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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":" \u00ae%e Batlij\nM\u00bbCIU   t\u00bbH\nVICTORIA  m  C\nVOL. $!7.\nNELSON. B. C. THURSDAY MORNING, SEPtEMBER 13, 1928 .\nNo. 126\n\u25a0\u25a0hi     \u25a0\nSee Pare 8\nPUBLIC UTILITIES BODY IS FAVORED\n|Pre_ent  Scale   Almost  Confiscatory Declare Speakers;\nClose Division\n[QUESTIONAIRK URGED\nON TAX IMPROVEMENTS\n(Large    Number    Resolutions\nDealt With During After-\nnoon at Trail\nRossiand Loses the Second Game 3*0 till\nRossiand Fails  Before  Superb\nHurling by Young Fraser\nHurler\nPRADOLINI PITCHKS\nWELL FOR MINKRS\nTRAIL, BC., Sept. lii\u2014 Kesolii-\n%~m adopted by the U ulot i of\nBritish tolumi.1.1 Municipalities\nthis afternoon and evening were\nmany and varied lu character.\nWhUe the membership on the\nwhole certain'., favored Increasing\nmunicipal revenues from new\nsources of taxation, as debate revealed, a resolution for reduction\nuf Ux penalties carried ou a, clone\ndivision, it being lett that tne\npresent settle was almost confiscatory. Reduction oi tue present\n16 per cent limit to Is per cent,\nand of (Ue lu iter cent to 7 is\nasked, on North Vancouver's lu-\nlliallvj\ncnanges ln the Municipal, act to\nfacilitate taxing haroor commission\nlands are asked, and relief ot owner ot\ntracts ot lo acres or less irom necessity\noi reconvening part to tbe government\nwbto subuiviatng is endorsed in prin\ncipie, both proposals irom norm van\ncouver.\n1..-.M1   PARCELS\nAnother resolution of thc same origin proposes tnat under t lie Local\nimprovement act a reauctlon ot\noauty soaped parcel irom special assessment may uc assumeu oy tne\ncorporation msteau oi oeuig dtstubuteu\nover tne otner  lots com-emcu.\nisanaimu auu burrey resolution\ntnat oiuy p. .(.oners ot sn\n*.tton.us rettiUeiu-e be itept- ... tue t.__<\n\u2022 petise   oi   tne   liiuiucipuiiiy   in   whicn\n(tney were con vie tea ot an otieuce,\nWas triumphantly pe.ssud u_i motion\noi C. O. jaotitt.-, A-crmc. under uie\npresent practice uiun.cipai.uts are\n'stuox' for au justice expense ior ot-\nivuuerB ' uupujcu \u25a0 on tuvui.\n1 AXittilel-        IMl'llOl (-.Ula>l!>\nMOUicipaiuits wui ote invited to ex-\npies* lUieinae-VDd in k questioiiaue as\nvo Wfcc.ncr iney preier uu or luu pet\ncunt ot lmpruvtiiiom* .s^aoie, .ne\nMunicipal ucb seu.ng the lonner ana\n; tue r.uvineiui taxution act tnu iai-\nter, witn tne iota ut the two aew.\nov.nc urougut uko line, ihis emanate* irom north uowicnan. ~\nT^uposai ui iran ior municipalities\nto Have a suy us to appointment- oi\ntneir Magistrate:, was iw. ptuceedeu\nwith, on tue givunu tnat it wouiu oe\nui-odviseu to see* tnis responsioiuty\ntnat is now cxc.us.veiy on tue attor\u2014\nmy-genera..\n19 'itn.NLU  UOHN\nbimuarty,    a    rernlc    proposal    for\nIraumupai   power   ot   veto   on   ctuo\ncaai-eia   waa   nut  furthered,   it   being\nUeiu  tnat  it   a  eiuo   i_t.t-.inu,'  ooiioxiouo,\nuitt-n.ntiy existed ior actuuig v. mi it.\niruii    proposal    tor    tnamng    a\n{municipal returning otilcer to vole\ntor mayor and aiuermun it uti.tlmeu\nwithout prejudice as to giving Uis\ncasting Vutu ni event vi u uc, was\ncameu.\na guunlch   proposal  thai  municipal-\nIltieu snuuiu i..-<c a _4i\/ us to iuca-\ntou w.tiuu men uordcu oi operations\nlic^notu o\/ tnu game uouru was approve*.   In   pruieip.e.\nine convention approved a Saanich\nproposed amtnuemt... to ine Motor\nact lor free or nominal licences io.\nmunicipal equipment uscu in road\nWm. Aiderumu tinny brtdgenian oi\nnortn Vancouver, u...inn,u. ot the\nresolutions committee, svateu tins wus\nproposcu to tiie? government. Ijsi year,\naim nivuiubiy tuiis.utrcii. but over*\nlouxctt in cuuetmciit.\n111.1 iXslikWV   IO\ntuMMlilt-i.\ncm isqu.malt's suggestion, It was dc-\nIClueu tu reier iu a commit lee uic\npruuirm oi uefinmg tne woru \"un-\nt>rovLincnt!.' in uie _*tuucipui act so as\ntu iiiuxe tne nnc of tusatit.ii cieur.\nKtniuoopo as a railway center P-els\nj the two-nour nomination period in-\n| adequate uud its proposal lot tne\nI pentm oelng extended tu tne 'inursuay\n[ and rtiuay  following wus adopted.\n-.naorsemeut  was \u00bbiven burrey s pro-\nj posai   tor   rtiunu   to   municipalities  of\ntax on gasouiit.  used  in operation oi\nroad   muting   equipment,   won.   one\n' vi\u00abw   wus   CApresaeu    tnat   tnis   was   u\n, tuning inlng  to asx u govenuneut, n\ni was   uiougut   out   tuat   iur   some   mini-\nf lcipaiitics  tnis  wouiu amount  to esuo\n, season.\nKcvibion of  the section of   the  aci\nj covering   advertising   ui   money   uylaws\nwas   Ub.\u00ab.'ed' lo   c.au.y   It.   it   was   tne\nopinion oi   uelcgates  tnut   wording   ot\nlue act tequueu more newspaper puo-\nUcation mun tue legisuitivc intended.\nu.vis.011   in   tne  leauiutiona  commit\ni tee  on  a  proposal   trom  bputiuiuctieen\naud reach-aim  tnat tue  tutai cost oi\ni primary tugnways in municipalities ot\n; ivsb   luau   oodo   population   snouiu   be\nassumed   by   ine  government,   lesultcd\ntne   question   ueu.g   tiu'uwu   open\nior gcucrui  uiscusstuu.   Alter  some  oo\ndelegates uuu expressed tvury  vuicty ur\nview,  u ituinuuy  prupusai   was tiualiy\naccepted,    to    request    tne    provincial\ngovernment   to   investigate   tne   wnoie\nquestion oi the construet.on aud maintenance ut  iughways,  aim  a  view  to\na lair distribution oi cj'.ts as between\ntne government uuu me municipalities.\nin   Haimon   Arm s   worus,   ine   gov*\nI ernment s attention Is oiawn to noxious weeds aioug me ptoviucial bign-\nwaye.\nFrasers Get All Runs in First\nFrame; Millmen Hitless\nFive Innings\nVANCOOVER, Sept. 13.\u2014Doug. Muo-\ncut, sleqdcr moundsman of tin- champion Praser Mills clul). hurled his\nway into baseball's hall of fame at\nAthletic Park Wednesday night when\nhe turned back the fast Rossiand\nnine without a bit tn neven innings.\nMuscutt mowed down Che opposition\nin snappy style, ln only two frames,\nthe first and second uid more than\nthree batters step up io thc plate\nand in each of those t*0 unly lour\nmen swung at his wicked curves.\nFlawless ball on thc part ot nis teammates helped Doug. In a. lew instances\nwhen spectacular worx on the part\nof the Helders curocu any threats of\na rally.   The score was :t-0.\nlhe swarthy giaftt, pradolinl, \\-tio\nhurled for the in u rior ere w, also\nwas in line torm. tic pitched a\ngreat game, one that would v.in nine\ntimes out of ten. rte worked a fast\nball the greater putt ul tne time,\nchanging now and men to a deceptive curve. The live hits charged\nagainst htm were uii rapped out in\ntne first two frames, niter that hc\ntightened up and held tue Mlnmcii\nhitless the remaining uve innings, it\nwas a tough breax 101 the oig righthander at that as only tnree of the\nbtngles were of ine cieun cut variety\nPeriodical moments oi weakness un\nthe pivrt of the visiting lufietd aided\nihe winner* though 'at times they ci.me\nthrough with some truiy good pluys.\nMOMK   I.HKUIC.s\nj The Circle P crew took all they\nwanted ln the opening lrnme when\nBrown, thc first mun up, singled down\nthe third base Hue, buistad neat out\n& bunt, Novak got on when Piadolinl\nmade a wild peg to lirst, Heroert\nsingled through snort, scoring Brown,\nand Bolstad and Novak scored while\nHawkes was being tnrown but at\nfirst.\nRossiand got a man on in their hall\nof the Inning when Hall was hit by\na pitched ball, but no one came to\nthe rescue and hc died there.\nThe Mlllmen made uuother threat\nln the second when Brown und Bolstad\nagain rapped out singles but Pradolinl tightened up at this stage and\nfrom then on to thc end botn teams\nwent down regularly, one. two, three.\nacore by nnlngs:\nR. H. E.\nPraser Mills   3 0 0 0 0 0 0\u20143\u20145\u20140\nRosi-land      0 0 0 0 0 0 0\u2014 0\u20140\u2014-\nBatteries\u2014Muscutt und Williams;\nPradollm and Sullivan.\n[iffan, Wife and Five\nChildren Killed in\nAuto-Train Crash\nST. CLOUD, Minn., Sept. 12\u2014An entile iuinuy ol seven was wiped out\neuiiy touignt when a Northern Pacuic\npasoenger train struc* their auiomoone\nat ft grade ciossmg three mues nur.n\noi Rice, Minn.\nTne deao John Morgel, his wife,\nand tbtir five cniluren, ranging in\nice from five montha to seven  years.\nThe family which lived between nice\nand  Roylton,   had  spent  the   evening\nI in the latter town ftnd waa returning\nhornT when the accident oocum-d.\nDEATH DUE FOOL\nPLAY IS BELIEF\nMan Taken From Ki.vcj- ui Calgary Had Hands tied Together Vith Kelt\nCALGARY, Sept. 13.\u2014With his hands\nlied together with a belt in u manner\nwhich suggested be was Hung there,\nArthur beicher, u curpenter, ot ho\ntixed abode, wus founu r.euu in tne\nBow river near Nose creek, Wednesday\nafternoon at 4 o'ctock.\nThere was a bruise on his head\nand his hands were coupied in sucn\na position as he mmseu would be\nincapable of sustaining, it Is oeneved\nthat he died irom urowmng and una\nbeen dead tor about two days.\nDr. i. A. Wright, coroner, who viewed\nthe body, after il nutt been taken\nfrom the river by detectives, said mat\npossibly the bruise on tne mans head\neould nave been caused by nd UM\nhitting stones as he iloa.ed in tne\nriver. On the other nand It could\nhave been done wun \u00bb oiunt Instrument.\n'lhe coroner stated that he was almost certain that mere wu., Tumi piny\nconnected with the man. death and\nthat he had been dead two days.\nBelcher was believed to nuve originally come from the Pacitlc coast.\nPinchbar Is Driven\nThrough Man's Body\nInto  Timber;  Living\nLONDON. Ont.. Sept. 13.\u2014\nGordon Scandrctt, aged 21, ties\nIn hospital here tcnlght recovering from what the doctors describe as one of the most amazing experiences in Canadian\nmedical annals.\nScandrett was working ln the\nC. N. R. yards this afternoon\ntrying to move a car along a sld-,\nIng with a pinchbar when It\nsuddenly slipped and fell Inside\nthe rail and the sharp end sticking upward caught him ln the\nabdomen and as the car gained\nmomentum the steel penetrated\nright through his body and emerged cloee to the base of the\nspine and men was driven three\nIncbes into a wooden beam of\ntlie car.\nFrantic fellow workers rushed\nto his aid while the Impaled\nyouth directed operations. When\nthe rescuers finally lifted him\nclear, he told them: \"Come on\nnow.   boys,  puil  It  out.\"\nDoctors who examined the\nyoung man. said that the bar\nhad passed within a hair's\nbreadth of several vital points,\ninjury to which would have\nmeant   certain  death.\nYEARS II DF\nPresident  Thomas  Reid  Gives\nExcellent Report and\nRecommendations\nURGES ACTION TO CUT\nEXCESSIVE SCHOOL TAX\nMayor Clark  Welcomes Muni-\ncipaities' Delegates to\nSmelter City\nWHARF SERVICE AT\nNEW DENVER MAY\nGO TO COMMISSION\nItamfurd ahd Urown Hear Irate\nCitizens; Claim Boat Service    Inadequate\nNEW DENVER. B.C.. Sept. 13. -A\nmeeting was held In New Denver today\nof the citizen* with C.P.R. officials,\nW. B. Bamford and Capt. Douglas\nBrown to adjust the freight handling\nut thc New Denver wharf. Last winter\nthe C.P.R. built ti tug for Slocan lake to\ntake cure of the freight traffic, next-|\nto no consideration being given to the\ncomfort and convenience of possible\np:i'.so Hirers.\nIt was built, they claimed, for freight\npurposes, to do thc work of the officials; to Handle cur barges for carload lots, aiul to deliver to such points\nan New Denver and Silverton freight\nof less than carload lots. A certain\namount of carload lots have been coming into New Denver by way of thc\nwhnrf In the past and there was no\ndifficulty with the old steamer Slocan.\ntt was asserted.\nWHAM'   NKUVM K\nThis spring the C.P.R. built h new\nwhnrf at Silverton and New Denver in\n.such a way, it was alleged, that it was\nnot convenient to bring in buries to\nlhe wharf. And now the C.P.R. waa\nrefusing to deliver or to take carload\nlots from the New Denver wharf, continued   the  spokesman.\nThe officials stated this uftcrnonn\nthat such are thc orders of the management.\nWhile It was true that the amount\nof such freight was not very great,\nit was a very serious mutter to thc\nshippers to take ore to Silverton at >3\nper   ton   for   hauling,   they   declared.\nThc rate was nearly the same for\nhauling -flour, household needs, and so\non, from the siding up at Denver\nCanyon   to   New   Denver.\nAt little or no expense thc C.P.R.\ncould have built a new wharf to accommodate barges, It wns claimed.\nEven-, now, It wns wild, by driving a\nffu\/ piles It could raslly be made safr\nInr bfufee to tie up there.\n' The meeting was considered of little\nvjilue by lr\u00ab;nl people. Mr. Bamford and\nexplain Brown having to rush Rway\nto catch a train at the. Cnnvon hi\n1:30. spent about half nn hour In Now\nDenver.\nThe citizens of the district are now\nconslclerlmt taking the matter to the\nrallwa y   commission.\nHon. Hugh Guthrie's\nDaughters injured\nin an Auto Crash\nOUELPH, Ont., Bept. 12\u2014Mrs. Hugh\nOuthrle Jr.. and Miss Helen Outhrle,\ndaughter-in-law of Hon. Hugh outline\nwere seriously Injured here today when\na motor car which Mrs, Guthrie was\ndriving crashed into a tree. Both\nsustained broken noses when they were\nthrown with great force to the front\nof the car. Wet pavement caused\nthe car to skid.\t\nFather and Daughter\nReconciled Through\nDeath of His Mother\nDrury ls Declared the\nWinner International\nAir Race, Los Angeles\n14>s AMIKLRM, (al.. Sept, 12.\u2014\num.iim II. Hrury, pilot of a Waco\nprune, a us announced winner of the\nInternational feature ewnt of the\nI!IJ8 National air race*, today alien\nhe landed his plane at Mines Field\nat 1:08 p.m. The race -.(arleil at\nWindsor. Out. The final iin-.ii was\nmade rrom Ltu Vegas Nevada, where\nUnify, hopped off at l:MK> p.m.\nthree minutes alter his \u00ab.<\u00bb|\u00ab* rival,\nKennedy Whjte. hud taken the air.\n ._\u00bb\u00bb\t\nBig Oil Tanker Burns;\nCrew Takes to Boats\nNORFOLK, Sept. 13.\u2014The big. Amer\njam oil tanker Shreveport. abandom\nby her crew of 50 men. was burnlnr\nat sea this afternoon, two miles east,\nof Frying Pan shoals buoy. The coast\nguard cutter Modoc was on Its way\nto give  any  aid possible.\nRIGHT LEG SEVERED;\nRUN OVER BY TRAIN\nAll Fruit Belts in\nCanada Protest at\n.Dumping by U.S.A.\nOTTAWA. Sept. 12.\u2014The situation tn the fruit and vegetable Industry of the Dominion, especially the fruit belt of British Columbia, and also Niagara and .Montreal\niH a source of a steady stream of\nprotests  to  the  government.\nIt Is claimed the Industry Is\nbeing ruined because of failure to\napply the dumping clause ttf\nI nlted   states  produce.\nHundreds of letters and telex nuns\nhave  been  received.\nSo far this season action seems\nunlikely hut undoubtedly there will\nbe legislation at tbe coming session.\nMeanwhile an application Is he-\nfore the tariff board for a seasonal\ntariff.\nTRAIL, IM'.. Kept 12.\u2014Necess||>\nof pressing lor a public utilities\nfirmiulssion, <lrslnihlllt.v of relief\nin connection with school taxation.\nliquidation of soldier settlement\nbind tax nrrear*-, aud the question\nof the tnvlug power with respect\nto such reverted lunds. were emphasized In tlie address of President Thomas Held, of f>iirre>. or\nthe In* >n of British Columbia\nMnnic lp;tlilies, (his afternoon, at\nthe opening session of the tno-dny\nconvention.\nIt is understood that all three of\nthese mnttcrs are prorr *^nt In the\nresolutions j^einy  tendered. w\nWhile stating that many of tne\ncl--.n(.cs e^Jted for ut thc last session\nof th\" house were placed on thc\nstritute books, the president appraised\nthe most Important as theaDoolntmcnt\nof a public utilities commission, the\nmatter of school finance, and the\nIncrease of grants to teachers salaries.\n\"On these matters,\" he commented.\ni\"thc results of our endeavors were\nnegligible, ns you are no doubt awnre\nlVOH.ll   i'Kliss   | I It I ill K\n\"ReKardlnv the public utilities commission.\" he stated. \"I believe It\nwould bc well If thc union were to\npress for this ngt-in. In mv opinion\nIt Is very necessary to have auch it\ncommlwlon In our provlncY today, n*\nUmtniice the trouble tint the city of\nOrand Fork*, are having over th\u00ab price\nof electric power supplier! them by\nthc West Kootenay Power <t Utrht\ncompiur. This Is a ca>.c where a\npublic iitillMei commission would have\nbeen   useful\n\"Another instance Is thc British\nColumbia Electric Railway company,\nand Ita rubsidlur\" companies in view\nof the change oV ownership of that\ncompany's stock and the nurchase price\npaid for the stock by the new owners\nwithout any corresponding Increase in\nthe company's assets. Franchises and\nwater rights have now been secured\nby this company amounting to almost\na monopoly, and In the event of any\nattempt to Increase or maintain rates\nand fare*, In order to pay dividends\non thc Increased capitalization of thr\ni.cw owners, wc should have this beard\nto go to with the object of having\nsuch I\": | 's and rates Investigated.\nWhile it is true that we have been\nassured by the preaent muuavemenr\nthat no Increase will take place. T\ncannot help hut feel that thc purchase\nprice paid by the new company will\nhnve the effect of offsetting any re-\n(Conttnuea on r__g* Two.;\n ii \t\nTen Thousand Worth\nFurs Stolen; Man\nArrested for Theft\nMOOSE JAW. Sask.. bopt. 13.\u2014Last\nSaturday evcung the stoi a of Louis\nMitchell, tailor nnd furrier of Winnipeg, was robbed of $10,000 wcrth uf\nfurs.\nTonight, on a farm north of Moose\nJaw, a man was arrestee. Oil suspicion\nof being concerned In ihe the., end\na large quantity of furs recovered.\nA second man escaped ln an automobile amid a fusilade of shots from\npolice revolvers and at a law hour was\nstill being pursued.\nIt ls stated that a fai tiicr living\nnorth of the city today found a\nnumber of fur overcoats cached on\nhis land. He immediately communicated his find to the city police who.\nIn turn, carried the news to ' the\nmountles.\nTRAIL SMELTER\nIS VISITED BY\nTHE DELEGATES\nWorld   Famous   Plant    Opens\nEyes of Delegates to Koads\nMunicipalities Meet\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 12\u2014 Entertainment\nof the crowds of delegates attending\nthc Oood Roads league and the Union\nof British Columbia Municipalities\nconventions was the program In Trail\nthis morning, when a visit to the\nworld-famous metallurgical plant of tne\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting company of Canada at Tadanac provided\nthe  visitors  with   a   unique   outing.\nGathering at the citv hall between\n8 and 8:30 o'clock, the visitors were\ntaken up lh cars to Tadanac, where\nOeneral Manager S. O. Blaylock and\nhis staff of superintendents ajid department heads acted as guides, on a\ntwo-hour  tour of the big \"works\".\nThe shops of various kinds, the lead\nand copper smelters, the sine plant.\nthe refineries, and some of tbe electrical installation were Inspected. The\nImmense size of many of the plants,\ntile bewildering diversity of operations.\nthe enormous part plsyed by machinery\nand plant n-s against labor, and tlie\nfact that here an appreciable part\nrf the world's supply of lead, zinc, nnd\ncadium were produced, seemed to br\nthe   fea tufw  arousing  most  comment.\nActual, visible production of ingots\nfrom the melting furnaces always arretted the attention of the visitors,\nwho brought away with them zinc\nashtrays bearlna the name \"Tadanac\"\nas souvenirs. The sliver refinery, wtth\nIta white metal bars, and Its pan of\ncaked gold powder somewhat resembling \"pumpkin pie\", was as usual, of\nspecial interest.\n   m   \t\nPercy Williams Is\non Last Leg of His\nJourney to Coast\nWINNIPEO. Sept. 12.\u2014Percy Williams\nIg homeward bound. Accompanied by\nhis mother, who has followed his\ntriumphal homeward Journey since his\narrival In Canada, the now famous\nOlympic sprint star, left for Vancouver this afternoon. Uc had spent six\ndays In Winnipeg during which time\nhe was the guest of a civic and mnny\nInformal  receptions.\nSPANISH PLOT\nPlotters    Intended   Overthrow\nand Deport Members\nof Government\nDISCOVERED IN TIMK\nBY STATES POLICE\nNumerous   Arrests   Frustrated\nPlans; Public Order Good\nSays Rivera\nSaskatchewan Will\nLine Up Winter Work\nfor Miner Harvester^\nNEW YORK, Sept. 12\u2014The Daily\nNews In a copyrighted article today\nsaid that Clarence MacKay. Postal\nTelegraph head, and his daughter.\nMrs. Irving Berlin, wife of the song\nwriter, have been reconciled as the\nresult of the death of Mr. MacKay's\nmother, Mrs. Marie Louise Hunger-\nford MacKay. It was the aged lady's\ndeath-bed wish that father and daughter  became reconciled.\nREOINA, Sask.. Sept. 12\u2014Fed Blon-\ndeau, 30, of Qu'Appelle district, was\nrun over by a Canadian National train\nearly today. Shortly after the train\npassed he was found lying on the\nright of way with his right leg severed,\nfrom his body. He Is ln serious\ncondition.\n --a*.\t\nsfntknci; iVirotMB\nREOINA. Sask.. Sept. 12.\u2014Mrs.' J.\nSolomon, who on May 1 hut, shot and\nwounded her husband, was found not\nguilty of attempted murder but guilty\nof unlawfully wounding by a King's\nBench court Jury hers thla afternoon\nShe was given a suspended sentence.\nThe shooting was the culmlnatton of\nn   number  of   family   quarrels.\nREGINA, ami... Sept. 12.\u2014Following\na conference called here today by the\nprovincial government, the various\nRgtnatM In Saskatchewan Interested ln\nimmigration and colonization and agriculture, took steps by which they\nhope to secure winter work for all\nBritish miners who remain in thc\nprovince after harvest. Chief among\nthe efforts to be made will be the\nwork of the field service men of thc\nfederal department pf colonization\nwho wlll endeavor to secure places\non the farms for thc men, \u00bb_,lle the\nofficials of the United PannerH of\nCanada. Saskatchewan section, will do\nall In their power to assist.\n, mW\nCloverdale Farmers\nAsk Abolition of\nthe Marketing Act\nVANCOUVER. B.C. Sept.   12\u2014Clover\ndale farmers In mass meeting today\nadopted a resolution calling for aboil\ntlon of* the Market Control act a\npresent constituted or at least re\nmoval of the potato control committee.\nSAILS   NHOKTIA\nLONDON, Sept. 12\u2014Sir William Clark\nthe new British high commlslson tc\nCanada, accompanied by Lady Clark\nand their two daughters, will sail fori\nCanada on the Empress of Scotland on\nSaturday.\nBORDEAUX. France. Sept. 12\u2014 Overthrow of the Spanish government and\nthe arrest of all Its high officials for\nimmediate trial and prompt deportation, were the avowed alms of the\nplot against the rule of Prlmo De\nRivera, according to news trickling\nacross the Spanish  frontier.\nthe plot, says La Petite OI ronde.\none of the leading newspapers of this\nborder city, was thwarted by the dictator's pollce.\nThe newspaper states that the frontier towns of Hendaye and Bayonne\nhave heard that nearly 2000 arrests\nhave been mode In different parts of\nSpain. The prisoners are said to Include all the leading plotters and It\nIs added that the Archbishop of\nSflraaossa. thc Rev. Vldal Y. Veraguer.\nhas been Invited to retire to a convent In order to save himself from\ngoing to prison.\nTaklncc advantage of the absence ln\nSweden of King Alfocso. the police\nsav that the Spanish Liberal and Republican elements, together with communists decided to .strike a blow which\nhad been scheduled for later in the\nuutumn. Martinez Anldo. minister of\nthe interior, got wind of the plot early\nTuesday and Immediately conferred\nwith police officials.\nMANY   AII.HI.MTS\nThey drew up a -list of persons to\nbe   arrested.\nTaxis scoured Madrid throughout the\nearly hours of Tuesday, more than \u25a0\nscore of arrests were made Jn the\ncapital Including Alexander Lerroux\nleader of the Liberal-Republican party\nSeveral nrwspaper men. officials of\nsome  lodges of  Free  Masonry and   the\nEresident   of   the   local   branch   of  the\ncaguc   of   the   Rights   of   Men   were\nalso   taken   Into  custody.\nBY  GKMAAl  PKIMO\nlit:   HIVI.K..\nMADRID, Spain, Sept. 12. \u2014 The\ncondition of public order In Spain\ncot|ld not be better lu all the country. Itls not correct that delegates\nto thc labor congress which Ik being\nheld tranquilly have been arrested nor\nalso a .\"ingle soldier, although lt was\nproved that n plot to produce disorders on September 13. (the fifth\nanniversary of tho establishment ol\nthe dictatorship) had been made.\nThere have been some arrests among\npoliticians, revolutionists and other\nelements which live and oroupcr bv\nprovnkinc  disorders.\nSees an Increase\nin the Matrimonial\nCasualties, Future\nWINNIPEO. Sept. 12.\u2014Although matrimonial casualties In the next 25\nyears are likely to be much greater\nthan In the recent past, there Is in\nthe present a challenge to a new\nfamily life and a promise of a better\nday. declared Rev. Hugh Dobson ot\nVancouver speaking at the general\ncouncil meeting of the United church\nhere tonight.\nDivorce, he said, is not thc church's\nproblem, but marriage. Changed economic conditions are .changing the\nbasis of matrimony and the ties that\nbind husband and wire in future wlll\nbc less economic than spiritual. \"I\nthink God is bringing us to a better\nday.\"\nAlthough the divorce rale had Increased greatly In dr.ud.i since 1913,\nDr. Dobson declared tl.e Dominion has\nneed to be thankful that 'the increase\nhere is thc lowest of any country on\nrecord.\nPrince George Pays\nVisit to Doug and\nMary at Hollywood\nHOLLYWOOD. Cal., Sept. 12\u2014Prince\nGeorge of England, son of King Oeorge\nV., and u lieutenant on H. M. S. Durban, now anchored at Santa Barbara,\nslipped into Hollywood by automiblle\nand today ls the guest of Douglas\nFairbanks  aud   Mary  Pickford.\nWans for World's\nSeries Completed\non Monday Next\nCHICAGO. Sept. 12.\u2014Plana for the\nworld series will be completed Monday\nwhen President E. S. Barnard of the\nAmerican league and President John\nHeydler of the National league, meet\nwith representatives of the pennant\ncontending clubs of each circuit ln\nNew York at the call of Commissioner\nK. M. Landis.\n. Thc rules call for the opening of the\nseries ln the perk of the club winning\nthe American league pennant, but tbe\ndates remain to be set. The tentative\nschedule opens the series October 3\nwith another game ln the American\nleague park  on thf fourth.\nJUST KILLED MAN\nSHE TELLS POLICE\nLay* Gun on Desk; Mother of\nNin* Faces Murder\nCharge\nCHICAGO, Sept. 12. - A i-habblly\ndrew-cd woman who. tit th'lrfy. Is the\nmother and sole sunport of nine\nchildren and who expects another\nbaby In two months, walked Into a\npollce station and Quietly laid a pistol\non   the   sergeant's  desk.\n\"I just killed a man,\" she told him\n\"I shot him at his home while hc\nslept.      Lock   me   up.\"\nThe woman was Mrs. Ada Johnson, a\nwidow who appeared old beyond hei\nthirty years and her victim was Doml-\nnlck Finn. 32. married and a former\nconstable. Mrs. Johnson, whose oldest\nchild Is 15. told thc pollce that she\nsold liquor to support her family and\nthat Finn found It out and extorted\nmoney from her In return . for his\nsilence. When she had no more\nmonev, ahe says, he forced her to\nsubmit to his attentions ou a threat\nthat  he  would  have her arrested.\nHer oldest son accomoanied her to\nthe police. The eight other children\nwere found at ho%?. asleep, and were\nnot Informed of the shooting. Mrs.\nJohnson was held without ball on a\ncharge   of  murder.\n _m        \t\nTrail and Tadanac Are\nHosts to Delegates at\na Three-Hour Banquet\nlit All.. |M.. Sept. I!.\u2014At a\noplcndld lit-nqoft In K. P. hall tonight Trail and Tadanac extended\nhospltulit> to the delegate*, to the\nI'liton of llrill-li Colombia Municipalities und the Good Koadv league.\nMajor Herbert Clark Wtl In the\nchair ami lhe fest Ivltle*. a hich\n\u2022darted at III o'clock, did not conclude   till   nearly   I   o'clock.\nT\nTl THE ACTION\nCommission     Would     Control\nRates, Contracts, Capiti-\nlization Public Utilities\nRESOLUTION ADOPTED\nAT NIGHT SESSION\nUrge  Government   Take Over\nOperation of Schools; Much\nDiscussed 'Problem\nTRAIL, b.c, sept, li.\u2014\"Thill the\nprotlrtclal government be requested\nto enact legislation making provision for a pubUc unities commission with effective poweft to control the rotes, capitalization and\ncontracts uf all public utllit* companies and thrlr oubsldlarles und\nbased upon sound principles of law\nand economic*, which principles.\nshould be set out In such legislation.\"\nThis resolution, adopted Wednesday night by the I nlon of British\nColumbia Municipalities, by uiuui-\nImous vote, wns drafted by the\nresolutions committee rroin un\u00ab\nsubmitted in the different municipalities.\nOF   URI.AT   IMHUM\nAlderman J. ll. Clearlhue of Victoria,   who   spoke   ror   the   resolutions committee,  said  the  uuesth.ii\nhad become of interest through two\noccurrgneeH.   The purchase and recapitalization of Ihe  B.  C.  Klectrh-\ncompany  and  the  dispute   between\nthe City of Orand  Forks  und  the\nHpst Kootenay Power compuil). Both\nwere    great    monopolies,    affect trig\ne\u00bb\u00bbr)'   man.   woman   and   child   In\nsouthern   British   Columbia.\nThe group purchasing the B. C. Electric  had raised the capital-Milan  from\n\u20222.V0O0.O00   to  \u00bbB0.O00.0OO  and   none  of\nthia  new  capital   waa  going   into   the\nB. C. Electric to add to Ua assets, but\ninto the pockets of the fanancters purchasing   it.   and   to   pay   the   vendors\nlarge   profits.\nWhile tllc new owners announced\nthey would be satisfied with a profit\nof S per cent a nd would not ratee\nrates, yet It was a fair deduction from\nknown facts that earning.) had been\nmore tike ti per cent\nNOT   KIUMT   mWNCLM.\nProfits were being put to capital\nand being used to finance development\nHe .submitted that while this was good\nfinancing, vet It was not financing\nthat a public utility that enjoyed _v\nmonopoly should Inauige In. the proper mode for such a concern being tbe\n.ale of stock. But tt waa patient thm\nit had been using profits for this\npurpose, for while last years capital\nexpenditure was $2,300 QP0 tbe entire\nborrowings of thc company over quite\na period of years amounted to onlv\n$5,000,000.\nRate comparison*! were moat ftrlk-\nlng. Aldei%_:\u00bbn Clerlhue suld. Where\nPoint Orev paid & cents a kilowatt,\nhour, and 2 cents after it certain consumption. Vancouver paid \u00bb boae rate\nof 4 cents at first. Down in Ontario\nunder the hvdro. Windaor naW 1 fi\nrentis. Toronto 70 miles from the\npower, paid 1.6 cents, ond Ottawa.\nwhich was closer n reui j\n'.KAMI   FORKS   CASK\nIn the case or West Koo' rn.i \u25a0\nPower & Llaht company. Grand Fork'1.\nwas charvd 3 cents wholesale, and\nTraU   1.6   cents  retail.\nWhile Orand Forks was farther from\nBonnington than Trail, there was cer-\ntalnlv not the distance to account\n:or the difference in rates. It looked\nis lf thc company was charging high\nrates to outside points to be able to\n*lve a low rate to Trull and to the\nndiiHtry   here.\nIt waa said lu some quarter,* tlis'.\n\u2022,be water board filled Hie bill. But\n\u25a0 hr Inquiry Jutt Tifld had brought out\nihtil the Ml MtttH up he water\n.ward would have to hr ..mended anyway, for while fi could control a\nllfWncw, it could not control u subsidiary of the licciuTe. Thc board\nwhile .skilled in water problems, wa..\nnot skilled In rate making. It wa*\nobvious, therefore, that the Hlne had\nromc in British Columbia for establishing a public utilities c^nmlsslon\n_>ne commissioner would probably bf>\n\u25a0ufflclent. and When necessary be\ncould call In skilled '0.&lstauts.\nrilKKK   AhV.WTAI.Ks\nThree advantages to derived from\nsuch a bodv, Alderman Clearlhue Bald,\nwere security to the Investing public.\nthc advantage to thc company of\nselling It's bonds at a lower rate,\nand fair rates to the consuming public.\nHe believed the Union of Municipalities was ihe body to go before the\nlegislature, as It had watched tin\ngrowth  of public  utilities lor years.\n\"Electric power ls becoming a Bwat\ndangerous monoply.\" hr declared,\npointing out that there were some 20\nsuch major, concerns In tho United\nStates.\n\"We   muHt   see   whether   we   are   to\nregulate   thc   monopolies,   or   whether\nthey arc to regulate It.\"     He Concluded,   amid   applause.\nMayok cove hi-: .kp\nMayo   T,   a.   Love   ct   Grand   Fork\nwaa  the  only  other  ipeakar.     He   reminded    thc   union   that   the   Orand\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nAccidental Death Is\nVerdict by Jury in\nWelland Canal Case\nTOROLD. Ont, Sept. 12\u2014A verdict\nof accidental death was returned by\na coroner's Jury here tonight In connection with the accident which resulted in lhe death of 10 men on the\nWelland canal on August 1. The Inquest dealt only with the death of\nJoseph Carrig. the only verdict to\ncover all fatalities. Dr J. H Herrold\nwas the coroner, and T. D. Cowper,\ncrown attorney, conducted the Inquiry\non behalf of the crown. k\nThe Weather\nFrom     Uic    Dominion    _1> Lcdiolo.ic.1\nOffice, Victorl*\nMln. Max.\nNELSON               4fl 74  ,\nVictoria                                50 \u00ab-\nVnncouvcr -  06   ,\nKamlooiw.                     50 \u00ab\u00bb\nBurkervllle                 38 48   .\nPrince  Rupert    44 52\nDawson              .0 48\nBeattle                  63 0.\nPortland          td U4\nSan Pranclaco    M 14\nSpo-anc                                50 fi.\nVernon                                     51 7:1\nOrand  Pork.            .64 8-\nKaulo                                       47 8S\nCranbrook     37 73\nCalgary                              .3* 18\nEdmonton   . ...    Vi\nSwtt  Current         J8 83\nPrince Albert          34 .8\nQu'Appelle             44 88\nWinnipeg                   4T 68\nForecast\u2014Nelaon and vi-luiu:, Becoming unaettled and mild, followed\nby rain\n__\n________________\n \u25a0\nPage Two'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 13, 1928\n\u25a0 \"II\" l l    mltaeee\u2014mmmmmm\u2014\u2014^\u2014. \u2014' - \u25a0'\nLeading Hotels of the West\nMm Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PUN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nI \/      Rooms With Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite.\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00. Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Com.orta\"ble Rotunda in the City\nHUME HOTEL\u2014R. S. Lennie. R. D.\nLennie. T. W. Thswe. C. K. Walsh.\nT. Dick, W. R. Morrison. Mr. and Mrs.\nkcP. Graves. C. E. Webb. W T\nPruntle. Vancouver: w H. Robinson.\nVictoria;   Judge  and Mrs.  Nisbet.  Mlr-\nrow Lake; Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Kane,\nKaalo: Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hoyt. C.\nO. Paulson. U. S. o. 8.; a. .. Parker,\nTacoma: Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Howell\nSt. Paul; T. C. Johnson, Montreal; C\nE    Reed.   Kamloops.\nTHE\nSAVOY\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel\nWhere the Guest Is King\nSteam Heat   Hot and Cold Running Water in All Rooms.\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A KERR, PROP., NELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY   HOTEL\u2014Mrs.   H.   A.   Hufty. ] mond,   Colville;   Mrs.   J.   M.   Lelllgrln,\nPlorence Hufty. Brilliant:  W. J. Heslip.   Enid.   (Ala.;   N.   Dosenberger .Procter;\n\u201e    _    \u201e         \u201e        __,   %.__    .    L.   T.   Lepar,   w.  E.   Akenhead,   Lady-\nH. R. Henderapn. Mr. and Mrs. J- smith: Mrs. N- McCalpin. Golden; E\nHoughton. P. B. Dully. Vancouver; T. Fitzsimmons. Calgary: A. G. Brown\nMrs.  W.  J.  Klnnon,  Mrs.  H.  F. Ham-   Cranbrook; A. C. Virtue. Vernon.\n,\nT.HE\nQUEEN'S\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nSteam Heat\nHot and Cold Water\nin All Rooms\nA. LAPOINTE, PROP.\nDewdney Defeats\nTennis at Trail\nTRAIL. B.C.. Sept. U..-*. t. h.\nDewdney won the veterans open tennis\ncup at the Memorial -courts here this\nafternoon when he defeated J. McAllister ln straight seta 8-6, 6-4. Mr.\nDeWdney and Mr, McAllister reached\nthe finals of the West Kootenay Tennis\ntourney at Nelson over Labor Day\nweek-end and arranged to play the\ndeciding  match  here  today.\nBesides this cup three others came\nto Trail this year. Miss Dorothy\nFlngland won the ladles' Class A cup;\nMiss Dorothy Anthony won the ladles'\nclass B; and ehe men's open doubles\nwas won by K. McBean and G. E.\nMurrav.\nj the conventions of the Good Roads\n\u25a0 League of British Columbia and the\nUnion of British Columbia Municipalities, the regular meeting of Trail\nboard of trade, which was called for\nlast   night   waa   poatponed.\nPresbyterians at\nTrail Will Lose \u2022\nTheir Minister\nMeeting of Board of Trade\nin Trail Is Postponed\nTRAIL,    B.C.,    Sept.    IS\u2014Owing    to\nNelson's Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevail.\nOPEN  DAY  AND  NIOHT\nSpecial Dinners.  11:30 to 3:30 35c\nSupper,  5:30  to 35c\nWe Specialize ln Chop Suey and Noodles\nPhone 182\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n330  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  B.C.\nOPEN  DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30  to 2:30,  Special   Lunch   35c\n5:30 to 8:00 p.m.. Supper  36c\nPHONE 154\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant ln the City\nOPEN  DAY  AND  NIGHT\nSpecial\u2014Ice Cream,  Soda  Water  and\nHot    Drinks.     Nice,    clean    furnished\nrooms, hot and cold water.\nWe Cater To Private Parties.\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE   THE   FISHING   IS   GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER,    B.C.\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing.   Golf,\nTennis    Courts,    Tourist    Park.\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied.     Grocery\nstore In Connection.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nOn   Koetenay  1_ake,  30  Miles From\nNelson.    $3. a Day, $17. and S19.\na Week.\nTRAIL. B.C., Sept. 12\u2014 Rev. Moton\nB. Holt, who bas been minister to\nthe Presbyterian congregation In Trail\nsine* February last, wlll occupy the\npulpit here for tbe last time on Sunday  next.\nMr. Holt, with Mrs. Holt, ls leaving\nfor California. They are going to\nBerkley, where\" they wlll both attend\nthe University of California. Mr. Holt\ntaking a post graduate course ln\nsociology and Mrs. Holt continuing ber\nstudy of music.\nMr. and Mrs. Holt wlll motor to\nCalifornia. On coming to Trail early\nIn the year, they drove over 7000\nmiles from  North Carolina.\nNo announcement has yet been made\nto to who wlll till the charge when\nMr.  Holt  leaves Trail.\t\nS. HARRISON WHITE\nWINS IN COLORADO\nDENVER, Colo.. Sept. 12\u2014Representative 8. Harrison White. Democrat,\nand the only Colorado congressman\nto face a renominatlon fight ln yesterday's primary, was returned victorious by the voters of the first dis-\ntrtst, Denver county, overwhelming his\nopponent, former Representative George\nKlndell.\nIn the three-cornered Republican\nrace for the congressonal nomlnaton,\nR. Eaton, former state senator, apparently   has   emerged   victorous.\nGovernor W. H. Adams. Democrat\nJncumbent. was unopposed for renuin-\nlnatlon.\nNEW STOCKS\nNew stock has arrived at the Busy\nBee, including desks, dressers, ranges,\nbeds, chairs, picture frames, tables,\nbread bins, new dressen.\nCome and Oet a Bargain at the\nBUSY   BEE\n3RD  AVENUE.  EAST  TRAIL\nNELS0N-SAND0N\nEXPRESS\nPhone 77 Nelson, or phone 55,\nNew Denver. Leave Slocan City\n7 a.m.; leave Nelson 1 p.m. Usual\nreasonable rates. We pride ourselves on  giving  good  servioe.\nCLEVER & COULTER\nQUEEN'S   HOTEL\u2014J    J.   Schoblnter,   kane;    O.    T.    Matthews.    Bluett:    E\n__ _ _ ..,.-', Johnson.  Silverton:   V.   R   Phillips. R\nSasKatoon;    E.   Chenett.   Rossiand;   T.   Kossman.   Und,   Wash.:   J.   Larsen.   R\nMylrole.   Vancouver;    J.   McNeil,   Spo- j Moran.   Ryley.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam   Heated   Rooms   by   the   Day,\nWeek or Month.\nEvery conalderatlqn shown to guests.\nCor.   Baker  nnd   Ward   Sts.,   Nelson\nMADDEN   HOTIL\u2014T.   Sowerbv.   Nel-\n_      son;   J.   Studley.   Spokane;   J.  Tj   Mc-\nPeak,   Toronto;   Mr.   and   Mrs.   w.   E.\nBison,  A.  Beaton.  Beaton.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2'r, Blocks Kast of Post Office\nSteam Heated. Hot snd Cold Water\nRooms by day or week.\nAlso Furnished Suites.\nP. H. Ill NH. Prop.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\ni'ndeb the management of\nwilliam jones\ngood, clean rooms.   reasonable\nRates,\nprone is. .118 vernon st.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA Modern Brick Building.\n616  Vernon  Street,  Nelson,  B.C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone\nIn All Rooms.   Steam Heated\nThroughout.\nJ. BLOMBERG, Prop. European Plait\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\u2014A. J. Cline. C\nB. K.; J. P. McDonald. R. Anderson\nH. Omberst. Vancouver; E, T. Coleman. Valllcan.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nThe Home of Plenty\nA.   G.   TOWNER,   Proprietor.\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfort.\nHeadquarters for Loggers and Miners\nSTAGE\nVK-UfON-EDOEWOOD\nMeets  all   Arrow   Lake  Boats.\nLeaves Edgewood\u2014Tuesdays. Thursdays\nand Saturdays at 6 a.m. Arrives Vernon  11:00.\nLeaves Vernon\u2014Mondays. Wednesdays,\nand Fridays at 10:00 a.m. Arrives  Edgewood  3:30  p.m.\nExpress  and  small  frelKnt  bundled.\nAt First Signs of Pimples\nUse Cuticura\nAnoint gently with Cuticura Ointment.\nAfter five minutes bathe with Cuticura Soap\nand bot water and continue bathing for\n\u2022ome minutes. This treatment is best on\nrising and retiring. Regular use of Cuticura\nSoap and Ointment soothes and comforts\ntender, sensitive skins and keeps tbem\nclear, healthy and attractive.\nSt_Ml\u00ab 1Mb fr*. *j HAL.. Addi-m CuiiKm Dapol:\n\"Stud-MM, IM., HrattMl.\" Price. Soap _.<-. Ointment\n* -od U<*. Talcum ttc\nWmW Cutirur* Shaving Stick 25c.\nTRAIL HOTELS\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. V. LEVESQUE, Prop.\nCOMPLETELY RENOVATED AND REFURNISHED\nHot ant) Cold Running Water European Plan\n- -. Steam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary Sample Rooms in\nHeadquarters Connection\nHOTEL MEAK1N\nROOMS  BY  DAV   OK   WEEK\n$1 and up.   Nice clean, well-lighted\nro-ms.\nBox im. Phone --3L. Trail, B.C.\nStrain  Heated\nThroughout\nHot and  Cold\nHater\nYear's Work of\nUnion Reported\nBy Surrey Men\n(Continued from Page One)\nduction ln rates  and   fares  demanded\nand   asked   for  by   the   using   public\n\"There    should    be    some    properly\nconstituted  body  tb- whom we  can go\nfor   settlement   of   any   such   disputes,\nshould   they   arise.\"\nSCHOOL   FINANCE\nOn school finance President Reld\nsaid:\n\"The union has for some years been\nasking for relief In the matter of\nschool expenditures, or for a change\nIn the method of school finance. Vour\nexecutive reaffirmed its request that\na special rate be levied on all persons\nln receipt of an Income, for educational purposes only. The financial\nBurden in connection with the educational system irj British Columbia Is\nwithout doubt getting heavier every\nyear. Many municipalities show an\nincrease in taxation for school purposes this year, adding an even greater\nburden than before on the land. The\nunion would do well, tn my opinion,\nto keep after this question until Bomo\nrelief 1b given the municipalities. It\nls hardly Just or fair that the land\nalone should have to stand the heavy\nburden of taxation necessary to maintain our educational - system, tha curriculum for which ts laid down by\ntbe province, without any control by\nthe owner of land.\"\nKOLD1EB LANDS\nPresident Reld reported successful\nadjustment of the issue between the\nmunicipalities and the soldier settlement board regarding arrears of taxes\non reverted lands, the board having\noffered lump sums consisting of the\narrears plus interest accrued at 6\nper cent., and the legislature having\namended the municipal act so that\nany municipality desiring could accept such a lump adjustment.\nIn regard to the larger Issue of the\nright to tax lands reverted to the\nboard, the president stated the position was unchanged, the board, while\nwilling to pav taxes on lands rented,\nrefusing to admit the liability of the\nlands lo taxation, claiming they were\ncrown lands. Appeal to Premier King,\nHon. J. H. King, minister of soldiers\ncivil reestablirihment, and other quarters have resulted ln some progress, he\nsaid, but the question of whether the\nlands were or were not crown lands\nwould either have to be settled by a\ntest case brought about by tax sale\nproceedings, or the municipalities\nwould have to accept the ruling of\nthe department of Justice.\nThe president suggested that a\nchange should be considered in the\nPoll Tax act. whereby the husband\nof a woman owning property in a\nmunicipality would bc exempt.\nVVHU.S   OF   RF.UIU.T\nOn opening of the session, President\nReld read a wire from Premier Tolmie\nregretting that necessity made lt impossible for him to attend, stating\nJ. H. Schofleld. M.P.P.. would repre-\nen the government, and wishing the\norganization every success in its deliberations.\nHe stated he had letters from Hon,\nH. R. Pooley, attorney-general and\nHon. Nels Lougheed. minister of public\nworks, also regretting their Inability\nto attend but expressing hearty good\nwill.\nMayor Herbert Clark welcomed the\ndelegates to Trail, stating he was\n\"honored and pleased\" that Trail's invitation to the organization had been\nso   widely   accepted.\nReferring to the tour of the plants\nof the Consolidates Mining & Smelting company of Canada made by the\ndelegates in the forenoon, he declared\nthere were openings for further Industries in Trail, for which markets\ncould be developed, without going\nmuch beyond the dlty limits.\nWOOIlHIIlF,   KFPL1FS\nAlderman Frank E. Woodslde of Vancouver, who came to Trail creek 32\nyears ago by boat from thc American\nside, replied to the welcome ln a\ncharacteristic flowery speech, which\ndwelt on the fact that the Kootenay\ndeveloped from this point, to the\nearly history of Rossiand, \"golden city\nof the west\", to the vast accomplishments of the Consolidated company,\nto Trail's expansion and present progressive spirit, and to Its great future.\nAlderman Woodslde declared that there\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nS. L. AMI A. (IBOl'TAOE, Props.\nOur\nHosiery\nDistributors\nSupply us only with\nFirst Quality Hosiery.\nWe do not carry Job\nLots \u2014 Seconds \u2014 or\nSub-standard.\nOUR HOSIERY BUSINESS IS FOUNDED\nON.REAL VALUE\nMIST\nWEAR\nBOYS\n ^H\t\nJim ansce im wch rent wswci\nwere the greatest opportunities for\nmining investment in the Kootenay,\nof  any  country  In  the   world.\nThe   credentials   committee   reported\n10S   accredited  delegt*es seated,  representing 47 municipalities,  both figures\nbeing records.\nPHILIP   SPEAKS\nOne address was given during the\nafternoon, P. Philip, deputy minister\nof public works, dealing flrat with\nhighway classification. He pointed out\nthat the government bore 75 per cent\nof the coat of primary highway* and\nentirely controlled their construction,\nwhile the municipalities entirely controlled the secondary, the government\nhaving nothing to do with the third\nclass. The present act called for a\ntremendous amount of cooperation between the parties. There was a trepd\nfor municipalities to contend that all\nroads should be primary highways.\nNOT   KFAsOV.ISM.\nMr. Philip noted that a Oood Roads\nspeaker Tuesday waa opposed to heavy\ntrucks, but the larger vehicles had\ncome to stay, and their problem must\nbe dealt with. However, on driving\nnear Salmo Tuesday, he passed a track\ncarrying 27 poles, and hauling a trailer carrying 50, over a harrow roftd,\nwhose users had to slip into tne woods\nCo let lt pass. This certainly was not\nreasonable  use.\nHe urged municipalities to plan well\nahead, and get their requests for highway classification ln before the fiscal\nyear instead of In mid-year. He also\nasked the municipalities to remember\nthat entirely outside their boundaries\nthe government had almost a staggering mileage of roads to keep up out\nof the provincial  exchequer.\nThe deputy minister asked the municipalities to believe that the new minister had the utmost sympathy with\ntheir road problems and with their\ndesire to raise their roads to the highest   standard.    (Applause).\nMunicipalities\nAsk Government\nto Take Action\n(Continued   From    Pan   One.)\nPorks had come to the union to get\na change ln the water act. and had\nobtained it. It then fought this matter for wo years, exhausting ever?\navenue of approach, getting excellent\nlaw, and spending 14000 though only\na small municipality.\nThe net result was to comnletelv\nprove that tthe Water act was inade-\nouate for the purpose of controlling\nthe  power  situation.\nAll O-.ind Por,ks had asked for, and\nall that it was asking for now. was the\nappointment of a court of appeal\nwhere it cou'd g**t reeress.\nOrand Forks, he said, probably used\nmore of the company's \"Juice\" than\nany other point except Trail, and yet\nit \u25a0 was' paying four times the rate\ncharged it In the days of heavy consumption. After the last raise, it had\ncalled quits, and gone to the mat\nwith the power company.\nHFNEF1TS   TO  ALL\nHe believed that every municipality\nin the province, not excepting Vancouver, would benefit by the setting\nup of such  a  body  as  proposed.\n\"If a certain company wishes to\ncut off our light, we can do nothing\nabout it, we have absolutely nowhere\nwhere we can get regress,\" Mayor\nLove  said.\nThe company did not own this resource. It came to the people and\ngot a charter. It harnessed it. \"We\ndon't wish to hu^,an Industry,\" commented the sneaker. \"We only want\nour rights protected.\"\nWhere the original rate ln Orand\nForks was one cent, it Is now two and\na half cents and notice had been\ngiven of three cents. So Orand Forks\nthought   it   time   to   act.\n\"It ls time we people bestirred\nourselves, or we soon won't have the\npower to,\" he commented .\"The time\nto decide this question is In our day,\nlt Is now. On behalf of the sons\nwho wtll succeed us. list us settle this\nvital question now.\" (Applause.)\nftCHOOL   I.E*'R\\TE\nA much discussed prnblrm of the\nafternoon, of how to deal with th-\nnecessity of new revenue for school\npurpose^, was settled ft nitrht bv *he\nunanimous passage of the following\nresolution.\n\"Whereas this union from time to\ntime made requests on thi* nrovLn-\nclal government to llahten the burden\nof education \u00abnon the oronert\" owners\n\u2666brouRhout the nrovlnce. either bv\ntaking over the orjerntinn or the schoo'\nsystem, or by broadening thc base of\ntaxation;\n\"Now. therefore, be It resolved that\nthis union reaffirms Its rpnuest to the\ngovernment to take over thp operation\nof the schools of the nrovince, or to\nhrinK into force the **comm\u00bbnri\u00ab*,tlon\u00ab\nof th* Putman and Weir rwnort nnd\nthat tbe executive of the union b*\u00bb Instructed, owing to the urgency of the\nsituation, to press for such legislation.\"\nPARLIAMENTARIANS\nARRIVE VANCOUVER\nNarks' Goal Is\nUniteds Victory\nin Trail Soccer\nTRAIL. B.C., Sept, 13.\u2014Scoring from\na pass, Marks put the ball behind the\nUnlteds' goalie in .the first h(Uf. and\nlave the Rangers a 1-0 victory over the\nunlteds 1$ tho sixth game of the city\ncup tie soccer series at the Recreation\ngrounds  this  afternoon.\nThe Uplteds played an offensive\ngame throughout the first half, but\nware unable to Bcore, After about if,\nminutes' play the Rangers tallied when\nMarks received the ball, following a\npass from the right wing.\nIn the second half both teams show!\nmore   spaed   but  failed   to  change   t)\n'-fctpre.    The Uniteds continued to pre.-^\nand   missed   two   tallies   only   by   _\nsmall margin.\nThe teams were:\nRangers\u2014Shearer, goal; Phllttpa an I\nCooper, backs; gmlth, T. McVie ant!\nBarr, halves; Marks. Bell. Hemming;\nJ.   McVle   and   Pollock,   forwards.\nUniteds\u2014Marshall, goal; Masersonaji-i\nKltchin. backs; Ross, Laurie and Thorn,*\nson, halves; Crelghton. Ferguson, Bow\nkett. Stiles and T. Laurie, forwards\nReferee.  J.  Raey.\nMembers of the Tulane university\nexpedition, in an exploring trip to Central America and Mexico, have found\nevidence that a game similar to squivm\nwas played by natives of Yucatan 3000\nyears ago,\nDYSENTERY\nIS DANGEROUS\nCHECK IT AT ONCE\n'olFOWLEUs\n'.    EXT-OF \u00b0\nS^AWBFRPY.\nis the remedy you should use.\nIt ia not an experiment, but a trie\nand proven preparation that has bee;\nused in Canada {or the past eight}\nyears for all bowel complaints.\nWee, 50c. a bottle nt all dn\ndealers;' put, up oiilyby TheT. Mil-\nburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nFor 9 Years Gas\nRuined Her Sleep\n\"I lind stomach trouble fl year ,\nand gas made mp. restless and nervous. Adlerika helped bo I can eat\nand sleep good.\"\u2014Mrs, E. Touchstone. Juat ONE) spoonful of Adlerika relieves gas and that bloated\nfeeling so that you can eat ftnd\nsleep well. Acts on BOTH upper\nand lower bowel and remov&a old\nwaste matter you never thought\nwas there. No matter what you\nhave tried for your stomach and\nbowels, Adlerika will surprise you.\nCanada Drug it Book Co., Ltd.\nIs -I'\u2014*\nmended by medical\npmctlUoiMrt for\npeople nn dnrn\nIn health \u2014 mttt-r-\nIng from inMnlft,\npoornras ot blood,\nconstipation. **\u2022\u2022\nDrinking It d-tlly\nwill billd ap yoar\nhealth. THo poek-\nM\u00bb makes I sal-\nlea*. It nnobttUn-\nuMe,   write\nH. Allen A C... Bmd Bid*., ToTonte JJ\nVANHOTTVEW. sent. IX\u2014*lgtv members of the Emolre parliamentary as-\nsoc.ititton *>rrlvpd In Vancouver from\nVictoria     this    evening. Tomorrow\nmcmlnu a ronferpfic with the bourd\nof (ra^e will ho held \u00bbt which Hon\nS. P. Tolmlf. nremlT of thr* nrovlnce\nwill review lmmigmtion conditions *md\nne\"ds At noon the parlUimentarlanB\nwtu be gi'ests of honor at \u00bb Canadian clnb luncheon, when srieakTs fo**\nthe visitor* will In^luf1\" Sir Pamue'\nfhanmfln. M.P. Pnt.t.h Edlnh\\,-fth. and\nT, j. O'Connell chairman nf the Irish\nFr\u00abe   State   nnrllamentnrv   tibo-  nart.\"\nLater In the d\u00abV the Hpiej-Rtes win\nhe taken ln <_JmrRe bv the bourd of\nharbor commissioners on a tour of\nthe hfl'-bo'1. grain Hectors and Industries of the  waterfront\nA civic dinner ln the evening win\nconclude the ^av. Prldav morning at\nB:30 o'clock the party will leave for\nKamloops.\nOTTAWA. Sept. 19._Prohlbltlonis's\nfrom sll over the Dominion tr to\nmer^ for a conferenr\u00ab on October ]fl\nand 10 in Ottawa. Th*1 conferenc 1s\nhelng arranged bv the prohibition\nfederation of '\"\"snaria which has headquarters   ln   Toronto.\nI \/^ I MEAM  WHAT   I   SAY\u2014\n\\l, I VVARN vou \\r YOU CONTlNUF\nTO RtPEAY YOUR S-AND-R6US\nREMARKS   ABOUT MY STEALING\nYHE  PERPETUAL MOTION   IDEA\nIT  MUST L_A_ TO SERIOUS\nTROUBIE\u2014.\nTHE  GUMPS-THE  KNOCKOUT: CARR  VS. AUSTINN\n;. U S. Pu. OS . Cowi\u00abM. 19a, b\u00bb Tin Cl.i.i|o Tribune.\n'\u25a0 '   ' \u25a0  \u25a0 llwwo--\u2014\u25a0       I\nFEELS LIKE\nNEW PERSON\nLydia E. Pinkham's VegetaW\nCompound Helped Her So Much\n' \"I had inward troubles and at time\nmy (ace would look so puffy that it\nannoyed me. I was so dull aod sleep;\nthat I did not feel like doing anythinn\napd was not particular whether my\nwork was done or not. I learned abot.\nLydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Coir\npound in the Toronto Globe and m>\nsister told me it was extra good medicine. I found it so too, as I now feel\nbright and active like another person.\"\n\u2014Miriam Mauker, R.F.D. No. L\nKlmira, Ontario.\nFor Change of life\n\"I took the Vegetable Compound to\nhelp me pass the Change of Life. For\ntwo years I have had hot flushes, rundown feelings and prostration but an\ngetting along fine now. I think th'!\nvegetable Compound is good andyoi\ncan use my name.\"\u2014Mas. D. nw-\nman, 942 Cloverdale Avenue, Victoria, B. C.\nPacific\nMilk\nGrows\nIf the growth or Pacific Mflk Is\nany criterion the people of British\nColumbia arc using British Colum\nbla products tn greater quantity.\nIn the last year Pacific Milk has\ntaken a marked stride forward\nPacific Milk, we know abaolut*h\ncan not be excelled. On the otb.-r\nhand, the population of the province  ls growing.\nPACIFIC MILK\nfactories at Ahbotsfor. an. Ulnar. B.0\n\"Bl'IU) a C.\"\n_\n_________\n T\u00a3E NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 13, 1928\nfago\ninmwmmmtiwmMie\\*mmom\\\\^\nmm-\u00bb,wmmiiM-mer^^\n\u25a0\nTwenty-Sixth? Annual\nFOUR BIG DAYS\nWednesday - Thursday - Friday \u25a0 Saturday\nSEPTEMBER 19\n\u25a0    Mfi\nSEPTEMBER 20        SEPTEMBER 21   SEPTEMBER 22\ni\n'Earth is here so kind that just tickle\nher with a hoe and she laughs with\na harvest.\"\u2014Douglas Jerrold.\nSEND FOR\nPRIZE LIST\nTo G. Horstead\nSecretary\nP. O. Bot 388\nKoson, B. C.\nThis Page Made Possible by the Following Nelson Firms:\nWOOD,    VALLANCE   HARDWARE\nCO.. LTD. \u25a0    '\nMCDONALD   JAM   CO.\nF.  \u00bb'. WOOLW'ORTH CO.,  LTD.\nEMORY'S    LIMITED\nI'imii l;   DRl'O  CO.,  LTD.\nRAMSDEN   BROS.\nJOHN   BIRNS   &   SON\nSMEDLEY GARAGE\nKOOTENAY   STEAM   LAI NDRY\nNELSON TRANSFER CO.. LTD.\nNATIONAL   FR1 IT   CO.,   LTD.\nW.ST TRANSFER CO.\nW. W. POWELL CO., LTD.\n(TRI.EW   CREAMERY   CO.,   LTD.\na  C.  TELEPHONE  CO.\nNELSON PAILY  NEWS\nCANADA DRIG  *  BOOK  CO.\nP.  Bl*NS   ts   CO.  LTD.\nMEAGHER   4   CO.\nSTAR GROCERY\nA.  O.  LAMBERT   CO.,  LTD.\nSAVOY HOTEL\nGII.KERS\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS. LTD.\nA.  MACDONALD  &  CO.,  LTD.\n1ICME  HOTEI. i\nIII DSOVS    HAY   CO.\nII.  ANDREW   ..  CO.\nMiirDONAIJD CARTAGE  *  FI'EL CO.\nli l III HS motors LIMITED\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0awiiisa-iww\u00ab-wwi---t----l--l\n__________\n\u2014\n '\u25a0\\H_o Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER IS, IS2cT\nTjgE  DAILY   NEWS\nPublished every morning- except Sim-\nday bv The News Publishing company, limited. Nelaon. B. C\n. BMdneas letters ahould be addressed\nand checks and mon*\" orders made\npayable to The Newa PubliaMp- co\u00abi-\nfany. limited, and ln no one to individual members of the atari.\n\u25a0turtlslng rate ca*-H\u00ab and A.B.C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\nof an- advertising agencv recognized by\ntho Canadian Press association.\n-DBSCRIPTION   RATES\nBt snail (country), per month I   .60\nJt\u2014  year  _    6.00\nft* mail  (city), per year...:.  1300\nOrtalde Canada, per month -    .75\n-Hr* ~*      ISO\nW'Tered. per week  _ _    at,\nret  year _ \u2014  13.00\nPayable ln Advance .\nMfember   Audit   Bnrrao   of   Circulation\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER  13.  1836\nLet's Think and Act as\nBritish Columbians\nThe\nLighter Side\nEvery once in a while we hear\ncriticism of coast public men\nas being \"hogs\". They are\ncharged with wanting to grab\neverything for the coast.\nOn the other hand we in the\njipper country are sometimes\ncriticized by coast people on the\nground that we are parochial.\nNo doubt the coast people\ndon't intend to give any ground\nfor the allegation that they are\ntrying to hog everything, nor\ndo we wish to be parochial.\nBoth coast and interior wish to\nwork in the interests of the\nprovince as a whole.\nBut really the coast people\nought to be a little more careful.'\nAppointment of committees\nat the Good Roads league at\nTrail was a case in point. When\nthe committees were announced\ninterior delegates were astonished to note that on this important committee not a single\nmember residing east of Vernon was named. Only when a\ntrail delegate called attention\nto- the matter was one interior\nman appointed.\nThe neglect of the interior\nwaa not, of course, intentional,\nbut it did indicate that occasionally our coast friends forget\n.MR the interior has some\nrights as well as the responsibility for paying a very large\npercentage of the total taxation of British Columbia.\nAUNT HET\n\u25a0wm.\n\"I un tell -when a woman la\nJust pretendln' she liken babies.\nBhe looks for a clean place before she 1-lsses one.\"\nWhatDoYouThink?\nthis were done thsn the general public\nwould have mon confidence in mining\nIn British   Columbia.\nYours truly,\nA   STOCKHOLDER.\nNelson, B.C., Bept. 11, 1028.\nThe Dally News Invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public\nInterest. A nom-de-plume may, lt\ndesired, be employed, but every letter must be signed by the writer as\na guarantee of good faith, though\nnot necessarily for publication. Let-\ntars should be brief, and must\navoid personalities.\nA republic Is a land ln which good\nmanners make people think you are\nup   to   something,\nNOW THAT WAH IB OUTLAWED.\nNATIONS NEED ARMAMENT ONLY TO\nSHOW WHAT THSY COULD DO IP\nTHEY  HADNT REFORMED.\nSuggested cartoon: Pox Hoover sitting placidly on a fence while the\nhounds race by hot on the trail of\nPox  Smith.\nSmall families are essential. Think\nof an old-fashioned family waiting on\nan electric  toaster.\nAmong the things that give the\nvlfiim future Immunity an- Hinall-\n\\m\\,  measles and  camping  out.\nThe undeslred alien shouldn't feel\nhurt. A lot of natives brought by the\nstork aren't wanted, either.\nCanadianism: Using time-saving devices; wondering miserably what to do\nwith your spare time.\nNo two can love equally\u2014and the\none who loves more lets the other\nhave his way.\nEvery community has a \"successful'\nlawyer you can't hire without seeming\nto confess guilt.\nEnterprise Stock\nChanges Unfavorable\nto This Stockholder\nThe  Editor of The  Dally  Newa\nSir:\u2014The writer was surprised to\nread ln thia morning's paper an account\nof a meeting to be held on Saturday\nof the Enterprise Consolidated Mining\ncompany for the purpose ot changing\nthe- par value of the shares from 20c\nto SOc and also for the purpose of\nchanging the name of the company.\nLast march the writer, together with\nprobably many thousands of others,\nbought a block of stock ln this company, paying 28c per share, the price\nlt was put on the market, and now It\nseems as If the promoters have some] Corp. G. A.\nobject    ln    view    whereby    they    will  and   Mrs.   A.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(The Daily News of September 13, 1908)\nW. Vigneau and W. J. Sturgeon have\nleft for McGUl university. E. K. Mahon of Peterboro ls replacing Mr.\nVigneau at the Poole Drug company.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJ.*T. Beatty read a paper on \"Shakespeare\" at the first meeting of the\nUniversity club after the summer recess\nat the public school last night.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBorn in Nelson on September 13 to\nMr. and Mrs. E. Frank Phillips,\ndaughter. Mr. Phillips la secretary of\nthe Miners' union.\nACTION TO COLLECT\nINSURANCE NOTE IS\nD1SM1SSEDIN COURT\nWard Being Under Age* Note\nFor Balance Premium Is\nNot Collectable\nThe Conservative committee selected\nWilliam Irvine to be chairman and\nD. C. Morris to be secretary of the\ncampaign committee in Lhe coming\nfederal  election.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(The Dally News. September  13,  1918)\nC.  Walley,  son  of  Mr.\nT.    Walley,   has    been\ngive ua one share for each  21.   shares' awarded  the  Military   medal according\nRoss Fleming's suit to collect a\nnote for M0.6S given him by George\nWard wu dismissed in county court\nhere yesterday when Judge W. A.\nNlabet held that the note 'was not\ncollectable. Mr. Ward being under\nlegal age.\nH. Clifford Irving acted for Mr.\nFleming, and E. P. Dawson, of Brown\n&   Dawson  for  Mr.   Ward.\nThe   plaintiff   set   out   that   he,   -\nthe S\n-te   a\nagent for U>e Sun Life Insurance company,   wrote   a   policy   for   Mr.   Ward\nHe paid the premium, $50.65. himself,\nund accepted (10. cash and a note for\n*40.65 from Mr. Ward. He Bought to\ncollect   the   remainder   due.\nMr. Dawson's defence was that his\nclient, belni under legal age, could\nnot   legally   sign   a   note.\nwe hold and probably wipe off the\n20c over and above the par value\nwe paid for our stock. There Beems to\nbe no Just reason for any such change\nexcepting tor a possible increase in\nstock ln the very near future, ln a way\nsimilar to which these promoters increased the capital stock ln the Kootenay Florence mines.\nIt Is only a few weeks ago that the\npaper stated that this company had\ndropped one of the most promising\nmines which they so widely advertised\nwhen first promoting this company,\nthat is, the dropping the Enterprise\nmine as well.\nThough the writer purchased a thousand shares of the atock ln this company from them laat March he hus\nnot received a notice of the meeting\nmentioned and lt would hardly seem\nas lf any of the thousands of shares\nholders are expected to be present at\nthe meeting as lt Is called In the\nlawyers' office, which could hold only\nvery   few  at the  most.\nEverything may probably be explained satisfactorily, but the small holders\nof stock should know and have an opportunity of expressing their views\nand not be handled ln a way like\nthey were when the Kootenay Florence\nstock was doubled, nor should they be\nasked to drop quite a fair amount of\ntheir original Investment (as mentioned\nabove) without some real cause. Personalty I think matters of this kind\nshould be thoroughly discussed and not\nleft   to a  few  to  railroad   through,   if\nto   information   received   by   his   parents.\n* \u2022    *\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freed\non September  12, a daughter.\n* \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. J. Watson of Nelson\nare vsitlng at Victoria.\n* \u2666   *\nMrs. Charles F. McHardy. and family have returned from their summer\nhome at Kaslo.\n* *    \u2022\n1. L. Buchanan, registrar for the\nAmerican army, registered nearly fiO\nAmerican citizens here  yesterday.\nSky Cloudy, Threatening\nRain; Barometer Rising\nClouds, thought by some to be a\nwarning of a coming shower, almost\ncompletely covered the sky yesterday\nafternoon. During the forenoon the\naun waa Binning brightly at times\nand the mercury went up to 74. This\nmaximum temperature for the 24\nhours ending at 5 p.m. yesterday afternoon. The minimum was well up,\n48 being the coolest temperature recorded, i\nWind reached a speed of about 29\nmiles an hour in the late afternoon\nwhich, with a rising barometer, indicated that the clouds might blow\nover without giving Nelson and district rain. The forecast for today Is\ngenerally   fair  and   partly  cloudy.\nGREAT INTEREST\nTAKEN ANGLING\nCONTEST FERNIE\nI*\nMany Fine Fish Already Recorded; Valuable Prizes\nAre Offered\n-TRNIE, B.C.. Sept. l__s ___.\ndeal of Interest ls being shown In the\n\u2022\u00a3*>\u00ab\u00bb contest being conducted here\nSL\u00abN^\u2122..n Su***'*- The contest Ys\nopen to disciple, of Isaac Walton resident In Fernle, Coal Creek White\nSpruce, Hosmer. Natal, Michel! Corbin\n!_{;'_**\u25a0 Morrlsey, Elko. Baynes\n\u00ab\u00a3?' .J!-\",0, ,Fla-!t\u00b0\u00b0e. Newgate. Jaf-\nfrsy, McBain Lake. Wardner and Bull\n2!_r\u201eAny n,h ** \"\"MM- If caught\naWi.il\" \u00b0.r_?\"t wlUlln \u00bb radius of\nJO miles of Fernle. The contest does\nJMrtclose until  October  16.\n_for the largest cut-throat trout Is\noffered a split cane fly rod; for the\nlargest char or bull trout, a steel rod\nand reel; for the largest Kamloops\ntrout, a steel trolling rod; for the largest grayling, Prench willow basket-\nlor the largest eastern brook trout,\npig skin fly book.\n\u2022 AT-HES  TO   DATE\nThat the largest fish have a marked\npredilection for the hooks of small\nboys Is attested by the fact that the\nlargest eastern brook trout brought ln\nUP to date was caught by Albert Pral-\nTler, a boy of 10 years. It was caught\nwith a grasshopper In Hosmer creek,\nweighed 2 pounda 6V4 ounces, and wu\nA hick town is a place where the\nfellow who tips the waiter is a traveling man.\nA professional radio operator seems\nto be one who connects with lost explorers after amateurs tell him how.\nCorrect this sentence; \"She took\nher precious kid to school.\" said the\ngossip, \"but didn't offer the teacher\nany  advice  or suggestions.\"\nof\nSours\nfi. lent, W Barton, MD\n\"SALADA\"\nJl  l_*-_fl_L\nDark-skinned natives\u2014glowing sunlight cool\nmountain tops\u2014great ships ploughing through\ntropic seas\u2014these things all come to mind when\na cup of \"SALADA\" Is steaming before you. Such\nflavour\u2014such fragrance. Try \"SALADA\".\nCanadian Pacific\n.    Sailinqs\nBKp-a TO    '\n'    EUROPE\nV-.~~ MONTREAL\nrrO-U QUEBEC\nTO   LIVERPOOL\n'Sent   14.   *Oct.  12  \"Montclare\"\nSent   21   \u2022\u2022Oct.  19....\"Duchess Atholl'\nSept'. -8. 'Oct. 26 \"Montcalm\"\nOct   .  \"Nov. 3 ''Duchess Bedford\n\u2022 Via Glasgow\n*\u2022 Via Belfast-Glasgow\nTO   BELlAST-OLASt-OW\nSept.   20    \"Melita'\nOct    4        \"Mlnnedosa\nTO   CHERBOt'Rft-ROl'THAMPTON\nANTWERP\nSept.  38,  Oct.   34   \"Montrose\"\nOct.   10    \"Montroyal\"\nTO   CHERBOURG-SOUTHAMPTON\nSept.   10    \"Empress  France\nSept. 30, Oct. 31 ....\"Empress Scotland\"\nSept.   20    \"Montnairn'\nOo*.  3   \"Empress Australia\"\nTO   CHERBOl RG-SOt TIIAMPTON\nHAMBURG\nSept.    16     \"Montroyal\"\nUse Canadian Pacific Express Travellers\nCheques\u2014Payable Everywhere\nBerth reservations can now be made.\nAsk about the New Tourist Third\nCabin. Full details wjth rates from\nany  Agent, or write\nJ. 8. CARTER\nlllatrlrt   rassentrer   Agent. Nelson, n. r\n^\n\u25a0\nHenBaby Wakes up\nLaughing and Cooing\n\"l started using Eagle Brand for my five month*\nold baby two months ago. Now she wakes up laughing\nand cooing and is more than satisfied. No more getting\nup nights, as she gets only one bottle, going to bed, and\nno more till 7 a.m. She won a third prize at a recent\nbaby show and I know Eagle Brand helped her to win.\nShe weighed 6 lbs. at birth but is now over 13 lba. If\nany mother would like me to tell her about Eagle Brand\nI would be pleased to do so. I only wish I had known\nabout it sooner as it cannot be too highly recommended\".\n\"Mrs. W. J. P.\nOnions*!,\n(Otigtt\u2014l feffer on tyhr)\nEAGLE BRAND\nMILK\nCONDENSED\n\u00bb <_.\u00bb\u25a0*\nThe Borden Co. Limited; Vancouver\nPlease send FREE Baby Books to\n128   Address..\nV\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding   Material.   Coast,\nLumber a specialty.\nMATERIAL JOHN BURNS & SON\nBUILDING\n19%  Inches long.\nTht   '\nlargest bull trout bo far goes\nto the credit of Oeorge Bough. It\nwm caught tn the Elk river, weighed\n8 pounds. 7 ounces, and its length\nwm 3fl'\/_ Inches. A grayling taken\nfrom the Elk. by William Grechen,\nweighed a pounds 1 ounce and had\na length of 17V& Inches.\nThe finest cut throat trout was\ncaught in McBain Lake by Peter Hurry.\nIt wu 30 Inches long and weighed\n3 pounds ll'fc ounces. All the largest cut throats entered so far In the\ncontest have been caught ln McBain\nlake or Its environs\nUnited Church Workers\nAfternoon Tea Nakusp\nNAKUSP. B.C.. 8eHt. 13.\u2014United\nchurch workers under the auspices of\nthe Woman's Missionary society gave\nsuccessful afternoon tea for the\nmeen Anderson fund. Many frlenda\nparticipated.\nin charge were Mrs. E. W. Somen,\nMtt. David Livingstone, Mrs. Oeorge\nKeyes, Mra. Thurgood, Mrs. A. Allen,\nlira. LaRue, Mrs. Kershaw and Mrs.\nI. C. Johnson.\n|  THIRTY YEARS AGO\n(The Dally Miner September 13. IMS)\nJtulfle J- A. Forin ls conferring with\nthe Dominion government minister of\njustice relative to bis appointment to\n1 the vacancy on the supreme court\nbench of this province.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nBorn  on  September  11  to  Mr.  and\nUn  John W. McMartln. a son.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSuggestion   of   prohibition   In  Nelaon\nKb causing considerable agtatlon.\nX-Ray and Facial Eruptions\nThere are so many of our young\nmen and women who are tormented\nby the facial blemish called pimples\nor acne, that I feel tt my duty\nto hand on any encouraging results\nthat are being obtained in their treatment. These facial blemishes often\naffect the whole outlook and career\nof  the   sufferer.\nA few months ago I spoke of Dr.\nWebb's suggestions, which included the\navotdence of pastry, freah bread, raw\nfruits, tomatoes, pork, veal, hard boiled\naggs, oatmeal and fried meats. Then\nthe blackheada and contents of each\npimple were removed by the little Instrument sold ln drugstores for the\npurpose, and the part washed with an\nantiseptic   mercury   soap.\nA course of x-ray treatments follow to\nprevent the accumulation of the waxy or\ncheesy substance ln the little glands.\nJust how effective these x-ray treatments can be, hu been shown by\nDr. J. C. Michael of Houston, Texaa.\nwho gives us the results In nearly two\nhundred cases. More than half of\ntheae cases were cured by one course\nof treatment; twelve per cent, were\ngreatly improved, and thirty-five per\ncent,   had   relapses.\nFailure to get rid of the ailment\ncompletely with one course of treat'\nment (ten or more occured In twenty\nfour instances. Twenty of theae patients later reported that the ailment\ndisappeared after the treatment wm\ndiscontinued.\nIn no Instance of the entfre number\nof cases treated (nearly two hundred)\nhas any permanent ill effect of the\nx-ray been seen. The average number\nof treatments In the first course wm\ntwelve, and ln the second course the\naverage  number wm five.\nTheae are truly encouraging results\nand the individual whose life hu been\nembittered by this distressing ailment\ncan certainly look forward to a cure\nor considerable Improvement ln his\ncondition. Tbe use of this treatment\nln this condition only serves to remind ua how great has been the advance ln the knowledge of the effects   of  the  x-ray.\nTour doctor will tell you of physicians who have lost hands, arms, even\ntheir Uvea from ths \"burning\" effect\nof these powerful rays. And yet today, with our greater knowledge, thej*\nare of wonderful benefit to mankind\nln the treatment of skin conditions\nIncluding even cancer.\n*S&.\nMarion (Ohio) mule feasted on the\nwings of an airplane ana caused WOO\ndamage.\nWE HAVE A FULL STOCK OP\nFROST & WOOD\nMOWERS and RAKES\nPrices:\nMOWERS\u2014\n8V_ ft., l-horse, each __ - __ \u00a795.00\n4*,. ft, 2-horse, each  _ 9108.00\n5 ft, 2-horse, each _ __  $110.00\nRAKES\u2014\n8 ft, .teel wheels, each  f 67.00\n9 ft, steel wheels, each  \u00a770.00\n10 ft, steel wheels, each _  f 73.00\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B.C. BOX 1060\nTriple Seal Protects their\nCrispness and Delicious Flavour\neRISP . . . fresh ... tasty ... and a flavour so good\nit is guaranteed the best... that's why Quaker Corn\nFlakes are so popular with so many families.\nThe children love them. And so good for the youngsters, served with the milk or cream they need.\nScrumptious for breakfast. And just as refreshing at\nany time through the day when youthful appetites crave\na light \"hold-over\".\nThe delicious flavour and crispness of Quaker Corn\nFlakes are absolutely protected against moisture, dust,\nand taint by the triple-sealed package.\nMade (ry the Millers of Quaker Oats\nQuaker\nCorn Flakes\nMONEY   BACK   OFFER   ON   EVERY   PACKAGE\n\u25a0\u2022\nm\n (THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER. 1928\nF*pWr\u00bb\nma*e*mmam\nSATINS\nfelack Satin Slippers are\ntight for evening wear.\nWe are showing several\nnew lines in Dorgey Pumps\nand Straps.\nPriced from $0.50 to\n$9.00.\nR. Andrew & Ce.\n\u201e Leaders in Foot fashion\nSAVE TIME-\nSAVE MONEY-\nLook your   best  this\nwinter.\nLet ua -Mint you ln looking\njr\u2014\u25a0 \u2022 your  best.\nCapitol Beauty Shoppe\nA Service to Beauty\nOpposite   Capitol  Theater\nf     \u2022 PHONE 732\nCLASSIFIED    ADS    BRING    RE-\nSULTR\nBishop Must Pay\nPortion Damages\n(o Balding Auto\nSuing Thomas Bishop fpr. 139. damages sustained by his truck ln a collision, and for $20. for loss of use of\nths car for four days. James Balding of Falrvisw was given Judgment\nIff County Court Judge W, A. Mtsbct\nyesterday for $80.33, two-thirds ot the\ntotal. 4\nE.   P.  Dawson  of  Brown   ii  Dawson\n100 Per Cent Satisfaction\nWHEN   VOtT   SMOKE? QUR\n8PSCUL  MIXTURE.\nBUSH'S\nT. H. Waters &Co.,Ltd\nBuilders and Contractors\nPhone 160 I*. O. Box 835\nNELSON, B.C.\nLIME,       BRICK,       CEMENT,\nSHINGLES,   COAST  LIMBER,\nSASH    AND    DOORS,    MILL\nWORK, DRAIN TILE\nrepresented Mr. Balding, and Archie\nDonaghy   acted   for   Mr.   Bishop.\nMr. Balding placed the responsibility for the collision of hip truck\ndriven by Mr. Bishop upon the latter,\nttating thit he had the right of way\nat the Intersection of Nelson avenue\n(tnd Cottonwood streets, and that Mr.\nBishop wafe on the' wrong side of the\ntoad.\nThe defence waa that Mr. Balding\nfailed to signal his Intention to turn\nto the left. At the time pf the\nWcldent   the  left side  of Nelson  ave-\nRue was the traveled portion of the\nIghway, |t was claimed, and under\nthe UJhhways act the rule was to keep\nto the right of the traveled portion of\nthe  highway.\nMr. Batdlng'a. testmony was supplemented by his wife's, W H. Morgan and Mr. Bishop were defence\nwitnesses. .\nOOLDEN  GATE  CAPE\n<+i++*+mmm-\u00bb*\nM4LKIHI5BE:\nBAKING\nPOWDER\nte better than',\nordimrybmms\nMrs. J. V. B.,\nFruer Street. Vancouver,\nSiyi\u2014\"I have been In Vancouver twenty**\nnine years and have tried all its Baking\nPowdara and have found none to compare\nfor QUALITY and PURITY WITH\nMALKIN'S BEST BAKING POWDER.\"\n(Original letter on file)\n\\\u00a5-~-\n*J*\nMY KITCHEN NOTEBOOK\nby yKajtAjTf_toJkt,\n* Domctic Science Coan.elor\ni When Kitchen* Ar, as\nBueineaelik* a* Office*\nI wt the other day in the workshop\nof a woman 'who heath the domestic\nscience department of a large corporation. It was th< most delightful combi\nnation of office and kitchen imaginable\n\u2014gray enamel desks, telephones and\nnail baskets offset by crisp curtains,\nplants and goldfish swimming in a\nbowl. Through the glass door of the\noven I could tee ddicwus-emelling\nthings bubbling away.\nBut what the head of this kitchen-\nlaboratory aaid kit-rested me even\nmore than her workshop, \"Bottled\nmilk 1\" she exdaimed,'' I haven't a drop\nin the place. Hon* in the world would\nI manage if t depended on bottled\nmilk? Probably about four o'clock this\nafternoon someone; will dash in with a\nnew utensil or a new flavoring for me\nto test. That means a rush of an sorts of\ncooking\u2014we test very thoroughly. If I\ndidn't have a shelf full of Carnation\nMilk, I'd be lost   I'm surprised you\ndidn't know how standard Carnation\nMilk is in departments such as mine,\nwhere cooking is done on a large scale\nand with scientific exactness.\"\nThink What You're Misting\nAre you one of the women who still\nkeep Carnation Milk simply for\"emer-\ngency\" use, or for certain choice recipes that you have discovered are mar-\nvelously better when made with Carnation? Think how much convenience\nyou misa. Carnation Milk is just as\nwonderful for all cooking._ and it's\nalways there when you want it\u2014in any\nquantity you need. Nor does it fail\nyou\u2014it s always pure and sweet.\nIt's just as dependable in results, too,\nfor Carnation is simply the purest\nwhole milk, from exceptionally fine\nherds, produced under ideal conditions\nthat insure high quality, uniformity\nand purity. This better milk has\nnothing added to it. It is merely\nevaporated to double richness for convenience, and sterilized for safekeeping.\n\u25a0Why \"Homogenization\"\nCiv,* Sack Wondew\nful Retail*\nWomen always comment an the unusual creamy Smoothness of loe cream*\nin which Carnation is used, on the rich-\nness of soups, the fine texture of puddings, the long-keeping quality of\ncakes, the creaminess o? candies ana\nsauces. This is due to \"homogenization\" by Which the cream globules are\nbroken up into minute particles and\ndistributed all through the milk, giving\nto the last drop the same double-richness that is in the firstdrop. Not only\ndoes \"homogenized\" Carnation enrich\neverything cooked with it, but it give* ,\na finer, smoother texture.\nYou can't really know how much\nCarnation improves cookery until you\nhave tried it lor all varieties of dishes.\nWon't you Bend for the Carnation Cook\nBook\u2014\"My Hundred Favorite Recipe*\"? It's free. Address Carnation\nMilk Products Co., Limited, Aylmer,\nOnt.\nUse It\nEvery Day\nFOR emergencies, of course,\nyou must have Carnation.\nBut the really wise woman\nis she who has found that\nCarnation is the most dependable daily supply-\nalways ready, always fresh,\nmaking everything taste\nbetter.\nCarnation Milk\n\"From Contented Cows\"\ntUcSOOEIY\nThis column te conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news of\na social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, man-lanes, etc., will\nappear ln this column. Telephone\nMre. Vigneux at her home on\nSUlea  street.\nMrs. Leslie Craufurd, Hoover street,\nentertained at a small bridge at her\nhome place at WUIow Point yesterday,\nwhen her guests included Mrs. D. A.\nMcFarland, Mrs. W. M. Walker. Mrs.\nJohn Cartmel, Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Mri.\nP G. Morey, Mrs. H. Rosllng, Mrs. 9.\nC. Whitehouse and Mrs. J. G. Bunyan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Kettle, matron of the Kootenay\nLake General hospital, had as her\nguest yesterday Mtss Senton, night su-\npervlsor of a Brandon, Man., hospital,\nwho arrived In town Tuesday night,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Bremmer of Ymlr was a visitor\nto town yesterday.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nMrs. W. A. Hufty and daughter. Florence, leave this morning for a visit to\nSpokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. D. Emory, Vernon\nstreet, have returned from their summer place, Buenna Vista, at Willow\nPoint, where they spent ths summer,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. E. McDonnell, president and gen\n(eral manager of the Canadian Pacific\nExpress, of Toronto; John Blackhall,\nfinancial manager, also of Toronto; o.\nFord, general superintendent with head\nquarters In Winnipeg, and W. M,\nGordon, superintendent at Vancouver,\ni spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. O. L. Sahlstyom of Nakusp are  visitors in town,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Fred Chapman and daughter,\nMaxlne, of South Slocan, expect to\nleave shortly for a visit to relatives\nln Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nDr.  and  Mrs.  Veasy  of  Spokane are\ncity visitors.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs.   Bird   of   Rosebery   ls   visiting\nfriends ln Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nColonel   Goode  of  Bonnlngton   spent\nyesterday ln town.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. J. James and family,  who have\nbeen visiting' at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. H. Harding. Hoover street, for the\npast month, left last night for their\nhome in Summerland.\nJ. Saples of Salmo was a visitor to\nthe  city  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. J. Cadden and daughter of Kaslo\nBpent yesterday In Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nB. S. Westbery of Crawford Bay paid\na visit to town yesterday, leaving last\nnight for  the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Homersham of\nRoethern, Sask., have taken up residence at 919 Carbonate street.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nDonald Cameron of Fraser's Landing\nspent  yesterday  ln  town,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Hawkins have arrived\nIn Nelson to make their home.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThomas Dronsfield of Crescent Bay\nspent  Tuesday   shopping  In  town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles F. McHardy has returned\nfrom Coeur d'Alene, Wash., where he\naccompanied his family, who have keen\nsummering at their cottage at Balfour\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Curnock of\nShutty'a Bench. Kaslo. are guests at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Rasmussen,\nWillow Point.       \u00ab\u2022\u2022\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Jean Lambert, Elwyn street, has\nreturned from a visit to MIbs Maxlne\nChapman   at   South   Slocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. E. A. Mann and her two daughters and son. Geraldlne and Margaret,\nand Roy, have arrived from Prinee\nRupert to Jotp Mr. Mann and make\ntheir home in Nelson for an Indefinite\ntime.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. Ferguson, who have\nbeen   spending   the   summer   at   their\nWillow  Point   place,  have  returned   to\ntheir home on 8111ca street,\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. F. C. Whitehouse, Hoover street,\nentertained at the tea hour recently\nhonoring M. D. Hamilton, superintendent of British Columbia branches of\nthe Canadian Bank of Commerce and\nseveral   visiting   district   managers.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. B. T. C. Francis and\ntheir son. Bobby, of Crawford Bay\nroute to Vernon, where they went to\nwere visitors H, town recently en\nplace their son In Rev. A. C. Mackles'\nschool.\nMrs. J. E. Annable, HaU Mines road,\nhaa left for a visit to her aofc-ln-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nBrodie, of Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. O. C. Arneson, Stanley\nstreet, leave today by motor for Spokane and The Dalles, Ore. In the\nlatter place they will visit Mr. Arne-\nson's sister.\n\u2022 \u00ab   t\nR. Hendricks and son of Kaslo were\nvisitors  to  the   city  vesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Andrews of the\nnorth ahore are expected home today\nfrom a motor trip to Spokane.\n\u2022 a  n\nOtto Becker and daughter, Elsa, of\nTarrys motored to town to shop yesterday.\nMrs. C W. Tyler and son, George.\nStanley street, have returned from a\nvisit  to Spokane.\nThe executive of the I.O.D.E. met at\ntlie home of the regent, Mrs. N. Murphy, Kerr apartments. Those present\nwere Mrs. W. S. King. Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. Alex Lelth, Mrs. Robert\nThompson. Mrs. William Taylor, Mrs.\nA. D. McLeod, Mrs. Gilbert Hartin.\nMrs. J. 8- W. Clowes, Mrs. George\nMotion, Mrs. W. O. Rose and Mrs. P.\nG. Morey.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. G. Matthew and Colonel Fred\nLister of Camp Lister motored to Salmo\non business Tuesday, the Colonel leaving yesterday for Trail. .\nMrs. G. C. Cobb of Rossiand spent\nTuesday  tn  town shopping,\n\u2022 at\nUr. and Mrs, A. D. McDonnell, Observatory street, have as their house\nguests ther son-in-law and daughter.\nMr. and Mrs. Duncan McDougail, and\ntheir twin daughters, the Misses Mary\nand Kathleen, of North Bend, who\nformerly resided ln town.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Robert Dey of Syracuse. N. V.,\nand Miss Margaret Coatee, recently\nfrom London, England, are visitors in\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Douglas Nagle and\ntheir two children, who have been\nsummering at Willow Point, have returned to their home on Victoria\nstreet.\nRecently the members of the Trinity\nService club met at the home of Mlse\nIna Steed on Victoria street, when\nthose present were Mrs. L. 3. Bradley.\nMiss Enid Etter. Miss Ida Fleury. Mrs.\nJ. H. Lawrence, Mrs. A. E. Murphy.\nMiss Gladys Ewlng. Miss Elva Hanna.\nMiss Dorothy Fawcett, Mrs. D. D.\nTownsend, Mrs Percy Amas. Mis. Carl\nE. Swanson. Mian M:.u\u00a3 Elliott, MIsh\nOrace Wilkinson. Mlas Eva Armstrong,\nMrs. Cl A. C. Walley. Mr*. W. C. Mawhlnney. MlM Florence Robertson. Mrs.\nH. D. Paterson and Mrs. G. C. Arneson,\nMrs. Oeorge A, Hunter, Edgewood\navenue, who has been on a visit to\nSpokane, Is expected' home today.\n\u2022 si\nMr. and Mrs. W   H, Folding of Trail\nven v\u00bb*Uors m N\u00abl\u00abn jwttt4w,\n^r^rrmm^m^MMJ^,mmmmim!mmmimmmmmM\n611 Baker Street, Phone 200\nNew Blankets and Comforters\nQuality Goods at Reasonable Prices\nA splendid assortment of the best British and Canadian\nBlankets. Made of fine Pure Wool in solid color* or Novelty\nPlaids. They come in single Blankets, some with Satin binding\nand others whipped with wool yarn. The values are excellent\nand we would urge you to see them today. 7 and 8 pounds in\nweight and extra full size. PRICED AT $10.75, $12.50,\n$15.00 TO $17.50 THE PAIR.\nNOVELTY BLANKETS\nAt $15.00 THE PAIR\nPlaid,or Plain Colored Blankets of Pure Wool Yarn,\nbound.   Full size, at $15.00 THE PAIR.\nFinished singly and Satin\nMcCLINTOCK COMFORTERS\n$11.95 TO $37.50 EACH\nBeautiful soft Down Comforters. Sateen or Satin combined in\na range of pretty designs. All full -size and best quality down\nfilling. Imported direct. REASONABLY PRICED AT $11.95,\n$15.00, $20.00 TO $37.50 EACH.\nVALIDITY TRAFFIC\nBYLAW IS UPHELD\nIN POLICE COURT\nSix More Fines;  Bylaw Does\nNot Create Rule But\nDirects Traffic\nValidity of th\u00a9 Citv ol Nelson bylaw\ndirecting traffic to keep to the right\non city streets was upheld ln city\npollce court yesterday morning.\nW. M. Myers, who attacked the bylaw\non the grounds of Hs validity, was\nfound guilty hy Magistrate William\nBrown of falling to keep to the right\non Nelson avenue and fined 110. and\ncosts. W. J. E. Biker and D. L. Kerr,\ncharges against whom were held were\nuntil the validity of the bylaw was\nestablished, pleaded gulltv and each\npaid fines of \u2022!<>. Mr. Biker declared\nthe sign directing traffic to the right\nwas   not   properly   conspicuous.\nA. Maarsund of South Slocan and\nLorrenzo Samartlno of Trail, whose\noffences were committed Saturday,\npleaded guilty and paid fines of 810.\neach,\nWilliam Rutherford, pleading guilty\nto a second offence of the bylaw, committed Saturday night, was fined\n$12.50.\nThis   swelled   the    total   fines   col\nlected   to   date   fbr   infraction   of   the\nbylaw to $112.50. t__      \u25a0\nMr Rutherford pleaded that his\naction was not in defiance to the\nbylaw, but rather to avoid discomfort\nto two elderly passengers. He t used\nthe iinved portion of the road, the\nleft side, Instead of the  unpaved right\nC B. Garland of QlShea & Garland,\nanswering Mr. Myer's charge that the\nbylaw was not valid because It created\na rule of the road and the Highways\nact prohibited municipalities making\nrules of the road, arguing that the\ncity bylaw did not create a rule, but\nmerely  directed   the  traffic.     The  rule\nof  thc road  Incorporated in  the High- i\nways act  merely   established  what  one* \u2022\nshould   do  in   parsing  another  car,  or\nwhen    being    passed    by   another   car.\nThe   city  wes   quite   within   Us  rights\nln   directing   traffic   to   keep   to   thd;.\nright  on  Nelson  avenue,  he claimed.   m\nAFRICAN   VET   DIES\nWOODSTOCK. N. B.. Sept. 19 \u2014 ,\n\u201e.eut.-Colonel W. B, Good, veteran of \u2022\nboth South African and the great .\nwar, died here today after a long lib-:.\nness. He had 50 years service In tho\nmilitary forceB of Canada, enlisting ithl\nthe  age of   16.\nTAXI\nPhone\n35\nLuxurious, comfortable\nclosed cars of. the latest\ntype. They're always cosy\n\u2014day and night.\nMODERATE RATES\nSFER CO., LTD.\nPeople say Dina-\nMite's delicious nutlike flavor makes the\ntastiest breakfast\nfood they have ever\nused.\nDINA-MITE\nTHF  NEW MEAITH   EOOD\nFINGER WAVES AND\nMARCELS\nHow to accent your individual charm by adapting the finger wave to your\nown facial contour is a\nsubtle art fully understood\nby us.\nFOR APPOINTMENT\nPHONE 19\nSAVOY BEAUTY\nSHOPPE\nSAVOY   linn l\n  hi\nWholesome Nourishing\nMILK\nFor growing children there is no\nfood like rich, pure, pasteurized\nmilk. Containing the precious vitamins, Curlew Pasteurized Milk\nbrings added health to youngsters,\nand adults, too. For guaranteed delivery by 6 a.m. Phone 290.\nCURLEW CREAMERY CO., LTD.\nICE CREAM BUTTER MU.K\nAll Perfectly Pasteurized Products\nWarmed-up\nTwice - cooked\nfood will never be\ntasteless if you use\nBovril. Bovril puts\nthe flavour back.\nA spoonful in your\nstews, hashes and\nsoups makes a big\ndifference at small\ncost.\n\/\nl%V\n3\n..\\ -\n\u00bb\u2022:_*?\n**\n.***\u25a0\ntv*\nBOVRIL\nPUTS IN BEEF STRENGTH\n____.\n_______\n_______\n r-v\nUfa?\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MOftNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 192\u00bb\nSimmons and ourselves co-operate in\nthis great sale of Simmons Bedding\n(*tyi a special arrangement of co-operation\nJ_J and with added reductions offered by\nthe manufacturers, we are able to give you\nthis opportunity to purchase Simmons bedding at unheard'of prices.\nThe lines shown here represent but\na few of the many bargains obtain'\nable during this Sale. There are\nSimmons Beds, Springs, Mattresses\nand Pillows in styles and sizes to\nsuit every taste and requirement, and\nat prices that are only possible\nthrough this co-operative plan.\nDon't let this fine opportunity slip\nty-\nThe CHATEAU Bed is \u00ab beautiful\ncombination of Gracclinc tubing and\ndelicately shaped steel spindles. Can\n_e finished in forestwood or colours\nto harmoni-e with almost any tutniturc\n\\ $25\n.00\nThe OSTERMOOR has been recognized as the most famous mattress in\nCanada since it was first designed 30\nyears ago. Soft, springy and resilient\n\u2014layer upon layet of the finest, cleanest white cotton. Its long life makes\nit cheaper in the long run than thc\ncheapest mattress you -,,_ _ nn\ncan buy . .... \u2022 - .^5\nSLUMBER\nThis is one of the greatest bargains\never offered in a Simmons Bed\nOutfit. The bed is everything that\nonly a Simmons Bed tan be \u2014\nbeautiful \u2014 rigid \u2014 will last for\nyears \u2014 Built for Sleep \u2014 grained to match the finest wood.\nSimmons Cable Spring is one of our biggest sellers \u2014 strong\ncable fabric and rigid angle frame. -\nOf course, thc mattress is a comfortable one, filled with\ngarnctted layer felt, covered in an attractive art ticking and\nupholstered with a toll edge. This 3-piece outfit <\u00a307 Eft\nspecially priced at tDOt.DV\nLook at lira extra wide centre panel of this genuine\nSimmons Bed. beautifully grained in two-tone Walnut\nlinish. Massive 2\" posts. Four steel cane panels. The\ncoil spring is one of the most popular types. Extu\ndeep coils on strong frame all finished in lovely\nbrown colour. The Peerless Mattress is built ol gar-\nnetted layet fell with firm roll edge. Floral design\nticking. These three pieces \u2014 all made and guaranteed by Simmons \u2014'offered at the (P JO rn\nnew low price of ....... j . . \u00ab-,t\u00bbaWaDv\nThe SLUMBER KING'S pressed steel\nframe carries 27 ribbon strips of fine\nsteel suspended at each end by stalwart\ncoil springs, joined by four cross rows\nof smaller flexible spirals. It gives a\nlifetime of sleep comfort _\ntt a minimum of cost . \u00abP \/_\\'W\ne*H\nSimmons\nBeautyslecp\nPillows\nire filled with pure feathers that are\nwashed, sterih-ed and steam-dried by\nSimmons. Striped ticking of exceptional beauty and so closely woven that\nfeathers cannot escape. Individually\npacked  in attractive dust-proof box.\nTlif $.\u00ab\u2022 MattreM is one of llic best known .in- mmt\npopular of Simmons, f.inioiH nuttusscs. Filled with\nfine white tolton felt, layer upon layer, il ciiinhinn\nminion  and  appearance  with fjreat   wearing  quill\nprice\ns  and sells at  thc  very moderate tr._m p\/i\nirfof Mv.oU\nSim mom Safety Cribs, wiih high\nsliding sides nnd closely spaced\nfillers, arc safe, cosy and com-\nJorttblc. Finished in hard-baked\nwhite enamel that will stand hard\nusage. The soft cotton maiucsi\nis covered with Bunny pattern\nticking. The com- (\nbination ai ,\n: $17.75\nIMMONS\nThe Ideal Mattress II filled with over 700 small\nsensitive coil springs encased in pockets and\nftfotected by a heavy envelope. Ventilators in side walls keep interior\nfresh and sweet. Between generous layers of felted white cotton, in t\n\u25a0 wnpartracnt of live air. hundreds of sensitive coil springs form a\nbuoyant inner cushion. Yielding tu the hip and shoulder, gentle but\nfirm support meets the small of the back and waist. With mrifi \u00a3\\f\\\n\u2022very muscle relaxed, U gives perfect sleep .,**,\u2666,, JjOJj.\u00bbUU\nStandard Furniture Co\u201e Nelson     H. Calvert, Kaslo     G. Trickett, New Denver\n\u00bb-\u00bb\nSOME VERY\nSpecial Values\nIn\nFurniture and Furnishings\nUse Your Credit Time Payment Plan\nDining RoonT\nSuites\nElOHT-PIECE SOLID OVAL SUITE\nOld English finish. Buffet with\nMirror. Oval 6-Foot Extension\nTable and Six Leather Seated\nChairs.    Complete for       8135\nEIGHT-PIECE WALNUT SUITE\u2014No Mar. Buffet. 60 Inchea, without\nmirror, Oval 6-Foot Table and Six Leather Seated Chalra, Corn-,\nplete   for    - (   $225\nEIGHT-PIECE    OAK\u2014Old    English\nfinish, Buffet, 60 inches, without\nmirror;   Oval  Extension  Table,  6\nChairs.    Complete  for .  $J}35\nDRESSERS\u2014Walnut    finish.\n$24.50 '\" $32.00\nODD\nat .\nGENUINE    WALNUT   DRESSERS\u2014\n*t $45 t0 $65\nBedroom\nSuites\nGENUINE        WALNUT        8U1TB\u2014\nDresser.    Vanity    Dresser,     Bow- \u25a0\nFoot Bed and  Bench.    Complete\n'\u25a0\"\u25a0    $225\nSIMMONS\nBEDDING\nThe complete -la* \u2022! Simmons\nBedding shown to the right are\nobtainable at our store.\n!\nBARRYMORE, WILTON,\nAXMINSTER RUGS\nSTANDARD AND\nBRIDGE LAMPS\nIN ALL SIZES.\nStandard Lamp*\nBeautiful silk shades\nln     several     color\ncombinations.\nComplete $13.85\n10 $27.50.\nBridge Lamps\nComplete    $0,85\nMl\nKENWOOD   BLANKETS\u2014In  assorted\ncolors and checks.\nPrtc\u2122   $8.50  T0  $14.00\n\u00ab\u00b0 $17.50.\nm\nBEAUTIFUL CHESTERFIELD SUITES\nr\na ijlV.llllalftllW'^l'Wj'Hla-IIIIIIll,..\n3-PIECE   CHESTERFIELD   SUITES\u2014Price       $235.00\n3-PIECE   CHESTERFIELD  8UITES-J-cquard   Covering   .        $265.00\nODD CHAIRS\u2014Tapestry.   Price     $37.50 AND\" m\nNAIRNS AND BARRY OSLER'S LINOLEUMS\nINLAIDS\u2014\nPer   square   yard\nto   \t\nThe World's Best\nPRINTED\u2014\n$1.90 Per  square  yard \u00a71.15\n$2.25      to  ii.35\nSCOTCH   MADRAS  CURTAIN  MATERIAL\u2014Per  yard,   45^   to  $1.00\nSEE OUR DOLLAR TABLE\nSTANDARD FURNITURE CO.\nCOMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS - - NELSON, B.C.\n ' THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 13, 1928\nFt$iSfliH\nmr'-\n!\niRDS INCREASE\nNATIONAL LEAD\nt Reds 2-1; Brooklyn Beats\nPhillies; Giants, Cubs\nIdle\nIT tORK, .Sept. * ia.\u2014Despite the\nthat they were outhit 7 to 6\nt. Louis Cardinals Increased their\nIn the National league to three\njames by virtue of a 3 to 1 vlc-\nover the Cincinnati Reds ln the\nhome same of the season at St.\ntoday.\nwalk,   a   single,   and   a   sacrifice\nIn the opening Inning enabled the\nReds to get their only score of the\ngame, while tbe Cardinals collected\ntheir counters In the fourth with a\nwalk, a balk, two singles and stolen\nbase.\nThe New York Oiants and the Chicago Cubs, other leading contenders\nfor the pennant,  were Idle.\nWatson Clark. Brooklyn southpaw,\npitcher, sent the Robins at Philadelphia today a little further along the\nroad to the .500 average by turning\nIn his second victory in three days\nover the Phillies today. The score\nwas six to one.\nATHLETICS BEAT\nYANKS AS BISHOP\nHITS OUT HOMER\nMackmen Now One and Half\nGames Behind; Ehmke\nIs Injured\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE GAMES\nYORK.- Sept.   12.\u2014Profr_-\nCorneUua MrtilllUudilv marrhed\nSacramento   4.   Hollywood\nOakland 0.  Missions 5.\nOnly   names   scheduled.\nFor Beauty and Satisfaction\n^MAGNET\nRANGE\nThe compact handsome design combined with tbe shining appearance of\nthe white porcelain enamel panels and\nheavily nlckelled trimmings makes the\nMagnet a range of beauty. The unbeatable cooking qualities and sturdy\nconstruction mean years of satisfaction. Bas generous size oven fitted\nwith reliable thermometer, warming\ncloset of twice the ordinary capacity,\nconcealed smoke pipe and other features.\nWrite For Free Illustrated Magnet Literature\nClare Bros. Western Ltd.\nriNNIPEO CALOARY EDMONTON VANCOUVER\nManufactured by Clare Bros. - Co, Ltd., Preston, Canada's\nLeading Stove and Furnace Manufacturers.\nStrongly Built.\nMade   In   Two   Sizes.\nCoal or Wood.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\ni\nNATIONAL LEAGl'E  STANDING\nWon     Lost     Pet\n8t. Louie     88\nNew   York      7*9\n54\n56\n58\nNEW\n\u25a0Of\nsolemnly    about   the    premises   of\nJacob      Ruppert     this     after noon,\ngathering up the bits ef wreckage.\nIn them  he  found one practically\none   ununed   ball   game   which   he\npromptly   appropriated   by  a  score\nof   four   to   three,   over   vigorous\nand    sustained    protest    by    thie\nYankH.     The  Athletics  m  escaped\nfrom   the  Bronx   with  one  victory\nIn four engagements and  vanished\nInto the went traveling  the champions  by one and one-half games.\nThe    winning    b_t>w    was    Max\nBishop's homer with two out and\nnone on  base ln the ninth.    This\nsmash  over Babe Ruth's head Into\nthe    right    field    seats,    broke   a\nt hree-all    tie    In    favor    of    the\nMacks and so unnerved Hoyt that\nhe tu\/ned the reins over a moment\nlater  to tlebrge Plpgras.\nThe   veteran   Ehmke,   battered   and\nbeaten   In   almost   all   of   hla   recent\nstarts, pitched magnificent ball against\nthe  champions  until  he  wrenched his\nknee   In   delivering   the   ball   to   Laa-\nzerl   ln   the   eighth.     The   tall   righthander bo Injured himself that he hsd\nto  give   away   to  Oswald  Orwall  with\ntwo out,  the Athletics one run ahead\nand the bases full of Yanks.\nOrwall promptly passed Lazzerl\nforce home the tying run but Mike\nQazella hoisted a high fly to Haas\nfor the final out.\nRube Walberg took up the pitching\nburden ln the ninth to defend the\nnew margin the Macks had built up,\nand retired the side without Incident.\nAlthough Ehmke gave the Yanks\n10 hits ln the seven and two-thirds\nInnings he worked, he fanned six and\nso scattered the drives that he seldom\nwas in trouble. Three Athletics\ndouble plays came ln handy In block\nlng Just that many Incipient Yankees\nrallies.\nChicago       \u00a71\nPlttsburgl*      76       M 551\nCincinnati        73       03 .537\nBrooklyn         68       70 .403\nBoston       **      80 .881\nPhiladelphia       42      95 .807\nNew      York-Boston,      double-header,\npostponed, rain.\nR. H.   B.\nBrooklyn       6 17     0\nPhiladelphia       I 5    0\nBatteries\u2014Clarke  and Oooch; Benge.\nWaleh; McOraw and Leraln.\nCincinnati    1     7    6\nSt.   Louis       2     5     (\nBatteries\u2014Donohue     and     Hargrave\nAlexander and Wilson.\n         -a* \u25a0\nConvent Girls\nGetting Ready\nFor Basketball\nSTATES TENNIS\nSTARS^VICTORS\nCrash    Through    Frenchmen;\nBorotra  Fails;  Some\nGames Close\nSOLD IN NELSON BY\nNELSON HARDWARE CO., LTD.\nWholesale and Retail Hardware, Sporting Goods,  Stoves,  Furnaces,\nSxclusive Agents for Clare Bros.' Stoves and Ranges for\nTrail and District\nWAGSTAFF HARDWARE CO., TRAIL, B.C.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAMERICAN   LEAGL'E   STANOINO\n\u25a0 Won    Lost    Pet.\nNew Yorw    Bl\nPhiladelphia     90\nSt.  Louis  70\nChicago      66\nWashington     OS\nDetroit      02\nCleveland\n.655\n.643\n551\n.471\n.464\n.44,1\n.421\n353\nE.\nPhiladelphia        4    13     0\nNew   York       3    10     2\nBatteries\u2014Ehmke,    Orwall,     Walberg\nand   Cochrane;    Hoyt   and   Bengough.\nCollins.\nOnly one game scheduled.\nBoston        49\n48\n50\nm\n73\n75\n78\n81\n90\nR.\n4\nConvent girls wtll enter one and\npossibly twb teams ln the junior division of the Nelson Oirls' Basketball\nassociation this year. Organization\nwork has already started and It Is\nthought there will possibly he three\nteams available at the convent, one\nor two to enter the league and the\nother to be used as a practice team.\nTbe girls are enthusiastic and are\nlooking forward to duplicating the trick\npulled by the Convent team last year,\nwhen the quintette, composed of nearly\nall first year players, won the Junior\ngirls' division championship.\nMRS.   WRIGHT   COACH\nMrs. Ouy Wright, who coached the\nteam to victory last year, will again\nbe ln charge this season. She will\nhave practically all new material. Most\nof the girls who formed the team\nlast year will not be back at the convent till about Christmas, and for\nthat reason the school will not enter\nan  Intermediate  team.\nWhether or not the girl baakctcers\nln Nelson wlll Join with the boys lu\nthe Nelson Basketball association this\nyear ls not yet known. When the season was about h%it over last year, the\ngirls broke away and formed the Nelson Oirls' Basketball association, when\nthe parent organization refused lo\ndraw up a further schedule for the\ngirls.\nThe Convent girls wlll be organized\nin a week or 10 days. It ls expected\na meeting of the girls' teams will be\ncalled shortly to decide whether they\nwlll join with the boys or whether\nthey wlll go through the season lu*\ndependently.\nFOREST HILLS, N. Y.. Sept. 12.\u2014\nAmerican tennis stars rose ln their\nmight today and defeated the formidable Prench contenders to advance\nto Quarter finals of the United States\nnational singles champ.ai.sh Id ln three\nout of five great battles. Outstanding\nheroes of the epoch -maKing battles\nalong the Franco-American front, were\nFrancis T. Hunter and young Frlta.\nMercur, former star of the Lehigh\nUniversity, tennis   team.\nHunter * tt was, whose slugging\nracquet sent Jean Borotra, the Inimitable \"bounding Basque\" of French\ntennis history, toppling to defeat by\nscores  of  0-fl,  6-7,  6-0,   6-4.  6-2.\nFully as heroic, if not so skillful\nwas toe part plaved by Mercur. when\nin the fading light of dusk, he battled\nthe one and only Cochet stroke for\nstroke beiore he finally succumbed\nto the genius of the rmuvelous Frenchman. Coming iiom behind, Cochet\neventually won by scores of 4-6,\n11-9. 6-4, 6-4.\nOeorge Lott, the spectacular young\nDavis cup player from Chicago,\nsteamed through the defenses of\nChristian Bou&uus. the left-handed\ntrench newcomer in straight sets, 6-2,\n6*2, 6-4, whtle Gregory Hunts in. of\nNewark, N. J. sprang considerably\nmore of a sin prise in defeating Rene\nue Bubelet, the conqueror yesterday Oi\nw timer Allison, by scores oi 8-0. 6-2,\n3-6,  6-2\n\"Toto\" Brugnon. the lone French\nplayer besides Cochet who survived\nthe American onslaught, eliminated\nDr. Oeorge King of New York wno\n.>topped John hennctssey in the first\nround. Brugnon won by scores ol\n6-2.   4-0,   6-0.   6-3.\nIL\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJersey  City 6-2,  Baltimore 3-7.\nRealing 3, Newark 4.\nBuffalo   11.   Rochester   2.\nToionto-Montreal,   two   games,   postponed, rain.\nSTART BADMINTON\nHERE TWO WEEKS\nNNIE\nAhKER\nof C. and Canadian Legion\nto Hold Meetings When\nFair Is Over\nAt least two badminton club* and\npossibly others wlll get away to an\nearly start this season. The Canadian\nLegion club, which includes two bodies\nA  and  B  clubs,  and   t\u00a3e  Knights  of\nTrail. Nelson Junior\nSoccerites Clash Here\nSaturday, Butorac Cup\nTrail Junior soccerites will invade\nNelson on Saturday to tangle with a\nrepresentative Nelson Junior team in\nthe first game oi a home-nnd-home\nstries for the Butorac West Kootenay\nchampionship cup. The i\\elsun te\u00abuu\nts to be chosen on the merits of the\nplayers in the City league, as shown\nIn the last two games tins week.\nALL DOPE UPSET IN\nRACES AT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Sept. 12.\u2014After running\naccording to Hoyle for two oonucutiv*,\ndays, tlie Bangtails cave the Punters\na few added thrills today when t*>ev\nupset the dope and paid good prices\nIn four of the seven racc.t. Conroy\nstarted the big price racket In the\nfirst and paid 440.80. This was followed by J16.85 by Clalrmonde Hops in\nthe second; $44.95 by Bee Somers in\nlhe third, and $37.60 by Torsida tn the\nfourth.\nUDGED by those who\ndo know as a most\nexcellent whisky\u2014all\nand more, that one\ncould desire.\n'Johnnie Walker!'\nThe whisky which never .\nfailed to bring complete satisfaction.\nAbsolutely pure - delightfully\nmature\u2014guaranteed the same\nperfect quality wherever obtainable and that is everywhere.\nThere's no need to\nask why'Johnnie\nWalker' has the\nlargest sale of any\nWhisky in the world\nBottled    by    ourselves   In    Scotland    and\nguaranteed same quality thron|bont tbe world.\nThii mdvtrH_tmt*i it not tmbUahed\nor displayed by ih* Utrttor Control\nBoard or by lh* Oovernment v\nBritish Columbia.\nColumbus, will call theltjuinu-J meetings   when   Ne.sor'\"\nIs over next week\netr.a:\niftl   fall   fair\nThe Knights of Columbus club newly\norganized last year and ajjtbough practically all members were first year\nplayers, the club hftd nn extremely\nsuccessful season. The A and B clubs\nof the Canadian Legion enjoyed a most\nsuccessful season also.\nARKAM.K   SritEni I.R '\nLast year there was no schedule of\nInterclub matches, but the organizations played home and home tournaments. This year formation of a city\nleague and arrangementTa? a definite\nschedule of matches Ku been suggested.  v\nIntercity games were played last year\nwith the Trail club and a schedule\nof these matches may also be arranged.\nThe Nelson Badminton club and associate members will also get In line\nwithin a few weeks.\nBASKETEERS ARE\nGETTING READY\nCordon Bowker Wins\nKootenaian Cup in\nFinal, Kaslo Links\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 12.\u2014The finals\nin the handicap golf play for the\nKootenaian cup took place Saturday\nwhen Gordon Bowker won from Mrs.\nChandler by one stroke. Tea was\nserved in the afternoon by Mrs. H. D.\nDawson and Mrs. A. W. Anderson,\nthere was a large attendance and\nmuch interest shown n thc game\nduring  its progress.\nR0BERTI MATCHED TO\nBOX GEORGE GODFREY\nNEW YORK. Sept. 12.\u2014R. Robert!. Italian gtaut. was matched today to fight\nOeorge Oodfrey, massive negro, in a\n10-roun*'. match at Ebbetts Field.\nBrooklyn, October 3.\nJack Sharkey, Boston heavyweight,\nhas agreed to meet the winner on October 12 if his injured knee has healed\nby that  tl^e.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMen basketeers are getting lined up\nfor the opening of the basketball\nseason here In two weeks. Already\nthere Is assurance of about six or\nseven teams for the Intermediate division, and at least four and likely\nmore ln the Junior division. Some of\nhe senior or Intermediate teams which\nare considered possibilities now may\nnot develop but others are \u2022xpectcd\nto be organized, comprising new teams\nfor this season.\nWOLVES   ONE   TEAM\nWolves will confine their attention\nto one team thla year\u2014an Intermediate\none\u2014to be selected from the A and\nB teams of last year, strengthened\nwith the addition of some former\nBanker  baBketeers.\nEx-High team will be a new entry,\nbeing composed of players already familiar to basketball fans. Nifty nine\nwill probably be entered, this team\nbeing composed of members of lsst\nyear's Trinity Crusaders' basketeers.\nand of the Nifty Nine basketball team\nof last season. These two teams will\nbe ln the Intermediate class.\nFAIRVIEW   TEAMS\nFairview Amateur Athletic association will enter nn Intermediate and\nJunior team in the league and the\nRowing club will also probably put in\nan  intermediate team.\nOther possible teams are Married\nMen, Live Wires. Senntors, 8. T. Club,\ntwo or three Scout teams and Trafalgar\nlunlor high. Hume and Central public schools may enter teams in the\nJunior division.\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL\nLouisville   8-1,   Toledo   1-4,\nColumbus   4,   Indiannapolls   11.\nKansas City  0,  St.  Paul  7.\nMilwaukee - Minneapolis,      postponed,\nwet   grounds. \t\nBORN 1820- STILL GOING STRONG\n( WALKM * SONS. Lift.. SCOTCH WHOM DISTIUMS. HLMa-WOCI. SCOTLAND.\nLONDON. Sept 12\u2014Scheduled league\nfootball matcher* today resulted as foi.\nlows.\nI m.i l-ii   LEAGUE\nSECOND DIVISION\nMlddlesborough   1,  Hull City   1.\nTHIRI.    DIVISION\u2014NOCTURES\nBristol  Rovers 4. Walsall  1.\nTHIRD   DIVISION\u2014NORTHERN\nNelson  1.  South  Shields 0.\nRIORY\nThe rugby league:\nWlgan  20.  Barrow 8.\nYork   15.   Halifax  a.\n__ -_\u25a0_ i\u2014\nVancouver Policeman\nAthlete Breaks the\nWeight Throw Record\nVANCOUVER, BC Sept. f\u00ab\u2014Hurling the .(-pound weight Ior 81 feet\ntwo inches. Robert QUI. Vancouver police athlete, aet a new world's record\nfor this event Bt the annual field\nday of the Vancouver police sports\nat Brockton Point here thla afternoon\nThe record was forcjerly held hy\nA A Cameron, of Scotland, whose\nmark was M feet at\u00bb Inchea,\nWINS ONTARIO  PLAY\nTORONTO. Sept. 12\u2014Jlmmle John-\natone, Rosedale. Canadian professional\ngolf champion In 1B28 and 1027. today\nwon the flrat match play chamnlonehlp\nof the Ontario Professional Dortera' association and the Millar trophy when\nhe defeated Nlcol Thompson, Hamilton,\ntwo us is tht tUuU.\nFL\nKILLS\nMosquitoes,riies\nRoaches-BedBugs ^\nThla advertisement as not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Ooverument of BrltUh\nCo.UJB.I-,\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nVour Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar Store and Cafe. Complete service under one roof.\nJOE  PEDICORD,  Manager\nMS  tt)  218  RIVERSIDE\n208   TO  -18   WRAOt*\n\t\n____________\nSPOKANE, U. S. A.\nHI\nIn every corner\ndf the\nDominion\nyou will find\nthis grand old\nginger ale\nWhy is it, the question is often asked by travelers, that we find \"Canada Dry\" served everywhere we go?\nFor many years travelers have come home to\ntell how they found \"Canada Dry\" a popular\nbeverage thc wide world over.\nDistinctive flavor \u2014 that is why -\"Canada\nDry\" has been known in the Dominion since\n1890. Why ten years ago Americans began demanding it in thc United States. Why it is served\nin countless homes from Nova Scotia to British\nColumbia, today. Why it is a popular ginger ale.\n\"Canada Dry\" uses thc finest quality Jamaica\nginger and other absolutely pure ingredients.\nIt is made under laboratory methods of purity\nand exactness from the highest quality of ingredients. And note how deliciously it mixes with\nother beverages. Here il a distinctive ginger ale!\n\"CANADA\nDRY\"\ni\nMeie in Canada b) J. J. McLauehlin Limited, Tor.nte eed Edmaeta*\nCaledonia Strings Corporalitsn Limited, M.ntreal\nla V. S. A., Canada Dry Cinaer Ale, Incarp.rated, Nets, Tar.\nWHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS\nMcDonald Jam Co., Ltd.\nNational Fruit Co., Ltd,\n____________\n_i______j\n Page EigEi\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 192? \u2022\nBig Game\n^vida'hurst\nBy.\nBEGIN   HERE  TODAY\nMONA DARIEN is thrilled when suddenly lc lifted by a stranger at a masked\nhell. She becomes angry when, aa ahe\nremoves hsr mask, the stranger apologizes, adding that he thought her\nto be someone else. She recognizes\nhim as\u2014\nBRUCE BERLON. fiance of her best\nfriend\u2014\nMABEL WALKER, a spoiled girl of\ntoday, who had petulantly informed\nMona that Bruce would be unable to\nattend the ball on account of business. Mabel had threatened to cancel\nthe engagement because of Bruce's\nInability to attend. On Brace's arrival.\nhowever, ahe forgets and enthusiastically praises him to Mona and\u2014\nRUTH MOREHOUSE, their mutual\nfriend.   Meantime\u2014\nJOHNNIE    MERRIL,    who    escorted   corner.\nself a real frelnd. As they swept past\ntbe corner where her Inebriated lady\nlaughed, dizzily. Mona felt the reassuring pressure of his hand. His\nwould be a loyalty worth having. The\nkind   of a friendship   she  needed.\n\"I like to dance with you, Mona.\"\n\"I like to dance with you, too,\"\nshe replied.\nTears smarted back of her lowered\neyelids. She swallowed, painfully, over\ntbe lump ln hsr throat.\nBut by the time the dance was\nfinished she had regained ber customary poise.\nAnd Mabel's husband had kindled a\nwarm ftre of gratitude ln her heart\nwhloh was to be the basts of a new\nrelationship   \u00ab \u2022 \u2022\nThe little crowd continued Its good\ntime  regardless of the  couple In the\nMona to the dance, protests against\nher being seen so much with Dan\nMaclntyre, who has figured in two\ndivorce suits. Mona laughs at him and\ndreams of Bruce.\nMabel and   Bruce   wed.    Mona  and\nDan go on a picnic.\nJOHNNIE MERRILL, who escorted\nMona to the dance, protests against\nber being seen so much with Dan\nMaclntyre, who has figured ln two\ndivorce suits. Mabel laughs at blm\nand dreams of Bruce. Mabel and\nBruce wed, and Mabel Insists on a\nfine appartment near the lake. Mona\nsuggests at party at Peacock Inn.\n.NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY\nThe \"crowd\" accepted Mona's suggestion, Joyfully.\nEven Dr. Sampson, who rarely made\nengagements for the evening, promised\nto come.\nBruce and Mabel drove their own\nsmall car. The others went with\nJohnnie.\nMona had not seen him since their\nride together. His manner was less\nfriendly and much more formal than\nusual.\nShe sat beside him, half-amused.\nhalf-angry, thinking how ridiculous It\nwas for him to assume this distant\nattitude with a girl who had played\nmarbles with him when they were\nchildren.\nJohnnie was a good looking youth.\nWith clean cut regular features and\na winsome, boyish mouth. More attractive in many ways than any man\nMona knew but lacking in \"finesse.\"\nBhe could always read him like a\nbook. She always knew what Johnnie\nwould say next, and compared with\nDan he was as intoxicating as a\nglass of  milk.\nRather ashamed of the comparison,\nMona asked softly, \"Mad at me,\nJohnnie.\"\nHe   replied   as   she   had   known   he\nwould,   \"Not   at   all.   Why   should   I\nbe mad.\"\nMona giggled.\n\"You know you are. You haven't\ntelephoned this week.\"\n\"I didn't suppose you'd notice it,\"\nJohnnie retorted. \"I understand you\nhaven't been lacking for attention.\"\n\"Oh, no I I can always manage\nwithout any one of my boy friends,\ndarling.\"\nJohnnie gave a vicious twist to the\nwheel.\n\"That's what I thought.\"\nRuth   called   from   the   back   seat,\n\"Do whatch where you're going, John-\nDie.   JTm and I aren't ready to die.\"\nBut Johnnie made no answer. His\nUps were compressed grimly. Mona\nknew he was suffering and because\nshe couldn't bear to really hurt anyone  she   patted   his  hand.\n\"You know I miss you. You're\niny   oldest   friend.\"\n\"That doesn't seem to mean much\nto  you  any   more.\"\n\"Oh, but It does.    I'd be lost with\nout  you,   honestly.\"\nHe did   not   rally   to  her  flattery.\n\"How   many   others   have   you   aaid\nthat to?\"\nMona made a tiny grimace and\nceased  all  efforts at  reconciliation.\nArrived at Peacock Inn, they made\ntheir way to the table Mona had\nreserved. The floor was already crowded. Without waiting to order, the\nothers started to dance. Mona looked\nat Johnnie wtth eyes brimming with\nlaughter.\n\"Not going to dance with me,\nJohnnie?\"\n\"Certanly, if you care to, Mona\"\nTheir turn about tthe room was as\ncoouy correct as t had once been at\nciaiw.ng scnool. Mona's voice took on\na poisonous sweetness.\n\"Perhaps wed  better sit down. You\neeem so tired.\"\nHis expression did not change.\n\"jusi as you like.\"\nThey   sat   in   silence,   watching   the\nother couples. Mabel and Bruce danced\nespecially   well   together.    Almost   the\nsame neghi  they  seemed  to  sway   io\na single rnythm.\nMaoel's neavy lashes awept her\ncheeu, a sinue played about her parted ups. Bruce was uan.ing w.ui eyes\nhalf  closed,   impassively,   areamuy.\nJim and Ruin whined about merrily, laughing and unking. Muna\nwondered why men always joked anu\nchaptered wnen they were uancinu\nwith Ruth.\n'mere was an ill-matched couple, a\ngray-naired man. with a young gin\nuropping over ins snoulder. ner lace\nwas vspld and silly. But there was\nsomething lanuliar about that inau.\nMona sat erect,\n\"its father.'\n\"l beg your pardon.\" murmured\n(Johnnie, stilt being polite.\nBui she aid not repent her astonished exclamation. josnua Danen\u2014\nat feacock inn with a girl! A girt\noovlousiy the worse ior ituuor! Vyuu\nwas she\/ And wimt was he tio.ng wiut\nher\/ Mona nad not even Known nt\ndanced.\n'lhe knowledge drove the blood from\nher face, sne ten, tne shamed embarrassment possibly only to ine vsrj\nyoung.\nine sight of her wayward parent\nfilled her with anger, amazement atu.\ndisgust. The elueny man with tiia\nlumpenng, giggling luol wus her latite.\nWhen tne nance ended tney rt.ur_.eu\nto their table ln a distant cornet\nHe was not facing Mona, but she was\nforced to look upon the girl's t*mpt>\nface.\nAnd when Bruce and Mabel returned\nMona knew that Mabel, too. had seen.\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Don't you  want  to go home?\"\n\"Why   should   I   go   home?\"   Mona\nsnapped.\nBruce said, smiling, \"Of course you\naren't going home. We're having this\ndance.\nHis instant champanionshlp brought\nteats to ber ayes. Johnnie had failed\nhsr. Sunk In his own misery, he was\nnot even conaclous of ber father'i\npresence, but Bruce wae proving him\nLOSSES RULE ON Winnipeg Grain\nMINING MARKET\nAmulet,   Noranda   and   Dome\nOff; Pend Oreille Down\nDollar\nOnce when Mona danced  past that\nother table her father's eyes met hers.\nShe did not recognize him so much\nas the flicker of an eyelaah, but a few\nmlnutee  later she saw tbat he     had\ngone, taking his companion with him.\nGone  where?    For  what  reason?\nMona   had   imagined   hla   evenings\nwere  given over to business  or  such\nstrictly masculine pursuits as billiards\nor pool.\nShe bad never suspected her father\nof the slightest desire for feminine\ncompanionship. For years he had refused all invitations to dine with\nfriends or relatives.\nIt was almost unbelievable that he\nshould of his own accord seek the\ncompany of a girl almost hla own\ndaughter's age.\nJohnnie dropped Jim and Ruth\nbefore taking Mona home. He had\nshown signs of relenting for the last\nhour. Signs whloh Mona had Ignored.\nShe was too absorbed In this new\nproblem to worry over Johnnie's attitude.\nWhen he   seized her hand and said,\n\"I was  awfully  sorry  about  tonight\nshe   replied,   coldly,    \"Do   you   mean\nbecause you were rude to me?\"\n\"Not exactly. I was peeved and I had\nreason to be. But I waa sorry about\nyour  father.\"\n'Keep your sympathy, Johnnie Mer-\nril.\"\n\"But, Mona, I'm trying to explain.\"\n\"here's nothing you can explain,\"\nshe retorted, angrily. \"You did your\nbest to ruin my evening on your own\naccount.\"\n\"Perhaps I did,\" he admitted,  more\nhumbly.      \"But,    darling,    I've    been\nterribly  hurt.\"\n\"I've   been  hurt,   too.\"\n\"Do   you   mind   when   we   quarrel,\nMona?   Honestly?\n\"Of course, I do,\" she answered,\nfeeing sorrier for herself than for htm.\n\"You've been snapping at me like a\ncross old dog. And all week I've wondered why you didn't telephone.\"\n\"But don't you remember,\" Johnnie\ncried,  eagerly,  \"the  blow  you  handed\nme the last time I took you riding?\"\nMona's   eyes   grew   hlg.     She    was\nacting now, and rather  enjoying  lt.\n\"Blow?   I gave you a blow?\"\n\"You  know darned  well  you  did,\"\n\"What  was lt, Johnnie?\"\nHe eyed her auspiciously, suspecting\nher mood, but not anxious to change\nlt.\n\"About   kissing   the   other   fellows.\"\nhe sad.\nMona  laughed.\n\"Oh, darling! And I suppose you\ntook that seriously?\"\n\"Well, you meant It. didn't you?\nYou certainly wouldn't say a thing like\nthat   ln  fun!\"\n\"You've known me  for 21  years and\nyou ask such a question!\"\nHe seized her shoulders.\n\"Answer yes or no.    Did  you  mean\nwhat you said that night?\"\n\"You're hurting  me.  Johnnie.'*\n\"Yes or no!\" he Insisted.\n\"No!    If   you   weren't   such   a   silly\nthing  you wouldn't  have  believed  me\nIn  the  first  place.\"\nHis   arms   dropped.\n\"I don't know whether to believe you\nnow or not.\"\nMona Jumped from his car and\nstarted  towards  the  house.\n\"Mona,\" he begged, \"whether you\nmeant lt or not we have to be\nfriends.\"\nShe turned, Impulsively, \"I don't\nwant to quarrel with you. It makes\nme  very  unhappy.\"\n\"So unhappy you'd lie rather than\nhurt roe?\"\n\"Johnnie,   dear   \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\"\n\"I   know   you   would,   Mona.     But\nso long as you have lied to save my\nfeeling   I   suppose   I   shouldn't   care.\"\n\"I   aro  going  to   be   more   careful,\"\nMona   promised.     \"Didn't   I   tell   you\nI'd  made a new resolution?\"\n\"Which   Includes   roe?\"\n\"It  includes everyone,\"  she  answered.     \"But   that   should   please   you.\"\n\"It  does.    So  long  as  you're  keeping   It.\"\"\nHow well he understood her. Almost as well as she understood him.\nMona smiled with real affection ln\nher farewell. But as she entered the\nhouse her smile faded. For Joshua\nDarlen, grimly erect, sat in the hall\nwaiting for her.\nTORONTO, Sept. 12\u2014Mining\u2014While\nthe total volume of sales on the\nStandard stock and mining -exchange\ntoday advanced to 1.084,467 sh.ires,\noperators for the decline held the\nupper hand and at the close losses\nexceeded gains by 50 tu 25.\nAmulet touched an extreme low ol\n$3.26 but rallied to close at ft-UO. a\nnet loss for the day oi 20c. Nontnda\nwas quite soft during the afternoon\nand ended at $63.25. down \u00bb2.0j Dome\nwas weak, the decline lor tM day\nbeing  65c  to  19.30.\nMclntyre waa $1.10 lower at* $21.50.\nInternational Nickel touched a new\nhigh for all time at $iaa.7f., but sold\noff again to $128.50, a loss of  50c.\nHowey strengthened to $1.15 but\nclosed at $1.11, unchanged. Jackson\nManlon dropped two cents to 8\u00bbe.\nMandy advanced 3c to $2.53 and Central Manitoba was _c belter at 9*Jc.\nHudson Bay moved back 15c to\n$19.10.\nPend OreUle sold off $1 to $12.25.\nBig Missouri was down 2V to \u2022>] V'\nPremier and Kootenay Florence were\nsteady at $3.35 and 23c respectively.\nI WHEAT\u2014\nOct.    ......\n1     Nov.    .\n!     Dec.\nMay\nOATS\u2014\nOct.\nNov.     .\nDec,\nMay\nBARLEY- -\nOct.    ..\nNOV\t\nDec\nMay    .\nFLAX\u2014\nOct.\nNov\nDec.   ..\nMay\nRYE\u2014\nCct.\nDec.    .\nMay\nOpen\n100 T8\n109%\n109*4\n116%\ni\\\\_\n49%\n46 %\n50'*\nHigh\n1X0%\n110%\n110%\n116i.\n521.\n50'.\n47%\n80 %\nLOW\n109%\n109%\n109' 4\n116%\n51%\n49%.\n48%\n60\n63%      63%      63\n61%\n05%\n181%\n188%\n88%\n87\n92>fc\n191\n93*,\n61%\n65%\nDP,\nClose\n110%\n110%\n110%\n116%\n52%\n50%\n47%\n50%\n63%\n63%\n62%\n66%\n1H8%\n186\n183%\n191\n93\nCash Wheat\u2014No. 1 Northern 114%;\nNo. 2 Northern 110%; No. 3 Northern\n105'\u201e; No. 4 Northern 100%; No. 6\nNorthern 92%; No. 6 Northern 84%;\nPeed 77%;  Track  112\".\nFruit Feature of\nAnnual Fall Fair\nNelson Next Week\nPREMIER GOLD\nTO PAY $300,000\nSPOKANE, Bept. 12.\u2014The Premier\nQold Mining company, operating near\nStewart, B.C., has declared a quarterly-\ndividend of $300,000, according to a\nreport from H. A. Guess, vice-president,\nNew York. This ls at the rate of six\ncents a share on the Issue of 5,000.000\nshares. Payment will bc made on October 4 to stockholder-, of record on\nSeptember  14.\nThis declaration is the second at\nsit cents a share, the other having\nbeen for the last previous quarter\nAll of the others, lor several ycars\nhaVe been at the rate of eight cents\na share.\nThe reduction of two cents followed\nthe announcement that expenditures\nwere to be made for the exploration\nof the Prosperity. Porter-Idaho and\nSilverado groups, ln thc Portland\nCanal region. This work has been\nproceeding since spring. In addition,\nan aerial tramway ls beng erected\nby the Riblet Tramway company ol\nSpokane, to connect the three properties with a ooncehtrating mill near\nthe  canal   level.\nThe forthcoming disbursement will\nincrease the grand total of dividends\nto $12,850,000,\n _^_\t\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 12.\u2014Dominion war\nIssue prices:\nWar loans\u20141931. $100.86; 1037.\n\u2022103.75.\nVictory loans: 1933. \u00bb102.60b, \u00bb102.95a;\n1934.   \u00bb10-.25b;   1102.35a:    1937.   (105.80\nWar   loan   renewals\u20141932,   $101.15.\nRefunding loans\u20141928, \u00bb99.76; 1943.\n$H)2li(l; 1944, $07.75)1. (99.10a: 1940.\n\u202298.75b;   (99 00a    1948.  (98.85b.   \u00bb99 25a\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Sept. 18.\u2014Montreal, steady\nand   unchanged.\nVancouver\u2014Local prices to retailers\nfor fresh extras 42 to 45; firsts 33\nto 40c; pullets extras 35 u 38c, pee*\nwees  26   to  30c.\nMinneapolis, Minn., man was fined\n$10 because he filed to display U S.\nflag when making street corner address.\nOne of the biggest features of Nel-\nsoirs annual fall fair next week wlll\nIx* section B\u2014the fruit exhibit, In\ni-hiR pect_on $368. \u2022 *< prize money ls\noffered In addition to iwo cud trophies.\none of them worth $800,, to be held\nby  the  winner for one vear.\nThc largest prizes, first of $100..\nsecond of $75, and third of $50., Is\nfor farmers' Institute and fruit growers' association exhibit. The dlsDlay\nIs to br In a booth not less than\n10 bv 20 feet and must Include a\nvnvletv of fnrm nvoduce.\nS!M('f(HM-SNY    cn\nThe Individual ranchers' display wlll\nInclude a variety cf farm produce for\nwhich prizes of $25. for first, $15. for\nI econd nnd $10. for third will be\nawarded, as well as the Shaughnessey\ncup. valurd at $600. The cup wlll be\nheld by the winner for one year and\nbis   name   inscribed  on   it.\nThe Canadian Pacific Express com-\nonny cup _y^' be awarded for one year\n\u2022 the wTii.it. of first prize ln the\n\u25a0 dibits of commercial pack of apples,\neach exhibit to consist of not less\nihan eight boxes and four varieties of\nipples. In addition there ls a first\nprat of $15., (second of $10. and third\nof   $5.\nThe balance of thr prize money wlll\n')e awarded lor boxed npn.es. plates of\nfive apolfis, collections of three plates\naf apples, plates of five pears. 20-\noouud crates of nlums and prunes,\nulates of five nlums and prunes.\nDeaebM. Krape*. crabapples and other\nfruits,\n<+**\t\nTwenty-four Babies Are\nExamined at the Clinic\nKootenay Lake Hospital\nTwentv-four babies ware examined at\ni hc baby clinic at Kootenay Lake\nOeneral homttal vesterdav afternoon,\nur.dfi the $uapleet nf the women's\nns-ittuT\". Miss G. Burnham and Dr\nI.   H.   Bennett   were   In  charge.\nThe clinic ti gradually becoming\n\u2022norc popular as Nelson and district\npothers take ndvantaite of It. The\n\"litiic has been a monthly event for\nurine time. ^^   \t\nTeachers Wanted\nW-*NTEI_-\u2014 Teacher for Division II\nduties in commence immediately.\nSalary to .*(\/T_pnce, twelve hundred\ndollar.'; \u2022 '_\u2022\u25a0 year. Apply not later\nfhnn September nineteenth to R.\nJohnstone. Scc'y., Coalcreck school\nboard,   Coalcreck,  B.  C.     (5442-6-131 >\nMi\nHLACKakd\nALWAYS    lHHMSUyl\nMona   and  her   father  clash,\ntomorrow's installment.\nRead\nCHICAGO, Sept 12.\u2014Like the celebrated manuever of the French king's\narmy, wheat prices marched right down\nthe hill today and then marched up\nagain. Closing quotations on wheat\nwere nervous at the same as yesterday's finish to *_c higher with corn\nat v.c decline to 1 TBc advance, and\noats  ',_   to %c off  to  %c up.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or thp Government of B. C.\nClassified Advertising\ns    I __  i      * i.\u2014 n,*~%\nClassified Advertising Rales\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES\u2014a\nWant ii ml ClHWiried urtvertlslnfC\u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion. II paid ln advance. 6c per word\n?er week, or 22yac per word per month.\nranslent ads accepted only on a\ncash-in-advance basis. Each Initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc,, counts as one\nword. Minimum 26c. if charged 50c.\nLocal Rending Noticed\u2014Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nmachine capitals 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent, discount If run dally\nwithout change of copy for one month\nor more. Where advertisement is set\nout in short lines the charge Is 15c\na line for Roman type, 20c for blackface and 25c for blackface capitals.\nMinimum 35C, If charged 60c.\t\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Chambermaid, Victoria Hotel,\nOeorge Brlen, Proprietor, Bilverton.\nB. C. (5356-6-126)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced     waitress,     Victoria  Hotel,   Silverton,  B.  O.\n(5358-6-1281\nWANTED \u2014 Capable woman. Assist\npost office. Oood references. Previous experience essential. Postmaster,\nProcter. Duties commence, end of\nOctober. <5390)\nWANTED \u2014 Immediately, woman or\ngirl, capable of doing ordinary cooking. Comfortable ouarters and work\nnot hard, a desirable situation. Apply secretary, Slocan Community\nHospital   society,   New   Denver.\n(5411-6-129)\nWANTED\u2014Boy, about sixteen to work\non fruit farm. Apply Box 5426,\nDaily   News. (5426-6-130)\nWANTED\u2014Shaft men for sinking and\ntimbering two shafts one thousand\nfeet In depth, twenty-four by fourteen feet and fourteen by eighteen\nfeet respectively. Practically all in\nshale formation. Address Cadomln\nCoal Company, Cadomln, Alberta, or\nJ. A. Miller, 633 Howe St., Vancouver,\nB. C. (5422-6-130)\nWANTED\u2014Capable    girl    for    general\nhousekeeper.      Mrs.  John  Oansner.\n(5437-6-130)\nWANTED\u2014Capable woman to assist in\nhousehold to two, also to help In\ncare of two infant babies. Apply\nMrs. R. W. Grlgor, Rossiand. B. C.\n. Phone   167. (5443-6-131)\nSituations Wanted\nEXPERIENCED COOK wants position\nin camp, hotel or restaurant. Apply\n611  Silica St. (5363-6-126)\nPOSITION WANTED\u2014Por an undergraduate nurse. Good references\ngiven. Apply to Bor 6359, Dally\nNews  office. (6359-6-126)\nEXPERIENCED     CAMP\n5289, Daily  News.\nCOOK.       Box\n(5289-t.f.)\nYOUNG  LADY  \u2014  With   knowledge   of\nstenography end bookkeeping wishes\nposition In office or store. Box 6376,\nDaily   News. (5375)\nSEWINO    WANTED\nJohn  Mlddleton.\nnt    home.      Mrs.\nPhone   277.3\n(5409-6-129-\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014Furnished house\nclose In. during winter months. Four\nbedrooms and fireplace. Box 5393.\nDally  News. (5393-6-127)\nWILL BUY small house, close in.  Cash.\nBox   5401,  Dailv  News.     (5401-3-128)\nSMALL HOUSE, close In. to rent with\noption buying on reasonable terms.\nApply   Box   223.     (5447-6-131)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nWILD LAND\u2014Improved farms, timber-\nland, sell, rent or exchange. John\nGraham. Perry Biding.\n(6121-52-156.\nAutomobiles\nFOR SALE CHEAP\u2014Ford car, two door,\nrexal. Apply Mrs. Trow. 6th St.,\nGordon  Road,  Nelson.      (5433-6-130)\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014Cedar Poles, all sizes. Quote\nprices f.o.b. shipping point. Advise\nquantities can supply, when can\nship. Spot cash. Niedermeyer-Mar-\ntin Lumber Co., Portland. Oregon.\n(5414-3-126)\nProperty (ok Sale*\nP. E. POULIN\nREAL   ESTATE  AND\nINSURANCE\nROOM 2. ABERDEEN BLOCK.\nNELSON, B.C.\n(5276)\nSummer Cotta ge\nFor Sale\nREAL SNAP\nPartly  furnished,   opposite tti*  Ml-\nFrio  only \u2022MO-OO.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nBeal   Estate   In-uianc.\nPHONS   M\u00bb. H-LSOM.  B.O.\n(4985)\n4-ROOMED HOOSE with two acres\ncleared land with fruit trees, raspberries,   outbuildings,   etc.      Oordon\nGllker Block, Nelson, B. C.  (53.1-tI)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Fourteen acres, about\nseven acres hay and grazing. Cherries, apples, abundant water. Modem house, modern cowshed, stable,\nchicken houses, garage, , and other\nbuildings. Close tp Nelson Will\naccept very low price. AW'V Box\n637o\" Dally  News, (6310-7-27)\nCOSY HOME, modern fittings, two lots,\noutbuildings, fruit trees. Phone\n670L2. (5413-6-128)\nFIVE ACRES. Appledale. no sand. rock\nor stone. Bench land. Acre cleared\nln hay. Price \u00bb860. for quick aale.\nOwner Miss Blackley. Box 88-. Nel-\n______ (5420-6-130)\nTO CLEAR UP ESTATE\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\u2014Fully furnlBhed,\nIncluding large dining room and\nbar. Going concern. Three doors\nfrom post office.   Price ,3500.00.\nApptr\nW. W. Ferguson'\nBarrister, Solicitor, Etc.\nOllker Block Nelson, B.C.\n(5320)\nLive Stock for Sale\nBEAUTIFUL six-weeks-old pigs, \u00bb6.\neach, Edgewood, Mrs. Jordan Williams.  (5098-31-132)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS.\nPhone  387R2. (6419-6-129)\nFOR RENT\u2014Two-room suite.    K. W. C.\nblock. (6423-6-130)\nFOR  RENT\u2014Room   in\n. Apply  1310 High St.\nprivate   family.\n(6441-6-131)\nPoultry and Eggs\nFOR SALE\u2014Leghorn pullets, laying.\n235 eggs strain. Albion. Nelaon,\nPhone   328L2. (5407-3-125)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nPOR SALE\u2014McClary range.     Apply 511\nSlUca   St. (5362-6-126)\nPIPE\u2014We have a quantity of one-Inch\npipe for sale, ln new condition. Nelson Iron Worki. Ltd. (4017)\nWANTED \u2014 Clean cotton rage.\nDally New.\t\nApplj\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL    ACT\n(Form P.)\nCertlftrat* of Improvement*.\nNOTICE\nHoward. Glencoe. Lochiel. Prince,\nCharlie, Contact; Paddy Jeremy &\nAlan Arc Mineral Claims, situate ln\nthe Nelson Mining Division of West\nKootenay   District.\nWhere located:\u2014South Fork Porcupine Creek.\nTAKE NOTICE that I Chas. Moore.\nB. C. Land Surveyor of the City of\nNelson, B. C, F. M. C. No. 14921-D.\nActing as Agent for the Howard Mine\nLtd.. None Personal Liability, P. M. C.\n17356-D. Registered office of the\nCompany ls 311 Rogers Bldg., No. 470\nGranville St.. of the City of Vancouver,\nBritish Columbia.\nFee Miner's Certificate No. 17356-D,\nIntend, sixty dnys from the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements\nfor the purpose of obtaining a Crown\ngrant  of the above  claims.\nAnd further tnke notice that action,\nunder section 85. must be commenced\nbefote the Issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 14th day of August. 1028.\nCHAS.  MOORE,\n Authorized Agpnt.\n\u25a0\u25a0HffVi\" (5094)\nTELL, your wants through The Dally\nNewt classified columns.\nBARRELS, KEOS AND EMPTY SACKS\u2014\nMcDonald Jam Company. Nelson.\n(4954-tf)\nREAD MARGARET SANGER'S BOOK\u2014\n\"Family Limitations.\" Sex Hygiene,\n|1. N. Winston, 2871 Euclid Ave.,\nVancouver. (5150)\nTHOROUGHBRED       female\ntrained   to   hunt   birds.\nRossiand. B, C. Box 114.\npointer,\nApplv   to\n(5334)\nPURE-BRED Cocker\nParents real bird\nNelson.\nSpaniel     pups,\ndogs.      Box   74.\nFOR SALE\u2014Office desk, swivel chair,\nand cash register. Apply Strathcona hotel. (6405-6-126)\nFOR SALE\u2014\"Kara\" piano In first class\ncondition.      New   Grand   Hotel.\n(5378-U>\nLOVELY SILVER PERSIAN (neuter)\nkitten, 17.; female, |5. Mrs. Stewart\nDodd,   Vernon.   B.   C. (5302)\nFOR SALE\u2014Dressers, rockers, dishes,\nand cooking utensils. 712 Stanley\nSt. (5431-2-1261\nFOR SALE \u2014 Shaker potato digger\ncheap. Mrs. M. Houdayer, Nakusp,\nB.   C. (5432-3-127)\nPhone\n.5435.\nFOR    SALE \u2022\n465L.\n\u25a0 Baby   carriage,\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014Semi-modern\nthree-roomed house, new, cement\nbasement.    Harding, Phone  110.\nf5366-6-126)\nFor\nFOR  RENT\u2014Flats. 515 Hall St.\n(5364-MB\nFOR RENT-^Five-rooaned partly tw\nnished house. Apply 619 Csrbo_Mt\nstreet. (5340-6-126\nFOR   RENT\u20142   furnished   and   2\nfurnished houses.     Phone 488R.\n(5345-20-146\nFOR RENT\u2014Apartments over Oallagh\nstore. (6108-Mai\nTO RENT\u2014In Procter. Arable _.\nSix acres alfalfa. Bottom land fl\nvegetables. Abundant water rui\nnlng through property. Breedlr\newes. If required, fully moder\nhouse.     Apply  Danlell, Procter.\n* (641i\n_m\u2022*  -    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0-   \u25a0 .  i   i     ii _\\'.fm_--m_m_u\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Ladles' purse ln Capitol MotOJ\nSunday. Reward. Box 64.7. PftJ\nNews;   (6437-3-1-'\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED\u2014A   fresh   good   milker   ei\nat a reasonable  price.     Write to\nPostnlkoff,   Rossiand,   B.   C.\na*4M_l-at\nWILL EXCHANGE Ford touring car, 1\n'good condition for good young cc\nFresh or coming , fresh soon.     App1\nRoy   543H    Daily   News.        (6466-6-131\nBUSINESS, PROFESSION A\nDIRECTORY\nPhotogxapht_rs\nIlKOaloE A. ME-ilES\u2014Aeilsl snd Pho\nto-ranher.   718  Baker  St.       (6800-lf\nShoe Repairs\nFor   Service   and   Satisfaction,\nHUM     SHOE   REPAIR   SHOP\nRomano,   Op. B.C.Tel.Co.,Stanley S\n(6301-tf\nBETTER   SHOE   HEP tlHIMi.   Mall  you\nshoes t_, us. They will have go-\nattention. A. MAZZA SHOE SHOI\nNel.O\"    tt    c. (53u_-tf\nCabinetmaker\nJ.  II.  CHAPMAN\u2014.Baker  St.    Cabinet\nmaker &  Upholsterer.    Phone a_0.\n(E303-tf\nDentists\nhk. (i. a. c.  \\v tl.i.KV\u2014Orlffln Block\nNelson.   B.  C. (6304-tt\nAccounting\n' IIARI.EK   t,   IHXTER\u2014\nAl IIITOK.     M.INrnaUl   jam  llulldlng\nRnx  11QI.  Nelson.  B. C. (5306-tf\nAssayers\nE. w. VilHlioivsoN. Box Alios, Nelson\nB.  C.  Standard  western charges, -\n  (5308-tf:\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY MAK11LE & liKANITK\nWORKS\u2014Nelson. B. C. Write foi\nPrices. , (5307-tl)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014 Bnegage.   Coal\n\"\"I   Wood.     Phone   108.       (S308-tfl\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\nJoiner.\n- Baker St..  Carpenter and\nSash  and   Hardware.\n (S308-tfl\nInsurance and Heal Estate\nK. W. innsiiv- Kill Eat.'itr, Insurance,\nRentals. Next Hipperson Hardware.\nMaker  Street. (9310-tfl\nE. HILL\u2014INS! RANCE\nFARM   ANI)   CITY   PROPERTY\nBOB Ward Street       (6311-tf)\nChiropractors\n1>R.   ORAY,   OILKER BLK..\nNELSON.\n(5313-tf)\nFlorists\norizzeli.es   oreenhoi'ses.  Nelson\nCut  flowers  and  floral  designs.\n(5313-tf)\nWM. S. JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 342.    Cut Flowers. Potted Plants\nand Floral Emblems. (5314-tf)\nWholesale\nA.   MacDONALI)  -   CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers of Teas. Coffees,\nSpices. Dried Fruits, Staple and Fancy\nGroceries.  Nelson.  B. O. (5315-tf)\nEngineers\nCHAS. MOORE. B.C.I..H., A.I.n.C.\ni. P. COATES. C.-\u201e AMBIC, M.P.E\nR. W.  IIIMHIN. .Mi-h. En... M.P.E.\nCivil.   Mining,   Mechanical   Engineering\nB.C. Land Surveying. Architecture,\nDrafting   and   Blue   Printing.\nP. O. Box 871, Phone 286, Nelson. B. C.\n(5316-tf)\nA.   H.   OREEN   CO CONTRACTORS\nFormerly  Oreen Bros.. Burden,  Nelson\nCivil    and    Mining   Engineers\nll.C. Alberta nnd Dominion Land\nsurveyors (5317)\nll.\nn.   DAWSON\u2014Land   Surveyor.\nMining   and   Civil   Engineer\nKaslo,  B.   C. (5318-11)\nFuneral Directors\n\u2022tni\n\u25a0fgm\nStandard Furniture\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers.\nAuto Hearse, up-to-\ndate ohapel. Best\nservices. Prices\nreasonable. (5319-tf)\n THE NEf-SON11\u00bbJLY *__W\u00a7, THURSDAY MORNING,' SEPTEMBER 13, 1928\n,i_t NttHf\nMarkets and Mining\nMGULAR TREND\nON MONTREAL LIST\nkel Leads Activity; Brazil-\nIan Off; Ogilvie Record-\nWidest Gain\nDdmlnlon   Glaai    _    194V.\nDom.   TtfMe\t\nA.  P.  Grain\t\nUUte ol tne Woods\nMassey   Harris   \t\nMontreal   PoWer   \t\nNational   Breweries\nOjtllvle   Milling\nOttawa L. H   <_ Power\n\u00absy4\n103\n135\n400\n120\n100\nnv,\n88\n-ONTRE*-, Bept. 12.\u2014stocks were\nin Irregular with the main trend\nmwarfl In today's trading on the\nitreal stock exchange,\n-ternatlonal Nickel led ln activity\nh 18.346 shares dealt ln and closed\n128 for a net loss of two points\n>r having sold up to the new high\nlaay,.\nIraUllan  cloeed   at  56\u00a5.   for a  net\ni ot   V    National  Bteel Car closed\nPenmane, Ltd.\nPrice Bros. ...\nQuebec   Power\nShawlnlgan           Wy,\nSherwin  Williams    150\n8o.  Canada Power   J.  140\nSteel  ol  Canada    188\nSt.  Lawrence Flour Mills        33\nWayagamack      81\nm*\nrecorded the greatest gain.\nling at 400 for a net advance of\ni, Willie , Power Corporation. suffered\ngraateat loss closing  at 73  for a\ndecline of. three points,\n-imfnlon   Textile   declined    114    at\nIfi'lvle Milling. B. C. Pishing Dread and,Hamilton Bridge had froc-\nWl   Increases.\n\u00bbtal sales, 42,800 shares; bonds.\n,000.\nonjjn rji-oTATioxs\nMONTREAL\n\u00bbk ot commerce    289\nminion   Bank     257\nperlal   Bank     255\nak of Nova  Scotia    380\nval   Bank     170\nak   of  Toronto     280\nItlbl  Power at Paper        51\naestos   Corporation         28y2\nantic   Sugar         15\nII   Telephone  165\nit.  Columbia  Pishing         17V.\nizltlan T. L. ts Power       57\nHnpton  Paper      44\nn.  Car ft  Foundry        44V.\nn.   Converters  107,\nna.  Industrial  Alcohol        43V.\nPower        32V4\nn.  Steamship   Lines         37V2\nns.   Mining   Is   Smelting  269\nminion   Bridge        85V.\nWestern    Grocers\nWinnipeg\n22\n     113\nCalgary Oi\nA. P. Consol.\nBritish Dominion  \t\nCalmont   \t\nDalhousie    \t\nDevenlsh \u201e \t\nMayland\nMcDougal Segur Ex ....\nMcDougail Segur new .\nMtLeod    \t\nMidwest   \t\nOkalta,   common   \t\nRoyallte\t\nSpooner\t\nVulcan    _,.._\u2022 ~<r\nClose\n\u2022    .53\n.46\n*$*\nA7\n1,75\n2.00\n1.34\n5.40\n.28\n32.90\n87.50\n1.40\n1.90\nSPECTACULAR RISE\nON WALL STREET\nBut Heavy Profit-Taking Cheek\nAdvance Near Clotte; Opening   Is   Wild\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK. Sept. 13.\u2014Copper, firm;\nelectrolytic, spot and futures 14%c.\nIron\u2014Steady;   unchanged.\nTin\u2014Steady;   spot 847.37.\nLead\u20148teady;  spot New  York  86.40;\nEast   St.   Louis  96.29.\nZinc\u2014Firm: East St. Louis, spot and\nfutures  86.25.\nAntimony\u2014810.75   to   810.87.\nAT   LONDON\nStandard   copper\u2014Spot   \u00a362   17s   6d;\nfutures 163 6s.\nElectrolytic\u2014spot   \u00a388    15s;    futures\n\u00a369  5s.\nTin\u2014Spot \u00a3210 15s: futures \u00a3209 15s.\nLead\u2014Spot \u00a322 2s 6d; futures \u00a321 15s.\nZinc\u2014Spot    \u00a324    12s    '\/ad;    futures\n\u00a324   15s.\nINVESTMENTS\n12000.00 CANADIAN PACIFIC RLY. CO.\n1% 1934, to yield 5';-;\n$2000.00 VICTORY BONDS\n5i\/2%, 1934, to yield 4.85%\nIMMEDIATE ACCEPTANCE NECESSARY\nR. P. Clark & Co., Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C., PHONE 100.\nNEW YORK. Sept. Ua\u2014A spectacular advance In stock: prices which carried scores ot issues up ope to 11\npoints to new high records was checked\nby heavy profit-taking Just before the\nclose, of today'* market, Final quotations were Irregularly higher. Total\nsales were 4,579,100 shares.\nThere was a plentiful supply of call\nmoney at the renewal rate of 7 Mi per\ncent.\nThe opening of the market was.onc\nof the wildest ever witnessed ln wall\nbtreet, particularly, in. the, absence, ol\nany unusual flyemlght developments.\nNational Cash Register and Studebaker\neach opened with blocks 01 10,000\nshares at new high records. Curtiss\nJumped six points ou the first tale.\nOeneral Motors five and Radio four.\nStanley Company of America opened\nwith a block of 5000 sharea at 09*,,\nan overnight gain ot 10%, but lt sold\ndown 63% at the close.\nOpening priceB, In several cases prove\nto be the highest of tbe day. Loose-\nWiles Biscuit for instance, opened four\npoints higher at 88%, a new high\nrecord, and then sold down to S2%.\nclosing at 83 v_. Montgomery Ward\nopened at -157 and cloeed at 248, off\nnine points net. Commercial Solvents opened at 219 and cloaed at 210\noff eight polnta.\nBuying orders were distributed over\na broad list wtth leading commission\nnouses reported a flood of out-of-town\norders, particularly from tbe middle\nwestern  states.\nReports of high dividends stimulated\nthe demand for the tobacco shares.\nTobacco Products climbed nearly six\npoints on the raising of the annual\ndividend  to \u00bb8.\nNEW YORK  STOCK QUOTATIONS\nHigh     Low     Close\nAllied Chemical       203%    198V*\nAmerican  Can    108%\nAmerican    Loco.    .    99'fc\nAm.   Smelt.,   Reftn. 263U\nAmerican   Tele  192%\nAmerican    Tobacco 170\nAnaconda       70%\n_\u2014_-\u00ab\u2022\nA\nSpecialized\nService to\nBrokers.\nTHIS firm io assisting in thc development of the mining industry\nof British Columbia. Kootenay Florence, Yankee Girl, Slocan Rambler,\nLorne Gold, are amongst the most\npromising developing mines of this\nprovince. We have prepared special\nreports on these properties which we\ne shall be pleased to furnish upon re\nquest.\nSTOBIE-IbRLONGfcG\nVANCOUVER OFFICE:   35 COMMERCE BUILDING\nSeymour 9114-5-6\nIlea. Ofl.e:   TORONTO\nMemt\u00bber,t    Standard Slock and  Mining Eacrunae, Toronto.\nVancouver Stock Exchange and other E.chang...\nMtVATB WIRE SYSTEM CONNECTING PRINCIPAL CANADIAN CENTRBS\nCATERPILLAR'\nTractors\nBIGGER THAN THE WEATHER!\nA Size for Every Use\nA Hundred Uses (or Every Size    0\n2 TON, TWENTY, THIRTY, SIXTY\nBETTER QUICKER CHEAPER\nLiterature and Prices on Request   '\nSole Distributors for B. C.\nMorrison Tractor & Equipment Co.,Ltd\nNothern ractflo Freight Bulldtn.\n040 Station Street\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nBranch Otflce:\nHipperson Block\nNELSON, B.C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice Smelting: and Refining Department\nTRAU,. BRITISH   COU MB1 \\\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,  TRAIL\n19814\n1061,    106%\nAtchison\nBaltimore.   Ohio    .\nBethlehem   Steel\nBunker H,  Sum.\nCanadian   Pacific\nCerro   de   Pasco\nChile   Copper\nChrysler    \u2014\t\nCoin  Products\nDodge    \t\nDupont      _.\nFlelschman  Co.\nFreeport-Texas   .\nGeneral   Motors\nGeneral   Electric\nOranby   \t\nHowe   Sound   \t\nHudson   Motors\nInsp. .Copper\ninter.  Nickel      .   ..\nMack   Truck   \t\nMarland   OU\nMiami   Copper   .\nKennecott  Copper\nKresge   8.S\t\nNat.  Power.  Light\nNash   Motors   \t\nN.  Y. Central\nNorthern  Pacific   .\nPackard  Motors\nPhillips   Pete   \t\nRadio   Corp\t\nRock  Island\nSchulte   \t\nShell   Union  Oil\nSinclair Con.\nSouthern  Pacific  .\nStand. Oil. Cal.\nStewart  Warner\nStudebaker    \t\nTexas  Corp.   \t\nTexas  Oulf Sul.\nUnion Oil. Cal.\nUnlop  Pacific .\nU. S. Rubber\nU.  S.  steel\nWeat.   Electric\nwillvs   Overland\nYellow  Truok   .\nAm. Pgn.  Power\nAm. Steel Pdry.\n195tt\n-0>\/\u00ab\n-to\n181\nno\nnv,\n193'i\n114%    113'\/,\n66 64',\n213'3\nSS_\n53 '.,\n108%    102':\n87\".\n211',\n\u00ab4'i\n51s,\n20%\n394\n79 H\n62%\n108%    204\n174%    171%\n60%\n60%\n82%\n25 Va\n133'i\n96%\n39\n22\n99%\n80%\n36%\n97%\n175%\n99\n85%\n41\n213%\n123%\n60%\n27%\n26%\n127%\n59%\n100%\n83%\n71%\n71%\n50%\n196%\n43%\n159%\n109%\n25'!.\n36%\n46%\n59\n249\n181%\n170\n7_%\n193%\n114%\n65\n120\n211%\n84%\n51%\n105%\n86%\n20%\n392%\n77%\n61%\n206%\n172\n59%\n60%\n80%      81\n24 %     24%\n127%    128%\n93%\n20%\n388%\n77%\n61%\n69%\n69%\n38%\n21%\n98%\n78%\n36%\n96\n172%\n97%\n86%\n39%\n204\n122%\n59',,\n28%\n16%\n126\n56%\n107',\n81%\n68%\n70\n50%\n195\n41%\n157\n106%\n24%\n38%\n44%\n67%\n38\",\n23\n98\n80%\n36%\n96\n173%\n99\n84%\n40 Vj\n207\n1-2'a\nMM\n20%\n26'-\n126%\n58%\n107%\n81%\nm%\n70%\n50%\nIBS'A\n43%\n158\n109%\n24%\n36%\nToronto Mines\nBid\nAconda \u2022   \u2022\u2022*'*\nAmulet             S-\u00bb, ,\nArea  JJt%\nAreo  _\"H\nAtlas \u25a0\u00bb;\nReaver     \u25a0'\u2022J\nRami   Holl\"   *'\nRldtrood     m\nCastle          .41\nCan   T.nrralp\u00bb       11\nCent. Man. Mines\t\nConlagas           3.6\"\nrrown   Reserve    47\nrutin ill 10\nDuprat      04%\nDome 9on\nGold   r\u00bb\u00able    Ie\nHold   Hill   \u2022    .'I\nr.ranadu \u25a0***\nnmver Daly 10%\nHollv \".66\nHudson   mv 19.0\"'\n.TackRon Manlon .88\nVlrklavc         1.65\nKirk   Hunton    07%\nKeelv          -1\u00ab\nKeora      01%\nKootenav   Florence    **'\nLake   Shore    22.35\nLaval    1\"%\nMacassa    27\nMcnousall     36\nMcKlnley     16%\nMoneta     08\nMining   Ctorp.\nNewbec     ***',.\nNlplsslng        3.25\nNoranda 63.55\nPend   Oreille 12.J4\nPorcupine Crown  03%\nPioneer    61\nPremier       2 81\nPotter  Doal .07%\nPreston    03\nflan Antonio tl\nSherrltt-Oordon 6.6J\nstadacona     1*\nPt'dbu\"' Basin      **>*\nSvlvani'e        '\u00bb\"\nTeck   Hn-tiea 9.06\nfouih   Oakes .an\nTnw.ampc 376\n\u25a0\"amlfamlng os\nvinonrt    ... 64\n*rlPht   Harg'enves 3.60\nWest   Dome  Lake        .11\nAsked\na   ,?.i\n3.35\n\"  .04%\n.06\n.51\n.70\n.43\n.12\n90\n3.06\n.50\n.11\n05\n9.25\n'.'\"%\n.35\na 75\n19.\"\nao\n1.67\n.06\n.41\n.33\n22.60\n.30\n.38\n.37\n.17%\n3.30\n.33\n3 30\n54 00\n12.80\n.04\n.08\n6.76\n.16%\n6 30\n3.06\n9.to\n.41\n.11%\nVancouver Stocks\nB. C.  Silver  \t\nBig Missouri \t\nCork   Province   \t\nDunwell    \t\nOeorge   Copper   .\nOlasalr\nOolconda\nOrandview     ,\t\nIndependence    \t\nIndian   Mines   \t\nInternational  Coal\nKootenay  Plorence\nLucky Jim \t\nL. 6i  L.\nMarmot Metals\nNat.  Sll.  OS.\nPend  qrellle\nPremier\nPorter Idaho\nRichmond\nRuth-Hope   \t\nRufua-Argenta\nSelkirks\nSunloch\nWhitewater   \t\nWr-UInt-tou\nBid\n\u25a060%\n.25\n.11\n;i\u00bb\n.84\n\u202244%\n.11%\n.06%.\n.36\n22%\n.13%\n12.26\n2 36\n.67\n58\n.26\n06\n2.10\n161\n.16\nAsked\n\u2022 1.60\n.51\n.28%\n\u25a01>\n6.90\n.20\n.87\n.44\n.12\n07\n.37\n.23\n.26\n.10\n.10\n.14%\n12.50\n2 38\n.69\n114\n06\n2.30\n1.6S\n.17\nNICKEL SOARS TO\nNEW HIGH MARK\nTouches  133  1-4  at Toronto;\nNoranda Lead. Mining\nIssues Downward\nTQRONTO, Sept. 12\u2014international\nNickel was again thc icuture Issue on\nthe Toronto stock exchange today,\nreaching a new high for all time at\n13S%. In the afternoon session the\nstock encountered a certain amount\nof selling and at the cloBe was down\nto 127%, a decline of 2%. The rights\nwent up aa high as 67.40, but at the\nclose sold at 67.00.\nOn the Toronto curb, Noranda led\nmost qf the mining stockB downward.\nThe stock declined from 955.10 to\n663.10, down  62.15 a share.\nService Stations was the principal\nperformer ln the listed section, 4080\nshares being sold from 40% to 42% at\nthe close, a 2% point gain.\nClosing sales of other active stocks\nreflected  the\" following Mtuatlon:\nGatiu--Bra-lltan % to 57; B. C.\nPackers % to 15', and pfd 5 to 67'\nBuilding Products 1 to 38; C.P.R. 1%\nto 213%; HtSZmy Harris % to 44.\nLosses\u2014American Sales Book 2 lo\n80; Shredded Wheat 1 to 04; Durant\nMotors % to 8%; Power Corporation\n1 to 75.\nSASKATOON.   Sask.   Sept.   13\u2014The ern and averaged 40 Bushels to the acre.\nfirst wheat shipments here show BOT_l\u00ab_     \u25a0____.   Canadian   government   elevator     Jfreah extras 43c;   flrata 40c;  pulleta\nof a good yield and  fair gra\u00abln\u00ab for       .\u201e,._._-  ...  \u201e\u201e.   wn\u201e.   ,,\u201em  the1\"     -\u25a0\nthe   crop   of   the   Saskatoon   district. \"   receiving  Its  nr\u00bbt   wneat  rrom  tne\nSome wheat has graded at No. 1 north- Saskatoon district.\nPRICES WORK TO\nHIGHER GROUND\nPremier     Mikes     Comeback;\nPend Oreille Weak;\nOils Steady\nVANCOUVER. Sept 12.\u2014A good demand came out today for it variety\nqf Issues on tbe atock exchange With\nprices, ae a general rule, working Into\nhigher ground.. Premier, yesterday's\nweak issue, came back to $2.42 today\nwith the close at 12.35, a net gain\nof 10c. Reports that the dividend\nrate would be cut started selling Tueaday. Woodbine was the chief interest\nduring the morning, 66,500 shares changing hands at higher levels. Durirm\nthe late session total sales reached\n\u2122500. with the close at 14'., up 3c.\nWhitewater common improved 4c tc\n$1.51, on a trade of 5500 shares.\nOrandview was also In demund, 16,700\nehares moving around 44*3 to 45, with\nthe close at the former unchaiiKcd.\nBig Missouri eased off lc to 50'^.\nRufus Argenta advanced 4c to 26. nnd\nKootenay Florence l%c to JSJk.\nPend Oreille was weak, opening at\n$12.50 and selling down to $12.30 at\nthe close, a net loss of 75c.\nThe oil issues were generally steady.\n __\u00ab_\u00bb\t\nDominion Live Stock\nCALGARY. Sept, 12\u2014Receipts; Cattle 1850: calves 301; hogs 221; sheep\n21.\nSteers\u2014choice $10 to $11; fair to\ngood  $11  to ao.78.\nButcher   heifers\u2014Choice  $8.50  to   $9.\nButcher cows\u2014Fair lo good $7.50\nto   $8.25.\nBulls\u2014Oood   $5.50   to   $0\nStorkrr  hleferB\u2014Choice  $t350   to   $7;\nFeeder  steers\u2014Choice $8.60 to  \u00bb!l.25;\nfair to good $5.50 to $6.25\nfair to good $7.60 to \u00ab8.\nCalves\u2014Choice $10 to $10.50.\nLambs\u2014Fair  to  good  $11   to  $12\nSheep\u2014Fair to good $8 to $10.\nHogs\u2014Select bacon $13.25; lights\nsnd feeders $11.75; thick smooth $12.75.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. Sept. 12.\u2014Sterling exchange eaay at M 80 for 60-day bills\nand   at  <4.84 11-16   for  demand.\nForeign bar  silver  5t%.\nCanadian dollars 1-16 premium.\nFrancs   3.90'4-\nLire *5.2_;v\nNelson approximtite rale Sterling exchange  \u00bb4.88V\nMarks\u201423.81. *\nKronen\u201426.76.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. Sept. 12.\u2014Eggs, steady;\nbutter  and  cheese,  easier.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns 23 to 23'\u00abc;\neasterns  23;iic.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized 40 Vi to\n40'2c;  No. creamery 39'a to 40c.\nEggs\u2014Storage, extras \/15c; firsts 41c;\nseconds 38c; fresh extras 60c; fresh\nfirsts 45c.\nLogan & Bryan\nPrivate  Wlrea\nSTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTOR,\nOBAIN\nMKMI1KRS\nNew York. Montreal and Vancouver Stock Exchanges, Chicago\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg Grain\nExchange and other leading exchanges.\nOFFICES:\nVancouver.   Spokane  and  Seattle\nAnother Exceptional\nOpportunity\nJack Waite\nA year ago last June we placed\nOOLCONDA before the investing\npublic at 25c per share.\nSince then OOLCONDA has\nbeen adequately developed and\nequipped, and ls now on a profitable production basis with assurance of becoming the next addition to Coeur d'Alene dividend\npayers. Market value of OOLCONDA shares has Increased approximately 400 per cent.\njack Waite\nIs another Coeur d'Alene enterprise. . It affords the same Investment and speculative opportunity today ai OOLCONDA did\na year ago. Fill out attached\ncoupon for full details:\nNorthwest Mlnea Investment Co.\nBox 2126 Spokane.\nWithout obligation, please mall\nrun details regarding Jack Walte\nConsolidated.\nNAME\nADDRESS\nCITY  OR   PO\nPROVINCE\nBRITISH   CO-l'MMA   EGOS\n35c.   Price   to   producers   tire   to   all\ncents lower.\n. an      \"   iim   '-rJ\n\"\u25a0\nm_mm_m_mmm_m\nIsn't This What fiou Want\nYour Heating System\nto Give You?\nL\n1. COMFORT\n2. LOW COST\n3. EASY OPERATION\nThe new series 100 Ourney Hot Water Boilers have been designed\nto give you maximum comfort for least cost together wtth great\nease of operation. The water flues are staggered so that the hot\nsmoke and gases must pass around and around them\u2014and so exhaust their heat on the water---none ls wasted on the chimney\nbricks. That means more heat with less fuel- The flrepot ts deep-\nincreasing coal capacity, making for fewer firings, easier control of\nfire and above all economy. The grates are rocking and dumping\ntype\u2014burn cheaper grades of fuel with splendid results. The shaker\nhandle ls long and handy. The ashpit Is deep\u2014keeps ashes off the\ngrates. Plrc door accommodates Urge shovel. Doors fit snug making\npossible better draft control. Make sure that in you home you\nenjoy the greater comfort, convenience and economy of this new\nse-ies 100 Boiler. There ls a size Just right for your home. Ask\nyour architect or steamfltter or send coupon direct to us.\nWhy\nThe New Gurney\nSeries 100\nHot Water Boiler\nis better\nExtra   Deep  I*'lrcpot\nLnrse  Combustion  Space\nAmple    Fire    Travel    and\nWell   Designed   Flues\nGenerous Water Connections\nFree  Water  Travel\nAll  Fuel   Orate\nOne-piece   Ashpit\nTl Eh t -Fitting   Doors\nPerfect Draft Control\nThe rrtlciency of a boiler\nwith AL1. these features Is\n<iulte apparent. Send f.V\ndescription bulletin\nThe Gurney Foundry Co., Limited\nVANCOUVER, aC.\nPlease send me complete information on iubject(i)\nmarked with an x.\nHot Wtter Hetting\t\nSteam Hesting\t\nLarge Sectional Boilm.,...\n(for apartments. *tom,\npublic buildings!\nCopf'iy Radiator*.. \"\t\nWarm Air Heating\t\nHeavy Duty\nKitchen Equipment\t\nName\t\nAddress\nPortable Bake Ovena....\u2122_\nGas Rnnaif -.,.._-\u00bb\nElectric Rangea.       , \u201e;,\u201e\u25a0\nCx-mbtnation, Electric,\nGat ind Coal Rangea\t\nCoal and Wood Rang*\u2014\nCoal and Wood Heataci\u2122\nGas Water Heaters \u201e_\nDomestic Water Hester*.....\n^Ttejttiifjof'Rilt (hmium!i.)|jf\n*t_*e^^is\u2014tmiee. ___._. m*m.     m\\ e\u2014_    t_JA\\S    IAVA\nINCOKPOftATfS \u2022\u00bb\u2666 MAY I6TO.\nc\nOther Branches it Winnipeg. Yorkton. Saskatoon, Edmonton, O-l.arr, Lethbrldnv\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria.\nMen's Wear\nNEW DESIGNS IN MEN'S ENGLISH BROADCLOTH SHIRTS with separate\ncollars to match.    Plain colors or the new fine stripe , $2.50 and $3.50\nMEN'S PYJAMAS, NEW PATTERNS IN CHECKS AND STRIPES, with silk\nfrogs.    Prices  ?2.75 to $4.50\nMEN'S CAPS in new tweeds and velours, very stylish.\nprices $2.00, ?2.25 and ?2.50\nENGLISH SILK TIES, very smart designs.\n-prices   754*,  91.00  and   $1.50\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nLadies' Wear\nLADIES  DRESSES\u2014New styles  at  popular prices, in Canton Crepe, Flat Silk\nCrepe, Satin, Silk and Georgette.    All colors, including black.\np-ijea    $16.95, $19.95, $25.00 and $29.50\nLADIES'  EXCLUSIXE COATS\u2014In  Broadcloth and Velour, with fur trimmings,\nin Navy, Black, Copenhagen and Fawn.    Prices $39.50 and  $49.50\nTHE LATEST MODE IN MILLINERY-THE FEATHER HAT.\nPrices   from    \u00a5\u00ab\u2022\u00bb& to $10.95\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nDry Goods\nSPECIAL REDUCTIONS IN FIGURED CREPES -AND RAYON DRESS FABRICS\u2014Lovely, heavy dress weight in pleasing designs. Every piece offered\nis taken from our new stock.\nNOTE\u2014In this range there are only one or two dress lengths left in each piece.\nThose desiring ah inexpensive dress length will shop early.\n38 INCHES WIDE\u2014(See the quality we offer.    Per yard $1.25\n.(-CORNER SCARVES OFFERED AT SPECIAL PRICES\u2014Beautifully printed in pleasing designs on a heavy weight Crepe de Chine. These scarves sell\nregularly at $1.95.    Special, each       $1.25\nShoe Department\nRemarkable Offer in Ladies' Footwear\n200 Pairs of All New Smart Styles\n$4.45~AI1 One Price-~$4.45\nPatent Pumps with buckles. Cut-out Ties in tan and patent leathers. Cut-out\nstraps and plain straps in patent leather. Patent Strap Arch Relief Shoes. Low\nand medium heels wltll \"UZtbcr lifts on u'.l lines. Good useful shoes for school\nor   treet wear.   All p'_-i from 2i\/8 to 8. \u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\n_\n_-_------------___i\n Fa*e Tm\n'THI. NELSON DAILY N13WS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1929\nNASH\nSIXES\nDODGE\nSIXES\nWHIPPET\nSIXES\nGraham\nTrucks\nTONS\nALL SIXES\nCAPITOL MOTORS\neternal w. pease. Uemm*\nOe*  78-.   Plione  88.  Nefcon,   B.C.\nOpposite Port Office\nREFUSE DISMISS\nDRIVER OF AUTO\nVERIGIN CRASH\nFomenoff Charged .Driving to\nCommon Danger; Saskatoon Lawyer Defends\n\u2014\n^__   ROM\n-\u25a0    \"\u00bb baaed\nLeal   aerval\nROM our experience,\nbased upon years ol observation ln examining\nthe eyes, we have\ni learned tbat serious\nI eyestrain could easl-\n'ly have been prevented In many cases\nlf the eyes had been examined\nwhen trouble first appeared and\nthc right glasses prescribed and\nfitted.\nExpert Service\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nQPTOM1TBIBT   AND   OPTICIAN\nQUALITY, SERVICE\nSATISFACTION\nE. COLLINSON\nJEWELER\nEXPEKT  WATCHMAKER\nC.P.R.    tnd    O.N.R.    Tim*\nInspector\nFlash Light Batteries\nFlask Lights\nami Bulbs\nBENNETTS' LIMITED\n-Itie Houae of  Electrlctl  flood.\"\n44 Taxi & Transfer\nSEDAN   CARS   FOR   HIRE\nDay and Night Service\nMcMOBabte Rates Careful Drivers\nCON CUMMINS. MANAGER\nMotion for dismissal made bv G. P.\nMakaroff. young lawver of Saskatoon.\nwas refused bv Stinendiary Magistrate John Cartmel yesterday, ln the\nhearing of P. Fomeppff of Castlegar\non a charge of driving; to the common\ndanger. The hearing was adjourned\nto today  at 6  o'clock.\nFomenoff was owner of the car\nIn which Peter Verigin. president of\nthe Christian Community nf Universal\nBrotherhood, and J. Mazloff went over\nthe bank at Taghum recently, miraculously escaping serious Injury. The\ncar was  wrecked.\nThe motion was made after hearing\nof prosecution evidence presented bv\nArchie Gray and .T. F. Van Horn of\nTrail, and Staff-Sergeant E. Gammon of the provincial police- Nelson.\nRtaff-Se*veant Gammon conducted the\nprosecution.\nAPUIFS  NO  OFFENCE\nDefence counsel arvued that the\nFomenoff csr went over the bank when\nattempting to avoid another auto, and\nthis did not constitute an offence.\nHe also areued that as there was no\nbeaw traffic on the road at the\ntime of the accident, about 6 a.m., Fomenoff was not driving to the common\ndanger. He also attacked the credibility of the evidence offered by the\nprosecution.\nStaff-Sergeant  Gammon  argued that\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nPHONE  77\nFurniture Moving, Storage and\nCrating, Baggage and E-pres-\n421 BAKES\nBUD STEVENS\nNothing   Is   Tov   Oood   for   the   Sick\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION  SPECIALIST\nIn bustness for your health. Let us fill\nyour prescriptions. Mall orders promptly executed. Call and wait for your car.\nPhone  1.\nSunday hours: 1 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.\nA.D. Papazian\nWATCHMAKER,    JEWELER\nAND GRADUATE OPTICIAN\n413 HALL STREET\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nFilms, Kodaks, Drugs, Stationery\nMall orders promptly despatched.\nBOX 1083      NELSON, B.C.      PHONE 34\nCome In and Oet Yonr Weight Free\nOkanagan\nPeaches\nThis week we'll receive\nshipments of choice, ripe\nOkanagan Peaches direct\nfrom the growers.\nOrder your supply today,\nbut insist on having Okanagan grown' only. You'll\nfind them the best of all.\nMcDonald Jam Company\nLIMITED\nNelson Brand Jams\nNELSON, B.C.\nFomenoff did not know whether any\nother cara were on the road, and hence\nwas driving dangerously.\nMr. Oray and Mr Van Horn testified\nthat when they were on their way to\nTraU in the early morning, the Fomenoff car rounded a curve juat beyond\nTaghum Btatlon. They pulled ln to\nthe bank whtle the approaching car.\nawttylng, ruahed toward them slowing\nuf> as the brakes were applied. Fomenoff turned out to pass and the\ncar went over the bank. Staff-Sergeant Gammon testified that he examined, shortly after the crash, the\ntracks made by the Fomenoff car,\nand  reported his .findings.\nTHRUMS AND TRAIL\nATOCOLLIDE\nWheels,     Fenders,      Running\nBoard Smashed; No One\nIs Injured\nLeft front wheels on each car were\nshattered   yesterday   when   cars   driven\n_-_,M. r.HS!P*\" of Tra\" \u00bbnd J\"1\"!\nS*,\"*1\"^0' Thr-ms collided on the\nNelson-Trail highway. Running boards\nand fenders were also smashd. No one\nwas injured.\nKarlani, driving toward Thrums, turn\ned out to avoid a man walking on\nthe road. Harper was driving Nelson-\nward, and the cars collided at the roadside. The car driven by Harper was\nowned by M. H. Lockle of Trail\nCATALAN!) IS SUING\nLARSOMAMAGES\nAsks $300 For Loss of Occu\nPancy of Building; Case\nIs Adjourned\nAdjournment to Wednesday was\ntaken yesterday ln C.  Catalano's suit\n\u2122.i _\"-\"'. court for \u00bb100 damages\nwhich he is asking from c A. Larson,\nior allegedly being unable to occupy\npremises he bought. He claimed he\nknew nothing, when he made the\npurchase for himself and two part-\nSS-.. s >\"\u00ab \"Pen a section of the\nbuilding he wished to use, and that\nthis occasioned him to a loss of 1100\nfor   three  months.\n,.E' .f- *rown o' Brown Is Dawson\n1; acting for Mr. Catalano. and Archie\nDonaghy   for  Mr.  Larson.\nMr. Catalano testified that he did\nnot discover that H. B. Purdy occupant\nof the premises, the old Nelson Steam\nLaundry   building   had   a   year's   lease\nJPmi f l2?n,h after ne \u00bbal\u00b0 \"ter\n\u00bb1700 to Mr. Larson. He assumed a\nmortiiaw for the remaining i960 or the\nMr. Larson and Mlas W. Harness, defense,    witnesses,    asserted    that    Mr\nthe time  the transfer  was  made    Mr\n^luiitto 8h\u00b0\"\"n8 th\u00ab *\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u00b0\nTestimony of w. w. Ferauson aa tn\nthe drawing of the dee.\u2122of\"r.n\u00abfer\nwas desired by both Mr. Dawson and\nMr.    Donaghy.       When   Mr.    Ferguson\nou \"\".ft TT * SU.\u00b0Poe\u2122 w\u00bb\"\u00bb\u00a3n\n?.\".'.J?ut \" **\" mt trye. in time\nto  the caae to be concluded  yester-\nMrs. Dill Made\nProvincial Life\nMember W.C.T.U.\nvIlJS.   \u00ab\u201eJ.D\"L\"'   *\"***<\u2022   \u00bb  \u00bbro-\nnrS_S '?,  *   \"\"   hiember',   p-|\u201eJ-  ^\nRft,!!\".''!*,\" the SetstiW-\noer rally of th W. C. T. U  at LakraiH-\n.\"sen0\"  TUeKl\"1'     ^^ty-'scven  we're\n..r^'i0?1\"8    *.   \"h0rl     \u25a00n\u00bb    \"\"Vice    dC.\nvotlonal exercise., were led by Mrs F\nOakley and Miss K. McNeill\/ Ab_tf.'\nness meeting concluded with the presentation  to Mrs.  Dili. P\nn.Ti1i8\u201e.\u2122rBun,'i''a\"on-<lecWed t0 MM a\nnonunion life member to Its roll, giv-\n,?,?..\"*-!' \"Dre*ntatlon on thc Do-\nminion board.\nRefreshments were In charge of Mrs.\n-_.!?. \"*_>\u25a0 M,r\u00ab \u00b0 s'mm\u00bb and Miss\nsmith. Mlas Margaret Lutes gave a\ncharming  recitation.\nBOSWELL IS SCENE\nPRETTY WEDDING\nBeatrice Johnson Becomes Bride\nEric Ba.nt>ridge; Bride\nShowered\nBOSWELL, B.C.. Sept. 12\u2014The Bos-\nwcll Memorial ball was the scene of\na very pretty wedding Monday evening\nwhen Beatrice, youngest daughter of\nRalph Johnson, was united In the\nbands of holy matrimony to Eric N.\nBainbrtdge, the eldest son of Mr. and\nMrs. E. Bainbrtdge, both the contracting parties being Boswell residents.\nand the service being conducted by\nRev. Clyde Harvey of Procter. The\nbride was given away by her father\nand was attended by Miss Ruth Cummlngs as bridesmaid. The groom was\nsupported by his cousin. Sylvester\nSpence. Clifford Bebblngton and W.\nMackie acted as ushers. The hall was\ndalntly decorated with asparagras fern\nand sweet peas, the bridal'arch being\ncomposed of Virginia creeper and\nsilver   birch.\nThe bride wore a powder blue georgette dress with hat to matcb, and\nthe bridesmad wore ivory lace over\npeach colored radium crepe, with a\nhat of cream and peach mohair straw.\nEach carried shower bouquets of\nsweet peas. Mrs. Stephens of Vancouver, a sister of the bride, wore a\ndress of rose beige crepe black satin,\nand another sister. Mrs. Geoffrev\nSpence, was in navy cloth with fur\ntrimming anu small felt hat. Mrs.\nBainbrtdge, the groom's mother, wore\na navy flat crepe with sand trimming\nand hat to match. Mrs. K. Wallace\npresided at the organ.\nThe groom's gift to the bride was an\nunder-arm bag, and the bride's gift to\nthe groom,  a tte  pin.\nAt the conclusion of the ceremony\na reception was held. Dainty refreshments were served by Miss Orace\nMackie. Miss Kate Bebblngton, Miss\nPatricia Johnstone and Miss Winnie\nBebblngton, Mrs. A. Heppcr and Mrs.\nH. Johnstone pouring tea.\nHONORED.   NIIOVYF.K\nThe home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hepher\nwas the scene of a very happy gathering on Friday afternoon- when a miscellaneous shower was tendered to the\nbride, prior to her wedding. In the\nearlier part of the afternoon the many\nguests gathered on the lawn and\nenjoyed some very good guessing and\nhidden  treasure   Competitions.\nMiss Holiday Smith was announced\nthe winner of the guessing competition, and Mrs. A. Mackle was the\nfinder of the hidden treasure. Tea\nwas served at small tables on the\nlawn and later the party went Indoors\nwhere the various gifts were on display, and were handed over to the\nbride-to-be.\nBOBBY JONES IS\nNEARLY BEATEN\nBeats   Gordon   on Nineteenth\nHole; Von EJm Is\nDefeated\nW. W. Powefl Co., Ltd.\nRetail Department\nGood Lumber for Every Building Need\nLOCAL\nuinn   mi.\n\u25baIK   AND  LARCH\nHEMLOCK\nSPRITE\nCM A*\nWHITE FINI. LATH\nCOAST FIR\ni i iiiiiiim.\nfinish\nstbppinu\nnoons\nMOU.DI.ViS\nCEDAR  shim.I.i.s\nQuality Plus Service\nfHOM. i;\u00ab.\nOrnCBl FOOT OK STANLEY STHEET\nHunter's Supplies\nHUNTING TIME IS HERE\nTRY   US   TOR  GUNS,  RIFLES,   AMMUNITION\nAND CAMP EQUIPMENT, ETC.\nSPECIAL REDUCED PRICES\non Duxbak Waterproof Clothing to Clear\nout balance of stock\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE        NELSON, B.C. RETAIL\nPopular Fernie\nCouple Are Wed;\nThrongs Guests\nPERNIE. B.C.. Sept. 12.\u2014probably the\nmost largely attended wedding In the\nS?\u00b07 QLFe^v u>ok Place last ev2?\nI.\"8..1,?..111* U|\u00bb\u00bb\u00abJ church when Har-\n?,nu2Xht* W\"1.*!** Dot.\" Tully were\nV,n ted In \"}ftrrlftBe- H\u00abv. Mr. Best officiating,   Tlie church was very prettily\nTo the strains of Lohengrin's wedding march played by Miss Minnie\nWilson, the bride entered the church\non the arm of John L. Oates, who\ngave her away. She looked even more\nbeautiful than usual in a gown of\npink georgette with picture hat. She\nwas attended by Mrs. Ashmore as\nmatron of honor, and Evelyn Hutson as\nbridesmaid. She carried a channing\nbouquet, The groom was supported\nby Mr. Ashmore, while the ushers were\nJames Oordon and Qeorge Rahl. Miss\nWilson played while the register was\nbeing signed In the vestry. The large\nauditorium of the church was filled\nto capacity.\nAfter the ceremony and the char-\nivary, the bridal party and friends adjourned to the hall, where the evening was spent ln dancing, except\nfor the Interlude In which delicious\nrefreshments were served. Including a\nthree-tiered wedding cake. The music\nwas furnished by a seven-piece orchestra composed of young native sons\nof   Pernie.\nThe bride was the recipient of over\na hundred costly wedding gifts attesting to the estsem and popularity she\nenjoys In the community. Mr. and\nMrs. White wilt shortly go Into business In Pernie.\nFIFIELD DEFENDS\nHIS WELTER TITLE\nvs.   jimmy\nW. II CAMPION\nOur Phone No. Is 121\nPLUMS\u2014Per basket  egfc\nPBARS-Per buket   35^\nPEACHB8\u2014Per -tike. _Q^\nTOMATOES\u2014Per -Sake.  30^\n8WSKT POTATOES\u20142  lbs. 2W\nGOLDEN BANTAM CORN\u2014\nPer done- 40_\"\nCAOLITIOW-B\u20143  lb\u00ab.  Ior 2W\nEverything for Pickling\u2014Helnz\nWhite Pickling Vinegar, Crosse a.\nBlue-well's Malt. Spices, Oreen\nPeppers, Pickling Onions.\nDELIVERIES TWICE BAILY ANT\nPAST OF IHE CITY\nAsks Injunction.\nDamages, Use Log\nChute Arrow Park\nAsking an injunction to prevent\nOeorge Walton and Url brothers of\nWynndel using a tog chute which he\nalleges was built by him at Arrow\nPark. Cecil Keffer brough suit before\nCounty Court Judge W. A. Nisbet yesterday. Mr. Keffer also asked for $250\ndamages, claiming the chute was damaged by Mr. Walton and the Url broth-\nera and asking lor rent of the chute\nfor the time he alleges they have\nused It.\nBefore cross-examination of Mr. Keffer was concluded hts honor-asked the\ncounsel\u2014E. P. Dawson of Brown tic\nDawson for the plaintiff, and C. B.\nGarland of O'Shea & Garland, for the\ndefence\u2014lf a settlement could not be\neffected. The solicitors retired but\ncould reach no settlement. The caae\nwas then adjourned to next Wednesday.\nOtmrn     \t\nMay Appeal the\nWater Board's\nPower Decision\nMONTREAL, Sept. 12.\u2014Scoring a\nknockout in closing moments of the\nninth round of a scheduled 10-round\nbout at the Forum here tonight.\nOeorge Fifield of Toronto, successfully\ndefended his Canadian welterweight\ntitle against Leo Lafontaine. local\nboxer, before a crowd of 6000 fans.\nIt wu a battle In which experience\nand ring generalship were the deciding\nfactors and tha winner possessed both.\nFifield scored on heavy rights to\nthe body during infighting. This style\nof boxing wore down the local man\nuntil he was forced against the ropes\nnear his own corner in the ninth and\nFifield fairly rained left and right\nhand punches to the heady and body,\nuntil Lafontaine dropped to the floor\nsnd  took  the count\nBRAEBURN COUNTRY CLUB. Newton, Mass., Sept, 12.\u2014-Thedownfall ol\nfive former American titleholders and\na close call for the king himself, Bobby\nJones, today furnished a succeslson\nof upsets and thrills In the opening\nrounds of match play of the amateur\ngolf championship.\nWith his crown hanging lu the balance. Jones staged a desperate uphill\nfight in his second match to outlast\nR. Ray Gordon, home club veteran, and\nwin by the margin of one up at the\n19th hole, after hc had easily disponed\nof the New Jersey champion. J. Woleott\nBrown, by a score of four and three in\nthe morning round.\nThis victory for Jones, the first extra\nhole match he has ever played ln the\ntitle tournament, brought to a spectacular climax a day that saw tlie defeat of the man regarded as most\ndangerous rival, Georve von Elm of\nDetroit, thc only man who has beaten\nBobby in the last four years of championship play.\nVon Elm. eliminated In thc first\nmatch of thc day by Arthur W. Yates\nof Rochester. N.Y.. by three and two.\nfaded out of the title picture along\nwith four other ex-champions; Francis\nOuimet. Max Marston, Jess Sweetzer\nand Chick Evan, and the amateur\nchampion of Canada, C. Ross Somerville.\nUpper half:\nPhillip Perkins. Great Britain, vs.\nJohn Dawson. Chicago.\nDr. Oscar F   willing, Portland, Ore.,\nvs.  Oeorge Voight,  New York.\nLower half:\nPhillip   Flnlay*   Boston,\nJohnston. St. Paul.\nJohn B. Beck, Great Britain\nRobert T, Jones Jr., Atlanta, Oa.\nCLOSE  MATCH\nIn a match not decided until the\nfinal putt on the eighteenth green.\nJohn B. Beck, Great Britain, vanquished Somerville, Canadian champion\none up. Beck sank a three-foot putt\nfor a four to win after Somerville\nmissed an eight-footer by an Inch\nand  took  five.\nVon Elm tossed away what few\nchances he had on the greens while\nYates, playing par golf most of the\nway, took a lead of three up at the\nturn and settled the issue on the\nsixteenth green. The Rochester star's\nsuccess was sensational, but shortlived, for he was put out ln the'second round by tbe British champion,\nPhil Perkins. 2 and  1.\nGeorge Voight of New York, the\nmedallist, continued hla sensational golf\nat the expense of Jesse Sweetser, whom\nhe beat 3 and 2 in the second round\nafter disposing of Billy McPhail, of\nNorfolk, Mass., by the some score In\nthe   morning.\nVoight faces another severe test however, tomorrow, when he meets Dr. Willing, who exhibited lhe most sensationally consistent golf of the day.\nThe Portland. Ore., dentist, continuing\nthe great pace that he set to qualify\nyesterday, trounced the southern champion. Watts Ounn; of Atlanta, four and\nthree ln the first round and then\noverwhelmed the British star. Eustace\nF. Storey, in the second round, six and\nfour. \t\nInaugurate Airplane\nPassenger Service on\nPrairies; Is Speedy\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 12\u2014A direct airplane passenger service between Winnipeg, Reglna, Calgary and Edmonton\nwlU be inaugurated tomorrow by the\nWestern Canada Airways, Limited, it\nwas announced today. Tne first\nmachine to be used In the new service ls an eight passenger De Haviland\nbiplane. It Is expected the 800 miles\nbetween Winnipeg and Calgary wlll\nbe covered ln less than nine hours,\nallowing for the Reglna stop.\nBOSWELL NOTES\nBOSWELL, B.C., Sept. 12.\u2014Miss Holiday Smith spent the week-end at\nProcter, where she was the guest of\nMrs.  W.  P.  Baxendale.\nMrs. A. Mackle and Albert Mackie\nwere visitors to Nelson on Saturday.\nStephen Sherman Came home from\nCreston   for   thc   week-end.\n8. B. Frank left Monday evening for\nMm\nMr. and Mrs. s. R. Sherman spent\na couple of days In Nelson, having\nleft Boswell Monday.\n| Rev. Clyde Harvey held divine servioe at Olnol Sunday morning and at\nfUnvell  In  the  evening.\nVICTORIA, Sept. 12.\u2014Intimation has\nbeen given to the water board of the\nprovince that an appeal may be made\nagainst the decision of that body ln\nthe matter of the West Kootenay Light\nSt Power company, whose rates were\nobjected to by the city of Grand Forks.\nA letter received from F. A. McDiarmid,\nwho represents the city of Grand\nForks, by the water board, conveyed\nthe information that he was contemplating taking an appeal to the minister of lands against the decision of\nthe board.\nIn doing bo the solicitor asked that\nthere should be Included on the finding\nof the board a' brief note which accompanied the same, but which he thought\nshould be made a part  of the record.\nThis note read as  follows:\n\"The board decided that it has no\nauthority to approve, adjust, Increase\nor decrease any charges for electrical\nenergy which ls not supplied ln accordance with the terms of a certificate of approval and licence Issued\nunder the Water act.\"\nIt is pointed out, however, that ln\nthe case of an appeal to the minister\nlf it Is found that any such appeal\nshould lie that thc minister Is at\nliberty fully to review thc whole situation.\nFAIRVIEW DEFEATS\nTHISTLES, SOCCER\nJUNIOR SOCCER  STANDING\nWon   Lost   Drawn Pts.\nOrioles     3           2           2 7\nThistles   3           3       % 1 7\nFairview      3          4          1 7\nFairview Junior soccerites lessened the\nThistles chances of copping the city\nJunior Soccer league when they took\nthat team Into camp yesterday to the\ntune of a 3 to 1 score in the last\ngame but one of the league schedule.\nThe game was Falrvlew's last, and even\nby winning lt had no chance of com-\nlng out at the head of the league.\nBut by beating the Thistles, Fairview\nput that team ln a position where lt\nmust defeat the Orioles In the final\ngame on Monday to win the championship. A draw will give the Orioles the\ntitle.\nTHISTLES   ASLEEP\nThistles seemed to be ot>lecp ln front\nof the goal yesterday. The game, however, was fast and Interesting. J,\nSutherland, a Juvenile, made any number of beautiful crosses to the goal\nmouth, but the Thistles failed, to cap\nUtilize   them.\nThe   teams  were:\nThistles\u2014Martin, goal: McLean and\nRamsay, backs: C. McLean. Condon and\nSmith, halves: Wallach. Fielding, Saare,\nWhitfield and Sutherland, forwards.\nFairview\u2014T. Harrison, goal; Skinner\nand Vyse, backs; Skinner, Bishop and\nOoldsbury. halves; Thompson, Harrison,\nRamsden. Bush and McLeod. forwards.\nReferee\u2014R. Smillie.\nPULLOVERS\nOur new range of Fall Pull-\nover Sweaters is one of the\nsnappiest we have shown in a\nlong time. Just the right\nweight for now that the evenings are a little colder.\nAll Colors, Both Fancy\nand Plain.\nf 5.00 to $6.50\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nFIFTY DOLLARS GIVEN\nFIRE PROTECTION YMIR\nYMIR,. B.C., Sept. 12.\u2014A public\nmeeting was called for Friday night to\ndiscuss fire protection and buying of\nmore equipment for the fire hall, Owing to another meeting- being held on\nthe same evening, the one to discuss\nthe affairs of the fire hall was postponed to a later date.\nThose preaent were Mr. and Mrs. A.\nB. Clark, Mrs. G. E. Edwards of Hamilton. Mont.. Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac, P.\nH. Watson and L. P. Bond. Total of\n\u202250 has been donated by the YmU*\nWomen's Institute and Ladles' guild\nfor fire fighting equipment.\nm \t\nRAIN    HALTS    GOLF\nMONTREAL, Sept. 13.\u2014There was no\nplay today at Beaconsfletd Golf club\nIn the second round of the Canadian\nwomen'i golf championship and ln the*\nconsolation flights as scheduled. Rain\nand a course puddled with pools of\nwater made lt essential that play be\npostponed, _        _\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 12.\u2014John, A.\nWeldon, manager of Hotel Georgia,\ndied suddenly in his apartment at the\nhotel last night following a heart\nattack.\nNelson News of the Day\nNOTICE TO PARENT*\nEngineer's field book, leatherbouiul\nset of tables, and two scribbler*, taken\nfrom auto Monday night. Relieved\ntalKfn by some child as prank. Bobk\ni-onialns valuable Information lo engineer. Return to Green Bros. _b\nBurden's office. Suitable reward fttr\nrecovery. No question If returned by\nparty who took articles.      (5440-2-127)\nATTENTION! Daughters of England.\nSpecial meeting Friday. 3 o'clock,\nMemorial   Hall. (6448-2-127)\nLes Crane and his Qanldlens will\nappear at 'Eagles Hall. Nelson, on\ntheir way to the coast, Thursday, September 20 (5444-tf)\nLast   dance   of   season   at   Lakeside\nPavilion, Saturday night.    Troubadours.\n(5446-3-128)\nLEARN TO EARN\nAT\nNelson Business College\nCO. UNDER, MD.\nJamieson Bid.., Spokane, Wash.\nSPECIALIST\nColonic, Rectal, Piles, Cancer and otl\u00ab|\ndiseases.   For men and Women.\nCall or Write For Literature\nAnenate of Lead Pottos |\nFOB   CUERBY   SLUGS\nINSECT POWDER (or cabbafe warn\nwith directions.\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CC\nTHE WIZARD ARCH\nSUPPORT\nHere's a real support. No heavy\nmetal. Can be built up to give\nthe required support for your\nparticular foot. You should try\nthem. \u00abljgi\nOur shipment of La Maglqtte\nCreams and Polishes have arrived.\nDrop In Today \\\nWADE'S SHOE SHOP\nWard   Street,   Next   Post   Office\nMrs. Enfield has Just received a shipment of New York Models ln New\nFall   Hats. (5440-2-t-s)\nATTENTION'    BOARD    OE    TRADE\nMembers are reminded that the first\nmonthly luncheon after thc summer\nadjournment will be held at 12 noon\ntoday lh thc Canadian Legion Hall.\nImportant Business\u2014Election of Secretary-Treasurer. (5448-1-126)\nSealed tenders are invited for the\nexclusive refreshment privileges ln tho\nmain building at thc Nelson fair for\nthree days. September 19, 20, and 21.\nEnvelopes must be marked \"Refreshment tender-' and must ' be in the\nhands of the secretary, G. Horstead\nby noon, Friday. Seoten\\ber 14. Low-.\nest or any tender not necessarily accepted. (5417-4-127) |\nDance at Eagle Hall. Saturday, the\n16th.     Brasch's Orchestra.   (5420-5-128)\nBAKENALE\nAfternoon tea. strawberrta) and\ncream wlll be served by the Presbyterian Women's association ln the Institute rooms, Thursday, of this week\nfrom 3 P_m. Rev. Ceitho-Davies, the\nwonderful Welsh baritone wlll sing. All\nmuelc lovers should not miss this opportunity. (6421-7-126)\nT\u00abDow Taxi Co. Stage leaves Williams\nTransfer every morning at 9 o'clock fbr\nTmlr. Salmo and Boundary line.\n_\u2014. '*\u25a0*!>\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOCAN   CITY,   B.C.,   Sept.   12.\u2014H.\nParker  was a business  visitor to Nelson  during the week.\nR. G. Warner was a visitor to Nelson\non Tueaday.\nJ. Orlffln, the Presbyterian missionary, ls spending the week here with\nhis congregation.\nJames Grant, and Harold Russel of\nSandon spent Sunday at their homes\nhere.    ,\nMrs. 'Hlrd and daughter Zcta, and\nMrs. Hill and son Frank, who werg\nvisiting for a few weeks near Procter,\nreturned home a few days ago for the\nopening of school.\nAlderman and Mrs. H. L. Fife left\non Monday to visit relatives in Edmonton. They intend to take advantage   of   the  hunting   season.\nMrs. T. J. Armstrong waa a visitor\nto  Nelson on Tuesday.\nMr and Mrs. J. Boisvcrt spent Tuesday In Nelson.    .\nMrs. D. McKay left for Port Moody\non Friday. Mrs. McKay was accompanied by Roddle Murray of Port\nMoody, who spent a holiday here as\nthe guest of the McKay family, and\nwas returning for thc opening of\nschool.\nmm\t\nBeatty Confident That\nRailways Can Handle\nGrain From the Fields\nCALGARY, Sept. 12 \u2014Confdence ln\nthe ability of the railway companies to\nmeet the rush of grain from harvest\nfields, was expressed by E. W. Beatty,\nK.C, president of tbe C.P.R, today.\nIn giving hts opinion on the question,\nhe did not fall to take cognisance\nof the quicker method of harvesting\nadopted In many districts. He pointed\nout that a great increase In interior\nstorage facilities would help to regulate\nthe flow between the field and the\nrailway freight oars.\nWest Kootenay Central\nFarmers' Institute\nHeml-Aimual    Meeting\u2014City    Hall,\nNUI.soy   B.C.,   TIILKHDAY.   SEPT.   '.ll,\nat  10:30 a.m.\nResolutions    for    Advisory    Board.\nAll friends are invited to be present\nK.    WALLACE,\nHe*1.,   Boswell,  B.C.\nYOUREYES\nuv\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. 0.\nOPTOMETRIST\n(.rifiin   Block Nelson,   ll.C\nFOR  TIIE  BEST  OF  TOAL  AND\nDRY  WOOD,  ALL  LENOTHS,\nNEE 118.\nMacDONALD CARTAGE\n& FUEL CO.\n603  Bake;  St.\nPhone  604\nMH1IV   OF   EYENIUHT   IN   SCHOOLS\nUnquestionably, close application in\nschools accentuates eyesight defects.\nAs the child advances from public\nschool, to high and co|lege\u2014there is\na oonWnuous increase ln eyesight defects.\nFurther conclusions of Investigation\nshow:\nMyopia (short-sighted) Is almost unknown In Infancy and very Infrequent\nbefore the beginning of school life.\nIn early school years Its percentags is\nstill low, and lt Is only ln advanced\nclasses that it attains preponderance.\nHypermetropla (far-sighted) ls the\nenormously preponderating condition\nin infancy and early childhood, and the\nfirst years of school life witness Uttle\nreduction ln Its proportion. Outside\nof the schools, lt remains by far the\nmost frequent defect throughout life.\nEmmetropla (norma} vision) In a\nmathematically strict sense, has probably no existence. Approximate emmetropla is Infrequent in all ages,\nprobably at no epoch exceeding 10\nper cent.\nLAST TIME TONIGHT!\nWILLIAM\nHAINES\nIN\nWest Pourf\nON THE STAGE\nGertrude Kirksmith\nThe Girl With the Viola\nJudd Griffith\nOriginator of Slow\nMotion   Dancing\nWheeler'i _\nCapitouanS\nCOMING TOMORROW\nH0E1ART BOSWORTH\nIN\n\"The Blood Sky\"\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_1928_09_13","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\/1.0403543","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":"1928-09-13 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":"1928-09-13 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":""}]}