{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0401182":{"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":"2021-07-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1923-09-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401182\/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":" Army & Naty Vets\nFLOCK BY THEMSELVES\nSee Page 2\nt\nAl 55  IAPR24\nPROV LIBRARIAN\nVICTORIA B C\n%H\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1923\nNo. 137\nQuake Spectator\nARRIVES IN NELSON\nSee Page 3\nNOTHER EARTHQUAKE RACKS JAPAN\nERUN TAKES ON EXTRAORDINARY POWERS\nMORS\nAWARD ITALY\nAN INDEMNITY\nrifty Million Lire Deposited\nby Greece Forfeited\nfor Tardiness\n\u00a3REEK DELEGATE\nMAKES A PROTEST\n.Ambassadors Order Italy to\nEvacuate Corfu, Which\nIs Being Done\nti PARIS, Sept. 26.\u2014The Greco-\n,1 Italian affair waa brought to a\nclose today, at far as the interallied council of ambassadors is\nconcerned, when that body de-\nS oided that the 50.000.000 lire de-\nn posited by Greece in tha Bank\nof Switzerland as security for\nj  indemnity   should   ba   paid   over\nto Italy.\ni *. The payment was ordered aa\ni a penalty for Greece's dilatori-\nnsts in searching for tha assassins of the Italian boundary mission near Janina, tha slaying of\nwhich brought about the Greco-\nItalian criaiii and tha subsequent occupation of Corfu island\nby   Italy.\nThe ambassadors upheld their de-\n\u25a0iBlon that, In view of Greece's ac-\nIon In fulfilling the terms laid down\n_>y the council, Including .payment of\nndemnlty, saluting the allied fleet\nit Phaleron, and rendering honors\n;o the bodies of the slain commissioners, Italy waa In duty bound to\njvacuate Corfu.\nIt wae announced   that  this  evac-\nKatlon was already begun, and would\ne   completed  tomorrow.\nGreece Raitea Howl\nOENEV.A, Bept. 26.\u2014Nlchol Politis,\nrepresentative of Greece on the\nLeague of Nations council, tonight\nmade public protests against the decision of the council of ambassadors\nAo compel Greece to pay to Italy\n30,000,000 lire,' describing the decision\nas an act of Injustice.\nT He insisted that the inquiry Into\nxhe killing of the Italians had not\n(oeen finished, and declared that the\n,Greeks have evidence that the Albanians were responsible for tho\n.murders.\n; M. Politis declared that the council of ambassadors' decision would\nibe. an outrageous injustice, and would\nj prove to the world that the big\n^nations of Europe are in complicity\n4to strike a blow at a small and defenceless country.\nWill Be Heard From\n. Observing that Greece accepted in\nadvance the decision of the ambassadors' conference, M. Points said\nthat nevertheless Greece would not\nfail later to express her opinion\nclearly in a communication to the\nambassadors.\nHe recalled that former-Premier\nVenizelos of Greece was shot several years ago in Paris, and that M.\nVorovsky, the Soviet representative,\nwas slain at Lausanne, but that the\nFrench and Swiss governments did\nnot   hold   themselves   responsible.\nHe said he believed world opinion\nwould support Greece.\n!..\nPRINCE .DISPENSES\nHOSPITALITY TODAY\nHe'll   Entortain   8horthorn   Breeders'\nAssociation   at   E.   P.   Ranch;\nPremier Will  Be There\nCALGARY, Sept. 26. \u2014 For the\nfirst time since his arrival in Alberta\ntwo weeks ago the prince of Wales\nwill be host to a number of Al-\nbertans tomorrow when he throws\nthe B. P. Ranch open to the members of the Alberta Shorthorn Breeders' association who are holding their\nannual picnic at the  ranch.\nInvitations to a number of prominent Calgarlans were also Issued\nby Professor W. L. Carlyle today,\non behalf of the prince. Premier\nHerbert Greenfield of Alberta and\nHon. George Hoadley, minister of\nagriculture, will represent the government.\nST. PAUL. Minn., Sept. 26. \u2014 Dr.\nEdward W. Buckley, aged 63, of St.\nPaul, supreme physician and member of the board of directora of the\nKnights of Columbus, died here tonight.\nThe Weather\ni The temperatures below are fot\n\u25a0 t_. 24 houra ending yesterday altar,\nnoon at e o'clock.\nWEATHER-\nVICTORIA,   Sept.   26.\u2014Nelson   and\nvicinity:   Partly cloudy and  cool.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON     _    48       70\nVictoria     _    49       65\nVancouver     -   44       62\nKamloops    _    40       64\nPrince  Rupert       48       66\nAtlin    _       40 43\nDawson    _..-    34       44\nCalgary         42       66\nWinnipeg     66       68\nPortland         64       64\nSan  Francisco        64      68\nSeattle    J.  _   62       64\nPenticton     61       72\nKaslo  ~-   48      64\nFERDINAND,\nBERKOWITZA\nSURROUNDED\nSoviet   Republic   of   Communists and Peasants\nIs Enveloped\nDECISIVE BATTLE\nNOW BEING FOUGHT\nBulgarian   Government  Asserts Insurgents Are Deserting in Bunches\nSOFIA, Sept. 26. \u2014 A semiofficial\nstatement Issued today says the\nrevolutionary movement in Bulgaria\ncan be considered as approaching\nIts end. The insurgents are deserting their leaders and surrendering\nIn parties, saying they were inveigled into the movement against\ntheir  wills,   the  statement  adds.\nThe decisive battle In the Communist uprising la being fought In\nthe city of Ferdinand and the village\nof Berkowltza, which are four miles\napart and halfway from Sofia to\nthe Danube, according to a statement issued by the war office.\nFive Thousand  Besieged\nFive thousand Communist and\nAgrarian, allien are besieged here,\nafter having proclaimed a soviet\nrepublic and established control over\nthe   area.\nFour thousand soldiers, aided by\ncivilian volunteers, have been carrying out an enveloping operation\nduring the past five days, and have\nnow drawn their lines completely\naround Ferdinand jind Berkowltza.\nEPIDEMICS .ARE\nSEIZING TOKIO;\nNURSESNEEDED\nHuge Clerical Class Unable\nto Do Manual Work Are\nSpecial Problem\nTOKIO, Sept. 26.\u2014Thousands of\nmen, chiefly professional men and\nclerks, are out of employment ln\nTokio as a result of the earthquake.\nThey are also without hope of obtaining employment for months to\ncome, although there Is plenty of\nwork for common laborers cleaning\naway the debria and on construction  work.\nThe authorities aro faced with the\nproblem of caring temporarily for\nthese jobless men. They have been\nadviBed to leave Toklo, but there\nis nowhere they can go, as other\ncities of the country do not offer\nthem a field for the kind of work\nthey are capable of doing.\nMuat   Have  Clothing\nThe clothing problem is next to\nthat of unemployment. Great quantities of clothing were destroyed,\nand It will bo months before merchants can restock. Meanwhile cold\nweather is approaching. Even now\nthe nights are colder, and the campers  are   suffering  considerably.\nEfforts ore being made by the\ngovernment and the Red Cross to\ndeal with a threatened epidemic, of\ndysentery and typhoid fever. Many\ncases have  already  been   reported.\nThe Red Cross Is employing additional nurses.\nReconstruction of\nHungary on Lines\nof Austria Is Next\nGENEVA, Sept. 26.\u2014A political\nagreement reached here between\nCzeeho-Slovakia, Jugo-Slavia and\nHungary has enabled ths League\nof Nations to taks preliminary\nsteps to man out a financial program for the reconstruction of\nHungary on a basis similar to\nthat of Austria. The plan, when\ncompleted, will be transmitted\nto   the   repsration   commission.\nDALMATIA FEELS\nA SUGHT SHOCK\nROME, Sept. 26. \u2014 A slight\nearthquake was felt ln Dalmatla this\nmornfng.   No damage resulted.\nGerman Suhs Used\nBay of Fundy for\na Quiet Refuge\nST. JOHN, N. B., Sept. 26.\u2014\nThat German submarines used\nto make the Bay of Fundy a\nrefuge, where, unmolested by\nallied submarine chasers, they\ncould clean and scrape their\nhulls and carry out minor repairs during the war, was the\nInformation given the Engineering Institute of Canada\ntoday by E. O. Cameron, chief\nengineer of the St. John dry-\ndock, in the course of a paper\ndelivered to the session of that\norganization.   ,\nBERLIN PLACES\nBAVARIA UNDER\nDICTATOR RULE\nNationalist Leaders  Appeal\nfor Recruits for Storm\nBattalions\nrhinelandTarty\nforms. directorate\nLabor Leaders in Rhineland,\nHowever, Are for German Connection\nBERLIN, Sept. 26.\u2014Dr. von\nKahr, former Bavarian premier,\nhaa been appointed general com-\nmtasioner of tha state for\nBavaria. He is empowered to\nproclaim martial law if necessary, but it is denied officially\nthat martial law has been proclaimed  as  yet,\nNot Yet but Soon\nPARIS, Sept, 26.\u2014Martial law has\nbeen proclaimed in Bavaria, accord -\nIng to late advices from Berlin, and\nformer-Premier von Kahr has been\nappointed   commissioner  of state.\nDr. von Kahr has issued a proclamation announcing that he will\ntake action against all acts of resistance to his orders, or hostility to\nthe country, by every means at his\ndisposal.\nTo Fight for Bavaria\nBERLIN, Sept. 26.\u2014Adolph Zltler,\nBavarian nationalist leader, - has\nIssued an appeal, according to a dispatch from Munich, summoning his\nfollowers to resign from other military organizations, and join the ranks\nof the storm battalions of the\nNational Social Oerman Workmen's\nparty.\nAnother's nationalist leader, Prince\nvon Wrede, has summoned all the\nBavarian and Oerman horsemen to\nform a storm cavalry corps.\nBavarian   Constitution   Suspended\nMUNICH, Bavaria, Sept, 26.\u2014An\nordinance has been Issued establishing \"temporary measures for the\nmaintenance of public safety,\" It decrees that several important paragraphs of the constitution of the\nreich and of Bavaria will provisionally cease to operate. Liberty to\nexpresB opinions publicly, liberty of\nthe press\", and freedom to hold public meetings will be curtailed. The\nsecrecy of postal, telegraph and telephone services will be established,\nand domiciliary visits and confiscation   of fortunes authorized.\nThe executive power passes into\nthe hands of the general commissioner. His orders and decisions\ntake precedence over those of all\nother authorities, excepting judicial\nand administrative and military\ncourts. The commissioner may have\nrecourse to armed force if necessary,\nRhineland    Republic    Sunday\nBERLIN. Sept. 26.\u2014Not the least of\ntho Oerman government's worries at\npresent come from the alarming reports from the Rhineland, where the\nseparatists are showing increasing\nactivities. They now have created\na \"general directorate.\" which has\nconvoked a grand rally to be held\nat Duesseldorf next Sunday for the\npurpose of proclaiming a Rhineland\nrepublic.\nLabor for Unity\nCOLOGNE, Sept. 26.\u2014\"Give no\nquarter to the secessionist traitors,\"\nis the command given by tho labor\nleaders ln the Rhineland to their\nfollowers, who are urged to bend all\ntheir efforts toward tho maintenance\nof national  unity.\n\"If we hate a Frenchman because\nof the torture we have been forced\nto endure,\" said a German political\nleader, \"we despise a separatist ten\ntimes more. However, whenever we\nrun into a secessionist, we scent a\nFrenchman.\"\nSmall Boys Play\nKu Klux Klan and\nDoctor Is Needed\nWARREN, Ohio, Sept. 26.\u2014\nCyril Stoddart, 10 years of age,\nis undsr physician's card, suffering shock and minor injuries, and\npolice are hunting for a gang of\nsmall boys who, wearing masks\nand said to be playing Ku Klux\nKlan, Monday night attacked ths\nboy, tied him to a telephone pole\nand gagged him. Ha waa rescued after being tied up for\nthree   houra.\nSaskatchewan Has\nNot Protested at\nTax Upon Options\nOTTAWA, Sept. 26-\u2014According to\nofficials of the department of the\nsecretary of state, no complaint has\nas yet been filed by Saskatchewan\nagainst the action of Manitoba in\nlevying a tax upon futures trading\non the Winnipeg grain  exchange.\nLLOYD GEORGE DATE\nFOR WINNIPEG 8ET\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 26.\u2014Rt. Hon.\nDavid Lloyd George will address the\nWinnipeg Canadian club, Saturday,\nOctober 13. C. C. Ferguson, president, stated tonight that notice to\nthat effect had been received by Sir\nJames  -AJkins, lieutenant-governor.\nTROOPS CLEAR\nCORRIDORS OF\nLEGISLATORS ON\nOklahoma Lower House Is\nPrevented by Military\nFrom Convening\nBALKED S0L0NS\nTURN TO COURTS\nGovernor    Extends     Fight\nAgainst Ku Klux Klan\nto Another County\n\u25a0OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept. 26.\u2014Undaunted by their first skirmish with\nmilitary forces of the state, members\nof the lower house of the Oklahoma legislature prepared tonight for\nthe next move in their attempt to\nmeet and clear the oflicial acts\nof   Governor   J.   C.   Walton.\nClaim   They   \"Conven.d\"\nDespite   the   fact   that   they   were\ndispersed     by     national     guardsmen\nA\nm *-v\nIf\n^_\\ '\n\u2022 \u25a0\n\/ _\\\n____\nfcfc**^.',...-.'\n\u00a5&\u25a0\u25a0'.        \"'\u2022.' \u25a0\nm ?\nP^'h.\nw<\n\"m\nGOV,   J.   C.   WALTON\nOf Oklahoma, by putting his state\nunder martial law, and taking evidence with military courts, since the\nordinary ones are dominated by the\nKlan, has the \"invisible empire\" in\nOklahoma with 'its back against the\nwall. The lower house of the legislature, which is trying to meet In\norder to Imp\u2014ah him, is composed\nmostly of Klnnsmen, and the newspapermen of the state are asserted\nto be all members of the order. His\ncourts have taken evidence of scores\nof floggings implicating the Klan,\nwhose grand dragon he has placed\nIn  jail.\nITALY SWITCHESSOUTHIST END PRESIDENT OF\nFROM ITS VIEW OF HONDO FEELS GERDANY TAKES\nCOMPETENCE FULL VIOLENCE SPECIAL POWER\nObjects    to     International\nCourt; Now Wants the\nLeague Council\nbranting\"caustic\nON inconsistency\nArabia   Also   Changes   Its\nMind and Decides to Take\nSeat in Assembly\nORNEVA, Sept. 26. \u2014 During a\nmeeting of the council of the League\nof Nations tonight, former-Premier\nSalandra of Italy refused to approve\nthe Bending of nil questions prepared\nbv Jurists concerning the competence\nof the covenant of the League of\nNations, to the permanent court of\ninternational   Justice.\nSalar.dra's Hew Contention.\nPlpnor Salandra agreed to tl)\u00ab sub-\nMission of the question concerning\nthe fixing of the responsibility of a\ntHate fnr a crime committed wilhln\nics borders, but he insisted that thp\ncouncil of the league Itself, and not\nthe international court, should pnss\nupon pueh direct questions of com-\npttency.\nHJalmnr Brant Ing, Sweden, retorted\nthat Italy having already repudiated\nthe council's competency, it was\nslrance that SlKiior Salandra should\nnow advocate submitting questions ol\ncompetency   to   the  council.\nArahia, through the voice of Prince\nLotfallah, her minister in Rome, but\nwho it* now in Geneva, enlivened the\npioceedlngs with a manifesto declaring that Arabia had changed her mind\n_\\r,d had decided to take a seat in the\nLeague of Nations' assembly to which\nbhe Is entitled without election b\u00a3\nvirtue of her signature of the Ver\nsjull.-s treaty.\nNINETY PER CENT\nOF BRITISH STAY\nwhen they gathered at noon today\nbefore the barred doors of the house\nchamber ot the capitol, the legislators contended tonight that the\nhouse was formally convened and\nthat It now was in recess pending\nthe   call   of   the   presiding   officer.\nRepresentative W. D. Mcllee, a\nleader in the assembly move, made\npublic what he declared to bo the\nofficial journal of the house of\nrepresentatives, lt detailed the brief\naction which terminated in tho clearance of the capitol corridors by the\nmilitary.\nPrevented from meeting, or even\ncaucusing, the members tonight\npinned their hopes for protection\nagainst the military authorities upon\nthe efforts of a legal committee\nwhich is prepaplng court proceedings to mark the next stage in the\nconflict.\nPromise   Delay   Next   Try\nThat there would be no immediate\nattempt to assemble again in defiance of martial law regulations,\nwas \"The promise made late today\nby house leaders to Adjutant-General\nMarkham.\nObservers predicted that the solons\nwould await a court ruling before\nassaying   another   assembly.\nRigid mnrtial law will be invoked\nln another county tomorrow, Governor Walton announced tonight. The\nname of the county was not made\npublic, but the executive said a delegation headed by the mayor of one\nof its cities had called on him with\na   request   for   \"military   protection.\"\nGrain Primaries\nAre Slowed Up\nby Bad Weather\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 28.\u2014Tnclerrtent\nweather slowed up grain loadings\nand marketings yesterday, according to railway reports received here\nthis afternoon. On Tuesday 4,658,438\nbushels were marketed, ns compared\nwith 6,140,..1)4 for the same date last\nyear, and cars loaded aggregated 2708\nns against 2913 for September 25,\n1922.\nThe Canadian National loaded 1219\ncars, as compared with 1133 last year,\nand marketed 1,903,000 bushels. Last\nyear's   marketings   totalled   2,745,000.\nOn tlie Canadian Pacific railway,\n2,755,438 bushels were marketed and\n14X9 cars loaded, as compared with\n3,395,394 bushels and 1720 cars for\nthe corresponding day of 1922,\nCambridge  Student  Who Took  Holt*\nday a*  Harvester  Says  Great\nMajority    Satisfied\nMONTREAL, Sept. 26.\u2014That 90\nper cent of the British harvesters\nwho went to the western grain fields\nthis year are well satisfied with\nCanada, and that they will stay in\nthis country, is the opinion of one\nof the young Britishers, Michael\nLampard, a Cambridge student, who\nsailed by the liner Mlnnedosa today\nto complete  his  studies in   Kngland.\nThe Minncdosa carried 60 returning harvesters, and they wero all\ndelighted with their \"holiday\" in\nCanada.\nOn board were about 15 harvesters\nwho have been deported from the\ncountry. Questioned with regard to\nthem, Mr. Lnmpard said that they\nwere Just slackers, who thought that\nthe   world   owed   them   a   living.\nTIMBER ROYALTIES\nMAY BE REVISED\nProvince    ol    H i r o shima\nRocks, City ol Kure Getting Worst of It\nCOMMUNICATIONS DOWN,\nDAMAGE IS NOT KNOWN\nTyphoon Brings Floods on\nLower  Wards  of  Tokio\nUpon Camped Refugees\nTOKIO, Sept. 2G.\u2014Another\nsevere earthquake occurred in\nJapan Monday in the Hiroshima. The quake was especially violent around the city\nof Kure. The extent of the\ndamage has not been determined, as communications have\nbeen destroyed.\nKure is in the extreme southwestern  end of the  island of\nHondo, and approximately 450\nmiles southwest of Tokio.\nLOWER TOKIO FLOODED\nFloods have followed a\ntyphoon yesterday in Fukagawa\nand Honjo, wards of Tokio.\nMany have suffered as a result, as thousands of refugees\nwere encamped in rude shacks\nin these wards.\nThe storm damaged rice and\nother crops.\nMosiifs\nOVER A BM;\nWRECKBURNS\nTwo Men Have Miraculous\nEscape in Motor Accident\nNear Grand Forks\nSix.\n3RAND   PORKS,   B,\nth.\nbrink\nept.\nLand   Departmental   Officials   *t   Victoria   Busy   Investigating   Claim\nThat They  Are  Excessive\nVICTORIA, Sept. .20. \u2014 Legislation\nrevising tho present scale of timber\nroyalties in British Columbia may\nbe introduced at the fall session nf\nthe British Columbia legislature, It\nwas stated at the lands depnrtment\nhere   today.\nOfficials of the department nre now\nbusy Investigating the advisability\nof reducing the present royalties.\nwhich lumbermen declare are far\ntoo   high.\nSHE HAD TO* STRIP\nWITH OTHER WOMEN\nbanlctnent     yesterday     morning     and\ncharging a telephone pole with such\nforce as to \u25a0 snup it like matchwood.\na high-powered runabout., driven by\nCharles A. Luckott 'if Spokane came\nto a. sudden stop against the trunk\ndf a tm ;!i> (pet further down and\nclose to the water's edge in ths\nKettle river, fi miles east of Grand\nForks, where the ear hurst lata\nnaUUS and WM .Soon a heap of\nburned    wreckage\nI,    B    Saunders     _vas    with     Luckett,\nand they escaped with minor Injuries,\nthough   this   is   little   .short   of   a   inir-\naclsi  as   imprints  t,f   thi*  ear   in   the\npole and tree reflected extreme impact\nMrs.   Hendry  of   Hamilton   Complains\nof Treatment  Given   Her  at   Ellis\nIsland on  Return  From  Sweden\nHAMILTON\", Ont., Sept. 26.\u2014\nCharges of inhuman treatment by\nUnited States immigration officers\nat Ellis Islund were made here today\nby Mrs. H. M. Hendry, who has\nreturned with her 10-ycar-old daughter from Christlaniu, .Sweden. She\ncomplained of having to strip to the\nwaist in a room with ahout a dozen\nother women, of the loss of her suit\ncane, and of having to stand in line\nfor three hours on a ferry boat, as\nwell as being treated roughly and\ninhumanly.\nLAKE RATE ON\nGRAIN IS UP\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont., Sept. 2S.\u2014\nBoats taking grain for Buffalo on\nprompt loading are getting 5 cents a\nbushel, it was stated tonight at the\ngrain commissioner's office. Boats\nwhich have been under charter for\nsome time for this purpose and are\nnow loading are getting 4*^ cents\na bushel to Buffalo. These rates\nare described ns practically the same\nas  were   in   effect   last   Monday.\nsteamer'arrIvals\nAlbania, at New York, from\nLondon.\nScythla, at Liverpool, from  Boston.\nAntonio, at Cherbourg, from Montreal,\nNova Scoticn Heads\nInternational Body]\nST. PAUL, Minn., Sept. 86. \u2014 Fred!\nw.    Armstrong    of   the    workmen's\ncompensation' board  of   Nova  Scotia I\nwas   today    elected    president   of   the [\nInternational Association of Indus- I\ntrial Accident Boards at tin* lUtli\nannual   convention.\nWILL PROBE FLOUR\nPRICES AT THE HAT\nMillers   Will   Be   Principal   Witnesses\nBefore    Grain    Commission    at\nToday's   Sitting\nCALOARY, Sept. 26. \u2014 Special\nattention wi 1 be paid to Investigation of the prices of flour when the\nroyal grain commission sits in Medicine Hat Thursday. This .statement\nwas made here today by Ge.rrge H.\nVan Allan, counsel for Alberta. Mr.'\nVan Allen said the heads of several\nof the mills in Medicine hat would\nbe called to appear before the commission.\n.Members of tho party left Calgary\ntonight   to   attend   the   sessions.\nUnderwear May Be\nthe Real Cause of\nYour Bad Temper\nCHICAGO, Sept. _.\u25a0_.\u2014If everything gets on your nerves and\nIrritates you, if your disposition\nIs disagreeable, and you are uncongenial, it may be because\nyou are not wearing proper underwear, according to P. J.\nPfarr of the Associated Knit\nUnderwear Manufacturers' association attending thc convention here of the National Association of Retail Clothiers.\nCorrect fit nnd correct weicht\nwere advocated by Mr. Pfarr\nas conducive to peace of mind\nund   happiness.\nFreedom of  Assembly and\nFreedom of Press Waived;\nSearch Legalized\nDEFENCE MINISTER\nIS MADE SUPREME\nMilitary     Commands     Are\nGiven Authority; Death\nPenalty Revived\nBERLIN, Sept. 26.\u2014A presidential decree has been issued\ncurtailing s number of constitutional rinlits in Germany, and conferring executive power in the\nminister   of   defence.\nThe decree, which is termed\n\"a decree for the restoration of\npublic security,\" was issued in\nPresident    Ebert's    name    tonight.\nAmoncj the rights restricted by\nit are \"freedom of the press snd\nthe rinht of meeting.\" It also\nauthorizes the use of domiciliary\nsearch   and   seizures.\nExecutive power is given to the\nminister of defence, the military\ncommanders appointed by htm,\nand   to   civil   commissioners.\nSevere 'penalties, including\ndeath, may be imposed for infringements   of   the   decree.\nTrouble is Just Beginning\nBKKL1N, Sept. 1!6. \u2014 Germany'*\nforeign trembles are Just about to\ncommence, and the time to spealc\nof capitulation has not yet actually\narrived, for the fate of the Ruhr\nand the Rhine and Is Intimately Interlocked with the Impending resumption  of   the  reparation.*,   problem.\nThis is the gist of a candid\nStatement by a government leader\nto a private audience of Berlin\neditors who were frankly told that\nthe government contemplated the\nimmediate, future with profound skepticism, if not pessimism, and that\nIt is not deluding Itself Into tho\nbelief that daylight and freedom await\nGermany now that she has relinquished   passive   resistance.\n\"Our troubles are only Just beginning,\" be continued, \"and wa\nhave yet to learn the entente's attitude toward our abandonment of\npassive resistance and whether tha\noccupying powers are sincerely desirous of cooperating with us in\nthe complex task of restoring order.\"\nTlie Question of whether the. administration of the German railways*\nis to revert exclusively to German\nnationals and whether the evicted\nofficials will be reinstated constitute* only one <\u00abf tbe mooted points\non which the government is not\nin a position as yet to express an\nopinion.\nRhineland   Big   Consideration\nThe  government's outstanding  con-\noern,    \u00bbai<_    this    official,    occupies\nitself wilh the fate of the Rhine-\n'and, and it is a cardinal point on\nwhich   clarity   is   demanded.\nHe believed that all tlie creditor\nnations wore entitled to have a voice*\nin deciding whether tlie Ruhr and\nthe Rhineland were to remain under\nFrench sovereignity, and added that\nGermany did not propose to indulge.\nin su.-ii a dangerous international\nexperiment ns flatly to go on record\nbefore the allies had expressed themselves.\n'Tlie German government,\" he asserted, \"does not propose to leave,\nthe pnpu'ation of the Ruhr and tho\nRhineland to itself, fnr that would\ndeservedly be stiminatized as treachery on the part of the German government, which has given to tho\npeople;, of those territories repeated\nassurance of its determination ta\nstatid  by  them.\"\nStresemann Meets Committee\nChancellor Stresemann was clos*\neted with the foreign relations committee for two hnurs. He informed\nthe deputies that the government\nwould not make a declaration In tho\nplenary session of the reichstag on\nThursday, as originally planned, a<*\nit preferred to await possible reaction by the entente to the newly-\ncreated   situation.\nTil chancellor will probably open\nthe debate on the foreign situation\nnext   Thursday.\nOpposition to the government having called off passive resistanco\nwas voiced only by tho German Nationalist   party    when    the    chancellor\ndiscussed    tlie    government*!    policy\nwith    the   foreign    affairs   committe**.\nThe    session,    which    was   a   confi- *\ndentin)   one,   revealed   that   the   four\ncoalition  parties  were  in  full  accord\nwith ths government.\nHclferich Criticizes\nDr. Karl Helferich, speaking fop\nthe Nationalists, criticized the government for neglecting to take advantage of the British note of\nAugust 11, in which the legality of\nthe Huhr invasion was challenged,\nby Premier Baldwin. He expressed\nthe belief that the government was\nin toe great a hurry to necommodata\nFrance,\nPersian Earthquake\nCauses Fatalities\nof Over a Hundred\nTEHERAN. Persia, Sept. 26.\u2014 \u25a0 ,\nOne hundred and twenty-five\npersons were killed in an earth*\nquake at Khorassan yesterday*\naccording to a despatch received\nhere today, I\n TageT-cH\nTEE NEESOH ___n__Y TOWS,' T_.tt.SDA7 ilORNBtG, SEWEMBEl. _a\n.1923\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWAere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAM RATES $3.50 TO |S.M\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nTHE\nSPECIAL SUNDAY. DINNER $1.00\nMOST    COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nHUME \u2014 W. S. Ilreckin, Winnipeg; A. G. Langley, Itevelstoke; CJenn\nHuxtable, Vancouver; F. A. Marlett,\nToronto; Dr. and Mrs. D. McGregor,\n\u25a0\\Vlndermere;_ Ernest   E.   Peterson\nEdmonton; F. A. Herry. Toronto; C.\nHarmon, Vancouver; James C. Roberts, A. C. Loxhead, Vancouver; F. H.\nHolnian, Vancouver; A. W, Ward, Van-\n          couver;   F.   Hutching.1.,  Winnipeg;  R. J.\nmonton;   C.   L.   Paulson.   Kitchener;   P. ; HUchings,   Winnipeg;   0.   W.   Harrison,\nA.   Paulson,   Spokane;   E.   F.   Marshall, | Vancouver.\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nH. W. SHORE, Prop.\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTEL\nSpecial attention to Commercial Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN\u2014$1.00  UP AMERICAN   PLAN-flOS   UP\nSTKATHCONA \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nShaw, Lethbridge; Mrs. Fred Webber\nNew    Denver;    Mrs.    George    Trickett,\nNew Denver; W. H. Dobson, Calgary;\nJames E. Hates. Vancouver; It. P.\nOlmstead  and   wife,   Montreul.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam    Heated    Throughout.     All\nrooms   modern.\n8p*cisl Weekly snd  Monthly Rstea\nA. Lapointe,\nProprietor.\nWHEN    IN    NELSON,\nTRY THE CLUB HOTEL\nUnder    New    Management.\nRooms   by   the   day,   week   or\nmonth.  .Rates  reasonable.\nDAN   NEEDHAM,\nPhone   550. Proprietor.\nQUEEN'S \u2014 T. Lines*, Argenta; P.\nH- Kchanhez, Perry Siding; H. Brooks,\nPerry Siding; J. A. Thompson, Sandon; R, A. Brockway, Hull; L. Reynolds. Fernle; A. E. Hird, Fernle; R,\nKushton, Fruitvale; L. Lannelle,\nRossland;   Max  Conn,   Grand   Forks.\nOCCIDENTAL    HOTEL\nA.   C.    TOWNER.    Proprietor\nThe  home  of  plenty.\nFifty   rooms   of   solid   comfort.\nWe  serve  the   best  meals  ln  Nelson.\nIt's   the   cook.\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing,   Golf.\nTennis  Courts.\nPishing   Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nStore in Connection.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nDay IS;  Week  J17  to  |19.    Special\nMonthly   Kates.\n8IRDAR,  B.C.\nOn the main highway Nelson-Calgary. East Kootenay's Summer Re-\neort. Good Fishing. Bathing Beach\nand Camping Grounds. First-class\naccommodation.\nB.   F.   WHITESIDE.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-heated   Rooms   by   the   Day,\nWeek   or   Month\nEvery   Consideration   Shown  tt\nGuests\nCor,  Baker  and   Ward  Sts.,   Nelsen\nNelson's Best Cafes\nMADDEN \u2014 T. V. Moran, Nine-\nMile; N. Wilmes, Trail; W. P. Hunter, Reno Mini*; J. J. Collins, Salmo;\nR F. Quarry, Spokane; Harry Gorman,\nVancouver; John Kyun, l-.mvrd.'ile;\nHerb   Gordon,   Marcus.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616    Vernon    St.,    East\nOnly   brick   hotel   In   city.     Steam\nheated,  hot and  cold  water.   European    and    American    plans.\nTHE  STANDARD  CAFE\n320    Baker   Street,    Nelaon,    B.C.\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special   Lur>ch_.__5\u00a3\n6:30 to 8:00   p.m.   Supper   _-35_'\nPhon.  154\nPRESS WOMEN\nARE GUESTS OF\nJOURNALISTS\nMiss Whitten Gets Ovation\nfor Her Portrayal of\nCanadianism\nCOMBAT SYNDICATING\nFROM ACROSS LINE\nWoman Editorial Writer on\nWinnipeg Free Press Is\nNew President\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic Keitanrant.\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   FrtvraU*.\nOPEN  DAY AND  NIQHT\nLuncheon 11:30 to 2 ,     860\nSpecial dinners 6:30 to 8     36a\nWe specialize In Chop Suey and\nNoodles.\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 21..\u2014Miss Ken-\nnethe Haig of Winnipeg, editorial\nwriter on the Manitoba Free Press,\nwill lead the destlhies of the Canadian Women's Press club for the\nnext three yeara. She was elected\nnational president by acclamation\nthis   afternoon.\nOther officers were elected as follows: Honorary president, Miss Lucy\nDoyle, Toronto; corresponding secretary, Miss May Clendennan, Winnipeg; treasurer, Miss Louise MacDonald, Winnipeg; historian, Mrs.\nButcher, Toronto. Vice-presidents\u2014\nFor British Columbia, Mrs. Isabel\nRcclestone MacKay: Alberta, Mrs.\nElizabeth Bailey Price; Manitoba,\nMiss Nan Moulton; Ontario, Miss M.\nHouston; Quebec, Mme. Benoit; New\nBrunswick, Mrs. Lawrence; Nova\nScotia,   Mlsd   Marshall   Saunders.\nThe sessions in Vancouver closed\ntonight with a dinner, ot which the\nBritish Columhia Institute of Journalists were the hosts. Tomorrow\nthe delegates will proceed to Victoria,\nwhere they will be the guests at\ndinner of the Victoria branch of the\nclub, the city, and the local press.\nAddresses conspicuous for their\nenunciation of high Ideals, remarkable oratory and wit were given by\nMrs. Lucy Doyle, national president;\nMiss Charlotte Whitten, national secretary, and Mrs. Miriam Green Ellis,\nvice-president for the provinces of\nAlberta   and    Saskatchewan.\nMiss Doyle confined her remarks\nchiefly to a eulogy of Vancouver and\nits hospitality, with a brief outline\nof the ideals and aims of tbe Canadian Women's Press club.\nThat  Trek  to  States\nAn ovation greet ed Miss Whilten\nat the close of a brilliant address,\nin which she urged Canadians not\nto lose sight of the potentialities of\nCanada. Her traditions and her vast\nresources were such as to inspire the\nhighest   optimism   us   to   that   fulure.\nTouching upon the trek tu the\nUnited States from Canada, Miss\nWhitten observed that this condition\nhad obtained in the Dominion through\nmany years, and was Inevitable by\nreason of the geographical situation\nof the two countries. If a certain\nsection( of Canada's population were\nlured hy the greater field of opportunity to the south,'then it was the\npatriotic duty of those who remained\nIn Canada to exert their best efforts\nfor the maintenance of those traditions so nnbly fostered by the pioneers  of  a   bygone   day.\nMrs. Ellis brought to tho assembly\na convincing picture of Canada's\npotential agricultural prosperity, presenting estimates of the wh^at crop\ngained by her in a recent 1400-mile\ntour through northern Alberta and\nSaskatchewan.\nEncourage    Home    Talent\n\"Syndicating Manuscripts\" was the\nsubject of an interesting paper 'by\nElizabeth Bailey Price of Calgary.\nMrs. Price made an appeal to women\neditors to encourage Canadian \"free\nlance\" writers wherever possible by\nusing their material, thus giving\npreference over syndicated matter\nfrom the United Slates.\nThe Toronto branch, in response to\na request for a central bureau\nthrough which women writers might\nnfarket their manuscripts, offered\nto appoint a committee of Its members for the purpose of issuing a\nmonthly bulletin of information of\nthis kind. This offer waa referred\nto the Incoming executive for consideration and tbe working out of the\nnecessary   details.\nNewspaper Press Rooms\nof New York Are Now\nUp to Full Strength\nNEW YORK, Sept. 2tJ. \u2014 Morning\nnewspapers tomorrow will resume\ntheir individual editions after several days of anonymity. Pressroom\nforces, the publishers report, have\nbeen brought' virtually to normal by\nthe Importation into New York of\nmembers of the International union\nin   other   cities.\nNEW GRAND \u2014 W. T, Beaver,\nVancouver; William Pyt-r, Hurton; 8.\nHall, Burton; W. Mann, Vancouver;\nE Eggen. Ainsworth; G. Kennedy,\nAinsworth; D. Garnham and wife,\nCranbrook; A. C. Rawness and wife,\nTranbrook; F. Johnson and wife..\nMeadows;   Conrad   Johnson.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs, Malletts A Son, Proprietors\nNice, warm, comfortable rooms at\nreasonable   rates.     Open   day   and\nnight.\nCorner    Hall   and    Vernon   Streets\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest equipped restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe cater to private parties.\nLAKEVIEW \u2014 Arthur Cote, Slocan\n;Clty; E, Molen. Slocan City; J. Ballantyne, Cranbrook; (.!. Draught, Cran-\n\"brook.\nSherbrooke Hotel\nN...r   C.P.R.   Station\nRooms at Reasonable Ratea.\nH.   DUNK.   Proprietor.\nTHE ELECTRIC CAFE\nThe only Cafe In town cooking\nelectrically. Dinner 11:30 a.m. to\n2 p.m. Lunch 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.\nPer cover, 35c Special Sunday\nDinner,   per   cover,   60c.\n511    Baker   St. Phona   450\nCLASSIFIED    ADS     BRING     RESULTS   EVERY   TIME,\nA display advt. in Thc\nDaily News enters into\nMany homes, catches\nmany eyes.\nWE BUY FROM MAKERS\nWHEN   there  appears  a  better\nLINE  of  Men's  or  Boys'  Wear\nFOR   vour   money\nWE   shall   sell   it.\nCuJTMp\n<p\u00abpiFJ!oi?|\nMen Suited\nOne Hundred Years\nWill Be Infant Age\nby Gland Science\nNEW YORK, Sept. II.\u2014One\nhundred years will eventually\nbe regarded as an infant age\nwhen glandular treatment becomes better known, I>r. Will-\nlam Held of Chicago declared\ntoday on his return from abroad\nafter three months' study of\nthat   science.\n\"Men can live to a great\nage,\" he said. \"Our present\nknowledge of cellular activity\nnnd glandular function has\nbrought to our understanding\nwilh accuracy pever before attained the causes of premature old age, senility, epilepsy,\nhigh blood pressure, and disease\nin general.\"\nCHURCHES MEET\nTODAY TO TALK\nOVER THE UNION\nDelegates Meet as Separate\nGroups on Eve of the Conference\nTORONTO, Sept. 26.\u2014Presbyterian,\nMethodist and\" Congregational church\nleaders from all parts of Canada\nmet In Toronto tonight in separate\ngroups. These meetings wore preliminary to a joint union conference which will be held here tomorrow. Most of the members of the\nPresbyterian union committee, both\nclergymen and laymen, were present\nat tonight's meeting of that denomination.\n\"The Presbytprlans west of the\nlakes have, with almost complete\nunanimity, accepted the fact of\nchurch union, as far as ecclesiastical action Is concerned,\" Rev. O., W.\nCordon, D.D., of Winnipeg, former\nmoderator,   stated  ln  an  interview.\nUnion    Charge*    Most    Numerous\n\"As a matter of fact,\" he said,\n\"the Methodist, Congregational and\nPresbyterian churches have for some\ntime been working out the church\nunion Idea fn preparation for and\nin expectation of the consummation\nof union. There are 150 union\ncharges and missions In existence now\nin Manitoba alone. In fact, outside the cities, there are more union\ncharges than there are of either\nMethodists or Presbyterians, and I\nbelieve that the situation in the\nprovinces west of Manitoba is practically   the   same.\"\nNo   Antit   .rf   West\nSpeaking of the antiunionists. Dr.\nCordon stated they were nonexistent\nin the west.\n\"I know Presbyterians,\" he said,\n\"and Presbyterians strike their roots\ndeep into history and traditions, and\nI expect that the call of tradition\nand historical affiliation with some\nof them will be stronger than any\nother call. I expect there will 'be\ncongregations thflt will decline to\nconcur in the constitutional action\nof their church. This is a free man's\ncountry. The Presbyterian church\n\u25a0stands for liberty. No congregation\nwill be coerced in its actions; it can\ndecline to become part of the united\nchurch  If It so desires.\"\nFAVORS FIFTY\nCENT DUTY ON\nSTATESWHEAT\nChicago Business Man Argues Tariff Can Save the\nwheat Farmer\nARMY AND NAVY\nVETERANS VOTE\nSTAY SEPARATE\nAmalgamation Would Be Absorption by Great War\nVets, Says Crehan\nthree-hoFrdebate\nshows one champion\nDelegates Are Unanimous for\nKeeping Organization Intact\nCAI-OARY, Sept. 26. \u2014 Amalgamation of the Army & Navy Veterans\nassociation of Canada with other Canadian ex-service men's organizations\nwi.l not be pressed further this year.\nIf other organizations want amalgamation they will have to make overtures to the Army & Navy Veterans\nassociation.\nThis was the unanimous decision\nreached hy the deb-gates to the Dominion convention of that organization being he!d in the city, following one of the most vigorous do-\nbates on record. The delegates did\nnot mince matters during the debate.\nCrehan 'Favors \"Principle\"\nMaj. M. J. Crehan of Vancouver,\npresident of the Army t_ Navy Veterans association, stated that while\nhe favored the principle of amalgamation he was opposed to lt as It\nnow stands. He said that the underlying principle beneath the amalga.\nmatlon proposals of the Great War\nVeterans af-Hocintion was not amalgamation, but the absorption of the\nArmy & Navy Veterans association\nby the Creat War Veterans association. He urged the delegates to\nstand fast on the resolution passed\nat the last Toronto convention, and\nsaid if the present Indications were\nany criterion ahsorptlon of other\nveteran organizations by the Army\n& Navy Veterans association might\nbe a possibility In the next five\nyears.\nNinety-five per cent of the delegates at the convention spoke in\nfavor of continuing the Army &\nNavy Veterans association as It now\nstands.\nThrough thefc three-hours' debate the\namn'gamation resolution found only\none champion, nnd that waa Maj.\nB.    W.    Ryan   of   Calgary.\nMerely   Postpone  Action\nWilliam J. Topper, K. C, of Winnipeg, did not agree with all that\nthe delegates said. He was of the\nopinion that the convention should\ngo on record as being ln favor of\nthe principle of amalgamation, and\nthen await further steps by the\nGreat War Veterans association and\nother organizations interested.\nIt waa freely predicted that the\nArmy & Navy Veterans association\nwould be in a flourishing state when\nother soldier organizations were defunct.\nMrs. Ca\nSugar\nCookies\nThere have been several enquiries\nfor Mrs. Carrington's Sugar Cookie\nRecipe\u2014so we will print it Instead\nof sending each a copy.\nCHICAGO, Sept. 26.\u2014Sibol Charris,\na prominent member of the Chicago\nboard of trade, referring today to\nproposals that the tariff on wheat\nIn the United States be made 45 or\n50 cents a bushel, ln place of the\npresent rate of 35 cents a bushel,\nmade   the   fnl'owing   statement:\n\"There appears to be merit In\nthe suggestion. The farmer feels\n\u2014and with a great deal of justice\u2014\nthat the manufacturer is given more\ncomplete protection than the farmer.\nIt is all very well to make ' the\nstatement (hat an import tariff on\nwheat is of no benefit so long ns\nwe produce an exportable surplus,\nhut this argument falls down under\nthe cold test of farts when the farmer\nsees No. 1 northern wheat se'ling\nin the Minneapolis market at $1.20\nper bushel for choice quality and\nCanadian No. 2 northern selling at\ntbe same time at 95 cents per\nbushel, representing a wheat of equal\nquality.\nMillers  Import Under Handicap\n\"When eastern millers are nctually\\l\nimporting Canadian wheat for domestic purposes and paying the\nduty uf 30 a bushel at the same\ntime that statistics show tbe United\nStates to have a surplus lt is idle\nto state that a tariff is of no\nvalue.\n\"It Is quile generally believed In\nthe trade than the United States\nmillers wltl import and pay the\n30 cents duty on a large amount,\nperhaps !\".(),OaO.0(H) bushels, of Canadian wheat of lhe present crop.\nThis most certainty decreases the\nprice which tbe United States farmer\nwill  receive   for  his   wheat.\"\nFARMER SHOT\nFROMAMBUSH\nHalf-Witted Man Is Arrested\nby Manitoba Police, for\nBorrowed Gun\nSYDNKY, Man., Sept. *26. \u2014 A\nman named Kalkiner, believed to be\nmentally unbalanced, was arrested\nby tbe provincial police tonight,\ncharged with the shooting of. Jack\nLemercier, a bachelor farmer, who\nwas shot down from ambush yesterday morning, and who is now\nying at the point of death with\nmore than 60 pellets of small shot\nin his chest and stomach from a\nshotgun fired at close range.\nCrawls   Half   a   Mile\nLemercier, weakened by loss of\nblood and long exposure while he\nwaited for aid, was unable to offer\nany theory regarding the attempt\nm his life. B'eeding and half conscious the farmer dragged himself\nhalf a mile to a point near a footpath  used  by  school  children.\nTonight he collapsed. He was\nfound late yesterday, and medical\naid was summoned. The attempt\non his life occurred while he was\nwatering    his    horses.\nThe shotgun, which was found\nabout 10 feet from the spot where\nLemercier fell, was the property\nof a well-known local farmer, and\nis alleged lo have been lent to\nl-'alkiner, __\nLabor Conference\nWinds Up but Its\nDecisions Secret\nThe Fall Coats\nWith cooler daya, are pressing their\nclaims  for immediate  attention!\nTHE VELOURS, in Self and Fur !\ncollars, are especially good values,\nand   were    ordered   a    generous\nlength, in keeping with the best I\nstyles.   No scrimpings.\nPrices  $23.00 to $32.50 |\nVELOURS in finer and heavier\nweight. All wool, best linings,\nmostly  Fur trimmed.\nFrom   $35.00 to 847.50\nHIGH GRADE . French Velours,\nDuvetyns, Marvellas, Samarahs\nand Bolivias, beautifully lined and\nFur trimmed.    '\nPrices $60.00 and Up\nTHE MILLINERY DEPARTMENT\nare busy matching Handsome\nFaces and Dainty Hats of real\ndistinction.\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nwas the bulwark of the opposition\nparty during the regime of Emperor\nFranz Josef.\nAutoists Are Killed\nby an Electric Train\nSPOKANE, Sept. 26. \u2014 Four persons were killed near Hay den lake,\nabout 30 miles east of here, today,\nwhen an electric train crashed Into\ntheir automobile. Mr. and Mrs. J. W.\nArnold and Fred Fowler were Instantly killed, and Jack Davis, son of\nMrs. Arnold, died soon nftcr the accident. All were residents of Hayden\nLake.\nCRESTON VALLEY\nYIELD IS HEAVY\nOrchards'   Pick   It   Heavier   Than   Expected,   and   Growers   Order\nMore   Boxes.\nCRESTON, B.C., Sepf;. 26. \u2014 A good\nstart has been made at shipping Mcintosh Red apples, the Creston _rowers' packing sheds at Creston and\nErickson both starting lo pack these\nlast   week.\nA feature of the apples handled so\nfar is that the crop fs turning out\nconsiderably heavier than was anticipated, some growers having to in-\nciease (heir orders for boxes at least\n2 5   per  cent.\nThe cooler weather has colored the\n\"Macs\" up splendidly, \u25a0 while for size\nthey show a decided improvement over\n1 _>_.<_ In nil orchards. So far. Creston\ngrowers have found a ready demand\nfor the cars offering at gratifying\nprices, and with the wheat crop now\nbringing act ual ensh returns to the\nprairie farmers, nn even better demand   Is   confidently   looked   for.\nIndependent shippers are loading\nout a few mixed cars at Creston, but\nat Erickson Independent shipping is\nvtry  light.\nSYRINGA CREEK NOTES\nSYRINC.A CREEK, B.C., Sept. 26.\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. H. Gibson and family\n;;nd Mrs. Qua nee were visitors to Deer\nlark.   Monday.\nMrs.   Gray   has   returned   to   Syringa\n2 cups sugar\n1   cup   butter\n3 eggs\nU-cup  Pacific\nMilk\n%-cup   water\n1 teaspoon   soda\n2 teaspoons\ncream of tartar\nPinch salt\nFlour to roll\nCream, butter\nand sngnr, add\neggs, then milk.\nAdd enough flour\nto roll out, sifting soda, cream\nof tartar and salt\ninto   the   flour.\nPacific Milk Co.\nuxnii.\nFactories   at   Ladnsr   and\nAbbotsford\nERIE NOTES\nERIE, B.C. Sept. 26.\u2014Erie building and property owners have followed the example of some of the fair\nsex.   \"painting  up a bit.\"\nMfss Cameron, local school teacher,\nspent Saturday evening and Sunday ln\nNelson.\nOsca r Peterson motored from Nelson to Erie on Saturday evening, after\nspending a day la the city with\nfriends.\nSOLDIER-MEMBER\nIN SOMERSET DIES\nLONDON, Sept. 26.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014The death la announced of I_.ieut.-Col Hon. Audrey\nHerzert, aged 43, Conservative member of the house of commons for\nYeoville, Somerset. He was the\nsecond son of the fourth earl of\nCarnarvon. He was a member of\nthe house of commons from 1911 until\nhis death, and also served with distinction in the great war.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 26. \u2014 The federal\npiovlnclal labor conference, which has\nbeen in session here since Tuesday\nmorning, concluded its proceedings to-\nt fght. Nothing will be given out for\npublication until the committee appointed has gone over the minutes of\nthe meeting and drafted a report for\npublication.\nAPPONYI WILL\nVISIT STATES\nNoted   Hungarian   Liberal   Will   Give\na  Series of  Lectures;   Will   Be\nAccompanied by Daughter\nNEW YORK, Sept. 26.\u2014Dr. Stephen\nDobay, Hur-garlan diplomat, who arrived Wednesday on the Lacbnia\nfrom Hamburg, says he came to\nthis country for the express purpose\nof completing arrangements for the\nreception to be tendered by Hungarian-Americans to Count Albert\nApponyl of Budapest, the Hungarian\nstatesman, who will arrive In New\nYork on September 28 to give a series\nof lectures. The count will be accompanied by his daughter, Coyn7\ntess   Mary.\nCount Apponyl wns for many\nyears speaker of the Hungarian\nchamber of deputies. He represented Hungary at the peace conference, set ting fort h his plea for his\nnative land in four languages. Meeting with failure, he refused to sign\nthe treaty.\nDuring the run of the St. Louis\nexposition, Count Apponyl represented Hungary at the Interparliamentary   conference   held   there.\nAlthough coming from an old\nfeudal family, and being born an\naristocrat, the count Is a liberal.   He\n^KIDNEY^\n%, PILLS i\nafter   visiting   friends   for   three   da J\nat Robson.\nJ.   R.   Martin   was   a   visitor  to   Ro|\nson,   Wednesday.\nMrs. L. T. Jones entertained at\nImpromptu gathering on Saturday ev|\nnlng in honor of Mrs. Bury, who I\nleaving here to make her home\nTrail, Cards and games were ll\n.bilged in until midnight, when del\nclous refreshments were served. Ml\nBerry and family left on Mondf|\nnlght'B  boat   for Trail.\nWILLOW POINT NOTES]\nWILLOW POINT, B.C., Sept. 26.-1\nDr. and Mrs. J. W. Dawson and Mil\nDawson, who have been spending tn\nsummer months here, left Sundsf\nmorning  for   New   York.\nMrs.    W.   Louis   and   sons   have\nturned     to     Nelson     for     the     wlnt\u00ab\nmonths.\nMr.    and    Mrs.    W.    A.    Keevil    haj\npurchased    a    house    in    Nelson,    _\nhave    left    Willow    Point    to    take\nresidence   In   their   new  quarters.\nW. I'. Dickson is busy wiring til\nBelcher   residence   for   electric   light. F\nMr. and Mis. H. R. Townshend anl\nfamily, who have been spending thi\nsummer in the Dawsons* cottage,\n(Orn to town at the end of the montl\nMiss    Florence    Hathle,    Miss    Edltl\nTownshend   and   Miss   Winnie   Thomi|\nFon    left    early    Sunday    morning\nhorseback,   spending    the   day   at   K<|\nkanee.\t\nKeep Your Hands Soft\nand White With Cuticura\nThe dally uae of the Soap, with\noccasional touches of the Ointment,\nis very effective for keeping the\nhands soft and smooth. For red,\nrough or sore hands: On retiring\nbathe In hot water and Cuticura Soap,\ndry, and rub in Cuticura Ointment.\n_M\u00bbtk 0.aim.l25\u00abi5\u00bbc. TafomlSe. Sold\nthroughout theDominion. Canadian Depot:\nLm..., U-H.J. 944 St. N.I St., W., M__lr\u00bbL\nSWCuticur* So\u00abp ikiTM without muf.\nBURNING   STOMACH\nrelieved in two minutes with\nJO-TO.\nJo-To relieves gas pains, acid stoml\nach, heartburn, after-eating dlstresl\nand all forms of Indigestion qulckljj\nwithout barm.    All Drug Store...\nCANADIAN,,^{PACIFIC\nSTEAMSHIPS   _^J^__^mt LIMITED\n_\u2022\u2022\u25a0.\u25a0Ill- * _***____da%r44*4M\u2022\nChristmas and New Year\nIn the Old Country\nSAILINGS\nMlnnedosa     Nov. 21\nMetagama   ....Nov. 22\nMontrose      Nov. 23\nMontlaurler ..._ Nov. _8\nMontclare  _ Dec. 7\nMellta    '. Dec. 13\nMontcalm   Dec. 14\nMarloeh    ..._ _ ...Dec. 15\nMontrose    Dec. 21\nFrom\nTo\nMontreal\nSouthampton\nMontreal\nBelfast,   Glasgow\nMontreal\nLiverpool\nQuebec\nLiverpool\nSt.  John\nLiverpool\nSt. John\nSouthampton\nSt.  John\nLiverpool\nSt.  John\nBelfast,  Glasgow\nSt. John\nGlasgow,  Liverpool\nReservations,   rates   and   full \u2022   details    may    be    secured    from\nlocal agents everywhere, or write\nJ. S. CARTER,\nDistrict   Passenger   Agent,   Nelson,   B.C.\n \u00b0i^\nr_r__E NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING,.SEPTEMBER 27,1928\nPafe TEre_~\n10AD OPENED\nIND\nJP. MOTOR CAR\nlore Than Thirty Thousand\nPeople Huddled Together\nBurned to Death\nVISITOR'S VIVID TALE\nOF JAPANS TRAGEDY\nC, Lolls, Aboard the Empress of Australia in Yokohama, Reaches Nelson\nA graphic description of the Japan-\nfe earthquake calamity In connection\npith which he poHBeaes a large number of remarkable photographs, waa\n;iven The Daily News last night by\nl. C. Lofts of Birmingham, England,\nrho had been in China, and at the\nIme of the disaster was aboard the\nJmpreus of Australia in Yokohama\n,arbor.\nMr. Lofts arrived last night from\nVancouver, to spend a fortnight with\nJr. and Mrs. J. tcoit Wardle of\n..ongbeach, who are friends of many\noars' standing, and who knew Mr.\n\u2022ofts  In  China.\n\"In Yokohama,\" states Mr. Lofts, in\n:iting Instances of the gravity of the\nllsaster, \"was a bank, and at about\ntoon a bank official was near ft door\nif the institution. When the crash\n.ame,   he   saw   the   building   literally\nMTER-EATING DISTRESS\nid all forms of stomach .rouble such\nfas pains, acid, aour burning atoin-\nich are relieved in two minutes by\naklng Jo-To. Jo-To 18 sold by all\na-UK-Msta. .   .\nMrs. Rose Peters\nTORONTO WOMAN ADVISES\nYOUNG MOTHERS!\nToronto, Ont.\u2014\"During all my\nrears of wifehood and motherhood I\nlave hud such great comfort from\nhe use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre-\nicrlption that I do not hesitate to\necommend it to other women who\nleed strength and help during expectancy. 'Favorite Prescription* re-\nieved me ot all nausea, or sick\n.ton-ach, and kept me well and\nitrong. I took this splendid tonic\nind nervine during each of my four\nxpectant periods and I feel quite\n*ure that my babies were just as\nxeatly benefited as I myself, for\nhey were plump and exceedingly\nealthy from the first moment.\"\u2014\u25a0\nMrs. Rose Peters, No. 257 Sackville\n.treet.\nHealth Is most Important to every\nwoman. You cannot afford to neg-\nect It when your neighborhood drug-\nlst can supply you with Favorite\nPrescription, in tablets or liquid.\n.This Prescription Is made In Dr.\nPierce's Laboratory ln Brldgeburg,\nDnt. Send 10 cents there if you\nwish   a   trial   package.\nf You are the Judge nnd\nthe Jury who try all advertised goods.\nI Your verdict and sentence\nmean business death to fraud\nand deceit; mean success to\nhonest quality and price.\n. The makers of clean, wholesome, well packed foods know\nthis.\nf Manufacturers of season-.\nable, sanitary and modem\nclothing know it well.\n11 Men who supply your\nhouse with its best furnishings and accessories share\nthis knowledge.\n1f Those who provide toilet\naccessories, medicines and cosmetics; dealers in books, pictures, jewels\u2014personal lux-\nuriei of every kind\u2014realize\n.the necessity of your approval.\n,1 The fate of any advertised\narticle is in your hands. The\nmaker must back his advertisements with every atom of\nvalue possible for the price.\nHe stakes his reputation and\nsuccess upon your opinion of\nthe product he offers.\nJf That is why the best goods\nin Canada are those which\nyou see advertised daily in\nyour home newspaper.\nreadthe\nadvertisements\n, Bttter Things Are Offered Dally\n-^l-l-^n^^^l--l----^-----l------r--TTlllITT~f '\nsink Into the ground, and th* hugs\nsafes In the offices juat disappeared\nbefore hla eyes. Outttdt, h\u00ab had left\nhis wife in a motor car. Bomehow or\nother he managed to throw himself\nout of tht door from the building.\nBut the ground upon which the auto\nhad opened up and buried lt and the\nwoman   sitting   In   It.\"\nX**P* of  t\u00bb\u00ab_4, )\nIn one email open space In Yokohama, niitf.H Mr. Lofts, 82,000 people\nhad gathered when the shocks came.\nIt seemed safe. But when a few\nminutes later fire broke out and\nswept the city, all perished in onf\nfuneral pyre, with the exception of\nabout 200. The flames had encircled\nthe  open  space  with   ghastly results.\n-On board the Empress of Australia,\non which Mr. Lofts was a passenger]\nand which wa\u00ab to have sailed at noon,\nconditions wert*. as was to be expected,  somewhat  dramatic.\n'\u25a0The ship's fire hose,\" says Mr,\ntofts, \"waB at once put into action\nand for 24 hours all Jets were plaved\non the decks and sides of the ship.\nTuring Saturday, and on Sunday morning, dozens of people were seen running backward and forward on the\nauctions of the wharf which still refrained intact, looking for safety, and\nwhilst many were saved, the bulk\nmust have met their end either by\nbeing burnt or drowned. The typhoon\nwind blew the ship several yards from\nthe wharfs side, consequently cutting\noff the opportunity for survivors to\nret on board, but many wonderful\nrescues were made. Rope ladders,\nropts, rafts, wooden poles and outstretched hands all accounted for lives\nsaved.\nThrown   Ortrboard.\n\"Very soon the heat and fire mode\nconditions almost unbearable on board\nespecially, on the bridge, which wns\nfacing the burning town, and targe\nnieces of burning debris were being\nblown on board with the terrific\nwind. The fire hose, fortunately a\nvary reliable and effective set, was\nkept at full preFsure by the crew and\npassengers, and beyond a little scorching, kept us moderately safe, but by\nnow the wharf itself, immediately in\nfront of us, was well afire, and the\ndanger of our oil tanks being heated\nto flash point was now very real.\nThe petrol and oil from our motor\nlaunch was Immediately thrown overboard, and all efforts were concentrated on keeping the wharf immediately in front of us from blazing up.\nThis was successful, and after a few\nhours the tvphoon abated, fortunately\nfor us all. Repeated earthquakes\nwere constantly occurring, and these\nhave kept up for seven days. (One\nthousand shocks recorded.)\nOn*   Hojt\u00bb   \/Ira.\n\"The tidal wave, one of the cruel\naftermaths of a bad ounke, was fortunately only slightly felt in the harbor, a rise of only efjfht inches being recorded. By 4 o'clock Yokohama\nwas one huge fire, and fires sprang\nup In every direction; small steamers,\nlaunches, lighters, some loaded with\noil and others with timber, that had\nbroken loose from their moorings\nwith the wind, commenced to blaze up\nand drift toward us. Several of these\nmasses of fire gave us a lot of\ntrouble nnd excitement, but our hose\nwas sufficient to keep them down,\nbut until || o'clock the following\nmorning every single hosepipe on the\nship was working at full pressure to\nkeep uh safe from this danger, as also\nother sections of the wharf which\nconstantly blazed up. Explosions\nwere heard from all directions, and at\n6 p.m. one more deafening than the\nrest, proved to be the naval port of\nYokosuka, situated to our left on the\nf-outh part of Tokyo bay. The magazines, oil tanks, naval hospital and\nthree or four cruisers were all blown\nup, SO per cent of the population being killed, &nd for four or five days\nthe smoke from this district bung\nIn the sky over Yokohama, making it\nalmost pitch black. The sea by this\ntime being more or less normal, our\nboats were lowered, volunteers called\nfor, and from this time until eight\ndays later, relief parties were constantly poiiag backward and forward\nto the shore, bringing back hundreds\nof survivors, many in a terrible stele;\nseme with both legs or arms broken,\ncrunhed, faces quite unrecognizable,\nnnd very many without clothes. Doctors and nurses were called for, and\nmore than one of the volunteers in\nthis department fully deserve to be\nspecially   mentioned.\nExchange   Collapses.\n\"By midnight the wind had changed\nIts cour.o. and was blowing from thc\nsea directly over the town, and the\nscene was positively terrifying. Only\none building appeared to lie standing\nintact, the telephone exchange, ond\nthis collapsed early in the morning,\n40 survivors who had taken refuge in\nit being killed Instantly. The scene\nwas one that no one will ever forget;\none enormous blaze several miles long,\nand  as  far deep.\n\"The survivors that were coming\non board, men, women and children\nof all nationalities, had suffered a\nghastly time. They were those who\nhad escaped with their lives from the\nwrecked buildings -*- they had made\ntheir way to the shore, hoping to be\nrescued from the steamers, but the\ntyphoon made conditions impossible\nfor any boats from the ships to make\nthe shore for several hours. ' In' the\nmeantime, the fire from the town\nblowing toward the sea compelled\nthousands of survivors to get into the\nwater to prevent being burnt; even\nthen the fire burnt many, and only\nby constantly throwing water over\ntheir heads did the others avoid their\nheads being burnt. Others. Including\na lot of the women and children. Immersed themselves in a canal running\nfrom the t.ea to thf south side of the\nt'iwn, but a quantity of oil catching\nfire and floating down accounted for\nmany   more   lives.\nTlirilling Experiences.\n\"When the earthquake occurred, a\ntug was Just on the point of towing\nthe Empress of Australia away from\nthe wharf, but. they severed the towing line immediately and ran for their\nown safety to the outer part of the\n1\"arbor, leaving us to look after ourselves. A whole chapter of accidents\noccurred, resulting in our being practically imprisoned in a place of extreme danger, and for 24 hours cm\nend our lives were in the balance.\nThe captain of the Bteel Navigator\nwas killed In the quake, and the officer who took command proved to be\nInexperienced, and, consequently, did\nthe wrong things. When the calamity\noccurred and the wind sprang up he\ndropped both his anchors, which were\nthen immediately at our stern. A\nlittle later a Japanese steamer that\nhad got adrift crashed into our stern,\ndamaging a considerable portion of\nthe upper work. She drifted away and\nagain hit us oo our beam, eventually\ngetting cletir and away. A little later,\nwhen an effort wns made to get away\nfrom thc wharf under our own steam,\nft was discovered that this impact\nhad resulted in one of the Bteel Navigator's anchor chains being fouled\nover our port propeller, and their\ncable connecting them with tlie wharf\n\u25a0being entangled with our starboard\npropeller. We were now Unable to\nmove.\n\"On the opposite Bide of the wharf\nthe M. M. steamer, trie Andre Lebon,\nwas tied up, and also was unable to\nmove .part of her engine machinery\nbeing ashore for repairs. AH night\nlong the fires on the wharf were being\nkept in check with our hose, and\nwhen daylight appeared, everything\nwas terrible to look at. The fire on\nland was still raging, and all around\nus were floating lighters, some almost burnt out and others just commencing to flame. Early ln the\nmorning (second), another big ,flame\nshot up to our left on the shore,\nfrom the oil tanks belonging to the\nStandard Oil- company, and as this\nwas situated within the harbor, the\nsight was anything but comforting.\nThe wind at this time was blowing\n\u2022long the shore, but later on It veered\ntoward our direction, and as the risk\nof floating oil was very real our\ncommander decided on immediate action.\nTal-Unt  Commander.\n\"I would like to put on record here,\nthat from this moment and for several\nhours afterward, the -fate of this ship\nwith thousands on board, was in the\nhands of our commander, and as\nevents   proved    later,   only   his    sound\n-jd-j'w.iK m4 __\u00a3* *Acniit.-;ui tammy\nof the ship <.avt.il all our lives. Our\ntilot was *ent over to the Bteel Navigator to ailvlsn lit ths handling of that\nVessel, A ste<l cable *\u00bb\u25a0< um.i1 to bind\nus securely to them, and a staff was\nset to disconnect their anchor cable\nwhich had fouled our propeller. They\nwere Instructed to endeavor to tow\nus away from the wharf, no amall\ntask to move 20.000 tonB. About this\ntime, the possibility had actually occurred, on enormous floating mass of\nburning oil, over 100 feet long, with\na flame as high as our funnels, had\nseparated from the tanks and was\nfloating about On the water, toward\nourselves. By chance I happened to\nbe in the stern of the ship when the\norders were given to tow us from the\nwharf, and the following few minutes\nwere about the most exciting in all\nmy experiences. The Steel Navigator\nstarted her rnglncs. and we all looked\nwy anxiounly for what resulted.\nWhfn she commenced to move, the\nsteel cable connecting us encountered\nseveral spars of their thick taffrail\nnnd these bent up like tissue paper-\nthen we were in direct contact.\nDifficult  Task.\n\"After a few moments we commenced to swing a little, and then,\never so slowlv, we were being towed\nsway, and from now on for a period\nof several hours, everything that was\ndone with this ship, that is in the\nc.neral handling, was worthy or being recorded as positively unique\nachievements. Whilst being towed, we\nhad not only to . pass between the\nAndre Lebon and a Japanese steamer\nwith what appeared only inches to\nspare, but we went completely over\nburning lighters, and a large launch\nwhich was adrift and had got under\nour stein. Twice we came to a dead\nstop, having brushed against the A.\nLebon, and I heard the officer in\ncharge of the other ship shout across\n\u2022'I cannot do any more for you; Im\nleaving you,\" but he was persuaded\nto continue, and eventually we had\nbeen cleared a few hundred yards\naway from the wharf, and the burning mass of oil was following Us up\nwhen we had another message to say\nthat be was off, and as the anchor\nchain had by now been clipped, he\ncleared, leaving us to our apparent\n'fight against fate.' He at once made\nfor the open sea. to. save his own\nship, -we being left with our how facing the wharf and town. With one\npropeller' out of action and the other\none crippled with part of a steel hawser the commander commenced to\nmaneuver this huge floating city to\na place of safety; backward and forward, with now a stiff wind holding\nus back, and the oil getting nearer, we\ngradually got into a position where\nwe could move crossways, and after\nseveral minutes, which seemed hours,\nwe were steaming toward the opposite\nside of the harbor, when we cleared\nthe oil by what seemed ft matter of\nfeet\u2014we could feel the heat as we\nPMlKb-and eventually we got Into a\nposition almost facing the entrance of\nthe harbor, and made for lt, but the\nwind blew us right over again, and\nonce a^ain we had to steam astern,\nafter which we got through th* harbor entranoe. a very narrow channel.\nThis in itself, was not without danger, as quite half of the harbor walls\nhad collapsed, and in the ordinary\nwav soundings should have been taken\nbefore passing over this part. Tn less\nthan 30 minutes of our leaving the\nflection of wharf that s ill remained\nthe floating oil brushing past it.\nset it all alight, and in a very short\ntime nothing remained by the shell or\nwhat bad been the finest of Yokohama's wharves.\nAway From Burning OU\n'I think this was the only period\nduring these blank days that any\nof those ' on board showed real fear,\nand this was possibly only caused\nby the order being given to stand\nby the boats to be already tn case\nof It being necessary to lower, which\nfinal   order   waa   happily   never   given.\n\"Our position was now Immediately\noutside of the harbor entrance and\nthe wind still blowing hard on our\nstern. W drifted out Of the\" man\nchannel and found that we again could\nnot move. Our position being far\nfrom secure, as the oil might still\nfloat out toward us. The captain\nof the oil tanker Iris very generously agreed try and tow us into\nthe open channel, but it was only\nafter many attempts and 12 hours\nlater before this was effected, and\nwe were safely anchored well away\nfrom   the   burning   oil.\n\"By the third day the fire was\nstill burning fiercely, but one of the\nprincipal ports of Japan had been\nwiped out of existence, not a single\nbuilding remained that could be seen,\n2U0 Ot.0 people are homeless, 185.000\nare estimated to have been killed,\nand 10,000 are on board the various\nships in and around the harbor.\nShip's Great Berries\nThe Empress of Australia has handled about 4000 survivors, including\n1000 Japanese, and the ship has\nJustly been mentioned as the 'haven\nof refuge.\" What would havo happened to all these people had this\nship not have been in the harbor is\ntoo terrible to think of, for It has\nbeen lb* means of saving lives\n\"wholesale.\"\n\"On Tuesday, the fourth day, a\nsection of the Japanese fleet arrived, and the admiral placed the\nwhole district and tho harbor under\nmartial law. It had not been possible to send or receive any wire-\nU-sa message from immediately after\nthe quake, a Japanese steamer, London\nMaru, practicing what I believe is\ntermed \"Jamming,\" evidently by instruction.., as no newa was known ln\nShanghai fur over 24 hours.\nStart   JUscne Work\n\"On Wednesday representatives of\nthe British and American fleets arrived, and without any waste of\ntime promptly continued tlie rescue\nand relief work that we had been\nfollowing. Destroyers were sent to\nTokyo and Kamaruka with food and\nmedical supplies, returning wllh many\nrefugees.\n\"On Thursday, the 6 th, we had\nthe services of a diver from II.M.S.\nDespatch, and our propellers were\neventually cleared of obstruction, and\nwe   were   in   a   condition   fit   to   clear\n.way, but as we had been commandeered on behalf of the British gov.\nrnment we could not make arrangements to move until the arrival of\na relief ship to take our place. I\nmake no attempt to describe the\neffects of the earthquake and fire\nin the other districts, but about 65\nper cent of the city of Tokyo has\nbeen wiped out, and the Japanese\nembassy gives as official a compilation of dead ana missing as ],-\n356,750. People to the number of\n32,000 took refuge after the quake\nIn a large open piece of land belonging .to the army stores department,\nbut the fires spread all around them\nand    they    were   hopelessly    caught\u2014\nly   200   escaped   being   burned   alive.\n\"On September 10 we handed over\nall our survivors to the Kobe earthquake relief committee, afterward returning to Yokohama, and on September 12 at 7:30 p. m. we sailed\nfor   Vancouver.\nCrew Highly _ raited\nThe greatest possible praise Is due\nto Commander 8. Robinson and all\nthe officers and crew, a larjre proportion of the crew \u25a0 being Chinese;\nthey all worked day after day, being\nheedless of food or rest. All the\npassengers on board have done their\nhit toward the general relief In one\nform or another, the harmony ban\nbeen perfect and the repeated calls\nfor volunteers for the many varied\nduties have been answered instantly.\nFood and water have been plentiful\nand every one of the survivors has\nhad the best of attention, food,\nand been given the run of the Bhip\nirrespective    of    nationality    or    caste,\n\"Letters of appreciation and grati\ntude hav been handed to the commander from the American committee\nand the British passengers, and as\na lasting record of their appreciation the passengers are presenting a\nsuitably-worded' bronze tablet to b*>\naffixed  to  the Empress of Australia.\"\nCRESTON TO HAVE\nTHE NATIVE SONS\nCRESTON, B.C., Sept. 26. \u2014 About\ntwo dozen Canadians of Creston have\nsigned application for the issuing of\na charter for a council of the Native\nSons of Canada In Creston. The object of the Native Sons is to promote\nthe all-round interests of Canada \u2014 a\nsort of Canadian club, with prominence given to social features, as well\nas the educational side. A ladies'\nauxiliary will shortly be formed.\nCANADA TO ADD\nFIVE MILLIONS\nYEARS\nBirkenhead Envisions Potentialities of Dominion at\nWinnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 26.\u2014\"I cannot\ndiscover any well-informed student\nof sociology hi the Dominion of\nCanada tvho does not -believe that\nthe next 10 years will seo an Increase in your population, of 5,000,-\n000,\" said Lord Birkenhead, former\nlord chancellor of Oreat Britain, in\nthe course of an address before the\nCanadian   club   here   today.\nLord Birkenhead stated that after\na careful study of Canada's progress\nund resources and intensely interested observations during his present trip, and another trip made a\ndecade ago, ho felt that one must\nbo blind aud . unimaginative who\nwould remain unaffected at the conclusions thus forced upon him of\nCanada's potentialities,\nLondon  Still  Center\nAfter giving a concise summary of\nGreat Britain's present causes for\nanxiety, the former lord chancellor\npointed out that in spite of free\npredictions that the world's financial center had passed from London\nto New York, it still remained, and\nbade fair to continue indefinitely,\nin London. He recommended free\nre:'U\u00bb-ocal trade within the British\nEmpiro.\nReturning buyers from Pnrls, declare that ' the three-quarter length\ncoat as the accompaniment to the\n.Iress seems the leading note In suit\nideas, for It appears both In this\nguise and ns the separate coat, always  on   slim  lines.\nMOUNTAINEERING'   DUCKS PLENTIFUL  ?\nCLUB AT-HOME    KOOTENAY FLAK\nMany Guests Are Royally  Entertained\nat  Pleasant Event  Held  at  Kil-\nlarney-on-the-Lake\nThe Kokanee Mountaineering club\nheld a largely-attended at-homo ut\nthe residence of J. Fred Hume.\nKillarney-on-the-Lake, last night. A\nbonfire on the shore welcomed the\nvisitors. The early part of the\nevening was devoted to whist, and\nthe   lutter   part   to   dancing.\nThe verandah was prettily decorated, and refreshments were served\nin the style that has made lhe\nKokanee   club   famous.\nWANT COMING LINK\nTO SERVE LISTER\nQuart'on   of   Worth    and   South   International Hoad Agitates   Creatou;\nMr.  ftxmtiy  Inspects.\nCR1.STON, B.C., Kept. 26.\u2014William\nRamsay of Nelnon, district engineer,\nwas here at the end of the week inspecting hard surface road work at\nAlice Siding as well as the new road\nat Kitchener, and making up his estimates for next year's work, which\nhave to he ln Victoria at the end oC\nthe month, due to the fall session of\nthc   legislature.\nAt Creston some opposition is manifest at the proposed connection for\nthe north and south international road.\nThe local board of trade has gone on\nrecord as favoring a cutoff that will\nget away from thc long hill at Port-\nbill and ItykertH, and shorten up the\ntrip about a mil<*. The beHUty of thin\nrout.* is that it will give the residents\nat Huscroft and Lister a. first-class\nhighway,   as  well   as   the   tourists.\nThe other demand Is for the putting\nof the abandoned <Ir**at Northern\nroadbed between forth ill and Creston\nIn shape, which latter route will assure the bringing of all \u2022 eastbound\nAmerican   traffic  directly   into   town.\nW*r\u00bb   If ever   Bo   JTcuneroaa    at   This\nTime   of  Tear;   Old-TUnerf   **y\nWinter   Will Be .Early.\nCttESTON, B.C., Hept. 26. \u2014 Although the hunting season has been\nopen 1'\u2014 n than two weeks, the de-\nmitnd for shooting licenses in the\nheaviest on reeprtj, Provincial Policeman McLaren having issued over 1300\nworth of them since the 15th. Ducka\nwere never so nunr-rous at this time\nof year, and old-timers way It Is a\nsure sign of an early winter. A local\nhunter came in oa Thursday with 27\nof them\u2014taken at flight shooting the\ntwo evenings previous.\nDue to forest fires that have been\n111 evidence at Kitchener, Arrow. Corn\nand Boundary creeks earlier in the\nmonth, the take of grouse has not\nbeen large, although the birds were\nreported numerous earlier In the season.\nSo far .there art no reports of (leer\nbeing   killed.\nCreston to Find a\nHundred Boxes for\nEmpire Exhibition\nCRESTON*. B.C, Fept. 28.\u2014Secretary C. W. Allan of the board of\ntrade has Just been advised that Mr.\nIVHart. who Is assembling the British Columbia fruit for the British\nEmpire exhibition at London, England, next year, will be In Creston the\nearly part of October to make selection of the apples offering here for\nthe exposition. Apparently Creston's\nnuccesses at the Imperial fruit show\naTe being recognized, as growers in\nthe valley will have an opportunity to\nsupply 100 of the (100 boxes that make\nup   the   total  exhibit.\nAs Creston valley raises only one-\ntwentieth of tbe total British Columbia apple crop, to be called upon to\nsupply 15 per rent of the apples to be\nshown Is certainly the greatest compliment valley orchard1sts have yet\nreceived.\nAll   women   are   born    equaf,    but\nsome spoil it by getting married.\nPlantol\nlet Soap\nNothing could be\nmore beautifying,\nmore cleansing, more\nbeneficial to the\ncomplexion than the\nregular daily use of\nthis choicest of all\nfruit and flower oil\ntoilet aoaps.\nAU grocers and dtps,\nttoret tell Plantol\nLITER -.BOTHERS LMITBD\nTORONTO\nMade only from\nFruit and Flower Oils _\n.u\nPublic Subscription is inv.tcd for\n$50,000,000\nDominion of Canada\nRefunding Loan  1923\n5% Bonds\nDated and bearing interest from 16th October, 10.3. and offered in\ntwo maturities as follows:\n20 year Honda due 15.h October.  1943\n5 year Ilonds due 15th October.  1038\nprincipal payable al the office of the Receiver-General at Ottawa or that of the Assistant Receiver-\n', General ai   Halifax.  Si.   John.   Charloitft&um, Montreal, Terento, Winmprg, Rtgina,\nr Calgary or Victoria.   Semi-annual interest (15lh April and 15th October) ,**\u00bb\u00a3*4\npayable al any branch in Canada of any chartered bank. **\nDenominations! $100, $500, $1000\n'All bonds may-be registered as tc principal only, and bonds in denomination \"I $500 mul authorised\nmultiples thereof ir.ay be fully registered,\nThese bonds are authorized under Act of tlie Parliament of Canada, and botli principal and\ninterest are a charge upon the Consolidated Revenue Fund.\nTo Cash SnltHcribers\nOffering Terms\nThis issue presents a most attractive investment. Tlie security is incomparable and tlie\nincome return high. The bonds v\/ill occupy\nan investment position equal to that of Canada's Victory Bonds.\nThe bonds are offered for ca_ti at the following prices:\n, 20 YEAR  BONDS\n98...5 and inlercst\nyieldini__>.14%\n5 YEAR  BONDS\n!(!> and interest\nyielding 5.'_!3%\nThis offer is made subject lo prior sale and\nto advance in price.\nTo Holder* of 192.1\nVictory Ilonds\nIn addition lo liic bonds offered for cash it ha. been\narranged that _ll o'.vner.s of Victory Bonds due\nNovember 1st, li*2;., may exchange their holdings for\nthe same amount of tho new issue. They will receive\nin cash the difference between the face value of their\nmaturing bonds and tlie purchase price of 'lie ne\u00aba\u00bb\nsecurity, namely: Ht the rate of $1.7.ri per 51ft0 for 20\nyear bonds and $1.00 for 5 year bond..\nSpecial Privilege\nInterest coupons on bonds exchanged are to be retained by the ov.ner and ca.hed on November 1st.\nAs the new bonds will be dated Oclohcr loth, holders\nwho exchange will thus receive an extra half month's\ninterest thereby reducing the cost of 20 year bonds\nfrom 98.25, and \u2022. year bond_ from 99, to the following:\n20 vcxr no MIS\nUS.O_ n.rt iiltrct Tieldin, ...18%\n5 Vkar bonds\n88.77 and infere-t yif IdinJ o.28%\nHolders are urged tn act promptly _s this privilege ia\nsubject to withdrawal. ^\nDominion   ol   Canada   bonds   are   the   most   attractive   investment\nobtainable   in   Canada.\nOrders may be telegraphed or telephoned (collect) and exchanges made through any of the\nundersigned or through your usual dealer or bank.\nThe right is reserved lo allot a less amount of bonds than applied for, and to sell for cash more than\n$50,000,000.\nThese bonds art offered for delivery in interim form on or about October 15th, 192}, when, as, and if\nissued and delivered to us.\nDominion Securities Corporation,\nBank of -Montreal\nBank \u00bbf Nora Scotia\nBank of Toronto\nBinque d'Hochelagi\nBanque Nalionale\nWeyburn Security Bank\n.Emilias Jarvis and Company, Ltd\nHanson Brother*\nRen* T. Leclerc, Inc.\nNesbitt, Thomson and Company, I,\nC. H. Busgess and Company\nW. A. Mackenile & Co, Ltd.\nLtd. Wood, Gnndy and Company\nA. K. Ames and Company\nKoyal Bank of Canada\nImperial Bank of Canada\nI'nion Bank of Canada\nStandard Bank of Canada\n' Montreal City and District\n' Savings Bank\nK. A. Daly and Company\nHarris, Forbes and Company\nMatthews and Company, Ltd.\nId.    Osier and Hammond\nF. H. Deacon and Company\nMacneiU. Graham a. Co. A. I>.\nNational City Company, Limited\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nDominion Bank\nMolsons Bank\nBanque Provincial dn Canada\nSterling Bank of Canada\nLa Cais.se d'Economie\nGairdner, Clarke and Company\nKerr, Flemming and Company\nMcLeod, Yonng, Weir and Company, Ltd.\nRoyal Securities Corporation, Limited\nGreenshiclds and Company\nMorrow ft Co. Marray Sl Company\nmm**:..\n ' Page Foo-H\nTEE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 27,1923\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except\nSunday by The News Publlghlnf company,   limited.   Nelson,   B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed and checks and money orders\nmade payable to The News Publish*\nIn* company, limited, and in no case\nto   Individual   members   of   the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or May be eeen at the office\nof any advertising agency recognlied\nby   th* Canadian   Press Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATE8.\nBy mall   (country)  per month....! .40\nPer   year      1.0(1\nOutside Canada, per month       ..76\nPer  year     7.50\nDelivered, ppr month    75\nPer six  months     4.00\nPer year    7.10\nPayable ln Advance.\nMember  Audit Bureau   of  Clrcnlatlom.\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1923\nn\u00bb MB Be Fine for\nEverybody\nThe frequent trouble in the coal\nmining industry has directed a good\ndeal of thought to the possibilities\nof fuel substitutes, and there seems\nto be a fair amount of conviction\nthat the day of coat as an indispensable article ln the scheme of\nthings is drawing to a close. No\none will regret that greatly. It la\n& terribly dirty commodity.\nThe opinion is widespread that\nelectrical energy will very soon t_up-\nplant coal. Ernest Fatterlnl, famous\nItalian engineer, says that within CO\nyears ships that have given up coal\nto burn oil will In turn give up oil\nand be driven by power wirelessed to\nthem from land.\nPower sources have been changing\nsince the world began. At first\nslaves were necessary, sweating all\nday on treadmills, to derive power\nneeded for the first primitive machinery.\nSteam generated by coal waa the\nnext big step. And slavery dlsap -\npea red.\nToday coal Is fast losing its industrial value, because oil-driven engines are cheaper and more efficient   than 'steam-driven   engines.\nThe next step is * to derive electrical power from tides, waterfalls\nand sunlight, and send it through\nthe air by radio to airplane, ships,\ntrains and Industrial machinery.\nWhen* all that Is perfected, even\noil  will have  lost  Its  value. *\nAt present coal is ao close to\nthe point where It will be valueless\nthat wise governments will make\nthe most of their coal deposits\nwhile they still have a chance.\nThe Smaller Town\nAmong the evidences of an advancing civilization is the growing\nrealization that there Is a limit\nbeyond which thickly-settled communities cannot grow. The point\nhas been reached, according to the\nBoston Transcript, in which a decrease in the number of inhabitants\nIn such places is welcome rather\nthan   deplorable.\nThe population of Manhattaln island, the original city of New York,\nis declining and the loss of population is regarded with equanimity.\nThe condition is not peculiar to the\nUnited States. London and Paris\nare shrinking in population, meaning, of course, the inner cities as\ndistinct from the spreading regions\nof the greater.\nThe mayor of Paris was quoted\nrecently as saying that during the\ncoming year he should devote himself to the disaggregation of the city.\nHe explnlned that he intended to\ndo all that he could to give Impetus to the movement of families\nfrom the city proper to the suburbs. And he added, that if, at the\nnext census, he should find that the\npopulation of Paris had decreased\nhe should regard is as- a veritable\nvictory of the sun, of the air, of\nvigor and health.\nIt is easy to understand the desire to check the growth of the\nworld's great centers of population.\nThe fact that a city may become too\nbig to be a fit place In which to\nlive is almost self-evident. Yet despite this spreading movement in\nthe large centers there appears to\nbe an aoute housing shortage, due\nundoubtedly to disturbed conditions\nand the influx of a transient popu\n,1a tlon. Then, too, gradual change\ntn growing metropolitan areas steadily restricts or eliminates residential\nareas.\nToday we can appreciate the advantages of living in smaller com\nmunitiea where dwellers are not\ncrowded together in 'inconvenient\nproximity, but can live in homes\nsurrounded by roomy areas in which\nthey may indulge a penchant for\ngrowing flowers or may follow an\neconomical bent by having a garden.\nThe smaller town,- once the butt of\nmetropolitan Jokes, Is coming into\nits own.\nWHEEL FROM TORONTO TO NEW YORK AND BACK\nThose ton, Leslie I'epperdene and Elvin KO-talnf of Toronto, have Just comulrtid a bicycle trip to New\nYork and tack. They pedaled their wheels tho entire distance, covering the 1204 miles. in 13 days, without so\nmuch  as a single  puncture.\nEfficient\nBY   Laura- A. KirKman\nKNITTING YOURSELF  A    SLEEVELESS   JACKET\nTOMORROWS   MENU\nBreakfast\nApple Sauce\nCereal\nCoffee Pouched    Eggs\nToast\nLuncheon\nWhole \"Wheat  Griddlecakes\nCocoa\nSyrup\nCookies\nDinner\nClear    Soup\nFried     Smelts\nHulled    Potatoes\nStewed   Tomatoes.   Lettuce\nCoffee Lemon   Gelatine\nThe new sleeveless knitted Jackets\nhave become almost as popu'ar as\nthe jaequet blouse. Everybody is\nmaking one nowadays. Here are\ndirections for a green-aud-white one,\nsize 36:\n\"Woman's Knitted Sleeveless Jacket\n\u2014You will need a pair of No. 4',_\nbone knitting needles, six balls of\n2-ply white iclelitnd wool, and two\nballs   of   \"-ply   green   Iceland   wool. I\nBack\u2014With  dontde strand of white 1\nset up 90  stitches.    K 4  ribs.    Work\nin    stocking     -stitch     (lhe    stockinet.\nstitch is knit one row. purl bos ]\nrow) for 7S rows. Bind off ,\". atltchee j\non each side. Decrease 1 stitch each ;\nside every other row 14 times. Con- j\ntinue working stockinet StltCb for ;\n36 rows, On purled side of work j\n\u2022 P 13 st lichen, K 26 stiKhes, P U\nstitches. Knit, back \u2022 . Repeat until i\nthere is a knitted band in center of j\nB ribs. IJind off H center stitches, j\nSeparate   work.\nFront\u2014Wind   together   one   ball   of I\nwhite   yarn   and   one   ball   of   green\n(that   is,    one    strand    of    each    for\nmixture). Tiow 1.\u2014Join the double-\nstrand mixture at shoulder edge, K\n1 stitch, P 1 stitch, 13 times. Drop\nmixlure and attach double strand of\nwhite. P.'iks white strands under\nmixture to hold border and body\nof work together, and K 6 stitches.\nP.ow 1\u2014K B stitches Jn white, pass\nmixture under strands of white,\nand with mixture K purled stitch\nand P knitted stitch. These two rows\nform tlie pattern of fronts. Increase every fourth row in sixth stitcb\nfrom front, tl times. On. armhole\nside knit pattern for .\". rows, then\nincrease every other row 14 times.\nCast on *i itltcHoa toward underarm\nto correspond with back. Knit pattern for M lows. Chants to double\nwhite  and   knit   band   of   6  ribs.\nHands for Around Armho.es\u2014With\ndouble white cast on 5 slitches and\nknit a band of 95 ribs, Fit it\naround the armhole and sew it\nthere,    sliteliing   on    tha   wrong   side.\nPockets\u2014Willi mixture cast On 16\n\u25a0titchea. K. U rows of pattern, and\n6 ribs of white (these 6 white ribs\nform top Of pocket). Sew .on 2\ninches, from but loin band and 2V_\ninches from front edge\u2014one pocket\non   either   side   of   tbe   sweater.\nButtonhole loops on thc edge of\nthe right hand of sweater, and sew\nbuttons on the edge of the left-hand\nfront, using five buttons in all.\npress back,' pockets and yrmholes\nunder a   damp  towel.\nTomorrow\u2014Putting  Up   the  Apple.\nAll inquiries addressed to Mtss\nKirk man In cure of the \"Efficient\nHousekeeping\" department will be nn-\ninvered In these eolumna in their turn.\nThis requires considerable time, however, OWtng to thf> creat number received.     Bo,   If   a   personal   or   quicker\nreply is desired, a stamped and self*\naddressed   envelope   nunc   be   Inclosed\nwith    th*   question.        Be    sure    to   use\n    name,   street   number,   and\nthe name of your City and  province.\u2014\nTOUR full\nthe name .\nThe   Editor.\n(tiestioti whether this expenditure is\nhigher than it ought to be by reason\nof producers and retaiUrs reaping\nlarger profits than they are justly\nentitled to is one of great Importance to everybody. The committee\nappointed by the ministry of agriculture to Inquire into this matter\nhave published a report in which they\nsay that after making allowances\nfor higher costs on all sides, \"meat\ntraders as a v\\wm appear to have\ndefinitely improved their relative\nfinancial status in the community.\"\nThey have maintained more of their\nwar profits than other tradesmen1\nhave been able to do.\u2014Yorkshire '\nWeekly Post.\nHonesty   as   Foundation\nTlie   country   banker   is   chosen   nut1\nso    much    for     shrewdness   and    efficiency  as  fur   dependability.     When\na   small   bank   invites   the   people   of\nthe   countrvside    to   open   the   sock-\nt reinjury ami   tu   take   from   under   the\nflagging  of   the   old   fireplace   the   tin\nbox    containing    the    savings    representing   self denial   anil   even   privation, character must   back up the  in- |\nvitation.      The    reliability   of   citizens\nwho   have   established   reputation   for\nhonesty  has   been   proved   so   often   in j\nthe case of the country bank's choice j\nof   officers   that    people   hardly    ever\nquestion   it.\u2014Louisville  Courier  Journal.\nIf beauty isn't furnished as factory equipment, the can buy accessories; but she can't change\nthe chassis.\nIt's a sad world, and every style\nthat reveals woman's charms reveals\nin other instances  the lack of them.\nIt must be humiliating to De\nValera to discover that the government doesn't consider him important\nenough   to   hang.\nBY LENORE\nFew people wno do not follow thc\norigin of fashions closely, can appreciate how many of our most popular\nstyles owe their life to Chanel,\ncertain model of hers, some five years\nago, brought on the vast number of\ntwo-piece Jumper dresses, and th*a\nmost recent great success of this\nclever French woman waa the side-\nfastened coat of pencil slenderness\nwhich simply everybody wore last\nspring,\nChanel's work is seldom spectacu\nlar or sensational, as Paul Poiret's\nnearly always is. Iter creations are\nvery   much   in   the   spirit   of  the  day,\nand exceedingly wearable, yet they are\nalways original and different, too.\nThis season, for example, when most\nof th... French designers are emphasizing embroideries, Mme. Chanel embroiders her  models less than usual.\nAlthough the -circular Ideas are an\nestablished feature in Paris, Chanel\n. dh.-res exclusively to the straight\nI outline, and throughout ber collec-\nt.on. she has made use of the ghoul-\n1 der cape, practically abandoned by\n' tho other houses. She has little\ni capes on coats, even on evening\n[ dresses,     but     most     particularly     on\n\u25a0&f)a_\nof\nSour,\nBu fames W. Barton. M.D.\nWhat About Castor Oil?\n(Registered   lu   accordance   with   the\nCopyright   Act.)\nPerhaps if I were to look around\na bit, I might find a more popular\nthing   to   talk  about.\nAnd yet what about it?\nWell, as a matter of fact, this\nis one of the things handed down\nfrom great-great-grandmothers to\ngreat -great -grandchildren that has\nsurvived all the new preparations\nknown   to  the   profession.\nAnd  why?\nSimply because it does its work\ncompletely, without much fuss, and\nis  so  easily \"available.\nAnd  what   does   it   do?  .\nAfter passing down the throat (a\nbit nasty, I'll admit), it passes\nthrough the stomach- unchanged and\nimmediately gets busy with the job\non   hand.\nThat job can be the removal of\na poison of some kind, an overloaded Intestine, a summer diarrhoea, constipation after an operation\u2014anything, in flavt\u2014\u00abnd the\ncastor  oil  will  clear  matters  up.\nOn entering the intestine it breaks\nup Into an acid which stimulates\nactlviity of both the muscular and\nsecretory coats of the intestine, and\nthey drive anything and everything\nalong tho intestine and out of the\nbody.\nAnd the nice thing about it Is that\nit is so safe. A* youngster can take\na. teaspoonful and an adult a table-\nspoonful and no harm Is done to the\nbody. In fact, the very oillness is\nsomewhat soothing to the intestine.\nIt Is hard to get youngsters to take\nit, but a peppermint before and after\ntakes away considerable of the taste.\nFor grown children and adults capsules are now obtainable, and are\nvery   easily   taken.\nIn an emergency, then, castor oil\nis a splendid thing, but should never\nbe   used   regularly  for   constipation.\ncloth  dresses,  which  may be worn on\nthe street all through the fall.\nFor the design in the sketch, dark\nblue charmecn may tre used. The\neffect is brightened with a cape lining of sulphur yellow, and there Is a\nyellow monogram on the black silk\ntie.\nNakusp Station Staff\nIs of Old Proportions\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 23. \u2014 There\nIs great relief felt by the patrons of\nthe   C.PR.   who   have   frequent   trans\nactions with tbe station to observe the ' generally waa Impaired, and it waL\nreinstatement of the assistant agent, . found Impossible for the remaining\nEdward Vlpond. An effort was made ! btaff to cope with the work,\nto reduce t)m staff, as a matter of . C. E. Jestley, accompanied by Mrl\neconomy, but lt was found that, with j Jestley. ]e(t Wednesday for a shoo!\nthe continued Increased business and I lag trip to the Whatuhan valley. M|\nearnings, the reduction was lmpos- j Jestley Is being relieved at the\nslbje, that the public was greatly in-. tlon by E. H. Marshall during his v_|\nconvenienced,     and     that     the     service I cation.\n1\n\u2022s\nThere's time in the package\nTime to do the many things ordinarily\nput off on wash-day. For Rinso does not\nkeep you standing over the wash-tub,\nrubbing until your back aches and your\nhands are red and sore.\nRinso, an entirely different kind of soap,\nsoaks clothes clean. Rubbing and boiling\nare unnecessary. The big soapy Rinso\nsuds gently loosen the most ground-in\ndirt without weakening a single thread.    *\nNOTE: In \u00ab\u00abr_ water fl take, from\nI lo 1 p.__.Re of Rinso to \u00ab tub to\nmake rood audi, [n car, Atari water\nyou will need from 1 _ to 2 p.ck.se.\nto . tub to get th. big luting audi\nt_et loo.cn all the dirt. t\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED\nTORONTO\nR306W\nLet us   figure your   bills  ot\nBuilding Material.   Coast Lumber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial John Boms & Son\n.Simmons \"Windsor\"\nbeds. Shown here in\ndark walnut finish,\nwith floral decorations on panel of foot\nSupplied also in a\nrich brown mahogany and  other fin*\n.voud finishes. Prices\nare very moderate\n| What the Press Is Saying\nI \u25a0 \u25a0 <\nNational Honor \u25a0\u25a0>\n+ Because certain Italian officials\nWere murdered In Greece, Italian\nwarships bombarded the island of\nCorfu and slaughtered a dozen or\nmore Innocent children. And that\nIs what is called vindicating the\nnation's honor. There Is as much\nnonsense talked about national honor\n\u25a0 as there used to be about personal\nhonor in the days of the duel. There\nwas a time when It was thought\nthat the proper way for a man to\nvindicate his honor was to go out\nend shoot at somebody, and be shot\nat by aomebody. Most people have\nchanged their Ideas in regard to personal honor. In time, no doubt, there\nwill be a change of Ideas in regard\nto national honor\u2014Woodstock Sentinel-Review.\nThe    Average    Household\nIn   the   average   English   household,\nmore than a quarter  of the weekly\nexpenditure ffoes in  the provision  of\nfneat,  bacon,  lard and suet, and  the\nThe Lighter Side\nThere is very little coal coming out\nof the Kuhr now, an very little\ntruth.\t\nThe reason there is no color line\nin France is because the tricolor\nneeds   all   colors.\nThe beginning of every <*reat nation's decay has been a discussion\nof  the  servant  problem-\nThe modern girl seldom chases a\nman. For that matter, molasses seldom   chases   flies.\nYou can't expect everlasting\npeace in a world where the\naecond man envied tho third.\nIt may be a sense of'Justice lhat\nurges arbitration, but usually it is\na   aense   of   weakness.\nIn the old days, the jilted girl\ndied of a broken heart; now tha\nman in tbe case dies of a broken\npromise.\nIf h\\fi car has two more cylinders\nthan yours, and you call him a big\nstiff,  that   is  class   consciou-me-js.\nThe nations are so worn out that\nHeating Stoves\nStove Boards,\nNow is the time to think about your\nHeating Equipment for the Winter.\nSEE Our Line of\nHeating Stoves\nFurnaces\nand Ranges\nMade by\nROUND OAK, FAWCETT,\nGURNEY and BEACH FOUNDRY.\nThe finest assortment in the interior of B.C. and the PRICES\nGUARANTEED.\nCoal Hods,\nShovels, Pipe, Etc., Etc.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL \"QUALITY HARDWARE\"\nBAKER STREET NELSON, B.C.\nYou are paying for sound sleep\n* ** but\u2014are you getting it?\nIf you have reason to think your But you cannot avoid the serf,\nsleep is not as sound as it ought ous consequences of this neglect.\nto be\u2014if you intend some time Simmons \"Banner\"Spring\nto provide yourself with sleep Take ten minutes tonight to study\nequipment\u2014why llot realize now your spring and mattress critically.\nthat every day you wait you are Theugoandgetacquainted with tho\ncheating yourselt? ' \"Banner\"S|1ringandolherSinm.ons\n\u00b0 _ springs and mattresses displayed at\nSleep is a necessity of life. If leading furniture stores in a wide\nnight after night you piiss tlie range of styles and prices,\nrest you need, your energy will' Comp-re their fan Itlesscouifortwith\nflag, your health will suffer\u2014and what you are using now. They are\nwith it, your personal success, economical - last for years-do not\nsag or break down. Decide now that\nYou can postpone the purchase you can't afford to delay lmying and\nof better bedding indefinitely, using Simmons sleep equipment.\nLook \/or the Simmons Label.  Beware of imitations\nWrite for your copy of \"Restful Bedrooms\" to Simmons Limited, Montreal, Quebec\nIMMON\n 9fcA>\nTHE NEi-SON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27,1923\nT Page Five\"\nService, Comfort\nand Appearance\nCombined in These Shoes\nfor Children\n77k Ideal Shot fir ChOdnn'M\nHurJljut K.oes are made In\nnatural tread last, the cushion\nsole making them soft and\nflexible.\nIn stock ln Black, Brown and\nQrey   Elk.\nBl\u00ab_\u00bb  4  tu  T__    $.1 oo\nSizes   8   to   10Vi    $4.75\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nOver One Hundred\nHouses in Nakusp\nHave Water Now\nNAKUSP, tipt 2T>, \u2014 Foreman Ben\n, Parkinson, Of the new waterworks, re-\nparts that connection lias Won made\nwith 10*S houses in town up to date,\nand Ih.it new Insinuations are being\nmade   daily.\nLast Tuesday evening a most enjoyable bridijo party wns Riven by Mrs.\nIt. Isllp at her home on Lake avenue, three tables being set, while,\nother guests than the players enjoyed\nthemselves apart from the games.\nThere were present Mr. and Mrs. E.\nH. S. McLean, Mr. and Mrs. L. J.\nEdwards, Mr and Mr*. E. McCamoii\nof Calgary. Mrs Rinn\", Mrs. Carter.\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. Leary, Misa Lillian\nHunter and Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Jordan. Prizes were awarded \u00bbnd refreshments   served  by   the   hostess.\nMrs. George Brown, w.ith her two\ndaughters and _gpn, arrived on Wednesday's steamer from Wolverhampton,\nEngland, having been met at Montreal\nby Mr. Brown. They will In future\nreside at Crescent Bay, three miles\nsouth of town, on the ranch which\nMr. Brown recently purchased from\nli.. L. Gore-Lnngton. The residence is\nmuch enlarged since the occupancy by\nMr. Brown, and will be lighted and\nheated   by   electricity.\nT. WHERRY\nTaxidermist and Tanner\nSend   for    price   list    of   work\u2014\nmountinK  heads,   eto,\n629   Pandora   Ave.,   Victoria,   B.C.\nTODAY I AM\n\u00bb\u2022    REAL WELL\nSo   Writes  Woman   After\nTaking Lydia E. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound\nJamestown N. Y.\u2014\" I waa nervous,\nlily excited and discouraged and had\n ino ambition. Part of\nthe time I was not\nable to sit up as I\nsuffered with pains\nin my back and with\nweakness.     I  took\nLydia E. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound, both the liquid and tablet forms,\nand used Lydia E.\nPinkham's banative\nWash for inflamma-\n_____________       J tion.    Today I am\nreal well and run a rooming house and\ndo the work. I recommend your medicine to every woman who complains, and\nyou may use my letter to help any one\nelse. 1 am passing through the Change\nof Life now and I keep the Vegetable\nCompound in the house, ready to take\nwhen I feel the need of it\"\u2014Mrs.\nAlic* D. Davis, 203 W. Second St,\nJamestown, N. Y.\nOften some slight derangement may\ncause a general upset condition of the\nwhole Bystem, indicated by such symptoms as nervousness, backache, lack of\nambition and general weakness.\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-\npound will be found a splendid medicine\nfor such troubles. In many cases it hae\nremoved the cause of the trouble.\nPLANS FLUME\nSILVERHOARD\nWilliam Hawley of Spokane\nWill Work the, Famous\nAinsworth Property\nAINSWORTH, B.C., Sept* 26.\u2014William Hawley, the Spokane min inn\nman, was In town on Wednesday, Inspecting bis property af the Kilver\nHoard. The mine Is going to be\nworked. A new flum-d la to be built,\nand   the buildings put In shape.\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Fletcher and\nIheir two little daughters, Eileen and\nMavis, arrived home on Thursday\nnight from Tatamagouche, N.S. Mrs.\nFletcher has been away all Hummer,\nMr. Fletcher having, spent the past\nmonth   there.\nMrs. W. Dunn of Kaslo, whose husband has been managing H. Oegerioh's\nstore here during Mr. Fletcher's absence, has been here for a few days.\nRory McLeod was a visitor to Nelson  on   Wednesday   for  the  fair.\nSlocan City Rebekaks\nEntertain Brethren\non the Anniversary\nSLOCAN CITY. B.C., Sept. 25. \u2014\nFloral Kebekah lodge, No. 15, I.O.O.\nF., commemorated the seven!y-second\nanniversary of Rebekah hood on\nWednesday evening,  in the lodge room.\nAfter the ritualistic service had l\nheen complied with, the balance of th'.- j\nevening w.is Bpent wilh cards and i\nmMta Mr-i Ada Clough presided at\nthe organ. The Odd Fellows and Re- j\nh< kalis then sat down to tables heavily ,\nladen with dainty refreshments, and\na very pleasant evening was brought |\nto  a   close  about  midnight.\nMrs.   R.   L.   Reynolds   was   a   recent ;\nvisitor   to   New   Denver.\nA.   Y.   Rae   left  on   Wednesday   on   a j\ntrip   to  the  Okanagan.\nEDWARDS WILL\nW0RKUN1TED\nCrew Will Start   on Ainsworth    Property When\nMachinery Is in Shape\nAINSWORTH, B.C., Sept, 28.\u2014E. J.\nEdwards has taken the United mine\nover, and expect* to set several men\nlo work as Boon aa he gets the machinery  In  Bhape.\nMiss Agnes Allen, schoolmistress\nhere, was a visitor to Nelson for the\nfair.    She  returned on  Saturday  night.\nFred Beuro left on Wednesday's\nboat   for  Nelson.\nW. _.. Lane and his two sons Bpent\nWednesday and Thursday in Nelson.\nWhile   there   they   visited   the   fair.\nWomen's Institute\nof New Denver Is\nWatching Schools\nNKW DF-NVER, B.C., Sept. 2S. \u2014\nMrs. O. V. White entertained the\nwomen's institute on the occasion of\ntlie regular September meeting. A\nmotion was passed to donate |10 to\nthe crippled children fund, a committee was elected to report on any requirements of the schools, and Mrs.\nW. A. Cameron was oppolnted dele-\nKate to the Institute convention, to be\nl-eld   in  November at  Nelson.\nThen the following Interesting program was given: Piano solo. Mrs.\nLevy; paper on \"Current Events,\"\nMiss Wilson; vocal solo. Mrs. Sells;\npaper on   \"The   Nile,\"   Mrs.   Kirk.\nAt the close, dainty refreshments\nwere  served by  the  hostess.\nOld Baldy Group\nof Slocan Peaks\nMantled in Snow\nNAKUSP NOTES\nSTOMACH SUFFERING\ndisappears as if by magic when Jo-T.\nls used. Gas pains, acid stomach, sour\nstomach, burning and all after-eating\ndistress relieved In two minutes. \"All\nDrug   Stores.\nNAKUSP, B.C.. Sept. 25\u2014The Misses\nCJray, sfst.-rs of Mrs. C. E. Jestley,\nafter a visit here for a couple of\nweeks, have returned lo their home in\nVancouver.\nMrs. (Jeoige Keys, accompanied by\nhor daughter. Miss Winnie Keys, left\nWednesday for Chaplin. Sask., where\nMiss Keys has been appointed to tbe\npublic school. Mrs. Keys will also\nvisit friends in Regina before returning   home.\nMrs. A. H. Freeman gave a mus'a?\nentertainment at her residence on\nDenver avenue last Monday evening,\nto a number of friends, which was\nmuch enjoyed. Refreshments were\nserved.\nMiss James of Calgary, who has\nbeen (.lift guest of Mrs. F. J. Funke\nof Nelson avenue for the past seven\nweeks, returned to her hontft on \u25a0 Inst\nTuesday's steamer. Klai James was\nhere for her health, and returned\nmuch   improved.\nMrs. Rowlands accompanied nv\nMiss Flo Diltey, left last Tuesday for\n-vnderby, where they will visit friends\nfor   a   couple   of   weeks.\nE. Picard and fimlly left, Tuesday,\ntc vfsit relatives at Revelstoke and\nArrowhead.\nRev. Dr. Cnlverl of Kaslo occupied\nthe pulpit nt the Methodist and Presbyterian   churches   here   Sunday   week,\nGallant Of J Slocan\nLooks Like a Nosegay\nof Morning Glories\nNEW DENVER, RC, Sept. 25. \u2014\nThe steamer Slocan is back on the\nlake once more, having been laid up\nall summer for repairs. Its appearance was hailed with delight at the\nDenver wharf last Monday morning.\n.New paint throughout, a new boiler,\nand sundry other Improvements are\nnoticeable. As the glistening white\nvessel approaches, the two huge \\en-\ntllators stand out like bright red\nmorning glories, one on either side of\nthe ladles* cabin. Some Dcnverites\nsuggested christening the vessel with\na bottle of Scotch, but concluded\nthere would lie too many open mouths\naround, which would prevent any\nlanding   on   tbe  vessel.\n  >sm \u00bb\t\nDramatic Club of\nNakusp Entertains\nNAKPSP, B.C., Sept. 25. \u2014 A very\nsuccessful social and dance was held\non Wednesday' evening at the opera\nhouse, ' under the auspices of the\nNakusp Amateur Dramatic club. It\nis intended to revive the usual activities of this popular organization\nduring   tlie  coming winter.\nThe young people of fllenbank thoroughly enjoyed a \"corn roa-st on Friday evening. September 11. The gathering w*is held in the open field near\nthe home of Mr. Cook. The. evening\nwas spent In boiling and roasting the\npopular corn, playing games and singing.\nMiss Lumsden. Miss Mary Lumsden. and their niece. Miss Helen Li mire y of Fife, Scotland, have been spending a few davs here, the guests of\nMrs. H. C. Waterfleld, of the \"As-\ntart,\" Crescent Ray, while on their\nway to China. Miss Mary Lumsden is\non an educational lecturing tour tn\nthe orient on behalf of an instltu-\nt'on in England,, and her sister and\nniece   accompany   her.\nNEW DENVER BOYS\nOFF FOR VARSITY\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Sept. 2G. \u2014\nMrs. Cam pi '1 gave a pleasant evening recent% In honor of her son,\nFrank, and his friend, Mr. Wood of\nKaslo, who nre .caving to resume\ntheir   college   work   in   Montreal.\nMike Zedra left, via Kaslo. to continue bis studies at Alberta university. Edmonton. He is in his second\ny.ars in arts, but intends to go on\nwith a medical course. He\" was accompanied by Buzz Hunter of Silver-\nton,   who will  enter  first   year arts.\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Sept. 26. \u2014\nFresti snow Is mantling the tops of\nUoat Mountain. Old Baldy and Silver\nMountain, not to speak of the Glacier\nand its rugged companions across the\nlake. A white frost was covering the\nsidewalks, Thursday morning, but did\nno   harm   to  fruit or garden   stuff.\nCut Trail in Dense\nTimber to Get Horse\nto Injured Cruiser\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 25. \u2014 The\nyoung man, Manson Smith of Glenbank, who was seriously hurt In the\nwoods 12 miles up the Kooskanux\ncreek, while engaged In helping cruising timber a few dnys ago, was\nbrought to his home on horseback on\nTuesday nitrht. A trail was cut from\nthc Hot Springs, three miles, through\nthe dense timber, to enable a horse\nt< reai.h him with an aiding party.\nHis foot was badly cut with an axe,\nbut   not  seriously,  as at first reported.\nH. W. Herridge returned on Thursday's steamer from attending the convention of the District Farmers' institute at Nelson, to which he was a\ndelegate   from   the  local   institute.\nKeiineth Salisbury, who has been\nvisiting his grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. A. F. Collier of Glenbank. since\nMs arrival here last March, left on\nSaturdav's boat for his home at Maple\nCreek,   Sask.\nCRESTON NOTES\nCRESTON, B.C., Sept. 26. \u2014 John\nAndrew, whn has been working nt\nPlairmore, Alta.. for the past six\nmonths,   returned   on   Friday.\nRev. W. Varley was at Duck Creek\non Bandit? morning., where he initiated Church of England service in\nthe   community   hall.\n.Mrs. Dnfni- on Vancouver Is a Creston \\lsitor nt jiresent with her sister. Mrs. George Knox, nt the Methodist   parsonage.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray Hughes of Kaslo\nare visitors for the fall fair, guests\nOf   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Barrier.\nMr. and Mrs. John Miller, one-time\nresidents of Creslon, who left about\nseven years ngo to reside at Clares-\nholni, Alta., got back on Thursday,\nand will again make Creston their\npermanent   home.\nMrs. Hook of Spokane, who has\nbeen a visitor with her mother. Mrs.\n.1. J. Grady, returned home on Thursday.\nMr. Sandvlgg of Portland, (tre.. is a\nvisitor here this week with his sisters. Mrs. Victor Carr and Mrs. O. J.\nWlgen of Wynndel.\nPROCTER NOTES\nPROCTER, B.C.. Sept. 25. -~ Miss\nR. A. Corbett, district health nurse,\ninspected the Gray Creek and Crawford   Bay   schools.\nMrs, H. McCarthy of Sunshine Bay\nAccompanied by her nephew. Robert\nPelton, has spent a week at. Cranbrook, and Is now leaving for Stratford. Ont., where she will spend the\nwinter   months.\nMr. Reynolds and two daughters,\nOlivia and Ruth, went to Nelson, returning with Mrs. Reynolds, who was\na patient at tho Kootenay Lake General   hospital   for  a  week.\nMrs. J. Hurst and two children,\nwho were visiting with Mrs. Hurst's\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. Fowler of Robson.  returned to their home.\nMrs. M. McKay spent last Monday\nIn   Nelson.\nO. S. Jones of Yakima. Wash., after\nspending two weeks' holiday here,\nleft   for   Nelson.\nF. W. Phillips of Creston arrived\nTuesday night to put in the telephone\nhere.\nW. B. Evans of Nelson spent two\ndavs   here.\nRev. J. M. Smith of Revelstoke\nspent  three  days  here.\nMrs. H. Martin and family of Crawford Bay arrived last Monday evening\ntr. take up their residence here for\nthe winter, having lost their home at\nCrawford Bay by fire.\nGituidaXSfehda^Smtm\nBRIER\nTRADE  MARK\nREGISTERED\n75\nThis column Is conducted by\nMra. M. 4. Vlgneux. All news of\na social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMra.   Vlgneux.\nLavender In every hue predominated\nat the pretty tea yesterday afternoon\nat the spacious home of Mrs. C. I.\nArchibald, Stanley street, when the\nways and means committee of the\nKokanee chapter of the I.O.D.E. hel$\na most enjoyable gathering. Profusions of autumn flowers were used\nln decorating. A huge basket of lavender and purple single asters adorned\nthe tea table, which was presided over\nduring the afternoon by Mrs. William\nSeaman and Mrs. J. \/_, Forin. Others\nassisting were Mrs. G. Douglas Nagle.\nMrs. 1* rank Hawthorne, Mrs. J. T.\nAndrews, Mrs. W. S. King, Mrs. John\nCartmel, Mrs. Harry A. Johnston, Mrs.\nRobert Thompson and Miss Jean\nForin. The committee in charge of\nall arrangements consisted of Mrs. C.\nI. Archibald, Mrs. I. R. Poole, Mrs.\nW. S. King, Mrs. Robert Thompson\nand Mrs. William Waldie. The lavender disposed of during the nfternoon\nwas the gift of Miss Annie Hoyle of\nQueen's   Bay.\nMiss J. E. Sweet left last' evening\nby  the   Arrow   lakes  for   the  coast.\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Pitner, Hall\nstreet, returned last evening from a\nthree-weeks' motor trip, having visited\nIn Portland Seattle, Spokane and Vancouver.\n\u2022 #    \u2022\nDr. J. H. Bennett, Baker* street, motored to Wlnlaw, Tuesday evening, returning   to the city  yesterday.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nMrs. R. Barrett of Memphis, Tenti.,\nand Miss Carmalita Ward of Phoenix.\nAriz., who have been visiting at the\nhome of Dr. and Mrs. B. J. Chevalier\nfor the past few weeks, leave this\nmorning   by   the   Great   Northern   for\nSeattle.\n\u2022 \u2022    I\nN. Johnson of Spokane, general\nroad master for the Great Northern\nrailway, was a cftv visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. IT, Collins left last evening via\nthe   Arrow  lakes  for  the  coast.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C. H. Fraser of Calgary, who are visitors In the city,\nhave taken apartments in the Kerr\nblock.\nGordon Bennett and A. Rockcliffe\nhave returned from a few days' successful shooting trip to Kootenay\nLanding.\nMrs. E. E. 3. McDougal of Regina,\nwho has been a visitor in the city, a\nguest at the home of Mrs. i>. Grant,\n\\ernon street, leaves on tbe Crow boat\nthis morning en route for her home.\n_    *    _\nA. M. Anderson of Spokane Great\nNorthern right-of-way, land and tax\nagent, spent Tuesday in the city and\nleft that evening via the Kettle Valley  for  Penticton.\n\u2022 |   \u2022\nCecil Drew of Regina, formerly of\nNelson, leaves this morning by the\nCrow boat for his home, after spending the past week a guest at the\nhome of Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Rose,\nVernon   street.\n\u2022 I    \u2022\nMiss Esther Levlne of Calgary, who\nts visiting in the city, and leaves\nshortly for Honolulu, was the guest\nof honor. Tuesday evening, at a\nhright gathering at the home of her\nbrother-in-law and sister. Mr. and\nMrs. E. ColUnson. 404 Gore street.\nCards and games were the main pastimes of the evening, after which\ndainty refreshments were served. Tlie\nguests were Miss Laura McEachern,\nMiss Irene Laughton. Miss Alma Choquette, Miss S. Bergstrom Miss Ida\nLevlne, Jack Laughton. Jack Morris.\nEugene Poulin. E. Colllnson and, of\ncourse,   Miss   Esther  Levlne.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. C, A. Anderson and baby, of\nYahk, are visiting wllh Mrs. Anderson's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew\nManson,   Hoover   street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. Gray nnd son, Archie Gray,\nof  Salmo,  motored   to town  Tuesday.\n\u2022 *    _\nMrs. F. Burton of Riondel spent\nyesterday  in  the  city,\n\u2022 _    \u2022\nA. G. Watson of Passmore was a\ncity   visitor   Tuesday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. nnd Mrs. A. Hutton of Calgary\nare   visitors In   town.\n\u2022 *    *\nMrs. E. M. Ker of Vancouver arrived in the city Tuesday evening, to\nspend a vacation with her parents.\nMr. and Mrs. T. B. Crothers, 616 Latimer   street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW. Harrison and J. Pritchard aro\nenjoying a vacation  in   Spokane,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Scott Wardle of\nLongbeach were city visitors yesterday.\n, \u2022    *    *\nMiss It. A. Corbett district nurse,\nwith headquarters in Procter, spent\n.vesterday  in  town.\nThe marriage of Angelina Josephlm\nS**hiavon of Shoreacres was solemnized Bt 7:30 yesterday morning at the\nChurch of Mary Immaculate, with\nVery Rev. J. Althoff. V.G., officiating, when she became the bride of\ni Anthony Gughellna or Trail. The\n|-TrrTn> \" WIS attended by her sister.\nHelen Schtavon of Shoreacres, and the\ngroom was supported by Angle lo Re-\nginato of Trail. The l_appv couple\nwill, make   their  heme   in   Trail.\nMayor and \"Sfrs.- I... It. Choquette,\nLatimer street, who have been on an\nextended visit in tbe east, are expected to return to the city the latter   part  of   the  week.\nF. C. Hanneman of Spokane, assistant rot't master for the Great Northern    railway,    spent   yesterday    in   the\nc:o- . . .\nfled ley Rendel, Silica street, left\nyesterday morning via the Crow boat\nfor   the  Crow   district.\nJ. Ashman of Smithers, and hlv\nnephew, J. Ashman also of Smithers\nare   In   the   City   on   an   extended   visit.\nSLOCAN CITY MAN~\nBACK FROM ALASKA\nAPPLEDALE FAIR\nDRAWS FOLKS OF\nSLOCANJALLEY\nExhibits Are High in Quality\nThough Not So Many\nas Year Ago\nJUDGES WORK HARD\nTO DECIDE WINNERS\nl\u00abF\nSLOCAN CITV. B.C.. Sept. 25,-B\nB Carter, who has been at Keno HIM\nAlaska for about two years, arrived\nborne a few days ngo. He has been\nvisiting In Seattle and other coast\nCities   since   early   in   June.\nMrs R F. McMillan'was a visitor\nto   New   Denver on  Wednesday.\nOpt and Mrs. William Klrby and\nlittle son, David, who have been holidaying at Edgewood, arrived home on\nWednesday   evening.\nMiss R. Pagdin was a visitor to\nNew   Denver   recently.\nMiss Carol Perney. who was operated on In Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, Nelson. for appendicitis\nsome two weeks ngo, wns brought\nhome bv Tier uncle, H. D. Hill. In his\ncar She wns accompanied by ner\nmother,   Mrs.   A.   E_ Perney.\nThe impressive feature about new\nsuits Is the way every edge Is\nfenced with fur. Hudson seal is conspicuous among these boundary line\npelts and mink, and of course alt the\nfoxes, with orange, brown, gray and\nbeige now leading, and broadtail, caracul, possum, black lynx, muskrat and\nsquirrel in  close pursuit.\nWhen some people are unable to do\na, -thing they boast of It.\nSchool  House  Gaily  Decorated; Day Winds Up\nWith a Big Dance    ..\nAPPLEDAI-E. B. C. Kept. 26.\u2122\nAppledale's annual fruit and vegetable fair today drew much attention from settlers up and down the\nSlocan valley. Although the exhibits this year were not aa numerous as last, the quality was; equal,\nif not better, All classes were\nkeenly contested, the Juvenile section, ln particular, drawing much\ncomment.\nOnly two sections this year fell\nbelow the mark set last year, these\nbeing the ladies' needlework and the\njuvenile sections. poultry exhibits,\nIf anything, outdistanced those of\nlast year, the Judges having some\ndifficulty   ln   p'acing   the   awards.\nThe show, which was held ln the\nAppledale school house, was under\nthe charge of C E. Harnhart, the\nsecretary. Home cooking and canned\nfruit a\u00abd vegetable displays drew\nmuch comment. J. Brooks was the\npresident  of   this   year's   fair,\nJudging of the exhibits! was done\nby Mrs. William Rutherford of\nNelson, who made the awards in\nthe needlework nnd home cooking\nas well as the Juvenile exhibits, and\nR. P. Murray of I'entlcton, who\nJudged the fruits and vegetables,\nthe poultry being judged by J. F\nStevenson   of   Harrop.\nThose assisting the judges ln their\nwork were, Mrs. V. Meyers, W. M.\nSmith, J. _.[. Lawson and Lionel\nWynne,   all  of  Appledale.\nNelson was represented at the fair\nby Alderman William Rutherford',\nformer Mayor Harold Selous and D.\nD. Townsend. Numerous visitors\nwere present from Lebaldo, Perry's,\nWinlaw,  and   other   valley   points.\nSpecial mention was made of the\npoultry by the Judge. Mr. Stevenson,\nand he favorably commented upon the\nbirds shown by C. K. riurnhart and\nA.  Cant.\nFollowing the awarding of the\nprizes, tbe building was thrown open\nto the public.\nThe fair wound up with a big\ndance in the evening, which was attended by people from all up and\ndown   the   valley.\nTbe   prize   winners   were;\nGirls*   Fancywork\nNeed'ework, any - article\u2014Francis\nAnderson first, Margaret Smith second,   Irene   Bridge   third.\nGirls's   laundered  wash   dress\u2014Mar\ngaret    Smith    first,    Margaret    Meyer\nsecond,   Dorothy   Cant   third,\nFloral\nCollection of dried and mounted\nwild flowera\u2014Jessie Brown first,\nHelen Meyers second, Mary Trozzu\nthird.\nBouquet of sweet peas\u2014Mary\nTfQlfQ first, Marguerite Meyer second.\nBouquet,     any    other    variety    of\nflowers\u2014Jessie    Brown.\nPenmanship\nGrades 1, 2, and 3\u2014Marjory Coffey\nfirst. Ruby Bolfe second, Mildred\nFlynn   third.\nGrades 4, 5 nnd \u2022\u2014Mnry Trozzo\nfirst, Helen Meyer second, Richard\nTrozzo    third.\nGrades 7 and |\u2014Athol Campbe'l\nfirst. Dorothy Cant second, Joseph\nTrozzo   third.\nSpecials for Children\nLight loaf cake\u2014Frances Anderson\nfirst,   Irene  Bridge  second.\nHighest agsrefa.'\u2014Jessie Brown.\nAdult Class\u2014Fruits\nApples\u2014\nMcintosh   Reda\u2014W.   M,   Smith\nWagoners\u2014W. M. Smith first, J.\nKirkpatrick   second.\nGravensteins\u20143, Kirkpatrick first,\n\\V.  M. Smith  second.\nAny     other     variety\u2014 Mrs,     D.     F.\nPeters   first,    Mrs.    C    E.    Bunihurt\nsecond.\nPears\u2014\nFlemish Beauty\u2014'.Mrs.  D. F.  Peters.\nBartlett\u2014.1.     Kirkpatrick     first,     G.\nMcKean   second.\nPlums\u2014\nPond's Seedling\u2014Mrs. C. K. \"Burn-\nhart   first,   \\V.   M.   Smith   second.\nGreengage\u2014Mrs.    D.    F.    Peters.\n.Any   other   variety\u2014Mis.   F.    Soucy\nfirst,   L.   Wynne   second.\nCrab   Apples\u2014\nHyslop\u2014W. M. Smith first, Mrs.\nD.  *   Peters  second.\nTranscendent\u2014Mrs.   D.   F.   I'eters.\nVegetables\nPotatoes, white\u2014Mrs. D. F. Peters\nfirst.   J.   Kirkpatrick   second.\nPotatoes* any other _ iriety\u2014J.\nKirkpatrick first, Frank Trozzo second.\nTable carrots\u2014A. Cant first, J.\nBrown    Sr.    second.\nCabbages, white\u2014U Campbell first,\nJ.   Brown   second.\nOnions\u2014Frank    Trozzo   first,    Mrs.\nD. F.   Peters   second,\nCorn, fieid stalks\u2014J. Kirkpatrick\nfirst.    A.    Cant    second.\nCorn, table ears\u2014J. Brown first,\nL.    W y n n l   see< ind.\nBests, Globe\u2014Mrs. D. F. reters\nirst,   Frank   Trozzo   second.\nSquash\u2014Mrs.   D,   \\T,   rears.\nVegetable Marrow\u2014J. Kirkpatrick\nfirst.   F.   Trozzo   second.\nRipe tomatoes\u2014J. Brown first, F.\nTrozzo   second.\nCucumber\u2014Mrs. V. Meyer first, J.\nBrown   Sr.   second.\nRhubarb\u2014J. Brown Sr. first, W.\nM.   Smith   second.\nMangels\u2014Mrs. D. F. Peters first.\nU   Wynne   second.\nPumpkins\u2014W. M. Smith first. Mrs.\nA.   Bridge   second.\nAdults\u2014Poultry\nLeghorn pullets\u2014Mrs. C. E. Runi-\nhart  first,  W.  T.   Wynne  second.\nLeghorn cock\u2014'Mrs. C. E. Barnhart\nfirst,   W.   T.   Wynne   second.\nLeghorn hens\u2014Mrs. C. __, Barnhart\nfirst.   Mrs.   A.   Bridge   second.\nWyandotte    pullets\u2014A.    Cant.\nWyandotte    cockerels\u2014A.    Cant.\nHeavy breed\u2014J. N. Lawson first,\nMrs.   A.   Bridge   second.\nLight   breed,   four   to   pen\u2014Mrs.   C.\nE. Barnhart.\nEggs, white\u2014J. Brown Sr. first,\nMrs.   C.   E.   Barnhart   second.\nEggs, brown\u2014A. Cant first, W. T.\nWynne   second.\nDressed  fowl\u2014A. Cant.\nWomen's Fancywork\nCorset cover yoke\u2014Mrs. C. E. Barnhart.\nCrocheted pillow case\u2014Mra. C. E.\nBarnhart.\nCenterpiece\u2014Mrs.  C.  E.   Barnhart.\nHomt Cooking\nBread,   white\u2014Mrs.   A.   C.   Young\n^r\n611 Baker St.        Phone 200\nNew Fall Dresses .\nDRESSES have never been prettier than\nthis season. Not only are styles up-\nto-date, but materials and trimmings are\nextremely smart, and prices reasonable.\nIn Silk Materials our\nstock includes\nCANTON CREPE\nDRESSES\nR0SH1NARA\nCREPE\nDRESSES\nGEORGETTE\nDRESSES\nBEADED\nDRESSES\nEtc.\nAt $35.00 to $75.00\neach.\nCLOTH DRESSES\nPlain and Coat Stylos, made up in best Poiret\nTwills, etc.   At, each  $22.50 to $50.00\nfirst,   Mrs.   C.    F_,.   Barnhart   second. |\nSpecial  buns\u2014Mrs.  C.  E.  Barnhart. '\nBaking powd'T biscuits\u2014Mrs. C. E.\nBnrnluirt.\nDoughnuts\u2014Mrs,   C.   E.   Barnhnrt.\nLayer   cake\u2014Mrs.   C.   E.   Barnhart.\nJellyroll\u2014Mrs.    C.    E.    Barnhart.\nCream    Pie\u2014Mrs.    C.    E.    Barnhart.\nCanned fruit\u2014Mrs. C. E. Barnhart\nfirst,   Mrs.   V.   Mever   second.\nCnnriod vegetables\u2014Mrs. D. F.\nPeters first,   Mrs.   V.   Meyer second.\nPii-kles\u2014.Mrs. C, E. Barnhart first.\nMrs.   D.    F.    I'eters    second.\nCanned meat\u2014Mrs. l).  F. refers,\ni\/iorinl (for brea*-M\u00ab. A. C.\nVuung first, Mrs. C. I_. Barnhart\nsecond.\nSpecial    Awards\nSpecial prize for home cooking*\u2014\nMrs. C.   E.   Barnhart.\nSpecial   prize   for   needlework\u2014Mrs,\nC.  E.  Barnhart.\nSpecial prise for canned goods-\nMrs.   D,   F.   P.tem.\nSpecial prlie for fruit and veg-\netables\u2014Mr\u00ab,   D.   V.   Peters.\nSpeoi..l prize for buns\u2014Mrs. C. E. '\nBarnhart.\nSpecial prize for bread\u2014Mrs, A. C.\nloung   first,    Mrs.   C,    1.. *-*Barnhar( |\nfi.rnily   in    Kaslo   for    several   weeks.\nreturned  on  Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Watts and\ndSQfh-ftT, Miss Loraine Watts, of\nSouth Slocan, were the guests for the\nrecent     wet-k-end    of    Mr.     and     Mrs.\nJames Oalbrattk\nMrs. H. T. Butler and Infant son\n.irrtved home from Nelson a few days\n;o.o, They were aecompanled by Mrs.\nButler1!    sister.    Miss    B.   Armstrong.\nMrs. fl. Calhraith was a visitor to\nHew   Denver  on  Wednesday.\n'\"PJ.ITVAT.E,   B.C..   Sept.   IB.   \u2014   On\ncsday last. September 18, Donald\n.*d, vou otrer son of Mr. and Mrs.\n>d   C.   Affleck   of   Frultvale   died   at\nTrail hospital. Bnhy Affleck waa\nIn KOOtanay Lake general hos-\nNelson, on January 7 last.\ns is the second trapic event for\nnd Mrs. Affleck this year, Mr.\nk having lost his right hand\narc j dent   on   February   7.\nborn\npiut,\nThi:\nMr.\nni.\ni.y breed poul.\nlight- br\u00bbe-   poul-\nSjk'Wii! prise fi\ntry\u2014A. Cant,\nSpecial prlH r.\ntry\u2014C. K. Barnhart\nJuvenile\u2014Vegetablc-\nBeeta\u2014 A. Trozzo (Irat, .1. Troajo\nrecond.   c.   Anderson   third.\nCabbage\u2014C. Anderaon first. A.\nTrot!,  second.   R.   Trozzo  third..\nCarrots\u2014R.   Trozzo  first.   M.   Trozzo;\nBei'oml.   Jeaata   Brown   third.\nCorn, tabl.\u2014a.  Brown,\nCucumbers\u2014H. Meyers first. A.\nTrozzo second.   M.  Trosao  third.\nCitron\u2014Jeaale Brown first, is.\nMeyera \u00bb md,  M.  Meyers  third.\nOnions\u2014Francis Anderaon first J. j\nTrozzo   second,   M.   Trozzo   third.\nPotatoes\u2014 ii. Harding first. J.\nTrozzu  second,   A.   Trosao   third.        '\nPumpkins\u2014<;. Meyers lirst. J.\nTrozzu   second,   A.   Trosso   third.\n_.t\u00bbah\u2014J, Trozzo first, A. Trozzo\nsecond,    M.    Trozzo    third. |\nVegetable Marrow\u2014R. Troao first\nA, Trozzo second, Francis Anderson\nthird,\nTomoatoes, ripe\u2014Jessie Brown first.\n1. Trozzo second,   M   Trozzo third.\nTomatoea, green\u2014M. Trosao first.\nj.  Brown   second,   \"\u25a0  (,;i111   third.\nMangels\u2014A. Triaso first. J. Trozzo\ntacond,  ll. Trozzo  third.\nCelery\u2014H. Trozzo frist, A. Trozzo\nsacond,  .1.  Trozzo  third.\nParsnips\u2014E, Cant first, \u25a0 JeeelS\nBrown  second,   Elms   Cant   tbird.\nJuvenile\u2014-Poultry\nP.-ilr bantama\u2014H. Harding first, i:.\nMeyera sacond.\nLight breed, any variety C. Anderson first, p.. Trozzo second, C.\nCoffey thin].\nHeavy breed, titty variety\u2014H. Htirii-\n'tift- first, K. Cunt second, .1. Trozzo\nthird.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOGAN  CITY,   BC,   Bept    rt.\u2014Mr\nand   Mrs,   .1.   B.   Tatteraall   etitertalned\nrecently,     their    Guest**    being    Mr.    ami\nMrs. K. T,. Reynolds. Mr. and Mrs, It\nJ Johns..n, Mr. and Mrs Billion\nMerry. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. BUChannon.\nMr. and Mrs. A B. QaffB, Miss\nMitchell, Miss  M. TatteraaU, Capt, w\nl-raser.   Mr.   I.unil..   the   .Misses   1* roth.\nand Mai,ei   Parker,  the  Misses Qledva\nSAd I.inda and Itayinond Reynolds,\nand    W.    A.    BuetUUlBOfl    Jr.       A    very\npleasant   mnsleal   tVSntng   was  enjoyed.\nMrs. J. I_. Tattersnll entertained on\nThursdav    afternoon.\nMrs. J. Spcis. who has hem vlsitlnst\nher    daughter,    Mrs.    Sutherland,    and\nMARION LEITCH\nContralto\nTeache|   of   Votes   and   Piano.\nROOM   8,   GILKER   BLOC\nSTURDY     CHILDREN\nBuild  them  up  by  letting   them\nhave   plenty   of\nMILK\nfrom   the\nThe Kootenay Valley\nMilk Co-Op.\nFoot of Victoria St.   Phone  116\nGood Advice!\nWe Say It Is!\nTake iliin tip and send your\nlaundry to us. Clean and ef-\nffclent service in a plant up-\nto-date in every particular.\nVour    infepection    Is    urged.\nPhone   1-2-8  snd   we'll  cell\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nC. A. Larion, Mgr., Nelaon, B. C*\nFRESH FISH\nIs nutritious and healthful, and\nmakes a pleasant change from\nmeat-\nTelephone us to send you\nfioxnp, nire Salmon, Halibut or\nCod.\nFresh   from   the   Coast.\nP. BURNS & CO., Ltd.\nBerrlce        Phone  50 Quality\nKELSO*,  B.C.\n \"Fa*. Sli\"-*\nTHE NELSON. DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27,1923\nVancouver Stocks\nRAIL DIVIDENDS\ni     PUT STOCKS UP\n*it#r   Sluggiah   Opening-   Kukit   Oete\n\u25a0oddeniy Bullish on Baltimore\nft Ohio meport,\nNEW YORK, Sept. 2\u00ab. \u2014. Stock\nJ.rices were sluggish during the\ngreater part of today's -session, but\nturned abruptly upward In the afternoon on the resumption of dividends\nly   tho   Baltimore   &   Ohio   railroad.\nThis came as a surprise as Wall\nMreet previously had been led to belie, e that the payment would be deferred until the end of the year, although It was a matter of common\nknowledge that the dividend was being fully earned. More than 70,000\nehares of the stock changed hands\nduring the day, the closing price of\n65 representing a net gain of 4 \\_\npoints.\nThe dividend action had a tonic effect on the rest of the market, other\nrail stocks were bid up, and a number\nof industrial issues, which previously\n1'ad shown marked heaviness, such a;)\nthe steels and the motors, were bid\nup 1 to 2 points above yesterday's\nClosing  prices.\nSugar shares again gave one of the\nlest exhibitions of the group strength.\n1-uylng of these share** being predicted\nor. another ndvance in the raw am.\nrefined   products.\nWeekly reviews of the steel industry report a slight quickening of interest, but morfl optimism is expressed by the United Bteel corporation, which reports an Increase of\noperations from 87.3 per cent a week\nAgo lo 90.3 per cent this week. United\n(States   Steel   closed  a   point   higher,   at\nMm.\nCall money closed at l\\|   per cent.\nForeign exchange lost ground on\nprof it-taki jut by speculators who\niought bills recently In expectation\nof favorable reparation developments.\nDemand sterling held fairly steady\naround $4.55*>i, but French francs\ndropped \\\\'_ points, to \u00ab20c, and Belgian francs dropped 5 points, to\nt.30*-_c.\nTotal   sales   were   606,500.\nClosing1   Quotation!.\nHigh     Low\nPOLITICAL TALK\nBOOSTS WHEAT\nExpectation   That Uncle Bam Will \"So\n\u25a0om\u00abthlnr   for   Farmer\"   Boll\nFactor,  Witita Corn,\nCHICAGO. Sept. 2(t. \u2014' With constant talk current that the government will do Hmnething to help the\nfarmers, wheat moved upwards In\nprice today, helped hy strength In the\ncorn market, and hy estimates that\nEuropean purehaf-iiiK of wheat yesterday on this side of the Atlantic\nhad   totalled   nearly    2.T.0O.0OO   bushels.\nWheat closed firm, lc to 2\\c\nhigher. Dec. $1.0_-N, to Jl.Oj-ii,\nMay   $1.10-%   to   tl.lsH-\nCorn finished \\_c to l^e up,\nHe to I'_,c up. and provisions\nchanged   to   17c  lower.\nSterling Exchange\nNKW YORK. Sept. 26. \u2014 Sterling\nexchange **asy at J4..-3 3-16 for 60-\nday bills and at $4.55 11-16 for demand.\nCanadian   dollars\u20141(7   29-32c.\nFrancs\u2014Demand,   6.17c.\nLire\u2014Demand.   4.47>rtC.\nMarks\u2014Demand, .00000082c; cables,\n.00000082c.\nCanada Bonds\nKi.l       Awk.d\nCoahnuiit    CollierkH         30 00\nCork    Frovliu.     07 11   '\nInt.   Coal     12_       .11\nJTcGMIIvray       B0\nKhftrp   Cr_._  Cunap \u25a0     \"0_        .00 Vi\nStlvercr-'Ht       03\nBtlv-THniith      37\nStandard   Sliver   Lead.       .10\n_______    Mines     23\nHounilary    Bay    Oil...       .00 1-1,    .00\nKmplre    oil     nil _ .00 15-16\nPitt   Moadowa     00%\nSouthern    Alberta    .-  600\nSpartan    Oil      O0 9-I6    .00%\nSalea\u201416.0,0   Sw-jettcrnsa   at   .-16c.\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 26. \u2014 Dominion\nwar   Issue   price!*:\nWar loans \u2014 1.23. ,100 bid; 1931,\nf 101.10  bid;   1937.  ,102.25 bid\nWar loan renewal* \u2014 1927. $101.10\nbid:   1932,   ,101   bid.\nVictory loans \u2014 1823, 199.90 bit\".\n,100 asked; 1924, ,100.50 bid. ,101\nasked; 1927. ,102.30 bid. $102.5. asked;\n1933. $105 20 bid; 1934, $102 bid. $102.10\nasked;   1937,   $107.95 asked.\nIi.\nC.   P.\nChlno\nC.   M.  &  St.   P...\nInt   lckel    \t\nMo.  Pac.  com.   . .\nPierce Arrow\nStudebaker   \t\nli.   S.   Steel   com..\nGen.   Motors\n142\n16\n97 _\n87 ,i\n141!.\n15 Ti\n95 '\u00bb\nll 4.\n13 .\u00bb\nClose\n142\n15%\n1. _\n12'_\n10%\n8_\n97 41,\nitg\n14\nMiami     -       23%\n\u2014 m \t\ni   Metal Markets\nNEW YORK. Sept. 26. \u2014 Bar filter,   foreign,   \u00ab47ic.\nCopper quiet; electrolytic, spot and\nfutures, 13*,.<- to   l_Hc.\nTin \u2014 Easter; spot and nearby,\nJ41.87;   futures,   $.1.75.\nIron \u2014 Easier; No. 1 northern,\n$26; No. 2 northern, %'l'.\\ No. '_ southern,  *22  to   $_!\u00a3..\nLead \u2014 Steady;  spot,   $6.<X5   to  $7 10,\nZinc \u2014 Wultjt: East St. Louis, spot\nund   nearby,   $6.40   to   $6.45.\nAntimony \u2014 Spot,   $7.40   to * 7.SO.\nAt London \u2014 Standard copper, spot.\n\u00a363 7s M; future*, f63 15s; electrolytic,   Spot,   \u00a3\u00ab7   10s:   futures,   \u00a3fiH.\nTin \u2014 Hpot, \u00a3200 5s; futures.\n\u00a3200   5k.\nLead   \u2014 Spot.   \u00a326;   futures.   \u00a3_..\">   15s\nZinc\u2014Spot, 133 17s 6d; futures. \u00a331'\nIta. \t\nWIKKIPEO    GRAIN    QUOTATIONS\nWheat\u2014      Open High     Low Close\nOct           \u00bb5-% 97 \u2022_      95 \\ 97 M,\nNov       ti* 97.*.      95 % 97 Va\nDec  94^ 9\u00bbi MM 90',4\nWay           99>_ 101 99 4,_ 101\nOats\u2014\nOct       4214 42r'i      42 ilK\nNov.    .-J;..'    41 If $t%       41 IIV\nDec        39^ 40 30% 39 \\\nMay            42% 42%       42*. 43*%\nBarley\u2014\nOct        51 5114      50% 51%\nNov  51 %\nDec        50%         51\nMay      53%\nFlax\u2014\nOct      I1\u00abU 217K     $10% 217\nNov      209   , 217.if     |M 217\nDec  204\nMay          202 207        202 2-t_\nRye\u2014\nOct       S5%      65%      \u00ab5%      85^\nNov       65 %         65 '\/ii\nDec        65 66 65 66\nMay            70%         70.4\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL, Kept. 26 \u2014 Trad\nIn listed shares on (li\u00bb local stock\nmarket today wan decidedly dull when\nvolume of business fell below Hip\n6000-share   mark.\nNational Breweries Closed at BIM\nex-dividend, for a net gain of 1%.\nToronto Railway was down 1 If points,\nat   83%.\nTwin City closed at   67,   up  a  couple\n\u00a9f points.    Canadian Car preferred  w\ndown 1%. at 73.\nOther price change* Included Abltibl\nUp 1; Bell Telephone, up I1.: Brttlfl\nEmpire Steel first preferred, off s\npoint to the new low level of 59\nCuban Canadian Sugar preferred, off\n1   point and  Spanish   preferred   up   %.\nTotal sales \u2014 Listed -iH24; bonds,\n$1M,\u00ab50.\nCon_.ol_d._t*-!   Shares.\nMONTREAL,  Sept.   .: \u2014Consolidated\nMining     &     Smelting     26%     bid.     27\nasked. __\t\nDominion Live Stock\n\u2022 WINN I I'll.-J. Sept. 26. \u2014 Receipts in\nthe yards up to 9 a.m. this inorntni\ntotalled 3615 cattle. 1095 hogs and'87\nftheep.\nSteers \u2014 Choice. $5.75 to $0; fair\nto  good,   $4.50   to   $5.50.\nButcher   heifers   \u2014   Choice,    $4.j0   to\n|4.75;   fair to good,   |3   to  $4.25.\no    Butcher    cows    \u2014   Choice,    $3 o0    to\nH.Ti;   fair   to  food.   $2.75   to   $1.25\nBulls\u2014Good.   $1.75   to   $2.25.\nOxen\u2014Good,   $3   to   $4\nStocker   steers    \u2014   Chole*-     *_.75\n|4;   fair to good,  $2 50 to $3.50.\nStocker heifers \u2014 Choice. $3 to\n#3.25; fair to g^'-d.  $2,25 to  $2 75.\nFeeder steers \u2014 Choice, $1.-5 to\nM.75; fair to good, $3 to $4.\nCalves   \u2014  Choice,   $5 50   to   $6.50\nHogs \u2014 Belect. $1072'..;; heavies,\n|7.75;   lights and   feeders.   $8.\nLambs\u2014Fair to good,   $7   to  $10.\nShee-p\u2014Fair  to   good,   $4.50   to   $6.50.\nToronto  Receipts.\nTORONTO, Sept. 2\u00ab. \u2014 Cattle receipts, 693, trade dull; heavy beef\nBteers.   $8,\nCalf  receipts   400:   choice.   $13.\nSheep receipts 1753; lambs, good.\n$11.25.\nHog receipts 1-7..; fed and watered\nbasis,   select   bacon. $10.49.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 2\u00ab. \u2014 Flour\nUiiChanged.   shipments   44,790   barrels.\nBran\u2014$2\u00ab50.\n\u25a0Wheat\u2014No. 1 northern, $ 1.15 % to\n$1.21%; September, $1.14%; December,\n$1.17%;   May.   $1.20%.\nCorn\u2014No.  3  yellow, \u00ab5c.\noati)\u2014No.  8  white,  $\u00ab%c to  39    C-\nHi*\u2014Wo    1,   $2 18   to   $2,60.\nToronto Board\nTORONTO, Sept. 26. \u2014 Today's session of the local stoek exchange presented little feature of note. The list\nwas narrow and price changes were\nfor  the  most   part of moderate  range.\nToronto     Railway    continued    active\nnd   closed   at   X8 *._,   down   1 %    points.\nTwin   City   moved   in   an   encouraging\nfashion,   the   final   quotations   of   67%.\npresenting a net gain of I pi>ints.\nDuluth Supeiior recovered to 92%, UP\n1%.\nSterling coal NH down to 41, off I\npoints.     A   broad   rang.*  of bank   shares\nme  out   at   prices   little  altered.  Com-\n\u25a0rat and Hamilton were fractionally\nlower.     Toronto  eased   off   to   ISO.\nThere was .111 improved demand for\nnimng stocks.\nMoney\nAT WORK\nBrief   Bat   Important   Ltasons   tn   -Titmice, Markets, Stock*. Bonds  and Investments.\n1000 BUILDINGS\nTO BE BUILT\u2014'.,\n(VERY UNDeSIRABLt)\nEXCESSIVE COSTS\nUNEnP-OTMENT\nl.2_J\nI92*>      1925\n(HIGHLY DESIRABLE)\n...\nM\n'M>\nI9Z3       I92t     1925\n- REASONABLE C05T5\nSTEADY EMPOriENT\nL\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Sept 26 \u2014 Eggs and\npotatoes   firm;   oheeae   easier.\nCheeiw   \u2014   Finest   easterns,   2.1'ic.\nButter\u2014Choicest creamery, 36%c to\n36%c.\nKg gs\u2014Selected.    tOc.\nPotatoes \u2014 I'er bag, car lots. $1.40\nto   11.45.   .\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, S-pt 2fi \u2014 Monlreiil \u2014\nSpecials, GOc; extras, 4 1c; firsts, 3\u00abc.\nStorage extras, 40c; storage firsts. 30c\nto   37c,\nVancouver\u2014Local fresh higher, extras, 4tc; firsts, I.M ,at country points.\nJobbing extras, 47c; firsts, 45c; storage   firsts,   3_c.\nChicago \u2014 Lower; spot, 32*_c; re-\nfrlg\u00abratorfl, September, 8X*\u2022\u25a0!\u25a0; Novem-\nb__r,    2S%c:    December,    2S%C.\n.mass- ^Hm\t\nMah-Jongg Not\nGame of Chance\nIn Philippines\nMANILA, Sept. 2.'.. - Mah-JoiiKg,\nthe great Chinese gaiue of dominoes,\nis not a game of chance. A competent court cf tho land lias ruled\nthus,   and   It   Is   so   ordered.\nThe   above   decision   was   rendered\nin a case against Teo Tong. Lee Loy.\nSo     Chee     and     Kuung     Chang,    all\nChinese,   arrested   on   the   charge   of\ngambling.      The    case     came    before\nJudge   Manuel   V.   Moran,   who   based\nhis    decision    on    the    case    of    the\nI'nlted   States   va   Llong-sin.     in   his\nf decision,    however,    Judge .Moran   ie-\nj grets    the    fact    that    local   author-\n[ ities   have   not   approved   any   meaa-\n1 ure   regulating   the   game,   us   he   be-\n1 lieves   that   Muh-Jongg   Is  a game   In\nj which fortunes may be won and lost.\ni     Judge     Moran     makes    a    lengthy\nanalysis   ol   the   game   in   which   he\n1 says     tiiat     while     the     element    of\n, luck    p ays    an    important    part    in\n, the   winning  of   the   hand,   tlie   game\nin    itself    is    one    of    ability    rather\nI than    luck.      lie   concludes   that    the\n; element   of   link   is   limited,   and   as\nthe   game   advances   this   element   is\nI more and  more  reduced  by  the  pro-\nI ficiency    of   the   player.\nj      His   cunclusion   that   in   Mah-Jongg\nI fortunes    may     be    won    or    losl     is\nj based   on   a   story    In    which   It   Is\nI related    that    four    wealthy    Chinese\ni once    played    the    game,    wagering   a\ngrain    of    rice    for    each    title.      The\n1 player   pi,ying   East   Wind,   lhe   story\nI runs,   put   over   11   master   stroke   by\nj virtue  of  which   his  three   opponent's\nand   their descendants   for   three  generations    had   to   cultivate    looo   hectares   CT.OO acres!   uf land   planted   to\nrice In order to pay what Kast Wind\n\u25a0M   won.\nThings a'-crt't always what I Key\nappear to be. Because wo had a\ndecline in building is no reason for\nbecoming  pessimistic.\nWe had a smalt building boom iti\nthe spring. Costs started skyward.\nCrudually new building subsided und\ncosts ceased lu advance. Many\nbuilders decided to defer operations\nuntil costs were lower. Is thin\nsomething    to    cry    over?\nBuppOM there were 1000 buildings which Bat-Sad to be built In\na given city In the next three years.\nIf 800 of them were built this year\ncompetition would force the price\nup on them ail. Then for two\nyears there would be but little building left to do. The slump would be\ndisastrous.\nOn the other hand, If one-third\nof these buildings were built each\nyear for three years', prices would\nbe stable and the building trade\nprosperous. liy the end uf three\nyears there wuuld be a further demand   for   new   buildings.\nIt begins to took a\u00bb if the slowing down in buttlding Is really\ngrounds for optimism In the long\nrun. Every needed building not\nbuilt this year must be built In\nthe near future, und possibly it\nwill  be  built  at   lower prices.\nfr<-nvr!c.-,t.     fH*.     AWWHlMWI     TTrtitnro \u00bb\nIt takes ji widow who is fishing for\nXo. 2 to distinguish between a nibble\nand' a   bite.\nPAWNEE ROCK IS\nSITE FOR SHAH\nKansas   Women's   Organizations   Wilt\nMark   Point   of   Last   Stand   of\nIndians Against Whites\nTOPEKA, Kas, Sept. 23.\u2014In their\ncampaign to place permanent markers along the routes of the pioneer\nwagon trains through Kansas, the\nwomen'8 organizations of Kansas selected as the site for the muBt elaborate monument of all the historic\nPawnee rock. It was here, historians declare, that the most bloody\nbattlat with Indians accourred in\nthe old days of the Santa Fe trail,\n.which passes within a quarter of a\nmile  of  the rocky  eminence.\nOn the creat of the outcropping of\nredd_bh volcanic rock which served\nas a natural lookout for the Pawnee\nIndians in their last stand against\nthe whites* Invasion, a granite shaft.\n40 feet In height, has been erected.\nIn bold lettering at the base are\nthe words, \"Pawnee Rock\/' and Just\nabove is an Immense buffalo head,\nengraved in relief on the Bhaft, and\nthe   Inscription:\n\"In honor of the brave men and\nwomen who passing over the old\nSanta Fe trail endured the hardships\nof frontier-life and blazed the path\nof  civilization   for   posterity.\"\nIt was through thc efforts of\nwomen's organizations that a tract\nof about five acres wan donated\nto the state as a park by benjamin P. Unruh ln 1908. Year by\nyear these organizations have Improved the site with a granite gateway and wall, an observation tower,\nthe mounting of two pieces of heavy\nfield artillery and a flag pole, and,\nfin.il'y.   th\u00bb granite shaft.\nThrough the efforts of these organizations scores of granite markers\nhave been placed along the original\nroutes of the Santa Fe, Fort Oregon\nand  other historic trails In  this state.\nSalesman Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 District salesman for\nseveral useful household articles.\nApply   Hox   *\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0_.   Nelson. (1058)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Furnished    nous\nful    __________     Phone   IlIR\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\nFt) It SALK \u2014 Elghteen-aere fruit\nranch at Mirror Lake, thrt-c hundred\ncherry tree,*, lake frontage, water\npiped, hot and cold water, bath\ntelephone, electric lights; a good\nrevenue producer; also ice cream and\nconfectionery business in Kaslo. A\nMilton.   KhsIo,   B.C. (1021)\nLegal Notices\nDEPARTMENT    OP    MARINE    AWD\nFISHERIES.\nFisheries   Branch.\nNOTICE TO ANGLERS.\nTbe public is hereby notiiied that\nthe capture of trout of all kinds Is\nprohibited in Koolenay River between\n'irohmun Creek and Castlegar, from\nihe fifteenth it;,y of Ht-pteuiber, |$M_\nlo the thirty-first day of March, lUi.4.\nboth days inclusive, under authority\nof paragraph 1. section 24. of the\nspecial \"Fishery Regulations\" for the\n1-rovinee   of   British   Columbia.\n(\u25a0ad.)   J.   T,   MOTilKItWKLU\nChief   Inspector   of   Fisheries.\nVancouver,   B.C..   Keptember   20,   1923.\n(1069)\nUMdArticU.\nRealE-tato\nRo\u00ab_m\nBoa...\nTo Rent\nBoati s_i\nAutomobilei\nClassified\nHelpWartd\nPosition* Wanted\nLoit and Fouui\nLirertock\nMachinery\nFarm Product\nTimber aid Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal Beading* Votioaa\u20143fi per word\neach Insertion. In blackface or machine capitals 4c per word. Blackface\ncapitals 6c a word; 25 per cent discount If run daily without change of\ncopy for one month or more, Where\nadvertisement Is set out in short lines\nthe charge Is 12 ><_c a line for Roman\ntype, 15c for blackface, and 20c for\nblackface capitals.. Minimum 3Sc, If\ncharged 60c.\nMale Help Wanted\nFOR SALE \u2014 Five work horses and\ntwo wagons. Apply Big John, City\nCab. (1098)\nWANTED \u2014 Immediately, filer's helper; good wages. Wire B.O. Spruce\nMills, Ltd.,  Lumberton, B.C.      (1083)\nWANTED \u2014 First aid man for our\nMeadows camp. Apply Llndsley\nBros.   Canadian   Co.   Ltd.,   Nelson.\n(1055)\nMEN, women to loam oarbermg; paid\nwhil* learning; tools supplied. Catalogue frea Moler College, Vancou-\nver.   (9741)\nFemale Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014At once, woman lo care\nfor baby and convalescent. Phone\nHlrchbank;   nsk   for  Snyder.       (1110)\nWANTED   \u2014   <\u00bblrl   for   general   housework.   Mrs.  C.   M.   Young,  Fairvlew.\n(1068)\nWANTED   \u2014   Housekeeper.     Apply   to\nD.   McKay.   Sandon. (9978)\nSituations Wanted Female\nUTENOORAPHER desires position; 4\nyears' experience tn insurance and\nlaw. (J ood references. Address\nSuite. 2, 2200 Oth Ave. West, Vancouver,   B.C. (106fl)\nSchools\nSPECIALIZED\nHOME-STUDY COURSES\nHigher Accounting, Bookkeeping,\nRhart Story Writing. Commercial Art,\nSalesmanship. Show Card Writing,\nStationary Engineering, Poultry IIus-\nbftidry.\nSHAW   SCHOOLS,   LTD.\n225   Standard   Bank   Bldg.,\nVancouver,   B.C.\n  (103\u00ab)\nFor Sale or Rent\nTOR   SALE   \u2014   Six-roomed   house. .415\nUelbruck  street,   or   Phone   _21L1.\n(9H34>\nLost and Found\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\n!   Company of Canada, Limited\nOffic. tm_.ti.ig ind  Refining  Oapirtnwnl\nTRAIL, BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refinen\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore*.\nProducer! of Gold. Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nLOST \u2014 Crank for Chevrolet. fte-\nt.irn K. Hutled^e, Dominion Express\nCompany's   office. (1112)\nLOST \u2014 Gold watch and chain. Finder\nplease return Ideal Cash Grocery.\nHeward MOlf.)\nLive Slock for Sale\n^CANADIAN;\nWACIFICJ\nk\\ railway\/'\nSlocan Valley\nFruit\nFair\nSLOCAN  CITY, Sept.  28-29\nExcursion Fares\u2014Fare and One-Third Return\nON   SALE   SEPT.   27,   28,   29.      LIMIT   OCT.   1\nSPECIAL TRAIN FROM NELSON\nSaturday, Sept. 29, 10 am.\nArrlTt  Slocan   City   12:3(1.    nelurninK,   leave   Mown   Cily   6 00   v m\narrive   Nelson   \u00bb:00   p.m. ^    '\nII    excursion    tickets\nTickets  from   any   _\\gent.    Conductors    will\nfrom   flag  stations.\nJ. S CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson.\nFO.KKK FOH HALE.\u2014-A few pairs of\nchoice 1H1.3 Pup* from Pt.iIipn..><I\nIteglKlered Stock, from prolific\nbreeder., and Rood Fur Producers.\nIf interested, write Medicine. Hat\nSilver Black Fox Co., Ltd., Medicine\nHat,   Alberta. (1101)\nTO K HAL \u25a0 \u2014 RMtetend AyrshTre\nbull, IV je.trs oM. Apply M. Du-\ninont,   Kinnalrd   P.O..  Castlegar.\n(1101)\nFOR IALS or PXcliHtiire\u2014Registered\n\"luernsey bull, \"Wentern Ktnp,\"\nbred by Buford Bros., Chilliwack.\nfor Bale or exchange for young\n..lock or milch cows. H. Trus.sler,\nArrowhead. (1082)\nFOR SALK \u2014 Ayrshire (grade), to\nfreshen (third calf) October 1.; T.\nB, tented; J75. T. A. Alrey, R.R.\nNo.   1.  (1072)\nFUR SALE\u201421 head of milk cows, all\nT.R. tested, K. 1\\ Klnned, Perry\nSidtne. (1051)\n_PpR SALE\u2014Chen p. One pure-hred\nToggenburg buck, fl niotitha old;- a\nbeauty. A. T. Sherraden. Ains-\nworth.   R   C. (102!.)\nMiscellaneous\nNOTICE \u2014 I am opening up, a Uen-\neral Blaekt-rnilhtng BuslnesH In the\nEast Half of Malcom's old stand,\nand am prepared to do all kinds of\nrepair work and horseshoeing. All\nwork guaranteed, and pricet. moderate. 1 specialize in horseshoeing.\n(Jive mc a trial,    M.  Maxwell.   (10..7.\nInsurance\nIosure==Be Sore\nflood   to   Bo   Sure.\nBetter   to   Be   Insured.\nBest   to   Be   Insured   With\nFire.   Life.   Accident.   AutomoMle.\nANNABI.B   BLOCK\nI'hone  111. r.O.  Box  733.\n197.0\nCity Property for Sale\nFOR SALE\nLots   in   Blocks   of   2,   4   and   6.\n$50   to   $100   a   lot.\nOne acre of land In city limits,\none block and a half from car.\nMake me an offer. Small cash\npayment   accepted.\nTwo-story House, Haker street.\nThree bedrooms, dining room, living room (open fireplace*). Furnace.    $3100.    Terms.\nCommodious Residence on five\nbeautiful level lots in lawn, Baker\nstreet.     $4500.     Terms.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhone 269\nBox 628\n(U989)\nFIVE-ROOM bungalow, In good shape;\nfireplace in living room; all large\nrooms; must _*>|], to take care of\nother property. No reasonable offer\nrefused. For further particulars\napply   Box   1073,   Daily   News.   (1073)\nSIX-ROOM   house,    Victoria   street;    3\nbedrooms,   dining   room,   kitchen,   living  room,  hath;   full  basement;  fruit\nCaller,   $2,000;   terms.       Liberal   discount  for cash.   Box  1073, News.\n    (1074)\nLatimer Street\"\nSix-roomed Bungalow on one\nlot, going for, $2500. Terms,\nhalf  cash.\na. t. McMillan\nPhone 601 P. 0. Box  61\nRoom 12, (Hiker Block, 610 Baker Bt\nRes.  I'hone 35KL*\n___________ (1106)\nMining, Timber, Lumber\nTWO or three teams to log by contract, Apply Mankin Lumber and\nPole   Co,   flail.    B.O, .1027*\nFor Rent Unfurnished\nV\\)H RENT \u2014 Unfurnished 6-foorh\nhouse. Kail Mines Road, next Skating Rink; $20,00 per month. Applr\nK W. Dawson, Annable Blk. Plione\n1\u00bb7;   P.   R   73... <1\u00abS9>\n=\u00bb\nMfecrilAneotiR Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 To rent or purchase,\nblacksmith shop, In B. C. preferred.\nBox  108..   Daily  News. (10fi4>\nArticles Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Used piano.    Write,  with\nparticulars to Box  1041, Daily  Ncwi,\n(1041>\nBoats and Automobilei\nFOR    HALE    \u2014   16-foot    square    stern\nrowboat,   complete,   with   \"Evtnrude\"\noutboard   motor;   $150   cash.       Com*\nniander   Prouse,   Crescent   Bay. .\n(1103)\nBAROAIN \u2014 Nineteen twenty-two\nFord. First reasonable offer takod\nlt.     Box   1042,   Dally   News.       (1042)\nFOH SALE\u2014Baby (Irand Chevrolet,\nalmost new, run 6000 miles; Kellogg enjrine driven ulr pump, clock\na,nd BpotliKht. Call, write or phono\nJack   Wright,   Wardner,   B.C.      (103H)\nMachinery for Sale\nFOR   SALE   \u2014   A Cleveland    tractor,\n12-20    h.p.,    good as    new;    a    saw\nbench   outfit  and belting.     Will   aell\ncheap    for    cash. Apply    Box     12,\nNeedles,  B.C. (1020)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\n DIRECTORY\n Printing\t\nTHE DAILY KBWS\u2014Quality Printing.\nRuling.    I.ooHe Leaf Forms.    laeilg.r\nSheets and Dlnd-TH alvvayt, In atoek.\ninsurance and Real Estate\nMiscellaneous lor Sale\nRED MITE KIM,EH \u2014 ..very poultry\nhouse   needs   thin.     Hed   BuK   I'olwon\nin   50e bottleH.     Insect   Powder.     Fly\nPoison.    Itutherford   Drug   Co.,   Nel-\n_ son^  (.7.3)\nFOK SAM. \u2014 Kin. desk, office safe,\nbookkeeper's desK, typewriter, etc.,\ncheap.    North  West   Biscuit Co.\n(1093)\nFOH H.U.I. \u2014 Household effects, nil\nIn good condition. Call afternoons.\nMrs. James Hawkins, Kootenay avenue,   Fairvlew. (1088)\nWALNUT BEDROOM SL'ITE. practically new. Apj.lv (10S Hoover\nstreet,   or   Phone   G0_I.. (10.0)\nn    W.  DAWSON\u2014\nXV.   Baal   Eatate.   Znattrtaae*.    atUntall,\nAnnable Blk.   P.O. Box 733. Phone 197.\n____\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL      k      KITCKIal      MO-TV'\nMENTAL CO.\u2014P. O. Box (6.. Nel-\nson.   BC.     Telephone   Ifil. (.7ol)\nPainters and Decorators\nFOR HALE \u2014' Kitchen raiiRe, used\nfive months.     Hox   10.1,  Dally   News.\n   final)\nPRIVATE SALE, household effects.\nCall after 1. Mrs II, E. Ferguson,\ncorner of  Hall  and   Innes streets.\n (1080)\nFOH  SALE\n(iOO.\nYoung   canarlt\nPhon\"\n(1078)\nMURPHY BKOB \u2014\nAntoa Pali-tea\nBealere In Wall Paper.\n8tor<!\u2014 Auto Shop-\n113 Josephine St. 411 Hall  8-\n (975..\nAccounting\nCBAKt,E\u201e F. HUICTEl-\u2014\nAuditor, McSosald Jam Bulldln.,    ,\nBoi 1191. Nelson, B. a'\n(976.)\nFOH KALE\u2014LogRlns and camp equipment, located at Boulder Mills, H.C,\nnear Salmo. Beds, mattresses, blankets, stoves, dishes, and many miscellaneous tools for cedar and logging camps. Much of this equipment Is new, Rnd all in good condition; prices reasonable. Write us\nfor inspection appointment. Deer\nPark Lumber Company, Deer Park,\nWash..   U.S.A. \u2022 (98S7)\nFlorists\nGBIZEELtaB'S   OR1BMHOCSES,   Nel.\nson. Cut Flowers and floral designs.\n (97.4)\nXXftt. B. JOHNS.!.\u2014\nVT    Phone   342.    Cut  Flowers.   Potted\nplants   anil   Floral   Eml'lcim*.     -    (1047)\nWholesale\nBusiness Opportunities\nGROCERY business for sale. Owing\nto ill-health, will sell my thriving\ngrocery snd. provision business,\nsituated ln a splendid position fn\nNelson. For further particulars ap-\nply   Box   IOL'1.   Dally   News        (10-4)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent.\nSUITES\u2014615  Hall  sin*..  (1108)\nFURNISHED ROOMS'over Poole Drug\n_       (1071)\nSUITE\u2014Campbell's   Sludio. (97471\n\t\nAaVA_PO_.AU>   _   CO.\u2014\n. Wholesale Grocers   and    PrOTlsloB\nMerchants.    Importers of Teas, Coffeea,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple And Fancy\n(.rocertes.     Nelson.   B C. (JB75B)\nEngineers\nFOR RENT \u2014 Three-roomed furnlshe.\nsuite.     Annable   Block. (9748)\nTeachers Wanted\nQteen Broi., Bnrrfei| ^\nXBI.SO.W. B.O. ,.    ,\nCIVIL  AND  KINIMQ _N_nfMB_W\nS. 0.. Alberta and Dominion\n, Land   SurTtjrora.\n! Crown Grant Aguti.        Bltt* BrlatUf.\n] t <B7{i*)\nHB.  DAWSON,  B.O.L._.\u2014\n\u2022 Enifin-ar and Sanrtjor.\nKanlo,   H.C.  i______\\\nTT..1. \u25a0.\u25a0_;JLUIJ.-\u25a0.\",,','.\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0!,'   \"T,.  'I'I'LBM\nAssayers \u2022\u2022\nIKACHKIt required, \u2022 to teach draff*\nniaking at night school lit Trail.\nClaKH.H. will be for two hours on\ntwo evenings rach week fur six\nmonth. Applicant.*) must state qualification, experience and ealary required, Applications must be In the\nLa mis of th\u00ab underflffntd not later\nthan October 1st. Wm. B. B. Mony-\npenny, Socictary Trail School Board.\n(1102)\nAgents Wanted\nMEN AND W'OMKN \u2014 Here Is a real\nopportunity\u2014\u00abel! Canada's best Personal iirnetintt Xmas Cards. Our\nngentH without previous experience\nare making $2 per hour spurc or\nfull time, day or evening. Beautiful\nHam pie book supplied free. Deal direct and get highest commissions\nnnd best service. Write without\nobligation. Manufacturers, 122 Richmond   West,   Toronto. (1100)\nE.\nW. WXDDOWSOV, Box A1108, Nal-\naon, B.C.   Standard western chary**\nAuctioneers\nW    CUTLER\u2014\n\u2022  Gooda Sold Frlrataljr or _t Anetto__.\nOpera House Blk.   1'bone 71.   Box  474. '\n(9758)\nFuneral Directors\nDJ. mOBBBTSOV. J_D__\u00bb. ft M^-t\n\u2022  801  Victoria street     Phone    199.\nN.ght   Phone   I57L. <8760)\n________________   itandard Tnrnltnrf\nCo. Undertakers,\nFuneral Directors,\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nservice. P r I o \u2022 f\nreasonable.  (9761)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\nPHOT ^CENE \u25a0 HC3W e_,,T\nCOir.   CatFO-HE THEV\n\u2014\u2014>     I^VOT!\n -==\n\"^\u2014\n<_(_.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NETS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMB\n_r, z\n,7,1923\nPage Seven\"\nSaved My Life, Sags\nMrsl Mae B. Leffering\n\"I really feel that I would not\nbe   here   today   to   tell   about   it   had\nnot taken Tanlac when I did, (or\nIt was the only thing among the\nmany I resorted to fur relief, that\ngot me over my troubles,\" Is the\nemphatic statement of Mrs. Mae Bell\nLeffering, 874 Georgia Ht. E., Vancouver,   B.C\n\"About three months ago I was\nsuddenly attacked hy indigestion,\nand along with It I had pulns in\nthe sides, splitting headaches, cold\nchills followed by high fever and\nspells of nausea. My liver and kidneys   were   wrong   also,   and   I   went\nKirkwood Exhibits\nSensational Golf\nPRLHAM MANOR, Sept. 26.\u2014Sensational golf featured play today in\nthe professional golf tournament. Joe\nKirkwood led the field In this respect,\nand after being three down at the\n18th, came back and won tbe match\non  the last  hole.\nOn  the second hole  this afternoon\ndown swiftly in weight, finally getting so weak I could hardly turn\nover in  bed.\n\"Three bottles of Tanlac made me\nfeel like a new woman, for all my,\npains have gone and indigestion wit.i\nthem, while I have gained ten pounds\nin weight. I shall always be grateful   to   Tanlac.\"\nTanlac Is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute- Over\n37  million bottles  sold.\nTanlac Vegetable Pills nre Nature's\nown remedy for constipation. Por\nsale everywhere.\nhis tee shot went 50 yards off the\nfairway over a hill. After a careful\nstudy, the Australian pitched to the\nblind hole, three feet from the pin.\nt Crulckshank defeated Ray Derr on\nthe 36th, after being three down at\nthe   halfway   mark.\n\"Willie Og_r. who -had previously\nwon as he pleased, lost his match\nat   the   38th   to   Oeorge   McLean.\nMany a woman studies her glass\nto  the  neglect   of  her  heart.\nPIRATES-TAKE\nPHILLY SERIES\nHome Pitcher Allows Visitors\nOne Hit in Last Pittsburgh\nGame\nIANS TAKE IATHLETICS ARE\nNATIONAL     LEAGUE     STANDING\nV.\nNew    V-irk     ...-     M\nClnclenatl       \u00bb0\np*.t____r_rh      sr,\nChicago\n1 St.   Loiiii\n] Brooklyn  \t\nJEcHrtoii   \t\nphllad-lpbl*\nL.\nE5\nCO\n63\n119\n12\n78\n.7    11)0\nPet.\n.628\n.600\n.574\n.r,31\n.SI 3\n.345\n.315\n.320\nDOUBLEHEADER!\nBeat  Athletics   Twice   and'\nBreak Even on Philadelphia Series\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE   STANDING\nTeam W.\nNew York   94\nCleveland    .......  76\nDetroit     75\nSi. Louis   70\nWarihinRton     71\nOhlcagf  64\nPhiladelphia   63\nIloHton     58\nla.\nPet.\n50\n.653\n65\n.639\n70\n..518\n70\n.500\n73\n.433\n78\n.451\nso\n.441\n85\n.40.\nUnd e rwear\nhas won the distinction of\nsatisfying more men in\nCanada than any other make\nof underclothing. Constantly\nputting in the highest quality\nof material and exerting\nscrupulous care in workmanship have created garments\nwhich have become the\n\"standard of excellence.\"\nThe choice of the world's finest\nmaterials go into Penmans. No\nmatter what your preferences in\nweights, styles, fabrics and qualities you can secure Penmans\ngarments which will just suit your\nparticular purposes.\nPenmans garments can be purchased everywhere from merchants\nwho have confidence in these lines.\nPenmans Underwear\nThe Standard kjffltfm of Excellence\nP.ratos   Bat   Timely\nPITTSBURGH,' Sept.   26.\u2014Morrison\nheld   Philadelphia   to   one   hit   today\nand    Pittsburgh   won   the   final   game\nof  the  KMttl.  at  Forbes  field   6  to  0, j\nmaking   it   three   out   of   fmir   games !\nfor   the   series.     Timely   hitting   a'.'- I\ncounted   for   the   Pirates'   runs.     At |\nbat   four   times,   Grimes   knoeked   out |\nas   many   hits,   one   of   them   being   a j\ndouble.      Score: R.  H. ft|\nPhiladelphia     --   *     1     ft\nPittsburgh        6    12      0\nBatteries\u2014 Behan and  Henllne, Wilson;    Morrison   nnd   Schmidt.\nCards Ra:.y in Second\nST. LOUIS, Sept. 26.\u2014A second-\nInning rally gave St. Trills today's\ngame wilh Brooklyn. The score Wtll\n7 to B. In the seventh Inning Four-\nnier protested against a called strike\nbv Umpire Wilson nnd was put out\nof   the   game.     Score: R.   H.   E.\nBrooklyn       5    10     1\nSt.     Louis     -     1    12      1\nBatteries\u2014Vance,    Dickerman     and\nHargreaves;   Sberdel and Niebergall.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nVernon,   5;    Seattle,   6.\nOakland.    4;    Portland,    5.\nSa t   Lak*,   4;    Kan   Francisco,   2.\nSacramento,  5;   Los  Angeles,  4.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nSt.   Paul,   3;   Columbus,   11.\nMilwaukee,    4:    Indianapolis,    8.\nMinneapolis,    _\\    Toledo,   3.\nKansas   City,   6;   Louisville,   3,\nEDINBURGH    SEES    A\nTWENTY-ROUND     BOUT\nEDINBUKOH, Scotland, Sept. 26.\u2014\nAngle Itatner. American middleweight,\ntod Johnny Prown of Hamilton, tonight fought a 20-round bout to a\ndraw.\nMERMEN\nIsHflisirrc\nGoes   to   Eleventh\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 25.\u2014Cleveland took two games from Philadelphia today, giving the Indians un\neven break on the series. The first\ngame went 11 innings before Cleveland won, 5 to 3, while a home run\nby Stephenson ln the eighth paved\nthe way for a victory for the Indians\nin   the   second   game,   6   to   2.\nFirst Came\u2014 R.    H.     E.\nCleveland     5     10       1\nPhiladelphia   3       9       0\nBatteries \u2014 Edwards, Uhle and\nO'Neill;    Walberg   and    Perkins.\nSecond   Game\u2014 R.    H.     E.\nCleveland     6       7       _\u00a3\nPhilade pbla      2        4        2\nBatteries \u2014 Uhle and O'Neill;\nBurns,   Hasty   and   Perkins.\nTigers Take  Yank Series\nNEW YORK, Sept. 26. \u2014 De troll\nmade it two out of threo from tha\nNew York Americans here today,\nwinning a lu-inning game, 8 to 3.\nAfter a double play by Oheriga, recruit first baseman from Columbia\nuniversity, tied the score for New\nYork in the eighth, the champions\nlost out in the 10th when Detroit\nlanded on Bush for five runs, the\nresult of three hits, two errors, a\nbase on balls and a fielder's choice.\nR.    H.     E.\nDetroit    8      10        1\nNew    York       3        5        2\nBatteries \u2014 Francis, Holloway and\nBass er;   Rousch and  Schang.\nRed   Sox   Beat   Browns\nBOSTON, Sept. 26. \u2014 Boston defeated St. Louis, 3 to 2, In the\nlast meeting of the two teams this\nseason.                                    R.    H. E.\nSt.   I-ouls      2        8 2\nBoston     3        4 2\nBatteries \u2014> Davis and Severeid;\nMurray.   Quinn   and   Picinich.\nNationals Beat Sox\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 26. \u2014 Johnson held Chicago to six scattered\nhits today, Washington winning, 1 to\n0, and taking the season's series,\n12 games to 10. Rice counted in\nthe sixth when he received a base\non balls, moved to third on a hit\nby .Judge and scored on Ruel's\nsingle. R.     H.      E.\nChicago   0       6       0\nWashington        1        7        0\nBatteries \u2014 Thurston and Crouse;\nJohnson   and   Ruel.\nTO BE PUSHED\nAT CRANBROOK\nAmateur Athletic Association\nFormed, Ice Sports Taking the Lead\nCRANBROOK, BC, Sept. 26. \u2014 A\nmeeting of those interested in amateur athletics, particularly hockey and\ncurling, was held In tlie city hall,\nMonday evening. The meeting was\ncalled to corn pi pte the organization of\na branch of the Amateur Athletic association, and especially to consider\nthe situation In regard to better Ice\naccommodation for the hockey team.\nA number of ladles were present at\nthe meeting. George Moir was elected\nchairman for the evening, and Miss\nDelia   Drummond   secretary.\nIt was decided to go ahead and\norganize a local branch of the Amateur Alhletio association, and to affiliate with the British Columbia\nunion.\nThe following officers were elected\nfor the local branch: President, W.\nM. Harris; vice-president. Dr. C. W.\nHuffman; secretory-treasurer, Q. T.\nMoir; executive\u2014Miss E. Patterson,\nMiss D. Greaves, Frank Constantine,\nJ.   M.  Clark and   Fred   Rcott.\nLater on It is hoped to form a district organization which will embrace\na number of local associations at\nCranbrook  and   other points.\nYankees Take\nCanuck Issue\nin Big Blocks\nTORONTO, Sept. 26.\u2014Continuance\nof United States interest in the pew\nDon inion of Canada refunding loan\nwas further in evidence when the\nProvidential Life Insurance of New\nYork bought a  -2,500,000 block.\nIt was further rumored that another United States Insurance company was In the market for a similar\nblock.\nThe biggest Canadian subscription\nto he reported today was one of\n$1,0(10,(100, taken by Dominion Textiles  of  Montreal.\nIndividual inquiry for the loan Is\nstill   heavy.\nLittle Lessons in\nBig Sports\nGOLF\nPUTTING STANCE\n\"ALMOST\nCRAMPED'\nRIGHT\nWRONG\nGeneral Wood\nFights Locusts\non Army Lines\nMANILA. Sept. 26.\u2014Experience ln\nmilitary tactics gained on the field\nof battle Is sometimes useful in civil\nadministration, and the armies backed\nby bayonets, airplanes and heavy artillery are not the only dangerous\nenemy to a country, Gov.-Gen. Leonard Wood demonstrated to the members of the Manila Rotary club recently.\nTlie governor-general referred to\nthe campaign against the locusts In\nthe terms of a military adventure,\ntelling how staff and field officers\nreported daily the spread and movements of the hoppers, where the\nlarvae hatched, what regions were\nmost Infested with the hoppers In\nthe preflying stage, and the direction   taken   by   the   large   flyers.\nCharts and maps were maintained\nin the governor-general's office,, the\nnew lines being marked by colored\npins, so at a gl;ince the exact position\nof the pest's lines, and the headway\nbeing made by the governor-general's pest control forces, could be\ndetermined at a minute's notice,\nmuch as a commanding general In\na battle studies the lines and positions  of  his and  the  enemy's  troops.\nThe governor-general said the campaign carried with lt much of the\ninterest and excitement of a military\nundertaking.\nHow should the putting\nstance differ from other\nstances?\nI Answered  by\nPHIL GAUDIN\n1      Me dall st,     British     open     champlon-\n] ship;   captain   of   British   international\nI golf   team;   member   cf   that   team   for\neight    consecutive    years.      Winner    of\nnumerous   foreign   tournaments,   including   Manchester   Guardian   trophy.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nThe putting stance must differ\nfrom other stances because, in putting, greater steadiness and not so\nmuch force is* needed. Better concentration can be secured by the\nclose, almost cramped stance which\nmany players use. To give any definite directions for a putting stance\nIs not desirable because the many\npositions that may be successfully\nused differ so greatly. However,\nit is safe to say that almost always\nthe feet are close together and the\nbody does not have that freedom of\naction which Is so necessary for\nother golf strokes.\n(Copyright.   1923.   Associated   Editors)\nFOX HAS BOUT FOR\nSATURDAY NIGHT\nBob Fox. the local heavyweight,\nis to be a contender in a semi-final\npreceding a bout between Harmes\nund Ketchel in Spokane on Satur\nday night\nFox   will   meet   Hilly   Chisbnlm   of\nSpokane.\nFIRPO BOXES AT\nMONTREAL ARENA\nCrimea Defender\nToo \"Modern\" Wives\nZAGREB, Sept. 26 \u2014Recent arrivals from Moscow report the execution there of Gen. Slashtcheff, the\ndefender of the Crimea during the\nworld   war,\nAfter ihe fall of Czarlsm, Gen.\nSlashtcheff made his way Into Jugoslavia ond lived here part of the\ntime ns one of Wrangel's officers.\nIt was intimated to him from Moscow that his presence would be welcome  in   Soviet  Russia.\nSlashtcheff permitted himself to\nbe persuaded. When he arrived ln\nMoscow he was tried for treason to\nSoviet Russia, found guilty and\npromptly executed.\nGiant    Argentine    Fighter    Does    Not\nExtend  Himself   and   Hardly   Usee\nHla  Left   at   AIL\nMONTREAL, Sept. 2(1,\u2014Luis Angel\nFirpo. Argentine hen vy weight, made\nhis first appearance In Canada when\nhe boxed two exhibition rounds with\nKtMtf Rlnux, French-Canadian heavyweight, and two rounds with his sparring partner, Natal lo Ferra, at the\nMount   Royal   arrna   here   tonight.\nTbe bouts were not spectacular. The\nSouth American did not extend himself, and it was noticeable that he\nused his left hardly at all. About\n.tonO Montreal fans witnessed the exhibition.\nFOLIUM   BEATS   CHELSEA\nlit    GAME    FOH    CH-UtlTY\nLONDON, Sept. 26. \u2014 (By Canadian Cable)\u2014In an association football friendly game played here today\nin aid of the London charity fund,\nl**ulham defeated  Chelsea  by   3   to  1.\nWEDDING BELLS\nRING AT SIRDAR\nCRESTON, B.C., Sept. 26. \u2014 Sirdar\nfurnished the first September wedding\nin Creston valley, Thursday, when\nRev. J. A. James united In marriage\nMiss Jean MeMasters of that town\nand John Swanson of Kamloops, the\nceremony being performed at the\nmanse, with Mr. and Mrs. R. MoMas-\nters of Sirdar as witnesses. Mr. and\nMrs. Swanson left on the afternoon\ntrain for their home at Kamloops,\nwhere the groom is a C P.R. fireman.\nTbe bride formerly taught school at\nSirdar.\nReady-to-Wear\nTHE H.B.C. UTILITY COATS\u2014Coats reflecting the\nlatest fashions in fabrics and colors. Made of\ngood quality cloths, on the fashionable loose lines.\nSplendidly tailored. $97 CA\nToday  *P& \u2022 \u2022\u00ab-\u00bb\"\nUSEFUL COATS FOR WOMEN AND MISSES\u2014\nA real surprise for those looking for a low-price\nCoat that combines smartness and service. Fashioned on splendid lines. fl*\"| \/? {TA\nToday  ^DlU.tJl\/\nWOMEN'S HOSE of Wool that is warm and distinctive. One only has to glance in our Hosiery\nsection to realize how accurately we have anticipated the Fall hosiery mode. Countless groups,\neach true to the spirit of the mode, and attractively displayed to make choosing easy and a pleasure.    The prices, too, are lower this season.\na \"pair &1-1\/U TO \u00abP\u00abJ.5U\nKAPOK FILLED CUSHION FORMS\u2014\nSize  12x16 inches,  each  50^\nSize 18x18 inches, each 85^*\nSize 20x20 inches, each $1.15\nSize 22x22 inches, each $1.50\nSize 24x24 inches, each $1.75\nSize 18x24 inches, each $1.25\nSize 18 inches, round, 5 inches deep, each....$1.25\nSize 20 inches, round, 5 inches deep, each...f 1.50\nSize 16x22 inches, oval, 5 inches deep, each....ifU.50\n100 VACUUM BOTTLES\u2014Every one guaranteed in\nperfect condition.   One-pint size. QP\u00bb_r\u00bb\nSpecial value, each  ODC\nBLACK LEATHERETTE SHOPPING BAGS\u2014Extra\nstrong and well made.    New styles.\nEach ' \u00abPl.y5   AND %^_..-dO\nOur Fall and Winter hours of business are\nas follows:\nOpen every  Morning  8:30\nClosing each Evening at 6:00\nExcept Saturdays  at  9:00\nIn  order to give you  good  service,  please\nphone your orders early to get prompt delivery.\nHu4$.?js.\u201e 13 .?y dt\\.mPanB\nAUTO CAMPS SAVE\nIN FOREST FIRES\nEast    Kootenay    Poreeter    Flan*    Several  Additional  Camp Bite*  to   farther   Reduce   Wayilde   PUee.\nCRESTON. R.O., Sept 26. \u2014 Lightning has be?n responsible fnr 70 per\ncent of thc forest fires in East Kootenay this year, according to Norman\nMoore of Cranbrook, district forester\nfon the But Kootenay district. To\ndate but 112 fies have been reported,\nonly a small part of the number of\nlast mr, Human agencies were responsible for 30 per cent of the fires\n\u2014the unextinguished camp fire being\nInrgely responsible for the most of\nthese, and often these have been left\nby residents of nearby centers of\npopulation.\nAuto t curl sts have been scrupulously careful in this resp.ct in the roadside camp site provided for th<m, and\ndue to the gre;it saving In forest fire\nfighting this year, Mr. Moore Is arranging to put In many new camp\nsites   next    year.\nAPRON FOR BARGES\nIS MADE OF STEEL\na few daya last week making the acquaintance   of   bis   parishioners,\nJames Cherrington got back, Friday, from a short holiday visit with\nfriends   at   Rossland   and   Nelson.\nMrs. W. H. T. Smith of Porthill.\nIdaho, hns returned after a couple of\nweeks' stay with her daughter, Mrs.\nRichard   Smith.\nHew Improvement  Put ln by  .Railway\nCompany   at   Kootenay   Landing\nShould   Last  Lifetime.\nCRESTON, BC, Sept. 26. \u2014 The C.\nV. R. has the McCabe bridge crew at\nwork at Kootenay Landing putting In\na big steel apron, which carries the\ncars from the pier to the barges.\nEver since the Crow line opened,\ncoast fir has been used for these\naprons, which have had to .he re*\nHfld every half-dozen years. The\nnew one is of very heavy const ruction,   and   should   last   a   lifetime.\nThe work trains that have heen\nworking on the fill at that point since\nthe end of July hnve been withdrawn.\nafter completing about 300 feet of new\nI rack   space.\nIn the absence of coke shipping,\nfreight traffic westbound is very\nlight at this end of the Crow at\nI resent.\n\u25a0* \u2014\nAinsworth Thimble\nCircle Will Meet\nThroaghout Winter\nAINSWORTH. B.C, Sept. 28. \u2014- Mrs.\nL W. Oughtred was the hostess to\n'tie members of the Thimble circle on\nWednesday afternoon. The afternoon\nwas spout In doing needlework. Mrs.\nOught red served a dainty lunch, Mrs.\nMcKlnnon   assisting   her.\nAt the close of thi_ meeting It was\ndecided to continue these meetings\nthrough  the  winter.\nT. W. Lane of Nelson came In on\nFridny night and spent the week-end\nas the guest of his son and daughter.\nMr   and   Mrs.  W,  E.  Lane.\nA. T. Sheraden left on Monday's\nboat   for  Nelson.\nH. Epperson came up on Sunday\nfrom Ne'son In his launch. He was\naccompanied by Miss Whitfield, the\nMioses   Rrant   nnd   J.   Brant.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith came\ninto town for the winter, after spending the summer months at the United\nmine,\nHeavy Hay Cut at\nReclamation Farm\nCRESTON B.C., Sept. 28. \u2014Haying\noperations are completed at the reclamation farm, a cut of about 200\ntons having been put up under Ideal\nwealh*r conditions, nn rain nt all\nbeing encountered throughout the\nmonth's  operations.\nThe cooler weather that has prevailed the Inst week has put nn end\nto the bathing at the old Canyon\nbride* at float river, which has heen\na favorite hot weather reRort for\nyoungsters   nnd   grownups   alike.\nFather Ehman of Kamloops succeeds Father Bessette fn charge of\nHoly  Cross  church, and waa here for\nBritain Scrapped\nMore Navy Than\nFrance Possesses\nNotwithstanding the failure of\nFrance nnd Italy to ratify the Washington naval limitation pact, Great\nBritain has virtually rendered \"Incapable of further warlake service\"\nas much battleship tonnage as Is\npossessed by France. Facts and figures supporting the statement were\ngiven   out   by   the   British   admiralty.\nTho dismantling of the 14 battleships and the five battle cruisers\nordered to the junk heap by the five-\npower agreement has gone so far\nthat \"it would be cheaper to build\nbrand new ships than to render them\nonce more fit for active service,\"\nan admiralty official said. The\nsmallest of these dreadnoughts is th*\nbattle cruiser Commonwealth, 18.350\ntons, which Is 16 years old. The\nlargest is the battleship Aglncourt,\n27,500 tons, which Is seven years old.\nThe IS dreadnoughts have a combined\ntonnage of 382,150, which practically\nequals the total French first-line\ntonnage.\nWhen, last November, public opinion here became suspicious over tho\nfailure of two of the contracting\npowers to ratify the. Washington\ntreaties and the admiralty was\npressed to slow up on scrapping\noperations, lt was found that dismantling operations had ' so far\nprogressed on these ships that naval\nconstructors regarded their recom-\nmlssioning as practically out of tho\nquestion.\nThe experts declared that only in\nan emergency, where time was the\nmost vital consideration, would an\nattempt to place them once more\non   the   active   list   be   Justified,\nRendering warcrnft incapable of\nfurther warlike service was defined\nby the Washington agreement as the\nremoval, landing or destruction within\nLhe ship of small guns, fire control\ntops, instruments, range finders, ammunition, explosives, mines, torpedoes, conning towers, wireless installations and nvlation accessories.'\ni These preliminaries to the eventual sinking or breaking up or use\nof the vessel as a target were to\nhe completed within six months after\nthe treaty enme into force. As two\nof the contracting powers thus far\nhave failed to ratify the pact, tho\ntreaty   Is   not   binding.\n\"We undertook the fulfilment of\nou r pa rt of the barga In to set an\nexample, and there Is no Intention\nof slowing up its completion,\" said,\nan admiralty official. Most of the\ndismantling operations thus far have\nbeen done by Rotterdam. Hamburg\nand other Oerman or Dutch contractors, he declared, explaining that\nBritish shipbuilding centers were\npoorly equipped with the machinery\nrequired   for   such   work.\nThe only dreadnought blacklisted\nnt Washington to be withheld from\nthe junking process Is the nine-year-\nold  cruiser Lion,   28,350 tons.\nWide fur borders for coats, no\nmatter  what   their   length,  are   smart.\nThe coat dress, so much emphasized for *h\u00ab* fall, has huge draped\ncollars, or slim, flat Tuxedo-llfce collars, or lt Is made with raglan shoulders. \u2022\nAfter   all,   most   nf   Europe's   crises\ntrove  to  be, incidents.\n f     Page EigEl\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27,1923\nTHE ARK\nStoves!    Stoves!    Stoves!\nBefore buying a new Heater, come\nto THE ARK and see our slightly\nused ones at bargain prices. Our\nstock of Dry Goods, Furniture,\nRanpes, Linoleum, Rugs in great\nvariety,   are   well   worth   inspection.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhona  (34\nCM   Vernon   8-\nCRAWFORD BAY NOTES\nLatest Fiction\nin Our\nLending\nLibrary\nEvery month we are adding\nmany of the very best Booka\nto  our  present  large  selection.\nJOIN NOW\nOur terms are very reasonable.\nOut-of-town customers may\nJoin by paying postage on\nbooks.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nLimited\nNELSON,   B.C,\nHAS IT\nJ.  H.   ROBINSON,\nManager,\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C., Bept. 2*3.\u2014\nMr. nnd Mrs. C. H. King of Iliilam\nranch gave a delightful dance in honor\nof Mr. and Mrs. Cullen and daughters,\nFlorence and Phyllis, from Trail.\nAmong those present were Mr. a nel\nMrs. Cullen, Misses Florence and\nPhyllis Cullen. Mr. and Mrs. D.\nFisher, Mr. and Mrs. Brasler, Mr. and\nMrs. R. Woolgar, Mrs. Fox. Mr. and\n.Mrs. W. Frnser, Mrs. Nelson. Mr. nnd\nMrs. R. McGrejrnr, Mr\u00ab. ,T Peter*.. 1II\u00ab*3\nPeters, Miss C. McGregor, Miss O.\nMear, Miss K. Mear. Miss Alma Palmer. Miss McGee. Miss M. Jacchson.\nFred McGregor, Charlie Mear. Alfred\nMan well, It. Bayliss. M. Johnson, A.\nMason, C. King, R. Jacohson and\nvisitors from Nelson were Jack Ink.\nMr. Murphy, Mr. Walkin nnd Mr. Sho-\nlander. Diinty refreshments wero\nserved by Mrs. King, assisted hv Mrs.\nPrasler. Mrs, Fox, Mrs. E. Woolgar\nanil   others.\nYour Eyes\nProbably Mr. Patenaude has\ntended your eye troubles for\nyears, and now again you are\nin need of his services. This\nbeing the case, we would urge\nyou to lose no time, and come\nTight in, as Mr. Patenaude might\nsoon again be called uway for\na time, and you would have\nto wait some time before he\nwould be able to personally attend to you. Make your appointment   today.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptlst snd Optician\nFURS\nG.   GLASER\nManufacturer   Furrier\nGuaranteed   High-Class   Furs.\nNice Selection kept ln  stock and\nHade   to   Order   from   Selected\nSkins. \u25a0\nCustomers' Furs Made Up,\nRemodelled and Repaired. Skins\nDressed and Mounted at Reasonable Prices.\n4U WARD ST., NELSON, D.C.\nPhone   106.\nORDER   NOWI\nELBERTA PEACHES\nFor     Preierving\nPer f\"\"  81.75\nFLEMING'S  STORE,  Fail-view\nLocal\nPeaches\nCrawford  Freestone;.,  solid pack,\nper   crate    $1.50\nCrawford    Freest ono.s,    4-basket\ncrate,   per   basket    30\u00a3\n\\Ht ti'ate  $1.15\nThese ;ire slightly  smaller fruit.\n(.'hiimpion        Freestones,       solid\npack,   per crate    $1.25\nCauliflower, Green Onions, Radishes, Leaf Lettuce, Cucumbers,\nHot-House Tomatoes and California Field Tomatoes, Cantaloupes. Celery\nJ. A. IRVING & CO,\nThs Oreat Supply HoUsa\n613  Baker  Street. Phons  161\nPRICES OF TEA\nAREADVANCING\nSugar Quotations Are Also\nShowing an Upward Tendency\nSugar prices continue to show an\nupward trend, according to advices\nreaching local wholesalers. A slight\nadvance was recorded during the\npast  week.\nOne leading line of tea became\ndearer durii'g the week, and it is\nstated that indications are for advance..* in all lines of bulk teas.\nToffee prices remain unchanged but\nfirm.\nQuotations on the new pack of tomatoes ore expected shortly. A\nslight reduction has been made in\ntho price of flour. Cheese prices\n;ire steady, and butter shows every\nIndication of advancing. Egf prices\nare considerably  higher at  the coast.\nJam prices have become stabilized\nand are somewhat higher than some\ntime   ago.\nWHOLESALE THFET\nOF GOODS ALLEGED\nHikers From Nelson\nCross Rose's Pass\nto East Kootenay\nCRAWFORD HAY, B.C.. Rrpt. \u00bbfc\u2014\u2022\nJack Ink, Mr. Murphy, Mr. Walkin\n!.nd Mr. 8ho.arH.fr of Nels-on arrived\nhere by Kootenay Hay on Tuesday.\nTh\u00ab*y all went for a long hike up\nRose's Pass, on to Marysville and\nCninbrnok. They returned lo Nelson\nhy  train.\nMrs. M. M. Fraser and Miss Walker\nspent a few days in NtlMt)  last week.\nMri, E. Francis and son, Bobbr,\nupent |f_rt week-end in Nelson, visiting  Mrs.   Eyton.\nD. Wadds is spending a few days in\nKaslo.\nCharlie Mear of the Imperial hank\nat Wetaskiwin is home for his holiday.\nWatchman     at    Brilliant     Doukhobor\nColony Will  Face Trial Today\non  Serious  Charge\nCharged with having stolen from\nthe Doukhobor Community store at\nBrilliant goods to the value of at\nleast $500, J. Zibin, for many years\nnipht watchman of the community,\nwill be arraigned before J. Cartmel,\nstipendiary magistrate, this morning.\nOfficials of the community state\nthat for more than two years goods\nhave been disappearing from the\nstore, and that for some time suspicion was directed toward various\ncustomers. All efforts to confirm\nthis proving futile, the services of\nthe provincial police were called\nupon, with the result that Hugh King,\nI provincial constable, found in the\n| residence of Zihin's daughter at Glade\na large quantity of goods declared\n{to have heen taken from the store.\n. When the case Is called today the\ncourt room is likely to resemble a\n[ departmental store, a3 the exhibits\nI include huge packing cases of dry\n[ goods and wearing apparel of all\nkinds.\n] SEAPLANE TEST\nI FLIGHT DELAYED\nOwing lo tbe fact that he was out\nof town on his run, Clarence Lammadee did not attempt yesterday to\ntry out hi:-, seaplane on the lake ot\n1 the C.JUl.  flats.\n| Expert ing that the test flight\nI would be made, rot a few gathered\nj around  the   machine yesterday  after-\nCRAWFORD BAY HAS\nITS HARVEST HOME\nCRAWFORD BAY, BC, Sept. 26.\u2014\nHarvest thanksgiving service was held\nhere. Sunday. Rev. J. S. Mahood offi-\nelatinfT. The church wan prettily\ndecorated with flowers, fruit and\nvegetables.\nF. 1'eierson has pone to Fort Steele\nto  pureiiase a horse and outfit.\nMother's Bread\nTastes even better than it looks\n\u00bbnd it's mighty inviting; has a\nfirm, tender texture; you should\ntry  it.\nChoquette Bros.\nPhono   258\nhivlertammetvt\n^^***T^?5\u00bb of\"\"*\"\n\u2014Additional Features\u2014\nComedy\u2014\"WHEN KNIGHTS WERE COLD\"       INTERNATIONAL NEWS\nUSUAL PRICES\nHunting Time Is Here\nTRY US FOR\nGuns,  Rifles and Ammunition\n\"DUXBAK\" WATERPROOF CLOTHING\nCAMP EQUIPMENT, Etc.\nBe Sure and Use \"WESTERN SHELLS\" Thia Season\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON,  B.C\nRETAIL\nBUY YOURWN\nSummer; Home Site\nI have for sale nine SUMMER HOME LOTS ranging In size\nfrom an acre to over five acres and in price from FIV1J HUNDRED\nDOLLARS to six thousand dollars, depending on state ot cultivation and Improvements. The Iota are on the north side of the\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake just ONE MILE from the ferry. These\nlots are convenient to town, having city conveniences, yet well\nout of town.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\n.REAL ESTATE Authorized Trustee in Bankruptcy BONDS\nINSCRANCE-r.fi   Accident,   Life PHONE   136\nCrawford Bay Ladies\nPlan a Sale of Work\nand Halloween Party\nCRAWFORD BAY. B.C., Sept. *6.\u2014\nThe monthly meeting of the women's\nInstitute was held in the public hall\nSaturday afternoon, when committees\nwere formed for the November wale\nof work. Mrs. G. McGregor, Mrs.\nHarrison. Mr.\u00ab. E. Woolgar, Mrs. D.\nWadds and Mrs. H. Richardson were\nappointed for needlework, knitting,\netc.; Misses C. Freeman, C. McOre-\n(tor, L. Peters, K. Mears for cnndles;\nMrs. J. S. Ooorh, Mrs. M. M, Fraser,\nMrs. Kidman, Mrs. Fisher, Miss Walker, for the tea 'able?.; Mrfl. J, S.\nOooeh, ^M. O. McGropor, Mrs. W.\nFraser, Miss Peters promised photo-\nnranhs.\nArranprment\" *\"'ere also made for\n\u2022he children's H\u00ablloW*\u00bb'\u00abn nartv, Thooe\n;n ena reo a re Mrs. F.. Wrolgn t\\ Mrs.\nFisher Mr\". I. Poutne, Mrs. W. Kld-\nBW>*\\   Mm   R   McGregor, Miss C.  Mear\nMrs M. M. Fraser. the president,\nwas elected ns delegate for the convention to be held in Nelson in November In place of Mrs. Wadds, who\nis   tillable   to   nttend.\nMrs. I_. Woolgar won the broom\nwhich was donated by the Canadian\nNational Institute for the Blind, nnd\nwa*i   raffled.\nTea. w*J served by the junior members.\nNelson News of the Dav\nT^e members of Miss Mnckenf le's\nCircle wt\" serve coffee and dongh-\nnuts on Fr'dav af'erncon from three\n\u2022fl six, <n a*. Paul's Church Ptrfffl*,\nHome Cook In\u2122, Aprons pnd Candles\n''or sale. Come. nnd hrini? your\nfriends. Proceeds for Ladies' AM\nfunds. (1114)\nLADIES'   PHYSICAL   CLASSES.\nMrs. Guv Wright (ladles' nhysicnl\nInstructor) will meet all tr-dles de-\nstroi*1. o'' .Ifiini\".? th*- \"Gyn.\" classes\n\u00bbt the Rec-ention Cluh. Senior and\nvoung Ladies.. Thursdav. Kenlemher\n27. at 8 nm. Hitch Unheal and Junior\nGirls, Friday. Sentemher \"Sth, at 4\np.m. Meet In Recreation Club Rnom\n(1113)\nRegular meet in\"   ef  Nel=on   pne^mn-\nment,   Nn.   7,   JOOF.,   nt   fi   o'c'nek   tonight.    Ctnton  Coront  P.  M,   will  muster at  7:15   o'clock.     Fatigue  uniform\n(1105)\nPvthlan Sixers will meet tonight at\nI o'clock Officers, 7:30. Refreshments   will    he    nerved. (1107)\nSpecial meeting W. H, A. of Maccabees, K. P. Hall, this nfternooi, .\no'clock, dtaetUH new rulings. Full attendance   requested. (1111)\nReserve October ith for the annual\nsimper at the Catholic Hall, hv the\nAltar   \u25a0OClety. (1109)\nNo     more     npnles     accepted     before\nOctober   10.    McDonald Jam Co.   (1070)\nPlums   wanted.      Communicate    first\nwith   McDonald   Jam   Co, (1053)\nJ.   Burgess,   Carpenter.    Phone   f>21 R.\n(9952)\nA general meeting of all Interested\nIn spnrta and nthletlcs will be held\nIn hoard of trade rooms, Frldav evening at 8 o'clock, to organl7.e a Nelson\nAmateur   Athletic   association.      (1094)\nIn millinery the turban Is strongly\npponsored, especially in effective combinations of felt and chiffon, the small\ncloche with the season's new wrinkles\nin the form of tiny double or triple\nhrlms still leading the field in spite\nof  all  rlregulnr   shapes as  entries.\nA WANT AD. IS BOTH CHEAP. AND EFFICIENT. IRJ IT,\nHEINZ\nQuality Goods\nWe have just received a\nnew shipment of Heinz'\ncelebrated Pork and Beans,\nSoups, Pickles, etc., and\nare offering them at a\nspecial   price.\nPORK    AND    BEAN8\u2014\nLarse size, 2 tins for ... 75<?\nMedium size, 3 tins tor... 70<*\nSmall  size,  3 tins for ....50_*\nCREAM   TOMATO   SOUP\u2014\nMedium size, 3 tins for   70_\"\nSmall  size,  3  tins  for .   50_\"\nCOOKED   SPAGHETTI\u2014\nMedium rize, 3 tins for-.^O^\nSour     Mixed,     Chow     Chow,\nChill  Same and  India  Relish,\nper  bottle    45\u00a3\nSweet   Mixed   or  Sweet   Mustard,  per  bottle   50_*\nMl.\nPhone 235\ntie Should Worry\nThe happy man will be he who\nhad ordered his Coal during the\nsummer months, for he will have\ntaken care of one of the greatest\nproblems winter holds. No need\nto worry if you call un up today\nand give us your order for immediate delivery.\nMacDonald Cartage &\nFuel Co.\nPHOKE  604.\nA. S. Horswill & Ce.\nPhone 121\n\u2022 Pnthu   will   toon   ba   a   thing\nof   tha   past.\nW_ got beauties at  \u00abJ 75\nCantaloupee\u2014At   2   for   \u25a0\u25a0_5t*\nPluma\u2014At,   a  basket  _ _^f)\nCrapaa\u2014At, per Ib 20<>\nPeorlasa Creamery Butter....45..\n\u25a0 Honey\u20146-lb tin   -\u25a0\u2022 $1.60\nRaspberry      pure      Jam \u2014\n\"\u00b0  81.00\nStrawberry   Pure  Jam  \u2014\n\"n    - \u2014 81.00\nWatermelon*\u2014At,   H> 4'\/itt\nGolden Bantam Corn\u2014Dot. 25_-\nCelery\u2014Bunch    5^\nQualify and Service\nHigh-Class Dyeing\nand Cleaning\nIs   Economical   and   Olvci\nReal   Satisfaction\nH. K. FOOT\nFail\nNelaon,   B.C.\nJUST ARRIVED\nAssorted  Semi-Indirect   Fixtures\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\nPlL 530   Opera House Blk.   P.O.Box 928\nHeather Hose\nAU Wool\n\"\\\"\\ ,r E have Jiwt received\n* * from England one of the\nlargest ranges of Woolen Hose\nwe have had In years. All\nthe new colors of Heather and\nLovat, in Plain, Clocked or\nRibbed.\n50c to $1.25\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\nCORPORATION   OF   THE   CITY   OF   NELSON\nTAX SALE\nAll properties in arrears for\nJ 921 Taxes o*\nConsolidated Payments\nWill be offered for sale on Monday, the 1st October,\nat 10 o'clock a.m., in Council Chamber of the City Hall.\nOctober 1st is the last day for redemption of properties sold in 1922.\nHOW WILL YOU SPEND\nYOUR WINTER EVENINGS?\nJOIN THE NELSON RECREATION CLUB\nAND SOLVE THE PROBLEM\nMembership Fees ,\nMEN\nSenior, $10.     Intermediate, $7.50.    Junior, $5\nLADIES\nSenior,  $5.     Intermediate,   $4.     Junior,  $3 \u2022\nIntermediate   and\" Junior   Members   are   allowed   use   of   the\nbuilding   only   during  class  hours except  on  speelal  occasions.\nClasses commence Oct. 1.   All clauses taken by competent instructor\n\u25a0M\nHere We Are Again\nAnother Enjoyable Program\nWilliam\nFOX.\npresents\nat\nSTARLAND\nVARIETY\nand\nLOTS OF IT\n\u25a0\u00bb\u00bbV-\">^i^\u00bb^-^\n\"FOX\" NEWS\n(Always Good)\n\"MUTT AND JEFF\"\n\"THE BLIZZARD\"\n2-Reel Comedy\nCHARLES\nJONES\nFootlight\nlinger If\n_fo Doroths ISsf \u00ab. vmrcted *r Scott DuKliui\nCOMING MONDAY at USUAL PRICES\nTHE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD IN PICTURES\nENTITLED \"SHADOWS\"\nREMEMBER\nyou see it\nat STARLAND,\nIt's GOOD\n\t\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1923_09_27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0401182","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"}]}}