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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" (Sards, ^hins Start Important\nBaWSeries Tpday\n\u2014-Page Seven\nDull Day Is Experienced on\nNew York Market\n\u2014Page Nine\ni \"\"-^\nVOL 29\nNELSON, B. C.     TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER Iff,' 1980.\nFIVE CENT'S A COPY\nNo. 126\nDUMP DUTIES NAY APPLY TO ANY GOODS\n\u25a0*       .\u2022\u2022''\u2666',       \u2666        \u2022 4   '\u25a0''.\u25a0\u25a0.      ' \u2666\n+ * +.       ' *' * * * +       .*   \u2666\n* \u2022\u2666:.;.\u2666.        :\u2666 \u2022 \u2022.    \u2022     \u2666        \\   * * *\n* * \u2666\n|A_me^ Enlarges   Scope of Gustoms   Act;  Bill   Is   Introduced; Several   Sections   of   Act   Changed\nGAMPS FOUND\nf FRANKLIN\nPARTY, NORTH R\n.\nBurwash    Back    From\np:l!^ht,v)_fe*(t:-jft-A 83\nw.        Years Ago\ni_. -MEN PERISHED\n1   IN-FROZEN WASTES\nTheory- Is They Believed\nTUey Were on Mainland\nWhen on Island\nEDMONTON, Alta.,  Srpt. IS.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014HJ-'-te_ luemlrers of tlie\narctic   expedition   ot   sir   John\nFranklin eight decades aio, lie;\nllev. d tlicy were on tne north\n.shore or Camilla when ln reality\nthey ; were  .marooned   on   the .\nroc|w   stretches   o(   Kln_   William's    Island. -   This    newest\ntheory on the fate which**overtook   129   men   ln   the   frozen\nbarrens   ls - believed    to'   have\nheen established by Major L. T.\niiiinvas n,     veteran     uonuni-n\nBoverahient explorer.\nDiscovery of graves, dotted across\ntho southern', portion of the Island\nwae made by Major Burwash ln a\nflight a few days ago In-company\nwith Pilot W- S. Ollbert of Western\nCanada Airways.   It Is now thought\n(hat the expedition's survlyors, who\nhad   abandoned   the   ships   Erebus\nand Terror In a. hay on the west\ncoast of the Island, ploddedseout^:\nw\u00abrd In'the belief-they were heaow\ntor' civilisation.'- \u2022\u25a0      \u25a0   ;-''\u2022____;__\nBut,' the new theory _ohsld_r_. ithe\nmen   encountered   Simpson   Btralt\nwhloh intervened between King William Land and tne Canadian mainland some 1000 miles due north of\nWinnipeg.- location of - ithe \"graves\ndiscovered hy  the -flyihg  explorers\nwould indicate'that the .bewildered\nmen,   Ill-provided   andi exposed   to\nthe arctlo weather's fury, struggled\nback toward their .ships.,\nA few of the men probably\nreached the, boats after tho Journey\nof more than 100 miles to the In-.\nlervening sea and hack again,\nThey may have manned the boats,\nsailed away and perhaps traversed\nsome of the way to safety before\nthe water-logged and lcS-hicked vessels Bank beneath them. The Bur-\nwash-Gllbert expedition tailed to\nlocate any trace of the ships\nwreckage. \u25a0\n,      EDMONTON,    Alta.,    Sept.    15.\u2014\nI; stories of tho grim tragedy which\nll Itefell  the  sir' John  Franklin  exploration party were brought to Edmonton   Monday,   and   related   By\nMajor _.. T..Burwash, Dominion gov-\n, crnment \u25a0 explorer   ln  an   Interview\nI) with the Edmonton Bulletin.\n1,    Rending the veil  of mystery  ln\n[1 which the final fate of the sir John\nFranklin  party haa  been shrouded\nii since 1B47, Major L. T. Burwash re-\n> turned   to   civilization  on  Monday\nI from King William's Land and gavo\nto the world the story of tho exploration which he carried out In\nthat  grim  coast  during   tho   past\nmonth. ,\nMaking a pilgrimage ln tho interests of science, the eminent explorer followed again the trail down\nwhich   a   Btraggllng   procession   of\nr British  seamen  stumbled   to   their\nIf death 83 years ago.\nThe major was taken Into tbe\nIsland hy a plane piloted by W. =.\nGilbert of tho Weat Canada Air-\nOttawa will geu the llrst ' complete details of what waa found In\nthat Ice-bound coast along wbioh\nthe Franklin expedition wandered\nafter spending two years on ships\nImprisoned  on  the   Ice.\nMajor Burwash said that Ottawa\nIs to get the first oomplete and\ndetailed report of hla discoveries,\nbut he admitted that they found\nfrequent evidences of Franklins\ncamps. \"8omo ot them were 2o miles\napart; some of them'were almost\nside hy side,\" the major, said.\nPay Out $26,880\n,   in Bounties for\nBlack Bears, Year\nQOBBEO, Que,, Sept. 16v\u2014Black\nbears continue to be numerous In\ntho province ot Quebec according to\nit report of bounties paid, lot their\nkilting, given out today by the\nprovincial department of colonization, game and fisheries. From\nSeptember 7, 1939, until September\nV 1930, no lees than 1792 applications have been made'for |hc 115\nbounty by farmers and trappers.\nThe amount paid out by - tho department, in bear bounties for the\nlKu.t' year li 120.880.\nSc ti^'Hay Put Crew of Qirls to\n* *  _\u2022 e   \"\".*>    *      *      *      *      *      *      *      \u2666 *      *--.--\u2022     \u25a0\u2022\u2666      *      *      \u2666      *      \u2666      \u2022\notiv    i Third Race for America Cup Today\nEnterprise's Margin of Vic.\ntory in Second Race\nNear 10 Minutes\nAMERICAN YACHT\nTAKES LEAD EARLY\nLight   Wind   Prevails   But\n. Shamrock No Match for\n' Defending Boat\nNEWPORT,.R. I., Sept. 15.\n-\u2014(By Ken Clark, Canadian\nPress' staff writer)\u2014Harold\nVanderbilt, defending the\nAnierici Cup for the United\nStates, sailed the Enterprise\nto a decisive victory \\ oyer\nSir Thomas Lipton's Shamrock today. In a mild southwest breeze Vanderbilt outsailed Ted Heard, demonstrating that with a light\nair and Smooth sea the yacht\ndesigned by W. Starling\nBurgess is faster than\nCharles E. Nicholson's boat.\nIt was a bitter, pill for\nBritish observers to see Vanderbilt take the lead at the\nopening of the second race\nand increase it to about a\nmile an'd!a; half over the 30-\nmilfe course, but they swallowed it gracefully. It was\nobviously no fault of British\nbuilding or seamanship.\nShamrock drew, like a,\nhuge triangular ghost out of\nthe mist astern as the horns\nand sirens of a city of boats\nroared for her rival's finish.\n\u2022 The wind was a hare seven knots\nas the racers mado Ball. As seven\n.bells sounded they were Jockeying\nmaking short hitches and today ln\nthis work the British skipper appeared a little the better. Both\nboats. had forestay sail jib and Jib\ntopsails set for the., 10 mile beat to\nwindward. Vanderbllt headed up\nto.the line a few seconds ahead of\nHeard hut this advantage appeared\nto be offset by tho fact that the\nBriton was lengths to weather. They\ngot away at 11:40.\nSLOWLY DRAWS AWAY\nVanderbllt went ov?r on the\nport tack and crossed Shamrock's\nbewV Thereafter tho Enterprlso\nslowly but surely left her rival\nastern and four miles from the start\nwas so .far ahead her skipper did\nnot have to worry about anything\nHeard might do. A couple of long\nhitches and the Enterprise rounded\nthe first mark at 1:20:2.. The\nShamrock was six minutes and six\nseconds astern.\nBoth skippers hoisted immense\nJibs and with tho wind off the\nstarboard quarter bore down tor\nthe second mark, tho Enterprise\ndrawing rapidly away. The racers\nrolled ln a groundshell and tho\ngreen boat from overseas kept dropping behind. As far as tho eye\ncould \"see to the port and starboard, craft of every sort moved in\nthe wake of the two sailing prln-\nRuins Left by Hurricane\nTho photograph reproduced  abovo shows ruins of  Aizoblsho Portes 1 wrecking about $30,000,000 'worth  of  property.  Outsido relief  has ; heen\nstreet,  one  of tho main thoroughfares of Santo, Domingo  City  left in rushed*to stricken area, where pestilence and famine threatened to reap\nwake   of  recent terrific   trpplc.il   hurricane   that   swept   tho   Dominican  a heavy toll, in .the path, of tho, storm,\nrepublic,  claiming about 4000  live;.,  injuring  thousands  and  completely!\nTREATY INDIANS\nAPPEAL AGAINST\nRIGHTSJJSURPED\nTell    Bennett     Non-Treaty\nChief Runs Rama Reserve\nfor Usurpers\nAt 3:31:33 Vanderbllt gybed\naround the eecond mark and a few\nminutes later hoisted his great\nwhite sheet of .a ballooner. The\nAmericana broke out their spinnaker. Under a nine-knot breeze\nVanderbllt now carried a perfect\nmountain of snowy sail.\nThree bells sounded _e sho male\nthe mark gybed about at 3:30 aud\nHeard followed Vaffderbilt's example,\nbreaking out his spinnaker. Later\nhe changed his mind, figuring the\nShamrock was under the circumstances not gaining the same advantage as her rival from the heav?\ncanvas and took.it ln.\nThe fog grew heavier and from\na position half a mile abeam of the\nEnterprise tho Shamrock two miles\nastern could barely be seen. The\nracers lolled along toward tho finish\nand as the following wind freshened\ntho Shamrock drew up slightly.\nBut she was dlsheartenlngly behind,\nas the Enterprlso at 3:40.44 swept\nalongside the committee boat and\nacross. It was obvious that tbe\ngood shamrock, hailed as a boat for\nlight airs, was not a match for the\nEnterprise under today's, conditions.\nThe Shamrock finished nine minutes and 34 seconds behind.\nnOYLE WILL BE\n$  COMMITTED FOR\nTRIAL TOMORROW\nWINNIPEG, Man., Bept. IB.\u2014(CP)\n\u25a0 \u25a0 -Preliminary hearing of Oeorge A.\nDoyle, former manager of a Winnipeg branch or the Bank of Toronto on charges of conspiracy, theft\nfrom employer and making false en-\ntries, ended today. He will bo committed for trial on September 17,\nMagistrate Tt. n. Graham giving n\nremand to that date, in order that\n\"Tovle fctsy arrange ball.\nLIVED ON BERRIES\nAND PORCUPINE IN\nMcKINLEY DISTRICT\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 16.-\u2014\niAP(\u2014Evidence in the search for\nTom Kinney, missing prospector,\nwhich ended In the discovery of hla\nbody on a bank of the McKlnloy\nriver, Indicated ho had lived on\nberries and porcupines until mado\nhelpless by exposure ,\nRangers recovered the body of\nKinney, fnlsslng Blnce July 19 when\nhe became separated from his Partner, Tom Black, In MoKinley park;\nThe body wae burled where found.\nOrlUia, Ont., Sept. 15.\u2014Charging\nthat Chief Alder York, v*o .they\nclaim lp a non-treaty Indian, is\nsmuggling ,non-treaty Indians into\ntho Rama resorve, near OrlUia, Johnny George, Hughlc Naniglshlng,\nCharlie George and 16 other treaty\nIndians of tho reserve, havo petitioned the department of Indian\naffairs asking for th0 removal from\noffice of Chief York and Councillors William Mortti, Sam Williams\nand J. B. Stlnson..\nThe petition also charges Chief\nYork and his non-treaty supporters are taking the land away from\nits rightful proprietors, the treaty\nIndians, and aro forcing them out\nof the reserve, given them by the\ngovernment; and into tho north,\nthat the treaty Indians aro being\ndenied loans from their own common fund, and that this, money is\nbeing given to the non-treaty Indians, as ls also all the work aval-\nable.      *\nThe treaty Indians also havo written .to Premier R. B. Bennett enclosing with the letter a list of\nall the non-treaty Indians on tho\nreservo, estimated at more than half\nthe total Indian population of the\nRama reserve.   \u25a0\nKING'S  BROTHER OFFERED\nTHRONE, BAYS A RLltlOR\nBUDAPEST, Hungary, Sept. ,15.\u2014\nRumors that tho Duke' of Gloucester, third son of King George,\nwould be offered the throne of\nHungary, recently caused a flurry\nin legitimist circles. They wero officially described as a hoax.    .\nThree Sections Repealed by\nAmendment to Customs Act\nREFER PLAN OF\nH.S. OF EUROPE\nTO COMMITTEE\nTo   Study   and      Elaborate\nUpon It and Submit Result Next  Year\nGENEVA, Sept. 15.\u2014(AP)\u2014Tho\nLoaguo of Nations assembly today\nbegan cataloguing ideas for the\nreal\" work ot this session, which will\nbegin in thc standing committees\nWednesday.\nWhilo orators ,from various nation's continued to review the\nleague's work for the past yoar,\nleaders got together on plans for\nthe disposition of suggestions and\nrecommendations which have been\nmade,\nArlstido Briand, French foreign\nminister, and Foreign Secretary\nArthur Henderson of Great Britain,\nhad a long talk which resulted In a\ndecision to recommend to tho assembly that Brland's plan for a\nEuropean federation bo referred to\na special European committee for\nstudy and elaboration, and , that\nthe result be submitted to the assembly next yoar.\nTho suggestion may meet somo\nopposition on thc floor tomorrow,\nbut In view of HendT-Tfns acceptance of tho Plan with \u25a0 a year's\nstudy it is expected the committee\nwill bo formed and will begin work\nImmediately.\nMILTON SILLS, WELL KNOWN AO'UR,\nDROPS DEAD WHILE PLAYING TENNIS\nLOS ANGELES, Calif., Sept. 15-\n;(AP)\u2014Milton Bills, t48, for many\nyears one of the best known actors\nln motion pictures, fell dead of a\nheart attack while playing tennis\nwith his wife and son at their suburban   homo   tonight.\nMrs. Sills, formerly Doris Kenyon,\nfilm actress, said her husband was\nIn the best of spirits- and \"the\npioture of \"health\" when tho match\nstarted. First intimation that anything was wrong camo when sills\nstaggered \u00abmd fell on the court.\nFriends of the atftor, visiting at\nSills' home, carried' Sills into the\nhouse   nnd   summoned   the   Sawtell\npolice lnlialator sqund> Ho died\n\"at 6:64 p.m., fifteen minutes after\nbeing stricken end without regaining   consciousness!\nSills, who began life as a professor nf mathematics at Chicago\nuniversity, was ono nf tho athletes\nof the spreen. Recently his health\nhad not been good. He was confined to his home Beveral weeks last\nspring with a nervous disorder.\nSills advanced to stardom in the\nfilms almost overnight, after a successful stogo career. Like many of\nthose with whom ho rubbed elbows\nIn the theatrical world, his start\nwrs   much   by   accident.\nOTTAWA, Ont., Seyt. IS.\u2014<CP)\u2014\nTho bill to amend thc Customs act\nwith respect to dumping which was\ngiven a first reading in tho house\ntonight repeals Sections 38, 37, part\nof 38, and 43 of tho present Customs act, and substitutes thc following;\n\"30\u2014(1) Such market value shall\nbc tho {air market valuo of such\ngoods ln the usual and ordinary\ncommercial acceptation of tho term,\nand as sold in the ordinary course\nof trade, such value in no case to\nbo lower than the selling price\nthereof to Jobbers or wholesalers\ngenerally at thc '.lmo nnd place of\nHhlpmcnt direct to Canada.\n\"(i_) Provided that the valuo for\nduty of new or unused good3 shall\nin no case be less than tho actual\ncost of production of similar goods\nat date of shipment direct to Canada plus a reasonable advance for\nselling cost and profit and tho minister shall be the solo Judge of\nwhat shall constitute, a reasonable\nadvance in the circumstances and\nhis decision therou Bhall bo final.\"\nThe olrj section 36 waa but one\nparagraph  reading  as  follows:\n\"Such market valuo shall be tho\nfair market value of such _;oods in\nthe usual and ordinary commercial\nacceptance of the term and as sold\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nBROMLEY MAY NOT\nTRY HOP AGAIN\nOMINATO, Aomtd Prefecture, Japan. Sept. 16.\u2014(Tuesday)\u2014(AP)\u2014\nTired and dispirited. Harold Bromley and Harold Gatty, whose attempt to span the Pacific from\nJapan to Tacoma. Wash., ln an airplane was frustrated earlv today by\nadverse elementa and a faulty exhaust pipe, reached this small city\nat 0 p.m. today (4 a.m. P.8.T.) in\na dilapidated  automobile.\nThey came from the little sea\ncoast village of Shltsukarl. where 15\nhours earlier Bromley's fourth nonstop transpacific flight venturo\nended upon the soft beach sands.\nAlthough Bromlev appeared determined to try again, Gatty concluded\nhis narrative of tho flight with tho\nstatement: \u00bb\n\"Personally. I tnmk another attempt at present is out of tho question. The typhoon season Is here\nand we cannot hone attain for conditions as good as those existing\nwhen we loft Samishlro beach Sunday. I bellsvo the flight must bo\nshandoned **'\nFRENCH ACES ARE\nWARMLY GREETED\nHARTFORMOSTON\nCoste    and    Bellonte    Start\nGood  Will  Tour  AVilh\nNew England\nBOSTON, Sept. 15.\u2014(AP)\u2014Dieudonne Coste and Maurlco BeUonte,\nFrench air heroes who recently\ncrossed thc Atlantic, received the\nplaudits of two Now England cities\ntoday as they started out on their\ngood will tour of the country. The\nflyers wero the guests of Hartford,\nConn., and Boston, wherft they remained   overnight.\nThe flyers were enthusiastically\nreceived in both cities. They stop>\nped at Hartford for lunch after a\nflight through f6g from New York\nA largo crowd greeted them and\nschool children waved the tri-cotor\nof Prance ln greeting.\nA crowd of 3000 mot them in\nBoston and thoy wero paraded to\ntho State House to recelvo the\ngovernor's greeting.\nVICTORIA, Sept, 15\u2014Reconstruc\ntlon of the Cariboo highway between\nSpcnce's brldgo and Ashcroft over a\ndangerous section of the road\nnow proceeding and will necessitate\nthe closing of tho road for a period\nof two' weeks. It wjb stated today\nby the department of public  works.\n'Have   to   do   Something\"\nSays Gallant Irishman\nAfter Second Loss\nSOME CAUSTIC\nIS\nFEELS THAT HE\nHAS  HO  CHANCE\nFORTHCOMING\nGovernment Charged Attempting: Assume Excessive Power\nTerribly   Disappointed,   Bat\n81-Year Old Sportsman\nHas Mo Alibi\nRECEIVES ONLY\nFIRST READING\nNEWPO&T, R. 1., Sept.. 15.\u2014\nblr Thomas Lipton Bat tonight\nIn the cabin of his steam\nyacht, Erin, terribly disappointed at the second defeat\nof tbe green Shamrock V., pride\nof his declining years, In his\n31-year quest of the America's\noup. l!n says, bravely, however, the series for the battered\nold mug is not over yet, nut\nhe feels, like all who saw tho\nEnterprise win today's race,\nthat he has no chance of success.\nHis ship has salted two races In\ntho light airs that were supposed\nto bo her favorites and has lost\nboth, second \u25a0 by an overwhelming\nmargin. Sir Thomaa bad even experimented with the trim green\nsloop to the extent of removing\nalmost a ton of lead ballast overnight so she might point higher and\nperhapa foot* hotter ln tho light\nbreezes prevailing.\nTERRIBLY   DISATPOINTED .\n\"I'm\"' terribly' disappointed,\" ho\nsqid as ho leaned back ln an easy\nchair ln hi? cabin, worn with the\nstrain of the day and 'the weight\nof his 81 years. \"I thought she'd do\nbetter than tliat.\"\n\"The Sh-\u00bbmrock won't be beaten\nas badly again as that In this series\"\nho added proudly, \"and you must\nremember the ^u-Ies. Isn't over.\nThere will'be moro chances. She's\nnot the beat Bhe was when we\nraced ln England, she's nowhere\nnear as fast, but I have no alibi,\nno excuse. The weather has been\njust what wo wanted. Heavier wind\nwould  not help her.\" \u2022    \u2022\nKomethfn gvcry unusual seems\nlt> havo happened to. hrr. Sfie ,\nseems dead under her\" sails, lt\nmight have been the trip over.\"\n\"I'll have to do something,\"\nhe concluded, regaining his\ncustomflTy Jovial; spirits. \"May\nbe I'll put a crew of girls on\nthere to run her tomorrow.\"\nNO PREFERENCE\nFROM BRITAIN\nGENEVA, Sept. 15.\u2014<By George\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff correspondent)\u2014While the international tariff truce remains ln force the\nBritish government cannot grant\ntariff preferences involving ihe imposition of tariff duties. The Rt.\nHon. William Graham, president of\ntho British board of trade, was mn-.-'.\ndeflnte upon this point when interviewed tonight. Tlie truce, Incidentally, is of 12 months' duration\ncommencing April 1 las';, but unless\nnotice of withdrawal ls given be\nfore February 1, 1931, the treaty ls\nautomatically continued for periods\nof six  months.\n\"But,\" continued Mr. Graham,\n\"there will be'the fullest and freest\npossible discussion at the Imperial\nconference of any proposal for the\ndevelopment of Empire trade whether or not it Involves ih' Imposition of tariffs.\"\nBAD WEATHER IS\nSTILL HOLDING\nBOYD TO EARTH\nCHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., Sept.\n15\u2014(CP)\u2014The chances of Captain\nErroll Boyd and Lieutenant Harry\nConnor getting their monoplane\nColumbia Into tho air tomorrow\nmorning for Harbor Orace, Newfoundland, were considered remote\ntonight.\nBad weather, which Iras been th*\nlot of the captain and hts navigator\nBinco head Kinds forced them to\ncomo down short of the first goal\nof their Atlantic hop on Saturday,\nstill   prevails  here.\nPOLICE LURED AWAY ON FAKE CALL\nAND BANDITS ROB EVERETT BANK\nEVERETT, Wash., Sept. 16\u2014(AP)\nA band of six men held up the\"\nCitizens Security bank today after\npolice had heen lured to the outskirts of the city by a fake hold\nup call and escaped with \u2022SS.OOO\ncurrency from teller's trays and\ntho    vault.\nTho six sped away in a lnrg\u00bb\ncar and apparently slipped through\na cordon of polico placed on nearby\nroads. Sixty pollco from Seattle,\n30. miles away, were rushed to cover\nthe highways.. Tho holdup wns\ncompleted within five minutes and\nno shots were fired.\nWhile one man stoc^l outside the\nhank with a submachine gun at\nhis shoulder, four entered and\nlined up the 30 employees and 10\npatrons against a will. A driver\nremained * at the wheel of the car.\nThe hold up occurred at 12:20 p_m.\n* A few minutes before the car\ndrove up to tho bank, in tho heart\nof the business district, a woman's\nvoice ,ov-,v a telephone summoned\nthe pollco flying squadron to a reported holdup in tho outskirts.\nPatrolman Fred Lawrence, who rushed to InveBtlgale from his beat\nnear the bank, was disarmed and\nforced to walk away with arms\nlifted ov\u00abt hia head\nOne Section  of Amendment Proves Hot for\nAwhile\nOTTAWA, Ont., Sept. 15.\u2014Th\u00bb\nparliament bill amending the dump*\nIng clauses of the Customs act\nfinally got reading \"tonight. Th*\nmeasure came befor\u00ab tho home In\nthe form of a resolution last Fri-\nday nlg-ht Just before adjournment,\nbut explanation was not completed\nthen. Today, Hon. E. B. Ryckman,\nminister of national revenue, wound\nup his explanation, and the houso\nln committee proceeded to discuss\nthe  resolution.\nThero were many questions, There\nwas Some caustic criticism. The government was charged with attempting to assume excessive power. There\nwas complaint that the interests of\nthe farmer and the consumer generally would, suffer seriously.\nThe resolution, i however, finally !\ngot through, and a bill based on it\"\nwas introduced. First reading, however, was as far as the measure\ncould proceed. A suggestion by Hon.\nR. B. Bennett, prime minister, that\nthe second reading be gone on\nwith at once met with the pirotfst\nof Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King that\nthe bill was not printed and olrcu-\nlated. Therefore it was held 'up.\nand the house turned to further\nconsideration of the 420,000,000 unemployment bill.\nAmendments proposed in tho now\nmeasure are broad in their scope.\nParticularly Is this so in the case\nof Section 43. Tho old section gava\nto the government power to fix\nvalues for duty on \"natural product\/; of a class or kind produced In\nCanada,\" If it was Ipund that such\ncommodities were being imported\nunder such, condition aj to Injur*\nthe Canadian producer. Tho now\nsection broadens, zhle i|ower to include \"goods of oii7 kind,\" thus\nbringing Into the purview of tho\nseotion all manufactured goods. The\ngovernment under tho bill may fis\nthe value for duty on any elan or\nkind of goods provided , that tha\nminister of natlonil rervenn* reports that the goods in qutstton\nare blng Imported Into Canada under conditions which, \"prejudicially\nor Injuriously\" affect the interests\nof Canadian producers or manufacturers.\nPBOVES   STORM  CBNTEB\nThis section provad a storm canter for some time.\nHon. Charles Stewart, former minister of the Interior, asked if the\ngovernment was requesting parliament to grant authority to fix by\norder-ln-councll the duties on all\narticles entering Canada,\n\"It is only in the event of producers and manufacturers being\nprejudicially and injuriously affected,\" said Mr, Ryckman, who wu\npiloting the bill through tha house.\nHo added that this power would ba\nnecessary m order that, when parliament was not In session, the government   could   act   quickly.\nHon. W. D. Euler, former minister of customs, objected that under\ntho measure the government could\nfix values so as to shut out manufactured products completely. \"Some\nllmltatlt*i ought to be placed on\nthose powers,\" ha asserted,\nNo doubt the measure provided\nabsolute power to fix values, agreed\nMr. Ryckman, but similar power\nhad been enjoyed by the previous\nadministration. Ho did not think\nthat any government would abusn\nsuch  power.\nThe Weather\nForecast:     Nelson   and   vici\nilt.-\nContinued fine and warm.\nNELSON  44\n.11\nVtrtnrla                      M\n61\nVanoouver _  34\n10\nKamloop,    _ \u2014  M\n14\nPrince  George     88\n84\n60\n88\nPrince   Rupert -    0\n__\nSO\n__\nSeattle _ 58\n1(1\nPortland ;. B8\n74\n88\n78\nTH\n78\n74\nGrand   Forks    41\n80\n70\n58\nEdmonton     __. ,. 44\n58\nSwift Current _ 40\n60\n84\nQu'Appelle       46\nCO\nWlnnlpeff  .^ ....... 44\n*.\n nKsgaTwo\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, SEPTEMBEB 16', 1930.\nPOLITICAL\nJATION PUZZLE\nwo  Parties    Makes Great\nGains; BiHening's Party\nStronger\n|BERt-IN,   Sept.   15.\u2014(AP)\u2014   Now\niat' more than  34,000,000  Oerman\nletters have endowed 576 fellow-cttl-\n|ens with, relchstag'mandates, It Is\nto somebody to sift this motley\nof widely divergent groups In\njuob a manner as to construct a\n)rkable government.\n| It is generally conceded this will\nno easy   task,  since   15   parties\ndel. seats,  and  in  view  of  the\ngains   mado   by   the\nrevolutionary parties,. the Oer-\nFasdst  and  the   Communists,\n| As often before, Chancellor Heln-\n, Bruenlng's Centrist party is In\npivotal   position.  Upon * Bruen\nand his party, who have been\nto tbe principal legislative\ntouse 09 atrong\u2014or eight more than\ni the previous relchstag\u2014will large\ndepend which ot the two possl\nlities presented shall  be adopted.\nOne obvious iine-uf is to expand\nthe present .coalition to Include thc\nSocialists, although this likely would\nmean the loss of the 18 Jrom the\nFarmers' league ahd the live Conservatives\u2014so that the coalition\nwould; be composed of 143 Socialists,\n66 Centrists, 30 People's party, '23\nEconomic, 20 State party and 19\nBavarians of 303 out of the total\nol 676.\nThis calculation whs romewhat\ndisturbed today, however, by the\nEconomic \u25a0 party's pronouncement\nthat since the' Socialists hitherto\nhad opposed, all the Economic\ngroup's financial demands the latter would prefer \u25a0 to enter a. coalition with the Fascists.\nMAN ARRESTED AT\nKOOTENAY LANDING\nTAKEN TO ALBERTA\nArrested at Kuskanook H few days\nago by Provincial Constable John\nWhiter at the request of tho Alberta\npolice, who wanted him on charges\nof non-support, J. Fullerton, after\nbeing lodged here in the provincial\njail for somo days, left Monday\nmorning for Edmontort, in tha cus- .\ntody of . Constable G. Banks of i the auto, apply turpentine and vaa-\nthe Alberta police. ' cllne, mixed  to a  paste,\nTRAIL CONSIDERS\nTWO YEAR TERM\nFOR ITS MAYOR\nTRAIL, B. C._ Sept. 15\u2014At a meeting of the city council tonight\nAlderman B. Lerose \/Suggested the\nbringing In of ' a bylaw to elBct\nthe mayor for two years Instead of\nthe   present   one.\n\" Tho members were in favor of the\nproposal but were not sure as to\nthe prooedure so it was left to City\nClerk W. B. Morjeypenny to look\nof the  council,\n\u25a0 It may: be that a referendum will\nneed   be .taken.\nTo ensure straight drying after\nwashing, instead of pegging the\ndress Or jumper to the clothes line,\nslot tho line through the armholes\nor sleeves, This will avoid peg-\nmSrks and wrinkles. This is a\nuseful hint when washing children's\ndresses or coats.\nTo clean the celluloid curtains of\n900 CHILDREN\nGET MEDICAL   J\nEXAMINATION\nWATERLOO,   Ont.,  Bept.   14.\u2014(By\nThe Canadian Press)\u2014During September and October, loao, the Ontario Equitable Life, through Its\npresident S. Q. Tweed, offered its\nfrce medical examination to every\nchild in Waterloo under tho age\nof 15, Some children took advantage of the company's offer. Of this-\nnumber, 673 were found to be in\nneeds a medical or dental attention. The reports were turned\nover to the Victorian Order of\nNurses for follow up. The Order\nappointed Miss. R. Ratz, Viotorlan\nOrder nurse, and Mrs. E. Neudoerffer\nto make a survey of tho cases requiring attention. Pour of' the medical men of Waterloo co-operated\nb yholdlng a free clinic when 49\ncases were operated upon.\nLondon reports than a new Instance of the Victorian revival Ib\nthe reappearance of the East India\nembroidered shawls our grandmothers prized and rarely wore and\nmany of these are now being reshaped to make evening cloaks\nwhile Scottish plaids are sometimes\nput to similar use.\nHEN TRAVELLING\nThe Following Offer the Best of Service\nNelson, B. C. Hotels\ngiai-___--ffi_\u201ew-.l!_^^\nVancouver, B. C. and Island\nifimtr Imhi\nVTQth Banning Water\nBaths Ensuito\nGEO. BENWELL, Prop.\nNelson, B, C.\n___SS-gK^SS_SI_l)l-\"..;:\",;.'\u25a0' 1^<.ii.\u00bb^*K^^^^_iiiK^!^A_'.'=t:_-.J._.\n| HUME\u2014P.  Kortes,   San  Francisco;\nMoore, C. R. McMillan. Mr. and\nP.   R.   Currlc.   G.   Herco,   B.\nortimer,  D.  Campbell.  Vancouver;\nL.  Stains,   G.   A.   West,   Kaslo;\nG. Strickland, Balfour;  Mr. und\nj. Anatoli,  Olympla.  Mr. and\nposcuzzo   and   lamlly,   Cran\nbrook; F. C. Curren, Trail; S. S.\nFowler, Riondel; Mr. and Mrs. W, E.\nCarter, Klamoth Falls; J. Blackman.\nToronto; J. Montgomery, Lethbridge;\nC. R. Zeincv, Reno Mine; H, Chester, Wluddrmere; Mrs. E. Bell,\nNanimo.\nBLACKBURN'S      SUPER      SERVICE\nSTATION\u2014822 Seymour St. The\nKootenay -Tourist's Vancouver Garage. Moderate charges for Washing, polishing and Greasing, Parking, Storage, Accessories^, Gasoline,\nand Oils. Engino Repair work. Free\nCrunk Case Service. Tire. Battery\nand Brake Service. Vulcanizing and\n\u00a3.1.nonlzing. Seo us for used cars.\nA largo stock at all prices always\ncitrrled.\nMake your trip to Vancouver a pleasure by having your meals at tho\nNEW OBPHEUM CAFE\u2014709 Granville St. Choicest Food at ModGrate\nCharges.    .Tames p. Dwyer.\nDUFFEBIM HOTEL\u2014DOR SEYMOUR\nBT.\u2014Bright Rooms. Central, Moderate rates. A. Patterson, Irtte of\nColeman, Crow's Nest, Proprietor.\nLONDON      CAFETERIA      LTD.\u2014710\nRobson St. The ever popular dining\nplace to make use of whilo.In Van\ncouver.\nProf.  Slgmund  Freud, world-famous psychiatrist, recently was award\ned   the   Goethe   prlw,   tlie   greatest,\nscientific and literary dtst.inct.lon in\nGermany.\nENGINEER REPORTS\nTO TRAIL COUNCIL\nON ROAD PROGRAM\nLay  Out  Gives  Recommendations for Expenditure\n.      of $25,000 Voted\nTRAIL', B.. O., Sept. 15.\u2014Recommendations of City Engineer B. S.\nMcDiarmid for expenditure of the\n616,000 vbtqd this Bummer by property holders in the $25,000 vpad\nequipment and building ny'.aw for\nroad work ' were presented to tho\ncity council tonight. . Tho letter,\nwhich   was   filed,   follows:\n\"in.view of the projected street\nimprovement authorized by the by-\nlawfof 1030 I would recommend tho\nfollowing program:\n\"Tlie grading and rolling of tho\nstreets berore winter.\n\"The Installation of all necessary\ndrains. I\n\"The adoption of the mulch system of top surfacing to bo laid immediately after winter.\n\"If tho mulch nystem is used it\nWill mean carrying out a plan of\ncrushing fine rocks during tho winter\nand placing .same along the sides\nof the streets to ho paved, thereby\naffording winter employment. In\nthc lato winter *,_pressure distributor costing approximately $1000\ncan bo purchased and we shall then\nhave complete equipment and bo independent of contractors who now\nhave to ship ln from thc coast.\n\"I behove that a. first class surface can be assured at a lesser\ncost by this method and that the\nwork can be extended to other\nstreets (is desired in the future.\nIf a pavement similar to the Ross*\nland road Is adopted then lt might;\nbe advisable to consider doing thd\nsftmo by contract.\"\nGOVERNMENT HAS\n38 MAJORITY IN\nFIRST DIVISION\nKaslo and Spokane\nWOODWOKTH'S      CAFE\n613 Riverside Ave. \"It's different.\"\nOfficial Western Travel Club. Free\nMops and  Tourist  Information.\nOne of New York's autumn bridal\nmodels, fashioned of antique satin\nand ivory laco features leg of mutton sleoves!\nKING GEORGE Hotel\nFirst  class  accommodations.  Excellent   meals.  Boating  and\nFishing.\nChicken   Dinner  every   Sunday\nevening\nBenter and l-Utham\nTrail, B. G.\n\u2014... \u2022\nit\nI h.\niWhere the GuestIsKin_\\\nThe Savoy\niWLSON'R   .FEWEST  AMD   FINEST  HOTEL\nMANY   ..OOMS   WTTH   PRIVATE\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR,Trop.\n\u25a0E_B_g\u00ab^ili^^\nSAVOY-^Mft. Emerson, Mips Em-\n_, Lance Emerson, sllverton:\nH. Oallams. Idaho; Mr. H. ('.\nWeet, Mr. and Mrs. J. Hhanson,\nBpoksnp;   J.  Lunby,   Cranftrook;   Mr.\nand Mrs. .1. Wllllkcr. Rosslnnd;\nMiss J. Qulnn, Miss L. Qulnn.\nMaryland; J. Kirklnwl, IT. r. Shaw.\n.1. Prudenl. Vancouver; I,. S. Swanson.   Oakland.\nQueen's Hotel\nThe Center of  Convenience\nHot and   Cold   Water   In\nEvery Boom\nBteam Healed\nA. Lapointe, Prop-\nQUEETNS\u2014 P.   P-   Harnes.   Renata;\nMcDonald.   Procter;    K.   Kanl-\noire,   Pernl\":    W.   P.   Whltehouse,\nIgary; E. Taylor. Ginols Landing;\nHyons,   Kuskanook;   D-   Brown,\notenay Landing;  A. McCoy, CreB-\n; W. Oarrett. Trail; A. Baumget,\nvelbourg,   Sask.;   B.   Johnson,   F.\nMadden Hotel\nd. a. Mcdonald\nSteam   Heated    Rooms   by.   tho\nDay, Week  or Month-\nBvery consideration shown\nto   guests\nCor. Baker and Ward Streeta\nNclson\n*-winfwvtwttnnnmtw\nHotel Arlington*\nCentrally Located\nUM0MMtkMkw%m\nTRAIL, B.C.\nA.  T.  LEVESQUE, prop.\nMMMA^AAAMAAIMk&e\\*MAMAw%mAMMMMww-*4\u00b1\nNOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS\nNEW CROWN POINT\nHOTEL\nAT\nTRAIL, B.C.\nEvery Modern Convenience\n, For Room Reservations Phone 730\nOTTAWA, Sept. lfl\u2014<CP>\u2014The\nfirst division of the present bpb-\nslon of parliament gave the government a majority of 38 votes in\nthe house of commons tonight. Thc\nvote, which took plare when the\ntwenty million dollar unemployment \"bill came up for third readings, followed on the introduction of\n\u25a0\u2014' .mcndm-Mit hy J. S. Woodsworth,\nmember for  Winnipeg  North\njWoodsworth moved In effect\ncases where federal nld\niteta '.gfltatcd for public works for\nimejmplqiment relief, fair nnd rea-\n\u00abom.ble'' Wages should be paid.\nTho'*''Woodsworth amendment met\nIththti support pf all members on\nopposition aide of the chamber\nAnd vraalopposed by all government\nsupporters. Liberals ond members\n\/Ol tho other groups present favored\nthe amendment hut Conservatives\nvoted  it down by   100  to 71\nThe bill was then given third\nreading,\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nBRIEFS\nTRAIL, B. 0.\", Sept. 15\u2014A letter\nfrom Major McLean, inspector of\nairways, to the city council tonight,\nstated Major E. C. Chalmers of\nEsquimau was preparing a survey\nof the work necessary at the Trail\nairport and congratula-ted the city\non Initiative in providing an airport.\nOffer of W. M. Duncan q. $25\nfor a. grader purchased by the city\nin 1923 and unused for the past\nthree years was accented.\nCity   council   was fedvlsed   tonight\nSocialEvenig\ngf Trail City\nNew Grand Hotel\nA  Modem Brick  Building\n610 Vernon  St.      Nelson, B. O.\nHot   and   Cold   Water  and   Telephone   In   all   rooms.   Steam\nHeated Throughout.\nRoOtlUi   by   Weekly   TUte\nor   by   the   Month\nP. t. KAPAK.  Prop.\nEuropean  Plan\nMADDEN\u2014A.  Erlckson, Nelson;   A.\nMcNeil, Slocan City; It. E. Mc-\njewan, Spokane; N. Boswell, Kua-\naook;  A. M. Harris,  H. William..,\nlit   Current. \u2022 -\nStrathcojia Hotel\nI When In Nelson xtup at the\nI Strathcona. Hot and cold wafer.\n[ Rates |1 per night, .special rates\n:' by the week or mouth.\nNEW GRAND\u2014H. Kong, Vancouver; V. Anderson, Cranbrook; Lee\nLlm, Nasookln, T. Slater, M. Ii.\nAck, Olty: .1. Woh. Trail; Mr. and\nMrs. A. Walker, Mr. and Mi's. O.\nDavie, OrJlgary; Mra. c. Smith,\nVancouver.\nDOUGLAS^\nHOTEL &\nROOMS and BATHS\nE.   I_   am)   A.   GROOTAGE\nProps.\nSteam neatrrl\nThrouslioul\nBox   60S\nHoi and Cold\nWater\nIMione 263\nTRAIL, B. C.\nUNION OARAGE\u2014Service station\nand machine Hhop. Accessories,\ngas. oils. Goodyear selected dealer.\nRossland   Ave.    Phono   1.\nNelson Daily News\nVacation Guide\nIs thoroifghly read and fcsed by\nthe many hundreds of eastern and\nwestern Canadian and American\ntourists who pass through the Kootonay every year during tho summer\nmonths, in addition to moro than\n4000 readers who live In the\nKootenay.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n0!i Vernon St. Phone B87\nll. WASSICK\nlifty   Ilooms  of   Solid   C'omrort\nHeadquarter-! (Uf Loggers and\nMiners\nWhen cooking beets, even for a\nHmall family, H is well to cook a\ngeneroiifi supply so as to have a\nreserve in the icebox lo servo with\ncold moats or use for garniture on\nvegetable   naiads.\nAinsworth, B. G.\nEnjoy Your Week-End and Summer Vacation at\nAINSWORTH\nHot Springs Hotel\nAND SWIMMING POOL\nNATCBE'S   HEALTH   ANT>   HUMMER   RESORT\nFTJRJJISHEB COTTAGES \u2014 EXCELLENT FISHING\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nThe Standard CaSe\n:i.l> llakftr Street, Nelson, It. C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n11:30  to  2:30  Speelal   I.uneli   350\n_:3f) to 8 p. in.  _-__\u00ab_    350\nPHONE   181 '\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON   STREET\nDinner, lllUO to 2:30   35o\nSupper,    8.30' to  8  p.  in 35c\nShort   Orrtttrs  a  Specialty\nQuick Service\nNext Kootenay Hotel, Nelson\nThc Royal Cafie\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement  and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nSpecial  Dinner 11:30 to 2:30  35r.\nSlipper    r,:30  Io 8   _  35c\nWe Specialize In  Chop\nSue.v  and  Noodles\n Phone   182\nA new fingerprint system has been\ndeveloped at Scotland Yard, In London England, which j, expected to\nevolutionism methods throughout\nthe world. I|. conalsls mainly of the\nuse ol a. special gians with a centra\nspot and seven concentric circles.\nBy this means a much moro detail-\ned and exact, scrutiny is posilbie.\n0. E. PARTY TO\nHAVE CANDIDATE\nLONDON. Sept. 16.\u2014(CP cablfl)\u2014\nAfiother byelectlon looms and again\ntho United Empire party will havo a\ncandidate  in the field.\nWhen Commodore tho Rt, Hon. H.\nD, KlnR. Conservative member for\nSouth Pflddlngton. waa drowned\nwhile wJnUnk In Auauai bin aeat\nWBA thrown open. He wno its member lor   1023  until   hla  death,   and\nwon the conoMuenry eac_i election\nby   acclamation.\nTho United Empire party standard\nbearer will bo Mrs. Stewart Richard-\neon, wife of Lteut-ool. Nell Stew-\nart-Rlchardfion. Shq is ft daughter\nof the late Peter Ralli. noted Anglo-\nOroek merchant of London, and Is\na cousin of Lady Byng, wife of\nGeneral Lord Byng of Vlmy, Can-\n(ida's  formor governor-general.\nVoting , takes placo ewly next\nmonth.\nthat the fourteenth annual convention of the British Columbia\nGood Roads league would be held\non October 7 and 8,\n. City council tonisht authorized\npurchase of a now cash register at\n$1108.\nInstruction's were issued *to the\ncity council tonight to city medical\nhealth ol-icc'r. Dr. P. 3, Eaton' to\nproceed on tho authority of his\noffico to enforce sewer connections.\nThese instructions were issued following a report by Dr. Eaton on two\nouthouses  In   thc  city.\nAlderman Charles A. Newman tonight Hskcjl what power th\u00ab city\nhad in controlling weight of loaves\nnnd was informed tba t thc city\nhad a bylaw under which wrapping\nof loaves had been demanded and\nwhich   governed    weights.\nOffer of M. BftlslMlcUl of $1100\nfor tho gravel pit. property, Glover\nroad, laccoptod by the city council\ntonight.\njoe Dcsantis proposed to exchange\nhis lot on Rossland avenue for\nground in the gravel pit was automatically turned down by acceptance\nof the bid.\nThe Alexander Bremner hnd s>?\nbylaw, transferring a lot to Mr.\nBremner for $40 received two readings in the city council tonisht.\nCorporation local improvement\nsower extension bylaw passed committee of the whole council tonight.\nSuggestion that preparations\nshould be made for a bylaw : for\naddition work on Trail creek was\nmade In city council tonight.\nSweaters\nCoats\n(V-Neck)\nA chill in the air morning and night makes\none of theso Under-the-\nCoat Sweaters desirable.\n$2.00t0 $4.50\nTRAIL, B. O., Sept. 16\u2014Anthony\nWhite, Walter G.' Merryweathw, G.\nV7. Roche and Arthur Hooker of\nthe Spokane Chronicle motored to\nTraU Saturday. They returned to\nSpokano  today.\n\u25a0 \u2022   ft   ft\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-\neurance. Notary. J. D, Anderson. TraU. (1687)\n* *   * '   '\nMr, and Mrs. j. G, Robertson w-\ncompanled Mrs. W. Orten and son\nRonald motored to Spokane Saturday. Ronald ls to undergo treatment by an eye specialist. Mr.\nOrten is \u00abway on holiday In the\nOkanagan.\nMrs, c. Cutler and children returned Thursday evening from Vernon, wliere they have been visiting\nrelatives   for  several   weeks,\n* \u25a0\u25a0*.*\nMr. and Mra. J. Muirhi|ad returned last evening from a honeymoon trip fo the coast, and have\ntaken up residence in tho Columbia\napartments.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Forest, Spokane\nstreet,. have gs their guest, their\nnephew,  James  Graham  of  Kellogg,\nalio,\n* \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. E. L. Hodge and\nson returned Saturady from a vacation sp:nt at Kaslo and at Spokane.\nColin Graham of Grand Forks\n(.pent tho week end visiting his\nbrother-in-law and .sister, Mr. and\nMrs.  D.   F.   Milne.\nMr. and Mrs. Hunter Woodburn\nand family spent yesterday visiting\nrelatives in Nelson. Mr! Wood-\nburn leaves this evening for New\nWestminster, where he will spend\nthe next three months ln the ln\ntcrest of the consolidated Mining\n& Smelting company.\nMrs. s. Young, who has been\nspending the past two weeks on\nholiday In Vancouver, returned last\nevening. She was met at Castlegar\nby Miss .Mottle YoiU-j, W. Hesketh\nand   Evart   Davies.\nKenneth Nollle returned yesterday to Moscow, Ida., where he is\nattending  college.\nMrs. M. Bohle of Spokane Is visiting In Trail and Rossland for\ntwo weeks. Mrs. Bohle, who was\nformerly Miss Wlnnlfred Gosse. whs\nfor several years a resident in Trail\nend wis ft stenographer for tho\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Harris and children of Cranbrook are .visiting relatives in Trail.\nDr. M, R. Basted, who attended\nthe British Medical association convention in Winnipeg, has returned\nto Trail. While in Winnipeg the\ndoctor took a post graduato course.\nMrs. Basted accompanied him.\nMrs. J. McMullen and baby returned Thursday evening from\nspending thc summer with relatives\nat   Reglna  and   Melfort,   Sask.    Mr,\nMcMullen met them In Nelson.\nMr and Mrs. D. C .Wilson of Victoria were visitors in thc city during  tho  week  end.\nMiss Doris Anthony returned last\nevening from a vacation spent in\nVancouver and coast cities.\nMiss Louise Robertson, who has\nbeen thn driest of Miss Marjory Mackenzie for the past week, returned\nto her home In Cranbrook today.\nF. R. Currie of Vancouver was in\nthc city over tho week end making\nan inspection of the Trail branch of\nthe Canadian Bank of commerce.\nMr. currie ib making a tour of the\ndistrict, accompanied by Mrs. Currlc,\nTHREE SECTIONS\nOF CUSTOMS ACT\nAIWEALED\n(Oontlmm Prom P\u00bbg. Ono)\nIn1 the onJInaiv comw or trado;\nprovided that the discount-.or cash\ntor duty jnmfoaes 'tail not eroeed\n214 per coit and Bhall not e-oeed\nmarlMt valuea ot any such manufactures or productions reapeotlvely\nas are opeolfled In such 'ordor-ln-\ncouncQ. '\nCHANGE   SUBSECTION   SIX        '\nSubsection six 61 Section 88 ot\nthe act Is repealed, and tho following, ls substituted therefore:\n\"(6) In estimating Bw value tor\nduty no discount or deduction shall\nbe allowed which ls not shown and\nallowed on Invoices concerning sales\nfor home consumption In tjie country of eitport ln the usual and ordinary course of trade.\"\nThe subsection repealed read as\nfollows:, \u201e   _\n\"(6) The appralsv, or colleotor\nacting as appraiser, in estimating\nthe value for duty, may dlsreg.rd\ntrifling fluctuations In market values occurring after the purchase of\nthe goods by the Canadian import-,\ner, and may allow a bona fide discount for bash, not exceeding 2Va\nper cent, when allowed and deducted by the exporter on' his invoice.\"\nTho new Section .3 reads as follows:\n\"(43) Tt at any tlmo it appears\nto the satisfaction of the govemnr-\nin-councll on a report from the\nminister that goods of any kind\narc being imported into Canada,\neither on sale or ln consignment, under such conditions as prejudicially\nor Injuriously affect tho Interests ot\nCanadian producers of manufacturers, the govcrnor-ln-council may\nauthorize the minister to lix the\nvalue for duty of any clatfl or kind\nof such goods, und notwithstanding\nany other provision of this act, the\n\u25a0value bo fixed shall be doomed 'to\nbe the fair market valuo uf, such\ngoods.\"\nSection reapealed reads, as follows:\n\"(43) If at any time\" It appears\nto the satisfaction of tho governor.\nIn-rouncil on a report from tho\nminister that natural products of a\nclass or kind being produced In\nCanada are bolng Imported Into\nCanada, either on sale or on consignment, under such conditions as\nprejudicially or injuriously to affect the Interests of Canadian producers, tho governor-ln-councll may,\nin any case or class of goods, authorize thc minister to value such\ngoods' for duty, notwithstanding any\nother provisions of this act. and the\nvalue so determined shall.be held\nto  bo fair market thereof.\"\nPROPOSE CITY\nWAREHOUSE AT\nYSMgROTY\nMeed  l'lace  to  Store  $10,-\n000 'Worth of Machinery;\n',>\u25a0' '\u2022'.\". larger Scales\nTBAIL, B. 0\u201e SftPt. 16.\u2014Tentative.:\nplans for a city w.rebouser on oVa-\nownod. ground on Bowery avenue\nwere placed'before the city council\ntcfrtlght by City Engineer S. Mc-'\nDlarmld. He suggested a three-\nstory building, embracing City workshops, city scajes, storage space, and\npublio Comfort stations, tb com\nabout $14,000.\nThe council agreed that the city\nwas faced with the necessity of\nproviding storage, space ' for' road\nequipment, during' tho winter. It,\nwas pointed out that thero was no\nplace to house the \u00bb10,000 worth of;,\nmachinery recently purchased.\n'It would also bo necessary very\nohortly to provide larger scales, the\npresent Installation Jailing short \u00b0*\nrequirements. The engineer was\nasked to go further into the matter,\nwith a view to preparing a bylaw,\nperhaps for sub\u2122 lsslon' to .property-\nlolders next yetir. i mltl'\nScientists have now produced an\nartificial. Bilk from water and carbon dioxide gas. .\nSARGON TRIUMPHS\nIN STUBBORN CASE\n\u2022Loss of 'appetite, indigestion, biliousness and' constipation for 5l\nyears kept mo ln wretched health.\nMrs. Oscar Lunde was honored\nSaturday evening by a number of\nhor friends when they called upon\nher and presented her with a lovely\nlinen lunch cloth, the occasion being her birthday. Cards and singing were enjoyed i nd dainty refreshments, were served by the\nIndies. ThiVe present were Mr.\nand Mrs. Luiidqulst, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Lund berg. Mr. and Mrs. Johanson,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Johnson, Mr. and\nMrs. Mnttfion and son. Mrs. G-\nNelson. Mrs. E. Erlckson. Mrs. A.\nAlmqulst. Mrs. ,T. Backman, Mrs.\nK. Anderson, Misses Marjory and\nFlorence V.inncita, j. E. Williamson,\nVictor Nelson and Roland Lunde.\nDISMISS COMMON\nDANGER CHARGE\nIN TRAIL COURT\nTRAIL. B. C, Sept. 15.\u2014Georg*\nL. Gill and B. E. Smith, appearing\nIn local pollco court this afternoon,\ncharged with drtvlnp to the common danger, were Ufa dismissed\nby Acting Maglstrat' '. E. R. Bedford. Threo wltnc; testified to\nthe careful driving both vehicles\noperators.\nTho accident causing the case occurred September 9 at the corners\nof Tamarac and Weir. Mr. Gill's\ncar ran into Mr. Smith's vehicle\nresulting in damages estimated nt\n$35. Witnesses for Mr. Gill were\nhis father, G. A. Gill, and a passenger, G. Nora, nnd Albert. De-\nbmn, a spectator, for Mr. Smith.\nMBS.    J.    MARTIN\nI suffered with terrific sick headaches and was awfully nervous.\nSargon completely restored by appetite without a sign of stomach\ntrouble or indigestion, l'vo gained\n5 pounds in weight, am no longer\nnervous and sleep splendidly. My .\nwholo system is strengthened and\nInvigorated. *\n....\"Sargon Pills toned up my liver\nand I' never havo a bilious attack\nor sick, headache.\" Mrs. J. Martin,\n5G0 Castle Ave, Elm wood. Winnipeg.\nSargon may be obtained at Mann\nRutherford   Co.,   druggist.\nTHREE ONTARIO\nMINISTERS IN\nOFFICE TODAY\nB\nroleci\nyourcar\nagainst\nWinter's\nCold\nTORONTO, Ont., Sept. 15.\u2014Three\nnew Ontario cabinet minister* will\nbe sworn in at government house\ntomorrow ln the persons ot Re '-.\nO. Martin of Brantford, as minister\nof ihe newly created portfolio of\npublic welfare; Dr. J. M. Robb of\nAigoma as minister of health, and\nCol. T .L. Kennedy as minister\nof agriculture.\nWITNESS HAS ONLY\nSHORT TIME, LIVE\nExperiments   are   to   jnarie   of   a\nHmall,    fast,    foldlnu-wing   Kcaplane\nfor oubarmlne equipment.\nl\u00bbfENS\nWEAR\nBOYS\nWEAR\nHIGH RENT DISTRICT\nSEATTLE, Sept. 15\u2014(AP)\u2014Four\nwitnesses were used to aftord rest\nperiods of Earl corwln, former chief\nprohibition field agent, during Ills\ncross-examination in federal court\nhero today In the trhl of former\nofficials charged with corruption\nand bribery.\nBecauso of Corwin's collapse during sessions of tho trial Friday,\nIt was decided to hear his testimony gradually. Corwln is suffering from an Incurable disease and\nis said by defense attorneys to\nhave only a short tlmo to live.\nAnother Robbery\nin Saskatchewan\nPROTECTION\nagainst frozen radiators and costly motor\ndamage \u2014 easier starting without excessive choking and thinning of oil\u2014prevendon\nof rust and saving of finish . . . these are the advantages which\nmake it an economy to line your garage with Beaver Board. The\ncost is surprisingly small.\nMany prefer to use Beaver Insulating Board\u20147\/16 inch\nthick, laminated board which presents a weatherproof blanket\nagainst extremes of weather. You can, apply Beaver Board or\nBeaver Insulating Board easily and quickly yourself\u2014or get an\nestimate from any carpenter.\nMADE IN CANADA\nfcEAVEk m &EAVER.\nWARD i ,n!oa\u00abJng\ny <\u2022>\n\u2022ewe* \\\\-ww\\vmir^s\u00abfw^mtkrm\/0w^\nSASKATOON, Saak., Befrt. 15.\u2014\nThft fourth robbery by experienced\nBare blowers In Sa.iktttchewan during\nthe past eight days occurred at\nRevenue,-Bask., near Wilkio, Sunday\nnight, when the thleveB got away\nwith $300 ln cash and cheques.\nPolice believe en organized gang li\nat work and all tralna are being\nwatched carefully.\nOther similar robberies have taken\nPlace at Swift Current, where |200\nwrh stolen; $136 cash and several\nthousand dollars In chequea wae\ntaken from, tho BritlBh American\noil company vault in Senl\/.toon,\nnnd a am all naf<\u00bb, laken from an\nplnvn+or offico at Bremen, yielded\n$loon. \/\nFREE\nInttresUni hooUtts n\u00bb\nBeaver Products {Um-\ntrots many practical\n_.\u00ab. j\n\u25a0___. _w_ \u25a0&__, ____ ____ ____ __\n>J&\nV\nWood, Vallance  Hardware\nNelson, B. C. Dlstrlot Distributors\n \u25a0\u2014^^ :tHE NEI_30N DAILY NKWS.      TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1930.\n10\nPage; Three\nDR. ROSE\nIs In Chicago attending a convention of rectal specialists. He\nhas been requested to read a\npaper and conduct a clinic on\nthe treatment or piles. Watch\nthis space for date of return.\nBB. FRANK  BOSE.\nV\nALE & STOUT\nMATERIALS\n(from an un.ottdlta\ntestimonial)\n\"We made up our\npackage of De.\nWnigon'i Tonic\nStout and It mad*\nan excellent drink\nns will ai a tonic.\nIt is at fine a* tha\ngood old Englkh\nStout.\"\nMail 75c jor a package, I\nwhich makes 4 galtont, to I\nM. Allen & Co., Ltd,    .\nFleet  St.,  Toronto  2\n-mm\nEMPIRE TRADE NECESSITY, DECLARES\nNEW CHAIRMAN OF LIQUOR CONTROL\nBOARD; WILL ENFORCE LIQUOR LAWS\nFormer  Food     Comptroller\nDeclares British Columbia\nImports Needlessly\n\"Inter-Empire trade occupies the\nminds of almost every thinking\nman throughout the King's Dominions, and at the coming Imperial\nconference, at which all parts of\nthe Empire will be represented, this\nquestion will bo uppermost, and the\nresult of that conference will indicate what lines the future expansion and consolidation of the Empire will, take,\" Henry B. Thomson,\nchairman of the liquor control\nboard, declared In hia address before the Vancouver Canadian club\nrecently.\n\" 'It is within the reach of statesmanship to initiate ln the British\nEmpire an era of prosperity and\nprogress   such   as   bhe   world   has\nTo Build Up The System.\n\"Fellows\" Syrup contains just\nthe right \"chemical\" foods to\nrestore strength and vigor after\nsickness.\nRecommended by doctors\nthroughout the world for\nLoss of Appetite, Nervous Debility,\nRetarded Convalescence, Aenemia,\nMalnutrition, Bronchial Troubles.\nSoldbyalldrugglsU. I_ori_t__ll_r_e__ds___]bottle_o_ly.\nRefuse Imitations. Insist on th. genuine.\nFELLOWS'\nSYRUP\n\u00a7.-\u2014i _______\nnever yet seen anywhere at any\ntime,'\n\"The statesmen of the Empire will\nforegather ln London, the heart of\nthe Empire, and they will be fully\nImpressed with tho Importance or\ntheir work, as each of them realize their individual problems will,\nas a result of the conference, be\nblended Into one Imperial policy,\"\ncontinued Mr, Thomson.\n\"Since the declaration of war in\nAugust, 1014, the minds of the public and the business men of ''the\nEmpire have been endeavoring to\ngrapple with the situation, but no\nclear-cut solution has yet been arrived at for the reason that the\nwar completely disjointed and upset the trade of the world, and as\na result of the war, new problems,\nnew conditions, and entirely different v surrounding circumstances had\nto be faced.\nDANGEROUS   EXPERIMENTS\n\"Experiments have been made oh\nmany lines. CTank theories have\nbeen tried out and have in process\nof time been exploded. When Interfering with thc channels and\nmethods of world trade which took\ncenturies to build up, experiments\ncan always be looked upon as\ndangerous, and of this we have had\nmany examples. Among them might\nbe mentioned the 'wheat pool,' and\nyou all know what effect this has\nhad on business in general throughout Canada.\n\"Through tho conditions brought\nabout by the war, many pe<z>le got\naway from the fundamental fact\nthat the'old principle of supply and\ndemand is the only paramount ruling theory. In this regard Britain\nhas her supplies of manufactured\nmerchandise. On the other hand 80\nper cent of the foodstuffs consumed\nin the British Isles Is imported.\n\"To get down to details in this\nconnection   some   of   the   following\nfigures  may  be of interest:\nENORMOUS   FOOD   IMPORTS\n\"England sends money out of the\noountry at the rate of $5000 per\nminute for foodstuffs:\n\"The total money paid out for\nfoodstuff Import* amounts to $3,-\n555,000,000 per annum, or at the\nrate   of   67,000,000   daily.\n\"The   Imports   of   butter,   bacon,\nTHE\nby\ncLAUGHLIN-\nBUICK\nwith NEW INSULATED\nBODIES by FISHER\nFOUR SERIES OF\nSTRAIGHT EIGHTS\nALL   VALVE. IN . HEAP\nmm\n1\nITS BETTER 1\njAUSB ITS CANADIAN\n\u2014revealing characteristic McLaughlin-Buick beauty and\nskillfully insulated, like a fine\nhome, against heat, cold and\nnoise. Another exclusive McLaughlin-Buick advancement.\nAmong other features, contributing to McLaughlin-\nBuick's all-around quietness, smoothness, flexibility and\ndurability are the new Engine-Oil Temperature Regulator,\nnew Air Intake Silencer, new Ring-Type Torsional\nBalancer, new Dual Carburetiori, and the new *Syncro-\nMesh Transmission.\nMoreover the new eights reflect the full experience of\nMcLaughlin-Buick, winner of many more buyers than\nany other maker of fine cars.\nGMAC, General Motors' own deferred payment plan,\nmakes purchase convenient. General Motors Owner\nService Policy assures your complete and continued\nsatisfaction.\noggs. beef, cheese and pork exceed\nJl7.500.ooo per week.   '\n\"B8_ Imports Into Britain Increased from $67300,000 in 1920 to\nover \u00ab100,000,000 ln IBM.\n\"New Zealand Increased her cheese\nand butter exports from $35,085,-\n857  111   1029,   to ta.893,000  In  19-8.\n'In 1928 Britain Imported over\n21.000,000 dozen eggs from Egypt,\nChina and Morocco.\n'The imported foodstuffs for the\nBritish   breakfast   table   run   into\nfabulous figures each 'Tear:\nBacon and pig products  $275,noo,ooo\nEggs     . ..100,000.000\nButter       276,000,000\n* SYNCRO-MESH\nTRANSMISSION\nAn ttbra-Juxuriaus and costly\nJeaturt, employed in thrtt qf tht\nnew MtLaugmn-Buick _r_W\u00ab,\nwith MdAHihlin-Ruifk'j Jim\nstandard transmission in th\nseries oj hwtst frit*.\nSEE IT.\nDRIVE IT\nTotal    j $650,000,000\nTherefore the mbney sent out of\nthe country amounts to $1,780,025\na day  for British  breakfasts.\n\"New Zealand exports of frozen\nmutton   and   beef   increased   from\n$24,786,880 in 1018 to (51,548,310 in\n1628. .    .\n\"Butter imports into G\/eat Britain from Denmark increased from\n$58,800,000 ln 1020 to 898,084,305 In\n1920.\n\"Denmark increased, her bacon export to England from $35,000,000 In\n1020 to $137,500,000  in   1029.\n\"Many people will say surely if\nthe British farmer energized he\ncould produce more eggs, butter and\nbacon. This is obvious, as Denmark\nhas. done it, and from a poor Impoverished country of 30 years ago\nher exports to Great Britain yearly\nalone in those commodities amount\nto:\nBacon       _. $136,147,580\nButter  _..   98,684,\nEggs    _.      23,495,720\nTHBRB Ig A MoLAUGHLW-BUTCK DEALER NEAR  YOU TO SERVE  YOU\nTotal     $258,327,685\n\"The Danes are a thrifty, latelll-\ngent people, and under government\nguidance have succeeded ; wonderfully, but the initiative and 'push'\ncame from the people themselves.\n\"Britain imports from the Argentine $325,000,000 of foodstuffs a\nyear.\n\"To bring thia matter home to\nour own province, what is *the con\ndltlon of affairs here? The last\nyear for which statistics are given\nshow that British Columbia im>\nported $22,044,070 worth of farm\nproduce, 73 per cent of wiiich came\nfrom other provinces within the\nDominion, and 37 per cent came\nfrom foreign ports.\nB.   C.  IMPORTS\n\"Last year in this provinoe but'\nter to the extent of $12,500,000\npounds was consumed; of this 7,-\n600,000 pounds were imported. Thlq.\nmeans 25,000 more cows, or 2500\nmore new farmers, could have been\nemployed.\n\"Vancouver Island produces only\nenough butter to feed her population for 63 days ' lh tho' year.' Meat\nImports on the Island aro 75 per\noent of the consumption, and would\nequal 34.000 head of cattle, 63,000\nsheep  and   124,000  pigs.\nBorne 7,000,000 pounds of canned\nmeats are Imported yearly into\nBritish Columbia; 3,500,000 pounds\nof oannad vegetables, and 3330,000\npounds of canned fruit.\n\"Surely we Iwvo a lesson to learn\nhere, and before we need worry\nabout tho export market in these\ncommodities we have a huge home\ntrade at our door. After this ls\nfilled we can look farther ofleld for\nexports,\n\"Wo, in this pjwince, the richest\nin natural reeourow tn the Dominion, are prone to brag about\nthese resouroep, but what are we\nindividually doing to develop them?\nTho provinoe, though small ln slso\nas regards population which, according to tbe last statistics, is\nonly 590,000, has an area oxoeedlng\nthe total combined area of the\nUnited Kingdom, Franoe, Holland\nBelgium and Denmark, yet our\npopulation is not as much as tho\ntown of Sheffield in Emgland,\nWORK   IS    SOLUTION\n\"This will give you some slight\nidea of the work we have before\nus, and it should be a matter of\nthe keenest interest to every citizen\nin the provinoe to see what can be\ndone first of all to reduce our heavy\nimports of agricultural products,\nall of whloh can bo raised here, and\nsecondly, to put our shoulders to\nthe wheel and further expand what\nexports we have and open up and\ndevelop British Columbia.\nCITES   NEW   ZEALAND\n\"New Zealand is a wonderful example of what oncrgy and organization can do with a population of\nless than 1,500,000 people. She exports over $275,000,000 worth of\nmost agricultural producte, and her\nexports of dairy products since the\nwar have risen from $30,000,000 a\nyear  to  $80,000,000.\n\"New Zealand has nearly one cow\nper capita of her population and\n18 sheep. She supplies Great Britain, 14,000 miles away, with 55 per\ncent of British imports of mutton and lamb, 23 per cent of British Imports of butter, 53 per cent of\nBritish imports of oheese and 23\nper cent of British imports of wool.\nCAMPAIGN   IN ENGLAND\n\"Dealing with the conditions and\naffairs in Oreat Britain. As moat of\nyou are aware, a tremendous concentrated campaign has been conducted In those isles, principally by\na Canadian. Lord Beaverbrook, who,\nwith the power of his wealth and\nbin tremendous chain of newspapers\nIs bringing It home to the people of\nEngland tbat in order to establish\nprosperity they must seek an outlet for thalr goods, and particularly\ndevelop a reciprocal trade with all\nportions of the King's dominions.\n\"It will bo well remembered bv\nmany here the campaign of that,\ngreat. Imperial statesman, ths Right\nHon. Joseph Chamberlain, whloh\nwas started in July, 1003. HI* policy, everyone now admits, would\nhave unified tho Empire and consolidated our world position. He\ngallantly fought the battle until ill\nhealth overtook him In 1010, and\nas we all know, he passed a^lay\nJust before the war. July 9. 1914.\nLlko many other prophets, ho did\nnot live to see the fulfilment of\nhts great Ideas and his great vision.\n\"On July 3. 1030. the famous\nbankers' manifesto was Issued supporting the movement they had\nopposed n his lifetime. This was\njust 16 years today from his death,\nand 37 years from tho starting of\nhis great Imperial campaign. Large\nbodies move slowly.\n\"Even today there are many Brit\nlsh statesmen who cannot grasp\nthe Importance of the situation. Not\nlong ago Lord Grey of Fullodon\nsummed up the position in these remarks:\n\" 'Empire free trade will not do\nbecause the dominions are not ready\nfor It.'\n\"Prom a Canadian point of view\nthis statement ls as amazing as It\nIs pathetically amusing. As far back\naa 1806 the Dominion of Canada\nannunciated a policy of Imperial\npreference, and aa we all know,\nBritish goods Imported Into Canada\nhk-v*   had   _.   substantial   preference\nover taiportattona from alien coran-\ntrlea   over   since.\n\"This has recently been further\naugmented and the last revision of\nthe tariff gave preference to British goods imported into Canada to\nthe  extent of $400,000,000  a y\u00abar.\n'Canada hardly expects nor could\nshe ask the motherland to impose\nan import duty on wheat. It is not\npracticable from several angles, but\nshe should expect a sheltered market whereby she could dispose of\nher crop, and surely we are reciprocating handsomely hy purchases of\nBritish goods imported under a very\nsubstantial preference tariff. . The\nBritish consumer ls protected from\na 'hold up' cm price for the reason\nthat the Empire produces over 240,-\n000,000 bushels more than Its total\nrequirements.\nLIQUOR   CONTROL\n\"Possibly on an occasion like this\nI am expected to' say something\nabout the liquor question in the\nprovince of British Columbia,\n\"First of all, the importance given\nto this question by the press and by\nthe public surely is an indication\nof lack of proper Voportlon. Were\nwe to visit Prance, mercurial and\nhysterical though we may deem the\nFrench people, would we not ridicule and comment upon a whole\nnation pinning its future progress\nand destiny on the question of\n'booze'?\n\"This situation has reached such\na head that within a week one was\namaaed to read on the front page\nof-a British Columbia daily paper\nthe important announcement that\nthe Chicago gang leader and bootlegger (Scar-Paced Al Capone) was\nnot dead but only suffering from a\ncold. The world, no doubt, ls now\nanxiously watting for news of \"Hard\nBoiled George,' and what he eats\nfor   breakfast.\n\"The present situation has, ,is you\nall know, ariBen as one of the results of the war, Many people\ndeemed that total prohibition would\nhelp the war. The results you know.\n\"Government control came into\nthis province early in the game.\nProm the normal man's point of\nview, the distribution of liquor to\nthose who want it should be conducted muoh on the lines of the\npost office, where people can go\nand buy what they require. Therefore, we could eliminate a lot of\ntrouble In this connection were\npeople to look upon the whole situation ln a cold-blooded businesslike way.\nOBSERVE   THE   LAW\n\"The present Liquor act, as it\nstands on the statute booko, Is the\nlaw of the land. Be it wise or otherwise, it is the law: and all right-\nthinking people will do their best\nto cooperate and see that it ls\nkept. Tho position of tho board\nwith the cooperation of the people\nis a simple one; without thetr help\nand good will It will be extraordinarily difficult.\n\"In order to impress the situation\nupon people's minds w\u00bb will have to\nget some horrible example.^ and in\nthe handling of these, as In most\ncases of the kind, Justice cannot be\ntempered with mercy cr consideration,\"   continued   Mr.  Thomson.\n\"When the history  of  the liquor\nJJSb*S\n-DODD'S '\nKIDNEY\n(j, PILLS s\nadministration Is written, perhaps\nsome oft the rulings and actions\nmay savor mors of the- blacksmith's\nanvil than of the calm, Judicial atmosphere of the privy council, but\nwe have the work to do and we\nmust get on with It.\n\"Now, as regards the city of Vancouver: Some people may think\nbecause I happen to have resided a\nlarge portion of my life on Vancouver Island, that I take no interest ln your great city and your\ngreat port, with such future prospects. This, I assure you, ls not\nthe case.\n'It has been my good fortune to\nvisit most parts of British Columbia, from the 40th parallel to the\nArctlo circle, and from Teto Jaime\nCache tn the Rocky mountains to\nBello Coola on the Pacific. In addition to this, I fully appreciate\nwhat benefits Vancouver benefits\nthe rest of British Columbia, and ln\nyour present expanding grain export trade, I think I might take\ncredit to myself for no small share\nof this.\nOn the first occasion when a\ndelegation went to Ottawa to urge\nthe building and establishing; of an\nelevator on the coast, I was sent\ndown by the board of trade ln Victoria io put forward our plea. Realizing the position and the urgency\nto establish an elevator on the\nPacific coast of Canada, I Joined\nforces with the delegation from\nVancouver and urged for the establishment   of   the  elevator   here,\n\"Later on, when you know there\nwere great difficulties from the railroad viewpoint of getting a western\nmovement of grain, the argument\nbeing advanced that shipments of\ngrain would not stand transportation through the tropics via the\nPanama Canal owing to the- moisture. I had an opportunity as food\ncontroller of Canada, to arrange for\nthe shipment of two cargoes through\nthe Panama Canal with men upon\nthem to keep a complete record of\nthe temperature and moisture of the\nwheat under the varying tropical\nconditions, and these records of the\ncargoes complete! y exploded the\ntheory and established the fact that\nthe Panama Canal route was both\nfeasible and practical. The result\ntoday is the development of Vancouver as a great grain port, and it\nis a matter of pride with me, personally, that I played my small\npart in this development.\nONLY   COURAGE   REQUIRE\n\"On visiting some towns during\nthese so-called hard times, one ruminates and wonders what a risk certain places are taking in being\nnicknamed thc 'Wailing Wall', We on\nthe Pacific coast of Canada, have\nour future in our own hands. You\nmen ln the great port of Vancouver\nhave the destinies of the city in\nyour  own\" hands.\n\"Wo are all proud of the fact\nthat the first Narrows has b%en\nchristened the 'Lions' Gate\" and\nwhenever you may feel 'blue' and\ndespondent all you have to do is to\nlook  up and see the rugged  lions\nof   natural   rock   standing   guard\nover the destinies of your city.\n'A Ilttlo of the lion's courage and\nthe lion's grit would stand us all ln\ngood stead at-the present time, and\nit should not be forgotten tbat although the 'poodle pup' Is much\nthe samfl shape as a lion, his actions are very different.\nDEFINES   CAPITAL\nIn conclusion, I would like to\nread Stephen Leaoock's definition\nof capital, One often hears the expression in .British Columbia: 'We\nlack capital.''The question Is, what\nls capital? Professor Lcacock says:\n\" 'For most people capital and investment aw vague terms, entirely\nconfused with money and documents, bank checks and other\nthings, with which they have in\nthemselves nothing to do. But by\ncapital we mean ln political economy\u2014not ln the money market\u2014all\nthe whole apparatus of things already made which are useful ln\nmaking other things. Machines are\ncapital\u2014factories railway equipment,\ntelegraphs, business premises, ln\nfact, we have only to open our\neyes and look about us, and what\nwe mostly see ls capital. In a modern Industrial olty there ls more\ncapital in sight than scenery.'\nTo this definition 'man power'\nmight well be added, as the character and quality of human llvestook\ngo a long way to mako a country\nprosperous.\n'Unfortunately, we are passing\nbeyond, the sphere and Influence of\nthose great men, the pioneers, who\nfirst opened and really made British\nColumbia what it ls. We should\nkeep their memories green and emulate their determination and courage, carrying on the work ln our\nown small way under much esater\nand pleasanter experiences than they\nencountered; doing our bit to Indicate our pride and faith in British\nColumbia, In Canada, and the British Empire, of which vie form a\npart, and handing on to the rising\ngeneration some of the wonderful\nfaith and spirit of the wwtero pioneers.\n'Gentlemen, we all have problems\nto face; work to do; difficulties to\nsurmount; let us get on with it, as\nis our duty,\" concluded Mr. Thomson.\n~L-UlDNEtD        ,\n\"Good Goods at Gray's\"\nDiamond\nRings\nWe have a fine selection in all the newest\nsettings. Priced from\n$25.00 lo $350.00.\nIt is a pleasure to\nshow you these diamond\nrings.\nJ. B. Gray\n407\nDiamond Merchant\nBaker St.     Nelson\nLADIES'\nFALL COATS\nDYED\nART SHADES\nH. K. Foot\nHigh  Class Dyer and\nCleaner\nFairview   Nelson, B.C.\nNorman L Pearson\nTells How Cotknra\nHealed Pimples\n\"The trewble first started with a\nfew b1\"*4***- on toy face- A lhtlo\nbiirx pimples fanned end spread ail\nover's. They were quite large end\nsome of them festered. The pimptoe\nitched end burned sod botbemraa\nslot. Many nights 1 conld not sleep\non account of tbe kritstipo. end\nwhen I scratched lt caused dteftgon**-\n1 tdrd.liftV.rnit\nhad the tronhlevfl-bout four\nmonths when I read an advertiseaxot\nfor Cnticnm Soap and Ointment and\nsent for a free sample. After using a\nfew daya I was greatly relieved so\nparchaood more and in about two\nmonths I was healed.\" (Signed)\nNorman E. Pearson, 5387 Fahro 6u\nMontreal, Que.\nDaily nee of Cutknra Boap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, wOl\nkeep tbe skin and scalp healthy.\nBo-tpqfo. OtntuMot B M\u00bbd Gto Tilcum \\U. Sold\n\u2014'\u25a0 f__ch tri\\ A J Ail Oetf\nKVWidb^MMtM-i.\n>tt\u00abi Otapatl J.\nCtttiotn Shtvbic Stick 35a.\nYellow Is the main theme of\none house where the color scheme\nwbs Inspired by wall paper as\nfollows, living room paper, cream\ntolle de Jouy with tan and mauve;\ndining roam, yellow with brown\nand white flowers; hall green and\norange stripes on dull white; bedroom, blue, mauve and white flowers tn lattices on warm yellow.\nMRS. I. D. STONER\nAND SON VISITS\nAT BONNINGTON\nBONNINOTON     FAI_LS,      B.      OL'.-\nSeptember IB\u2014Mrs. I. D, Ston*r\nand son Richard who have h\u00abn tha\nguests Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Thompson for several weeks ' have left *\nfor tholr home in Aahtabala, Ohio.\nMr. and Mrs. Andrew Willey am\nspending two weeks on, e motoring\ntrip to Spokane and' Vancouver,\nThey were accompanied by their\ndaughter Ruth, who will remain ih^\nVancouver to attend . school.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Bert , McKim   and \"'\u25a0'\nfamily were Nelson visitors, on Saturday. .   ,.\nMrs.   A.   Harris   and   Miss   Made- .\nline Harris spent Saturday \u25a0 ln Nelson.   '\nMr. and Mrs.  W. D. Rldje  were\nvisiting friends  in  Nelson  on- Sat-v\nurday.\nMr. and Mrs. fi. b. Sharpe of thn\nCity   Power   Plant  side   spent   Sat- .\nurday shopping  in Nelson.\nJute Is one of the autumn's smartest new fabrics for decoration.\n4 Years Without\nHEADACHE\nHow do you deal wtth\nDo   you   Just   take\ndeaden the pain without\nof   ths . trouble   which\npain?   Thousands   do,   df\nmedical    profession's\nof  \"DOITTI\"\nSuch makeshift\nsuppress ths symptoms ol\nThey merely numb the\nleave the underlying\nafter itself. And ft only\nfirmer grin. Headaches\nerally be traced to a\nstomach and to tha iinaTwieflfcaa\ntcntlon la tho system <n f&MD\nIng waste materiel whloh pea\nthe blood. Remove tha \"\nprevent them forming\nyou'll never ham to\nmore. And that ls Just\nohen Salts bring swift\nrelief from headaches.\nSalts aid Nature 1)0\nbody completely of ill\nwaste matter.\n\"For many years X imfftaed\nsevere   headaches   almost\nstarted   taking  the small\nKruschen)   a matter of four\nago and I oan honestly say X\nnever   had    a    headacha\n(Mrs, M. W_)\nyoii'Il\nHid tbatJ_>OoggNrGc_e_tfU\u00absri\nan ideal for tbe children's\nmpper. Wholesome. Easy to\n-tigest. Packed with flavor and\nerispneas! Millions of mothers\nprefer\n*t_T\u00bb Kellogg', error, d.j.\nCORN\nFLAKES\n* Welemr-i \/mr trmitfuO, batch .\n\"giwi'i-i .im ., _gj_e_^_M_r_\nmtijwitfi\nOther Branches at Winnipeg, Yorhten, Saskatoon, Edmonton,\nCaLigry, Lethbridge, Vanoonver* Eamloope, Vernon and Victoria\nPYJAMAS\nFor the cooler\nnights we aro\nnow showing our\nnew season's Pyjamas for men\nand boys, in\nsmart new imported, cloths\nthat will give\ngood wear and\nsatisfaction i n\nthe washing,\nboth in medium\nand heavy weight\nMen's sizes,\n98.75, 92.95\nand $3.75.\nBoys' size in one\nor two piece\nstyles. Suit,\n$1.75 and $2.\n-Main  Floor, H. B. c\u2014\nDRY GOODS\n,**.? inch Crepe ric Ohenes in a nice\nheavy weight, all pure silk, suitable for underwear and dresses.\nFull range of the newest Fall\nshades. Special, yard $1.25 and\n?1.40.\nTravel Tweeds assuring you of the\nbest qualil.ic.. in only the smartest designs. 36  inches wide.\nYard  _  $1.05\n\u2014Main  Floor. H. B.  C\u2014\nChildren's Wear\nCOATS for Fall\nwear. Made of blanket cloth, broadcloth and tweeds.\nVery serviceable\ncoats for dress or\nschool wear. The\nnew styles feature\ncapes, high belts\nand fur trimmed.\nThe very latest for\nthe smart little\nmis*. Shades include Brown, Blue,\nGreen and Wine.\nSizes 6. 8, 10, 12\nand 14 years.\nPrices range from\n?8.95 to $16.95\nHATS \u2014 Made of fine all wool felt.\nTurned off the face or with brims.\nChic, smart styles for the little\nwomen. Shades include Blue,\nRose, Piecrust, Red and Black.\nPrices $1.95, $2.25 and $2.95\nREEFER CAPS .\u2014 In Navy and\nSand shades. In all sizes. Prices\nrange from .... $1.25 to $1.95\nREEFER COATS \u2014Winter weight,\nlined throughout with good quality flannel. Trimmed with brass\nbuttons and patch pockets. Suitable for school wear. Sizes 4, 6,\n8 and 10 years. Prices range\nfrom   $8.95 to $10.95\n\u2014Second   Tloor\u2014H. B. C.\u2014\n Page Four\nTH.. NELSON DAILY NEWS      TttESDAYI'SEFTEMBER 16, 1930.\n2foli.mt 0a% Nrwa\nPublication every morning except\nSunday by The News publishing\nCompany, Limited, Nelson, B. c.\nBusiness letters should he ad*\ndresaed aud checks and money orders made payable io The News\nPublishing Company, limited, and\nin no cass to individual members ot\nthe stair.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. 0.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at ths office of any advertising agency recognized by the Canadian Dally\nIsuwspaper association.\nSUBSCRIPTION AATE3\nBy Mall (country), per month $   .60\nPer year .  .    6.0n\nBy mall (city), per year .._ 13.00\nOutside Canada, per month _-.     ,1a\nPer < year    , V &Q\nDelivered, per week .     _2&\nPer year     1B.0G\nPayable in advance\n.Member Aumt Bureau ot Circulation\nTUESDAY,   SEPTEMBER   16,   1030.\nHELP   SAVE  THE\nPHEASANTS\nGranting of three days\nshooting of cock pheasants\n\u2014October 15 to 17\u2014for the\nCreston electorial district, is\nno doubt ;i verbal slip, the\nCreston valley, where pheasants have been maintained\nfor years and where they\nhave gradually increased,\nbeing presumably meant.\nAt other times when the\nlimited shooting of the\nCreston pheasants has been\nallowed, the area has been\ndescribed as ending at\nKootenay Landing. Prob.\nably the individual who\ndrafted this item supposed\nthat he was describing,virtually this area when he\nmade this open season apply to the Creston electoral district.\nIf the game authorities\nreally had the Creston electoral district instead of the\nCreston valley in mind, and\nreally meant to subject\npheasants wherever found in\nthe Creston electoral district\nfrom the East Kootenay\nboundary to the Columbia\nriver and from the West\nArm and Kootenay river to\nthe international line\u2014 to\nthree days shooting, then it\n; is a most unfortunate error\nof judgment, that the\nauthorities should correct.\nFor outside thc immediate\nI Creston area, the only\npheasants in the Creston\nelectoral district are birds\nthat have been specially introduced, most of them being comprised in the handful in the outskirts of Nel\nson. The Nelson pheasants\nhave been gaining very\nslowly, and it is thought\nthere may be two or three\ndozen in all here. Under\nthc regulation as drawn,\nthese birds, if they are spotted outside the city limits\non the three days named,\nmay bc shot.\nThe likelihood is that this\nclause was drawn by someone without knowledge of\nthe district, for it is hard to\nimagine it was the intention\nto wipe out the birds around\nNelson, or to open pheasants to shooting in localities\nwhere they are only trying\nto get a foothold.\nNo doubt amendment of\nthis pheasant shooting season, to confine it to the area\neast of Kootenay Landing,\nwill be readily granted.\n\"Ben ain't jealous of other men.\nIt just hurts his vanity to sec his\nwife havln' a _oocl tlmo without\ndependln' on him Ior It.\"\nto purchase commercial power and distribute it on a\nprofitable basis, is entirely\nKaslo's own affair, but the\npossession of an adequate\npower supply, from whatever source, will be a splendid\nasset that will tend to build\nup the lake city.\nThe\nLighter Side\nIf that 253-year-olcl Chinaman\never mcrta Zaro Agha, tho 156-year-\nold Turk, he'll probably- greet him\nWith: \"How's tricks, kid?\"\nSO0l_   OF INDUSTRY\nApplicant (for position of office boy); \"I may say I'm pretty\n.smart, I've won several prizes\nIn cross-word and cross-picture\ncompetitions   lately.\"\ni.mploycr: \"Yes. but I want\nBOIOC one who can Itc smart\nduring   office   hours.''\nBoy:   \"This  was  during   office \"\nhours,\"\u2014Kpwortli   Herald. \u25a0\n\u2014o\u2014\n\"Where   would   Americans   be\ntoday IX It weren't for prohibition'.'\"  ysks  ii  writer,    Duck  in\nAmerica, probably.\n\u2014o\u2014\nSLOW   FREIGHT\nOld  Lady;  \"Where did those large\nrocks  come  from?\"\nTired Guide: \"The glaciers brought\nthem   clown.\"\nOld Lady: \"But where arc thc\nglaciers?''\nGuide: \"They've gone back alter\nmore rocks.\"\n\u2014o\u2014\nA doctor declares that there is a\nman living ln Kingston whose akin\nls as tough as leather. What |s a\nman like that doing outside politics?   '\n\u2014o\u2014\nGood-day.    No doubt you will   he\npleased   to   hear   that   thc   price   of\nplatinum is coming down.\n\u2014o\u2014\n\"HEAVY   SWELL   GREETS   GIRLS.\"\nSAYS    THE    HEADLINE.      BUT    IT\nNEGLECTS    TO    ADD    THAT    THE\nGIRLS   KISSED   THE   SWELL.\nVanishing Americans: Tho ones\nwho bumped off Rothsteiu and\nLlngle.\nSijat Soto}\nof fmurs\nBit  JAS.   W,   BAItlON,   M.W.\nRUN DOWN,  INFECTION,\nRHUMATIBM\nPromote]-\u2014\"What sunrises you have out here!   Why, they\u2014they\ndeserve to be advertised.\"\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News of .September I\u00ab, 1930)\nThc chiirch of .Si. Aridrew-by-thc-\nLakc, Willow Point, was thc scene\nof h. Himple but Impressive service\nwhen on Sunday mornlnt*. September 12. Rev. pred H. Graham, rector\nof Nelson, unveiled thc roll of\nhonor and dedicated the new lectern.\nMrs. W. Livlngfitone, (nee Miss\nStarkey) Is visiting tn Nelson for\na few weeks and is the guest of\nMrs.   Hawthorn.\nOmer Oellnas of this city will\nleave this morning for Ptiwtucket,\nRhode Iblnud. U. S. A., to take up\nresidence with his parents.\nA bomb thrown in' the heart at\nWall street yesterday caused the\ndeath of 20 persons and Injured\nalmost 200. Many prominent bank\nbuildings and government, buildings\nwere  wrecked.\n\u2022   $   \u2022\nAt Trail yesterday the Wedding\nof Mlas Eileen Oliver, daughter of\nMr and Mrs. Sidney Oliver, to\nMalcom Thompson was solemnized  by  Rev. A.  m. O'Donnell.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy  LAURA   E.  KIRKMAN\nSirup\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange   Juice\nCereal\nFrench Toast\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nPeanut  Butter  Soup\nCorn  Muffins\nFruit   Salad\nCookies iced Tea.\nDinner\nRoast Leg of  Lamb\nPotatoes Spinach\nCottage Pudding with\nLiquid Lemon Sauce\nCoffee\nANSWERS TO INQUIRIES\nYoung Reader: \"1 can bake a good\npie   crust   but   would   like   a  recipe\nfor a chocolate  pic  filling.\"\nAnswer: Chocolate Pic \u2014Shave Into a saucepan two nquarcs of bitter\nchocolate; add one cup of hot water.\ntwo tablespoons of butter and one\ncup of granulated sugar; stir and\nrook till melted, then add two well-\nheaten egg yolks previously mixed\nwith two tablespoons of cornstarch\ndissolved In two tablespoons of cold\nwater. Continue stirring and cook'\nIng till thc mixture Is thick: flavor\nwith one teaspoon of vanilla, then\ncool slightly before turning it Into\nthe baked ' under-crust. Meringue\nBeat two egg whites stiff with two\ndessertspoons of cold water (added\nafter beating); then fold in six\ntnhicspoons of granulated sugar, one\nat a time, previously mixed with one\nteaspoon of baking powder. Spread\nthis froth over thc cooked filling in\nthe baked under crust, return pic to\na slow oven, and let bake 16 mln\nutes. Let cool in the oven also, with\noven door open.\nMiss Y.: \"How is rust removed\nfrom metal?\"\nAnswer: Rust, Is removed irom\nIron and steel by soaking small objects in kerosene oil for sereral daya,\nthen smoothing with steel wool or\nemory paper; large surfaces, however,\nsuch as stove tops, are freed from\nrust by rublng first with kerosene\nand then with steel wool moistened\nwith linseed oil. Sometimes a light\nfilm of rust eon be removed with a\npiece of heavy woolen cloth saturated wltn Unseed oil. Rusted nicke*'\nshould be covered with lard for several days and then rubbed with a\ncool cloth wrung from hot water and\nmoistened with cither kerosene or\nammonia.\nStudent: How is a torn oilskin\n(thin) slicker or raincoat mended?\"\nAnswer: With a strip of adhesive\ntape pasted on thc under side.\nLadies' Aid Has\nMeeting, Glenbank\nGLENRANK, Nakusp, Sept. ID-\nMr. and Mrs. G, Hunter G;ii;dner\nBetty, Helen, a.nd .loe left, by car\n6n Thursday for Nelson and Trail\nvia   Oknnagan.\nThc Glenbank Ladies Aid mot\non Tuesday afternoon at tho borne\nof   Mrs.   E,   W.   Bill.\nFull arrnugomonts Were made for\nHarvest Home to be held Sunday,\n.September 21. Also hale of vegetables and afternoon tea Monday,\nSeptember   22.   from   3   to   6.\nAfternoon tea was served by the\nhostess.\nFor trousseau underthlngs, Paris\nhis had the charming Idea of making them in the bride's own color\u2014\nblue, a new turquoise blue.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News or September 15, 1910)\nWhile Caretaker Smith WM digging a grave at thc cemetery yesterday, he looked up from his work\nto discover two hears, one on each\nside of him, surveying the results\nof  his  labor.\n* *   \u00bb\nA farewell tea was given yoster-\nday afternoon to Mrs. W. B. McDer-\nmid at the homo of Mrs. Joseph\nPatrick on Edgewood avenue. A\ncabinet of silver wa; presented to\nMrs. McDcrmid by Mrs. C. Miller\non  behalf of  ber  friends,\nThat n new business hloek in to\nbe built in Nelson is the announcement of E. B. McDermid, well known\nbroker. It will replaco the old\nCarney block on the south side of\nBaker street- near Kootenay street.\nThe Standard Furniture company,\nthe Kootenay Coffee company, and\nthc Arcade theater occupy the\nground   f|>or  or  the present  block.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nCaptain   West,   shot   a   Urge   dog\nwolf    from    the    steamer   Hercules\nyesterday.\nAl Tregiilus returned to lhe city\nlast, nijrht from Graham creek\nwith 21 rainbow trout.\nYou are reading dally about rheumatism or arthritis, u lt ll called,\nand that most of it is caused by\ninfection of teeth, tonaU-i .sinuses,\ngall bladder and other organs and\ntissues.\nNow just why do some individuals\nhave these Infections and others\ndo not?\nIn other words what causes tha\nInfection Itself?\nInfection not only causes the arthritis, but it causes'tb* \"run down'\ncondition of the body before arthritis-starts, and often where arthritis never does get a. start.\nResearch men are now wondering whether the run down condition may not be a cause of the\nbeginning or starting of the infection. Thus a man will work hard\nmentally, will become irregular in\nhis eating, sleeping, and intestinal\nhabits, and thus the blood going to the different tissues will be\nof such poor qu&llty that it does\nnot build up tho tflssues of the part\nbo that It can withstand the harmful orgBnlams that are always in\ntho body.\nIa this way these organisms, where\nthere ls a weak or exposed point\nopen to attack, aro enabled to begin   their  destructive   work.\nIt would seem that: stress or\nstrain interfere with the way the\ntissues should handle food stuffs,\nand this paves the way for trouble or Infecttoh.\nAs you know the drain on the\nmother with child, is often sufficient to lessen the amount of\nlime or other substances in her\nown teeth or tissues, even when she\neats plenty of food and drinks\nplenty of milk.\nAlso lt has beon well established\nthat arthritis or rheumatism can\nbegin, and be continued in the\nsystem, by the absorption of wastes\nfrom intestine. In fact a great\npart of the treatment of rheuma-\ntlms is by the use fo Epsom, Rochelle, or other salts to holp clear out\nthese wastes from large Intestines.\nEnemas, high Irrigations, or colon\nflushings as they are' often called,\nnow now an important part in the\ntreatment of chronic arthritis or\nrheumatism. ,\nNow what about all this?\nAll you need to know ts that to\ntry and avoid rheumatism you endeavor to prevent infection by getting enough sleep, enough all round\nfood, and enough exercise daily to\nkeep your particular body ln good\nshape.\nIf rheumatism docs start, you\nget rid of thc Infection\u2014teeth, tonsils, nnd so forth\u2014and also got rid\ndilly of the products of this infection which are not only In the\njoints, but to a large extent In.\nthe largo Intestine also.\nVancouver People\nVisit, Ainsworth\nSOUTH SLOGAN Sept. J5-<.6._m-\nat nnd Mrs. John Murray accompanied by Mrs. and Mrs: Brio Uaenby\nof Vancouver, were motorist to\nAinsworth on. Thursday.\nBadminton at tfce West Kootenay Power & Light Company's Hall\nNo. 3 Plant, haa started in full\nfarce. The annnual meeting to\nelect the executive wll] bo held next\nweek.\nMiss Gazelle Splllei' of Brilliant was a visitor, here Saturday.\nMiss A. R. Mitchell waa the guest\nof Miss Spliler a* Brilliant on\nSunday.\nMiss Muriel Harrop sepnt ths\nweek-end at her home at Harrop-\nRev. W. J. Crick of Nelson held\nan early service of Holy Commun-\nYou'll be. proud to\ntell friends your\ndress is Sunset -\ndyed \u2014 otherwise\nthey'll never know\nYou are not betrayed by a home-dyed\nlook. Sunset-dyed material looks new.\nSunset-\"- dy\u00a3s\n  MAD-IN CANADA \"\"\"\"\nShoulder .traps and a belt of _U-\nvev sequims will be a feature of new\nautumn evening frocks.\nion at St, Matthew. Churoh oa\nSunday.\nMlas Edna Watts who attends\nhl.h school, ln Nelson, spent tha\nweek-end at ths hon.e of her par.\ncuts Mr. and Mro. Edward Watts.\nMiss Irene Klngsley was a Nelson vlBltor on Saturday.\nA   new\nsafety\ndevice\nhas\n*been\ndesigned\n-or   .\nautomobiles.\nlb*\nsll.htest\nmpaot against\nthe\niump.\ner brines\nthe car to a\nquick stop.\nHeadache\nr_W_     Relieved without\n_\u25a0<\/] *>      \"dosing.\" Rub on\n^\u25a0jE. VJCKS\nM-_s\\   W VAPoRm\n\u00bbffiiMftwwMif\/.i*a*mmTO\nFall and Winter\nCOATS\nRichly Furred, fine fabrics, new Cuffs, the Princess silhouette trimmed in Paris ways.\nKASLO POWER-\nCONSCIOUS\nThe Kaslo Kootenaian and\nprominent citizens of Kaslo,\nboth in the city council and\nout of it, are actively campaigning for early action on\nthc power situation.\nWhatever thc method\nKaslo takes to provide itself\nwith reliable and sufficient\npower service, to replace the\npresent unsatisfactory one\nfrom an old and greatly deteriorated plant, the lake\n.capital is unlikely to ever\nregret putting itself on a\nsolid power basis.\nWhether Kaslo elects to\nproduce electric power from\na new plant of its own, or\nES   DISCOUNT on AU gjj\nSUMMER GOODS S\nBB   Screen   Doors,   Windows,   Refrigerators, 55\n5*^5   Rasoball Goods, Lawn Mowers, Oil Stoves\nSEE OUR SPECIALS ON\n\u00abrajj   High  Grade Aluminium  ;iml Granileware BBS\nPRICES ALL CASH ON SSB\nTHIS SALE\nIt Will Pay Von to Call SSS\nH lelson Hardware Co. \u00a7\nWHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL QUALITY -SSS\nHARDWARE SSS\nNELSON, B. C. SSS\nBuilding\n\u2022\\   er .      | LumDer a ep-ciaity.\nMaterial   J0hn Burns & Son\nLet us figure your bills nn\nBuilding Material.   Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nThe Furs\u2014Caracul, Wolf, Fox, Beaver,\nSquirrel, Mink, etc. etc.\n$15.00 TO $90.00\nSUmsben Iros.\nSmart S-lwppe for Smart Women\nSPECIAL\n1929\nESSEX\ncoUpe\nNEW\nGENEROUS TERMS\nNO TRADE-IN\nSmedley Garage Co.\nNext Door to Post Office\nNELSON, B. C. PHONE 71\nDuffuS\nSchool of Business Ltd.\nActual Business Offices in Operation\nVANCOUVER'S LARGEST BUSINESS\n-COLLEGE\u2014\n12 Experienced Instructors\nTune in on C. J. 0. R. every evening at\n7:15-7:30 except Wednesdays at fi p. m.\nfor Duffus Program.\nWRITE FOR CATALOGUE\nSEYMOUR AND PENDER STREETS\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nMAGIC fSW.S\ngives  better  baking  results . .\nMagic\nBAKING\nPOWDER\nUNSI\n3 out of every 4 Canadian House-*\nwives,* who bake at home, say\nthey use Magic Baking Powder\nbecause it gives consistently better baking results.\nIf you use Magic, then you, too,\ncan always be assured of the same\ngood results with all your baking.\n\u2022Thli fact wai rtvialad In a .ecenl\nDominion-wide Invutigatlon.\nII yo\u00bb bake at home, I tin)\nfor lh_N<sv. Magic Cook\nBook. It will provide yea\nwith do_cm of Interesting\nluggtttloiM to help you\nwith your baking. A copy\nwill bt lent fr\u00abt oo ce-\nqt.it..\nte\/c\n\u2022 Look for dill nail: on every tin.\nIt ll our guarantee that Magle Baking\nPowdti doea not contain alum <\"\n\u2022ny heiml-l Ingiedlent.\nSTANDARD BRANDS  LIMITED\nGILLETT PRODUCTS\nToronto    Montreal    Winnipeg    Vancouver\nand BrandiM In all the principal cltlu of Canada\n.\n THB NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1930.\nPage V\nChxncVs British Shoes,\nA MODEL built fon a\nrounded too last\u2014ca-\n- pable of worlds of\ncomfort, irith \"CHURCH\"      '\nrecognized quality nnd unfailing pervice.\nWe wish to announce these are some\nnew Church Models.\n^\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders itii Footfashion .\nUttS.iaV.fi. A.\nSociety\"\nThia column la conducted by\nMra. M. J.v Vlgneux, AH newa\not a social nature, including receptions, private entertainments,\npergonal Items, marriages, etc.\nwlU appear ln this column.\nTelephone Mrs. Vlgneux at het\nhome, 619 Silica street.\nE.   B.   L.   Dewdney,   manager   of   . \u25a0 ,_,-,, .  .,\nthe   Bank   of'  Montteal, .left .last  honeymoon spent at Spokane, Leth\nnight   for  Vancouver   to  attend   al^?e>   Calgary.   Banff   and Lake\nbanquet   being! given  in  honor  of\nin   Spokano,  visiting  Mrs.   D.   Foray the,\n. *   *   *\nMrs. William Waldle and Miss\nJean Waldle have returned from a\ncouple of weeks* motoring trip to\nVancouver, where - they visited with\nMr. and Mrs. Benjamin McGregor\nand Mr, and Miry Oeorge Elly. On\ntheir return trip they wero accompanied by Robert. Waldle and-Sobert\nTaylor, both of Vancouver.\n*   *   *\nMr,    and   Mrs.   Everett   Breach\nhave   returned   to   Procter   from\nROTARIANS ADOPT\nPROGRAM IN BOYS'\nINTERESTVNELSON\nWill Send Boys to Kokanee\nX'amp; to Sponsor Two\nScholarships\nTHIS STOWAWAY\nWAS EQUIPPED\nLIVERPOOL, Sept. 16.\u2014<CP cable)\n\u2014A  completely  outfitted   stowaway\n, appeared in police court today when\n\u25a0 Henry   Edwin   Bradshaw,   aged   32,\ndescribed as a Bristol analyst, plead-\nl ed guilty  to stowing away on the\nWhite S'lir liner Doric,, on \u25a0 its voyage from Montreal to Liverpool.\nBradshaw was sent tu Ja'i]   for a\nI fortnight. He was found by members\nof the ship's crew in a lifeboat with\nfood sufficient for eight weeks, blan-\n' kets.i\/and even a stove and fuel.\n\"I left for Canada two years ago,\"'\nhe   said,   \"but   I   couldn't   get   on\nI with the farmers.\"\n10,509 JUVENILES\nI\u00bb COURT, YEAR\nSuch Is Record for Canada;\nShowing Increase Over\nPrevious Year   .\nWait! try\nIthe Connor First\n^HE    Connor   Thermo   Electric\n1 Washer ia insulated to keep the\n * water hot until the end of the\nEvash\u20143 Yi times thicker than the regular\nPopper tub machine. Built stronger to\nIjast longer.\nY[> Has the New large roll water remover\nJi-tafe for button*\u2014wrings drier and\nQuicker\u2014-oa screw adjusting.\n\\ The aluminum agitator is polished\nJjmooth\u2014safe for the most delicate gar-\nIjaehta\u2014washes cleaner and faster.\nj New lifetime oil encased drive runi\n| moothly and quietly.\nYou are protected for 12 years by the\nl.onnor guarantee\u2014the Longest, broad-\nI st ever given with an Electric Washer.\nI Approved   by   the   Hydro   Electric\nCommission of Ontario.\nIt is to your interest to investigat*\nI hene latest, exclusive advantages before\npurchasing.\nSEE IT TODAY I\nli'HIpperson Hardware  Co.,  Ltd.,  Nel-\n!\u25a0 Hoh;   Modern   Electric   Shop,   Trail;\nHendricks'    Garage,    Kaslo;    H.    A.\nSpeers,   Creston:   F.   Parks   &   Co.,\nCranbrook; Went Kootenay Power Ss\n((Light     Co.,     Rosslnnd;     Klmberley\nHardware  Co.,  Ltd.,   Kimberley.\nH. A. TREHERNE, .\nFactory Representative\nThe annual* report on Juvenile delinquency for the year ended September 30, 1920, gives the number\nof cases dealt with in the courts\nfor that year as 10,509. Of these.\n237 were dismissed 'cases of major\ncharges, and 2446 cases adjourned\nsine die, leaving 7826 proven cases.\nOf these latter 6,100 were maior\nand 2720 were minor offenceB. This\nis an increase of 43 major and 84\nminor offences, as compared with\n1928. Thc total cases increased 3.7\nper cent. The major offences increased .0 per cent, and the minor\n3.2 per cent.\nDuring thc past. eight years in\nwhich these reports on Juvenile\ndelinquency have heen published\nthe increase in the total proven\ncases has been-17.0 per cent, or an\naverage of 2.2 per cent per year.\nTHEFT TS PRINCIPAL OFFENCE\nThc principal class of offences in\nthe major class ls, as has always\nbeen, theft, which, including breaking and entering, constituted 79.4\nper cent of tho total number of\noffences.\nOf   thc   2720   minor   delinquents,\nI were cases of breaches of municipal by-laws, 343 disorderly con^\nduct and disturbing the peace, 327\nIncorrigibility, 484 trespass, and 327\ntruancy.\nOf the 1826 total delinquents, 8556\nwere reported from thc principal urban centres, 1270 from tho rural\ndistricts, or 83.8 per cent for the\ncities and 16.2 for the less closely\nsettled  districts.\nPerfect dyeing\nso easily done!\nDIAMOND DYES contain * the\nhighest quality anilines money can\nbuyl That's why they give such\ntrue, bright, now colors to* dresses,\ndrapes, lingerie.\nTho anilines In Diarriond Dyes\nmake them so eaay to use No\nspotting or streaking. Just clear,\neven colors, that hold through\nwear and washing.\nDiamond  Dyes  never give things\nthat re-dyed look       They are Just\n15c  at  all   dealers.     When   perfect\ndyeing costs no more\u2014Is so easy\u2014\n', why experiment with makeshifts?\nDiamondoDtyes\nHighest Quality for 50 Years\n\\[rmimmmw-Mwmw-ri___i_r_____^^^^_lll^_______M\nRADIO\nabitsbesb... -\nNow you can compare the\n\u25a0 finest standard makes of radio\nhere . . . and make your selection\nin the certainty that it is no danger\nof obsolescence within the next\nseveral years.\nKootenay Music\nHouse   '\nYour Music and Radio Headquarters\nNelson, B. C.\nSir    Charles    Gordon.\n, \u2022   *   *\nJ. Jerome, of Bonnington was a\ncity  .visitor  yesterday.\nv Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Diamond and\nfamily wsrp among those from Trail\nspending the week end at their\nsummer home at Willow Point.\n* *   *\n- Miss   Mary   Bradshaw   of' South\nSlocan spent yesterday ln town.\n\u25a0**\u25a0* .\u2022*\u00bb.\u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. -D. Kerr and. eon\nhave   left   for   Victoria.\n*' \u2022   *\n- Miss Evelyn Bradley spent the\nweek end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Bradley at\nErie.\n* *   *\nArthur stromstead spent the weejc\nend at the Jjoino o( Mr. and Mrs.\nO. Bradley at Erie.\nE. Flower who has been the\nguest of Mr.,and Mrs. W. T. Choate,\nVictoria street, left last night for\nthe^ coast cities en route to his\nhomo   in   Toronto.\nMiss Kathleen O'Sulllvan has returned from a holiday spent., in\nTrail.\nMrs. George Stewart of Sandon\nand her mother, Mrs. Law, of Slocan  city  are  in  town.\n* *   \u2022\nJ. V. Neil of Procter paid a visit\nto Nelson over the week end.\n* \u2022 . *\nFrank Carter of Winlaw spent\nyesterday   in   the   city.\n* \u2666   #\nMr.'   and   Mrs,\u00ab J.    pascuzzo   of\nSlrdarv were week end visitors tn\ntown.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. s. a. Blaylock and\nfamily of Trail spent the week end\nat their Willow Point home.\nMiss ii. Addison left last night*\nfor   Vancouver.\nT. Kuntz of Boswell paid a visit\nto  town yesterday,\ni$   \u2022   *        i\nMr.-and'Mrs. Hugh Burnett and\nson Grant Burnett, who have recently arrived from Nanaimo are\n.taking up residence in the Terrace\napartments.\n* *   *\nMrs. J. Sewell of Sunshine Bay\npaid  a  visit to town  yesterday.\nH. Perry Leake of Balfour spent\nyesterday   in   Nelson   on   business.\n* \u2022  \u25a0\u2022\nMrs.   W.   E.   Clayton   of   Victoria\nhas arrived in town to spend a\nmonth while Mr. Clayton is relieving   In   the   C.P.R.   Telegraphs.\nP. P. Harmes of Renata was a\nvisitor  to  town  yesterday. .   .\n* \u2022    * v\nA, Grant of Dutton and Grant,\nC. P. R. contractors at Procter,\nspent ysetcrdny shopping ln the\ncity.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Peter   Stromstead.\nGranite road, have returned from\na   motor  trip  to  Spokane.\nFrank Carter of Wlnlaw spent\nyesterday in the city.\nMrs. Charles McLanders and\ndaughter, Muriel, have returned to\nthetr .home in Sandon after a week\nspent in Nelson, guests at the\nhome of Mrs. McLandcr's son-in-law,\nand daughter. Mr. and Mrs. James\nDavidson.\nT. D. Stark, who spent yesterday\nIn town and Trail, has left for\nhis  home  in  Vancouver.\nMrs. J, strachan has returned to\nTrail after a few days spent ln\ntown.\n* *   \u2022\nJ.  O.  Lehnle of the Royal  Bank\nof   Canada,. has   returned   from\ncouple of weeks spent at the coast\ncities,\n* \u2022   *\nMr.   and   tors.  J.  Paul  Pltner  of\nRossland are ln the city,\nCecil Lambert of Boswell is in\ntown the guest of his parents.\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Lambert. Elwyn\nstreet,  Falrvlew.\nMlsa Peters of Oray Creek spent\nyesterday In the city.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nRev. J. S. Mahood. who has been\nofficiating In the Robson district,\nSunday was in Nel m.h yestcrdny\nen route to his home nt Queens\nBay.\nCaptain Fred Cogle of Procter paid\na visit to town yesterday.\nMrs. A. Jeffs has left on a visit\not  Spokane.\nMiss Florence Scott, who has been\nvisiting relatives In Nelson for the\npaat few weeks, has left for her\nhome  in  Calgary.\nMr., and Mrs. A. Le Page, Victoria street, and their family, leave\ntoday,  for  Kitchener.\nHarry Stevens of Ymlr paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\n* *   *\nE.   G.   Matthew   leives .today   for\nRossland.\nJack Gray, who has been spending\nthe past month in Cranbrook, was\nin town yesterday on hts way to\nhis home at Bonnington.\nRev. Mr. Watson of Kaslo officiated at St. Saviour's services Sunday and left for his home yesterday.\nWhile in town he 'was thc houso\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. L.\nDewdney,   Carbonate   street.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. j. T. Uwriea of\nHammond, British Columbia, are\nvisiting Mrs. Lawrie's brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr, and Mrs. J. D.\nFoggo, Mill street. Mr. Lswrle\nla the C. P. R. agent at Hammond.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nMiss Lillian Lewis - of Creston,\nwho has been a guest of Miss\nIsabel Burnett, Fairview, has left\nto make her home In Vancouver.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nJanet Wilson, night supervisor of\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital,\nwho has been holidaying in Victoria, has returned.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Grace Dunbar lias returned\nfrom spending two weeks' vacation\nin Trail, the guest of Miss K. W.\nRlgby.    Sho also spent a few days\nLouise.\n\u2022\u25a0  * \u25a0*\u25a0\nMrs. Norman. McKay, accompanied\nby Mr. McKay's mother, Mrs. J. S.\nMcKay, arrived last evenlug from\nVancouver,\nPhone 200 607 Baker St.'\nStore News^c>\nPAUL PITNER IS\nHONORED BY GYRO\nMEMBERSJELSON\nIs   Presented   With   China\nWare; Mr. Pitner Contributes to Program\nPaul Pltner, formerly manager of\nthe local theater, and-now manager\nof- the Rossland . theater, \"was an\nhonored guest at a meeting of the\nlocal Gyro club Monday evening. A\npresentation of china ware was\nmade to Mr. and Mrs. Pltner by Dr.\nW. B. Steed on behalf of the club.\nAfter the presentation Mr. Pitner,\naccompanied by W. Wallace, rendered   several   vocal   numbers.\nImpromptu speeches on humorous\nsubjects concluded the program.\nAlderman J. B. Gray, Oharles Morris. Gene Poulin and others contributed to the speech making. Mr.\nGray's talk was especially Interesting.\nJ\u2014 yrfl\t\nMuch Entertaining\nOrder, Cranbrook\nAn intensive program of boys'\nwork waa submitted to a meeting of\nthe Nelson Rotarlans in tbe Hume\nhotel Monday afternoon by the directors of the club. The program\nwhich was in the form pt a resolution and which called for the\ncontinuance of camp work and for\nthe aid of under-privileged boys,\nwas adopted by the club.\nAfter a discussion by tho various members of the club plans\nwere heard for the furthering of\nthe camping activities at Kokanee.\nNext year the club Intends to put\nbetween 30 and 60- boys from the\ncltj\\ odt at Kokanee. other than\nthe Boy Scouts. These boys will be\nchosen through the aid of the\nchurches,, and the Salvation Army,\nand will' be those who are in the\ngreatest   need   of   such   an   outing,\nA number of members volunteered\nto go out to Kokanee camp this\nfall and with the aid of the Scouts\nconvert the creek which inundates\nthe grounds in the spring. The\nScouts have already done a part\nof   the   creek.\nA Rotary scholarship for junior\nmatriculation was provided for. A\nscholarship will be given to a boy\nand a girl. These scholarships will\nbe supported by a birthday fund\nIn which each member gives a donation   on   his   birthday.\nDIGESTION OF\nFAT EXPLAINED\nNOW AT CORNELL\nCRANBROOK, B. C-, Sept. 16.\u2014\nComplimenting Miss Margaret Henderson and her brother, Jack Henderson, who leave on Saturday for\nVancouver where they will enter\nthe University of BrltlBh Columbia,\nMrs. J. McCallum entertained the\nchoir of Knox Presbyterian church,\nof which the departing guests havo\nbeen members, at her home on\nThursday evening. At the conclusion\nof a Jolly evening and a delicious\nsupper Mrs: McCallum, on behalf\nof th* choir, ^presented Miss Henderson with a handsome brown\nleather purse and Rev. J. C. Mo-\nLean-Bell, with a few well-chosen\nwords of appreciation, presented\nJack \u25a0 with a fountain pen. All\npresent expressed their best wishes\nfor success. A hearty vote of\nthanks to the hostess was moved by\nW. Grove,\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. Cummings\nentertained at bridge on Thursdiiy\nevening when the prize winners\nwere Mrs. McPherson, Mrs. ry m,\nMr. MacPherson and Mr. Dixon.\nThose playing were Mr. and Mrs.\nF. M. MacPherson, Mr. and Mrs.\nP. Price, Mr. and Mrs. Dixon. Mr.\nand Mrs. McKowan, Mr. and Mrs.\nWilson and Mrs. Pym.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Jones left at the\nend of the week for a visit witli\ntheir son aud daugutcr-in-law in\nVancouver. They were travelling\nby  motor.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Wilson entertained at dinner on Friday evening In honor of their daughter\nand son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nPrice, who are their guests and\nwho leave short ly for Montreal\nwhere Mr. Price haa accepted a position in tho McGlll metallurgical\ndepartment. Covers were laid for\n14. Tho dinner was followed oy\nnovelty bridge when mystery prises\nwere awarded each person .making a\ngame in one hand. The guests\nwere Mr. and Mrs. Price, Mr. and\nMrs. MacPherson. Dr. and Mrs. MacKinnon. Dr. and Mrs. Fergle, Mr.\na^d rMs, Snjig and Mr, nnd Mrs.\nMcKowan.\nRev. Brycc Wallace left on Friday\nfor London, Ontario, where ho will\nattend the general presbytery of\nthe United church.\nThe Krcmbo club held tlie opening dance of the season on Friday\novenlng in the parish hall. A good\ncrowd wns\" In attendance and the\ndance was enjoyed Into the early\nhours  of  the   next  morn in?.\nMrs. W. Shepherd, Mrs. G. Molr.\nMrs. J. Jarvls and Mrs. A. Bridges\nwere hostesses on Friday afternoon\nat Mrs. Shepherri'R home at nn\nold timers' tea In honor of Mm,\nArgue who leaves on Wednesday to\nmake her future homo at Vancouver.\nAn address to Mrs. Arguo WM read\nby Mrs. McBurney and a presentation of a handsome Ivory dresser\nset made by Mrs. Shepherd- on behalf of the guests, Mrs. Bridges\nthen presented Mrs. \"Argue with a\nhandsome dresser lamp to match\ntho set wjth tho compliments of the\nCranbrook Trading company to their\noldest customer. Mrs. McFarlnno\nread an address written by Rev.\nBryce Wallace on behalf At the\nquarterly board of the United\nchurch. Beside the guest of honor\nthe Invited guests were; Mrs. R. M.\nArgue. Mrs. Gill. Mrs. E. Hill. Mrs.\nII. Bridges. Mrs, F. Bridges, Mrs.\nWarren, Mrs. Clerk. Mrs, Willis, Mrs\nStender. Mrs. Flnnls. Mrs. J. F.\nSmith. Mrs. Mennln, Mrs. McFarlane,\nMrs. McBurnpy, Mrs. .1. Young. Mrs.\nW. J. Wilson, Mrs. Moffat, Mrs. H.\nBrown, Mrs M. ,T Harris, Mis\nHarrison. Mre. Shankland, Mrs.\nBains, Mrs. Hlnton. Mrs. J. F.\nBridges. Mrs. Clnpp. Mrs. Wells.\nMrs. Chester. Mrs. w. Brown. Mr.-.,\npatmore, Mrs. Wnltnrp. Mrs. Oarden\nMrs. Norgrove and Miss Olive\nNorgrove left at the end of tlie\nweek for Vancouver where Miss\nNorgrove will enter the University\nof British Columbia. Mrs. Norgrove will visit for a time before\nreturning.\nITHACA, N. Y., Sept. 15.\u2014A newly\nfounds principle of the digestion\nof fat was reported to the eighth\ncolloid symposium at Cornell University   recently.\nIt Is that protein, the lean portion of meat, forms a protective\nfilm around fat which is transported through the blood. Fat is\ndistributed in the form of globules in the blood, going to thc\nplaces needing this food. The globules are very small, about one\ntwenty five thousandth of an Inch\nIn dlnmcter.\nLiterally tho fat of meat. In digestion, Is coated with a little bit\nof loan, reversing the position\nfamiliar to tho eye. The discovery\nwas reported by Dr. S. Dew Iridium, A. E. Tart, and R. L. Nugent,\nof the Gladwin, Penn, Research\nLaboratory.\nDr. Nugent, presenting the paper,\nsaid the reason lor the films seems\nto be that fat cannot be dissolved\nln the blood as arc proteins and\nSUgarfl, The films of protein are Invisible even ln the best microscopes, but their presence wns detected by thc chemical reactions\nthey  caused.\nWOULD DIFFUSE\nSHAKESPEARE IN\nUNITED STATES\nNEW YORK. Sept. 15. -The will\nof the late Henry 0, Folger. former chairman of the Standard Oil\nCompany of New York, leaves approximately 9in.ooo.ooo, a world\nfiimous .Shakespeare collection and\nmuseum to house If., as a gift\nto the United States \"for the promotion and diffusion of knowledge\n1*1*1   regard   to   Sh.ikespcare.\"\nThe museum building is now\nunder construction in Washington\nadjacent to the property of the congressional   library.\nNew Instruments\nfor British Army\nBands Are Costly\nLONDON. Sept, lp.\u2014BrttVh armv\nband instruments are being Pitched a semi-tone lower The change\nwill cost about $600,000.\nControversy has been raging over\n\"pitch\" for 30 years, because army\nbands playing a semi-tone higher\nthan orchestras and organs In this\ncountry mado it difficult for civilian instrumentalists to tune \"up\nto them.\nThe change was planned by thc\nWar Offico last year and came into\neffect with the recent opening of\nthe Royal Tournament at Olympia\nwhen thc army band played on the\nlower pitch, Several of the guards\nregiments have already received\ntheir  new  instruments.\ni\n::*:::::::::.:.'Y::._::_:::\/'':.-]\n\u25a0:S5ss:5:!i#:S:js(H|\n(\n__\\Aif\u00b1\n#* \\w\n\u25a0 \/     _9\nW0M\nBiHd*''\nmm**--  \u2022\nJlllllf*\nii*\\ ____\n'_B5Hfl\nfi\nfM\nRf  I:\nHP^Bii*_.\nffn.\n111\nmm\nWomen's Silk' Hose\nin\nNew Fall Shades.\nService weight, chiffon or renadine\nhose in all the late Fall shades. Full\nfashioned with pointed or French\nheels. All silk or with lisle top and\nsole. Sizes 8Va to 10. Holeproof, Ori-,\nertt or Superajlk makes.\nTHE PAIR $1.25, $1.50, $1.65\nTO ?1.95.\nWomen's Sports\nSUITS\nTwo or three piece style sport suits\nof fine Botany yams or in the\nBramble knit. Plain or combination\ncolors. Sizes 36 to 42.\nEACH ?14.00, $16.00 to $35.00\nNew sweaters and pullovers in a\nrange of colors or combinations.\nMade of pure silk or silk and wool\nin all sizes.\nTHE VALUES ARE EXCELLENT\nAT, EACH $4.00, $5.00 TO\n$10.00.\nSUM IS VOTED TO\nBLAKEBURN FUND\nPur trimming hat come Into first\nplace in fashion .'Mont. with tho Tur\nmuffs   and   tln,,j\"' hlch   are   the\nnewest things for 1930, J ,i\u00bb3]\nChesfieatfield\nSuite Spaeial\n3 Piece Jacquard Suite.\nReversible Cushions.\nComplete\n$147.50\nStandard\nFu_fss5t&si?e Co.\nComplete  House\n\u25a0  \u2022   Furnishers\nNelson, B. C.   \u2022\nfc,HMDflsG00D\nIf your wife is away on\nvacation, dine at the\nGolden Gate. Here you\nwill be staved with\nmeals like you are used\nto at home. With our\ntwenty-four' hour service you are able to get\nyour favorite dish at\nany time.\nQolden Qate\nCafe\nWillow   I'oint  Women's  Institute to Give $10 to\nRelief Fund\nreceived splendid support, the prizes\nexcepting one or two being donat- i\ned by th\u00a9 members. j\nThe Health Exhibit staged by\nMrs. T. A. Alrey was very Inter- I\nesting 36 children and 15 adults\nwere weighed and measured. Three\nchildren Barbara and Prances Camp-\nWTUjOW POINT. Sept. 14\u2014Mrs, D.\nHeddle and Mrs. P. Horrigan were\ntea hostesses at a meeting of the\nWillow Point Women's Institute\nheld ln the Institute House recently.\nMrs. P, Horrigan vice-president;\noccupied the chair and 14 members and two visitors were present.\nA letter thanking members (or\ndonation of 2n dollars to the Otbes\nScott Fund was received and 10\ndollars was voted to be sent to the\nBiakeburn Relief Fund.\nMrs. W. J. Mohr 'reporting on the\nFlower    Show   said    that   she    had\nbell  .ind   William  Heddle  had  correct weight:\nIt was decided to have the grandmother's entertainment on the evening of the October meeting Instead\nof the afternoon as many of tha\nmembers would be engaged in tho\npacking shed.\nBOVRIL\nin Tour Daily Diet\nMeans\nStrength Without Fat\nAstonishing Guns\nShoot Food to Eat\n jm^Wvw\n& '^~i._ltY>'J        \/\n?#?__\nWheat and rice grains given\ntheir most nutritious form\nHERE are wheat and rice grains shoe from\nguns! To give them a new rlelidousness...\na more perfect digestibility.\nFirst the choice, plump grains are sealed in\nguns. Then revolved in fiery ovens. Then fired.\nThis causes 125 million explosions in every grain.\nIt blasts open every tiny food cell. Thus every\nparticle of the grain is made as completely digestible as though it had been cooked for hours. And\nso Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice atrain thc virtual\nnourishment of hot cooked cereals.\nAnd what new flavoriness ... what delicious,\ncrisp crunchiness . . . this wonderful invention\nbrings to wheat and tice. The gtains arc puffed\nto 8 times normal size. They taste like sweet new\nnutmeats. They entice as\ngrain foods never have\nbefore.\nServe Puffed Wheat and\nPuffed Rice every day in\nevery way you can. Your\nfamily deserves this finer\nkind of nourishment. Your\ngrocer hns Puffed Wheat\nand Puflcd Rice, The\nQuaker Oats Company.\nJ757\nQuaker Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice\n Page Six\nTOE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1930\/\nALMOST   HUMAN\nEdgar Stow ot Detroit had 25\ncases of beer and sis bottles ol\nwhiskey la his auto when he stopped on the river front near Am-\nheretburg, Proylncial police seized\n.the supplies and the car and arrested Stow. A speed boat with\ntwo occupants landed at the spot\nihortly afterward, so it is believed\nthe liquor was intended for United\nStates delivery.\n#* FOR MnCK.,\nHAIBrfLESS COMFORJ\nOOdmCiyMt\nASKS PAY DEFICIT\nINCURRED BY FALL\nFAIR, CRANBROOK\nCity Sells 1000 Bonds; Fire\nDepartment Has Fires\nDuring Month\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. 15\u2014\nT. R. Fleet, president of the Cranbrook Agricultural association, waa\npresent at a meeting of the council\nThursday evening when he presented a statement of the finances\nif the recent fall fair. The report\n\u25a0 ( receipts and dlabursments showed a deficit of $200. Mr. Plett stated\nthat when all the'accounts were ln\nthere would be     an additional de-\no you Look for a\n\"Biie inAVKisky ?\nMany cheep and inferior whiskies an noted for their \" kick\"\nor \"mte.** A \"bite\" is the result of adding raw Bpirit to the\nblend. Actually a whisky with \"bite\" is usually much less\nmature than a whisky with none.\nOne reason for the world reputation of \"White Horse\"\nWhiokyia ito complete lock of \"bito.\" The rich, creamy body\nis acquired after many years in the wood. When deep in its\nmaturity and properly \"married\" White Horse is bottled\u2014\nready for the world's approval. A more mellow, generous and\ndelightful spirit than White Horse is not obtainable.\nDISTILLED, BLENDBO AND BOTTIED IN 8C0TUVND\n'.     advertisement is not published or\niT.ibia.\ntho    LIQUOR    CONTROL\nbv tho Government of British\nIM.\nQfeLAMP.\nto dress bij^s\nAGAYc. ..g in prospect . . dancing . . a\nlate supper. . . Just now, you're adding \"the\nfinishing touch.\" But are you peering close up to\nyour mirror . . eyes puckered . . forehead\nwrinkled just a little ? Better use Edison Mazda\nLamps. Their caressingly soft light banishes eyestrain and helps you look your best always.\nL-so\nEDISON MAZDA\nIN 5 I OF.      FROSTtO\nLAMPS\nA'   CANADIAN    GENERAL   ELECTRIC   PRODUCT\nMay We Supply Your Lamps?\nGUY'S ELECTRIC STORE\nOUR STOCK OF EDISON MAZDA LAMPS\nIS ALWAYS COMPLETE\nColumbia Electric, Ltd*\n, Nelson and Kimberley, B. C.\nlicit ol approximately $150. He asked that consideration be - given the\nmatter, of making a grant of 9200\nto the association to the usual grant\nequal'to the light bill in the fair\nbuilding.   <\nAldermen Collier and Attrlde moved that a grant be made tbe agricultural association equal to the\nlight bill which amounts to $57.25\nand that the matter of a further\ngrant be.held for further consideration. An amendment that the\ngrant to the association be considered at the December meeting was\ncarried. \"\nLETTERS   HEAD   FROM   COAST\nLetters were read from the circulation manager of the Vancouver\nSun regarding the Cranbrook entrants in the recent Exhibition\nOlympald held there: from the\nThomas Skinner. Company regarding\nadvertising in 'Canadian Progress'\nfrom the B. C. Nurseries regarding\ntrees for planting on highway^ and\nboulevards and from the Broadcast\nPublishers of Vancouver about-advertising in Brown's \"Guide to British Columbia 1931\". These were ordered filed. A letter from the secretary of the Union of B. C. Municipalities on the convention to be\nheld ln Kelowna on October 8, 9\nand 10 and a meeting of the Municipal officers association to be held\nln conjunction with it was also\nordered filed.\nA letter from the city clerk of\nPrince Rupert enclosing a resolution suggesting a change of Section\n8 of the Municipal act to provide\nfor the registration of householders-\nand llsence holders during the\nmonths of February to. October of\neach year was read. It was resolved\non motion of Alderman Jackson and\nFlowers that Prince Rupert be advised that the Cranbrook council\nwis not ln favor of the resolution,\ntlon.\nAlderman Jackson and Balment\nbrought up a motion that the city\nclerk write the Police Commission\npointing out the fact that the council disapproves of employing a\npoundkeeper ' and request that the\nservice of one be dispensed with;\nalso pointing out the' the appointment of a poundkeeper should be\nIn the hands of the council.\nSI.1.L   BONDS\nThe sale of $9000 City of Prince\nRupert 5 per cent 19340's and $1000\nCity of Prince Rupert 5 per cent\nlE)3'9's to the Royal Financial Corporation, Ltd., at $97.78 and accrued\ninterest was confrimed. Also the\npurchase of $11,528 Province of Alberta guaranteeing C.N.R. 4 per cent\n1939 debenture stock at $92.82 with\naccrued interest.\nThc chairman of the Relief Committee brought up the matter of a\ncertain lady resident m Slaterville\nbeing unable to pay her account.\nThe matter wus left for further\nconsideration.\nAlderman Jackson referred to the\nmatter of the colored lights on\nBaker being left on continuously.\nThe matter was referred to the Unlit\ncommittee. The light committees\nreport showed that 12 services had\nbeen discontinued and 14 new connected up, (Four services were cut\noff for arears and two connected\nup again. consumption for August\nwas 83,240 K.W.H. ks against 84,-\n680 K. W. H. for July and 70,720\nK. W. H. for August 1939.\nDISPOSE   OF   FURNACETTES\nAlderman Collier of the Fire Committee   referred   to   the   matter   of\nI the   furnicette   on   hand   from   the\n! old  fire  hall  nnd asked  the authority of the council to dispose of them\nThe   fire   committee   was   given   au-\nI thorlty  to dispose of the  fuinncette\nat the best price possible. The chairman   also   brought   up   the   mutter\nof disposing    of the old  lire    siren\nto   the     Consolidated   Mining     und\nSmelting  company. ' This  was     left\nwith   the   the   fire   committee   with\npower   to   act.\nThe fire chief's report for the\nmonth showed two calls. One at the\nresidence of P. Orant with a damage\nof $500 covered by Insurance, and\none of the residence of Mrs. Ln\nAbbey of French Avenue which had\nbeen set' by children playing in\nthe attic' Cost of calling men for\nthe Orant fire, $51.30 ana for the\nLcAbbeR   fire   $15.00.\nUnder the heading of the Works\nDepartment Alderman Balment Inquired as to wh <_was bearing the\ncost o[ erecting lhe welcome signs\non the highway at the north and\nsouth entrances to the city, it being his understanding thnt the board\nof trade had simply asked for permission to erect these signs. It\nwas moved by Aldermen Balment\nand Scott that the account covering\nthe cost of erecting said signs bc\nmailed to the Cranbrook Board of\nTrade.\nThe works committee report\nshowed work on the Gold creek\ndiversion progressing satisfactorily,\nthc new concrete spillway at the\nGold creek dam being completed.\nThe work of raising the dam was\nreported two thirds finished and the\npipe laid except for approximately\n650 J eet which will be completed\nby next Monday. It Is expected that\nwater will be turned into tho\npipes  by  October 8.\nConcrete sidewalk on east Hanson\navenue has been completed, also\ntrimming and resetting gravel and\nmacadam, on Kains, Hanson, Louis\nstreeU. and Garden avenue.\nERECT WELCOME ARCHES\nWelcome strcha., supplied by hte\nBoarci of Trade were set In concrete\nat the entrances to yio city north\nan:i   south.\nRegarding thnt portion of the\nresolution of the Works committee\nunder date of May 20, 1930, dealing\nwith an agreement covering relaying\nof the old brewery line, it was decided tl\\t this be reclnded on thc\ngrounds thnt there ls a question\nas to the city's legal authority to\nenter into such an agreement, and\nthat the brewing company be so\nnotified.\nA letter from tho Board of Trade\ndealing with tho condition of Van\nHome street between thc Imperial\nbank and the hospital crossing waa\nrend* and ordered filed, It being\npointed out that the work referred\nto had already been undertaken and\ncompleted.\nAlderman Jackson made the suggestion thnt in his opinion tenders\nshould be called for ln the purchase\nof coal for thc city hall and flro\nhall, It was pointed out that the\n[ supplies on hand wore sufficient for\nthe balance of the yoar so no action\nwas taken.\nAlderman Jackson gave notlco of\nmotion that at the next meeting of\ntho council, he would introduce a\nbylaw for the regulating and compelling of the measuring or weighing\nof butter, bread, potatoes, milk and\nother articles of food, cordwood,\nfirewood, coal and other fuel sold or\nexposed for sale as provided under\nsection 64, subsection 126 of the\nMunicipal act.\nRestrictions on  tho  use of water'\nfor lawn and garden sprinkling waa\ncancelled.\nThe matter of the cost of installing a water connection . on the\nNicholson, property on Oranbrook\nstreet, north of the city, was discussed. It waa decided that in application for water connections outside the city .limits be referred to\ntho council lor consideration on\nthe merits of each Individual application.\nThe dairy inspector's report showed\nthat all dairies had been visited\nand found to be handling the njilk\nwith the utmost cleanliness. Playle's\nnew barn ls nearlng completion and\nwill be a great Improvement ln the\nsanitary handling of milk,\nBylaws 606 and 607 were passed\nand adopted. Accounts to the\namount of $18,936 wero presented\nand ordered paid. Mayor Roberta\nwaa in the^halfiand Aldermen Scott,\nBalment, Jackson, Attridge, Collier\nand Flowers were present.\nROUND UP MANY\nRANGE HORSES\nNEAR NEWGATE\nNEWGATE, B. C, Sept. 15.\u2014Great\nexcitement reigned over Newgate on\nTuesday last. Unbranded range\nhorseB were rounded up\/ ln the\ndistrict between Cranbrook and the\nborder and were brought to be\nshipped,\nIt Is expected that about eight\ncars will be sent to the States,\nNumerous Indian riders gave a gala\nappearance to  the  scene.\nTo clean the ftUto upnblstery, use\nthe vacuum cleaner with the suction attachment; it is excellent for\ngetting tho dust out of crevices and\nwill clean the seats and upholstery\nquickly and effectively.\nCRANBROOK GETS\n$200jN FINES\nHave 19 Arrests During August; Two Arrested\nfor Forgery\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. '16.\u2014\nThe report of the ohief of police\nsubmitted at thfi regular meeting of\nth* police commission showed, a\ntotal of 19 arrests for August, also\ntwo summons. Of the arrests two.\nwere for intoxication, two -Indians\nfor intoxication, two Indians for\nhaving liquor in their possession,\nsix for vagrancy, two for theft, two\nfor forgery, two for escaping lawful\ncustody, one for Intoxicant operating auto, two for driving to the\ncommon danger, one contrary to\nthe  Dominion  elections  act.\nOf these eight paid fines, two\nlet out on suspended sentence, five\nare serving sentence, four committed for trial, two 'dismissed.\nFines collected for the month\namounted to $200; pound fees\namounted to $35.50; inspection\nfees   $1.\nOne Btolen auto was recovered at\nCreston.\nMeals served to prisoners totalled\n213 and 17 to indigents at a cost\nof $32.32)\nThe police had difficulty in\nrounding up several stray horses\nthat had been annoying residents\nand destroying lawns and boulevards. One horse was sold from the\ncity  pound.\nMarcel Rochas, bringing tho focus\nof attention on lace gownH, stresses\nblak as against the colorful royal\nblue, the overworked beige, cocoa.\npale   yellow   und   delicate  blue.\nNEWGATE HAS A\nVISITOR, ENGLAND\nNEWGAT, B.. C, Sept. 15.\u2014Miss\nDora Gftllpway of England *\/- at\npresent visiting Mies M. \u25a0 C. \/ ott.\nSh$ has conducted a 'party a- JJng-'\nltsb girls to Canada and Is now on\nher way,hojne. Miss Galloway 'intends stopping off in Montreal for\na month or more.\nRev. jMoMorlne', vicar of Mlohel\nAnglican church held a communion\nand   harvest   festival   service   com-\nQuickly Builds Up\nThin Scrawny Women\n\"Would you like to quickly add\npounds of firm, attractive flesh-\nbanish nervousness and irritability\n\u2014fill that tired out body 'of yours\nwith amazing strength and energy?\nDo you-want to bring out \"your\nhidden beauty\u2014acquire a smooth\nand clear skin\u2014bright eyes reflecting your glorious health within?\nThen take McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets\u2014Just chock' full of\npowerful flesh-adding, strength-\ncreating, rejuvenating and health\nbuilding   elements.\nWho'd ever think the livers of\nlowly Codfish would yield such vital\nhealth essentials yet they do and\nfor years doctors ' and world's\ngreatest medical authorities have\nprescribed them for underweight,\nrundown men, women and children.\nYou can get McCoy's Cod Liver\nExtract Tablets at any drugstore.\nGO sugar coated tablets 60 centB\nandv if you don't gain at least 6\nlbs.   In  30   days\u2014money   back.\nbined on Sunday. September 14.\nMra. Richard Williams % ls planning to have a short holiday on\nVancouver Island with hett'. friend.\nMiss A. Melkle.\nV. 2. Manning, Inspector Of public schools, paid an unofficial visit\nto the school  last week.\nJ, Sattler. and' so\/i won 'two first;\nprizes in white potatoes and one\nfirst In corn at the ;_?errile and\ndistrict fall falr;.. \u25a0 ''    '\nMiss A. E. Hewitt, having .spent\nthe past year In. Canada, is leaving\n\"BUILD   B.   C.   PAYROLLS\"\nA Booklet\nOn Infant\nFeeding\nWe'll send you a booklet on; Infant\nfeeding 'thoujh It Is not to be taken\nas a substitute for your doctor If\nthe child ne;ds treatment,. Pacific\nMilk' as a food for babies is a very\nfascinating subject. Tt purifies little\nbodies and bbilds tissue. It has\nrestored babies who had let go\ntheir grip. Scores of mothers In\ntheir letters tell us the good it\nhas  done.\nPacific Milk\nFactory at\nABBOTSFORD.   B.   C.\nNewgate on Sunday for London,\nEngland. She la travelling via, the .\nStates and, she will stay a short\ntime in Pittsburgh. Miss Hewitt-\n\u00bbxpects to meet her mother in-\nNew York and vshe will be sailing\non' the \"Majestic,\" which leaves\nNew York. September 19.\n\"Patou's new green, is especially\nflattering t\u00bb wqmeri who wear\n36 or 46.\"\nREAD OF A CASE\nUHjn OWN\nDecided to take Lydia \u00a3\u2022\nPinkham's Vegetable  \\\nCompound\nMoncton, New Brunswick\u2014^'Before\nmy last baby was born I was very weak,\nnervouB and dis-\ncouraged. -I e&w .\nan advertisement\ninthe paper about*\na woman who bad\nbeen like me so I\nbought a bottle of\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound. I took\nthree bottles and\nit carried me imfe-\nly_ throuph that\ncritical tune.. I\nhave1 three children to care for and I\nfeel well and Btrong. I have told two\nother women about your medicine.\"\u2014;.;\nMrs. Gus Absbnaui\/t, 82 AJbert Street,\nMoncton, New Brunswick.\noan Crawford reveals\nthe Secret of Fascination \u2022\u25a0 \u2666 *\nJoan Crawford, adorable\nyoung M. G. M. star, in the\nluxurious bathroom created for\nher in Hollywood. At home,\nas in her dressing room on\nlocation, she use3 Lux Toilet\nSoap, andsays: \"There'ssome-\nthing about a smooth, soft\nskinthat's\/rresz's.j'\/b\/e.Inever\nfound anything like Lux Toilet\nSoap for keeping my skin\nlovely.\"\n\"npHERE'S ONE kind of girl who al-\nJL ways attracts,\" says Joan Crawford;\nthe screen star whose vivacious.loveliness\nhas won conquests by the thousand.' 'It's\nthe girl with exquisite skin!\n\"There's something about a smooth,\nsoft skin that's irresistible, it seems. Just\nwatch the girl who has it. She's sure to\nbe sought after, the center of attention\nwherever she goes!\n\"The Hollywood directors found out\nlong ago\"\u2014Joan Crawford shook her red-\nbrown head in emphasis\u2014\"that a girl\nsimply must have ravishing skin to win\nher public. Those great\nglaring close-up lights\nreveal even tiny flaws,\nyou know.\n\"So you can imagine\nhow carefully every girl\nin Hollywood guards\nCARLOTTA KING (M. C. M.)\n\"Keep, my .kill to .month I\"\nGWBN LEE (M. G. M.I\n\"1 find It wonderlull\"\nJULIA FAYE (M. G. M.)\n\"I alway. ul. it.\"\nher skin!  Especially now that the talkies\nare here, with more close-ups than ever I\n\"For a long time almost everyone I know\nhas been using Lux Toilet Soap. It does\nleave the skin sq soft and smooth! That's\nwhy lovely Gwen Lee uses it regularly. And\nCarlotta King. Did you ever see more,\nbreath-taking skin than hers? Julia Faye\nand Dorothy Sebastian, too, and ever so\nmany others.\n\"If a girl wants to have the charm of\ntemptingly beautiful skin (and what girl\n_ lioto by Clarence SlacUlr Bull\ndoesn't), she ought to try this nice white\nsoap. She's sure to be delighted with the\nresults 1\"\nNine ont of Ten Lovely Stars use it\u2014 \u2022\nin Hollywood\u2014on Broadway\u2014in Europe\nOf the 521 important actresses in Hollywood, including all stars, 511 are devoted\nto Lux Toilet Soap. All the great filfn\nstudios have made it the official soap\nfor their dressing rooms!\nThe lovely Broadway stage stars, too,\nhave discovered that Lux Toilet Soap gives\ntheir skin just the gentle care that is required to keep it lovely.\nAnd how the European stars are using this\nfragrant white soap!\nYou, too, will want to\ntry it. Order several\ncakes\u2014today.\nDOROTHY SEBASTIAN (M.G.M.)\n\"Soothing and refre r\u00bbhln_l\"\nr Brother. Limited, Toronto\u2014Soap .maker, by appointment to their Bacellenciea\nthe Qovemor-Oeneral and Vlieountew Willlngdon\nLUX Toilet Soap\nluxury such as you have found only in fine\nFrench Soaps at 60c and $1.00 the cake\u2014NOW\n\/ \u2022        .*\n10*\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER' 16, 1930.\nROBINS   AND   CARDS   START  SERIES  TODAY\nBROOKLYN HAS LONE GAME LEAD OVER\nST. LOUIS; CDBS DIVIDE DOUBLE BILL\nWITH PHILLIES; GIANTS TRIM PIRATES\nBrooklyn-St.    Louis    Series\nMay Decide the National\nPennant Winner\nWith the Robins holding a slim\nadvantage   ot   one   gome   over   the\n.', second   place   Cards,   Brooklyn   and\n* St. Louis open an all-Important\nthree-game series at Ebbetta 'Weld\ntoday\u2014a series'that may go a long\n, way toward deciding the winner ot\nthe National league ' pennant race.\nThe Robins picked up a half-game\n' yesterday, defeating the Beds 13 to 5,\nwhile the Cards were Idle and the\nCubs were dividing a double-\nheader  with  the  Phillies.\n' The division of the double bill\nleft the Cugs 1V_ games \u25a0 back of\nthe Robins. The Glanta managed\nto stay ln the race by downing the\nPirates.\n_   Here Is how the race looks today\nwith the games won and lost, percentage  and   games   to  play:\nClub: To\nW   !_j   Pet. Play\nBrooklyn      84   60   .585   10\nSt.   Louis   _....._.  82   60   .577   12\nChicago    \u2014  82   '61   .673    11\nNew  York   ...:  78   66   .546   11\n\u00ab. -\u2014. . .       ,   I      \t\nChicago Cubs, fighting to regain\nthe National league lead whloh\nthey lost through two defeats at\nthe hands of the tell end Phillies,\nsplit even \u25a0 with the, Phils In a\ndouble header today, The Cubs loat\nthe first game 12 to 1*1, but won\nthe second 6 to 4\t\nThe Phils gave the Cubs another\nscare ln the oth lnnlttg by a batting\nrally, which the western team\nmanaged to stop after the Phils had\nscored   three   runs.\nFirst game: BHE\nChicago  11   19   3\nPhiladelphia  12   18   0\nBlake, Petty, Teachout and Hartnett, J. Taylor, Benge, Collard,\nElliott   and   Davis.\nSecond game: R   II   E\nChicago     6   12   0\nPhiladelphia  '.  4     9   1\nBush and Z. Taylor; Collins and\nRensa.\nGAP   IS   WIDENED\n, . BROOKLYN. Sept. 15\u2014The Brook-\nI lyn' Robins widened the gap ' sep-\nl .rating them from the St. Louis\nCardinals and Chicago Cubs ln\n1 the hectic National league' pennant\ntrace today. A 13 to 6 victory over\nI the Reds while the Cubs were\nI breaking even with Philadelphia.\n1 left 1 the Robins a full game ln\nj front of the Cardinals, who wero\nI Idle and a game and a half ahead\nJot Chicago. The Cardinals and\n\u25a0 Robins open ln the important series\n-i at Ebbetts field tomorrow.\n1 R   H   E\n\u25a0 Cincinnati  . 6   11   0\nI Brooklyn      . 13   17   0\nI Lucas, Benton, Prey. May and\nI Gooch, Moss, Clark and Lopez,\nIPlclnlch.\nSCORES   12-11   AND   6-4\nPHILADELPHIA.   Sept,   16\u2014   The\n\"SEE MOORE FOR .\nMORE VALUE\" !\nOur Work Wins i\nSatisfied Cust- !\nomers whether\nit is a\nBROKEN TOP\nDENTED BODY\nSMASHED\nFENDER\nBROKEN GLASS\nWe can fix 'em\nright \u2014 and we\nknow that you will\nbe pleased with\nour work and also\nthe price.\n' It will pay you to con-,\nHUlt us on any fender or\nbody  rcpulr  work.\nMOORE'S\nFender&Body\nWORKS\nPHONE 45\nfor Quick Service\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\nFITZSIMMONS   STAR\nNEW YORK. Sept. 16\u2014(AP) \u2014\nWith Fred Fitzsimmons pitching\nthree hit ball and his mates\npounding Steve Swetonlc hard in\nthe early Innings, the New York;\nGiants defeated the Pirates 6 to 1\ntoday to stave off Pittsburgh's\nrush  toward   the   first   division.\nR   H   E\nPittsburgh      130\nNew   York  6   12   0\nSwetonlc a_d Bool, Fitzsimmons\nand ' Hogan.\nSECOND INDOOR\nCOURSE HERE TO\nCOST\n'\u2022' \u00bb\u2014>-4s\u00a3\nM\/w Pitchers Prefer \"To Hwe\nonly the center pi elder\nshift for various Batters\n_!_\u00a3-\u2014^LEfFT y\nFIELDER. OOfiiRO\nNEW COACH AT\nWASHINGTON U.\nIS \"CLICKING\"\nFORT WORTH WINS\nIN TEXAS LEAGUE\nIs Introducing Modern Football to the Pacific\nNorthwest\nFORT WORTH, Texas, Sqpt. .15.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Tort Worth won the Texas\nleague pennant today by defeating\nWichita Palls, 5 to 2, In the fifth\nand deciding game of the play-off\nseries, ivid will meet Memphis,\nSouther Association champions, in\nthe fir3t game of the Dixie series\nat Memphis Wednesday.\nSecond Story to be Added to\nGelinas' for the Latest\nGolf Innovation\nAnnouncement that another story\nwould be added to his present brick\nbuilding on Baker street to houso\nan 18-hole indoor miniature golf\ncourse was made last night by A.\nO. Oellnas. The project will entail\nah expenditure of about 510,000 and\nwill be ready for use in about, a\nmonth,   Mr.   Gelinas   stated.\nIt will be equipped with all the\nlatest improvements and will be\nsteam heated, air cooled and ventilated. The entrance will be from\nBaker street, separate from the entrance  to  his  present  store.\nThis will bring the indoor courses\nin Nelson up to two. it having been\nrecently announced that the opera\nhouse  would  he   turned   Into one.\nMANDELL    WINH\nJANESVILLE, Mis.. Sept 15\u2014(AP)\nSammy Mandell, former lightweight\nchampion, won the decision over\nMickey ' O'Neill. Milwaukee*, in a\nten round flRht at the fairgrounds\nhere   tonight.\nMandell weighed 143'\/a and O'Neill\n130.'  \u25a0\nBy AL DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher New York Giants)\nThere are two . systems ol playing a defensive putlleld. Under\none sytem ail three outfielders shift\nfor various hitters, and under the\nother, onlv the center fielder shifts,\nthe other two men guarding the\nfoul lines.\nAll outfielders | should know\nwhether a curve, slow or fast ball\nis being pitched the batter, this in-\n| formation being relayed to them by\na sign from the shortstop or second\nbaseman. \u201e   .\nMany pitchers tell the outfielders\nbeforo the game where they wish\ntheni to play \u2014and try and mako\nthe hitters hit to certain fields.\nBy pitching fast balls outside they\nt-an usually make thc lefthand hitters hit to left or left center, and\nthe right banders, hit to right or\nright   center\nThe main reason for guarding tho\nfoul lines is the Inability of tho\npitcher to always get the ball where\nhe wants lt. A long hit along\nthe line will orten break up a ball\n>amo with tho outfield shifted the\nother way.\nSave this Bin League Baseball\nSeries, another will appear Friday.\nAl Demaree has prepared a new\nIllustrated leaflet on \"Batting\" which\nhe will gladly send to any ^reader\nrequesting it. Address ai Demaree\nin carfl of thin paper, and be sure to\nenclose a self-ad dressed, stamped\nenvelope.\nPIPES\nFromSlto$10\nMonaca\nOrlick\nDelfit\nDBL\nDunhill\n(QELINAQ\nTOBACCONIS1S\nTHE ARISTOCRAT AMONG FINE GINS\nUPPER\nIL\u00aeKIIID\u00aeK]\nDRYGSN\nSolo AT ALL\nCOVERNMENT\nUqUOR   ST0.C3\n**-^(Pints\n)1\u00ab\nFORMER CHAMP\nLEADS LADIES'\nGOLF, MONTREAL\nMrs. Alex Fraser, Champ in\nID16, Heads  Qualifiers\nin East\nMONTREAL, Sept. 15\u2014(CP)\u2014 A\nchampion of a decade ago returned\nto the links today and in ono\nspectacular effort hurtled again to\nthe forefront of the continent's\nwomen golfers. It was Mrs. AJexa\nStirling Fraser of Ottawa, United\nStates champion from 1910 to 1920\nwho captured the qualifying medal\nin today's initial Play for thc open\nCanadian women's title, at Laval -\nSur-Le-Lac. She led a field of 78\nprominent players that indued Miss\nHelen Hicks, (defending champion)\nin the 18-hole round that whittled   the   field   down   to   33,\nMrs. Fra\u00bbr and Miss Hicks, combined to break the women's courep\nrecord at Laval by shooting 7^.\none under par and five strokes\nunder the old mar.; Tlie tie between the players for the qualifying mcd.il was broken by the regulations of the Canadian Ladies'\nGolf union, which gives the medal\nto player having the lowest gr\\ss\nfor the first five holes Mrs.\nFraser  was  one  stroke   better.\nThe victory of the Ottawa player\nproved the crowning achievement\nof lhe Canadians today. The United\nStates delegation came into its own\nwhen 17 players from below tho\nborder scored 88 or under and took\ntheir places beside fourteen players\nfrom Canada and one from France\nin the first routed of match play\nfrhicii   starts   tomorrow.\nJACK\nTOWNSEND\nBEATEN\nIS\nCINCINNATI.. Sept. 15.- (AP) \u2014\nLong Tom Hawkins, San Diego. Cal..\nmade short work of Jack Town-\nsend, New York, by knocking him\nout in ono round here tonight.\nThey are negro heavyweights. Hawk-\nIns weighed 210 and Townsend 197\npounds.\nUNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON,\nSeattle, Washington^ Sept. 15.\u2014A\nquiet determined Irishman, young\nin years, but wise in the ways of\nfootball\u2014he has in three months\nintroduced more modern football\nto the Pacific Northwest than that\nregion has seen in a decade\u2014-is\nJimmy Phelan. the new head mentor at the University of Washington.\nBrought to\nWashington last\nyear following his\nwinning of the\nBl\u00a3 Ten Championship for Purdue, Phelan presents a positive,\nagreeable personality to the\ncoaching fraternity of the coass\n\u2014one that promises to -be Jelc\nstrongly ln that\nfraternity, so Jong\nas Phelan coaches Husky teams.\nIan Is average in height, square\nand well built across the shoulders.\nlarge handed, and invariably neatly groomed-^-one of the results, probably, of hts several years of military training during the World\nwar,\nIn action, Phelan displays oth^r\nresults of military training, for he\nhas the decisiveness and directness of a military leader, without\nhowever, the brusquencas or domination often associated with that\ntype of leadership,\nEarly In his football career ho\nbegan exhibiting those characteristics which made him a success ln\ntwo conference, and won his berth\nIn the third, the Paclflo Const\nConference which he considers one\nof the toughest in tho country.\nON   SANDLOTS\nAs a stripling\u2014and he was hardly more than that all through his\n'teens\u2014Phelan payed football on\nthe sandlots of his home town.\nPortland. Oregon, before, winning a.\nberth on the Columbia High School\nteam of that city. On that wind\nPhelan played every position irom\nend to quarterback, and began to\nshow those qualities for field generalship which won him the commendation later from Knuto\nRockne at Notre Dame of being\n\"one of the smartest and gameBt\nquarterbacks in Notre Dame football   history.\" .\nWorking his way through Notre\nDame by waiting on tables, Phelan\nwon a berth as first string quarterback with tho varsity squads of\n15, 16. 17, calling the signals for\nevery important game of the three\nseasons up to the Nebraska contest\nof the latter year when he left\nschool to go. In training for tho\nair force aud later see service\noverseas.\nAs a player nt Notre Dame,\nPhelan got a lot of credit for courage and nerve. He played through\nan entire game against Army with\na couple of broken ribs, could out-\npunt anybody on his squad, and\nwas rated a brilliant in the business   of   field    generalship,\nPhelan's first large scale exhibition of one of hla outstanding\ntraits\u2014that getting what bo wants\nit\u2014was shown shortly after he took\nover the coaching berth at* Missouri In 1919 In his first year\nthere he piloted his squad to a\nValley championship, tied for the\ntitle the following season, and\nclicked Id tho upper bracket in\n1022.\nLeaving Missouri, Phelan, stepped\nonto thc bottom rung of the Bl\u00ab\nTen Conference ladder\u2014tho coach-\nberth at Purdue University, Lafayette, the relatively small school that\nhadn't won u conference title in\nsome 20 year. Beginning his first\nyear with one win. five losses, and\na tie. Phelan slowly and determinedly built up a football machine that' walked through the 10-!!'\nseason of Big Ton competition\nwith eight straight victories and\nthe bacon?'\nPhelan brings to Washington n\nworld of determination and a first.\nclass ability for organization He.\nIs a rigid disciplinarian with his\nmen, is'noted for his fairness and\nhis Intense loyalty On the field\nhe \" is a task master, ._ driver if\nthere ever was one\u2014and an en-\nrouragcr of thoso who are slow\nand a modifier of those who aro\nrunning away  with themselves.-,\nThc wonderfully loyal following\nPhelan built In the Big Ten Conference and among the men who\nworked \"with him at Purdue, ls\nalready, becauso of thc man's personality and ways of dOlllfl business,   building   up   at   Washington.\nAs Coich Rockne said when Phelan signed at Washington: Purdue's\nloss is Washington's galn\u2014I indict that Phelan will be success.u)\nIn more ways.than one at hts if;w\nbeitft   in   Seattle.\"\nHe is.\nAs the gentlemen of the sporting   fraternity   say,   \"Hoa  clickinfe-\"\nO. C. FOOTBALL\nSTANDING\nYANKEES TRIM\nDETROIT, 5-3\nWashington   Beats   Chicago\nby 14-9; Boston, St. Louis\nSplit Double\nDETROIT, Sept, 15.\u2014A four run\nattack In the second inning gave\nthe New York Yankees a E> to 3 decision over the Detroit ligers here\ntoday. Sherld was hit hard but man-\naged to keep the Tigers' even hits\nwell   scattered\nR. H. E.\nNew   York ., 5 10    1\nDetroit       3 11    0\nSherld and Dickey; fiorrell and\nHay worth.\nTED   LYONS   PAINTED\nCHICAGO, Sept. 15.\u2014Washington\nrouted Ted Lyons and the White\nSox today winning ; heavy hitting\nbattle 14 to 9. Tho White Sox duplicated the Senators'- 15 hits but\nfailed to bunch them as effectively.\nR. H. E.\nWashington      14 15    2\nChicago    _..._.    9 16 '3\nJones, Burke and -Spencer; Lyons,\nWendc,   Henry,  Walsh   and   Tate.\nTAKE    LONG    GAME\nST. LOUIS, Sept.. 15.\u2014The Boston\nRed Sox took the second game of a\ndouble header with the St. Louis\nBrowns today 2 to 1 in 11 innings,\nafter dropping the first gamo 3 to 1.\nFirst  game\u2014 R. H. E.\nBoston    __  1    8    0\nSt.  Louis  \u201e.._.. . ... 3 10    1\nLlscnbee and Connolly; Stewart\nand   Ferreil.\nSecond  game\u2014 R. H. E.\nBoston    _ 2    7    1\nSt.    Louis   .;    t    8    3\nMacPayden and Hevlng, Connolly,\nCoffman  and  Manion.\n.Only  three  games).\nMAX SCHMELING\nIS RECOGNIZED\nAS HEAVY CHAMP\nStribling    Ranked    Second;\n_ Carnera Third by National Association\nMONTREAL  MAN   WINS\nOTTAWA. -Ont., .Sept. 15.\u2014Slugging f n I \\ bell to bell for 10\nl'oui'Ofl, Harfy Smith. Montreal welterweight, pounded out a decision\nover \"Ro:l\" Bragan, Toronto, in the\nfeature bout of the Gunner Athletic club's boxing cord here tonight.\nThis' advertisement is not published or displayed by\nhe Liquoir Control Board or by the Government of Brit-\nBh Columbia. .\nBENNY   BASS   WINS\n] DE3 MOINES,\/ Iowa, Sept. 15.\u2014\nI (AP)\u2014Benny Bass, Philadelphia Ju-\n1 nor lightweight, hammered out a\n(decision over Eddlo Anderson, Casper. Wyo.. cowboy, in a fast 10-\nround   bout  hare   tonight.\nCOWBOY JACK  BEATEN\nCANTON. Ohio, SCpt. 16.~-.AP) \u2014\nGorilla Jones. Akron negro middle-\nweigh, outpolnto;! Cowboy Jack\nWillis of San Francisco in a 10-\nround boxing match here touiguv.\nBig Six Baseball\nHis position at tho top of the\nNational league and Big Six letting average threatened by Babe\nHerman, Bill Terry got Into action\nyesterday, pounding out four hits\nlti five trips to tho plate to send\nhis average again soaring above the\n400 mark to 404 to bo exact, Herman alsti moved up, cracking four\nRed hurlers for four hits, to boast\nhis bitting average three points\nto   .308.\nGehrig f tilled lo get a hit at\nDetroit with the result that he\nmoved clown Into a tlo for third\nplace with Chuck Klein, who remained stationary at .385. getting\nthree hits in a- double-header with\ntho Cubs. Simmons was idle but\nBabo Ruth found Detroit pitching\nto his liking and collected three\nhits  In  lour times at bat.\nThe   standing;\nPlayers, G   AB   R   H   Pet.\nTerry, Giants 143 591 135 239 .404\nHerman, Robins 143 575 136 220 (198\nGehrig, Yanks 144 541 134 2t>7 383\nKlein, Phillies 145 603 142 231 383\nSimmons. Ath 128 611141 194.380\nRuth. ' Yankees    135 473 142 172 .362\nFans Figure Ruth\nto Break Record\nOMAHA. Sept. 15\u2014(AP)\u2014AH\npresent champions of the various prizefight divisions were recognized by the National Boxing\nassociation delegates in their\nannual convention here today,\nThe action recognizing; the\nchampions was (alien at a late\nafternoon season.\nThe association recognizes\nMax schmellng of Germany as\nking of the heavyweights. A\nsurprise or two came as the\nothers were ranked according\nto the association's views on\ntheir   merits.\nTo Young Stribling of Georgia\nfell the honor i>i' being ranked\nNo. 'i in the heavyweight ranks.\nNo. 3 position was . awarded\nto Prima Camera, the giant\nItalian Ifghter whfle Jack\n.Sharkey was ranked No. 4.\nAt.  singer of New  York,  waa\ngiven   recognition  as  lightweight\nchampion   through   his   knockout of Sammy Mandell.\nLate  today   the   assocl a tlon  voted\nto give  Prlmo Carnera a clean bill\nof   health   and   overthrew   all   and\nany   suspension   against   the   giant\nItalian,\nThis action was taken in the\nform of a resolution fn which the\nassocition voted not to accept or\nrecognize any suspension placed on\na fighter by a state not a member\nof   the   N.B.A.\nHome Run Standings\nHome runs yesterday:\nHeathcote,    Cubs    a\nEnglish.   Cubs    _     1\nWilson,    Cubs     -  1\nO'Dual,    Phillies     ' l\niKleSn,    Phillies    l\nMeusel,   Reds     1\nHeilmann.   Reds         l\nGoslin,   Browns        1\nCronln, Senators    _    i\nThe leaders:\nWilson,    Cubs  60\nRuth,    Yanks       46\nGehrig,    Yanks        39\nSimmons.     Athletics     _   35\nBerger, Braves      34\nFoxx,   Athletics    ~  34\nHartnett.   Cubs      ...... 33\nKlein,    Phillies     _  33\nLeaguo   total:\nNational    -   -.... 819\nAmerican         628\nGrand     total      _ 1.447\nJVfffVVVflf\nSPEAKING   \u00ae@\nOF SPORT .\n*?i\n\u2022}\\iT-+~--**--~*--~*--mmAmtkt.i\\wit'i%-$\nThe second race Is over and tho\nEnterprise again beat the Shamrock,\nchallenger for the America cup. That\nputs the American yacht two up\nand five to go. Lipton's yacht still\nhas a chance. The competition is\nto be decided by tho best four\nout of seven races. But Just the\nsame, yt\\\\ couldn't get odds ou a\nbet that the old trophy will be retained once again, by the defender,\nA great many now are confident,\nafter viewing the result of tho flrat\ntwo races, that Lipton is destined\nto go home once more without the\ncup. But they forget tbat wlien\nLipton last tried to lift the trophy\nhis Shamrock IV. won the first\ntwo races and then lost three to\nlose tho competition. Who knows?\nThe tables may bo turned yet.\nBELANGER WINS,\nTORONTO\nTORONTO. Ont., Sept. 15.\u2014 (CP)\u2014\nMaking his first appearance V1 the\nring since fracturing his hand some\nweeks ago, Charlie Belangor, Cana-\nadian light heavyweight champion,\nof Winnipeg, secured a unanimous\ndecision over Joe Srkyra, clean hitting light heavyweight of Dayton.\nOhio, In their 10-round bout which\nfeatured the Shamrock Athletic\nclub's  show  here   tonight.\nMINIATURE   GOLF\nAlthough It was a little late in\ndoing so, Nelson has gone \"miniature golf crazy,\" apparently. The\nopening recently of an outdoor Tom\nThumb <*>urse met with instant approval, as well as earning for Nelson the honor, If any. of having\nthe flrat such course ln tho interior\nof B. C. Then followed tho announcement of an indoor course, so\nthat players might escape the weather thia winter. Thia brought to\nNelson the honor of having tho\nfirst Indoor Tom Thumb course in\nthe interior. Now It is also to have\nthe second, as far aa is knowr..\nThe announcement of a second indoor courso was made yesterday.\nWhether or not the game has taken\nsuch a hold on Nelsonites ihat two\ncourses will be necessary will be\nknown   within   a   short   tlmo.\nHUNTING   FATALITIES\nSaturday, September 13 ushered\nIn the .hunting eeaso n for deer\nand blue grouse. By all accounts\ndeer are plentiful, although tho\nforest fires have wrought havoc\namong the grouse. An unusually\nlarge number of licences have been\ntaken out, from which lt would\nappear that hunting retains all\nits popularity. Tills is hardly, surprising when one reflects upon the\nzest which attaches to even fie\nbriefest of hunting trips; and now\nthat the automobile has become a\ncommonplace, what was formerly ln\nthc nature of an expedition Is now\nmerely  a  day's   outing\nUnfortunately, though, year after\nyear with painful regularity the\nhunting season brings its crop\nof fatal accidents, to cust thetr\ngloom over the community and\ndarken homes and lives with sorrow and remorse. Last year, it will\nbe remembered, there were five\nin B. C. It will bc remembered, too.\ntliat there were five prosecutions.\nThero has been one already this\nseason on Vancouver Island.\nFor most hunting accidents thero\nIs no reason under the sun, and no,\npalliation. Practically all of them\nare duo to rank carelessness with a\nloaded  gun.\n\u2022 It is not always the novice\nwho is guilty. \"Familiarity breeds\ncontempt,\" and all too often tho\nexperienced hunter nogleOta to practice    the    very    precautions    which\noften he has preached. The novica\nlooks to experience Ior guidance\nand example, and it devolves the\nmore upon the older hand to watch\nhis  actions and  mind  his  step.\nIf hunters would observe the\nfew simple rules, take the ordinary\nprecautions which commonsense\nshould indicate, there would be\nfewer tragic home-comings and sad\nhomes, and the non-hunting public\nwould bear a friendlier attitude.\nLearn how to shoot, by all meana\nand learn how to avoid shooting by\nincident.\nNever, under any circumstances,\nshoot If there la a vestige of doubt\nas to the object. Most of tite fatalities which mar the hunting season are caused, by taking a chance.\nDon't shoot until you're sure. Be\npositive before you press the trigger.\nNever point, a gun, loaded or not,\nat any person. Don't load sooner\nthan is necessary, and never leave\na loaded gun where here lt oan fall\ninto Irresponsible hands. While your\ngun is load, never stand lt up or\nlay It down, and always pass your\ngun  through a fence barrel flrat.\nProbably these warnings are sup-\nerfuous to the majority, but if ont\nlife is saved through giving thorn\npublicity they are more than Justified.\nTWINS GIVE UP\nIN ATTEMPT TO\nSWIM CHANNEL\n15-Year Old Zittenfeld Girls\nWlithin   Five   Miles  of\nCompletion\nDOVER, England, Bept. 15.\u2014(AP)\n\u2014Bernice and Phyllis Zittenfeld, the\nAmerican girls swimmer twins, failed\nthis evening ln tholr attempt to\nswim tho English channel, though\nnearly   reaching   the   French   cojst^\nColdness of the channel water,\nwhich a sharp wind made increasingly rough, obliged the girls to\nabahaon their swim within four or\nfive miles ot Cape Grlz Nez, They\nclimbed Into their accompanying\nmotorboat tit 7:22 p. m., and returned   to   Dover.\nThe twin., who are 15 years old,\nentered the water at South Foreland, near Dover, at 8:60 A. M.\nThey swam for a little over l'l'\/a\nhours.\nKOOTENAY GARAGE. Tom  Sargent,\nStuclcbuker  and* Durant   Service\nA NEW STANDARD OF PERFECTION\n\u2014a new pinnacle of smoking\ndelight\u2014a cool, mild, fragrant\nmellowness that comes from the\nEXdl.Isn LEAOUE\n1 ir,1   Division\nAstoJi Vlllii 2, Urlmsby 0.\nBlackburn    2.    Arsenal   2.\nChclscn   0,   Shcfllold   0.\nHuddsntleld   3,   Manchester   IT.   0.\nNecond  iHm inn\nCharlton   'A.   Swansea   0.\nSouthampton   1.  Oldham  0.\nStoke   1.   Wolverhampton   2.\nTottenham   0,   Preston  0.\nThird ..Division\u2014Southern\nNewport county  1, allllngham 3.\nThird  Division\u2014Northern\nHull    1,    Darlington    1.\nLincoln   2.   Nelson   0.\nNew Brighton o. Gateshead 0.\nRo.h_.lo 4. Barrow 2.\nStockport, 3.   Carllslo   0.\nBASEBALL\nINTKUNATIONAE  LEAGUE\nBaltimore 2'2, Reading 5.\nNewark 6. .Jersey City 4.\nDuffalo  0, Toronto 2,\nFinal Result Home-Run Vore\nTotals\nG*5HF?I<3\n**..\nKi-eiN.\n4-1\nSimmons\n4-Q\nFoxx\n39\nPERGB.R\n36\nGrQSUN\n35\nHerman\n34-\nHartnct\n\u202233\nMorgan\n30\nHAFEY\nar\nBy   Al.   DEMAREE\n(Former, Pitcher  Nrw  York   (Hants)\nA month or ho ago 1 ran a ballot\nto let the fans vote on tho total\nnumber of home runs they thought\ntheir favorite sluggers would accumulate  by  October.\nThe fans almost unanimously\npicked Babe Ruth to break his\nhomo run record. Personally, I do\nhot think ho will this year. Hack\nWilson ran second ln tho fans'\nchoice with Lou Gehrig a good\nthird. Klein or the Phllltee wns\npicket! to run fourtn, probably becauso of his record of 43 laet year\nund alBO because the Phillies finish\nthe season at home with that short\nright field fence to aim at.\nSo, fellow fans, pnnte this advance\ndopo ln your hat and comparo lt\nwith the official totals this fall and\nsec how closo you guessed them.\n Page Eight\nTHE NELS(5iOXft.f TTCWS '   TUE^M^SI5_^MBEf*flP?i-^\nThe World's Delight\nPart Three\nCHAPTER V\n(Continues\nAn hour had passed, and with\nonly an occasional comment to re-\naseure him. he talked on, confiding\n\u2014while ahe listened as eloquently\nan any woman he had ever spoken\nto. He told her all about Tudor\nHouse, in Chayne Walk, where he\nand WUllam Rossetti and Meredith\nand others had clubbed together,\nand- where he, because he paid\nmore than the rest, had a sitting-\nroom of his own on the ground\nfloor. There was a large garden in\nthe. baok where he had often written. It waa said, so Swinburne\nexplained, that Tudor House was\npart of the mansion occupied by\nQueen Catherine Parr after the\ndeath of Henry VIII, and that it\nwaa here that Lord High Admiral\nSeymour Visited and paid his court\nto her.\nShe knew that now he was living\nat 22a Dorset street, but ho did\nnot explain why he had left such\na charming retreat as Tudor House\nfor. ordinary lodging chambers. In\nfaot, he all of a sudden stopped\ntalking about himself as if he\n*ancled he had disclosed far too\nmuch already.\n\"Would you do a great favor for\nme?\" she asked, after a pause;\none of those pauses when all the\nworld seems holding its breath.\n\"Would you recite, Just for me\u2014\nmy two favorites among your shorter poems?\"\n'TVhat aro your favorites?\" he\nasked as if now he was In a position to appraise her.\n\". 'The Sundew' and 'A Song in\nTlma of Revolution'.\"\nHa appeared gratified, and not\na Ilttlo surprised. Again the far-off\nlook came back into his eyes; he\nolaaped his strangely small white\nhands across his knees and began:\n\"A little marsh plant, yellow\ngreen,\"\nand recited the nine stanzas 'perfectly and without hesitation; after\nthat the Italian one for which she\nhad   linked.\n\"And now,\" he said as the last\nsyllable was carried away on the\nwind, \"tell me about yourself. I\ngive you my solemn promise that\nthis time I shall listen.\"\nOf course, she was eager to tell\nhtm about hereof\u2014and yet she\ndreaded it, too, for she had felt\nbo protected as long as she could\nkeep him talking. And sho was\nafraid her own life would seem\nunimportant\u2014even all that had\nseemed of such critical Importance\nto her. But he persisted with mock\nkingly demands\u2014and so Adah Menken began by telling Algernon\nCharles   Swinburne   that   her   real\nLADIES' AID MEETS\nAT YMIR HOME\nSailinqs\n-\u2022m TO   J\n'EUROPE\nTHt_ ORIENT\nSept. 30   Empress of Scotland\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nOct. 2   Montcalm\nTo Havre-London-Antwerp\nOct. 3  Duchess of Bedford\nTo   Olasgow-Belfast-Livcrpool\nOct. 8   Empress of franco\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nOct. 10  Duchess or York\nTo Liverpool\nOct.  11  ...._..._ _.   Mlnnedosa\nTo Belfast-Glasgow\nOct. 16  ^.\u00ab.._..\u201e.\u2122 _. Montclare\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\nand  Antwerp\nOct. 17   Duchess of Richmond\nTo   Glasgow-Liverpool\nOot. 21 -  Duchess of Atholl\nTo   Liverpool\nOct. 35       Mellta\nTo Belfast-Glasgow\nOct. 20    _. Montcalm\nTo Cherbourg -Sou thamptom\nana  Antwerp\nOct. 31   Duchess of Bedford\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\nFROM VANCOUVER TO\nHAWAII-J AI'A.N-Ul.NA-M AMI,\\\nOct.\u00ab_) Empress of Canada\nOct. 16 .  Empress of Russia\nOct. 30 \u2014....\u201e____.____. Empress of Japan\nNov^ 13   Empress of Asia\nA8K FOR SAILINGS TG HONOLULU\nPull detslla with rates and Paw\nport information from any agent of\nname was Dolores. The name instantly aroused  interest.\n\"Doloresl\" lie repeated aloud, \"Doloresl It  is musical,  it  Is poetry.\"\nAnd often, as she went on telling\nhim the story of her life she observed hlB lips silently moving, repeating her baptismal name as lf\nite syllables haunted him. Dolores\nrelated to him her life in New\nOrleans, and in tho clrcus~|but\nwith no mention of Buddy\u2014and\nof Isaacs Menken sho told him, and\nof Heenan, but again no word\nabout her child\u2014and now it was\nSwinburne's turn to listen eloquently. A half-formed, incredulous question, almost a giillty and yet\nwholly reasonable suspicion, flashed,\nas h& hearkened, again and again\nlike llgthnlng across the intense\ngreen sky of his eyes. He asked\nno questions, but by the very impassivity of his countenance he\nseemed to be making answers to\nhimself; to be confirming hidden\nconjecture. Ah. Dolores\u2014had you\nbut the courage and the frankness\nthen to have told this man everything!\nWaa there now an alternation ln\nhis manner toward her? 11 so, it\nwas subtle and jiot to have a finger\nput on this phrase or that glance\nto identify lt\u2014It lay only in an\neasier assurance with her; a more\nconfident gallantry that was disconcerting   but   charrhlng.\nAU through her little story Dolores had contrived, wherever possible, to mention her verses: \"When\nthat happened, I wrote a poem\nabout it,\" or, \"That gave mo an\nirt-ea for somo verses\"\u2014she wanted\nto prick his interest In her writing\nand remind him without seeming\nto that he had promised to listen\nto her poems. When she mentioned\nWhitman again, ho did not soem\nnearly so interested as she had ex'\npected; his mind seemed elsewhere\n\u2014when suddenly he electrified her\nwith tho question: \"Did you bring\nany  of your verses  with  you?\"\nWas there a note of patient resolve in his voice? She wondered\nas s\/e took several sheets of manuscript from her reticulo and spread\nthem carefully  on   her  lap.\n\"I would love to read at least\none to you,\" she faltered. \"And\nI would like your honest opinion\n\u2014it would mean so much to me,\"\n\"Read me the one you think is\nthe best,\" he invited with a friendly\nsmile.\n\"Tills  Is   called   'Rcsurgam',\"   Bhe\nannounced   gently,   and   ln  a   distinct, though nervously husky voice,\nshe began to read:\n\"Yes, yes, dear love! I am deadl\nDead to youl\u2014\nDead to the world!\nDead   forever!\nIt was one young night in May.\nThe stare wero strangled and tho\nmoon was blind\u2014\"\nOn to the crying end of the\nthing she read, her voiw> shaking\nwith the pain of her own spirit,\nbut her eyes lifted now and again\nInquiringly on the poet's face. How\nwas ho taking It? No need to ask,\nno need lor him to speak when\nshe had finished. He was ailont;\nhis face impassive; stony condemnation. Perfectly well she realized\nthat Algernon Charles Swinburne\ncould not lie about such a matter\u2014\nshe had hoped that Into his eyes\nwotild come somo gleam of noble\nrecognition, but his atnro wns blank.\nNot for him this poem of hers that\nshe considered her best; and filil1\nfelt It was a tnic judgment, for\nshe had been listening not through\nher own par. but, Swinburne's.\nThis, her best, was nerond rate,\nor firth rate, or tentl> rate\u2014at\nleast it was not first rate! and,\nif it were not first rate, it. was\nnot of any rate  nt  all  for him.\n\"You think it- banal, don't you?\"\nshe choked, crushing thc sheets of\npaiper   in   her   hands.\nWith a cry he sprang up and\nleaped to hn side.\n\"Why do you want to be a great\npoet?\"  he   argued.\n\"I want io be - -something\u2014\"\nshe   gasped.\n\"You yourself are a poem,\" ho\nargued frantically, himself as moved and shaken by spiritual wind:;\nas she. \"Besides\u2014there are many\nwho wlU love what you write.\nYou do not have to bc great,\nDolores\u2014a violet has as much right\nto live  as  nn   oak   tree.\"-.\n\"Couldn't you help me to be a\nbetter pnet?\" she asked, a desperate\ncatch in her throat. \"I would\ntry so hard--\"\nHe Put his small white hot\nhands against her cheeks and\nkisficd  her.\n(To   be   continued)\nYMIR, B, C, Sept 14\u2014Tho Ymlr\nLadies Aid of the United Church\nheld a meeting at thc home of Mrs.\nJ. M. Gille on Thursday afternoon\nwith the president Mrs. J. H,\nClarke in the chair, other members present were Mrs. W. Clark,\nMrs. A. B. Clark, Mrs. J. M. Gille,\nMrs. Hugh Jones and Mrs. L. P.\nBond. Visitors were Mrs. Willard\nSmith of'vseattle and Mrs. W. B.\nMclsaac. The aid is planning an\nanniversary entertainment in the\nchurch soon and a card party in\nOctober. Dainty refreshments were\nserved by the hostess assisted by\nMrs, 3, H. Clarke.\nDouglas Gibbons, Jack Llness and\nJames Fraser of Salmo were Ymir\nvisitors on Thursday.\nL. A. Keele of Vancouver was\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Curwen on Thursday. Mr. Keele left\nfor Vancouver on Friday morning\naccompanied by his sister-in-law.\nMrs. Walter Keele. who Is returning\nto her homo there. Mrs. Keele has\nbeen the guest of Mr, nnd Mrs. S.\nA.  Curwen.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Peterson had as\ntheir brldgo guests on Monday evening B. W. W. McDougall of Vancouver and J- M. Robinson of New\nDenver.\nMrs. N. Peterson enteralned at\nthe tea hour on Friday afternoon\nln honor of Mrs. Willard Smith of\nSeattle. Other invited guests were\nMrs. J. M. Gille.'Mrs. Carl Nystrom\nand Mrs. H, Stevens. The living\nrooms were twtVuUy decorated\nwith  autumn   flowers.\nWillow Point Boy\nResumes    Studies\nat Moscow, Idaho\nMr. and Mrs. Bowker\n'-Return to Kaslo\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, Sept. 15\u2014\nCyprian Taylor has returned , to\nMoscow, Idaho, to resume his ~\\M-\ndles, his mother Mrs. A. N. Taylor\nmotoring wHV him as far as Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Buchanan\n.and family of Trail spent the weekend at their summer home nt Ferndale, their son James leaving Saturday mot*fiing for Edmonton.\nMrs. R. Walton and daughter Mrs.\nGllroy left Sunday morning for Edmonton.\nMr. and Mrs. Scott, have as their\nguests Mrs. Scott's brother and\nsister-in-law Mr. and Mrs. R. .Maclntyre and daughter Jean of Honolulu,  H. I.\nMiss Gwen Ferguson, Willow Point\nteacher, motored to Slocan City\nFriday   night.   t\nMrs. W. Bennett leaves today for\nEngland and her son Raymond for\nprairie points.\nH. I. Mlddleton was a visitor to\nTrail  over  the  week-end.\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. Drumond\nand family or Trail spent the weekend   here  at  their  summer  home. .\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Spenco and\nRalph of Trail were thc guests of\n-xmg -13AO uouumis 'siW Pirn mj^\nday.\nKASLO, B. C\u201e Sept, 16\u2014Miss\nEffit Oharboneau of the Victorian\nhospital nursing staff, was a Nelson visitor Thursday. She was accompanied by her mother, Mrs,' Mc-\nCrimmon   of  Cranbrook.\nW. Frampton of Nelson was a\nThursday   viBltor   tn   the   city.\nMr. and Mrs, F. W. Corell of\nSeattle arrived in the city, Friday\nand will spend several days visiting   friends   here.\nSohool Inspector P. H. Sheffield\narrived in -the city Friday, from\nNelson, leaving Saturday for the\nLnrdeau    dlsrtlct.\nMr. and Mrs. GordSn D. Bowker\nreturned Thursday, from their honeymoon and are the guests, of\nMrs. Bowker*s parents, Mr, and Mrs.\nA.  T.   Garland,\nMr. and Mrs. M. J. Half In and\nchildren who have been holidaying\nIn Kaslo have left for thetr home\nin Klmberley.\nR. O. Orchard has as his guests,\nhis sons Robert and Ernest, who\nmotored ln from Detroit, after a\nshort visit they will vlBlt their\nbrother in Vancouver and their\nsister In Los Angeles. Mr, Orchard\nwill accompany his sons and will\nspend the winter in Los Angeles.\nMaypr F. _8j. Archer Is holidaying\nIn Spokane, Alderman S. J. Renter\nis acting mayor during Mr. Archer's\nabsence.\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Sedgwick of\nNelson were visitors in the city\nThursday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. p. Allsebrooke\nand daughter elf Shutty Bench have\nreturned from a visit to Vancouver and points on Vancouver\nisland.\nMrs. McCvimmon, who has been\nvisiting her daughter, Miss Effit\nChnrboneau of the local hospital\nnursing staff, has left for her\nhome   In   Cranbrook.\nW. H. Byne and U. P. Choquette\nof Spokane and M. J. Byrne of\nSandon motored ot town from the\nlatter   place   Thursday.\nC. F. Nelson of New Denver was\na  Kaslo  visitor  Tuesday.\nMiss Gertrude Erlckson was a\nvisitor   to   Nelson   Thursday.\nCity Clerk W. V. Pafworth and\nWalter Kendrlcks left Friday for\nNelson and Trail where they will\narrange for the testing and transportation of the new machinery\nfor the local power plant, which\nIt is hoped will bo installed early\nIn   the    coming   week.\nF. A. Baker of Nelson was a\nKaslo   vlMtor   Friday.\nCLASSIFIED' ADVERTISING\nLEGAL NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT  LIQUOR ACT\"\nNOTICE    OF \"APPLICATION    FOB\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER BEER\nLICENCE\nSITUATIONS VWANTED\u2014(Cont)\n, NOTICE IS HERBY GIVEN that\non ths 13th day of October next the\nundersigned intond to' apply to tne\nLiquor control Board 'or consent to\ntransfer, ol Beer Licence, No. 1520\nand Issued ln respect at premises\nbeing part ol a building' known as\n\"Pinehurst Inn,\" situate at South\nSiocan in the County ot Kootenay\nupon the lands described as Parcel\n'. of Block \"B\" of District Lot\n303, District of Kootenay. Map 872,\nNelson \"Land Registration Dlstrlot,\nIn the Province ol British Columbia,\n\u00a3_om ployd M. Barnett to Robert\noeorge Elliott and George Jerome\nKlngsley, ot South Slocan, British\nColumbia, the  transferees.\nDATED at South Slocan, B. C,\nthis l_tu day of September, A. D.\n1930.\nROBERT GEOROE ELLIOTT.\nGEORGE   JEROME   KINGSLEY.\n(1767)\nDEATHS\nm\nST. LAURENT\u2014Albert, age 47\nvears. The body wllj rest at the\nrlowell Funeral Home .until 8:45\nWednesday morning, thence to tho\nChurch of Mary Immaculate where\nMass will be celebrated at 9 o'clock,\nRev. Father J. C. McKonzio officiating. (1815)\nMRS. McISAAC IS\nHOSTESS, YMIR\nYMIR. B. C Sect. IS\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. B. C. Mclsaac entertained at\nthree tables of bridge on Friday\nevening honoring Mrs. S. L. Springer\nof Grand Forks. Sweet peas. ..stars\nand golden glow graced the living\nrooms. Other Invited guests beside the guest c. honor were Mr.\nnnd Mrs. W. Clark. Mr. nnd Mrs.\nA. B. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. E. Daly.\nMr. and Mrs. H StevenB, Mr and\nMrs    W.    J.    \"\nUEL1' WANTED\n(W)\nWANTED\u2014GIRL ABOUT 20 YEARS\nold for general house work. Apply post office Box 595 or Nelson\nGrocery. (1795)\nWANTED \u2014 YOUNG MAN WITH\nJunior Matriculation Papers as\napprentice. Good opportunity.\nMann,  Rutherford   Co. (1807)\nYOUNG -aim, DESIRES POSITION\nas bookkeeper, stenographer. . Apply Box 1783 Dally News.     .1783)\nAOENT8   WANTED\n(12)\nCALENDAR SALESMAN. FULL OR\npart-time. Good contract, highest\ncommissions, exclusive line and\nterritory. TApply, stating qualifications, to Box No. 820, London,\nOnt. (1766)\nROOMS\u2014To Rent\n(19)\nSUITE ASHMAN AfARTMENTS. 716\nBaker St. (1787)\nFOR RENT\u2014A VERY NICE TWOr\nroomed suite, suitable for two\nyoung women, or married oouple\nwith no children. Apply to C. G.\nSimpson, 216 Baker St.       (1801).\nHOUSES FOR RENT\n(-1)\nFOR   RENT\u2014FIVE   ROOMED   BUN-\ngalow on Second Bt.   Phono 189.\nI (1704)\nFOR RENT\u2014\u00ab24 HDGEWOOD'AVE.,\nfour bedrooms, garden. Phone\n271R. \u00ab800)\nFOR  SALE   OR  RENT\n(22)\n\u2014r\nFOR SALE OR RENT-ONE HVE-\nroomed Bungalow, two bedrooms,\nfull cement basement, garage,\ncloso high schools. The Sugar\nBowl Grocery. (1788)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR  bALli (23)\nFOR SALE. PUREBRED YORKSHIRE\npigs\u20146 weeks\u2014.6.50. G. Brown.\nHlondel. (1781)\nMISCELLANEOUS FORSALE\u2014(Con)\nFORl SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEGO, BlIR-\nlap sacks, white' sugar aa--*.\"\":\nDonald Jam Co. (1680)\n(31)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 ON SATURDAY AFTER-\nnoon'between K. W. C. Block and\nffhe Golden Gate, a black purso\nwith Bank book and several letters of Identification. WUl finder\nreturn to 316 Cedar St. or leave at\nElite Grocery. (181\u00bb\nLOST\u2014ABOUT FRIDAY, AUGUST 20,\nspeotacles on railway. Finder\nplease return to Dally  News.\n(1808)\nPROPERTY  FOR   SALE\n(34)\nFOR SALE-.HOTEL WITH BEER\nParlor and .'12 acres of garden\nground. Apply to A. W. Johnson,\nR. No. 2, Lynch Creek, Grand\nForks,   B.   0. (1623)\n$1700 BUY3 ONE ACRE CULTIVAT-\ned. large bungalow, sleeping porch,\ncement basement, city water, electrlo light, phone, outbuildings.\nAlbion,' Bealby's Road, - Falrvlew.\nP. Q. Box 887. Kelson.        1,1871)\nFOR SALE\u2014DESIRABLE 10 ROOM\nresidence, 2_i lots ln lawn, fruit\ntrees, shrubs and flowers, situated\nono block from Baker St., central, two car garage, all modem\nconveniences. Apply 418 Victoria\nSt. Phone 4G7Y. Has coat owner\nover 8000 dollars. (1812)\n_________________EGOS\n(20)\nMAY  HATCHED   PpiUTI-.   WYAN-\ndotte  and   Leghorn, from  R.O.P,\nstock,   .1.    J.   G.  Fox.  Crawford\nBay, B. O.   Phone Crawford Bay \u25a0\u2022\nP. O. , (1809)\n(SB)\nPROPERTY  WANTED.\nWANTED FOR CASH\u2014SMALL ACRE- i\nage with water.    With or without  __1M:;:.<..    Josopn Highiteld.\nTaghum. (1788) '\nAUTOMOBILES FOB SAM\n(40)\n1030   PONXIAC   SEDAN   FOR   $600 I\ncash and small equity.   Box 941.\n'Trail, . a742)\nEXCELLENT\nBARGAIN.      :\nTON. AND HALF . FORD THtTOK\ni stako  body   removable,  late   1923\nmodal,   in   tost   class   condition.\nApply to Mr. Raymer, Hume Hotel.\nC-808)\nPUKN_TLRE   FOB   MUM\nM0)\nFOR     SALE\u2014HANDSOME     IVORY\nenamelled    bedroom    suite.     823  I\nCarbonato   st   .Phono   S89Y1.\n(1798)\nCATSJUm^DOO^OR_SAlg(M)\nGBSMAN. POLICE    PUPPIES,    ago  _\neaoh, G. A .F..'Box 1177 Nelson.  I\n(1814)\nBLUE PERSIAN KITTENS (NEUTER)\nfor sale. Dunsden Cattery, Vernon, B. O. (1784)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(11)\nBOY, GOOD ON HANCH, DESIRES\nwork. Donald Sutherland, Wlnlaw. (1731)\nDRESSMAKING, PLAIN SEWING\nand Alterations promptly done by\nday or at home. 012 Observatory\nSt., or Box 1130 city. (1738)\nWILL LIGHT AND ATTEND TO\nyour furnace this winter, small\nmonthly   chargo.    Phone   269.\n(1550)\nUPHOLSTERING DONE VERY WELL\nand cheaply. Expert work. Prompt\nservice. Mall orders special attention. You will profit by it. John\nKlus,   Box   639,   Fernle,   8.   O.\n(1536)\nMrs. M. Peters and Mrs. W. B.\nMclsaac. First prizes were awarded\nto Mrs. E. Daly, and H. Stevens,\nconsolation to Mrs. W. M. Mclsaac\nand W. Clark. Dainty refreshments\nwere served by the hostess, assisted\nby   Mrs.   S.   L.   Springer.\nJ. T.  Price   Is   a  patient in  the\nKootensy Like General hospital.\nGreen is the leading color for new-\nBremner    of    Moyie, est evening wraps in New York.   \u2022\nFORTY    YORKSHIRE    PIGS    FIVE\ndollars each.    Boothby, Edgewood.\n(1810)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\n(28)\nWANTED TO PURCHASE\u2014A GRO-\ncery or Confectionery Business ln\nNelson or District. Box 1747 Daily\nNews. (1747)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR  3Al,g     (27)\nFOR SALE \u2014 BABY CARRIAGE,\nlike new, $16.00. Phono 660R. G.\nA.  Hunter. (1750)\nFOR    SALE\u2014KETTLE    DRUM     IN\ngood  condition.    Phone 449R.\n(1799)\nFAWCETT 3TEEL RANGE. ONB\nleather chesterfield, Winnipeg\nconch, etc. The Sugar Bowl\nOrocery. (1789)\nNEW OROP HONEY\u2014COMB HONEY\n35 cents per section, 12 and 16 oz.\nJars 26 and 35 cents; 4-lb. tin\n90 ' centa. Arthur Homersham,\nPhone   337R. (1813)\nSECOND HAND PIPES AND BTT-\ntlngs for sale. When you are' in\nneed of used Pipes and Fittings\nany size Black or Galvanized,\nwrite to Swartz Pipe Yard, ' 220\nFirst Ave, East, Vancouver, B. O.\nThe Largest exclusive dealers in\nReoonditloned Pipes and Fittings.\n(1709)\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAccounting\nCHAS. F. HUNTER\nPublic Accounting and Auditor\nMcDonald Jam Bldg., Nelson\n(1632)\nArchitects\nCHAS.    MOORE,    C.    E.\u2014Architect\nLand Surveyor,  RevClstokev (1562)\nAssayers\nE. W. Wlddowson, Box A1108, Nelson,\nB.  C.    Standard western  charges\n(1633)\nBeauty Parlors\nSociety Beauty Shop.    Gilker Block.\nMrs. E. Halgh, Phone 171.    (1834)\nChiropractors\nT>R   MTTTUN, X-RAY, CRANBROOK\nUK\" . . (1038)\nDR   GRAY, GILKER BLK., NELSON,\nr\u21227 (1630)\nDentists\nDR   G.  A.   C.  WALLEY  \u2014   Griffin\nBlock,   X-ray,   Nelson,   B.   O.\n(1637)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nEngineers\nH\\.?\u25a0\u25a0 BAWSON\u2014LAND. SURVEYOR.\nMining and,Civil Engineer, Kasla\nA. H. GREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS.\nFormerly Green Bros., BurdM.\nNelson, Civil and Mining EngS,\neers B. c\u201e Alberta and^anKlco\nLand Surveyors. \u25a0(1.40)\nPhotographers\nGEORGE A. MEBRBS\u2014Artist _\u25a0__'*\nv Photographer, 716 Baker St. '\n\u2014_ \u2022 (1641)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAOE.'COAL AND WOOD\nPhono   108 (I84J) I\nATKINSON     TRANSFER-Ooel     and I\nWood.   Long dUtanoe hauling.   \"\n 11643)\nWood Working Factory '\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St. Carpenter and\nJoiner.    Sash  and  Hardwood.       j\n \u25a0 '        (1644)\nFlorists\nORIZZELLE'S GREENHOUSE, Nel-\nson. Cut flowers and floral designs. (1646)\nr W. \u2022 DAWSON\u2014Real Estate. In- \u25a0jyjj. s. JOHNSON\u2014Phone 342. Out )\nsurance. RsntalB. Next Hlpperson flowers. Potted Plants and Floral I\nHardware. Baker  St. . U638)      Emblems. (1646)-\nTHE   GUMPS\u2014TENDER  RECOLLECTIONS\nWE make our printing\nsay \"Hello'* . . . cordially, interestingly, attractively. We make type\ntalk with heady attention\nand convincing salesmanship. We plan your print,\ning requirements with intelligence and economy.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nJob Department\nPHONES 143 and 144\n uM\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16; 1980.\nPage Nta*-\nRICES DECLINE IN QUIET TRADING AT\nIEW YORK; CALL MONEY: AVAllABlf\nWIDE MARKET AT 21-2 PER CENT\n(.easiness Felt in Copper;\nBunker Sees Better Times\nCoining       .\n_3y John.' L. \u2022 Cooley.. Associated\nIL Frees financial writer)\nJNEW YOK,;\u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0 Sept. l6.--_PersIstent\n\u25a0Wvlncsa or tho grains, combined\nfttft a few''other news terns sublet to unfavorable interpretation\nft. speculative Quartern, played into\nj; io hands ot tho bears on the stoclc\nIWlxt today and prices declined in\nfillet tradhg.\nI There] waa some short covering ln\nfie late nfU.rno.Mi, but anal prices\nfere mostly aroUnd the lowest.\n(Of Importance was tlie uneasiness\na. copper, for one custom smelter\nI.it to JOvi cents, a \u2022 quarter-oent\nlelow1 recent levels. Prominent\nIvdducers were also * said' -to be\nItyllnK to toko 10% cents, likewise\n\"i concession of \\_ point.\nf TWIN  COMING\nli'One prominent. banker-econom.st\nmoao views attract tho financial\nJSmmunity's attention, said he saw\nI\/ldehce that a turn In business\nlas ln the making, pointing to the;\nIrength of bonds1 and the apparent\nlirst of - the decline in commodity\n\"Hces as among the significant\nf.dlces.      ' ;-v-, \u25a0\nI Call money eased to two per. cont\n]4d funds wero available in' the\nIdtslde market at 1 V!!_ - \u25a0 ''\nI utility, merchandising shared and\nreel shores, as well as the coppers,\nI id specialties, led the decline on\nIve stock ' exchange. U. ' S, Steel\nlid six. points under the high for\nlie recovery, made a week ago;\nfeeing off 2%. .American Smelt-\n|g, .Standard Oil of New Jersey,\nInerican Telephone,' Radio, 1'ntev-\nttional Harvester, Vanadium, Au-\n1-n Auto, Woolworth and Johns-\n\u25a0anvllle yielded \u00abne to two. Auto\nfcop Safety' Razor rallied. five\nInts on revival of the Gillette\nirber rumor and closed 3% higher.\nl\/arncr Brothers Pictures closed\nirong, more than a point higher.\n[Total  sales   1,662,060.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nMINERAL OUTPUT\n1 CANADA DOWN\nIN HALF YEAR\nCoal   Production   Lessened;\nAsbestos Output Lower\n.For Period\nnfc of Commerce\n[bniinion Bank \u2014*\nicrial   Bank\nClose'\n\u201e 246\n_ 233\n_. 233\n- 317\n- 323\n- 307\n- 240\n_. 22\nink of Montreal  ,.\u2014__.\nJuik of Nova Sootia, _.\u2014*\nloyal Bank  \u2022\u00bb**--\nlink of Toronto ..\u2022.. \u2014\nbltibi Power __. Paper \u201e__.,\nhibestos corporation*          V,\n\u25a0tlantlc Sugar \u00bb      5\nwell Telephone ,  *\u25a0\u2022\u2014   163\nllrazlllau T..L. & Power     35%\nIrltlsh American Oil  _      18,50\n1 - 231\/4\n40 H\n22%\n18 \\_\n\u25a066\nOS\n50\n8?5\nlirompton Paper\n|;anada Bronre  \u2014.\u00ab_..\njahada Car & Foundry __\u00bb.\nIfinuda  Cement   \t\nItanada Csment pfd\t\nim<l_ Converters   _\nJaxtada Industrial Alcohol\nanada Cottons' .......\t\nanada Ben. Eleotrlo pfd \u2014   cwt,\njanada Power - _.,   ll'\/i\nJada Steainship Lines. .^...      0\nns Minlriff Ss Smelting ......   190\n\u25a0minion Bridge  ..'. 1      67\nflominlon   Glass    _.,    122\n,pi..talon Steel Corpn pfd ._.    48\n.minion Textile      84%\n\u25a0p.   Grain , \u2014 '   10\njillcrest   Colliers         50\nito   of   the   Woods   \u2014 '..     38 tt\niescy   Harris -    20tt\nmtrrol   Power    -     64%\nontreal Telegraph.       *J\niiontrcal Tramways  ,\u00bb  ^\nJVtional Breweries\nitlonal Steel Car\njllyle-Milling\n60 tt\n295'\nitarlo  Steel  Products      78\n,tawa U H. & Power,'\nipmans Ltd\t\npiver  Corporation \u25a0 -\t\n[rice   Bros   _. \t\n(\u25a0\u25a0uebec  Power   \u2014\nlawlnlgan        \t\nlerwln Wllliama .........\nCanada   Power        32tt\n\u00abel.-of  Canada.  -...    46%\n;. .Lawrence Flour Mills     27\nabasso Cotton  \u2014-\u2014    40\n'estern  Grocers  ...-....-     18\nrin_-.pee Railway      102\nflnnlpeg Railway pfd _....._..    38\n101\n70\n60\n34\n(Attendance at the Toronto exhibition dropped a quarter of a mil\n(Jon this year.' v \u2022\nProduction in Canada of metals\nand non-metals during the first six\nmonths of 1930 was valued at $116,-\n360,409 as compared with $123,702,-\n334 for' tho half-year ending June\n1829, a ' decrease Of six per cent,\naccording to the half-yearly report\nJust issued by the Dominion bureau\nof statistics. Lessened coal production, lower output of asbestos and\nthe fa,lling-pfr in metal prices were\ntho principal contributory factors of\nthe decline '   \/\nMore wsenlc, gold, silver, copper,\nnickel, platinum metals, lead and\nzinc were produced but these increases in quantity wore not great\nenough to offset the lower prices for\nsilver and tho base metals with jthe\nresult that metal production totalled\n$75,031,606 as against $75,476^321\nduring the same period of 1929, a\ndecrease of 0.6 per cent. Production\nof bismuth, cadmium and cobalt\nwas not as great as ln the first s)x\nmonth of 1929.\nCoal output for- the half-year ending June was 7,159,781 short tons\nValued at $25,854,127, a decrease of\n18.4 per cent in Quantity and 18.9\nper cent in value..\nPetroleum and natural gas both\nshowed increases over the same period in 1929.\nAmong.'the non-metals, asbestos\nproduction was lower;' gypsum registered an Increase; the value of salt\nproduced was higher; magneslte\nshipments were off. Other non-metals produced were quartz, feldspar,\nsulphur, graphite, talc, sodium sulphate, mica, Iron oxides, soapstono,\nsilica brick, mineral waters, dlano-\nmlte, volcanic dust, sodium carbonate, hog manganese, bituminous\nsands, phosphate, barytes, actlnollto\nand fluorspar. \u25a0\u25a0\nThe report gives final figures of\nCanada's mineral production ln 1929\nby items and by provinces. A table\nshowing production by months from\nJanuary to June, 1930, of Canada's\nsixteen leading mineral products ls\nalso Included. JS \\\nCOPPER PRICES\nDOWN\n' NEW YORK, Sept. 15.\u2014<AP>\u2014\nOno custom smelter was reported\ntoday to have offered- copper lor\ndomestic delivery at 10 tt cents a\npound delivered, one-quarter of a\nceut under thp level which custom\nsmelters have been holding the metal for some tlm6. Even at that\nlow price, It was said that there\nwere no takers.\nLeading producers were reported\nto be offering copper ln tli^_ipmes-\ntlc market at 10%, although they\nhad been asking 11 cents a pound,\nbut it wm; said that they were disposing of practically no metal.\nSome second hand copper was sold\nSaturday at 10tt cents, but a purchaser today rejected another offer\nat the same price. ,\nThe export, price remained nt\n11.80 cents c.l.f, European base\nports, the level at which It WW\nheld  for some  weeks.\nCALGARY OILS\n.56\n.73\nA. P. Consolidated \t\nC.  and  E.  Lands \u201e\t\nEastcrest         .25\nFreehold '  20\nHome    Oil        3.58'\nIllinois. Alberta  -     .08\nMill  City  SU      .21tt\nRegent : 07\nRoyallte 20.50\nSterling Pacific :, \u201e...     .12\n\"TRY A NIP TONIGHT\"\nr%vm&\nBEST PROCURABLE\nThe Original -.--.I \u2014 look fo. it mt tho V-n-or'j and in.i.t on\nGRANT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\" \u2022\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of Brit-\nish Columbia. -\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. o\u00a3 Canada, Ltd.\n\u25a0'\u25a0\".. 0_flo\u00bb,'Sm\u00ab!t_o* and Beltolng Department\n, .TRAIL. .BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS s*nd REFINERS\nPurchasers of iSold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and. Zinc\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nStrikers Go Back\nto WorkYMontreal\nMONTREAL, Quo., opt. 19.\u2014Tbe\nstrike of local plastcrem which occurred last week waa brought to an\nend today.add'.the nun returned to\ntheir Job-.'\" \" ... i\nD. i\\. Patterqon, secretary of the\nBuilders' Exchari.-x stated today:\n\"We have^entered into a -O-months'\nagreemen...\" ... . \" .-\n- The men, who had been receiving\n$1.0!> un. hour, struck last weelt and\nasked for'an Immediate Increase of\n10 cents sin hour. I\nMONTREAL LIST\nDULL BUI TONE\nREMAINS FIRM\nMost of Leaders Are Little\nChanged; Demand Develops for,' Power\nOILS POPULAR ON\nTORONTO MARKET\nVolume of Trading High; 5\nOil Issues Account for\nThree Quarters\nTORONTO, Ont.. Sept. 16.\u2014As a\nresult of a decidedly brisk, movement ln Acme oil shares and beavy\ntrading in. four other oil Issues\ntransactions, on the Standard mining oxchange today rose to a total\nof 471,051 shares. The trading,\nhowever, \u00abas strongly specialized\nand- the five active on Issues accounted for three-quarters of the\ntotal  business.\nAcme touched a high for tho\nday of 3&c and closed- at 38ft, a\nnet gain of 6^ points. Ajax WjM\nalso In the heavy trading class, but.\nlost three points dosing at $3.12.\nNordon broke 10o to 03c, ln strong\ntrading. Other active Issues included Walnwell and Oggla, the\nformer making a fractional gain\nand the latter moving to lower\nlevels.\nHigher-priced' metal stocks were\nreactionary. Stronger prices developed lntthe Lindsley issueH, with Falconbrldge up lfic to \u00bb2.30. Sudbury\nBasin advanced fe to 91.31, and\nVentures gained 6Mi to Olftc.\nThe precious metal group was\nwithout special feature. Lake Shore\nmoved up 3$a to $23.65 and Mclntyre feU 30c to $19.05.\nHigher prices neld at the close\nln most of tho oil stocks. Imr\/rlal\nmoved up 16c to $22.80, Home advanced 6o to $3.45, Dalhousle 12C\nto 80, and Calmont 7c to 84c, whilo\nMayland fell 10 points closing at 76.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana   30\nAJajt     _.    3.10   \u2022\nAmulet      _.     .57\nlAmlty    _ '. I  _     .02\nA,   P.   Consolidated  _ 5 .\nAssociated    , \u2014 HIT\nBaltic Oil       JS\nBmd_ord     _     .1414\nBarry Hollln_er        .14\nBig   Missouri         .60\nO and E Lands _    .78\nCentral Manitoba       .08\nDom*      ,   aso\nDalhousle       .75\nFalconbrldge >__ -.._   2.20\nHome    Oil    _ _   3.45\nHowey      .-_     .34\nHolllnger     _J    S.00\nHudBon   Bay    ....'. _   7.85\nInternational Nickel  24.75\nLalce    Shore     _._ 23.50\nKlrWand   Lake    24.75\nKootenay   Florence     01 Vi\nMaoaasa     _ - 08\nMcDougall    14\nMclntyre    _  18.00\nMining Corp.       1.10\nMayland    .'. ._- 75\niNewboo     -.:      .07\nNew   Imperial   OU     22.60\nNiplsslng       1.10\nMoramda  22.75\nPedd   Oreille 80\nPremier   Oold    88\nS . w  Pete    - 36\nSherrit Gordon     1.67\nSudbliry   Basin   \u25a0   156\nSterling Paclllc 10\nSlscoe _ 32\nStada\/jha  '...:      .03%\nThompson Cadallac  03\nVipond       1.24\nVentures     :. 80\nWright Hargreaves     1.86\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Man., Sept. 15.\u2014Grain\nquotation,:\n. \u25a0 ..       open    High    Low    Close\nWheat\u2014\nOot    81V.     81 li      78\u00abi      7811\nNov;       81H,     82H     7B\u00bbi     80%\nDeo    S3 .i     B3%     81 81%\nMay        OO'\/j     9014     87(4   _88\nOats\u2014\nOot.        33',i     33.i     321,     S3\nDec    33%     34  ,     32H      3314\nMay        38%     38%     37%     38\nBarley\u2014\nOot    31        31!i     20T4     3114\nDec    33%     38%     32%      33%\nMay        30%     3914     38 30%\nFlax\u2014\nOct  148%    147       148       14614\nDec-   14614    14\u00abti    144       144\nMay      160       160       140%    150\nBye\u2014\nOct    48%      46%      43%      44%\nDec    48%     '.18%     45%     47%\nMay        65        65        .52%      53\nCash prices\u2014  \u25a0\nWheat\u2014No. 1 hard 79; No. 1\nnorthern 78'4; No. 2 northern 76%;\nNo. 3 northern 74%; No. 4 7014; No.\n5 87%; No. 651%; leod 45%; track\n78%; screenings, per ton, $4.00.\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPEG, Sept\non Victory bonds\nas  follows:\nBonds:\nWar loan:\n1931, 6 per cent,\n1037, 5 per cefit,\nVictory  loan:\n1933, 614 Per cont,\n1934, 5% per cent,\n1937, 5% Per cent.\nWar loan renewal:\n1932, 514 Per cent,\nRefunding  loan:\n1940, 4V4 Per cent,\n1844, 4% per cent,\n1946. 4% per oent.\n16\u2014Quotations\nfor   $1,000   are\n100.60.\n105.00.\n103,25. \u2022\n103.25.\n108.60.\n101.80.\n100.10; 100.50.\n100.10: 100.50.\n100.10:  ion.r,o.\nLOGAN <Sc BRYAN\nGRAIN .\nSTOCKS, BONDS, COTTON\nMEMBERS:   .\nNew York, Montreal and Vancouver\nStock Exchanges, Chicago Board  of\nTrade,  Winnipeg Grain  Exchange\nami other trading exchanges.\nlMuvATi.  wmn\nOFFICES:\nVancouver. Spokane and Seattle\nMONTREAL,. Que., Sept. 1ft.\u2014A\nfirm tone continued to prevail ..In\ntoday's extremely (dull and uninteresting trading on the local market.\nMost changes were of _, fractional\nnature, and most leading stocks\nolosed Uttle changed from Saturaay.\nNet gains on' the day had a moderate margin over net losses.\nOne of the most Interesting features of the day was the development of a much more Insistent demand for Canada Power and Paper,\nwith the quotation advancing to\n12V4, and the close at 11%, up \\_.\nThe other papor Issues failed' to\nreact to the strength ln the leader.\nAmong closing prices were noted:\nCockshutt Plow, 20H, \"i*p %\\ Canadian Car, Vs hlgncr ac ***\"_; Canada steamship preferred, a point\nhigher at 39; B. O. Packers, unchanged at five; Textile, % higher\nat a*Va. ex-dlvidend; Massey, v.i\nhigher lit 20t6; McColl-Prontenac,\noff Vi at 19; Power off ft at 64%;\nSteel Car, off lVa.at '50; ogllvle,\nfive higher at 2D5; Power Corporation, unchanged at 6B; Shawlnlgan,\nup V'i at (i0V_; and Steel of Canada up % nt 47. Brazilian closed\nunchanged at 35^.\nInternational Nickel was aotlve\nleader, and closed at 25, off %.\nMontreal Power closed at 64%, off\nVo and Canada Power, third in\nvolume, finished at 11%, up Vi.\nTotal sales 19,047 shares. Band\nsales    $11,700. '<\nPOTATO MARKET\nAT COAST SHOWS\nIMPROVED TONE\nShortage in Canada Is Seen;\nSupplies in the West Are\ni     Ordinary ''\nfe. C. APPLES ARE\nINCREASING, EAST\nPrunes From B. C. Beginning Arrive, Edmonton\nMarket\nNEW   VOKiV  STOCKS\nAllegheny        22 31 23\nAllied Chemical 274 267.i 267%\nAm Ca n  131% 128.4 128%\nAm For Power    72% 68% 70%\nAm   Smelt   Kef.    68 65% 66%\nAm Telephone    216% 213% 214%\nAm ToDaccc.   ....  128% 123% 124%\nAn-oondu        48% 48 46_s\nAtohleon     220% 219.4 220\nBaldwin        33% 32>,_ 33%\nB   Is   O       00     ** flBVi 98%\nBen    Aviation....      32 ,31% 31%\nBeth Steel _    89 88% 88%\nC   P     188% 185% 185%\nCerro do Pasco    45 \u2014 w\nC   tc   O       49% 40% 40%\nChrysler       2B . 2714     28\nOons Oas N Y    109% 107% 107%\nCorn   Products     91 90 90\nDupont      1120 118% 110\nEast   Kodak   .... 216% 211% 213\nBrie .'..   39 38% 38%\nFord English ....   \u2014 \u2014 20%\nFord  ot   Canada \u2014 \u2014 28%\nFirst Nat Stores    56% 64%     65\nFreeport   Texas    48 45%     45%\nGen   MotOTe   ....   44% 44%     44%\nOen    Electric       72% 70%     71%\nOen Foods     57% 60%     67\nQranby        21% \u2014        21%\nHowe Sound  ....   30% 30% 30%\nHud   Motors   ....   29% \u2014 29 Vi\nIna   Copper   ....   14% 14        14\nInter  R Trans    \u2014 \u2014 30%\nInter Nickel   ...   36% 24% 26\nInter   Tel    Tel     43 42% 43%\nKelly  Spring  ....     5%      3%       3%\nKenn   Copper       34% 34% 34%\nBresge   8   S   ....   31     . 30% 31\nOroeg   Is   Toll     27% 27% 27%\nMack   Truck   ....   58% \u2014 68%\nNash Motors  ....   34% 34% 34%\nN  P   It,   L       \u2014 \u2014 49\nN   Y   Central      163V. 161% 162>i\nPack    Motors       13 VI 13        13\nPenn   R   R   ....   73% 72% 72%\nPhillips   Pete       32% 32% 32%\nRadio   Corp   ....   40% 39 39%\nRadio   K   Orp     35% 33 Vi 34%\nRem Rand      30 29 29\nR   I    98 \u2014 98\nShell Union Oil   14% 14%     14%\nSin  Con       21V4 21 21%\nSo   Cal   Edison     68 \u2014 58\nS   P     118% \u2014 118%\nStand   Oil   Cal     60% 60% 60V4\nStand   OU   Ind    \u2014 \u2014 49%\nStand  Oil   N   J    69% 68% 69\nStew    Warner     27% 26% 26%\nStudebakei    ....   31% 30% 3l\nTexas   Corp    ....   51% 61% 51%\nTexas G Sul   ....   69% '58% 69\nUnion   Oarbldo,    78% 76% 76%\nU  P    219% 317% 217%\nUnited  Aircraft    \u2014. \u2014 60%\nU    S    Rubber      19% 19        19%\nU S Steel      170 167% 107%\nWest   Electrlo     152(4 149% 150%\nWillys   Over   ....     8%       6%       6%\nYellow    Truck      22 21% 21%\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16\u2014Some further\nprice advances are reported from a\nnumber of Canadian egg markets\ntoday, with the general market\nsituation   continuing    strong.\nToronto\u2014 Dealers are quoting\ncountry shippers for ungraded e_gs\nextraB 32 to 33, firsts 29 to 31,\nseconds  23   to  24.\nMontreal\u2014Prices are strong and\nactive, especially on frc6h extras.\nSpot prices for this grade ere now\n39 to 40 with other grades unchanged. Storage eg_s prices to\nretailers are extras 40. firsts 36.\nseconds 30. Dealers arc quoting\ncountry shippers for ungraded eggs\nextras 35 to 39, firsts, 30 to 33,\nseconds   24   to   25.\nWinnipeg\u2014Paying prices to country shippers hero have under-gone\na two cent advance with dealers\nnow quoting extras 29. firsts 27,\nseconds   19.\nVancouveiv-Paylng prices to producers continue to hold at extras\n82 to 33, firsts 28 to 31, pullet\nextras 25 to 26.\nChicago  spot  26%.  Nov.  27%.\nBUSINESS    OUTLOOK\nThe Financial Post summarizes.tho\ncurront business situation in Canada\nas follows:\nCommodity prices; Wholesale Index\ndrops 1.7 points In August, to 84.1.\nIron and Stoel: industry looks to\nOttawa for further tariff aid.\nCir loadings: Current loadings\nonly 7 per cent, below 1920 level\ndue to heavy grain movement.\nForeign trade: August grain shipments at: 18,600,000 bushels far exceed 1,929' movement.N\nEmployment: Seasonal occupations\nactive\u2014manufacturers and trade still\nqutot.\nStock market: Many groups did-,\ncount prospects of favorable tariff\naction.    ,\nCredit: Bank debits currently '>\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\nPer cenvbelow July, 1929, level,\nTrend: Many llnea ot business\nhope for favorable tariff action in\nspecial Ottawa meeting.\nNews letter Issued from the markets branch, under dato of September   12,  says:\nVICTORIA '    .\nWeather cool and cloudy.. Market condition and price unchanged\nsince last report. Grapes are being . shipped from the Okanagan\nValley in baskets, and are expected on thia market next week.\n9 The following copy of wire from\nCalgary gives latest market news;\n\"\u2022Weather cool and showery. Threshing being rushed and rep V: ts s^iow\ngrain grading high. Even at the\nlow prices quoted returns for 1930\ncrop will mean a lot of money available immediately e_n initial, payment. Country car movement In\nfruits and vegetables' has Improved\nconsiderably. This makes a marked\ndifference ln activity in city jobbing houses as majority of country\nmerchants have thetr wants supplied from these cars. The demand\nfor preserving fruits ls still in\nevidence although- the season Is\ndrawing to a closo. Washington and\nB. C. prunes are quoted at 80c to\n$1.00. Elberta peaches, $1,65 to $1.80.\nBartlett pears, fancy, $2.50 to $2.75;\nO grade $2.10 to $2.25. Wealthy\napples .\u25a0\"\u25a0till arriving green but meeting with good demand. Mcintosh\nprices named for 15th, satisfactory.\nShippers report color will be better\nthan last, year. Car of bulk, Jeffries arrived here and were very\nunsatisfactory as they are too small\nfor the trade. Jobhers here not\npartial to bulk apples but ir\/,y\nconsider handling numbers of cars\nbulk Macs, (f stock saleable. Washington onions off the market. B, C.\nonions Jobbing at $2.25 with stock\nshowing improvement. Jobbers are\nfinding It necessary to dump large\nquantities of Alberta corn as shippers, in Southern, part of Province, are flooding, the market. All\nother root and ground vegetables\nIn poor demand.'.'\nRE-IMPERIAL   FRUIT   SHOW\nWe would remind exhibitors that\nfruit Intended for the Imperial\nFruit Show must reach Montreaj ln\ntime for loading on the Duchess\nof York sailing October 10. It is\nessential to cfetaln the lowest\ntransportation rates, and to arrive,\natMestinatlon on tho correct date,\nthat your shipments should bo\nbilled right through to Leicester,\nEngland, on the Duchess of York,\nwhether forwarding by express\nthrough Canadian Pacific or Canadian National Railways. Entry forms\ntogether with fees, must reach\nOttawa not later than September\n30 and any entry rt^elvcd at a\nlater date will be disqualified.\nSUMMARY OF POTATO MARKET\nThe potato market in Vancouver\nis showing\" a decidedly firmer tone.\nGrowers afe at laat falling into\nline behind the prices set by thc\nInterior Gommittee of Direction.\nTaking the Dominion as a whole a\nrecent survey Indicates that there\nwill he a shortage of potatoes this\nyear, Jhls will not greatly affect\nthe west coast where supplies are\nexpected to meet tho demand. A\ngeneral firmer market is anticipated.\nVANCOUVER\nWe3thor conditions are unchanged since the last report. There Is\nnow a good display of Mclnlosh Red\napples on the market from Kamloops. Thc coloring Is good. Household pack is wholesaling from $2.00\nto $2.26. Local pears aro still plentiful a_%d arc going very cheaply.\nMany shipments are 100 per cent\nscabby and are mdved out with\ndifficulty. A little attention to\nLhe control of such diseases would\nbe profitable to the growers, of such\nfruit a,s It would enlarge their\nmarket and bring them a higher\nprice. Local Italian pruncB are now\nmore plentiful. Some arrivals have\nbeon picked too late and show-\nInx soft rot. Locaj Greengage plums\nare now in. Much of this stuff is\nvery attractive in appearance but\nthe demand ls dull and prices aro\nmade to move off the fruit as the\nopportunity offers. The peach deal\nIs at the moment still on Import\nbapls carlot arrivals from the Okanagan aro expected before the week\nIs out. P<tfces are unchanged $1.60\nbeing about the top for J. H. Hales.\nThe tomato deal is exceptionally\nfirm for this period although the\nprice ls low. There has been no\nglutting   so   far.\nFruit and vegetables imported\ninto Vancouver week ending September 10th, Washington; Pears,\n2206 boxes; peaches 15152 boxes;\ncanteloupes. 86 crates; headlcttucc,\n22 crates; cabbage, 60 crates; cauliflower 25 crates; celery 66 crates.\nCALGARY\nWeather cloudy and much cooler.\nApple movoment still \" fair with\nslight slackening of demand in\ncountry. A car of bulk Jeffries arc\non the market and wholesaling at\n2\\_ cents per lb. Bartlett pears have\na very good run hero lately, and\narc practically cleaned up. These\nare priced at $2,60 for fancy, and\n$2,25 C. grade. There are plentiful supplies of Flemish Beauty\n'Pears on hand and demand for this\nvariety is slack. The market is\nglutted with Plums and very little\nmovement at any price. Pond's\nSeedling, No. 1 plums are being\nquoted at $1.26 and No. 2, at $L00.\nPrunes aro in fair demand but\nprices are weak at 06c top price for\nNo. 1, Italian prunes. A car of Ontario Worden grapes and Damson\nplums was received hero this week.,\nDamsons In 11-qt. bskt are qnoted.\nat $1.60 and Worden grapes in\n6-qt. bskt. 7fic. The tomato market Is bRdly overloaded, with demand poor. Quotation oh 4 bskt\ncrates arrf.'90 to 96c Very heavy\nsupplies of peaches on hand heavy\nto ripe Elbertas from Washington,\ncanteloupes ere ' arriving heavy to\nlarge sires 37'b and larger for which\nthere is little demand. Standard,\ncrates are quoted at $2.26 to $3.60.\nA ear of green tomatoes, in 30-lb.\nhampers, wae received on tho market this week from Vaushall. Theee\ntomatoes Are quoted at 80 to 860\nper  hamper. .  ,\nEDMONTON \u2022    \u25a0\nBusiness .in fair. B. C apples are\nIncreasing In volume and arrivals\nare of good quality. The demand\nfor Apples If. Improving. Practically\nall Washtngtnn pears are cleaned up\nAlthough stnali lots are atlll arriv\ning lh mixed cars. B. c. pears are\nalso arriving (n small lots In mixed\ncars. Bartlett pears are bringing\n$3.60 $2.66 for fancy; O grade, a\nquarter less. Flemish Beauty and\nBoussock,'$2.25 to $2.60 for fancy;\nC grade, a quarter leas. Peach stocks\nare' short with demand good and\nprioes firm at $1.76 to $1.86 for Mo\n1, Elberta and J. H. Hale. Other\nvarieties 10 to 26c less. Prunes are\narriving in fairly large volume fr6m\nWashington also small lota in miked \u2022 cars .from. B. C. Washington\nprunes are a good pack of large\nuniform fruit averaging lft. B. C.\nprunes are much, smaller, some\nlota rtmnin? in size from 1 to: IV*\nNo. 1 prunes are selling at 90? to\n$1.00. cucumbers are selling well\nat 660 to 70c per box; The market\nhas had an over-supply of B, C.\nfield : tomatoes which were selling\nretail as low as $1.00 per 4-bskt.\nSEATTLE\nThere    ls    a liberal    supply    of\npeaches on the market;\"' but the\ndemand is decidedly lacking as\ncompared to the free movement experienced last week. Dealers, are\nexperiencing difficulty IS moving\nsupplies Into consumptive channels.\nSome sales of Elberta were reported as low as 76 cents. 4. H.\nHales continue to - .hold ,at prices\nranging from $1.00 to $1.25 per\ncrato off thc Walk. The potato\nsituation for! the present lp ruling\nln a healthy position, Sales, from\nthe car, were made at from $1.60\nto $1-76 per 100-lbs. arc quoting a\nf.o.b shipping point price of\n$25.00    per   ton    for    combination.\nMANY ISSUES ARE\nSOFTER,J0R0NT0\nStock   K\\change   Sees   Oils,\nFoods, Utilities Lose\nSome Ground\nTORONTO, Ont., Sept. 15.\u2014OIK.\nfoods, utilities and several Issues ln\nall groups, except agricultural implements on tho Toronto stock exchange, . softened today following\nNew York's decline.\nInternational Nickel led the local\nmarket and closed at 25, off %.\nConsolidated Smelters was ofr one\nto 192, wbllo Noranda gained .10\nto 23.10 and Lake Shore was up .60\nto  $23.50.\nBrazilian Traction gained <_ to\n35%.\nOil issues generally receded. British American was off \\'\\ to 18^,\nImperial % to 22%, Intentional\nPetroleum V* to 18^, M^ff Fron-\ntenac preferred % to 8^,, Service\nStations gained U to M>'.~,\nTho only gains In the lO^ds section wore made by -Consolii ^_ed\nBakeries whloh t\\t 15 waa up Vi\nand Maple Leaf preferred which\ngained one to 50.\nBritish Empire Steel preferred at\n4Va was up the fraction.. Page\nHersey gained % to 90%. Foni of\nCanada \"A\" gained \u00bbi to 29. Cockshutt Plow at 20 was up V* end\nMassey Harris at 20% was up thc\nfraction.\nTotal sales 16.770 shares.\nDOMINION    LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG,  Sept.   15\u2014\nReceipts:\nCattle 1715, dilves 510, hogs\n584,   sheep   645.\nSteers up to 1050 lbs\u2014Oood\nand  choice 6.50 to 6.25.\nHeifers\u2014Good and choice 6.60\nto   6.00.\nFed calves\u2014Good and cholc* 8,00\nto   10.00.\nCows\u2014Good 4.25 to 4.50; canners\nand  cutters  1.75  to  2.25.\nBulls\u2014Good  3.00   to  3.76.\nStocker and feeder steers\u2014Oood\n4.50   to   5.26.\nStock cows and hetfera\u2014Good\n3.00   to   4.00.\nMilkers and springers 40.00 to\n75.00.\nVeal calves\u2014Good and choice 8.50\nto   10.00.\nHoxs\u2014Select bacon 1.00 per head\npremium; bacon U.50; butchers\n70c per head discount; lights and\nfeeders   11.00 to  11.50.\nU|mbs\u2014Good handyweight 7.25\nto 7.50; good heavies 7.00 to 7.25;\nbucks  4.00  to 6.00.\nSheep\u2014Good heavies 3.00; good\nhandyweight   4.00.\nINCREASED FARM\nPROPERTY IS\nCH1EFPR0BLEM\nLower Transportation Costs\nAre Needed in the United\nStates .\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 16\u2014Increased farm prosperity aa reflected in'\nlower transportation costs la .agriculture's chief Interest ln the national waterways survey undertaken\nby army engineers. Tha war department describes lt as probably\nthe most extensive and comprehensive study of American waterways\never undertaken. The 183 streams\nIncluded in this survey drain practically the entire area of the United.\nStates except the Colorado basin.\nThe study i is the first attempt\never made to arrive at a complete.\nn.mi coordinated estimate of .water\nresources possibilities for aU, purposes.\nNavigation Is of particular interest to agriculture in the fight of\nlower cost of transportation already\nafforded by improvements in shipping facilities on the Ohio and\nMississippi. Tlie new rivers and\nharbors act authorizes an appropriation of $17,600,000 for completing\nthe Illinois waterway, final link\nIn the development of a 9-foot\nchannel from the Great Lakes to\nthe gulf. Agriculture sees' great\npossibilities ln getting ocean freight\nin and out of the interior through\nbarge line connections with lake\nand gulf ports. \"\nThe act also provides $15,000,000\nfor the development of the. Missouri between Kansas City and\nSioux City; $7,500,000 for a 9-foot\nchannel in the Mississippi from the\nmouth of the Illinois river to\nMinneapolis; $5,000,000 for improvement of the Tennessee river and\nappropriations for a., largo number\nof other rivers and harbor projects.\nArmy engineers are endeavoring to\nformulate a coherent plan, with\ncost estimates and with detailed\nproposals for the ultimate development of each river. It is not expected that tho entire plan will be\nundertaken at once, but, that this\nwllj \"he a goal to be worked toward.\nThe plans are being carried forward with a view to determining\nwhat further developments could bo\nmost effectively made for navigation, flood control .irrigation and\nwater  power.\nCANADIAN* FIRM\nFIRST TO SENI}\nA SALES TRAIN\nThree dining co^chee fitted as\nshow rooms for Robert Sinipeon\ncompany goods have Just completed\na tour of the prairie provinces, saya\nThe Financial post, Toronto.\nOfficials of the Robert Simpson\ncompany are enthusiastic over the\nresults. It was an experiment never\ntried before by this or any other\nmerchandising company and\u2014lt met\nwith phenomenal success ln point of\nattendance at the 44 stops throughout the three provinces.\nIt was to celebrate the ffiteenth\nanniversary of the opening of Its\nRegina. store, that the company\nundertook to literally put its store\non wheels, and took thouwmds of\ndollars worth of representative merchandise out on thc prairies and ln>\nvlted prairie wives and customers to\ncome and see for themselves the\ntype and quality of merchandise\nthat could bo purchased.\nThe special train was on the road\nfor over six weeks. It travelled over\n4000 miles, stopped at 44 points and\nembraced no less than WOO postal\nstations in Its unique tour.\nThe response to this merchandising venture was so great that the\ncompany's officials hrwd to telegraph\nfor an extra car to accomodate the\ncrowds. It is estimated that between 60,000 and 70.000 people\u2014of\nwhich over 70 per cent wrro the\ncompany's own customers\u2014visited\nthe display during the six-week\nperiod. Originally there was to have\nbeen one special car sent out. In\nthe end there wero three.\nPAPER COMPANY\nCLOSES ANOTHER.\n, MILL IN STATES\nQUEBEC. Que., Sept. 15.-* \u00bb:\nport that the International Paper\ncompany had closed its Degraaso\nnewsprint mill tn th* State of New\nYork and transferred Its tonnage\nto Canada, was confirmed at the\ncompany's head offices, and by Pre-*\nmler L. A, Taschereau here over the\nweek-end. This makes the eighth\nmill closed by the company ln the\nUnited States thia year.\nRECEIPTS FROM\nAUTOS IHN.B.\nSET NETRECORD\nReceipts From'Gasoline Tax\nincrease by Abont 38\nPer Cent\nFREDERICTON, N. B., Sept. 15.-\u2014\nNew Brunswick department of pflblic\nworks cash receipts through the motor vehicle branch have reached new\nhigh figures, the first 10 months ot\nthe present fiscal year having produced $2,322,240 whereas the gross\nreceipts for the last fiscal year ^ero\n$1,321,000.\nThe estimate of receipts for the\nmotor vehicle branch xor the present fiscal year was $1,485,000 and\nHon, D. A. Stewart, minister of publio works, believes it is not unlikely\nthat this total will be reached, despite the fact that they are so much\nln excess of the 1029. record, which\nprovided new peak figures.\nIncreased touriBt motor travel ln\nNew Brunswick ls reflected ln the\nincrease of 38 per cent ln receipts\nfrom gafeollno tax up to August 31st\nthis year as compared with 1929, the\nfigures showing $482,141.27 for 1880\nas compared with $347,326.66 up to\nAugust 31st last year. Tho normal\nyearly Increase or 12 per oent in receipts fdbm motor vehicle license\nfees has been sustained this y__ar,\nwhich In view of adverse, business\nconditions existing generally ls regarded as reflecting a gratifying situation In New Brunswick.\nThe estimate for receipts from\nmotor vehicle licenses for 1930 was\n5.00O, whereas up to August 31st\nthe actual receipts have been $840.-\n108.26 as compared with receipts of\n$746,341.69 up to the ond of August,\n1929.\nVAjNCOUVEK stocks\nBid Ask\nBig  Missouri    00 .64\nGeorge   Copper       1.20 1.26\nGeorgia River       .05 \u2014\nGrandvlew 05 .05^,\nNoble   Plve         .06- .07\nOregon Copper       .08^4 .11\nPremier    _ 01 .\u00a3 .02\nPend   Oreille         .95 \u2014\nPorter   Idaho    12 \u2014-\nReeves  McDonald    31 .is\nSllvercrest    .._        \u2014 J04\nSnowflake          \u2014 .03\nWellington \u00ab-     \u2014 .03\nFOR SALE\n1 Triumph Combination\nGas and  Coal\nSTOVE\n1  Water  Tank,  Gas,\nHEATER\n1 Gas Fire\nJ. F. COATES\nElectrical Engineer\nBox 1161   Nelson, B. C\nYoin\\s To Use\nTke B-WKOFMONTREaL\nyours to use,'-'\nis\nt yoar money\nFor making your money earn\ninterest\nRr the safekeeping of .your\n\u2014i and small articles of\nFor advice on financial matters\nBur everything Wing to do\nwWk t_\u00bb collection or send*\n'lag of money.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nEstablished l8l7\nTotal Assets h\\ excess 0T.I800_0O0.000\nNELSON BRANCH:\nTrail Branehi\nRoaaland Branehi\nNaw Denver Branehi\nKnalo Brmir.li:\nK E. L. DEWDNEY, Manager\nD. C PATERSON, Manager\n\u2022 J. GALT, Manager\nJ. J. IRWIN, Manager\nR. A. CHESTER. Manner\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON. DA.LY NEWS   '   TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1*980.\n1\nNYALYPTUS\nThe Golden\n\u25a0   Cough Syrup\n75c\nMann, Rutherford\nCo.\nGLASSES\nS. A. C. Laughton K.O.\nOPTOMETRIST    and    OPTICIAN\n.   Room  a  _-  Grlffln  Block\nL14 TAXI AND 44\n^ TRANSFER \u2122\n\u2022\u25a0   TRAIL   AND   ROSSLAND\n__U_IGU'J'   AND   EXi'lltBS\nSchedule\nDaily to Trail, leaves  lo A. 11\n\u00a3___IS   DAY'  AND    MIGHT\nOnly Ten More Days to  Get Your\nSuit   Made   at   Reduced   Prices.\n'        $33   to    .52\nC. TING\nMerchant   Tailor\nVernon   Street\nSMYTHE'B  RHEUMATIC REMEDY\nValuable and Effective Treatment of\n\u2022cute and chronic. Jiheumtlsm\nLumbago, Neuralgia nnd Gout.\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPRESCRIPTION  SPECIALISTS\nPHONE   1\nGLASSES'-are either a source of\ngreat comfort or discomfort.\nMuch depends on the examination to determine the kind of\nglasses needed, much depends on\nhow Ihe glasses are matin and\nfitted. iye examine eyes, make\nand fit glasses in a thoroughly\nscientific manner. Satisfaction\nguaranteed,\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist Sz Optician\nExpert  Optical  Service\n!.h0\u00bbe TAXI\nM\nThe  Best  ot Service\nCareful,   courteous\nDrivers\n_t oison Transfer Co., Ltd.\nCSTY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemists\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drugs,\nStationery\nMall   Orders   Promptly\nDispatched\nCome and get your\nweight  free\nBox   1083    Nelson,   Phono   34\nPhone Taxi\n77\nFreight     Schedule\nDally  to  Rossland\nand  '.\"rail  lu  u.m,\nBUD    STEVENS,\nProp.\nTrau    Phone    135\nOMtWr Tntw Repair\nKtU t*fc* OBM Of MOW'\nIMS w-pti-* an tho\nrot-cL Ono may eav*\nyon lhe prica of \u25a0 new\ntab* or tit* aad a Ut\noi tlmo ontl treubls.\nThey come In threa\n\u25a0fitl\u2014 et  low  prices.\nj 1 Our; expert repair dej\npartmentiWill quickly\nvulcanize|y ou?| punctured ftubea:     For&a\n<** \u2022    ,_ fj\u00bb tatt  \u25a0 ^ew*--mtlh*i\nsmall cost we'll put on a\nrepair thatVwill last as\nlong as the tube. Bring\nin your work1 now.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\n,   Phone 35\nFBts,  A-Mssories,   Tires,   Tin*   Repairs,   (ins,   Oil,   Auto  Repairs,\nBody  and  Fender  Works\u2014All  under  one  roof\nWHEN\nTHE 12\nO'CLOCK\nWHISTLE\nBLOWS\nTODAY\nDASH TO\nPITNER'S\nFOR THE FINEST\nFEED OF\nBantam Corn\nYOU EVER HAD\nFrom  Chalmers' Farm\nFOUR PETITIONS\nFOR NEW WALKS\nARE ACCEPTED\nFell Street Walk to be Three\n-!   Blocks Long; Finish\nEast Baker\nOf four now cement sidewalk\nprojects authorized by the city\ncouncil Monday night, three are ln\nFairview, and one calls for three\nblocks of six-foot sidewalk.\nThe three-block project is on the\nsouth side of Pell street, between\nNelson \u25a0 avenue and Fifth street,\nand will be six feet in width. At\npresent there is no walk at all\nthere.\nFour-foot walks will be laid on\nthe south sldo of Cottonwood street\nbetween Fifth and Sixth streets, and\non tho west side of Fourth street\n\u25a0between Elwyn and Davles.\nWith a six-foot cement walk on\nthe north side of Baker* from\nHendryx east for 150 feot, Baker\nstreet will havo permanent walks\nfrom end to end exc?Irt from the\nEagle block eastward to Hall intersection, and except for the western\nextremity of the street, which Is\ncontrolled by the Canadian Pacific\nrailway.\nThe petitions for these four projects   were  reported   by'  City   Clerk\nW. \u25a0 E.   Wesson   to   be   sufficiently\nsigned.\nTASK   BYLAWS\nThirty-four local improvement bylaws, providing for borrowing for as\nmany' comrv \u25a0*\u25a0 upr~**r# of *^_*e\ncurrent season, were put through by\nthe council. Of these,* 16 were\nsponsored by Alderman j. p. Morgan\nMAYOR AND CLERK i\nTO BE DELEGATES\nMayor R. D. Barnes and City\nClerk W. E. Wasaon -will; represent\nthe -t corporation, .of Nelson at the\nannual convention of the Union of\nBritish Mufiicloent, at i Kelowna October 9 Ho 11, and at,-the annual\nconvention also of the Oood BoadB\nleague of British Columbia, which\n\u25a0also meets there.\nCHILDREN ROCK\nTO CARNIVAL HERE\nCOUNCIL WONT   I\nBELIEVE THAT\nAFFLECK SWORE\nP. J. Sheran Charges    He\nProfariely Refused Work\nto Brother\nIllusion of Guillotine Amazes Audiences; 17 Pound\nGirl Is Shown\nEXCHANGE RATES\n\u25a0NEW YORK, Sept. 15.\u2014sterling\nexchange at $4.83% for 60-day bills\nand at 64.86.. Ior demand.\nForeign   bar  silver\u201436V.e.\nCanadian dollars__5-32c.\nMarks\u201423.80V_c.\nKronen\u201428.8614 c  '\nFrancs\u20143.02 8-tHc.\nLl_e--6.23 7-16c^\nNelson approximate sterling exchange rate\u2014.4.87.4,\nWe Employ\nTHE LATEST\nSCIENTIFIC\nMETHODS\nIN\nDentistry\nDr. KEELEY\nDENTIST\nNelson and Trail\ncircus..days are back in Nelson\nonce more, brlnginj with them the\nsmell of hot dogs, peanuts and\npopcorn and. the ' whirl of the\nmerry g6 round and ferrls wheel.\nThe first \u25a0 sign of the popular\namusement waB on Saturday night\nwhen the band wagon heralded the\napproaching days of the circus.\nTh& tents and equipment went up\nMonday morning and In the' evening the lower city presented a\nveritable hee hive. Conklln and\nGarrett's shows, familiar, to Nelson\nkiddies are hack with added attraction.\nThe feature of %the carnival this\nyear is a marvellous illusion of the\nguillotine. A girl ls placed in a\nreproduction of the primitive means\nof execution, the blade falls arid\napparently the head with It into a\nbox below. The man in charge\nplaoee, a towel over the box, lifts\nOut what is thought to bo the\nhead and places it on the blade\nof a sword, passes between the\narras of a chair. He lifts the\ncovering and the head ls visible and\nlife ls very much in evidence. The\ngirl's head tiiks and acts in a\nnatural way. , While the head is\nresting on the knife blade, her\nbody is still in the machine on the\nother side of tho enclosure and\nthe . hands move ln response to\nlhe show man's Instruction.\nCOW   HAR   TWO   HEADS\nMany other attractions almost\nequally as interesting arc shown.\nA splen(dld collection cy fre-=fc\nanimals numbering ttboUj 15 or 20\nare offered. Cows with eight, six\nand five legs are on exhibit. Ono. in\nparticular haa n leg growing out\nof its back, while others have faces\nlike bull dojs and one actually\nhas   two   heads.\nSeveral human freaks are also on\ndisplay. One gi*l 17 years old\nweighs only 17 pounds. A stunted\nman gives sleight of hand feats\nand the fire eating stunts. High\ndiving Is another Popular attraction. The diver plunges from a\ngreat heighth into a tub of water\nbelow. He executes his feats at\n4:30 o'clock In the afternoon and\n10 o'clock In the evening. Hawaiian\ndancers and many other side show\nentertainments aro offered.\nENGINEER HAS RIGHT\nTO \"HZRE AND FIRE\"\nOther WbtterS' Raised     by\nMr. Sheran Receiving\nAttention\nW.RCAMP1QN\n; GROCERIES\nDON'T   WALK\u2014TALK\nOUR,PHONE NUMBER\n. ?   is\n121\nCauliflowers, , lb\nISq\nPickling* Onions,\nwhile,\nIb. ...\n16o\nPickling .Onions\nbrown\nJib. .\n10c\nIt-ananas,   do\/en\n_, \u25a0\n30c\nPeaches,   ..uskct.\n.__,'.;...\n:!.._\nPlums, basket .\n\u201es\u00bb\nPears, basket ...\n__\u201e..-.\u201e;_\n___,_-\n.5o\ndrapes,, lb.   \t\n._...\u201e.._._\n_ *\u2022\n_tto\nsweet Potatoes,\nih\t\n.._....;\nISO\nHead   Lettuce,\nCelery,\nCabbage,.\n\", Bantam Corn,\nOreen Bean\n.   .\nDELIVERIES  TWICE  DAILY,\nUPHILL and FAIRVIEW\nThat City Knglnter B. C. Affleck was engaged by the city council to handle the city's public works\nand that he alone has 'tj&e power to\n\"hire and fire\" men ^.-connection\nwith publio works employment, was\nt-.he answer made hy Mayor R. D.\nBarnes Monday night to P. J. Sher-\nai, who asserted that on' July 1\nwhen Mr. Sheran interviewed him\non Baker street and a|ked him to\n?ive employment *tS\u00bb hia brother 'On\nFalrvlew work, Mr. Affleck both doclared that the brother should never have any city work again, and\nused profane' language in consigning Mr. Sheran himself to perdition.\nMr. Affleck, , aske^ if he had\nmy remarks to make, admitted he\nmight have held the interview, out\nlenled that in such caso he would\nor could have used strong lattgivge.\nMr. Sheran -clatnv< he could produce three witnesses to his statement of the case.\nExchanging views informally, members of the council refused to believe Mr. Affleck used the language\nImputed   to   him by Mr.  Sheran.\nAsked by tho mayor ir thoy wanted to go into the matter further,\nhe aldermen Implied a willingness\nto let the matter rest with Mr. Affleck.\nCLEANING   STREET\nMr. Sheran was informal that a\n.leanup of the south side of BaVer\nstreet in the 700 block promised\n_ilm by Alderman J. P. Morgan had\nOeen carried out, with the exception that a new drainage pipe\nwould have to he Inserted under\nthe approach to the Oran>2 Crush\nfactory. %\nWhen Mr. Sheran drew attention\nto-the practice of certain motorists\nof driving up and down Baker street\nendlessly on certain nights, making\n\".U\" turns at the Hendrjtx street\nntersectlon, ' Mayor Barn?-* asked\n!f 'he had ever complained to the\nlolicot When Mr. Sheran laid he\nhad, without there being any remit, the mayor i-romMeri that ne\nwould take this matter up personally and seo that the situation was\nremedied.\nHunting Time\nIs Here\nTRY US FOR\u2014\nGuns, Rifles and Ammunition,\nWaterproof Clothing, Decoy\nDucks, Camp Equipment, Etc.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany \u2014o\u2014 Llcited\nWHOLESALE - Nelson, B. C. - RETAIL\nJust-*\nComing\nInto Stock\nNew Fall\nMerchandise\nOvercoats  ior  Fall\nSociety    Brand Suits\nSweaters    and\nPullovers\nFall Weight    Underwear\nNew Socks\nDress Shirts\nSee Them  Early\nIt's   a   pleasure to\nshow you Top Quality Merchandise     at\nreasonable prices.\nIt It's New\u2014\nWe Have It\nQILKER'S\nCOAST FIREMEN\nB. C. CHAMPIONS\nBeat Westminster Champs in\nPlayoffs for .Baseball\nTitle '\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 15\u2014Vancouver Firemen wound up thc provincial playoff series with Trapp\nBulcks of New Westminster this\nevening at Athletic park by nosing\nout the New W-esl-mlnster champions 1 to o. ln a brilliant pitcher's\nduel  between  Ray and  Olson.\nOlson held thc city champs to\nfour well-scattered hits. while\nTrapps got only three singles off\nRay and Kaye.\nFiremen scored their run in the\nsixth after Olson had fanned lhe\nfirst two men to face him, Wattcrs\nwalked, stole second and went to\nthird on a wild throw by Kulal,\nMlron brought him home with a\nsingle  to  left  field.\nScores  by   Innings: R   H   8\nFiremen     > 000 001 0-1      4   1\nllrapps       000 000 0\u20140     3    1\nRay, Kayo and Goodall; Olson and\nStoddart.\nTiny black blconnc hats perched\non top of thc head and worn with a\ndotted nose veil arc smart.\nBANKS HELPING IN\nAUSTRALIA :\nMEI..BOUR.NK, Australia. Sept. 15.\n(O P cable via Beutpra)\u2014Thebahka\nof Australia are aiding the commonwealth cabinet' to balance the national ledger, 'Hon. P; A, ' Lyons,\npostmaster-general ahd minister of\nworks and railways, informed Jho\nLabor party unemployment- conference in session here. .\n\"If the budget is\" not balan6ed\nthis year it will be balanced 'next\nyear,\" declared Mr. Lyons,\nThe minister warned the party\nagainst favoring \"fantastic pleas,\"\nalluding evidently tot the* repudiation of war debts proposal which\nhas been heard frequently\u2014and told\nthe party the ministry favored all-\nround sacrifices without wage reductions at the expense of the- workers. ' \u25a0     .\nB. C. EGG LAYING\nTWO PAYDAYS PER\nMONTH FOR CIVIC\nEMPLOYEES DECREE\nOn motion ol AldBrman J. F.\nCoate. Monday nlpht, tho city\ncouncil decided that in. future thero\nshould bo two pay-dayfl a month\nfor civic employees lliatead of on.,\nand authorized the mayor ond the\ncity clett to lsBUe the payroll\nchecks on the fifteenth and on the\nfinal  day of each month.\nAlderman J. B. Gray, who pointed\nout that the provincial statutes\nrequired two pays a month, and\nar_ued that the city should conform\nstrictly, seconded Alderman coates'\nmotion.\nThe request for a semi-monthly,\npay emanated from members of the\nflro   department.\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld.. Scot. lS.-r-\n(CP)\u2014The flndlnn or fragments\nbelieved to bc of Sir John Franklin's ship, tho Erebus, and tho discovery of Bevcral small Islands In\ntho re.lon of. the mannetlo pole,\nwere described on arrival hero of the\nHudson's Bay company's steamer\nFort James, after two years ln the\narctic.\n(Experimental Farm, Acasslz,\n(46th \u2022 week)\nVI.   Egss\nBARBED ROCKS\u2014\nExp.  Farm,  Brandon 51 1706\nLamble,  Jas.-  :. 31 1767\nMains,  Alex    30 1816\nPennington, A  47 2212\nTrafton,  C, H  49 2016\nitNCONAS \u2014\nPullen.  F,  E  36 1664\nBLACK MINORCAB\u2014\nMartin, S.  S,  .'.  24 1170\nWHITE LEGHORNS \u2014\nAppleby,  F,  W  44 1083\nBo^var P. Farm ........ 35 2007\nBoyes   Bros 31 1893\nCalder,   C.   D.     33 1910\nChalmers, J  38 1003\nChalmers, R. W  53 2170\nCookson, Mrs. VT. J. 29 1664\nDarbey, P. Is Sons .. 37 1862\nDlederichs, J. C  45 2059\nDowd Ss Moran   35 1515\nEvans, F. C  48 2211\nFaJrweather, W. M .. 21 1489\nForsyth, W  16 1691\nOreen, J  30 1706\nHodgson & Bushby _ 62 1926\nHolland   it. Sons   ...211727\nKennedy Bros 42 173*4\nLawson,   C.   W  22 1747\nLucille P. Farm  42 2122\nMetcalfe,  C. P  44 1817\nMufford, J. H, At\nSons 36 1664\nRobertson, A  55 2074\nRump & Sendall  .... 28 1561\nRuttledge, M, H\".   42 1029\nSchofield,   A!   W 45 1973\nSchofield, M. S  60 2008\nShannon, Bros 48 2001\nSmith   Bros  45 1939\nSpence, J. W  40 1865\nUniversity ot B. c. .. 37 2114\nWard,    Geo  44 1820\nWhiting, W  65 2060\nRHODE  ISLAND  REDS\u2014\nSwastika P. Farm .. 60 1831\nGarrlck, Fred   45 1081\nHoman, M. L  27 1678\nRussell, D  41 1698\nWHITE WVAISDOTTES\u2014\nCant,    A  51 1739\nLloyd, Miss Ruth  .... 48 1806\nExp.  Sta.  Sidney .... 38 17.7\nLAST MINUTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nReceived   too   late  to  go  oa\nclaffilflrd pate.\n\"Say It With Flowers\"\nOur Floral Baskets\nmade by the blind Canadian     soldiers,     with\nsome of our choice\nCut Flowers\nmakes an excellent presentation for graduation\nor any other occasion.\nWe have the finest variety of cut flowers\nin town.\nNelson Flower\nShoppe\nA ndrews and A ndrews\nMeans  Service  In  Flowers\nPhono 233\nFURNISHED   ROOMS   For Rent.   (15)\nTO RENT-LARGE THREE-ROOMED\nsuite, furnished, no chlldreYi.\nPhone 773. .    (1816)\nNews of the Day\nWanted\u2014Plums and apples, McDonald   Jam  Company. (1803)\nQueen City Rebekah Lodge No. 16\nI. O. O. V. meets tonight 8 o'clock.\nFlower  Drill. (1805)\nD. C.)\nPoints\n19,02.2\n1882.2\n2429.2\n2211.6\n1763.2\n1341.1\n2179.4\n2076-\n1966.7\n2250,9\n2053.5\n2273.4\n1878.1\n2026.6\n2062.1\n1573.9\nX3585.4\n1523.3\n1700.6\n1750.1\n1062.7\n. 1911.4\n1738.6\n1858.-\n1905.2\n1047.3\n1590.2\n1878.4\n1620.7\n2297.7\n2181.5\n1940.6\n2318.5\n2037.3\n2014.3\n2403.6\n1961.6\n2221.9\n1920.9\n11114.4\n1676.8\n1781.8\n1827.1\n1B75.7\n1890.7\nlllll IH(15(190038.1\nProduction\u201456,24  per cent.\nMETAL MARKETS\nWe   Will   Give   You\nQuick Service\nOur Machine Shop Is\nEquipped to Handle\nYour Work.\nBENNETTS\nLtd.\nniiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimn.l\nApolli-\nnaris\nA new shipment of this\nfavorite mineral water\nhaa just arrived.\nSwedish Kisses\nCinnamon Balls\nGolden Nougat\nAU Fresh Stock\nKandyland'\nDiamonds\nThe sparkling beauty\nof a perfect DIAMOND\nenhanced by its exquisite hand carved setting\nof white or green gold\nor of platinum, makes a\nbeautiful engagement\nring that will be prized\nfor a lifetime.\nWe have a fine selection from $25.00 to\n$250.00.\nE. Collinson\nJeweler\nC. P. R- Time Inepoclor\nNEW YORK, Sept. 15.\u2014Copper\nquiet; electrolytlo apot antl future\nl(Hi to 11.\nIron quiet; No. 3 f.o.ft. Eastern\nPennoylvanla 18.00 to 19.00; Buffalo   16.00;   Alabama  11.60  to  14.00.\nTin quiet; spot and nearby 20.87;\nfuture  30.06. *      <\nLead, steady; spot New York 6.50;\nEast St.  Lculs 5.35.\nZlno quiet; East St. Louis hpot\nand   future   4.25   to  4.30.    .\nAntimony   7.75   to   7.87.\nQuicksilver   117.00.\nAt London:  ,\nStandard copper, spot \u00a348 15s;\nfuture i^t_ 12s Qd; electrolytic spot\n\u00a350;   future  t61   10s.\nTin, spot \u00a3134 5s; future \u00a3135 15B.\nLead, spot and future \u00a318 2s 8d\nZinc, spot \u00a316 17s 6d; future \u00a318\n7s- 6d.\nMINNEAPOLIS     GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. J6.\u2014\nFlour\u2014Unchanged. In carload lots,\nfamily pjtc.it:. quoted $5.60 to $5.60\na barrel,  in Q8-lb cotton sacks.\nShipments\u201448,661.\nBran\u2014$21 to $21.50. Standard\nmiddlings $22 to $32.60.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 nor., 82&C to 88'Ac;\nNo. 1 Red Durum, 70o *o 71c; Sept.\n80y*c; Dec. 83\u00bb'Hc; March 88^0;\nMay  89 c.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow, 86&c to 88'Ac.\nOats\u2014No. 3 White 33c to -33&C\nFlax\u2014No.   1,  $1.68  to  $1.92.\nHOPS BRANDON TO\nREGINA IN LESS\nTHAN THREE HRS\nliimiiiiimti.miinifl'__i\nREGINA, Sask., Sept. 15.\u2014Piloting\nhis fast monoplane from Brandon\nto Reglna in the remarkable time\nof ono hour and 45 minutes against\na heavy wind which at times attained a velocity of 60 miles an\nhour, Leo Bchoenhair, crack American pilot, landed his Lockheed\ncabin monoplane, powered with a\nWasp engine, onto the Regina airport shortly after 2:30 this afternoon Bnd more than 30 minutes\nbefore tho next -plane to arrive.\nwhich wns tho \"New Cincinnati,\"\ntho radio station of the air.\nHarry Russel, leader of the tour\nto date in total points, piloting his\ntrl-motoffed Ford, dropped from the\nair onto the airport flold about one\nhour after the first 'plane to arrive\nnnd tonk fourth place In Monday's\nrace from Brandon.\n\/your Hat's the\nBig Thing NOW!\nSeptember the 1.5th your straw hat goes into retirement (or the-furnace). When you look at.\n'the hat you put away this spring you'll decide a\nnew one would be better\u2014at least to start the\nseason. ,\nThere's a great collection of new, Ball Aiats here-\nsoft brim Tiats or Homburgs in the new shades.\nSeetherii.   Get yours today.   Be ready.\nY  THE WALDORF AT ?g.00\n>!\u25a0     THE BELMONT, 9g-SO.:<.   \u25a0\n;v*   f HE. BORSALINO, ?g.50\nEMORY'S Limited\nME \"CHANT-EGONOMIST M.EN'S STORE\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\n~y^ GROCERY JHL\nPhones 10 and tl\nMl   expert  dietitians  recommend |\nMalkin's   Best   Pure   Foods.\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPhone 235\nPublic Opinion\nSayB .'..*,\nGARRETT\nShows\nWftuniwiit\nBIQQE&\nAND\nBETTER\nthan ever\nDon't fail to see\nCapt. Soderbery\nin his sensational\nFIRE-DIVE\nTonight\nTwo Shows\nNightly\n7-9 P. M.\nNovf\nPlaying\nRomance, tunci, laughs ana that perfect pair: Oajnnr\nFun-ell, thc stars of \"Sonny Side Pp.\"\n'HIGH SOCIETY BLUES'\nWith\"-'\nJanet Gaynor\u2014Charles Farrell\nITS SWEET\nIT'S SAUCY\nIT'S APPEALING ,\nIT'S ROLLICKING\n. ITS ORIGINAL    \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nITS CHARMING\nEverybody Says This Is a Splendid Show\nsriOWlHO AI.L THIS  WEEK\nKootenay District  Tennis and Golf  Championship\nplayed at the Golf and Country Club, Nel\u00abo_r\nSeptetnber 1st (Labor Day).\nMILLAR  and   I.VI.KS   In  \"THE   MTDNIGHT   LODGE\"\nMUSICAL NOVELTV ACT; \"THE GLOW WORM\"\nDon't Forget -Matinees Daily at 2 P.M.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_09_16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0400560","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","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.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"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","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1930-09-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1930-09-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}