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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":" - \"\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2022*-\u00bb-\nKimberley WiVj Shield\nSee Paf e 7\nBatln\nVOL. 27. NELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1928\nIW    I Coast Honors M'DonaM\nSte Par 2^ |\nNo. Ill\nHUNDREDS BUI\nUll M UST\nIn New York Village Between\n' 400 and 500 Are Swept\n'_ Into Waters\nWATER RISES FORTY\nFEET IN ELLENBURU\nTwenty Houses Caught; Passenger Train for Ontario\nIs Stalled\nMADE BRITAIN'S ARMY |\nEL-LENVILLE, N.Y., Aug. 28.\u2014Three\npersons were reported drowned and between 400 nnd 500 were rescued by\nboats when the waters of the Round-\nout creek engulfed the Napanoch Country club here late today. Two of the\ndrowned were reported to have lost\ntheir lives trying to save others at the\nclub.\nWATKB UP\nTO HOOKS\nRoi lout creek was reported to be\nrunn _ 40 feet deep and surrounding\nmany houses to the  roofs.\nTwenty houses at Napanoch. a village\nof about 825 residents, had been engulfed by the hlsng waters and their\nowners  fled  to higher  ground.\nA passenger train on tho Ontario &\nWestern railway which left Ellenvlllc\nlate ln the afternoon, was reported\n\u25a0tailed five miles from Ellensvllle.\nThe rise in the streams throughout\nthis section of the country followed a\ncloudburst which lasted nearly an hour.\nMAN IS STABBED\nDOZEN TIMES ON\nVICTORIA BOAT\nWilliam Canning in Vancouver\nHospital; Negro Is\nin Jail\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 26\u2014Stabbed\n10 or 12 times ln the chest and back\nand arm. once over the heart, WlUlam\nCanning, Vancouver, lies In St. Joseph\nhospital with a good chance of recovery unless complications set ln.\nFreeman Frederick Fletcher, negro, of\nYorkton, Sank., ls ln the city Jail\ncharged   with  attempted   murder.\nThe stabbing took place aboard the\nsteamer Princess Adelaide, which left\nhere shortly after midnight lust night,\nwith race horses and stable hands for\nVancouver. On the way over the two\nbecame Involved In a dispute over a\ncrap game* It ls alleged, with the\nresultant stabbing.\nThe Princess Adelaide immediately\nput back to Victoria, where the wounded man, who was sinking rapidly from\nloss 'of blood, was rushed to the hospital. Canning was reported out of\ndanger this evening.\nBRITISH MINERS\nFIND WORK EASILY\nGoose   Lake   Farmers   Prefer\nThem; Saskatchewan Gets\nHalf of 8000 Total\nSASKATOON. Sask., Aug. 26\u2014Four\ndollars per day ls the average wage\nbeing paid here to harvesters. The\nprovincial government service here reports British miner-harvesters are receiving this amount. It would appear\nfrom reports that the men are finding\nwork readily The superintendent of\nthe bureau states th:1.. any miner-harvester he has had to deal with have\ngone out. A number have returned\nto the city and have been sent out\nagain. Farmers on the Goose Lake\nllne are showing a preference for British workers.\nCabinet to Decide\nByelection Dates\nWhen Shelly Back\nVICTORIA. Aw. 30\u2014Ono of the\nI lint Mtl of the cabinet when It\n: i-eeta M-ln wlU be to decide elec-\nt tlon d\u00bbt\u00ab\u00bb for the membere df the\n(cabinet.\nIt Is expected that one whole cabl-\n' net cannot meet together for at least\n> a week. Hon. W. O. Shelly, mlnlrtetr\nI Of finance, will be In Seattle to at-\nftend a national Canadian and United\nL States taxation conference.\nADRIATIC   HAN    HAK.ks'II.II-\nHALIFAX.   NS..  Auf.   .8\u2014Five   hun-\n!dred and seventeen passengers, most of\n[Whom are harvesters bound west, were\nlan-sd here Saturday by the White\nStar liner Adriatic, which arrived\nUnm Liverpool and Cherbourg.      ......\nNew Minister of Mines Writes\nto all Engineers! of Depart-\n. ment \"No Wildcatting\"\nWILL USE ALL POWEKS\nOF LAW FOR INVESTORS\npHVaaMHHaspajB_HHV #r~\n^\u2014^_f-Wi- '*^\u2014*m_ S    KL-lZfi<-Z->*--l\nTHE  LATE   LORD  HALDANE\nVlscount of Cloan, noted English\nstatesman, who died recently at the\nage of 72. Hc was minister of war\nbefore the great war.\nIf Flow of Capital to Be Kept\nUp, Activities of Faker\nMust Be Barred\nTHINKS BRITISH\nMINERS HAVE A\nCHANCE TO WIN\nRamsay Macdonald Tells Province Labor Delegation May\nMake (.ood rfere\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 28.\u2014British miner-harvesters in Canada would have a\nfighting chance to succeed, and the\nold land was thankful for the opportunity presented to them, said Rt. Hon,\nJ. Ramsay Macdonald, former premier\nof Great Britain and leader of the\nLabor party, when he met a delegation\nof British Columbia Labor men here\ntoday.\nMr. Macdonald discussed- unemployment and labor problems in general\nwith the delegation which Arthur Taylor, member of the British house of\ncommons, introduced to him.\nASKS ABOUT\nDRFBAT IIKRK\nThe ex-premler questioned .his Interviewers regarding thc recent British\nColumbia elections, and asked the\ncause of the set-back suffered by the\nLabor party. A closer contact, Mr.\nMacdonald said, should be established\nbetween the Labor party in Canada and\nthe motherland.\nThe Labor leader discussed the British unemployment situation, and ln\nthis connection observed that thc\nsending of 10.000 unemployed miners to\nCanada's harvest fields had alleviated\nthe situation ln Great Britain somewhat. He. aaked whether or not ll\nwould be possible for the British miners\nto find employment when the harvest was finished.\nSamuel Guthrie, ex-M.L.A.. declared\nthat the British miners could not possibly bc absorbed Into the coal industry ln Canada, as already the men in\nthe mines were working shorter shifts\nthan was the case io'years ago.\nENCOURAGED WIFE\nTO END HER LIFE?\nOttawa Man Ls Held on Unusual\nCharge;  Daughter  In\nHospital\nOTTAWA, Aug. 26.\u2014Provincial pollce\nhere were notified today by Inspector\nMcCarthy that he had taken into\ncustody Kenneth Regan. 24, Ottawa,\nand would turn h Im over to the\nprovincial pollce at Prescott. Provincial Constable MacLeod at Prescott\nhas a warrant charging Regan with\ncounselling and abetting his wife. Ada.\nto commit suicide. Mrs. Regan was\nfound In a field near the Prescott\nhighway on August 17 suffering from\nthe effects of parts green poisoning.\nThe girl is still In hospital here.\nPollce have been seeking Regan ever\nelnce,\nIreland Most Keen\nFor Outlawing War\nCosgrave Declares\nLONDON. Aug. 36\u2014Ireland must be\nIncluded among the nations that are\nmost keen on the treaty for the outlawry of war, said Premier Cosgrave of\nthe Irish Free State as he left London\nSaturday en route for Paris to sign\nthe Kellogg pact.\n\"The signing wlll be the event of\nthis decade,\" he skid, \"and wtll have\nan example from the great nations of\nthe earth of remarkable good will and\nthe desire among them to promote peace\namong men.\"\nDUNCAN, B.C.. Aug. 36.\u2014Ernest\nWlckstrom. chokerman, was Instantly\nkilled at Camp 10. V. L. & M. company. Lake Cowichan, when the carriage\nworking on a skyline suddenly dropped,\ncatching him on the back and neck.\nVICTORIA. Aug. 26\u2014War was declared on the fraudalent mining promoter Saturday by Hon. W. A. McKenzle,  minister of, mines.\nIn a letter to every mining engineer\nof hts department, Mr. McKenzie issued the. emphatic instruction that\nevery possible step must be taken\nto save British Columbia investors from\nfake mining schemes. His entire support and that of thc government wlll\nbe thrown behind engineers of the department in curbing wildcat operations\nwhich fatten on the present wave of\nInvestment in British Columbia mines.\nMr. McKenzie declared.\nWILL KNFORCE ,\nTO LIMIT\n\"The mining laws of this province,\nas designed to prevent fraudalent mining operations, will be enforced to the\nlimit,\" Mr. McKenzie declared. \"At no\ntime have such measures been so necessary as they are now. on account of\nthe present activity in the mining\nindustry. ^^~\n\"Interest in British Columbia la\ngreater now than at any time In our\nhistory,\" \\ Mr. McKenzie said in his\nlatter to hla officials. \"I am of the\nopinion that if this great activity Is\nto continue, if the Industry is to be\nkept oa a sound and healthy basis, if\na. free flow of capital from outside as\nwell as from resident investors- Is to\nbe maintained, lt is necessary that\nnothing be left undone ln the endeavor to restrict the activities, of all\nbut those who are engaged ln legitimate mining development,\"\nCasualties 100 When\nCheefoo Authorities\nDisarm Some Troops\nCHKFOO, China, Aug. 26.\u2014\nFighting broke out here today\nwhen the authorities attempted\nto disarm, 200 soldiers whose loyalty was under suspicion. There\nwere more than 100 casualties,\nmostly among the dissident troops\nThe remainder of the band escaped to the countryside, to swell\nthe number of disbanded soldiers\nwho have adopted banditry as a\nmeans of livelihood.\nTEN THOUSAND\nSEE MacDONALD\nUNVEIL STATUE\nVancouver Gives ex-Premier an\nOvation; Burns' Effigy to\nHe Bond to Scotland\nPOOLEY RETIRES\nFROM LAW FIRM\nAcceptance of Attorney-Oner\nalship I.naks lip Firm Over\n:>0 Years Old\nVICTORIA. B.C.. Aug. 26\u2014 The ac\nceptance of Hon. R. H. Pooley of the\nposition of attorney general has been\nfollowed by the announcement that he\nIs retiring from all connection with\nhis former legal firm, of which he is\nthc senior member. Mr. Pooley states\nthat as long as he hold a the office\nto which he has been railed he will\nnot  be  identified  with  any  legal  firm.\n\"I'llIs dccclsion on thc part of the\nhow attorney-general means the breaking up of a firm which has existed\nfor over 50 years in tl.e city under\nvarious forms, but always with the\nname Pooley in it. On September\n1 he will retire from the firm of\nPooley 6t Davis. The practice will\nthen be assumed by H. J.- Davis, the\nremaining  partner in  the  firm.\nStork Makes 5040\nTrips in Province\nin Past Six Months\nVICTORIA, Mf. S\u00ab.\u2014Over MM\nImMe* wer* born In ItiMWi Columbia tor tlie firat bull of tilt*\nyear, according to tltisres rcle-awt\niron, ihp firths, marriage* am!\nrlertt lis    office   of   lin*    dcimrtmeiit\nOf     lllMllh\nThe exact future* for the *lx\nin,nilb* are MM birth* IN* deaths\nand .031 marriage*.\nExplosion, Fire, M\nWreck Big Store\nINDIANAU0U8. Ind.. Aug 26-One\nman was,probably fatally hurt and two\nfiremen severely injured ln an explosion and fire which wrecked a downtown business building tonight. The\nwrecked building was occupied by a\nclothing store and a sporting goods\nstore. The cause of the blast Ih unknown. Stock of the sporting goods\nstore valued at 1126,000 was al nost\na  total   loss.\nNT. l-EaNTS  ULIKVID\nDHOWNKO   IN   STORM\nBURNS LAKE. B.C.. Aug. 26.\u2014Craig\nC. Oodenburg, 10, and John H. Hessel,\n18. university students, of Woodmen,\nLong Island, are believed to have been\nfrom here during a storm on August\ndrowned ln Whitesall lake, 60 mUes\nfrom here, during a storm on August\n3. After searching for them a week,\na party headed by Provincial Constable\nQ  A. Johnson lute returned here.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 26\u2014\"I trust this\nstatue will form a bond that wlll unite\nevery Scottish man and woman to tbe\nland of the heather and help them,\nevery time* they pass It, to be worthy\nchildren of those who handed over such\nan inheritance,\" said Rt. Hon. Ramsay\nMacdonald, former premier of Oreat\nBritain, ln unveiling the statue to\nRobert Burns at thc entrance to Stanley Park Saturday afternoon.\nThe ceremonies attendant upon the\nunveiling were attened by Prince\nGeorge. Premier S. P. Tolmie. ex-Pfe-\nmlcr J. D. Maclean, Vlce-Admlral Sir\nCyril Puller and by some 10,000 people.\nMr. Macdonald received an ovation\nupon his introduction that lasted several minutes.\nArizona Capital Suffers Losses\nof  Quarter  of  Million\nin Nine Minutes\nFll-M-IY Mill\nMANV INJURED BUT\nNO LIVES ARE LOST\nPersons Struck by Flying Debris;    Auditorium    Ileinjr\nBuilt Is Levelled\nBEATTY PARTY\nSTART WEST ON\nANNUAL TOUR\nTravel   West   by   (row;   Will\n.Spend   Four   Days  Seeing\nPeace River Country\nMONTREAL, Que., Aug. 26.\u2014 In\ncompany with a party of Canadian\npacific directors and a number of\nleading business men. C. W Beatty,\nchairman and president of the Canadian Pacific, left Montreal Saturday\nmorning for an extended tour of the\ncompany's western lines. Tlie party\nwlll consist of Mr Beatty and Sir\nHerbert Holt, F. W. MoUon. W. E.\nTllley. K. C. Col. Henry Cockshutt*.\nW. A. Black. James Richardson Ross,\nH. McMaster and Sir Charles Oordon.\npresident Bank of Montreal, Mr. Beaud-\nrey Lemon, general manager of the\nBanque Canadlenne Natlonale; Senator Smeaton White and Dr. W. W.\nChapman. A. D. MacTler, vice-president of the Canadian Pacific will accompany the party us far as Fort\nWilliam, and D. C. Coleman, vice-president Western lines wlll accompany\nthem   throughout  the  west.\nThe party wlll travel via Toronto,\ntheir visit there being made specially\nfor the purpose of allowing its members to see something of the Toronto exhibition and also to inspect\nthe Royal York' hotel now ln the\nprocess  of  building.\nLeaving Toronto early Sunday morning the directors and guests proceeded\nto North Bay and will go over thc\nmain line to Winnipeg, stopping on\nthe way to see some of the mining\ncenters of northern Ontario.\nmn nv soi thkbn ROUTE\nWinnipeg wtll be reached on Tuesday, August 26 and on Thursday they\nwlll proceed west traveling through the\nsouthern part of the prairie to Lethbridge and on over the Kettle Valley\nrailway to Vancouver, arriving there\nSeptember 4. Both on the way west\nand on the return Journey they\nwill pass over parts of the line not\nusuallV visited on the annual tour\nof inspection, and every opportunity\nwill be taken of seeing the country\nand gaining a first hand acquaintance\nof   its  economic  conditions.\nAfter visiting Victoria the party wtll\nleave Vancouver for the east September 0 and will pay a visit Of Inspection to Lake Louise and Banff, arriving at Calgary September 18. After\na visit to Edmonton four days will be\nspent in the Peace river country, traveling over the E. D. & B. C. railway as\nfar as Peace River Landing, arriving\nback ln Edmonton on September 31\nand   at   Montreal   September   23.\na\u2014i  __p ..,._.\nStewart Miner Dies\nWhen Slide of Sand\nBuries Him in Trench\nSTEWART, B.C., Aug! 26 \u2014While\nworking in an open cut on the Lake-\nview property. Peter O. Anderson was\nburled in a slide or earth and fine\nsand and suffocated, though his head\nwas uncovered in five minute* and his\nbody released in less than a, quarter\nof an hour.\nPHOENIX. Ariz.. Aug. 20.\u2014M- nine\nminutes a storm of cyclonic proportions\ntonight cut a swath of destruction\nnearly a mile in width through Phoenix and vicinity and caused damage\nestimated at a quarter of a million\ndollars.\nNo lives were lost In the storm, a\ncheck by the city and county officers]\nshowed late tonight, although many'\ninjured, one seriously, was reported.\nfrom isolated places where persons were\nstruck by flying debris.\nThe greater fury of the storm, which;\ncombined wind. rain, hail and lightning, was felt near the Phoenix high\nschool where an auditorium under construction was levelled, scores of telephone poles blown down and a garage\ndemolished,\nBEATTY EXPECTS\nLOVAT TO SPUR\nUP IMMIGRATION\n.Railway Has Plan for Put ting\non Small Holdings First to\nGain   Experience\nTORONTO. Ont.. Auy. 26\u2014\"A|...ou:li\ntho flow of Immigrants to Canada is\nnot at present ns large a., was hoped.\nlt Is safe to say that the various conferences which Lord Lovatt. undersecretary of state for the dominions, is\nholding with thc authorities ln thts\ncountry should result In more concrete\nproposals for a movemcut next year,\"\nstated E. W. Beatty. chairman und\npresident of the C.P.R.. on his arrival Saturdny afternoon at North Tu-\nronto station on ills MHUMl tour of inspection of (lie company'.. lines Md\nactivitlcji   throughout   the   DowJuJofl.\nMr. Beatty stated that the visit l_\nToronto was beinij made especially for\nthe purpose of allowing thc members\nof his party to sec as much as possible\nof the Toronto exhibition, and also ta\nInspect the Royal York hotel now in\nprocess of building. Hc was satisfied,\nhc said, that thc hotel would open In\nJune of next year.\nt O.MIMNVN  PLAN\nDiscussing lB_m_gratlon. the president\nof the C.P.K. said the railway was\nfathering a plan ut Its own with thc\nhope to put In it effect, in oonneoUOfl\nwith the British government. In pari,\nhe said, it Consisted of settling a certain\nnumber of families on small holdings,\nand moving them to holdings of their\nown when they had received thc necessary experiences.\nThe special train carrying the visitors left this morning at 7:18 from\nNorth Toronto. On arrival at Sudbury they will be taken for a motor\ntour of the mining territory. Tor;,\nWilliam will be reached at 7:28 am\nTuesday, and here the party will b*\nmet by James A. Richard*. C.P.R.\ndirector, and D. C. Coleman, vlce-\npresldent of western lines.\nPlanes and Vessels Vainly Scour\nPuget Sound in Search;\nOil on Water\nMIGHT BE DOWN IN\nOLYMPIC   PENINSULA\n<l.  II.  COLLINSON\nWill-known educationist of England\nand Canada, who has returned to Toronto after an eight-year sojourn In\nthe old country. Mr. Collinson says\nunemployment In England Is caused by\nthe numbers of women now working\nwho used to belong to the leisure class.\nBritish    Parliamentarian    and\nWife Among Passengers;\nPilots Experienced\nChamberlain Sails\nThis Weeh on Tour;\nWill Cross Canada\nLONDON. Aug 26.\u2014Sir Austen\nChamberlain is planning to leave England next Thursday on a voyage for the\nbenefit of his health which will carry\nhim as far as Vancouver. He will sail\naboard the steamer Orlcnta. from Liverpool, accompanied by Lady Chamberlain and their two children.\nTheir Itinerary takes In Bermuda,\nHavana and Cristobal, where thc party\nwlll disembark for a short holiday,\ncontinuing their Journey through the\nPanama cana I to Sun Francisco for\na holiday in California, later to Vancouver, and then overland to Montreal.\n.VKI.MI -IllsHOP   MM\nLONDON. Aug. 26 \u2014Rt. Rev. Daniel\nDavles, bishop of Bangor since 1928.\ndied Friday at the age of 68. He lived\nln Wales all his Ufe.\nDIES FROM TAKING\n\u25a0 POISON   AS   \\|K.MINI-\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 26.\u2014Miss Margaret\nBowser, aged 32, daughter of Mr. and\ntin,. Prancl* Bowser. Point Orey. died\ntn the Vancouver Oeneral hospital Saturday as the result of taking poison In\nmistake for medicine.\nMISSING RECTOR\nIN HARVEST CREW\nSees  no  Reason   Why  Anyone\nNeed  Be Excited;  Friends\nKnew His  Plans\nCALGARY. AUK. 26.\u2014Rev. Hi l>l I III\nHutchinson, whose disappearance from\nDoddlngton. Essex, aroused so much\ninterest, u working for the C. P. R.\non an Irrigation project at Brooks.\nAlta. Hc is In company with 32\nBritish' harvest hands, and in somewhat amazed that any fuss should\nhave been made over his movements.\nWhen his school term ended, he said,\nhe decided to resign Use supplementary\nduties of the churoh and come |o\nCanada tm \u25a0 vaofttlon. His purpose\nwas to study conditions here as u\ntourist and to inquire Into higher\neducational methods. For further enlightenment he threw In hts lot with\na party of harvesters to whom his\nIdentity has been no secret This\nparty has kept together and ls employed in the same work. His immediate friends, said the clergyman-\nteacher, kpew of his Intentions, and\nthere bas been not him: secret, mysterious or purposeless about hit move-\nmen's\nMOTHER SUPERIOR\nDENIES ACCUSATION\nAsserts Neither She Nor Catholic Church Guilty of Death\nof Obregon\nMEXICO (ITY. Auk 2'i MoUier Superior Ccncepcion Accbeda Dc La Lata,\nunder custody since assassination of\nGeneral Obregon in July, denied categorically a.i thc charges made against\nher. in an interview with correspondents In the Jail at Mexico City, where\nshe  Is being held\nMother Conccpclon also declared that\nneither ihe Catholic church nor the\nclergy was responsible After denying\nall thc charges HalB-rt her, she added:\n\"However. It Is my Ideal of life to be\na martyr. To be a martyr one must be\npunished tor u crime one has not\ncommitted- I wish to be a martyr,\ntherefore I welcome punishment and\nsuffering.\"\nCanadian tacitic\nLiners Bringing\nMany Harvesters\nQUEBEC. Que., Aug. 26.-Third-class\naccommodation on Canadian Pacific\nsteamships this week-end is responsible fur discharging approximately 3100\npeisons at Quebec, The Empress of\nPrance, Montcalm. Melita and Marloch\neach mined an average of 950 per\nvessel. These newcomers it re rjioatly\nBritish, the majority of them being\nlimi vt'Mt'is especial y recruited to aid\nIn the garnering of western Canada's\ncrop. A total of 1860 of these young\nharvesters are being rushed by special\ntrains over the lines of the Canadian\nPacific to the plains of western Canada.\nwhere harvesting Is In fu.1 swing.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 26.\u2014Six\npersons are believed to have\nlost their lives in the British\nColumbia Airways Victoria-\nSeattle monoplane which left\nhere at 10 o'clock Saturday\nmorning and has not been heard\nfrom since. The plane, a land\nmachine, is believed to have\nstruck water while flying low\nin extremely foggy weather,\nand to have gone under with\nall on board. Patches of oil\nseen in Puget Sound by searching planes, and two men's hats,\nseen floating in the sound by\nthe Edmonds-Victoria felty, are\nfeared to be evidence of thc\ntragedy.\nSoldiers at Kort Worden, near\nPort Townsend. Wash., stale\nthat at about 11 o'clock they\nheard what sounded like a crash\nin the water. Several other\npersons near Point Wilson, in\nthe same vicinity, also reported\nhearing   a   crash.    Heavy   fog\nand smoke made It impossible to determine the cause of the sound. Point\nWilson Is just serosa thc strait ol\n.Juan Dc Fuca  from Victoria.\nFour passengers were on Ix.ard and\ntwo pilots. The passengers were ,Alex-\nncler MucCalluni Scott. MA., barrister\n\u25a0Ud former member of the British parliament and wife; Thomas E. Lske. far\neastern manager of thc Union Oil company ot California and believed to be\nthe son of Simon Lake, a submarine\nInventor, and Dr. D. B. Holden. Victoria.\nB.C.. physician. The pilots were Harold Walker, veteran Seattle airmail\npilot, and L. Carlson. Victoria pilot.\nAlexander MaeCallum Scott was born\nin 1874. Hc was Liberal M.P. Tor\nBrtdgfttoa division of Glasgow Irom tOSO\nta 11*22. parliamentary secretary lo\nthf minister of munitions 1017-rj, and\n(i Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill, secre-\ntiiiy of state for war In 191\u00b0. He WM\ncoalition whip for ScDtland in 1922 In\n1024. he Joined the Labor party Mr\nScott K the author ot several books\nMr. and Mrs. Scott registered \u25a0 here\nfrom London. England Mrs. Scott, the\nonly woman aboard, before her marriage in 1910 waa Mis* Jessie Hulchln-\non. daughter of Dr John Hutchinson,\nformer rector of  Glasgow  high   school.\nMr.  and   Mrs.  Scott  were  In  0h_HsH\ni a pleasure trip. They have a son\nIn Montreal and Intended to Join him\nthere.\nThe plane was a 10-passenger tri-\nmotored aii-metal machine. She arrived here Saturday morning from\nVancouver on thc regular triangle schedule recently Inaugurated, and took\noff at 10 o'clock for Seattle. Twenty\nminutes later, she passed over Dun-\ngeness lighthouse on the Washington\ncoast, flying low and with her engines\napparently faltering,\" iiccordii.K 10 N\nCadwelt, assistant keeper He said h\u00ab-\nhcard the machine for some minutes\nand   then  all  was silent\nM. D. Spencer, lighthouse keeper at\nPoint Wilson. 15 miles southeast of\nDungeness, reported that Saturday was\nthe first day on which he had not\nheard the plane pass overhead.\nIf the plane came down near Port\nWilson, as available evidence would indicate, she would strike Into a terrific\ntide rip.\nAviators expressed the opinion that\nthe all-metal machine would not float\nmore than two or three minutes on the\nwater. They said low riving on Saturday was very dangerous wtth the fog\nmerging Into the water so that lt was\ndifficult to' distinguish one from the\nother.\nA feverish search by sir snd water\nwent on yesterday into the night, and\ntoday. Continuing hcavv fog and\nsmoke made the search hagardous and\nInterfered with observation-\nOne of the searchers was Alex. Holden. a pilot at the Tacoma airport,\nand a son of Dr. Holden. believed\non the plane. Dr. Holden was en route\n(Continued   on   Ptft  1)\n_____________________\ni__________M_____M\n \t\nT Page Tw<f\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEtfS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1928\nWHERE\nOUTLE\nO ID \u00abOOD\nMIOCTEB, B.C.\nFishing,  Boating,  Bathing,   OoU,\nTennis  rourta, Tmrlat Par*.\nFUhlng   -ukto   ;\u25a0!*_\u2022..     Onem\nEton la Connection.\nW. A. WABD. r-ajrtetat.\nOn   Kootenar   Lake,  10  Mlka  Tret,\nNalsoa.   n \u00bb DM. M7 rat |1\u00bb\na Week,\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nSUNDAY\nH.  H.  B,\nClereland  1     5     \u00bb\nWaahlngton      8     8     1\nBatteriea\u2014MUJus. Bayna. Underhill\nand I* Sewell:  Braxton and Ruel.\nHo others played.\nMP    KIDDIK    DROWNS\nNEW WE8TMINSTEB, B.C.. Aug. 36.\n\u2014Matjao Pujino, 3-year-old son ot a\nJapanese farmer of Annacla Island, near\nhere, waa drowned In the Praser river\nlast evening.    The body waa recovered\n\\ GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor      ~%\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior        I\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms 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\nTbe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City.\nKEEP UP Ij\nDF\"\u2014\nUM.ITY\nNo Fear for Race, Empire, of\nFolk If Forefathers' Qualities Are Perpetuated\nFLOWERY BEDS OF\nEASE NOT METHOD\nCanada   Must   Play   at   Great\nPart ex-Premier Tells Vancouver Canadian Club\nHUME HOTEU-W. C. Mesler. J, A.\nMitchell. Midway; Mrs. W. Hufty. Miss\nHufty. Brilliant; B. M. Burgess, Mr.\nand Mn. C. Robbins, Misses L. and\nF. Robbins, P. Coxnupe. F J. Kelly.\nB. Peebles, Spokane: Mrs. W. Shieller,\nMrs. J. Ironsides. Silverton; Mrs. Lockhart and son, W. F. Smith, C. Henderson, F. Seeba. San Francisco: A. Garland. A. B. Lelth, T. rtrres. J. Ent-\nwlstle. M. a Brodie, M. Bonlsestle\nand family, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrt.\nF. Bird. 8. B.  Bamfabell,  Rossiand;   O.\nItrnos, A. Thompson, Trail; N. Luzer.\nW. J. Kocher. Edmonton: Mr. and Mrs.\nK. GUley, Mrs. J. Turnbull. S. H.\nExcell, H. J. Turnbull, New Westminster; Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Solfield.\nSalinas; C. Webster. Kaslo: Mrs. C.\nRlnlott, Grand Forks; W. Coles, Post\nFalls; Judge and Mrs. Nlsbett, Mirror\nLake; Mrs. R. M. Young and daughter.\nCanmore; D. Bruce, A. CUllaban, L.\nWhite, Bonners Ferry; Mrs. R. Chad-\nwlck, Parttull: Miss J. McTavtsh, Tees-\nwater;  J. V. Davidson. Toronto.\nTHE\nSAVOY\nNelson'* Newest and Finest Hotel\nWhere the Guest Is King\nSteam Heat.    Hot and Cold Running Water in All Roonu,\nMAN? BOOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS OB SBOWKBS\nJ. A. KERR, PROP., NELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY  HOTEL\u2014Mr   and  Mrs. J. M.\nParrlsh,    Mr.   and   Mrs.    J.    R.   Vertc-\nboles. Mr and Mrs. E. M, Elliott, L.\nMurphy, Mr. and Mra. G. Novits and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. H. Joy. Spokane; Mrs. G. Chase. Cottonwood.\nIdaho: A. Olsen, Sandon; R. Leslie,\nRobson: W. J. Simpson. Miss M. Kelly.\nSilverton; A. B. Stanley. A. Armstrong.\nB. L. Sangelle, Trail; Mr. and Mrs. M.\nHeap,  J.   M.   Robertson,  Mr.   and  Mrs.\nC. Moulton. Mias E. Eden, N. Malllcson.\nM. Macaulay. Vancouver; Mr. and\nMrs. V. Brian. MacLeod: V. Tommel.\nNelson; A. Thomas, Lethbrldge; E.\nBeth. South Slocan; F. ABlln. Burn's\nLake; Hon. L. Sutherland. Pentlcton:\nMr. and Mrs. R. Oalbrlath. Longvlew;\nR. Serlght, Calgary; E. Carmlchael.\nRevelstoke; R. G. Bailey. Lewiston;\nMrs. A. W. Mason. W. Cooper and son\nWynndel;   M.  Orth.  Allenby.\nQueen's Hotel\nIBS  CENTER OF CONVENIENCI\n\u25a0ot ud oold \u2014-tar ln s-ery room.\nBteun  Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\u2014M Morrison, Trail;\nA. McDonnel. Procter, J. Blince, Creston.\nOCQDENTAL HOTEL\nThe Home of Plenty\nA. o. TOWNER, Proprietor.\nFUtr Boom, of Solid Comfort,\n\u25a0aadquuten far Lot (en and Miner.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA Modem  Brick  Building.\n\u202216 Vernon Street, Nelaon, BC.\nHot and Cold Water and -elephant\nIn AU Boon,  Steam Heated.\nThroughout.\n*, BLOMBERG, Prop. European Plan.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 26\u2014\"I hare no\nfear for our race, for our Empire\nfor our kith and kin, provided we\nmaintain tne quantise of the fathers\nwho begat Ue,\" Bt. Hon. J. Ramsay\nMacdonald, former premier of Oreat\nBritain, aaid here Saturday In an address to the Canadian club.\n\"Quality rather than Quantity,'' was\nMr. Macdonald's text, and he applied\nthis to the British Empire, particularly\nemphasizing lt ln regard to Immigration.\n\"It   la  not  Quantity   that   wlll   rule\nthe   world,\"   he   said,   \"but   quality\u2014\ncharacted. the capacity of human beings to face the difficulties ot life,\n\"One quality we must strive for\n\u2014the openness  of  mind,  keenness\nof Insight, alacrity of Intelligence.\nand the willingness to tackle every\nnew   problem  which  faces  us.  for\nsolution.\nBE EXPLORElts\n\"The British race was never carried\nto the skies on flowery beds of ease.\nWe must encourage that capacity for\nlabor. I have no sympathy for the\nman   or   woman  who   has  the  spoon-\nCuticura\nSoap\nand Talcum\nPure and Fragrant\nSoothing\nand fnmfortInff\nB\u00abld l-TBtywh\u00bbra.     8<_\u00bbp\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nROYAL CAFE\nCLA8SIC  RE8TAUKANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevail\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT\nSpecial Dinners, 11:30 to 3:30 38c\nSupper, 5:30 to 8 36c\nWe Specialize ln Chop Suey and Noodles\nPhone  182\nTHE  STANDARD CAFE\n820 Baker Btreet, Nelson, B.C.\nOPEN DAV AND NIOHT\n11:30 to 3:80. Special Lunch 88c\n8:80 to 8:00 pjn. Supper . ,....,. 86c\nPHONB   IM\nTHE L D. CAFE\nPlnett Equipped Restaurant ln tbe Olty\nOPEN DAT AND NIOHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ie\u00ab   Cream,   Soda   Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice clean furnished\nrooms, bot and cold water.\nWe  Cater to  Private Parties.\nPASSENGER PLANE\nNOT HEARD OF\nSINCE SATURDAY\n(Continued   **om    Pace   On*.)\nto  join Mrs.  Holden  and   to visit  bis\nson.     Alex.   Holden   searched   for   the\nPlane   and  bis   lather   until  darkness\nand tog forced him down.\nUpon receiving won! that the monoplane was missing, Brnest Eve, president\nOf the British Columbia Airways, and\nPilot H. Wilson, took off from here ln\nthe plane \"Whirlwind\" In Bearch of the\ncraft. Mr. Bre reported that the log\nwas terrible. \"We had to fly 12,000\nfeet to get back.\"\nPilot Wilson reBumeq the search with\nanother plane and Pilot T. H. Creasy\nwent out later. \"If I had stayed out\nanother 16 minutes,\" the latter said.\n\"I would never have got back. The fog\nmerged with the water so that flying\nwas dangerous. It waa hard to tell how\nnear the water I was,\" he said.\nOIL si'OTs ALONE\nPOIND\nMeantime two naval planes from Sand\nPoint, Seattle, and planes from other\nWashington airports Joined in the\nsearch. The net research of-the hazard-\nus flying was the finding of oil spots\nnear the place where the plane Is feared\nto have been loet.\nLieutenant-Commander J. D, Price, in\na naval seaplane, sighted a big oil spot\nnear Port Townsend. which he circled\nfor 16 minutes, but could find no trace\nof wreckage. He suggested that the\nplane might have flown Into thc water.\n\"The fog was so heavy that lt blended\nright ln with the water,\" he explained.\nfed notion of life. I admire those\nmen and women who are willing to\nexplore, passing from new valley to\nnew valley.\n'\u2022States are not perfect,\" the speaker\nwent on. \"but the state to which we\nbelong ia founded on Justice. It ls\nfounded not only on law. but upon\nthe moral spirit founded upon lawfulness.\n\"We are a state that believes in\nliberty. Yet there are times when we\nquestion the \"lumbering paraphernalia\nof democracy'. States are made permanent by their ability to educate the\npeople to sound Judgment; not of one\nman, but of the mass.\n\"Old England  has her  troubles,\"  Mr.\nMacdonald said, \"but make no mistake\nabout It old England is coming out of\nthem with flying colors.\nBRITAIN\nREVIVING   YOITH\n\"We have shouldered a great debt.\nLet me tell you this: that debt will\nbe paid to the last farthing. It matters not if we consider lt fair or unfair. Our country's name has been\nplaced to that document and when\nlt  does so,  becomes a  pledge.\n\"Tbe old country is reviving Its\nyouth, and the next generation will\nbe placed In possession of a splendid\nheritage.\" Mr. Macdonald said.\nWhile on the topic of Immigration.\nMr.  Macdonald  said:\n\"Canada has not only to be filled.\nIt has not only to be developed. Canada Is not an economic expression.\nCanada is a country that has to play\nIts part ln the world. Who Is to play\nthat part? Canada must find Its place\nin the arena of these tremendous\nworld   problems.\"\nThe speaker apologized for stepping\non what might be called somebody\nelse's ground, but he felt that no man\ncould travel through Canada and not\nhave such thoughts.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Busttl and party, Mrs. M. Ivens.\nMrs. A. McArthur. Kellogg: Oeorge\nPredrood, John Under. J. 8. Shlpe,\nMr. and Mrs. P. J. Kelly. Spokane: P.\nNoberg. Procter; w. Beaton, E, Long,\nValllcan; Mrs. M. Bruce. Nelson; T,\nM. Ivens, Pruitvale: M. Robertson, H.\nRobson, C. T. Kelso. N. Mutch, T.\nLyson. Trail; A. R. Bell, C. 8. Thorton,\nSouth Sfocan; H. Crimp, A. Thompson. Vancouver; R. Carson, Lardeau;\nMr. and Mrs. O. Spence. S. Spence.\nGinol: P. Bremner. Cranbrook; R.\nBeyto. Banff: Mrs. J. Rutledge and son.\nMoose Jaw; 8. Ronlnet. E. Sire, Orand\nPorks.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nIH Block* last of Port Ottfe*\nHeated. Bot and Cold Wat*\nBooma br day or week.\nAlao PurnlalMd Bullae.\nP. a BUSH, Prop.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\n>    VHTOB  m   MANAGEMENT   OP\nWILLIAM  JONES\nSOOD, CLEAN BOOMS.    SEASONABLE\nBATES.\nrnONI  II. Sit   VERNON  ST.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prat.\nSteam  Heated  Booma br tha  Dai,\nWeak or  Month.\nBrarr conatdemtlon ehown to\nkueata.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sta. Neleoa\nMADDEN HOTEL \u2014 M. O'Donnell.\nReeve. Oroup: ll. McNeil, R. Oraham.\nJ. Turnley. South Slocan; Mr. and\nMrs. Hoder.  Moose Jaw.\nRead the Advertisements\nTHEY SAVE YOVR TIME\nTRAIL HOTELS\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C\nA. P. LBVMQUI, Prep.\nCOMPLETELY RENOVATED AND REFURNISHED\nHot and Cold Running Water European Piatt\nSteam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary Sample Rooma in\nHeadquarteri\nConnection\n\"Plying low as a pilot Is compelled to\ndo lb such weatber, tt would  be only\ntoo .easy for blm to strike tbe water.\"\nMH.HT BE DOWN\nON COAST\nHope wu beld out last nlgbt that tbe\nplane might have come down ln an\nIsolated place on the Washington coast,\nbut wltb no word received today this\nhope was fading. It -was also suggested the plane might have crashed\nInto a hill or gone Into a tall spin\nand been unable to get out of it.\nThe flight from Victoria to Seattle\nnormally takes about one hour.\nII.YIM.  UNDER POO?\nVICTORIA, Aug. \u25a0\u00ab.\u2014Aviators here\nexpress the opinion that the Victoria-*\nSeattle monoplane, missing since Saturday morning. If lost, probably met\ndisaster by flying Into the water. They\nbelieve that Pilot Harold Walker was attempting to fly under the fog, and as\nthe altimeter would not register under\n200, he was' unaware of the closeness\nof the water.\nIt Is believed that If the plane was\nflying 80 miles an hour and struck\nwater, It would Instantly turn over\nhead-foremost and sink like lead.\nPlfot Walker was an ex-United States\narmy aviator. He was known as a\n\"boatman\" or seaplane pilot. He had\nflown 3000 hours and had experience\non 38 different types of planes. He\nwas considered one of the best pilots\nIn the northwest.\nSEATTLE PILOTS CAN'T\nTAKE AIR\nSEATTLE, Aug. 26.\u2014Kept down by\nlow visibility, searching aviators today\ngenerally agreed that tbe same dftise\nfog and smoke yesterday morning sent\nsix persons ln a giant plane of tbe\nBritish Columbia Airways to their death\nIn the Strait of Juan De Puca while\nflying from Victoria to Seattle.\nWhile half a dozen pilots waited today for visibility to improve, coastguard boats continued their patrol of\nthe beach without finding a trace of\nthe missing plane. Seven planes braved\ntbe black fog and smoke yesterday and\nlast nlgbt In an unavailing hunt.\nBRIEF FLKJHTS\nSHOW NOTHING\nToday more than a half dozen planes\nwere kept on the ground and water at\nPort Townsend, near Point Wilson. Seat\ntie and Victoria. Brief flights were\nmade over the stretch ln which the\nplane was thought to have fallen, but\nsmoke and fog made these efforts use^\nless.\nThe most interested searcher was\nAlex. Holden of Victoria, B.C., forest\npatrol pilot, whose father was making\nhis first flight at the request of the\nyoung man's mother.\nR. E Parker, aviation representative\nof the Union Oil company and former\nRoyal Air Force pilot, joined the queBt\ntoday. He chartered an army plane\nfrom Sand Point field, Seattle, ln the\nhope of finding a trace of the craft on\nwhich the far eastern manager of his\ncompany was n passenger.\nWIFE FLIES FROM\nFRISCO\nMrs. Lake arrived here _ today By air\nplane from San Francisco to be on tbe\nscene If any news Ih obtained of her\nhusband. She had returned from the\norient one boat ahead of him, and\nwas waiting ln the California city to\nrejoin him when the plane disappeared.\nLeaders of the search said they would\ncontinue as long as the slightest possibility existed that thc passengers and\nHOTEL MEAKIN\nROOMS BT DAT OB WEEK\n11 nnd up.   Nice clean, well-lighted\nroomi.\nBoi   69,   Phone   2551,,    Trail,   B.C.\nBteem Rentes\nThroughout\nBot end CoM\nW\u00abter\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nS. I_ AND A. (IBOUTAGE, Prop*,\nu tog        Phon* um       Trail, B.C.\nMoney\nTalks\nThese days of keen competition have served to\npoint out more than ever\nthe old adage that \"money\ntalks.\" We believe, when\nit comes to\nPOPULAR PRICED\nMEN'S AND BOYS'\nWEAR\nyour money talks the loudest here.\nThis is the secret of our\nrepeat business\u2014VALUE,\nSOUND, HONEST - TO -\nGOODNESS VALUE.\nYessir! Your money\ntalks here.\nHtHT\nWEAR\n00YS\nWEAR\nJUST OURK TME HWH RENT 0BIWCT\ncrew were alive. But with mora than\nhours elapsed since ber take-off on\nan hour's flight, only the bare *hojw\nremained that the plane had crashed\nIn some Inaccessible spot and Its oe-\ncupants were so badly Injured that\nthey could scarcely walk. _      ,,\nCOUNTRY\nPOPlXATED\nIf the plane landed or fell in the\nhills near her course, lt was tonsidered\nImprobable that lt -would be far from\nsome habitation from whldn \u00bbord would\nhave been carried by this time. The\ncountry Is dotted with (aim houses,\nand at this season many tourists and\nvacationists visit the Olympic peninsula\nand San Juan islands, which border the\nplane's course.     '\nWOMEN   SEE\nPLANE    IN    FOOTHILLS\nPORT TOWN8WD, Wash.. Aug 36.\u2014.\nThe theory that the missing Victoria-\nSeattle passenger plane containing six\npersons may be in the foothills south\nof here gained strength tonight when\nthree women reported seeing the plane\nheading up the valley, seven miles\nsouth of here yesterday morning. \u25a0\nThe women were at Port Hadlock,\nnear the valley when, they said, the\nplane passed overhead. It passed so\nclose, they declared, that they could\nread the words which were written on\nthe missing plane. The motors seemed\nto be  missing,  they said.\nThe women, credited with being reliable persons, were Mesdames Florence\nArey, Agnes Hendricks and Lyle Eldridge.\nBOY*   HEE   lf\nPORT TOWNSEND, Wash., Aug. SS.\u2014\nThe missing Victoria-Seattle passenger\nplane may have passed Port Townsend\nby an Inland short cut, had fuel pipe\ntrouble south of here, and headed In\ndesperation for the clearings and fields\nthat dot the forest of the Chlmacum\nvalley, crashing there In a forced landing.\nThis was the possibility tonight based\non the stories of two boys at Port\nHadlock, eight miles south of here,\nwho said they saw a plane at 11 a.m.\nSaturday morning passing them heading for Oak Harbor. Lieut.-Commander\nL. L. Bennett of the coastguard ls\nhurrying to Port Hadlock tonight to\ncheck up the story, and searching parties\nare ready to strike inland.\nMAY  BE   ON\nWEST  COAST\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug- 36.\u2014That the\nall-metal 10-passenger airplane missing\nsince Saturday morning when It left\nVictoria for Seattle on its regular schedule, may have made for the west\ncoast of Vancouver Island and landed\nat Long Beach, a hard sandy stretch\nof beach north of Toflno, was today a\nvague hope of anxious relatives and\nfriends of thoBe aboard the plane. One\nof the crew of fishermen aboard a\nfishing launch arriving here today from\nthe west coast, stated that a plane\nwas said to have landed at the west\ncoast beach.\nMrs. Harold Walker, wife of the pilot\nof the missing craft, stated that her\nhusband told her lf he ever lost his\nbearings he would make for the west\ncoast of the Island aiid that she was\nto notify search parties to that effect.\nWireless stations along the west coast,\nhowever, were without advices as to thc\npresence of any plane Id their locality but upon being Informed by the\nCanadian Press of tbe rumor. Immediately began investigating.\nNOT  AT  TOFINO\nVICTORIA, Aug. 36,\u2014The report that\nthe missing Victoria-Seattle airplane may\nhave landed at Long Beach north of\nToflno, Vancouver Island, is groundless,\naccording to a statement that the\nbeach had been searched Its entire\nlength by parties ln a motor car today\nwho had reported that the plane was\nnot there.\nEX-PREMIEK MSTRESKHl)\nVANCOUVER, B.C. Aug. 26.\u2014Deep\nconcern was expressed by Rt. Hon. Ramsay Macdonald, former Labor Prime mln\nister of Oreat Britain, when he learned\ntoday'of the probable fate of Alexander\nMaeCallum Scott, who, with Mrs. Scott,\nwas one of the passengers aboard the\nmissing Victoria-Seattle airplane.\nMr. Scott was a close personal friend\nof   the   British   statesman   and   was\nwell-known  English   barrister.    He  was\nslated as the Labor candidate for Peter\nhead in the next general election.\nLICENSED   FRIOAY\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 36.\u2014Robert\nLouis Carson, assistant pilot of the\nmissing Victoria-Seattle airplane, was\na Victoria boy, residing on Quadra\nstreet. He was 30 years of age and\nhad been awarded hia pilot's license\nafter completing a test by flying to\nVancouver   and   back   on  Prlday.\nFAMOUS  PHYSICIAN\nVICTORIA, B.C., Aug. 36.\u2014Dr. D.\nB. Holden of this city, one of the\npassengers .aboard the missing Victoria-\nSeattle airplane, had practiced his\nprofession here for SB years. ' He\ngraduated from McOill university,\nMontreal, and obtained his M. D.. c M,\nfrom Edinburgh university, Scotland.\nHe was a son of the Montreal shoe\nmanufacturer. Pour step-children survive  him.\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL\nLONDON, Ehg\u201e Aug. 36\u2014Association\nfootball got away Saturday. Scheduled\nmatches played ln the British Isles\nresulted   as  follows:\nnGUSH    LEAGUE\nFIRST   D1VI8ION\nBirmingham 4,  Manchester City  1.\nBurnley  3,  Sunderland   1.\nLeeds United  4,  Aston Villa  1.\n\u2022Portsmouth   1,   Huddersfield   0.\nWestham   4,   Sheffield  United   0.\nBolton   2.   Everton   3.\nDerby County 5, Blackburn 1.\nLiverpool   3,   Bury   0.\nNewcastle 3, Cardiff 1.\nSheffield 3, Arsenal 2.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nBarnsley   l,  Bradford 3.\nChelsea,   4,   Swansea   0.\nMlllwaU   0,   Notts   County   1.\nPortvalle 1, Wolverhampton 4.\nReading 3, Mlddlesboro 3.\nWest Bromwleh 3, Clapton 1.\nBristol   City   3,   Orlmsby   2.\nHull City 2, Southampton 2.\nNotts,   Forest   1,   Stoke  8.\nPreston 3, Blackpool  1.\nTottenham  4,  Oldham   1.\nTHIRD DIVISION-\nNORTHERN   SECTION\nAccrlngton 2. -Carlyle United 8.\nDarlington 2,  South  Shields 3.\nHartlepool  2.  Nelson  2.\nLincoln  City   l,  Wlgan 3.\nSouth Port 2, Ashington 1.\nWrexham   4,  Chesterfield  3.\nBradford City  11, Rotherham  1.\nHalifax  2,  Crewe   Athletic  3.\nNew  Brighton  1, Barrow 3.     tm\nRochdale   1.   Doncaster  3.        w\nStockport  3,  Tranmere   1.\nTHIRD   DIVISION\u2014\nSOITHERN    SECTION\nTorquay United 3, Queens Park *<\nBrentford 4, Exeter City 2.\nCrystal   Palace   3,  Watford   0.\nLuton  1,  Brighton  and Hove 0.\nBournemouth 2, South End 2.\nCoventry   3,   Norwich   0.\nGllllngham   2,   Fulham  2.\nNewport   3.   Walsall   1.\nPlymouth  4, Merthyr 0.\nSwindon  3,  Bristol  Rovers  1.\nNorthampton 4, Charlton 1.\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nFIRST   DIVISION\nAlrdries 3. Kilmarnock 1.\nClyde   1,   Hearts   1.\nFalkirk   0.   Partlck   0.\nHibernians 4,  Aberdeen  1.\nRaith  Rovers 0. Third Lanark 0.\nAyre United 0, Coltie 3.\nDundee   2,   St.   Mlrren   3.\nHamilton 2. St. Johnstone I.\nQueens   Park   3,   Motherwell  3.\nRangers 3, Cowdenbeath 1,\nSECOND   DIVISION\nAlloa  0,  Albion  Hovers  0.\nBathgate 4, East Fife  1.\nBo'ness   2,   East   Sterling  0,\nForfar 1, Dumbarton 1.\nMorton 3, Arboath 0.\nArthurlee 4, Queen of South 0.\nClydebank 4, Dundee  1.\nDunfermline   3,   Armadale  3.\nKings   Park   1.   Leith   3.\nSt.  Bernards 2,  Stenhousemulr 2.\nkxtljui\nReady.\nTHE  GUMPS-THE  BUSINESS   MANAGER\nvnell-EE to that \u2014\nTHEY  .MC  COLUM8US   COUL_N'Y   SAIL\nACROSS THE  OCEAN   ANO LlNDBOR&H OOULbN\nFLY   ACROSS\u2014   TOU  KNOW  WHAT   HAPPENEB\n*T\\ _UVT  THE   ->-(_  STORY OF THE   POOR\nINVENTOR\u2014    HE'S   BROKE \u2014\n\/VNb   I   HAVE   A CHANCE\nTO  6.ET A HALF   INTEREST\nIN THIS   THlN-r   IF   I\nPAT   FOR THE\nWORKINt-   MObEL \u2014\nV,;!\non\\\nbo tou realize what perpetual motion\nMeans?   \\t means that steam engines\n6.a. en-rlnes and electric dynamos  are\ndoomed -   perpetual motion will li6ht and\nHEAT  OUR   MOrv\\ES\u2014   COOK   OUR   FOOD   ANb\nMAKE   OUR   ICE \u2014   PERPETUAL   MOTION  WILL DO\n| EVERY KIND  OF WORK IN THE WORLD FROM DlGC-ING.\nv Subways to peelin-, potatoes- oust start\n~^_y- \"T^-*-, \"f^   MACHINE AND\n5 \/J-ra\\ 1T RUNS forever\nTHINK OF IT !\nWhen^tw\nChildren Ciy\nfor It\nBaby has little upsets at times, All\nyour care cannot prevent them. But you\nrun be prepared. Then you oan do what\nany experienced nurse would do\u2014what\nmost physicians would tell you to do\u2014\ngive a few drops of plain Castorla. No\nsooner done than Baby is soothed; minis Just a matter of moments. Yd ou\nhave eased your ohild without ine rf a\nsingle doubtful drug; Castorla Jt vegetable. So It's safe to use as often a*\nan Infant has any little pain you cannot pat away. And its always ready\nfor thc cruder pangs of colic, or constipation, or diarrhea; effective, -top, fo:\nolder children. Twentyttve \u2022 ml-H. .\nbottlfa  were hoiiiti.f   hist  >ear.\nCASTORIA\n\t\n\t\n\u2014\u2014_________________\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1928\nPags\" Three 1\nAfter Absence of\nTwenty-Two Years\nA sudden desire to see once again,\n\u2022nd to show hts wife, the city vhich\nhe left 92 years ago, brought Robert\nO. Bailey, proprietor of a printing\n\u25a0hop in Lewiston, Idaho, to Nelson\nlast night, accompanied by his wife.\nThey were Just \"traveling through\"\nand this morning, having seen a great\nchange in the city, Mr. Bailey and his\nwife  will return to their home.\nThey motored from Lewiston to\nKootenay Landing where they boarded\nthe boat for Nelson. The trip down\nthe main lake ftnd West Arm wts the\nmost pleasant and most beautiful\nthey had ever taken, Mr. Bailey stated.\nMCHTs   WHERE   HI SUES   WERE\n\"As we came near Nelson and we\ncould see the hundreds of lights ln\nthe hill district, X thought back to\nthose days In 1005 when that part\nof the city was nothing but bush,\"\nMr. Bailey said.\nMr. Bailey paid a visit to The Dally\nNews office after being shown around\nhe told of the year he spent ln Nelson\nfrom the fall of 1906 to the summer\nof   1006.\nHe came to Nelson when he heard\nthat n printer was needed by w. B.\nJones,  who operated  a  printing  shop\n__.-i..-;_L \u25a0\nToday's Specials\nNew stock of Dlshee, Furniture.\nChain, Clothes, and other things\ntoo numerous to mention\nCome and get. a bargain at tbe\nBUSY   BEE\nSrd   Avenue. East  Trail\nat   tb*  comer   of   Baker   and   Ward\nstreets, across from the offloe at that\ntime, of Tn* Dally Newi.\nFOUR-PAGR   PAPER\nHe described th* newspaper as it\nwaa then\u2014an afternoon edition of\nfrom four to six pages. There was\none linotype machine and a flat-bed\npress. The paper* earn* out of the\npress unfolded and were folded by four\nboya working at a long table at the\nend of the press. Mr. Bailey waa\nsurprised at th* growth of the paper\nsince then.\n\"Baker Btreet is certainly different\nfrom what lt was tile last time I\nsaw It,\" Mr. Bailey remarked. \"At\nthat time lt wu a dirt road aad\nWard creek crossed it at Ward street.\nThere was a bridge across the creek.\"\n\"When I was here before;\" Mr. Bailey\nsaid, \"there was a big frultland boom-\nReal estate agents were selling lake\nshore property for fruit orchards. It\nwas sure a busy  time.\" he eaid,\n\"Nelson wasn't a very big place then,\nnor were there an awful lot of people\nbut there sure was lots of money\naround,\"  he  said.\nFOREST LECTURE IS\nGIV0. IN ROSSLAND\nDestruction   Timber   ttossland\nArea Cause of Lack Water,\nSays Plewman\nMontreal Banquets\nthe Olympic Victors;\nMakes Presentations\nNELS0N-SAND0N\nEXPRESS\nPhone 77, Nelsoi}. or phone 66,\nNew Denver. Leave Slocan City\n7 am.; leave Nelson 1 p.m. Usual\nreasonable tales We pride ourselves on giving nood servioe.\nCLEVER-COULTER\nSTAGE\nVI.KNON -KIH.I U\u00abMI||\nMeets .all  Arrow  Lake Boats.\nLeaves Edgewood\u2014Tuesdays, Thursdays\nand   Saturdays   at   0   a.m.     Arrives  Vernon   11:00.\nLeaves  Vernon\u2014Mondays,   Wednesdays,\nPt and Fridays at  10:00 a.m.     Ar\nrives Edgewood 3:30 p.m.\nExpress snd  small  freight   handled\nMONTREAL. Aug. 26.\u2014The city of\nMontreal acted as host tonight at a\nbanquet tendered the members of the\nCanadian Olympic team, who arrived\nfrom Europe on Saturday night. In.\nthe absence of Mayor Houde, Alderman Rubensteln welcomed the visitors\non behalf of the ctty. Presentations\nwere made to Joe Wright, Ethel Catherwood, formerly of Saskatoon, now of\nTumult). Mias \u25a0Fannie Rosenfeld, Toronto, aud other members of the team.\nMisa Caihetwood was presented with a\nwnich.\nZAGREB. Croatia. Aug. 20.\u2014Earth\nchecks lasting 30 seconds were felt\nhere last night at 11 o'clock. No\ndamqgf was reported.\nT.H. Waters &CoMLti\nBuilderi & Contractor!\nPtinlM  ISO r.O. Bo. Ml\nNELION. B.C. ,\nPrlrra Snhmlttril nn Any Kind of\nCONSTRUCTION WORK\nLIME        BRICK        CEMENT\nI\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour 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 servioe under one roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\n209  TO  .19   KIM KSlllK.\n.M  TO  -IS   SPRAOUB\nSPOKANE, U. S. A.\nROSSLAND. B.C.. Aug. 26-E.ghty-\nseven per oent of the forest fires were\ncaused by carelessness, stated E, V. Ablett, lecturing in the Knights of Pythias\nhall at Ross-ant- Friday evening, under tbe auspices of the Canadian association. The timber Industry was.\none of the bas.c incustrles of thc\nDominion generally and of British Columbia In particular, but unless thc\nfire hazard could be lessened, the\nindustry faced danger of extinction.\nTo the destruction of timber along\nthe upper reaches of the Mississippi and\nMissouri rivers and their tributaries\ncould be laid much of the blame for\nthe havoc wrought in recent years by\nthe Mississippi floods, the speaker asserted. Wooded areas held back water,\nabsorbing the rainfall and allowing\ntt to escape gradually.\nMagistrate R. E. Plewman acted a.\nchairman. He stated that the question\nof preservation of the forests was a very\nvital one In Rossiand. In the early\ndays when the hlUs around were covered\nwith m heavy growth of timber, the\nwater In Rock creek alone was sufficient\nfor a population of about 8Q00 people.\nLater, as the timber was cut. It became\nnecessary \u00a3o build a reservoir and last\nyear another larger one had to be\nconstructed. That meant that for a\nnumber of years, quite a few dollar;, per\ncapita had to be raised for the sinking fund in order to meet the reservoir\nbonds when they became due. Prom\nthe economic standpoint alone, the\nquestion of forest conservation was one\nwhich affected the entire population.\nand education along the lines taken\nby the Forestry assoclatioi. was most\ndesirable, said Mr. PleWniun.\nMoving pictures showing lumbering\nIn all Its details, and means taken to\ndiscover and stamp out forest fires,\na travelogue showing many beautiful\nspots in British Columbia, and \\_ comic\nreel which delighted the kiddies, com'\npleted the program. A hearty vote ol\nthanks was tendered the local Knight.'\nof Pythias for the use of tlie hall.\nFERNIElABORDAY\nPROGRAM COMPLETE\nSoccer Tournament, Ball Game.\nField and Aquatic Sports,\nHorse Races\nFERNIE. B.C.. Aug. 26\u2014 With the\nexception of a few details all arrangements are complete for Fernie's\nbig Labor Day celebration Monday. At\n10 o'clock ln the morning a program\nof sports designed to occupy everybody's attention will Ret under way\nand continue until 5:30  p.m.\nThe first event of the program will\nbe the first round of the football\ntournament for the Liphardt cup. The\nsecond round wlll be played at 12\no'clock, and the final round wlll be\nthe last event on the program, netting\nunder  way  at  4:30  o'clock.\nAquatic sports, horse races, running\nraces, relay races, tug of war. and n\nbaseball game between Fernle and\nWhitefish. Mont., wlll provide entertainment for aU.\n-    \".\u25a0-\u25a0'\u25a0 ijulmwii       \u25a0\nTrail News of the Day\nThis column, is conducted hy\nMiss L. li. AnthoojoT Tadanac.\nAll news of a social nature. Including receptions, entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., occurring in Trail and Tadanac wilt\nappear   ln   this   column. Just\n'phone Miss Anthony at her residence. She will also handle any\nadvertisement*     appearing \u25a0 under\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 28.\u2014Miss Dorothy\nMcKay has returned after spending\nsix   weeks  at  Vancouver.\nW. Manson motored to Nelson to\nspend the week-end with his parents.\na  s   \u2022\nD. Thain motored to Nelson on Saturday to spend tlie week-end with his\nparents.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. R. O- S. Anthony returned home\nSaturday night after spending the summer at Robson.\nK, A. Margeson motored out to Robson on Sunday to spend the day with\nMrs. Margeson and the children, who\nare camping.\nBob Hall motored to Nelson Saturday\n.to spend the week-end with his parents.\nMrs. P, Mclntyre, Miss J. McKinnon\nand Miss A. McKinnon motored to\nNelson Friday.\nW. R. Baxendale spent Friday in\nNelson.\n\u2022 *    a\nMlas Dorothy Hall, who has been\nspending the last two weeks as the\nguest of Miss Maxlne Chapman ol\nSouth Slocan. haa returned to her\nhome in Trail,\nF. J. Olover returned Friday niaht\nafter a few days' husiness trip to Spokane.\n\u2022 #   *\nF. W. Wyatt left for Nelson Saturday afternoon to spend the week-end\nwltb Mrs. Wyatt and children, who are\nholidaying m that city.\nD. Dlmock has returned to the city\nafter a short holiday.\nDr.   Campbell  of  Kl.in.ath   Fulls   wan\nweek-end visitor to thc city.   He visited   with   hts   fa,', her.   A.   Campbell,   of\nthis city.\nDance at Trail. Friday. September 7.\nAurplces Trail Elks Lodge. Elks\" hall.\nEverett Brasch's orchestra, with Kayo\nUnbler. Bob Hester, .Alston Laurie\nnnd Aulay Mclmm. Hot rythm and\nringing  novelties (5213-121)\n(MRU   OF   THANKS\nMrs, A. Downie and Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge McKenzie wish to express thetr\nheartfelt thanks for the beautiful floral\ntributes nnd for the sympathy shown\nthem during their recent bereavement.\nThey especially wish to thank the\nKnights of Pythias, the Coledonias 8o-\nctetv and Trail Branch Canadian\nLegion of  the B.E.S.L. (8216-1-111)\nFAIRVIEW AND THE\nWOLVES TO BATTLE\nWinning Team Will Take Championship of City Soccer\nSeries\nWolves soccer squad will make a\nlast try tonight to prevent sharing\nwtth the McLearles the cost of a supper\nfor the league, when it clashes wtth ihe\nFairview team In the final gam? of\nthe city senior soccer series at the\nRecreation grounds at 0 o'clock. By\nwinning fhe Wolves will win the\nchampionship and will be treated, along\nwith Fairview to a supper. If the\nWolves lose, they wlll be tied with the\nMacs in the cellar and will have\nto share the expense of the supper.\nIf Fairview can duplicate it 7-0 win\nover the Wolves of a week ago, It will\nbe city champion. If Fairview loses,\nthe team will hold second place. A tie\nwould still give thc Fairview boys the\nchampionship, and would also prevent\nthe Wolves from helping the Macs pay\nfor the supper.\nThe Wolves team was not known last\nnight.\nFairview team will be: Hlngs. goal;\nWard and Roynon backs: Laurltz. Ring-\nrose and Ionian, halves; Chapman,\nEccles. Nutter, Andrews and Bendy,\nforwards.\nM. N. Oallpen will probably be referee.\nFOREST FIRE STATE\nMUCH BETTER NOW\nla'tm Clock Store,-descriptive Dumber.\nJ. Orth.\nBarber of Seville, overture,  O.  Roa-\n.' alnl.\nSons of Australia, mareh, A. Llthgow.\nTamnhauser, overture. R. Wagner.\nHall, Hall. The Gang's All Here, maroh\nM. L. Lake.\nChu   Chin   Chow,   selection,   Oscar\nAsche.\nRobespierre, overturt. L. Lltolfr.\nI HI.  MIMICiANm\nThose taking part were:\nViolin\u2014T, Wilson, H. McLaren, Eric\nAndrews, Thomas Reid aiul Kit Wilson,\nTrail;-L. Rose. R,1 Bade. s. Elliott, G\nGrizzelle, C. Catalano, Miss Charlotte\nNotman and Mtss Helen Gould, Nelson,\nViolas\u2014Alex Kerr and C. Leslie. Trail;\nMrs.  Ross Fleming,  Nelson.\nCello\u2014G. Truscott, Nelaon.\nCello and organ-^-S. Fawcett. Nelson.\nBass\u2014L.   Farnum.  Trail.\nTuba\u2014C. Williamson, Trail.\nFlute\u2014A.   Treglllus.   Nelson.\nClarionet\u2014P. Johnson, Trail; H. Bar-\nwood, Nelson.\nCornet\u2014B. Forteath, Trail; John Brown\nNelson.\nTrombone\u2014D. Wood, Trail; F. V.Webber, Nelson.\nHorn\u2014P. Mills. Nelson.\nDrums\u2014A.   Smith,   Trail.\nPiano\u2014C Openshaw\", Trail; Mrs. 8.\nTruscott,   Nelson.\nRANGERS AMD THE\nMAPLE LEAFS MIX\nTo Battle in Trail Soccer Series\ntoday; Only Three Teams\nCompeting\nTRAIL.    BX...    Aug.    20 - The    Maple\nLeafs are due to clash with the Rancera\nln tomorrow afternoon's city teague sec- '\ncer   future   at   5^*0   o'clock,   with   W.\nLlghtbody   refereeing.\nFollowing the withdrawal of the\nHearts' Football club from the serttt\nlast week, the Rangers were reorganized and strengthened and will he\nIn a position to field a nood strong\nteam for tomorrow's  battle.\nIn its executive meetiiiB, the Foot-\nbell club decided to cary on the cup-\ntie schedule as drawn in regards to\nthe number of fixtures and dates But\nhaving but three teams now entered,\nMaple Leafs. Uniteds and Rangers, theae\nthree teams wilf play the series. It\nwas decided thst the team playing the\nMaple Leafs on Monday would play the\nthird team in the league on the Wednesday of the same week.\nGo to the head of\nthe class!\nAnswer these:\nWhat is the best all-round flour?\nWho makes the clearest-toned radio?\nWhich is the smartest of the new car models\nHow can you make your roof both beautiful and\nfire-proof?\nWhere would you go for a stylish afternoon\nfrock at a moderate price?\nWhy do up-to-date women have so much more\ntime to do the things,.they like?\nAll correct.   Go to the head of the class.\nIn the school of civilized living there are definite\nrewards for .those who study carefully. They are\nbetter clothed, better housed, better fed. Their\nmoney goes farther. They have more beauty in\ntheir lives, and more leisure for enjoying beauty.\nAnd the text-books they use are the most interesting ones in the world\u2014the advertising columns.\nWhen  yoa  rend  the advertisements\nyou are taking a practical coarse\nin domestic economy\nROSSLAND NOTES\nROSSLAND. B.C.. Aug. 20.\u2014Mrs. J\nArmstrong has returned to her home tn\nWatrous, Sask.. after visiting in this\ncity with her son. Noble Armstrong.\nHugh Nelson has been visiting with\nIlls  parents  In Kaslo  this   week.\nEarl Peddicoard has returned from\nspending his holidays with his parents\nat   Olenbank,  near  KtfcvttP-\n\u2022 *   *\nMisses Florence and Inn ith Woods,\nwho have beeu the guests of their\nsister here, have returned to their home\nln Wynndel.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Peggy Pynn of the nursing staff\nof   the   Sisters'   hospital   returned   from\na holiday at the coast.\n\u2022 *    *\nWilliam  Harrison  returned   Thursday\nnight    from    spending    a    month    In\nEverett. Wash.\nIll\nW. Fowler of Lethbridge. Alta., arrived\nIn the city last evening. He is the\nguest of his sister. Mrs. o. Hani-\nson.\n\u2022 *   t\nMr. and Mrs. James Carlisle and\nfamily have returned from a holiday\nin Spokane.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. J. D. McDonald spent the afternoon in Trail.\nWANT   PERMANENT    HOMES\nREGINA. Sask., Aug. 20,\u2014Of the\ntotal bf 8000 British miners coming\nto the three prairie provinces, Saskatchewan by the middle of the week will\nhave received approximately 4000, many\nof whom are desirous of remaining in\nthe province.\nOfficials of the employment service\nbranch of the provincial department of\nlabor state they have received positions ns they desire to locate their\nhomes on Saskatchewan farms, No information has as yet been tabulated\nby departmental officials as to whether\nor not any miners have signed up with\nfarmers for periods during harvest.\nFirst Instalment\nOn Pooled Wheat\nLess Than Dollar\nCALGARY. Aug. 80.\u2014A special' dispatch to the Albertain today conveys\nthe Information that n reduction in\nthe Initial payment of the western\nwheat pools has been derided upon.\nOriginally lt wae the intention to pay\ntl per bUFhcl. No. 1 northern basis.\nFort William, on deliveries cf the new\ncrop as a first payment. At a meeting held In Winnipeg last week between thc various pool representatives\nand the financial powers it was decided In view of thc market situation\nthat the reduction should be made\nThc report was called to the attention\nof H. W. Wood, president of the Alberta\npool, who agreed that a decision to re\ndure the initial payment hud been\nmade, and that 1k Would apply to the\nAlberta pool deliveries on the basis of\nHo. 1 northern at Vancouver. \"Under\nthe existing conditions,\" said Mr. Wood,\n\"we thought lt wise to lower the\ninitial payment,\nLong Nights With Heavy Dewn\nand   Higher   Humidity\nOffset Dryness\nVICTORIA, Aug. 20,\u2014Forest fire conditions throughout British Columbia\nfor the time of year may be considered\nfairly satisfactory, according to the\nweekly report prepared for the minister\nof lands. Tlie long nights with heavy\ndews and relatively high humidity offset the lack of ruin to a considerable\ndegree. The continued fine wealher,\nhowever, has again increased the hazard\nover the province generally.\nThe fire hazard Is reported to be increasing in the southern Interior, and\nIs also reported as hazardous ln Prince\nRupert and  Vancouver districts.\nThe total of fires to date this year\nis 1087 compared wtth 1133 at this time\nlast year.\nEnglish Cricket\nResults Saturday\nLONDON. Aug. 20.\u2014Closing scores ln\nEngllBh cricket matches Saturday were.\nSurrey. 352: Middlesex, 39 runs for\ntwo wickets.\nEssex vs Leicestershire. Essex. 324 for\n8  wickets  (O'Connor   1231\nYorkshire vs Buasei; Yorkshire, 429\nfor   four   wickets   i Sutcliffe  2281.\nNotts. 122; Derbyshire. 64 for 5\nwickets.\nWorcester,    205;      Warwickshire.    151\nfor  one  wicket.\nNorthants, 101: Hampshire, 133 for\nsix   wickets.\nGloucestershire vs Somerset; Gloucester,   224   for   7   wickets,\nLancashire vs Wales; Lancashire, 200\n(Hallows  114).\nWest IndieB. 282; Kent. 112 for eight\nwickets.\nMILESTONE   on   EHM\nFROM    IN.11RV   BY    AI TO\nREGINA. Aug. 26.\u2014OdeUa, Wetzel,\naged 11, daughter of Sir. and Mrs.\nAndrew Wetzel, farming 12 V_ miles\nfrom Milestone, died late yesterday at a\nReglna hospital from the effect of Injuries received when she was struck\nWednesday afternoon by an automobile\non the highway near her home.\nBADKISSINGEN, Germany, Aug, 26 \u2014\nRear Admiral Alfred Meyer-Waldeck,\nwho defended Klao-Chau during the\nWorld war, died here today at the\nage of 04. He was appointed governor\nof Germany's colony on the Shuntung\npeninsula of China ln 1911. After an\nultimatum of the Japanese that he\nsurrender, he succeeded in holding\nKlao-Chau for more than two months\nln the early part of the great war.\nRosthern Has Forty\nThousand Fire Loss\nROSTHERN. Sask. Aug. 26.\u2014Sweeping from a livery born to tlie National hotel, fire tonight caused a\nproperty loss estimated at $40,000.\nThe hotel and barn were destroyed,\nwhtle nearby buildings in the business\nsection were endangered. Guests at the\nhotel had ample time to escape ;nui\nnone were Injured.\nTRAIL AND NELSON\nORCHESTRAS JOIN\nFORCES AT ROBSON\nTrail Veterans and Nelson Symphony  Orchestras   Delight\nat Joint Concert\nTrail Veteran orchestra and the Nelson Symphony orchestra entertained\na large audience yesterdoy at Robson\nwhen a Joint concert program was given In WIckham's hall. Besides practically the whole population of Robson.\nvisitors motored out from Nelson and\nTrail lor the day\nThe first number was conducted by-\nRoss Fleming of Nelson, who took alternate selections with E. W. Hall of\nTrail for the remainder of the program.\nA cooperative spirit hetween the two\norchestras featured the concert, ana\nthe hope was expressed that the concert would be but the forerunner of\nmany more during the coming winter.\nThe program  was  as follows:\nMen of Spat'.a. march, J, M. Zamec-\nnlk,\nHawaiian number, selection, M. L.\nLake.\nFlnlandla,  overture,  Jean   Sibelius.\nCOAL and WOOD\nSTORAGE\nPiano and Furniture Maving a Specialty\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nDRIVE OUT\nTO\nBALFOURBEACH\nON BEAUTIFUL KOOTENAY LAKE\nBring the family out to spend the\nweek-end.\nLots of fishing, bathing and boating on the calm surface of the lake.\nAttractive meals in bright, clean,\nairy dining room.\nTWELVE ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED COTTAGES\nTO RENT RY DAY, WEEK OR MONTH\nJESSE SANDERS, LESSEE\nII.11.1 Ol K. B.C.\n.4 Score nf Miles From Xchoii\nSackcloth and\nYou would no more think of trying to protect yourself bodily from cold and weather by donning sackcloth\nand ashes than you would think of living under the blue\nsky throughout the year. r\nYet, unless you carry adequate insurance on your\nhealth, life and home and also automobile insurance, you\nare giving your loved ones as much protection in cases of\nemergency as your body would receive if dressed in sackcloth and ashes during a stormy, cold day.\nThink it over. See for yourself if you have really\nadequate insurance, or call any of these firms for their\nadvice.\u2014You'll profit thereby.\nFor Fire Insurance\nAutomobile\u2014Life\u2014Accident and Sickness\u2014Plate\nGlass and All Other Forms oi Insurance\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nR. W. DAWSON\nG. A. HUNTER\nC. F. McHARDY\nII. E. DILL\nP. E. POULIN     fc\nFor Life Insurance\nC. W. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nC.  D.  BLACKWOOD, The Great West Life Assurance Co.\nR. W. DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.\nR. E. CRERAR. North American Life Assurance Co.\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nR.   C.   NAIRN.  Griffin   Block;   Manufacturers'  Lift\nAssurance Co.\nP. E. POULIN, North American Life Assurance Co.\n'-fogtaffif-foain- _- a. _i,^m'__-.-\u00a3--WsV---WB_.\n___________\n____________\n  w\nPajs Font\nTHB IIBISON D-OCT NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1923\nBS\n|fy   DAILY   NEWS\n\u25a0MM nwr mornlnf except Sun-\nH'' V Th* Hem PuNlehlivt eom-\ntetrt. limited, nelson. B. c.\nVuelneee letter should nn ne Veaaa.\nd checks an. pn-ar ?-*--* _,..\u2022\u2022\nparable to The New. Publishing com-\niu\u2014, limited, and ln no rate to Indl-\nndoal membera of the staff.\nI Arttartlslng rata cants and ABO.\nWill rata of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may ba seen st the office\nIf Bf edTerflelna ayencr recognized br\nthe, Oanadlan Press a.\u00aboclatlcn.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSr piatl (countrr), per month I   .60\nNr year  _ 8.0.\nBt mall (dtr), per reat. isoo\n.70\n7.50\n9\nill\n I perTatr\t\nOKfalde  Canada,  per month..\nPer  year\nThe\nLighter Side\nOdtrered.  per  week\nNr  year\nPayable ta Advance\n\u25a0JRSL\nAndlt  Burean  ef  ClrrahUlon\n.MONDAY,   AUGUST   37,   1928\nCanada's Huge Tourist\nIndustry\nIt is pleasing to note that\nPrtmier Tolmie is \"sold\" on\nthe necessity for extensive advertising of British Columbia.\nReturns from tourists alone will\nmake advertising of British\nColumbia tremendously profitable.\nForeign tourists leave in Can-\nad* in the course of a year\nmore money than is brought\nintp the country by the export\noftany single commodity, with\nthf exception of wheat and\nnewsprint. That is the surprising statement found in the\nreport of the department of the\ninterior. It is based upon information gathered by officials\nat boundary points, sea ports,\nnational parks, and other points\nwhere pertinent facts are to be\nsecured.\nStill more surprising is the\nestimate, based upon the same\ninformation, as to the net gain\nto Canada from the interchange\nof tourists with other countries. \"The significant conclusion is reached that favorable\nbalance of the traffic, after deducting the expenditures of Canadians in other countries, has\nincreased rapidly year by year\nfrom 1922 to 1925, and is estimated to have reached the\nStupendous total of $100,420,-\n000 for the calendar year of\n1926.\"\nThe  interchange of  tourist\ntraffic is one kind in international commerce in which the\nadvantage lies with the coun\nJtvy having the smaller population.   For  one  Canadian   who\n\u25a0goes abroad for a holiday, several travelers from the United\nIstates or from Europe spend a\n\u25a0time in Canada, on business or\n(pleasure  bent.      In  the  older\nontinent, for one Swiss who\nisits the Riviera in the winter,\nhundred or a thousand for-\njgners flock into the Alps for\nhe summer.\nCanada has as yet done little\nrealize on the opportunity to\nake itself the Switzerland of\nhis continent.     Enormous as\nhe figures cited show the gain\no the country to now be from\nJie entertainment of tourists,\nhat gain has been secured with\ni minimum of expense and ef-\nort.   Every added tourist who\nan be induced to holiday in\nlanada represents a clear gain\nthe country of the amount\nhat he spends here.\nThe   tourist   takes   nothing\nway but a memory.   He leaves\nhe country no poorer in retirees.   He leaves it richer,\not  only  by  the amount  he\npends, but also by the favor-\nble publicity it receives if his\ntoy has been a pleasant one.\nn\u00bbe  stoppage  of  the  tourist\nraffle would be severely felt\na good many Canadian corn-\nunities.      That  loss  is  the\nleisure   of   what  these   and\nher communities are losing by\ne failure to  make  a more\nmlted  effort  to  attract  two\nutists for the one who now\nme8.\nAUNT HET\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\n% uunu a.\nNEW DISHES THIS WEEK\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBreakfast\nMelon\nCereal\nScrambled Eggs Toast\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nVegetable Hash\nRaisin Bread\nDressed Lettuce\nJam\nIced Tea\n\"Ella's oldest girl ls he kind\nthat's goln' to be Insulted by\nmen makln' advances ever' time\nshe gets a chance.\"\nDinner\nRoast of  Beef\nOravy\nMashed Potatoes Spinach\nBerries with Cream\nSponge Cake\nCoffee\nEXPERTS FEEL\nSKEPTICAL ON\nPLANE SIGNALS\nFlyers Inexperienced Senders;\nLocation Far From Where\nVillagers Saw\nCoastward\nBy  GERALD  8. REES\nSponge   Cake:    Beat  two   egg   yolks\n\u25a0  well, add lo them lour tablespoons of\nEven ln  the  old  days  the   amateur   orange Juice and one-half tablespoon of\nwas rich, but he got the riches first,   lemon Juice, stir ln one-fourth teaspoon\nof grated orange rind which you have\nA logical contender Ih one who\nmn damage an opponent most and\nRickard least.\nThe number of unemployed depends\non whether you call golf sport of labor.\nThere's alwaya compensation. If you\nserve cheerfully as goat, the big boys\npraise your morale.\nFortunately none of our religion and\npolitics get mixed except the lowest\ngrade.\nThe befit way to handle a traffic,\ncop Ik to move your head up and\ndown ns he finishes ench sentence.\nHandicap: Something that keeps you\nfrom doing your best\u2014like being related  to the  wife of the  boss.\nMUSIC HELPS ATHLETES. AND\nWHAT THE YANKEES SEEM TO NEED\nAT PRESENT IS THE REFRAIN FROM\nSUPPING.\npreviously combined with three-quart\ners of a cup of sugar, and beat well\nNow add two egg whites stiffly whipped\nthen fold In one cup of flour sifted\nwtth one-fourth teaspoon of sod... Pour\nthis batter Into a cake pan and bake\n40 minutes in  a moderate oven,\nSpanish Chicken: Singe, clean and\nJoint a young and tender chicken. Barely cover lt with water and boll till\ntender. Remove the meat to a buttered casserole and cover with an onion,\nand one sweet pepper finely chopped.\nAdd four tomatoes thinly sliced, one-\nfourth cup of olive oil. a little bud\nof garlic, minced, and one teaspoon of\npoultry seasoning. Bake 40 minutes\nln a medium oven.\nClub Ham ln the Chaffing Dish: Saturday night's dinner wlll consist of a\nslice of fried ham. The housekeeper\nshould fry enough of his meat to have\ntwo cups of chopped cooked ham left\nover for Sunday night's supper. Melt\nthree tablespoons of butter ln your\nchafing dish and to It add three tablespoons of chopped onion and one red\npepper also minced (seeds discarded).\nWhen these have cooked for several\nminutes, or till the onion ls a light\nyellow, add two cups of sweet cream\nand let continue to cook five minutes,\nthen add two cups of cooked chopped\nhsm, a drop of Worcester sauce, and\nsalt to suit Individual taste. Stir ln the\n^^^^^^^^^^^^ beaten youlk of four eggs which have\nModernism: One grocery store, three bMn thinned by a little cold sweet\nfilling stations, five ready-to-wear shops milk flnd then tnicken (do not fltop\nfor women. stirring)  serve on crisp pieces of but-\n \u00b0  tered toast.\nSTILL. STEAMSHIP TRAVEL WOULD Cherry-Grapefruit Drink: Into a\nBE UNSAFE, TOO. IF THE SHIPS WERE sampan put one pint 6f preserved\nSO CONSTRUCTED AS TO BUST WHEN   cherries,   one   pink   of   grapejulce.   one\nCHICAGO, Aug. 26.\u2014Although amateur radio operators In Chicago, Toledo and Brooklyn received messages\nlast night purporting to come from\nthe missing Greater Rockford, radio\nexperts were still frankly skeptical\nthat the messages came from Bert\nHassell and Parker Cramer, the missing aviators.\nDespite the doubters, however, relatives and friends of the flyers believed the messages genuine, and that\nthey gave added evidence that the\naviators who left Rockford eight days\nago,   are  safe.\nThe messages picked up last night\nand signed \"Rockford flyers,\" said the\nplane Greater Rockford was down on\na small island about 60 miles off the\ncoast of Newfoundland, adding that\nfood supplies were low and asking that\nthe Associated Press and the flyers'\nfamilies be notified.\nREASON   FOR   DOCRT\nWhile there was no doubt that such\na message was sent, skeptics pointed\nto many reasons for doubting Its\nauthenticity. It was on a different\nwave band than that assigned the\nGreater Rockford, while Hassell and\nCramer are Inexperienced senders, and\nthey point out where the message\nsaid they were down hundreds of\nmiles from the two village\"; ln southwestern Greenland over which villagers\nsaid the plane passed Sunday morning headed east. Ships which have\nbeen patrolling the north Atlantic\nhave been ordered to make a search\nof Islands off the coast of Labrador\nand Newfoundland, while Eskimo\nhunters are searching the terrain be-\nGtween the west *oast of Greenland\nwhere the plane was sighted by villagers, and Mount Evans, ita objective, 300 miles to the north.\nThe Rockford chamber of commerce,\nsponsor of the flight, received an\noffer today from friends of the flyers\nin Detroit to help finance an expedition  to search for  the  airmen.\nCANADIAN NATIONAL\nEXHIBITION OPENS\nHope Shatter Attendance Records,   Toronto;   Messages\nFrom King and Wales\nTEN YEARS AG0^~T\nThe  Dally  Newsdf Aug,27.1918)\n[Mrs. R. H. Brett and daughter Orace\nI this morning on a visit to Niagara\nUU, Out.\ntee\nI Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Breeze,\n_**$*, on August 36, a  son.\na    a    a\nTws>  young  deer  were  seen   on  the\nanite   road   on   Sunday   by   D.   L.\nt'Who was driving by ln a car.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nPkrs, to Mr. and Mn. H. J. Chomat,\n\u25bacter, on August 34, a aon.\nHALF   WAY   ACROSS\nAn old boy merely feels that way,\nbut a wrinkled prune actually looks\nyounger when  it's stewed.\nNo light without heat? Ruts! Did\nyou ever notice the cold light in the,\nbanker's eyes when you ask to renew?\nGreat batters seldom are great golfers, probably because they can't bluff\nthe ball by swinging three clubs as\nthey approach.\nCorrect this sentence:\nsaid the truck driver.\n\"Pardon me.\"\nTold in Rime\nTORONTO. Aug. 26.\u2014With hopes of\nsetting new attendance records, the\n1B28 addition of the Canadian National\n ^^       exhibition opened Friday with the cere-\nand   one-half   lemons   sliced,   one-half j monies more elaborate than before, a.1,\nstick  of cinnamon.  15  cloves, one and , )*  *\u2022*  the  flfthleth   anniversary   of  the\none-fourth cups of granulated sugar and\nfive quarts of boiling water. Bring to\na boll and let continue to boll for three\nit   is   the   fiftieth   anniversary   of   the\nHis   Excellency   Lord   Willingdon   officiated at the opening ceremonies and\nwith  chipped   Ice  ln  tall   glasses  with\nstraws.    It ls delicious.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to Inquiries.\nminutes,  then  cool  and  strain.    Serve   \"ad   messages   of   greeting   from   the\nKing and the Prince of Wales. Coincident with the opening, a salvo of\nbombs, fired on the waterfront, burst\nln the air and released a shower of\nparachute-borhe  Union  Jacks.\nHis Majesty, In his message, expressed deep Interest In the exhibition\nand pleasure at its success. He recalled\nthe part It had played In the economic\nadvancement of the Dominion. The\nPrince of Wales said the jubilee exhibition was of particular interest to htm\nas tt brought bach memories of 1919\nand his visit of last year.\nall\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n# . \u2014\nSMELTER   SONG\nBy \"Nightshirt\"\nOhl the Smelter ls a place\nWhere you must not feel disgrace\nIn working  mid  the  acid \u00bbnd the\nslime.\nAnd though it* mighty hot\n'Round  the  furnace   and   the  pot.\nThey   say   It's   getting   better\nthe time,\nwc  are  working  all   the  time\nIn the acid and tne slime.\nYet   we   grin    at    one    another\nthrough the  smoke;\nPor  lt ls the  happy  day\nWhen they dlvy  out the pay.\nAnd so,  for  half  an hour  we  are\nnot broke.\nBut when our work ls done\n'Neath the early morning sun.\nWe   motor   back   to   Rossiand   for\nour rest;\nWhere the air is pure ns snow,\nAnd the breezes come and go,\nIn the city  on  the  mountains  of\nthe west. ^^^^^^_\nI'm aswlng between the trees\nIn the gentle morning breeze.\nWhile   birds   are    singing    gayl\/\noverhead;\nSo pass the magic hours\nWhile  the  perfume   of the flowers.\nIs   wafted   'round   about   my\nhammock  b<xl_\nSo here's the place to stay,\nTo cast your  cares away,\nAnd   make   your  home  a place*  of\ngardens (air;\nFor though the mlnea are dead.\nAn' Ut' gold rush daps are sped,\nWe still possess the  wine of\nmountain aii>\nPoll?\nOf\nSour*\nBjfmmetW Bwto-.M.D\nThe liver \"Mind\"'\nBritisher to Organize\nCanadian Branches of\nParliamentary Body\nThe Weekly Tribune, Aug. 27,9$)\nright   of    way    for    the   Last\ntftne* tram is completed and It Is\nthe   tamway   wlll   be   finished\nP_t\u00abt winter.\n\u2022 \u2022   s\nrtvs  feet  of  clean  ore  was struck\nj tht Payne mine last week and the\nDas been Increased to 140.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nore  hss  been  encountered   ln\nfth   i\nisan   Star.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRuth  mine   In  the  Slocan  has\nnth,   and   tbe   estimated   poflt   is\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The  Dally   Newi, of Aug. 27.1908)\nThe  payroll at the St.  Eugene mine\nat   Moyie   was  over   $41,000.   recording\nto thr last payday, Jieid recently.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nBorn,   on   August.   22,   to    Mr.   and\nMrs. W. C. Hill df Harrop, a daughter\n\u2022 a   \u2022\nE. R. Vlpond of \"Poplar Is   erecting a\nshingle   mill   on    ihe   Lardo    river  and\nwill start operation shortly.,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNearly lI.500.Co  was pa'-d   by  Insurance  companies   to reside1 sts of Fernle\nwho   lost   property   during   the   recent\nlire.\nI sometimes think that my readers\nmu.it be of the opinion that I have\nthe liver on the brain, because I talk\nabout, it so much: about Us size, the\namount of blood always coursing through\nit, snd about the various Jobs It does\nIn the body.\nHowever, at the Tennessee State Medical association recently, Dr. Stewart\nP. Roberts of Atlanta, said, \"the liver\nls as Important as lt is large (it ls\nthe largest organ , in the body) and\nthe time is at hand when we axe\nbeglnlng to think in terms of liver\nproblems and to develop a liver \"mind\"\nThe liver cell probably does more\nthings well than any other cell ln the\nbody, and has the power when under\nstress, of not only stopping one or two\nof Its Jobs, but goes on with others.\nTwenty per cent of the total mass of\nthe liver seems enough to carry on\nthe ordinary amount of work lt has to\ndo. Thus lf a portion of lt Is injured, there is enough of lt to do Its\nvarious Jobs.\" Now you can readily\nsee that an organ that ls so large and\nhas so many cells there' ls a sort of\nguard or protection, to prevent bad\nfood, poisons, and Infections, from doing too much damage to the blood.\nBecause Dr. Roberts points out all the\nserious infections, acute and chronic,\nand all Inflamatlons within abdomen,\nmust do harm to the liver.\nIt is because of its power to make\nnew cells when old ones are severely\ndamaged, and the large amount of liver\ntissue above that necessary for ordinary\nwork, that enables the liver to withstand so much abuse from Infections,\nand from our earless eating habits.\nIt li because of Its importance that\nso much research work has been done\non the liver and this has enabled\nphysicians and surgeons to give proper\ntreatment, medical und surgical, and\nthus Insure health and save life\nAnd remember as I've said so very\nmany times, sll the liver asks ls a fair\ndeal frdm you. This fair deal is a few\nbending exercises dally wtth knees\nstraight, lind the avoidance of heavy\nmeals especially fats and pasteries. Rock\nlng from side to side with knees\nstraight, or twisting from side to side,\nkeeping knees straight snd hips facing to the front as you do the exercise will help to squeeze the liver.\nI believe you can see why your family\ndoctor and every other doctor in fset,\nIs developing ft liver  \"mind\".\nQUEBEC, Aug. 26.\u2014\"The principal\nobjective in view during my present\nstay ln Canada ls the tendering of an\nInvitation to the members of the\nprovincial parliaments of all the provinces In the Dominion to form affiliated branches of the Empire Parliamentary association,\" declared Sir Howard\nD'Egvllle, K.B.E., secretary of the parliamentarians here.\nSir Howard pointed out that while\nhis stay In the Dominion Is actively\nconnected with the present visit of the\nEmpire legislators, he wlll not remain\nwith the party during their entire\ntour, but wlll later concentrate his\nefforts on the formation of such provincial parliamentary affiliated\nbranches.\nStriking the main line of the Canadian Pacific at Revelstoke, one senses\nan entry into a main current of travel.\nOne arrives at the gateway city from\nthe south by a slow moving, yet\nmighty \"backwater\"\u2014the Columbia river, on whose bosom long yesrs ago\nmarauding Indians\u2014the really early Canadians\u2014cruised'* the Arrow lakes\nagainst their neighbors' scalps, and\nshot their arrows with unerring aim.\nOne realizes that the far stretching\ngleaming ribbons of steel\u2014eastward and\nwestward\u2014link up two vast oceans, and\nonce linked with the sea, this jolly\nold world of ours loses its bigness\nand ts easily reachable anywhere. The\nlife and bustle of any transcontinental\nhalt attracts even the Jaded traveler.\nCosmopolites parade the long platform\nfor a breather; a few, pity them, ape\nsuperiority\u2014they are traveling de luxe.\nSome fare forth to far Cathay., and the\nocean flier with gleaming decks and\ngreat yellow smoke stacks even now\nfrets at her moorings awaiting her\nhuman freight.\nOne notes with interest the routine\nof inspection at divisional points; Its\nsmooth functioning betokens a keen\nefficiency. Fresh eager engines relieve\nother tired locomotives released from\na heavy load for a \"wash and brush\nup.\" One nearly always meet a friend,\nold or new, and hall \"whither away?\"\nand picks up the latest news ftom the\nhome town\t\nSitting at ease in the rear of the\n\"Limited,\" one notes the gathering\nshadows of dusk filling the violet\nshadowed valleys to the brim, and\noverflow to the heights of timber line\nand snow. Lights gleam ln little\nhouses along the track, and the westbound flyer thunders along past long\nlines of stalled freights, side-tracked\nfor our .passing...,\nThe familiar yet ever-changing skyline of Vancouver looms up ln the\nmorning sunshine. One feels quite at\nhome. Four and twenty years ago I\ntrucked rice In cunningly made bags\nfrom ship's side to dim warehouse\u2014\nthe pay was very small. Dtsh washing,\ncarpentering, and many another odd\nJob kept the wolf from my cheap\nhotel window. I even helped to build\na house at English Bay\u2014that famous\noily and dusty bathing reserve. I\nthink the house has fallen down\u2014it ls\nno  longer  there I\nI spent several hours ln wandering\nalong the deep sea wharves, fringed\nwith masts, spars and derrick booms,\nscanning with critical eye all ships,\nlarge and small, of high and low degree, and of every build, and rig,\nwindjammers, coasters and mall liners,\nand cast an envious but not a covetous\neye on brightly labelled stacks of baggage and steamer chairs tn the slings\nof an \"Empress\" boom: the \"Blue\nPeter\" at the fore spoke of sailing day\nfor the great white liner.\nTo hear the quickening breeze strumming through rigging and funnel stays\nis music enough for me, and to see\nthe sea gulls too, wheeling and piping\nin the wake of moving vessels. Lorries and clanking winches, yawning\nholds and swaying booms, giant crones,\nbolts, bales and barrels, and all the\nother clangor of deep sea loading complete a wondrous panorama of life and\nactivity. Tanned seamen, mahogany\nbrown, spin hefty yarns at stand-\neasies; they tell tales of the seven\nseas\u2014the purple tropics and surf-tm-\nbroidered fringes of the entreposts of\nthe Yang-t-zeang and the Far East.\nThey follow the sun around the world\nand home again.\nAt English Bay, I gazed seaward,\ndreaming of the days of long ago\n\"when all the world was young, lad.\"\n\"I wouln't trade what I  have seen\n\"For all your life can give;\n\"For It's traveling down the gypsy trails\n\"That one really learns to live.\"\nA rusty sea tramp goes stumbling\nby the Prospect point lighthouse, past\nthe first narrows, outward bound with\na bone ln Its teeth, hurrying along\nto bury tt alongside' some sea-scarred\nwharf in some sunny far-off land. I\nwonder on what shores her gaunt sea-\nbitten bows would thrust ere she rims\nthlB way again. The mind Is stirred\nat such times with a strange longing\nto answer the call of the off-shore\nwind\u2014one wonders what lies beyond\nthe far horizon of sea and sky. Wandering thoughts of far-off lands, yet\nunseen, possess the Imagination. Only\nthe Incurably obese of body, or the\nincurably Inert of mind can fall to\nrally to the stimulating call of the\nwanderlust.\n\"To follow the call of a clean old flag\nWhere the outermost borders lie.\"\nVancouver ia changing yet unchanging. The smell of burning forests, and\nthe resindua odor of newly sawn logs\nare little things In themselves, but one\nremembers them nowhere else on earth\nfallen in clouds of smoke; homes have\narisen; bush roads have widened to\nasphalted highways\u2014and the Indians\nare vanishing for ever. Unknowingly,\nperhaps, each little Jaunt coastward ts\nthe gateway to romance. One takes an\nomnibus to the nearest travel bureau,\nand demands a ticket for the Isles of\nthe Blest- Many, and many a time\nhave I Intended to-go to\u2014say Turkey\u2014\nand Instead have had to buy a round-\ntrip ticket to Timbuctoo. And. so you\nsee, there ls all this much ado about\nnothing, simply because I boarded one\ntrain in Nelson, and stepped from another In Vancouver.\nBENNETT FORESEES\nSOLIDMARITIMES\nExpects Provinces by the Sea\nto Rebuke Liberals at\nNext Appeal\nManifested in\nSuch Is Christian Science Sermon Here; \"Christ Jesus\"\nIs Subject\nMONTREAL, Aug. 26.\u2014\"From what\nI have gahered in my recent tour, I\nam convinced that men and women\nof the Maritlmes will return an almost solid delegation to parliament\nopposed to the present administration,\nwhose policies have so increased our\ndependence on other countries for the\nsupply of those necessary products upon\nwhich our very existence depends,\"\ndeclared Hon. R- B. Bennett, leadef of\nthe Conservative party, ln an interview\nhere.\n\"The Maritlmes are determined to\nsupport a policy that will insure the\nutilization of the great resources of\nCanada so that they may be able to\nremain n the land or their fathers and\ndevelop the country for their future\nprogeny.\" Mr. Bennett stated.\nThe subject of the lesson-sermon in\nNelson Christian Science church yesterday was \"Christ Jesus.\"\nThe lesson-sermon Included the following text from Matthew 9:2 \"Aad,\nbehold, they brought to htm a man\nsick of the palsy, lying oh a bed; and\nJesus seeing their faith said unto the\nsick of the palsy; son, be of good\ncheer, thy sins be forgiven thee.\"\nThe lesson-sermon also included one\npassage as follows: \"Though demonstrating his control over sin and disease, the great Teacher by no means\nrelieved others from giving the requisite proofs of thefr own piety. He\nworked for their guidance, that they\nmight demonstrate this power as He\ndid and understand Its divine principle.\nImplicit faith In the Teacher and all\nthe emotional love we can bestow on\nHim, will never alone make us Imitators\nof Him. We must go and do likewise, else we are not Improving the\ngreat blessings which our Master worked\nand suffered to bestow upon us. The\ndivinity of the Christ was made manifest ln. the humanity of Jesus.\"\nPERRY SIDING NOTES\n* PERRY SIDING, B.C., Aug. 26\u2014Miss\nRena Dawney of thii Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital staff ls home for a\nfew  weeks vacation.\nF. Powell was a visitor to the South\nSlocan pool last week.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bell and Infant son\nDonald of Trail arrived last Saturday at\nthe Ewlng ranch for a two weeks' vacation.\nT. Ewlng and J. _\/l'Commick of Troll\nmotored here on Saturday, subsequently\ngoing up to the new Slocan Silverton\nroad. *\nJ. Nixon left last week for the pral\nries for the harvest. He expects to be\naway   about  two   months.\nThe social club held its fortnightly\ndance at the school on Saturday. A\nlarge crowd was present.\nW. Dawney left on Wednesday last\nfor Evans creek, where he will work\nat Llngle and Johnson's lumber camp.\nMrs. G. A. Hodgson and daughter,\nMrs. E. Flynn, and the latter's son.\nmotored to Nelson on Wednesday last.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOCAN   CITY,   B.C..   Aug.   St~-Mrs. . %l\nR. Clifford and little son Bobble, spent\na few days In Nelson during the week,     i\nreturning home on Wednesday. .\nMr. Tarrow left a few days ago for\nthe harvest fields.\nMrs. T. McNelsh entertained Thursday afternoon at bridge. Among the invited guests were Mrs. A. E. Purney,\nMrs. J. H. Pinchbeck. Mrs. A. Merry,\nMrs. T. G. Carter, Mrs. R. S. MacMillan.\nMrs. E. Graham, Mrs. M. Johnson, Mrs.\nBreen, Mrs. E. J. Leveque, snd Miss\nMarlon Leveque.\nMrs. A. S. Morley entertained on Tuesday afternoon. The following ladles\nwere present, Mrs. E.' Graham, Mrs.\nHerman, Mrs. R. E. MacMillan, Mrs.\nJ. H. Pinchbeck, Mrs. T. G. Carter, Mrs\nF. M. Hufty, Mrs. W. A. Blackbourne\nand Mrs. H. C. Nye. ,\nTHROWS  BELT  BEFORE\nAN   INTERt'RRAN   TRAIN\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Aug. Stfl.\u2014\n\u2014Reported to have thrown himself on\nthe tracks In front of an lnterurban\ntrain at 12:40 o'clock Thursday afternoon near Jemmett atreet, Joseph\nMichelson of Vanoouver wu so badly\ninjured that he died on the way to\nhospital.\nSafe food for hot days\nSHREDDED\nToasted shreds of whole wheat\nFilled with nature's health givers\nDelightful for any meal\nTB^SCUIT** The shredded wheat wafer\nVISITORS WELCOME. TO AU. FACTOR.!ES.\nBUILDING\nWE HAVE A FULL STOCK OF\nFROST & WOOD\nMOWERS and RAKES\nPrices:\n $95.00\n $108.00\n $110.00\n  $67.00\nMOWERS\u2014\nZ\\r_ ft., 1-horse, each\t\n4V_ ft., 2-horse, each\t\n6 ft., 2-horse, each _...\nRAKES\u2014\n8 ft., steel wheels, each ..,   .^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n9 ft., steel wheels, each  \u2014 $70.00\n10 ft., steel wheels, each $73.00\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B.C. BOX 1050\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMATERIAL JOHN burns & SON\nAny\nStationery Needs\nSupplied Promptly\nPractically any kind of office\nstationery, including legal forms and\npaper, can ht promptly supplied by us.\nYou will find our stock and equipment capable of meeting your particular needs and at prices that are on a\npar and frequently less than those paid\nelsewhere. Check off your present\nneeds on this list. Let us give you a\nquotation:\nLETTERHEADS\nLEDGER LEAVES\nAFFIDAVIT PAPER\nENVELOPES\nSYNOPTIC SHEETS\nSECOND SHEETS\nSTATEMENTS\nBINDERS\nCARBON PAPER\nCall 144   We'll Send Our Representative\nThe Daily News\nJob Department\n IHB NELSON nAUY JIESJ& MONQAY MO-NINC, AUOUST -I, Ifft\nSport\nOxfords\nFor Men, Women and\nChildren\nALL MARKED DOWN\nPRICES\nWOMEN'S $3.35\nand  $4.35\nMEN'S    ,f3.65\nCHILDREN'S   ........fl.45\nto... ?1.85\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in FootfiuMon\nMasloff Is Fined\n,   For Allowing Cow\nat Large in City\nPleading guilty to a charge of allowing his cow to < run at large within\nthe city limits, J. Masloff, before. Police Magistrate William Brown Saturday morning, was fined 14.75 and\ncosts.\nGLENBANK NOTES\nOLENBANK, B.C.. Aug. 26.\u2014Mrs. E.\nW. Bill wai a charming hostess on Monday afternoon at her home, Shakespeare\navenue, at a farewell tea for her house\nguests, Mrs. Wal\/*s and family, who left\nfor their home In Calgary Tuesday.\nD. Livingstone left on Thursday for\nDrumheller, Alts,, where he will work\n* during the winter.\nVancouver Man\nCreston School\nCR1STON, B.C.. Aug. 30.\u2014James O.\nKirk of Vancouver Is to be vice-principal.of Creston public school this term,\nreplacing Mlse Orace Randall of Nelson, who had charge last year. Principal Stallwood and Misses M. L Wade,\nEdna Holmes and Helen Hunter, with\nMr. Kirk, will comprise the staff.\nMiss Hazel Hobden, a graduate of\nCreston high achool and Victoria normal, ls to have charge of the Huscroft\nschool, and Mlse Joyce Moore, another\ngraduate of Creston and Victoria, wlll\nbe ln charge at Weat Creston.\nPrincipal Lukas Is to return to Alice\nSiding, and Miss M. Severn will again\nbe at the head of educational affairs\nat Wynndel.\nHARROP NOTES\nHARROP, B.C.. Aug. 26.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. E. Har;op had as their guests on\nTuesday Miss A. Pollitt, Miss E. Pollttt\nand Nicholas Pollitt of Medicine Hat,\nwho have been holidaying at Balfour.\nMr, and Mrs. O. Perteous and chll\ndren of Queen's Bay were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. H. Falrbank Friday.\nMlsa Gladys Ogllvle of Trail Is spending the week-end with her mother,\nMrs. C.  D. Ogilvie.\nF. Andrews and daughters, Frances\nand Ada, Mrs. J. E. Fltchett and Waiter\nFltchett, Mrs. V. J. Armstrong and son,\nStanley, and Mrs. P. J. Cote, were visitors to the scout camp at Kokanee\nThursday.\nMrs. ftnd Mrs. J. F. Chapman returned on Thursday to Fairview after\na visit wtth their son-in-law and daugh*\nter, Mr. and Mrs. B. Harrop.\nOordon Ironside* bas arrived from\nBelfast, Ireland. He ls staying at the\nhome of Mr*, and Mrs: Ogilvie.\nCRESTON, Br., Aug. 26.\u2014Two property sales on the west side of the\nC.P.R. has been reported.\nH. S. McCreath has disposed of his\nsix-room residence to a Mr. Llndqulst\nof Klmberley, who ls to take possession\nas soon as' the preaent tenant, Mr.\nMosrblto, secures a new home.\nR. Easttake has acquired four more\nlots adjoining his residential property\nln the Park Road area, whleh he intends to put into garden.\nFRUITVALE NOTES\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Aug. 26.\u2014Miss Hilda Young of Fernle is spending a short\nholiday with Mr. and Mrs. F. Young,\non her way home from coast cities.\nEarl Grieve left Monday for the\nprairie,\nMiss E. Stalnthorpe was a valley visitor Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Smith and family\nof Tarry's left Thursday for their\nhome after being the guests of Mrs. T.\nCharlton.\nMr. and Mrs. A. De Bupn and family\nhave returned from a motor trip to\nSeattle and coast cities.\nMr.   and   Mrs-   Broadhurst   and   son\nErnest Abott of the Canadian forestry\nhave returned to their home ln Trail,\nassociation conducted an entertainment\nhere Wednesday.\nHapp\niest of\nSummertime\nBreakfasts\n\u25a0\nASK your grocer to send it to you to-day\u2014Grape-\n\u00a3_ Nuts, the crisp, delicious food that has held the\nfavor of the whole world for more than thirty years!\nPour out a less-than-one-cent serving for each person-\nfour tcaspoonfuls is sufficient. Add cool cream or milk.\nAnd there you have the happiest of all summertime\nbretkfasts! By far the most wonderfully appetizing.\nA food which literally lures the fickle, warm-weather\nappetite. And abundantly supplies the precious nourishment your body demands 1\nGripe-Nuti ii made from whole wheat and malted barley\u2014tpecially\ncasyto digest. In it) delightfully flavorful form it gives you Antrim, maltose and other carbohydrates for energy; iron for the\nblood, phosphorus for teeth and bone; protein for muscle and bodybuilding; and the important iritamin-B.\nStart your happy Grape-Nuts breakfasts to-morrow. Get it in the\nt.mous wax-wrapped package.\nrape:Nuts\nfor Dmcious nourishment\nltte*e k Cn.li\nH\u00ablp\u00ab You io Good\n.ears,, rtite 1\nDoctor, and demur, c.try-\nwhart ,lr._ tht impocunc,\nol incl.d.n, criap foodi io\nvour daily diet to fi**\nlieillhlul tierciat to T\u00ab\"\nteeth, gum, ind facial\nrmticle,. Alio befauat chlar-\nin| prapam the di|\u00abtivt\n.ecretioru t\u2122 the woimch for\n,h\u00bbir mere (.ripe-Nut, ii\nJaliciooitr cr\u201er\u2014you like\nus chew it, golden kernel,.\ns**m**Rmm\u2014*m\u2014\nYahk Man Is Fined\nCreston Failing to\nObtain Fire Permit\nCRESTON. B.C.. Aug. ae\u2014Adolph\nHJort of T-hk waa fined 1-5 and cents\nby Magistrate K. Mallandalne ot Creator- yeBterd*- on a charge of setting\nout a fire without flrat obtaining a\npermit.\nIt wae the aecond prosecution of\nthla nature conducted by Forestry Officer ' 0-pUln  Oatti ln  a  week.\nMcCreath Home in\nCreston Is Sold;\nCRESTON NOTES\nCRESTON, B.C., Aug. 86.\u2014Mr. snd\nHrs. R. 8. Beavn are entertaining their\ndaughters, Misses Louise and Evelyn.\nPor tlje past two years the former has\nbeen In the staff of tbe Chase National bank at New York, and ls home\non a month's vacation. Miss Evelyn Is\na nurse at the Kelowna Oeneral hospital.\nOUle Christie of Klmberley Is holidaying wtth 1.1s parents, Mr. and Mre,\nHerb ChrlBtie. Wilfrid Mason, also of\nKimberley, ls holidaying with his\nmother, Mrs. W. A. Mason, at the ranch\nhome west of Creston.\nMtss Prances Knott, who has spent\nthe past year at Columbian college,\nNew Westminster, and the provincial\neducation department summer school\nst Victoria, has arrived home for a\n10-day vacation before going to Sandon,\nWhere she will teach this term. Her\nmother, Mrs. F. Knott, who has spent\nthe Past six weeks at the capital, returned with her.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Pears and daughter, Betty, left on Saturday for a\nweek's, motor trip holiday, which will\nInclude visits at Cranbrook, Windermere, Banff and Lake Louise.\nMrs. Carlton S. Hester spent the\nweek-end at Cranbrook with her husband, who ls recovering from an operation for appendicitis.\nProvincial Police Officer H. W. McLaren ls taking his two weeks' vacation\nthts month. With Mrs. McLaren and\nfamily he left by motor on a visit to\nSpokane, intending going on to Salmo.\nIn his absence Constable R. H, Hassard of Nelson is ln charge of the\nwork.\nYMIR NOTES\nYMIR, B.C. Aug. 26.\u2014Miss Bessie\nClark was a recent viator to Nelson.\nJohn Brenner was a Nelson visitor\non Thursday.\nO. Poulin spent Thursday ln Nelson.\nMiss C. Kublski has been on the sick\nHat for a few days.\nThe Ymlr women's Institute held a\nmeeting ln the guild hall on Friday\nafternoon. Those present were Mrs.\nA. B. Clark, Mrs. W. Clark. Mrs. L. M.\nProchnow, Mrs. P. H. Watson. Mrs, J. H.\nClarke, Mrs. C. Anderson, Mrs. E. Daly,\nMrs. H. Stevens and Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac.\nThe tea hostesses were Mrs. L. M. Proch\nnow and Mrs. H, Stevens.\nP. H. Watson was a Nelson visitor\nThursday evening-\nMr. and Mrs, P. H Watson have as\ntheir guest their nelce, Mtss Bonnie\nWatson of Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Clarke were Nelson  visitors Thursday  evening.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Curwen. Mtss\nLaura Ford and Leslie Keel left by motor on Saturday  for Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Buchanan of\nSalmo have taken up residence on\nBirch street, Ymlr.\nMrs. A. Bremner, Mrs. W. Miller, Mrs.\nP. Campbell, Mrs. N. Allen and Mrs.\nW. Stewart of Salmo were visitors here\non Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Stevens had as their\ndinner gueets on Saturday, Mr. add\nMrs. H. H. Perkins, Mrs. C. Mclsaac,\nand Mrs   W, B. Mclsaac.\nWIN AT YMIR\nYMIR, B.C., Aug. 36.\u2014At the women's\nInstitute fair on Thursday, Mrs. R. R.\nShrum took second prize for dahlias,\nand Miss May Horton first prize for\ngirls' sewing. Miss Ethel Oreene wan\nawarded second prize for girls' sewing.\nEnjoy Your Smoke\u2014\nThere's nothing that will make\nyon enjoy your smoke as much ai\nour Special Mixture.   Try it.\nBUSH'S\nOdEIY\nThis column- is conducted by\nMiw Helen Murphy. All news of\na social nature. Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Itams, marriages, etc., will\nappear In this column. Telephone\nMfss Murphy at ber home oa\nVictor!* \u25a0      \u25a0 ^-^-^-^-^-^^\nMrs. O. A. C. Walley was a tea hostess\nat her home on Stanley street Saturday\nafternoon, when she entertained a* a\ntrousseau tea for Miss Oenevleve McMahon, whose marriage takes place today. Ine living room; where tha\nhostess and Miss McMahon received\nthe guests, was very atractlve with\nlarge vases of gladioli, Jonquils and\nsweet peas. The dining table, centered\nwith a bowl of marigolds, was presided\nover by Mrs. A. T. Noxon at the urns\nand Mrs. A. O. Lambert cutting tba\nIces, the servlteura being, Mrs. O. Fleury.\nMrs. R. Brown, Mrs. D. D. Townsend,\nMrs. J. laughton and Mrs. W. Taylor,\nThe invited guests were Mra. R. Brown,\nMrs. R. Smyth, Mrs. Carl A. Larson,\nMrs. G. Fleury, Mrs. E. Swanson, Mlas\nPhyllis Church, Miss Crlena Horstead,\nMrs. J. Morris, Mra. D. D. Townsend,\nMrs. W. Taylor, Mrs. Alleen Mansfield,\nMrs. L. McPhail, Miss Eve Armstrong,\nMrs. J. Laughton, Miss Jean Lambert,\nMrs. W. Ferguson, Mrs. W. Brown, Miss\nCatherine Stark, Mtss Charlotte Notman,\nMrs. C. J. Currier, Mrs. C. J. Sedgwick:,\nMra. R. Maurer. Mlas Carmen Horton,\nMiss Helen Murphy, Mra. Rhodes, Mrs.\nA. T. Noxon. Miss HaU of TraU, Mrs. A.\nG Lambert, Mrs. R. Peebles,\" Miss C.\nSmith and Mrs. T. E. Levasseur.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCecil King of Vancouver ls spending\na few days In the city, tbe guest of hla\nparents, Mr. and Mrs, W. 8. King,\nJosephine street.\n\u25a0 *   *   *\nR. Cooper of Slocan Ctty wu a ctty\nvisitor Baturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs.  W.  Wheeler and Mrs.  Ironsides\nmotored tnto the city from Silverton\nSaturday and spent the day shopping.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. R. E. Orey and son, accompanied by Elmer Oray, have returned from a month's holiday spent\non the prairies at Lake Louise and\nBanff.    They made the trip by motor.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nDr, and Mrs. Major and Colin Major\nof Procter motored to town Saturday.^\n\u2022 e   a\nW. R. Baxendale of TraU passed\nthrough the city Saturday on his way\nto Procter, where he spent tbe week\nend with his family, which ls summering there.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Laura WlUey of Bonnlngton was\na town shopper Saturday,\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2666\nMiss K.  Scanlan,  who has been  the\nguest of her brother, T. J. Scanlan,\nStanley street, for the past month, has\nleft for her home in Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mra.   H.   RosUng,   Willow\nPoint, passed through tbe city yesterday\non their way to Spokane by motor.\n\u2022 *   *\nTom   Sturgess   of   Ymlr   was  ln   the\ncity Saturday on his way to Thrums,\nwhere he attended the Becker dance.\n\u2022 *   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Alex. J. McDonald of\nSouth Slocan were city visitors Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nR. Blols of Trail spent Saturday ln\nNelson.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss D. Fawcett returned to the city\nSunday night after spending two weeks'\nvacation visiting in Vancouver and\nVictoria.\nMrs.   R.   Long   of   Bonnington\nshopping In town Saturday.\nwa:-\nBen Creasey of Harrop was in town\nover  the week-end.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. R. D. Barnes entertained at thc\ntea hour on Saturday, complimenting\nMrs. J. Mahony of Vancouver. Dahlias\nand marigolds were used throughout the\nrooms. The hostess was assisted by\nMrs. W. Hoare and Miss Eileen Mackenzie.\nsee\nA. H. Oreen leaves today by motor for\nKamloops.\nMrs. Joseph Sturgeon and Mrs, M J\nVigneux returned last evening from\nEast Robson, where they have been the\nguests of Dr. and Mrs. McNaughton at\ntheir summer home, Wyalong,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Yulll of Coleman, Alta., was ln\nthe city during the week-end on her\nreturn from the coast. While here Miss\nYulll was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nPercy Horton, Kerr apartments,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJ. Cameron and Miss Cameron, High\nstreet, have returned after spending a\nfew days with Mr. and Mra. Hugh\nRobertson at their summer home on the\nnorth shore.\nGordon  Thompson  motored   in\nBonnlngton on Saturday.\nfrom\nMr. and Mra. Ian Gilroy of Chicago,\nwho are spending a few days with Mr,\nOilroy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J\". Ollrey,\nH\nSPECIAL SALE\nGalvanized Washtubs\nEXCEPTIONAL VALUE\n$1.25 Each\nTAKE AVANTAGE OF THIS OFFER\nHIPPERSON J HARDWARE\nCOMPANY, LTD.\n\u25a0ox (M I\n\\_e___----~-\n\u25a0BB-QH\n011 Baker Street, Phone 200\n_     NEW KNITTED SPORTS SUITS\n$20.00 to S33.50 Each\nFor golf, tennis or out-door wear, these are the ideal garments. They\ncome in pure wool or silk and wool with round or V-neck pullovers\nand skirts pleated or plain. Assorted colors. Sizes 34 to 40.\nEACH $20.00, $22.50, $25.00 AND $33.50.\nNEW PULLOVER SWEATERS\n$8.50 Each\nA splendid range of new pullover sweaters in all the new light\nshades. Made of extra fine light weight yarn. Round neck, square\nneck or V-neck styles.   Sizes 34 to 40.   EACH $8.50.\nNEW RAINCOATS\n^^^^^1    $7.95 Each\nDuro finUhed Raincoats in smart belted styles. Convertible collars.\nPermanent finish. Colors: Blue, Green, Red and Black. Sizes 16\nto 20.   EACH $7.95.\nCHILD'S RAINCOATS WITH HATS\n$4.50 Each\nBelted styles of best quality rubber.   All wanted colors.\n12 years. With hats to match.   EACH ?4.50.\nof Willow Point, spent Saturday ln Nel-   wlll   spend   some   time   visiting   with\nson.    Mr.  and  Mrs.  Oilroy   have   been! Mrs.    J.    Sturgeon   and    Mrs.   M.    J.\nholidaying at Banff and Lake Louise\nThey leave shortly for Vancouver, San\nFrancisco and Los Angeles, before re\nturning to Chicago.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Alex. Laurie and daugh\nter of Trail were visitors In the city\nduring the week-end\n\u2022 *\nMrs. H. H. Rhodes and sons of South\nSlocan spent Saturday shopping ln the\ncity.\nMiss Jean Lambert had as her guest\nover the week-end Miss Maxlne Chapman of South Slocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Peterson of Ymlr mo\ntored to Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nW. H. Hanney. of Trait passed through\nthe city Saturday oa hts way\nCrescent Bay, where he spent the weekend wtth his family, which ls holidaying\nthere,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Waldle have as their\nguest for the next few days their ion,\nRobert, of Vancouver.\nW. H, Qoldlng of Rossiand\nvisitor Saturday.\na city\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. McDonald motored in from Bonnlngton oo Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Wilson, who 20. years ago\nworked for the Ashdown Hardware company here, and who since then has\nheen living ln Winnipeg, apent the\nweek-end ln. Nelson looking up oldH\nfriends. Mr. Wilson left for Vancouver\nwhere he has been transferred.\n\u2022 *   *\nR. O. Leslie of Robson wae In town\nFriday.\n\u2022 e  i\nMiss R. Henry of Alnsworth was a\nNelson shopper on Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMtss Hazel Kerr returned last evening from Cranbrook, where she has\nbeen for the past week, the guest of\nMr. and Mrs. A. Wallach.\nMrs. L. Starmont. wife of ths editor\nof Spokane Mining Truth, and Mrs.\nMargaret Orr, secretary of the company,\nhave been spending a few days In Nelson and leave by the Crow boat this\nmorning for Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlas Louise Peebles, Latimer street,\nwas hostess at a small tea on Baturday afternoon ln honor of Mm Molra\nMcLeod, who leaves shortly for Spokane, where she wtll become a nurse-\nln--mining. Mrs. Peebles assisted her\ndaughter in receiving the guests. Profusions of asters were used ss decoration throughout the reception and\nliving rooms. Vocal solos wart given\nby Miss Edna Buchanan during the\nafternoon. In the dining room, tea\nwas poured by Mrs D. McLeod and\nthe Ices were cut by Mrs. R. Peebles,\nfrom an attractive tea table centered\nwith a bowl of pink roses. Those assisting In serving were Mlas Gladys\nMcLeod, Miss Florence Hanna, Miss\nEvelyn Wallace and Miss Helen Vance.\nMiss Peebles' Invited guests were Mrs.\nD. McLeod, Miss Gladys McLeod. Miss\nEdna Buchanan. Miss Merle Archibald.\nMiss Phyllis Archibald. Mia Jessie\nHarrop of Harrop. MIbs Dorothy Sturgess, Miss Margaret Hipperson. Miss\nDorothy Htllam, Miss Ruth Hancock.\nMrs. R. Peebles, Miss I Mildred Lutes.\nMiss Elizabeth Borden, Miss Iris\nRobertson, Miss Ruth Robertson, Miss\nIsabelle Benson, Mtss Margery Benson.\nMiss Kathleen Green, Mtss Helen Vance,\nMiss Nookle Blackwood. Mtss Evelyn\nWallace, Miss My trie McKeown. Miss\nFlorence Hanna, Miss Jean Glenden-\nnlng and Miss Mary Jarvis.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs M. K. Heap, who have\nbeen summerinn al the Robertson cottage at Willow Point, left yesterday\nmorning by motor for their home ln\nVancouver,\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nThe Misses Julia and Freda Coffin,\nwho have been the guests of Dr. and\nMrs. Palmer at Christina Lake, arrived Ui the city last uvouing     The*\nVigneux,  Silica street.\nsts\nMr.    and    Mrs.    Edgar    Jamieson   of\nPassmore were Saturday visitors in the\ncity.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Mahony, who have\nbeen the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H.\nMackenzie, Carbonate street, for the\npast two weeks, left last night for\ntheir home ln Vancouver.\n\u2022 a e\nTed Wilson motored to town from\nSilverton on  Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs, Elliot of Trail spent the weekend  visiting in  the  city.\na- a   fl\nGeorge Sutcliffe left yesterday morning to visit prairie points as far east\nas Reglna.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. Gordon of Bon-\nnlngton motored to the city Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Jessie Harrop, who has been\nthe guest of Miss Phyllis Archibald\nfor the paat 10 days, has left for her\nhome  In Harrop.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. J. Simpson of Silverton spent\nSaturday  ln town.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. H. H. Marshall and family,\nJosephine street, have left to visit ln\nRossiand with Mr. aod Mrs. Grlgor,\nfor a few days. From there they will\ngo to Vancouver, where they will make\nthetr   home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 \u25a0\nMrs. John Grant and Miss L. Brandon of Trail were visiting ln Nelson\non   Saturday.\n\/ \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Goldsmith recently entertained at the tea hour at her home\non Cemetery road. Pink and white\nphlox were used as decorations. Miss\nGoldsmith was assisted by her mother.\nGuests invited were Mrs. J. McPhail,\nMrs. J. Robinson and Miss Ellen and\nJean Robinson of Beasley, Mrs. J. J.\nMcEwan, Mrs. D. McEachern, Mrs. J.\nMorris, Mrs. E. Hopwood. Mrs. F. Foster,\nMtss Mamie McPhail, Miss Helen\nForbes and Miss A, McPhail.\n\u2022 t   \u2666\nMr. and Mrs. Sid J. McDonald and\nlittle son Ewart of Trail are ln Nelson en route to Howser for a two\nweeks'   holiday.     They   were   motored\n-   I\nover Saturday night by Mr. McDonald's il\nbrother Thomas, who returned ty T\nTrail  last  night. L\nMr. and Mrt, J. Belt and family*]\nreturned last evening Irom a motoir'-l\ntrip   to  coast  cities.\nMr   and Mrs. T. Sargeant spent Butir\"\nday with friends at Procter. ^B_\n\u2022 a   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S. H. Murdln. who have J\nbeen spending the past month holt- I\ndaylng in the eastern prairie provtncflayff\nhave   returned  to  Nelson.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss I. MacAstockcr and Miss itf'\nMacAstocker. who have been visttlnsH\ntheir uncle, T. J. Scanlan, for the pass'I\nfew days, have left for their home ia,7\nPentlcton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Kelman haver I\nreturned from Trail, where they wer*.\"*\nguests of Dr. and Mrs. Williamson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.  A.  A. Pltchford and Mrs. O. M.\"\nMcKenzie.      accompanied      by      their*-*]\nmother,   Mrs.   Hurry,   are   spending\nweek   In  Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ.   McLeod   and  two  daughters, whoj\nhave    been   summering   In    the city,'*\nhave  returned  to  their  home  ln Calgary. - J\nMrs.\nwas  a\nJ.   Chapman   of   South   SlocaqJ\nshopper   In  town  Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Howard Jenne and son'\nLeonard left Sunday morning for two I\nweeks' holiday to be spent ln Port-)|\nland and coast cities.\n\u25a0   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.  W.  G.  Elsdon   and  Misa Elsdoh'\nwere-city shoppers from South Slocan :\non Saturday. 1\n* \u2022   \u2022\nA. B. S. Stanley of Trail spent Saturday visiting  in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. D, P. Graham. 704 Baker street |\nentertained    informally    in    honor   o.C\nMtb. W. Barker of Portland, Ore., form-*!\ner  resident of Nelson. ^^_\n^_m_imw,mwim^eimr\\mmrm >l\nL0NGINES\nLADIES'    AND   C1ENTS',    WRIST,\n(JESTS' POCKET\nWATCHES\n,    A. T. NOXON\nTOTJB\nCLASSIFIED\ntULTS.\nADS    BRING    RE-\nApple\nWrappers\nft\nLots of 100 lbs., per lb lit\n50-lb. bundles, per lb 15f\nLess than 50 lbs., per lb. ., -Of\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nPHONE 144 (Tws Line.)\nPRINTINC-RUUNG-BOOKBINDING\n m#\n,mommWm-m\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014em\u2014mi\nW\u00bbTT I I\t\nf Pagi !__Jt'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MOKNfNu\", AtfGU&T tf, l92cV\n-__=-\nThe Gilded Rose\nBy MAY CHRISTIE\nCHAPTER   LXII\n1#M.   ISLAND\nIWPACOMaS\n; Suddenly a queer, electric tremor\nwent through her slender body. It wu\nalmost as Chough a radio message had\nheen   wirelessed,\n\"lie\"  was neVI\nThe sea no longer drew her, nor\ndid her yearning eyes search the sunset, as though seeking to solve the\n| eternal mystery of life. Those eyes\ndf! hers turned Intuitively Inwards to\n(jjjgq undulating clttf land, where the\nflgu.c of a man was silhouetted . . .\nWk  van  Rupert  Briscoe,  she  knew.\nHer pace quickened. Every nerve\nU. her slim body was steeled to reach\nhim. told him . \u25a0 \u25a0\nShe was about to break Into a\n\u2022\"halloo\" when suddenly he disappeared\naffcum right. The earth apparently\nswalio'vcd him up completely.\n' Thi. queer phenomenon was all the\n\u2022^ddtr In that Marietta was on top\nOf .a high knoll at the moment of the\nai-sspi>carance, and the surrounding I\nsudfcape was like an open book before\ntyer straining  eyes.\nV Bhe hastened to the very spot of\nfU disappearance. Her sense of locality ond her eyesight were alike ex-\ncetyent. and these bramble bushes and\npHehly clumps of gorse formed the\nitrf spot where \"he\" had dlsap-\ngEN-rcd, She would surely find htm\nJf she searched ...\nA queer story had once reached her,\nVia Van Vorst. of some caves hereabouts,\nletta wu Imaginative, and her an-\nofitorft had- been adventurers and ma-\nWUders. Was Rupert Briscoe mixed\nup in some \"funny business\"? Dr.\nJekyil and Mr. Hyde, maybe? A double\ncharacter?     A dual role?\nNothing could surprise her any\nWare . . .\nSbc thrust ulde a grose busy, and\nan opening was revealed, like a glori-\ntyed rabbit-hole.\n\u25a0AUcej in wonderland!\" thought Marietta, wltb a little touch of humor\ni i-i'ln g her mouth.\nThc urge wu on her to Investigate.\nShe must reach Briscoe, too ....\nThe entrance was a narrow one. and\ntt\u00ab chalk looked grimy, but the girl\nNw clad ln a workmanlike black serge\ncoat snd skirt that wouldn't \"spoil\",\negd a small close-fitting hat.\nOlngerly she Inserted a foot In the\nAlining In the ground and found\n*>Kv-t three feet down, a rough rope\nkddcr.\nHt was easy for her to slip down\nn>at latter, and the six foot drop at\n'!$\u2022 bottom did not Jolt her ln the\nleast.\nantern burned in the cavern, and\nIn Its rays she saw a heavy door that\nreinforced with iron and two\nenormous bolts. .\n, The door, .was ever so slightly ajar,\nland a ray of light came from the other\nske\nMarietta did not hestitate. Her erstwhile lover had passed through that\ndoor hut recently, and she would fol-\n[Iqw  him, despite  the consequences.\n\"Rupert!\"     She   Inserted   her   body\nle   (he   aperture.* aad   called   out   his\n[name the  moment  that she saw  him.\ntlunert! It's I, Marietta! What are you\nhere?\"\nThe  man   wheeled   around.    Hc   was\nlow-hung,    chalky    cave    whose\nides   were    almost   lined   with    casts\nhd mysterious cases and bottles.\n'Good God;\" His hand had flashed\nto an Inner pocket of his coat, and\n..sr.ritn saw a weapon gleaming . . .\n>fais he going to shoot her?\n\u25a0It's only I.\" she repeated, shivering\n\u25a0fih bidden apprehension. \"Just\nJ4*rictta\u2014 \"\nAnd what brings you here woman'\/\nHow dare'you apy on me?\"\nSpr?\" she repeated-blankly. \"I\u2014X\n:\u00abew you on the cliffs\u2014I followed\u2014\"\nHc slipped the weapon back Into his\nttwt pocket, and came directly towards\ntteavV,\n' \"Who sent you here? tn whose pay\nH| you? But I needn't ask\u2014it's\nV\u00bbn Vorst sent you here!\"\nI \"Oh. Rupert, that's what I wanted\nty rvpialn. i He\u2014he hadn't the right\nto Intrude that night\u2014he'd been dlnk-\nfijg\u2014he apologised afterwards to me.\nHc  did,   Indeed!\"\nBriscoe cut'In. brusquely and rudely:\n\"Tell that to the marines I I know\nyour kind! You weren't born yesterday! But\u2014\"\u2014he caught her by the\nshoulders with a grip that actually\nhurt\u2014\"I'm going to get to the bottom\nof this spying business. Wu lt Van\nVorst  who wnt  vou  here?\"\n\"Don't!    You  hurt I     Let got\"\n\"Answer me I And don't attempt to\ndouble-cross me! I've been far too\ngood to you in the past, and this Ib\nthe way I get repaid You've lied to\nme already about Van Vorst, but you\nshan't get away wtth tt a second time\nI don't care who keeps you, but\u2014-\"\n\"It's false I\u2014It^-it wu Just a business arrangement\u2014\" she protested, with\nshaking limbs, for Briscoe's mien, his\naccusations,  almost   stunned   her.\n\"Faugh! Don't pile on the sweet\nsimplicity! And now\u2014\" with another\npainful Jerk at her shoulders\u2014\"tell\nme why you came  here?\"\n\"No reason at all. I\u2014I didn't know\nthere wu a secret. I saw you suddenly disappear, and so I followed\nI\u2014I wanted a talk with you\u2014that\nwu  all.\"\nTomorrow\u2014Marietta   Leaves.\nCHAMBERLAIN IS\nDEEPLY TOUCHED\nGlad Hearty Welcome to Canada Promised But Desire.,\nno Functions\nPARIS. Aug. 26\u2014Premier Mackenzie\nKing received the following reply to\nhts message to Sir Austen Chamberlain. British foreign 'secretary, who\nwill shortly make a trip to the United\nStates and Canada In the Interests\nof  his  health:\n\"I am deeply touched by the terms\nof your kind message. It ls a profound regret to me that my Illness\nhas left me so weak that I cannot\nJoin with you and the other representatives   of   the   Empire   ln   signing\nthe pact In Paris. Lady Chamberlain\nand I thank you warmly for your\nassurance of a heartly welcome to\nCanada, where lt will be a great\npleasure to me to renew our friendship. But I beg that even then public\nfunctions may be avoided and our\nmeeting   be   purely. Informal.\"\nTORONTO, Aug. 2fl.\u2014Six Ontario cities\nreceived their first air mall service Prlday  when planes from  nut  and west\narrived In Toronto bearing .messages of\ngood wishes oh the' occUlon of the\nopening of the Canadian National ex-\nWoman's Throat Cut\nhy Glass Flung by\nBolt of Lightning\nSOKANE, Aug. 20.\u2014A barrage of\nflying glass and concrete flung by a\nlightning bolt slashed the Jugular vein\nof Mrs. Ella Poor, aged 38, during an\nelectrical storm and punctured her\nface, arms and, abdomen. A doctor\nsaid she will Uve.\nBabe Ruth has played In more world\nseries than any other major leaguer,\nthree with Boston and live vjlth the\nYankees.\nhibition. Klngsyra. Wlndaoir. Hamtl-\ntoft and Toronto were linked by air\nmall U?r tne flrBt tbne'\n!#>\u25a0\nWee ofa kind and all of the best\nSold by all gfocefs in the west\nSHELLY, JOHNSON,\nFOR TAXCONCLAVE\nMinister  of  Finance  and  His\nDeputy to Attend at\nSeattle\nVICTORIA. Aug. 26.\u2014Hon. W. C.\nShelly, minister of finance, and E. D.\nJohnson, deputy minister, are to attend the twenty-first annual conference of the* National Taxation association of thc United States, which\nwill meet in Seattle, holding sessions\nall this week, starting today.\nThere will assemble at this convention all thc leading experts of the\nUnited States and Canada on schedules\nconnected with various branches of\ntaxation. The gathering Is one that\nlt was felt that minister and thc\ndeputy minister of this province could\nnot afford to miss, as the information\nto be gained from men of the widest\nexperience would be of invaluable assistance to them both ln meeting\nproblems that have to be faced ln\nBritish   Columbia.\nGlenbank School\nls Reduced to An\nAssisted Status\nGLENBANK, B.C.. Aug, 26,\u2014Word has\nbeen received from Victoria that the\nstatus of the Olenbank school has\nbeen reduced from a regularly organized school district to an assisted\nschool.\nSecretary Bailey announced that this\nwould mean that the department would\nln future pay the whole of the\nteachers' salary, leaving the ratepayers\nthe costs of maintenance.\nDuthie Advises He\nIs Making Payment\non Rufus Argenta\nVICTORIA, Aug. 26.\u2014J. P. Duthie of\nSeattle notified thc head office of\nthe Rufus Argenta mines here that\nhe wns paying at once another IU8.000\nInto thc treasury of thr company,\nbringing thr rash paid up to $27,000\nto  finance work  now  contracted   for.\nAl! supplies for the operations are\nbeing purchased from Vancouver and\nPrince Rupert firms. The first, shipment went north Trom Vancouver Wednesday night. Operations will hc carried on all winter.\nReforestation\nMuch has been said recently about\nre-forestation in B. C. The present\nforest is the result of natural reforestation when the human hazard\nwas not present to defeat nature.\n. Natural re-stocking of cut over lands\nig now going on, as may be seen almost\neverywhere, and nature will again reestablish the forests if only fire is\nkept out\nPREVENT FOREST FIRES-YOU CAN HELP\nB. C FOREST SERVICE\n\u25a0\nAll These\nOil wells beyond.the equator, tank ships transporting\na better crude from far\nPeru, tank cars, refineries,\nthousands and thousands\nof men all these enter into production of Marvelube,\na better oil made from a\nbetter crude. And then\nthere are the years of research and experiment;\nmillions of dollars expend\ned in perfecting better\nmethods of manufacture,\n'and the unending, jealous\nvigilance that maintains\nMarvelube quality always.\nOnly Imperial Oil Limited\nhas resources tomakeMar-\nvelube, only Imperial Oil\nhas access to Peruvian\ncrude, the belter crude\nfrom* which this better oil\nis made.\nMarwlub\nLET THIS CHART BE YOUR GUIDE\nThere is a grade of Marvelube exactly suited to your motor's requirements,\nyour car is not listed on this abbreviated Chart,,see the complete Marvelube\nChart at any Marvelube dealer's\nMAKE OF AUTOMOOll.B\nBuick  \t\nCadillac        -   \u2014\nChandler (Sp.\u00ab)\t\nChandler (a\" \u2014<\u2022\u00ab model,).\nChevrolet\t\nChry.ler (Imperial Highly)\t\nChryaler (all other model,)\t\nDodge (all models)\t\nDurant \t\nfrakine .....   \t\n-Ilea  ,-\nFord (model \"T\") \t\nFord (New) \t\nFranklin..\n\u00bbW-\"a--P----\u2014\nGRADEIOK\n(HMl-EFOR\nSUMM1-U\nWINTER\nHeavy\nMedium\nSp. Heavy\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\nHeavy\nMeiiium\nHeavy\nMedium\nSp. Heavy\nMrJium\nHeavy\nMeJium\nHeavy\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\n<ip>>\n\"F\"\nHeavy\nMedium\nSp. Heavy\nMedium\n\"Heavy\nMedium\nMAKE OF AUTOMOBILE\nHudson\t\nHupmohile (6 and 8 cylinder)\nJordan (6 and 8 cylinder)...\nla Salle \t\nLincoln\t\nMarmon (S cylinder)\nMarmon (all other models)\nNash\t\nOakland\t\nOldsmobile\t\nOverland \t\nPackard\t\nPaige\t\nPcerlcM (90. 70. 72)\t\nPrerleM (all other models)\nGRADE FOR    GRADE, FOR\nSUMMER WIN IT K\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nSp. Heavy\nSp. Heavy\nHeavy\nSp. Heavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nSp. Heavy\nHeavy\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\nMAKE OF AUTOMOBILE\nPierce* Arrow .\u201e_.\nPontiac _ .\t\nHco \t\nRtckenbacker \t\nRolls Royce\t\nStar\t\nStudebaker ,\nStutx \t\nVaiuhaH   \t\nWhippet\t\nWillys-Knight (4 cylinders)\nWillys-Knight (6 cylinders)\nWolverine ,-    ,-\ntJRADt-Fojt   GRADBPOR\nSUM MB 4       WINTER\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nSp. Heavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nEn. Heavy\nSp. Heavy\nHeavy\nHeavy\nMedium\nMedium\nMedijim\nHeavy\nMedium\nMedium\nHeavy\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nMedium\nl\\\n I ~-(^-\nfai msm man news, monbay mmm, xtjoust 2?, 1528\nftimberley Wins the Bennett Shield\n:EATS EDMONTON\nSIX NOTHING IN\nFOOTBALL FINAL\n'unnei Team Wipes Out 3-1 Defeat at Edmonton to Win\nthe Shield, 7-3\n5DMONTON IS HELD AT\nTHE HALFWAY MARK\nforward:   Smith,   Inside   right   Deljuce,\noutside right.\nThe referee, Mr. Lewis, controlled the\ngame, which waa played ln the bast\nspirit throughout. In a masterly manner.\nIrilliant Kimberley Backs Hold\nVisitors' Spasmodic\nBreakaways\nREDBIRDS WIDEN\nGAP TWIXT THEM\nAND THE GIANTS\nWin Over Phillies While Clan\nMcGraw Loses in Tenth\nto the Robins\nTWO HELENS IN\nTENNIS FINALS\nON CARD TODAY\nHelen Wills and Helen Jacobs\nBoth Defeat Opponents in\nStraight Sets\nLa Futelaye Proves\nGrand Prix Winner\nDKAUVILLI, France, Aug. \u00ab\u00ab.\u2014Held\nat lt to 1 In the betting, James Hennessey's La -Futelaye captured, the\nGrand Prix, worth \u00bb10,000 to-af. S.\nJ. Unque's Renadlne was second, and\nM.   Boussac's   Loenlndas,   third.\nKIMBERLEY. B.C., Aug. .6\u2014Klmber\n\u2022y won the final football game for\nne Bennett shield Saturday In Klmber\niy, winning 0-0 to overcome the hand!\nip of a two-goal lead obtained by\ndmonton ln the first game at Edmon-\nm on August 18.\nKlmberley Tunnel team, having dls-\nosed of Michel 1-0 and Lethbrldge 3-0,\nuffered defeat at Edmonton ln th>\nrst game of the final by 3-1.- Edmon-\n)ii played here ln the return final on\n.turday. t. good crowd witnessed the\nime. The total score was 7-3.\nTh. game opened promptly at 6 p.m.\nader the control of Referee Lewis of\n.Igary.\nRight from the start It was evident\nist Klmberley meant to wipe out that\n1 deficit.\nAt \/the cloae of 30 minutes' play the\nore stood 4-0 In favor of Klmberley,\ndmonton seldom crossing the half way\nat. The aecond half was a repetition\n: the first, Klmberley keeping play\nmtlnually In the Edmonton half,\nhe spasmodic breakaways by Edmon-\nin were easily repelled by the Klmber-\ny backs, Hotchktss ln goal having\nractlcally nothing to do.\nThe final score was Klmberley 6,\ndmonton 0.\nIn a team which played football\n. it ught to be played those out-\nandi _ were Jackson and Green on\nleft wing, and MacFarlane and\nee, left and center half, respectively,\nho displayed a masterly understand-\nof positional play and low and\nicurate passing. Isaacs, Kimberley's\new center forward, played an aggreB-\nve and effective game throughout.\neluce played his usual brainy game.\nThe Klmberley team was: Hotchklss,\nMl: Lily, left back; Corrlgan, right\nack; MacFarlane, left half; Nee. center\nUf; 8cott, right half; Jackson, outside\nftf Oreen,  Inside  left;   Isaacs,  center\nNEW YORK, Aug. .0\u2014Hal. Carlson\nstopped Boston with five hits and the\nCubs won the final game of the series\n6 to 3 today at Chicago. It was the\nfourth straight over the Braves.\nDel. Blssonette's 20th home run.\nknocked over the right field fence, wltb\ntwo cut and none on ln the 10th, gave\nBrooklyn a 4 to 3 decision over the.\nGiants at Brooklyn today. The defeat,\ncoupled with the victory of the Cardinals over the Phils, dropped Clan McOraw to a position three and one-\nhalf games behind the leaders.\nContinuing the process of regaining\nthe National lead, the St. Loula Cardinals won another contest on the\nPhillies today 6 to 1. With the Oiants\nstill In a losing slump, the Redblrds\nIncrease- their lead by three and one.\nhalf games.\nCincinnati beat off Pittsburgh. Its\ncloset rival for fourth place, by defeating them 4 to 3 today. The Pirates\nwere held ln check by Charles (Red)\nLucas until the ninth Inning, when\nthey broke lose with a wild rally for\ntheir only tallies.\nCanadian Olympic\nTeam at Montreal\nMONTREAL, Aug. -6.\u2014The Montcalm of the Canadian Pacific fleet,\nwhich arrived Saturday brought over\nthe major portion of the Canadian\nOlympic boxing and wrestling contingents, ln addition to a numbed of\nother passengers, among whom were\nViscountess Harding, mother of Viscount Harding, who Is to be a guest\nof the Governor-Grand at Ottawa until\nI^rd Harding's marriage to Miss Margot Fleming of Ottawa; Capt. R.\nRaynes, of London, A. D. C. to the\nOovernor-Oeneral; J. H. Ellon, manager\nof the Toronto Symphony Orchestra;\nJ. Landy, brother of Captain Landy\nof the Canadian Pacific fleet; and\nparty of 15 of the Federation of British\nIndustries.\nOne \u00a9Ionization'\nMany Offices\nand Services\n\u2022Jumklutt Gistitr, Jeufer\nXHB chief services rendered at each of the\nmore than 600 offices of the Bank of Montreal include such as have to do with\nFOREST HILLS. N. Y., Aug. 26.\u2014\nCalifornia's tennis Helens\u2014Helen Wills,\nthe queen, and Helen Jacobs, who has\nbeen widely hailed as the crown princess\u2014swept through to victory In\nstraight sets Saturday to enter the\nfinal round of the national title tournament here Monday. They are to\nfight lt out for the championship.\nIt was Just another romp for Queen\nHelen of Berkeley, the champion, in\nwinning her semi-final match from\nEdith Cross, another sturdy young\nCalifornian, 6-0, 6-1. But Miss Jacobs\nof Santa Barbara underwent a searching test of stamina, courage and ability\nat' the hands ot the veteran Mrs. Molla\nBJurstedt Mallory of New York before\nshe finally emerged victorious. 6-2,\n7-8.\nIt was tn a memorable match\nwhich marked the rising of % new\nstar and the virtual setting ot the\nold, that Miss Jacobs asserted, the\nsupremacy of youth over the experience and \" Incomparable fighting\nspirit of the sun-tanned Mrs. Mallory, who came out of the northland\nsome 13 years ago to win tbe national championship no less than eight\ntimes.\nWILLS   VICTORY\nANTI-CLIMAX\nEven though featuring the queen,\nthe match between Miss Wills and\nMiss  Cross came  as an  antl-cltmax.\nThere was far too great a discrepancy between the abilities of the\ntwo, although Miss Cross had looked\nremarkably strong as she marched\nthrough all her previous matches In\nstraight sets, counting Mrs. Hazel\nHotchklss Wightman among her victims.\nIn addition to her singles victory,\nMiss Wills, paired with Mrs. Wight-\nman, won ln the doubles quarter\nfinals from the energetic and magnetic MIsb Evelyn Parsons of Palo\nAlto and VlrgThla Rice of Boston,\n6-3,    6-0. Mrs.    Harper    and    Miss\nCross also advanced, beating Clara\nZlnke and Ruth Oexm&n, Clnclnn-\nti.  6-2, 6-0.\nThe other two matches were interrupted by rain, with' Miss Jacobs\nand Mrs. May Sutton Bundy leading\nVirginia HUleary of Philadelphia and\nDorothy Andrus of Yonkers. 5 games\nto 1, in the first set. Mrs. Chapin\nand Miss Anderson were 1-all in games\nin their match with Mrs, B. P. Stem.\nand  Mrs. Hester, New York.\nLOTT   WINS   AT   Nt-WPORT\nNEWPORT, R. I., Aug. 26.\u2014 William T. Tilden's undefended title ln\nthe Newport annual Invitation tennis\ntournament went Saturday to Oeorge\nM. Lott Jr., Chicago, member of the\nDavis cup team, who won In five\nsets from John Van Ryn of Orange\nN. J.. 2-6, 6-0. 3-6, 6-2. 6-0. ln the\nfinal   match.\nLott, paired with John Doeg of\nSanta Monica, carried off honors ln\nthe doubles finals this afternoon, 6-3.\n\u00ab-3. 6-1. when they defeated Austin,\nTexas, former national Intercollegiate\ntitleholder.\nSENATORS LOSETO\nC. P. ALL-STARS BY\nFOURTEEN TO HVE\nFRANK DOLP\nREGAINS WEST\nGOLF CROWN\nPortland Man Beats Chicagoan\nin Sensational Battle in\n33 Holes\nNEW LEITH TROPHY\nPOSTED MEN'S GOLF\nTITLE IN KOOTENAY\nHeavy Hitting and Errors Are\nFeature  of   Exhibition\nBall Game\nPresented   by   Mr.   and   Mrs.\nLeith; Arrangements Complete; Entries Pour In\nBabe Couldn't\nKid Lad About\nCommcTQ-l Ehnking\nOifft-i-g Account.\nSavings Deposits\nCollectioDI\nLoans and Di-c-unts\nCredit Information\nForeign Trade and\nExchange\nLettera of Credit and\nTt-r-Uen'Owquea\nMoney Ordera\nBanking by Mail\nHolding their opponent, to eight\nscattered hlu and connecting for 13\nhlt\u00bb themselvea. the all-star baseballers\nof the C. P. B. and C. P. Bspreas\nromped to a 14-6. victory over the\nSenators, second aeries champions of\nthe Trafalgar league, in an exhibition\ngame at the Recreation grounds yesterday afternoon, before a fair Bleed crowd\nEvery man but two on the All-Star\nteam connected for hits and every man\nbut one scored at leaat once. Senators\nscoring wu left entirely to Olllett,\nRealya, Pasacreta and Deferro.\nMANY  ERRORS\nErrors were numerous on both teams,\nalthough the Senators had six more\nchalked up agalnat them, than the All-\nStart. Senators made 17 errors and\nthe All-Stars made  11. ..,      ,\nHeavy hitting was a Iraure of the\ngame. H. Olllett, Renwick and Buchanan each got a two-base hit from the\nSenators' pitcher, Walt Olllett. Realya\nand Olllett each connected for a two-\noaae hit from H. Olllett, and Realya an\nDeferro each got one from Richardson,\nwho replaced Olllett on the mount; for\nthe All-Stars ln the sixth Inning.\nH. Olllett. twirling for the All-Stars\nfor five Innings, struck out six batters\nand allowed alx hits. Richardson\ntwirled the sixth and seventh Innings,\nstriking out one batter, allowing two\nhits and hitting one with a pitched\nball.\nWalt Olllett went the whole route\n(or the Senators, striking out three,\nallowing 13 hits, hitting one batter\nwith a pitched ball and giving one base\non balls.\nP. Bamford started as umpire and was\nrelieved by Jack Long, who walked off\nwhen the Senatora began \"crabbing\".\nand H. Bums handled the balance of\nthe game.\nSTATISTICS\nThe score by innings waa:\nSenators  0003030\u20148\nAll-Stars     10   4.33   X\u201414\nThe box score was:\nSenators A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E.\nArcura.  c      4   0   0   4 41   3\nR. Bell. 3b    4   0   0    10    1\nW. Olllett,  p    3-3043\nL. Realya. lb   3   13   10   3\nPasacreta,   as     3    1    1    13   3\nT. Deferro, rt 3   13   0   0   1\nO. Ford,  lf   3   0    110   0\nK.   Fish,  3b     3   0   0    13   3\nL.  Stewart, cf    3   0   0   3   0   0\nCHtCAOO, Aug. 38.\u2014Defeating three |\nstar golfers from the. Pacific northwest was lust a trifle too big a Job\nfor Pus Novotny of Chicago, especially\nwhen the last of the trio shot within\nfour strokes of par for 33 holes.\nPrank DolP of Portland Saturday\nbecame the western amateur golf cham-\n: pton for the second time In three\n' yean by beating the fighting Illlnl,\ntour and three, after the Chicagoan had\ndowned Bon Stein of .Seattle, defending titleholder. and Dr. O. P. Willing.\nPacific northwest amateur and open\nchampion.\nThe former captain of the University\nof Illinois golf team did not give up\nwithout a terrific struggle, although\nhis ragged game In the morning put\nhim alx down and he was seven holes\nto the bad when Dolp took the nineteenth wtth a birdie.\nDOLP SCORES\nSEVEN niKi.lis\nThen the sturdy young Chicagoan\nof Bohemian race bent bis. back to\nwhat proved to be a hopeless task.\nBut he made the beat of lt until, alter\nhalving or winning 13 hole* .straight\nand cutting the lead to three up. hc\nfinally became conscious of the precarious position and missed a 30-inch\nputt on the thirty-third green to lose\nthe hole to Dolp's eighteenth par. to\nsay nothing of seven birdies the Port-\nlander had.\nNovotny cut Dolp's lead to three up\nat the thirty-first, where Dolp got ln\ntwo traps and took five, but he could\nget no better than a half at the\nthirty-third. This made .he thirteenth\nhole that Novotny had either halved\nor won and he seemed to have a sure\nhalf on the 416-yard thirty-third. Dolp\ngot down all right, as usual, but Novotny, after hesitating on the putt\nlonger than Is his custom, putted UM\npellet right by the cup and gave Dolp\nihe hole, the match and the title without  more ado.\nYou muscd m*\ncap.mww ni #\u00bb\n?#4TURN Ti 4MMT\n^at rooR H\/rr.'\nAll arrangements for the Kootenay\ngolf championships to be played off\nover the coming week-end are now\ncomplete. Entries are pouring ln and\nthere is every Indication that all clubs\nIn the district will be well represented\nThe course and greens are ln good shape\nQ. N. Douglas Is receiving out-of-town\nentries.\nsir. and Mrs. Alex Lelth have presented a magnificent cup for the men's\nchampionship. Very keen competition\nls expected ln this event, as this year's\nwinner wlll have the honor of having\nhis name engraved on the cup first.\nThe cup has not yet been placed on\ndisplay, and Mr. and Mrs. Leith. are\nbeing besieged by golfers anxious to\nknow all about ot.\nThe cup which Is to be played for ln\nperpetuity, will replace the Leith trophy also presented by Mr. und Mrs.\nAlex Lelth, which Is now held by T. ...\nWilson of the Nelson club. Mr. Wilson\nwon the cup three times, thereby becoming possessor of lt.\nQualifying rounds are to be played\non Wednesday, Thursday and Friday\nI*o contestant will be allowed to play\nor practice ou any of these three days\nbefore he or she haa played in the\nqualifying rounds. Men have been asked\nlo play as many v games as possible on Babe Ruth was telling me a abort\nWednesday so as to leave Thursday time ago ln the clubhouse an amua-\nfree  for the ladles. lng   Incident   that   occurred   while   he\n _\u00bb 1  -J was  on   a   hunting   trip   last   year.\nBabe, who ls always a great favorite\nwith  the  youngsters as he  ls really\nSj^#&\u00a3&\nBV   Al.  DRMAREE\n(Fonwr   Pltrlicr   New   York   Olam*)\nMartin and Balfour\nTnho  m-VmeAmrn Titlm bl\u00ab ~id \u00bb\u00bb\"\u00bb\u00bb\". JM kidding 01\" <* ttae\ni ukc rr cncr.i i wc boyg on lne trlp about hto marlumftn-\nMOOSE JAW, Sask.. Aug. 26.\u2014Walter\nMairtin and  Arthur  Balfour  of  Reglna,\nTell  you   what   I'll  do.\"   said   Babe\nthe    young    hero-worshiper,    \"I'll\nBRAXTON HOLDS\nCLEVELAND DOWN\nAllows   Five   Hits   and   Fans\nSeven; Senators Win Only\n'Game by 5-3\nTotals     38   6   8 18   8 17\nAll-Stars\nH. Olllett, p.,\nO. Richardson. c.,p. .. 4\nJ. Wallace. 3b   4\nW. Freno, lb   4\nC. McKinnon, 3b ... 3\nD. Renwick.   as     4\nF.  Kraft,  lf    4\nE. L. Buchanan, rf    4\nR. Anderson,  cf    3\nAB. R. H. P.O. A. C.\n.533383\n3\n0\n3\n1\n1\n1\n2\n0\n8 0\n3 0\n0 3\n3 4\n0 3\n0 0\n0.0\n0    1\nBILLY PETROLLE\nSTOPS BRITISHER\n8aturday won the men's singles title bn y()U two wu x can hit your j^t\nof western Canada in the courts of w you tnr\u00a3JW u up ln the & ^^\nthe Moose Jew Tennis club when they   thflt   you   can<t   mt   my   hat   when   t\ndefeated A. J. Wlckens, Moose Jaw, ud\nhis Reglna partner, Jack McCallum, In\nthree straight se:s, 6-2, 0-1, 0-2. Thi.\ngame was a replay of thc final played\nduring the  recent  western tournament\nthrow   It   up.\"    The   youngster   agreed\nand   Ruth   took   careful   aim   and   Intentionally  miscd  hla cap.\n'Now    it's    my    lurn!\"      said    the\nsets  and  were  all  square  when   dark\nntss Intervened.\nwhen   the   above   teams   battled   four   youngster   nnd   he   took   careful   aim\nand    blew    the    Babe's    $18.    hat   to\nsmithereens.\nYou never can tell what a boy will\ntlo. They are seldom hypocrites and\nusually fay what they think.\nFi fd Snodgrass, who made the\n$100,000 mulf in the Giant-Red Sox\nworld   scries   of   1012.   found   this  out.\nSnodgraf.n wns invited to be present\nut a Y. M. C. A. gathering one night\nshortly after his famouB faux pas and\nSt. Louis to Replace\nWinnipeg in American\nProfessional Hockey\n\"Fargo Express\" Wins Technical in Fifth Round Against\nJack .Berg\nCHICAGO, Aug. 36.\u2014Billy Petrolle.\nthe \"Fargo Express,\" stopped Jac..\nBerg, British lightweight invader, In\nthe fifth round of their scheduled\n10-round fight here Friday night after\nknocking thc Englishman down 10\ntimes In two rounds. Berg was floored\nnine times In the first round and\nonce   again   ln   the   third.\nAfter two vicious rights to the Jaw\nwhich knocked Berg reeling and helpless ln the fifth round, hls seconds\nhumanely sent a towel flying Into the\nring, and the victory goes Into the\nrecord books as a technical knockout\nfor the Fargo lightweight challenger.\nST.   LOU13.   Aug.   20.\u2014Ot.   Lauls   will\nreplace    Winnipeg    In    thc     A-._er.can  wa;; called  on for a speech.\nI Professlonal   Hockey   league   In   Novem-      '1  CM*,   make  a  speech.\"   said  Fred,\nI ber.   It   was   announced   here   tixturday.   \"but   111   try   to  answer   any   question\nwith  the purchase  of the  franchise  hy   about  baseball  that  the   boys  will  ask\n[F. D. McDonald and Earl Reflow.    Win-  me.\"\nnipeg  was dropped  because  of   the  \u00bbv      \"How  did   you  happen   to drop  that\ntreme  distance,  officials  said.    The  St.   fly   ball   in   the   world   series?\"   piped\nLouis team wljl be composed vol Cana-  up   one    kid    in   the    audience,   and\ndlans with  a Canadian manager,  pres-  tJr.cdgrasa   almost   fell   off   the   plat-\ner.t plans Indicate. fo.m and  left  the party flat.\nTotals     35 14 11 31 IS 11\nTO SELECT SOCCER\nTEAM TO GO TRAIL\nEvery btanch office has behind it the full reiourcej\nof the Bank as a whole. No account is too large\nand none too small.\nBANK OF\nMONTREAL\nEstablished l8l7\nTOTAL  ASSBTS IN EXCBSS OF  *M0,000,_0_\nBranches in Nelson and District\nNELSON BRANCH\u2014L. B. DeVEBER, Mp-.\nNEW YORK. Aug. 26-Braxton held\nCleveland to five hits today end .true,\nout seven men, the Sen-tors taking the\nthird .-me of the series 5 to 3, at\nWashington today. Mllhus and Bayne\nwere hit for nine safeties. Washington's first baseman drove In three\nruns.\nThe Detroit-New York game here today was postponed on account of rain.\nA double-header wlll be played tomorrow.\nREADYFORPLAY\nClash W<ith Senators in Double\nHeader of Play-offs Next\nSunday\nExecutive Will Chose Team for\nWest Kootenay League\nGame Labor Day\nWith their team once more complete, the Live wires, winners of the\nfirst aeries of the Trafalgar Independent Baseball league, announced last\nnight they were ready to start the\nplay-offs with the Senatora for th\u00ab\ngrand championship. The Senators won\nthe second series of the league. Next\nSunday was aet aa the date, with a\ndouble header at the Trafalgar grounda.\nThe play-offs will be for the best\nout of five gamea, with the second\ndouble header on September 0 at the\nRecreation grounda, If a fifth game Is\nnecessary to decide the Isaue lt will\nbe played on the following Sunday.\nNelson's representative soccer squad\nto battle Trail at the smelter city on\nLabor day, ln the third game of the\nWeat Kootenay senior soccer league, will\nbe chosen at a meeting of the city\nleague   executive  tonight.\nIt'Is expected a strong team can be\nselected as practically all the players\nhave shown Improved form ln the\nnew city championship series, which\nwas designed mainly to keep the boya\nln practice for the West Kootenay\ngames.\nLAST CHANCE\nThe game on Labor day will be\nNelson's last chance to hold The Dally\nNews cup, emblematic of the West\nlast year, and also to cop the Individual\nKootenay championship, which It won\nmedals, donated by W. R. Thomson,\nhonorary president of the league. Nelson lost the first two games, and with\none more game only after Labor day.\nthey must win both to create a tie\nand make necessary a play-off, to stay\nin the running.\nRath Twelve Days\nAhead of Record\nMade Last Season\nNBW YORK. Aug. 36 \u2014Although Babe\nRuth Is 1. games. 13 days and six\nhome runB ahead of his 1937 record\nmark after slapping his fony-slxth\ninto the bleachers at the Yankee stadium ln the second game against Detroit yeaterday. he facedihe necessity\nof hitting almost one homer In every\ntwo games to Improve upon his mark\nof 60 made last year. Ruth now rapidly\nla drawing into the period which \u25a0 tn\nH37 saw him smash 16 circuit drives\nIn   his  last  31   games.\nA year ago yesterday thc Babe\nhad only 40 homers and waited until September 6 In this thirteenth game\nthe first half of a double-header, to\ncollect No. 45 and No. 46 off Tony\nWelzer at Boston, the start of his\ngreat September spree. He followed\nwith No. 47 In the second game that\nday. and picked up Nos. 46 and 49\nthe following afternoon In game No. 136\nThc second game at the Yankee stadium yesterday was No. 123 of the\niMrrent schedule for Babe and the\nYanks. The big slugger thus has only\n32 engagements remaining In which\nto pick up the 16 circuit drives necessary to break his record by one.\nMAODl!   DON  WINNER\nWilli TICK   PARK  EVENT\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 36\u2014 Under the\nheavy Impost of 128 pounds, afagdu\nDon, of Col. Boyle stable, romped home\nthe winner in the feature event, the\nWhlttler Park handicap for western\nCanada breda of the Manitoba Jockey\nclub'a opening fall meet here Saturday, lt waa an easy win for the Boyle\nhorse. Clncoe wma aecond and Ducheaa\not York, third.\nGene Tunney Proud\nof Irish Extraction\nDUBLIN, Aug. 24.\u2014Oene Tunney has\naeen enough of Ireland to \"make me\nprouder than ever that every drop of\nblood in my veins Is Irish,\" he told\nthe   Associated   Press.\n\"I don't know how to express my\nthank); I have never before \u2022 experienced such a tribute aa haa been paid\nme by the people of Dublin,\" the ex-\nchampion of the world MO-.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJersey City 3-4, Buffalo 4-10.\nBaltimore 4-3, Rochester 5-10.\nReading  8-6.   Montreal  0-1.\nFor Comforts Sake\nUse Edison Mazda Lamps\nThey are frosted on the inside and give an abundance of 10ft, well-diffused light that is restful\nto the eyes. _**\nEDISON MAZDA\nINSIDE      FROSTED\nLAMPS\nACANADIAN GENERAL ELECTDIC PPODUCT\nDOLP  MBNTERN   MU  TITLEHOLDER\nCHICAOO, Aug. 26\u2014 Pank Dolp. Portland, Ore., won the western golf cham-\nplonahlp. defeating Ous Novotny of Chicago 4 and 3 ln the final 36 holes\nmatch over the Bob O'Llnk course.\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS\nARE   SOLD  DY\nDILL'S SUPER-SERVICE STATION\nCOR. VICTORIA AND  STANLEY  STS. PHI\nW. G. HUNTER\nsells Edison Mazda Lamps. Cor. Victoria A   Ward Sis., Phone 5S0\nSALMON   BELLIES   DEFEAT   CELTICS\nMOM-REAL. Aug. 36.\u2014The New\nWestm nster lacrosse team, which represented Canada in the Olympics, defeated Celtics of Montreal. 17-6 ln an\nexhibition game here today. The\nSalmonbellles leave tomorrow for Ottawa.\nMACDONALDS\nElite Git\na. perfect blend, for those\nwho \"roll thtir oton\"\nm\n- -\n\u25a0_-M_______i\n Page Eighl\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1928\nTHREE-QUARTERS\nMILLION BRITISH\nSEE SOCCER OPEN\nDerby Count Beats Blackburn\n5-1, Dean Scoring Three\nGoals\nLEEDS UNITED BEAT\nASTON VILLA TEAM\nIn  Second   Division   Hotspurs\nMake Start Back by Won\nOver Oldham\nHAVE SEAS CLAIMED HASSELL AND CRAMER?\nLONDON, Aug. 26.\u2014Derby County as\na team, and Dean, the masterly Everton\ncenter forward, won the individual honors In the English league first division\nsoccer matches Saturday. Portsmouth,\nwho trimmed Huddersfield Town, staged\nthe biggest surprise. Marking the\nopening of the soccer season 750,000\n.spectators saw the matches despite the\nfact that the weather was unpleasant\nand first cricket matches were competing for sttendances.\nDean, who broke all records last season by goals scored ln league games,\ngot off to a fine start by doing the\nhat trick for Everton against Bolton\nWanderers.\n1.RI.IT FOK.YAKI)\nWORK\nDerhy County scored a sensational\nwin over Blackburn Rovers, the cup-\nholders, by 6 goals to 1 at Derby ln the\npresence of 18,000 people. They achieved\nvictory through thrustful forward line\nwork. Bedford and Crooks stood out\nfor the County in the first half.\nWhitehouse got two and Ramage, late\nof Coventry, added the other three.\nRlgby netted for the Rovers.\nLeeds United signalized their return\nto senior company by a fine win from\nAston Villa. Thirty thousand of their\nfellow citizens saw Leeds suppress the\nVilla team. Keetley performed the hat\ntrlek for the victors, Wanscoat getting\ntheir fourth counter. York registered\nfor Aston villa.\nThe Wednesday, who narrowly escaped\nrelegation last season, made a good\nstart by beating Arsenal before 23.000\npeople. It was one-all at half time.\nHooper scoring for the Sheffield team\non a penalty kick, and Jones for the\nLondoners. The Wednesday got two\nmore through Marsden and Hooper\nafter Arsenal had been temporarily ln\nthe lead through a goal by Bain.\nThe other match between Londoners\nand a Sheffield team\u2014West Ham vs.\nSheffield United at Upton park, saw\nthe decision reversed, the metropolitan\nteam winning very impreslvely. Ruffell got three goals and Barrett one\nfor  the  Hammers.\nBurnley and Sunderland played before\n20,000 at Burnley The Lancashire\nteam won, their goals coming from\nBurton, two. and Devene. Halliday\nscored for Sunderland.\nManchester United and Leicester City\nplayed a draw through the goals of\nRawllngs. for the former nnd Hlnes\nfor the latter. Twenty thousand saw\nthe game.\nEverton had to Journey to Bolton\nWanderers' terrain. Dean scored one\ngoal in the first half and the other\ntwo soon after the Interval. Gibson\ngot Bolton's markers In the second\nhair.\nMO <.vn: AT\nBIRMINGHAM\nThe record gate for the day was at\nBirmingham, where the locals played\nManchester City. Forty-five thousand\npaid to see the game, which was won\nby the home team. A close second\nwas the 40,000 crowd which witnessed\nLiverpool's defeat of Bury at Liverpool. Miller, two, and Whitehourse\nwere the scorers.\nOallagher. Newcastle United, and\nFerguson, Cardif City, two noted players, each scored for their teams, which\nwere deadlocked at the end of the\ngame.\n>vi ks BUT\nIn the second division. Tottenham\nHotspurs made a flrBt step back to\nward the first division by beating Old\nham Athletics. Twenty thousand Spur\nfans saw them win. Scorers were\nElkes, Roberts, two. and Osborne, for\nTottenham, and King for Oldham.\nBradford were behind at tbe interval through Miller's goal for Barnsley,\nbut won out in the end though goals\nby Uoyd. from a penalty, and Hart,\nand started their career in the second\ndivision  auspiciously.\nA crowd of 30,000 saw the home team,\nReading, bow before Mlddlesborough.\nCamsell. the (rest Mlddlesborough\nplayer, helped his team by two counters\nChelsea showed they have not lost\nmuch as a drawing card, even though\nthey did not give the best display last\naeoson, for 36.000 crowded  the stand\nBradford City's enormous score of 11\nagainst Rotherham United was made\nup of three goals each by Edmunds\nand White, two each for ScTiven and\nHarvey and one by Burkinshaw\nMar got all of Wrexham's four scores\nagainst Chesterfield, while Parsons, Bar\nrow  and  Goddard,  Queen's  Park,\ndid the hat trick.\nArctic seas that pound against Greenland's ley shores conceal the fate of\nBert Hassell s attempt to fly from\nCochrane. Ont.. to Mount Evans, Greenland, ln the monoplane Greater Rockford. Not since 4 a.m. eastern standard time last Sunday has any word\ncome from Hassell and his companion,\nParker Cramer, who left Cochrane at\nnoon Saturday, August 18. on the second lap of a good-will flight from\nRockford,   III.,   to   Stockholm.   Sweden.\nNo. 1 shows Hassell and Cramer surrounded by Cochrane lady friends\nshortly before the take-off on Saturday. From left to right, those In the\npicture are: Mrs. F. C. Ivy. wife of\nthe mayor of Cochrane; Mrs. A. W.\nBarlow, wife of manager. Imperial\nBank; Mrs. A. V. Waters, wife of M.P.P,,\nOntario legislature; Parker D. Cramer:\nBert Hassell; Mrs. W. Mltehel. wife of\nmanager. Bank of Nova ScoUr: Mrs. R.\nR.  Mitchell,  wife of postmaster.  Coch\nrane; Mrs. Geo\nThorong, wife\nNorthland Post.\nNo. 4 ln the layout ls a map of the\nterritory over which the flyers passed\nnnd were due to pus on the Journey\nIrom Roccioru. IU,. to Mount Evans\nGiT.nland. The map also shows points\nat which BMMMte were received from\nthe plane. No. 2 is a picture of Bert\nHnssell, the pilot, and No. 3 ls that\nof  Parker D. Cramer,  his companion.\nClassified Advertising\n : i , i  .  .\u2014x s\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant   and    Classified    M-Bttlsjnf \u2014\nOne and a half cents a wort per Insertion, lf paid In advanoe. oe per word\nper week, or 22'o per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nin-advanc. basis. Kach Initial, mure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts as one word.\nMinimum  25c. If charged 60c.\nLocal Beading Notices\u2014Three centa\nper word each insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals 10c per word.\nBlackface capitals 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount If run dally without change of copy for one month or\nmore. Where advertisement Is set out\nln short lines the charge ls 15c a Una\nfor Roman type. SOc for blackface and\n25c for blackface capitals. Minimum\n36c, If churged 60c.\nBirth Notices\u2014Free.\nCards\u2014Three cents per word; BOo\nminimum.\nHelp Wanted\nWAITRESS WANTED\u2014September first.\nWages fifty dollars. Hotel Reco,\nSandon. B. C. (6130)\nWANTED\u2014Good man for ranch. Must\nbe good teamster. J. D. MacDonald,\nR.  R. No.   1. (5181-4-111)\nHIOH SCHOOL GIRL wants room and\nboard ln return for light services.\nMrs. J.  H.  Clark.  Ymlr.   (5188-6-114)\nMEN. train for firemen, brakemen.\nbeginners \u00bb150, later \u00bb250 monthly\u2014\nalso clerks. Railway Association.\nApply Box, 5070, Dally News.    (5128)\nWANTED\u2014Traveler calling on mines\nand mining communities on commission basis. . State line already\ncarried and territory covered. Kaye-\nmay,   Postal   Box   938,   Nelson.\n(5J18-6-116)\nSituations Wanted\nEXPERIENCED   CAMP   COOK.     Phone\n505L.     Mrs. Bourner.       (5091-14-114)\nAutomobiles\nFOR SALE\u2014Oldsmobile six. Good ordel\nwith five good tires. 8175. Bot\n5154.   Dally   News. (5141-6-1101\nPOR SALE\u2014One 1927 Ford Tudor\nSedan In splendid running shape\nfor only 8450. Easy terms can be\narranged. Mrs. H. Trowe. Oordon\nroad, phone 743R1. (5164-8-112)\nHEADQUARTERS FOR DEPENDABLE\nUSED TRUCKS AT LOW PRICES\n1% -ton Graham with new cab and\nexcellent tires; Hi-ton Reo. has disc\nwheels, cab and body; Hi-ton Timken\nworm-drive truck with Continental\nRed Seal engine, cab and platform,\nonly 8300. (great snap); 2',,-ton Gar-\nford with long wheelbase and 7-speed\ntransmission; 3-ton Day-Elder, also\nwith auxiliary transmission; 3-ton\nDay-Elder with or without hydraulic\nhoist and body; *t\\.-ton Federal. Easy\nterms arranged to suit your convenience. Call or write for further details.\nHAYES-ANDERSON  MOTOR  CO.. LTD.\n1256 Granville  St.,  Vancouver, B.  C.\n\"10  years  of  square  rlonllng\"\nLive Stock for Sale\nBEAUTIFUL elx-wceks-old pigs, 66.\neach, Edgewood, Mrs. Jordan Williams. (5098-31-132)\nStates team ln the Olympics, the\nopinion was expresed that the team\nhad experienced an off-day\n_ 11\neach\nPAC1FK COAST\nLEAGUE GAMES [\nSATIRDAY\nSeattle  3.   Los  Angeles   1.\nMissions  3,   Oakland   2.\nHollywood 4. Sacramento 3.\nPortland  4.  San  Francisco  3.\nM'NDAY\nMissions 2-0. Oakland 4-3\nPortland 4-1, San Francisco 6-3.\nHollywood 10-0, Sacramento 7-8.\nSeattle 1-1. Los Angeles 6-2.\nhy   the   first   aid   team   of   the   First! In   1925  the  team   won  the  provincial\nNelson Troop of Boy Scouts, have lucn , title   nnd  the   members   were   awarded\nreceived by the troop and depositee! with \\ Bold   medals.    Iu   1920  the  team again\nThe boys  are scheduled  to play  ex-' a  Jeweler  for  Inscription.    This  Is the I won  the provincial  title and  the  boys\nhibition  games tn  Ottawa on  Monday \\ !\"'>'\u25a0 vear the shield *hus been at 3take,   wer. awarded iuver medals.\nand  ln  Winnipeg   towards  the  end   of ; ll,1d the Nel-,on troop therefore hits the'     'the tram  woh second  place ln   1927\nnext   week,   while   other   matches   may 1 honor of  being the first winners, ! Jlllt|  Wila nwjudfd  brol-'e medals.    The\nbe arranged for  them  before they  get'     The   medals   are   ol   silver   and   one I shield  wm not et   st'uke  during  these\nI wlll   be  awarded  to  carh   of  the   four j years.   The personnel of the team must\nboya on the first aid  team.    The prc-\n-a-tttttoa of the medals and the shield\nwill   take   place   about   thc   mkldlr   of\nnext month.\nback to their homes.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nR    H.   E.\nNew   York  3    13     2\nBrooklyn 4     7     2\nButteries\u2014Hubbell   and   Hogan.  O'Farrell:  Petty.  Elliott  and De berry.. Gooch.\nR.   H.   E.\nBoston 3     5      1\nChicago    . 6    13     2\nBatteriea   \u2014   Greenfield   and   Taylor;\nCarlson and Hartnett.\nR.   H.   E.\nPittsburgh  3     8     0\nCincinnati   . 4    14     0\nBatteries\u2014Bra me and Hargruves: Lucas\nand Piclnich.\nR.   H.  E.\nPhiladelphia  .   1     8     2\nBt. Louis  6   10      1\nBatteries\u2014Ring.  Wllllngan,  Walsh nnd\nLeruln;   Sherdel  and  Smith,  Wilson.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nSIXTEEN   MEDALS  WON\nThe lour medals won this year brini's\nthe total ol medals won by first aid\ntei.ms ol the flnt Nelson Troop to l~.\nbe  different each year,  except  for one\nmember.\nNext month when the shield and\nmedals are presented, certificates will\nrilso be presented to 14 boys ol the\nt.-cup who were successful In first aid\ntests held under the auspices of the\nC.  P. R. council  in June this year.\nPOR RALE\u2014One single horse buggy,\nGood shape, (35. J. P. Morgan,\nNelson. (5148-6-111)\nYORKSHIRE WHITE PIGS\u2014 Ready\nSeptember 10th, \u00bbS.50 each. R. H.\nBaird.   Nakusp, (5207-1-1101\nProperty for Sale\nSACRIFICE SALE TO\nCLEAR UP ESTATE\nLAKKVUW HOTEL\u2014Going concern.\nVerhon street. $3500.00 cash. Including furnlahlngs. Bar in connection.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\u2014Going concern.\nVernon Btreet. 13600,00 cash. Fully\nfurnished, Including large dining\nroom and bar.\nAt these prices you must act at\nonce.\nApply\nW. W. FERGUSON\nGILKER BLOCK NELSON, B.C.\n(4037)\nWILLOW POINT, Kootenay Lake-\nTwenty acres, small well-built cottage and fine hewn cedar log barn,\nwith top room, low prloe, terms,\nparticulars. Lockwood, Cobble Hill.\nVancouver  Island, (5104-12-114)\nFOR    SALE\u201436\nacres    excellent    un-\ncleared    land\nnear   Procter.    B.    C.\nA real  snap.\nFor  information,   ap-\nply   Box   5168,\nNelson   News.\n(5168-12-118)\nFOR SALE\nActing aa executor for T. Pasmore\nestate. I am authorized to offer for\nsale property situated 523 Carbonate street, on the corner of Carbonate and Josephine streets.\nThis property consists of two\nsuites, an upper and lower. The\nlower suite consists of a kitchen,\nliving room, bedroom apd bathroom.\nAll modern plumbing, and rents\nfurnished for $22-0 per month.\nThe upper suite consists \" of\nkitchen, living room, 2 bedrooms\nond a bathroom, and rents furnished for \u00bb25.00 per month.\nThe price asked ls 11600. Inspection Invited.\nAPPLY\nR. W. DAWSON\nHipperson Block\n(R-02 >\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014Good dairy farm,\nsmall fruits, chickens, bees, with or\nwithout equipment. Three miles\nout Ymlr rood. Plorence A. Foster\nNelson. (8166-0-1121\nFOR SALE OH RENT\u20148-room house\nwith 5 or 7 lots. APP'yto J- Balding.   Nelson. (6198-6-116)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014Semi-modem\nthree-roomed houBe. new. cement\nbasement.      Harding,  Phone   110.\n(5220-6-116)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nPIPE\u2014We have a quantity of one-Inch\npipe for sale, ln new condition. Nelson Iron  Works,  Ltd. <\u00ab\">\nBARRELS, KEGS AND EMPTY SACKS\u2014\nMcDonald Jam Company, -alarm\nFor Sale or Exchange\nWILD LAND\u2014Improved farms, timber-\nland, sell, rent or exchange. John\nGraham,  Perry  Siding.\n(5121-62-166)\nRead the Advertisement*\nKNOW WHERE TO SHOP\nREAD MARGARET SANGER'S BOOK\u2014\n\"Family Limitations,\" Sex Hygiene,\n11. N. Winston, 2871 Euclid Ave..\nVancouver. , (-150)\nFOR SALE\u2014Bell piano. Good condition. Phone 486Y or apply 712\nVictoria street. (5177-6-113)\nFOR SALE\u2014Golden oak dining table,\n6 chairs, 2 oak dressers, kitchen\nrange. Singer machine, waterpower\nwasher and wringer, 4 kitchen chairs.\nPhone 383L3. 3rd and Davles. Fair-\nview (6187-6-114)\nSINDAY\nLouisville 3-3, Kansas City 7-4.\nToledo 5-4, Minneapolis 3-1.\nIndianapolis 1-9. Milwaukee 3-7.\nColumbus 3-3, St. Paul 6-7.\nTROPHIES WON BY\nTHE SCOUT FIRST\nAID TEAM ARRIVE\nMedals, Shield and Certificates\nto  Be  Presented  First\nNelson Troop\nSt. John's Ambulance assoclalon's\nshield, emblamatic of the provincial\nJunior ambulance championship and\nthe   supporting   medals,   recently   won\nCONDENSED \u00ab ADS ORDER FORM\n\u00bb   *.\n1 t,\nUse this Hank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each space.\nEnclose money order or check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c Each initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., count as one word.   No charge less than 50 cents.\n!    Please publish the advertisement below times, for which I enclose $ _.\nIf desired, replies  may be addressed to box  numbers at The Dally News.    It replies are  ta  be\nmailed, enclose 10c extra to cover cost or postage and allow seven words extra for box number.\nBAKERS' OVENS\u2014Write tor catalogue\nand llBt ot used ovens. We pay\nfreight to Winnipeg and Vancouver.\nHubbard Oven Company, 1100 Queen\nWeet, Toronto. (4763)\nFOR SALE\nS. Vi Sec. 28, Tp. 69, K.D. 320 acres\n11 miles from Edgewood on Vernon\nroad. 100 acres level farm land,\nbalance range.\nGOOD TIE CHANCE\n200 M. feet B.M. sawlogs. ',4-mile\nfrom drivable stream. Running\nwater. No Improvements. Good\nInvestment. Priced for quick sale\n$2500.00. Write for particulars or\nappointment.\n'   J. S. HOAS\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED \u2014 Clean cotton rags\nDally News.\nX\nWANTED\u2014Wood pipe boring machine\nIn good condition. Box 5101. Daily\nNews. (5161-\u00bb-.ll l\nWANTED\u2014Home for high school girl\nIn return for light services. Nelson\nor Trail.     Phone   189L1.   (Sl.O-il-1141\nWANTED-Hlgh   Power   Rifles.      Stat;\nSrice    and    calibre.       H.    R.    Kitto.\nuttsmlth.      Kelson,   B.   C\n  163-1-S.llCl\nPersonal\nWOULD  YOU  MARRY   girl   18,   \u00ab25.0O0.\nwill    Inherit    $90,000.       Widow    40.\n$78,000.       Photos    and     description\nfree.    Club. Mrs. wa-n, 8377 w. 4th\nSt., Los Angeles, Calif.\n  (4980)\nLost and Found\nWILL ThE PARTY who picked up 111'\nparcel containing two dresses a*\nCastlegar Saturday pleas? nhotv\n339L,   Trull. (5217)\nRead the Advertisements  I\nVT WITH PROGRESS\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR.\nPhotographers\nUEOROE   A. MF.F.nns\u2014 Artistittnd Photographer. 715 Baker street.   f,956-tf)\nShoe Repairs\nPor Service and Satisfaction\nIDEAL  SHOE   KFI'AlIt   SHOP I\nC. Romano, Op. B.C. Tel. Co., Stanley St.\n(4957-tf)\nBetter Shoe Repairing. Uall ypur\nshoes to us. They wlll have good\nattention.      A.   MAZZA   SHOE   SHOP,\nNelson.   B.   C. (4958-tf)\nCabinetmaker\nJ.   H.   CHAPMAN\u2014Baker   St.     Cabinet\nMaker & Upholsterer.   Phone 320.\n(4959-tf)\nDENTISTS\nDR.  (1.  A.  C. WALLEY\u2014Griffin Block,\nNelson,  B.  C. (4960-tf)\nAccounting\nrilARl.ES F. HUNTER\u2014\nAuditor,    McDonald    -am    Bnfldtng\nBox  1101.  Nelson. B. C. (4961-tf)\nAssayers\nI   W. WIDDOWSON. Box A1108, Nelion.\nB.  C.  Standard   western  charges.\n              (4962-tf)\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY     MAKIII.K      &     (1RANITE\nWORKS\u2014Nelson,   B.   C.      Write   for\nprices. (5027)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014Baggage.  Oo*l\nond  Wood.    Phone   106. (4963-tf)\nWood Working Factory\nUfWSON  \u2014  Baker St.   Carpenter  and\nJoiner.     Ccreens and Hardware.\n  i4964-tf)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. Dawson\u2014Real Fstate, Insitranoa\nRentals. Next Hipperson Hnn mere\n\u25a0laker Street. (196.VW1\nT,. DILL\u2014INSURANCE\nTARM AND CITV PROPERTY     .\n508 Ward Street  (49\u00ab6-tfe\nChiropractors\nDB. OKAY. OILKER BLK. NELSON.\n(49\u00ab7-tf)\nFlorists\nFor Rent\n4-ROOMED HOUSE, chicken houses,\non 2 acres, with fruit trees and\ngarden, end of Oordon Road. *_lr-\nvlew, $16. monthly. Apply W. W.\nFerguson, Gllker Block, Nelson, B.C.\n(5043-tf)\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished cottage across\nlake, opposite park, from September\nlst.     O. A.  Hunter. (5153-6-111)\nPOR RENT\u20144-room house close ln.\npartly furnished. Also my camp\ncottage.    J. E. Annable. (6162-6-111)\nPOR RENT\u20145-roomed furnished house.\nClose ln. Apply 712 Victoria street\nor Phone 486Y. (51-6.,.n3,\n01tI7.ZE1.LE-S    GREENHOUSES.   Nelson\nCut flowers and  floral designs.\n(4968-tf)\nWM,  S.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 342.   Cut Flowers,   Potted Plant*\nand Floral Emblems. (4969-tf)\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD * CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers of Tens. Coffees\nSpices. Dried Fruits. Staple and !__-*\nGroceries.  Nelson.  B. C. (4970-tfl\nEngineers\nCHAS. MOORE, B.C.L.S\u201e AJ.B.C.\nJ. P. COATES. C.E. AMRIC. M.P.P..\nR. W. HINTON. Meeh. Eng.. M.P.E.\nCivil,   Mining.   Mechanical   Engineering\nB.C. Land Surveying, Architecture,\nDrafting   and   Blue   Printing.\nP. O. Box 671. Phone 285. Nelaosi. B. O\n(4071-tf)\nA. H. OREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nPormerlv Green Bros., Burden. N&ltoD\nClvll and Mining Engineers\nB.C.. Alberta and Dominion Land\nSurveyors 14972-\nFOR RENT\u2014September lst, apartment*\nover Oallagher store. (5189-6-114)\nH  D. n UVSON\u2014Land Surveyor,\nMining and f'lvll Engineer\nKaslo. B. C. (4973-U)\nFOR RENT UNTIL APRIL\u2014Chicken\nranch, two blocks from city limits. j\nGood six-roomed house, hot nutl\ncold water, telephone. Electric light |\nIn aU buildings. Pruit and trees I\nincluded. House partly furnished\nClose to high school and Junior hlgh.i\nApply Box 5204, Dally News.      (52041 j\nFuneral Directors\n_-_-_-H&_--\nRtandard   Fiiraltart\nOo.  \u2014 Undertaken.\nAuto Hearee. ujRr\ndate  chapel.      a\n\u2022 e r t 1 o e * Pro\nreasonable. (4974-'\nken.\n1\nSdmonbellies on\n. Canadian Soil Now;\nWitt Flay En Route\nMONTREAL, Que., Aug. 26.\u2014The <**r\nnadlan Olympic lacrosse teem 20 atrong\nreturning from their triangular tltts\nwith the American and English twelves\nat Amsterdam and also fresh from a\nseries of victories ln England arrived\nback in tke Dominion Saturday en\nroute to their homes ln New Westminster. 1. C. Queried as to the\nrttuon for their .efe_t hy the United\nTHANK COODNE.V-\nTHA.T WA\u00ab=> HI'S\nUA\u00ab_T \"&ONC-1\nONLV REGRET-1\nGOT HERE *iO\n-OOM\nDIDN'T TOO UKE\nIT? I THINK HE\nSIMCb WITH\nSUCH FEELING-\n THE MSLfiON DA_L\u00a5 N-BWB, MONDAY MORNING,. AUGUST 27, 1M8\n_____________\nMarkets and Mining\ni\nPEND OREILLE UP\nON COAST BOARD\n \u25a0     \u25a0  a\nCoast Copper Is Bid Up and Big\nMissouri Strong Early\nBot Close. Same\nVANCOUVER, Aug, 26.\u2014-Little of In\nterest developed on the stock market\nBaturday, trading being only moderate\nVlth quotations generally unchanged\nPend Oreille was the only Issue to show\n.ttrength, selling up to til.90 and closing\nIt 111.75. a net gain of 16c.\nPremier touched $2.40, but closed unchanged at |2.47, Coast Copper appeared on the board, the bid being\n\u202234.50. up 02.50 from the previous\nclose.\n'  Big  Missouri   was  strong  during  the\nearly trading, selling at 49, hut closed at\n46, unchanged.    Orandview was,  in fair\ndemand at steady prices,\ni The oil Issues were quiet.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh\nOct.\n.    110\nHI.\nDec.\n.   110\nIll1*\nMay\n116\n111*\n0*n\u2014\nOct.\nm,\n48*.\nDec\t\nti\n46%\nMay    ...\n49\n49%\nBarley\u2014\nOct.\nest.\n65%\nDec.\n03\n64\nMay\n67\n67%\nFlex\u2014\nOct.\n. mv.\n189 V.\nDec.\n184\n186 V,\nMay\n191',\n103%\nBye\u2014\nOct.\nDec\nMay\n82%\n92\n07'\/,\n93%\n93%\nLow\n110\n110.\n116\n47'\/a\n44%\n48%\n66\n63\n66%\n188 y,\n184\n191%\n92 V,\n92\nCloae\nwi',,\nmy,\n117\n48 V,\n461,\n49%\n66%\n63%\n67 V.\n189\n189\n193\n93 Vi\n93%\n97 Vi\nCaah wheat\u2014No. 1 northern, 116H; No.\n8 northern, 113%; No. 3 northern, 106%\nWo. ., 102%; No. 6, 85%; No. 6, 88%;\nfeed. 81%; track, 114'-,,\nPUBLIC BUYING\nSENDS STOCKS\nCLIMBING AGAIN\nPool Purchases Also Heavy and\nConservative Selling Is\nOutweighed\nSNAKE UP HEAVY\nEQUIPMENT FOR\nBULLOCK MINE\nMcNatnata Hauls Engine-Compressor Up Special Road by\nTackle and Four Horses\nDRIVING IN TWO SPOTS\nTO REACH MAIN VEIN\nh\nCOMMITTEE SETS   '\n\\t NliWfRKE CUKES\nNew Prices 75 and 90\" Cents;\nPtf>pers Reduced; May Ship\nPrunes Wednesday\n' Etfectivetoday. cucumbers are up 25\ntnd 30 cents over the prices on July\n16, according, to a telegram received\n\/trom the interior committee ol direction. The new prices are 76 cents to\nJobbers and 90 cents to retailers, per\nfour-inch peach box.\nPepper* were reduced two and three\ncents to eight cents to Jobbers and\nnine cents to retailers.\n* Shipment of prunes may begin on\nbut not before Wednesday, the prices\nbeing 55 and 60 cents per three and a\nhalf inch peach box. to Jobbers and\nretailers respectively.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA. Aug. 26.\u2014No change ls reported from Canadian egg markets but\nthe   general  situation   remains   firm.\nToronto\u2014The local market Is firm\n\u25a0nd unchanged, Dealers quoting country shippers for ungraded eggs delivered,\ncases returned: Extras. 30c to 40c;\nfirst*, 36c to 37c; seconds. 28c to 29c,\nMontreal\u2014Presh eggs-are selling: Extras, 43c to 44c; firsts. 39c to 40c; seconds,  32c  to  34C\nHalifax\u2014This market Is unchanged.\nDealers quoting country shippers for\nungraded eggs delivered cases returned:\n.txtrns. 37c to 30c: firsts, 33c to 34c;\nSeconds,  25c to 27c.\nCalgary 03s\nCALGARY,  Alta.,  Aug.   26-rOU   quotations :\nClose\nAdvance    $   .60\nDdlhouele       3.47(4\nDevenlsh    6.\nIlllnola-Alberta 48\nMoDoug-1! Segur ex    1.95\nMdDougall Segur new      1.05\nMcLeod      4.00\nRoyallte    63.00\nSpooner Oils ..,    1.43V.\nUnited  OMa  _    1.56^\nVaaeouver Stocks\nBid Asked\nB.  C.  Sliver  6 1.40 \u00ab 1.60\nBig Missouri      .46 .46%\nCoast Copper   34,00\nCork  Province        .281*. .30\nDunwell 13 .15\nOeorge  Copper       6.00 \t\nOlasalr  30 .35\nOolconda      1.11 112\nOrandview - 86 ^ .88>\/4\nIndependence  10^ .11\nIndian  Mines   06 .06%\nInternational Coal 34U ,Z6V\u00bb\nKootenay Plorence 21^ \t\nLucky Jim 26 .28\u00ab\/i\nL. & L 10% .11%\nMarmot Metals 10% .10M.\nNat.  Sll. G.S W\/t .16\nPend Oreille    11.75 11.95\nPremier        2.47 2.48\nPorter  Idaho       .73 .74\nRuth-Hope 59 .60\nRufus-Argenta      27^ .28\nSilver Crest      10 .Itv.a\nSilverado       .70 .75\nSilversmith            .07 M\nSlocan King   .06^\nB. C. Montana   4)0 1-16\nSunloch       2,40 2.50\nWhitewater    *  206 2.09\nWelliTiKdon    17Vj .18V.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 26.\u2014Expanding\npublic participation, coupled with large\nfeale pool operations, brought about\nanother sharp advance ln pricea in Saturday's stock market.\nExtreme gains ln active issues ranged\nfrom 2 to 14 points, but some of these\nwere cut down by heavy profit-taking\ntn the last few minutes of trading.\nTotal sales aggregated 1.935,800 shares,\nmore than double thoee of a week ago.\nThe recovery received chief impetus\nfrom the improvement ln the credit\nsituation as reflected in the drop of\nnearly $23,000,000 in broker's loans on\nThursday.\nConservative traders sold stocks freely\nthroughout the session in the belief\nthat the rapidity of the recent advance\nhad weakened the technical position\nof the market and that an early correction would be necessary. However.\nthe big pools were Inclined to press\ntheir advances. Shorts, who sold stocks\nearlier ln the week, were again forced\nto buy ln at much higher prices, or\nelse watch paper losses mount to\nlarge figures.\nRails, which took little part in yesterday's advance, were in better de\nma nd today, National Cash Register\nclimber 4 points to a new high at 84%\nPark & Tilford also moved Into new\nhigh ground. Other Issues to better\ntheir previous 1928 prices were Detroit\nEdison, Postum, Woolworth, Drug, Inc.;\nLoft, Kreger Stores, Atlantic Refining,\nOtis Elevator. Allied Chemical. Loose-\nWiles  Biscuit  and   Sears  Roebuck.\nHeavy buying of General Motors,\nwhich gained nearly two points net\nand displayed the greatest aggressiveness on the upside in some time, was\nattributed in large part to Interests\nclose to former Finance Committee\nChairman John J. Rnskob and the\nDupont  Interests.\nCLOSING   (ROTATIONS\nAT  NEW  YORK\nCalifornia Engineer Is Looking\nfor Tonnage for Important\nPrincipals\nWHEAT TOO LOW\nIN COMPARISON\nThis Consideration Leads te the\nBuying Which Firms Up\nQuotations\nWe Suggest for\nSeptember Investment\nBONDS\n$5000 Burns & Co., Ltd  .!\/_'\/,\n$3000 Canada Power &\nPaper   5V_%\n$5000 Arcadia Sugar Co  6    %\n$600 Alberta  Pacific Grain 6    %\n$500 Canada Biscuit   6'\/2%\n$1000 Fraser Companies   .. 6'\/_%\n$4000 Republic of Colombia 6    %\nPrice\n1948 $100.00\n1958\n1946\n1946\n1946\n1942\n1961\n99.25\n100.00\n104.00\n101.00\n107.00\n95.50\nYield\n5V_%\n5.55%\n6 %\n5.70%\n6.45%\n5.90%\n6.30%\ntl\nSTOCKS\n20 shares B. C. Electric Power & Gas, Common\n(Class A).   Per share $80.00\n18 shares Pacific (Coylc) Navigation,\n7% Preferred  $99.00   7.07%\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY OE ANY OB AIL OF ABOVE\nPRIVATE LEASED WIRE TO COVER ALL MARKETS\nR. P. dark & Co., Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C., PHONE 100.\nI,\nV\n1\nMunicipal Bonds\nCity of Edmonton 5% 1933\nDistrict Maple Ridge  5% 1956\nCity of North Vancouver 5% 1961\nCity of Trail 5% 1948\nCity of Victoria  6% 19SS\nAt prices to yield 6%.\nM Financial Corporation, limited\n___-__\u25a0*_-_\n^^^^^     V-MCOUVBB' ^^^^^\nR. S. HEWITT, DISTRICT  REIHE9ENTATIVR\nlutpnone tov\nNELSON\nMl\nHigh\n204\n108 U\n98'\/,\nStem,\nlltm\nMM\n72\n194*,\n111*4\n82 14\n213>]\n78*.\n46%\n98 li\n84 Vi\nHK\n381%\n73%\n\u25a0HI\n198','s\n181\n69 V,\nwry,\n69\n81%\n  221,\nInter. Nickel       104%\nAllied Chem\t\nAmerican   Can\nAmerl. Loco.\nAm. Smelt., Ref.\nAm.  Telephone\nAm.  Tobacco  \t\nAnaconda   \t\nAtchison   \t\nBaltl. ts Ohio\nBeth. Steel\nCanadian Pac.\nCerro de PaBCO\nChile Copper\nChrysler   \t\nCorn Products\nDodge    \t\nDupont \t\nFleishman  Co.\nPrceport-Texas\nOen.   Motors   \t\nOen. Electric\nOranby   \t\nGt. Northern, pfd.\nHowe Sound\nHudson Motors\nInsplr.   Copper\nMac- Truck  \t\nMarland Oil\nMiami Copper\nKresge 8 S\nNat. Pow. & Light\nNash  Motora  \t\nN. Y. Central\nNorthern Pac\t\nPackard Motors\nPhillip.   Pete\n91\n38'a\n21%\n81%\n36',\n89 'i\n173\n98%\n84%\n3914\nRadio Corp     194%\nSchulte   \t\nShell Union Oil\nSinclair Cons.  .    .\nSouthern   Pac.\nStandard Oil. Cal\nStandard Oil. N.J.\nStudebaker    \t\nTexas Corp.\nTex.   Oulf   Sulph.\nUnion Oil. Cal.\nUnion Pacific  \t\nU. S. Rubber\nU. S. Steel\nWest'house Elec.   .\nWillys O-erland\nYellow Truck\n82'.,\n27\n27(4\n124\n58%\n44%\n79%\n83'4\n12V,\n50%\n197%\n35\n152 %\n102'\/.\n22%\n34%\nLow\n197%\n106%\n94%\n238\n179\n183\n\u25a0m.\n198%\n110\n62',.\n212'\/]\n78\n48 li\n9714\n83%\n19Vi\n381%\n7314\n65%\n1114\n168'4\n58%\n97%\n59\n81%\n22'i\n104\n90%\n37%\n21%\n80%\n35%\n88%\n170%\n98%\n83%\n39%\n190%\n60\n26%\n26%\n123\n68%\n45\n78\n62%\n71%\n50%\n196 '4\n34%\n151%\n101%\n22%\n34\nClose\n203\n108%\n94%\n238\n170%\n162'i\n71'4\n198%\n112\n82%\n21214\n78\n45 \"4\n07%\n84\n19%\n380\n73%\n65%\n194'',\n161\n59%\n97%\n58%\n8114\n22\n104%\n90\n37%\n21%\n81 %\n35%\n88%\n171%\n98%\n83%\n39%\n193\n62%\n123%\n5814\n45\n78%\n62%\n71%\n50%\n196%\n34%\n151%\n101\n2214\n33%\nWtth oil engine and four-drill compressor, \"snaked up\" a specially built\ntwo miles of road with DO per cent\ngrades and hairpin turns by cable,\ntackle and four-horse team, Jacob _Ic-\nNamara, California mining engineer,\nwho ls looking for tonnage for Important principals ts hammering away\nAt the Bullock gold property on Cascade creek, near the Lardeau branch\nof the Canadian Pacific railway,\nin'II.lis ROAD\nIn getting up hts equipment, this\npower unit, weighing seven tons, was\nplaced on two-Inch plank, and worked\nup Intact. All told, 80 tons of equipment was taken up. The supposed road\nbeing hopeless. Mr. McNamara proceeded to build one, on which a wagon and\nfour horses  could  bc  used.\nObject of the operation Is to reveal\nwhether the Bullock which has been\nworked ln a small way by the Graves\nin-other, of Kaslo for 10 years or more,\nhas big tonnage, and this is being explored for ln thc main vein. Oolng\nIn on an old crosscut, the present operator ls driving on to get thts vein, now\nestimated on thc largest of about 20\nlaterals, from where thc main tunne;\ncrossed tt. and will follow this contact\nvein to the main vein. From both\nintersections of the main vein. _tttr\ncrosscutting to thc further wall, he will\ncarry drifts till they meet. The Intersections will be about 400 feet apart,\nthe main vein ls about 40 feet wide\nwhere the crosscut wlll cutch It. and ln\ndrifting In the main vein crosscuts\nwill bc run every 100 feet. The contact vein Is about eight feet in width.\nNAME VEIN 12IMI\nFEET, LOWER\nShould this work develop large tonnage, which alone would Interest the\ngroup behind the operation, the proposition will be to drop down 1200\nfeet where the main vein shows again,\nby thc railway track at Poplar sldlmj.\nthere locating the working tunnel aud\nthe  mill.\nThc main vein Is traced for a mile\nand a half on hc properly, and burface\nshowings carry a good milling grade.\nCascade creek, adjacent, bu 10.000 potential horse power. A crew of 14 is\nnow employed.\nCHICAGO, Aug. 36.\u2014Uneasiness over\ntbe relative low level of wheat prices\ncompared to other commodities, especially corn, stimulated wheat buying\nSaturday. Closing quotations on wheat\nwere firm, %c to lc higher, with corn\nshowing %c to l%c advance. oatB %c\nto %c up, and provisions unchanged\nto  17c up.\nFRUIT MARKETS\n3%  to 9  cents;   Sllverskin, peach-boa.\n\u00bb1.85 to 81.75; Celery, lb. 6% to 8 cent-\nPOOLS MAKE HNAL\nPAYMENT ON OLD CROP\n><\u00bb\nWinnipeg\u2014 British Columbia Peach-\nPlums, 4-baskct crates No. 1. 81.60;\nTomatoes, 25-lb. lug, \u00bb3; Apples, bojes.\nHousehold, 81.76 to 81.85: Transcendent Crabapples. l>cy., 81.75; New Potatoes, cwt.. 82; Celery, 50-lb. crate,\n(8.50.\nReglna- British Columbia Blackberries\n24 pints, 83.25; Cherries, 4-basket\ncrates, No. 1. Bing, Lamberts, 83.76;\nHothouse Tomatoes, 4-basket crates,\nNo. 1. 83; Field Tomatoes. No. 2, 81.76;\nGreen ln pear-box, 81.65; Headlettuce,\ndo... 81: Field Cukes ln peach-box.\n90 cents; Celery,, 30-lb. crate. 82.50;\nCabbage. Carrots. Beets, lb., 4 cents;\nOnions, Sample, cwt. sack. 88; Pickling\nOnions In peach-box. 81.75; Apples,\nTransparent, Duchess, Astrachan,, crate.\n81.75; Apricots, various varieties, 4-\nbasket crates, No. 1. 81.75; No. 2.\n81.60: Plums, Bradshaw, 4-basket\ncrates. No. 1, 81.75; Cantaloupes, salmon-flesh, Standard crate, No. 1, 84.\nSaskatoon\u2014British Columbia Blackberries, 24 pints, 82.75; Aplcots. 1-\nbasket crstes, No. 1, 81.45; No. 2.\n81.35; Peach-Plums, 4-basket orate,\nNo. 1, 81.36; No. 3. 81.30; Cantaloupes.\n3tandard crate. 85; Field Tomatoes. 4-\nbasket crates. No. 2. 81.25 to 81.30:\nCukes ln peach-box. green. 70 cents;\nTurning Yellows. 26 cents to 35 cents; l\nPears, Fancy, boxes. Bartlett. Claps\nFavourite, 83.50 to 83.60; Apples, boxes,\nHousehold, Astrachan. Duchess, 81.50 to\n\u26661.C0; Alexander, box \"C\". 83 to 82.10;\nTransparent, crate. 81.35; Crabapples,\nTranscendent, boxes. Fancy, 8160 to\n8165: Peaches. No. 1, St. Johns. Carman, box, 81.20; No. 2, 81.25; Potatoes,\nWhite, cwt., 81.75; Onions. Bermuda.\nSample, 83; Celery. 6 to 7 cents per lb.\nEdmonton\u2014British Columbia Apples.\nOravenstein, Duchess, Fey.. $1.75 to\n81.90: Various, crates. 81.40 to 81.50;\nCrabapples, Transcendent. No. 8140 to\n81.50; Plums. 4-basket crate. Bradshaw. Diamond, Tragedy, No. I, 81.25 to\n81.50: Off Varieties. 81 to 81.25; Berries. 24-pt, 84.25 to $4.50; Blackberries.\n$3.25 to 83.50; Tomatoes. Hothouse,\n4-basket   crate.   No.    1,   82.75   to   83.;\nNo. 2. 82.50 to 82.76; Field. No. 2.\n81 10 to 81.25; Green, pear-box. 81.25\nto $1.35; Cnntaloupe. Salmon. No. 1,\ncrate, 83. to 83.50,  Flat. 81.26 to 8150;\nCelery.    86    to    $7.:    Onlona,    Yellow.\nSample,  $2.   ;o  $2.50;   Grapes,  lug.  No.\n1, Tokay, M-0 to 84; Malagas, Red.\n83. to 83.50; Oreen, 83. to $3.50; Pears,\nBartlett. Pcy, $2.50 to $2.75; Peaches.\nElberta, Rochestter, Crawford. No. 1.\n81-6   to   81.40;   Prunea,   Italian.   No.\n1, 90 cents to 81.\nCalgary\u2014British Columbia Strawberries, 24-pt., 83.75 to 84; Blackberries,\n83; Cherries, 4-basket crate,. Olivet.\nMorello, 82.25 to $2.50; Plums. 4-basket\ncrate. Peach, No. 1. $1.25 to $1.40; No.\n2, $1.16   to   81.25;   Burbank,   No.   1,\n81.50;   Greengage,   81.50;   Damson.   82; I\nApricots, 4-basket crate, Tllton: No. 3,\n81.25 to 81.36; Peaches, box, Triumph,!\nHales, Rarly, 81.60; Cantaloupes, Stand-}\nard,   84.26   to   84.75;   Tomatoes,   Field \\\n4-basket crate,  No.  2.  8110 to 8136;\nGreen,   pear-box.   $1.15   to   $1.35;   Cucumbers,   Field,   peach-box,   70   to   751\ncents,   Apples,  box,  Duchess, C,  8175;\nTransparent.   Pcy..   81.75;   Crates,   81.301'___________________________-________^^^^\nto 81.40;   Wealthy,  Pcy..  $3;  C.  Orade, [Saturday from what physicians said w_8\n$1.86;   Pears, box.  Bartlett. Fey.. 83.60: | alcoholic poisoning, Witt oedema of tha\nC. $3.25;  Clapps, Favourite, Fey.. $2.25; i lungs  a  tributary  cause.\nCrabs,   box.   Transcendent.   Fey,   8135      The couple were found In a serious\nIo 8150;  Potatoes, New cwt., 8175  to | condition   ln   their   home   on\n$1.85;    Onions.   Bermuda,   lb.,   Sample,   ctrcet east.\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 26 -Una! \u00abMa\nof the 1927 coarse grain crop handled\nby the Manitoba and Saskatchewan\npools will be made Monday, when\nchecks totalling 81.586.860 will ha\nmailed to the rarlous Tnerabers la the\ntwo provinces. The Ma-Mobe coarse\ngrains pool ls paying Its membera\n8661.338. and the Saskatchewan organisation ls paying a total of 88-4.513.\n las* \t\nALCOHOL POISONS TWO\nVANCOUVER, Aug. -0.\u2014Mr. and Mra.\nJ. Enrlght. Vancouver, died ln hospital\nVancouver Electrical Work*\nOffer you Quality and Service to the utmost. Our\nProducts  include:\nELECTRICAL\nMotors, Generators, Panels,\nTransformers,  Meters.\nMECHANICAL\nBall Mills, White Iron Balls,\nOre Cars, Aerial Tramways,\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^     Manganese Liners.\nRepairs\nL. MORRIS..TTE, Local Sales Engineer      NELSON, B.G.\nHead  Office\u2014VANCOUVER. II.   R.   SMITH,   M.I.E.E.   Oen.  Mgr.\nNICKEL SCORES A\nNEW HIGH LEVEL\nSells   at   Montreal   at   104?\/.\nDominion Coal Preferred\nHas Decline\nMINING UST AT\nTORONTO STRONG\nNo Stock Declines in Mining\nSection; Noranda Up\n45 Cents\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\n Bbmw Bmeltlni and BefUtt-f       ________________\nTRAIL, BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc, Owi.\nProduce!* of GoU, Silver, Coppe*^ Pig Lead and ZL-C.\nTORONTO. Aug. 26. \u2014 Moderate\nstrength characterized the light trading\non the Toronto stock exchange Satur\nday. International Nickel again established a new high at 104 V, and closed\nthere, for an advance of Va point. Large\ngains were made by Canadian Car &\nFoundry, up 4% at 43, and by Fanny\nFarm, which cloaed at 31%, also up\n4%- Cockshutt ahares were offered ln\nlarge volume and the price eased l\u00ab to\n38%.\nThe mining section waa notable for\nthe fact that no stock declined, Noranda closing at 156.20. up 45c. Hudson\nBay Mining advanced 25 at 018.50.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. Aug. 26\u2014Sterling exchange steady at 0481 3-16 for 60-day\nbills and at'04.84 15-16 for demand.\nForeign bar silver\u201468%.\nCanadian dollars\u20141-16 premium\nFrancs\u20143.90   fl-lSc.\nUr\u00bb\u2014tJBM-\nMarlc*\u201423.82.\nKronen\u201496,67,\nbondB\nMO\n356\n375\n355\n52 Vi\n28\n12 y4\n19%\n65\n38%\nMONTREAL. Aug. 26.--So.ne price ir-\niTRUlarlties developed in Saturday's short\nsession of the Montreal stock exchange,\nbut the main trend was again upward. International Nickel furnished\ntrading in more than 2000 shares and\nclosed at the new high of 104 V for a\nnet gain of %. Winnipeg Electric closed\nat 109. for a net gain of 4'_ points, and\nPowec Corporation at 70. up one point\nBritish Empire Steel 1st pfd.. with a net\ngain of 4'\/3 was another strong spot.\nThe greatest loss was suffered by Dominion Coal pfd.. which closed at 89%.\nfor a net loss of 8% points. Firm spots\nwere Canadian Bronze at 96, up 2, and\nDominion Bridge at 83, up 1,\nTotal    pales    15,724     shares,\n(H7.560.\nCUMING <M OTATIONS\nAT MONTREAL\nBank of Commerce  \t\nBank of Montreal\t\nBank of Nova Scotia \t\nRoyal   Bank       \t\nAbitibi Power JU Paper \t\nAsbestos   Corporation   \t\nAtlantic   Sugar\t\nBell   Telephone   \t\nBrit. Columbia Fishing  \t\nBrazilian T. L. <fc  Power  \t\nBrompton   Paper    ...\nCan. Car & Foundry        43\nCan.   Converters   .,    101%\nCana. Industrial Alcohol      48%\nCan. Power       32\nCan. Steamship Lines       37\nDominion  Bridge         83\nDominion Glass ... ,   125\nA.  P.  Grain   .       63\nHlllcrest Colliers   60\nLake of the Wood*  .... 67\nMassey   Harris 43%\nMont. Telegraph  .......... .65\nMontreal Tramway*    196\nNational   Breweries        123%\nOgllvle Milling     390\nOttawa L. H. & Power     ..... 125\nPenmans. Ltd      99\nPrice Bros      79\nQuebec Power         70%\nShawlnlgan   .             85\nSherwin Williams    155\nSo. Canada Power  130\nSteel of Canada      181\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills       00\nWayagamack            07\nWestern Grocers       20\nWinnipeg Railway  ........a.-...   109\nLogan & Bryan\nPrivate  Wlrea\nSTOCKS,    BONDS,    COTTON,\nGRAIN\nMEMBERS\nNew York. Montreal and Vancouver atock Exchanges. Chicago\nBoard of Trade. Winnipeg Grain\nExchange and other leading exchanges.\nOFFICES:\nVancouver,   Spokane   and   Seattle\n'CATERPILLAR'\nTractors\nBIGGER THAN THE WEATHER!\nA Size for Every Use\nA Hundred Uses lor Every Size\n2 TON, TWENTY, THIRTY, SIXTY\nBETTER QUICKER CHEAPER\nLiterature and Prices on Request\nUnit Distributors lar B. C.\nMorrison Tractor & Equipment Co.,Ltd\nNothern   PiK-lflr  Freight  Building\nW0 Station Street\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nIlrniirli Of'loe:\nHipperson Block\nNELSON, B.C.\nIMM-M\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. Aug. 36.\u2014Eggs, sten-y;\nbutter and cheese, firm.\nCheese\u2014Western. 3_V.o to 3%c, east\nerne 21c to 33He.\nButter\u2014No. 1 paateurteed 8914c tc\n39HC.\nEgga\u2014 Fresh extras 45c to 46c, 'Iran\n41c to 43c.\nBRIT1MI COLUMBIA U<1\u00abS\nPrrsh   extras 41c.   tlrsts Sic.   pulleta\n38c;     price    to producers 6c    to    8c\nunder.\n\u2022WSa\" * i-msenaiTrn ... mav iats.\nifieem\u00bbosATKP iw may i\u00abt\u00bb\nOtner Branches tl Winnipeg, Yorkton, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Calgary, Uthbrldg-.\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria.\n[\nBE PREPARED-\nFor School Opening, Sept. 4\nWe are now ready with a complete stock for boys and girls for the coming school\nterm, at prices we know you will be pleased with and merchandise that will give\nsatisfaction for hard wear.\nGirls Wear\nGIRLS' FLANNEL DRESSES GIRLS' VESTS AND BLOOMERS\nGIRLS' NAVY PLEATED SKIRTS GIRLS' COMBINATIONS\nGIRLS' CHECK FLANNEL SKIRTS GIRLS' CORSELETTES\nGIRLS' WAISTS IN WHITE OR KHAKI GIRLS' HOSE, ART SILK AND WOOL\nGIRLS' PULLOVER SWEATERS GIRLS' H HOSE, FANCY TOPS\nGIRLS' GYM BLOOMERS GIRLS' GARTERS, SUSPENDERS\nBoys' Wear\nBOYS' SHIRTS\nBOYS' WAISTS\nBOYS' UNDERWEAR\nBOYS' HOSE\nBOYS' PYJAMAS IN ONE OR TWO-\nPIECE\nBOYS' CAPS\nBOYS' TIES\nBOYS' BELTS\nBOYS' SUITS\nBOYS' BLOOMERS\nBOYS' KNICKERS\nBOYS' REEFER COATS\nBOYS' WINDBREAKERS\nBOYS' JERSEYS\nBOYS' SWEATERS\nBOYS' SUSPENDERS      \u25a0\t\nFootwear for School\nBOYS' BOOTS BOYS' SLIPPERS\nimv_. nvvriDn. GIRLS' OXFORDS IN TAN OR BLACK\nbU.S UAMlKDis GIRLS'   SHOES  WITH   STRAPS   OR\nBOYS' CANVAS FOOTWEAR TIES IN ALL STYLES\nDRESS FABRICS for school dr\u00abHW\u2014-Prints, Voiles, Broadcloths, Ginghams,\nFlannel?, Serges and Tweeds, Spun Silk, Crepe de Chines and Satin de Chines.\n______________\n 'THB NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY*MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1928\nPl-snbara' Brsaa Ooodi   Flxturao\naa. SupsUaa, TH. ea* rim. Pin\nB. C. PLUMBING ft\nHEATING CO.\nIM \u25a0*!\u00bb- tt       N.laon, B. 0.\nToo,  nM   nr   Nw  Mai\nSmythe* Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION SPCCULIST\nIn bustneaa for (your health.   Let ua fill\nvour praaortptlcfna. MaU ordera promptly executed.   Call and wait far your oar.\nPhone 1.\n-n-dar hoars:    1 to 4 and lk| pja.\nHUNTER ELECTRIC\nOpera   Hoasa   Block\nNSLSON\nINSTALLATIONS\u2014REPAIRS\nAPPLIANCES\nNOW IS\nUm time to have the eyea ot\nschool children attended to. Olvo\ntham tha help now and avoid\nfuture compllcationa.\nExpert Service\nJ. \u00a9.PATENAUDE\nOPTOMITMS*   AND   OPTICIAN\n.\nKootenay Lawn Tennis\nAssociation\nTHIRTEENTH ANSI AL\nTOURNAMENT\nSeptember 1, . and 3\nDance Memorial Hall, Saturday  1\nEntries close Thursday, August 39\n('.   II.   HAMILTON,   SECRETARY\nP.O. Box IOM Phone 137\nKOOTENAY LAWN TENNIS ASSOCIATION\nANNUAL TOURNAMENT, SEPT. 1, 2, 3\nIs Your Racquet in Shape\nIf not, let us repair it at once.\nDO NOT DELAY.     *\nJ. HOLLAND\n\"515 BASE* STREET PHONE IM\nService and Satisfaction Guaranteed\nCome on Over!\nSee our stock of coast fir lumber. Shipments just arrived, consisting of bone dry,\nclear coast fir in all sizes of finish, casing,\nbase, window stool, stepping and beautiful\nedge grain flooring.\nReal Quality at Rig'nt Prices\nW* We Powell & Co.\nThr llumr of Good Lumbtr\nPHONE  nil OH ICE, I OOT OK STANLEY  STREET\nFT\ni An Electric Range \u25a0\nIs Clean and Economical\nJust think of the \"kitchen comfort\" that\nan electric range provides for the housewife.\nIt reduces housework, because once you\nput in an electric range you have no more\ncoal or ashes or dust.\nIt simplifies cooking, liecause thc heat is\nregular and under perfect control.\nEconomical? Well, ask someone who is\nusing one.\n-THE CITY OF NELSON\n:j\nFLIT\nDESTROYS FLIES, MOSQUITOES, MOTHS,\nANTS AND BUGS\nWe ftock small and large size cans for household,\nhotel or camp use.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE        NELSON, B.C.        RETAIL\nREPRESENTATIVES\nARE APPOINTED TO\nSCOUT COMMITTEE\nGyros,  Rotarians and  Council\nName   Representatives   to\nNew Council\nCity council. Rotary club and the\nOyro club have responded to a request\nof tbe First Nelson Troop ot Boy Scouts\nand have appointed representatives to\nthe newly planned scout council, which\nwill take on duties much the same aa\na ways and means committee In connection with the troop. J. Foggo. scoutmaster, asked the three aiormentioned\norganizations aa well as the Travelers\nand The Dally t'ews to appoint representatives to the council.\nAlderman A. A. Perrier was appointed\nby the Rotarlans and the city council\nalso named him as IU representative.\nThe Gyros appointed Boyd C. Affleck.\nFathers of the scou.s and cubs are\nalso to be represented on' the council,\nthe former by Percy Bates and the\nlatter by J. B. Oray.\nThree Possible\nSites Airport\nChosen, Dobbin\nThe airport committee of the board\nof trade Is preparing a report on suitable altea and will present H at the\nnext meeting of the  board.\nAt least three altes which would be\nsuitable for the purpose have been located and approved by Capt. E. C. W.\nDobbin.\nQUEEN'S BAY NOTES\nQUEEN'S BAY, B.C., Aug. 26.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Homersham or Saskatoon\nspent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. A.\nAttree.\nDennis Budd is home with his parents, Major and Mrs. A, J, Budd. recuperating from an accident which he\nreceived at the West Kootenay Power\n& Light company's plant at Slocan.\nThe Queen's Bay Fruit Growers' association has  Improved  Its packing shed.\nMrs. H. N, Way. Mrs. R. j. Bashford\nMrs. A. Attree and Miss Pafford attended a meeting of the Women'r\nauxiliary at Balfour.\nThe roads tn Queen's Bay arc being\nrepaired for the hauling of the applf\ncrop.\nMrs. F. J. Cornish and Mrs. R. W -\nDawson spent a day this week with\nMra. K  Attree,\nMrs. Hughes, who is taking charge of\nthe school, has arrived with her\nfamily.\nMr. and Mrs. II. Thome or Winnipeg1\nare the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. H\nSymonds.\nCRAWFORD BAY NOTES\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C., Aug. 25.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Mawdsley of Trail have\nbeen spending a few days camping at\nHooker point.\nRev. C. Harvey of Procter' haa been\nspending a short holiday here, the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. E, Francis.\nMrs. W. Freeman ls spending the\nweek-end in Nelson, the guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. Williams.\nMajor and Mrs. Gooch nnd Miss\nThurston left yesterday for a few weeks'\nhunting.\nThe Port Crawford mission Sunday\nschool picnic was held on Wednesday\nat Kootenay bay.\nMr. ftnd Mr*. B. Parker of Winnipeg\nare visiting Mr. and Mrs. I.. limine.\nINSTITUTE AT HARROP\nARRANGES A LUNCHEON\nHARROP. B.C.. Aug- 26\u2014A meeting\nof the women's institute was held on\nWednesday afternoon, the president,\nMrs. C. D. Oftlvle being* in the chair.\nArrangements were completed for a\nluncheon and entertainment of guests.\nA floral display and Judging of lt\nwas also arranged.\nMrs. W. A- Howard favored with a\nvocal solo. Mrs. W. S. Ashby being\naccompanist.\nTea hostesses were, Mrs. Grant and\nMiss Hlndley.\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nspecializing    In    Correcting    Defectlvt\nSight  by  Proper  (.lasses.\nQuick Repair Service.\nGRIFFIN BLOCK. PHONI Ui\n44 Taxi & Transfer\nSKUAS   CARS  FOR  HIRE\nDay and Nlfht Hervire\nReasonable Rates Careful Driver*\nCON CUMMINS, MANAtiER\ncm DRUG CO.\nNelson'.  Dispensing  Chemists\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drnts,   Stationery\nUall   ordera   promptly   despatched.\nSOX   10(1   NELSON,  R.C.      PRONE   U\nCome In and net Tour Welfht Ere*\nFor Salt\u2014Wallpapers\nNow'e your chance to buy some\ncheap Wallpaper I'm selling\ndining, altttng and bedroom papers\nat Hall Price. I need the room\nfor my new stock on order. Prices\nrange from SSc por double roll.\nBorders to match from fie per\nyard. Celling-, Cream and White\nMoire, 30c per double rolls.\nTIM PLAYER\n511 Stank) Street\n\u2022UT ADVERTISED GOODS\nThey Mutt Make Coot,\nLOST IN BUSH 46 DAYS\n'UR\nAbove ls a picture of \"Andy\" Taylor,:\nSouth Porcupine prospector, who was\nloet In the bu\u00bbh of northern Manl- ''\ntoba for 46 days. The photograph was '\ntaken after Taylor was rescued and Is j\nthc first published since the prospector\nwas brought back to civilization after\nhis  harrowing  experience.   Insert  is  a\n\u2022   TAYLOR\npicture of Fred Coleman, friend of\nTaylor and who. with Capt. Kenyon\ncf Western Canada Airways, rescued\nthe lost prospector. The picture of\nColeman was snapped by Taylor before\nhe went on his hazardous Journey into\nthe wilds, which nearly resulted ln\ntragedy.\u2014Photos copyright by The Toronto Star.\nPEACH PIUMS ON\nE. W. Widdowson, ji_s-.ee of the peace,\nln provincial pollce court.\nSALE AT MARKET Coulter Pays Fine\nCucumbers, Corn and Tomatoes\nDrop Few Cents; Small\nAdvance in Eggs\nSeveral small reductions were marl*;\nIn prices of commodities at thc local\nmarket Saturday morning.\nTomatoes were reduce< 15 cents for\nfour pounds and were In large demand.\nThese sold four pounds for 35 cents,\nThe only rise tn price was ln eggs.\nThese sold for from 45 to 50 cents a\ndozen, where they previously sold for\n45 cents.\nTwo or three varieties of corn were\non sale and sold at fronts to 40 cents\na dozen, according to size. The price\nthc previous week was 40 cents straight.\nPeach plums were on the market for\nthe first time thts season and at a\nprice of four pounds for 25 cents experienced  a   large  sale.\nPrices quoted are as follows;\nButter, pound       .45\nBeef, pound  15c to    A0\nVeal, pound \u201e.._ 15c to    M\nPork, pound  ......200 to     -25\nFowl, pound  -o\nCheese, pound         .35\nCream cheese, pound      55\nCurd, dtsh, _       .30\nPotatoes. 8 pounds       T..\nPotatoes,   sack       2.50\nHeadcheese, pound   -     .20\nTurnips, 7 pounds       .25\nLettuce,   head    _ 05\nParsley, bunch   05\nNew carrots, bunch 05\nCelery, bunch , 10\nGreen peas, pound  16\nGooseberries, box 10\nCabbage,   pound  05\nOnions,  3  bunches 10\nSwiss  chard,   bund.        10\nCucumbers,   doz. .20\nEggs,  doz.,   45c   to .50\nBeans, 4 lbs. . .25\nApples, 7 lbs 25\nApricots, lb       .10\nPie Cherries,   1 lb,   10; 3 for ...     .35\nCorn, doz., 25c to  40\nBeets, pound,   .05;   6 lbs      .25\nRadish,   bunch    05\nPeach plums. 4 lbs .25\nTomatoes.  4   lbs.        .25\nKootenay Valley\nTories Gather at\nSocial at Thrums\nFor Driving To the\nCommon Danger Here\nW O Coulter was fined 125 and\ncosts und surrendered bis white licence\nfor a ..me one, ln provincial pollce\ncourt when he appeared before E. W.\nWiddowson. justice of the peace ou\nFriday, on a charge of driving to tbe\ncommon danger,\nMr. Coulter attempted to pass a car\nnear Crescent Valley and Just as he\nswung out struck a cow. He swung\nthe other way and hit the car he had\npassed, breaking its axle and damaging   a   fender.\nOne of the most successful of Kootenay valley gatherings was the social\nheld at the R. W. Chalmers ranch at\nThrums on Wednesday. About 200\npeople from various centers attended,\nthe function being tinder the auspices\nof the Kootenay Valley Conservative\nassociation. R. M. Power, president\nwas In the chair.\nAmong those speaking were J. H-\nHarrts, ll. P. for Toronto-Scarborough;\nW. K. Esling of Rossliind, M, P. for\nKootenay West; Col. Fred Lister. M.\nP. P. for Crwton; J H, Schofleld, M\nP. P. for Trill; Dr. c. M. Kingston\nM. P. P. for Orand Forks-Greenwood;\nand Mr. Shannon of willow Point.\nMrs. McGhle of Robson led community singing and iisslsted the Hobson  orchestra,   whirl.  \u00abnve selections.\nNelson News of the Day\nReserve afternoon and evening. Wet*\nt.rsdnv.  20th   for   Church   of  Redeemer\nAnimal  Garden  part;- at  the  home  of\nAlderman   und   Mrs.   J.   P.   Morgan.\n(5219-1-111)\nRound oiil your holiday by attending\ntbe dance at Ea\u00able hall on Labor Day\nScottish Choral Society.        (5221-3-113r\nWait for Ramsden Bros, announcement for fall opening winter coats and\nmillinery, (5223-6-110)\nDauBhters of Bmrhind will meet to-\nnlglit ln Memorial hall at 8 o'clock.\n(6210)\nMrs Nelson Bull. teaehrT of beginners\nnnd edvanced students of pianoforte.\nFall 1eim ^ntember. studio: 415\nHouston St.     Phone 523L, (5200)\nTennis   Dance   at   Eagle   hall   Satur-\nda l    September    first    In    connect ion\nwith,   tournament.       Proceeds    towards\nnew   courtri,     TrGUb.idour3'   orchestra.\n(521S-6-llff>\nDance. Slocan City. Saturday, Sept.  1.\nMush:   by   Brasch's   orchestra.\n(5214-0-117)\nATTENTION  KAQLH\nAii   members   who   Intend   going   to\nRossiand   on   Sept.   5th.   kindly   give\nname to Secretary, before August 29th.\n(5212)\nThermos Bottles\nAND KITS.\nLowest prices;   new  goods;   complete\nstock.\nMall Orders Filled Promptly\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nMrs. Leslie Weaver, teacher of Toronto Conservatory of Music piano\nund theorv. Phone 275Y. 618 Carbonate street. (5205-6-115)\nHEE TI.K1.II I. FOR Fl'RNITI'RE REPAIRING AMI M'llOI.STiKIM. 120\nMil-II   STREET. (.7.111-1-110)\nMiss   Minnie   E.   Fletcher.     Teacher\nof  music,   1319   Kootenay.   (5196-2-111)\nCAPITOL    BE.M'TY    SHOPPE.       Opposite Capitol Theatre.    Phone 732.\n(5108-6-114)\nFOR SALE\u2014Gladloll blooms. 50 cents\nper   doz.     Mrs.   H.   Ross.   Phone   472R.\n(5184-3-110)\nMrs. Ijiwrrnt-r MiTliull\u2014Teacher of\nbeginners and advanced students of\nsinging and pianoforte, Phone 658R.\n516   Hall  street. (5175)\nKOOTENAY    LAWN    TENNIS\nASSOCIATION\nFourteenth annual tournament. Sep\ntember   1st.   2nd.   and   3rd.     Program\nHamilton, P. O. Box 1004. Nelson, B. C.\nof   events   on   application   to   C.   H.\n(5088)\nDance    at    Outlet    hotel.    Saturday,\nAugust   25. (5100-5-110)\nNick Kattboochoff\nPays fine. Costs,\non Assault Charge\nNick Katboochoff paid a fine of #15\nand coats on Friday, nn a charge of\nussaultlivt,   When   he   appeared   before\nDance at Mkeside Park. Pavilion\nevery Wednesday and Saturday nicht.\nTroubadours. (5084)\nMusic teachers will soon be opening\ntheir   fall   classes,     Thev wlll   secure\npupils   by   advertising   la the   Dally\nNews.\nv\nIt's Time for That\nNew Fall Hat\nAnd Here's the Place to Get It\n$5.00 to $8.00\nSmart new block, to top the fall outfit\u2014thc\nnarrower brims, the sharper pitch; new\nwelt styles, new snaps\u2014in the favored new\nshades of pearl, cinnamon, brown and other\ntones.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nFIRESTONE\nThe new twin-\nbead heavy duty\ncasing Is giving\nexcellent satisfaction. Used exclusively by B. c.\nElectric Railway\nCo., B. C. Motor\nTransportation Co.\nand others.\nDealers for Nelson\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nPHONE  77\nBaggage.  Express   and  storage.\nLong Distance Hauling.\n421  BAKES BUD STEVENS\nFILMS\nDEVELOPED\nPRINTED\nENLARGED   AND\nFRAMED\nJ. H. ALLEN\n,       Picture Framing\nAmateur Finishing\nThe Smedley Garage Co.\nBE Assl Rl:t> OF YOUB\nSUPPLY OP\nICE AND SUMMER\nFUEL\nWe make prompt delivery.\nAsk Our Driver to Call\nMacDONALD CARTAGE\n& FUEL CO.\n501 BAKER ST. PHONE 504\nShoe*, repaired: handmade, ellmlnat-\n1-p arch troubles. Underwood \u2014\nHall.   Baker Street,  next P. Burns.\n(4950-tI)\nVelio* Taxi Cn. Stage leett* WIIHUM\nTranaF.r every morning at \u00bb o'clock for\nYmlr, Salmo ami luiiinrt.rr line   '\n\u25a0\u2014  - \u20224BD1)\nWANTED\nPLUMS\nGREENGAGES\nBLACKBERRIES\nCRAB APPLES\nRIPE APPLES\nMcDonald Jam Company\nLIMITED\nNelson Brand Jams\nNELSON, B.C.\nTONIGHT 7 AND 9\nNORMA TALMADGE     V\n^\u2022THEDOVE- $\nBEAUTIFUL NORMA IN ONE\nOF  HER MOST  ALLURING\nROLES\nTHE COMEDY\n\"BLOW BY BLOW\"   <\nPathe Newt\nON THE STAGE\nWheeler's\nCapitouanS\nNEXT WEEK\nlst ANNIVERSARY\nSpecial Program\n_____________________^M\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1928_08_27","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\/1.0403564","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":"1928-08-27 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":"1928-08-27 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":""}]}