{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-17","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1929-08-29","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404671\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" !**\u2022\nLambert\nSTORY DISPUTED\nSee Page 10\nailg $tto&\nB   C\nHarlow\nTO BOX IN WEEK\nSee Page 7\nVOL 28\nNelson, B. C.       THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1929\nNo. 114\nGRAF REACHES GOAL TODAY\nAIR AHACK\nARABS HAR1FA\nFrench Troops  Stand  on\nGuard in Jewish Section\nof Beirut, Syria\nNAVAL DETACHMENT\nPROM DURHAM HELPS\nIndications of Attempts at\nPeaceful Settlement of\nPalestine Trouble\nThe ' creet of Arab-Jewish teror\nIn .Palestine seems past but ten-\nlion and unrest continue*.\n} Ten thousand flrhtinc men,\nmostly World war veterans, were\noffered to Oreat Britain by the\nAmerican-Palestine Jewish Legion\nto aid the restoration of peace.\nThe British government today assured Ambassador Dawes ln .London\nthat Americana would be protected.\nFollowing a conference between!\n0, Welsemann. Zionist leader, and\nLord Passfleld, British colonial\nmlri\u00bbi*er. It was announced energetic measures would be taken to\nprevent recurrence or trouete. i-ante\nBritish reinforcements are being\nsent to idbTiTiHTn order in the far\nBEIRUT, Byrls, Aug. 38.\u2014French\ntroops are permanency stationed on\npatrol Inside the Jewish quarter here\nto protect their Uvea and the property of the inhabitants from possible\nArab attack, although no further demonstrations have occurred since the\norderely Arab procession this morning.\nThe parade today waa only a small\none to escort the Moslem leaden to\nthe government house to discuss their\nplans for a great demonstration similar to the parade of 20,000 Arabs yes.\nterday. French authorities persuaded\nthem to abandon their Idea.\nTheir arguments were effectively underlined by the presence ln and around\nthe Jewish quarter of battalions with\nfixed bayonets.\nReports from Palestine said that\nBritish troops had the situation well\nln hand  In all urban districts.\nUTTLE  CHANOE\nLONDON, Aug. 28.\u2014The British col'\nonial office official communique, on\nthe situation ln Palestine stated there\nla little change since tbe last announcement was made.\nJerusalem, Jaffa and Haifa, are reported as quiet, a disorder In the last\nnamed place having been dealt with\nsatisfactorily by a naval detachment\nfrom the battleship Durham, which is\nstationed  at Jaffa.\nAircraft has been employed ln re-\nconnoltering in the disturbed areas\nand fire from the air has been opened\non parties of Arabs ln the neighborhood of Haifa, and on the hills around\nJerusalem,\nThe telephone lines from Jerusalem\nto Nazareth, Haifa and Tiberias are reported  cut.\nThe situation ln the trans-Jordanla\nIs reported normal.\nindications of attempts at peaceful\nsettlement of the Palestine troubles\nWere contained ln messages from Jerusalem Issued tonight by the central\noffice of the Zionist  organiza'tlon.\nThe colonial office stated tonight\nthat no further reinforcements were\nreaching Palestine, indicating that the\ngovernment believed there are sufficient\ntroops there to, maintain order.\nEnglish Zionists decided today to\nhold a mass protest demonstration ln\nAlbert hall next- Sunday.\nLapointe Will Be\nat London Meeting\nRepresent Canada\nOTTAWA, Aug. 28.\u2014Hon. Ernest Lapolnte, minister of Justice,\nwill represent the government\nof Canada at the meeting ln\nLondon on October 8 of a committee which will consider and\nmake recommendations regarding legal points raised at the\nImperial conference of 1028. That\nconference recommened the appointment of the committee'\nrepresentative of Great Britain\nand the Dominions.\nB.C. PEOPLE ARE\nGREATEST MONEY\nSPENDERS,CANADA\nFigures Issued by Bureau  of\nStatistics Show More\nBank Debits\nOTTAWA, Aug. 28\u2014Canadians sre becoming \"rpater spenders, it figures pub\nlished today by the Dominion bureau\nof statistics, showing the relation of\nbank debits to bank deposits, may be\ntaken as a criterion\nDuring the month of July M.C00,\n000 was withdrawn from Canadian\nbanks, 15 per cent more than during\nIhe corresponding period of 1928, while\ndeposits showed a decline of 2 per\ncent On a percentage basis, the people\nof British Columbia appear to be the\ngreatest spenders with an increase In\ndebits of 23 per cent during the first\nseven months of this year over the\ncorresponding period of last year Ontario came second with an increase\nof nearly 12 per cent and with debits\naggregating more than 811.000,000\nCONTIUE EFFORTS\nOBTAIN GERMANY'S\nAGREEMENT TODAY\nConference leasts .Late Into the\nNight But Fail to Obtain\nAgreement to Plan\nMELBOURNE, Aus., Aug. 28.\u2014Mem- '\norlal prayers wlll be recited here for,\nthe Jews killed ln Palestine ln the\nJew-Arab disorders. Rabbi Brodle an- |\nnounced today. The Jewish Herald ln |\nan editorial exhorts Australian Jews to |\nbe calm. It says Oreat Britain's In- i\nspiring response to the high commissioner's appeal shows she realized fully\nher obligations under the mandate.\nTHE HAGUE, Aug. 28. (Thursday)\u2014\nThe allied creditors of Oermany after\ntwo long conferences yesterday and\nanother which lasted late into the\nnight, were unable to obtain agreement by Oermany to the reparations\nplan which they had agreed upon between themselves. Adjournment was\ntaken until 10 A. M-. today.\nThe Germans demanded as compensation for releasing their Interests ln\nsurplus payments under the Dawes\nplan before the new plan became effective, recognition by the powers now\noccupying the Rhineland\u2014Oreat Britain, France and Belgium\u2014that after\nSeptember 1, tlie cost of occupation\nshall no longer rest upon Oermany.\nIRQRI   TO   EVACATU\nThe British have already begun to\nevacuate the Oerman territory and\nhave announced they would push lt\nto a quick conclusion. The French\nand Belgians on whom would fall\nthe cost of continued occupation, lf\nthe Germans are relieved of lt, were\nunwilling last night to accept the\nOerman   thesis.\nWhen no method of recognizing the\ndifferences was ready apparently lt\nwas decided to adjourn the meeting\nof the big six to this morning to enable the delegations separately to\nseek a way for obtaining Oerman adhesion  to the accord of the creditors.\nSo confident had the delegates been\nthat the last obstacle in the way of\nagreement would be surmounted that\nthey arranged for a full public session at 2:30 P. M., today at which\nthe proceedings would be broadcast by\nradio. With the adjournment the time\npus jnoj oi ina si uojwas oqi sjojeq\none half hours, but hope waa still\nentertained that an agreement would\nbe reached  in time.\nUnion of South\nAfica \"Insults\"\nMoslem Leader\nBOMBAY, India, Aug. 2ft\u2014Because\ntb4 government of the Union of South\nAfrica imposed certain conditions for\nhis visit which he considered Insulting, Maulana Mohamed All, prominent\nMoslem leader, who waa to have sailed\nfor South Africa today, cancelled his\npassage at the laat minute.\nJust before leaving for the docks he\nreceived a communication from the\nprovincial government or Bombay stating 'the Union government was willing\nto allow himself and his brother,\nBhaukat All to enter the Union provided, among other things, that they\nconfine their tour to certain parts of\nand did not engage ln any political\nactivities whatever, publlo or private.\nFurthermore, they were not to stay in\nthe Union more than three weeks.\nMohamed AU was highly Indignant\nat the message, which he characterized\nIM an Insult. His brother, however,\nsailed as scheduled.\nCanadian Minister\nto United States\nEKIIITV-FOOT STEAMER IH B\\S\nMONTU JULMN, Ont., Aug. 28.\u2014\nFire ot unknown origin completely destroyed ths 80-foot steamer Empress\nof ths Stoney Lake Navigation company here today. Members ot the\nprtw   escaped.\nHALIFAX. Aug. 28\u2014America's minister to Canada, Hon. William Phillips\nand Canadas \u25a0 minister to the United\nStates, Hon. Vincent Massey, were\namong those receiving honorary degrees at Dalhousle untversltys reunion\nconvocation today. Other distinguished\nmen to be honored were Hon. E. N.\nRhodes, P. C, premier of Nova Scotia;\nHon. A. K. McLean, president of the\nexchequer court of Canatla; Colonel\nThe Hon. J. L. Ralston, minister of\nnational defense and Chief Justice A.\nM, Morrison of the supreme court of\nBritish Columbia.\nImposing Array of\nAircraft Is Seen,\nCleveland Affair\nCLEVELAND, Aug 38.\u2014The most\nImposing Array of aircraft ever to be\nassembled participated her* today ln\na mighty spectacle of the air, a klaed-\nlscoplc succession of serial event* of\na combined magnitude and daring\nnever  befor*  equalled.\nMora than 100.000 alr-mlnded persons attending the national air ra***,\ncheered themselves hoarse at th* arrival of th* ntvy dirigible \"Lo* Angeles\"\nand th* maneuvers of th* thre* baby\nblimps, aa auto-gyro, glltier* and\nhundred* ot Hrplsnes,\nB* C* Welcomes 'bull's Eye' Blair\nScones in Vancouver when Colonel R. M. Blair of Vancouver, King's prize winner of\nBisley was accorded a hearty reception by the military unit', city officials and populace of Van\ncouver.\nHe was \"chaired\" by his military comrades on  a  park  campus  and  afterwards   headed  a\nparade to Stanley Park.\nIn the upper photo he is shown with Mrs. Blair after having been presented with a silver tea\nservice.\nIn the lower picture he is seen  (sitting down) as he appeared driving in the parade.\nSTEEL COMPANY\nOF CANADA WILL\nREPEAL DECISION\nIf Ruling on Disposal of Dividends Put in Force Company Suffers\nHAMILTON, Ont., Aug. 28\u2014The\nboard of directors of the Steel Oompany of Canada at a meeting here\ntoday, decided to appeal the decision\nrendered recently In trial court concerning the disposal of dividends. Tlie\ncompany will carry the case to the\nappeal court of Ontario. If the decision\nIs again unfavorable to the company\nthe situation wlll once more be reviewed  bv  the  bourd  of directors.\nTlie suit was launched by two shareholders of the common stock of the\ncompahy. They contended the preferred\nstock of the company had not received\na dividend rate of h*ore than seven\nper cent until an equal amount had\nbeen paid up on the common stock.\nMr. Justice Ortlc ruled last Priday In\nfavor of the plaintiffs It was estimated\nthat if the ruling was put Into foroe\nabout 96.000,000 would be due upon\nthe common ahares. It would also prevent the putting Into force of a contemplated eight per cent dividend on\npreferred shares.\n I\t\nTwo Die and Ten\nInjured in Fire,\nTenement House\nNKW YOHK. Aug. 29. (Thursday)\u2014\nTwo unldentlfed persons were burned\nto death, and 10 others were Injured\nearly today in a fire which swept\nthrough a five-story tenement house.\nThe deed persons, _ man about 25\nyears of age, and a woman 50 years\nold, were trapped  on the  top  floor.\nSaskatchewan Hen\nLay 353 Eggs in\n.    361 Days; Record\nSASKATOON. Aug. 2ft\u2014\"Lady Vic-\ntorlne,\" known officially m poultry\ncircles ns Barred Plymouth Itocl: pullet\nNo. 4*0, property of the University of\nSaskatchewan, today laid her 353rd e*rc\nln 361 days, establishing a new world's\nrecord. The previous record was held\nby White Leghorn No. 351, owned by\nthe University of British Columbia.\nwhich laid 361 eggs in 62 weeks find\nher 352nd the day after the close or\nthe year. \"Lady Victorllne\" had until\nLabor Day to boost her egg laying record far over the previously established\nmark.\nFire Fighter Is\nMissing, Nipawin\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Aug. 2ft\nPire fighting crew* are actively engaged in suppressing fires nt Candle.\nlake. White Fish river, Oull and Wh'te-\nsaml hikes, also at Peesane in thu\nPi.sq.iu forest reserve. The forestry,\nbranch declared today that unless rain\nfalls stton. thc situation wlll be extremely serious,\nA fire fighter mimed Steele has been\nmissing since Saturday In the vicinity\nof Tobln Rapids, east of Nipawin.\nForestry officials and R- C. M. p.. are\nsearching. Stele It known to be without  supplies.\nFIRE SITUATION\nIN MANITOBA IS\nSTILL SERIOUS\nMany Large Blazes; Rain Assists Greatly; Only One\nNew Fire Reported\nWINNIPEG. Aug 23\u2014Manitoba's forest fire hazard lessened to some degree\nby heavy mlnu In several districts yesterday, continued to be serious tonight,\nwith lam- blazes flaming ln many\nwooded\" areas\nYesterday's rains assisted greatly the\nwork of forest rangers and volunteers\nin their ii-isi against the menace, said\na report this afternoon of the forestry\nbranch, \"but what we need now ls\nmore rain or continues eool weather\nto min:iin:',c the risks of fires breaking\nout again\"\nOnly une new fire was reported and\nthis, between Ophlr und Hooper, on the\nCanadian Nntlojuil Railway's main line.\ntna  not consderetf at  aU serious\nAll Manitoba forcnt reserves were\nfree of flames today for the first time\nin more than two weeks. At the Duck.\nPorcupine and Simdilnnd reserves, the\nshowers helped fire fighters subdue\nUt-mes which had started to penetrate\nthc  timber  limits.\nFernie Man Has\nWound in Head; Is\nin Critical State\nFERNIE, B. C. Aug. 28.- A man\nQlflud .Joe Kablnco of Pernle. B. C.,\nannex extension, is in Fernie hospital\nsuffering from I wound In the head\nthought to have been self-inflicted\nby a 22 rifle. The accident ls said\nto have occurred about 6 or 7 o'clock\nTuesday morning. The man's condition   is extremely  grave.\nU. S. Coast Guard\nCutter Leaves for\nScene of Wreck\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 28.\u2014Coast guard\nheudquarters was advised late today\nthat the coast guard cutter Unalaga\nI was leaving Ketchtck.m, Alaska, for\nCraig, to pick 11 shipwrecked members\nof the crew of the oil steamer Corona.\nThe advices did not say how the\nsteamer was wrecked or how the message had  reached Craig.\nLondon Business Men Full of Praise\nfor Triumph of Snowden at the Hague\n+        +        *        4\nLONDON, Aug. 2ft.\u2014Lending business\nmen as well as many prominent ln\npubllc affairs were today full of\npraise fof ths triumphs of Right Hon.\nPhlllip Snowden, chancelor of the ex-\ncbequper, at the reparations conference\nthe  The  Hague.\nThe chairman of ono of the chief\ncotton manufacturing concerns who\nla also a director of the Mu\nbank and the Manchester chamber of\nCommerce said Mr. Snowden merits\nthe warmest congratulations on the\n\u25a0trong stand -he made. It was not\nsufficiently appreciated abroad what\nireat sacrifices this country had made.\n+ + + + +\n\"The time has quite definitely arrived when Great Britain can no longer\nafford to make such sacrifices. The\nwhole discussions show there can be no\nsatisfaction for anybody until the whole\nquestion of reparations and lnter-al-\nlied  debts  have  been eliminated.\n\"Inasmuch as this country Is so\ndependent on export trade It is not\nunreasonable to say It suffers mors\nthan any other country from reparations, oapecialy reparations In kind.\nIt ls therefore gratifying to know Italy\nhas agreed to purchase a million tons\nof coal from us which up to new shs\nhas been getting by reparations.\"\n+        + + + +\nRight Hon W. O. A. Ormsby-Oore\na former member of the Baldwin government, predicted there were rocks\nahead ln a speech at Northumberland -\n\"So far\" he said, \"We (Conservatives) have not much occasion to quarrel with the action of the Labor government. But there, are rocks ahead.\nThe Labor government has stood up\nfor British Industries and their attitude commends Itself to the majority\nof the nation. But lf the Conservative\nparty had done the aame thing they\nwould have been told they were imperilling   European,  peace.\"\nForest Fire Damage\nin Manitoba Reaches\nover $500,000, Says\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 28.\u2014Havoc wrought\nby flames that have already awept\nthrough large sections of tbe province\nhas exceeded \u00ab600,O0O and officials of\nthe Manitoba branch of the Dominion\nforestry service believe that unless the\nfury of the blazes now raging la Immediately quelled, damages will soar\nabove  the  million dollar  mark.\nNEW FIRE REPORTED\nBURNING IN SLASH\nCLEARWATER CREEK\nFire Springs Up Between Farron and Murray's Mill;\nSpot Fire\nLate yesterday afternoon a fire was\nreported to bi> sweeping up the mountain ln the vicinity of Clearwater\ncreek. This fire was burning In an old\nlogging Nlash where the fire travelled\nwith  great speed.\nA new fire was reported to the forestry branch last night to have started between Farron and Murray's mill,\nevidently a spot fire from one of the\nother blazes then burning la the vl.\nclnlty.\nApproximately fiva small smokes were\nreported up behind the Sliver King\nyesterday. These fires are under observation since none of them are of a\ndangerous  nature.\nWestern part of the Nelson forestry\ndistrict was reported to have fair situation existing yesterdny with the exception of the district around Beaverdell\nwhere a high wind had Deen experienced and caused a good deal of\ntrouble to the crews that have been\nguaruing Wallace mountain.\nSituations ln other parts of the district were reported ln a fair condition.\nOn the Kootenay lake south of Procter where the big fire last week wiped\nout a stretch 20 miles along the C. P.\nR. construction line the few remnants\nat either end of the devastated area\nwere well under control yesterday.\nBarometrical readings , last night\nahowed that the mercury was slowly\nlowering which ls a probable indlca\ntlon of more wind today.\nSHORT IS NAMED\nHEAD CANADIAN\nMILLER'S BODY\nWill    Retire   From    Dominion\nMills; Charles Kit\/,. Montreal, Is Chairman\nMONTREAL, Aug. 28\u2014C. H. O. Short\ngeneral manager of l~.it? Dominion flour\nmills, limited, Montreal, was elected\npermanent president of the Canadian\nNational Millers association at the an-\nnual meeting of the association held\nhere today. Mr Short Is retiring from\nhis connection with the Dominion\nflour mill and will devote all his time\nto his studies with the Millers assocla\ntlon.\nCharles Rltz, eastern manager of the\nRobin Hood Mills. Montreal, was elected chairman of the board of directors,\nwhile A. R. McDonald, general manager\nof the Maple Leaf Milling company,\nlimited, Toronto, was named vice-\nchairman. D. E, Murphy was appointed\nsecretary.\nTlie board of directors for the ensuing year includes W. W. Hutchison.\nLake of the Woods Milling company,\nlimited; R. R. Dobell. the Ogilvle Hour\nMills, J, J. Page, Western Canada Flour\nMills company; A. R. MacDonald,\nMaple Leaf Milling company, limited,\nand Charles Rltz, Robin Hood Mills,\nlimited.\nSENATOR REID IS\nBURIED^RESCOH\nHonored  Son  of   70   Years  is\nLaid to Rest in Blue\nChurch Cemetery\n01 TO\nUD EARLY\nWill Be First Aircraft to\nConquer Pacific; New\nRecord Around World\nPASSES CLEVELAND\nAT 11 AT NIGHT\nReception at Lakehurst is\nReady Chicago Cheers\nShip on Its Journey\nPRESCOTT, Ont., Aug. 28\u2014An\nhonored son of Prescott, whose 70\nyears of life had led him from the farm\nhouse to the house of commons and\nthe senate, was burled here today. Last\nrites for Senator J. D. Reld. long\nprominent as a Conservative lawmaker,\nwere   solemnized   at   his  residence.\nIn the blue church cemetery, noted\nai the burial place of Barbara Heck.\nfounder of Methodism in Canada, the\nremains of the senator were Intcred.\nHis death had occurred on Monday\nfollow.n\u00ab a stroke, the preceding week.\nHonorary pall bearers were: Oeneral\nA. C. Mewburn, Premier O. Howard\nFerguson, Toronto; Sir Robert .Borden,\nSir Thomas White and Hon. o. P.\nQraham.\nAKTOS, O.. Anr. 28\u2014The On*\nZeppelin appeared over the municipal here at 11:57 P. M\u201e and\ncircled low over the field, flying  slowly.\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 38\u2014The Graf\nZeppelin passed over downtown Claw\nland at  11:03  P. M. tonight.\nNEARIM1   (JOAL\nThe world circling dirigible Onrf\nZeppelin waa rapidly approaching Lakehurst, N. J, the goal of lte great exploit tonight and was erpecwxl to\nland  early  tomorrow.\nWhen the Oraf does land, it wlll\ngain for Itself several records. It will\nhave circumnavigated the globe ln\nless time than was ever done before;\nlt wlll be the first airship ever to\nHy around the world, and lt wlll be\"\nthe first aircraft of any type that\nhas made a non-stop flight across the\nPacific.\nAt 4:15 Central Standard time, the\nhuge air liner had Traversed lta way\nacross several states, against advene\nweather conditions and soared majestically over Chicago. After dipping;\nseveral times ln response to a jubilant welcome, the atrahtp continued\non' Its course across Mtclflgan. and for\na few minutes crossed the international boundary, passing over Windsor.\nOnt.\n\u2022\u00bbUAK< III.K.IITS   PLAY   ON   N1IIP\nDetroit greeted the visitor at 9:40\nP. M, Eastern Standard time, where\ngalnt searchlights played on her silver\nsides until she vanished southeast ln\ntlie uirecticn cf Cleveland. Ohio, where\nthousands waited patiently for a sight\nof the history-making craft.\nNaval officers at Lakehurst had\ncompleted preparations for the reception of the airship which will\nmark the end of the flight of more\nthan   30,000    miles.\nFlood lights kept burning during\nthe night, and lana crews were assigned to where they could be routed\nfrom their beds at a moments notice.\nIt was antlclpateo Captain Eckner\nwould glide the Ornr over Greater\nNew York some time around 5 A M.,\nand proceed immediately to t*ke-\nhurst.\nKOI s|\\(.   WVLCOMX,  CHICAGO\nCHICAOO. Aug. 33~The Oraf Zeppelin slid Into view of thousands\nperchedatop the city's vantage points\nat 4:35 P. M. C. s. time, and apparently all was well aboard. Variable\nwinds of the cross head wind type\nwere subsiding as Dr. Eckener, Lakehurst and a record for circumnavigating the globe.\nThe huge ship cut diagonally across\nChicago's Loop, circled and then headed   east  once   more.\nIts complement of passengers and\ncrew waved acknowledgement of the\nhuge roar which shot upward from\nthe roofs of Loop buildings. The roar\nincreased as the ship headed out over\nthe   I*ake.\nChicago's population thronged the\nroofs, streets, fire escapes and windows and exhibited a carnival spirit\nwhich Boon filled streets wtth tape\nand  paper.\nHardly had thc din subsided when\nDr. Eckener brought his ship about\nin a gallant gesture of salute to\nChicago and her millions.\nAnd each time the epoch-making\ncraft snaked across the Loop another\ndin arose and eyes centered upon\nthe big ship, now within a day's\nsailing time of a new around-the -\nworld   record.\nI\nSearch for Ottawa\nGirl Missing Month\nQUEBEC. Aug. 38.\u2014That nothing\nhad been left undone and that the\nprovincial police are even now continuing their Investigation into the\nmysterious disappearance of Miss Irene\nMslone, Ottawa, which occurred on\nJuly SS at Houder's lake, some 33\nmiles north of Buckingham, was Premier Taachereau's answer to criticism\nlevelled at the atorney general's department by A. ouertln, member for1\nHull.\nTHURSO, Ont.. Aug. 38\u2014Dragged In\nmanner   unknown   Into   a   circular\nm, Gerald Way, an employee of a\nsewing machine company hen, waa terribly mangled today. Death was Instantaneous.\nSeattle Battler\nLoses to Holder\nof German Title\nFAIRVIEW, N. J. Aug 38 Dr. lud-\nwig Haymaim. holder of the h**VV-\nwelght championship or Germany.\nknocked out Ray Thompson of Seattle\nIn the third round of their 10-round\nfight at Fletcher's field here tonight.\nWeather Bulletin\nn\n\u2022a\nt*    t\nM\nHI\nM\nVictoria\nVancouver\t\nNanaimo    \t\nKamloopa   .\nEstevan  \u2014 -_-_\nPrince Rupert                  ........ H 83\nDawson 44 M\nPrince   Oeorge 60 73\nSeattle (0 80\nPortland to 8S\nSan Pranclsco    M t*\nSpokan*      60 M\nPenticton   . 35 80\nVernon MM\nQrand  Fork* 56 90\nNeiaon 56 87\nKaslo M 85\nCranbrook 59 M\nCalgsry 44 \u00bb2\nEdmonton 58 80\nSunt Current 48 80\nPrlnc* Albert 44 69\nWinnipeg 59 74)\nForecast\u2014Neiaon   and   vlclnltj: Pin*\ntnd nrm with local thunderstorm*.\n age Tm*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY M6RNING, \"AUGUST 29,1929\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Axxotaodation Is Obtainable\nBoom* With Running\nWater\nPrivate Bath* EaSulte\nThe Hume\nGEO. BENWELL, Prop.\nTh* Premier Hotel of th*\nInterior\nHtlafE\u2014Mr.   and   Mr*.   J.   Connode,\nSeatUe; Mrs. R. iglip and Nancy. Nak-\nA. Hellne, Toronto;  Mra. J.  Hod-\nVancouver;   P.   Z. Caverhlll.   Vlc-\nUr.   and    lira.   O.   W.    Haln,\nNew   Denver;    A.   Smith,   Toronto;    R.\na.   McLeod.   Poplar;   Mr*.   E.   Rutherford  Kaslo;   H.  Hlncks,  Crawford   Bay;\nMr. and  Mrs.  R.  Trover. Mr.  and Mr*.\nQueen's Hotel\nTIE    CKNTRR    OP    CONVRNIaWCE\nBot and cold watar In every room.\nSteam Hwted.\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nqueens\u2014A. Oraham, Hew Denver;\n3. Gardner, Kaalo; E. Cockerell, J.\nClark*. J. Keith, V. Carlson, Vancouver\nJ. C. Hick*, Toronto; Mr*. O. Dimon\nand family, Revelstok*.\nMALCOLM TELLS\nOF IMPORTANCE\nEXPORT TRADE\nSpeaks Briefly at Luncheon at\nToronto; Outlines Branches\nof Work\nT\nMadden Hotel\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam   Heated  Room* by  th* Day\nWeek   or  Month\nEvery consideration shown to taesti\nCor.  Baker and  Ward gt*.  Nelson\n\u2022anted doubl* the export trade ol eight\nyean ago.\nThe minister outlined three br*nch*s\nof his work, the establishment of\ntrade commissioners in foreign and\nempire countries, the promotion of tbe\nsteamship lines and Induatrial and\nscientific research.\nThar* war* now 33 Canadian com.\nmlssloners established abroad and in\nevery country In which they ware working there had been a substantial trade\nIncrease.\nL A. Taylor, Spokane; H. Stilton,\nField; c C. Harr, Kelson; Mr. and\nMra T. Stirling. J. R. Cann and family, Mlas G Nell .Mlat J. Cawood. J.\nS. Carter, P. H. Middleman, Vancouver; J. H. Tabot, A. Harvey. Victoria;  w. A. Moss, Dundas, Oot.;  Mr.\nand   Mra.   A.   Ultngar,   T.   J.   Polrier.\nSpokan*.\nMADDEN\u2014R. Laib, A. Laib. J. Hall,\nE.   Leplnakl,   J.   Kuntr.,   Cutlus   Creek.\n1 1111111 11111 H ! 11II! 1111111111111 M 1111II III 11111111\nWhere the Guest is King\nTKeS\navoy\nNELSON'S   NEWEST   AND   FINEST   KORL\nMANY    ROOMS    WITH    FBIVAT1\nBATHS   OB   8BOW1BS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nlnmrnimiiimmiiniiiitittintiinitmnilll\nRefuelling Plane\nIs Reported Down\nNear Cleveland\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 28.\u2014Captain Ir*\nEaker, pilot of the tram-continental\nrefueling plane \"Shuttle\", waa reported down near the Municipal airport\nJuat before midnight hy an accident\nto his plane, caused hi aa attempt to\ntransfer oil to him for the night's\nflight.\nTORONTO,   Aug.   28\u2014\"Quebec   could\nlearn a lot from Ontario and the Can-\nadlen   National   exhibition,''   said   Hon.\nAlfred   Leduc,   minister   without   portfolio In  the Quebec government,   In  a\nbrief  address  at  the exhibition,  directors' luncheon today. Quebec waa eager\nto   take   up   whatever   good   Ideas   it\nfound anywhere,  he said,  adding that\nOntario   had   not   hesitated   to   adopt\nQuebec's Ideas on the liquor question.\nMayor Houde said one of his election promises had been to establish an\nexhibition ln Montreal but after seeing\nthe tremendous Investment and else of\nthe one In Toronto he was quite discouraged.\n\"That ls one of these political promises tbat wlll go by,\" he said, \"but I\nwas well Intended when I made it'.':\nMr Leduc and Mayor Houde accompanied a party at merchants from Quebec on a good-will tour of Ontario\nwho were preeent at the luncheon.\nHon. James Malcolm, minister of\ntrade and commerce, discussed the lm_\nportance of export trade to Canadian\nbusiness and sppealed for the retailers' support in Increasing export trade.\nMr. Malcolm said 10 Per cent of the\npeople of Canada were dependent for\nthetr livelihood on the country's export trade in manufactured goods and\nlf one took Into consideration the\nnumber of dependents on export of\ngrain, cattle, minerals and timber one1\ncould realise Importance of this trade\nto the Dominion.\nLast year $660,000,000 worth or manufactured and semi-manufactured goods\nhid been exported. The amount repre-\nLieutenant-Governor\nto Open Cranbrook\nFair This Evening\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Aug. 28 \u2014Off\non a Journey to Banff, during which\nhe will officiate at three different\nfunctlona, Hts Honor Lieutenant-\nGovenor Randolph Bruse. left here\nlsst evening aboard th* private Canadian Pacific railway ear \"Champalln.\"\nHe will officially open the Cranbrook fair tomorrow night, motor-\nlng the following morning to Banff\ntor tha gala commencement of the\nBanff Highland gathering, Auguat 30-\nSeptember 2, remaining there until\nth* cloalng day. whan another motor\ntrip to Lake Wlnermere provides the\nopportunity of His Honor's atendance\nat the Old-timers' convention to be\nheld there.\nGreat intereat Is displayed by His\nHonor in the Banff Highland gathering this year, to auch an extent, that\nhe personally donated a perpetual\nchallenge trophy for the beat all-\nround athlete ln such event* aa tossing the caber, putting th* shot and\nthrowing   th*   hammer.\nAccompanying the Lieutenant-Governor were Mlas Helen Mackenale, Captain A. H. Molson and Captain Ian\nMackehale.\nSAVOY\u2014L.   c.   Kimpton,   TraU;   E.\nIttonbay,    D.    NacKatn.    Procter;    Mr*.\nC. Holmer, c. Bllverton; Mr. and Mra.\nV. S. Jones, C. O. Jenkins, Trail; Mr.\nand Mra. Klnnovlrch, South Slocan;\nMra. G. A. Hlrd. Slocan City; Mr*.\nE. G. Smith, Winnipeg; F. C. Harme-\nmaan,   R.   Stafford,   Spokane;   Mr.   and\nMra. J. Cox and Jack, Roaaland; M.\nE. Learmonth. J. M. Learmonth, J.\nE. Avery, Creston; Mr. and Mrs. A.\nD. Richardson, Miss M. Kelly, J. Aln-\nbo, J. Barlow, Winnipeg; H. J. Hogan\nand family, B. E. Smaille*. V. L. Mclntyre; J. strather, Edgewood; T. H.\nBetalt,   Vancouver.\nSteam Heated Throughout\nC6hi\nqJ^Cew Grand\n616 Vernon Street, Neiaon, B.C.\nHot and cold Water and Telephone In all Room*\nP.   L.   KAPAKS,   Prop.\nWifiow Point Club\nStages Successful\nV7TLLOW   POINT,   B.   C,   Aug.   te\u2014\nAn evenly contested tennis tournament\nwaa held here oln which TaJIss A. Johnson, Nelson,! won the ladiea singles\nand R. Taylor of willow court, won\nthe  men's  singles.\nIn th* mixed double* T. Weet and\nMrs. C. S. Horsfleld beat Mra. A. N.\nTaylor (playing as a man) and Mis*\nM   Blaylock.\nAfter the matches were over Mra. J.\nJ. Campbell presented th* cup* and\nprizes, after which tea waa served by\nMrs. C. H. Applewhatte and Mra. JL c.\nCampbell.\nHatch awn* wart:\nMens single*: T. West beat h. Crau.\nfurd. 4-0, 6-a. 10-8; W. P Dickson defaulted to C. Craufurd; T. West beat\nC. Craufurd, 1-3, 1-3; R. Taylor beat\nj. Campbell, 6-1, 6-1; E. L. Dewdney\nbeat B. Alrey, 6-1. 6-8; R. Taylor baat\nE L Dewdney, <V7, second aet defaulted: R. Taylor beat T. West, 6-4, 6-7.\n6.1.     . \u201e    ,\nLadle* alnglea: Mlas A. Johnson beat\nMiss V. Hamilton. 6-1. 6-0; Mlas R.\nCraufurd beat Miss D Graham, \u00ab-4,\n7-5. Mrs. Lawse beat Miss M. Camp-\nhell. 4-0 7-5. 6.4; Mis* at. Hlllard beat\nMlaa M. Blaylock 6-4, 7-8; Miss K. Hill-\nlard o*at Miss H. Blaylock 6-4, \u00ab-4;\nMlas Johnstone beat Mlas R. Craufurd\n6-1, 6-3..\nSons of Freedom\nStill Encamped\nat South Slocan\nMembers of the Sons of Freedom\nstill remained camped at South Slocan\nyesterday with little apparent Intention of making an Immediate\nparade  Into Neiaon.\nThese Doukhobors have set up a\nregular camp kitchen at South Slocan\nsnd aerve meals all around at various\nperiod* of the  day.\nRumor bad it at one time yesterday that the Doukhobor* at South\nSlocan had told one of their numbere\nwho waa coming ln to Nelson from\nBrilliant that they were going to\nmake their parade In a few houra.\nHowevar th* parade did not material-\nIB*.\nA motorist passing through Brlllant\nyeaterday afternoon stated that he\nhad seen a large number of Doukhobors\nparading and chanting through the\norchards there.\nIt 1* expected that a large party of\nth* sect which started out from\nGrand Pork* to march to Nelson Monday will be arriving to Join their\nfellowa at South Slocan early this\nmorning.\nNEW  ORAND-tI.   Fltzaimmone,  San-   **\u25a0  L- Morehouae, Trail;  C. C. Bakalo,\nSpokane;   8.   Sherman,   Boawell;   A.   C.\ndon; E. Braaanett. N. L. Ack, Sllverton; \u25a0 stubba.  Nelson;   W.  Hicks.  Trail.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n70S  Vernon   Kt. Phon*  587L\nH. WASSICK AND O .HNATIL'K\nFifty Room* of Solid Comfort\nHeadquartera for Loggers and Miner*\nKootenay Hotel\nUNDER   THE   MANAGEMENT   OF\nWILLIAM  JONES\nOOOD   CLEAN   BOOMS\nREASONABLE   RATES\nPHONE   75 516   VERNON   ST.\nt^ ON and daughter will need a lot of new things when\n^  they go to school.   The very latest\u2014the very smartest wearables for boys are shown at this Shop. Parents\nwill appreciate the qualities and the values that are available here.   We also sell Sweaters and Hosiery for girls.\nBlatk Stockings       Boys'   Leather  Belts\nA. P. LEVretJUE. Prop.\nHotel A\nHot and Cold Running Water\nSteam Heated\nRotary   Headquarter*\nEuropean Plan\nCentrally Located\nSample  Rooma  ln  Connection\nRLINGTON\nTrail\nB.C.\nWool   and   Cotton\n50c\nThe Beat Value.\nTweed Caps\nG.-A0,    75c,    fl.OO,    |1.I5\nSlicker Coats\n|!.95, (3.95\nColored Border\nHanderkerchiefs\n5 tor $1.08\nWhite, 10 for $1.00\nA  wide  range,  2  for  35c\nBoys' Shoes\ntt.50 to moo\nBrown   Canvas   fl.25\nBoys' Long Pants\nfl.95,   3225\nFin*  navy  serge  f2.9.'i\nMerino  Underwear\nVest or Drawers\n75c\nSpring Needle\nCombinations\nLS. <c A., SB. * K.\nPer  ault   91.45\nBloomer Suits\nand long pant ault*\nBoys' Blouses\nO.   K.    quality\nMc.    79c,    fl.OO,    fl.50\nWe   have   a   broad   cloth\nspecial   at   85c\nBoys' Navy Knickers\nfl.OO\nSeparable Cuff Links\n25c  pair\nSilk Ties\nROe\nLanky   Bill  tie*   39e\nSweaters\nOld reliable polo collar.\nAll colore and *law* fl.25.\nLarge rang* at higher\nprices.\nFruitvale Notes\nFBUITVALI. Aug. 28\u2014 Mr. and Mra\nMikeBxnee and family have returned\nto their home In TraU alter spending\nthe aummer months her.\nMr. and Mra, Harry Cog and aon\nhave left tor their home ln TraU\nafter holidaying In the Valley for the\npast   three   months.\nD. Murray and Son Bill of Hall\nwere   Valley   visitors   recenUy.\nMiss Laura Startup ls spending a\nweeks   holiday   tn   Hall.\nAmong the visitors to Trail recently\nwere Mr. and Mrs. J. Wataon. Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Nelson and family, Mr.\nC. H. Davl*) and son, Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Enderby and Mr. and Mrs. E. Enderby   Jr.   and   sop.\nJ, Williams. O. Rushton. Mr. and\nMrs. A. DeBruJr and daughter Batty\nand Mrs. Rushton were Trail vlslton\nrecently.\nTHE PAM OF\nRHEUMATISM!\n\"F\u00abit*.tiTe.\"RidH\u00abof\nTrouble of Lan* Standing\nA suferer from ittenmabarn for yean, Mi\nS. Floyd, Nanaimo, B.C, turned !\u00bb\u25a0**.\na-tivej\".   Be writ**:\n\"la \u2022 ikMvUlalM nisi 'Puili. di..'\nmaJBBjl It,, chaaaB.\"\nDo yon have the terrible % \u25a0ajn mtm\not rhemMttm-oMT. week, cart sleep,\ntorture aU the time? \u00abFl\u00ab*WtW*2\ngive you relief Juat as it ha* helped thou\nsands of others. No more p*4a ttt ttt\nrest of your days I Get a aa*ta-sjay. |gM\nat all druggist*. i\nFour Bottles,\nTemptation-\nBecaul* he felt it water to drink\non aomebody else than \"foot the bur\nlor four bottles of whtakey, J. Carlson\nwlll spend the net three month* laboring strenuously in .the violnity ot\nthe Jail here. Carlson reoently welled\ninto th* *prtjnenet ot M. Kolotito In\nthe Occidental hot*l and finding nobody at home, helped himself to ICol-\nolyto'a whiskey. Kololyto wa* naturally exaeperated at th* lass of his dm! \u25a0;\nand laid a complaint with th* city\npolice.\nAa a result, Carlson was arrested anal\ncame up for trial before' afagletr.au\nWilliam Brown ln city police oou**\nyesterday morning. He pleaded guilty\naad received the sentence ef to..**\nmonth's hard labor.\nNelson Boy Wins\nHonors at Upper\nCanada College\nNewa haa been received hy Mr and\nMra. Leslie Crauford tbat their son.\nClifford, who ha* lor the past two\nyear* been ln attendance at upper\nCanada College, Ontario, has i^sea\ntan out of eleven *uhject* taken (i'.trUag\nJunior matriculation work a: th*\nsohool, with first claa* honor*. Th*\n11th *ubj*ct, English Composition, mu\npassed with the second claw honor*, a\nrating considerably higher thai! the\naverage.\nIn carrying off the** laurels Clifford\nis following the sum* path he fc .owed\nthrough the Nelton publlo aehool*.\nwhere he won honor after bono.. finally taking a scholarship which entitled him to attend Upper Cuiaoa\nCollege.\nClifford haa Juat turned It *:id at\nthe time he wrote hla Junior m nou-\nlatlon examination* ln June, w*< only\n15 years of aga.\nHe will return to the college fot\nanother year at the \u00abnd of the sum.\nmer\nChris Anderson, a\nNelson Old-Time\nDies Near Ser' lie\nGlenbank Notes\nGLENBANK. NAKUSP, B.C.. *\u00bb.\u00ab. 38.\n\u2014Mr: and Mrs. Wales and family have\nleft for their home In Calgary after\nspending their summer vacation with\nMr. and Mrs. E. Bill, Shakespeare, avenue,\nMrs. Bill was hostess at a dinner\nparty to a number of young boys as\nan \"Au Kevolr\" to Eric, Cyril and Ronald Wales who have apent the past\nfive   weeks   as   house   guests.\nMiss Nellie Johnson has left for Revelstoke.\nWord has been received In, In-latm\nthat Chris Anderson well-knowr Nel-\nson old-timer who left here 26 yean\nIs dead He was on a picnic .r.th\nfriends near Beattle when ha died\nsuddenly. Burial took place tn Ta*\ncoma and aevaral former NeUojiite*.\nnow living In Tacoma attended the\nfuneral.\nltfr. Anderson was a plasterer r ra\nln the early daya and was a member\nof the uniform ranks of the Baglee.\nHe was responsible for the beautifully\nplastered celling in the Bank of Moa-\ntreal building here.\nThe dead man waa born in DeiuuMk\nln 1873. coming to Canada aa a young\nman.\nCharles Morris, Ltd.\n(Rossland Notes\nHOSSLAND. Aug. 88\u2014Miss Patricia\nCrow* and Mlu Catherine Usquhart\nare apendlng the day ln Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nS. S. Herrod, of the local branch\nof the Bank of Montreal has been\ntransferred   to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong the Trail people ln town\nthla aftethoon to attend the funeral\nof the late Alfred Morgan were: Jamw\nH Schofleld. M. L. a., w. A. Curran,\nMayor Herbert Clark, I>r. j. b. Thom,\nDr. c. Williams. Dr. J. H. Palmer. Dr.\nW. A. Coghlln, Mr. and Mrs. Francis\nOlover and C. J.  Miles\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAlex   Cox  of  Paterson  wu   in   th*\ncity today,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlsa   Mildred   Mllby   la   enjoying   a\nholiday at her hom* ln Victoria.\n\u2022\n.\u2014   ..A\u2014\u2014\u25a0 ... I I\t\nOold Rush Walks\nAway Prom Field\nin B.C. Derby\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 38\u2014Packing 138\npounds, top weight, Oold Rush, owi. I\nby O. D- Cameron and ridden by Pollard, figuratively walked away from\nhi* field In the Brltlah Columbia derby,\nfeature event on thi* afternoon'* caw\nat Brighouse, winning by five and a.\nhalt lengths.\nTh* punter* got their inning ln the\nthird when Caa Welch came over to\np\u00bby \u00bb53 on the nose and H3.S0 aero;.-\ntha board.\nPrankie Wine to\nTest Lenhart of\nSpokane, Shortly\nPred Lenhart of Spokan* la to mwt\nFrankle Wine of Billings, Montana, In\na main event light heavyweight batUt\nat the Billing* on Labor Da\u00bb, September a. The bout I* considered locally as a real twt for Lenhart w\nWin* alrwdy holds a victor* over\nLenhart an* also boed a go-round\ndraw with K. O. Christener Just prloi\nto th* rubb*r mane memorable bout\nwith \"Jaok Shark*y, heavyweight\nchampionship contender.\t\nQOUGLAfi\nmkW    HOTEL \\\nRooms with Baths\nE.   L.   AND   A.   GROUTAGE,   Prop*.\nSteam   Heated\nThroughout\nBox\nHot  and  CoM\nWater\nPhone 863      Trail. B.C.\nThe Standard Cafe\n820 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN    DAY   AND    NIGHT\nll M te 3:30 Special Lunch\n5:10 to * p. m. aupper \u2014\nPHONE   IM\nThe Royal Cato\nCLASSIC  BINTAURANT\nRefinement and DeHoaey Prei\nOPEN DAV AND NIOHT\nspecial Dinner 11:30 te t:3* life\nSupper  8:30  to  8  \u2014,\u2014 ~ Mo\nWe specialise In Chop Suey eo* Noodle*\nPhone IM\n THB KELSON DAILf NEWft   THURSDAY 340RNH\nIT 29, 1929\nTRAU MAGISTRATE\nSETS A PRECEDENT\nFines Man Driving on Arterial\nStreet, Dismisses Charge\nAgainst Lady\nTRAIL, B.C. Aug. 28\u2014When Police\nMactetrate Noble Blane fined William\nUahtbody 116 and costs and dismissed\na Similar charge against Miss Vera\nM. Oralc he made a decision which will\nbe interesting to motorists ln general.\nTt waa to the effect that a motorist\nenter-in* a through street from a\ncross street, having obeyed the stop\nsigns, has right which the motorists\non the through street muat respect, It\nsimply means this: Becauae on* is\ndriving on a through street and knows\nthere are signs that require motorists\nto stop before entering' that street,\nthe driver on the through street la not\nprivileged to go tearing dovr nthe\nstreet as if he bad the whole right\nof * way. Thn motorist who has to\nobey tba stop sign haa aa much right\nto come out onto the through street\naa the* car on trie through street has\nto be there.\nThe incident occurred at the comer\nof Bay avenue and Spokane street\nAugust  30, Mtss  Craig  waa proceeding\ndown Spokane street In her car and\nstopped at the \"stop\" sign at the Bay\navenue intersection. Assuring herself\nthat the Intersection was clear she\nproceeded to make a left turn onto\nBay avenue and whea turning into\nthe street, her car was struck by\nUghtbody's car proceeding ln the\nsame defection on Bay avenue. The\ntender and running board of the Light-\nbody car struck the bumper of the\nCrsig car.\n, Seven witnesses were examined in\nthe course of the hearing.\nGround for Trail\nNurses'Heme Is\nHeld Not Taxable\nUtter of R. J. Clegg. Trail city solicitor, to the Trail city council on\nMonday night, held that while the\nNurses' home at Trail was taxable, the\nground upon which It was situated\nwas exempt from taxation, according\nto a communication to The Dally Mews\nfrom Mr. Clegg. It was wrongly reported that letters from Mr. Clegg and\nfrom A. Q. Cameroon of the Consolidated legal department, acting* for the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital society, had concurred In the opinion that while the\nNurses* home was exempt from taxation\nthe  grounds   were   taxable.\nDa not be tempted by tba price\nof cheap teas. Only fine teae\nwill gtve continued enjoyment\nBENNETT CLOSES\nHIS TOUR WITH\nTALK AT FERNIE\n 1\u2014\nDeclares Trad* Treaties With\nSome Countries Not of Advantage to Canada\n\u00bb\nSALADA\"\nTEA     \"\n\u2022\u2022Fresh trom the gardens*\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour Spokane Homt\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar Store and Cafe. Complete service under one roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\nMD TO 119 RIVERSIDE 208 TO 818 SPBAODI\nSPOKANE, U. S. A.\nFHIUflB, B. C , Aug. 28\u2014Closing his\nftve-w'eeift tour covering 6000- mllea\nthrough British Columbia. Hon. R, B.\nBeanett here tonight charged that\ntrade treaties with Prance, Italy and\nNew Zealand had not worked to the\nadvantage of Canada.\nTrade treaties with France and Italy,\nUie Conservative chieftain declared,\nspecified that the Dominion should receive the \"minimum\" on Canadian\ngoods entering those countries. \"But,\"\nMr. Bennett proceeded, \"Prance only\nraised the tariff three times and when\nparliament was in session the Prench\ngovernment raised the tariff on wheat\nto 64 cents per bushel.\" The opposition leader paused and then he observed: \"But we still had the minimum.\"\nHe went on: \"The same thing with\nItaly. Mussolini raised the tariff on\nwheat to 74 cents per bushel, but still\nwe had the minimum.\"\nIt waa the sixteenth speech of the\nofficial opposition leader since entering the Pacific coast province on July\n25. The theatre in which he spoke\nwas crowded to the doore. Mr. Bennett\nwlll depart early tomorrow morning\nfor Calgary and will attend the sessions of the Canadian Bar Association\nto be held in Quebec eaf*y next month\nHPKAKft  TO   TADIEH\nHon. R. B. Bennett spoke this after,\nnoon to a large assembly of ladies and\nsome gentlemen on the spacious lawn\nof Mrs. A B. Trltea, beautiful residence, after which tea was served and\na social hour spent tn chatting with\nthe leader of the opposition. Mr. Ealing, Mr. Stewart and others of the\nparty.\nThe ladles found themselves as\ncharmed by the dlstlngifisneetd vlslton\nvivid personality as they were spellbound by his eloquence. Mrs. Sherwooc'\nHerchmer, president of the local Conservative ladles, fn Introducing thc\nspeaker invited him to tell his audience some of the Conservative party\ntenets. The speaker waa pleased to set\nso large a .number of women Interested\nln the affairs of the! rcountry, as 5?\nper cent of the voting power was 7n\nthe hands of women. Women had not\nsought the franchise but the need of\nthetr help was felt after the war, tc\npreserve peace and outlaw war. while\nIhe means of effectulng was in the\nhands of men and women, there would\nbe war, therefore disarmament was\ndesirable Women had a close relation\nship to the maintenance of every day\nlife, and understood the nature of\ntheir country's needs and therefore the\nbest policy to be followed. Women had\nthe direct control of boys and girls and\nhence   a   tremendous   responsibility.\nIn closing Mr. Bennett appealed to\nhis hearers to do their best toward the\nbuilding up of Canada. Mrs. Herchmer\nln thanking the speaker for hts addresr\nlnvtted all present to become consumers for the moment when the tea and\nthings  should   be   presently   passed.   A\nlarge number were present from Michel\nand   Natal   and   also' from   the   south\ncountry\nCanadian Chamber\nCommerce Party Is\nHonored, Toronto\nTORONTO. Aug. 28\u2014\u25a0Britlan Ignorance ' la not restricted to Britain.\"\ndeclared C. H. Wright, president of\nthe Halifax board of trade, tonight\ntn pleading for a better understnd-\ning of tbe problems of the maritime\nprovinces. Mr. Wright challenged his\nlarge audience to place, accurately, the\nfollowing towns: Sussex, New Olaacow,\nAnttgonish and North Sydney.\nThe occasion was a dinner tendered\nthe Canadian chamber oi commerce\nwestward party by the directors of\nthe   Canadian   National   exhibition.\nWilton Crowe, representing the Manchester chamber of commerce, and Mr.\nWright were the two speakers at *he\ndinner presided ovsr by P. L. Ratcllffe,\ndirector   of   the   exhibition.\nThe chamber of commerce party,\nwhich reached Toronto this momii.g\nfrom Montreal, will being Joined by\nmany mora delegates from this city,\nproceed   to  tha  Niagara  peninsula.\nA journey across the lakes to Port\n.Arthur will follow and the party\nwill proceed from there to a tour of\nthe Peace River district, prior to the\nannual convention to be held at Edmonton and Calgary on September 11,\n12 and   IS.\nSign Poate Direct\nMotorists Will Be\nPlaced, Auto Club\nA crew of men working under the*\nauspices of tHe British Columbia\nAutomobile association wlll be \u2022 here\nwithin the next few days to put up\ndirection signs In Nelson and the surrounding district. Lumber for this\npurpose haa already arrived.\nSign posts will be placed wherever\ndirections are thought necessary and\nin case some places where signs might\nseem necessary are omitted, members\nof the club are requested to notify\nthe local bureau of the association.\nTrail Man Fined\nfor Failing to\nReport Accident\nTRAIL. B.C., Aug. 28.\u2014John Dublner,\n-who failed to report an automobile\naccident which occurred August 10, was\nfined $1 and costs by Police Magistrate Noble Binns. Dublnen's car\nknocked off the tall light of P. E.\nLee's car on Bay avenue.\nJUDGE RENDERS\nDECISION FOR\nFORKS SHIPPERS\nOrder Committee of Direction\nReinstate Shipping Licenses\nef Men\nReinstatement of the shipping\nof J. A. Coleman, Robert Lawson and\nA. L. Lawson, Independent, growera and\nshippers of Orand Porks, was ordered\nby Judge Brown, sitting tn chambers,\nto bear the applications of the shippers\nfor reinstatement, following suspension\nof their licenses by the Interior tree\nfruit antf vegetable committee of direction for non payment of levies imposed by the committee on fruit shipped ln 1928. The committee had alao\nsued ln the county court at Kelowna.\ntat tha amounts ln question, and bts\nhonor held that this waa tha proper\ncourse Instead of using the suspension\nof licenses as a club to force payment,\nand advised the shippers to pay the\namounts Into the oounty court at fcel_\nowna under protest as they had started civil action against the committee\nto test the constitutionality of the produce marketing aot. It was stated they\nwould carry the cases to the privy\ncouncil tn London lf necessary.\nWTK.\u00bb    HAKNHLY\nIn ordering the reinstatement of the\nlicenses his honor awarded costs against\nthe' committee of direction and stated\nthat ln bis opinion the committee had\nacted  harshly.\nAt least 80 per cent of the Orand\nPorks tonnage, lt ts heM, has always\nbeen opposed to the principle of control, and have petitioned the committee and th\u00ab lieutenant-governor to exempt the Orand Porks district tor\nmany reasons. As tbe committee had\nchosen to Ignore the request, the growers are determined to carry the fight\nto a finish.\nC. P. R. Plncott appeared for the\napplicants and B. P. Dawson of Nelson\nand Mr. Norrls of Kelowna: acted for\nthe committee, Mr. McDowell of the\ncommittee of direction was also sitting\nwith the counsel.\nNo More Duty on\nCanadian Wheat\nto States in Bond\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 28 .\u2014Provisions\nmade by the house for the Imposition\nof the regular duty of 42 cents a\nbushel on Canadian wheat entering\nthe United States in bond, has been\nstricken from the tariff bill by the\nsenate finance committee. This was\nrevealed today when the complete work\nof the  committee  was made  public.\nAlfred Morgan Is\nBuried by Lodge\nMembers, Rossland\nROS8LAUD. B. C Augiut M\u2014Urg-\nley attended by frienda residing ln\ntrna and Roaaland, Uie funtral ol\nAlfred Morgan took plaoe ln Roaaland  yseterday  afternoon.\nSome TS members of the Jseaonlc\norder ln TraU and Rossland attended\ntne f mitral In a body. The Masonic\nburial atrvlce waa conducted by Dr-\n3. H. Palmer, nvaater of Cartnthian\nlodge No. IT, of which Mr. Morgan\nwae a member.\nThe funeral took plaoe from the Masonic temple, where tha remains lay\nln state to St. George'* Anglican\nchurch, where the service* were conducted by Rev. D. 8. Catchpol*. At\nth* graveslile thc commltal tervtc**\nol both the Masonic order and the Anglican churih were orrled out. Th*\npallbearers Avere Dr. J. B. Thom, Dr.\nC. S. Williams. F. B. Peter*, R. Anderson,   R.   K.   Plewman   and  J.     Cos\nA large number of floral tributes\nbore testimony of the esteem ln which\nMr. Morgan had been held tn TraU\nand   Rossland.\nTwo Prest\nat Con\nat Sm\nTRAIL, B. C. Aug\natlona  were   made  >*_W__\nat   cloalng   urn*  !*_____\nstore on behalf of the staff\nJack fartrlcl**, who laarft;\nago  ehortly.   wa*   tha  rer\"\nbeautiful aet ot military\nHarold    Townsend.    vrtV\nKlmberley   thl*   weak,\nwith an electric coffee \u2014\nT.  H.  Alty mad*  the  present*!\na   few   word*   being   added   oi   tie**\nJackson,, manager of tw atore.\nMr.   Towaaend   and   aft.   Paitrldge\nan well  known la Tnll.\ntents.\n\"\"** ________\npereolatoT\nT.H. Waters ft Co., Ltd.\nBuilders aa* Contractor!\nPhone VS* r. O. **st Is*\nNELSON, B.  C.\nLOR,      BUCK.      CEMENT,\nSHINGLES, COMT !\nSASH    AND    DOOM,\nwork, nun rata\nOur New Schedule\nLeave Roaaland\nAllen Hotel\n\u2022 :1ft...\n\u00bb:10...\n2:10...\n3:60...\n6:10.\n7:30\n10:10...\nLeave TraU\nElectric B*kary\nAK.\n     6:58   \t\n      \u00bb:S5   \t\nvm.\n  12:65 \t\n  2:55 \t\n  3:25 \t\n  10:85\t\n  0:80\n  11:58 \t\nUnaosa derate\n- 7:10\n-10*r>\nPJf.\n- IM\n. \u00bb:10\n- Site\n-11:10\n-1230\nI Trip* Dally\u20148 Trip*\nOUR   FARES)  ARE:   ONE   WAT,   Me;   RETURN,   Mat\nBusses will pick up paaaengera or baggage at any hotel Ib Trail\nor Roasland upon receipt of a phone call, 90 minute* befor* leaving tlm*.\nLook for tha Oreen and  Orang*  Bn****.\nRossland-Tadanac-Trail\nTransportation CoH\nl. E. KELDEKMAN, B. S. TAYLOR\nONLY THREE DAYS MORE\nAUGUST\nFURNITURE SALE\nEight and Nine Piece Dining Suite\nNo better suite was ever offered at tlie price. 'Consists of\ntable, five side chairs, ana chair, buffet and china cabinet.\nBuilt of walnut.    Fron, $187.50 to $286.50.\nFive Piece Bedroom Suite\n\" $16750\nBed, Chiffonette,\nDreRsor and Vanity\nand   Bench   m   the\nnewesl Mylc Fronts,\ntojis and ends genuine walnut veneers.\nOther sets equally\nlow in price.\nSTANDARD FURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers \u2014 \u2014 Helton, B.C.\nTh* Slot* art Service and Sat! \u2022factIon\nSee Our Dollar Table\nH| I)nteonV $\u00abti damptmg.\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.\nOther Branches st Winnipeg, Yorkton, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbrldge, Vanoouver, Kamloop*, Vernon ana Victoria\nNew Arrivals\nIN\nMEN'S\nFANCY\nSOCKS\nThe latest designs and\ncolorings in silk and\nwool and silk and lisle.\nWith extra splicing in\nthe   toes    and    heels.\nSpecial prices\n501, 75tf and $1.00\n\u2014Main floor\u2014rj B C\u2014\nThree Days Special\nIN\nFall\nFashioned\nFootwear\nk,\n$4-45\nLadies. A successful purchase enables us to place this\nwonderful selection of the latest styled shoes in a\nBow pump in Patent and Gunmetal, also Black Kid\nand Patent Broad one Buckle Strap, also Tan Calf\nTie and straps, with solid leather soles and cuban\nand low heels. An opportunity to secure holiday\nfootwear at a price never before offered. See special display in shoe window. Per pair  $4-45\n\u2014Main l'loor\u2014H B C\u2014\nDry Goods\nImported\nAll-Wool\nAutomobile\nRugs\not Bargain Priees\nOur extensive range of\nPure Wool Auto Rugs\nrepresent the best im\u00bb-\nported values. These\nall wool Motor Rugs\ncome in a soft fleecy\nnap and are obtainable\nin Reverse Plaid. They\nare so serviceable while\ntravelling and are attractive in appearance.\nPlain or fringed ends.\nMake tt a point to see\nour range, we can supply Auto Rugs to meet\nyour requirements.\nEach (Specials) $3.50,\n$3.95, $4.95, $5.95\nRegular Selling lines at\n$7.95   and   $11.50.\n\u2014Main   floor\u2014II   B   C\u2014\nNew Fancy\nEARTHENWARE\nConsisting of Flower Bowls and Bulb Boxes in glazed\n\"Bretby Ware.\" The colors are very striking and\nnovel, such as Mauve, Helio, Grass Green, Rose,\nCanary, Blue, etc.\n79<, 981, $1-25, $1.95, $2.25\nThe \"Zuyder Zee\" series of Bretby Ware consists of\nFlower Vases, Bulb Vases and Pet Vases. These\nare all \"Dutch Designs,\" in colors. Are novel and\nnew.   Each  $1.50, $1.75, $2.50\nThese must be seen to be appreciated.\nLarge Vases suitable for lamps. In Japanese styles\n\"Satsuma.\" Each  $1.50, $1.75 and $2.50\nFancy china gift pieces. Each 98e*, $1.25, $1.50\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nNEW FELT\nHATS\nFORtJEN\nNew shades and shapes.   Snap welted of bound brims.\nIn felts or velours. .\n$4.00, $5.00 and S\u00a7J5ft\ntoor\u2014R B C\u2014\nSCHOOL WEAR\nPull-Overs and Coat Sweaters\n100 per cent pure wool. Suitable for school wear. In\ncolors of blue, fawn and heather.Sizes 6, 8, 10 and\n12 years.   Price  $1.25 to $2.50\nGirls' White Middies\nWith long or short sleeves. Navy flannel detachable\ncollars and cuffs. Sizes 6 to 14 vears. These range\nfrom  $1.98 to $2.95\n\u2014Second   Floor\u2014H  B  C\u2014\nCHILDREN'S WEAR\nNavy Botany Serge Skirts\nThe very thing for school wear. Narrow or wide\npleats. Detachable waists. Sizes 6 to 14 vears.\nPrice  $1.50 to $2.50\nFlannel Skirts of Wrap-Around Style\nTrimmed with buttons. Size 14 to 18 years. Colors\nnavy, red and sand. Price $3.50 to $4.95\nFlannel Dresses\nTo fit the girl from 12 to 14 years. These have kick-\npleats  and   are  trimmed   with   contrasting   braid.\nColors are fawn, green, navv and red.\nPrices  $3.95, *4.50, $4-96\n\u2014Second  Floor\u2014H B  C\u2014\n r\nPafe Pour\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29,1929 \"\"\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n\u2022very morning except 8un-\n..ltj   News   Publishing    Com-\nIted. Nelson. B. C.\nlatter* ahould be  addressed\naaj-aa*   and   money   orders   made\nto Th* New* Publishing Com-\n..mlted. and in no case to lndi-\nmanbers of the staff.\n^Alalng nt* cards and A. B. 0.\nit*   of   circulation   mailed   on\n\u2022 or may be aeen at the office\n_ advertising agency recognised by\nCanadian Pre** association,\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATBS\nBy mall (country), per month a   .so\n_P*f   tear      6.00\nBy mall  (city), per year - 13.00\nOutside Canada, per month      .75\n_Per year     7.50\nB*liv*r*d,   per   week J6\nPar \u00bb\u00bbar _ isno\nPayable ln Advanc*.\nMember  Audit Barren  of  ctrttfatlon.\nTHURSDAY. AUGUST 88,  1829\nGO AFTER THE\nNON-METALLICS\noAunt Het\n\"A mouse don't scar* women near\nao bad since they oan show their legB\nwithout  no  excuse.\"\nBritish Columbia has developed rapidly its metalliferous\nmining resources, but has paid\nfar less attention to its non-\nmetallic mineral wealth-\nThe Consolidated company is\nleading the way with the development of fertilizers, involving\nthe mining phosphate, potash\nand other rocks, but there are\nmany other non-metallic minerals to which efforts should be\ndevoted.\nThere are, for example, silic-\nious sands, building granite,\nceramic clays, minerals used in\nchemistry\u2014scores of different\nmaterials which are undoubtedly tb be found in British Columbia-\nThe Canadian Pacific railway\nthrough the engineering department of its natural resources and development department- has been doing good\nwork in making investigations,\nassays and so on, but it would\nbe good business if the provincial department of mines would\nalso start a campaign of investigation and education along the\nsame lines.\nIt is true that a million tons\nof non-metallic mineral may not\nbe as spectacular as a\" rich\nstringer of thousand dollar gold\nore, but from the viewpoint of\nemployment of labor and production of wealth the development and operation of the big\nbody of non-metallic material\nwould in many cases add far\nmore to the general prosperity\nof British Columbia.\nUtyat li% of\nIhe\nLighter Side\nIn the  brlgl.-t  lexicon of our youth\nthere waa no men word as \"phrall,\"\n\u2014o-\u2014\nThe three words iwmt effectively\nused by man to i-n\/nve peace are\n\"Yes, my dear.\"\nThere's always a bright sIQe. Lighter\noars may be easier to turn over, but\nthey're easier to lift off.\nMaybe that train was named The\nSenator because it blows harder when\nIt's got a full load.\nDon't buy a razor yet girls. A farm\npaper says thi, \u00bbaU sheds at the end of\nthe first year.\nmtra\nBy JAS. W. BARTON,   M. D.\nVARICOSE     VEINS     VERY\nVEINS\nCOMMON\nBy  JAS.  W.  BARTON,  M.  1).\nWhat we need i- a windshield\nthat will magnify. A cow ts Just as\nstupid as a chicken, but motorists\nrun over few of them.\nA Hollywood honeymom isn't a def-\n_   Inlte period.    It Just peters out when\nI have written more than once about   th\u00ab mihiintv tint**\nrim-*.     v\u00bb,n.     \u00abf     thr.     .._.      *\u2022\u201e..    *.,*.    lne  PUDUCllJ   UOeS.\nvaricose   veins   of   the   legs,   for   the\nreason    tbat    during    examination    of\nOnce man travelled fi.r in search of\necrults  or  the  army,   and   since  that ; adventure.   Sow he Is content to make\n\\__?; t\u00a3e_number.or ca?es ls certainly   a  uttle ^ tlftwl fai\nmore   than   was   formerly   suBpected\nYou   wlll   remember   that  the  treat-\nHonesty ls rhe quality that prompts\n___    .     .      - _      _ __        ___ jJAA\/ucoi\/y     10     ', lie    \\unij17     uiaau    ayii\/uii^va\nment  before  and  during  the  war  was you  t0 confeag you  nver  Wore heard\nto   remove   these   outer   or   superficial of  the  greftt   matl   the   preflident   ap\nveins by  operation,  and   depend   upon potato\nthe   deeper   veins   to   carry   the   blood _o\u2014\nback  to the heart. I     MODERNISM:     OLD     DAD   LAYING\nThen   research   men   discovered   that BRICKS AT $12 A DAY AND 3AVINO\nby   injecting   these   veins   they   could MONEY TO EDUCATE THE BOY SO HE\ncause   them   to  dry   up   and   look   like CAN H0LD A WHITE-COLLAR JOB AT\nPl^,\u00b0f4.8^Ing , *75 A MONTH\nAt first there were a few \"accidents'\nfrom this method as some of the fluid      it  must  be  a  gr at  dlsapt-oMtment\nnjected got into the tissue surround-   ^ a m06quito when  he drills  a  bald\ning  the   vein  and   caused   ulcers   that   head and otrika hardpan so near the\ntook a long time to heal. surface\nAnd  so,   members   of  the  profession\nhave   been   waiting   to   see   how   sue-      -r^ purp0se ,._ tne culhor who writes\ncessful  this  Injection treatment  would   at>out   sex   problems   is,   first   to   get\nprove to be.  and   ir the \"cure\" would  moQey,  and so. ond,  to spend  it,\nbe  permanent.\nWith over fifty thousand cases treated by the Injection method, compared\nwith the record of cases where the\nveins were removed by the knife, there\nis no question but that thc Injection\nmethod   has   proven   its   superiority.\nWhile deaths from the operation .are\nnot common, the finance of such an\noccurance Is sixteen times more likely by the use of tho knife than by\nthe injection method.\nAnother point that means much to\nthe patient and to the physician also. Is the chance of other veins ln the\nleg becoming varicosed after tlie treatment.\nThe old maid his one consolation.\nMan likes a woman dumb enough\nto make him seem u.ifht by contra sl.\n\u2014c\u2014\nThose   Georgia   rrackm   who   thlnX\n, Bobby   Jones   should   le   ln   Congress\nIt   was   found   that   this   happened   mean well, out thntr Idena are confused,\nmuch   more   frequently   after   the   op-   That Isn't the kind of i.'ub he uses,\neratlon  by  the  use o the knife, than\nHousekeeping\nEfficient\nB7 LAURA A. KIRKMAN\nsteadily, then turn the mixture Into th* (wtth   raiders   rather   than   to   Insure\nhot   milk-butter   mixture,   cook   three\nminutes longer,  and serve  with oyster\ncrackers.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers  to  Inquiries\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nBananas\nCereal,\nScrambled Eggs Cc\nCoffee\n|,ini' 'irnn\nShrim,) Bajad\nHolls\nSweet Cabbage Slaw\nSliced Peaches\nTea\nDinner\nFruit Cooktail\nLamb \u00bb'.rw  with\nPotatoes and Peas\nChocolate   Whip\nCoffee\nChocolate Whip: Dissolve one quart\nof chocolate over boiling water, In the\ntop qf a double boiler, then Into lt stir\none cup of cold, sweet milk and add\ntwo tablespoons of cornstarch powder\npreviously mixed with one-third cup of\ncold, sweet milk; stir till smooth, then\ncover and cook 20 mldlltes, before adding two egg yolks mixed with one-third\ncup of sugar. Cook two minutes longer,\nthen cool and chill on Ice. Atjervlng\ntime, fold Into the cold mixture two\nstiffly whipped egg whites, and flavor\nthe dessert with two teaspoons of\nvanilla. Sprinkle with desslcated cocoa-\nnut and serve in stemmed sherbet\nglasses.\nSweet Cabbage Slaw: In a saucepan\nmix together two beaten, unseparated\neggs, one tablespoon of dry mustard.\none-half cup of sweet cream, one-half [\nteaspoon of salt, a piece of butter thej\nsize of on egg, three tablespoons of\nvinegar and one tablespoon of sugar. >\nCook over moderate heat till hot but I\nnot boiling, wiille stirring constantly. 1\nThen remove from range and pour over,\none and one-half cups of chopped cabbage. Cool before serving. (If desired,\nthe cream may be omitted from the\nrecipe.)\nCrabmeat Stew: Heat one pint of\nsweet milk with one-fourth cup of\nbutter, ln the top of a double boiler.\nIn a saucepan over direct flame, melt\none additional tablespoon of butter and\nInto this fat stir one. cup of flaked\ncrabmeat (either canned or freshly\ncooked), then season to suit individual\nUklng with pepper, salt and paprika;\ncook gently for four minutes,  stirring\nWhat the Press\nIs Saying\nBANKS  AND  BANDITS\nOne industry, the recent decline ln\nwhich can be the subject of little regret. Is the bank hold-up industry\nPossibly step* taken by the banks\nthemselves are aa much responsible\nfor the Increasing lnfrequency of\n\u2022uch affairs as 1* the activity of tha\npolice. Armed guards, armored car*,\nand other protective -measure* have\ncombined to convince the bandit that\nthe welcome on the bank door-mat 1*\nnot for him.\nThe  subject   ls  mentioned   Incidentally   In  a  recent  novel  by  Peter\nKyne.   A   Tezan   cattleman   1*\nhi* herd. HI* answer 1* that\nInsure thetr funds; that 1* why there\nare \u00bb many successful bank rob-\nrobbers that raid* cannot be Indulged\nIn with Impunity.\nBetween the atmosphere of battle,\nmurder and sudden death of th*\nTax** ranger*, aa described ln th*\nKyne novel, and the quiet cathedral\nhu\u00bbh of a Toroato banking chamber\nthere la, of course, a wide difference.\nBut the criminal mind appreciate*\nthe aame argument* ln both settings.\nIn the Interest of lew and order, lt\nis better for bank* to spend money\nto prevent banditry than to offer\n\u20225,000 reward* after the criminals\nhave got away with the loot. TORONTO\nTELEGRAM.\nFOREIGN   TRAVEL\nFOR    AMERICANS\nBut the American tourist in his\nwanderings does not necessrily cross\nthe sea*. Our northern neighbor ls a\nforeign country. It la estimated that\nlast year Americana spent ln Can-\nasked ada 1232,000,000. Thla compares with\nwhy he prefers to pursue  and battl* * figure of \u00bb199,ooo,00u tor 1927. There\nls no *ta*on to suppoae that the 1*M\ntotal wlll not be exceeded thl* year.\nThere Is sufficient reason to believe\nthat lt will be. The figure* are significant, visitors Id* the on* oountry\non the north spend nearly half a*\nmuch a* visitor* to all countries\nreached by the overseas tourist\nroutes. Cananlan tourist* spent ln\nthe United states ln 1927 M3.000,0\u00abX.\nIn 1928, $87,000,000. More or th* visit*\nare being returned, but the lncreaa*\nln expenditure* la not comparable\nwith the Increase tn montea spent\nby tbe American travelers. Yet lt\nI* to be observed that, relatively\nspeaking, tbe Canadians ars spending more ln the United state than\nthe Americans in Canada. Then are\n10,000,000 Inhabitant* north of ths\nborder. There an 120,000.000 on our\nside   of   it.\u2014Boston   Transcript.\n128  HOURS   IN  AIR\nCHICAGO, Aug. 28.\u2014The crew of tbe\n\"Chicago We Will\" plane seeking an\nendurance flight record passed thee\n128th hour aloft at 7:30 o'clock Chicago daylight time.\n(elg's Mi\neeea\nocie\nIn the heart of the Empire, Yardley's Old English\nLavender Soap bas been looked to for charm by\nleaders of taste and fashion for more than a century\nand a half. And in the passing years this luxury\nsoap has come to be sought by discerning women\neverywhere for its skin-enriching purity and its\nlingering lovable fragrance.\n$i per box of 3 large cake* at all bat\ndruggists and department store*.\nPrices uniform throughout Canada.\n\\ABDLEYfc\nOld (Tnglidh.\nLavender Soap\nsince irro,\nI, New Bond Street, London, England\nCANADA: 358-362 AMmit Stmt W., Toronto 2, Ont.    V.S.A.: 452, Fiftk Avmm, Ntw Ytrk.\ni*M-l_- - , \u25a0m-JMW\nThirty Years Ago\n(Prom The Dally Miner, Aug. 28, 1899)\nMr. Justice Walkem who has been\nat tbe Phalr for the last few days\nleave* this morning i*or Halcyon Springs\nPrank Peters returned from the\nCrow's Nest pass last night where a\nlandslide  was delaying trains.\nThere ls a dawning realization\nthroughout the world that Oreat Britain li making the most systematic\nand thorough preparations for making\nwar In the Transvaal South Africa.\nNelson ls the only town In the Kootenay which  has a bicycle path.\n81k new stone and brick business\nblocks are Ln process of erection on\nBaker street and et least two more\nare  contemplated.\nNext year wlll see Nelson a divisional point for the C. P. R. There will be\nlarge roundhouses, repair shops, found-\nerlee and othei laaor empoying\nbranches  of  the  great   railway's   work.\nby the Injection  method.\nThis means then that ln suitable\ncases, and the majority arc suitahle,\nthat the safe and simple Injection\nmethod will now be the choice of\nphysicians.\nRemember there are cases, where\nfor various reasons, one method would\nbe superior to the other, and some\ncases where neither of the methods\ncould  be used.\nHowever as mentioned before, a\nlight band is placed around the leg\nabove the veins, and the patient required to walk a little distance. If\nthe working of his muscles by walking keeps the vein or return circula- CORRECT T!1I5 SENTENCE: \"PEA\ntlon. going properly, despite the tight NUT BUTTEP AND PICKLES AND\nband, lt ls felt that the underneath FANCY CRACKfJ'-S SATISFY MO-\nvelns are In good condition and an op- . THER AND DAD,\" SAID THE FLAP-\neration may be performed either by ] per \"BUT I PREFER COMMON.\nthe   knife   or   injection   method. j WHOLESOME   VICTUAIfl.'\nPromoters   u-e   arraivjing    a   heavy-\nwelghtweight   bout   for   Miami,     thus\nclinching   the   theory   tha'   the   great\nAmerican Bucker 13 minatory.\n\u2014o\u2014\nIf lack of water causes plants to\nturn yellow, we at last know how to\ncure the politician who pussyfoots on\nthe question rf I-rohib.lion.\nLife   grows   more   simple.   Once   the\nstranger's   diabct   afforded   your   only\nmeans of guessing what tectlon he hailed from; now >ou can tell by his opln\nIon of a  bootlegger.\niHtO\nOti*\n8*tf**\nom11*\nLA8\u00ab\u00bb\n^gttftiJt?redttced\nto shop\nat prices\nOATS\needs P\n>Ui<*\nand\nassutn\nrsday\nOur\nSuiner\nSale\n6ads ^^^^^w^w*\nXT&\nBe\nuch reduce0 \u00abgT()RE\nthat\nwere\nprices w        x_ money\n- jur.\ntah\\es,:\u201e,a on\n\\osing\n^.rs* sss a>\nof n^\nS\u00ab*WJ\u00abtffSi!BS\nprices\nohati^- ^ compter\nW-^\n>**ea*\nclud-\nTwcnty Years Ago\n(PMm The Daily News. Aug. 28.  1909 >\nIt has been decided at thc Imperial\n\u25a0defence conference bc;ng held in London, that New Zealand will adhere to\nher policy of making a monetary contribution to the upkeep of the British\nnavy, while Canada and New Zealand\nhave determined to build navies ul\ntheir own. They will proceed with this\nwork   Immediately.\nMrs. S. A. Enfield leaves on Monday\nfor the A. Y. P. exhibition at Seattle\nand   Portland.\nJ. E, Annable reports that the\nKootenay ore exhibit sent to the Toronto exposition has Just arrived and\nls in good condition.\nMembers of the Eagles baseball\nteam are hard at practice ln anticipation of thetr game with Rossland\nen September 5.\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News.  Aug.  39,   1919)\nCaptain C. p. Wetthea-u has return\ned from a visit to tht' coast.\nLeslie Realby Is spending the apple\npacking season in the Okanagan valley\nSaloons ln the Yukon were abolished\nby law last night Yukon ls the last\noaftis of the saloon In Canada.\nOen. Sir Arthur Currle in a speech\nlast night in Toronto, emphatically dc\nBled charges floating about from unknown sources, thai he sacrificed many\nCanadian lives unnecessarily the day\nbefore the armistice was signed.\nTie    government   has   wired    Nelson\nto   tbe   effect   that   the   Nelson   ferry\nbe   run   In   two   eight   hour\nand a U*\net.lt tit***** *\n\u2022SSSSra? Sa\u00ab I\ntti^f^Z***** \"4W\u00ab . r.ff^j r*\u00ab.-^'\u00ab\nno. 2\nprice\n:.roSB^fS;\u00bb^'1SI*sii.K\n\u00bb !**,*& *>>* * \u2022\n\u2022.svSffiX\nr^r^i _v%& -stf^tf^\"\u00bb <-; \"\n.\u00ab-! -let**\"itSS\ni^ss^ -Mnss^^m\n^JCan^n.   Sf^ day-   jWjJ   n&fif   SE^ ^ ^e *&m\n\u25a0SU^or. $30. for       -^   PRESSES\nSU*   Y\u00bbree \"ty\nCrepeVG~R0UP\n*\u00b0-   Cre\nh^'^^r?\nprices V\"'   \t\nlarge\nNO.\ntyles-\nLWthat an^ \u00a3i_9.1*\n*\u2022,\n,\u2666\u00bb\nThe-new\nMJGGET\nopens with a twist*.\nand ifs the\nbest polish toob\n^ssv\u00bb\u00b0\nDresse?\nThree\n\u00abAt^\u00a7\u00a33^?*\u00bb\nprice\n*x*?l    ri\u00a3{NE*\ne *>i\nsenjXts*\nstore\nap?10\n,bation\nBuilding\nMaterial\nI,et us figure your bills oi'\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\nI.MPRKHN K.III.S TODAY\nVaNCOUVIH. B. C\u201e Aug. M.\u2014The\nlaraadian Pacific liner Empress of\ntaace wlll leave on iu laet Pacific\nutttmnd Journey tomorrow at noon.\nOrient, with 770 passengers,\n^^^^K^gQminand of Captain Sam\nbtstrawn. K   N. (., C. B   a.\n^^^^^vajmritt lova* \u2022  lover and  the\nHaa a Aumniir cottage with\n\u25a0pan bedrooms\nLawn Mowers\nWe Have Now in Stock a Full Line of the Latent\nModels in High-Grade\nLawn Mowers\nPRICES TO SUIT ALL POCKETS\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale Sr Retail Quality Hardwair*\nNELSON B.C.\ni^ssS'**^\ncoiVe'\n:nience.\nwith\u00ab^sc9&\"   tatd\nGoods\n\u2022 ,S^nch \u00abde\nCrepe\nChenes. ^e s^e beei\\ ^ o({e\nDetain-\nat * it yard\nrlaVS at, >\u00bb\nard.\nWe\nday?\nJaP\ncrepes w\n>ard9f    GingnamP\nAlso \u2022'^earv.e\"..   *_ create at y^\"\nli aVon all*\nWataons i\nBloome\"\ntadis*\nand\nlosses'\nSKI**8\n\"get**-\"**\"?'\na^s^\u00ab *^s^\u00ab- -\nWhat'.\n904\nWhaU\nsi.oo\n.rterns-\n32 1\nnches\nvaiSs\"*\nseven>Bl Gingn>\"\" *-    -\u2022\u2022-      he9 vyiu<=,\n_*_Z%zdtt_^&&\n\u25a0wide\nwide,\nand\n29*\njust\nincluding   ^\"better c\\ass\nPongee Pn\u00bb        0 ^ cent \u00aba|ll\nfui pr ce\u00bb. \\hree W\u00bbJ\u00ab eaCh.\nano^V.OOand4W .\nthree tor ?*\u2022 , fjjfijS.\n\u2022wonder-\n,. \u00ab fashoned, e\u201e   'naive, fea .*?\nLadle*\nselect'\nHate-\nEach -\u25a0\"j'fAisses' wv- ^^\n..tos^^andM       \t\nweek tttjvi?,^\nun-\nNext\nny\nr***at *\n.tnawng\n> Depa*\ntlaaC*1*\nopport'\npyi^:\nQuite\nSuite. SwesteTS^aP \u2022 hoice ot any\n*r   . '.Rayon's^ \u00ab\u00ab*\nLad*' K+1.   Pair\nr1\u00a3S* UneS-      ^    0d<i PMS>:\u00ab?ftor school at this\nD          .\u00bb3*   Wear- .\/'Children t\u00bb\ntolO's.P^-    %-       Outfit the cl\nsale-\nB\nkos\nCash\n1 Hiuh Cla*\nSale ot W*0-\n THF NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING,    AUGUST 29, 1929\"\nJust\nCAvvived\n' MtV%%* just received,\nthis three eyelet kid tie.\nLeather  heel and  rubber\ni\ntop    lifts.     Combination\nlast.   Splendid value.\n$5.00\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nBETTER\nFlavor\nIT'S in KeHogga Pep Bran\nFlak.it The wonderful\nflavor of PEP blended with\nthe nourishing element* of\nthe wheat and juat enough\nbran to bs mildly laxative.\nServe with milk er cream.\nWonderfully crisp\u2014to the\nlast spoonful. Sold only in\nthe red.aod-green carton.\nMade by Kellogg in London. Ontario.\nBETTtR BRAN FLAKES\nSubscribe    for    Th\u00ab    Daily\nNews and get the paper daily.\nDisposing of Junk\nOars Is Tremendous\nProblem in States\n, NEW YOK, N. *., AOg. OT.\u2014Henry\nPord has ben aaked by Borough Prealdent Harvey ot Queans to help solve\nthe problem of disposing of abandoned\noars.\nProfessing to see a situation which ln\ntime will i tax the resource* of the\nnation for Its elimination, Mr, Harvey\nrequested Mr. Ford to lend his automotive genius to abating the nuisance\nof streets and vacant lots Uttered with\ndiscarded automobiles.\n' \"We have yet to find an effective\nmethod to combat this Frankenstein\nmonster,\" Mr. Harvey wrote.\n\"You have personal knowledge of the\nconditions caused ln moat of the nation's towns and cities by the promiscuous discarding of old cars. I think\nyour company should bear a large part\nof the responsibility for the elimination of the abandoned car problem.\"\nSCHOOL\nSUPPLIES\nPaint*   j...... - 40*\nPaint Refills   5f\nScribblers. 6 for   2!*r>\nScribblers. 3 for  25c\nPencils. 6 for  25*?\nIndia Ink  ...,15\u00ab?\nVenus Pencils. 2 for 25c\nPenholders   10\u00ab?\nRulers  10r>\nErasers Sep and 10i>\nDrawing Pads  lOtf)\nPortfolios   10**\nCompasses ...!SOi*\nSet Squares. 3 for ..25**\nKlives Note Books 45*?\nKlives Refills   30**\nAll Text Books for Public\nJunior High and High\nSchools\nMail Orders Promptly\nFilled\nFree Blotters\nPoole Drug\nCo.\nPhone 25\nBURN\nMcGillivray Steam and Furnace Coal\n$9 TON\n' \u25a0    Special Rates on Carload Loth\nGait Lump Coal\nDry Wood Any Length\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., Ltd.\nCor. Vernon and Stanley Sts.\nPHONE 35\nNel***, B. C\nRecipe for\nGRAHAM CRACKER CAKE\n1 t\u00abhl*ajpoon butter.        1 scant teaapoon baking\n. loupEaa^kBrsndMilk.      powder.\n1  _\u25a0 H teaspoon salt.\n1 cup finally railed Vi teaapoon vanilla.\n**\u00bbnajm cracker*. H nip chopped nut meat*,\nMelt butter, add to condensed milk, then add\nwell-beaten agar yelk. Roll graham cracker* until\nfine and add with baking powder and salt to firat\nmixture. Mix well. Add vanilla and nut meat*.\nLastly, fold ln ttlfriy-brntcn egg white. Turn into\nwcB-greaaed baking di*h. Bake in moderate oven\n(JS9\u00b0 F.> about\u00bb minute* or until well act. Serve\nwith wraipraedcreaaA.CavamelS.'iuccorFajamy Sauce.\nJ\"* Eagle Brand in place ol cream Ti\nIcorm and tuger improve! eoftel _*\nEAGLE BRAND\nSWEETENED\nCONDENSED\nMILK\nTHB BORDEN OO. LIMITED, Honw Araad* BM*., Vaneoaanr, Da*at. A.\ncorset me free \"Hew Math In the Kitchen\" Recipe Book\nthta column ts conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. All news ot\na social nature. Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriage* etc., will\nappear In thla column. Telephone\nairs. Vlgneux at her home.\nComplimenting Mrs. D. O Thomaa\nRobson street, wbo .Is, prior to her\ndeparture for her new home in Victoria, being greatly entertained. Mrs.\nP. C. Whitehouse was hostess yeeterday at a smart bridge at her home on\nHoover street. Mrs. W. V. P. Clery\nprealded at the tea table. Mrs. White-\nhouse's Invited guest* included Mrs. W.\nM. Cunllffe, Mrs. Hugh Robertson Mrs.\nCharles F. P. Faulkner, Mn. Leth-\nLeslie Craufurd, Mrs. P. G. Moray, Mrs.\nbridge of Calgary, Mrs. W. R. Hlnton,\nMrs. H. R. Townsend, Mrs D. A. Mc-\nFarland, Mrs. A D. McLeod, Mrs.\nPeters, Mra. I. X. L. Dewdney, Mrs. C.\nW. Appleysrd, Mrs. Alex Leith, Mrs.\nS. T. D. Francis of Crawford Bay, Mrs.\nJ. G Bunyan, Mrs. 3. Gibson, Miss M.\nCameron, Mra. Gordon Hallett, ot\nLongbeach, Mrs. J. H. D. Benaon, Mrs.\nH. H. MacKenzle, Miss Adele MacLeod\nof Vlotorla, Mrs. W. V. P. Clery. Mrs.\nH. H. Rhodes and Mrs. H. Reeling of\nWllloV   Point.\n' Mr. and Mra. Charles Fransen of\nIVall were visitors to  town  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Adele MacLeod of Victoria who\nhas been the guest of her sister and\nbrother-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. H. H.\nMackenzie left last night for tho\ncoast. Mlsa MacLeod who was met\nat Yohjt by Mrs. Mackenzie ls en route\nhome from spending the summer\nabroad.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mtt. 8. R. Bowell and family\nof Vancouver are visiting ln Nelson.\n* \u2022   \u2022   \u2022 \u25a0\nAndy Burgees Jr., of Ymir paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. Welch who has heen vlaitlng his\ndaughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nRichmond. Terrace apartrnents for a\nfew weeks left for his home In Vancouver last night.\n\u2022 \u2022    a\nH. and P. Settle ooth of Procter\nwere visitors  ln  town  yesterday,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss G. Stewart leaves this morning for Montreal.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs.\" Drury Darley and her two children George and Doreen who have\nbeen spending the past few weeks ln\nNelson guests of Mrs. Darley's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. George Johnstone, Kootenay street, leaves this morning for\nher home m Medicine Hat. Mrs. Darley\nduring her visit was the Inspiration for\na gre&t many social  affairs.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLieutenant-Colon el E. Majlandlne of\nCreston  spent yesterday  ln  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. W. B. Steed and his son Graham\nh*ve returned from a motor trip to\nSpokane. ,    ,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. A. Nicholson have\naa their guest Mrs. Hardy of Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss L. I. Young of the Royal Bank\nof Canada staff has returned to duty\nafter a vacation spent ln Spokane and\nProcter,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n. Mra. A. M. Reimann of Trail and\nher daughter, Mlse 8. A. A. Reimann\nwho have ben visitors to Nelson and\ndistrict for a fortnight leave today\nfor home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. Rosllng Willow Point\nleft yesterday my motor for a few\nweek's visit to their son Terence in\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. O. Norrie, M. E\u201e of Vancouver,\nreturned to Metaline Palis yesterday\nwhere he is ln connection with the\nOrandvlew  mine.\n\u2022 e   *\nNorman Beattle, son of Mr. and Mre.\nD. Beattle 814 Silica street, has received word that he has successfully\npassed with honors his senior matriculation eamlnatlons at pUper Canada\ncollege,    Toronto.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nKenneth Rees, Water street has returned from a few weeks spent at the\ncoast cities.\n' a   \u2022   a\nMr.' and   Mrs.  Frederick  Nlven,  Willow Point; have left for a weeks vacation   to   be   spent   ln   Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. W. Hawkln of Trail\nare summering at WUlow Point. Miss\nWinnlfred Day of Spokane ls their\nguest.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Q. Benson, Victoria street have as their house guests.\nMrs. Benson's sister and brother-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. o. B. Henwood of\ntdmonton who arrived in town last\nnight. Mr. Henwood Is deputy attorney general of the province of\nAlberta.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs Evelyn Wood, Hall Mines road\nhas had as her gueat Mrs. A. Cosens\nwho left laat night via the Arrow\nLakes for Banff, Lake Louise en route\nto her home ln Wlngham, Ont.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Nellie Chandler has returned to\nTrail after a visit with her niece, Mrs.\nP.  Coris   who   ls   camping   at   Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. H. H. Mackenzie, and\ntheir three sons, Harry, Roddy and Ian\nreturned  to  their  home on Carbonate\nnmniiiTimniiuiiMi\nstreet today, after spending the summer at their summer place Ferndale.\nWUlow  Pojnt.\n\u00ab   \u2022   *>\nRube and  Abe  Laib  both  of Cultus\nCreek   are   city   visitors.\n*   \u2022   *\nMiss Christina Williams. Houston\nstreet daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pred\nWilliams, left last night for Victoria\nwhere  she  will   attend   normal  achool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. Miller or Mirror Lake was\nln   Nelson   recently.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G. H. Ashman of Los\nAngeles, Cal., are city visitors en route\nto make their home  in Victoria.\n9    9 * \u2022\nMrs. J. Bunrus and her infant son\nleft the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital yesterday for their home In\nPalrview.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. Paterson and their\nChild of Vancouver who were former\nresidents* of Sandon were In town\nyesterday on their way by motor to\nKaslo where they are going for a\nholiday   ,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Ferguson, Stanley\nstreet snd their daughter Betty and\nJoy have returned from a motor trip\nto Edmonton.\ne    \u2022   *\nJack Buchanan son of Mr. and Mrs.\nE. L. Buchanan, haa returned from a\nvisit to Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. A. Benson and son Beverley of\nGrand Porks have returned, after a visit in town with Mr. and Mrs. T. S.\nJerome,   Victoria   street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. B. Steed, Latimer strset has\nreturned from Vancouver where she\nattended the funeral of her father, R.\nLlllle.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLloyd C. Rogers of Creston paid  a\nvisit  to Nelson yesterday,\na \u25a0 o  \u2022\nMlsa O. Stewart leaves this morning\nfor Montreal.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. M. Kingston of Vancouver are  visiting   Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert McLeod mining man of Seattle Is In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Vera Redpath, Victoria street\nhas returned from Trail where she\nvisited  Mrs.  T.  Jenkln.\nBOMB AND RACKET\nCOST MILLIONS\nChicago Gangsters Use Bomb\nto Fore* Blackmail Pay;\nTo No Avail\nWHIP VICTIMS\nFAST INTO LINE\nNinety-Four Organized Rackets\nAre Now Operating in the\nWindy City\nCHICAGO, 111., Aug. 27.\u2014The bomb\nand racket, twin terroros to small\nmerchants and tradesmen, have shown\na sharp gain this year over lsst, the\nEmployers'  association hss found  out.\nRackets cost the city S188.000.000 ln\n1938. according to computations by\nJoseph Nellsen, ssslstant secretary of\nthe association.\nThis represents an average cost of\n436 for every man, woman and child\nIn Chicago. Figures for 1929 Indicate\nthat the final total for the year will\nbe even higher.\nThe bomb, which serves racketeers\nas a lash to whip racket victims into\nline, is more dangerous than the bomb\nof a year ago. The average damage of\neach bomb in 1938 was $1314.\nThe Employers' association has catalogued 04 organised rackets now operating ln Chicago. The \"business\nracket,\" as Nellsen called lt, was described as having been originally a\n\"purely Chicago institution which\n| worked so successfully here that it\nI spread to other cities.\"\n\"BUILD    B.    C.\"\nMany\nThanks\nEveryone\nMrs. Wilson's demonstration at\nthe Exhibition showing how tc\nwhip Pacific Milk attracted considerable Interest, brought lo\naome new recipes and a request\nthst we again publish the\nPsclflc Milk recipe for whipped\ncream, the recipe so well demonstrated by Mrs. Wilson. Wc\nwlll do so gladly and you may\nexpect to see lt ln Saturday's\npaper.\nPacific Milk\nAbbatataru .nt Ladnajr\n\"\"\"\"\"\"\" W\" \u25a0\"\"\" \"\nWhat Do\nYou Think?\nSays Roads Needed\nDuncan, More Than\nBridge at Nelson\nEditor The Dally News. Nelson, B. C.\nSir:\u2014The Duncan river drains an\narea of some 1808 square miles of one\nof the richest parts of the Kootenays\nln natural resources, such aa timber,\nlands and minerals.\nLying at the entrance of this great\nvalley la Howser lake, a body of water\nsome nine miles long, which Is frozen\nover, or pertly froren, for from four\nto five months, snd as there is neither\nrosd nor trail around the lake, which\nhas no beach n\u00bbd ; the mountain\nHides are covered with thick! brush and\nfallen timber that makes It almost\nimpossible to get ln or out' during\nthe  winter  months.\nInstead of lumber camps, and mines\noperating, and drawing their supplies\nfrom Nelson, the owners or timber see\ntheir property being destroyed yearly\nby forest fires, and the men who have\nheld mining claims for the last SO\nyears see them He undeveloped for\nlack of the most primitive means of\ntransportation.\nDuring the four or five years\nthe government has spent more money\nfighting forest fires on the upper\nDuncsn (with absolutely no benefit)\nthan would have been required to\nbuild a good pack trail from Howser\nto Haleys, making a through connection to Hall creek and the upper\nreaches of the river, which could later\nbe widened for the main highway.\nOwing to the strong winds which\nalmost constantly blow down Howser\ncreek, the lake from Oallops Point\nnorth to the head of the lake ts almost always open water.\nIf a trail were built from Howser to\nthis point, along the west side, a\nshort ferry could land horses snd\nsupplies on either side of tbe upper\nvsUey, later the ons mile of rock\nwork could be done to give a through\nconnection on the west aide from\nthe   north   end   of   the  lake.\nThs drainage of the Lardo about\nequals the Duncan, the combined\narea   being   nearly   3000   square   miles.\nFor years we have ben trying to get\neven the most primitive means of transportation in thla great area, but our\nefforts have been nullified by the demands of the people of Nelson and\nthe lakes for a million dollar bridge\nahd a motor road to the south end of\nthe lake wbere a good dally transport\nservice already  exists.\nWith the vision of moles, \u25a0 whose\nsight Is governed by the length of\ntheir whiskers, they can picture an\nincrease In tourist traveel during the\nfew summer months, but they fall' to\nvisualize two or three thousand n*en\nemployed ln the mines and lumber\ncamps of the Lardo-Duncan country,\nbuying their supplies in the cities of\nNelson and Kaslo, and spending their\nmoney lu  the district.\nIt should be remembered that the\nmines and mills, not the tourist, built\nthese   cities.\nIf a delegation of your business men\nwill come, as far even as the north\nend of Howser lake, during the winter\nmonths and push a boat on sleds, over\nslush ice, till they break through, or\nclamber along the mountain side\nthrough brush and fallen timber, they\nwill get some idea of what men in\nthese parts  have  to contend  with.\nor let them come in the summer\nmouths, when the smoke from burning forests hang low in the valleys,\nand see swarms of men, taken from\ntheir various occupations, and carry-\n36 and 30 mllea over logs and brush,\nlng heavy packs of grub and bedding\nto gaze on forsst tires of unknown\norigin as they consume and destroy a\nforest wealth that most business communities would consider of \u2022 vital interest to their future welfare and existence.\nIf they are not completely, tourist\nmad. and come and see thla great area\nof potential wealth, long Iain neglected at their very doors, they may\nget some idea of why the grass is growing on the streets ol mans ol our\nonce busy mining towns, and why our\nyoung folks have to leave the district\nio find that employment mat might\nho easily be proviaed st home.\nR.   S.   OALLOP.\nNelson. August 37,  1939.\nPLANES TO RUSH\nTHROUGH THE AIR\nSpeed of More Than 300 Miles\nPer Hour is Expected at\nCowes Tests\nCOWES,, isle of Wight, Aug. 38\u2014\nSeaplanes of four nations, with the\nspeed lf bullets built into them, will\nhurtle through the air here September\n6 and 7 ln an International assault\non   existing   speed   records.\nTo the swiftest will go tbe Schneider\ntrophy for seaplane speed, first offered\nby the Prench sportsman and pioneer ln navigation, Jacques Schneider, It\nIs to become the permanent property\nof the nation which wins it three times\nln succession. So far no nation has\nben able to win lt more than twice.\nTwice, In 1930 and 1931, Italy captured ths trophy, only to lose It the\nfollowing year to Great Britain. Twice,\nln 1933 and 1935, it went to the Unit-\ned States. In 1937, when the race was\nheld In Venice, Flight Lieutenant Web-\nsetr won' it for Oreat Britain with a\nspeed of 381.49 miles an hour.\nThis year speeds well over 300 miles\nan hour are expected.\nThe speed of Schneider trophy winners has increased remarkably since\nthe first race In 1913, when Prevost\nwon for France with an- average of\n44.7 miles an hour. Other winners\nand their speeds were.\n1914.\u2014Pixton, Great Britain, 55.3\nmiles an hour.\n1930.\u2014Bolongna, Italy, 103.3 miles\nan hour.\n1921,\u2014DeBrtgnntl, Italy, 117.4 miles\nan  hour.\n1933.\u2014Biasd, Great Britain. 140.8\nmiles au hour.\n1933.\u2014Rlttenhouse, TJnited States,\n177.38 miles  an  hour.\n1938.\u2014Doollttle, United States, 232.57\nmiles   an   hour.\n1936.--Bernard l.   Italy,   346.49\nan hour.\n1937.\u2014Webster, Oreat Britain, 381.49\nmiles an hour.\nThe course to be flown this year is\nquadrilateral, extending roughly from\nAyde, on this island, to a point off\nSeaview to Southsea to Cowes and\nback to Ayde. Altogether the contestants wm cover about 330 miles In\ntheir seven laps around the 31,05 mile\ncourse.\nHalf a million spectators thronged\nthe Lido when the race was ln enlce.\nTwice as many are expected to see it\nhere. Already all the hotel accommodations  in  cowes  have   been  reserved.\nOne ocean liner has ben reserved for\nthe Royal Aero clu'o, in whose hands\nare the arrangements for the contest,\nand several other liners yill be turned\nInto grandstands for the event.\nFrance, Italy and Great Britain will\nhave full quotas of three planes each\nIn the race. The United States has\nonly one plane to enter. It will be\npiloted by Lieutenant Al Williams of\nthe  navy.\nmiles\nMajor Gooch,\nCrawford Bay\nIs Dead Here\nMajor J. S. Oooch, RA, aged 63,\ndied yesterday morning, succumbing\nafter an operation performed here.\nMajor Gooch had resided ln Crawford\nBay for 13 years, coming to this district In 1913 and spending four years\non the Salonlca front, returning ln\n1918.\nBefore coming to Canada, the major\nwas stationed  in India with His Majesty's  forces   there  for  over   10  years.\nMajor Oooch was integrated ln sport\nof all kinds ln British Colummbla and\nwas  an  ardent  huntsman  and  fisherman,   He made hunting trips to Alaska\nand   Mount  Robson   and   on   one\ncaslon was on a fishing trip to Great\nSlave  Lake.\nThe major Is survived  by his Wife.\nFuneral  will  be  held  in Oray  Creek\non Friday mornlnk.    Rev. J. S. Mahood\nwill    officiate.\nBamber Funeral\nIs Attended by\nSons of England\nFuneral of William Bamber was held\nyesterday afternoon. Ven. Archdeacon\nP. H. Oraham conducted the services\nat St. Savlous's Memorial hall and at\nthe graveside. Sons of England were in\ncharge of the arrangements.\nMsny of the friends and relatives\nof the dead man attended the funeral\nFloral offerings were    very    numerous.\nPaH bearers were. R O. Joy, J. E.\nHamson, L. Dunk, A. Cuthbert. John\nBnuofa and  J.  BaUass.\nNEW SWEATERS\nUnusual Designs\nThe chilly Fall daya call for sweaters for\nsports wear with the sleeveless dresses, and\nfor wear underneath the lightweight coal-\nThese new sweaters are most attractive in\nboth weave and design and are shown in all\nthe Fall colorings.   Coat and Slip-on models.\nEach  S\u00bb-50 to $10.00\n(^Meagher's\n611 Baker Street.      Phone 200\nIn\nNelson\nThe Curlew Delivery places each morning\nin a neat sanitary holder, bottles of Pasteurized Milk.    .\nIt's safe because it's yasiturized\nCurlew Creamery Co.,\nLimited\nICE   CM:AM 111 TTKB MILS\nAD \".'rfrctly Pasteurized Product*\nClassified Ads Bring Results\u2014Try On\n Pago Sh\n\u2022>rTT\"   HfTM\n.cow nAILY NEWS. THURSDAY MORNING. AUGUST 29, 1929\nMarkets antf Mining\nVANCOUVER LIST\nIS RATHER DULL\nUttle Change In Prices; Home\nCM) Sells Down; Big Missouri Sales Heavy\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 28\u2014 With the ex-\nceiTwon or a good demand for A. P.\nConsolidated, Mercury and Sterling Pacific In the oils, the Vancouver market\nwas a rather dull affair today with\nlittle change ln prices. In the mines\nextreme dullness prevailed hut the\nspread In prices also held within narrow  range.\nRome OU opening at 121.00 sold down\nto close unchanged at $24.75. C and S.\nCorporation was off 26 cents at $0.00;\nA. P. COn, and Calmont ranged steady\nas did the majority of the list. In the\nmines Big Missouri was under heavy\nset ling skid cloeed at $1 27 off 8 centa.\nOeorge Copper closed at $0.10 aaked,\ndown 15 cents, the balance of the list\nheld about steady.\nE&fc Markets\nOTTWA, Aug. 28\u2014Egfa markets\nstrong,\nToronto\u2014 Ext rod . 48c; firsts 44c\nseconds 88c; dealers quoting country\nshippers, ungraded, extra 48c; firsts\n41c  seconds 30c.\nMontreal\u2014Prices on this market are\nsteady\nVancouver\u2014 Ungraded extras 42c;\nfirsts 30c; pullets extras 34. Prices to\nretailers extras 48c;.. firsts 45c; pullet   extras   42.\nChicago\u2014spot ae'.^c;  Mov. stc\nCalvary Oil\n(By H. W. Robertson. Ltd. leased wire)\nA. P. Cent\t\nAssociated      ,\nCalmont    \t\nCommonwealth   \t\nC.  and I. Lands\nDalhousle   \u201e\t\nDevenlsh\nBULLS CONTINUE\nTHEIR ACTMH\n4.86\n8.60 \t\n6.0a Atchison SeUs Up Eight Points;\n\\_     Steel Up, Reacts and Closes\nsis I Steady\nExchange Rates\nNEW TORK. Aug. 88\u2014sterling exchange 14.84 13-16 tor 60-day MU* and\nat 6*84 5-16 tor demand.\nForeign bar silver 52%c per ounce.\nCanadian dollars 7-16c discount.\nFranca 3.9iv*c.\nLire\u20145.22HC.\nNelson approximate rate sterling\nM-86K.\nBait Crat \t\nFreehold    \t\nFabian   \t\nHargal    \t\nHome\t\n3.86 j \t\n.2*3      NKW     YORK,     Aug.     28\u2014Ranewed\n1.91  evidence of  the extraordinary  vitality\n.17  of Industry prompted a resumption of\na oo i bullish   activity   ln     today's     market\nFLURRY IN PAPERS\nMONTREAL 'CHANGE\nMcDougall   Seauer   Xx.\nMaryland    \u2014 _..\t\nOkalta    New     \t\nIllinois-Alt*\t\nM*rcury       \t\nMcDougall Segur new ..\nRegent\t\nSpooner\n  83.76\n.... ,5.00\n  S.9S\n  3.86\n  .80\n  1.14\n  1.70\n.  .63\n  1.40\nMill   City     8.10\nModel    _  .93\nSterling   Pacific     8.80\nUnited _... 149\nVulcan     -  J\u00bb\nMcLeod\nRoyallte\n4.30\nLive Stock\nWINIPEO, Aug. 38\u2014Receipts: 1000\ncattle; 300 calves, 800 hogs and 300\nsheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice gO to $10; fair to good\n\u20228.78.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice 18.50; fair\nto good 17.60.\nButcher   cows\u2014Choice  17;   fair   to\ngood 86,50.\nBullt\u00a3-Good $6.00.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice 18.50; fair to\n(rood 87.00. , _______\nSudbury Satin\nSherritt Gordon\nPalconbridge Nickel\n'The direction and management of this inter-allied\ngroup of properties is most conservative and highly\ncompetent. On any recession for price they present\nattractive opportunities for purchase.\nR.P.Clark&Co.,(Vanc.)Ltd.\n338\n173%\n145'i\n133\n6414\n11!\"'.\n390\n195',,\n124tt\n285\n63\n139%\n134 a,\n238\n71%\n108),\nClose\n341V4\n174\",\n146(4\n12214\n66\n119%\n297\n197\n124%\n289\n63\n140\n136>4\n234\n9914\n73\n109 S4\nINVESTMENT BANKERS\nNELSON, B. C.\nPHONE 100\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of C anada, Ltd,\nOffice,  Smelting and Refining  Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers. >f Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Orer\nProducers of Gold. Silver, Copper,  Pig  Lead and Zim\nTADANAC.   TRAIL\nEXCURSION RATES\nEAST\nToronto _  $116.90\nOttawa  129.60\nMontreal    134.10\nSi John 162.20\nSt. Paul     76.60\nChicago     90.30\nNew York _ 161.70\nWEST\nVancouver  $32.90\nVictoria  37.30\nSeattle   41.75\nAlso circular tours at\nattractive rates to Pacific\nCoast and Canadian\nRockies.\nCall moey renewed at 9 per cent. The\nmarket  wlll   be  closed  on   Saturda;\nAtchison sold up more than t\npoints to a record price above 292\nbut cloaed at 889. iAckawanna moved up about five pointa to a new\npeak, but later lost most of It* gain.\nErie, St. Paul, Baltimore and Ohio,\nNickel Plate and Chicago and Northwestern were among others reaching\nnew peaks. Per* Marquette soa;*xl\n12% pointa at 1230. United States\nFreight, U. S. Industrial Alcohol, Air\nReduction, Amertcan Tobacco, American Water Works, Eastman Kodak.\nCoca Cola, R. H. Macy, Ingersoll Rand\n__. and Otl* Steel were among other\n146.00 Issues reaching unprecedented levels\n' with substantial gains.\nIn the oils. Pan-American \"B\"\nreached a higher peak and transcontinental wa* sent to a new high\nat 616%.\nStock* swejt down for a net losses\nor about 2 to 6 points ln the late\naelllng included American Telephone.\nAllied Chemicals, Cons. Oas, General\nElectric, Oeneral Railway Signal, Gillette and Radio.\nToatal   sales   3.96S.0O0   ahares.\nNEW   YORK   Ql'OIATlONH\nHigh       Low\nAllied   Chem    348\nAmerican   Can    178%\nAm. Foreign Pow .. 149V4\nAm.   Loco    182%\nAm.  Stel  Fdy  65%\nAm. Bmlt. Sc Bet 120%\nAm. Telephone  300%\nAm. Tobacco   197\nAnaconda     136%\nAtchlnson  898%\nBaldwin  63%\nBait.   As   Ohio    141%\nBeth. Steel  137%\nC\u00bbn.   Pacific    :...837%\nCerro de Pasco   95%\nChrysler     73%\nCorn  Products    111%\nDupont    219%\nFlelschman    Co 90%\nFreeport-Texas    46%\nOen.  Motors     73%\nOen.   Eelectrlc    393%\nOranby     80%\nOreat  Weat  Sugar .... 87\nHowe    Sound      67%\nHudson   Motors     84\nInsp.    copper     46%\nInt.  Rpd   Trana  66%\nKelly   springfld 11%\nKennecott   Copper   .... 90\nKresge    8    S      68\nKroegger Sc Toll  \t\nalack   Truck      99\nSash    Motors      85%\nflat. I>ow, At Light    67%\nN.   Y.   Central    363\nNorth.   Pacific    113%\nPackard   Motora   .160%    146%    148%\nPaclflo    OH     \u201e 38%\nPhillips   Pet*    wm\nRadio   Corp  96\nftock   Island 139%\nSchulte       19%\nShell   Union   Oil   . . 89\nSinclair   Con\t\nSouthern  Pacific\nStand. OH of Cal.\nStand. Oil of N. J.\nStewart Warner ....\nStudebaker    74%\nTexas   Corp 70%\nTexas    Gulf    8ulph. 73%\nUnion Oil  of  Cal.    52%\nUnion   Pacific    295\nU.   S.   Rubber     48%\nU.   8.   Steel    266%\nWest.   Electric     283\nWillys   Overland   .... 23%\nYellow   Truck     86%\nCons. Oas of N. Y. .175%\nRadio Keith Orptl  36%\nSouth Cal. Edison     86\nInt.  Tel  Tegh 144%\nUnited Aircraft \t\nBendix   Avla\t\nRem.   Rand    51\nChea.  6c   Ohio   374%\nPenna R. R IWV,\nSt   Louie,  San Fran.131%    130% 131\n211%   311%\n89%      69%\n46%      46%\n71%      73%\n387       387%\n80       '80\n36%    36%\n66%    65%\n83%    83%\n45%    45%\n64%    64%\n10\n88%\n51%\n10%\n61%\n39\n98\n84%\n66\n347%    248%\n111       Ul\n65\n66%\nWayagamack  Leads With   HI-\nPoint Gain; Canadian Car\nIssues Jump\nMONTREAL, Aug. 38\u2014A Hurry ln\nthe paper* continued buoyancy ln the\nutilities, with Brlzlllan a participant,\nand sharp advance* ln the Canadian\nCar issues were the features of a\nconsiderably more active local stcck\nmarket today. The general list was\nIrregular   at   the   close.\nBrazilian closed at 71% up more\nthan 3 points, Shawlnlgan waa a\nbright feature, advancing 3 pointa to\nUl, a new high. Both these Issues,\nhowever, eaaed off somewhat during the afternoon and at the close\nBrazilian waa selling at 71% and\nShawlnlgan at 108%. International\nNickel closed fractionally lower at\n64%.\nThe papers were fairly strong, Wayagamack leading wtth a ten point\ngain  at  99.\nThe Canadian Car Issues' were also\nstrong, the common Jumping nine\npoints and the preferred aeven. Other\nfirm features Included Canada Northern Power which closed at 35, a\nnew high, Dominion Bridge, Famous\nPlayers, McCoil-Frontennc, National\nBreweries. Quebec Power, Winnipeg\nElectric and Montreal Power. The\nlatter touched a new high during the\nday at 148%, but cloaed fractionally\nbelow  that level.\nThe day's widest loss was Buffered\nby Simmon pfd. which declined three\npoints to  103 a new low.\nOn Sale Daily Till Sept. 30\nReturn Limit Oct. Jl\nAak for rates from and to any point East or West\nDetails from any agent, or write\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., Nelson B. C\n38\nISO\n37%\n93%\n138\n19\n28%\n37%\n147%\n67%\n76% 76*4\n71% 71\n66%\n73%\n70%\n71%\n61%\n391\n46\n253%\n377%\n33\n36%\n170%\n34%\n83%\n140%\n49%\n371%\n106%\n37%\n92%\n139\n19\n39\n37%\n147%\n75%\n71%\n66%\n74%\n76%\n71%\n62%\n292%\n-47%\n253%\n277%\n22%\n36%\n170%\n85%\n83%\n140%\n133%\n90%\n60%\n271%\n107%\nCLOSINd    Ol'OTATIONS\nAT    MONTREAL\nBank   of   Commerce   294\nBank    of   Montreal     360\nBank   of   Nova  Scotia   397\nRoyal   Bank    345\nAbltlbl   Power   At  Paper     64%\nAsbestos    Corporation        9%\nAtlantic    Sugar    0%\nBell   Telephone    180\nBralzllan  T.   L.   Sc   Power     71\nBrompton  Paper     46\nBrit.   American   OU     M%\nCanada   Bronze     71%\nCan.   Car   As   Foundry    146\nCan.    Cement      37\nCan.   Cement   (pfd)     90\nCan.    Converter*   .**(,.  90\nCana.   Indus.   Alcohol     22%\nCan.   Cottons    06\nCan.    Power  36%\nCan.   Steamship   Lines    34%\nCons.  Mining  As  Smelting     396\nDominion    Bridge    ..-\u00bb 118%\nDominion   Glass    ....305\nDom.   Steel   Corp.    (pfd)     106\nDom.    Textile      91\nA.  P.   Oraln   jl  4144\nLake   of   the   Wood*,    67\nMaasey   Harris     56\nMontreal   Power    i,..,\u2122.- 148\nMontreal   Tramways    180\nNational    Breweriea     148%\nNational   Steel   Car     61\nOgilvle    Milling     600\nOntario   Steel   Producta     25\nOttawa  L.  Ss Power   104\nPenmans,   Ltd 83\nPower   Corp 137%\nPrice    Bros 108\nQuebec   Power      87%\nShswtnlgan     108%\nBherwln   Wllllama     48\nSa   Canada   Power   '.-  66%\nSteel   of   Canda     63%\nTuckett    Tobacco     170\nWabasso  Cotton     38\nWayagamack   98\nWestern  Orocers    34\nWinnipeg   Railway     91%\nWinnipeg Railway   (pfd)    \u2014106\nToronto Mines\n(Rk* II. W. Robertson, Ltd. leaned wire)\nAoonda  _    .18\nAjax      8.88\nAmulet .3.76\nAmity 21\nA.   P.   Corp 4.66\nAdmiral 2.86\nArno .. tt\nAssociated  OH .   8.60\nBaldwin .     .04%\nBaltac OH    -   8.06\nBarry-Holllnger           .27\nBaae    Metals ...   693\nB*dford ...     .46\nBldgood           JO\nBig Missouri ...    161\nCalmont        6.00\nCapital SUver .05\nCapital   Manitoba       .36\nClearecy  18\nCommon  wealth      1.19'\nDome   .   10.00\nDuprat         M\nOood flah  0\u00abUj\nFalconbrldge   11.60\nOold  Dele         _      .05%\nGranada 27\nHome Oil  23.60\nHarker  Oold 10%\nFoothills     7.09\nHowey    1.11\nHolllnger       660\nHudson Bay  . . 1875\nRelley     -     .4B\u00bb\nInternational  Nickel    5555\nKukland  Lake 70\nKirkland   Pawnee   05%\nKootenay    Florence     14\nLakeside    84.60\nLowrey   Pet   .    8.00\nMacassa      17\nMandy     45\nManitoba   Basin       .23\nMalarttc     09\nMcDougall .46\nMclntyre   .....   14.80\nMayland      10.00\nMerland     .   1.02.\nMining   Corp    4.30\nMurphy     .  .04*4\nNewbec   .. 41\nNlplssing            .3.50\nNoranda        64.50\nPend   Orellle     5.55\nPeterson-Cobalt .28\nOld Colony 20\nPremier    Gold   a         1.76\nSan    Antonla     12\nSherrltt  Gordon       7.40\n8.   W.   Pete       3.75\nSudbury    Basin        8.86\nSterling  Pacific    2.25\nSaint Anthony  17\nTeck   Hughes       6.60\nThompson   Cadallac    10\nVentures    8.08\nVlpond     86\nUs\u00a74W W^tcd S&ace\n\u25a0Si,\nl!4a^YOU|^&tfc]\n9*t*&\n**&l\nJk\n*\/ aSs\u00a7\n1\np\/\n' At trivial expense Gyproc will convert space\noow wasted into one or more extra rooms.\n___*__9         \u2014_____.  .____                                                                           *\"\n^flMMV     aVKt^Basav\u00ab8JHlB*aaw   ^ad^a*.     ^aaajasm\n1\nI\nj.\nreproof1W*\nllbc\n>ard\nCHICAOO, Aug. 28\u2014Wheat had t\nsinking spell ln the early trading today and thereafter held lta own aided\nby the example of other grains and\nthe support of local commission housea.\nIn view of the abundance of available\nwheat and the good tidings from European fields, the trade was pessimistic\nover the changes of higher prices ln\nthe near future and followed Liverpool down the scale at the outset.\nThe close was not far above the bot\ntom points of the day, wheat closing\n1% to 2~-'g. cents under yesterday's\nclose while corn after picking up\nbit on bullish crop sentiment, was sent\ndown and finished easy at half to 1\ncent decline. Oats closed firm quarter\nto half cent up and provisions 5\ncents lower to 7 cents up.\n[anadian Pacific\n,-      Sdilinqs\nB      L TO    J\nEUROPE\nLOCAL STOCKS ARE\nSTRONG, TORONTO\nWinnipeg Electric Has Biggest\nGain;  Goodyear Common\nGains Five\nTORONTO, Aug. 28\u2014Local stocks\nwere  unusually vigorous today, despite\nconsiderable profit taking among the\nol}  securities.\nWinnipeg Kleetric made the greatest\ngain of the day up 6 _ to 92. Canadian Car made a sharp gain, of fi%\npoints to 144 Goodyeer common gained 5 points to 90S on sales of Ul\nshares. Bell Phone rose one to 160,\na point below the year's high.\nStandard Steel touched 140 during the early part of the session,\nclosing 140 for a net g.iin of one point.\nLake Superior and General Steel Wares\nwas stronger. Page Hersey and Steel\nof Canada easier, Ontario Sllknit up 3\nto SO and Noranda  up do cents.\nStocks closing lower Included Canada    Cement    3-4;    Canada   Bridge %:\nOypsnm H: IPckel %: Osatadm P\u00bbt-\ning 9; British American oil J ana\nService Stations 1.\nLogan & Bryan\nPrint* Wlr*\nSTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTON,\nGRAIN\nMEMBERS:\nNew Tork, Montreal and Vancou-\nrer    Stock    Exchange*.    Chlcaio\nBoard of Trad*, Winnipeg oraln\nExchange and other leading et\\\nOFFICES:\nVancouver,  Spokan* anal Saato*\nThat furniture you don't\nneed will sell if yon advertise it in The Daily News\nclassified columns.\nWrit*   for\nOur map of\nTurner\nValley\nPRODUCTION\nMEANS PROFITS\nSpectacular result* art expected within th*\nnext few months aa a result of th* extensive\ndevelopment programme*, now under way lathe Alberta oilfields.\nNew producer* will ba brought ln and oil\nstocks will move to appreciably higher price*.\nAuthorities are of the opinion that a record\nmarket will prevail for oil stock* during tto*\n^^^g\u2014 coming winter.\nFrom our Semi-Monthly Stock and Bond Report, It will be possible to watch the results\nof the work now under way. Have ua ih*ii\nyou thla report free.\nMiller, Court & Co., Ltd.\nINVESTMENTS\nBranches\u2014London, Eng.;   Toronto,   Winnipeg,  Regina,   Calgary,\nNelson, Victoria and  Seattle, Wash,\nMembers Vancouver, Victoria, Calgary, Winnipeg, and Standard\n(Edmonton), Winnipeg, Seattle and Standard  (Spokan*)\nStock Exchangee\nBranch Office: Nelson, B. C. Fhone 68\nHead Office:  Stock Exchange Building, Vanoouver, B. O.. Canada\nPATHFINDER\nOutstanding .Quality at\nLOW PRICE\nA TlREevenbetterthantheGood-\n** year Pathfinder that has served\nthousands so well and so economically. The improved Goodyear\nPathfinder\u2014in many popular sUes .\n; now in your dealer's stock.\nV\nancouer\nStock\n(By H. W. Robertsoon. Ltd. leased wire)\nBayvlew   \t\nBig    Missouri    \t\nBluebird      \t\nBeaver     ~\t\nCork  Provinee   -\u25a0\nCottonbetlt\t\nDalhousle    .....\nDanwell      \u2122\t\nDuthle     _..\nOeorge  Ent .....\nOeorge   Copper   \t\nOeorge River \t\nGladstone    ....\nOolconda     ...\nOrandvlew    \t\nInsependence      _..\nInt.   C.  At  e \t\nRoot. Florence\n**%*\"-\n\u201e ... LAWRENCE VORT8\nMONTREAL \u2014 Ul TBF.C\nSept. 10   .._.  Empress Scotland\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\n\" 11    Duchiaa   Atholl\nTO Liverpool\n18       Metagama\nTo  Belfast-Glasgow\n18     Montrose\nTo Antwerp\n14     , Jaellta\nSept\nSept\nv*pt\nSept\nSept.\nS*IAt.\nSept.\nTo Liverpool\n17    Montroysl\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\n18    _.. Duchesa   Bedford\nTo Liverpool\n...    18     Montcslm\nTo   Plymouth-Cherbourg-Southampton   and   Hamburg\nSept.   31 Duchesa  Richmond\nTo 01aagow-B*lf**t>LlT*rpool\nSept.   34   ....>. - Kmpre**   Australia\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\n36     Montclare\nCherbourg-Southampton-Antwerp..\n27     Duchess   York\nTo Liverpool\nFor Sal* By\nJohn Burns & Son, Ltd.\n\u00a5unter Hardware    -    -    -\nrail Mercantile Co., Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nRossland, B.C.\nTrail, B.C.\nSept.\nSept.   38     ...\"...~.'..~.~.7.~ Mlnnedoss\nTo Belfaat-Llverpool-Olaagow\nOct.    1                           Empress    Scotland\nTo    Cherbourg-Southampton-Hambiint\nOct.   4' Duchesa   Athol\nTo   Olaagow-Belfast-Uverpool\nOct. 18    .  Montrose\nTo    Ch*\u00a3bourg-6outh*mpton-Antwerp\nPull   details   with   rate*   Horn   any\nagent, or writ*\nJ. 8. CARTER _______\nB\u00bbttlAl rassesuer Aaisalt. Minn, U, I',   at 4.86.\n.02'A\n02(i\n.10\n.13\n.08\n.48\n.15\n.17\n.48\n.25\n8.10\n.33\n.10\n.70\nM\n.0B>\/4\nM\n   _ .14V4\nKoot   King          .88\nLoa Angelea Voan          1.33\nLucky   Jim        .08\nMarmot   Metals    _ 03?,\nMarmot  River   03\nMorton   Wolsely          ol'..\nNational   Silver    13',,\nNoble   Plve         11\nOregon   Copper           3.1\nPend   Orellle        5.50\nPioneer     _     IM\nPlanet 86\nPremier         1.70\nPorter Idaho  _      .45\nReeves MacDonald  .....    1.85\nRufua   Argent*          Jltt\nRuth    Hope    ....\nSilver  Crow   \t\nSilver   Smith    .\n811ver   Cap   \t\nSlocan   King\nSilverado     \t\nSlocan  Rambler\nSnowflak*    \t\nSunoch    \t\nTopey   Richfield\nTorlc    \t\nWellington   \t\nWhitewater    \t\nWoodbine    \t\n3b\n.07 tt\n.06\n.30\n.04\"-\n.60\n.18\n.47\n1.85\n.70\n.70\n.06\n.48\n.0314\nHOME OIL DOWN\nTORONTO LIST\nTORONTO. Aug 38\u2014The standard\nstock and mining exchange was dull\ntoday. Teck Hughes slumped 40 cents\nclosing the day at 656. Ajax Oil closed unchanged at 335.\nMclntlre opened at IS and closed at\n14.75, off 30 cents. Falconbrldge was\noff 25 at 11.60 and Lake Shore down\n35 cents at 24.86. International\nNickel dropped 35 at 54.85: Hudson\nBay moved up 15 cent* \u00bbt 18.90.\nIn the oils, B. A. oil wa* up 30\ncant* at 67.20. Horn* OU declined\n25 cenU to 28.50.\nHolllnger advanced 36 cent* at 6.50\nand Mining Corporation lost flv* pointa\nfield in which it is now offered to\nyou.\nThe big, husky, handsome Path*\nfinder!  Examine it todays You'll\nsee traction in every groove and-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^        block of its massive tread.   You'll\nAnd what a tire it is! A tire that      see quickly that it's built for long,\nwould be considered good in any      even wear,\nprice class,   it rightly and  quite      And more than that, Pathfinder has\nnaturally leads in the low-priced \/a body of Supertwist Cord,- that famous extra-elastic cord\nof matchless vitality and\nresistance to shock,\nWonderful value * *\nwhen yon consider Pathfinder's low price, A\nstar performer ranking\nwith many highet priced\ntires.\nYou should see this great\nnew Pathfinder to-day.\nYour neighborhood\ndealer will show it to yon\nand explain why Goodyear unconditionally\nguarantees it*\nm\nm\nGoodyear means Good Wear\nCANADA\nGoodyear Selected Dealer in Nelson Is\nThe NELSON TRANSFER Co\nCorner Vernon and Stanley Streets\n., Ltd.\nPhone 35\n rTHB NBD30N DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST \u00bb, 1929\nfage Sever\nPORTS\nHITS TO HOLD\nSWAY ON LABOR\nDAY AT FERNIE\nJig Program Lined Up; Mara-\nIthon Will be Feature; Other\nCompetitions\nInnifUE,    Aut.   28\u2014The   Labor   Day\nto   be   held   ln   Psmle   next\nnday   promise  to be  tbe  most   exiting   that.have   ever   been   held   ln\npi*   dty.   There   wlll   be  a   marathon\nrun over a distance of ten miles\n1* *n  open  event  for  amateurs\nentries are already ln from const* a* far afield as Portland Ore.\nlocal    champion*    are    Jractlctng\nittf.   Tbe   winner   of   the   marathon\nreceive   *75   ln   value,   the   next\n\u25a0t   sgo   and   tn*   third   \u00bb25.   In\ndltlon  ther* Is  a  fine  cup  donated\nM   tb*   Fernie  Garage  which   wlll   sp\nto the winner.\nKeen Interest ls being shown ln tbe\nbaseball and football competition*.\nThe flnt prize ln ba*eb*U I* tlSO\ndollar* \u00bbnd th* \"Chevrolet Trophy,\"\ndonated by tbe Crow's nest motors\nand held for one rear. Second prize\nla tlOO.\nFirst prise ln football 1* a tl\u00bb0 valu*\nand \"Liphardt Shield.\" Seoond 1100\nvalue.\nThor* ar* substantial prise* for\nhorse racing and foot races as well\nas a splendid bill of acquatlc eport*\nln Fernie* famous swimming plunge\nwith  band  In attendance.\nThe grand final will take the form\nof a ball In Victoria Hall In tb*\nevening.\nThe proceed* of the sport* wlll be\ndivided equally between, the Hospital\nBoard, the Legion and the swimming\npool committee.\nInternational Race\nBaltimore 2-12, Rochester 3-0.\nNewark  1-5.  Buffalo 7-\u00ab.\nJersey City 3-3. Montreal 1-0.\nReading 5, Toronto 3.\nIt Isn't\nthe Telephone's\nFault\nThe distance some people jet from ths mouth-\nEicce of the telephone is not a matter of inches,\nut of feet; nnd they direct their conversations\nto the ceiling, to the Boor, out of the window-\nanywhere, in fact, except Into ths telephone.\nIt Isn't the telephone's fault, then, when ths\nparty at the other end of the line can't hear.\nB. C. TELEPHONE COMPANY\n\u00bbY APPOINTMENT TO\nHAH. THB PtIKCl OF WALES\nGin 1%. Gin\nGuaranteed\nDistilled & Bottled\nin London\nENGLAND\n17 UNDER PROOF\n\\\nNo\nColouring\nMatter\nNo\nInjurious\nIngredients\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed\nby tb* Liquor Control Board or by the Government\nof British Columbia.\nRUTH GETS HIS   <\n36th AS YANKS\nLOSE OUT 9-7\nPhiladelphia Evens the Series;\nWashington Beats Boston;\nOnly Two Games\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 38\u2014In a game\nwhich saw the score knotted twice,\nWashington Senators fell upon M.\nOaaton In the eighth inning today for\nenough hlta to net them three run*\nand make a clean sweep of the two-\ngun* aeries with Boston. The final\n\u2022oore wa* 7 to 4.\nR    H    B\nBoston        4   13     l\nWaahlngton    a,    7   10     1\nBatteries\u2014Gaston, Bayne and Berry;  Thomas and Spencer\nATHLETICS (IAIN EVEN IIKEAK\nFists Brandished\nIn Good\nNEW YORK,  Aug.  28\u2014The  Athletics\ngained  an  even  break  In thetr  two-\ngame aeries against the Yanks by trimming   them  9   to   7   here  today  In\nbatting duel.\nBabe Ruth returned to the game after departing ln the first Inning yesterday, due to a cold In his back and\nslammed out his 36th homer. The drive\nIncreased the Babe's margin over hla\nnearest competitor to three.\nR    H    I\nPhiladelphia     -.   9    10     0\nNew   York.      7   12     a\nBatteries\u2014Walberg, Qulnn, Rommell.\nOrove and Cochrane; Sherid, Moore,\nZachary, Plpgras and Dickey.\nOnly two game* scheduled in American league.\nUMPIRE |\natsfrYlK--\nncK in fliuioHeifr i\nwenT AjjO^TooJeieoTHlY-\nUmpire\ndecs.\nrikWWRTYi\nUSEKTb\nBaTONE\noeltsg\n'r\u00bbrsvr\"Roi>\u00abH\nAWTorlBlEnam\nIN PAStBAU\nBRITISH DAVIS\nCUP STARS ARE\nBEATEN, STATES\nVan Ryn and Allison Lose to\nBell and White in National\nDoubles\nHARLOW TO MEET\nSPARK PLUG BOYD\nON SEPTEMBER 7\nSeattle Heavyweight to Oppose\nNelson Battler's Attempt\nat Comeback\nUniteds Trounce\nWood Butchers in\nTrail Football\nTRAINW   STAFF OF\nF0UJ> jkARDEN HARLOW\nSpokaiv And Nova Scotia Middle eights Here to Put\nHim in Shape\nBROOKLYN, Mass., Aug. 28. \u2014 Tiie\ntwo top ranking teams in the 48th\nnational doubles tennis championship,\nthst of Johnny Van Ryn and Wilmer\nAllison, the British Davis cup champions and Bunny Austen and J. 8.\nOlliff, England, met with crushing\ndefeats here today hi the quarter finals play in the ixmgwood turf courts.\nBerkeley Bell and Lewis N. White,\nboth of Austin, Texas, defeated the\nDavis cup stars, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4, 8-6,\nwhile W. P. Coen, Jr., Kansas City and\nhis youthful partner, Harris Ooggeshall,\nDes Monies, Iowa, defeated the Brltsh\nplayers, 6-4, 2-6.  1-6,  16-14, 6-2.\nIn the other two quarter finals\nmstches, Gregory Mangln, Newark, and\nNorman Parquharson, South African\nDavis player, lost to BUI Tllden and\nFrank     Hunter 6-1, 6-2, 3-6, 3-6, 7-5.\nOeorge M. Lott, Jr., Chicago and John\nDoeg,   Santa   Monica,   deefated   Frank\nShields, New York, and Donald Strach\nan, Philadelphia, 12-10, 6-4, 6-2.\nBy  AL.  DEMAREE\n(Former   Pitcher  New   Yark 'GlantiO\nHack Wilson seems to have gained\na good deal of notoriety as well as\npopularity from his fights -with Kolp\nand Donohue of the Reds, but Hack\nIs rather small potatoes as a fighter\ncompared with the late Paul Sentella,\na star of the Southern league who\nlater became a National league umpire.\nPaul used to keep a date book of\nhis fights. He never fought during\nthe playing season. But every time\nhe had an argument with another\nplayer, he'd put it down In his book\nwith a date for the fight. \"I fight\nafter the season,\" he would say. \"I\nput your name down.\"\nOf course, most of these fights never came off, partly because he was\nreally a tough fighter. They framed\nhim once. They hired an ex-pug as\na slugger to get him, but Paul cleaned up the pug!\nQeorge Moriarlty, the umpire, player and manager, also was a great\nfighter, as was Charlie Schmidt, the\naid Detroit catcher, who had to whip\nTy Cobb, when he first came up, four\ntimes before Ty would admit he was\nthe better man.\nTRAIL, B.C. August 28.\u2014In a somewhat uninteresting football game this\nafternoon between tne 7,'ood  Butchers\nand thv Uniteds. the United walked\naway with it to the tune of five goals\nto nil. Toward the end of the second\nhalf the Uniteds weer so far ahead\nof the game that they were abto to\nslacken down considerably. The Wood\nButchers showed little of the form with\nwhich they beat the Hearts on Monday.\nGoals were scored by: Wiltanu (2);\nJeffs   (2);   Pish   (1.)\nHORNSBY SLAMS\nOUT 304 HOME\nRUN, COBS LOSE\nPittsburgh, Tail Enders, Take\nBoth Ends Doable Header\nFrom Leaders\nRecord\nConsiderable interest in connection\nwith the Nelson open golf club district tournament qualifying rounds Is\nattached to the fact that up to date\nout of 54 competitors, Mrs. R. 8.\nPollard ls low medalist with a splendid\n79 for the 18 holes. Up to date even\nthe low handicap men have failed to\nLAST GAME OF\nSOCCER SERIES\nTIUMONDAY\nTrail Has One Game Lead, lt\nNelson Wins,  Play-Off\nNecessary\nbeat  her score,  and   the  only  entrant\nwho    seems    to    have    a    chance    of\nFourth  and  last  game  of  the  West equalling or beating her score'ls A. E.\nKootenay  soccer  league  series will   be Allison of Trail, an old Nelsonite, who\nPlayed ln Trail on Iaabor day between wlll b, ln t^^ t0 qualify today\nNelson and Trail.    Of the three games TaWng lt a!1 ln ftl. the forthcoming\nplayed   to  date.   Trail   has   taken  two tournament   look*   as   lf   lt   ls   going\nand    Nelson   one.     In   the   event   of to he one of the beat tests of golf thst\nNelson taking Mondays game, play-off ^ ,\u00bb\u00bb heW ,or \u201e\u201e\u201e, time.   There are\n2,.;^\"Ve.,,to *. \u00bbrran\u00bbKJ' ..     .a. \u00ab\u00b0ln\u00ab t0 be man>\" v'\u00bb\"\u00b0\u2122 \"om many\nWith   the   series   at   stake   the   ap- outside    points,    such    as    Vancouver.\npreaching game should prove the fast- Spokane, Trail. Kaslo. Cranbrook. Klm-\nest of the season and the Nelson men ^^gy and n,..^ and competitors are\n'\"^.'I\"1 up t0 eo \"\",\" \"?',     _ , \u00bb\u00b0ln\u00ab   \">   o*\"*  *   !>*\u00ab.   time   to  hold\nThird   game   was   played   ln   Nelson their   own\nlast Saturday.    After a long and fierce CADDIE* TOURNAMENT\ntuasle.   Trail,   In   the   dying   moment. In   the   Mrly   part   of   0cMkt   tl).\nWith the data ot his nut battle set\nfor Septmber 7, and with \"Spark\nPlug\" Boyd, hefty heavyweight of\nSeatle, for hla opponent, three sparring partners besides his manager-\ntrainer, have started to give Oeorge\nHarlow, Nelson heavyweight, the necessary hard work to put him ln shape\nfor what will be the greatest battle\nof his career. Right now, following\nweeks of steady and enthusiasm*;\ntraining, including road and gymnasium\nwork, Harlow ls In splendid condition\nand rested up laat night so a* not\nto  overdo a good  thing.\nWith the arrival tonight of Johnny\nO'Brien, bristling middleweight of Spo-'\nkane and one of Xddle Qulnn's boys,\nHarlow's training staff will be complet\ned O'Brien along with \"Fighting Barret from Nova Scotia, a middleweight\nof repute in the east, Ted McVlcar,\nrising young Nelson heavyweight, and\nDean Pearce, welterweight manager-\ntrainer of Harlow, will give Harlow\nsome of the hardest work he haa ever\nencountered, ln or out of the ring.\nBarrett has been in Nelson for several, day* and on Tuesday night\nshowed the fan* he had some real\nstuff\u2014in  speed,  punch  and  footwork.\nNo pains ar* being spared by the\npromoter to prime Harlow for what\n1* hoped will be his comeback after his\ndefeat ln his laat battle with Augle\nBauer of Calgary last December. While\nmonths have elapsed since the bout,\nHarlow ha* kept In the pink of condition and today 1* ln better shape\nthan ever before. He la reentering the\nring with a greater enthuslaalm and\nhe realizes he wlll be facing a formidable opponent ln the hefty \"Spark\nPlug'' who handed Aguie Sauer the\nworst licking of tbat battler's career\non last New Year's day at Calgary.\nNever before any of hla former\nbattles did Harlow have the array of\nsparring partners that has been lined\nup for him this time. This has been\ndone In view of the fact that Harlow\nls endeavoring to put a few more\nbattles under his belt before accepting enticing offera fro mthe coast and\nelsewhere. And that ls another rlas-\non why a tough battier like Boyd has\nbeen choaen for his opponent In the\nfirst of hi* new aerie* of battles.\nBoyd will arrive  In Nelson on Sep-\ntembeer 3, lt Is expected, so there will\nbe  plenty  of  opportunity  lot  fan*  to\nso* him ln action before the battle.\nI    Tne   bout   ia   to   be   staged   in   the\nNone of Men Qualifiers Have1 0v\"_ nou\" *\u00b0* wm,1* \u00b0,V8r th\u00ab 10'\n-* ..       ......    round   route.   A   semi-final   and   two\nEqualled Mrs.  Pollard's\nOntario Athletes\non Way, Banff\nTORONTO, Out, Aug. 28.\u2014On Ust\nnight's C. P. R., train No. 3 for the\nwest, the largest delegation of Ontario\nathletes to ever attend a ehfunotonshlp\nmeet ln western Canad left Toronto,\nbound for Banff where they wlll com-\npete at the national track and field\nchampionships which will be held in\nBanff on Labor Day. The trip of\nthese athletes was made possible by\nfunds donated by the Ontario branch\nof A. A. U.. of Canada. The Ontario\nAthletic commission, who gave dollar\nfor dollar with the provincial amateur body, and the Hamilton Olympic\nclub, who not only financed several\nof their own athletes but alao contributed to the fund to send the men\nchosen by the selection committee.\n.President Charles E. Hlgginbottom, who   \u00ab\u00bb\nhas   been   selected   as  track   club   for! Ol6V6lantl   .Battier\nthe meet at Banff was in charge of the\nparty.\nPITTSBURGH,   Aug.   SB\u2014The   wrath\nof a detunct pennant contender\nmarched from IU tomb today to haunt\nthe coming champions with fears ot\nwhat might have happened If the\nPirates   bad   not   cracked.\nThe Pirates were bold enough to take\nboth ends of a double header from\nfhe Cube by scores of 10 to 3 and 7\nto 6. The two victories however served\nonly to reduce the Chicago lead to 13H\n^ames,\nHornsby batted Chicago Into a four-\nrun margin with hts thirtieth homer\ntn the seventh Inning of tile\" night-cap,\nbut Penner yielded three markers ln\nthe home half, cne of them on Bar-\ntoll's homer within the park.\nPlrst game\u2014 B   H   \u25a0\nChicago       3     9     3\nPittsburgh   10    15     1\nBatteries \u2014 Malone, Cvengros and\nTaylor;   Orlmes and Hargreave,\nSeeond  game\u2014 R    H    B\nChicago       6   10     0\nPittsburgh        7   14     0\nBatteries\u2014Nehf. Penner, Cvengros,\nBush and Gonzales: Kremer, flwetonlc\nand  Hemslev.\nAmerican Association\nLouisville 8,  Columbus 7.\nMinneapolis 2.  Milwaukee '3.\nSt. Paul 9. Kansas City 7.\nToledo 3-10, Indianapolis 3-4.\nBeats Andre Routis\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 38\u2014Johnny Dat-\nto, Cleveland, tonight won a referee's\ndecision In 10 rounds from Andre\nRoutis, of Prance, world's featherweight\nchampion.\nRoutist* title was not Involved, as\neach came in over the weight class\nlimit.\nFifteen years ago today Dan O'Leary,\nthe veteran pedestrian, passed the 140\nmile  mark  ln  his   1000   mile  Journey.\nNo Medal Round\nAppoaches Mrs.\nPollard's, Golf\nother preliminaries of the high caliber\nhanded out by the promoters of\nHarlow's other battles, will preceede\nthe main event. Officials have not yet\nbeen named.\nScores Hundredth\nCentury, Cricket\nLONDON, Aug 38\u2014Prank Woolley,\nnoted Kent cricketer. Joined the immortals of the game when he flnlahed\nhi* Hundredth century today. He scored 176 not out for Kent against Mld-\ndlesaex. Other players who have made\na hundred centuries are D. W. O\nGrace, Tom Hayward, ( J. B. Hobbs, C\nP. Mend and Put Hendern.\nAl Brown Retains\nBantamweight Title\nin Copenhagen Bout\nCOPENHAGEN, Denmark, Aug. 28. \u2014\nPanama Al Brown, lanky, negro auc-\n,c . ceasfully defended his claim to the\nof tho game, broke the deadlock vrtilch \u201e__ Committ*e 0f the Neiaon club world's bantamweight title tonight by\nneither team had been able to break intends holding a caddie* tournament defeating Knute Larsen, Danish cham-\naway  from  during  the   game,   to  win  tar th0K ,_,, who have \u201e,\u201e\u201e\u201e tnHn.\nyJ?!* * ^_\u201e \u00bb\u00bblvM to he energetic and attentive to\nThis  gam.   gave  Trail   a   one   game   the   beBt   lnterMU   0,   the   cluD    \u00bb<,\ntead In the serlea which she will carry  \u201e,\u201e t . \u201e,\u201e be    ,        ^lh J\nttUtll\n*_\nik\n\"best\nW1IIIEU0BE\nPEAL OLD SCOTCH\nWHISKY\n1\nI\nj\n1\ni\ni\ni\n1\n1\nwith   her Into  Monday's  game.\nview to    encouraging the young golfer.\n.KNe^Pime\"UP.(Wl11   ^.^XS    .7? ^y *\u00bb*\u00bb who h\u00bb\u2122 shown themselves\nthe  following:  Hlngs.  goal;   Datu.  Rol- to   ^   ^ntng   ftnd   expert   caM[n    t\n|K>n. backs; Bendy, McCrone, St. Dennle, tne nt tournament and  the\nhalves; Boathe, Day tison. Nutter. Roth- forthcomlug   oUlb   tournament   wlU   be\nery,  Welch,  Boquette,   forwards. eligible\nOam* ls called for 4 p.m. \t\nMiss Giegerich\nand Sklllicorn\nWin Kaslo Golf\nKASLO, B.C.. August 38.\u2014R. Sklllicorn and Miss Elizabeth Qlegeiick were\nthe winners of the handicap championship of the Kaslo Oolf club In the\nmen's and women's sections of the\ntournament Just completed there, represented by the Kootenalan cup and\nthe Oordon Bowker rose bowl respectively. Both finals matches were close\nand well-fought. Mrs. E. 8. Chandler\ngnu, runner-up for the Bowker rose\nbowl and Gordon Bowker ran Mr.\nSklllicorn  a close second.\nMr. Bowker wo n the trophy last\nyear.\nEnglish Cricket\nLONDON. Aug. 38.\u2014Closing Korea In\nEnglish crocket matches:\nAt   Lords:   Kent   380   for   83   runs;\nLeichester 366 for four wickets.\nAt   Cheltenham:   Gloucester   204   for\neight wickets.\nGlamorgan   339;   Lancashire   73   runs\nfor one wicket.\nNorthampton 310; Nottinghamshire 45\nfor four wickets.\nWarwick   three   runs\nSomerset   334;\nfor   one   wicket.\nWorcester    94;\nfour wickets.\nSouth Africa 330; Sussex 18 runs for\nthree wickets.\nYorkshire    139    for\nSpecial Fares\naccount\nSPOKANE\nInterstate Fair\nSept. 2 to 7\nRate Fare and one third Return\nOn Sale August 31 to Sept. 6th\nReturn Limit September 9th\nFrom all stations in B.C. West of Field and Fernie\nincluding all points on Kootenay, Arrow and Slocan\nLakes.\nTickets from Agents or-Pursers.\nJ. S. CARTER, Dist. Pass. Agt.\nplon ln a ten round match.\nThi? advertisement is not published or displayed -by the LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or by the Government of B. C.\nMADK  IN  CANADA\nKNOWN  THE  WORLD  OVER\nla* emit man ,n AUA*\ni.rv, a\u00bbA*A\u00ab*A or modem. trJaoa, airi.fa\nand nntojrnpk nrt\nfound as rrrr* cit,\nnnd town, M eterv\nCMtAAlrj, el the wortn,\nia Kiat C. anitUa\nWhy experiment -^g^iiejg>\u00bb- and risk shaving\ndisappointment? For over 100,000,000 users\nthroughout the world liillette has solved\n<^^^>onee and for all -t^^^gj&- the shaving\nproblem -<^ji^rg>- Let Gillette resources and\nGillette inventive genius protect your shaving\ncomfort.    Insist on  t.KM l\\i:   Gillette   Blades.\nGILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPAiSY Of CANADA LIMITED     -     UONTSEAV\nGenuine\nFtrtt In Ott Fitld . . .\nand the world's s Un -\n\u2022 lard throughout 27\nrears of constant improvement.\n-G-Ueite\nGillette\nBlades\nTITH\nTBE\nFINEST\nEDGE\nSTEEI,        CAN\nTAKE\n Page ElgH\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, M\u00bb\n.......:....\n'The Foolish Virgin\nBy KATHLEEN NORRIS\n9 <\\\nja*\u00abw\u00abo\u00abtaa\u00abaa\u00aba\n\"Ott, my Ood!\" she tald. in \u25a0\nwhisper,   \"what   am   I   (joint   w   do?\"\nBer soul fait sick, ther* waa a sort\nof vertigo upon ner; ahe waa an\naider woman now than tbe Pamela\nwho had first faced her troubles a\nyear ago and ate had lived to laugh\nat much that had frightened her then.\nBut this she could not face.\nSue Rose a bride\u2014the church all\nrosea and smllax \u2014 congratulations \u2014\na new establishment somewhere for\nthe young Chester Hill lards\u2014no, no,\nno, she couldn't bear ttt They said\nSue Hose's tatter had left her a\nmillion dollars\u2014a thousand dollars a\nweek. A thouaand dollars a week-\u2014\nthat meant travel and hospitality\nand   beauty.   .\nPamela writhed and put her head\ndown on ter knees. \"Oh* what shall\nI do? I can't go through with lt\nall\u2014I can't  face  lt\u2014I  can't  pretend\u2014\n\"Maybe he's there now, at the\nCatterwooda'.   Talking    plans\u2014\n\"And in the bank. 'Tou have to\nsign thla dear.  .  .\n\"Oh, my Ood, If I could get away.\"\nSuddenly, with a strangling and\nchoking pain that almost tore her in\ntwo, ste was sobbing. For a few minutes ste fought the rising storm; she\ngot to her feet, flinging back her\nhead, and walked to tne patio doorway, beating her hands noiselessly\ntogether,    gulping,    breathing    deep.\nBut lt was no use; the flood was\nupon her; she flung herself at length\nln charterls' chair, and drew his pillow against her face, stretched face\ndownward in the steamer chair, in\nall the dappled sliver and black, the\nsweet mysterious silence and floiwer\nfragrance of the garden.\nPresently ahe sat up, and brought\nher feet to the ground, and wiped her\neyes wtth a soaked hard ball of handkerchief. She remained staring blindly\nahead of her, exhausted, not thinking, ter mind a blank.\nHer childhood passed before some\nstrangely lucid Inner vision. Little Pam\nRaleigh\u2014one of the Raleigh twins,\nliving romantically ln the old Carter\nhouse. The most Important persons in\ntown,   of   course.\nUttle Pam Raleigh learning that the\nBeavers and the Catherwoods and the\nBroomes and the Billlngses had plenty of money.servants and motor cars\nand expensive clothes, and that the\nRalelghs didn't have anything. But\nwhat mattered lt Pam Raleigh was the\nmost popular girl in town. Just trie\nsame. She could make a Joke ot\nmoney.\nAnd then, gradually. Maisie being\nengaged, and Sue Rose engaged, and\nhappiness aad excitement for these\nother girls\u2014plainer girls, much less\npopular girls\u2014and Pamela was squeezed\nout, ignored, the girl who could be\nsnubbed  with  Impunity   .   .   .\nBut why? Why? Pamela wanted,\nlike everyone else, to believe that\nUfe was fair\u2014that everyone had an\n\u2022ven chance. But why should some\ngirls, like Malsle and Sue Rose and\nJessie, have everything and other girls\nnothing? Why should lt be Pamela's\nmother, rather than theirs, who must\nfive at Mrs. Patty's and Pamela, rather\nthan either of them, who must work\ntor her livelihood?\nIt old Km. Chard died Pamela must\ngo Into the Women's Exchange, or\nperhaps become a mother's helper somewhere\u2014no more fun, no more freedom and youth for her! She would\ngo, shabby and admiring, to Malsie's\nwedding   and   to   Sue   Rose's  wedding.\nHow lossT *te sat staring at the\nmoonlit patio she did not know. The\nnight was warm and soft; there was\nno movement ln the dark masses ot\nfoliage high above her head that were\npepper trees and widespread oaks, The\nbeat and swell and enveloping rush\nof the sea came steadily to her ears.\nThere was a scent of night, mysterious and penetrating and exquisite,\nln  the black and silver patio.\nSuddenly, suffocatingly, tears were\nupon her again And again Pamela\njumped to ter feet, and flung back\nher head, and walked to and fro\u2014\nto and  fro\u2014to  master  them.\nIt was then that she heard a voice\nclose to ber, quiet.\n\"Pamela!\"'\n\"Chester!\" she said ln a whisper.\nBut Immediately she saw that the\nsquarely built, easily moving figure\nthat came toward her across a patch\nof   clear   light   was   Oregory.\nHe had awakened, tt appeared, sn\nfelt restless, and had come downstairs\nfor  a  smoke  and  some  fresh   air.\n\"Lord, these old rooms dp bold ths\nheat!\"\n\"Bu\u2014bu\u2014but I love the hacienda\"!\nPamela tald thickly.\n\"Some night!' He looked at the\nunearthly beauty of the old. arcaded,\ntiled haesenda and the trees, and the\nmoon, sailing now across an open sky,\nand, sitting against the Up of the\nold fountain as she had sat earlier in\nthe day, he folded his big arms on\nhts chest and yawned frankly. Pamela\nwound her tittle wrapper tigntly about\nher and looked at the stars, too\u2014the\nfluttered long scarf of the Milky Way\nseeming so much tower tTTan the others,\nso close above   her  bare   head.\n\"Some day I mean to travel,\"' Oregory said unexpectedly. \"But lt wilt only\nbe to come back to \"THollno. There's\nno place1 like it! I don't think there\nla any place In the worlu like it!\"\n\"I don't think there Is,*' Pamela\nsatd ln a low voice, but steadily, and\nwith returning self-control. \"Were you\nborn   heft,   Gregory?\"\n\"No, I was born down at Mazatlan,\nIn Mexico, We've\u2014I've a place there.\nYou thtak this ls savage\u2014you ought\nto see that!\"\n\"I dont think this Is savage, now.\"\nIt was simple enough, as conversation.\nBut somehow she couldn't feel ss lf\nshe were talking to Oregory, who had\ndiscussed window curtains and bath-\n' room rugs with her a few weeks ago,\nwho had seemed to be so awkward\u2014\nloutish\u2014undeveloped- The man who\nwas   snicking   ln   the   shadows   might\nhave   been    a    complete   stranger,    s\nyoung  Spanish   don,   smooth   of   voice\nand   manner,   quite   at   ease   with\nwoman in  a  moonlit garden  in   June,\n\"Oregory. you seem so different tonight. Perhaps it was that tea party\ntoday; perhaps lt was that I'd never\nseen you with so many people\u2014as\na host\u2014entertaining In your own house\nbefore.'*\n\"I think perhaps\u2014\" he blew a long\nplume ot smoke from his cigarette\u2014\n\"I think perhaps I had been wanting\nsomething I couldn't have,\" he said\nlightly. \"And now I know I cannot\nhave it. and my mind is at rest about\nft\u2014and\u2014that's   over.*\nHis tone told ter to what he referred, and with a Uttle sympathy for\nhis trouble, ln the midst of her own,\nshe   old   deprecatingly:\n\"You   see   how   It   Is,   Gregory?\"\n\"Oh, I see how  It Is!\"\n\"You're not;\u2014you're not cross with\nme?\"\n\"Cross!  No. You mustn't\u2014you mustn't   talcs   these   things   too   seriously\nhe reminded her.\nI think\u2014things had gone a good\ndeal further with me than you,\" Pamela said, feeling ashamed snd cowardly, yet longing for comfort in spite\nof   herself.\n\"Perhaps so,'' he said. \"You know\nI'm   part 'Spanish.\"\nTTo  be   Continued)\nUNCLE SAM KEEPS\nMUM ON RADIUS OF\nNEW FAST CRUISERS\nTwo New Warships e\\~re to Be\nLaunched Sept. 7; 32.7\nKnots an \"Hour\nHuge Excursion\nPlans Are About\nCompleted Now\nMELBOURNE, Australia. Aug. 37\u2014\nPlans are practically complete for\nthe \"Britiah - Australian - New Zealand antarctic expedition\" which will\nsail from Capetown, South Africa, in\nNovember, unaer the leadership of\nSir   Douglas   Mawson.\nBlr Douglas ls In England making\narrangements for the departure of the\nship Discovery, which ls being loaned\nby the Brltlah government for tbe\nexpedition. The three government* will\nshare the costs of the trip, and al*\nready the necessary funds from Australia have been fully subscribed.\nThere will be a representative from\neach of the three governments aboard\nthe   Discovery.\nThe expedition will sail from Cape-\nTown for Enderby Land, whence the\nship will turn east and make her\nway slowly along the coastal area\nthrough the pack ice. The object of\nthe voyage is to make a survey of\nthis little known sector. It ls expected that the Discovery will spend\nthe whole of next summer ln the\nantarctic region, making for Perth or\nHobart   ln  the   tall.\nA moth plane, suitable for landing on Ice or water, is being taken\nfor short flights over the mainland.\nthough   Sir   Douglas   does   not   Intend\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Aug. 87\u2014(By\nPrank I. Welter. Associated Press Feature Writer)\u2014\u2014Uncle Sam has a very\nparticular   secret   about   his   navy.\nHe isn't telling anyone the cruising radius of his new 10.0000 ton battle cruisers or the range of thetr\n9-inch guns.\nTwo of them, the Houston and the\nNorthampton, will be launched simultaneously September 7: the first at\nNewport News, Va,, and the latter\nat   Qurney,   Mass.\nThe cruisers are the fourth and\nfifth of eight authorized in December,\n1034. The Pensacola. Salt Lake City\nand the Chester already have been\nlaunched. The Augusta. Louisville and\nthe Chicago are not yet completed.\nWhen they are done the eight will\nbecome division 5 of the scouting\nfleet operating from the Atlantic coast.\nJute, 1930, is the tentative date of\ncotrimission, with the Northampton\nas the division's flagsnip.\nBuilt under the terms of the Washington limitation of armament conference tbe new craft are Uncle Sam's only modern scout cruisers. Like similar\nships of Other naval powers, they are\nlimited to 10,000 tons displacement\nnnd eight-inch guns.\nIt le no secret they will make 32 7\nknots an hour and carry an airplane,\nnine 8-lnch guns, four 5-inch antiaircraft guns and 3 torpedo tubes\nBut, questions about the \"radius\nof action\"\u2014the distance they wlll\ncruise without refueling\u2014get no official  answer.\"\n\"Here,\" says Uncle Sam, \" ls a\nprivate publication with an unofficial list of sll the war craft In the\nworld. It says they will cruise 13,000\nmiles at 15 knots an hour without\nrefueling.   \"\u2022\nWith only two stacks for the oil\nburners and stripped of all except m\nsentlsl rigging, they radiate an atmosphere   of  cruising   efficiency.\nThey are far superior to th* ten\n7,6000-ton cruisers of the Omaha type\nnow afloat. These have a cruising\nradius of 10,000 miles, have only 6-\nipch guns and 3-lnch anti-aircraft\nguns.\nOnly six of the 22 old-type cruisers built between 1890 and 1908,\nare ln use snd they are not combatant ship now. By June. 1930. Uncle Sam will hsve 18 cruisers. Two\nmore laid down under the 1929 naval\nprogramme are being constructed In\nprivate yards at Camden, N. J., anc\nputney.   Mass.\nAMKRK'AN   LKAUl K\nW.\nPhiladelphia           86\nNew   York 70\nSt.  Louts 65\nCleveland 03\nDetroit   57\nWashington      58\nChicago      40\nBoston         43\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\nLEGAL NOTICES\nI,\nPCt.\n8;>\n.tm\n5(1\n.583\n57\n.833\n58\n.521\n55\n.467\n55\n.45PI\n75\n40J\nHi)\n.350\nRuled Forms\nThe Daily News Bindery and Job Department\ncarries a large stock of\nstandard ruled forms such\nas ledger leaves, payroll\nsheets,  synoptics,  etc.\nSpecial forms ruled to\norder promptly\nTh* Daily News\nJob Dept.\nOpen for Inspection\nThat makes the selection of the\nhome you consider purchasing an\neasy matter\u2014plenty of time today to\nvisit the property and make a careful inspection\nLocal real estate dealers descrilie\ntheir listings in the Classified Real\nEstate Ade\u2014and specify those homes\nthat are \"Open for Inspection.\"\nRead these offers; then spend a\npleasant day in looking over the\nhouses themselves.\nThe Daily News\nNOTICE   OF   INTPATION\nTO   APflY   TO   LBArtB\nLAND\nIn Kelson Land Recording District\nof Kootenay District antf situate tn\nKootenay River four miles west of\nNelson and adjoining Lots 10436 and\n3870.\nTake notice that West Kootenay\nPower and Light Company Umlted\not Rossland. B. C.. occupation Producers of Electrical Energy, intends to\napply 1*t lease of the following described lands; Commencing at a post\nplanted 1818 chains due north of\nIron Post Number 28 as shown on a\nplan filed ln the Land Registry Office\nin the City of Nelson as number 828-\nD; thence N 51 degrees 4l* W 17.008\nchains, more or less, to the northeast\ncorner of Parcel \"A\" of Lot 10428.\nKootenay District, as shown on explanatory plan IfO, 28095-1: thence\nIn a so-\u00bbtherly direction and following high water mark on the westerly\nbank of the Kootenay River to a point\ndistant 2.73 chains downstream from\nthe soi >th east corner of said Lot\n10426: thence 8 59 degrees ST E.\n10.867 chains to high water mark\neasterly bank of thc Kootenay River;\nthence northerly and following high\nwater' mark of the Kootenay River\nto point of commencement. Saving\nand excepting the two islands -<h*s-\nignated an Lots 14243 and 14244: containing 22 acres more or less.\nWBST    KOOTENAY\nPOWER    AND    LK1HT\nCOMPANY.   LIMITED\nBy C. B. SMITH.\nSecretary-Treasurer\n(.OYEKNMFNT   OF   PROVINCE  Of\nBRITrsn^COl.tMTlIA\nvonc nn THrt Men went toi the\nNOTICE   TO CONTRACTORS\nKiMslHiiU-trull    DlHtrlH\n'avrng   of    Tralt-Rosiland    Rcmd    from\nRusBland   (ity   Limits   tt>   Warfleld.   &U\nmites  approximately.\nSealed tenders, endorsed \"Tender\nor paving. Trail-Rossland Road\" will\nye received by tbe Minister of Public\nWorks up to 13 o'clock noon of Wed-\niccday the 4th dav of September.\ni020.\nPlans. Speciflcationse. etc, may be\nibtained from the undersigned, or at\n.he Public works Office. Court House.\n\/ancouver, on payment of a deposit of\nTen (10> Dollars, which will be refunded en the return of the plans.\n>tc,   in   nood   condition.\nEach tender must be accompaniied\nby an accepted bank chepue of a\nshattered bank of Canada, made payable to the Minister of .Public Works\n'or the sum of Forty-five Hundred\n(4500 > Dollars, which shall be f or-\n'eited if the tenderer declines to enter\n,nto contract when called upon to\ndo   BO.\nThe cheque of the successful tenderer will be retained as security for the\nlue and faithful performance of the\nwork till the satisfactory completion\nM   the   Contract.     .\nTenders will not be considered unless made out on the forms supplied\nand slirned with the actual signature\n:f   the   tenderer.\nThe lowest or any tenderer, will not\nnfccssarlly    be    accented.\nTenders will be opened In public\nit 3:30 P. M. Wednesday. 4th September.   1929.\nD     PHILIP\nDeputy  Minister  and\n\u25a0 Public   Works   Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works\nParliament    Buildings,\nVictoria, B. C,\n19th  August.   1929.\n\u25a0JLSSSU\n(i)\nPIERSON\u2014At the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital to Mr. and Mrs. A.\nPlerson. Carbonate street, August 28.\na  aon.\nHELP,WANTER _\n-il\u00a3?\nWANTED\u2014Boy 1\u00a9 years for mailing.\nDatly News. Applv Mr. Brown, pressroom, (10288)\nWANTED\u2014Girl for alt around kitchen\nwork.   Apply   Balfour Beach Inn.\n(10318)\nWANTKD     EXPERIENCED    GIRL\u2014For\ngeneral   housework.   Apply   Mrs.   B.\n}.   Anderson.   Trail.   B.   C.       (10333)\n^IjnjA_TION8_   WANTED\nJill\nHOTEL      PORTER\u2014Desires      position.\nBox   10919   Dally   News. (10319)\nWANTED HOTEL WORK\u2014Br experienced chamber maid. Apply, Nelson\nDally   News.   Box   10164. (10164)\nMOTHER WITH CHILD WANTS\u2014\nSituation. Wlll work for small salary.\nPhone   6l\u00bbL. (10244)\nn iAMMih.li    KaMims\u2014wanted\u2014    (Ml\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014Furnlahed apartment, three months. Three or four\nrooms, tens. No family. Box 10232\nDally News. (10223)\nROOM   AND   BOARD\n(17)\nWANTED ROOM AND BOARD\u2014Central location. Phone 8. S. Herod.\nBank of Montreal. Phone 20. (10249)\nHOt'NEK   TOR   RENT\n(21)\nFOR RENT\u2014Seven  room house.  Apply\n(10264)\n614  Vernon  Street.\nFOR   SALB   OR   BENT\njm.\nFOR   SALE\u2014423   SUlca, St..  four   bedrooms, sleeping porch, fire-place, hot\nwater heating, fruit treea. F. H. Orr.\n(10330)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   KALE\n.(23)\nFO\" SALE\u2014Horae about 1200 lb*.,\nAdam'* wagon, spring wagon, drag\nharrows, Atwater Kent Radio oom-\nplete, sideboard, chalra, rugs, etc.\nBrocklngton,  Slocan  Park.      (10206)\nFOR SALE\u2014Seven weeks old Yorkshire pigs at five dollars and fifty\ncent* each. F. O. B. Nakusp. Oood\nstock. Apply to Gust M. Henke.\nNakusp,   B.   C.  (10207)\nONE ORADE JERSEY\u2014And one Orade\nAyrshire cow. to freshen within two\nweeka. Splendid milkers. J. D. Mac-\nDonell.   RR   1    Nelson. (10228)\nMISCELLANEOUS\nmOt\nLAMP   APT\nNotlrr   i,r   Intention   to   upply   to\nLrase   IjiiiiI\nIn the District of Kootenay Land\nRecording District of Neiaon. and\nFltl'.ated on the Northerly shore of\nKoctcnav Lake adlolnlag Lot 917.\nTake notice that Selwyn O. Blaylock of Trail. B. C. occupation Gen-\noial Manager of The Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company of\nCanada Limited Intends to apply for\na lease of the following described\nlands:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Intersection of the Northerly\nboundsrv of Block E of Lot 917 with\nthe Easterly boundary of the Government road through Lot 917; thence\nSoutherly following; the said Eaaterlv\nl.oundary of the Government road\neight hundred (800) feet more or leas\nto the Northwesterly corner cf Parcel\nassigned No. 1 of Block D ot Lot\n917: thence Easterly following the\nNortherly boundary of aald parcel\nBsslaned No. 1 of Block D of Lot 917\nnnd perductlon of same, 300 feet:\nthence northerly seven hundred feet\nmore or less to a point on the Un*\nof the northerlv boundary of Block E\nor Lot 917 produced Easterly 300 feet\nfrom the point cf commencement\nthence Westerly 300 feet to the point\nof commencement. Containing rive\nacres  more  or  less.\nSELWYN   GWILLYM   BLAYLOCK\nName  of  applicant   ln   full.\nDated  August 34.  1929.\n  110256)\nFor  Quality  In\nFUEL\nand Satisfaction In\nTRANSFER\nPHONE 106\nFor aale\u2014general purpose team of\nmares. Weight 2700 pounda. Price (260,\nIncluding harness and skidding outfit,\n.     WILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\n(10366)\nFor Printing\u2014\nPhone 144\nThe Daily News\nJob Dept,\nThat furniture you\ndon't need will sell if\nyou advertise it in The\nDaily. News classified\ncolumns.\nMiaCaXLANtOtia FOB SALB.\n,\u00a3\u25a052\nFOR SALE\u2014 Frultvale 10 acre wood\nblock, houae near depot, 2V. h. p.\nFairbanks Morse engine, dynamo.\nswitch board, amall engine for\npumping etc. Enamelled Iron bath\ntaol: wash-basin, sink with fittings,\nall good as new. Toilet and fitting*\nKurston stump puller, folding and\ncro**-cut, aaws. Corn grinder, hand\nseed drill, potato, planter, smolt\nbarrel churn, aeparator. cheese press,\ntwo cream shipping cans, glass show\ncase 6   ft.  by  2  ft.  6  In.,  etc.  0*0.\nCastle.  Frultval*.  B. C. (10369)\nFOR SALB\u20141-3 H. P. FalrbankB-Mora*\nga* engine good condition; 1000 ft.\neach, l and 2 Inch used Iron pipe,\ngood condition: IV, ton* 8 lb track\nrail; 2 centrifugal punps, 10 and 14\nIn.: 1 3by6 ft. galvanized tank,\nnew; l ball bearing 16 cu. ft. mln*\ncar. nearly new. Apply News Office\nBin   10283. (10263)\nHEINTZMAN PIANO\u20146378. Cash or\nterma. Writ* or oan Mason Sc Risch,\nWard   St. (10223)\nPOR SALE\u2014Uoyd Baby  Buggy. Apply\n706  Silica or Phone  347R.       (10229)\nFOR SALS\u2014Three barber chairs and\none revolving barber pole. Box 1154.\nNelson.\u00a3 (10181)\nFOR SALE\u2014Stelnway Piano, cost 61200.\nwlll sell for $400. Apply Box 10248.\nDally News. (10348;\nFOR  SALB\u2014Goderlech  Piano-case organ\nSood condition, beautiful tone. Cheap\n,PPly Dally News. Box 10343.\n.(lOBat)\nCANARIES FOR SALE\u2014 Rlngsrs Five\nDollars. Apply Mrs. Adam Grieve.\nFrultvale    B.    C. (10361)\nMBCELLANLOllg. ^WANTED\n(26)\nWANTED     TO     BORROW-63000     oh\nSood security. Answer P. O. Box 987,\ntelson. (10337)\nWANTED\u2014Soda Fountain and Ice\nCream, Parlor equipment must be\ncheap for caah. Box No. 10324\nDally  News. (10224)\nNOTICE TO FRUIT GROWERS\u2014We\nare In tha market for straight and\nmixed cars of fruit and vegetables\nahlp direct and save all handling\ncharge*, wire or write what you\nhav* to ahlp and prices. Regina\nPubllo Market. 10th and Broad ST.\nRegina. Sask. (10192)\nBU8INES8   OPPORTUNITIES\nj_2i\nCANDY STORE\u2014For aale ln Rlalto\nTheatre. Beet of fixture* Including\ntwo-hole Frigidaire and cabinet.\nWrite Box  10. Trail. (9987)\nPOR QUICK BALK AT A BIG SAO-\nrlflce. The Arrow Lake* Hotel known\nalso a* the Arrow Inn. 63000. Cash.\nApply Mrs. Jordan William*. Edge-\nwood. (9936)\nCHEAP FOR QUICK SALE\u2014Together\nor separately. Restaraunt equipment.\nIncluding two oven*, range, cash\nregister, stools, chairs, crockery, etc..\nall ln good condition. Apply Box\n10237   Dally   New*. (10337)\nLOST   AND   frPUND\n.sm.\nLOST\u2014Between   Cranbrook   and   Yahk\non Saturday. Kodak   In  leather case.\nApply Box 10252. Dally News.\n(10252)\nLOST\u2014Gentleman's square gold wrist\nwatch on black strap Under phone\n812L  or Dally News\u2014Reward.\n(10240)\nLOST TWO CALVES\u2014One bull calf\nS months old, white and darVT brown\nshe-calf brown. Notify Martin Mor-\nrla. Granite road, or Post Offlc*.\nTaghum (10260)\nClasalied Advertising Ratal\npar word each Insertion. In^^^^^H\nor machine capltala 5c a word. Twenty-1\nfive vet eent discount lf rata dally I\nwithout change ol copy for on* month I\nor more, where advertlsment ls set I\nout ln short Una* tk* charge 1* 1601\na line for Roman typ*. 20c for black- I\nface and 25c tor blackface capltala.\nMlAAttnum SIX!. It charged OOc.\nWant and Classified advertising \u2014\nOde and t half cents \u2022 word per lnaer-\ntlon. If paid ln advance te Der word ]\nper week, or 33V, ? oer word per month\nTransmit ada accepted only oa a\ncaah-ln-advanoe basts. Bach Initial |\nfigure, dollar sawn, et*.. counts a* on*\nword. Minimum 25c. If charged 60c.\nBirth Notice* and Soeta) Item*\u2014free.\nBUSINESS,    PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR*\nAmbulance Service\nprompt\nModern-Sedan Ambulance -\nand efficient 14-hour servloe.\nable price*.   Lady attendant.\nUndertaking   Co.   Phone   262   *.   I.\nHowell, proprietor. (9901)\nAccounting\n(9902)\nCHARLF.S F. HUNTER\u2014AUDITOR, McDonald Jam Bulldlnt.   Boat 1911, H*l-\nson,  B.  C. (9*08)\nAssayers\n*. W. WIDDOWHON, BOX A1108 Nelion\nB.   C.     Standard    western   charge*\n(9604)\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nJAMES H. DOYLE\u2014 Bailiff, Auction**?,\nNelson,   B.   C. (9905)\nChiropractors\nDB.  MIMUN. X-RAY,  CRANB1\nm\nDR.   GRAY,   GaJUR   BLK,   NEUON.\n(9907)\nDentists\nOR. O.  A. C.  WALLEY-Orlfttn  Block.\nNelson,   B.   O. (9908)\nEngineers\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014Land Surwyor* mining and Civil Bnglneer Kaalo. B. O\n(MM\n0.8. MEAD\u2014Mine Surveying and Aerial\nTram   Construction.     Kaalo,    B.   O.\n(8010)\nA.    H.    OREEN    CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly Green Broa., Burden Neiaon\nCivil   and   Mining    Engineer*\nB. a. Alberta and Dominion Und\nSurveyor*. (9911)\nFlorists\nQRLTZEI.LE'8    GREENHOUSE.    NelNm\nCut flower* and floral designs.\nMB)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\n(34)\nFor Sale\nLarge residence; good location; four\nlots. House consists of living room,\ndining room, kitchen, bathroom, four\nbedrooms and basement. Main part of\nbouse   on   cement   foundation.\nPrice( splendid value)  $2500.00\nC. F. McHardy\nReal Batata\nPhone 135\nInsurance\nNeiaon B.C.\nPOR SALE\u2014On Cemetery Road, two\nacre*, level, ln hay and fruit, good\nsix room house, cement basement,\nlight, telephone, hot and cold water,\nhen houses to hold 600 birds, equip-\ned with electric light, cow stable.\nPrice reasonable. Apply Mr*. A. J.\nCrack,   Innlsfall.   Alberta.      (10180)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\u2014Wanted\u2014(45)\nA Basis for Settlement\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nWANTED   MOTOR   LAUNCH\u2014Muat   l\u00bb\na snap. Apply Dally News.      (10248)\nWM,  S.  JOHNSON\u2014 __ * -_\nPhone 843 Cut Flower* Potted Plant*\nand  Floral  Emblem*. (9921)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nB. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estat*, Iniuranoa\nRentals. Next Hlpperson Hardwar*,\nBaker atreet. (9923)\nU.  E. DILIa\u2014INSURANCE\nFABM AND CITY PBOPEBTT\n508  Ward St., (9914)\nD. Jl. McFaiiand, Real Estat*,\nInsurance, OaaL Board of Trad* Boom*\nTelephone 40.    P. O. Bog 24.\n(9911)\nPhotograpKZrs\nGEORGE A. MEEBES\u2014Artlrt and Photographer.   716   Baksr   St. (9917)\nTransfer\nBERTRAM  THORPE'S TRANSFER\u2014\nPhone* 684 and 377 L 3     \t\n__~*     (9918)\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014 Baggage.   Coal\nand   wood.   Phone   106. (9919)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON \u2014 Baker St., Carpenter and\nJoiner.    Bash, and Hardwood.\n\u2022MSO)\nFor   Job   Printing   phone 144, The\nDally Newa Job Department.\nBy Weetover  ,\n TBE ffiSGN DMLY NEWST THURSDAY MORNING, 'AUGUST 29,029\nPats!\na i     .       I\nHEAR TORY\nCHIEF, CRANBROOK\nti. R. B; Bennett Creeted by\n|Packed House; Leaves Good\nImpression\nlOBANBROOK,\" a C., Aug. 38\u2014A\naudltorlnm greeted the first ap-\n\u2022rance tn Cranbrook of Hon. R. B.\nfennett. leader of the opposition ln\nps)   Dominion   house,   at   his  meeting\non Monday.\n[The Impression left hy the opposl-\nleader le that the Conservative\nVn\\y has chosen as Its leader a man\n~ '^outstanding ability as a speaker.\nPts exposition of the platform and\noUcies of his party, muoh the same\n_. that which has been given at other\nkootenay centres, was clean cut and\nloroefui arid held the Interest of hla\npearers  till   the   last   word.\nDoctor    Rutledije,    president    of    the\n;   hbrook   ctty     ConBervatlve    \u2022assocl-\ntttota, acte)l as chairman of, the meet-\n|ng,  welcoming the  leader to the district  and  also the  audience,  many  of\nwhom' had   driven   long   distances   ln\nbrder   that  they   might   hear  the   distinguished speaker. He referred  to Mr.\nlennett's   having   oeen   more   or   less\nneighbor,   haying   lived    for   many\nbears ln the city of Calgary, and said\nthat the people of Cranbrook and district ' are following with' Interest the\npuNlc   career   of   the   speaker   of  tka\nevening. He aald that Conservatives\nthroughout Canada had been pleased\nwith Mr. Bennett's appointment as\nleader of his Majesty's loyal opposition, feeling that It had bean a wise\nmove, and that now, having heard\nthe speaker In many parte of Canal\nda, jjiey were mon? than, ever convinced as to tha wisdom of the choice.\nHe- advised the audience to consider\nwell the policies outlined by the\nspeaker and in accordance with their\nconsidering to mark their ballots at\nthe nest  general  election.\nSlocan City Notes\nSLOCAN PARS, B.C., Aug. 3*.\u2014III.\nand Mrs. P. Jonea and children ot\nTrail motored, to Slocan Park to spend\na few days with Mr*. Crebbln. On their\nreturn trip they were accompanied by\nMiss Alice Nichols who 1* spending\na week with HU* Beatrice Damn* of\nCastlegar.\nMr. and Mia. c. S. Brockineston and\nMr. and Mrs. A. Smith attended th*\nmeeting at South Slocan, Hon. R. B\nBennett being speaker.\nGREATEST UPSETS\nIN DECADE, GOLF\nTBT OEVEIAND\nVeteran Lady aad 16-Year-Old\nMiss Shake Western Tour-\nnoment Play\nSan Pranslco,   As   Seattle,   4.\nLos   Angele*.    8;    Portland,   3.\nSacramento,   3;   Hollywood,   14.\nOakland,   4;   Mission*,   6.\nHere's Stomach-joy For You.\nLight, Flavory, Easily Digested\nSHREDDED\nHEAT\nWith all the bran\nof the whole wheat\nWhen fussy appetite* are hard to please, these crisp, oven*\nbaked, flavory shreds of whole wheat give zest to the meal'\nand energy for work or play. Delicious with whole milk and\nfruits.\nMIE eeonomle* made\n' possible through  tha\nproilutlioaa at nn than a\nmillion Frigidaire* hav*\nmade Frigidaire prion so\nlow that every model I* sn\noutstanding value aad represent* \u25a0 tremendous earing to the buyer. Frigidaire\noperate* from individual electric plants or central\nstation current.     Let a* give you a Frigidaire\n' anm- Robinson Electric <H. C, Limited, Vancouver-Victoria\nColumbia  Electric   Limited,  Klmberley-Nelson,   B.   0.\nL. s. McKlnnon, Special Representative\nFRIGIDAIRE\n( Oh* QUIET automatic JZetyetolor)\n Swk\nYour Own j\ntt\nLOME - MADE mustard pick-\nle\u00bbr* . . , how proudly you\n\u25a0how them to him . . . and with\nwhat satisfaction you serve them\nto your guests!\nThere is a taste and a tang to the\nhome-made kind that you can\nnever buy. Put in just the ingredients that everybody likes\n'. . 9 add a touch of COLMAN'S\nfine old English Mustard \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nand you have something distinctively your own, something\nto give added individuality and\nenjoyment to meals throughout\nthe year.\nMill BIUSB\naaaaak    1    plat   aat\n\u00abfa*pp\u00abd  aaw\u00ab  rmt\nFinhii lit\nwaisw fair 1\nDrain wall,\nWM    w\u2014.,   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0UTS]\ntytswsti* and aaa, raa\nwhlt* KitUii.\nr.hot>\u00ab-pT.t\u00abJTas>d\n1 quart af\n,__ll       \u00abf       >AS\u00bbPpiSa\n1   enaArt   \u2022)   mXt\nAkatu, 4 tataU-\naaACAoaraua of .wit. 4\nt\u00abtal\u00ab*a>ooafwl* af\nCnlmna't Maa.au*.\n1 taba\u2014paaawafial or\nW\u00abimWI\u00abauM1\nW  H *aa*sal   ml\n\u25a0Aj*.r. Lm* tSAnt\n.... alajht ta a e.a~\n\u2022taJ qlaaaaa.1 waa.\nrMk ha .iwtS.,1\nInrn wrmsmln, tk*\nensleis    6m. m    an*\nfc\u00a3J\u00a3a,*--\nFREE \u2014 Senri for a copy of dot keek Ussstsf mriity rsscipea\nfor smttfy Hvndrrfctl pickle* and reUses.\n\u20acMMJ&iS MUSTARD\nM\nAid* Digestion\nCoknan-Keen (Canada) limited, low .Aniherst St,, Montreal\nCLBVBLAaND, O., Aug. 28-Mn, Lm.\n(Fighting Mlkei Mid., of Chicago, who\nhM b\u00ab*n whacking golf ball* around\nfor almost a quarter of a century and\n10-yttw did Rena Nelson, her little\ncompatriot, shook the women's western\ntournament at Mayfleld today.\nMra. Mlda conquered Mra. Leona\nPresaler, Los Angelea, who was seeking\nher third straight crown, 2 and 1,\nwhile Mlae Nelson, the \"baby*' or the\nfield, halved the march or Virginia Van\nWle, Chicago's first ranking golfer.\nThe victorias were the greatest up*\nseta ln almoat a decaaT of play in tbe\ntournament. Favorites oame through in\ntbe other matches. Mrs. Hill defeated\nMay Johnson, Chicago, 4 and 2. Mrs.\nLifur who upset Virginia Wilson, Chicago, in the first round yesterday,\nswamped Virginia Vilas, Chicago, 7\nand 8.\nTORONTO SWIM\nIS POSTPONED\nSecond   Postponement   Caused\nby Weather; Not Causing\nany Trouble\nTORONTO, Aug. 28\u2014Adverse offshore winds and an overcast sky which\naent the temperature of Lake Ontario\nwaters down to about 5? degrees, today caused Elwood A. Hughes, sports\ndirector of the Canadian National Exhibition, to postpone for the aecond\ntime, the men's IB-mile swimming marathon, if weather conditions are favorable, the swim will be held Friday,\notherwise lt will be further postponed\nuntil  probably  Tuesday  of  next week.\nLate today, Mr. Hughes announced\nwater temperatures oyer the course\nrnnged from 67 to 62 degrees. Rules\nof the marathon specify temperatures\nmust average 58 degrees or higher the\nday pf the swim and as weather forecasts predict southwest winds and probably storms Thursday, It was decided\nto postpone the race until Friday.\nTrainers and critics said these postponements wlll not have any effect on\nthe physical  condition of entrants.\nTo Ruth Towers, the marathon's\nlone female entrant, the postponement\nhas proved a great help, she said today.\nShe added that Bhe did not feel the\neffects from her exertion In the women's swim held last week, but admitted every 24 hours delay was allowing her time to fully  recuperate.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO, B. C. Aug. 2ft\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Qeorge Burkltt and son are the\nguesta   of   Mr.   Burkltt's-parents.\nMrs. Jack Cadden has returned from\na   visit   to   her  parents  in   Vancouver.\nJ. Paterson, G. Oaasells and E. E.\nSchiller of Nelson were visitors in\nKaslo   yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Cfrosscup, Charles\nA. Wallace and Charles Hendricks of\nSeattle are spending a few days ln\nthe   city.\nO, D. Thompson or New Denver was\na city visitor recently.\nIra Tombough has returned from a\nweek  end  visit  to Neison.\nK. C. Ward was down from the\nSturgla   Creek   mine  Tuesday.\nJohn Stubbs was a Nelson visitor\nrecently.\nHazeldean Nelson of New Denver\nis the guest of her grand-parents Mr.\nand Mrs. Burkltt.\nMrs. D. B. Jonee and children of\nTrail are the guests of Mrs. JOrie'a\nmother Mrs.  Clark.\nMrs. Archie Doharty was a Visitor to\nNelson  Monday.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH, B C.. Aug. 38\u2014Miss\nIsabel McLlllan was the guest ot Mr.\nand Mrs. J. B. Fletcher for a lew\ndays.\nAmong- rlsltors to Ainsworth recently were Mr. and\" Mrs. j. Ramsden,\nE Steel and party and Mr. and Mr*.\nEd Murphy of Nelson and Harry Ab-\nb*y and Tom Hawes of Kaslo.\nMr. andl Mrs. J. Bums and family\nwer* her* recently.\nMr. McDonald of Nelson ls staying\nhere.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Aug. 3S\u2014Butter, cheese\nand egg* firmer.\nCheese\u2014Finest western 19; finest\neastern*  18%.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized 38. to\n3\u00bb\nBars, storage extra* 42; storag*\nfirst* 38; storage seconds 33c; fresh extras 63  to BS;  fresh firsts 48.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Aug, 28\u2014Copper steady\nelectrolytic   spot  and   future   18,\nIron\u2014Steady  and  unchanged.\nTin\u2014Easy   spot   46.12;   futurea  46.82.\nLead\u2014Steady, spot New York 6.75;\nEast St.  LOUIS 6.55 to 6.57.\nZinc\u2014Steady, East St. Louis spot\nand   futures   6.80.\nAntimony\u2014887.\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nWeek-End\nReturn Fares\nNelson- Procter-\nBalfour\n81.28\nOn sale Saturday end Sunday,\ngood to return on or befort Monday following.\nJ. S. CARTER,\ni>. r. A.\n.Sell   livestock   through   The\nDaily News Want Ads.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPIO,   Aug 28\u2014Oraln  quotations:\nWheat\u2014      Open High    Low Cloaj*\n154 184       151% lit**\nDec 188 188       151 151H\nMay     IM* .148(4   IM* 187(4\nOata\u2014\nfe    \u00ab\u00bb *t%    *t%    tt*\nMay 11**) T!i4     71 71*\nOct     69* 70        88* 88*\nBarley \u2014\nOct.         78 18*     78* lot*\nDue     Tf 77 \u00ab\u00ab      T*\\\nMay         83 83 81*     81*\n\u2022law\u2014\nOtt.         7*% 78*      78*      TS*\nD*c     T7 77*     7\u00ab* 76*\nFlax\u2014\nOct. 388 15*\nBee. 261\nMar 361\nRye\u2014\nOct 10\u00bb* 110*    108* 108\nDec       113 112       111* 111*\nMar      117     ' TIB*    117 117*\nOash   wheat   No. 1   northern 111*;\nNo. 3  northern   148*;   No. 8  northern\n146*; No.'4 187*; No. 5 133*; N*. 8\n102*; feed 88; track 131*; acreernnga\n89 par ton.\nATHLETIC STARS\nGATHER AT BANFF\nCanadian    Track    and    Field\nChampionships Will be the\nClimax to Activities\nKID CHOCOLATE\nMAL SINGER\nBATTIIT0N1GHT\nExpect   50,000   to   See   First\n\"Natural\"' of Season at\nNew  York\nNEW YORK, Aug. M.\u2014Two sparkling kids, without a title between them,\nbut packed with the stuff of which\nchampions are made, wlll all but fill\ntha polo grounds tomorrow night for\nthe first \"natural\" of the outdoor season.\nOne Is Al Singer, fast deadly punching, Jewish boy from the Bronx, who\nknocked out Andre Routis, the featherweight ' title holder, In his last Important match. The other Is the ebony\nboater from Cuba. \"Keed\" Chocolate.\nThey-* are scheduled to box 12 round*\nat  136%   pounds.\nWagering on the match ls believed\nto have reach 1500,000 with Singer a\nbit favored at 7 to 6. A crowd of\n50,000 probably will pay $200,000 or\nmore to see the battle.\nThe patent leather \"Keed\" had defeated Fidelia Barba, Bushy Qraham\nand Vlnai Oregorlo for his outstanding\nvictories.\nBANFF, Alta., Aug. 2$.\u2014Domlnoted\nby the slight figure of Percy Williams,\ngreat Vancouver sprinter, the Canadian\ntrack and field championships will be\ndecided in this pleturesque setting In\nthe Rocky mountains on Labor Day.\nSeptember   2.\nThe meet will be the climax to the\nseason's athletic activities In the Dominion. Last year lt was overshadowed by the Olympic Games, being a\ngigantic try-out for the Olympiad, with\ntrack events in metres, as is the mle\nevery four years. The track events on\nLabor Day will again be In yards.\nWilliams possibly will be running\nbetter than ever at Banff. This 21-\nyear-old*, athlete, a world figure since\nhe captured the Olympic sprinting\ncrown last year both at 100 and 200\nmetres, equalled world's record time\nfor the first time last month. At\nVancouver In July he equalled 9 3-6\nseconds for 100 yards ln a preliminary of this event. The track was\ncovered with Inches of loose dirt.\nThe day after equalling the world's\nrecord, Williams raced the 100 yards'\nfinal ln 0 4-5, to beat Eddie Tolan of\nDetroit, United States champion by\ninches, with Frank Wykoff, another\nUnited States star, pressing closely.\nWilliams will not faoe Tolan at Banff,\nbecause the \"midnight expreea\" has\ngone to Europe; and whether or not\nWykoff   will   be   here   1b  doubtful.\nWhat records will be broken, lf any?\nSeven Canadian marks were lowered\nln the Intense competition for Olympic places last year. This season three\nmore Canadian marks have been\nlowered, though the new marks have\nnot yet received official sanction\nthrough   the   regular   channels.\nAthletes will some from all parts\nof the Dominion for the meet. The\nstrongest team it expected from Hamilton Olympic Club. While the Ontario branch of the Amateur Athletic\nUnion of Canada was hampered ln\nappointing tbe provincial representatives, by lack of ample funds, the\nOlympic club of Hamilton has developed into the greatest body of its\nkind in the Dominion and win undoubtedly send some of Its stars by\nprivate means lf official inclusion Is\nnot possible.\nCanada's stars of the track and field\nwlll be all the better, as demonstrated\nat sectional meets, for the experience\nafforded at Amsterdam last year. They\nwill have an eye on the British Empire\nGames to be held at Hamilton next\nyear, though this event has no official connection with the Banff meet.\nDoral Pilling of Cardston, Alta., will\nbe on hand for the Javelin throw, in\nwhich he is expected to retain his\nlaurels. He holds the Canadian record\nof 202 feet 4 V, inches, made last year\nat Hamilton. Alex Munro of Toronto,\nwho set the previous Canadian high\nJump record, beaten reoently at Vancouver, wlll undoubtedly be Included\nIn Ontario's quota. Like Pilling and\nWilliams, Munro was at Amsterdam.\nAnother Olympic Canadian, Vic Plckard of Hamilton and the University of\nPennsylvania, will probably be here\nfor the pole vault.\nStrang competition will be afforded\nin the track events above 100 yards,\nthough the line-up for the century\nagainst Williams ls shrouded ln doubt.\nAbove this distance there ls a fine\nclass to select from, including Johnny\nFltzpatnck of Hamilton, Oeorge Hester\nof Hamilton, Henry Warren of Vancouver ond others. The three named\nwere  all  at  Amsterdam.\nFor 440-yarda James Ball of Winnipeg is an outstanding entrant, holding the Canadian record and championship. Phil Edwards, of the Hamilton Olympic club and New York, possibly wlll be here. He will have recovered from the injury to hia foot\nsuffered ln the Ontario meet early ln\nAugust. W. J. Montabone ot Montreal.\nS. B. Glover of Edmonton, F. W. Mac-\nBeth of Hamilton and W. A. Wilson of\nMontreal are other outsanding 440-\nyard men.\nJack and Pete Walters of Toronto,\nalong with Ben Little ot Winnipeg, A.\nDoherty of Montreal and D. Orlffln of\nMamilto nare the Canadian stars in\nthe long distance runs, up to a- mile.\nMcBain Notes\nMcBAIN LAKE, B. C, Aug. as\u2014Mrs.\nJohn McLeod one of th* officials ot\nthe* International Coal and Coke Co\nof Coleman Alta.. with Mr*. Mcl>od\nand their two daughter and twin sons\nwere week-end guests of Mr. and Mr*.\nAlfred  Cummlngs  at  Amberlow  Lodge.\nMUs Catherine Wilson of Wlllsw\nLodge Intend* leaving tht* week for\nVancouver wher* she will enter the\nSacred Heart Convent for the fall\nsemester. She will be accompanied to\nthe Coaat by her mother Mra. Stafford\nWllaon\nMr. and Mr*. Robert Potter and son\nHerbert returned to Cranbrook on\nSunday after spending th* summer at\ntheir  cottage  \"Pine  Lodge\".\nMr. Darrold Varner who haa been\nsummering at McBaln Lake ha* returned to his  home  tn Cranbrook.\nMrs. 3. Hewer* and family of Pernle who have beer, oocuplng on* of\nthe Rosen cottage* for the paat month\nIntend moving back to Pernle Thursday.\nMiss Mary Currle of pernle Is spending a few days at McBaln Lake thl*\nw*\u00abk th* guest of Mu* Virginia\nCummlngs.\nUnion Ranks Not\nLoyal, Australia*\nto Arbitration\nCANBERIA, Australia, Aug. 28\u2014Hon.\nJ. G. Latham, federal attorney general\ndeclared in parliament today, there was\nno loyalty to the principle of arbitra\ntlon in the trades union ranks of Australia, He pointed out the timber workers precipitated their recent strike\nagainst the award of the arbitration\ncourt. He was speaking on the bill to\nrepeal the Commonwealth conciliation\nand arbitration acts and industrial\npeace acts, ln connection with the\nforthcoming abolition of the Australian\ncourt of arbitration.\nProcter Notes\nPEOCTER, B.C.. Aug. 38.\u2014P. Q.\nMacLean of Nelsod spent Monday in\nProcter.\nUlss J. Manlon and Donald and\nOlive MacLead ef Procter spent a\nday in Neiaon.\nK. Dixon of Rossland spent the day\nin Procter.\nO. P. Melrose of Nelson spent Monday ln Procter.\nRobert Wilbur of Procter apent Tuesday   in   Neiaon.\nMiss Cherrle Sewell and Mlse Edna\nJohnson spent tho week-end In\nNeiaon.\nP. Caverblll of Victoria apent Monday   in   Procter.\nD, MacNalr of Nelson was a Procter vudtor on Monday.\nMiss Elizabeth Sewell of Vancouver\nwho has been visiting her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Sewell hu left for \"her\nhome.\nRosie Severn of Trail spent the weekend ln Procter visiting her parents\nMr. and Mrs. H. Severn who are camping   here,\nMr. and Mrs. D. Male of Nelson spent\nthe week-end ln Procter.\nP. CorrlB of Trail spent the weekend  ln  Procter.\nLawrence Smilllle spent Monday ln\nNelson.\nNancy Severn of Nelson spent the\nweek-end ln Procter visiting her parenta.\nW. Rigby of Trail motored to Procter\non Sunday.\nFernie Quotes\nFERNIE. Aug. 28-^J. 8. Fernie and\nsons, John and William of Jacksonville Florida, who have been guests\nof Mr. F. C. Lawe have left for the\nTurner Valley oil fields by motor. They\nwere accompanied by Mr. Lawe who\nwill spend the week-end In the oil\nmetropolis.\nECZEMA CAUSED\nMIPPJUN\nOn fingers. Lasted Tea\nYears. Cuticura Healed\n\"When I waa two vaara old ecse-\nma broke oot In a rath between my\nfingers snd caused roach pain. My\nfingers were swollen and Inflamed..\nThe Itching and burning caused roe\nto scratch, which made lt worse. I\nloat sleep on account of R.\n'* Tbe rouble lasted about ten years\nbefore we began using Cuncnia Soap\nand Ointment. After one week's use\nit looked b-tter, and after ualng three\ncakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes\nof Cuticura Ointment I was completely healed.\" (Signed) Mlas .Eileen\nCavansugh, Enterprise. Ont- Jone\n3.1928.\n\"> S-tly on Cuticura Soap and Ointment to keep your skin clear.\nBow SV- OtntiMrit \u00bb *nA 50c  Tmleoin Be. InU\n\u2022vtt-Twhen.   SmhU t-cti ft**.   AddrtM Cnm-\ntoWit j. r. win nuiijiij it\u2014%w*. mum ui\n\u25a0V Ci-ticiira Ska* ing Stick 24c\nMn,    A.    Merrlfleld    and\nMary returned to their home l\nafter    spending    the    past   \u25a0<\nRoaaland.\nMn. J. Karn of Kaslo spem\nin   Procter.\nMlsa Mildred Twlss of Kasl\nhen on Monday.\nt__t_t\\*J\nI our vacation start* th*\nmoment your Anchor-\nDonaldson Matter-at-\nArnsa salutes you at the\ngangplank.    Thi* la tb*\nfront door of Scotland ;\nyou can already fael that\nvery gracious atmosphere\nwhich you will find again\nin the fin* old home* of\nScotland.   And dignified,\nquiet, yet friendly service.\nSail Anchor - Donaldson I\n10% Reduction, lak* advantage\nof tbe 10% reduction on roumi-\ntrip far**, available on Cabin\nclaas accomodation, when sailing from Montreal after August\n15th, and returning altar October 15th.\nBook through The Canard Stum\nShip Co., Limited, 622   HasHnts\nSt. W., Vancowm iTel. Seymtmr\n3648-9), er any steamship agent\n\/Mlatyfefflaesrram Montraa;\nland Quebec) to Irasaad,\nSesHsnc) snd England in\nconjunction with Cunsrd\nANCHOR\nDONALDSON\nN*-s_^ LINE\nCabin. TourM Third CaMn and Third Cass*.\nWhipped cream desserts at plain milk cost\n.TKcttsAA niajcci\nIsn't that interesting news! Just think\nof ail the delicious\nHufty Invariant and\ncharlotte* and creams that you can\nhavt, without a bit of expensive whipping cream!\nThis is what you do. Buy a few\ncant of Carnation Milk. Take off the\nlabels, put the cans in a pan of water\nand boil the water live minutes. Let\nthe cans cool, then put them in the\nrefrigerator to get thoroughly chilled.\nWhenever you want a dessert with\nwhipped cream as a basis, simply open\na can of Carnation, pour the milk into\na chilled bowl, add y, teaspoon gelatine\n(dissolved) to cup of milk\u2014ana whip!\nCarnation makes wonderful desserts,\nrich and smooth and creamy. It has a\ndouble portion of cream, you know,\nbroken up into the finest particles so it\nstays distributed all through the milk,\nlta richness and fine texture make candies and ice creams, cream sauces and\nsoups, puddings and cakes exceptionally line-teitured and delicate.   And\nwhen you think that thit pure whole\nnalk\u2014evaporated for convenience and\nsterilized for safekeeping\u2014costs only\none-third as much aa whipped cream,\nyou will surely want to use it for all\nyour cooking.\nSend for free Cook Book. Address\nCarnation Milk i?roductsCo., Limited,\n134 Abbott Street, Vancouver, EC\nCarnation Chocolate\nCharlotte\nIH Ukd. gelatine.2 tbsp. cold water,\n)a\\ cup sugar, l>{cupsCarnationMilk,\ny* cup water, 1 square bitter chocolate,\nii tsp. vanilla, fi dozen lady ringers.\nSoak granulated gelatine in 2 tbsp.\ncold water 5 minutes. Melt shaved\nchocolate in double boiler, add sugar,\nit cup water and yi cup Carnation.\nLet cook 5 minutes or until smooth;\npour over gelatine and stir until dissolved. Wnencool, add vanilla. Whip\ncup Carnation which has been chilled\nfor a couple of hours, gradually add\nchocolate and gelatine mixture and stir\nuntil It begins to thicken.   When well\nthickened pour carefully into mold\nwhich has been lined with lady fingers.\nChill for hour or more. Turn out,\ncover with whipped Carnation and\ngarnish with maraschino cherries or\nnuts.\nCarnation Macaroon Dettert\n\\y, tbsp. gelatine, '.' cup water, 9\nmacaroons, crumbled, 11. cups Carnation Milk, 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten,\nyi cup sugar, 1 tsp. vanilla. Soak\ngelatine 8 minutes in \u25a0< cup water\nmixed with yi cup Carnation. Scald\ni's cup Carnation diluted with H cup\nwater; pour over slightly beaten egg\nyolks to which the sugar has been added; cook in double boiler until mixture\nthickens slightly (about 3 minutes);\npour over gelatine and stir until dissolved. When cool, add vanilla. Whip 1\ncup Carnation which has been dulled\nfor a couple of hours, gradually add\ngelatine mixture and stir until it begin\nto thicken. Add crumbled macaroons\nand pour into mold. Chill for hour or\nmore.   Serves 5.\nRich for Desserts\nCarnation Milk is doubly rich in cream.\nIt makes the most delicous desserts. It\nis dependable, too. Pure, whole milk,\nsterilized for safekeeping. You'll find\nit more convenient, more economical\nthan milk in any other form.\n(See recipes tbove)\nPRODUCED\nIN CANADA\nfrom\nContented Cows\nton the label meant EVAPORATED MILK of highett quality\nsac\n=\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY MORNING, 'AUGUST 29,1929\nSCHOOL SUPPLIES\nWe have them\n6c Scribblers end Exercise Books.\n10c Scribblers and Bxerctae Books.\n16c ataercise Books.\n36c Exercise Books.\nSOc Exercise Books.\nCltne's Science Note Books and Refills\nReeve's water Colour*.\nReeve's Water Colour Brushes.\nReeve's Terrachrome Crayons.\nUacLean's Pen*.\nMacLean'a Pen Nlhe.\nDrawing Pads and Portfolios\nErasers, Rulers, Protractors.\nSet Squares, School Bags, etc.\nAll the prescribed Text Books.\nMANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\nDispensing Chemists\nCareful Service Prompt Delivery\nFOREST OFFICIALS\nTAKE ISSUE OVER\nLOG SLASH STORY\nAre Not Opposed to Slash Dis- ]\nposal by Proper Methods\nStates Official\nKILLED IN CRASH\nSTATE MR. LAMBERTS\nARGUMENTS DECADENT\nPresence of Slash Has  Little\nto do With the Starting\nof Fires They Say\nt\nSudden Service\nOur ability to give you lumber when\nyou need it.'\nTo load and deliver on short notice.\nAlways glad to sell\n\"One stick or a carload.\"\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nPhone 176 Stanley St.\nConsulted about the Hem in\nIssue of August ai in which A.\nLambert took issue with the forest service, officials of the Nelson office have\npointed out some important facta concerning slash burning that Mr. Lambert\nmay possibly have missed, or at least\ndid not mention.\nThe officials state tbat the forest\nservice ls not opposed .to slash disposal by proper methods, in support\nof which they point to their hundreds\nof timber sale contracts in nearly all\nof which slash disposal ls provided\nfor, often by controlled piling and\nburning. But lt should be noted,\nthat thetr method is by piling the\nslash ln compact piles and burning\nln auch a way that damage wlll not\nreault to young growth left standing\nNeither will there, be danger of the\nfires spreading farther than they\nshould, while at the tame time complete disposal la obtained.\nNo general rule for slash disposal\ncan possibly be made, the officials\nstate, unless the whole idea of forest\nmanagement for perpetual yield be put\naside, for the reason that every forest\nsite differs, in some degree, from\nevery other, making It imperative to\nconsider every Individual case on its\nmerits.\nAROl MKNTS   BASF.D   ON\nDECADENT   METHODS\nWhile Mr. Lambert argues from the\nparticular of his own Individual case\nand experience to the general rule\nof procedure, forest service officials,\nwhose experience covers many years\nand all conditions throughout' the\ncountry, and whose business is based\non study of such factors, reverse the\nprocess of reasoning, and, after finding\na condition that is general, apply it\nwhere possible to each Individual case.\na process much more likely to lead\nto good results.\nTo Illustrate this point officials point\nF\nALL IjOATS\nQ UR first showing of Fall Coats.\nThese come   in   the   Blin-Blin\nFrench  fabrics  trimmed   with  Male,\nMuskra'i, Lynx, Tersi&n Paw and American Oppossum.\nPriced from  S49 to S110\nA new shipment of Hits in Felts\nand Velvets.   Latest American styles.\nFrom  S4.\u00bb5 to S6.50.\n_n\/WU*i\/LW,M4J.g.,jm\nWard   St.   Opposite   Capitol   Theatre\nNelson News of the Day\nI^sor Day Dance Lakeside pavilion.  Monday.  September  2. (10370)\nDon't forget dance at Outlet Hotel,\nProcter. B. C, Saturday. 31. Brasch's\norchestra. (10287)\nMarvslCroeSrjnTnoted aviatrix, and\nair derby entrant, whose body was\nfound tn desert brush near WelltdV\nAriz., where har plane was reported\nto have dropped to earth ln a tall spin,\nMiss Crosson had recently established\nworld's altitude record for women of\n23,990 feet\nSOUTH POLE SHIP\nHAS STRANGE CARGO\nVessel \"Discovery\" on Way to\nAntarctic, Carries Research\nEquipment\nWANTED\u2014Plum*. Green Gages. Damsons snd Blackberries. McDonald\nJam Oo.\nU017B)\nINA U. STtatD\u2014Will relume piano-\ntort* teaching. Seotember 3rd at\n305  Victoria  Bt.  Telephone   190R.\n(10198)\n(Take QAdvanta_e of Our\nNatural (Beauty Spots\nGet on a street car and it will take you to\none of the finest parks in the interior. Clean,\nfine textured sand; pure, healthy swimming\nwaters. Tables and benches for picnickers.\nBoats for hire at reasonable rates.\nEnjoy yourself at\nLakeside Park\nDON'T HUtOKI .'THE YMIR FAIR\nWEDNESDAY Al'OrRT 28. DANCB IN\nEVENINO   GOOD   ORCHESTRA.\n(10211)\nKOOTENAY   LAWN   TENNIS\nASSOCIATION\nFifteenth   Annual   Tournament   Auk.\n31.   Sept.   1.   2..   Programs   of   events\non application to A. E. Whitfield, Box\n1045    nelson. (10203)\nSt. Joseph's Academy Reeidental and\nDay School Classes In primary,\nelementary, high and commercial education. PuJll's prepared for normal\nentrance and Matriculation examinations. Students ln muaic prepared\nfor the London College examin\"\" -~i*.\nOpening   date   Septmeber,   3rd.\nMRS. LAWRENcinScPHMaL\u2014Teacher\nof Pianoforte and voice production.\nPhone C58R. for appointment. Studios\n010  Hall  street. (10234)\nThe funeral of .the late Samuel\nWaters wlll be held Friday aftcraoon\nat 2.30 from the First Presbyterian\nChurch. (10241)\nMrs. N. Hagsrtv will resume her\nvocal and piano teaching after September 1st. Phone 215. (10250\nMrs. Weaver, teacher of Theory and\nPiano. Commencing term September 1.\nPhone  275Y. (109321\nPupils prepared for Toronto Conservatory  examinations. (10260)\nF. E. Wheeler. Teacher of Piano, has\nhad more successes with beginners\nthan any other teacher in Nelson.\nPhone   786. (10267)\nDon't forget the dances at the\nOutlet Hotel. Procter. B. C. Saturday\n31st.   Brafch's  Ocheetra.\nBand . Concert .New Band Stand.\nVernon Street   Tonight 8 o'clock.\nMM)\nWe wish to thank our friends nnd\nneighbors for their kindness during\nthe sickness and death of our motl er.\nMrs. Brlttin ..tonjpark and tor the\nbeautiful ..oral ou\u00abmi& IroTrT Tames\nHUI and family and Arthur, Qeorge\nind   Harold  Ronmark. (10271)\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe take this opportunity to thank\nMi our friends and neighbors for their\nkindness snd sympathy shown us in\nour sad bereavement In the loss of\nmy wife and our mother and also\nfor  the  beautiful   floral  tributes\nCHARLES   HOLMBERG\nMr.   and   Mra.   J.   LEARMONTH.\nWILLOW POINT FLOWER SHOW\nAND   CONCERT\u2014 Friday   Aukg.   30.\n(10254)\nRamsden Bros, advertisement, on\npage 4 certainly is noticeable for\nlower prices ln finishing up their\nsummer   sale. (102021\nCARD   OF   THANKS\nMrs. Bamber and family wish to\nexpress their appreciation to the staff,\nmatron. Doctors of the Kootenay Lake\nOeneral Hospital, and Oeorge r. Motion, for the many kindnesses shown\nto our late husband and father, also\nto all those who sent flowers.\n(10266)\nout that Mr. Lambert's statement that\na burning of tha slash, and lt is taken\nthat broadcast burning Is meant, because that was the only method used\n25 years ago, from whence Mr. Lambert takes hla example, lf applied generally, will do away with forest fires. Is\nIgnoring many very self-evident facts.\nFACTS    IUNOKKD\nPresence or absence of slash has little\nto do with the actual starting of flrea.\nThey are caused by lightning, by people\nwho are careless with fire in some\nform or other or by some Industrial\noperation. Witness the vast areas even\nclose to Neleon burned over 25, 50 or\n100 years agd. Slash could not have\nbeen the reason for them emphasised\nthe officials.\nFires often get into slash areas and\nundoubtedly are hotter and harder to\nhandle than otherwise, but officials\npoint out that broadcast burning does\nnot help the situation. Most logging\noperations In the Southern Interior\nleave actually more trees standing\nthan they take out. These are made\nup mostly of trees too small to be\nmerchantable, but which will grow\nto merchantable size and faster for the\nrelease from tha shade and competition of the larger trees logged. This fact\ncan be checked along many of our\nmain   roads.\nOn the other hanf lf broadcast\nburn is allowed to run through at\nsuch a time aa to allow efficient destruction of the slash it is quite\nevident and can be shown to many\nexamples that the young stand left ls\nkilled and Its many years' growth lost\nAgain, dead trees blow down with the\nwind and in a vety few years the area\nIs a worse fire trap than before, while\nno green growth remains. The officals\ntherefore point out that broadcast\nburning does not generally reduce the\nhazards nd doea cause very considerable\ndamage and that Is their main reason\nfor refusing to allow that method of\ndisposal.\nOFFICIALS   TAKE   IHHIT.\nWITH   OT1IKR   STATKMKNTS\nForest service officials take Issue with\nseveral other of Mr. Lambert's statements. For instance, that their reason for refusing to allow slash burn\nlng is to save the seed in the soil. True\nenough, a certain percentage of seed is\nlost, but they agree with Mr. Lam\nbert that sooner or later most areas\ngrow up again to young trees. They\nstate that their main reason Is as stated\nbefore, more damage done and no\nbenefit   derived.\nAgain Mr. Lambert states that the\nForest service has banned slash burning . They state that such ls not the\ncase, but that many of their timber\nsale contracts call for piling and burn'\nlng, At the same time they state that\ncomplete piling and burning has not\nbeen required in all case*, but a combination of clearing branches on the\nrest of the area, which brings the\nslash ln closer contact with the ground\nand thereby promotes quick decay. The\nlumbermen themselves are to blame\nfor the Service not requiring complete\npiling and burning owing to their plea\nof excessive cost. The' Service has\nmet, them half way in allowing cheaper methods while not sacrificing entirely the principle of disposal with\nwhich Mr. Lambert agrees In his Interview of the 21st.\nSMALL PERCENTAGE OF FIRES\nIN  LOGGING   SLASH\n'Forest Service points out further than\nonly a small percentage of the large\nfires of thla year waa logging slash the\nreason for them escaping control. The\nbulk of them started back tn the mountains from lightning, far from any slash\nand spread rapidly on account of the\nextraordinary dryness and the abnor-\ni mally high winds. A personal inpsec-\nI tlon of tbe fires and studies of the\nfield officers' reports substantiates thla\npoint. Many of the large fires escaped\ncontrol several times. Rarely was the\ncause other than high winds, as they\nspread Just as fast on the many fronts\nwhere there was no slash as they did\non the few where slash existed.\nIn conclusion the officials pointed\nout that Mr. Lambert's arguments were\nnot very convincing in view of the fact\nthat the A. O. Lambert company has\nhad its deposit forfeited for failure to\ndispose of slash as provided In Its\ntimber contract, ln spite of the Ideas\nset   forth   by   Mr.   Lambert   himself.\nLONDON, Aug. 28\u2014Under Captain J.\nM. Davis of Australia, the Discovery\nhas just left on the first lev of lta\nvoyage to the Antarctic 'to continue\nthe research work begun in 2911. Sir\nDouglas Mawson, famous explorer, and\nthe remainder of its party of 12 scientists will be picked up at Cape Town.\nA stranger assortment of gear than\never was loaded on Spanish galleon.\nElizabethan venture-ship, or pirates'\nschooner at stowed ln the Uttle Discovery, writes a Dally News correspondent. The vessel will chart an unknown\ncoastline, atudy machine life from the\nhumble sea-worm to the \"leviathan of\nthe deep,\" and prospect the coastal\nvalleys.\nFor example, there are about 20\ngross ot empty bottles\u2014bottles of all\nsnapes, seizes and costliness, from five\nOunce mlik bottles for sea-water\nsample to intricate brass Ekman bottle\nior ueep sea study. Some of these bottles aie Qf line wontmanship, mad*\nwith many chambers of heavy brass,\nsome are coated w*ch' silver. Some may\nou sent nearly four miles down into\nicy, briny depths, there to take ln a\nspecimen of sea water, A brass \"messenger\" then sent down the wire will\nseal them; their contents wll be care-\nfully recorded, reboiUed, labeled and\nstored  for further examination on  re-\n(M KANOORAPIIEK\nAn oceanographer will determine the\nchemical ana physical properties of\ntne water, whue a marine biologist\nor \"pianatologwi\" will examine the\nminute forms of life wmch swarm\ninerem, ior this \"piankto, as lt is\ncaned, is the iood oi wnaii flsn, wnlch\ntn uieir turn teed larger ones\u2014Including whales.\nafore numerous than the bottles are\ncigarettes; lou.uuo are being uken.\n*iau a ton ol suet, however, waa too\nmuch for the cook; tne amount waa\ncut down. Tnere Wul be trawling nets\noi many dmerent mates and mesnes,\nirom tne unest silk.to the coarse rope\noi utter and Monogasque trawls.\nPiano wire is another important\nitem; there will be more than no mlies\noi it, for sounding aepths. A newer\nsounalng method wul also Oe used\u2014the\nncno sounder. This emits a tap from\nthe hull of the ship, sound waves radiating ln ail directions. Thoae that\niinauy \"hit the noor\" of the ocean\nare echoed baca, and from tne length\nui tne time between tapping and receiving the echo the instrument calculates and records the depth on a\nuiai   plate.\nOther Items of equipment Include\na Moth aeroplane fitted with wireless\nwhich is to be the \"long arm\" of the\nexpedition; an elaborate short-wave\ntransmitting set; sets of chessmen, and\na phonograph.\nThere ls an Owen's Dut More Counter, to determine the amount of dust\nin the Antarctic\u2014an Important factor\nto meteorologists. Bottom Oon samplers will collect ooze from bhe aaa\nfloor. \u2022\nA few sledges are being taken, but\nno dogs. The work being mostly coastal\nand oceanographlc, only day excursions wlll be made ashore.\nA few random Items from the food\nsupply are 48 pounds of Christmas\npudding (with buttons and sixpences)\nfour dozen bottles of horseradish sauce,\n28 pounds of tamarinds, and\u2014aeven\npounds of Epsom salts.\nThe Discovery herself? She was Captain Scott's ship for his famous expedition of 1910, and is probably the\nbest ship afloat for work ln ley waters. Her every line expresses strength.\nHer timbers are of stoutest oak. Bhe\nhas stood years of Arctic and Antarctic work, and Is good for years more.\nTwenty-six men and all thla gear she\nwill carry for a year or mon, yet her\ntonnage ls under 200 tons, and har\nlength ls only 198 feet. To see har\nsice and know her work makes one\nrealize that Drake's spirit ls not dead,\nV** 'BAPCO' Patot\nFor Fall Painting\nThia is the beat ready-mixed paint we can buy and\nwe carry a wide range of colors to choose from, also\nTurpentine, Linseed Oil and Rrushes.\nColor Cards and Prices on Request\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompsny, Limited\nWholesal. NELSON, 8* C.\nRetail\nNelson Brand\nNew Pack\nJAM\nAak your grocer for\nNelson Brand Jam. The\nnew 1929 pack is on the\nmarket and it ia high in\nquality m ever.\nThere is no better jam\nthan Nelson Brand Made\nof pure fruit and sugar.\nMcDonald\nJam Co.\nNelson Brand Jams\nWhen You Cheek Over\nYoiuvPurchiises,\nand figure the saving effected on each\nItem, and add up the total, you will\nagree that it pays to buy your groceries\nfrom us. For though' our prices the\nlowest, the quality of our merchandise\nould not be higher. And because of\nour large volume of business, and\nrapid turnover, our stock ls alwaya\nfresh.\nTHE ELITE GROCERY\ntll-* Baker Stmt\nthem* It! Nelson, B. C.\nImperfect Eyesight\nZ* the heritage of from one-\nfourth to one-half of all civilized\npeople.\nTb* strain caused by Imperfect\nvision usually causa* headache*\nand ma; bo the eau** of Indigestion, sleeplessness or over\nsleepiness.\nOlasses wlU remedy most eye-\ntroubles It taken to time.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist nnel Optician\n\u2022xpert Optical Service.\nDRY SLABS\nCOAL\nWOOD\nAU Different Length*\nPHONE  797\nTell   ts   V*ur   Want*\nUght Delivery\nat Btaaonable Batt*\nAENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nTwo Cows Making\n1200 Mile Trip\nto Fair on Foot\nBeing   Driven   From   Vermont\nto National Dairy Show at\nSt. Louis\nFolds in Brain\nof Whales Is a\nMystery, Science\nBALTIMORE Md., Aug. 28\u2014Folds\nIn the human brain may signify degrees of mentality, but In whales their\noccurrence ls a fact unexplained by\nscience.\nCerebral convolutions are more mark,\ned in whales than in man, according\nto A. Brazier Howell, John Hopkins\nmammaloglst, yet the purpose of a\nhigh-type brain in the monster sea\nbeasts, with need for only low mental\nequipment,   in  unknown.\nThe scientist suggests that man's\nmentality may not be as greatly attributable to the folds as many have\nsuppose.\nFor this, and other reasons, Dr.\nHowell believes that the whale ls\nthe most attractive beast for scientific study. \"The greatest beast that\nhaa ever lived,\"he said, Is Interesting\nbecause.\nMore than any other mammal now\nliving his skull has changed most,\npartly because of the migration of\nhis nostrils to the top of his bead.\nHe Is the only one that has more\nthan three bones to a single finger,\nsome whales having more than 17 bones,\nFor mechanical reasons he has assumed a cigar shape and ta ona of\nthe only two kinds of mammals whose\ntall has taken on a fish-like shape.\n\"Whalebone,\" the sieve through\nwhich some .whales strain their food,\noccurs   in   no   other   mammal.\nA whale,, with a length of 100 feet,\nhas a gullet no more than five Inches\nIn diameter.\nSounds are transmitted by resonance through the bones of tbe head\nto an Inner ear very different from\nthat   of   other   mammals.\nHe has a remarkable hldem so tend-\nHe can submerge to a depth of a\nmile, yet can speed to the surface\nwithout being affected by the quick\nremoval   of   pressure.\n\"A scientific understanding of the\nremarkable animal,\" Dr. Howell concluded, \"would probably give knowledge that can be applied in correcting a number of serious, and even\nfatal, derangements of bodily functions\ner in some ways and so tough ln\nothers,  and  without  skin  glands.\nMrs.B.\nHoogerwerf\nA. L. C. at\nTEACHER OF\nPIANOFORTE   AND\nTHEORY\nCommencing   September   3rd\nStudent*    prepared    tor    the\nLondon    College    of   Music    examination.    Phone 087L.\nEXAMINATION OF\nCHILDREN'S EYES\nChildren's eyes are not fully\ndeveloped eyes\u2014yet we improve\nupon these immature eyes\u2014tasks\nas strenuous as eyes can perform;\nwithout stopping to question,are\nthey fit  or not.\nJ* A. C. Laughton. R. O.\nSpecializing   in   Eyesight   Defects\nIn the  Orlffln Blcck\nSMART\nSOCKS\nNew Patterns\u2014\n' New Colors\nThe new patterns and\ncolors in Holeproof socks\nwill truly surprise you.\nRich colorings, along with\noriginal designs, put these\nsocks in a class by themselves.\nAsk to see these, new\nsilk and wools for fall at\n75C and $1.00\nEMORYS\nLIMITED\nNASH\nSixes\nDODGE\nSixes\nWHIPPET\nSixes\nGraham\nTrucks\nVi, %, 1%, 2V4\nTONS\nAll Sixes\nCAPITOL\nMOTORS\nGEOROE    w.   PEASE,   Manager\nBoi W, Phone (3, Nelson. B. C.\nOpposite Fast Olfles\n1]\nI\n_\t\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPrescription   Specialist Phone   1\nWe have just received a large consignment of Ed. Plnaud's famous\nShampoo, BrllUan-ttne, Hair TOnic, Eau\nDe Cologne arid Lavender Toilet Waters\nand After  Shaving  Lotion.\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nPhone 77\nSedan \u2014 Cars\nDay and Might Service\nBaggage  and Express\n8t. Louis M, Aug. 28\u2014Just to\nprove they have aa much etamina aa\ntheir forefathers of pioneer days, two\nblue blood* of the dairy animal world\nare making- a 1200 mil* Jaunt on foot.\nScorning the comfort of properly\nappointed cattle Pullman* In wh,ch\nthey ordinarily travel. Tomboy and\nAlice, two registered Ayrshire* with\nImpressive pedigree* are emulating tha\ncattle which accompanied early settlers on overland trails.\nFrom the hills of Vermont, the two\noows are trekking across country, with\nSt. Louis a* their destination. Here\nthey wlll seek blue ribbon* at th* National   Dairy  show  ln  October.\nIn  their  retinue  ar*  attendant* to      \t\ncar* for their want*, and a Barn j 0\u00bb Brandon, Vt., which (elected two\nmounted in a motor chassis houses\u25a0 average animals for tha endurance\nthe food and supplies. hike.  Original plan* called for  travel\nDespite the additional strain on on dirt roads, but experience ha*\ntheir vitality, the cowa do not *hlrk i *hown that hard roada are more *atls-\nthelr duty a* milk producers. | factory. Leather boot* have been pro-\nOne   pound   of   balance*   ration   I* j vlded for such  emergencies a* rough\ngiven each oow tor every four pounds roads and aore feet.\nof milk produced. Mo beet. pulp, oorn      On* day's Journey averages between\nsilage or hay la carried. The animal* 110 and  14 mile*. Th* oows. will walk\ngran at  night. every   day   with   tb*   exception   of 'a\nThe trip l* sponsored by th* Na- a two wnk* period at th* Ohio state\ntloaal   Ayrshire*   aVstMtsrs    AaaoctaUam {**%<\nCity Drug Co.\nNELSON'S    DISPENSING    CHEMISTS\nFilms,   Kodak*,   Drug*,   Stationery\nMall orders   promptly   despatched.\nBOX  1083  NELSON,  B.  C,  PHONE  34\nCom* In and Oct Tour Weight Fraj*\nGeneral Machine\nShop Work\nBENNETTS\nLimited\nn\ni\noA. <_). 'Papazian\nWATCHMAKER,    JEWELER\nAND GRADUATE OPTICIAN\n418 HALL STREET\n.44 Taxi and Transfer.\nPhone  44      Con  Cummin*      Bog  as\nFreight and  Express Service Dally\nIncluding   All   Int*rm*dl*te    Point*.\n9 a.m.\u2014M*lson to Trail and Rowland.\n7   am\u2014Slocan   City.   Sllverton.   Hew\nDenver and Sandon.\nFor Job Printing\nphone 144, The Daily\njNews Job Department.\nWe Have\nPROMISED\nThe most perfect potwibte\nresultis in\nSOUND\nPICTURES\nWhat we promise,\nwe carry' out\nIt Won't Be\nLong Now!\ni-1\n\\\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1929_08_29","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404671","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1929-08-29 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1929-08-29 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0404671"}