LoWt-r; carton extras,\n.le to 34c, extras. 30c to 31c; fin-its,\n5c to  2\"c.\nMoose Jaw \u2014 Dealers quoting 17c\ndellvertd Receipts light, quality\npoor.\nBritish Columbia \u2014 Local fresh. 23c\nat country points.\nChicago\u2014Spot. 22c; etorage packed,\nJuno, 24c; n frlgerators, September,\n27c; October, 27Vic; November, 27Hc;\nDecember,  z~%c.\nNew York \u2014 Extra firsts, 25c to\n16tt\u00ab; firsts, 23V.C to 'i\\\\_c; storage\npatted extra firsts, 26o to 26**.ic;\nfirsts,   25c to   2_>__<_.\nVANCOUVER.  WHEAT.\nVANCOUVER, June 20. \u2014 Closing\nprices for wheat, basis No. 1 northern, delivered f.o.b. cars Vancouver,\nfor export:\nBid        Asked\nFor  prompt   BhtpflMnt\nfrom   prairie   points      $1.14%\nIn   store    ' ;       1.14%\nBa   route     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_.\u25a0       1.14 K\"\nMontreal Produce\nCork  Province\nSilversmith\t\nSunloch     \t\nBoundary   Bay   Oil\nI'.mpire    \t\nHpartan Oil\nBid     , Asked\n.12\n.3714        .45'\n,11 .28\n.no 3-10 no 5-16\n01% .0114\n.0114        -ll**\nTrojan      02'4\n.03 V4\n\u2022WlKmrEO    OBA1H    QOOTATIOHS.\n\u2022Wheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nJuly    \t\n115**\n116\n11314\n113%\n107\n10714\n104\n1\u00ab414\nOats-\nJuly     \t\n48 *\n4\u00ab**4\n4714\n47%\n43\n4314\n4114\n41%\nBarley\u2014\nJuly     ....\n54'i\n54%\n54\n54\nOct\t\n54%\n54%\n5314\n5314\nFlax\u2014\nJuly    \t\n245\n115\n234\n234\nOct    ......\n20014\n20714\n205\n207\nBye-\nJuly     ....\n6614\nU%\n60%\n6114\nOct    \t\n69\n6914\n64%\n64%\nMONTREAL, Juno rn \u2014 Potatoes\nslow;   butter  quiet.\nCiitese \u2014 Finest easterns, lfi % c to\n16 lie.\nHut ter\u2014Ch nicest   creamery,   31114 c..\nKkrk\u2014Selected,   ,t.!c.\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag, car lots, $1.25\nto   $130.\nLAKE OF WOODS\nREPEAL MEETS\nBIG OPPOSITION\nMeighen, Forke and Winni-\npegger Stage Unsuccessful Fight to Keep It\n0NTABI0 NOT ACTING\nUP TO! ENGAGEMENTS\nMinister Says If Necessary\nDominion flVill Fight Drury\nand Backus\nOTTAWA, JuVie 20. \u2014 The bill to\nrepeal the Lake' of the Woods Kegu-\nlatlon act of lt-21 met with strong\nopposition in th****! house of commons\ntonight, when .its second reading\nwas moved by Sir Lomer Gouin,\nminister of JustlW. The main objections raised were against the\nrepeal of tho section of the, act\nof 1921 which placed tho Lake of\nthe Woods under' federal Jurisdiction.\nOpposition camo from the Conservative leader, Ut. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen, from tip Liberal and\nLabor members frotm Winnipeg, and\nfrom Robert Fork e. Progressive\nleader. The bill contains a clause,\nunder which it is to come Into\nforce   by   proclamation,\nSecond reading was carried by\na vote of 57 to -12. The bill\npassed committee* stag*** without opposition, but A. B. .Hudson, Liberal. Winnipeg South, objected to\nthird   reading,  and   it   was   held  over.\nSir Lomer (Mate, In moving the\nthird \"reading, reviewed tho history\nof the legislation and the agreement of November, 19211, between\nthe Dominion and Ontario- and Man-\ntoba. He pointed out that Ontario had specified that aiho would\nnot be bound by the agreement unless the Lake of the Woods waa\nremoved from federal jurisdiction,\nwhile Manitoba did. not want federal control taken away until the\nagreement of November, 1921, had\nbeen  carried out.\nWinnipeg   Demanda   Protection\nWinnipeg members, tn opposing\nthe measure;, declared the industrial life of Winnipeg was hound\nup in the development of power\non   the  Winnipeg  river.\n\"A private corporation had it in\nits power to cut off power from\nthe city cf Winnipeg,\" declared J.\nS. Woodsworth. Labor, Center Winnipeg.\nE. J. McMurray, Ljberal. Winnipeg North, thought there was\nevery reason to suspect the ambition of E. W. Backus in hia\nendeavor to secure not only valuable timber lands, but also water\npowers  in   that,  district.\nHon. Charley Stewart, minister of\nthe interior, declared that the Ontario government had urged tlie\nstrongest opposition to the 1919 bill\nPremier Drury had antiuunced all\nintention of fighting it. The on*\njection of tho Ontario government\nwas to the clause declaring the\nworks to be In the general interest\nof   Canada.\nMr. Stewart, replying to a question, said that if the Ontario government failed to carry out Its\nagreements there was just one thing\nfor the Dominion to do, that was\nto \"fight Huckus and the Ontario\ngovernment.\"\nHandle  Jointly,   Says   Meighen\n\"There should be }olot administration, appointed half by one\nprovince and half by the other,\nt protest against the repeal of\nthe    legislation.\"    MM    -Mr.    MetghtB,\nRobert Forke, Progressive leader,\nsaid that Manitoba was desperately\nInterested in the matter. He failed\nto see why the government was so\nanxious to pass the bill at the\npresent tlm**. Surely Ontario and\nManitoba could find some basis for\nagreement before the 1921 legislation was repealed.\nSir Isomer Gouin said unless the\nbill became law he was of the\nopinion that the only province to\nsuffer   was   Manitoba.\nToronto Board\nTORONTO, June 20. \u2014 The stock\naxobUlfa displayed an erratic, tendency today, and a number nf leaders\nmoved off in sympathy with the decline in Wall street. Bell Telephone\nImlil wound the high point attained In\nrecent trading nt \\'\u00a3'*_, but moved\noff to Its at the close, Consumers'\nr.-is moved up to IflHi \u2022 w**** eain of\nBrazilian d-'cllned In sympathy with\nthe tone of the market, closing at 48,\na net k>aa of X*%. Canada Bread common declined 2 polnU to 62. Locomotive common changed hands at 69.\ndown 2 Canadian Pacific declined\n2%,  to 163.\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nHelp Wurta-j\nPositions Wasted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and. Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal Baadin-gf Hotlcaa\u20143c per wr.rd\neach Insertion. In blackface or machine\ncapitals 4c per word. Blackface capitals 5c a word; 25 per cent discount\nIf run dally without change of copy\nfor one month or moro. Where advertisement ia set out in short llnea\nthe charge ia 12^c a Une for Roman\ntype, U.o for blackface, and 20c for\nblackface   capitals.     Minimum   3&c   II\n\"\"wEt ut owned Adv.rti.ln-** -\nOne and a half cents per word per\nInsertion. Six cents per word per\nweek, or 22 He per word per month,\ncash ln advance. Transient ads. ac\ncepte only on a cash-in-aiivance basis\nEach initial, figure, dollar sil,*n,_ eto..\ncounts as one word. Minimum Z..C, u\ncharged  60c. _ __     ,\n1.1st. of W.ddlnr Pr.MHt\u00ab \u00bbnd floral\ntribute,  at  fun.raU\u201410c per  line.\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTKD \u2014  Night porter for Queen's\nHotel, (87u8>\nWANTI'iD\u2014Carriage setter a tor hand\nset work. Communicate by wire.\nAlso one green lumber grader, western pine grade. Good wages for\nnod men, White Spruce Lumber\nCo.,   Fernle,  B.C. <86'3>\nWANTED \u2014 Six bricklayers for Monday   morning.     Bmedley'a  Garage\n(Bbil)\nWANTED \u2014 Setter or carriage rider,\nsteady employment year round to\nright party. Write or wire, tf Interested, Otis Staples Lumber Co.,\nWycliffe,  B.C. (8031)\nWANTED    \u2014    An    experienced    hotel\nporter.      Apply   Strathcona.        (8495)\nCity Property for Sale\nFOR SALE\nNEAT COTTAGE\nMill   Street.\nTwo    Bedrooms,    Living    Room,\nKitchen   and   Bathroom.\nAttractive Garden Lot.\nPart   Stone   Foundations.\n$1400.00      :\nOn  Terms.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nBox   626. Phone   269\n(8696)\nMEN, women to learn barbering; paid\nwhile learning; tools supplied. Catalogue free. Molor College, Vancouver. <84til)\nVKLL   your   wanta   tnrougn   The   Dmllj\nNew* classified  rolumnw\nSituations Wanted Male\nMAN AND WIFE will take charge of\nkitchen and dining-ionm In hotel or\nrestaurant; experienced. Address\nBox   1054,  Brandon, Man. (8738)\nELECTRICIAN seeks position; first-\nclass man; inside and outside work.\nReferf-nce furnished. Reply Box\nSR74.  Dally  Newj^ <SH74)\nSituations Wanted Female\nPOSITION wanted aa housekeeper,\neither In town or country. Apply\nBox  48. Creston. \u25a0     <ri(,7i,<\nBoats and Automobiles\nFOR KALE \u2014 4-ey!inder MrLaughlln-\nBuick five-passenger touring car. in\ngood condition and perfect running\norder; price $450. Hoyle, Queen's\nBay,  BC    _______)\nPoultry and Eg-Ers\nMl'ST SELL my 30 pullets and yearlings (laying). $1 .each; going away.\nBox  Hit,  Daily  News. (1111)\nPEARL Guinea Kgga. J2 for fifteen,\nexpress, collect. William S. McAI-\nplne,  Creston.      ^             (86\u00bbS)\nTHOUSAND \"White Leghorn Baby\nChicks; last hatch June 27; $15 100,\nsafe delivery. Our pullets lay at 4\nmontha, trap-netted stock. Riddle's   Poultry   Farm,   Salmon   Aim.\nri5|4i\nMiscellaneous Wanted\n$1100\u20145    rooms,    fully    modern;\ncement   foundation;   no   hills;\n3   minutes   from  P.   O.\n$1200\u20145    rooms;    fully   modern;\nstone    foundation;    close    to\nBakor street.\n$1450\u20144   rooms,  Bungalow;   large\nliving     room,     fireplace;     2\nlevel   Iota;   fruit  and  shrubs;\nchicken   house,  etc.\n11S0O\u20146   rooms;     3    beds;    large\nbasement;  fruit;  in Al ahape.\n$-500\u20147    rooms;     fully    modern;\nstone foundation;  large Jiving\nrooms;    4   choice   corner   lots,\nall in  fruit trees and garden;\non tho level.\nWe havo homes at prices and\nterms to suit all purchasers, ranging in price from $700 to $4500,\nincluding some excellent huys\nfor cash. For further particulars\napply   to\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON\n414  Wurd  Street\nTO  MR. HOMESEEKER\nA small house for a small family, quito near the city. AH the\nFurniture goes with it. A well\nplanted garden\u2014potatoes, vegetables, strawberries and smalt\nfruits. $1350 cash buys the property -with  a clear title\na. t. McMillan\nPhone   601 P.   O.   Box  81\nRoom 12, Oliker Block, 510 Baker St.\nRes. Phono 358L2\n(8742)\nFOH SALE \u2014 Small hf>u.se. close in,\nwell    furnished.      Apply    Box    X710,\n Daily_News. (ttl$)\nNICE house, nine rooms, full basement, nicely located. Corner close\nto car track. Everything up-to-date.\nFor sale cheap ior cash. Apply\nOwner,   312 Carbonate  street.     *H4\u00ab7\u00bb\nInsurance\nOOOD pasture With water and barb\nwire fenced. Apply Nick K. Pooho-\nchoff.   Winlaw,  B.C. (8713)\nWANTED\u2014Etgh teen-foot double oarlock rowboat, Peterhoro preferred;\nmust be In good condition. Thomas\nO'Neill,   Gray   Creek. (8704)\nLive Stock for Sale\nJERSEY cow, young, fresnened mid-\nApril, eighty dollars. Grade Holstein heifer, 2 years, fifty dollars.\nRees ln Kootenay hive, sixteen dollars. ' Clay,   Slocan City. (83iSl)\nFOR SALE.\u2014Excellent pony, 9 years,\nquiet; ride, drive, pack; forty-five\ndol lars. C. Taylor, Willow Point,\nNelson. (8735)\nFUR SALE \u2014 Thoroughbred Jersey, 6\nyears old; freshens June 28. Price\n$90.00.     O.   Hallett,   Nelson.       (8724)\nFOIJ SALE\u2014Yorkshire pigs. 6 weeks\nold, $7 each, f.o.b. Crescent Valley.\nB.  C.    V.   Kosiancic. (8711)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Young h\u00bbrse, saddle,\nbuggy and harness, light wagon and\nharness, also cutter. Mra, E> Ratcliffe. (8685)\nCLEARANCE RALE of all my live\nstock, consisting of 1 registered Hoi-'\nstein cow, 5 years, $85; 1 Holstein\ngrade cow, 4 years, due September,\n$80; 1 Holstein Shorthorn heifer,\ndue October, $45; heifer calf, 5\nmonths, $16; 1 Yorkshire boar, 3\nyears, $20; 6 brood sows, due September, $35 each; about 160 White\nLeghorn hens, 1 and 2 years, $1.50\neach, very heavy layers, averaging\nnow 100 eggs per day; about 100\nPullets, April hatch, 50c each; 40\nchicks, 1 month old, 30c each; 200\nchicks, 10 days, 18c each; 1 Oraln\nGrowers' Incuhator and Brooder,\ncomplete, 120-egg size, $20. No\nreasonable offer refused. All exceptionally good stock and In good\ncondition, Terms cash fob. Harrop. William Thompson, Harrop.\n(8683)\nFOR SALE \u2014 12 head horses, all In\ngood condition; weights from 161,0\nlbs. to 900 lbs.; broken to drive;\nwagons; heavy and light harness,\nKaslo Transfer Company, Kaslo.\n(8664)\nWELL-BRED Holstein, 6 years this\nfall, good milk and butter cow.\nCalved January and due to freshen\nIn November. Milk capacity, fourteen to sixteen quarts daily; quiet\nand gentle. Reason for selling,\nworking away. Price eighty dollars.\nApply  Box  8498, Dally News.     (849H)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 One horse mowing machine, ln good condition. State\nprlcf.     Richards,   Tarrys.           (8736)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nPAINT \u2014 Sherwin Williams famous\npaints and varnishes; wall colors;\nalso paint brushes; fruit tree sprays;\ngopher death, etc. Rutherford Drug\nCo. (8415)\nLADY'S navy serge suit, braid trimmed; almost new; size 38. Thone\n489Y. (8725)\nWHAT about the dry months that are\ncoming Order your irrigation pipe\nHOW.    Jamleson,   Passmore.       (8490)\nWOOD PIPE for sale, for Irrigation\nand pressure systems, suitable for\nheads up to 300 feet. Tarry ft\nChalmers.   Tarrys. (8341)\nWOOD Irrigation Pipes For gale.\nDeer Park -Wood ripe Co., Deer\nPark, B.C.      t (8466)\nFOR   SALE   -^ Empty   barrels,   kegs,\nsacks.     McDonald  Jam Co. (8467)\nWANTED   \u2014   Clean   cotton   rags;   five\ncents   per  pound.     The   Daily   News.\n(8630)\nCOW HIDES, five cente pound; calf, |\n\u25a0night cents. J. P. Morgan, Nelson, \\\nB.C. (8471);\nTELL your  wants tnrougn  Tbe Dalb\nNewa classified columns.\nWhy Play With Chance\nWhen\nInsurance Will Protect?\nAutomobile    Accident    Life    Fire\nK.    W.   DAWSON\nAnnable   Block\nBox 733. Phone 197.\n(8705)\nOLDS FARMER CLAIMS\nMIRACULOUS BARLEY\nLets   Thin   Forty-tight   Hour*   After\nPlantino   Hat  Helf-liwh  Root*\nand Blade Started\nCALGABT. Juno 20.\u2014M. A. Samia.\nfarmer ot lhe Olds district, is responsible for this story, which he\nclaims  Is true:\nThe hired man, sowed some hard\nbarley last Saturday noon under\nperfect conditions. At 11:30 the following Monday morning Mr. Samls\ndug into the ground to see If there\nwas any Indication of the seed germinating. He found the roots half\nan inch long, and the Wado shoot\nan eighth of an inch. He says he\nexpects to reap CO 'bushels an acre.\nte the fact he should not get\niliing   on   account   of   sowing   the\najeaen    In   Calgary   district   now\n'   shualld   exceed\nrta'e (a,nn> r   j\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited   ;\n\"T\"\"   \"~~ Offioe Smelting end  Refining  Department        \u25a0'  I ?\u25a0\"\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC. TRAIL\nOld Papers\nUSEFUL FOR PACKING, ETC.\n4c Per Pound\nTHESE ARE OLD NEWSPAPERS AND ARE\nPRINTED.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNELSON, B, 0,\nSpecial June\nBargains\n1. Player Piano\u2014Full size, 68-\nnote, rich mahogany case,\nsatin finish, with 25 rolls.\nPrice I72&.O0. Small monthly\npayments.\n2. Player Piano\u201488-note, fumed\noak case, with 25 rollH. Price\n$750.00. A great bargain. Small\nmonthly  payments.\n3. Piano\u2014Rich walnut case, satin\nfinish. This superb instrument\nonly $025.00. Small monthly\npayments. Call and see or\nwrite.\nMASON    &    RISCH,    LTD.\n613  Ward   pt.\nPhone 251. 'Nelson, B. C.\n(8707)\nFor Rent\nFOR SUMMER months, desirable\nseven-roomed house; Hleepliu? porch;\nfine view. Thone 412L or P.O. Rox\nS77. (8728)\nFURNISHED   HOUSE,   June   25th,   Apply  616  Carbonate street. (8702)\nFURNISHED HOUSE \u2014 Hall Mines\nruad, next skating rink. Apply Rox\n8691,   Dally   News. <86M)\nFOR RENT\u2014For two months from\nJuly 1st, furnished house, 6 rooms,\nclose In. Apply Box 8682, Daily\nNews. (8682)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Three-roomed   house   for\nrent,     partly    furnished,     fill*     Hall\nstreet.    Apply 717 Josephine strppt.\n(8663)\nCLASSIFIED ads. bring  results quickly   and   \u2022oonomlcRllv    mo   *   word\nLost and Found\nSTRAYED \u2014 One dapple gray horse,\nshort \u2022 mane, wearing halter and\nnever-filtp nhoes when last seen.\nPlease write or phone Churches,\nWaneta.    E Stone,  owner. 48693)\nTeachers Wanted\nTEACHER wanted for Procter school;\napplications. F. J. Sammeim, secretary. (8677*\nWANTED \u2014   Experienced   teacher   for\nKitchener     Publio     School.       Salary\n$108.00.    Apply  Sec, Kitchener,   B.C.\n(8616)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms over\nPoole  Drug. (8726)\nFOR     RENT\u2014Furnished     front     suits\nover   Starland   Theater. (8670>\nSUITE\u2014Campbell's Studio.\nFOR RENT \u2014 Three-roomed furnlsh\u00abdl\nsuite.    Annable Block. (8469>\nfurnished Strang\nXKRB,    APART MEM TS\nProperty Wanted\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014Small hotel or\nconfectionery business; pleasure resort preferable. Apply S. Chadwick,\nWilcox,   Sask. (8700)\nNursery Products\nSTRONO, healthy cabbage plants, $1\nper hundred; cauliflower, $1.50. W.\nMawer,    Nelson,'  B.C. (8336)\nTELL  your  wants tnrouith   Tht  Dally\nNews classified columns.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nInsurance and Real Estate\nB.   W.   DAWSOH,\nBaal Estata, Xnauranca, Bantala.\nAnnable lilk. P.O. Box 733. Phona 1*7.\n(8472)\nB.  S.   DIXIa,\nGeneral Inanranca At.-of.\nCity and Conntry Propartr For Bala.\n508 Ward (treat Phona IM\n(\u00ab27\u00bb)\nMonuments\nCampbell   ft    Bltchla   Monumental   Oo.\nP.O.   Box   865.   Nelson,  B.C.\n Tflrphone   164. (\u00ab473)\nPainters and Decorators\nAntoa Painted\n1TOEPHY  BBOB,\nDaalara In Wall Paper.\nRtora\u2014 Auto Shop\u2014\n413   Josephine   St. ill  Hall  St.\n  (8474)\nAccounting\nCHARLES  P.  XUHIEB.\nAnlltor,  McDonald Jam Bnlldlnf,\nBox 1181 Nelaon. BC.\n (8475)\nFlorists\nQRIZZEI.LE'S     OREENHOIJ8R     NeU\naon.   Cut flowers and floral designs.\n \u2022 (8476)\nWM.  8.  JOB1TBOB.\nPhone    342.        Cut     mowers,     Potted\nPlants   and   Floral   Emblems.\n       (8273)\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD ft CO., WHOLESAM\nGrocers and Provision Merchant*\nImporters of Teas. Coffees, Sploea,\nDried Fruits, staple and Fancj\n<;rocorlen.   Nelsnn,   B.C (___**\nEngineers\nH.   D.   DAWSON,\nB. C.  Land Surveyor,\nMininir   TCnirtneer,\nBASLO, B.O. (8471\nGte* *o\u00abu ***. c,\nBBLBOB,   B.O.\ncivil, aud minino Enomaiaa\nB. C, Alberta and Dominion\nLand Surveyors.\nCrown Orant Agents. Bins FrlnMni\n_________^^^^_ (8479\nAssayers\nB.   W.  W1DDOWSON, Box AU0\u00ab,  Nal\naon, B.C.    Standard western charge,\n(8480\nAuctioneers\t\nW.   OTJTLEB\nOooda Bold Privately or at AnoHnn.\nBox 474     Opera House Block     Phone 1\n  (8481\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERT80N, F. D. \u00bb. * B, \u00bb(1\nVictoria   street.     Phona   JM.    Nigh\n11    '\u2022\"'\u2022\u2022 (8482\nStandard Pqjrdtnj\nCo., Undertaker\nFuneral Director\nAuto hearse, up-ti\n[XT data   chapel.     Be\nservice.      Price\n(848;\nreasonable.\n\"BRINGING UP FATHER\"\nBy George McManus\nYOU DON'T KNOW\nTHE. HALF or IT-\n -\n\u25a0HH\n^^\u2014\u2014\"\n633\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY HORNING, JTJNS 21, 1323\nPare Seven\nLATE DESPERADO AND HIS VICTIMS\nNews of Sport\nThree of the bullets fired by\nteepere&o, found human marks.\nAbove (tre seen, left to right, Leo\nRogers, 24-year-old handia, shot\ndead on May 30, after slaying two\nLaPO Rogers, the late Nortli Bay\nprovincial offieer.s nnd evading\nhis pursuers for two weeks; Constable Fred Lefebrve a\u00abd Sergt.\nJohn Uniuhart, the slain officer.*?;\nConstable William McGovern, who\nwas also seriously wounded in the\nhunt for Rogers. Lower, left,-\nbacft dour of the home of Rogers,\nparents in North Bay, showing\nthe broken glass, shattered by the\nbullet whjcll killed Sergt. \\Jt_U-\nhart. At lhe right, the window\nthrough which Rogers escaped after   the   shooting.\nCAMPAIGN ENDS IN v\nADVERTISING BLAZE\nWets    and    Dries    of    Manitoba    Will\nMake   Their*  Final   Appeals   to\nPublic   Today\n*\nWIKNiPBOi    June    HO.\u2014Tho    campaign  afca.nst tht Manitoba Temper-\n' ance act, conducted with more or less\nactivHy  for  the  past  two   years,  and\n1 with   a   ^ood   deal   of   vigor   during\n[ rwnt    months    by    the    Moderation\n1 league,   comes  to   a   close   tomorrow\n'nlgjit.   and   on   Friday   200,000   or   so\nof the men and women of the province\nare    expected    to    vote      to      decide\nI whether or not a  system  of   government  control  of  all   liquors   for  bev\nerage purposes shall be introduced\nSupporters and opponents of existing legislation claim to be confident\nof   victory.\nThe campnlgn is closing in a blaze\nof advertising. Both sides publish\nlists of supporters among business'\nand professional men and from the)\nwomen voter*. Arguments are mndej\nfor and against the moderation bill.\nIt Is claimed on the one hand thnt |\nit would promote economic and social\nprogress, and on the other, that it\nwould take huge sums of money\nout of the province, and would provide new temptations for a generation growing up without legal access\nto   Intoxicating    lkpinrs.\nLook   to  This   Province\nThe   record   of   the   present   prohibition   measure  and   its   enforcement\nhas come in for a good deal of attention\u2014the question has been dis\ncussed at length by public speakers\nand by writers of letters to the pa-\nfifeMt of whether the moderation\nbill would eliminate or Increase \"boot\nlegging, and the history of govern\nment control in British Columbia\nand   Quebec   has   provided   campaign\nmaterial   fur   both\nA mass meeting\n(Moderation league\naddressed by Dr.\nRed   Deer,   Alta.\nand \"drys.\"\nin support of the\nbill tonight was\nMichael   Clark   of\nA movie ad says: \"Ko wonder he\nloved her when he saw her do the\nhula hula.\" He and the censors\nwere  ^he  only   ones   who  got   to   see\nIt. \u25a0  \u25a0\n0B\nm\nwMm\nSIXTEEN TO ONE\nISCUBHCORE\nChicago Nationals Go on\nBatting Rampage and\nClimb Up to Fifth Place\nCnbH Move Up a Notch\nChicago, June 20.\u2014Chicago went\non a hatting rampage today and defeated Philadelphia 16 to 1, and as a\nresult the Cubs moved up to fifth\nplace, displacing Brooklyn, who lost\n(o Cincinnati. Alexander had won-\nlerful control.\nR.    IL    E.\nPhiladelphia          l      8      4\nChicago   7 16    18      0\nBatteries\u2014Weinert, Winters, Mitch-\n\u25a011, Behan, Hubhell and Wilson;\nO'Brien, Alexander. Dumovich and\nyVerreU, Wirth.\nBraves S<*oro Six In Tenth\nPITTSBURGH, June 20.\u2014-Going ln-\no the tenth inning with the score\nled 8 \"to 8, Boston made six runs on\n'our hits and three walks, winning a\n>urlesque game from Pittsburgh to-\nlay 14 to 8. Boehler, who went into\nhe box for the Pirates in the ninth,\nvas wild in the tenth, and Kunz re-\nleved him but was unable to check\n.he  stampeding Braves:   .\nR.       He       E.\nBoston             14     19       1\nPittsburgh     8    15      1\nBattereies \u2014 Oeschger, Genewlch,\nBenton, Barnes and Gibson; Hamilton\nBagby, Meadows, Boehler, Kunz and\nMattox.\nGiants Score Flvo ln Ninth\nST. LOUIS, June 20.\u2014Coming from\nbehind In the ninth, New York scored five runs, taking today's game from\nSt. Louis 7 to 5- The victory gave the\n:hampions three of the four game\nseries. Haines held the Giants hit-\nens for five Innings. Hornstby was\nback in the lineup after several days\nibsence due to Illness of his mother.\nR.    H.    E.\nNew, York           7      9      0\nSt.  Louis     5    11      3\nBatteries \u2014 Nehf, .Scott, Jonnard,\nBentley and Snyder; Gaston, Haines,\nToney and Ainsmjth.\nItrds Take Brooklyn Kerb's\nCINCINNATI, June 20.\u2014Cincinnati\nmade it three out of four from Brooklyn today, winning handily behind\nBenton's effective pitching. Vance,\nwho shut out the locals with one hit\njn Sunday, tried to come bock but\nwas taken out ln the fourth inningst,\nR.     H.    E.\nBrooklyn           1       6      1\nBrooklyn            4       8       1\nVance, Decatur, Smith and Deberry\nBenton and Margraves.\nKING'S HORSE\nWINS PLATE\nWeathervane, Rank Outsider,\nTakes Royal Hunt Cup at\nAscore;  Victory Cheered\nLONDON, June 20.\u2014His majesty's\nfour year old colt, Weather-Vane, by\nIjemherg, out of Vain, Withington up,\nwon the royal Hunt cup, the principal race on today's program of the\nAscot meeting. Hook fire, a Rock\nFlint Fletchet colt owned by Francis\nPrice, and ridden by Bolght, finished\nsecond, with C. C. Hatry's Jarvie, a\nthree-year-old Louvois-Hackar colt,\nthird.\nAfter ft shower the weather cleared\nBhortly before 1 o'clock. The royal\nparty drove up to the courne a few\nminutes later, and were given a great\novation.\nTremola dropped lengths at the\nstart. Plas Newydd made the running from Jarvie, Golden Duke, Bon-\n'ie Race and Weathervane for the\nlrst quarter mile, when Jarvie went\n*o the front, followed by Rockflre,\nAVathervane and monarch. At the\nhalf way point Weathervane joined\nJarvie, and racing on, took the lead\ni quarter of a-mile from home, stalled off a challenge from Rockfire,\nand won comfortably by a length.\nCondoi^ was fourth. Time was one\nminute and 39 seconds.\nCheering greeted the victory of his\nmajesty's entry. The King's horse\nwas an outsider In the betting, being\nquoted at 20 to 1 against; Rockfire\nstarted at 10 to 1 against, and Jarvie\nat 20 to 1 against.\nLittle Lessons in\nBig Sports\n'\u00ab**\u00ab\u00ab*.\u25a0\u25a0.. ,<y\u00bb\nGOLF\n\"RUN-UP\"\n^tRAIGuHT-FACED club\n(EA51ER)\n\u25a0\u2022\u00bb\n\u2022PITCH\"\n1\nuSu-Uiy MASHIE-NIBUCK\nIs it best to pitch all shots to\na run-up shot when possible?\nthe green, or is it better to play\nAnswered bv\nBOB CRUIKSHANK\n'The pitch shot Is always a safe\nway to a green but the run-up Is\noften better, if ynu have a clear space\nto the green. It Is also easier. In\nplaying a run-up,\" a straight faced\nclub should be used, and throughout\nthe back-swing and down-swing the\nclub head should be kept low. The\npitch and run, a combination of\nboth. Is also a very useful shot, but\nrather difficult.\n(Copyright.   1923.' Associated   Editors.)\nProbable Starters\nin the Cold Cap\nLONDON, June 20. \u2014 (By Canadian Press Cable) \u2014 Following\nis a revised list of the probable\nstarters tomorrow In the Gold cup\nrace at Ascot, with the names of\nthe Jockeys: Happy Man, Victory\nSmythe; Flechois, Jennings; Chivalrous, R. Jones; Mont Blanc, Mac-\nGee; Buck's Hussar, Carslake;\nSimon Pure, Frank Bullock, and\nNorseman,   Stokes,\nATHLETICS WIN\nLONGTHRILLER\nBeat White Sox Four to\nThree in an Eleven-Inning\nContest\nm jr^udson's|}atj(fompanij j B\nJune Silk Sale\n\u2014\nOffering first_gm^de_quality\nSilks i at Hudson's Bay Conv\npany's Special Prices^bought\ncollectively for all our stores\nso you may benefit individually.    _\nJune Silk Sale Offerings\nFANCY STRIPE SILKS for Skirth in len***ths of t%\nyards. d\u00bb1   Qr\nSpecially priced at, per yard  *_7l.m*JO\nIMPERIAL DUCHESS\u2014A Seal of Quality line made\nespecially for the H. B. Co.   A fine, rich, lustrous\nsatin; black only; 38 inches wide.       (PQ Kf|\n. Per yard  tpOaUv\nGENUINE FRENCH CREPE CHARMANTE\u2014Soft,\nclinging silk fabric, satin face, with crepe black,\nkingfisher   blue,   rose,   navy,   ivory;   (J\u00bb A   FA\n40 inches wide.   Per yard\nNATURAL   COLOR   SPUN   SILK\u2014Noted   for   its\nwashing quality.   Ideal for Shirts, Pajamas, waists,\netc.; 38 inches wide.\nPer yard \t\n$1.95\n50 YARDS WHITE  HABUTAI WASHING  SILK,\nsuitable for underwear, waists or dresses; 36 inches\n $1.00\nAthletics Tit in Ninth\nPHI'LADEL-PHIA, June 20. \u2014 Coming from behind in the closing Innings, Philadelphia today won a\nthrilling 11-inning battle with Chicago, 4 to 3. The home team tied\nthe score in the ninth and then\ntook the game in the Uth. Vaber\ntwirled line ball, but weakened In\nthe ninth, wht'.e Harris held the\nWhite Sox in the Ifcftt two innings. It.     H.    E,\nChicago     3       7       3\nl*hil.nielphiu        1     IS\nBatteries \u2014 Faber, Robertson and\nSchalk; Ilommell, Walberg, Harris\nand Bruggy.\nTigers Even With Yankees\nNEW YORK, June 20. -\u2014 Detroit\ngot an even break in its four\ngame series with -New York, winning\na slugging match today, 9 to 7.\nThird Baseman Haney sprained his\nankle In the first inning. Jnnes,\nout four weeks with an Injury,\nthen played third base, but limped\nbadly. It.     H.    E.\nDetroit     9     17       1\nNew York    .7     11       0\nBatteries \u2014 Pillette, Holloway and\nBassler; Pennock, Bush and Hoffman.\nEhmke Allows Tluv.* Hits\nBO.STON, June 20. \u2014 Ehmke held\nSt. Ivouis to three hits today and\nwon his tenth game of the season\nfor  Boston,   3   to   1. R.     H.    E.\nHt.   Louis       1        3        0\nBoston  3       4       0\nBatteries \u2014 Davis, Root and Severeid;   Ehmke   and   Devormer,\nIndians Beat Senators\nWASHINGTON, June 20. \u2014 Mogrldge weakened in the seventh inning of a pitching battle with Morton\ntoday, and Cleveland defated Washington, 5 to 1. Speaker's first hit\nthree games, a double, paved\nthe way for the visitors' winning\nruns. R.     H.    E.\nCleveland         Ei      10       0\nWashington       1      10       0\nBatteries \u2014- Morton, Edwards and\nO'NVH; Mogrldge, Brlllheart and\nRuel.\nA real snap, per yard\nA LARGE ASSORTMENT OF SILKS, such as Wash\nSatins, Crepe de Chene, Georgette Crepe, Paillettes and Taffeta Silks. A big range of colors\nto choose from. All selling at one\nprice, per yard \t\n$1.75\nClosing today at 5 o'clock. Open every morning at 8 o'clock, and your phone orders will\nhave prompt attention at that hour. During the\nrush hours phone .13, our Grocery Phone is frequently engaged. In such cases ring 2 (two)\nand ask for a grocery clerk to take your order.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nRochester, 8-3;  Reading, 2-9.\nBuffalo,  2-5;   Jersey City,  9-6.\nToronto, 4-4; Newark, 5-11.\nSyracuse, 6; Baltimore, 7.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nLouisville,   11;   Columbus,   4.\nSt.  Pnu!  6-4;   Kansas City,   3-3.\nIndhnopolis, 6; Toledo, 3-\nMinneapolis,-Milwaukee, rain.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSalt Lake, 5; Sacramento, 6.\nSan Eranclsco,   2;   Vernon,   3.\nI.os Angeles, 0; Oakland, 4.\nPortland, 5; Seattle, 3.\nRAILWAY IMPROVEMENTS\nTO COST MANY MILLION\nVictoria Man ,\nAfter Sherwin\nas Grand \"Z*\nNEW WESTMINSTER, Juno 20.\u2014\nAt a mooting tonight preliminary (o\ntho opening of the flfty-seoeonrt communications of Uifl grand lodge, of\nRoyal Arch Ma.sons of British Columbia, Vernon Stewart, Victoria, was\nelected grand \"Z\"\u00ab\nDuring the past year C P. Slu-rwln,\n| of RlouOal, was grain! \"Z\".\nPennsylvania     Railroad      Will     Spend\nEighth ot a Billion tn Betterments  Thla  Year.\nCHICAGO, June 20.\u2014The' Pennsylvania railroad system has begun a\nscries of Improvements to cost more\nthan $125,000,000, according: to an announcement made by the road here\nrtcently. Work has already begun on\nImprovements costing more than two\nmillion dollars in the northwestern region, whleh Includes most of Illinois,\nIndiana,  Michigan  and   Ohio.\nThe largest single improvement will\nbe at 55th street, Chicago, where the\ntracks will be elevated at a cost of\n$616,221. Another expenditure, of\n1121.319, will be made Just four blocks\nscuth, at 59th street, where the Pennsylvania shops are located. Facilities for making heavy repairs to\nfreight cars will be Installed in these\nshops so that disabled cars can be\nput on \"the tracks promptly, in accordance with the present campaign\nto keep all equipment in constant\nservice.\nPennsylvania railroad coal docks at\nSandusky, O., will have their slip\ndeepened to permit the entrance of\nlarge  ships and allow  continuous pas\nsage   to   other   crafts.\nA second track will be extended\nfrom Webbs to Walbrldge, Ohio, with\na 125-car capacity siding at Webb.s,\nat a cost of $400,000. This Improvement will expedite the handling of\nfreight from Toledo and relieve the\nToledo yard from considerable congestion.\nAt Port Wayne, Ind., a 110-foot\nturntable will be installed to replace\na 75-foot turntable, which has become inadequate for the large, modern\nengines.     This   will   cost  $68,068.\nThe announcement says that these\nimprovements are In accordance with\nthe nation-wide campaign being conducted by the American Railway association to have all railway equipment In constant service for the expected traffic this summer, when the\npresent business boom will reach its\nheight.\nADMIT C0NJESTI0N\nAT ELLIS ISLAND\nwhen Miss Eileen Odell of Yahk became the bride of Frank Woodhouse,\nassistant C.P.R. agent at that place.\nThe trip was made by auto. The\nbride's father accompanied the young\ncouple to Cranbrook, and gave his\ndaughter   away.\nA quiet wedding was solemnized on\nSaturdny evening in the Methodist\nparsonage when Edwin Thomas Quirk\nof Klmberley and Miss Marion Holt\nof Cranbrook were united In marriage,\nRev. B. C. Freeman performing the\nceremony. Mrs. Margaret Quirk was\nmatron of honor and the bride's father\ngave her away. They will reside at\nKlmberley.\nBut    Immigration    Officers    Sea    No\nWay   to   Avoid    It   Without\nGigantic Building\nNEW YORK, June. 2Q.\u2014Immigration officers at Ellis Island today\nfrankly admitted statements made in\nthe British house of commons that\n150 persons of various races had heen\nhoused In the same sleeping quarters, but said they knew of no way\nof remedying the situation, unless a\n\"gigantic\"   building   could   be  erected.\nIf the immigrants were to be separated according to classes It would\nbe necessary to have a building with\n200 rooms, they said. Eight classifications, according to sex and statbs,\nare now  In  use at the  island.\nCranbrook Plans a\nSmoker for Bowper\nand His Associates\nResolution on the\nSales Tax Is Passed\nWithout Discussion\nOTTAWA, June 20. \u2014 At an early\nhour this morning the house of\n\u2022commons adopted the resolution on\nthe 'sates tax in committee on ways\nand means practically without discussion. The aim of the amendment is to substitute a general\nsales tax of 6 per cent, instead of\na varying scale as at present In\neffect, explained lion. W. S. Fielding, minister of finance. He hoped\nthat the new system would increase\nrevenue    and    simplify    collection.\nA bill to amend the Special War\n\u2022lievenue act to give effect to the\n[resolution was separately introduced,\n.and  given   first  reading.\nTHIS   SEA   MONSTER\nIS   RE Ala   WHOPPER.\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla.. June 20.\u2014A\nhuge sea monster,' 32 feet long, 20\nfeet around and estimated to weigh\nmere trun 2'>.noO pound.1\", was landed\nlast week .at Long Key. after a day's\nstruggle, during which 50 bullets from\nf> high-power rifle were fired Into It,\naccording to a telegram to the Times\nt. nlon fiom one of the party of fishermen that captuured the prize.\nCRANBROOK, RC, June 20\u2014W. J\nHowser, accompanied by a number of\nConservative members of the provincial parliament, Is expected In this\ncity nt the end of the month on his\nway to attend the official opening of\nthe Banff-Windermere road. The gentlemen   are   coming  by  auto.\nA smoker and banquet are to be\nl^eld here in their honor next Wednesday.        \t\nYahk end Kimberley\nCouples Are Married\nat Cranbrook City\nCRANBROOK, B.C., June 20. \u2014 A\nwedding of Interest to Yahk residents\ntook place in this ctty on Monday\nafternoon   nt   the   Methodist   parsonage,\nPINEAPPLES ADVANCE IN PRICE\nHONOLULU, June 20.\u2014Increases In\nthe Jirlces which the large pineapple\n'canners In Hawaii will ask for their\npack this year are expected to rais-e\nthe territory's gross revenue from this\ncommodity from $19,000,000, tbe am-\nmount In 1922, to approximately $24,-\n'255,000. it has been estimated-\nThe Increases, announced alrady by\n'the Hawaiian Pineaepple Company,\n*he largest packers of the commodity\n'ind the Pearl City Fruit Company,\n'one of the smaller concerns, averagn\n\/\"about 25 percent. They are mad'\"\nVnecessnry, according to the firms' an-\nnoucements, because of the Increaso\nof the prices of sugar, cans, boxes,\nand the raw pineapples. The price-\nadvances approximate 60 cents a case*\nof one dozen cans.\nDempsey-Gibbons Fight\nSHELBY, JULY 4\nAll tickets not sold must be returned by June 25.\nSemaphore Cigar Store\nNELSON, B. C.\n f    'Page\" EigHfl\nTHE NELSON DAILY* NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1923\nMARK\nLadles' Lisle Hose, all colors, <W)t*\npair; Fancy Lisle Hose. pair. Q54;\nSilk Hose, SO* and $1,00 l\">lr:\n40-inch Unbleached Factory Cotton,\n35\u00ab*   yard;   Dress   Ginghams,   JJOt*\n25*. 30-#. 35****. 40<* \"nd 4.^*1*\nper yard. Wilton, Axminster and\nBr-ussels Hugs, Linoleum, Furniture\nand Ranees.    Campers'  Supplies.\nPhene W4\nJ. W. HOLMES\n6M   Vernon   St\nHAVE US FILL YOUR\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nOur Dispensing Department\nIs \u00ab, special source of pride.\nWe une Prescription products\nrecognized by the Medical Profession as a standard for quality.\nPrompt delivery without charge.\nCanada Drag &\nJ.  H.  ROBBINSON,   Mgr.\nWedding\nGifts\nWe have Just received a large\nshipment of Cut Glass and Silverware at prices ranging from\n|2 50 10 $20.00. Any piece would\nmake an Ideal Gift for the Juno\nBride.\nSee thin large assortment of\ndainty and useful articles before  buying  elsewhere.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nJeweler and  Optician\nNovelty Skirts\nand SWEATERS\nDRY   CLEANED\nH. K. FOOT\nHioh   Claia   Dyar   and   Cleaner\nFairview,   Nelaon,   B.   C,\nCLASSIFIED  ADVTS.  BRING   RE\nSULTS  EVERY TIME.\nWE    RECOMMEND\nJELL-0 FOR DESSERT\nPure Food, 10c.   Honeit Weight.\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW.\nSUGAR PRICES\nDROPALimE\nFlour Rises; Strawberries\nand Bins Cherries Find\nSale      \t\nDuring the past week local whole-\nsalers report that flour has again\nadvanced and is back at Its original\nprice. A decline of 20c per hundred\nIs recorded in sugar. It is however\nexpected that sugar will advance\nshortly owing to the demand for Jam\nmaking.\nThere will be no cheaper teas than\nat the present prices. It was for a\ntlma the general opinion that tea\nwould drop, but on the contrary haa\nslowly dvanced- Wholesalers re~\nport a demnnd for Jam with a probable rise In price. Date are on an\neasier market. On account of the\nbackward season honey prieeH are\nfirm and may have a tendency to\nrise. Klce is showing a slight advance. There is also a reported riB*e\nIn the price of currants. Coffee,\nspices and dried fruits are unchanged.\nCantaloups Arrive\nProduce wholesalers report the\narrival of a shipment of cantaloupes.\nFresh (strawberries from United States are selling ot 20c per basket, and\nlocal at 26c per basket. Bing cherries\nfrom the United States, and Osoyoos\nIn the Okanagan valley are spiling\nwell. Lemons are advancing rapidly\nln price. f\nLocal gardeners are now handling\nbuoh beets and carrots and fresh\nlocal green peas are also on the marked Watermelons and peaches are\nprocurable but at present there Is no\ndemand for them, reports are that\nthe prices of these at present would\nbe cheaper than in August.\nTonight\nKSJU\nrC*p\u00bbtoi\nti\\lertaii\\iiie(\\l\nz^m^m^\nTHEODORE ROBERTS\n\"\\7 OU'LL see a brand new\n1 Agnes Ayres \u2014 bobbed\nhair, sparkling eyes\u2014full o'\npep. In a rollicking, racing\nromance. By the author of\nWally Reid's auto successes.\nShe'll whizz right into your\nheart.\n\u2014\n\"The Spice of the Program\"\nLloyd Hamaton's Comedy, \"POOR BOY\"\nFelix the Cat, in \"ALL AT SEA\"\nINTERNATIONAL NEWS\nCRESTON JOINS\nON BASIS OF\nPROVINCE POOL\nDirector Campbell Receives\nWire Announcing Negotiations Successful\nCrenton Valley, which has about\nhalf lhe tonnage output of apples and\nfruit in the Kootenay district, will\nl.ne up with the Associated Growers\nof British Columbia. This was announced yesterday by a wire received\nby J. J, Campbell of Willow Point,\nthe association representative for the\nKootenays south of the Arrow lakes,\nfrom Archie M. Pratt, the general\nmanager of the ssaor.ation  at Vernon.\nR. B. .Staples, manager of the Creston Frutt union, has been named as\nmanager of the subeentral office,\nwhich will be established at Creston.\nThis means that practically all of the\nKootenays comes under the one organization.\nCreston will come in on the basis\nof the provincial pool.\t\nWater Drops\nAnother Half an\nInch in a Day\nA drop of another .08 of an inch\nwas recorded by the gauge at the\nboat housea for the 24 hours ending at 5 o'clock yesterday. The\nwater la now 16 feet 10 Inches\nabove the low-water mark. On the\nsame date 20 years ago the water\nrose  3   Inches. .\nThe weather yesterday old not\nvary as much aa lt has In the past\nfew days, the temperatures being:\nMinimum,   50;   maximum.   65.\nItnlnfnll recorded in the 24 hours\npreceding 6 o'clock yesterday was\n.07  nf an Inch.      .\t\nRecord Crowd\nAttends Second\nSchool Producton\nAnother crowded house greeted the\nperformers In the annual entertainment of the students of St. Josephs\nacademy, which was repeated last\n' night   in   the   Catholic   parish   hall.\nAs on the flrBt night the entire\nprogram was of a high order,\nand the audience went. home well\npleaaed with th\u00ab. operetta, \"A Rose\nDream,\" and the drama, \"In the\nValley of the Mohawk.\" The musical\nnumbers were also heartily applauded.\nMILITARY WHIST\nDRAWS A CROWD\nSouth Africa, represented by Mrs.\nA D. Oliver. Miss Ida Ounn, A. D.\nOliver and J. Elliott, carried off\nthe prize in the'well-attended dance\nand whist drive given by the Great\nWar Veterans' association in the\nArmory   last   night-\t\nHAMILTON SHINES\nAS DRIEST CITY\nINDIAN FACES\nCHARGE\nHeld Over for Trial on the\nCharge of Stealing at\nProcter Residence   ,\nAlvln White, an Indian from Creston was brought up before\nMagistrate John Cartmei yesterday, charged with stealing from\nthe Evans household at I'rocter, some\ntime during August of last year.\nThe provincial police have been\nconducting investigations and on\nMonday last Constable Mclaren of\nCreston, arrested White and he was\ncharged with the crime. He will be\nsent up for trial.\nFA1RVIEWITE\nPASSES AWAY\nMagnus Sutherland Dies Suddenly at Home of His Sister on Silica Street\nMagnus Sutherland, for the past\nfive years a resident of Nelson,\ndied at the home of his sister nnd\nbrother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, C.\nH. Stark of 804 Silica street on\nTuesday nlRht at 0 o'clock. He\nhad been ailing for some time, and\nwas recovering from a recent spell\nof pneumonia, when he passed away\nSuddenly   on   Tuesday   night.\nMr. Sutherland is survived by\nhis wife and two sons aged 10 and\n12 years; his mother and father,\nMr. and Mrs. Benjamin Sutherland\nof Wttck, Scotland; twoi sisters,\nMrs. J. Black of Edinburgh, Scotland, and Mrs. C. Stark of Nelson;\na brother, Benjamin, in Blythe, England, and a brother, William of\nthis city vfho Is a member of the\nNelson    fire    department.\nMr. Sntheland was 43 years of\nage, and came to this city with\nhis family ffom Winnipeg, settling\nIn Fairview five years ago. He\nwas for three years an employee of\n('ampbell & Ritchie, the local stone-\ncutters, and was for a time on the\nstaff of the Canadian Pacific railway shipyards in Fairview. For the\npast two yenrs he had been employed in the government liquor\nstore  a,s  shipper.\nFuneral arrangements are ln charge\nof Clan iMoL-ea.'y, and will be\nheld from the residence of Mr. and\n'Mrs.  C.  H.   Stark  on  Friday.\nBRIGHTER BRITAIN\nMOVEMENT GROWING\nHAMILTON\". Ont., June 20.\u2014\"Hamilton Is the driest city in Ontario,\"\nsaid Li-dense Inspeior James B.\nLeakey, when questioned today regarding present Ontario temperance\nconditions  here.\nFURS\nSummer discount has commenced on all goods and work,\nexcepting dressing and mounting of skins.\nLarge selection of CHOKER3\n%t  all  prices.\nG. GLASER\nManf'j. Furrier\nP. O. 767 Phona IM\nNELSON,  B.  C.\nButter Is Down\n?urlew Creamery, per lb 45<d\nClendale  Creamery,  lb 45<^\n8T.   CHARLES   MILK\nBaby   size,   3. cans   for 25$\nFamily size, 8 cans for..$1.00\nTails,   7   cans   for --$1.00\nLOCAL STRAWBERRIES\nDue    to   arrive   this    morning.\nPer   cup    \u2014 25\u00a3\nWashington Berries, cup...-20-^\nSpinach, Green Onions, Rad-\nithes, Rhubarb, Leaf Lettuce,\nHead Lettuce, Cucumbers, Hothouse Tomatoes and California\nField  Tomatoes.\nJ. A. IRVING & CO,\nThe Great Supply Home\n613 Baker 8trtet.        Phona 161\nNo  Titled Patronesses In This  Campaign, Bnt Duchess Doubles\nXtr OUt.\nLONDON, June 20.\u2014The Brighter\nBritain movempnt, which aims \u25a0 to\npopularize rural life, Is attracting\nInterested attention here, and one\nreason is that it has turned away\nfrom the time-honored Rnglish prne-\ntice of having women of title on its\nlist   of   patronesses.\nA certain duchess was asked for a\nsubscription. Languidly she answered\n\"You may put me down for 100\nguineas, and you may add my name\nto your list of patronesses.\" The efficient young woman solicitor replied\nthat they would gladly take her\nguineas, but that there were no patronesses, so that aspect of her contribution  must be Ignored.\nThe duchess, at first amHted by\nthis unexpected frankness, was not\nslow to see the possibility presented\nto become, for a moment, her own\npress agent. So she doubled her contribution and said Rhe was glad to\nbelong without being listed as a\npatroness. *\nWomen run thlB movement, peeresses and working women taking part,\nand lt is affiliated with the National\nFederation of Women's Institutes. Cooperation Is the keynote. Everybody\nis supposed to help somebody. Snobbishness, the bane of rural life In this\n\u2022old land, is the one falling for which\nthere is no forgiveness.\nThe members meet regularly at their\nInstitutes on terms of absolute equality and good fellowship. They teach\none another useful handicrafts, especially In the domestic arts, discuss the\nproblems of the day, and brighten\nnnd stimulate the communal life with\nfolk songs and dances and dramatic\nperformances. They are out to banish\nfrom the villages the deadly dullness\nwhich most people who have lived in\nthem   say   makes   existence   intolerable.\nThe movement really started In\nCanada, which perhaps accounts for\nthe spirit of Independence and self-\nhelp which  has always animated  it.\nSN.\\KES ANlV MONKEYS\nSTILL CHEAP IN LONDON\nr\nBrushes and Brooms\nPaint Brushes\nVarnish Brushes\nKalsomine Brushes\nShoe Brushes\nSink Brushes\nScrub Brushes\nHouse Brooms Stable Brooms\nAll kinds of Brushes and Bri,ums\nLet us supply your wants\nWeod-Yallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B. 0.\nRETAIL\nLightning   Fire\nLast night's storm demonstrates that lightning must\nbe reckoned as a FIRE HAZARD in Nelson. Policies\ncover the loss from lightning whether a fire ensues or\nnot\u2014Protect yourself against loss.\nOur rates are very low.   Call or phone, us for rates.\nREAL ESTATE\nINSURANCE\u2014Fir*,    Accident,    Life.\nCHAS. F, McHARDY\nAuthorized Tr uetee  In  Bankruptcy\nBONDS\nPHONE 139\nA SANT AD, IS m\\i CHEAP. AW) EFFICIENT, TRY IT.\nLONDON. June 20\u2014 One of the\noddest institutions in London Is an\nauction mart where wild beasts, monkeys, reptiles and other animals and\nbirds are sold for absurdly low prices.\nFull grown Rocky Mountain or\nHimalayan eagles can be bought for\n$3 each. There are many bargains in\nmonkeys too, lively young mandrills\n(iringing only $10. and little sooty\nMangebipi $7. Pure white Rhesus\ninonkeys are in favor among society\nwomen and sell for $30. The animals\nare taken from their cages and held\nup on the auctioneer's rostrum where\nPhona      The Old Keliable  Phona\n9    KERR'S JITNEY  i\nPhona      At Your Service   Phone\nGet   Our   Quotations   On\nFIRE ALARM SYSTEMS\nIt Will Pay You\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\nPhone  530.      Ward   and   Victoria   8ta.\nA. HIGGINBOTHAM\nEyaaijht\nSpaciallat\nNELSON,   B.   C\nBeat    In    Optloal\nWork\nA. S. Horswill & Co.\nPhon.  121\u2014P.O.   Box  IM\nFancy   Fresh   Dates,   lb 154\nCurlew   Creamery   Butter\"\npound   .-.. -   40\u00a3\nOranges, 3 dozen for  91.00\nCooked   Ham,   Premium,   .\nelloed,  lb.  .. _.._ :.eOt*\nCorned Beef, No. 1, tin. _>_\u00a3\nGenuine   Sockeye   Salmon,\n18   500\nPink Salmon, 1-lb. tin   15^\nCrab Meat, large tin, each 50\u00a3\nVan Camp's Pork and Reads,\nsmall, 4 for ..\u201e .^_ 35^\nLarge  Florida Orfrpe  Fruit,\nLunch Baskets, from, each *f_^\nClark's Potted Meats, tin....!().\u00a3\nMonserrat  Lime  Juice,\n\u25a0  P'nts     ,_ 50^\nFresh Vegetables, Hot House\nTo ma toes at 10 west market\nprices.\nPROMPT DELIVERY\nthey timidly survey the Tiolsy Throngs\nbidding for their possession, '\nAt a recent sale of animals which\nbelonged to a disbanded American circus, a six-foot Florida alligator\nbrought only $12. Two reticulated\npythons, measuring 16 feet each, sold\nfor $40 and $75 respectively, *nd a\n15-foot Indian python realized $35,\nAn 8-foot anaconda was bought for\n$26.\nBand to Give a\nConcert Tonight\nTonight at 8 o'clock the Nelson\ncity band will give' a concert at\nthe band stand on the corner of\nStanley and Baker streets, weather\npermitting.\nThe concerts which the band are\ngiving each week are attracting\nmore people than ever before, and\ntonight's concert promises to be\n'a   good  one.       \u00bb\nNelson News of the Day\nTickets are on sale for the garden\nfete and SUPPER at the home of\nMrs. Ledlngham. .Silica street, Thursday, June 28.    TICKETS 50 centp.\n(S747)\nReserve Friday afternoon and even*,\nIng, July 8, for lawn fete at Mrs. J.\nP, Morgan's, proceeds Fairview Mission\nchurch. (8746*\nA whist drive will be held tomorrow afternoon in the Armory from 3\ntill fi.    Admission 25 cents. (8746)\nWeather -permitting there will'be w\nhand concert tonight at the Baker\nstreet   stand. (8743)\nKelson's Hay Bay\u2014Jtfy a. The\ncrowning feature of a crowded day\nwill be tht Big- Dunce at the Armory,\n9  till 8. U744)\nThe funeral of the late Magnus\nSutherland will 1 take place nt 5 o'clock\nFriday afternoon from the residence of\nC.  H. Stark, 804  Silica street.      (8748)\nr-iE favorite fkirt for\ntennis, golf and other\noutdoor sports is calUd\nFORSYTH\nPOLO SHIRT\nmade of fabrics specially\nselected to meet die requirements of outdoor\nWear. Tltere is a ne?)\nstyle cuff on (his shirt\n(hat eliminates cuff links\nand a dresrj collar (hat\nis comfortable.\nWe carrjl a complete assortment.\nA Ncv> Shirt for\nOne.   that  Fails\nCourt Star, A..O.T., m..ts tonight at\n7; Court Royal at S o'olook, la Odd\nr.Uowa' HaU.    Election of offle.rn.\n(8739)\nCarpenter\nJ. BURGESS\nLata   of   Liverpool,   England\nEstimates given for House Repairs, Office and Store Fitments,\nFurniture   Repairs.\nAny piece made to your own\nrequirements.\nPHONE   621R\n*-\nCommencement   and   Graduating   Exercises   of  St.   Joseph's   Academy  will i\ntnlte place  In  the Catholic   Parish  Hull\nthis evening nt 8  o'clock.    AH parents, j\npatrons  and   friends  are   cordially   in-'\nvltert. (8741) l\nraESBYTERIAH   CHOI*,\nATTENTION I\nImportant   pracetce,   7  o'clock sharp,\nFriday   night. (8740)\nHousewives\u2014McDonald's\nstrawberry jam Is ready,\nyour grocer's.\nnew     pack\nOet   It  at\n(8737)\nThe McDonald Jam Co. will handle\nall your Strawberries, Raspberries,\nGooseberries, Black Currants, Black\nCherries, Red Currants, etc. The\nprices to be the same as paid by all\nCoast Jam Manufacturers for the 1923\ncrop. (84\u20acQ)\nNOTICE   TO   CONTKA.CTOM.\nSealed separate or whole tenders will\nbe received by th* undersigned until\n12 o'clock noon. Thursday, the 6th\nday of July, 1923, for the different\ntrades Jn connection with the completion of the Hume School Rulldlng.\nContractors who submit whole tenders\nare to separate the trades in detail,\nln their tender. The School Board\nreserves the right to reject any or all\ntenders.\nMans and specifications may be seen\nat my office in the Griffin Block. \u2014\u25a0\nAlex.   Carrie.   Architect. (8727)\nSTOP AND SHOP \u25a0\nOR TELEPHONE\n235\nPEANUT BUTTER\u2014\nSquirrel   Brand,    18,   P\"\nUn ,    ~-25*#\nMOLASSES  SNAPS\u2014\nPer  pound  ..,..-\t\n204\nSOAP   CHIP8\u2014\nMake washday  eaiy.\n3   pounds    - \u2014\u00bb50<\u00a3\ntil i;\nGR0CERIER1A i\n\u2022 Economy Grocirt\nWhatYouWant\n\u00abAt Starland Tonight*-\nA FAST PICTURE\nstarring\nDUST1N FARNUM\nentitled\n'OATHBOUND'\nSpeedy Motor Boats, Autos and Hydroplane\nAll contribute,  together with  the popular  star  and\nstrong cast, to make this production ONE OF THb\nBEST PRODUCED.\n EXTRAS\t\n\"Fox News\" \"Mutt and Jeff\"\n\"Fun From the Press\"\n\"The Wise Cracker,\" 2-Reel Comedy\nDON'T MISS THIS UNUSUAL OFFERING\nREMEMBER\u2014If you see it at Starland\u2014It's food.\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_1923_06_21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0401067","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"}]}}