{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0401068":{"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":"1923-06-25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401068\/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":" Leader Bowser\nSPEAKS AT TRAIL\nSee Page 5\nW\ncr-.\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 25, 1923\nNo.   56\nStates Takes Liquors\nFROM BRITISH LINERS\nSee Page 5\nFLUSH OF PINKBR1TISHPAPERS\nWAX SARCASTIC\nTHROUGH GOWNS\nPLEAS1NGEFFECT\nFifth of Million Paris Race-\nGoers Admire Dainty Poke-\nBonnets at Grand Prix\nHOOP SKIRTS SEEN\nBUT NOT DOMINANT\nToilettes So Decollete Would\nBe Barred on Bathing\nBeaches on This Side\nPARIS, June 24.\u2014Summer styles\ni were easily the feature of the day at J\nthe Long Champs course, during the\n! running of the  Grand  Prix de Paris\ntoday. It was really the first day of\n' brilliant sunshine of the season to\nI grace a feature event at a French\ni race course.     Summer furs of  silver\nand blue foxes and white monkey\n1 adorned the necks of the dainty Paris-\nI lennes, who,  with cobwebbed    stock-\n\u25a0 ings, showed just a suspicion.of the\n[ color of the skin beneath gowns    of\ntaffeta,   with   ruohlnge,   and   wearing,\npoke \"coal scuttle bonnets,\" attracted !\n[ more of the attention of the 200,000;\ni persons than  did  the quadrupeds nn\nthe race track.\nCrinolines and Tom Thnmb Shades\nA    reversion    to    the    1830    Louis\nPhilippe    styles\u2014what   Anglo-Saxons |\nhave been pleased to regard as early]\nVictorian\u2014cam out second best     in\nthe d'lplay.    In this    category    they\nwore hoop  skirts of  flimsy material,\ntopped  with  Immense  waists of    the\nsame design, and miniature umbrellas\ncalled *'tom thumb shades.\" j\nDuck green,  which had been    the\ni reigning color at the track during the\n\u25a0 entire spring season, today had to\n\\ give way hefore an avalanche of\ni white and mauve.\nMost conspicuous among the. sum-\nner styles was the difference in the1\n\"decolette\". Last year 90 per cent\nof the Parlsen women who watched\nthe running of the Grand Prix de\nParis displayed bare arms up to the\nshoulders. This year arms were covered, but shoulders were exposed to\nsuch an extent that it caused one\nclerical-looking United States tourist\nto mutter:\n\"Some of these dresses would never\n1 pass the muster of the beach censor\nat Atlantic City, or many of the Long\ni Island resorts.\"\nFlappers aro Bobbed\nAt the track, the \"flappers\" were\n[ in   pink,   paisley   or   flimsy   dresses,\nJ bare  heads and  with    bobbed    hair.\nr Short eklrts wore few.\nPresident and Mme. Millerand were\ninterested spectators of the fashions,\nand the race.\nCATERPILLARS\nHOLD UP THE\nNATIONAL TRAEN\n! In New Brunswick Ocean\nLimited Loses Four Hours\non the Up Grades\nMONCTON, N. B., June 24.\u2014Satur-\n1 day's Canadian National Ocean Lim-\n', ited, from Montreal, was delayed\nfour hours between Bathurst and\nNewcastle by tho swarming caterpillars, which have been giving a\nlot of trouble on certain sections of\nNew Brunswick's  railways of  late.\nNear Bartlbog river, sectionmen,\ntrain hands, and soldiers on the\nOcean Limited, were used in sweep-\ni ing the insects from the rails, before the engine could pull the rain\n'up the grade. At some points the\nrails were completely covered with\ncaterpillars, the pests being the worst\nexperienced in recent years.\nsteamer\"arrivals\nI Cedric, at New York, from Ltver-\nI pool.\nCaronla, at Now York, from Liverpool.\nProvidence, at New York, from\nMarseilles.\nDeltlc, at Queenstown, from New\nYork.\nCarmania, at t Queenstown, from\nNew York.\nFlemish or French?\nM.  THEUNIS\nPremier of Belgium, who resigned\nduring the parliamentary crisis over\nwhether Flemish or French should be\nthe language of Ghent university, the\ncabinet being as badly split as the\nchamber. Asked by King Albert to\nresume the helm, he reserved his\nanswer till the policy on the Ian\niVgnage question should have further\n\u00bbtudj>        _\/     ,.\n'Mil\nSee British Rights Trampled\nUpon in Volstead Act\nRegulation\nDEMAND GOVERNMENT\nTAKE ACTIVE STEPS\nShipping    Circles    Increase\nPressure; Foreign Office\nWill Probably Act\nLONDON, June 26.\u2014No subject in\nrecent days had occupied more of\nthe attention of the British newspapers or offered a better topic for\nanimated discussion than the liquor\nseizures in New York.\nThe London newspapers seldom before have printed so many dispatches\nunder United States date lines, and\nthe greater majority of these relate\nto the liquor confiscation. The items\nare   variously   captioned.\nDtvote  Pag*  to   It\n\"Dry comedy In the United Staes,\"\n\"Meddling with our ships,\" \"The\nProhibition farce,\" The wet liner absurdity,\" \"Making the Atlantic Dry,\"\nand   \"America's  dilemma.\"\nThe week-end editorials are couched in sarcastic vein. Some of them\nmanifest resentment, and others are\nseverely critical. All of them are\neager to know what will be gained\nby a \"test\" case, and whether the\nseizures will continue. Some of the\nwriters take the British government\nsharply to task for what is char-\nasterized as Its passive attitude, and\nits apparent intention to make the\nsteamship companies fight out the\nissue with the United States government.\nSome of the newspapers take a\nstronger view of the situation, -and\nsay the is.sue may lead to grave international complications unless the\nUnited States relaxes its ridiculous\nlaw.\nInternational  Discord\"\nThe Sunday Times declares:\n\"If the British government does\nnothing, then we practically invite\nWashington to trample upon British\nrights and the amenities of civilized\nexistence. In a few years the Americans may ban tobacco, or diaphanous\nblouses, or some other target of the\nreformers' wrath, but if the Ameri\ncans try to force prohibitions that\nhappen to appeal to their taste or\nmorals upon foreigners wh0\"e habits\nand predelietlons run in the opposite\ndirection, then they deliberately are\nsowing the seeds of international\ndiscord.\"\nThe Sunday Pictorial champions\nthe cause of the \"many Britons who\npride themselves in living in the\nfreest state and most democratic\ncountry in the world, and who resent\nAmerica's action as an invasion of\ntheir liberty. We don't think prohibition should be forced upon u?,\neither in our ships or in our homes.\"\nLiner*  Sail   Full   Stocked\nThe Homeric, Belgenland, Laonla,\nand several other transatlantic liners\nare to sail this week, and their captains are evidently to run the risk\nof having their wet stores confiscated.\nShipping corporations are, bringing\nrenewed pressure to bear on the\nBritish government, and lt is considered likely the foreign office will\nmake further representations to\nWashington  on  the  liquor  situation.\nLLOYD GEORGE FRIEND\nTO THE VOLSTEAD ACT\nFormer Premier Says Britons Should\nView Sympathetically Effort to\nDeal With Great Curse\nLONDON, June 24.\u2014Addressing a\nlarge congregation In the Welsh\nBaptist church here today, former\nPremier David Lloyd George made\nsome interesting observations* regard\nIng the prohibition situation ln the\nUnited States. During his discourse\nhe made It apparent that he did not\nshare the views of certain of the\nBritish newspapers concerning the\nlack of right of the United States\nauthorities to seize British, liquor\nstores aboard  ships.\n\"I hope we won't get excited over\nthe seizure of liquor in New York\nharbor,\" said Mr. Lloyd George. \"It\nis not merely that America seems to\nbe well within her rights, but I think\nwe ought to extend a certain meas\nure of sympathy to her in her diffi\nculties.\n\"America is making a very bold\nexperiment to deal with probably the\ngreatest curse of modern civillza-\ntion.\n\"It is all very well for us to say\nthat alt this liquor is merely for our\nown salors aboard ships. I do not\nsay this with regard to any particular ship\u2014it may not b-3 po. But,\nspeaking generally, there Is no doubt\nfortunes have been made by smug\ngllng liquor into the Unite! States in\ndefiance of a law which was passed\nby a greater majority than almost\n'any other great law in any other\n\u25a0country,\n\"Give lt a fair trial. I do not\nsay the experiment will succeed. It\nis just possible that America may\nhave to modify It. It Is In the interest of civilization that they be allowed full time to test this effort\nto solve a problem which is just as\nmuch ours as theirs.\"\nSeveral Houses in\nToronto Are Struck;\nNobody Is Injured\nTORONTO, June 24.\u2014Half a dozen\nhouses were struck by lightning and\nset afire during the storm which visited the city Saturday night. In\neach case the flames were extinguished before making much headway. All the occupants of the\ndamage houses  escaped injury.\nThe downfall of rain was the\nheaviest of the year in Toronto\ndistrict,\nBRITISH PREMIER AT HOME\nALL RUHR COAL\nHELD AT ORDER\nOF DEGOUTTE\nNew Decree Says Commission\nMay Requisition It for\nReparations\nIF REQUISTI0NED\nMUST BE UNTOUCHED\nRT.   HON.  STANLEY   BALDWIN\nWith his wife, and their son, Oliver, in the garden at the premier's summer  home.\nSHJTH AFRICA   \t\nREOPENSTOPIC THE NEXT STEP\nOF PREFERENCE SAYS MR. WOOD\nSmuts Says Present Policy\nWorks   for   British   Producer Against Dominions\nDOMINIONS WILL\nDEMAND REVISION\nUnion Will Appoint Trade\nCommissioner for Canada\nand the States\nCAPETOWN, South Africa, June 23.\n\u2014In the Union house of assembly\nSaturday, Premier Smuts Initiated e.\ndiscussion regarding the agenda of thi*;\nImperial economic conference to be\nheld In October. He declared thai:\nimperial preference, up to tbe pres-\nenti has been largely to the advantage!\nof the British rather than thu\ndominions' producers, and he felt sure\nthe question of the Imperial preference  would  be  raised.\nWill Welcome Tariff Assistance.\nThe position which South Africa\nwould adopt, he said, would be to\nwelcome any assistance which Iba\nBritish people could give ln the way\nof preference to South Africa's products, and also any widening of tlie\nfield of tariff preference which could\nbe  given  to  her  producers.\nPremier Smuts pointed out that, owing to the British fiscal policy, thu\nfield of preference was limited and\nthat was where the Issue would aris*.\nAustralia and New Zealand were going to press very strongly for a very\nmuch stronger measure of preference\nfor their products by Great  Britain.\nThe premier foreshadowed substantial exports of dried fruits from\nSouth Africa, which would have to\nmoet competition from the continent\nIn the British market. South Africa.,\nsaid the premier, was not going to\npress the British government to\nchange its fiscal policy. With reference to the fiscal policy in general,\nSouth Africa would adopt the same\nline as Canada had done.\nWill   Reserve   Trww  Hand   on   Market*.\nHe emphasized tbat the development of South Africa would require\nthe widest expansion of her markets\nall over the world, and whatever arrangements they might make at the\nconference would not be of an exclusive   character.\nDealing with shipping and com*\nmunlcatlons, Mr. Smuts pointed out\nthat faster communications were\nneeded within the Empire, but, owing\nto the difficulty of dealing with the\nquestion of shipping, they must await\nproposals the' British government\nwould   make   at   the   conference.\nThe premier paid tribute to the\nwork of the trade commission and\nthe commissioner for commerce. He\nforeshadowed tlie appointment of a\ncommissioner for Canada and the\nUnited States.\nAetna Refugees\nStart Refitting\nDismantled Homes\nCATANIA, June 24. \u2014 The crater\nof Mount Aetna is still rumbling\nhut the streams of lava are rapidly decreasing in volume and  speed.\nThe situation in the afflicted district Is gradually becoming normal,\nthe people have resumed their work\nand many are engaged in refitting\ntheir dismantled houses.\nMan Drowns While\nSwimming a Horse\nGRAVELBOURG, Sask., June 2f,.\n\u2014Late tonight, search parties had\nfailed to find the body of Reno\nCareau, who drowned in the Wood\nriver Saturday afternoon. He is believed to have fallen into the river\nwhile endeavoring to swim a horse\nacroaa  lt. r-.... __,\t\nMarketing Organization With\nLong Term Contracts Will\nTake Long to Form\nCALGARY, June 24.\u2014Plans for\nplacing in operation a voluntary pool\nfor the centralized marketing of\nwheat in Alberta and Saskatchewan,\nwill be the next step in the prolonged wheat bmlrd negotiations, which\nhave now extended over a period of\nmore than two years. This was the\nopinion expressed Inst night by H.W,\nWood, president of the United Farmers of Alberta, who returned to Calgary Saturday after attending conferences on the wheat board in Winnipeg,, which ended in failure to or-\nganize, Formation of the voluntary\npool will not take place this year,\nhowever, Mr. Wood wild.\nMr. Wood did not say whether this\nmeant that the scheme of forming n\ncompulsory wheat hoard would forever be abandoned. He merely said\nthat in his opinion a voluntary pool\nplan would be the next topical step\nin the process of ultimately attaining\ncentralized marketing of primary\nproducts.\n\"Contracts with  farmers would   be\nnecessary to ensure success    of    the\nplan, would they not?\" he was asked.\nSouthern Pools Rigid.\n\"Yes.\" replied Mr. Wood, \"I l\nderstand that in the Texas and Oklahoma pools, contracts were obtained\nwith farmers to market their product under the voluntary pool plan for\na numher of years. I believe the same\nsystem is utilized in the tobacco pool.\nThus, the formation and organisation\nof a voluntary pool would be much\nmore different than a compulsory\nboard, and would take more time.'\nMr. Wood however, was confident\nthat ultlmateley a plan would be devised nnd placed in operation for the\ncentralization of wheat selling. While\nthere is life there is hope, and while\nthere is life, there \\s necessity, Mr.\nWood said, and efforts would continue unabated.\n(Mr. Wood wild naturally he wa?\ndisappointed at the defeat of the\nwheat hoard plan, saying that the\nfact that suitable men could not he\nobtained, was responsible for thc\nfailure, It waa suggested that a?\nManitoba was not In the scheme,\nand that trading in futures would\ncontinue on the floor of the Winnipeg\nGrain exchange irregardtess of what\naction Alberta nnd Saskatchewan\ntook this might have Influenced grain\nmen approached on the wheat board\nproposition,  and  Mr. Wood agreed\nWheat will probably be lower In\nprice this year than last, Mr. Wood\nsaid, when asked regarding what the\npossible effect the collapse of the\nboard plans would have on prices.\nGrain men with whom Mr. Wood had\ntalked were also of this opinion. The\nfact that the crop in Alberta probably\nwould he greater this year than for\nmany years in the past, would exert\na bearish influence on the market also, he said.\nMcDougall &McCharles\nReceive Two Contracts\nFrom the Government\n' VICTORIA, June 24. \u2014 Contract\nfor a new school at Balfour has\nI?been let to Mi-Charles & McDougall\nfor $3000, and a bridge on the Nelson-\nYmir road to the same firm for\n$4000,  it \"was announced   Saturday\nFrench Liner Will\nTest Volstead Act\nPLYMOUTH, England, June 24.\u2014\nLike her sister ships and the Gditish\nliners the French steamer La France\nleft today for New York with reduced liquor supplies. Her cap-\ntian Intends to test tho new American la w. His ship carries a considerable quantity of liquor under\nseal, intended for the eastbound\nvoyage,    _ _.\u201e\t\nAwesome Penalties Are Provided (or Infractions of\nthe Regulations\nDUSSELDORF, June 24.\u2014General,\nDe Goutte today Issued an ord^r of\nthp day declaring that the Interallied\ncommission of control in the Ruhr\nhas   the   power   to   requisition   for   ac-\nount    of    the    occupying    powers    all\ntook* of coal in mines, factories and\nother industries in the Ruhr, tn order to insure deliveries for the\nreparation account due the allies, as\nwfill as  to  Insure  the payment of coal\naxes due from the exploitation of the\nmines.\nOrder Baaed on Treaty.\nThe order was based on part VII.\nof the Versailles trpaty. It declares\nGermany violated this provision of the\ntreaty by voluntarily reducing the\nproducing   of   coal   for   the   reparations\nccount. Tha order says that from\nthe date of a decision by the president of the interallied control commission to requisition any given\nstocks of coal, the coal may not be\ntouched    by    anyone    except    through\nFecial authorization of the control\ncommission.\nThis authorization can be given by\n:tie president of the control com mis-\ndan to factories and mines. The re-\nllfiMtl for authorization must be addressed to the control commission by\na director of the concern seeking it,\nwho must state what use is to be\nmade of the coal it is desired to remove.\nPenalties provide for a fine of\ntwice the value of tbe entire stock\nrequisitioned with a minimum limit\noi' 100,000,000 marks, or imprisonment\nfor five years, or both. The order\nwill   take   effect   immediately. \u25a0\nHe Is the Greek\nArm in Thrace\nGENERAL (=AOALOS\nOommunclor-in-thi'-f   of   the   Greek\narmy  in  the  disputed territory.\nLIQUllf\nIN MANITOBA\nIS\nONTARIO LOOKS\nFOR HUGE VOTE\nTODAH POLL\nLiberals Oppose no Minister\nbut Drury; Conservatives\nLead in Lineup\nTORONTO, June 24. \u2014 The 16th\nlegislature of the province of Ontario\nwill be elected tomorrow, when 2S9\ncandidates seek to enter tht\u00bb assembly\nIn 109 constituencies. Two candidates\u2014W. F. Nickle, K. C, Conservative, Kingston, and Peter Heenan,\nLabor, Ken-Oft\u2014have been elected by\nacclamation. Fine, warm weather\nthroughout the province is forecast\nand, with keen interest being taken\nly the electorate, it is probable\nthat a heavy, if not a record, vote\nwill  be  polled.\nThe interest taken is recorded by\nthe record numher of candidates.\nConservatives number 102; Liberals,\n77; United Farmys, 7f>; Laborites,\n21, and Independents,   14.\nStraight fights are scheduled for\nP0 constituencies, and there will be\nB. similar number of three-cornered\ncontests. In seven ridings, four\ncandidates are in the running, while\nin Port Arthur five are hopeful of\nsuccess. To West Ottawa goes the\nhonor of tbe greatest number, six\npersons seeking election In that\nconstituency.\nExtravagance   Chief   Issue\nWhile there has been no great\nIssue at stake in the long campaign, chief interest has been taken\nin charges of extravagance levelled\nfit the United Farmer-I-abor government, headed by Hon. E. O,\nDrury. by the parties in opposi-\nlion, the Conservatives and Liberals,\nwhile the former have strongly criticized tbe enforcement of the Ontario   Temperance   act.\nVigorously defending the government against the allegation of ex-\ntruv.ignnce, Premier Drury has\nclaimed that the increase in the\npublic debt hM been hrought about\nby nothing but necessary expendi-\n;ures. Denial of charges made in\nconnection with the enforcement of\n:he Ontario Temperance act has been\nmade principally by Hon. W\nftaney, attorney-general.\nHours of voting are 8 a. m.\n*.o 6 p.' m., standard time. All the\nmember* of Premier Drury'\u00ab3 cabinet\nnave opposition, but the premier him-\nml Is the only one with a Liberal\nn    the    field    against    him The\nUnited Farmers are not opposing\nWellington Hay. leader of the Liberal party, or Nelson Parll.iment,\nspeaker   of  the  house.      '\nNintey-five membera cf tbe Inst\negislature are offerinc; themse'ves\nFor  election.\nIn the event of no group having\ni clear minority In the next legislature, .1. J. Morrison, secretary\nof the United Farmers of Ontario,\n.believes the largest group will be\ngalled upon to form the next government.\nIn an interview tonight he stated\nthat the precedent of 1919 should\nbe followed, nnd the leader with\nthe most followers behind him should\nbe  the next  premier.\nFarm Technicians\nReelect Secretary\nSASKATOON, June 24. \u2014 Fred\nIf. Grindley was reelected as secretary of the Canadian Society of Technical agriculturists, at the meeting\nof the new executive at the close\nof the convention here Saturday. A\nscholarship of $-000 for post-graduate\nwork in agriculture was awarded to\nw. F. Hanna of the University ol!\nAlberta,\nBRITISHJURKS\nWILL SETTLE\nMOSUL ASIDE\nIf Nine Months Pass Without\nSettlement League Will\nArbitrate It\nON OTHER QUESTIONS\nCONFERENCE NO BETTER\nCompanies Fad to Get Satisfaction on Their Pre-\nWar Concessions\nReturns Since Friday Night\nHave Made No Material\nDifference in Majority\nWINNirF.Cr, June It \u2014 Very,little\nchange in the large majority obtained in Friday's referendum in\nfavor of the Moderation league's\nbill for the government control of\nlio,uor occurred over the week-end,\naccording to the returns tabulated\nup till a late h'our tonight, the\nmajority resting nt Sl!,714. This\nrepresents an increase of about 200\nsince Saturday afternoon, rural polls\nbeing   responsible   for   the   Increase.\nThere are still 1CS rural polls to\nreport, it was shown, including one\nwhole constituency, whence no returns   have   yet   been   received.\nSo far, .ir-6,710 ballots have been,\ncounted, of which the Moderation\nleague's hill was indorsed on 94,712.\nland opposed on (J1.99S. Tbe Modera-\ntlonists have obtained a majority\nof 672(1 ln the districts outside of\n! Winnpeg, and \u00a35.988 n the capital.\nThe city polled 4$M9 wet and 20.371\ndry, and tbe outside vote 43,353\nwet   and   4t,#VT   dry.\nDries  and   Wets\nOf the constituencies from which\ncomplete returns have heen received,\nIn the wet column are, definitely:\nAssinibola, Birtle, Brandon, Dauphin,\nIberville, Morden,Rhineland, St. Boniface and Winnipeg while dry was\nvoted by Arthur, Beautiful Plains,\nCypress, DuftViin, Gilbert Plain.**.,\nGleuwood, Humiota, Kiilarney, Mani-\ntou, Minnedosa Portage La Prairie\nand   St.   George.\nAccording to Incomplete returns,\nthe following went wet: Carillon,\nEthelbert, Emereon, Fuirford, Fisher,\nKildonan and St. Andrews, Laver-\nandrye, Norris, Rublin, Rockwood,\nRussell. St.. Clements, .Springfield and\nThe Pas. Also on incomplete returns. 10 are dry; Deloraine, Gimli.\nGdnd.ston\\ Lake-aide* Lnnsdovflmi,\nMountain, Norfolk, Swan River,\nTurtle   Mountain   and   Vinlen.\nDESPERADO MAKES\nSTAND IN SWAMP\nMichigan     Convict,     After     Five-Day\nSiego,    Is    Captured,    Riddled\nWith   Bullets\nMARQUETTF, Midi., .lime 24.\u2014\nGeorgo Natch on*, who escaped a\nweek ago from tbe state penitentiary\nhere, and who has been surrounded\nin a swamp between Maple Ridge and\nKscnnaba since last Wednesday, was\ncaptured today. The man's body\nwas riddled with bullets and doctors\nsaid there was slight chance for his\nrecovery.\nNatchoss bad previously killed a\ndeputy sheriff and wounded an official.\nHe Completes the\nBritish Cabinet\nSIR     LAMING  \u2022 WORTHINGTON-\nEVAN3\nThe    newly    named    British    post\nmaster-general,    is    snapped    at    his\ndusk ou the general post office, London, ..... - - -\nThe Weather w\nVICTORIA,   June   23.\u2014Nglsoa \u00abnd\nvii-inity:     No  forecast.\nMln. Max,\nNELSON    62 87\nVictoria   ._ \u2014   Bl H   '\nKamloops   \u201e . \u2014   K2 72\nPrince  Rupert  .    48 84   *\nCalvary    _.-^.~   44 66\nPortland -    48 68\nSeattle        48 88\nC.r.lml   Porks    _-_....    65 71\nKaslo  -      68. 6J\nKdmonton \u2014  68   '\nPrince Albert      64 68\nVancouver      *    64 88   .\nnarkervills     - ..... 8*   |\nAtlin    48 74   |\nWinnipeg _\u201e  __   _ JJ J\nLAUSANXK, June 24. \u2014 The attempt Saturday by the alllea and\nTurks to clarify tha critical situation which has arisen in the near\neast conference was successful In\none way, disastrous in another.\nTurks Take Stand\nToward the end of the session,\nwhich lasted well In the night, the\nTurks announced that they could\nnot discuss the problem ot concessions at Lausanne until the question of the evacuation of foreljrn\ntroops from Turkey and the Question of the Ottoman debt were satisfactorily disposed  of.\nThe meeting got nowhere In the\nbig unsettled nupistlons. An agreement was reached on one Important\n\u25bapoint, namely that Great Britain and\nTurkey mutually agree to settle the\nMosul controversy between themselves within nine months of the\nsignature of peace, falling which\nGreat Britain will bring the controversy to the League of Nations for\nsettlement   by   arbitration.\nAngora   Parleys   Fail\nFive British companies dolntr mial-\nneps in Turkey, including the Vlckera-\nArmstrong organization, have reported\nto the British delegation that they\nutterlv failed In their Angora negotiations to make satsfactory arrangements with Turkey concerning\nthf future status of their concessions.\nThis means that the British will\nstiffen in their stand at Lausanne\nthat prewnr concessons must b\u00ab\nformally protected by the Lausanne\ntreaty.\nBELlfff\nAH AUTOMATIC\nPriest Liked Weapon Better\nThan His Old One; Sister\nBreaks Down\nMONTREAL, June 24. \u2014 A verdict\nIn the case against Abbe Adelard\nDelorme, charged with the murder of\nhis half .brother Raoul, is expected\nat   the  end   of   this   week.\nChief Justice Sir Francis Le-\nmieux. presiding judge at the trial\nnow in progress here, announced In\ncourt Saturday that there would be\nlong sessions this week, and R. L.\nCalder, K. C, crown prosecutor, also\nstated that the crown hoped to end\nits   case   by   Wednesday.\nThe evidence of Oscar Haynes, the\ngunsmith who sold an automatic\nrevolver to Delorme, brought out the\nfact that the latter had not come\npurposely to buy a new revolver,\nbut to fetch an old type weapon,\nwhich ho had left at the shop to\nbe   repaired.\nHaynes stated that Delorme had\ncome to his shop on December, 29,\n1M1| and had agreed to buy the\nmore modern weapon after he had\nseen it tested, and actually had,\ntested it himself in Haynes' shooting gallery.\nLily   Poor  Witness  on   Time\nIn the evidence of Lily Delorrrte,\nthe accused's sister, stress was laid\nby the prosecution on the question of\ntime, to test the witness' ability.\nMr. Calder unstrapped his own wrist\nwatch and asked her to read th\u00bb\ntime from it. After some hesitation she replied, \"11:15.\" At that\ntime the clerk of tho court Bhowed\nthat it was 10:40. Tho witness was,\nhowever, very nervous, and shortly\nafterward broke down and cried\nbitterly.\nONTARIO REPORTS\nNEW HEAT RECORDS\nLondon    Has    Ninerty-nina    and    Te\u00ab\nronto Ninety-six;   Fair Weather\nfor   Polling   Day\nTORONTO, June 24. \u2014 New heat\nrecords for the year were reported\nfrom various points of Qntario today. The temperature has been\ngetting warmer for several days.\napparently in sympathy with the rise\nof the political excitement, and the\nclimax is promised by the weather\nnan for tomorrow, when Ontario\ngoes   to   the   polls.\n\"Fair and decidedly warm,\" Is the\nmiction day forecast for the whole\nprovince.\nLondon topped the list today,\nwith a mixirnum of 98, Toronto\ncoming   second,   with   96.\ni*\"\\irther east the temperature was\nnot so bud, Ottawa getting off with\na high temperature of &2, and\nKingston with 80.\nThere were electrical Fhowere In\nvarious parts of Ontario Saturday,\nand considerable damage waa done,\nby   lightning.\n Page T^a\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEu'S, MONDAY MOF.NING, JUNE 25, 1923\nLeading Hotels of the West\nAMERICAN   PLAN\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nRATES $3.50 TO $5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER $1.00\nTHE    MOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nHUME. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. J. P.\nO'Connor. Mr. and Mrs. C. C,. Bay-\nwere, Okanagan, U.S.; K. J. Bowser,\nVancouver; J. H. Khalefer. Trail; J.\nW. Jones, H. Morrison, Kelowna; Mr.\nand Mrs. C. W. l'edecord, Colville,\nWash.; Q eerie H. Ferguson, Frank\nPaaffer, Vancouver; W. H. Logan,\nCalgary; Charles M. Defleux, Edmonton; J. W. Ritson, Victoria; J. W.\nClarke. Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. H.\nJ. Wife, Alex. Smith, Lethbrtdce; P;\nS Malcolm, Winnipeg; C. Manson,\nMontreal; David Millar, Taylorton,\nSask.; C. F. Sherwin. Kiond.l; Joseph\nHarrington, H. C. WllVox, L. P. Du-\nsart,    Vancouver;    J.    W.    Vleson_ and\nwife, Ttcvelstoke; r>r. and Mrs. Mc-\nNaughton, Trail; M. W. Williams,\nWenetchie; D. M. Williams and wife,\nMrs. Travix, Northport; Miss lt. Stulit,\nSpokane; .1. J. .hick son, Ymir; H. H.\nlye, Vancouver; It. M. Durland, Walla\nWalla: A. G. lirynnerr, Kdmonton; J.\n(i. Billings. Vancouver; Fred Young-\nblood. \\V. K. Sluuiks, Toronto; J. H.\nRiches, Vancouver; R. D. McLaugh-\nton and wife, Mosshunk, Sask.; W. J.\nMooncy   wife and  baby,  M.   H. Cowfien\n:mj wife. Preek Carebtn, Bpoluae; v.\nE. Johnson, Slocan City: E .1. Hanks,\nC. S Rankin, J. Hall, Vancouver,\nHarold Brown. Penticton; Harold H.\nRichardson, Toronto; C. W. Gales\nLardo:   O,   Ross,   Castlegar.\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNELSON'S  LEADING    HOTEL\nFIRST-CLASS SAMPLE ROOMS\nThe Home of the Commercial and Mining Man and\nof lhe Tourist.\nAMERICAN   PLAN W TO 19 PER DAY\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nSTRATHCONA.\nL.     C.    Kcrber, Vanc>\nQueen's Hotel;\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nSteam Heated Throughout\nI\nModernly Furnished Room\u00ab.   Special\nWeekly  and  Monthly   Ratei.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   PropriVtr,\nSherbrooke Hotel\nN\u00bbr C. P. R. Station\nRooms   at   Reasonable   Ra\nH. DUNK, Proprietor.\nTWO DAYS' RAIN\nALMOST INCH SUNDAY SERVICE\nAlmost Four and Half Inches\nol Rainfall Recorded (or\nThis Month to Date\nSaturday's nnd Sunday's rainfall\ntotalled almost an inch, accordinK to\nthe report of the local weatherman,\nWhaM rain gauge registered .91 of an\ninch for the two days. Saturday's\nrainfall amounted to .-11 of :m inch.\nwhile yesterday's was ,&l of an inch.\nThis brings the grand total for the\nmonth to date as 1.4 inches. The\nrain has been general over the district, some sections, however, reporting a larpor fall than in this cily.\nAlong South Slocan and Thrums way\nthe rainfall, according to the farmers,\nhaa  been   greater   there.\nAnother drop was recorded In the\nwater of the West Arm, the drop being .5 of an Inch. It now stands at\n16.2 feet above the low water mark,\naccording to the gauge at the boat-\nhouses, Ten years ago today the\nwater fell 4% Inches over the weekend and the height was 16 feet 11\nInches; and 20 years ago lt fell\nexactly the same as over the pas:.\nweek-end.\nThe temperatures over the weekend   were   a   little   warmer.\nSaturday \u2014 Minimum, M degrees;\nmaximum, 67 decrees, Sunday \u2014\nMinimum. 51 degrees; maximum, G5\ndegrees.\nINTERNllQlL\nLEAGUE SOCIETY\nOPENS SESSION\nTwenty-three Countries Have\nDelegates at the Convention in Vienna\nyL'EEN'S. \u2014 K. J. Scoort, Hall; W.\nliritndon, Calgary; U. A. jMkeoil and\nwife, hallway; C, M. MacDouian.\nQtea4 Forks; i>. C. Cleave, A. Ii, Kelt,\nA. Iidsen. C. McLeod, F, A. Kindel, T.\ny. Donald, G. K. Herman, W. Uur-\nrows, Colin Jones, A.- VV. McDonald.\n\"W. Weir, Harold Doyle, James Krwin,\nA Forrest, J. liourget, J. Scott, J. N.\nCurrie, William Wineberg, C. V. Hudg-\nfna, Trail; Thomas Harres, Hlairmore;\nD. S. Hetts, Aberdeen, Scotland; P.\nArmstrong, Princeton; C. J. Minton,\nK J Fowler, H. Marshall, H. W, Han-\nkin, W. K. Woodacre, Alex. Kerr, U.\nHurton,  Trail. \t\nVIKKNA, June 24. \u2014 The seventh\nplenary   conference  of the  Federation\nof League of Nations society opened\nhere today, presided over by Huron\nAdelswnerd,    Sweden.\nTwenty-three   countriee,   inciudin-K\nCanada, were represented, hy tM\ndelepnt es. The session will last\nfive   days.\nH. .1, Calder, representing tbe\nAmerican Non partisan association,\n'spoke of the security felt by nations under the shadow of the\nLeague of Nations, with resulting\ngreater economic activity and prosperity.\nNelsons Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nClanilO    Restaurant\n*\u00abfim#nient and Delicacy FreTaUs,\nOPEN SAY AND  NIGHT\nLuncheon 11:30 to 2     He\nSpecial dinners 6:30 to 8        Ha\nWe   specialize   ln   Chop   Su*y   and\nNoodles.\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nThe only Cafe in town cooking\nelectrically. Dinner 11:30 e. m. to\n2 p, m. Lunch 6 p. m. to 8 p. m,,\nper cover, 35c. Special Sunday\nDinner, per  cover,  SOc.\n611  Baker 8t. Phene 450.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nJ. A. Kerr, Manager\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty   rooms   of   solid   comfort.\nfr* eerve the best meals la Neleon.\nIt's the cook.\t\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nFlrst-clui    Rooma    by   tha\nWa\u00abk   or   Month.\nDay.\nTHE  STANDARD CAFE\n320   Bakar   Straet,   Nelson,   B.   C\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special  Lunch. .Wis*.\n6:30 to  3:00  p.   m.,  Supper. .354\nPhana 164\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nOH,   Hoy',   that  spring  tonic,\nWHAT a memory!    It's <iuite\nDIFFERENT   when   you   buy   our\nMEN'S  and   Hoy-s'   W-ar,\nTHE memory clings, hut it's good.\nMASONS ATTEND SCHOOLS LEAD\nLadies Let Cuticura\nKeep Your Skin\nFresh and Young\nEvery Contidaration Shown te\nGuests.\nCor.\nBaksr en\nd  Ward\nSt\nt., Nelson.\nMAI\nV.    C\niDBK, \u2014\nI).   K   1\nO.    ME,\nwife,\nJam.-a\nMf\nT.e\nyih. Balroo;\naker.     city,\ntkin    and\nII,   Trail\nhhridge;    J.\ni.'rund\nbrook.\nKa\nytnn,   Cran-\nNEW GRAND  HOTEL\n616  Vernon   St.,   East.\nOnly   brick  hotel   In   city.     Steam\nneated, hot and cold  water.   European and American plane.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFlnsat equipped restaurant In the\ndtj- OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014left cream, Boda water &n_\nhot drinks. Nice, clean, furnlahsd\nrooms; hot and cold water. Ws cater\nto private parties.\nSummer Resorts\n'   NEW   GRAND.   \u2014   T.   Jago,   Coqult- ]\n,la*n;   John   Virgo,  Corbin;   F.   J.   Poller,\nNewport,   Wash.;   H.   J.   Lowee,   C.   V. 1\nTetrie,    Robert    Anderson,    K.    Martin,\nW,   v.  Mitchell,   Rowland; S.  Cornell, i\nI'al^ary; T. K. Albert,  Sandnri; W. Ed- \\\nwards.   Frortcr;   F.   Cnx,   Cranbrook;   A.\nCampbell,    T.    Heath.    Vancouver;* R I\nSloan   and   daughter,   Cranbrook.      |\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL] ',\nMrs. Mallette A Son, Proprietors. 1\nNice,  warm,  comfortable rooms  at l\nreasonable rates. Open day and I\nnight. I\nCorner   Hall   and   Vernon   Streets. I\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nFROCTEB,\nriflhinfr,   Boating*,   Bathing,   Oolf,\nTennis   Courts.\nFlthlnir   Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nStore   ln   Connectlom.\nW.   A.   WARD, Proprietor.\nDay  S3;  Week   $17   to   $19,     Special\nMonthly Bates,\nROYAL HOTEL\nREVELSTOKE,    B.   C.\nWill be opened on or about June\n18th to the traveling public. All\nrooma newly renovated. Close to\nC. P. It. depot. Room 51.00 and\nup. DmlnK room in connection.\nROBERT   LAUGHTON\nAdvertising is the Motive\nPower of Business.\nH The traffic officer stands on\npoint duty to protect you. An\nunlicensed car has no chance to\npus his corner.\n| On the highway of retail\nbusiness the daily newspaper\nopens the \"GO\" sign to all\nlicensed travellers speeding to\ncompete for your comfort and\npleasure. It bars the way to\nunlicensed, irresponsible traders.\n\u2022J Take advantage of your\nnewspaper's protection. . Keep\nyourself informed. Read the\nadvertisements. They tell you\nof every new and good article\nthat honest business produces,\nlabels and guarantees by Brand\nand Trademark and Name.\n(J Tht m\u00bb1\u00abr who brands his product\n\u00bbnd k\u00abpj his mark known by daily\nnewspaper advertisinj rests his wneW\nluccess. his entire business life, on\nyour approval.\nQ Read the advertisements in this\nnewspaper every day. q Buy goods\nthat are advertised. This is the\nmodern, sane and economical policy.\nREAD THE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nUt Them Protect You\nRev. Mr. Dredge of St. Paul's\nChurch Delivers Address\nto Memhers of Local Lodge\nAbout 75 members of Ihe Ancient\nFree and Accepted Masons from the\nNelson lodge attended the Presbyterian church In a body last night-\nRev. F. Tl. .1. Dredge welcomed the\nlodge, statin* he was always glad\nio have thf* Mason's attend the church\nand listen to his sermon as their order had done such wonderful work\nn carrying Christianity to all parts of\nlhe world he hoped the order would\nontinue its wonderful work.\nThere was a legend In the Masons\nthat a cubical atone was once found\non which was a divine name written\nin mystical writing. It was found\nby Jacob after he fled from his home\n\u25a0ind was carried into Egypt hy him. It\nwas taken to the land of Cain by\nMoses and later Stftttabobl used it as\nlhe corner stone In his second great\ntemple.\nAH masons know the Importance of\n\u2022he corner stone In a building and\nthat it Is laid first and the other\nstones are then placed around it\" stated Rev. Dredge \".Jesus Christ is the\ncorner stone of Christianity and we\nhis followers are the \"stones\" that\nire ln the great building known as\nX'hristianity\".\nHe stated that Jesus Christ as the\ncorner stone of Christianity had been\nscrutinized by many people, just as\n% master mason scrutinizes a corner\nstone before it Is laid but the people\ncould find no flaw in Jesus Christ.\nThe Jews had taken the Saviour and\ncrucified hiin and put another one\nIn his stead as the corner stone of\nreligion this being their downfall, as\nwithout the presence of Jesus Christ\nChristianity was impossible.\nThe minister quoted the words of\nNapoleon when he was in exile on the\nthe island, who said that Caesar, and\nmany others Including himself had\nbuilt up great kingdoms through\nforce, but Jesus had established a far\nureater kingdom through love, and\nthat great kingdom waa Christianity.\n\"Jesus Christ Is the great coordinator in all the troubles of mankind\nand the only way to stop wars and\nsubsequent suffering is to keep our\ntrust in Jesus\", he said. The great\nsuffering of the late war could have\nbeen prevented if the nations had not\nforgot on the great teachings of\nChrist and taken them into view when\nwar was imminent.\"\nRev. Mr. Dredge related the happenings of some sailors who were\nshipwrecked on an island in the south\nseas and seeing some natives thought\nthat it was a cannlble Isle. One day,\nis one of the sailors was out looking\nfor food he saw In the distance\nchurch spire, and he knew that he\nand his fellowmen were safe because\nChristianity teaches men to love each\nother and thus strife was stopped.\nJesus Christ was also the corner\nstone of the Masona. The lodge\ncould be no better either by oath of\nallegiance or ritual, for the order\nwas what the members make it and\nthus the members should not forget\ntheir belief in Jesus Christ.\nTHE PROVINCE\nFORMING\nCentral* and Hume Classes\nWere First, Seconds and\nHonorable Mention\nSHANS OF BURMA\nGIVE WEIRD DANCE\nFederation    States    Are    Inaugurated\nWith   Wonderful   Spectacle   of\nTorchlight   Dancing\nTAUNOC.YT, Burma, June 24.\u2014The\nrecent inauguration of the federated\nShan States was marked by a\nremarkable series of exhibition\ndances. These included tribal dances\nin which 24 of the hill tribes of\nBurma participated, as well as the\nfamous animal and bird dances of\nthe   Shans.\nThe entertainment took place in\na specially-built arena with over\n:>000 spectators In attendance. .Brilliant and unusual lighting was a\nfeature of the occasion. The thoroughfares lMdlB-g to the arena were\nlined with huge lamps in the shape\nof lotus blossoms. The governor.\nSir Harcourt Butler, was escorted\nto his place by 220 torchbearers.\nearring torches, 10 feet long and 1\nfoot thick, made of bamboo and\npine   chips.\nIn tbe opening parade some of the\ntorches used were as much as GO\nfeet in height and required GO or\nCO men to carry them. Each torch\nwas followed hy several musicians\nwho beat tom-toms and played weird\ninstruments.\n(tf the tribal dances those of the\nPad&ttngl proved the most popular.\nThe l'adaungs are noted for' the\nenormous rings they wear. The bras*\nrings worn about the neck, arais\nand legs of one woman often weigh\nover N pounds. Those of the neck,\namounting to about 15 pounds, are\nconsidered the most important. Their\npurpose is to elongate the neck,\nA girl starts wearing such rings\nfrom childhood; as the neck sti-et\"h*-a.\nadditional rings are added. The\nwoman who has the longest neck\nis considered the most beantiful and\nthe   most   to  be   desired   as  a   vile.\nThe Shans In their .lances disguised themselves ns animals and\nbirds. Buffaloes, elephant-*, timers,\nbears and cocks were among those\nrepresented. A small dog which\nhappened to stray Into the arena\nwas so frightened by one <>t tbe\ntigers that he hid his tail between his iegs an.1 awaited ln terror\nthe end which he thought was\nabout  to come.\nThe Hhan States, rich In agricultural and mineral products, ure In\nthe   northern  part  of   Burma.\nNelson Central and the Hume\nSchool of Fairview ranked high in the\nprovincial school penmanship contests just closed. The testa were for\nthe \"Muscular movement system\". In\nthe second year tests the Central\nschool won a third place Miss B. E.\nTrembath's class, sharing the honor\nwith Miss lmlah of Burnahy. In the\nthird year tests Miss H. Hodgson of\nCentral carried off the third honors.\nIn the fifth year Miss E. Hanna's\nclass won third place. In the sixth\nvear Miss Greta Steeves carried off\nthird honors.\nFor the second year training ln the\nHume school, Miss M. Sharpe's class\nwon first honors, while ,Miss M. McGregor also of the Hume school carried off third honors In the sixth\nyear. Several of the classes of both\nInstitutions received honorable mention-\nThe class In each grade showing:\nthe highest standard of writing was\nawarded a high honor diploma. To\ngive tKe smaller schools an equal opportunity with the larger ones, the\nclasses were grouped according to\ntheir numbers. Three high honor\ndiplomas were given in each grade.\nThe first group (Section 1) consisted\nof classes composed of from 3 to 10\npupils; the second group (Section 2)\nconsisted of classes composed of from\n11 to 30 pupils, and the third group\n(Section 3) consisted of classes composed of more than 30 pupils.\nFollowing is the standing of the\nschools of tho province In the contests:\nSecond Year\nSec. 1\u2014Sand Creek school. Grand\nForks; Miss A. D. Dillon, teacher. Sec.\n!\u2014David Lloyd George school, Point\nGrey; Mrs. D. M. Ycwdall, teacher\nSec. 3\u2014Kingsway West school, Burnahy; Miss L. M. Imlah, teacher. Central school, Nelson, Miss B. E. Trembath, teacher.\nThird Year\nSec- 1\u2014Hume school, Nelson; Miss\nSharpe, teacher. Sec. 2\u2014Gordon\nschool^ South Vancouver; Miss A. C.\nMclntyre, teacher. Sec. 3\u2014Central\nschool, Nelson; Miss H. M. Hodgson,\nteacher.\nHonorable Mention\nPenticton school, Penticton; Miss\n2. Page, teacher. Central school, Nelson; Miss ($. Redpath, teacher. Strathcona school, Vancouver; Miss M. Jop-\nling, teacher.\nFourth Year\nSec.  1\u2014Keating    school,    Saanich;\n,Mrs. N. Barbery, teacher. Sec. 2\u2014Gordon school,  South Vancouver;       Miss\nG. W. Killop. teacher.\nSec. 3\u2014Strathcona school, Vancouver; M. C. Noble, teacher.\nHonorable   Mention\nHume school,  Nelson; Miss      C. A.\nCoates, teacher. Gordon school, South\nVancouver; Mrs. F- R. Milne, teacher.\nCentral school, Nelson; Mrs.    H. E.\nEldridge,   teacher,     pentlcton school,\nPenticton;  Mrs. L. Roadhouse, teacher.  Dawson  school,   Vancouver;   Miss\nC. F. Murray, teacher-\nFifth Year\nSec.  1\u2014Sandon  school, Sandon;   E.\nB.   Broome,   Sec.   2\u2014Norquay   school,\nSouth Vancouver;  Miss F. O, Hamilton, teacher.    3.\u2014Nelson Centre; Miss\n0, Hanna.\nHonorable Mention\nCentral school,  Nelson;  Miss Z. M.\nManning, teacher.\nSl\\lh Year\nSec. 1\u2014Jordan River school, Jordan River; ,MisH Rita Maloney, teach-\n'\u25a0r. Sec. '_.\u2014Hume school. Nelson; Miss\nM. H. McGregor, teacher. Sec. 3\u2014Central school, Nelson; Miss Greta Stives\nteacher.\nHonorahle Mention\nNorquay   school.   South   Vancouver;\nMiss P. O. Hamilton, teacher.    Tolmie\nschool,   Saanich;    Miss   E.   M.   Beane,\nteacher,\nCentral school. Nelson; Mrs. S- J.\nMacDonald, teacher. Kingway West\nschool, Burnahy; C. E. Somerville,\nteacher. Strathcona school, Vancouver; Mrs. M. C. Johnston, teacher.\nDawson school, Vancouver; Miss Mae-\nDonald, teacher.\nSeventh Year\nSee.     1\u2014Lumby     school,    Dumby;\nlames F. Nicoll, teacher. Sec. 2\u2014Central school, Nelson; Miss M. F. Irvine,\nteacher. Sec. 3\u2014Dawson school, Vancouver; ,Miss N. Bain, teacher-\nHonornble Mention\nCentral   school.   Nelson;   Miss\nEtter,  teacher.     Central school,\nson; G. Carter, teacher.\nSeasonable Goods\nWhite Flannel and White Homespun\u2014\nFull 56 inches wide, per yard  ?3.00\nWhite Wash Satin-\nExtra heavy, 36 inches wide, per yard $3.00\nSilk Sweater Coats\u2014\nIn white and Saxe blue at  $9.50\nHeavier weights in old rose, mauve, burnt orange and\ncardinals, each 812.50\nThe All-Wool Bathing Suits\nAre now on sale\u2014the newest.    Also Bathing Caps.\nChildren's Sox\u2014\nCutties, all colors, pair  50^ to 85*.\n\"Fancy Embroidered Collars and Cuffs\nAt  $1.00 and $1.25 '\nOat aim is Seasonable Goods in Season.\nNelson Dry Goods Co,\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nSEIZE LIQUORS\nON BOARD THE\nBRITISH LINERS\nUnited States Officers Take\nWet Goods Off Berengaria\nand Baltic\nNEW YORK, June 24. \u2014 Four\ntrans-Atlantic passenger liners\u2014two\nBritish, one French anil one Italian-\narrived at quarantine today, with\nlaree  quantities of  liquor  under  seal.\nThe manifest of the White Star\nliner Ced'ric. from Liverpool, showed,\nin the shape of wet stock, 7S31\nbottles of ale and stout; 11M gallons\nnn wine, 60 gallons of spirits, and\nSeven gallons of liquors and  cordials.\nThe British liner Caronia, the\nFrench liner Providence and Italian\nliner Conte Verdi all carried similar   supples   of  liquor.\nAll the CedHc's liquor was, .listed\nns surplus medical stores. The\nConte Verdi had all her liquor\nunder the care of the  ship's surgeon.\nNone of the liners had their\nstores disturbed, but docked without\ninterference.\nUnited States authorities are expected to follow the same procedure\nas practiced \u25a0 on the Baltic, and\nBerengaria Saturday. seizing all\nliquors above the amount set by\nDr. ft. K. Sprague, chief of the\nUnited States public health service,\nas  nP-.pSSary  for  medicinal  purposes.\nThe first seizures of liquor from\nBritish liners Saturday occurred\nunder spectacular curcumstnnces, the\nseizures being halted twice by mysterious   telephone   calls.\n10\nNel-\nMEMBER OF HARDING\nPARTY IS KILLED\nCar Oops Into Canyon Wlille Newspapermen Take Moan-tain Trip\nWlillo President Is in Denver\nDENVER, Colo., June 24.\u2014Sumner\nCurtis of Washington, representative\nof the Republican national committee,\naccompanying President Harding'*\nparty on Its western trip, and Thomas\nFrench, of Denver, were killed, and\ntwo other men seriously injured,\nwhen the automobile in which they\nwere making a mountain tour plunged\nof the road into Benr Creek canyon.\n35 miles from here, late today, French\nwas driving the car.\nThe accident victims were members\nnf a large party of newspaper corres-\npondtoU, who, because President\nHarding wo* resting this afternoon,\ndropped their work, and took an ex-\ncuraion to the mountains un guests of\nthe Denver Press club. President\nHarding won not with the party\nThe steering gear of the car broke\nat the treacherous curve.\nwhere he died  within  two hours\nhis admittance,\nTt Is unlikely that an Inquest    i\nbe held.\nODD FELLOWS\n'   visit in cm\nwai\n-hi\nDID BRITAIN COACH\nCANADA ON REPLY?\nNew York Herald Suggests Canadian\nHt fusii I to Stop Liquor Export\nI'roposod by Downing Street\nFifteen automobile loads of Tnlj\nOdd Fellows arrived in -the city\nSaturday evening and took part\ndegree work in connection with\nlocal Odd Fellow Order. In all al\nBOO Odd Fellows motored from\nsmelter city.\nFollowing   the   administration\nthe first degree    the    meeting\nthrown  open  to  the  sister  lodge\nRehekah's, and a banquet and music;\nevening wound  up the affair.\nPerhaps the feature of the assomb\nwas the speeches by the recently cho\nen grand lodge officers; D- H. Proul\nfoot. G. M.  of  the Orand Lodge\nB-rilish Columbia. W. H. Watkins O.Pl\nof the Orand Encampment of Britlsli\nColumbia   and   Mrs.   George    Motion!\n['resident   of   the   Rebekah   Assembly\nfor British  Columbia, all giving\nports of the recent conventions.\nThe following toast   list wasi   gon-i\nthrough:\nTon-st Idst\nThe King\u2014\"God Rave the King\".\nThe Grand Lodge of British Colun\nhia\u2014\"D.   H.   Proudfoot,   G.M-\";     ThJ\nGrand Encampment of British Colun\nbit-\u2014W.   H.  Watkins.   G.P.\";  The  Re\nbekah Assembly of British Columbia\n\u2014''Sister G- Motion, President\";  \"En|\nterprise   Lodge,      Trail\"\u2014W.      J.\nCleave;   \"Rosslond   Lodge,   Rosslandi\nCleave;   \"Rosslond   Lodge,   Rossland'j\n\u2014K. Martin; Fraternal greetings front\nKootenay No. 16, I.O.O.F.\u2014J. Drap\nN.G.; High Lights and Low Lights i\nOddfellowship\u2014D-   C.   McMorris;   Th|\nLadies-Our Sisters\u2014H.   E.   Dill,   rep\\|\nF. Reimann;    The    Warden's Toast\n\"Hail to the Covenant of Friendship]\n\u2014Brother   Mitchell,   P.G.     Rosfdaii\n\"Auld .Lang Syne.\"\nCONSERVATIVE\nLEADER HERE\nMr. Bowser and Other Members Will Be Guests at\nSmoker in Armory Tonight\nW. J, Bowser leader of the opposition, J. W. James member for South\nOkanagan, James IL Kchotfield member for Trail and If. Morrison of Ke-\nkiwna, reached this city by motor\nfrom Trail yesterday afternoon. The\nparty on Us way to this city stopped\nat Thrums where several of tho ranchers of that vicinity were met at the\nhome of II.  I. Power.\nWhile in Trail Mr. Bowser addressed the members of the Board of\nTrade at a luncheon; he and Mr.\nJones nddressed a meeting of the\ncitizens on matters of Importance in\nthe province during Saturday evening.\nThis evening they will be the gues<s\nit a smoker In the Armory glvtm by\nthe local ooniervatives. Songs, musto,\nboxing and speeches will be tho program for the evening. The Kootenay\nKilties will also parade for the occasion,\nMr. Bowser and party have motored\nfrom Pentlcton, and from Nelson will\nproceed to Creslon and Fernle,\nrAILURE8\" DECLINE\nTORONTO. Juno 24. \u2014 The number\nof failures ni the Dominion, a* reported by R .G. Dun & Co., the la*t\nweek, wa* 54, compared with 58\n'for the corresponding week of last\nyear.\nManitoba had two; Alberta, six;\nSaskatchewan, two; British Columbia,   six.\nNEW YCI-.K, June 24.\u2014The Herald\nIn a special dispatch from Washington, undertakes to explain what was\nbehind the Canadian government's\nrefusal to stop the export of lijuor\nfrom Dominion soil to the United\nStates.\nBritish Imperial policy, rather than\nihe single will of the Canadian government, was behind the answer, the\ndispatch  says.  \"Canada's answer was\nsent to Washington    after prolonged\ndiscussion between Canadian officials\nand Downing street.    Furthermore, It\nis stated that Washington has generally interpreted  the Canadian    answer\nas foreshadowing what Great Britain\nwill say to  \"two    definite    proposals\nmade  by  the  United    States    asking\nKnglish officials to aid in the suppression  of smuggling.     These  proposals\nrefer to the request for information of\nliquor  consignments  leaving    British\nshores, and  to the  reciprocal    treaty\nsuggestions      made      by      Secretary\nHughes-\nlit .was    recently    reported    from\nWashington  that     Secretary     Hughes\nhad  suggested  to  the   Uriiish   government  that if  the  latter   would   allow!\nUnited   States  customs   officials       to:\nsearch  British ships for  liquor      he-]\nyond the three-mile limit, the United |\nStates would allow British liners     toi\ncarry   liquor into  United  States   ports j\nunder seal.)\nNAME WHIST WINNERS\nTop series at the Great War Vet-I\nerans whist drive Saturday night herJ\nwon by Mrs. T. Brown and Arthul\nLapointe, Hay time series\u2014Mrs. Hoz|\ngard and J. W. Turner.\nMrs. E. Gammon and J. G. \"Webstel\nwere the winners of the second agl\ngregate whist competition at thf\nArmory on Saturday night.. The drivl\nwas wound up with a dance.\n\u00a3\"DODDS ''\nfKIDNEY\nk PILLS\nWh^flirts B.'iHW\n\u00a987 THEPp\nTORONTO SADDLER\nTAKES OWN LIFE\nGriffith    Clarke   Klmles   Guards\nami SliootH lliniM-lt' Through\n(Ik; Head\nTORONTO, Juno 24. \u2014 Suffering\nfrom nervous trouble for some time\npast, and guarded closely since hia\nreturn from England recently, Griffith Clarke, head of A, lt. Clark & Co.\nleather manufacturers, of this city,\nand a well,known speed boat racer\nand enthusiast, escaped the vigilance\nof his guards late tonight, and shot\nhimself through the head.\nHe was rushed    to    the    hospital,\nDance Programs\nProgram Pencils\nDance Invitati'us\nWe can . supply high\nquality materialls and\nworkmanship at reasonable prices.\nc\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers\nNELSON, B. C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting '\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOfficft Smelting  ind  Refining   Department\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,\n___m_^amimi__.__.\n \u00a3HE NELSON DJ^ILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 25, 1923\nbHH\n\u25a0figw'TBrtw'\nTRAIL BOARD\nHEARS BOWSER\nAT LUNCHEON\nAsks Members to Boost Ties\nThat Bind England and\nCanada\nTRAIL. B.C., .Tune 24. \u2014 In hi* \u00bbrt-\ndrenH to the members of the Trail\nboard of traie st a luncheon here on\nSaturday afternoon. W. J. Bowner.\nleader of the opporiftnn for tbe pro\\-\n1rce of British Colombia, stated that\nit watt up to the board nf trade\nmember* to <1o everything iiv their\n\u25a0power to make the tlen between BSajt-\nland and Canada all the strnncer, and\nto mop any RUEcentlons which mieht\nlead to the breakln* up of the Empire\n.T. B. Cray, the itrofident of the\nTrail hoard of trade, presided over\nthe meetlnr. which wan attended hv\nf>2 nf the Imnlnest men of the rity\nHe welcomed Mr. nnwsrr, ffattnp that\nthe board had heard the premier. Hon\n\u2022Tr.h'n Oliver, and Oeneral McCraa of\nThe Provincial tarty, amt were pleaded\nTiow to hear from the leader of the\nopnoHttlon.\nTho lehder of the opposition WV\ndelighted to nee r*-. laree a tnrnotit\nof members of the board of trade at\nthe btnquet, Tiie hoard bad bcffl ad\ndrcswed by Hon. John Oliver, the\n\u25a0premier, an old. trusty opponent of\nhis for many years, and possibly for\nmany years to come. They had nls.i\nheard Oeneral Meltae. and now they\nwere to hear from the lesser men\nHe hoped that they had had as fair\nar  attendance  as  he\nHe waa glad that the people of\nTrail took po much Interest in their\ncity, especially In the establishing of\ne strong board of trade, which could\nproduce so much good In putting\nforth suggestions to (lie higher powers for the establishment of various\nreforms. \"As, when a nonparty hody\ngets together for the better of the\ncommunity It cannot help stating\nsome   reforms,\"   said   Mr.   Bowser.\nThe world today was war wUkl\npeople thought that the millennium\nwould dawn on the European and\nAnglo-Saxon ra<*es. This* Was not so;\nthe world was in the grip of reactions\nand troublesome times; the people\nwere dissatisfied and it was the duty\nof the local community to what It\ncould   to settle  conditions.\n\"The people today are not normal,\nP.nd until then there will not be prosperity.\" said Mr. Bowser. \"Those In\n( ana da. cor.Id, however, do a Rreat\ndeal as lhey had a grand history und\ntradition.\"\nA Splendid Heritage.\n, It was a glorious thing to Im ah\nAnglo-Saxon or a relative of the\nAnglo-Saxon. Many distracting times\nhad been faced In the British house\nof commons owing to the Ltborltai,\nwho were pitting for the first time\nKngland would, however, come through\nuqruffled. She had held pence until\ntle.rmany had broken it, and as a\nresult had offered aid and finance\nto tho other European nations. When\nthe was wa:. concluded It looked a.s\nif there would be M SUOQOM for centuries. England had not attempted to\nrepudiate, and as a result the United\nStates, which nation Mr. Bousej- did\nnot in any way wish to rim down,\nwhose object seemed to be the almighty doilar,   asked   for payment.\nEngland  had  not   pushed   the  other\nTerrible Headaches\nAnd Dizziness\nMiss H. Raphael, 237 Kenil worth\n' Ave., N-. Hamilton, Out., writes:\u2014\"I\ni used to suffer from terrible head-\nachea and dizziness. Lust Summer,\nwhile I WM walkinR up a side street,\nI got a dizzy spell and fell In the\nmiddle of the road. An old gentleman helped me to get where I was\ngoing and told me to get a vial of\nMilburn's Laxa-Liver rills. Well, 1\ndid, and they did wonders for me. I\ndon't \"know how to thank you, as 1\ndon't get headaches or diy.zy spells\nany more.\"\nWhen your liver gets sluggish and\nInactive your whole health suffers,\nand the only way to keep well la to\nkeep the liver active and perform-\n\u2022j Ing Ha proper functions by using Milburn's   Laxa-Liver  I'llls.\nFrice 25c a vial at all dealers or\nmailed direct ou receipt of price by\nThe T, Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,\nOnt.\n' When using n\n\/   WILSON'S\nFLYRADS\nREAD   DIRECTIONS\nit-*-.'?.,   CARCfttllY AND.\n\u25a0----X.. FOtlOW:THEM\/\n.\u25a0 .?: **p   EXACTLY\/.\nBest of a!I Fly Killers Lie\nper racket at all druggists.\nGrocers and General Stores\nI\nVisiting Cards\nFor  Ladies  or\nGentlemen\nWe can give you\nprompt delivery of personal visiting cards.\nHighest grade printing\nand materials.\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers\nNELSON,  B.   C.\nThere Will Be Fewer Curries\nJ. W. CURRY\nWho sat a\u00ab Li'beial for \"B\" seat in\nToronto*. Southeast In the 1st-* assembly, is not running tod;.y. Neither\nis the J. M. Curry who \"Hlolu\" the\nLiberal nomination from If H. Dewart\u2014to use Mr. Dewart'.-. IHn|11*eTft'\nin Toronto Southwest \"A\". But the\nold fire-eater, Lieut.-Col. J, A. Currie\nthe* Conservative, is again running\nfor Toronto Soulhoast \"A\", though\nit   one  time  reported   to  be   retiring\nrations for their debts. Hbe did.\nhowever, acknowledge her debt to the\nUnited States, and through the chancellor agreed to ri-pay it In CO years,\nwith Interest, not knowing when payments would be made to her by the\nother Kurop\u00bbnn nations. KiikI:iii>1 had\ncome through the crisis and at presenl\n.showed a surplus of J500.000.000. This\ndebt would be reduced ' this year, aud\nIt was Mr. Bowser's belief that the\ngreat strHin of taxation and finance\nwas   practically   over.\nAt prevent the center of exchange\nhad moved from London. England, to\nNew York, but in a short time lie\nt'l-erticted it would change back to\nLondon.\nThe animal addresH of Sir Arthur\nJohnstone of the Bovrll company, read\nby Mr. Bowser, liuggcsted that if such\na surplus ns named above existed, the [\npeople t-hould create a reserve fund\nfor disposal to Canada for the development of tlie {minlry, and it would be\na great thing. He also puggeHied that\nthe work of the support of the sol-\noters along the Rhine ami tho debt\nincurred   should   be   wiped  off,\nAn extract from lhe Chicago Tribune   was  BlA   read   by   Mr.   Bowser.\nThe article, he stated, did not work\nalong the lines that diplomacy meant\nKMOIM However, Canadians bhould ;\nin ver be ashamed at suggestions made1\nat British traditions, as they should\nbe proud to conic from tdock of thi:**.\nkind,.\nEngland  Was  Firm.\nThe speaker then read a It-tin written by Otto H. Kahn, a (Jennan-\nAiuerlcan financier. This opinion\nmeant something, he stated. The letter said that England faced her problem with courage, resolul ion and resourcefulness. Someone had always\nbeen ruining lOaghind, but it was still\ndoing business at the old stand. Today she was disappointing the il t-\nwi.shes by wise tradition and Hit*\nrespect. l-.tigtand's ijualities made\nBnglUfd strong and thus kept her e\u00bb-\nchanse up iu timo of trouble. Thia\nMeant that money was going to England for safe-keeping; capital took\nrefuge in England. In closing his letter lie hoped that Kngland and America, as in 1.U7 and 19JS they slood\ntogether, would In time of peace\nstand together for their own good and\nfor the good of the world.\n'\u2022Why should we not be proud when\nwe are British and Anglo-Saxon?\"\nasked Mr. Bowser, \"If we have some\nconfidence in Kngland, settled conditions will come In Europe; prosperity\nwill come to this American continent\nwhich   has   so   liutiiy   assets.\n\"What British Columbia needs fs\nforeign capital, and England will onie\nmore return to Canadian Investments,\"\nhe  Mid,\nSuggestions had been made that\nCanada break away from the Empire\nand become a separate nutl-m. Mr.\nBowear was personally opposed to any\nsuch action, and was sorry to see\nHon. K, Lapointe Wanting to put Canada on i higher plane of treaty making.   Just suppose, stated the speaker.\nthat the United States and Canada\nwent to trouble, or Canada and Jupan\nwent to war; one battleship cuuld\nwipe British Columbia off the face of\ntlie map. What was wanted was\ncloser ties with the Empire for protection's   sake.\nWhen these new-fangled Ideas of\nbreaking away from the motherland\ncame up, the boards of trade could do\na great, work, and it was their duly\nand responsibility to do all possible\nte stop the suggestions which might\nlead to the disintregation of the\nEmpire ln closing, he stated that\nl.c thought it would be the unanimous\nopinion of the members of the board\nol trade that if the time should come\nagain, as In the past, for Canadians\nlo aid the Empiie, there would be the\nsame   response   as  during   the   war.\nJ. B. 'liay, on behalf of the Trail\nboard of trade,\" expressed its thanks\nto   Mr.   Bowser. e\nHe Paid for His\nBoll From Drury\nPATRONAGE\nWIDESPREAD\nM PROVINCE\nSo Says Mr. Bowser, Leader\nof the Opposition; Jones\nand Schofield Speak\nTRAIL AUDIENCE HEARS\nOF GOVERNMENT DEALS\nLiquor Question Discussion\nCauses Much Laughter\nand Applause\nTRAIL, .tutm 24.\u2014Well over IM\nooople weft present in the J-Cnlght'c\n\u2022>f Pythias hull on Suturday night\n\u25a0vhen \\V. |, Bows.-r leader of (ho op-\n\u25a0\u2022fsition in British Columbia. J, W.\ntones, member for South Okanagan\nmd Jantei H. Schofield member far\nTrail addressed a political meetingR.\nJordon acted as chairman. All\ntpeakerd dealt with the reckless spen-\nling of public moneys hy the present\nfovernment-    \u2022*\nMr. Bowser, in addressing tlie\nmeeting, stated that he was not in\nTrail to criticise lion. John Oliver,\ntho premier, but to discuss the\nserious situatiop of the province. The\nmatter was not case of politics, but\nwas a chance for all people who\nhad the interests of the province at\nheart tu \u00abee if the present government should he rntuincd any longer.\nBoth sides of the question needed\nd iscusslon, and was u p to It he\nelectors to decide if their business\nIn tbe province was being run on\na  suitable   busis.\nMr. Bowser stated he had been\nin office fur many years. The\nLiberals had denounced htm and\nhis   government;    the   peopio   later\nremoved him. Men, untrained for\noffice, were placed In charge. He\nhad no complaint as to the verdict\nof the people at that time. Now it\nwas up to the people again, and\non its record the Oliver government   must,   shortly,' stand   or   fall.\nPremier Oliver, when taking office.\nhad denounced the system of patronage, claiming ft to be clan-ted with\nhighway robbery. \"Vou have a liquor\nstore In Trail. Do you find nny\nConservatives there?\" asked the leader\nfor     the     opposition.        Patronage\nthroughout the province was widespread, and the people in public\noffice were not of the best class.\nHe referred to tho recent bur;*l;iry\nof the Oreenwood liquor store, where\nthe woods had heen taken to the\nI'nited States hy airplane In broad\ndavlight.\nIn llll, continued Mr. Boveer, the\npresent government had told the\npeople that the late government was\ncorrupt, unbusinesslike, ran a Wg\npuhlic debt und had not developed tile\ncountry as they should, and lhal\na change would mean a superior\nsystem of administration. l'eople\ntook their word. In the WM election\nthe excuse was, although time hud\nadded to debt it had left the vox\ntry in a muddle, the unsuctessfsl-\nness was blamed on tbe McBride\nand Bowser administrations. Now\nthe party was about to again face\nan election, \"They can't go to tin\npeople now and say I'm to blame,\"\nsaid the speaker. \"They will stand\non their own bottom, and you people\nwho are taxed to death are to\nhold them at their own stewardship.\"\nGovernment   Aided\nJohn Oliver claimed lo have built\nroads throughout the country, and\nwould lead people to believe that the.\ngovernment had built the Rossland*\nCascade mad. The Dominion government (iaid 41 per cent of the cost.\nthrough the policy of Uobert Borden,\nwhich hgd been followed by Mackenzie King, the present prime minister. Oliver, he said, also told the\nSlocan people he had given the\nwomen tlie vote. \"I draftel the referendum in 1*916, and the .men voters\nby a large majority decided the\nwomen should b\u00ab on an equal basis,\naud still Mr. Oliver will tell be\ngave the vole.\" The Workmen's\nCompensation act, also claimed hy\nMr. Oliver, was drafted hy Mr.\nKowsei- when he was attorney-general In ltll it had been laid\nankle for Improvements. lt was\nlater adopted as law. That, declared\nthe speaker, was tlie honesty of\nMr.   Oliver's   discussion    of   affairs.\n\"Mr. Oliver asks how I am going\nto economize?\" If I am going tu\nclose tlie labor bureaus?\" Half the\ncoat of maintaining the hureaus\nwas stood  by the federal government.\nPeople's Party Man\nWon't Try It Again\nMALCOLM   MacVICAR\nTlie East Elgin Laborite, is not\ncarrying Lubor's flag this time, though\nhe won  the mint in  tho late house.\nM\nIr\nBowser declared.\nie closed. Dozens of\nit arc old men's homes\nta. He told of a case\ntthig | IN per month\nlabor bureau iu a non-\nalso   running   in   con-\nWliere   tli\nfunctioning)\nthey Should\nthem at pres<\nand rest hoii\nof a man g\nfor running a\nlabor district\nMOtlon a store.\n.Mother's   Pension   Act\nThe    Cons\non\nANDREW   HICKS\n. VTh was U. F. O. whip In the\nOntario house until the closing weeks,\nwas turned down by the U. F. O.\nconvention in his constituency of\nHuron Center.\n1917 first framed the Mothers' Pension act. Mr. Bowser favored the\nact, but witslied honest enforcement.\n\"We will look into this when we\nlake office,\" s&ld the Speakor, \"and\nall cases will be adjudged u.\ncording to their merits.\n\"TbO greatest rond builder in lhe\nInterior of British Columbia is James\nSchofield of Trail and formerly of\nYmlr riding, his road monuments,\nbuilt years ago, st;ui<Iing today.\nThe present government won't even\nkeep tlie roads iu repair,\" snid the\nspeuker. Under the old government lti.OOil miles of highway aud\n(099 miles uf trails were built nnd\npftid for out of. the revenue. The\npresent government was borrowing\ncontinuously, and still Mr. Oliver\nclaimed them to be government roadbeds, notwithstanding there was\nthree time* the revenue. The public\ndebt bftd bt\u00abn increased to $T,7,i>00.(H>0,\nOf this J,r.,000.000 had been borrowed this year, aud six months of\nthe  year was  not  gone.\nCivil service cost twice as much\ntoday as in l?lfi. Mr. Oliver claimed\nincreased revenue meant a quarter\nmore cost of operation. He had\nfailed to state that the province's\npopulation had not yet Increased.\nNo more clerks were necessary today than in 1J10 hecnitse the same\ntaxpayer was just paying three times\nas much now as then. There was\nno excuse or justice for the enormous overhead. This was caused\nthrough hotel bills and Joy riding,\nmotor curs for the civil servants\nat the taxpayers' expense; $1.5,000\na month  was  spent this *way. '\nFigures of borrowing and expenses were alarming. Since 1516\n$132,000,000 had been borrowed. Oliver\nIs rich, where spending the peoples' money is concerned, and it is\nhard to believe he Is the same mon\nwho denounced the Conservatives.\nAl! this is charged to you, said Mr.\nBowser.\nSpeaking   on   Mr.   Oliver's   freight\nrate question. Mr. Bowser stated that\nIn 1901 'James I>unsrnuir, who was\nthen premier, sent a delegation to\nOttawa on this question. lrj 1903\nColonel Brlor pressed the matter.\nUtter Sir Richard McBride sent u\ncommittee, composed of Charles Wilson and Itobert Green, now tien-.it or\n(ireen, tg interview the federal authorities on this question of butter\nterms for the mountains. In 1905,\nwith no assistance of John Oliver,\na brief was filed by the Conservatives, ln 1907 Sir Richard McBride passed a resolution that British Columbia receive Jluy.ouo fully years, for the payement of better\nterms. Hhls was later accepted hy\nthe then-Premier Sir Wilfrid Laurier.\nand made final and unalterable. At\nthat time John Oliver was in the\nlegislature, and he didn't do a tiling i\nthen. In 1910 the Conservatives\ntook up the freight rates question\nwith the government and W. A. Mc-\nIXjnald, formerly of Nelson and now\nJustice McIXinuld, assisted by several experts, went fully into the\nmatter with the railway commission,\nbut with no succe.\u00abs, This committee was In no wav assisted by\nthe Liberals. Thus. stated the\nspeakoi', ths freight mles question was decided 10 vcars ago. and\nOliver lij.,1 been iu a Bip van Winkle\nsleep for that time. It was only\non the eve of an election that\nthe premier started this freight rates\nquestion.\nHe was now usiim it as a smoke\nscreen, lo cover up administration\nof which he was ashamed, The\nIHuikiiobor situation at Orand Forks\nwas another deathbed repentance,\nstated     Mr.     Bowser. \"I     am     as\nstrongly    in   favor   of   freight    rates\nas    he,    except    I    do    not    start    out\non   the  eve   of  a   nelection.     ln   1914\nthe   rallwav   commission   was   to   sit I\n-ui   the   eve   of   an   election.     In   1914 |\nwar    th*    tiling    was    cancelled.      In |\n19ltl   the   government   had   been   overthrown.     \"After   Oliver   is   dead   and\nTone,    t    will    take    up    the    freight\nrates     question     again,\"     said     M*.\nBowser.\nThe public debt of the province\nwas serious, ho continued. The\ncredit was almost gone. Hundreds\nof people were being carried\nby false reports, What was neede i\nwas a new government. Willi good\nmen selected from each constituency, .Mr. Bowser stated, he could\nform a government which would do\nmuch better work than the present\nadministration   is   doing.\nRestore Confidence\nThe first step would be to restore the confidence of tlie people in\nIbis country. Mr. Oliver was denouncing the Canadian Pacific vail-\nway, and Mr. Bowser stated that,\nin the :n years of his public life,\nhe had never seen a corporation\nwhich had done so much good us\nthe Canadian Pacific railway had\ndone. All Kootenay developments\nwere because of tlie Canadian Pacific railway lines, nf which the\npeople should be proud. The Trail\nsmelter    was   made   possible    through\nthis organisation,   \"if Premier Oliver\nwishes lhe Canadian Pacific rahvay\nto reduce freght rates. I could tell\nhim how tu do it.\" said Mr. Bowser\n'Hlis people control the Canadian\nNational system and charge the\nsame freight rates as the Canadian\nPacific railway. All he has to d\u201e\nis to reduce the Canadian National\nrates for competition.*1 The premier\nhad attacked the Canadian Pacific\nrailway, but had- never said a word\nibout the Canadian National railways\nThe pverhead expenses of the\nprovince should be reduced. Tliey\nwere now S-.I.l-OO.OOO. Mr. Bowser proposed cutting these by $1,000,000 the\nfirst year, The civil service salaries should be looked into, mid\nMM   man   retained   fo,-   one   job.     Th.   |\npublic   works   should   be   simplified. |\nhi    1911   tin-re   was   a   road' superintendent,     where     today     there     were j\nlislrict     engineers,     and     morn     en   <\ngineers.\nSpeaking    mu    the    liquor    control |\nsystem,   Mr.   Howser   created   an   att- ,\nmosplni-f!   which   kept   tlie   audience\nwide   awake.     \"Vou   know   tho   class\nof    people    employed    in     the    liquor |\nstores.\"   said    .Mr.    Bowser,   who   told\nof meeting a vendor last year, whom\nhe had  defended in court for rolling\na     Swede.       In     the    old     days    the\nbars   kept   a   stock   of   perhaps   10\nbrands id whiskey. The new bartender, John Oliver, stocked 84 brands\nwith the people's money. That was\nwhere the graft came in. Many war\nbrands hail been purchased at. M\nShillings a piece. Tho . government\nbought the ill-natured whiskey at\ntQ shillings through an agent, aud\nit  was sold   at   -10  shillings.\nEelectricity  Does   It\nthlsilsbottleil - .\nA     blander    wns    employed    at    the\ncoast warehouse, where cheap whisk]\nwas emptied into a vat--King George\nwhisky was added to give it tone,\nprune juice was then added aud tho\nfollowing process. a professional\nsecret obtained from the blender\nunder oalh, was then gonji through.\nAn electric wire was attached to\nthe vat, and the mixture churned,\ntho Idea being to give tho whisky\n10 years of ageing In 10 minutes\nThe mixture was then withdrawn\nand bottled, and labelled U C B., and\nsold at $.1.50. \"iJentlemen maybe you\nhave been drinking h. C. B. brand;\nthat will account for the headaches\"   stated   tho   opposition   leader..\nUnder a. new regime all this would\ngo. There would be no Archie\nJohnstone of the Kootenays at the\nhead of the liquor hoard. In his\nplace would be an old-time liquor\nman, obtained from some of the\nwell-known liquor houses. The business would bo run as the people\nwished   it.\nMr. Oliver had attempted to prove\nthat Bowser was crooked, so stated\ntho speaker, but was unsuccessful\nAll that was needed was the proper\nmen from each constituency, and\nthese,    under   -Hr.   Bowsers\" leader- I\nship,   would   bring   about   a   change\nfor   the   good   of   the   province.\nPeople Leaving Canada\nJ W. Jones, member for South\nOkanagan proceeded Mr. Bowser. He\nwas pleased to greet a Trail audience\nthe home of the Conservative whip\nJames Hchoffeld. The prewent government, he stated did not know Its\nown mind. lion. John Oliver had\nstated that there was prosperity and\nno criticism of the government in any\npart of the province. He defied the\npremier to go to his South Okanagan\nconstituency and preach prosperity.\nThe premier referred to the people\ncarrying on but made no statement of\nthe exodus from this province to the\nstates in the last six months'. From\nSeptember to March 14,000 had gone\nto the States, of these there-were 8,000\nCanadians, the others were naturalized Canadluna. Thus there must be\nsomething wrung. Production in the\nprovince two years ago was $64,000,-\n000, last year It was $04,000,000 and\nyet while the people had agreed to\ngo on the land a decrease had been\nid*own. Twice aw much butter was\nbeing imported to British Columbia\nas was beitiff produced, seven times as\nmuch mutton and two and half'timea\nas much pork was imported as produced, these did not point to progress.\nWhat the people needed was advice to encourage them to stay on\nthe land. One reason for the people\nleaving, being the heavy taxation of\nthe past six years, premier Oliver\npointed with pride at the revenue\nfigures of this year for |lt,000,000 as\ncompared with $0,291,000 of 1916.\nThe latter figures were at the husie.it\ntime of the empire when the men\nwere away or leaving the country for\noverseas and produce had fallen\ndown. He took pride in increasing\nthe revenue of the province through\nthe pockelN of the taxpayers. thus\ncapital   was shy-\nDuring the past six years the revenue had amounted to $86,000,000\nwhile the expenditures were $96,000,-\n000 and the government had been\nforced to borrow. On comparing j\nHritish Columbia and Quebec It was\nshown that (lie expenditure there per\ncapita was $7 while iu this province 1\nit was  $40.     This  was  the  difference\nof careful administration and that\nof British Columbia.\nCivil service saluries this past\nyear were ||,1I8,0-H while under the\nConservatives it was $1,664,000. In-\ncrtOHf in salaries had been granted\nbut only a few of the servants had\ngot  it.\nPulillr Dent Largo\nThe public debt of the province ju\n1M7 was $1B,?S4.000. tin the first\nof November last year it was $57,060,-\n000, nearly three times us much in six\nyetrp. The taxpayer was helping to\npay that ibht off and some of thos*'\ntoday would not live to see it paid off.\nIt was going to lake th<* best endeavors of the coming government to wipe\noff the debt. Tho finance minister\nhad claimed that the debt was increased .owing to war debts and land\nventures for soldiers, irrigation\nschemes and other methods. For the\nboard $1,500,000 had\nfor settlements nt\n1. and Fernie. At\nMerville the land had been purchased\nthree or four years ago one of the\nagricultural experts of the government denouncing the, hind as unfit.\nUp to last fall nut more than 8 to 10\nlots of from two acres had been cleared and ttie liabilities against each\nsoldier settlers had amounted to between $4,000 and $6,000. The land\nwas stoney, light and stumpy. Al\nCreston $lj,400.000 had been spi\nin clearing operations under Col. I.\nter who had resigned In disgust. Of\nthe 130 returned men originally ther\nabout so remained, the others' having\ngone to Fernle and Trail to seek employment.\nAnother debt incurred was the irrigation scheme In the Okanagan Valley at Oliver, which had amuunred to\n|1,865,D00 and the iiistrictf, wero now\nwondering how the debt would be\npaid. The land settlement Idea at\nOliver had also cost Ihe province\nmuch money.    There had been 2^,01)0\nres bought apd   irrigation  proposals\nlounting to IS50,006 made. After\nthe land was subdivided and roads\nbuilt only half was able to bo irrecat-\nAlready $2,606,000 had been\nspent    nn   this  schme,     and   it    wuh\ntlmated that four millions would be\nspent hefore it was compiled. From\nin investment of $4,000,000 tin- re-\nurns would be $1,500,1*00 showing a\n;lraight loss. Such reckless squandcr-\nng :is these, bad put the province in\nlent and it was up to people when\nlection  came,   to  elect   men   who had\n'\u2022Cards for ihe sdmlnhrtrat\niffalrs of the province.\nJames   II.   Schofield,   mel,|l\"T\nTrail stated, .that it looked like\nlection  in the next  six months\nthe visitors wore sort of spying\nthe land. He stated thnt a new\nninistration   was   needed     and\nwhen  tbe  tirin- came  it would  be     up\nto lhe people.\nDRIVE THEM OFF THE ROAD\nA correspondent of The limev-\nlournal supgcsis publishing the num-\nbtr of the trucks   driven   in   road-\nhog fashion. Too easy, altpgether\nTake away thc driver's licence, and\nif that 'doesn't turn the trick, confiscate     the   truck,     Th-*  same  rule  tn\napply '\"- all autos. \u2014 st. Thomas\nrimes-Journal.\nFarmers Didn't\nNominate Him\nA.  T.   WALKER\nSat for South Oxford as U. F. C\nmember in the late house. But h\nwon't   bn> in   the   new  one.\nWIFE SHOULD\nSHARE GOODS\npoint\u00abd a committee to report at the\nnext annual meeting on the subject\nof community of Interest between\nbusband and wife with regard to all\nreal and personal property acquired\nby them as a result of their commas\nlabor   and   effort.\nI--. Htowe-iiullen said that th* wife\nwas often dresFrnaker, milliner. Cook,\nscrub lady and mother, without a\naalary, ani yet the husband considered   that   lie   supported   her.\nAdam Shortt, Ottawa, tuld of rank\ninjustice that resulted under tbe present law, quoting the cose of a woman\nwhos\u00ab bunbaiiu left everything to ths\neldest   Pon.\nfir. Carrie M. Derrick emphasised\nhearty agreement with the principle\ncf absolute equality between men and\nwomen, hut-bund and Wife,\nAustralian Liner\nArrives Bone Dry;\nHonolulu Reason\nNational       Council       Believes       Laws\nBhould   ftecognize   \"Community\"\nProperty\" of Married.\nHALIFAX,    June    H.\u2014The    National\nCouncil    of   Women   on   Saturday    ap-\nVANOOrVErt, June Zt\u2014 The Canadian- Australaslan liner Makura docked\nhere today from the Antipodes, for t.ie\nfirst time in the history of the line,\nbone dry. !n view of the application of the new t'ntted States liquor\nlawn to tho port of Honolulu, the\nUakura's com mon iters decided to leave\nall Imuor supplies at Suva, except for\nsupplies sufficient to carry the passen-\nBerjj   to   Honolulu.\nIt has not been decided whether or\nrot the Mi.kura will curry liquor outbound.\nThe Australian Davis cup tennis\nteam, captained by J. o. Anderson,\narrived on the Makura, sp-tit a quiet\niuy iu Vancouver with friends, and\nv. ill leave, tomorrow for San Francisco en route to New York, where\nthey   Wll   meet   the   Hawaltans.\nland settlement\nbeen   borrowed\nMerville,  Ore\nof  the\nfor\nun\ni    and\nout\nad-\nthat\nMaKeYour\nWantsKnown\npvo.VT hide your light, under\n*- a bushel. Let it burn\nbrightly through The Daily\nNews Want Ads where It will\nsurely be seen by the people you\nwant to reach.\nEmployers who are seeking help\nare watching The Daily News\ncolumns, place your Want Ad\ntoday.\nThe Daily News\nNELSON,  D.  C.\nSaid Uncle Harry\nTo Nephew Jim\u2014\n\"Jim,\u2014111 put up from $2,000 to $20,000\n(any amount you say) to the credit of\nBetty and th,e children\u2014if you will jurt\ndeposit a small rate of interest against\nit each year. In that way I am willing\nto help you provide an Estate for them.\"\n\"What is more\u2014I'll never ask yon to\npay the principal\u2014just the interest\u2014and\nI'll stop even that if you die, and at once\ndeposit the full Estate in your Bank to\ntheir credit.\n\"And apain, if ynu live to old ape and\nneed the money\u2014you can call the deal\noff\u2014and I'll apree to pay you back all\nthe interest deposits made.\"\nIF YOU WERE JIM-WOULDN'T\nYOU TAKE HIM UP?\nCertainly you would!\nThe same ofTer ia open to you through\na Young Man's Policy in the North\nAmerican Life Assurance Co. By the\npayment of 3 to 5';;. interest each year\nyou create an immediate estate for any\nsum you name.\nMail the coupon today for complete information.\nNORTH AMERICAN LIFE\nASSURANCE COMPANY\n*So\/\/Ji)s ihe Continent*\nHead Oflice, Torunto, Canada\nP\n-A.  ('.  Lawrence,  District Manager.\n0. Box 0110, Nelson, B. C.\nYOUR NAME \t\nADDK13SS \t\nAmount of Estate desired %\t\nDate of birth\t\n..Orruiiation....\nPREVENT FOREST FIRES\nThe fires tliat start eaeli summer might have\ncome from If OURcigarette-stub.\nThe Forest charred and burned might have been\nthe result of YOUR camp-fire.\nThe wooded hillsides might have been blackened\nby YOUR lighted matches.\nThe burned farms might be the wages paid by\nYOUR thoughtlessness.\nIdle logging camps might be the result of YOUR\nmomentary carelessness.\nIf forest, fires annually destroy our natural\nwealth, if money is to be spent in fighting\nfires instead of building up the Province,\nthen the loss is YOURS and that of the generations to come.  Be careful.\nIT PAYS\n^t\n I . 'Ttgw Yov*\n'THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 25, 1923\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except\n\u25a0no<Uf bT The Newt Publishing com-\npkxnj,   limited.   Nelson,   B.C.,   CanadA.\nBueineaa letter* ahoilla be td-\n\u25a0irttlia and checks end money orden\nMade payable to Tbe Newe Publishing company, limited, and In no case\nto  individual  membera of  the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A- B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be teen at the office\nof any advertising agency recognised\nby tbe Canadian   I'ress  Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES.\nBy mall   (country),   per  month...9 .90\nPer    year      1.99\nOutside Canada,   per  month Tt\nper    year 1.99\nDelivered,   per   month     7S\nPer ill montha    * 00\nPer  year 1.99\n_   Payable   in   Advance, \t\nKember Audit Bureau of Clrculetioa.\nMONBAY, JUNE 25, 1923\nThe World Court in Public\nSession\nWhat a distinguished British jurist\nhas called \"tho first real lawsuit\nbetween nations\" ta ab'out to be\nargued before the permanent court\nof International Justice at The\nHague. Thia fact, coupled with the\n\u25a0significant debate in progress ln the\nUnited States respecting the advisability of American participation In\nthat tribunal, accounts for the lively\nInterest manifested ln its first public\nsession.\nThe world court previously met\ntwice In private, and lt haa given\nftdvtce to the council, of the League\nof Nations ln issues submitted. It\nhas also decided a case involving\nthe legal status of British subjects\nla French Morocco. The present\nsession Is noteworthy chiefly because two nations, Great Britain\nand Germany, are appearing before\nthe court as litigants in a suit\n-which grew out of different inter\npretatlons of a provision In the\ntreaty  of Versailles,\nGermany is not a member of the\nLeague of Nations and is not repre\naented on the regular bench of the\nworld court. It wisely availed Itself, however, of the right conferred on nonmembers of the league\nby the constitution of the court\nand appointed a Judge to take part\ntn the case which affects vital\nGermar? Interests. The appointee is\na learned and progressive Jurist and\neducator. Prof. Walter Shucking.\nThe question at issue is whether\nGermany has kept the Kiel canal\nopen, as required by the treaty\nof Versailles, or has violated that\nInstrument by refusing access to the\ncanal desired by certain British\nships. There is to be a Judicial\ndetermination of the facts and of\nthe principals Involved.\nIn addition to thlB suit the court\nhas on Us docket two other interesting cases. One of them Is\nGermany's complaint that Poland\nhas been oppressing its German\nminorities. The other case concerns\nthe autonomy of eastern Karelia\nas guaranteed by the Russo-Finnlsh\ntreaty. The Russian soviet gov -\neminent, unlike Germany, has seen\nfit to repudiate the international\ncourt on the alleged ground that,\nas constituted, it cannot be impartial or Judicial. Whatever opinion the court may give in the\nRusso-Finnlsh dispute, therefore, will\nserve merely as a moral basis for\nsubsequent diplomatic or other action- by Finland or by the powers\nfriendly to that nation In case the\nopinion   is   unfavorable   to   Russia.\nThe world court is meant to be\nIndependent, to .build up a true\ncode of law, to promote Justice. Its\nopportunity is great. Its regular\nmembera are acknowledged authorities\non- international law and the evolution  of   Jurisprudence.\nWfidenf\nbuseh\ni^ur%A_Kta*in>n\nSERVE FISH   T WICE A  WEEK\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nCreamed   Dried   Beef\nCoffee Toast\nLuncheon\n\u2022SpanlHh   Omelet\n.   Wbole   Wheat   Bread\nLettuce\nCocoa Jam\nDinner\nTomato   Bisque\nBaked  Sword  Fish\nBaked Potatoes\npeas Fruit   Salad\nCoffee   Cottage Pudding\nIt la a deplorable fact 'that the\naverage family ia not fond of fish.\nOn Fridays such a family will eat\nlt\u2014but on other days of the week\nmeat is  preferred.\nAnd I mum confess that I am\nnot among this majority who prefer\nmeat to fish! Yet, for reasons of\neconomy, I believe that we should\nent fish at least twice a week.\nMany varieties of fish are cheaper\nthan our favorite meats. We should,\ntherefore, be glad to eat fish often,\nrather  than  only  on  Fridays.\nIn summertime, especially, It Is\nwise for us to eat plenty of fish.\nFor in hot weather we do not need\nthe heavy, red-blooded meats; our\nstomachs are working under the\nhandicap of exhausting atrfiospheric\nheat, and they can more easily\ndigest  the  simple fish.\nAlthough there are 40 commonly-\nknown varieties of edible flBh, the\naverage housekeeper Is familiar with\nflnly a few. This is doubtless\nbecause her local market carries only\na few kinds, (for, In different parts\nof   the   country,   different   kinds   of\nfish are plentiful). Almost all of\nus, however, are familiar with the\nfollowing   kinds:\nThe Dark-Fleshed Fish \u2014 These\nare known as the olly-meated fish.\nThey have a rich flavor, for the\nfat is distributed through the flesh.\nThe best known ol thla variety are\nthe bltiefis.li, mackerel, shad, salmon,\nherring, awordflth and sabh'flsh. Because of their own rich flavor, they\nn\u00ab\"fd very little seasoning, (except\nsalt, butter and pepper), and they\nare best served with the mildly-\nflavored and sweet-Juice vegetables,\nsuch as peas, carrots, beets, greens\nend asparagus . They need no\nsauces.\nThe White-Fleshed Fish \u2014 These\nfish, however, need rich butter and\noil sauces to make them tempting.\nThe heet known of this variety are\nthe flounder, pike, cod, hake, turbat,\nperch, pollack, Rtrlped bass, red\nsnapper haddock, halibut and white-\nfish. These are called \"lean\" and\n\"dry-ineated\" fish, and they have\ntheir fat secreted in the liver. All\nstrong-juiced or acid-flavored vege\ntables are suitable to serve with\nthpm\u2014such as tomatoes, onions, cu\ncumber, green pepper, dandelion\ngreens and chives.\nOf course these suggestions are not\nfixed dietetic laws. If you wish\nto serve one of the milder-riavored\nvegetables with a white-fleshed fish\nyou can supply the acid or puiquant\nflavor with a fruit salad or fruit\ndessert.\nTomorrow  \u2014  Answered   Letters.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Mis?\nKlrkman In care of the \"Efficient\nHousekeeping\" department will be answered In these columns In their turn.\nThis requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number received. So, If a personal or quicker\nreply Is desired, a stamped and self-\naddressed envelope must be Inclosed\nwith the question. Be sure to use\nYOUR full name, street number, and\nthe name of your city and province.\u2014\nThe Editor.\n(      The Lighter Side\n\"Chloroform used on blooming\nflowers.\" If only we could use it on\nblooming   idiots.\"\nIt Isn't so very difficult to get to\nEasy street if you can pay tho price\nat  the  toll gates.\nChildren   nre   an   educational force,\nat   that.     No   Kelson    parent could\nkeep   up   with   the   new   slang without  them.\nIf you are free to hold it. It Is a\nmere belief; but a little persecution\nat one\u00a9 makes  it  a principle.\nA Violent Protest\nThat have-you-left-anything \u00abign\nIn a hotel room Isn't an invitation\nto take the other towel.\nIf the sun really went on  strike, as\nprophesied,   can't   we   get   an   in June\ntion   to   make   it   refrain   from   vio\nlence?\nSouth Wellington\nWill Have Change\nH.   C.   BUCKLAND\nConservative    member    In    the   late\nOntario  house,  is not in today's battle of ballots.\nTen Years Ago\nWhy do fat people whe want to\nreduce always take such a roundabout way of attaining this end?\nIf Increased physical exercise will\nbring satisfactory results, as it is\nsaid it will, why don't these oversized persons find some sensible\nand useful kind of work In which\nsuch exercise may be found?\nThey 'seem to go to a good deal\nof trouble to get themselves Into\nBhape so that a smaller Buit of\n\u2022 clothes will fit them; but lt is\nnot by* the kifid of work which appeals to reasonable persons. Roll-\nffig \"Around ln one's pyjamas on the\nfloor for a half hour every morn-\nning may be an effective way of\ngetting rid of superfluous flesh; but\nneither- to the persona in the next\nroom, nor to those in the room\nImmediately below, does thia process of weight reduction appeal as\na rational form of exercise.\nFat are urged now to play croquet.\nThe fact that they are to use only\na mallet with a- very short handle\nwill make H necessary for them to\nstoop over, and thus exercise regions\nmoat -affected by the adipose tissue,\nTh* sport Is said to be becoming\nmore popular from day to day, and\nthe results In decreased weight are\nunusually gratifying.\nBut why not take to something\nuseful? If exercise will do the business, why not a couple of wash-\ntubs with a week's washing done\nto a state of immaculate whiteness? Hep-eat this exercise every\nday for a month or two, and the\nresults will be Just as satisfying as\nthey will be from rolling insanely\naround the bedroom floor for a\nhalf hour in the morning. Probably\nmore  so.\n- What shall be said of an individual\nwho finds that at all hazards he\nmust reduce, and then hires someone to remove the dandelions from\nthe front yard, and for himself\ntakes to playing croquet. If It Is\nstooping exercise to use in plucking\ntgteoplngn exercise to use in plucking\nout the dandelions? That would\nadd profit to pleasure.\n\u25a0In this blessed country Borne men\nget rich so fast that they Spit on\ntheir hands before grasping a steering  wheel.\nCritics once said Germany was\nwithout imagination, but that was\nbefore she began to think up a new\nreparation   plan   each   Thursday.\nCorrect this sentence: \"I don't\ncare what the style does,\" said the.\nflapper; \"I like mine 'bdbbed. and\nI'm going to keep lt that way.\"\n\"But whose fault Is it,'* demands\na writer. \"If a pedestrian gets run\nover the second time?\" Speaking\noffhand, we should say the undertaker's.\nThe everpresent panels of pleating contribute their charm to a\nfawn-colored frock of crepe-de-\nchene, which is smart for daytime\nwear in the city, with the accompanying pleated cape, and for a restaurant dinner and theater when\nmore formal clothes are not necessary.\nThe sleeves are mere capes. Which\nis  but  consistent with   the  tendency\nof the newest models foi* sleeve\nless effects. To complete the waist\nline there is only a simple string\nbelt -of the same material, tying\nln   a., graceful   bow   at   one   side.\nFlat roses of the same material\non the collar of the cape give the\nFrench note to the \u201e costume and\nharmonize wilh tho rest of the\nscheme.\nBy Jama W, Barton, M*Dt\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The Daily News, June 25, 1903.)\nA game of bowls was played yesterday on the court house greens; the\nscores being. W. P. Tierney, A. Turner. F. J. Hume, J. Neelanda (skip)\n9; D. Booth. W. G. Gillett, H. Irvine,\nJ. A- McDonald (skip) 17.\n\u2022    *    *\nROSSLAND.   B.C.,   June   23.\u2014Ship\nments of ore for the past week are\u2014\nLe Roi, 4000; Center Star, 1680; War\nEagle, 1320; Kootenay. 290; Le Roi\nNo. 2. Uii, Velvet, 100; Giant, 30;\ntotal 7780; total for year to date\n171,627 tona.\nRev. J. Reid Jr. returned last night\nfrom the coast cities, and states that\nthe Columbia river is very high, and\nis flowing over the Great Northern\ntrack In many places, and in one\nplace the water is over the wheels of\ni the engine.\nDo You Get Seasick?\ndit-\nw\nthe\nWhatMouThink?\n(Registered   ln   accordance   with   the\nCopyright   Act)\nSeasickness or trainslckness are\nsuch distressing conditions that perhaps a few thoughts about them\nmight be helpful.\nAs to the cause?\nWell, there are about 20\nferent things that are blamed,\nthat our balancing organ in\ninner ear is at the bottom of it seems\nto find favor with most investigators. This fluid in the ear gets\nshifted about in such an unusual\nway that It sends impulses to the\nvomitting center in the brain. Tfce\nfact that deaf mutes are free from\nseasickness would tend to sterngthen\nthat idea  as  to its cause.\nOn thc other hand the shifting of\nthe abdominal organs by the motion\nis also blamed. The fact that a\ngood wide belt worn* tightly about\nthe abdomen affords relief to many\npeople has been amply proven.\nIt Is estimated that only about\none person in 20 entirely escapes\nseasickness, while at least one ln\nevery   two  are   pretty  sick.\nNow, what to do about it?\nWell, the first thing is to get\nyourself, particularly your \"Intestine,\nin good shape beforp you go on the\nboat. Take a good purge, particularly one that will stimulate the\nliver. Cut out pork, pastry and\nca ndies for a few days before you\ngo  on   board.\nAnd, when you get on board, go\nlightly on meals. I know they are\ngood and the open air makes you\nhungry,   but  eat  little  and   often.\nYou know they feed you five or\nsix meals a day, so take a \"little\"\nevery time, with the emphasis on tlie\n\"little.\"\nIf you feel Rick, notwithstanding\nall your precautions, try and stay\nmidway in the boat and get less of\nthe motion.\nRemember you must take something\ninto your stomach or you' will get\nvery, weak. So. after each retching\nspell,  take a little broth or, beef tea.\nSo, if you're up against It, remember the above suggestions\u2014midway on the ship\u2014a wide belt\u2014and\nnourishment after each retching spell.\nprepared from the fresh young leaves of\n\"SALADA\"\nis   the   ideal   drink   for   Summer.\nCool, Refreshing, Delicious \u2014 Try it.\n^r^\nThe Dally Newt Invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public Interest. A non-de-plume may,\nIf desired, be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\nas a g larantee of good faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief and\nmust avoid personalities. The\nDally Nowa does not hold Itself, ln\nany way. responsible for the vlewa\nof correspondents. Letters which\ncontain advertising matter or propaganda which is classed as advertising will not be accepted under\nany circumstances.\nThe Daily News, Jtne 25, 1913)\nThe steamer Moyie will make i\nspecial trip dally, beginning on Frl\nday next In Order to accomodate the\nranchers who are shipping large\nquantities of berries from the 1\npoints.\n* *    *\nFinal arraii\u00a3emeiits have been\nmade for the Nelson football team to\nplay Phoenix, tlie Boundary champions, here on July 10.\n* \u2022    \u2022  \t\nMany claims have bftfl staked on\nCottonwood crepk In the past month.\n* \u2022    *\nThe government, wharf at Boswell-\nwhich was Junt completed about a\nmonth ago, was yesterday badly damaged by the heavy storms, which have\nprevailed on the Kootnay lake lately.\nElectric\nHot Plates\nAsk Pupils Sixty Years\nfor Their Opinions on\nSchools, Says Old-Timer\nNelson, B.C., June 24, 1823.\nTo the Utter of The  Daily News:\nSit* \u2014 Some wine man has said\n\"Fools step In where ancels fear to\ntread.\" Yes! In the middle a\u00abes I\nmight have played the fool, and history tells us that fools sometimes\nspoke   like   wise   men.\nIn our great Dominion. I am sometimes a man in the street, a pedestrian, not even reaching the - auto\nstage, for whom crossings are sometimes   tnken   up.\nWe hear some talk of the \"high\ncost of  living,\"   of   the   British  Colum\nbia Liquor law, and the deterioration\nof Scotch whisky, also the high- cost\nof ga .sol tne and the modern song,\n\"Ten nights In a garage, and Father,\ndear Father, the car will Hoon be\ndone,  and  mother Is  waiting for you.\"\nWe feed oats and h.iy to horses\nbecause time has shown they thrive\non such food. Other varieties, pre-\nJlgested and olherwi.se, are not considered because the horse has no\npurchasing power, but has considerable   horse   sense.\n1 was reading your report of the\nteachers' meeting, and- was pleased to\nlearn that the city of Seattle had\nfound a system of education that was\nan aid to children in guiding them\nalong   the   path   of   life.\nTea] It is a good thing for teachers to get together and debate on\nquestions in reference to their calling.\nWhat about getting some old pupils,\nsay about 50 to 60 years of age, and\nhear what they would suggest? I\nwarrant 99 per ont would speak well\nof the good influence teachers had\nupon their life's work, and would say\n\"We admire you for trying to find\nthe best trail so as to make our children   betler   citizens.\"\nTry Specialty System.\nI would like to see the specialty\nsystem tried; find out what the child\nis best adapted for, then educate him\nalone those tines. (But, who will\nbe   the   judge?)\nTench them to make use of the\nnatural resources of the district in\nwhleh   they   live.\nCost? Never mind the cost. It will\nbe a good Investment, and the boys\nand girls, when they grow into the\nadult stage, will again gladly pay\ntheir share of the cost for their own\nchildren.\nOLD-TIMER.\nIt's kind to the\nhands\u2014\nThree times a day your\nhands may go into the rich\nharmless Sunlight suds,\nand never be made red\nand rough or sore.\nSunlight Soap is a blend of\nthe pure cleansing oils of\nthe cocoanut and the palm,\nthe same grade as used in\npure toiletsoaps. Itsgreat\ncleansing power, and absolute purity, make\nSunlight particularly\nsuitable for dish washing.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED\nToronto\n(\nO,\nc>\nLet  us  figure  your  Mils  of\nBuilding Material.  Coast Lumber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial   John Bumsi& Son\nfor\n$1.69 Each\nOn Sale only on. Saturday Morning at 9 o'clock.\nOne to Each Customer\nJust the thing for Afternoon Tea.    Get busy.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nBAKER STREET NELSON, B. C.\nHighly Nutritive\u2014Easily Digested\nAll the good food elements of selected wheat and\nmalted barley are contained, in Grape-Nuts.   Phos-'\nphates and iron for bone and brain building.   And :        -\nsuch delicious flavor!\nServe only a moderate amount for the cereal part of\nthe meal\u2014with cream or milk. Highly nutritive\u2014\neasily digested.  Ready to serve right from the package.1\n\"There's a Reason\"\nGrapesN\nA   THE BODY-BUILDER\nCANADIAN POSTUM CEREAL CO., LIMITEJJ\nHead Offic* *. Toronto       Factory: Windior\n m\n\u2022TEE NELSON DAILY* NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 25\/ 1923\nGolf Shoes\nThis Ladies' Golf Shoe\nin made of Brown Smoked\nTanned Leather.\nPanther rubber non-slip\nsoles.\nIt is Dressy.\nIt is Comfortable.\nIt is Serviceable.\nPrice  $6.50.\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNorth York Will\nMake New Choice\nKootenay and Boundary\nCHRISTINA LAKE    >\nEXODUS STARTS\nHwnj Oran-1 Torki Resident* Will Put\nla  Summer at PIrMunr* assort;\nSlanj   Bungalows.\nr.RAND FORKH, B.C., June 24 \u2014\nRepairs on the new Cascade-Rossland\nhighway are to be pushed forward.\nW. 8. Phillips and E. J. Fttepatrlck\nhave, left with crews to carry out\nwork on different Hections, and It Is\nhoped to get the had spots On the\nhighway fixed up as soon as possible,\nafter which surfacing will be proceeded with. Work has been some\nheld up by the^ continued rains, which\nhave also resulted ln cuts in the\nroadway. \u2022\nThe exodus to Christina lake for the\nsummer has commenced, and there\nare indications that even a larger\nnumber than usual of local residents\nare planning to take up summer quarters at the popular resort. Lost season there wore a score or more new\nbungalows built, and more will go up\nthis year. A syndicate has been\nformed nnd has purchased considerable frontage north of Hodge's Cove,\nand it Is not improbable that much\ndevelopment will take place In that\nfcrra this summer. Quite a nice bungalow has just been completed for\nMrs.   C.   Manly   at  Hodge's   Cove.\nVic. Biner, former resident of\nPhoenix and owner of the pavilion\nproperty, has come back from California and Is taking charge of the\npavilion personally for the first time\nThe pavilion has been moved and\nnewly fitted up with hardwood dancing floor and fine dining-room.\nThe usual celebrations are in lune\nfor Christina this season. Dominion\nDay will be celebrated with the usual\nbaseball and athletic sportH; the\nMasons will hold thHr annual outing\nfor children on July 11, and the\nKnights of Pythias are planning for\na big  picnic on July  26.\nNAKUSP NOTES\nNakusp Enjoys a\nMusical Recital\nNAKCHP, B.C.. June 24 _ A de-\nIlRhtful niu.si.-;,! recita.1 Wi,\u201e ..jven t,v\nlY__.a J   Horele,  ThuraisLjiwSi\nat thp Masonic hall, when her ninny\npupils,   assisted   by   ether   Instrumental\nexhibition of their abilities. The hall\nwas crowded with parent*, relatives\nand friends of the partlelpants, who\nvoted a high coropllm.nl to Mrs\nHorsley as a capable anil painstnk\nitiK   teacher.      ^.\nThose -who took part were- S J\nHarlow, w. P. Calhoun, W. Carruthers; Mosdames C. P. Horslev. A J\nHarrison of Arrow Park. M E West-\nMisses Kuniee CorniUl.nl, Grade\nFreeman, ltuth Horsley. Iner. Carlson\nAlice Powell, Nancy Waterfield. Mary\nCarlson, Dorti C0W\u00bbn, Flo Dilley,\nHildrcd Gardner. Hilda Patterson\nLouise Horsley. Jesse Inn. Jean Water-\nfield and Kathleen Fowler; and Mas\nter   Alfred   Carlson.\nG. H. Gardner. I B, Hcbled-I Mrs\nGardner and Mrs. West u;so gave a\nquartet   selection\nThe hall was beautifully decorated\nfor the occasion '\nBURTON RANCHERS\nIMPORT JERSEYS\nLIEUT.-COL.  T.   H.   LENNOX\nWas not nominated as Conservative\nj standard  bearer  this   time.\n; Mummies Make a\nFine Brown Paint\nEven mommies havo their use,\nespecially those of between 2500 and\n30UO years of age, for one of the\nrichest and finest of brown paints\nis   manufactured   from   theth.\nThe paint fs made by grinding\nthe hones of the mummies with the\nhitunien with which they were embalmed. ICach mummy, when ground\nup, makes sufficent paint to last the\ntrade for about five years. Besides\nIts wonderful rich color, it has the\nadvantage of being practically permanent, and for these reasons it in\nIn great demand amongst artists,\nespecially portrait painters fhose subject'*  have   brown   hair.\nUnfortunately, the supply of suitable mummies is getting scarce, for\nIt is only those of between 20<W\nand 3000 years of age that will\nproduce the beautiful, brown paint\nso  loved  hy  artists.     It   was   during\nNAKUSP, B.C., June 24. \u2014 F. A,\nMcDonald, chief forester of Nelson,\ndrove in to Nakusp in his car on\nThursday evening, accompanied by\nDistrict Ranger A.. J. Harrison of\nArrow Park. This Is the first time\nthat a government official has brought\nhis car on a trip of Inspection\u2014taking\nadvantage of the cheap ferriage. He\nreports the road from Fauqulers to\nBurton to he in a very bad state and\nrequiring immediate attention to take\ncare   of   the.   increased   traffic.\nK. Aalten and Miss Gladys Olnfetl\nof Vancouver visited Mr. Aal ten's\nparents at Rrmtse and returned to the\nconst   city   yesterday.\nMrs. Rerry is having her dwelling\nmoved from Block 2 to Block 10. and\nwith her fellow teacher. Miss Rooke,\nwas camped on Broadway on Thursday\niJght pending the final removal of the\nhouse   to   Its   new   location.\nMrs. Karl Aalten of Brouse WW\nbrought in to the local hospital\nThursday evening for an operation,\nthe result of a recent accident when\nahn was thrown out of her buggy on\nher   way   to   town.\nBURTON, B.C., June 34. \u2014 Thomai\nMiller of Burton has Importsd a valu\nable Jersey bull, purchased from B\nC Cornfield, Cowtehan. n, w. Bton\u00abi\nhas   purchased   a   beautiful   pure-bred\nheifer   of   the   Jersey   breed.\nRanchers of this district are showing an increased inlerest In the development of high-grade dairy stock\nTwelve-Pound Char\nCaught at Nakusp\nNAKUSP. BC, June 21. \u2014 F\nHushes, proprietor ef the Orand hotel,\nand A. Hansen of Demars, returned\nto town on Friday morning after\nvery few hours' fishing trip betwf\nhere and Rock Island, witli nine-' beautiful specimens of dolly varden trout\n\u2014the largest of which weighed 111\npounds, This Is one of the best\ncatches   reported   for   some   years.     On\nSunday J. H. Wstmp also cm tht fi\nrainbow    trout   averaging   2 %    pounds\neach.\nKINNAIRD NOTES\n* KINNAIRD, B.C.. June 21 -English\nchurch service was held in the school\nhouse on Sunday afternoon last, the\nservice heine conduced by L. Thompson  of  Edffewood.  .\nPaul Villle of this city visited\nTrail on Monday.\nMiss M. KilioiiKh and Joe Kill-High\nspent a couple of dSyi In Trail the\np.ast week, the bursts of Mr. and Mrs\nJ.   Dovey   and   family.\nthat    period    that   the    art   of   embalming was at Hs best.\nAfter the embalming process had\nbeen carried out, the body was\ncoated with bitumen and subjected to\na slight heat. It is this warmth\nin combination with tho great age\nof the hitunien that has produced the\nwonderful brown that makes tho\npaint produced from lt the finest\nin   the   world.       \u25a0       _______\nSince the days of Queen Elizabeth,\nDutch eel boats have been berthed\noutside the custom house on the\nThames at London, and have been\nfinite a picturesque feature of the\nriver; but now they are to be re-\nahout 10,000,000 eels a year. The\nDutch flsherinen-ln-charge capture\nabout 10,000,000 ells a year. The\nboats have for centuries had the\nright to berth at the same spot in\nthe Thames, one of tho conditions\nbeing that at least one boat must\n-always be there.\nTho right was granted In Charles\nIII.'s reign, because, when other\nforeign shipping was frightened away\nat the time of the great plague,\nthe Dutch boats continued to bring j\neels   to  London.\nJAPANESE   ENGLISH I\nHere is a copy of a traffic rule\nNo. 2. said, to be actually used\nhy the street cars in Toklo.\n\"When a passenger nf the foot\nheave in sight, tootle the horn\ntrumpet to him melodiously at first,\nIf he still obstacles your passage,\ntootle with angry vigor and express\nhy words of mouth the warning;\nHtl     Hi!\"\nDrops Oat Alter\nTwenty-nine Years\nReady for Canning Season\nPreserving Kettles. 4 Blzes, In Aluminum and Granite ware;\ncanning-Racks; Jelly Strainers, all sizes; Wash Boilers In copper,\ntin and galvanized  ware, and all   accessories.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CQMPA1W\nLook for the Red  Hardwsra   Store\nBox  414 \"    PHtns  407\nSELL YOUR\nUsed Articles\nThousands of Daily Newa readers are looking\nfor bargains in household, farm and other effects\nwhich are no longer needed by their owners.\nTell what you have to offer and the price you\nwant for it in a\nDAILY NEWS\nClassified Ad.\nThere is no better way in which to turn used\narticles into money, iy2c a word, 6 insertions for\nthe price of four when cash accompanies order.\nTHOMAS  CRAWFORD\nOf  Tururito.  father ot  the lute On\ntariu   hutls,:,    h;ih    wpoilk'T    llll'I'T    111,\niiist  CosMrvntlvfl uiH-.'t'titiKiit\nNorth CountrpWon't\nHave His Services\nSocial Happenings\nIn Nelson  fi&\ni     T.   MAGLADERY\nWho siit as Conoefvatlve tot Temis-\nkanihtg in the Ontario house recently\ndissolved. Is not u candidate today.\nHare you\n, shinedyour\n1*V^|shoes today?\n|2.n1\nShoePolish\nSttvtri yon\n\/*\u25ba\/.*\u00bb it cy\nThin column la conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. All news of\na social nature. Including rece-p-\ntions, private entertainments, personal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMrs.   Vlgneux.\nMiss Mayme MePhatl, 91* Silica\nstreet, -entertained a numher of her\ngirl friends at the tea hour Saturday, During ths afternoon a contest\nwhleh created much merriment resulted\nin Miss Loreen Dunham 'being the\nwinner of the first prize, while Miss\nViolet Towgood car red off the consolation. Assisting in serving the refreshments were Mi.ss Margaret Ingram, who poured, while Miss Hazel\nMaundrell cut the Iocs. Others assisting were Miss Kathleen Hhaw, Miss\nKllen Robinson of Be!ford, Miss Erma\nBrown, Miss Eileen Simpson and Miss\nAlice   McPhail.\nThe guests were Miss Eileen Dill,\nMiss June Phair, Miss Loreen Dunham, Miss Helen Murphy, Miss Dorothy Gilchrist, Mlsn Frances McHardy,\n.Miss Kathlyn Waterson of Vahcou-\nVSf, Mivs Violet Towgood, Mtss Agatha\nScott, Miss May Lawson, Miss Muriel\nMaundrell, Miss Hazel Maundrell, Miss\nMarjorie Jerome, Miss Barbara Kil-\ntnrg, Miss Jessie Croll, \"Miss Mayme\nCroll, Miss Stevenson of Vancouver,\nMiss Edith Proudfoot, Miss Grace\nMcDonald, Miss Peggie Cameron of\n.Shirley, Miss Kathleen Brodie, Miss\nAlice McPhail, Miss Eileen Simpson,\nMiss Erma Brown, Miss Ellen Robinson, Mi.ss Kathleen Hhaw, and Miss\nMargaret   Ingram.\nMr. and Mrs. H. G, Blaylock and\nfamily of Tadanac have taken the\nFord cottage at Crescent Bay for the\nsummer   months.\nvet\nMaster Francis Kellogg, 417 Carbon-\natf street, acted as host to a numher\nof his boy frlendN, Saturday evening,\nin honor of Master Thomas and Master George Cherry, who leave shortly\nfor England. Games and music were\nthe matn pastimes. Those present\nwere James Kinahan, John McLean,\nBobby Burns, Joe Vlngo, Joe Vlgneux,\nThomas  Cherry and George Cherry.\nW. H. Ktubbs, 1319 Cedar street, left\nvia the Crow Boat yesterday morning\nfor Lethbridge, where he will visit for\na few weeks with his son, E. H.\nStubbs.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nHerbert Pitts, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. H, Pitts, 319 Cedar street, arrived\nIn tUe city via the Crow boat Friday\nevening from Lethbridge, where he\nhas been attending a business college\nfor the past  year.\nDr. and Mrs, C. McNaughton of\nTrail were city visitors over the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n\u2022I. Ottestad of the Ymlr road engineering staff spent the week-end In\ntown.\nMrs. Minnie Brine of Los Angeles,\nCal., arrived In the tity last week.\nShe Is a guest at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. B. Hall, 324 Gore street,\nwhile   here.\nE. Norman, Ward street, leTt via the\nafternoon boat, Saturday, for his home\nat   Mirror   Lake.\n\u2022 *    \u2022   *\nMlsa   Mary   Sutcliffe   and   Miss Alice\nDii'ilop    left    by    the    afternoon boat.\nSaturday, for Riondel, where <hey\nspent   the   week-end.\nMrs. B. G. Rennie, Victoria street,\nentertained informally at the tea hour,\nThursday, for her sister, Mrs. Col-\nl.nrwood Gray of Bonnington. Others\nInvited were Mrs. W. S. King. Miss\nNf. M. Currie. Mrs. Gordon Beeston,\nMrs. Benjamin McGregor, Mrs. J. A.\nGibson, Mrs. J. McGregor and Mrs,\nW.   B.   Evans.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mis. R. A. Kade. |S4 Stsn-\nley street,\" and children, left by the\nSaturday afternoon boat for Cresoent I\nMay, where th-y spent the week-end, [\nLittle. Harry, who has been 111 For\nsome weeks, remained there to visit\nwith   ills  grandparents.\nMrs*      Robert     Smillie,     1117     Hall j\nstreet,     entertained     the     members     of |\nMrs.     H.     MacKenzie's     circle     of     Bt. j\nPaul'l  Presbyterian church  Friday afternoon,      The   hostess   was   assisted    in '\nserving    refreshments    by    Mrs.    Glen- [\ndinning   and   Miss   Alma   Smillie.     The.\nguests   were   Mrs.   A.   Brown,   Mrs.   K.\nU.    G.    Dredge,    Mrs,    J.    Foggo,    Mi.ss\nWhiteman,   Wiss   Robinson,   Miss   Mar- \u25a0\ngaret    Brown.   Mrs.   John   Stobo,    Mrs, ]\nMclntvro,   Mrs.   Thomas   Price,   Mrs.   J. \u25a0\nR. Stewart,  Mrs. Gl.-iulliining and  Mrs.\nT.   Martin.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nMr     and    Mrs.    E.    Whittemore    of\nTrail    motored   to   the   city   yesterday.\nThev   were   accompanied   by   their   sons,\nHarold   Whittemore   and   Carl   Whitte-\nnore,   R.Ke ,   the   latter   having   recently;\n\u2022\u25a0eturned   from   M\u00abOtU   university.    Miss:\nViolet     Irving    of    tt-fr.    Trail    Central ]\nschool   staff  ,ftlM accompanied   them.     1\nMrs. W. C, Motley and young (laugh- j\nr,     Roimnigton,    were    city    visitors \u25a0\nSaturday.\nRev. Father F, Verbeke of Kelowna, |\nwho was operated on at Rt. Paul's\nhospital in Vancouver a month ago. :\nhas recovered sufficiently to travel SOS\nfar as Nelson, where he will remain j\nfor a few weeks recuperating. He is :\na guest at the'residence of Very ReV.'!\nJ.   Althoff,   V.G.-Ward  street.\nClarence Ogilvia of Harrop returned j\nto his heme on the afternoon boat i\nSaturday. (     .    g\nIrs George Truscott. of Harrop j\n...,) visited last Week at the home of\nMr. and Mrs, A. Dolphin, 122+ Ward\nstreet, left \\ la the afternoon boat\nSaturday  for her home.\nlis. H. J. Bishop, High street.\nFairview, entertained a few of her\nladv friends Thursday evening in\nhonor of Mrs, Walter BhSOkSlton, who\nleaves with her hushand and family\nfor Portland, Ore., where they go to\nreside permanently, A very enjoyable\ngame of whist resulted In Mrs. Herbert Thorpe winning the first prize,\nhtle Mrs J, Bell Jr. was winner of\nthe consolation. The hostess was assisted in serving \u2022refreshments by\nMrs.   W.    Hancock.     The   guests   were\nMrs. R. Rowling. Mrs. T. Cookson.\nMrs. W. J. Brodie, Mrs. W. E. Warburton, Mrs. D. StDenis, Miss Doreen\nHtl>enis, Mrs W. Bennett. Mrs. J.\nBell Jr., Mrs. R. Bell, Mrs. A. W.\nStubbs, Mrs. M, Melneruk, Mrs.\nHerbert Thorpe and Mrs. Walter\nShack el ton.\n\u2022 i    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G. Noel Brown of\nBonnington spent Saturday ln the\ncity.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n\u25a0ft K. Metcalf of Willow Point\nwas a city   visitor   Saturday,\n* *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. William Rutherford\nreturned from Trail Saturday morning, where-* they have been spending\ntlie  past  few days.\nMajor Turner Lee of Bonnington\nwas  a city   visitor  Saturday.\n\u00bb   \u25a0   w\nDr. David Hartin, 817 Vernon street,\nmotored to Castlegar yesterday, and\nreturned with Mrs. Hartin and young\ndaughter, Miss Mary, who have been\nvisiting with Mr. and Mrs. John A.\nWaldie   for   the   past   few   days.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Louise Scott of the high school\nstaff at Trail, passed through the\ncity Friday evening on her way to\nher home in Fredericton, N.B.\nss i\nMrs. T. Lean of Trail was a city\nvisitor  Saturday.\n\u00bb   s   e\nMiss Kathleen Grey of Bonnington\nspent Saturday  In  the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. Henderson Cleland and his daughter, Miss Henderson Cleland, left by\nthe morning boat yesterday for their\nhome after spending Saturday in the\ncity.\nHis grace Archbishop Casey, accompanied by Rev. A, L. Mclntyre\nand Rev. A. K. Mclntyre, who have\nbeen making a tour of the surrounding district, will arrive In the city\nvia the Kaslo boat this morning. They\nwill be guests at the home of Very\nRev. J. Althoff, V.G., 819 Ward street,\nwhile here.\nest\nW. Oakes of Crescent Bay spent\nSaturday  in town.\nLawrence Cody of Kaslo arrived in\nthe  city  Friday  by the morning boat.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Beley of Riondel spent Saturday   shopping   In   the   city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 \u25a0\nMrs! W. llamiay of Trail has taken\nUp residence for the summer months\nat Crescent Bay ln Captain Prowse's\nhome.\na     \u00bb     \u2022\nMrs. Louis and sons, Reginald aud\nValentine, are spending the balance of\nthe summer months at her cottage\nat   Willow   Point.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nE. P. McDermid and bride, of Vancouver, arrived in the oity by mfllor\nFriday evening and are guests at the\nHume hotel for  a few days.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. A. T. Eyton and Miss Betty\nBytOII \u25a0petit the week-end with Mr.\nand Mrs. C. R. Hamilton at their\nsummer place at Kokanee.\n\u2022 *    *\nMiss Jean Corsan of Fernle arrived\nin the city on the Crow boat Friday-\nevening and is a Buest at the home\nof Miss Louise Cunliffe, 423 Observatory   street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nFriday afternoon   Mrs.  A.   W.   Stubbs\nand -Mrs.\" C. .Simpson were joint hostesses at the home of the former.\nNelson avenue, Fairview, at a bright\nfarewell tea In compliment to Mrs.\nWalter Bhsckslton, who leaves shortly\nfor Portland. An Interesting event of\nthe afternoon was an address which\nwas read by Mrs. Annie Peters, which\nwas responded to very suitably by the\nguest of the afternoon. A club hag\nwas then presented by the twin daughters   of   Mrs.    Stubbs,    Miss   Mona   and\nMiss    Helen.      Dainty    refreshment!\nwere   then   served.\nThe invited guests were Mrs J,\nSmith. Mrs. Jack Ryan, Mrs. R. Bell.\nMrs. Jack Bell Jr.. Mrs. W. B -Warburton, Mrs. C. A. Larsen, Mrs C.\nSimpson. Miss Eileen Simpson. Mrs.\nJ, Robertson, Mi.ss J, White, Mrs. W.\nTallon, Mrs. S. Jackson, Mrs. A. V.\nRowley, Mrs. Herbert Thorpe, Mrs.\nW. Brown, Mrs. T. L. Marquis. Mrs.\nC Maltbv, Mrs. W. Pascoe, Mrs. C.\nWard, Mrs. J. MoHlhai,, Mrs. H. Procter. Mrs. Edgar Mason. Mrs. W. Wall.\nMrs, H. Stevenson. Mrs. J. T. Sitidell,\nMrs. Thomas Dunbar. Mrs. B. West.\nMrs. D. StDenis, Mrs, Annie Peters,\nMrs. Harrv Bishop. Mrs, V Smvthe.\nMrs. E. H. Hutt. Mrs. W. Wahl. Mrs.\nT. Gratcher, Mrs. J. McVay, Mrs .1.\nHr.hecard, and, of course. Mrs. Walter\nShackelton.\nCircle No. | of the Trinity Methodist church held a very enjoyable\ngathering at tbe home of Mrs. ,T. M.\nArmstrong, Hall Mines road, Friday\nafternoon in compliment to Mrs. K.\nCryderman and Mrs. C. H. Chat field.\nJosephine street. Miss Erma Fercu-\nson sang very acceptably during the\nafternoon, accompanied by Miss Helen\nHodgson. Interesting contests resulted in prizes being won by Mrs.\nR. L. Norman. Mrs. G. E. BpSrkSS,\nMrs. E Rowling nnd Mrs. Leonard\nCampbell. Assisting in serving were\nMrs. J. M Armstrong and Mrs. George\nSteed, who poured tea. while Mrs. J.\nE. Annable cut the Ices. Others as-\nfc'sting were Mrs. W. H. Bmedley,\nMrs. J. A Irving. Mrs. R. L. McBride\nar.d Miss Erma Ferguson. Among the\nguests were Mrs. W. R, Steed, Mrs. W,\nE Coles. Mrs. J. R. Hunter. Mrs.\nWright, Mrs. Leonard 'Camnbell. Mrs\nW. A Thnrmnn, Mrs. J. H. Wilkinson. Mrs. N. C. BtlbbS, Mrs. Fleury,\n! Mfi. A Terrill, Mrs. Colclough. Miss\nI Helen Hodgson, Mrs. W. II. Smedley.\nMrs. Neelin, Mrs. A. C. Lambert, Mrs.\n: John A. Snrln(, Mrs. George S'eed,\nj Mrs. Gerirge Ferguson, Mrs. W. Hancock. Mrs. R. L. Norman, Mrs. Mr-\n1 Beath. Mrs G. E. Sparked Mrs J, E\n1 Annable  ajid   Mrs,   R.   L.  McBride.\n\u2022 \u00bb    a\nI     -G.   Whftacre   nf   Toronto   was   a  city\n! visitor    Saturday,    nnd    left    via    the\ni Crow    boat     yesterday    morning     for\n1 Winnipeg.\n\u25a0    \u2022    *\n! H Clifford Irving, who has been\ni confined to his home for the past\nI couple of weeks, expects to return to\n: his   office   today.\nJMk\n611 Baker. St.      Phone 200\nSummer Corsets\nFor perfectly fitting summer clothing, you must\nbe sure to have the foundation Corset up-to-date and\ncomfortable.\nOur complete stocks of Corsets and Brassierea\ncan take care of your wants, at prices that will please\nyou. _ i\n\"D. & A.\" Corsets at $1.25 to $5.00\nBack-lace Corsets with plain or\nfancy coverings over best quality\nboning. Styles for slender, medium and full figures. Prices,\neach -..?1.25 to $5.00\n\"GODDESS\" Front-Lace\nCORSETS at $2.50 to $10.00\nComfortable and beautifully fitting Corsets, with best quality\nplain or fancy coverings. Low\nand medium busts. Sizes 20 to 32.\nPrices  $2.50 to $10.00\nWARNER'S \"RUST-PROOF\" CORSETS\nAt $1.75 to $10.00\nBack and front-lace styles, a model for every type\nof figure. Made of finest quality materials, and\nguaranteed absolutely rust-proof. All styles and sizes.\nPrices  $1.75, $3.50 to $10.00\n\"NEMO\" CORSETS at $4.50 to $8.50\nIdeal fur stout figures, every model has special features. Low and medium-bust styles, and splendid\nquality Coutil covering. Sizes to 36. Prices, $4.50,\n$5.00 to $8.50 each.\nWomen's BRASSIERES\nAt 60c to $3.75\n\"Numode,\" \"Warner's\" and \"Nemo\" Brarssierres, front and baek\nfastening styles, made of plain and\nfigured cloths, in white or flesh.\nSizes 32 to 44. Prices 60\u00a3, 75C,\n$1.00 and up to $3.75 each.\nSoldier Drops Out\nin North Country\nEloquent Soldier\nNot for Riverdale\nLIEUT.   K.  c.  bTOVER\nUberal,   who   rep\nill   til..   Illt\u201e   l.-KiKliitlll\nth.; rtdjf]f*i raffrafe\nMerited   Alfoma\n\u25a0, la not Melting\nBrigadier-General\nIs Not a Candidate\nSERGT.-MAJ.   JOScPH   McNAMARA\nwit\"  roprwented RlverteJt,  one uf\nth,,  Toronto group of  tmm&m,  in  the\nlate  Ontario hmis<', i* not m cundi-\n,l;,l,i   t,\u201el;iy,     Jl\u201e   wiin   ducted   aa   an\nIndependent.\nflow to Can\nStrawberries.\nCham (reik, mad fruit,  pick <>\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0,\nbtitl and wa\u00bbh In a colander.    Peck ta\nj:ir\u00ab and pour ovpr boiling hot sjTUp to\ntill Jars completely.   M ii*i. thesvruplo\nihe proportion of one pint of *\"ft*r to\nt\u00ab*o j*inn of wnter,   .Skim off all  lui\"\npurifies and me only when clear.   Pour\ntnio Perfect .Seal.Crown or Improved\n<,\u00abm jari. place robb-rr and ftlaw top\ntn sseUion, iterillM for lb minutes.\nand seal. i\nPerfect Seal, Crown and Improved Oeffl\nj ir*> on sale at your grocers.\nSend for FRFF. booklet of teated\nrecipe* forcimnintland preaer*-\ni inft fruits and vegetables.\ndominion GfauaCo., Limited, Montreal\nBR1G.-GEN.   D.   McD.   HOGARTH\nWho  bee  represented   Port  Artfmi\nlinos till  u a Conservative, is no I\nIn   field   today.\nSUN LOSING ITS HEAT\nIS DR. ABBOTT'S CLAIM\nENGLAND   STILL   WORRIES\nOVER    SMOKE    PROBLEM\n'Eii\u00a3lam1 iigaiiis Is becoming excited over Its black srnoko problem\nand rumors that something might\n'tte done have caused manufacturers anxiety. lt has been said\nthat legislation -would be passed\nrequiring manufacturers to place\nsmoke, (-onsumers o*t their plants,\nnut they have little to fear from\nthe government, If one may judge\nfrom the records of the past century, a correspondent in the Manchester Guardian says.\nThe first actual mention of the\nBmoke nuisance In Great Britain\nwa\u00bb in IWTi when Eleanor, the\nqueen of Henry VN., Indignantly\nrefused to live any longer at Nottingham castle because of the obnoxious black smoke from tho \"sea-\ncoles\" burned in the village below,\nand went off in a huff to live at\nTilbury castle.\nHjdwonl I. made a yreat  effort tp\nstop the use of coal in London,\nissuing his famous proelamation In\n1307, and about this time at least\none man is said to have been hanged\nfor the cirme of persisting in ths\nuse of coal. However, the shortage\nof wood made lhe use of coal Imperative, and Great Britain had to\nendure a moderate\u2014but still very objectionable\u2014amount of smoke for the\nnext five centuries. The invention\nof the steam engine and inauguration of the Industrial era began,\nabout 1870, to render Uie smoke\nnuisance   intolerable.\nIn 1822 the house of commons\ntook up the question. Experts said\nthat with ery little trouble the\nnuisance could be abated, but the\nmanufacturers set up a howl, and\nthe committee dropped the matter.\nAnd su^h is the status today. After\na 100 years the situation is the\nsame, and until the house ignores\nthe voice of the manufacturers the\nsmoke nuisance will continue throughout Great Great Britain.\nIf   Correct,   It    Means   CoM   Surnmet,\nSpoiling   of   Crops,   and   Sever9\nWinter\n\u25a0When L)r| diaries Q Abbot, secretary of the National Academy of sciences, announced that Uu heat uf\nthe siiti was gradually diminishing\nand had decreased from ;i to 4 fee\ncent during the laid U iiiyi-ths, In-\nstarted a controversy which promises\nto rage Indefinitely, If Dr. Abbot's\nstatement is prnved to be correct\nit means a cold summer, a spoiling\nof the rrops and an unusually severe winter.\nE>r. Abbot id.ouM speak with authority, since he. has ben continuously engaged in the study of solar\nradiation since UK, when he joined\ntho staff of the Bmlthionlan Astronomical    observatory.      During    thiB\nperiod ho has conducted several\nexpeditions to study solar eclipses\nand has made frequent journeys\nabroad to confer with foreign scientists. He was born in Wilton. N. H.,\nIn 1872.\nProsperity is\nnew sale\nProoporfty is never saf* un!ea\u00bb\n\u2022t rests uoon protection.\nvour home is never safe.\nProtett it by insurance. Your\nbusiness is surrounded by ri\u00bbks.\nInsure it. Your valuables sr-*\nalways in danger unlest protected by insurance. fniur*\nyour present prosperity to rs-\nmain prosperous. WE CAN\nHELP   YOU.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nTel. _.<>     Boa 626, Nelson, B.C.\nRepresenting   the\nINSURANCE    COMTANT     OF\nNORTH AMERICA\nFounded 17SI2\nI\n____________________________\n_____\n___\\\n Tftsgs Six\nTEE'NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 25, 1923\nZ^\"\nfits 22* Finance\nFarmers Tarn Down\n,    \/   Traitor to Drury\nSTOCK MARKET\nIS IRREGULAR\nt *\nBatnrfliT    Balf-Besslon    Ii    Dull,    and\nMore  Selling-  Than Buying\nPre Taili.\nNEW  YORK.   ,fun<*   23.   \u2014   Irregular\nprice move rn <-*nts characterised today's\ndull half-holiday heswion of tlie stock\nmarket.\nSeveral large operators, who June\nbeen active recently, were away for\nthe week-end, and those who remained\napparently found it more profitable to\nsell stocks than to buy them. Price\nfluctuations, as a rule, were narrow\nand unimportant.\nPresident Harding's Kansas City\nspeech on transportation problems\nbrought some buying power into the\nrailroad group at the opening, but th*1\ncarrier stocks sagged with the rest of\nthe list in late trading. Pittsburgh\n& Wedt Virginia and Atchison each\ndropped about a point and Union Pacific, .New York Central. Southern\nRailway and a few other of the njore\nactive Issues yielded  fractionally.\nBaldwin, Studebaker and American\nCan were the henvy spots among tho\nao-called \"pivotal stocks.\" but ner\nbosses   were   held   to   frat-tions.       Corn\nIV idiicts. which wns strong recently\nPk he \"announcement of an extra divi-\non u dropped more than ;J points on\n. king. Fisher Hody broke ti\nj profit-ta, a small turnover,\npoints  on the     strong    spots    were\nSome    of       -,,-Kto,- Oil, Hartman C\nI 'Woolworth. Bw     ic   n^fining   and   West\nporation,   AMaiu     \u201eer     u      .\nPennsylvania    Pov\npoints. \u25a0'tions\nHigh      ljt,w\nC.  P.   R -     .;\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nChino            \"M\nC.   M.   &  St.   P.   G    \t\nMo. Pac; com\t\nMo.   Paa   pl'd.   ...      S8S\nRock    Island    ...      \u25a0in a\nStudebaker        1f'\u00ab%\nU   S.   Steel  com..      98%\nWillys\ntr*\nn_.\n15614\n21'A\n11\nll\n1044\ninr.i-2\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL. June U, *~ A firm\ntone continued in Saturday's short\nsession of trading on the stock exchange ' with Spanish River again\nleading and closing 114 potntg lower,\nat 92-V\nCanadian Steamships common was\nthe strong spot of the list, that i*SU*\nClosing  at   15.  a   net  gain  of  2   points.\nOther price changes Included British\nEmpire, Steel seeontt preferred, Up\nVi; Steamships preferred, up _:\n.Dominion Textile, up _; Illinois Traction, up \\k', National PrewerieS, up 1\npoint; and Steel of Catinda, up 1\npoint.\nConiolidated Sharei.\nMONTREAL,    June    24.    \u2014\ndated   Mining   &   Smelting,   -b\nasked.\noil\nRAINS IN WEST\nDEPRESS WHEAT\nTear  nf   Drmi\u00abtit   Danmge  It   Over   and\nBoth  Corn   and  Wheat  Cloee\nWith   Het  Losses.\nCHICAGO, Jm* 24. \u2014 Rains In the\nnorthwest, ten.)ing to dispel f'*\u00bbr that\ndrought VPUld damage the spring\nwheat crop, had a bearish effect on\nthe wheat market .Saturday. As a result, wheat closed jins.tiled and 1 %o\nto \\_c pet lower, with September\n$1.04 % to * 1.04 >4 and December $1.08%\nto   11.0-1%.\nCorn lost fc-a to lUe; oats unchanged to %v high\"!-.- and provision!*\nunchanged   to a  decline of  2c\nSterling Exchange\nBoat* wai\nAdanio&iie*\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\n''i i Classified Advertising Rates     City Property for Sale\nNEW    VI1I1K,    )**\nexchange   irn'snl.i\nday  bills  an.I  M '\nJl.\nIN.   f\"r\n-- Sl.-rllnff\n11% l..r 19-\nil.nian.1.\nForeign Money,\nMilton c. fox\nWho  iNt\/undcd   the  motion  of\nof   con fk'.cint;   in   tho   Ontario\ntnier,      Ji'.unclled      by     Andrew\nami   \\\\*V  h.  Csss-elmta. wh  left  bo\nhind   '-iy\nEssex South convention\nNEW   YORK,   June\nPiftreipn.   84 %v.\nCanadian dollars--!'\nITranci\u2014Demand, *\u2022\u25a0\nUn-\u2014Demand, 4.M1*,\nMarks  \u2014   Demand,\n,00(19',at*.\ni.-Har\n'Mtlc.\n)\nKM IX STWDI.Mi ILOOl\nLocal Saaoiaff  Notices\u20143c  per  word\nI each lnnertlon.     ln blackface or machine\n| capitals 4c per word.    Blackface capl-\ntiflH   5c  a  word;   25   per   cent   discount\nIf   run   dally   without   change   of   copy\nfor   one   month   or   more.     Where   advertisement  is   set   out   in   nhort   lines\ntbe  charge   Is  12 He  a line  for   Roman\ntype,   lr-o  for blackface,  and  20c  for\nblackface   capitals.      Minimum   3i.e.    if\ncharged   50c.\nWant   and   Classified   Advartising  \u2014\u2022\nI One   and   a   half   ceiitB   per   word   per\nWant i insertion.      Six    cents    per    word    per\n\u25a0pre-| week,   or   22 He   per   word   per   month,\ntt    l-     caKb   in   advance.     Transient   ads*,   ac-\nUnks | ceple only on  a cash-in-advance basis\nEach   initial,   figure,   dollar   tlfO,   etc.,\ncounts a.s one  word.    Minimum  25c, If\ncharged   BOc.\nLints of Wsddlny Pressats snd florU\ntributes   at   funerals\u201410c   per   line.\nI    TIJs  Turk*  are   talking of  Joining\nI thc i League of Nation*,  but nothing\n' furt'her hai  bPen   hoard  from   Mexico.\n|     > United States und Russia.\nMale Help Wanted\nWHOLESALE SUGAR\nRISES AT COAST\nWANTED\nAi'ltly  A.\n\u2014    t.ood\n\u25a0I.   Martin\nbarber   at   once.\nVAN(*'ll\\'J:tt.\nnra-.-   nf   I*\n,,lr.,l   ii\\  tht.\ngranulated\nHatttrda\n\u25a0runra-aM\nWIlHl\n.tu!-'     \u25a0\u25a0\nOct\t\nJuly\nOct     \u2022 \u25a0\nI'arli-.\n.luly\nOct     \u2022 \u25a0\nHas\nJuly     \u2022\nOct\t\nlive \u2014\nJuly\nOct.     .\nIjIUUN\nH\n111*\nIIK'i\nQUOTATIONS\nlb    Ur\nin\n%    101\nCloaa\nI UK !\n101      I\n41V\ntm\n4s-y.\ni\u00bb%\nt>l\u00ab i\nsift I\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTUK.M..    .'\"\"\nlM\u201e,,.r active,   ch\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nquvuutona:\nCssemmm \u2014. \u2022'\"\"'\nKutlcl- < '\nEtta\u2014 B*l<\ntt\u2014EBM*  down,\ndemand  fair.\nWe M \u00bbke It a Point to Go\n:i^tb\" cai'li-si   tm.sKjhK*. iiiniiiciil   when\nBatted upon tn to traBifirr-lng. Ow\nequipment is ample for any demand,\n'\u2022i\\\/ upon  pfotQpt  service\nll time*.\n\"HANDL'E\n-i   i\\]ini'i-es3ai\nail*\n[handle\nbe.\nWITH   CARE\"\nMary direeiipn to ua. We\nthing as carefully as can\nWANTKD-\nHotel.\n\u25a0Mght   porter\nfor    Queer's\n(877S)\nWANTED\u2014'Carriage Mttsrt for hand\n. set work. Communicate by wire.\nAlso one (jreen lumber grailer, wefit-\nern pine grade. tinod wages for\ngood men. White Spruce Lumber\nCo., Fernie, B.C. (S673)\nFOR SALE\nNEAT COTTAGE\nMill   Street.\nTwo     Bedrooms,    Living     Room,\nKitchen   and   Bathroom.\nAtlractlve Garden  Lot.\nTart    Stone   Foundations.\n$1400.00\nOn  Terms.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nBox 6:\nJ6.\nPhone\n269\n(S696)\nNICE   ii'\nment,\nto car\nFor    8\nOwner,\njiiHe,    nine   rooms,    full   base-\nnlcely   located.     Corner   close\ntrack.    Everything up-to-date.\nale    cheap    for    cash.      Apply\n312 Carbonate street.     <8487>\nWANTED \u2014  -Setter   or  i\nsteady   employment   ><\nright party. Write or\nte rented, Otis Staples\nWycliffe,  H.C.\nivriage rtd*Ti\nir round to\nwire, if In-\nLumber   Co.,\n(SMI)\nWANTKD    \u2014    An\"   experienced    hotel j\nporter.    Apply   Strathcona.      (811f. > I\nMEN, women to learn barberms; p:ild i\nwhile learning; toolfi supplied. Catalogue free. Moler College, Vancouver. ' (Hill) |\nHouses Wanted\nodorn\nWANTKD    TO    KENT\u2014Small    t\nhouse    or    apartment,    furnished    or\nunfurnished.       Pnone     Mrs.     Qood,\n Grand Hotel,   ,   . cwr.)\nA GOOD BUY\nFor $21-00 you can buy a well\nplat)nod -r>-rooni Bungalow, fully\nmodern. There are 4 lote and\nlocated within ten minutes' walk\nto the cily. $600 will handle this\nproperty and the balance ut $25.00\npet' month.\nHouse and Furniture\nThis Is a nice little 4-Itwmed\nhouse within a few minutes' walk\nto Baker street, and all the furniture is in good Nhapo. The price\nIs $2I0(i, with IHfl cash payment\nand   }tt\u00bbM   per   month.\na. t. McMillan\nPhono   IM P.   O.   Box   61\nRoom  12, (iilker Block,  filO Baker St.\nKcs. Phone 358L2\n(878ti)\nLive Stock for Sale\nJERSEY cow, young, freanened niid-\nApril, eighty dollars. tirade Holstein heifer, 2 years, fifty dollars.\nBees in Kootenav hive, sixteen dollars.    Clay,   Slocan   City. (8581)\nFOR RALE \u2014 Six A No. 1 Ayrshire\ncows, ail good milkers - will sell\nchettp for cash. Apply Mrs. M.\nCarlton, West Demars I'.O., Arrow\nLake*!, B.C. (8783)\nFOR SALE.\u2014-Excellent pony, 9 years,\nijufet; ride, drive, pack; forty-five\ndollars. C. Taylor, Willow Point,\nNelson. (873G)\nFOR SALE\u2014Yorkshire pigs, 8 weeks\nold, $7 each, f.o.b. Crescent Valley,\nB.  C.     V.   Kosiancic. (8711)\nWELL-BRED Holstein, 5 yeara this\nfall, good in Ilk and butter cow.\nCalved January and due to freshen\nin November. Milk capacity, fourteen to sixteen quarts dally; quiet\nand gentle. Reason for selling,\nworking away.     Price eighty dollars.\n_ Apply  Box   M.'8.   OallV  Newn.     (8498)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED    \u2014    Pure-bred    Jersey    hull\ncalf.     John   T.   Tipper,   Yahk,   B.C,\n(87R7)\nTeachers Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Experienced teacher foi\nLongbeach school; salary $101.0.0(1\nApply to D. T. Fergimm,  Sec.  (8794|\nWANTED \u2014 Experienced: teacher foi\nKitchener Publio School. SalarJ\n$108.00.    Apply   titc,  Kitchener,   RCT\ntifiH\nFurnished Rooms to Rent |\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms o\u00bbel\nStarland   Theater. (8777f\nFURNISHED housekeeping  rooms OW\n_Poole_DrugL_ (8726,\nSUITE\u2014Campbell's BUdto. (8\nFOR  RENT \u2014 Three-roomed furnlshei\nsuite.    Annable Block. i84*,!-|\nrURKISHED   SUITES\nKERB    APARTMENTS\nNursery Products^\nSTRONG,   healthy   cabbage   plants,   $|\nper   hundred;   cauliflower,   $1.50.\nMawer.    Nelson.    B.C^ _ (833\u00ab|\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nSI'RAY     for     Aphis    on     RatMe    nnd\nShrubs Spray      for     Caterpillars.\nRed Mite Killer for poultry ftOUWuiw.\nLouse Powder, etc. Rutherford\nDrug Co. 1SGIH)\nFOR BALE. \u2014  Austrian  scythes.  Only\nplace in  British Columbia where yon\ncan   get   them.      J.    P.   Morgan,    Nelson,   B.C. _     (8789)\nI WHAT shout the dry months that are\ncoining Order your irrigation pipe\nHOW.    Jainlesoti,   I'aKsmore.       (8490)\nWOOD Pli'E for sale, for irrigation\nand pressure systems, suitable for\nheads up to 300 feet. Tarry &\nChalmers,   Tarrys. (8341)\nSituations Wanted Male\nMAN AND WIFE will take charge of\nkitchen and dining-room iii hotel or\nrestaurant; experienced. Address\nBox  ior.4,  Brandon,  Man.        ___(87J8)\nToronto Board\nTORONTO. June 01 \u2014 The weekend session of the stock exchange was\n(narked by dullness in both listed and\n\u25a0unlisted sections. The one feature of\nInterest was the further reaction of\nUnion Bank, this Issue selling down\nto 109H. ft n,1t decline Of 4-yii points\nIn a turnover of  20  shares.\nIn tne listed department, Canadian\nQeneraF' KlectfTc conrinon was active\nbut closed unchanged at 99 \\_. Steel\nof Canada rom mon sold at 73-K. Twin\nCity scored an advance of 1 point\nDuluth Superior touched 12 and closed\nat  41%.\nPapers, with the exception of\nBrompton. were neglected, Brompton\nmade a further advance of _ point.\nto 34.    Brazilian sold  off to \u00abVi.\nvakcouver \u25a08T|0f;lKS-\nnol-irv\nEmpire  <\u00bb\nIpartaa   *\n.mi S-lfl\n.in _\n.81*\n. i   (1\n,01H  i\nPia|nos   s   Specialty\nCITY  CAB\nPhone   18\nI\nFemale Help Wanted\nFOUR-ROOMED houw wl\"1 l,rlUl'\nBlllca street, Apply H\"x \u2022'\u00bb\u2022. 'r,ll|v\nNewa. <\"\u00bb2)\nLost and Found\nLOST\nOUKb\nCo;tl(\n\u2014 QrtM canvassed I'elerbor-\nrowinK caitoe, wilh one rei]\nMM white oar. Please notify\na   Hrcis..   Balfour. (8755)\nARTICLED pupil wunleil In Chartered\nAccountant! offlee In the Interior.\nKnowleltie of lyulng and stenoij-\nraphy (Uslrahle. AW*t I\" own hand-\nwrllintT.   llvtns. partleulars.   to   A.   B. I\nSTFtAYKD \u2014 One dapple Krny horse,\nshort mane, wearing halter and\nnever-sl!|> shoes when last seen,\ndense write or phono Churohes,\n\u2022Waneta.    E  Stone,   owner. (S633I\nDally Newa, N.-ls<\nB.C.\n18,7\u00bb>\nEgg Market\nOTTAWA.     June     U.\n'Jobbers, reported    paying\nreceipts   f.o.b.   country   pol\n30c   extras.   Jobbing   extra^\n28c to  Sic.\nWestern markets unehai\nMontreal\nstraiaht\n.   nff.rimi\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNKATTilalS.    Jun*    21      --   I\nfie    lower    to    \\(>C    higher,    faintly\nents   |6.S6   to  $6.80  a   barrel.\nBran\u2014136.$0  to  $21.\nWheat\u2014No,    1     northern.    $1.06*!\n5l.ir.si;   September,   11.06%;   Decei\n\u25a0$1.1014.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 velb.w. 1*_e to 1\nOats\u2014No. a white, $?%c to 3S:!4\nFlax\u2014Mo,  l; $2.77  to   |2.?8. *\nHe Won't Sit for\nCapital This Time\nRepprtsion\nCanadas\nCrops\nM\nV; if\/ :\u2022\nV, \u2022 ****_** ,\n;^H&s\nH_\n*mi\nyms?^\nH.   P.   HILL\nWho\n'represented   Ottawa   W'\na   Cot,\nMfvaatiVtt,    Is    not    the\nIn  toda\ny**9 eiectroftl battle.\nAt'frequent 'intervals throughout\nthe season the Bank of Montreal\nissues, reports on the progress of\nthe crops in Canada.   These re-\n,   ports.rtelegraphed to headquarters\n\\ from the Managers of the Bank's\n600 Branches, cover every Prov-'\nv.   ince,and form a reliable index of\n. Vcropjcond.tions.\nI 'The reports tire furni'hed free,\nllpon reque*t til tiny Branch of lhe\nBank your nntne will he plated on\nour mailing list.\nMMtOraONTKE'AL\nTotal Aswts in Excess of -^6SO,000,000.00\nWANTKD \u2014  rtotnestic,     lnhldle  - HRed\nwoman, for Dngltsh family on West\n: Arm; good nn; Hox S769, Daily\nj      News. (8760)\nVELL  your   wants   tnrough   The   Dailj\nNews classified columns.\nTEI..L  your  wants   tnrougn   The   Dail)\nNpwh  claspifleil  columns\nRoom and Board\nLegal Notices\nQUEEN'fl   BAY.   \u2014   Room   and   board\nfor   summer   months.     Terms   moderate.     Apply  Iiox  877:5,   Daily   News.\n(S773)\nWOOD Irrigation Pipes For Bale\nDeer T'ark Wood Pipe Co., Deer\nI'ark. RC. (84fi.it\nFOR   SALB   \u2014\nsacks.     McDoti\nEmpty   barrels,   kegs,\nltd  Jam Co. (84fi7J\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTKD \u2014 One 15 or 16-foot canoe,\nsecondhand. Advise price and condi-\nt Inn of same. Loverl-M Lumber Co.,\nWasa,   B.C. (877^>\nGOOD pasture with water and barb\nwire fenced. Apply Nick K. Pooho-\n-ahoft   Winlaw.   B.C. (8713)\nwantkd\u2014Eighteen* foot doable oarlock rowboat, Peterboro preferred;\nmust be in good condition. Thomas\nO'Neill,   Cray   Creek. (870*1)\nWANTKD   -*\u2014   Clean   cotton   rags;   five\ncents   yer   pound.     Tbe   Dally   News.\n(8fi3\u00ab>\nFarms and Ranches for Sal|\nFOR BALE\u2014Jefferv Hotel and\nacre of land Hiid buildings. Prid\nSiirt'jo. Also two hundred and sixt>|\nfour acres, half broken, some\nfruit trees, Rasps, Curants, CrahJ\netc ; 11 building* en property. OooT\nwell at house, also at barn. Prid\n9256*. Write Owner, J. liendersorl\nJeffery,   for   terms. (8750|\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR_\nInsurance and Real Estate |\nR.   W.   SAWBOH,\nKeal Eatate, Inauranco, Xentala.\nAnnable ltlk. I'.O. Bex  733.  l'hone 19a|\nMonuments\nCampbell'  ft   Ritchie   Monumental   Otfl\nI'.O.   Box   \u00ab6fi,   Nelson.   B.C.\n Telephone ____*.    (\u00bb473|\nPainters and Decorators\nAnt.ai Painted\nMURPHY  BROS\nOealera in Wall Papal.\nStore\u2014 Aulo Shop\u2014\n413  Josephine St. 411 Hall Sll\n  184741\nAccounting\nPoultry_and_EgK8_\nCANCHLLATIOM   OF, KESEKVE.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY OIVE.V that\nhe rMerra cxislltia,' over Lot 14J7A.\nIroup 1. Koolciuiy Dlatliet, Is nan-\n.,|l,,l. \u2022\n0.   It.   NADEN.\nDoi.uly Minlsterof Liinds.\n.amis  Department,\nVictoria,  B.C.,   Juno  11th.  lIM,\nNOTICE.- All iny pullets and chirks\nsold. To clear out the remniti'ler of\nlhe hens, quick, $1,110 each; any selected hens. 51.2f, each. Tom H:ir-\nron and University Hens, the bait\nlavitiK   strain   I   could   get.     William\n__Thompson.__Harrop. (S776)\nMfHT  8ELL my if pullets  and   year-\nUiiks (laying), Jl aach; goinK away.\nHox   S7^2,  Dally News. 18712) |\nCOW HIDES, five centa pound; calf,\neight centa. J. P. Morgan, Nelson.\nB.C.   *\u2022 _     18471 I\nFor Rent\nCHARLES   F,   HUNTER,\nAuditor,  McDonald Jam  Building,\nBox 1191 Nelson. B.C\n(S4751\nFlorists\nORIZZELLE'R     GREENHOUSE.     Nell\naon.   Cut flowers and  floral designer\n(I1HI\nWM.\nKASLO. \"The Lucerne of B.C.'* -\nW'anled. pleasant, sociable small .\nfamily, or two or Ihree young people !\ntn have pretty, cosy cottage on lake I\nfor suniiner. Bout, splendid fishing. 1\nLow rent to right parties. Write |\nHox   S7f>2,   LiRily   News. (87:,a) j\nJOHNSOH.\nThone     312.       Cut      Elowers,     Pottel\nPlants aud   Flora!   Emblems.\n(87531\nWholesale\nPEARL Guinea Eggs. J2 for fifteen,\nexpress, collect. WiUiatu S. McAl-\npitip.   Creston.      tS69S>\nTELTTyour vnai tnrougn Tha Dallf\nNews classified columna\nBusiness OpDortunities\nSynoptic Foftns\nTHREE SIZES\nMADE TO SVIT ALL BUSINESSES\nCan be used lo shnw al a glutei daily, weekly,\nmonthly or annual subdivision of expenses and\nrevenue.\n' i\nThe Daily News\nBAKER  8TREET\nQualify Printer*\nNELSON. B, C.\n'   FOR SALE\nA Real Live Hotel in a\nLive   Town\nBUSINESS  GOOD\nUooil reasons for selling out.\nIf you an*. lookinK for a goud\nhotnl. you will have to hurry.\nWin, J. Pratt\nI'PlRIUl   Hotftl.\n.   N&kutp.   B.   C.\nProperty Wanted\nWANTKD TO BUT\u2014Small hotel or\nConfectionery business*; pleasure resort preferable. Apply H. Ctuulwlok,\nWlleca,  Sask.\t\nMininir, Tirfibcr, Lumber\nWANTtSD    \u2014\u2022    Otiar    poteo,    Iix30\"\nfexfiO'.     Apply Box I7M,   Dally   Ne\n..  MACDONAT.D A CO..  WHOLEflALd\nOrocers and Prov t .sion Merchant*m\nImporters of Tees, Coffees, Bploeu\nDried Fruits, StapU and FancM\nr.rorerlps,   N'-lsnn.   BC (84771\nEngineers\nH.   2).   SAWSOIT,\n1.  C.   Land   Surveyor,\nMining IBnirtneer,\nKASLO, B.C. (847l|\n&Ite\u00bb Bro\u00bb, B^t$ ft\nNTLSniT,    B.O. ,\ncrra ass mihii\u00abo ehsiubem I\nB. C, Alberta ana Dominion\nLand 8tirv\u00abyora.\nCrown Grant Agent,. Blue Prlnttnf I\n(84791\nAssayers\ni,   W.   WIDDOWSON    Box A110!,  Nell\neon, B.C.    ytuiMlard  western cbargea]\n  184181\nAuctioneers\nW.   CCTTI.EH\nOood, Bold Privately or at Anotlom. i\nBox 474     Opera Houho Block     Phone 71\n*    -, , (84811\nFuneral Directors\nBoats and Automobiles\nFUR KALE \u2014 14-foft rowboat. complete with F.vlnruje engine; liood\ncondition; price reasunable. Apply\nBox   8771,   Dally   Ncwh. (8771)\nPhone l!7t\nFOR SALE \u2014 4-cyllmlcr MtLnuKhlln-\nHulck flvR-pat.scnger touring car. In\ngood condition and perfect running\norder; price t4,,0. Hoyle, Queen's\nBay,   B.r*. (8681)\nROBERTSON,  F.  D. D. *_ B., t*_\nVictoria   street,     l'hone   ....    Nlghl\n(84^\nStandud   rornltaz\nCo.,       Undertaken\ntti   Kun\u00abra1     Director!\n\u25a0it Auto hearse, up-to\n'\u00ab*X fln,ft   chapel.     Bee\ni|R     service.       Price\nrnasonabK      f84fi.'i\nCLASSIFIED   ADVT8.  BRING   RK<\n<ULT8   EVERY   TIME.\n=H\n''BRINGING UP FATHER\"\nLIGHTNING   FLASH   WOULD\n,       LIGHT A  HOUSE TEN  YEARS\nA tvell-known ectentiet has nut-tor\ned the energy in an average flash\n*at lightning, and finds it equal to\n370(1 hdfije-power hour*\u2014that la. euf-\nficient to lift 560 tons to a height of\na mile nnd a quarter above the\n\u2022earth's .surface.\nThe energy was measured 'by a,\nthree-fold operation. First, the distance ti-vyay of the. flash waft computed by noting the interval between\nthe sight of the flash and the sound\n, of the, thunder peal. Then the height\nof the -cloud discharging the electricity was found by means of trigonometry. Finally, the change in the\nelectri-pal \u201e field of an electrometer\nvas noted. From these t hi ee data\nthe energy of the flash was worked\nout.\nDr. Wilson estimates that the\n-erage lightning storm represents\nenough energy to light a house' by\nSle^jLj-icHy,  .for   at   least   10  y_ears,\nARE\u25a0ME POV\nwrxi-4-b to ac\n'IM   CELLAR\nDAN*b\nPL\nI FELL. IN rti\n\u2022\\CCIDETAT- I\nWW LOOKING\nUP IN THE Ml?-\n-:-        By George McMamu\n \t\nTEE NELSON DAILY NETS, MONDAY MORNING, JtJNE 25, ISIS\nPage Seven\nLittle Lessons in\nBig Sports\nGOLF\n\"ZIP-\nIN WRONG SECTOR.\n'ZIP' AT\nPOINT\nGREATEST\nEFFECT\nAt what angle of the down-\ntward stroke of the drive should\nfthe \"zip\"\u2014the wrist movement\n-start?\nAnswered by\nJIM BARNES\nAmerican      open      champion,      1921;\n_nlz\u00ab-d   sverywher*   as   on*   of   th*\nVteit    g-olltra    In    th*    world.       In\nritlsh    open    championship,    1922,   he\nshed    itcond,    on*    stroke    behind\nliter   Hagen,  th*  winner,\n*    *    *\nThe wrist action should be delayed\nlas long aa possible because it it\n[la used early in the swing its\n\u25a0force is played out when the time\n[\u2022DBMS for the club head to hit\nIIIm hall. Don't actually start \"strlk-\nllng Ihe ball\" until the club head\nIts about two feet from the ball.\n\u25a0Then ,h the time for the wrist move-\nImen* During the downward swing,\nIbefore the \"zip\" is used, the wrists\nIshould be free and not rigid.\n|*Copyright,    1928,   Associated   Editors.)\n80UTH    AFRICAN    ROBBERS\nThe farmers in the neighborhood of\nINairobi, the capital of Kenya Colony,\n\u25a0 South Africa, were very angry be-\nIcause, while they were asleep, thieves\n\u25a0came and stole their corn and other\nI produce.\nThe police were informed and tried\nIto detect the robbers, but without\nIsucQess. None of the suspicious\n^characters  of  the  district  seemed   to\n\u25a0 go near the farm bouses, yet the\nI losses increased, and at last It was\nI derided to set a watch until the\n[thieves   were  caught   In   the   act.\nThe watchers concealed themselves\nland at last their vigil was rewarded.\nll'he thieves appeared among the corn,\nI hut, when the men rushed forward\nIio seize the offenders, they found\nI that they were not human thieves\nlit   all,   but   a   troop   of   baiboonB   that\n\u25a0 were evidently acting under the or\nJders of an old baboon, who led his\n[followers out of danger with much\nI skill.\nThe monkeys a re great pests in\nJ South Africa, and In some parts they\n|\u00bb'ven   enter  houses  in  order   to   steal.\nThe housewives have to watch their\n[sheets and clothes very carefully on\n[washing days as the baboons often\nI come and try to carry these, off from\n[the clotheslines when they are hang-\nling out to dry or air in the sun.\n| It is not easy to get rid of the\n[nuisance, for tconkeys are very darling and are  not easily  frightened.\nNEAL PILOTS\nFOURJNNERS\nSensational Riding of Western Jockey Fatures Opening Day at Peg\nWINNIPEG, June 2,.\u2014The riding of\nJockey Neal, who won four firsts, and\nrode home a place ond a show In six\nmounts, featured the opening day's\nracing of the fifth International race\nmeet here on Saturday. Over 8000\npeople watched the runners perform\non a muddy track, and, though the\nfavorites came through In the majority of races, the heavy going upset\nthe dope  on two or  three occasions.\nC. C. Kmmert of Edmonton, as\nusual, proved a winner with 1'rolrie\nand Humma, both horses living up to\nlast  year's  form.\nThe feature race, the citizens purse,\na mile event, was captured by Ber-\nnlce JL, from Malton, Wash., when\nshe came, from behind to nose out\nBmmcrt's Certain Point, Quite nicely\nIn   the   stretch.\nThe races continue all this week.\nNo exceptional prices were paid by\nthe   mutuels.\nBnmmarr.\nThe following Is a summary of the\nresults:\nFirst race\u2014About five furlongs,\npurse \u00bb300; Bill Splvens won: Mulligan, second: The Mrs. third. **lso-rans\n\u2014Foley Martin and Chalroslte. Time,\n1:13.\nSecond race\u2014About five furllngfl,\npurse 1400; Welga won, Rublvarl second, Spizzerine third. Also-rans\u2014La\nBete Nolr, Charles Connell, Molly 0.\nBlack Spray, Madame Hurry, Effle\nRandall.     Time,   1:13   3-5.\nThird race\u2014About five furllngn,\npurse \u00bb300; The Sheik won, Montagu\nsecond,   Symbol   third.     Time.   1:10   2-5.\nFourth race\u2014Citizens' stakes, one\nmile, purse $500; Bernice E. won,\nCertain I'oint second, llelman third.\nAlso-rans\u2014Bob Nail, Snapshot, Merry\nMarquis.   Mudoda.    Time,   2:04   1-5.\nFifth race\u2014About five furling*,\npirse |400; Camouflage II. won; Wal-\nlerln second, Ballota third. Also-rans\n\u2014Daisy Stevens and Colonel Boyle.\nTime,   1:00   3-5.\nSixth race\u20146Vi furlongs, purse 1100:\nPrairie won, Jingo second, Mtss Se-\ndalla third. Also-rans\u2014Comul. Hugo\nK,  Asher and  Dusty.    Time,  1:38.\nSeventh race\u2014Six furlongs, purso\n1300- Hinnma won, Welnland second,\nI 1,11 Martin third. Also-rans\u2014Mildred\nBoone  and Captain.     Time.   1:30.\nOUTLINE PLAYOFFS\nOF CONNAUGHT CUP\nFinals In WlnnlpfB In August If Fin-\nunit's Permit; ItuiUtvajiinn llcst\nGuard\nGIANTS TAKE\nSIX STRAIGHT\nMcQuillan Is Touched for\nEleven Hits, but So Are\nHis Opposing Pitchers\nDouble Score on Braves\nNEW YORK, June 24. \u2014 The New\nYork Nationals defeated Boston, 6 to\n3, today and turned In their sixth\nstraight victory. McQuillan beat\nGenewlch and Rube Marquard of the\nBraves, although touched, for 11\nhits. R. *   it.    E.\nBoston       3      11        1\nNew   York        6      11        2\nTJattertea \u2014 Genewlch, Marquard\nand K. Smith;  McQuillan and -Snyder.\nPirate* Rampage in Sixth\nST. UJt.'lS, June 24. \u2014 Pittsburgh\nbeat Pfeiffer, batting him hard in\nthe sixth innings and scoring four\nruns, In the opening game of the\nseries here this afternoon, 6 to 4.\nR,\nPittsburgh     S\nSt.   Louis      4\nBatteries \u2014 Morrison, Bagby and\nOooch; Pfeiffer, North, Barfoot and\nAinsmiih.\nAlexander Starves Cincy\nCHICAGO, June 24. \u2014 Alexander\nheld Cincinnati to 3 hits in a pitching duel with Luque today, and\nChicago won, 2 to 0. Luque's wlld-\nness proved his undoing, putting\nan end to the Cincinnati star's\n.string of 2? scoreless Innings. It\nwas also Luque's second defeat of\nthe  season,  in   11   games.   R,      H.     ft\nCincinnati        0       3       0\nChicago         2        8        1\nBatteries \u2014 Luque and Wlngo,\nIlargrave;   Alexander   and   O'Farrell.\nWeir>\u00abrt Stakes Dodgers to Six\nBROOKLYN, June 24. \u2014 Weinert's\nwildness gave the Dodgers a six-\nrun lead in the first inning today,\nand they beat the Phillies easily,\n&  to 4. \u25a0     R.      H.     E.\nPhiladelphia  4       8       1\nBrooklyn        91       6       1\nBatteries \u2014 Weinert, Winters and\nHeniine, O'Brien;  Grimes and Taylor.\nTWO NEW RECORDS\"\nON DORVAL TRACK\nNix-k   and   Nick   Race   lowers  Tlnu>\nfor Five    nnd Half    Furli>n*js;\nllnby Grand Also Stci\u00bb Fast\nH. B.\n11 3\n1\nSENATORS HAVE\nLARGEJBATFEST\nGet Fourteen Hits and Blank\nthe Ambitious Athletics by\nEight Runs\nWASHINGTON, June 24. \u2014 Washington enjoyed a batfest at the expense of Philadelphia today, finning\n8 to 0. Bleuge led the Senators attack of 14 hits, wiih two doubles and\na single.\nR.     H.     E.\nPhiladelphia           0      6      1\nWashington           8     14       0\nBatteries\u2014Hasty, Ogden and Perkins,   Rowland;   Mogridge  and   Ruel.\nDaiLss Ij-oncs Gome In Ninth\nDETROIT. June 24*\u2014After pitching eight innings, George Dauss, veteran Tiger hurler, weakened in the\n;tth and Chicago attacked him for six\nrani and the game, 9 to 8.\nR.    H.    E.\nChicago        9    17      2\nDetroit           8    10      2\nBatteries\u2014Robertson, Blankenship,\nCvengros, Thurston and Schalk;\nDftUM, Johnson and Bassler.\nIndian-*-; Knix'k Pitchers Out\nCLEVELAND, June 24.\u2014Cleveland\nbunched its hits with passes in the\nfourth inning and defeated St. Tvouls\n8 to 2 today, knocking Van Gilder\nand Pruett from the box.\nR.\nSt.   Louis         2\nCleveland         8\nBatteries\u2014Van       Gilder,\nBayne, Kolp and Severeid; Smith and\nMyatt.\nH.    E,\n9       2\n13      0\nPruett,\nSalmonbellies Lose\nThrilling Game at\nVancouver by Goal\nVANCOUVER, June 24\u2014Van-\ncouver rtcfeotd Now Westminster\nIn a thrilling lacrosse nmtcli lierer\nSaturday ait< mo-ui, 1 to <i.\nCANUCKS WIN\nIN BOUNDARY\nGrand Forks Beats Republic\nand Midway Outscores\nCurlew in Sunday Fixtures\nBOUNDARY  LEAGUE STANDING\nW. L. Pet.\nGrand  Forks      6 2 .750\nCurlew      5 3 .625\nMidway         5 4 ,66\u00ab\nRepublic    1 8 .112\nRepublic   Lead*  at   Fint\nREPUBLIC, Wash., June 24. \u2014 In\nthe game here today between Republic and Grand Forks, BepubJic\ngot away to an early start, leading\n6 to 0 up to the sixth, when the\nCanucks, coming from behind, staged\na rally and tied the score, then\nlead the game up, ln the eighth, by\nscoring   five   more. R     H.    E.\nGrand   Forps    10       9       I\nRepublic       7     11       4\nBatteries \u2014 Weir and Aatwood;\nMilton   and   Pearce.\nTen   Innings   at   Curlew\nCURLEW,   Wash.,   June   24.   \u2014  In\na   game   that,   went   10   Innings   here\ntoday,    Midway    won,    10    to    9.\nR.     H.    E.\nCurlew     9       8       6\nMidway     10       9       3\nBatteries \u2014 Nicholas and Brown;\nBellew,   Stinger  and   Pace.\nYoung Bloods Will\nMeet Old-Timers on\nthe Lacrosse Field\nMONTREAL. June 24.\u2014Thc C.P.R.\nfootball team qualified to enter the\ninterprovinrial   finals   for   the     Con-\nI naught cup. emblematic of the soccer\nchampionship of Canada, when they\ndefeated   the   Grenadier  Guards   here\n; yesterday 1 to 0.\nI     Under a tentative scheme, the CPR.\n' will meet the Ontario representatives\nin Montreal July 21 and in Toronto\nJuly 8. The winners will play the\nrepresentatives of New Ontario at\nKor William, to decide the championship of the east. The eastern nnd\nwestern representatives would then\nmeet in the final at Winnipeg\nAugust 4.\nThere is a possibility, however,\nthat owing to financial reasons, the\nfinals may be played in the east.\nKootenay Bitter Ale\nTh.   Ale   with   the   real   flavor, ?2.20 do-*..    Order through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nFREE    DELIVERY    DIRECT     FROM     BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\n^jsrs______t__^_____[\\\nMONTREAL, June 24.\u2014Two new\ntrack records were established at\nthe closing day of the Dorval meet\nSaturday. In the fourth race Eddie\nHickenbeseher and Mainmast ran\nlocked together to the finish, the\nformer winning by a nose, and making a new record for 5 1-2 furlongs\nof 1:04 4-5.\nIn the fifth race the Ro.ss hor.se,\nBftby Grand, won the Queen's hotei|\nhandicap by a length from a large\nfield, completing the mile and one\nsixteenth in  1:40.\nCUP  GAME  POSTPONED\nCALGARY, June 24. \u2014 The Con-\n.naught cup game here Saturday, between Drumheller and Calgary Hill-\nhurst, was postponed until Wednesday,  June   27,   on   account  of rain.\nPACIFIC COAST TEAGUE\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nSaturday's  Games\nToledo,   2;   Louisville,   3.\nColumbus,   5;   Indianapolis,   6.\nSt. Paul,  O;  Minneapolis,  4.\nKansas City, 9;   Milwaukee,  13.\nSunday's Games\nToledo,   10-4;l.ouisville,   8-5.\nMinneapolis,   2;   St.   Paul,   7.\nColumbus,  6-0;   Indianapolis,   7-2.\nKansas    City,     17-17;     Milwaukee,\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSaturday's  Games\nPortland,   4;    J^pattle,   2.\nSan    Francisco,   8;    Vernon,\nSalt    Lake,    0;    Sacramento,\nLos   Angeles,   2;   Oakland,   1,\nSunady's   Games\nPortland,   6-1;   Seattle,   4-6,\nSan  Francisco,  4-10;   Vernon,\nSalt Lake, 4-5;  Sacramento,  5-6.\nLos   Angeles,    1-6;    Oakland,   2-6.\n2-2.\n.Saturday\nToronto, 6; Jersey City, 5.\nBuffalo, 6; Newark, 7.\nKyracu.se,,  8;  Reading,   2.\nRochester, 6;  Baltimore,  4.\nSunday\nToronto.   2-8; Jersey  City  4-4-\nRochester.   8;   Baltimore   13.\nSyracuse,  8;   Beading,   0.\nBuffalo,  10-13;  Newark,  1-10.\nGwuidaXSfehda^Sh^\nBRIER\nTRADE  MARK\nREGISTERED\n73\nMITTHKL BOYS SION\nfX\u00bbll DOI-BLF. wivmrp\n\u25a0MILWAUKEE, June 24. \u2014 The\n\u25a0Mitchell boys* Ritchie and Pinkey,\nMilwaukee boxers, have been signed\nfor a double wlndup in Philadelphia\non July 9, according to announcement\nhere. Pinkey will defend his junior\nwelterweight title in a bout with Joe\nGoldman, while Ritchie will take on\nJoe Tiplitz, whom he defeated in\nMilwaukee two years ago.\nSaskatoon, Regina\nTie in Connaught\nSASKATOON, Jane 24.\u2014Saskatoon\nCN.H. and R.gina Imperial Oil played\nto a 3-3 draw in the final match for\nthe right to represent Saskatchewan\nin  the  Connaught cup.\nThe replay will take place in Regina next Saturday, provincial foot-\nhall   officials   said   today.\nMcKenzie Wins the\nQuebec Golf Title\nMONTREAL, June 24. \u2014 Redvers\nMcKenzie, Country club, Montreal,\ntton the Qufbce amateur golf championship at the tournament here Saturday, with a score for 36 holes of\n111, R. Chlllas, of Beaconsfield, was\nsecond, with lf>6; and W. M. Hodgson,\nRoyal   Montreal,  was  third with   157.\nOn Wednesday next the Nelson lacrosse fans will have an opportunity\nto see how. the old-timers and the\nyoung bloods will stack up against\neach   other.\nA frw days ago the younger players\nissued a challenge to play against any\nam the old-timers wished to put in\nthe field. This was accepted Immediately, and a team was organized to\nplay against the Tecumsehs, which ts\na, picked team from all the young\nlacrosse   players.\nThis game will be a good one, as It\nwill settle rr.-ny arguments among.it\nthe Nelson fans as to whether the\nteams of today could hold their own\nagainst a team composed of players\n\u25bc\/ho followed lacrosse in Nelson years\nago,\nThe teams will line up as follows:\nTecumsehs\u2014J. Kingrose, goal; C.\nCryderman, point; O. Benwell Jr.,\ncoverpoint; O. Armstrong, first defence; E. McVicar, second defence;\nJ. Curran, center; F. Archibald, first\nhome; C. King, second home; O. Long,\noutside home; H. Pitts, inside home;\nspares \u2014\u25a0 Freno, Ritchie, J, Madden,\nJack Madden, O. Jack, H. Thurman.\nD.   McLean.\nOld-Timers \u2014 A, Williamson, _ goal.\nC. D. Blackwood, point; Charles'Mac-\nGregor, coverpoint; R. Bell, first defence; O. Benwell Sr., second defence;\nJack Curran, center; J, Thompson, first\nhome; J. Armstrong, second home; A.\nJeffs, outside home; J. Hawkins, inside home; spares\u2014W. Curran, W. Ferguson,   II.   Fergu.son.\nfflFTM^gfl'sTfes (t\u00b0.s!?PanB,3j  )\nGray Wins Ontario\nAmateur Goli Title\nTORONTO, June 24.\u2014Rohert M.\nGray, Jr., of the Rosedale club, won\nthe first Ontario amateur golf\nchampionship here Saturday from\nfield of 130 competitors with a score\nof 79, by defeating Frank Thompson,\nformer Canadian champion, the latter scoring 80.\nIn the morning Gray defeated\nStanley Thompson, the match going\nto the twenty-third green.\nGUbey't 'SPET\nROYAL' is th*\nchoicest Scotch\nWhisky obtainabU\nat any price. Ther*\nwe many brand*\nof Scotch Whiskie*\nbeing offered to\nthe public, some at\nhigher price*, but\nno matter how\nmuch you pay you\ncannot get anything finer than\n\"SPEY ROYAL.\"\nSPEY-ROYAL\nSOLD AT ALL\nGOVERNMENT UQU0B\nSTORES INB.C \t\nThia advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nSCOTCH\nWHISKY\n' V\u00aby-0ay-\u00ab>   _\nBrule Eliminates\nSouthside Eleven\nKDMONTON, June 24. \u2014 In the\nsemi-final of the Alberta Elimination\nplayoff for the Connaught cup championship Brule defeated the Edmonton\nSouthside team this evening by a\nscore  of   1   to 0, at Brule.\nFOREST FIRES\nYET THREATEN\nNEWBRUNSWICK\nFate of Rocky Gulch Is Not\nKnown; Situation Is Very\nGrave ih Province\nFRF.lSERICTON, N.B., June, 24. \u2014\nThere Is no cessation of the forest\nfire menace In this province, and In\na statement given out today Hon.1 W.\nC. Robinson, minister of lands and\nmines, saya that the situation Is very\ngrave.\nNo word has been received from\nRocky Gulch, a town about 10 miles\nfrom Campbell ton, ln Restlgouche\ncounty. At latest reports the village\nwas   threatened   with   destruction.\nOne of the most serious fires in the\nprovince is now situated fn a heavily\ntimbered and very dry forest area to\nthe   southwest of  the   Miramichl  river.\nGUNS SALUTE AS\nEXPLORER SAILS\nBowdoin    Leaves    Mains    Port   With\nDestination      of      Northern\nGreenland\nWISCASSET Me., June 24.\u2014The\n115-ton auxiliary schooner Bowdoin,\nbearing Capt. Donald McMillan and\nhis party on their way to resume\nscientific work and explorations in\nthe Arctic, sailed from this port\nSaturday.\nThe booming of cannon and deafening salutes of sirens and whistles\ncheered the explorer and six associates as the staunch little schooner\nslipped down the Kheepscot river on\nthe first leg of her perilous voyage\nof more than 2100 miles to northern\nGreenland. McMillan anchored for\nthe night at Booth bay harbor, to\nmake preliminary compass adjustments.\nThe present Is the explorer's 10th\ntrip to the polar regions ln 15\nyears.\nThe Bowdoin Is expected to carry\nthe expedition to Cape Sabine for\nscientific work and exploration in\nBUlsmore Land, and to bring it\nback safely  a year  from next  Sep-\nMOUR LEADER*\nSHEETING\n(of ZXmjSH H*t&ACXV*B)\nOur Leader\n'Seal of Quality\nBleached Sheeting\nThis dependable Sheeting is manufactured for the\nHudson's Bay Company in England, from durable,\nfull bleached cotton yarns.\nIt is positively free from dressing. Of good,\nmedium weight.\nOur leader is an ideal Sheeting for general household use. Our purchase of many thousand yards enables us to offer this exceptionally fine Sheeting at\nthe moderate prices shown below.\nLook for the brand, \"Our Leader,\" and the \"Seal\nof Quality.\"\nWidth 70 inches, *7K\/\u00bb\nper yard  I DC\nWidth 80 inches, Q__n\nper yard OO C\nWidth 90 inches, QK\/\u00bb\nper yard  \"D C\nCompare the quality of this wonderful cloth,\nlt tvill please yon.\n\u201e\ntember, unless Ice conditions make\nnecessary a two-year 'stay in the\nnorth.\nAt daybreak tomorrow the Bowdoin\nwill sail for Sydney, C. B., where\nshe is due next Friday, to take on\nthe balance of her 3000 gallons of\nfuel   oil.\nGENERAL LECKIE\nFMSTORALLY\nDistinguished British Columbia Engineer and Soldier\nDies After Operation\nVANCOUVER, June 23. \u2014 Major-\nOen. R. d. Edwards Leckie, soldier\nand pioneer mining man of British Columbia, died ln St. Paul's hospital\nlast night. He had undergone a serious operation.    He was 54  years old.\nMajor-General Leckie was born In\nHalifax, and was the son of Major\nRobert OHmour and Sarah Edwards\nLeckie. He was educated in the Montreal high school, the Bishop's college\n.school of' Lennoxville, and In the\nRoyal Military college of Kingston,\nwhere he took the governor-general's\nmedal In 1S90. He graduated from\nKing's college, Windsor, as a bachelor\nof   science   in   1895.\nAs an engineer he was associated\nwith many works In Nova Scotia and\n.New Brunswick. He surveyed and\nsuperintended the construction of the\nTorbrook railway, was locating engineer and constructor of the Middleton\nWater Supply c<v*pany, and designed\nand located the Granville ferry water\nsystem   in   1893. all  in Nova Scotia.\nIn 1898 he came to British Columbia as consulting engineer for several\nmines, both In thjs province and ln\nWashington.\nDuring 1903 and 1904 he undertook an expedition Into British Somali-\nland. He was gazetted a lieutenant in\nthe 75th regiment in 1891 and became\nft major in 1895. ln that same year\nhe transferred to the Sth Princess\nLouise's NVw Brunswick Hussars and\nli. 1900 Joined the cavalry reserve of\nofficers. In the Houth African war of\n1901 and 1902 he won the Queen's\nmedal with two clasps, while a member  of   the Canadian   Mounted  rifles.\nReturning to Vancouver he organized ln 1910 and 1911 the 72nd regl-\nrient of the Seaforth Highlanders. Or,\nNovember 24, 1910, he was gazetted\nlieutenant-colonel.\nIn the course of his service In the\nlate war he rose to the rank of major-\ngeneral.\nPENSION BOARD\nIS CHALLENGED\nGreat     War     Veterans'    Organization\nSays Colonel Thompson  Misrepresents    Bill    Before   Stnate\nATTAWA, June 24. \u2014 The Dominion officials of the Great War\nVeterans' association have sent a\ncommunication to local units against\nthe statement of Lieut.-Col, John\nThompson, chairman of the pensions\nboard, that the legislation now before parliament does not alter the\npension law in regard to disabled,\nbut only in regard to dependents.\nThe communications Is as follows:\n\"The investigation of the royal\ncommission was caused by the fact\nthat pensions were refused certain\nclasses of applicants among disabled ex-servicemen and dependents.\nThe Inquiry resulted in the recommendation that the benefits so withheld should be restored. The pensions board recently refused to restore these benefits until authorized\nby   parliament.\n\"legislation with this was, accordingly, introduced by the government,\nand approved by the house of commons. The pensions board now informs the senate that this leglp-\nlation will not alter the attitude of\ntho board In regard to disabled\nmen.\n\"Either we are offered trick legislation   or   trick   administration.\"\nPARLIAMENT IS\nDUE TO WIND\nUP THIS WEEK\nSenate Soldier Inquiry Only-\nThing That Will Delay the\nProroguing\nOTTAWA, June 24.\u2014{By Canadian\nTress) \u2014\u25a0 The week now opening is\nexpected to be the last of the session\nof parliament. By some, prorogation\nis put as early as Thursday; by other*\nas late as Saturday. It Is pretty generally accepted that it will be over\nby  the end of the week.\nThe only serious obstacle to prorogation is now said to be in the\nsenate. The banking bill Is through\nthe committee, and is making good\nprogress in the upper house. Redistribution has not been disposed of, but\nIt is understood that it will b\u00bb\ndropped.\nIn the Senate an inquiry into tha\nreturned soldier legislation has beea\nopened, and the length of this i\u00bb\nstated to be the determining factor In\nthe date of the closing of parliament.\nIt Is not expected, however, that this\nwill  cause a delay beyond  Saturday.\nThe week in the commons is scheduled to start off with a debate on (he,\nI'nlon bank statement. Robert Forke\nwill move the adjournment of the,\nhouse to discuss the situation In regard to this bank, but the debate Is\nnot   expected   to   be   long.\nAfter that, the minister of railways\nIs to go on with some legislation tn\nregard to branch lines of the National   railways.\nWIXNIF'BCr, June 24.\u2014Rose Weller.\naged 44, w\u00abs run Over and killed early\nthis morning by an automobile driven\nby Lloyd Conklin. Conklin Is being\nheld by the police pending the Inquest. ^\n f     'Page EigHI\n(THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, TONE 25, 1923\nTHE ARK\nLadles' Lisle Hose, all colors, 00<*\npair; Fancy Lisle Hose, pair, C5<*m\nSilk Hose, 90-\u00a3 and $1.00 V*fr,\\\n40-inch Unbleached Factory Cotton,!\n3f>*\u00a3   yard;    Dress   Ginghams,   20<*\" I\n35*. 30*. 35^. 40* and 45*!\nper yard. Wilton, Axminster audi\nRrussels Rugs, Linoleum, Furniture\nand   Ranges.    Campers'   Supplies. ,\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPh,n\u00ab  634 606  Virnon   St\nHAVE US FILL YOUR\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nOur Dispensing Department\nIs a special source of pride.\nWe use Prescription Products\nrecognized by the Medical Profession as a standard for qual-\nity.\nPrompt delivery without chargs.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nJ.  H. ROBBINSON,  Mgr.\nWedding\nGifts\nWe have Just received a large\nshipment of Cut Glass and Silverware at prices ranging from\n(2 60 to $20.00. Any piece would\nmake an Ideal Gift for the June\nBride.\nSee this large assortment of\ndainty and useful articles before   buying   elsewhere.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nJeweler and  Optician\nPhon.    The Old Keliable p\"on\u00bb\na    KERR'S JITNEY  a\nPhone    At Your Service Phone\nGet   Our    Quotations    On\nFIRE ALARM SYSTEMS\nIt  Will   Pay  You\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\nPhone  530.      Ward   and   Victoria   St,\nFURS\nSummer dl.scount has commenced on all goods and work,\nexcepting dressing and mounting  of skin.1*.\nLarge selection of CHOKERS\nat   all   prices.\nG. GLASER\nManf'g.   Furrier\nP. O. 767 Phona IM\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nTRY  A  CLASSIFIED  AD.\nSalesman\nWanted\nOld reliable firm requires\nhigh pressure Specialty Snles-\ninrtn. Conviction to make good\nnecessary. Apply In writing\nBex  R,  II.  P..  Daily  News.\nTAG DAY IS\nASUCCESS\nDaughters of Empire Realize\nOver Three Hundred for\nX-Ray Machine\nA total of a$34i> was realized\nSaturday by the efforts of the\nImperial Order of the Daughters of\nthe Kmplre, who held a tag day\nIn aid of tbe Kootenay Lake General\nhospital X-Kay fund. The sum of\n(Situ was realized from the sale ol\ntags, while $f>2 was received in do-\n'nations, and will be acknowledged\nlater.\nAlthough the day was overcast\nthe Luughters were pleased with\nthe lull in the storm, which made\nconditions more favorable. The headquarters ot the operations were at\nthe Standard furniture store, where,\nunder the leadership of Mrs. W. O\nRose, the regent, tbe various teams\nwere managed. The following ladies\nbad chart* of teams: Mrs. A. Leith,\n; Mrs, J. Cartmei, Mrs. R. Thomp-\n' son, Mrs. N. Murphy, Mrs. William\nSeaman, Mrs. Andrew Sutherland and\n.Mrs.   C.   K.    McHardy.\nMrs. Hawthorne was in charge of\n'he Josephine street corner, at\nBaker, and assisted by tiie tallowing:\nMrs. 1). Nagle, Mrs. William Seaman, Mrs. B. McGregor, Miss <!.\nVincent, Mrs. H. McDonald, Mrs.\n1 R. Pool. Mrs. C. I. Archibald and\nMrs.   R.   Thompson.\nWard and linker streets were lookec'\nafter by Mrs. W. S. King and the\nfollowing ladies: Miss Currie, Miss\nA. Mansfield, Miss Jean Forin, .Miss\nMiss Phyllis Church, Mrs. Ferguson\nWilson, ftllsa L>orothy Lawrence, Miss\nHelen Tuwnseiid, Miss Edith Towns-\nend, Mrs. A. E. Lawrence, Mrs. A.\nE. Allan, Mrs. Middleton, Mrs. H.\nK. lull, Mrs. CrydVrman, Miss\nFletcher   and    Miss   Redpath,\nMrs. C. Watts, at the corner of\nStanley and Baker streets, was assisted bv Him ___. Phillips, Miss\nMabel Phillips, Mrs. Richards, Miss\nK. Johnston, Mas Cnnley, Miss N.\nShaw, Miss G. Lister and Mrs.\nDeKatz.\nWhile Mrs. Vlgneux, who had\ncharge of the Vernon street district, was assisted by Mrs. J. Mc-\nIyor, Mrs. Guy Wright, Miss Jessie\nCroll. .Miss Loreen Dunham, Miss\nHelen Murphy, Mrs. J. Ryan, Mrs.\nJ. P. Pit tier, and Miss LoflM St-Mt,\nDnrlng tbe afternoon the workers\nnt headquarters were served with\nafternoon tea. and ices, by local\norganizations which were assisting.\nSEES SON SUFFER;\nPARALYSIS COMES\nBig Conservative Smoker\nin honor of\nW. J. Bowser, M. P. P.\nLeader of the Opposition\nTonight   Tonight\nARMORY, 8:30 P. M.\nSongs, Music, Boxing Bouts, Short Speeches, Smokes.\nAdmission  Free.    Follow the Pipers to the  Armory\nMonday evening.\nOttawa   Ex-Merchant   Rushes  to   Victoria    to    Son's    Bedside;\nDies After  Him\nVICTORIA, June 24.\u2014Francis Edward Knight, a retire; merchant of\nOttawa, died her*1 today.\nHe was born in Quebec 73 years\nago and lived most of his life in Ottawa.\nFive weeks  ago he was  summoned\n! to   Victoria,   where   his   son,   Percy,\n1 was dying of injuries sustained while\ntrying   to   snatch   a   Hindu   employee\nof   a   sawmill   from   under   a   rolling\nlog.      The    shock    of   witnessing    his\n; son's   sufferings   Induced    a    paralytic\n1 s'roke in   the older man. and   he sur-\n\u25a0 vived  his  son  by only  one week,\ni     Mr.    Knight     leaves ' another    son,\n! fluudes,   living   in   Calgary,   nnd   two\n\u25a0 daughters, Mr,i. W. M. Stewart of\nj Ottawa, nnd Mrs. R. L. Jones of Rev-\nI elstoke. Mrs. Stewart came here with\n; her father ai*d will take his body\n| back  to   Ottawa  for  Interment.\nB C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO..\nAgonta   for\nALBERTA   CLAY   PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE and DRAIN TILE\nHIGH SCHOOL\nSTUDENTS ARE\nRECOMMENDED\nFirst and Second Year Students Are Named (or Promotion to Higher Grades\nRecommendations for promotion in\n'he first and second years of the high\nschool have heen announced by principal U V. Rogers. In all 102 pupils\nhave heen recommended for promotion 67 being from the first year classes and 35 pupils from the second\nyear classes.\nThe class leaders for the school\nyear in order of merit are:\nDivlssion Til-\u2014Odin Sostad, Alest-\nair McOharles, Winnifred  Harrop.  '\nDivision IV.\u2014Genevieve Sooman.\nKric Ramsden, Kathlyne Porter,\nDivision V.\u2014Olive Mouat, Jean\nWestman, Hazel Gardiner.\nDivision VI \u2014 Blanche Forsberg,\nTools Houston, Arthur England,\nDhlion VTt.\u2014James Boyd Tom\nTait, Orrin St. Denis-\nThe complete list of recommendations hy classes, the names arranged\nalphabetically Is:\nDivision III. (Second Year Class)\u2014\nBeatrice Campion, Isabel Fraser,\nCharles Gallagher. Winnifred Harrop,\nStanlev Hepher, Hazel Hillam. Doro-\n*hy Hipnerson, Mary Hirst, Charles\nHoare, Gerald Lee, Alestalr McChar-\n's, Alice McDougall, My rile McKe-\nown, Margaret Mel-end, Gladys Ran\nieli, Richard Renwick. Violet Row {\nUn?, Odin Sostad, Vera Walley, Don;\nWilson. j\nDivision IV. (Second Year Claps)\u2014\nVellie Ados. Evelyn Armstrong, Bessie Bell. Bernal Biker, Oliver Covington, Audrey Foot, Joseph Ink, Eric\nNordberg, Kathlyne Porter, Eric\nRamsden, Rosie Richardson, Genevieve   Sooman,   Marjorie   Stobo.\nObtained pass standing in subjects\ntaken.\u2014Walter Bradshaw.\nDivision V. (First Year Class) \u2014\nDorothy Airev, Sybil Archibald, Edna\nBurgess, Gladys Fotherlncham, Kvelvn Frasr. Gladvs Gammon, Lee\nGansner, Hnael Gardiner. Dorothea\nGraham. Elmer Gusta'fson, Stanley\nHall, Rose Halney. Christina Mav,\nOlive Mouat, Helen Murphy, Isabella\nMcCuaiV, Othelie Olsen. Ellen Robinson. Edna Shore, Helen Sutherland\nTsabel   Thompson,  Vera   Thor,       Jean\nWallach,     Seen     Wertman,     Ruby\nYoung.   \u25a0\nDivision VI. (First Year Clnpn> \u2014\nLlovd Armstrong, Evan Brown. Kenneth Campbell, Arthur England, William Farenholtz, Kelson Fletcher\nBlanche Forsberg, Toots Houston\nGordon, Trving, Arthur Joy, Cecil\nLambert, Jean Lambert, Norman Lnu-\nrltt, Calvin I-awrenee, Myr:nd Morrison, Hazel Murphy. David Proudfoot. Howard Scott, McBride St. Denis, Cvprian Taylor, Sam Thomas, Helen Tregilhis.\nDivision VTL (First Year Class)\u2014\nHoward Bayley, Clare Bennett, James\nRoyd, Robert Boyd. Andrew Rureesn\nHarold Ericksnn, Jack Fleurv, Edith\nGeroux, Rnv Hill, Granville Houston.\nOrphn Manhart, Olga Melneesnik, Tn-\ne-a Nordberg, Alexander Rintfrose.\nWallace Scott. Elizabeth Sewell, Dick\nKnur way, Orrin St. Denis, Arthur\nttromatend, Tom Tait, Edgar White-\nfield,   Loreen   Williams.\nAustralian Premiers\nVisit Alberta, Guests\nof Provincial Cabinet\nTRADE IS BRISK!\nON THEMARKET\nOnions, Radishes, Strawberries and New Chicken Sell\nWell Despite Weather\nA brief business featured the Nelson\nmarket on Saturday morning, despite\nthe rainy wenther. Local radishes,\nonions, strawberries and peas were\n\u2022he new articles of produce, nnd con\nsequentty were quickly sold. Eggs\nhave dropped 5 cents per dozen,\ntumbling from 3f\u00bb cents to 30 cents\non    the    dozen.      Potted    plants    also\nlb.\nfeatured,    and   were\nfew   hours.\nThe prices were\nYoung     Chickens,\nBeef,   per   lb\t\nVeal,  per   lb\t\nPork,  per  lb    \t\nBeef heart, per lb. ..\nFresh   Liver,  per lb,   .\n2   lbs.   for   \t\nKidney Suet, per lb.  .\nSausage,   per   lb\t\nPotted Meats, per lb.\nDairy   Butter,   per   lb.\nCheese,    per   lb\t\nEggs, per doz\t\nGreens, per bunch ..\nLettuce, per bunch ..\nBadishes, per bunch .\nOnions, per hunch ..\nCarrots, 6 lbs. for ...\nPotatoes,   per sack   ..\nPot Plant*, each  \t\nCut   Plants,   per   doz.\nBulbs,    per    doz\t\nBeets, 6 lbs, for  \t\nTurnips,   6   lbs.   for   ..\nLeeks    \t\nTomato     Plants,     per\ndoz \u2022\t\nCauliflower Plants, per\ndoz\t\nCabbage    Plants,    per\ndoz\t\nPer 100   \t\nHome-Made Jelly, per\nH>., Up  from   \t\nJam,   per   lb\t\nGooseberries,   2   boxes\nfor   \t\nsold   out   in   (i\nGabardine Raincoats\n$25\nIX \/E have just received another shipment of all-wool\nVV English Gabardine Raincoats. Just the style\nCoat for showery weather, or, in fact, an all-year-around\nCoat. New styles also in the rubberized tweed or the\nlovat and fawn checked waterproofs with the three-way\nbelt. ^^\u2122\n$11 to $35\n.30\n.10\n.15\n.40\n.25\n.25\n.30\n.18 Vi\n.16\n.25\n.20\n.26\n.20\n.40\n.46\n.30\n.05\n.10\n.06\n.05\n.26\n1.60\n.75\n.25\n.80\n.26\n.26\n.10\n.25\n.20\n.20\nl.OO\n.15\n.15\nYOUR MONEY'S\nWORTH    OR\nYOUR   MONEY   BACK\nNelson Steam Laundry\nPhona 148. P. O. Box 48.\nSMrat-cI'iss  laundry Work done\nat  moderate price*\nFrench Dry Cleaning and Dyeing\nWorks,    Steam Carpet Cleaning.\nAgency at Trail, B. C.\nC. Fransen  (Barber Shop) Agent\nGRAIN INQUIRY\nBEGINS TODAY\nRoyal   Commission   Will   Open   Two-\nI>u>  KitrIntro at Kdmonton\nThis Morning\nQUEEN CIGAR STORE\nSpecial\nSmoking Mixture\nSweet    and    Fragrant    Virginia\n13ths     15c\nH. BUSH\nCorner Baker and Ward Sti.\nEDMONTON, June 24.~Premler Rlr\nOeerffe Fuller of New South Wales,\n.ind Tlon. II. S. W, Lawson. premier\nof Victoria. Were In the elty Saturday\nen route to Jasper Park. They were\nentertained, by membera of the provincial  government.\nBo-bei*t Z. Leonardj>ments\nMae\nBroadway Rose\nHer Best Picture Since Peacock Alley\nDazzling  Dances,   Marvelous  Gowns,   Tense   Dramatic  Action\nEDMONTON. June 24.\u2014 Members\nof the royal commission which was\ntppolnted to look into th*11 grain\n.rade, holds its first session in Edmonton, starting tomorrow morning\nin the city council chamber, nnd the\n'orrimissloncrs arrived in the city\nSaturday night. Judge W.FA. Turge-\n>n of Saskatchewan; Dr. D. A. Mc-\nJibbon, Professor of economics of\nthe University of Alberta, Dean W. J.\nTtuthcrford of Saskatchewan University, and James Q, Scott of Quebec,\nare the members of the board. D'Arcy\nScott is the senior counsel, nnd J. F.\nFisher of Winnipeg the junior counsel\nfor the commission, of which R. J.\nDeachman of Calgary is the secretary,\nlt Is expected the commission will\nhold a two-day session ln Edmonton,\n.ind will sit ;it various pieces ln the\nprovince before going to Saskatchewan.\nIt is expected Hint \u2022 large number\nof witnesses will volunteer to give\nevidence here, but there Is no record\nns yet as to who will be called.\nBrooklyn Eagle Party\nEn Route tor Alaska\nEntertained at Ottawa\nOTTAWA, June 24.\u2014Some present\nmembers of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle\nparty, which left New York on Friday for n trip through Canada and\nAlaska were welcomed to Canada here\ntoday by Hon. Charles St\nIster of the Interior,\nof   Premier  King.\nThe party spent tlie day In sightseeing, and were guests at a banquet\nin the evening. They left on the\nCanadian National tonight for Prince\nRupert, whence they wilt travel by\nboat   to  Alaska.\nTRY  A  CLASSIFIED  AD.\nAttractive Eyeglasses\nWhether you pret'er pince-nez\nor fully mounted glasses, we can\nsupply you with a pair which\nyou will find pleading In appearance and comfortable to\nwear.\nJ. J. WALKER\nOptician wu_ Optometrlai.\nWE    RECOMMEND\nJELL-0 FOR DESSERT\nPure Food, 10c.    Honest Weight\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW.\nSTARLAND\nUSUAL PRICES TONIGHT USUAL PRICES\nmln-\nthe   absence\nNelson News of the Day\nOwing to uncertain weather, the\nWomen's Institute garden party of\nJune 27 has been postponed\nindefinitely. (S796)\nThe Spice of the Program\nCOMEDY, \"BETWEEN SHOWERS\"\nConsidering the weather we have had, this ought to be good\nTOPICS OF THE DAY\nv;\nCapitol\nhivlertammeixt\n'\"\u2014 PlWCa.*\u00abC\u00b0^\"\">\"\nif\"\nTonight\nUSUAL PRICES\nKO\"!  Of   \u2022\nCapitol\nUtertaii\\mei\\t\nfinrden fete and SUPPER nt home\nof Mrs. T. Ledingham, 205 Silica\nstreet, THURSDAY, June 28. Ice\ncream and candy booth, country store\nand putting contest. ORCHESTRA\nand CITY BANS, community singing.\nSupper served 5:30 to 7:30. Admission f.O cents. Proceed! Presbyterian\nLadies'   Aid. (8797)\nNOTICE   TO  RETURNED   MEN.\nAll returned men desirous of taking\nadvantage of special rates for purpose\nof visiting Vancouver during He union\nWeek are requested to communicate\nwith Secretary, O.W.V.A., at once, In\norder to \u2022 obtain necessary transportation certificates. Rooking dates, June\n30 to July 2. Return limit July 15.\nOnly a limited supply of certificates\non   hand. (8764)\nnew    pack\nGet   It  at\n(8737)\nHousewives\u2014McDonald's\nstrawberry Jam is ready,\nyour  grocer's.\n%1**m\\%*mC\u2014*-S0**\n..I-***\n-V\nBrushes and Brooms\ni Paint Brushes\ni Varnish Brushes\ni Kalsomine Brushes\nShoe Brushes\nSink Brushes\nScrub  Brushes\nHouse Brooms Stable Brooms\nAll kinds of Brushes and Brcums\nLet us supply your wants\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B. C\nRETAIL\nTwo Good Buys\n5-Room Cottage, good condition. Splendid location, on\nMill street.    Terms  $2100\n4-Room Cottage, modern, completely furnished. Close in,\non Silica street. Store room and cellar. Terms.\nPrice    $2100\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL  ESTATE Authorized Tr uetee  In   Bankruptcy BON08\nINSURANCE\u2014Fire,    Accident,    Life. PHONE 135\nThe McDonald Jam Co. will handle\nall your Strawberries, Raspberries,\nOooseberrles, Black Currants, Black\nCherries, Red Currants, etc. Thf\nprices to be the same as paid by all\nCoast Jam ^lanufacturers  for   the   1923\ncrop.\n(84fi0)\nPOULTHYMENI\nMeeting called for June 28th at City\nHall Is postponed for one Week, to\nmeet   exchange  directors   from   coast.\n(8788)\nATTENTION   OF   FRUIT   GROWERS!\nTour executive have decided to establish a Kubcentral at Creston. Local\nmanagers and growers will direct all\ncorrespondence to -Subeentral Associated Grower* Creston, H.C. Associated\nGrowers,   J.   R.  Conway. (8785)\nOn vacation \u2014 J. F. Croll, Tailor,\nJosephine street, will be closed all this\nweek. (8787)\nA WANT AD, IS PATH CHEAP, AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nCARD TV THANKS.\nMrs. II Sutherland and Mm. C. H.\nStark wish to thank all friends for\ntheir kind sympathy and floral tributes\nriurlnif thetr recent sad bereavement.\nAlso Dr. H. II. MacKenzie - for his\nkind    attention. (8793)\nReserve June 27 for Women's Institute Lawn Social at Mrs. McHaxdy'a.\nAdmission\u2014Adults 25 cents, children\n10 cents.   Everybody welcome.    (8720)\n' SPECIAL\nCOMEDY.AND    NEWS    ..\nCOMING THUR. lor 3 days\nVaudeville and Pictures at Usual Prices\nHear the Bartendale Brothers in Mirth and Song\nRemember\u2014H yoa see it at SIARLANfi\u2014It's fiooj ]\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_25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0401068","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"}]}}