{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0400535":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-07-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1930-09-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0400535\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" 8^6-i copy\nlObt?\n\/\nNew Marria&e Act Is in\nForce, B. C. Today\n-\u2014 Pa&e Two\nGolf and Tennis Play Is\n, Narrowed Down\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\n\\\nMr. and Mrs. Thos.\nRossland.   Killed  at\nTHEIR CAR IS\nCoast\nFREIGHT TRAIN\nAuto   Coasts   Past Another Car Into Path\nof Seattle Train\nBOTH DEAD WHEN\nAID REACHES THEM\nCar    Demolishes    Telegraph Pole; Couple\nOldtimers Rossland\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Ann. 31.\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Embleton\n\u2022\u00ab of Holland, B. C, both aged\nabout 60, were Instantly killed\nwhen the automobile in which\nthey were riding was struck1 by\nOreat Northern railway train\nNo. 360, bound for Vancouver\nfrom Seattle, at Sperling avenue\nand the Oreat Norther railway\ncrossing, a Vancouver suburb,\nlate Saturday  afternoon.\nThe train hit the automobile\nWith a terrlflo force and hurled\nIt against a telephone pole,\nwhich was split In half by the\nImpact. , Mrs! Embleton wsb\npicked up dead 20 feet from the\near. Her huchruul, vvlin waa\ndriving, was dead ln the demolished car, a heavy sedan.\nThere Is a steep grade where\nthe accident took place, and\nwitnesses stated that the Embleton car was apparently coasting. Another car ahead stopped\nat the crossing, but the Emble-\ntons failed to stop. The train,\nlt was stated, was proceeding\nat Its usual Bpced, and blew Its\nwhistle for the crossing.\nThe train was delayed more\nthan half an hour by the accident.\nAn   Inquest   Into   the   deaths \u25a0\nwill be held Tuesday.\nMU.   OLD   TIMERS\nROSSLAND, B .0., Aug, 31.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Thomas Embleton of this\ncity were Instantly killed near Burn-\nany, Vancouver, when tne car ln\nwhich they were riding was struck\nby a Great Northern railway train,\n\"according to word received here by\nCity Clerk J. A. McLeod Saturday\nafternoon.\nThe Embletons were old time residents of Rossland, Mr. Embleton\nhaving carried on a grocery business for a number of years and\nlater having been*' employed by\nHunter Brothers.\nMr, Embleton had been an Odd\n.Fellow for over 30 years, and was\na past grand master and a past\ngrand patriot. He was -i member of\nthe Corinthian lodge, A. F. and\nA. m., and had served as district\ndeputy. He was,a member of Royal\nAroh chapter, of which he was\ndlstrlot superintendent, and of Rossland Preceptory, Knights Templar,\nhaving served as provincial prior.\nHe waa also a Shriner. He was past\ngrand ohancellor of Rossland lodge\nNo. 31,  Knights  of  Pythias.\nMrs. Embleton was formerly a\nmember of the teaching staff of\nRossland sohool.\nWord received here was to tho\netffeet that Interment would bo at\nthe coast.\n11  DEAD, 30 HURT\nAS TRAIN WRECKED\nST. LOUIS, Ho., Aug. 31\u2014 Eleven persons were\nreported killed and 30 injured, many of them seriously,\nearly tonight when the \"Texas Special\" of the St. Louis-\nSan Francisco Railroad was derailed by a spread rail at\nOsage Hills, about 10 miles west of here.\nThe accident occurred about 500 feet east of the\nOsage, His., station. The train, which left St. Louis at\n6:30 p.m. for Fort Worth, Dallas and San Antonio, Texas,\nwas travelling about 60 miles an hour when the locomotive\nand three coaches left the rails and overturned. The other\ncoaches also left the rails, but did not overturn, reports\nindicated.\nThe known dead include Engineer Ernest T. White of\nMaplewood, Mo., his fireman and five 'persons whose bodies\nwere removed from the first coach. Four other bodies\nwere caught in the debris of the second coach.\nDoctors and nurses from the Frisco hospital were\nrushed to the scene. Ambulances brought the injured to\nthe Frisco hospital and other hospitals in the city.\nVESSEL BEARING\nANDRE'S BODY\nREACHES PORT\nBut Has Not Been Reached\nby Newspapermen and\nBoat as Yet\nSKJAPR ISLAND, Norway, Aug. 31.\n^ti*J^1\u00bb^\u00abft4lW'3\u00bb*TOafr; bearing the bodies of the three members\nof the Andree polar expedition of\n1807, put Into the harbor hero at\nmidnight (6 p. m., E. S. T.), instead of proceeding directly to\nTromoe  as schodulecl.\nA ship with correspondents of the\nAssociated Press and Oslo newspaper Aftenpostcn aboard, which has\nbeen lying in a Norwegian port not\nfar distant, was exuected to urrivc\nshortly  to meet the Bratvaag.\nEarly i| th> month the Bratvaag,\ncarrying an exploration group headed by Dr. Gunnar Horn, discovered\nthe bodies of Salomon August Andree and hts companions on Whito\nIsland, a little known region in\nthe Arctic seas. Dr. Horn sent word\nof the find back to civilization by\nCapt. Oustave Jensen, captain of\nthe sealer Ternlngen, and the world\nwas astounded 'at the solution of\na 33-year-old mystery of the Arctic.\nIt was In 1807 that Andree and\ntwo companions set out In tho\nfirst balloon trip toward the north\npole, and the Arctlo sllenco soon\nswallowed  them.\nAfter sending1 back word of the\ndiscovery the Bratvaag calmly vent,\nabout her business of gathering\nmore seals. It was tlim that a race\nset ln to bring ihe lUtl-i vessel\nback to paths of communication and\nthus obtain a complete .\u00abtory. Numerous messages were broadcast to\nthc Bratvaag, but it was not known\nIf she received them, for she -carried\na radio receiving apparatus but no\ntransmitting equipment,\nMight as Well Try\nControl Weather as\nthe Price of Wheat\nESLING AND GRF.EN\nARE LEAVING FOR\nOTTAWA SESSION\nW. K. Esling, M. P., was In\nNelson Saturday returning later\nto his some at Rossland. He\nwill leave Monday night for\nOttawu to attend the special\nsession of parliament.\nSenator R. F. Oreen will leave\nVictoria on Wednesday for Ottawa, also  for  sessional  duties.\nMRS. H. COOLIDGE,\n. A NELSON BRIDE,\nDIES, MANITOBA\n01ENBORO, Man., Aue.- 31.\u2014Mrs.\nHebert Coolidge, only daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Watson, or\nStockton, died at Victoria hospital,\nWinnipeg, August 27, following an\noperation, and the death of her In-\n. fant son, Sho was 3a years of age,\nand was born In Stockton, residing there until her marriage ln\nSeptember, 1929, to Herbert Coolidge of Nelson, B. O. After a few\nmonths'., residence at Nelson, the\noouple came to Stockton to reside.\nThe funeral was held August 28\nfrom the home ln Stockton, burial\nbeing ln Qlenboro cemetery. Mrs.\nCoolidge ls .survived by ncr hus-\nVand and parents.\nLONDON, Aug. 31.\u2014(CP Cable)\u2014\nThe proposal that the British government should buy wheat in blocks\nfrom til? dominions, and especially\nfrom Canada, which Is said to be\nunder consideration in governmental\ncircles, ls discussed today in a\nlong article In the Observer by a\ngrain broker of somo 60 years'\nstanding.\nThe broker's conclusion, summarised, ls as follows:\n\"Over a 60-year period I have\nseen the price ot wheat aa low ns\n18 shillings per quarter and as\nhigh as 120 shillings. I have seen\nflour as low as 15 shillings per\nsack and ns high as -100 shillings.\nAnd I have seen tho cost for freight\nacross the Atlantic as low as five\nshillings a ton and as high as\n235 shillings. In every case of low\nprices trado was unfettered. In every case ot high prices trade was\ncontrolled by government boards.\n\"I have seen many attempts made\nby cllqucB, pools,, farm boards and\ngovernments to. control tho prlco of\nwheat, all of which ended disastrously, either for the producers or\ntho consumers,\n\"In my considered opinion one\nmight as well attempt to control\nth0 wind or heaven or the tides\nof the ocean as to stabilize the\nprice of wheat or to regulate Its\nmovements.\"\nTRAIL   TEMPERATURE\nREACHES    76\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 31\u2014Temperature here (today varied between a\nmaximum of 76 degrees and a mini,\nmum of 47.\nCaptain Boyd Has\nPostponed Ocean\nHop for One Day\nTORONTO, Ont., Aug. 31.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Captain Brroll Boyd today postponed his departure\nfor St. Hubert airport, Montreal, until tomorrow morning. Captain Boyd arr\/ved\nhere from Montreal last night\non a flight made to test\nspecial navigating Instruments\non his Bellanca monoplane\n''Columbia,'* in which-'he^con-\ntemplates a transatlantic\nflight.\nBUSY WEEK IN\nSTORE, OTTAWA\nPRIMING\nPremier Has  Week   in\nWhich to Prepare for\nOpening of House\nTHRONE SPEECH\nHOLDS INTEREST\nWill    Divulge    Efforts\nCurb Unemployment;\nTariff Is Question\nENGINEER TO\nTAKE CHARGE,\nOFJTOODBINE\nPortland    Canal     Property\nWill Be Worked; Machinery on Way  .\nPREMIER MACDONALD AND HON. DAVID\nLLOYD GEORGE NOT SO FRIENDLY ON\nUNEMPLOYMENT; MAY MEAN A SPLIT\nLONDON, Aug. 31.\u2014(By the Canadian Press Cable)\n\u2014Relations between (Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald\nand Mr. Lloyd George, the leader of the Liberals, are not\na little strained following several discussions of the prob.\nlem of unemployment, according to the Sunday Express.\nWednesday's meeting between the two chiefs and\na few of their prominent followers elided without result,\nsays the Express,- which discloses that another meeting\nis to lje held within a few days.\n\"The best-informed political circles regard the failure of this coming meeting as practically a certainty,\"\ngoes on the newspaper, \"and a. complete rupture between\nthe two parties is tjuite probable. In the event of such a\nrupture the Liberals Would join the Conservatives to defeat the government when parliament meets on October\n28, and there will be a general election in November.\nGAR WOOD WINS FIRST HEAT SPEED\nBOAT RACE FROM MISS CARSTAIRS'\nWHEN FEED LINE BECOMES PLUGGED\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 31.\u2014Following shipments of machinery and\nsupplies this week, eastern interests who have taken over the financing of the Woodbine mine, Portland Canal, are sending an engineer to take charge of the property.\nThe engineer left for the north\nSaturday   night.\nM. M. Kelllher, representing the\neastern interests, left for the east\nSaturday night ln rtonnectlon with\nWoodbine financing. Mr. Kelllher\nwill be established ln the Woodbine\noffices here and stated that stock\n.transfers ln future will be handled\nby the Potential Trust Co., ltd.\nThat the gold ore bodies disclosed\nearlier In the year by diamond\ndrilling will be the objective of the\ncrew now at work was stated by\nMr. Kelllher, who ls associated latfth.\nHugh M\u00bbulre, managing director\nof Woodbine, ln the development\nof  the  property.\nEIGHT DIE IN\nWAVE OF HEAT\nLONDON, Aug. 31\u2014Eight person\ndlod Saturday from England's heat\nwave which continued with high\nhumidity despite heavy Btorms ln\nthe  north Friday night,\nFOREST FIRES IN\nDISTRICT, QUIET\nCool nights on tho week-end\nhelped tho fire hazard considerably,\nforestry officials here state. No new\nfires were reported, and thoso still\nburning were reported well in control.\nHitch-Hikers Are\nMaking Good Time\non Way, Hollywood\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 31\u2014On a hitch\nhike from Windsor, Ont., to .Hollywood. Calif., \u25a0Thomas and Michael\ns^owney, of Detroit, reached Winnipeg\nSaturday eyening. The brothers left\nWindsor, Aug. 13. The young m|m\navail themselves of preferred lifts\nIn automobiles, but they have\nwalked moro than 300 miles and\neach has worn out a pair of boots.\nTho Downeys left home with a\nnickel, and this they lost soon after\nstarting their trip. But they find\nmoney unnecessary, having no difficulty in obtaining food from the\nhospitable people along the route,\n- Their next stop will be Brandon,\nwhere they will rest before proceeding westward.\nOTTAWA, Ont,, Aug. 31.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nWith a special session of parliament\nscheduled to open ln a week, and\nan Imperial conference co follow\nnot long after, all signs point to\na period ot great activity ln Ottawa. From Alberta, Hon. B. B. Bennett, prime minister, has returned\nto take the helm. He is faced\nwith the task, of preparing for a\nsession in but a few short days,\nThe speech from the throno, which\nopens the deliberations of parliament, must be got ready; the conclusions and recommendations of\nthe employment service council of\nCanada must be ct?i>sldere4,^pd\u201e,w\u00bbi|\nslbly spme of them put in legislative form. Finally, it is Btated\noh good authority that certain\nchanges ln the tariff, designed to\nmake for increased employment, are\nin contemplation, and If so, these\nmust also be decided upon and embodied In legislation. The program\nls one which calls for strenuous\nwork. Cabinet meetings during the\ncoming week will probably be frequent.\nTARIFF CONTROVERSY\nIt iT\"ivnt>w regarded as practically\ncerfcart.\u25a0 \\hafc Oeorge Black, member\nfor the''\u2022Yukon, will be called to\nthe speaker's chair.\nThe speech from the throne will\nbe awaited with some eagerness as\nan-Indication of tho nature of the\nleglslatlpn to be introduced, Thd\ncoming session Is designed to deal\nwith unemployment. Consequently\nlt ls expected that all the measures\nto be presented will havo a very\ndefinite bearing on this problem.\nIf the tariff Is changed, the alterations will probably be calculated\nto increase the number of Canadians engaged ln various activities\nthroughout tho Dominion. Generally speaking tariff changes arouse\na good deal of controversy in parliament, but opposition may not be\nso active if the government is ln\na position to show that all changes\nare clearly and definitely earmarked\" to insist in meetlijfc the unemployment problem. This remains to\nbe seen.\nMembers will begin to arrive in\nOttawa early next week, and the\nprocess of swearing them ln and\nsettling them In their quartets will\nproceed.\nSPROAT LAKE'S\nPOWER SCHEME\nFOR THE ISLAND\nWill Be Used for Develop-\n. ment of West. Coast;\n1000 H. P.\nMORE TROOPS ARE\nRUSHED INTO CITY\nOF BUENOS AIRES\nBUENOS AIRES. Aug. 31\u2014Reinforcements of heavily armed '\ntroops were brought ln Saturday by the government as a precaution against n possible outbreak or an attempt to assassinate   President    Vrtgoyan.\nChill Winds Now\nPrevail on Prairie\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 31\u2014Chill winds\nblew across the prairies tonight\nas the weather man switched from\nhis summer program and the mercury touched autumn temperatures.\nScattered showers were reported\nfrom many dlsVlcts, while in far-\nnorthern Alberta areas snow fell\nduring  the  weeJi end.\nTemperatures, which but a few\nhours before had been in the 90's,\ndropped fast, .ind tonight ran-:j):i\njust slightly above the BO mark. Winnipeg was a good example. Bunday\nthe high-mark here was 02; tonight\nlt was 60.\nThree-Year-Old Girl\nIs Seriously Injured\nWINNIPEG* Aug. 31\u2014Three-year-\nold Christina Roberta was seriously\nInjured when she fell 30 feet from\ntho balcony of a downtown apartment block. There were no Wit.\nnesses   to  tho   accident. \u25a0*\nThreo porsons were injured in a\nmotor car accident on St. Anne's\nroad, southeast of here. Barbara\nRoss, her mother, and a companion,\nJ. R, Hunter, sustained injuries, the\ngirl Buffering from a possible fracture of the iik.nl),\nVICTORIA. B. C, Aug. 31.\u2014An-\nother Important hydro-electric project for British Columbia, designed\nto supply tho growing communities\non the west coast of Vancouver\nIj^rjlsl*. was , announced .Saturday.\nSponsored by the B. E., Electric\nRailway company, through Its subsidiary, the National Utilities corporation, tho scheme involves the\nharnessing of the great falls ol\n\u00a3}proat river. The level of Sproat\nlake, one of the best known bodies\nof water on the Island, will not\nbe raised.\nThe initial scheme will produco\n1000 horsepower, which can bo increased as consumption demands.\nThis power will be used largely for\nthe Increasing Industrie? of the Al\nbernl and Port Alberni district.\nThe company asks for the right\nto divert 400 cubic feet per second\nfrom Sproat river, with a storage\nof 34,000 acre feet. Tho point of\ndiversion will be 200 feet above\nthe place where the great Central\nLake highway bridge crosses the\nSproat river. There a dam would be\nerected to Impound the water.\nTlie National Utilities corporation's\napplication to the water board for\nthese rights will be considered during  the   autumn.\nMeanwhile tho B. C. Electric la\nproceeding with Investigations into\nits great Campbell river power\nscheme. It has not decided yet\non Its precls0 plan for harnessing\nthe  powers  of   this  stream.\nCHURCHMEN TALK\nOVER PROGRAM,\nWINTER, TRAIL,\nWood  Wins  Heat  Throttled\nDown; Hawker's Speed\nBetter for Time\nTRAIL, B. C. Aug. 31\u2014Churchmen's club of St. Andrew's Angllcr^i\nchurch held an open forum at Its\nmeeting tonight to discuss the program for  the  coming winter.\nCrowd Booes Down\nMinister, Argentine\nBUENOS AIRES, Aug. 31.-~(AP)\u2014\nA demonstration at tho cattle exposition this afternoon against Juan\nMelt-as, minister of agriculture, and\nPresident Yrigoyen caused the minister to leave the building and tho\npostponement   of  thc  exhibition.\nAs Pleitas entered the building\nto open the first program a crowd\noutside shouted \"I>jwn with the\ngovernment!\" and those inside began booing and whistling when the\nminister attempted to speak. It continued as long as ho stood on the\nplatform, and finally he was forced\nto leave the hall, escorted by firemen.\nThe Argentine chamber of deputies, whose tardiness ln getting to\nwork is said ln many quarters to\nbe responsible for the discontent\nwith the Yrigoyen administration,\ntoday finally completed the revision\nof the credentials of deputlo3 elected on March 1.\nThe cftamber ls apparently rc\\itiy\nto begin normal legislation sessions\non Monday.\nGAMBLING VESSEL\nBURNS, HUNDREDS\nESCAPE BY BOAT\nLOS ANGELES, Aug. 31\u2014 flev.\nerol hundred persona escaped\nfrom aboard the gambling sWp\nMontfaloone, anchored off the\ncoast here, when the ship caught\nfire Saturday night following\nan explosion of gasoline and\nwas destroyed. Only the presence\nof water taxis made the escapes\npossible, atuid great excitement.\nDETROIT, Aug. 31\u2014The ill-\nluck that has dogged every attempt made during the last\n10 years to beat Gar Wood In a\nMarmsworth speedboat riwe followed the British challenge\nsponsored by Miss Marlon Bar-\"\nbara Carstairs into the first\nheat of the world's hydroplane\nclassic yesterday, and Wood won\nJust as Bert Hanker, driving\nEstelle V, the necond of the\ntwo British challengers, .seemed about to overtake Wood In\nhis Miss America IX, at the\nstart of the third of the six\nfive-mile laps, a broken feed\nline forced him off the course.\nt Ha*wker had been thf .Inst ,of\n'the five competing criirts to'get\nstarted, and by a terriCIc burst\nor speed had drawn to within\nalmost a boats' length of Wood\nstarting the third lap. He was\nHocked ut ; 8.54 7 statute miles\nan hour when the break-down\noccurred.\nWood covered thc 30 nautical\nmile course at an average speed of\n75.177  statute   miles  an  hour.\nThe Miss America VIII. with\nGeorge Wood at the wheel finished\nsecond, about half a mile behind\nMiss Amci\\ca IX, and Estello IV,\ndriven by Miss Carstairs, was third\nwith an average speed of 70.117\nstatute miles an hour. The Miss\nAmerica V. the third of the American defending team, went around\nthe course at an average speed of\n66.806  statute  miles  un  hour.\nGar Wood's fastest lap yesterday\nwas at an average sped of 77.448\nmiles an hour. This was on his\nthird turn around the course. MIbs\nAmerica IX undoutcdly had more\nspeed* in her huge .Packard marine\nmotors, but lt seemed almost certain Hawker who had Just begun\nto open up tho two Napier-Lyon\nmotors of the Estelle V. would pass\nhim as they crossed thc line starting the third lap. They were\ngoing down the river with Estelle\nV, slowly closing tho slight gap of\nopen water between her and. Miss\nAmerica X, when she was completely swung out of course, and\nthc challenge was left to Miss\nCarstairs alone In Estelle IV. Mis\nCarstairs by this time, however, was\nhalf a mile behind the two Miss\nAmerican's and with both of the\nlatter running #noothly was clearly\nbeaten. She Kept gamely at it,\nhowever, and finished the heat\nabout three miles behind the win.\nners.\n\u25a0 NEW-. MINISTER\nHon.. Dr. Murray McLaren, new\nminister of pensions and national\nhealth ln thc Bennett cabinet, who\nis a native of Now Brunswick, with\na  very  distinguished  career.\nQUAKE SHOCK\nDOES DAMAGE,\nLOSANGELES\n\\Sp One Injured But Several\nBuildings Are Damaged\nin Venice\nLOS ANGELES, Calif., Aug. 31\nA quake about 30 seconds duration\nstruck Los Angeles and adjacent\ncities Saturday afternoon causing a\nslight amount of damage \u25a0 In B0XSl\\\\\noutlying communities.\nNo one was injured.\nThe quake seemed to center tn\nthe Santa Monica district, where\nthree distinct shocks were felt. Prom\nall parts of the bay district house\nholders reported clocks stopped and\npictures turned askew.       ;i -\u00ab+\nIn Venice, part of Los Angeles, a\nbridge rj-annlng the speedway and\nconnecting two buildings, sagged\nand a large portion of one ot the\nwalls fell, narrowly missing a bus\nloaded with passengers. Tho speedway, main traffic artery, was roped\noff to all traffic.\nACCIDENTS TAKE\nTOLL OF FOUR\nLIVES IN WEST\nLITTLE REDFISH\nARE PROTECTED,\nKOOTENAYWATERS\nHave  Started  to  Run     Up\nStreams Already;  Will\nContinue for Month\nWINNIPEG. Man.. Aug. 31.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Pour persons met Instant death\nln accidents ln widely scattered\nsections of western Canada during\nthe week-end, while several received minor Injuries, mostly in\nautomobile mishaps.\nProm Vancouver comes tho report of a double automobile fatality where an aged couple were\nkilled when tholr automobile was\nstruck by a train. The victims\nwere Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Embleton,   of   Rossland,   B.   C.\nAt Myrtle, Manitoba, Mm. David\nI Barlow, a farmer's wile, fras drown-\nj eel when she slipped ;'rom the river\nbunk Into deep writer while attempting to fill a pall for household use. Her dlsappeaSaijce was\nfirst noted by a daughter, who\nfound her mother's hat, on the\nriver bank.\nNear Elm c~eek. Man., Rudolph\nMandryk, 9-year-old farmer's son,\nwas killed when lie fell under the\nwheel of a grain wagon.\nInspector J. H. Robinson of the\nfisheries department draws attention to the regulations forbidding\nthe taking of Little Redfish (Kokanee) from any streams up which\nthey ascend to spawn. This regulation applies to all tributaries of\nthe Arrow lakes, Slocan lakes, Little\nSlocan lakes, Kootenay lako and river, Lardo river, Trouj, lake.\nThis partcular fish has started to\nrun already and will continue to do\nso until tho latter part of September.\nWTNDSOR, Ont., Aug. 31.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nThe steamer Vedas, which has been\nmuch to the front ln tho liquor\nnewa during the past fow weeks,\nis tied up at tho government dock\nhere and Is to be tho subject ot a\ntest case so far as can be ascertained. Sho was seized on Saturday of Robdeau harbor by Preventive Officers Charles P. Gress, of\nWalkervlllo, and L. O. Turner, of\nToronto, and brought here. No official statement Is being made, but\nit Is reported that fires have beon\ndrawn on the vessel and the crew\npaid off, and that tho ship will\nbe held pending a test caso regarding breaking of cargo hi Canadian waters.\nGovernment Records\nAre Destroyed in\nWashington Flames\nWASHINGTON, D. C.. Aug. 31.\u2014\nFlames fed by government record;;\nshot -skyward from offices ot thc\nfederal trado commission for two\nhours yesterday afternoon.\nTwenty-five firemen were injured\nor overcome by smoke. The building, one of the temporary structures erected during tho war, stood\ntoday a charred wreck. Its Interior had become inmost a sialic\nleaping flame Shortly after the\nworkers left for their Saturday half\nholiday.\nLieut,-Col. U. S. Grant, third, director of public buildings, estimated\nthe building damage at $140,000.\nSome $26,000 worth of orficc equipment  was  also  lost.\nPERCY WILLIAMS\nRETURNS QUIETLY\nTO HOME, COAST\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 31.\u2014All\nunannounced, Percy Williams, Canada's sol\u00a9 winner ln the British\nEmpire games, slipped back Into\nVancouver Saturday morning. Limping slightly from tho painful muscle\ninjury which perhaps prevented him\nfrom running to a new record ln\nthe final hea.t at Hamilton, Percy's\narrival was not even known to hla\nfamily.\nWilliams' Injured leg ntlll bothers\nhim slightly and ts tightly taptd up.\nPILOT\nTO FLY OVER\nGREAT CIRCLE\nRises Early in Paris for\nStart of New York\nFlight\nWEATHER FORECAST SUITABLE\nOfl\nGreat Crowd Present for\nTakeoff; Decision to\nFly Is Surprise\nLE BOURGET, France,\nSept. 1.\u2014(Monday)\u2014 - With\nideal weather forecast' for\nCaptain tiiedudonne Coste's\nlong- planned trans-Atlantic\nflight to New York, the\nFrench ace rose shortly alV\nter 2 a,m. today for a final\nweather report. A great\ncrowd swarmed out of Paris\nby the Flanders Road to Le\nBourget as tho hour for the\ntake-off approached.\n'Coste's plane was wheeled out from the hanger to\nthe field and the task of\nfueling  commenced.\nIS  A  SURPRISE\nLE BOURGET, Franco, Aug. 31.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Captain ll.eudonne Coste,\nPrance's most famous* aviator, announced this afternoon, that he\nwill take off at dawn on the grea-.\nlap from Paris to New York. With\nhis a.'de. Maurice Bellonte, 22\nlanded his plane the \"Question\nMark\"  here  at  5:50  p.m.\nThe flyer's decision came as a\nsurprise since the conl lnued un_\nfavorable weather outlook, and reports that Coste was no', satisfied\nwith the engine had l\u00a3*%icfited to\nobservers that the flight would not\ntake place  this year.\nFor weeks and months he and\nBellonte have tested their plane,\nboth far altitude aud speed. OwTif\nhad repeatedly Mild that he would\nbc hurried by no one. bub would\nbide his time nnd take off only\nwhen  he   had   the   best   of  weather.\nThc meteorlogical bureau: predicted excellent atmospheric conditions, and Coste wai confident of\nthe  ability  of   his  plane.\nHe not only announced his departure as certain, but also outlined the Itinerary\u2014via the great olr\ncle, over South-western Englanti,\nand over Irrsand from east .'\nwest.\nOIRL WITHO\nCOUNTRYI\nThat's what Canadian immigration authorities at Vancouver\nthought when Naomi winter, pretty\n20-year-old Japanese-Canadian dancer landed aboard tho now Canadian\nPacflic liner, Empress of Japan, ou\nthe big white liner's first and rcc-\nortl-breaklng voyage from the Far ^\nEast. Naomi had the largest and\nPacific liner Empress of Jupan, on\nherself for two dayj while officials\ntried to figure out whether she was\nCanadian, American or Japanese.\nFinally she was allowed to land\nafter her Canadian birth had been\nclearly established. Born in Montreal\nof Japanese-Canadian parents, Naomi\nwont to Iftsw York mid married an\nAmcrlcan-Japaneso whom sho ls now\nIn process of divorcing. The divorce\ndecree, howevor ls not final. For\na time Canadian Immigration men\nsaid she hud lost Canadian rights\nby marrlugc with an American but\nUnited State* authorities said she'\nwas a Canadlnn of Japanese extraction and would nofr grant her admittance to tho U. S. A., And, Jap-\nthe formor New York night\nclub dancer aald, almost refused her\npapers because n\\.0 did not have\na visa from tho Japanese consul in\nSan Francisco.\n Page Two\nfoe^fcpi\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1930.\nWHEN  TRAVELLING\nThe Following Offer the Best of Service\nNelson, B. C. Hotels\nI       :\n\\\\nmt ijn&l\nRooms With Running Water\nPrlvato Baths Ensulto\nGEO. EENWEI.L, rrop.\nNelson, B. 0,\n\u00abMS$^*SSMS\u00bbSftSWa\u00ab*\u00abS^^\n^re^ee-e-ee-e-eev\n***W*M\u00ab5*W\nHVJ4E' \u2014 M. Campbell, Wfflow\n\"-Boliat; W. Cranfleld, J. A. Whlte-\nhili, C. Allan, T. Donaldson, B.\nM. Ktrkpatrlck, Toronto; .w. P.\nDunbar, 2-Mllo; D. A. Roonoy,\nProcter; A. H. Laird. Victoria; 0.\nC. Atincs, Janet Boswer.. aWJee- Mil-,\nlock, \"Marian Skill, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. li P. Grcavra, A K. Mackasly, h.\nRosen, C. W. Klosson, N. E. Cleveland, ^ P. at. Corcoran'e, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. C. Jarger, K.\nCaflaaa, TC ah'a-\"Mrs.'J. H. Boliaeief,\nMr.   and   Mrs.   G.   Eden,'  A.   F.\nVancouver, B. C, and Island\nNEW MARRIAGE ACT I B.C. COMES\nINTO FORCE TODAY; MUST GIVE EIGHT\nDAYS NOTICE TO GAIN CERTIFICATE\nliLACKUUitN'y SUFJSB SERVICE\nHTA'iioN\u2014822 Seymour St, \u25a0 Tbe\nKootenay Tourist's Vancouver Garage. Moderate charger; {or Washing, polishing, and Greasing, Parking. Storage Accessories, Gasoline\nand Oils, Engine Repair Work,, Free\nCrank Cas\u00abj Service, Tire, Battery\nand Brake Service, vulcanizing and\nStmonlzing, See us lor used carp,\nA large stock at all prices always\ncarried,\nMake your trip to Vancouver a pleasure by having your meals at ths\nNEW OBPHEUM CAFE\u2014762 Granville St, Choicest Food at Moderato\nCharges.   James P. Dwyer.\nDUFFERIN   HOTEL\u2014900   SEYMOUR\nST.\u2014Bright Booms, Central. Moderate Rates. A. Patterson, late ol\nColeman, Crow's Neat, Frfprletor.\nLONDON       CAFETERIA,    LTD.\u201471\u00a9\nRobson 8*. The ever popular dining\nplace to make use of while ln Vancouver,\nJacquard men's cotton shirting\nand piano ere effectively employed as trimming on woollen sports\nfrocks lor the coming season and\nthese cottons are used lor do-\nmure collars, vestee and cuffs.\nColumbia River Highway\nSchaefer, E. Hardin,' A. Schaefer,\nHelen Walmer, Spokano; B, Power,\nOkanagan. Landing; B. O. Leslie,\nRossland; W. H; Northmore, Ham-\nnton, S. B, -lepsdn, Nblson; Mr.\nand Mra. C. F. Onkett, O. Vuye,\n.Colville; 8, E\u201e Gordon, .R.. 8. Wood-\ntoxA,\". Trail; D. W. McDenby, Calgary; Dr.. F, Putman, KentvlUe;\n\u2022Mr. and Mrs.. R.. Wolthansen, Sandon; R. Crawford, B. H. Dawson,\nIsabel Dawson, Kaslo; B. T. Nes-\nbltt, Penticton.\nj Where the Guest Is Kii%\nThe Savoy\nMSMOITB NEWEST AND FINEST HOOT,\nMANY EOOMS WITH PRIVATB\nBATHS   OB   SHOWERS\nJ. A. KEEE, Prop.\nSAVOY\u2014Q. F. Raseta,. Mr. and\nMrs. J. Seedman, Mrs. J. A. New-\nroan. Metallne Falls; J. M. Murphy,\nB. W. Shultz, Miss Betty Leo, Mr.\naand Mrs. BlUcrby, Mr. and MrB.\nBourke, Mr. and Mrs. L. Campbell,\nMl*, and Mrs, 0. J. Grey. J. Has-\nfeathcr, Mrs.'W. A. Wappenstlne,- Pi\nTenvlUlger, Mr. and Mrs. P. Kelley,\nD, Ellis, Grace Kelley, H. A. Douglas, R. E. DuK, L. Plgott, Mr. and\nMrs. H. D. Olson, Mr. and Mrs.\n\"'UT Fat\u00abmt, A. P. Summers, J. C.\nBean, Mr and Mrs. Ci. W. Rlt-\ntfcrman, Mr. and Mrs, E. L. Smith,\n:  H.  oot*, c.  N. Hansen,  Helen\nShady Nook Auto Camp\nand Cabins\nRates from $1.00 Up\nOn the Columbia Klver Highway, 40 miles from Portland, I mile west of iionnevlilo.  Coolest spot on the\nHighway.   Grocery, 'confectionery   and   gas   station\nln connection. P. O. address,\nV. Ford BONNEVILLE, OREGON\nAlberta\nHOTEL BBETION   HALL\nBANFF,  ALBERTA\n160 Rooms.  SO  with  bath and en\nSuite\nAmerican  and  European Plan\nModerate Ratee.    Special Family\nand Party Rates on Application.\nParking space and Tennis Courts\nFree to our Quests\nExcellent Dlnlni Room Servlca\nN. H. Murray. Manager\nCandles will last nearly twice as\nlong lt their wick ends are given\na coating of white carnlsh. Put the\ncandles away for a day or two so\nthat the varnish m\u00aby dry. They will\nnot only last longer, but also bum\nwithout dripping the usual Quantity of wax.\nKaslo, B.C.\nKING GEORGE Hotel\nFirst   class   accommodation,   Excellent  Meals.     Hunting  and\nFishing.\nChicken Dinner every Sunday\nevening.\nBanter and Latham\nHendricks' Garage\nFord   Bales and \u25a0 Semen.   General\nRepairs   to  aU  cars.   Fully\nequipped Machine  Shop.\nniONE  31 NIGHT   44\nAinsworth, B. C.\nBlfjo, Julie Bige, Spokane; Mrs. E.\nM. Shannon, New Denver; Mrs. H,\nDewls, Sllverton; Miss Ethel Shaw,\nBrilliant; J. Prudent, A, M. Parker,\nJ. Palrbalrn, A. R. McGallaam, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. E. Warner,\nalocan City; J. Brannen, F. L.\nHallan, J. R. Mills, W. Patterson\/8.\nPearson, J Lindsay, R A Kerr, W\nC. Clarke, Trail; J. L. Creamy, E.\nJohnston, Creflton; Mr. and MrB.\nW. K. Bert. Seattle; MIbs E. Mercer, New Westminster; W. J. Hef-\nferson, Mirror Lake; C. C, Moon\nand urn, Kellog.\nteen's Hotel\nIh. Center of Convenience\nHot   and   Cold   Water   ln   livery\nRoom\n' ' Bteam Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nW. O.  Smith, Betty\nMr. and Mi's. Carrean, Mr.\n\"   Eyllng,   Mr.   and      Mrs.\nand  Mrs. Preston.  Mr.\nOaro,   A.   Wordllng,   L.\nA.   Strand.  L.   Moown,|\nWarren. Mr. and Mra.\nand Mrs. Kutln,  Spo-\n; McGuire,   Slocan  City;   T.\ni Calgary; C. Hanson, Sal-\n.\"W. anmley, Lethbridge;\n., Heglna; B. W. Dyeart, J.\nL E. Gordon, tl. 8. Wood-\nWeterson, Trail; W. CoIcb,\nJ. Harrison, W. Wak-\nJters, B. Franks, Vancou-\n\u25a0 AUday, W. Benton. Vlc-\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modem Brick Building\n616   Vemon   St.,   Nelson,   B.   c.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone Jn all Rooms,   steam\nHeated Throughout.\nBooms by Weekly Rate\nor by the Month\nP. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nEuropean Plan\nSadden. Hotel\nD  Ji,  MCDONALD\nr Bteam Heated Rooms by tho\nDay,  Week or Month\nSvsnr consideration shown\nto guests\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts.\nNelaon\nMADDKH\u2014H. Hansen, W. Lyon\nand family, Procter; A. Dawson,\nTrail 0. V. Aldonan, Boswell, C. 8\nTaylor, Spokane; M, J. McPhee, J.\ncouver; T. E. Peden, E. McNeil, R,\nNeabltt, Lardo; D. Beaton, Van-\nW. Winter, P. LlrHmo, G. Grand,\n' SOuth Slocan; P. Rlckwurd, Willow\nPoint; A. Mclnnes, A. Spiers, Kaslo.\n'\nStrathcona Hotel\nWhen In Nelson stop at tne\n\u25a0Strathcona. Hot and cold\nwater. Rates $1 per nlelit.\ntpeclal rates by ths week\nor month.\nEnjoy your week-end and summer vacation\nat-\nAINSWORTH\nHot Springs Hotel\nAND SWIMMING POOL\nNature's Health and Summer Resort.\nFurnished Cottages Excellent Fishing.\nSpecial Permit May Be Ob.\nta hied; Residence Clause\nAlso in Force\nPARTIES MUST BE\nIN B. C. EIGHT DAYS\nCeremony   Must    Be    Performed by Minister Registered With Government\nTrail, B. C.\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTrail, B. C.\nA. P. JUEVE3QUE, Prop.\nNEW GRAND\u2014J. Marsund, H. J.\nPeck, R. McDonald, S. Decker,\nSouth Slocan; c, Moore, D. Bradley,\nCreston,  O. Raselo,  w,  G.  Engurt,\nD. Hepburn, M, Hepburn, Metallne\nFalls; K. McDonald, Vancouver; Mr.\nand Mrs. H.' A,' Peebs, Mr. and Mrs,\nE. Glllcn, Mr. and Mrs. H. Proch-\nman. P. Tokarz,. Mr. and Mrs. C.\nA. Stutz, H. Ponls, Mr. and Mrs.\nOould, Mr. and Mrs. Freeman, Mr.\nand Mrs, Parfke, Mi's. HaJsladt,\nNorma Halstad, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.\nMlchaclcn, Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Jes-\nseps, Mr. and Mrs. Chapman, Mrs.\nA. C. Carlson. Alice Norberg, J.\nShcU, L S Haldstadt, C A Carlson,\nMr and Mrs. H. Cower, Mr. and\n\u25a0Mis. c H. Dory, Mr. and Mrs.\nL. W. Scot, Mr. and Mrs. G. G\nSeagram',     J,   .Slerk,. Waverley;   J.\nF. Fraser, Salmon Arm; H. J.\nJohnson, A. C. Johnson, A. Speaker, J. Rathbone. Rossland; A. E.\nAnderson, D. Lancaster, Trail; T.\nLarson, 0. Farmer, Sandpoint; O.\nSund, Norway; Mrs. G, Perplval, A.\nW. Jeffery, Rosebery; R. F, Mitchell,   D.   J.   Allen,   Molly   Gibson.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n70S  Vernon   St Phone  637L\nII.   WASSICK\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comrort\nHeadquarters for Loggers and\nMiners\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nThe Standard .CaSe\n\u2022to linker street, Nelson, B. C\nOPEN DAY A.NI) MOOT\n11:30 to 2:30 special Lunch .... 35c\n6:30  lu  a  i>.  in.   Slipper   3So\nPhone IM\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON    STREET\nDinner 11.30 to 830.... 35o\nSupper, 6,3o to 8 p.m.- ..... :il>r:\nShort Orders  a  Specialty\nQuick  Service\nNext KoDtfcrsay Hotel, Nelson\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC KESTACBANT\nRefineinent   and   Delicacy   rrevali\nOl'EN   DAX  AND  NIGHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 to ii:30 ..- :i.in\nSupper  5:30  to  \u00bb ... ,-,...\u25a0.. 350\nWe   specialize \u2022 In   Gnop \u25a0 sucy   and\n-   -\u2022   Noodles\nPhone IBS\nNOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS\nNEW\nCROWN POINT\nHOTEL\nAT\nTRAIL, B. C.\nEvery Modern Convenience\nFor Room Reservations Phone 730\n||OUGLA\n\u2122HOTEL\nRooms and Baths\ni;. i.. and A. oroutage.\nProps.\nSteam Heated\nThroosbout\nr.o-. (103\nHot nnd Cold\nWater\nPhono 333\nTRAIL, B. C.\nUNION GARAGE\u2014Service station\nand machlnn .\u25a0\u2022hop, Accessories\nBtts, oils, Goodyear selected dealer.\nRossland Ave.   Phone 1.\nAt the last session of the legislature new marriage act was enacted which brings Into effect on\nSeptember 1st,, 1930 two important\nchanges la law as affecting marriages whloh take place ln British\nColumbia. Ministers and clergymen\ncan no longer officiate in the eol-\nemnlaatton of marriages ln this province unless they first become registered with the provincial authorities under the new act; and marriage llcenes will no longer be Issued\nas a matter of course on the mere\nfiling of an application, but only\nafter proof of' the necessary facts\nto the satisfaction of the authorities\nhy statutory declaration and other\nevidence.\nUnder the former act no registration of ministers and clergymen\nwas provided, Owing to the continual increase ln the number of\ndetached religious bodies, doubt a-\nrose as to the authority under the\nact of the ministers or leaders presiding over some of the smaller\nand newer so-called churches. This\nled' to considerable uncertainty as\nto the legality of marriages solemnised by certain of these min\/stors\nor toacheoi. and as to the legitimacy\nof the offspring of these marriages\nand their' ability to Inherit property\nfrom their parents and relatives.\nIt was impossible to foresee just\nhow far the courts would go in extending the act to some of the\nnewer sects or religious societies,\nand the matter became increasingly\ncomplicated, as more of these bodies\nwere established from tlmo to time,\nMUST REGISTER\nTo remedy this situation, the new\nact prohibits solemnization of marriage unless by a marriage commissioner by civil contract or by minister or clergymen who became registered under the act. This list is\npublished, and copies kept on file by\nthe several Issuers of marriage llcenes throughout th* province. Recent . inquiry in the office of the\nregistrar discloses that registrations\nhave -already been made under tho\nact of some 800 ministers and\nclergymen. In this way an authentic list Is provided by reference\nto which it is possible to ascertain\ndefinitely whether or not a clergyman is entitled to officiate ln solemnizing a marriage.\nHereafter persons contemplating\nmarriage can readily protect themselves from the uncertainty which\nexisted under tho old act. cither\nby consulting tbe published list\nor by requesting, the clergymen to\nproduce his certificate .of registration. Unregistered clergymen aro\nprohibited by thc act from solemnizing marriage, and the criminal\ncode of Canada makes every pflt\nson who solemnizes marriage without lawful authority guilty of an\nIndictable offense and liable to a\nfine  and  two  years   imprisonment,\nHASTY   MARRIAGES\nTbe second important change in\nthe act ls found in the provisions\ninserted ln connection with the Issuance of marriage llcenes with the\nobject of discouraging hasty jr improper marriages. Under tlidtiorm-\ner act no length of residence of\neither of the parties in this province or waiting period was required before the Issuancd of the\nmarrlaze license. Upon the mere\napplication of one of the parties\nsilting that he or she knew of no\nlawful Impedlmeht to the mar-'\nrlage. ths Issuer of the marriage\nIlcenese had no option but to Issue\nthe license, even though he might\nhave reason to doubt the truth of\nthe statements in the application.\nIn this way the parties were permitted to apply for and obtain a\nlicense and have thetr marrtge\nsolemnized all on the same day, or,\nin fact, all within the same hour.\nThis led to undesirable results\nln many cases, and provisions have\nbeen Inserted Jn the new act tending to prevent Improper, hasty, or\nclandestine marriages. The appl-\ncatlon is required to be by statutory declaration stating In detail the age and status of each\nparty, and cannot be made unless\nat least one of the parties lias resided ln the province for a period\nof eight days Immediately preceding.\nThe issuer of the marriage lioenoes,\nIf he la not satisfied with correctness of the faots stated in the application, may j-equlre the production of further evidence, or may\nrequire the personal attendance of\nboth parties or of other' witnesses\nfor   interrogation   under   oath,\nBY Gerald S.Eecs'\neither. jkarty Is under the age of\ntwenty-one years the issuer will\nrequire the filing with him of\nthe written consent of the parents\nas   provided   by   the   act.  .\nThe marriage license Is not issued ' on the day the application is\nmade, but only after the. expiration\nof a waiting period of el$ht daya\nafter the filing of tthe application.\nThe issuance of the license may be\nfurther delayed by -Jhe filing of\nany person with the issuer. of a\ncaveat showing cause. why tho marriage should not take place.\nIn view of the fact that, occasionally, a bona fide case may arise\nwhere It Is not only desirable hut\nquite proper that a marriage be\nsolemnized without delay, provision ls made In the act for the\ngranting of a' special permit which\nwill do away with the necessity of\nobserving the requirements as to\nthe residence -and waiting periods\nin the Issuance of the marriage\nlicense. These permits will be\nissued only in special cases where\nit is shown to the satisfaction of\nthe authorities that lt ls expedient\nand in the Interests of the parties\nthat tho marrlgo be solemnized\nforthwith. They are designed to\nmeet a case where evidence is produced showing the bona fides of\nths parties and somo substantial\nreason for an Immediate marriage,\nand are not to he Issued merely because the parties desire to avoid\npublicity or to be married without the knowledge of their parents\nor families.\nBoth these changes in the act\nas to the registration of ministers\nor clergymen and the residence and\nwaiting periods ln the issuance of\nmarriage licences had the endors-\natlon of representative clergymen\nof leading* religious denominations.\nThe provincial council of women\nwas also on record as being in favor of legislation along these lines.\nSomewhat similar provisions are\nfound in value. The new act may\ncause some inconvenience at first,\nuntil all clergymen should know\nIts provisions, and that no clergyman should attempt to solemnize\nany marriage after September 1st.,\n1930. unless he is duly registered\nunder the act and holds a certificate from the registrar.    -\nGENERAL CUT IN\nWHEAT OUTPUT\nNOW INDICATED\nOTTAWA, Ont., Aug. 31.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nA general reduction ln the world\noutput of wheat .and other cereal\nthis year ^ls Indicated by reports\nreceived by the department ol trade\nahd commerce from Its varltius\ntrade commissioners. In Great Britain the government crop forecast\nshows a reduction of nearly 660,000\nbushels of wheat and. a liyge reduction In the crop of barley ahd\noats. The British hay crop, however, appears to bc abimdant,  .\nProm Paris, Herculc Barre, Canadian trade commissioner, reports\nthat France will probably be\nheavy purchaser of wheat this year.\nExports of all cereals from Argentina during the first six months\nof the year were under ha'if of\nthose of the corresponding period in\n1029.\nCAMP LISTER MAN,\nDISTRICT PIONEER,\nIS DEAD AT TRAIL\nNelson Daily News\nVacation Guide\nIs thoroughly read and used by\nthe many hundreds of eastern and\nwestern Canadian and American\ntourists who pass through the\nKootenay every year during the\nsummer months; in addition to\nmore than 4000 readers who live\nin  the  Kootenay.\nLondon reports that the present\nhard times seem likely to bring\npewter more into favor again, and\nsome of tthe artistry usually expended on costlier materials ls now\nbeing devoted to objects In the\nmetal of whloh ornamental pieces\nwere frequently made ln olden\n.tJJ8S&.\u201e,-. ,.....*...,.,,\t\nWhat the\nPressIsSaying\n\u25a0 \"Gandhi.\" doclared Viscount Dunc-\ndln, one of the English war lords\nand a member of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, \"is t\\\nperfectly futile person. A dreamer\nan idealist. You could no more put\nhim at the head of a government\nthan you could put him ln charge\nof a big Now York department\nstore.\"\nLord Dunedln haa contributed\nlittle to the present publlo discussion of Indian affairs hy making\nsuch remarks, The hest that can\nbe said for them le that a big New\nYork department store would be\nat least as likely to ask Gandhi to\nbecome general manager as lt would\nbe to ask Lord Dunedln.\nAs to the futility of Oandhl'i\npersonality, there are many who\nwill disagree with Lord Dunedln.\nThere ure cc^ftlnly many who wo\\i)d\nTRAIL,. B. O., Aug. 3I-^JOhh. Plnlay, Kootenay resident for. over 30\nyears, died ln Trall-Tadanac hospital\nearly this morning, aged 73. He\nhad been a patient since early ln\nMay, belnz brought here fro\/. Camp\nLister  for  treatment.\nMr. Pinlay was born ln England.\nHis residence ln this district dates\nfrom bofore  1900.\nTwo sons and a daughter, Mrs.\nJury,  survive   him.\nThe funeral ls to be held at\nCreston.\nLabor Day;,-let \\vaie' otter ft feW\nodds and ends anent the problems\never associated with ths word Labor\nand hallowed, rlghtlyj or wrongly,\nby Tlmo and Custom. Another word\n\u2014Capital\u2014usually used in cqnlunc-\ntlon, ' causes more1 argumentative\ndiscussion from tfoap-box and.fOrura,\nthan any other topic under the sun,\nmoon ahd stars.\nOther words, similarly hostile, are\nSocialism   and   Communism.\nPor tho subjects thereby indicated, how true, that \"a little\nknowledge ia a.-dangerous thing\"!\nThe Communist (team\u2014 uieali3tlc\nin spirit and theory, hut impractical- economically and humanly\u2014\nof a world revolution remains a,\ndream. Red Russia Is 'eleven years\nold: Eleven years since 'Lenin, Trotsky and their blood thirst;: pair;\noverthrew Kerensky and b*v<.H. tiU!\nmost momentous political ec jnpmlc\nand social'experiment in all.ri.iorded\nhistory. Not only was the ,'ormer\nompir-a of the Czar changed almost\nbeyond recognition, hut jjc-hovlk\nRussia also ln its very hour of\nbirth, hurled a defiant, chsilflnge\nto tho whole existing world, order.\nA titanic twofold \u25a0ttugtfle- tinned\u2014\na struggle of the Comniuniot to\nllolshevlze Russia, and a warf.i'e of\nthe same group, organised internationally, to bolshevlze the world.\nThe propaganda of the Third\nInternational running the Unlpn of\nSoviet Socialist Republics haa caused\nvast unrest, world-wide, yet this in\nturn has hardened the non-communist world and keeps Red Russia\nIn chronic isolation\u2014from 'vhlch\nlt Is the worst sufferer,\nCummunlim has clearly failed to\nconvert Red Russia itself, thou-gh\nIt haa led to emancipation from\nmuch Ignorance and superstition;\nthe peasant fatalistic by nature,\nclings to the land he has won,\nresenting the Idea of land socialization in the oommunlstlc sense;\nprivate trading and much ol the\nold order has been restored. Communism reverts to its pre-war status\nsa an -academic hypothesis; in thia\nfact, the proponents of constructive\nprogress can- find considerable satisfaction. Revolutoln ls not necessarily Immoral. Cromwell was a revolutionist, as were Barons and Run-\nnymede; George Washington was a\nrevolutloniary hero. Many of the\nprivileges wero now valued most.\nhighly wero the outcome of revolutions and seditions\u2014our own av\nsomebody else's. However, ten years\nof communist effort in Muscov v\nhave convinced thoso who cry out\nmost loudly for reform thai tho\nnecessary changes are most likely\nto come through evolution rather\nthan   by   violence.\nWhat Russia's eventual evolution\nIs to be, no man can surely say.\nThe problem Is too vast and contains too many incalculable factors\nto make accurate prediction possible. Red Russia remain;; the most\nchallenging phenonema of our age.\nCommunism Is, in fact, a religious\ndogma. Its leaders' ambition la\nnot to raise others to the standards\nof the \"more . fortunate, but to\nmake everybody equally unfortunate,\nso that all will meet on a common\nbasis of misery.\nLooking across the North Atlantic,\none notes, that. Premier Ramsay\nMacDbnald's .political prestige fadest.\npolitical gossips give., hla . government-but one more year.\nFairly successful in foreign affaire,\na failure in home' politics, \u25a0\u2022\nTWO    MILLION\nOUT-OF-WORK ;  i\nUnemployment, increases,, even in\nsummertime when work ought to\nbe most plentiful.\nA cabinet committee, in place\nof Jimmy Thomas,- now tackles the\nJob, and struggles to solve the social catastrophe. A perilous rock\nindeed, on which the government\nmay founder. What to do? That Is\nthe question. Working men of\nBritain begin to despair of thc\nworking man's government. In attempting to please everybody, it\nhas pleased none, least ot all lu-.\nown followers, who want the fruits\nof power at tho sarllest date posstblr\nCoal miners, social reformers, educationalist, farmers, women voters\nand trade unions quarrel and despair of aid. and the rich are furioup\nat the Increased taxation, while\nthe   land   tttxers   remain  displeased\nessence j of Christianity; but the\nsocialists hare no monopoly of the\ndesire to  do good.\nOne supposes that at the back.\nof hla head, Is tho idea^-a right\none\u2014that the ordinary man, who\nin turn and in Time moves tha\nworld, :\u2022\u25a0 should Und life g\u00bbt easier\nrather than harder, m time. weaw<\non, that he Is entitled to &ome ot\nthe comforts.of life as well as mow\nof tho risks, a feeling. that . he\nshould po'-ft co-parther in a world,\nsystem rather than -. a chattel who\nlives by the breath of an employing system,''that can make or break\nhim acfcordlnE to Its moods and\ninterests. Life for mdet on. thia; .\nplane of cxl^tenos Is spelt mostly\nin terms of Work and wagw, that\nmost griefs or differences, disproportionately in very truth, flow\nfrom a feeling that the two aro\nnoS commonsurate, . -\nWe are'not getting as much'out\nof tho system as .w*; are putting\na; th&t is why so many talk\n.vLilf.i.ti; Not so keen on state\nwncrshlps, which is generally less\nefficient, but it is thought, that\nwhen the State, whloh is. the pitt-\nccn, owns tho mines and factories,\nit will seo that the worket gets\na fair deal.\n1   do   not   think   Socialism   will\n--or como to pass, but that sooner\nor iatcr Industry will realiEo ths*\n\\m-dw-tlw present -system, tho difference of the wage controversy\ncan he reconciled and that lndus-\ntralj contentment alene oan be PUIS*\nchased by' both employer, ana employee gettlr>2 far more out of\ntheir Jobs than hitherto thought\n:A......:bk- that our work is something, more than a mere Job\u2014lt is\na way of life. High wages have\nto he earned before they can he\nplad. I-would like to go Into the\nmatter a little more fully, but\nenough is enough for the present.\nAfter all. this is a holiday, and'\nas a Chinese friend remarked to\nme \"Labor Day. Whaffor* Nobody\nlabor.\"\nIn conclusion, Jt m\u00bby not ba\ngenerally known that the unl-'\nvcrcally celebrated Labor Day had\nIts beginnings in a parade. In\n1882, the Knights of Labor\nstaged a parade to protest against\nrising fodd cdst\u00bb,r ahd'repeated'it\nyear by .year till 1887. So vast\nIts extent that one State of the American Union, always' bubbling over\nwith' labor troubles, became so\nconvinced of Labor's power that it\nset aside the first Monday ln September as dedicated to Its inter- \u25a0\nesta. Other States-followed, until'\nln 1909, Labor Day became a general\nholiday.   .\u201e j\nBUILD DOMINION\nBY AGRICULTURE\nAND INDUSTRIES-\nSuch Is  to Be  Efforts of\nNew Government States\nStevens\nCANADIAN  FRUIT  1NP8KCT10N\nThe shipping point Inspection service of the fruit branch of the\nDominion department of agriculture\nlast year handled 25,760 oars of\nfruits and vegetables, an Increase of\n23,000 cars in the past five years,\nand 9300 cars more than were inspected in the 1928-29 season. Hundreds of thousands of tons of\nperishable fiV'ts and vegetables now\npass from producer to consumer\nthrough this new system of established quality marketing and the\ngovernment certificate of Inspection\n(has placed trading on a basis of\nIf' confidence.\nadmit the power wielded by this\nextraordinary nun. Webb Miller of\nthe United Press, special correspondent ln India, reports that the boycott against English goods is gaining strength. He writes:\nIt Is generally admitted that\ntrade is seriously damaged.\nOne of the highest officials of\nthe-Indian government In Simla admitted to ine that the\nboycott ls \"very effective\". Partial trade returns covering only\nthe first two month when the\nboycott was beginning to gain\nimpetus, show a decrease of 11\nper cent.\nThe boycott ls the weapon deliberately chosen by Gandhi, and\nthe measure of Its success is,\ntherefore, the measure of Gandhi's\nfutility or non-futlllty. To dismiss\nhim as contemptuously as Lord\nDunedln did does nothing but lay\nLord Dunedln opsn to serious criticism.\u2014Manitoba  Free   Press.\nThe Priceless Ingredient\n. In the City of Bagdad lived Hakeem, the Wise\nOne, and many people went to him for counsel.\nThere casne' to him a young man who had spent\nmuch but g-ot' little, and said, \"Tell me, Wise One,\nwhat shall I do to receive the most for that which\nI spend?\"\nHakeem answered, \"A thing that is bought or\nsold has not value unless it contains that which cannot be bought or sold. Look for the Priceless Ingredient.\"\n\"But what is this Priceless. Ingredient?\" asked\nthe young man.\nSpoke then the Wise One: \"My son, the Priceless\nIngredient of every product in the market place is\nthe Honor and Integrity of him who sells it. Consider\nhis name before you buy.\"\nCHARLES MORRIS Ltd:\nWILL TRY ADJUST\nTRADE WITH N. Z.\nImport Nothing That    Can\nBe Grown at Home Is\nStevens Idea\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug.. HI.\u2014'\n\"The new government led by Hon.\nR. B. Bennett alms first to build\nup Canada industrially and agriculturally by suitable protective tariffs,\" said Hon. H. H. Stevens, who\nleft, for Ottawa, today to attend the\nspecial session of' parliament called\nfor September S. \"Our Ideal Is\nthat nothing hereafter will foe' Imported except what can not be\ngrown or manufactured or other-\nwl.se produced at * -home, -and If\nCanada can not produce lt, then\nwc hope to get the soods from\nBritain or from- our sister dominions.\n\"I am not laboring under any II- [\nlustons about the problem of male-'\nIng now agreements with Australia '\nOhints or figured muslin bedspreads wear well, require less laundering than plain white spreads, and\nalso aid in carrying out a color\nscheme. ..,\nTRAIL\nNEW DENVER\nNELSON\nUnhappy political. Britain In the ! and New Zealand. Just now it ls\nland of the Southern Cross, Aus- I not a question of Canada selling\ntrallans wake to the fact that I more goods to these-two dominions\nunder unwt.se government, they have f\nbeen brought nigh to bankruptcy;\nstern measures evolved to relieve\nthe situation bring loud outcries;\nlavish spenders of the commonwealth's sterling wake to th> unpleasant morning after a hcctlo\nnight.\nTHE   COLLECTIVE   BARGAIN?\nIn passing, it may be mentioned\nthat Trado Unionism ln Britain is\nln bad odor, while professing to\nbe a democratic institution', lt has\nmore than onco trampled underfoot\nthB fundamental. principles of '.democracy, In one general sfitlke,\nneither the workmen nor the numbers of the unions were balloted or\nconsulted by their leaders; there\nwas presented tlie unhappy spectacle of a railway union exeouUive\nthreatening a national railway strike\nIf the Government of the day did\nnot adopt a certain line of home\nlegislation  and  foreign policy.\nNo self respecting democraoy can\ntolerate such dictation or threats.\nBtrllces may be all right so long\nas the present capitalistic system\nremains, but only with due safeguards, but the right to strike in\npublic utility services should be\nabolished. If a man wishes to ro-\ntaln the right to be a union man\nand the right to strike, he should\nremain ln private .capitalistic employment. Democratic government\ncertainly should not he challenged\nby & union committee breaking\nthe rules of Its own organization.\nPRUSSIANIZED AND\nRUSSIANIZED\nOne writes wtth regret that\nBritish trade unionism seems to\nhave become unreliable and tyrannical, a severe handicap to much\nneeded trade. In Its aim to improve the condition of its members,\nits recent .polioies tend to make\nthings scarce and costly, lncreasa\nthe. cost.of living, and reduce the\npurchasing power of wages, also\nto limit the volume of wages by\ndriving trade elsewhere. Its' demarcation rules and other restrictions have' something to answer |\nfor in the falling state of British\nIndustry today. .\n\u25a0What ls at the' back of tho mind\nof the Socialist which would desJ\ntroy1 any 'one system and set up\nanother ln its place?. What underlies the class hatred that makes\ndiscord where there should be\nharmony,1- and sets - man against\nman rather than shoulder to shoulder alongside of him? Why does\nthe overalled workman lnollne to\nJe\u00abr at \"the white collar Johnny\"?\nI do not know; I wish some So-\n~-Capital\u2014usually hsed in onjun-\ncUHet would, enlighten , me, but\nnot today,  plosse,    Those. who be-\nover how wg can enlarge our buying irom Australia. In my department at Ottawa we are now going\nover with a fine-tooth comb the\nlist of Canada'*: Imports from various oountrles to discover what of *\nthese we may Just as well'or better buy from Australia unij Nsw\nZealand, rather than from tho conn-'\ntry of present export.\n\"It may take some time to swing\nthis business ln favor of the Brit-\nlsh dominions, but we are earnest-1\nly trying to work out that plan.\nWe are importing some tallow\u2014 why\nnot got this from Australia,? We\nshall endeavor to steer our dried\nfruit imports from that direction.\n\"There la every reason to believe\nthat the Australian orange trade\nwith Canada can bo greatly extended. We in Canada should he buying whatever wines wo require from\nour sister dominion. Ne\\V Zealand\nrather overdid her butter exporjts\nto Canada, and that poUpy had a\nrather serious elfeot upon some\ndairy districts, Our own people we\nmust consider first, but certainly\nwo shall give our best attention to\nan adjustment of this butter business with New Zealand. I hope'\ntbe British people Of the southern\nhemisphere will realise that we are\nhoping to enter a new era ln our\ntrade relations with them.\"\nTournaments and\nHoliday Visitors\nTax Accommodation\n1\nNelson'8   MTOBamOaHttOO   {OT.  Via**\nors waa tixcd to tho ItmJt .during,\nthe week end, by tho combination\nof the Kootenay tennis champion-\nships end Kootfiiay soil oh&mplon-\nshlpn bringing In greet numbere of\nvisitors from other Kootoimy points,\nand of great numbere of Americans\nmotoring up for Labor Day holtdajr.\n- bast night not a hotel KUcnt-roo\u00bbi \u00abij\nyru.to be had la town, all available\naccommodation being early reauaan-\ntjoned, while Jn some cage! bed*\nwen made up In sample-rooms.\nRooming houses wore equally can-\ngeted.\nMany motorists who oame up irtth\ntents or bedding uullaed Nelson'o\nmotor   tourist  facilities,\nEmpire and Dtrectolre\u2014as golwmlntt\ntlon of a lightweight woolen dress\nin pale tones, suoh as pink or\nblue, worn with black woolen coat*.\nWhen cooking rhubkrb and while\n... - r,z~'',w-'-~-Zi \u2014\u2122*w - wurj we- i lt is till' laot, try dropping in a\nlleve in claee war need olther to small chunk of plneappf,T jfllr end\nbe converted or overborne. Some stir until melted, Tm gives a 55-\nof the.eoclalletlc,Ideals.are.:-In,th\u00bb-|tlnoUve delicious-flavor.  -      '\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1980.\nlOlfit\nPage Thnt*\nSCHOOLS AND COLLEGES RE-OPEN\nCambria House\nSchool\n1100 West llth Ave., Vancouver,\n.   Bay   406S\nBoarding and Bay School for\ngirls and junior boys. Kindergarten to matriculation. A home\nschool In! beautiful surrminrtinss.\nIndividual attention.\nArt,   Mush-,   French.\nSCHOOL OPENING\nRECALLSPOPILS,\nTEACHERS, ALIKE\nNew Tenn Opens on Tuesday Morning; Teachers\nTake Up Betas\nFor the past' week 'Nelson school\nSt. Ann's Convent\nNanaimo,   B.   C.\nResidential School for Glrla conducted by the Bisters of Bt. Ann.\nComplete Grammar, Grade Course.\nStudents are also prepared for\nMusic Examinations from the\nRoyal Academy and Toronto Conservatory  of Music.\nFor further' particulars apply to\nBister Superior.\nColumbian  college\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nRe-opens Tuesday, \u2022 Bept. 9th.\n\u25a0   High  School,  Commercial  Art,\nMusic and other courses.\nCost   moderate,   quality  unexcelled.\nWrite  for  calendar to\nO.    G.    MacKENZIE,\nPrincipal\nCONVENT OF THE SACRED HEART\nPOINT GREY\nBoarding and Country Day'School within'access of city by\ni Car. No. X4.\nUaBMENTAEY\u2014PREPARATORY   AND   ACAJJUMIO    DEPTS.\nJunior, and  Senior  Matriculation\nFrench, German, Italian and' Spanish 'Languages\nTor   Particulars   Apply   REV.   MOTHER   SUPERIOR\n3851 West 29th Ave. Phone Bay. 165\nSt, Stephen's Lodge\nLangford, Victoria, V.I.\nA residential school for boys from beginners (o Matriculation. Refined home with estate of sixty acres. All usual games, individual\nattention.\nManual Training\nAccommodatioon Limited\nLow Inclusive Monthly Fee.\nFOR PROSPECTUS APPLY the\nDirector: REV. C. J. CHERRY.\nST. ANN'S ACADEMY\nAlbert Crescent New Westminster, B. C.\nBeautifully situated. Founded 18(15. Forty Minutes from Vanoouver\nBoarding and Day School for Girls conducted by\nthe Sisters of St. Ann.\nThis popular Institution affords superior educational advantages.\nThe course of Studies ls tliat prescribed by the Department of\nEducation of BrltlBh Columbia for Primary Classes, Grammar\nGrades and High School leading to University and to Normal\nEntrance. -    '\nsrECIALS: COMMERCIAL COURSE affords a thorough business\ntraining\u2014Bookkeeping, Shorthand and Typewriting, according to\nup-tp-date methods. ...\nMUSIC-^A solentlflo and classical course leading to L; A. B. and\nto A. Tl C. M.\nElocution, Physical Culture and Domestic Science taught by dual-\nlflod teachers. Tennis Court arid Gymnasium.\nA PRIMARY SCHOOL, opposite the Academy, furnishes accommodation for the primary grade. * \u25a0\nFor further particulars apply to SISTER SUPERIOR, Phone N.w. 241\nVANCOUVER SCHOOL\nof DECORATIVE and\nAPPLIED ARTS\nDAY AND EVENING CLASSES\nOffering   courses   In   Drawing   and   Painting,   Design,   Commercial\nArt,  Architecture, Modelling, Pottery,  Lettering  and  Illumination,\nLeatherwork,   Embroidery,   Interior   Decoration.\nDAY SCHOOL\nSept. 15th\nOpening Dates\nEVENING SCHOOL\nOct. 1st\nTjustrated prospectus free on application to\nSCHOOL  BOARD   OFFICE,   690   Hamilton  St,   Trinity  2M1\nEnrolments Now in Progress\nfor Autumn Term\nTROTT\nHAW\nCHOOLS\nMAIN  SCHOOL\u2014386  Hastings   Street   West\n.   Sey.\n1810.\nBey.\n0003.\nCBNTIt.U,   SCHOOL\u2014Corner   Robson   and\nGranville\nSts.\nScy.\n2178.\nMT.  PLEASANT  SCHOOL\u2014Corner  Main  and   Tenth\nAve,\nFair.\n41.\nWIRELESS   AND   RADIO   SCHOOL-Pender\nand  Hamilton\nScy.\n5461.\nSCHOOL\nOF  AVIATION\u2014336   Hastings   St.\nW. Sey.\n1810.\nSey.\nU002.\nThe choice of a school Is a VERT IMPORTANT MATTER. A\nbungled education iLgaiu a blighted, caroer. Therefore a\nschool record, the success of It > output, and Its standing\nwith tho empioylr.g buouioss public should be made tbe\nprime consideration. Price should be entirely secondary, for\nwhat is sni or e20 ln a business career? .    '\nA FEW OF THE MAW.  OUTSTANDING F.tUTS  WHICH ARE\nWORTH   CONSIDERATION  BV  ALL  INTERESTED\nIN   A   BUSINESS   EDUCATION\nSprott-Sriaw Schools jilurc la positions all their graduates.\nSprott-Shaw  Students ilaww stand high  in public compe-\ntltlone.  They have *mn  nearly  everything  there  Is  to\nwin\u2014gold medals, doaeos of them, oupey pins, etc\nSprott-Shaw Students are always In demand. Ask their employers.     ..\nSprott-Shaw Schools havo a moat efficient Employment Department   to   which   emloyere   may   apply   and   receive\ncourteous  treatment\u2014th* proper person  far the proper\nplaoe and the proper plaoe for tho proper person. No\nsquare pegs' In round holes.\nSprott-Shaw ' Teachers  are  all   hltWy   educated   people\u2014elx\nuniversity graduates;  six university  undergraduates  and\nfive with brilliant teaching reeorde all in Vancouver.\nSprott-Shaw Schools train up to a standard, not down to\na price. That, la why, they may quite properly be termed\n\"the Behool of Champions.\"\nchildren (have been digging around\nin old drawers and, ln the attics\nand basements of their homes looking up their school books that' were\ndiscarded gleefully two months .ago.\nOn Tuesday morning high sohool\nstudents \u2022 and kindergarten pupils\nalike will take their seata In school,\nto start a new fall term,\nBehool teachers, too, during the\nvaoatlon period have either travelled\nthrough the country at their leisure\nor attended summer schools at various points. For the past 'few days\nand particularly on tha week-end\nthe out of town teachers have\nbeen returning to the olty. preparatory to the opening bt the term.\nLast June the usual: number- of\nnew teachers graduated from .the\nprovincial normal school, and during the summer months these newest additions .to the teaching profession have been bu*By, scurrying\naround trying to secure their first\nschools.\nAs Tuesday, morning approaches\nthey view, more or leas ; with a\nflutter of excitement, the possibilities that their new profession offers.\nCORN IN DEMAND\nNELSONMARKET\nRadishes Are Back on Mar.\nket List, Selling at Five '\nCents a Bunch\nW. J. THOMPSON\nINJURED IN DIVE,\nLAKESIDE PARK\nHits  Lake    Bottom    When\nHe Dives From 20-Foot\nistand\nCOAL EXHIBIT\nFERNIE FAIR\nHAKES A HIT\nShows   Various   Interesting\nThings in Connection\nCorbin  Collieries\nM.&S. DISPLAY\nSHOWS PRODUCTS\nDiving from thG 20-foot stand\non tbe float at Lakeside park Sunday afternoon, W. J. Thompson,\n\"Bud.\" received a nasty gash on\nhis head and'was somewhat shaken\nup, when.he struck the rocky bottom of the lake. Several stitches\nwere required,' and he is now In\nKootenay Lake general hospital suffering from, shock.\nThe accident occurred about 2:30\no'clock, ln the afternoon. Mr.\nThomspson \u25a0 dove from the stand,\nand. when he. came up hts companions noticed that he waa ln: difficulties, and pulled him onto the\nfloat'. When it was found \u25a0 he -was\nInjured, he was rushed to the hospital.\n.'.'With the drop of the water level\nthe water in front. of, the stand Is\nnow.  Quite; shallow, and   dangerous.\nPulverized Coal, Forest Exhibit. Needlework Exhibits\nAttract\nCorn was ln greater\u2022 demand : at\nthe Nelson public market Saturday\nthan any other Item'on: the \"market\nlist. Selling at 35 cents' a.dozen,\nthe large supply laid, up,'for the\nbeach picnickers was completely mid\nout. Radishes were\" back on 'the\nmarket for the first time ln over\na month, being offered at'five cents\nbunch. Curd cheese sold at 30\ncents a dish and cream cheese at\n40 cents a pound. Price of new\npotatoes remained the same as on\nthe previous week, seven pounds\nfor 25 cents. *        ,\"\\,'\nPrices were:\nRadishes, per bunch * . $ .05\nCurd Cheese, per dish .\nCream cheese, per lb.:.\nChicken, per lb. \t\nPlums, per basket ...I\nPeppers, per lb. \u201e...'.:\u201e;\nDill seed, per burfch'\nFLOWER SHOW\nB HELD, SALMO\nExcellent Exhibition; Prizes\n. Awarded; Mrs. McKenzie\nJudges    ,\nVegetable  marrow,  each \u201e_.\nEarly apples, five lbs. ..J 1'\u21221\nGrapes, per lb \u2122.\u2122_..\nOreen peas, 2 lbs. _  m.\u2122.\u201e\nCurrants,   two  lbs.  _. \u201e..\u201e\nPotatoes,  early, 7 lbs.   _\nBeans, string, per lb \t\nBeans, bibacl, per lb \u2122\nCabbage, per head '..-.  10 to\nCauliflower,   per  lb.    _   .16\nStrawberries,  per box\nRhubarb,   6   lbs.   ... ...\nSpinach,  bunch  .\nTomatoes,  per  lb, ;..\u201e.' ..\nCut   flowers,   per   doz.   .25   to\nLettuce,  per  head   _ \u201e\u201e...!\nParsley, per bunch  - _...\nEggs,   firsts         ..\nEggs,   extras   - ^. ...\nPot plants  .50 to 1.75\nCarrots, per bunch ..\u2122 ,   .05\nOnions,   a   lbs.   .._       - ..IS\nButter,   per ' lb.    _.-..-  .50\nHoney,   per   Jar    ,..._ ; .25\nBeets, per bunch -.* :...^.-.  .05\nPotatoes, per 100 lbs. -  3;So\nTomatoes,  a   lbs. _   .35\nSALMO, B.,C. Aug. 31\u2014The Salmo\ndistrict Women's Institute held a\nmost successful flower show In the\nCommunity Hail on Thursday afternoon when prices was awarded as\nfollows: Sweet Peas\u2014Mrs. W. Miller,\nfirst, .Mrs.  C.  A.  Cawley,  seoond,\nAsters\u2014Mrs. G. Bradley, first, Mrs.\nW. Grutchifield, second\nGladiolus, Mrs. J. C. Hanson,\nSheep Creek, first, Mrs. C. A. Caw-\n,ey, second, ,.   .\n'Best House plant*\u2014-1 Mrs. C. A.\nCaslln, first, Mrs. W. Miller, second.\n' Best: Table Bouquet\u2014Mrs. F.' Mc-\nCawiey;' first, 2 Mrs. Q. Bradley, second.\nBest ' Collection of Vegetables\u2014\nMrs. A- Bremner, first Mrs. ;G. Bradley; second. \u2022'*\"'.\nA special - prize' was awarded to Mr,\nG. Schwlnkey -for sweet, peas being\nthe only entry made by a bachelor. Mrs. H. McKenzle of Nelson\nacted   as  Judge   for  the   afternixm.\nA special feature of the afternoon was the spinning and carding\nof wool which was looked after\nby Mrs. A. Bremner and Mrs. J.\nPayant. Tea was served by numbers of .the  institute.\nMRS. OGILVIE AND\nDAUGHTER CAMP\nAT CULTUS CREEK\nHARROP, B. Ci Aug. 31\u2014Mrs.\nC. D. Ogllvle and daughter, Miss\nFlorence Ogllvle, are spending the\nweek oamplng  at Cultus  Creek.\nMlas Wlnnlfred Harrop left Wednesday morning for Cranbrook where\nshe wlU visit with friends for i\nfew days prior to leaving for Invermere where she has been engaged\non the teaching staff for the coming\nyear.\nMiss Arlington of Willow Point\nspent Thursday the guest of Mr.\nand  Mrs.   j.   Maokereth.\nMrs. E. Carter and children spent\nthe week end with Mrs. F. O.\nHaines  and family.\nNEW ORE CARS\nARRIVE, TRAIL\nAre 50 Cars Enronte From\nEast for Use at Tadanac and Kimberley\nFERNIE, B. .0., Aug. 31.\u2014The\nFernle fall fair which is Just over\nwas the best event of its kind ln\nthe history of Fernle. Keen Interest\nwas shown in all departments. and\nthe entries were better and more\nnumerous than ever before,.\nOne of the most Interesting features' was a display entered by the\nCorbin Collieries. This consisted of\ncomplete illustration lh various\nforms of the Corbin coal area and\nwas the work of Dr. Bertram McKay,\ngeologist of the Dominion geological\nsurvey who has been at the head\nof a party working the Co'rbtn geological Bheet throughout the summer.\n. The.exhibit began at the top with'\nphotographs of the topography on\nwhich were marked the outcropplngs\nof the coal. From these, there were\nribbons,leading down,.to their corresponding positions on a topographical map, showing the structure sections on paper. These in turn1 were\nconnected up with a \u25a0 glass model\nshowing 21 structure 'sections by\nmeans of glass plates, each representing a section of the -. mountain,\n800 feet apart, on which-were painted- the seams-and faults-of-the-mine.-\nLooklng through from one. end to\nthe other it is as though' one were\nlooking through the transparent\nmountain and seeing the tortuous\nveins of coal. \u25a0    \u2022\u25a0\nDEPTHS OF STRATA\nThis formation was further illustrated by a geological column, btfing\na glass Jar containing depths of the\ndifferent strata tn the proportion ln\nwhich they occurred In the mountain. Ribbons led off from this to\nexhibits of the rock found in each.\nSome, of-the formations Illustrated\nIn' this way*were:        = '\"''\n1, Paleoeolo formation, as Rocky\nmountain Quartztte belonging to the\ncarboniferous age and Pennsylvania\ndivision, and being 1000 feet in\ndepth.\n. 2. Fernle formations\u2014Jurassic period; containing Belemlte fossils;\nFernle shales and Ironstone concretions.\n3. Kootenay formation in lower\ncretaceous, being the coal-bearing\nstrata and occurring to a depth of.\n200 feet. This contained the Kootenay sandstone, Kootenay shales and\nthe coal yieasures. Some of the more\ninteresting specimens displayed were\nRocky mountain quartzlte; pyrlte\nconcretions like little round balls;\nand a segment of a sandstone dyke\nwhich occurs to the length of 100\nfeet In a coal seam  130 feet thick\nat  Mine   No.   3   at   Corbin,   B.   C.\nThis sandstone dyke cuts downward\nnormal to the bedding for a distance\nof at least 10 ieet,\nPULVERIZE COAL\t\nAn exhibit of the pulverized coal\nwhich tho East Kootenay Power, company . uses regularly at their steam-\nplant for the generation of electricity at. Sentinel,' B. C, was- on\ndisplay. It bore the legend: \"Used\nIn this form coal presents, all the\nadvantages claimed for fuel oil.\nMoreover it does not need to be imported from California or Mexico.\"\nThe East Kootenay Power company have their '\u25a0 own pulverizing\nplant at Sentinel.\n., Beautiful. specimens of. coal and\ncoke were displayed' from the mines\nof the Crow's Nest Pass Coal company at Fernle and Michel,\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting company- exhibited , their\nproducts such as superphosphate,\nammonium phosphate, phosphate\nrock and sulphuric acid.- \u25a0 \u25a0>\n\u2022 Also some - beautiful specimens of\nhanded lead and zinc oro from the\nSullivan mine, as well as samples of\nIron pyrite, lead ore, zinc conCen-\ntraces and lead concentrates, were\ndisplayed. \u25a0 < \"*\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\nFORESTRY  EXHIBIT\n. The forestry exhibit was .worthy..of\nspecial note, being a miniature\nmountain-side forest, with appropriate trees,' animals, waterfalls and\nrailway withbridge, and,, tunnel.\nThe display of.needlework, cookery,\nflowers and vegetables surpassed\nanything in previou3.:years.:.'\nSamuel Morley carriedi off- the cup\nonce more for apiary ;products which\nmeans that thia beautiful' stiver\ntrophy becomes hla proparpy. > ..\n' .Mr. - Morley gave \u2022 special prizes-\nfor cakes made with hone?.\nCRANBROOK RANK\nMANAGERRETIRED\nJ. H. McQuaid WlU Reside\nin Toronto; Mr. Baird\nSuccessor\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 31\u2014\nRegret is being expressed in the\ncity at the news which has come\not, the retirement of J. H. McCjuald,\nmanager of the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce, After over forty years\nof service ln the bank Mr. McQuald\nIs being superannuated and will be\nsaying farewell \"to frlendB ln the\ncity and district at the end of another month.\nJ. M. Baird, assistant accountant ln tbe main Vancouver branch\nfor several years, ha\u00bb been chosen\nto take up the duties of the bead\nof the bank , here., and will a-rrtv*\nwith his family in e. tew weeks,\nM)r. Baird Is a brother ot Un. Car-\nriok of thia city. '. -\nIt la the-plan-of-~Mr.,McQUflla\nand his family to njake tttrtr horn*\nln Toronto w-bere their daughte*\nMiss Wlnnlfred will enter th* Toronto University.\nARE FINED FOR\nPASSING STOP\nSTREET SIGNS\nFred Carmlchael and Edward Wat- s\nerer of Nelson\" appeared In' olty,\npolice court here on, Saturday jnor:i- '-\nIng belore Magistrate (villlam. Brown,\nand were each-fined W.60 for .pass- j\nIng atop street signs -vt'jut stop-,'\nplng.\nNew Y\nbeaded sll\non crepe\nrhlneetow.\nshops   ar\u00ab   featuring\n. with cut steel beads\nchene  or Kalian,  ctit\na moire.''\nGALT CCAL\nSUMMER PRICES\nGALT   LUMP   ._ $11.00 pt, ton delivered\nGALT EGG  810.00 per ton delivered\nGALT STOVE  _.. ?9.00 per ton delivered\nNow is the time to arrange for your winter simply.\nWEST TRANSFER GO.\nPHONE as\nFOUR SENTENCED\nTO JAR. TERMS\nCRANBROOK COURT\nFORMER CALGARY\nALDERMAN IS A\nVISITOR, NELSON\nFormer Alderman G. D. Bachelor,\nof Calgary, accompanied by bis\nwife and daughter, wore viritors to\nNelson on the week-end as they\npassed through on their way home\nafter holidaying ln tjie interior.\nMr: Bachelor Is active ln political\nand community work ra Calgary,\nand is especially known as a booster\nof public ownership.\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 31.\u2014Tho first\nof the large new C. P. R. cars for\nhandling concentrates between the\nSullivan concentrator at Klmberley\nand the Tadanac reduction plant of\nthe Consolidated Mining & S\/nelt-\nliig Company of Canada, limited,\nwas unloaded at Tadan&o yesterday.\nThere are 60 of these cara en\nroute from east for use between\nTadanac and Klmberley, and their\ncapacity ls 80 tons compared- with\nthe 60 -ton capacity of the largest\ncars up to this. time.. There are six\nor seven of the cars in the Tadanac\ntarda  today.\nThe cars are of the latest type\nof construction, particularly with\nregard to their wheels, trucks, and\nso on, and they are equipped with\nEnterprise door gears for opening\nand closing the doors of the car.\nOne of the particular advantages of\nthis gear is that it locks the doors\ntightly so that there ls no chance\nof leakage The cars can be used\nfor either lead or zinc concentrates.\nThey.havo a. capacity of 1400 cubic\nfeet.\nE. Y. Brake, car foreman for the\nC. P. R. at Nelson, came here with\nthe first cars to \u25a0 give instruction\nlocally on the methods of operating\nthe new door opening and closing\ndevice.\nMRS. McISAAC\nHOSTESS AT YMIR\nYMIR, B. 0., AUg. 31.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs, Carl Nystrom, Mrs. E. M. Gille\nand W. Smith of Beattie were Nelson  visitors   on  Wednesday.\nJohn Bremner, Mrs. Graoe Grant,\nMrs. 8. L. Springer of Grand Forks,\nMrs. w. Si. Mclsaac,, Mrs. E. Emilson and Mrs. 3. C. Mclsaac were\nwere visitors to Salmo and, Sheep\ncreek on Wednesday.\nMrs. W. B. Mclssao had as her\ntea hour guests on Wednesday Mrs.\nJ. H. Clark and Mrs. C. P. Pond.\nMr. and Mrs. H. SteVens had\nas their guests on .Wednesday even-\nin; Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Curwen and\nMrs. Walter Keel.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Curwen bad\nns their guests on Tuesday ev*n-\nuig Mr. and Mrs. N. Peterson and\nShner   Peterson.\nCharley Kublskl, who has been\nvhltlng relatives ln Spokane for the\npast two weeks returned home on\nWednesday. .   ,. '\nBABY GIRL DIES,\nHOSPITAL, HERE\nnorenoe Handeraon, ago S years,\nof Alnaworth, died here yesterday\nmorning ln the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital. *\nTh* little child wns the daughter\nof Janes Henderson, who accidentally lost hU IlM-ln Woodherry\noreek Just three week* ago.\nThe funaral will oe held in-Alnsworth on Tuesday, Bev. 3. h. Seat\nof Ratio offjototlng.   \u25a0.      '\nOSCAR V. WHITE\nLAID AT REST\nAT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Aug. 31.\u2014The\nfuneral of the late Oscar V. White\ntook place from tho family residence\nNew Denver, on Tuesday, August 26.\nTho Rev. J. Herdman had charge\nof the service and was agisted by\nthe Rav. D. A. B. Stoddart, M. A.,\nB. D.   The Masonic order attended.\nMiss May Kelly of Sllverton was\nthe soloist.\nAt the grave side the Impressive\nMasonic servlco was conducted by\nMr. C. F. Nelson, assisted by members of the order.\nThe pallbearers were N. Tattrle,\nA. L. Levy, T. Smith, J. Sime, J. P.\nWilson, E. Marshall.\nAmong' thoso present from out of\ntown were E. O. Whito jA Helena,\nMont., J. B. White and M of Spokane, Mr. and Mrs. Ro^Sharp of\nNelson, Mrs. (Dr.) Steed of Nelson,\nMiss Grace Wilkinson, of Nelson.\nFred Irving of Nelson, Capt. Fitzsimmons, M.L.A., of Nakusp, Hon. W, A.\nMcKenzle, minister of mines; Robert Dunn, deputy minister of mines;\n8. ' tt. Williams of N6lson; J. M.\nHarris of. Sandon.<\nORANBROOK; B.' C. Aug. 31\u2014At\nthe sitting , of the county., court\nheld thia week, at. which Judge\nNesblt of Nelson presided ln'the\nabsence of Judge Thbtnpson in\nthe east, tbe case . of the two magazine solicitors held on the charge\nof forgery and breaking custody\ncame up.\nFrank Eager, elder of the two\nyouths was given a sentence of three\nmonths imprisonment on each count\nthe sentences to run consecutively.\nJack Hatfield, 'hie companion, wu\ngiven a sentence of one month on\neach count,, the- sentettcea-to run\nconcurrently.\nDavid Jukshaus and! Maul. Maar\nwere' given: thirty days eaoh for\n\u25a0stealing oil from . a government\nroad grader- Tbe four sentenced\nmen have been conveyed to the\nNelaon Jail.\nFined for Being\nIntoxicated Here\nAppearing in city polios court here\non Saturday morning before Magistrate William Brown on a charge\nof being Intoxicated ln a publlo\nplace, Victor Johnson of Nelson\npleaded guilty and paid a flhe of\n936 and costs. .,\n}jf 1ttu*0tt>15*K (Lmpm^!\ntwcoawowA-n. art may ia\u00aba\nOther Branches at Winnipeg, Vnrkton, saskatoon, Edmonton,\nCsletry, Lethbridge, Vancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria,\nLABOR\nD.AY\nStore Closed\nAll Day\nDESERT  SWEETS\nThe giant Sahuaro' and organ\nplpa cacti and the smaller organ\npipe p'ltahaya coo tun of Arlzonc.,\nproduce good crops of dellclotia\nfruits iififid for centuries by Indians\nfor syrups, conserves and dried loop..\nThey bear fruit1 even after three\nyears   of   extreme   drought.\nWOMAN MASON'\nTravelling with her two children\nnnd husbandi working at their\ntrade, Minnie Lott, Grand Rapids,\nclaims to be the only woman ma-\naoa u\u00a3the' world.\nDon't Stub Your\nToe!\nONE DARK NIGHT\u2014so the story goes\u2014a certain monarch placed a large boulder\nin the middle of the road. Thousands of his people, thereafter, severely stubbed\ntheir toes or troubled to walk around. At length, one lusty youth\u2014wiser than the\nrest\u2014seized the stone and heaved it from his path. And where it had rested, he\nfound a bag of gold.\nAre you stubbing your toe? Are you overlooking any bags of gold? How about\nthe advertising in this paper? Do you read it consistently? It is a bag of gold to\nmany of our readers.\n In our columns you will find the advertisements of alert, progressive merchants and manufacturers who seek to tell you something they think you ought to\nknow. The advertising is news about the very thinks that interest you most\u2014articles that will save you money, lessen your work, or add materially to your\ncomfort and well-being\nThrifty men and women read advertising. To them it is a plain, everyday\nbusiness proposition\u2014a duty they owe themselves and their purses. It tells them\nwhere they can buy exactly what they want at a price they can afford to pay.\nIt Will Pay You Too. Read It\n\\\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1980.\n3fclriott lailu 2fao\u00bba\nPublication every morning except\niunday by The News ---,-\"-1-'\u2014\nCompany, Limited, Kelso:\nSunday   by   The   News   publishing\nCompany, Limited, Nelson. B. C.\nBusiness   letters   should   be   ad-\nB. C.\n    _,,... .   be   i\ndressed and checks and money_ or\nders mad* payable co The News\nPublishing Company, Limited, and\nin no case to Individual members of\nthe ataff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. 0.\nstatements of circulation mailed\nrequest, or may be seen at the 0l\niico of any advertising agen      \"\nognized    by   the   Canadian\nNewspaper association,\neu;\t\n;ency reo-\nDaUy\nJUBSCRiPtroN AATES\nBy Mall (country), per month I   .60\nPer year ....\u201e\u201e___.. .\u2122.\u201e\u2122   6.0o\nBy mall (olty), per year \u201e 13.00\nOutside Canada, per month ....     .76\nPer  year   \u00ab\u00ab , ,      7.80\nDelivered, per week , .._.......     .25\nPer year. _. .. , , , 13.00\nPayable in advance\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation\nMONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1980.*\nFINES EMPHASIZE\nENFORCEMENT\nTRAFFIC LAWS\nAunt Het\n\" Amy wj cryln' about John not\nklssln' her no more, an* I told\nto kiss one o* his cigar stubs.\nShe wouldn't notice no difference\nin the taste.\"\nNelson motorists alter a\nmonth's probation from the\npolice department in which\ntime they were to acquaint\nthemselves with the new\ntraffic regulations, are now\nbeing checked up for infractions.\nStop signs have been placed at various intersections\nand the motorists are asked to live up to these notices'\nIn spite of this numerous\ncases of motorists ignoring\nthe signs have been proven\nand fines have been paid into police court.\nFines imposed on forget.\nful motorists during the\npast week should serve as\na warning to others. If\ntraffic laws are made it is\nonly right that they should\nbe enforced. From all indications the new system is\nworking out splendidly and\nis a protection to the pedestrian as well as for the\nmotorists.\nfor transportation into the\nwilds of Angola West Africa. It consists of a rubber-tired wire wheel on\nwhich is mounted a light\nframe with a spring - seat\nfor the pass'enger directly\nover the wheel. Shafts fore\nand aft are used by natives\nwho propel the conveyance,\none pulling and the other\npushing.\n- While Kootenaians usually boast of their sixes and\neights the West Africans no\ndoubt talk of their one\nwheel driven and a two\nlunger  motor.\nIT CAN BE DONE\nEVEN AT BRIDGE\nTHE SPECIAL\nSESSION OF\nPARLIAMENT\nMembers of parliament\nfrom east and west are\nnow heading toward Ottawa\nwhere the special session of\nthe Dominion parliament\nwill sit starting on September 8. This special session\nhas been called by Canada's\nns>\u00ab premier, Hon. R. B.\nBennett, to deal primarily\nwith the unemployment situation in the Dominion.\nAll eyes, not only in Canada, but throughout the\nworld will be turned to-\nSl wards Ottawa during this\nbrief sitting. Premier\nBennett is implementing his\npromise made during the\nelection campaign, and that\nwas to deal with the unemployment problem and as\nsoon as possible after the\nelection.\nEver since the election\nthe premier, himself, and\nhis cabinet ministers have\nbeen working on the unemployment problem and no\ndoubt numerous plans for\nkeeping the workingman\nbusy will be suggested. If\na remedy is suggested Canadians will have to get behind the scheme to put it\nover. Relief of unemployment is something in which\nall the employing class can\nbear a hand.\nThat some remedy will be\nfound for conditions in east\nKootenay where the miners\nare working but few hours\neach week is the promise of\nHon. H. H. Stevens, minister of trade and commerce\nand member for Kootenay\neast. In his brief visit to his\nnew constituency he went\ninto conditions there fully,\nand frr\/tn statements made\nat Vancouver, residents of\nEast Kootenay have at least\na hopeful outlook for better\nConditions.\nA Texas editor made in\nhis paper an offer to bet\ngood money that no woman\ncould go ten hours without\nsaying a word. He lost a\nnumber of subscribers for\nhis bravado, and not only\nthat but a bridge party of\nfourteen tables was made up\none afternoon at which no\nword was spoken by any of\nthe lady players. This, without doubt is a world record\nsays the Los Angeles Times.\nA bridge game without a\nfight \u2014 much less a spoken\nword, is a distinct rarity.\nFew folks will believe it.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nOr LAl'BA A. KIBSMAN\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange Juice\nCereal\nPried Eggs\nJam\nMuffins\nCoffee\nDinner\nRoast Chicken\nPotatoes\nSquash\nLettuce   Salad\nice  Cream,'\nCoffee\n1 Supper\nCold Meat Loaf\nPickets\nPotato Chips\nRolls\nFruit    Gelatine    Mold\nIced  Tea\nLINES OF STEEL\nLENGTHEN ALONG\nNEW WOE LINK\nWork on the 34 1-2 Miles of\nGrade Will Soon Be\nCompleted\nNICKSON SECTION IS\nIN THE LAST STAGES\nAfter Nearly Year of Settling Roadbed Ready\nNext Summer\nThe\nLighter Side\nGLINTS OF HUMOR\nA key turned in the latch and the\nmaid knew her mistress had returned.\n\"Did anyone call while I was\nout?\" asked her employer, taking\noff her hat.\n\u25a0\u2022'Yes, ma'am. Mrs. Robinson\ncame round about 3 o'clock, ma'am\"\nAnd the maid picked up the hut\nand coat.\n\"One minute, Mary\u2014Was she disappointed when you said I was\nout?\"\n\"Well, she did look a bit queer.\"\nwas the reply. \"But* I\" told 'er she\nneedn't take on about. It, 'cause It\nreally   was   true   thir\"?lme.\"\n31jai Unto;\nof lours\nliy   JAS.   W.   BARTON,   M.1).\nX-RAY TREATMENT OF\nGOITRE\n25 per cent failures, lt would Beem\nthat this method Is certainly worth\nthe trying in those cases where the\npatient dreads surgery, or where\nhis general condition makes him\na poor surgical risk.\nOf   course   lu   sitripie  gdltfre   r.irs\nthe usual rest treatment, sometimes\nFine Salmon Are\nTaken, Jewel Lake\nEXTERMINATING BUGS AND MICE\nA reader friend has written to\nask me how to exterminate \"silvery\nbugs which Infest the oupbofird,\"\nand also how to get rid of bedbugs,\nrats and mice.\n\"Silver Pish\" is the name of the\nsilvery bugs. To get rid of them\nsprinkle bubach powder on shelves\nand in drawers and also force this\npowder Into cracks and crevices\nwith a blower.\nBedbugs: Kerosene ls a safe exterminator for this pest. Squirt\nit Into all cracks of woodwork and\nfloor, along wall paper cracks, on\n'furniture (especially beds, mattress\nand all., using a spring-bottom oil\noan. However, there is a poison\ncalled Corrosive Sublimate which\nmay be used in homes where children or pet anlmala will not get at\nthis poison. Still another method\nof ridding a room of bedbugB ls to\nclose up the room tightly and burn\na sulphur candle; or fumigate the\nroom and its closets with formaldehyde. An amateur should never\nattempt to fumigate with hydrocyanic gas, however, for this must\nbe used by suoh an expert as Is\nsefct out by health departments of\ncommunities to fumigate after ill\nness.\nRats and Mice: To stop up a\nmouse hole, use a larg oork first\ndipped into water and then Into\ncayenne pepper. Infested cellars\nmay be cleared of rats and mice by\nsprinkling quicklime round edges\nof floors close to the walls. In\nbaiting traps, use fried bacon rinds,\ntoasted cheese, oorfi on the cob,\nraw meat or broken fresh eggs;\nhandle the traps only with stloks,\nfor your hands would give lt the\nhuman scent. Also eoald traps\neach time after using. To make a\ndough whloh is poisonous to rats\nand mice, mix together one part\neach of grated cheese and barium\n(carbonate of bwytes) and four\nparts cornmeal, then wet with oold\nwater till it becomes a atlff dough.\nHave no water near. Tha mice or\nrats will eat this and then will\nleave the premises In search of\nwater.\nLaying of steel of the new railway\ngrade between Procter and Kootenay\nLanding ls making steady progress,\n\u25a0according to reports from the main\nlake, and already rails extend from\nthe Procter end for a distance fo\nseven miles south, and from tho\nKootenay Landing end ns far aa\nShaw creek, where a bridge is being\nbuilt.\nIt 1? said there will be an effort\nto have the whole 34]\/2 mileB of\nsteel laid if possible before the\nend of October.\nWork on the various sub-contracts\nis in an advanced Btage, and crews\nare being reduced as the parts of\nthe work on which they are engaged\nare completed.\nNICKSON  SECTION AHEAD\nOne of the first sections of the\ngrade to be turned over completly\nto the Canadian Pacific railway\nby Dutton & Grant, who have the\ngeneral contract, , from present appearances will be that from Shaw\ncreek to Midge creek, for which the\nNickson  sub-coDtract  completed,\nOn this section, on which the\naverage of experienced crews has\nbeen high, lt is said that the men\nhave made a good thing. Matt\nJohnson and his crew of 13 -men\nhave cleared, above all expenses,\nIncluding board, $31,600, in a shade\nover 13 months, on the tunnel work,\naccording to reports, or an average\nof $3250 per man. On another\nsection O. Stevens and his crew of\n14 have divided $31,000 clear, or\nwell over $2,000 apiece, men state,\nFINISH IN   NOVEMBER\nReports from different sections of\nthe line indicate that the grade\nshould bo completed in November\nat the latest.\nSettlement of the roadbed where\nIt ls situated on fills will take\nplace during the fall, winter nnd\nspring, and it will ba In permanent\ncondition for next summer, the\ntime announced by the Canadian\nPaclflo for bringing tho through\nran route into service.\nMANY VISITORS\nAT GREENWOOI\nGREENWOOD,   B.   C,   Ail*.   31-\nMr. and  Mrs. -. Whiting wero visitors to Greenwood on Tuesday*    \u25a0\nMr. Whiting who was station agents,\nat. Kettle Valley for a number of\nyears   Is   now   ln   charge   of lthe' J\nBoulevards... at      the      University\nGrounds, Vancouver.\nMr. Robertson and Mr. Fox were1\nln town this week surveying the\"\nclaims they, anticipate working at\nthe Jewel Camp,\nWilliam Jenks and son Gordon,\nold timers of Greenwood motored\nhere from Lulu aland early In the\nweek and' are renewing old acquaintances in the district. They,\nwere accompanied by Mr. Charles\nPatohworth, James Napier Paton la\na patient In the Grand Porks hospital.\nMr., and Mrs. Fred Christensen\nand fa^Uly have been visiting thetr\nparents here for the last 2 weeks.\nHerbert Hartley haa been elected--;!\npresident   of   the' local   Conserva-'*J\ntive in the place of W. S. Bomblne, ;\nwho  had  resigned.\nA.   L.   White    of   Princeton    _\nGreenwood   old   tlnwr 'paid  a -visitJ\nof several days accompanied by his\ntwo children.\nBlack   is   considered   outstanding,\nand  the  dark  green  shades shown!\nby Patou are also regarded as im-.\nportant for the fall season.\nEverybody dislikes  tho  idea of a, ;n(!taboll8m  tes(.  ta able to decide\nsurgical   operation,   and   so   wlien  vhml  tWs must  w done,\nother   methods   are   sometimes   suc-\nCeiWiUl     it    la     u.11,     ..u.. ....i\nGREENWOOD, B. O. Aug. 31\u2014Two\nlarge   salmon   wore   caught   Jn   the\nJewel  Lake this week by  a visitor HELPING   HAND\nwith Iodine medication, Is \"sufficient  Irom Omsk, U. S. the salmon weigh- Fifteen  persons  arrived  in  Lonrr-\nto correct the condition.                    ed respectively 30 and 33 lbs. Ang- mbnt,   Colo.,  from  Missouri   la  an\nHowever, lt must not he forgotten   lers vlsltmg the lake tthe last month oW  *\"\"*\u2022 The  tlres mn  ln \u00bbuoh\nthat there are some cases that can- I poor condition that they could not\nnot be cured except by surgery and ' nave not been very successful, the oontlnue. Polloe Ottloer Klok Schlup\nyour   doctor   by   examination   and   :er.eral   opinion   being    that    feed secured donations of four tlrea and\ntoo plentiful, the party was helped on Its way.\nflj Watson   Shoe  On,  IM.\nWilli- do\"  \u25a0\"**>  \u00bb\">il  quick*.*\nUUUC  work.    Oar  new  McKay\nstitcher,  \"the  onlv one\nIn   the   filstrtct,\"\nsews soles on all\nwomen*,    sboos.\nPrompt   out-cf\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet as figure your bills on\nBuilding Material.   Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\nthe Individual needing an operation wonders why h 1 could not\nbe treated by some non-sur^lcal\nmethod.\nAnd some of these non-surgical\nmethods have been most successful,\nnamely the use of Injections for\nvaricose veins nnd (or hemorrhoids\nor piles, which are really Just varicose veins, the ubo of the rest and\nalkaline treatment for stomach nnd\nIntestinal ulcer, rndlum treatment\nfor cancer, and so forth.\nAlso many cases of serious goitre\nhave been cured by the use of\niodine and rest, and so the patient\nwho has been advised to undergo\na surglcat operation for this condition  often wonders why.\nBy testing thc metabolism, (that\nIs the gulldlng up and breaking\ndown of his tissues), it has been\nfound thnt the thyroid gland ls\nstill too active despite the rest\nand medical treatment, and so a\nportion of the gland must be removed.\nBy  testing   the  metabolism,   (that\nThere is no other way, and now\nthat the patient is put into the\nbest possible condition before operation, nad our surgeon^ are so\nskilful that the operation has been\nmade less dangerous than formerly,\nthere should be no hesitancy about\nundergoing lt.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From The Daily News of\nSeptember 1,  1920)\nMiss  Vera  and  Miss Muriel Bed-\npath    returned    last    night    from\nGreenwood,   where   they   have   been\n\u25a0spending  the  week-end.\nHugh D. Ferguson, youngest son\nof Assessor Ed. Ferguson, arrived ln\nNelson last night with Mrs. Ferguson and family xo take up their\nresidence here.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nGeorge   Millar,   nssistnnt   principal\n\u25a1I the Nelson Business college, with\nMrs.   Millar   arrived   in   Nelson   last\nnight   from   Penticton,   having   mo-\nIs the building was up and break- j lcrci] t0 that polnl- from Vernon via\ning   down   if   his   tissues,)    is   has   kamloops,   Merrltt   nnd   Princeton.\n\u2022-----*    i hat   the\nlOUlHl\nstill too active despite the rest and\nmedlcnl treatmen..   m .\nol the gland must be removed.\nI have spoken before of bow the\nxray has been of help in these cases\nwhere surgery was advised, and now\nI Dr.   W.   Brednow,   Munich,   reports I tcok   \"\"other   Jump   on   the   New\nhis   experience   of   thirty-six    cases <York  niarket yesterday when  It was\nYou   aren't   really   old   until   you! treated    by    the    xray    during    the ! Quoted   at   90.75   cents  aa  compared\nwish   to   comfort   a   squalling   brat j l)a\u00abt year.\nThese   cases   were   of   severe   type\nEight persons recovered completely, seven of whom were under thirty\nyears of age.\nIn nineteen cases Improvement\nwas noted.\nIn the remaining nin\u00bb p-w-ji tv\ntreatment was not effective; however the majority of cases were\nmore than fifty yenrs nnd somo\nmore   than   sixty   years.\nNow although this series consisted\nof only thirty six cases, with about\ninstead of choking lt.\nMAYTIME   FANTASY\nMaytlme In a forest glade\nFinds us strolling, you and I,\nWhere  the  pretty  birdies  fly\nHigh   above   the   vagrant   cow,\nSo,  before  the  flowers  fade,\nPluck a garland for my brow.\nHandsome, in your flimsy dress,\nYou, my dear, delight the gaze,\nWith  your  cute  and  gentle  ways,\nSitting  there  Just  like  a  doll,\nGraceful   as   a   shepherdess,\nWith  your  crimson   parasol.\nAh I The cow is coming near,\nWading slowly through the grass\nLet's watch pretty bossy pass\nDown the glade so beautiful\u2014\n\"That's   no   cow,   you   stupid   ass,\n\"Run   like   sixty\u2014ITS   A   BULL!\"\n\u2014The  Side-Liner.\nIT HAS BEEN DISCOVERED\nTHAT THIS CONTINENT HAS\nBEEN INHABITED FOR APPROXIMATELY 30.000 YEARS, WHICH\nEXPLAINS SOME OF THE VEHICLES ONE SEES IN THE USED\nCAR   LOTS\u2014SAN   DIEGO   UNION.\nM.ss^ wilcen McKenzle, who has\nbeen \"attending summer school at\nVictoria,   returned  to the  city   last\nevening. _     \t\nThe value of the Canadian dollar\nWith 88.5*0 centa on the previous day.\nPACIFIC COPPER TO\nDRIVE A TUNNEL\nGREENWOOD, B. C. Aug. 31\u2014The\nPacific Copper Mines Ltd. operating the \"Old England Mineral\nclaim at the North Fork of Rock\nCreek has let a contract for 100\nfoot tunnel work was started on this\n...aim about 3 weeks ago.\nONE-WHEEL TAXI\nIN AFRICA\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nConsisting of one wheel,\na platform and shafts, a\ntaxi is bc|ng used by natives\n(From The Dally News'of\nSeptember 1, 1010)\nAl Garvin, well known mining\nman of Salmo, arrived ln town yesterday with samples of ore from the\nbig strike recently made on the\nPipe Dream group of claims ln the\nSheep   Creek   canyon.\nH. H. Pitts has taken a three-\nyears' lease on the Orand Central\nhotel from J. A. Erlckson, proprietor\nof the well-known  hostelry.\nJack Mulholland. the well-known\nSheep Creek packer, arrived In the\ncity yesterday with samples of ore.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nF. B. McDermid and W. E. Wasaon leave this morning for Creaton\non a duck hunting trip.\n\u2022 *   *\nS. Deslreaux and L. Dumont .eft\nlast night for Bt. Boniface college.\n1    20%     |\nDISCOUNT oat AM\nSUMMER GOODS\nScreen   Doors,   Windows,    Refrigerators,\nBaseball Goods, Lawn Mowers, Oil Stoves\nSEE OUR SPECIALS ON\n[\"Ugh Grade Aluminium and Granitewarc\n  PRICES ALL CASH ON\nTHIS SALE\nU Will Pay You to Call\nH leison Hardware Co. S\nSSS   WHOLESALE   AND  RETAIL  QUALITY\nSSS HARDWARE\nBS NELSON, B. C.\nElinor Glyn talk to\nNELSON Women\nabout clothes, marriage and romance\n\"\/\"'LOTHES, clothes, clothes!    life.letmegiveyoutworules...\n^Clothes in courtship!    \u201ertv_, _.     ,,      .    '    .  .\n\"ONE: Wear the colours that\nsuit you best;\ncolour-vital... new-like in huo   surroundings, colour ia vital,\nand power to charm. The curtains, draperies and slip\ncovers of your living room form\nAnd let your surroundings    part of the magic spell.   And\nreflect YOU . . here, too, Lux is invaluable.\"\nClothes after marriage! How\nsteadily the note runs through\nall my correspondence with\nwomeii,\" says Elinor Glyn,\n\"and how much of a mystery\nclothes still seem to be!   \t\n*  a.   - in ;aai I;,   .uiva    ivj:v. n mil..,, imii.    \u201e   _,, nQOCl JOflD '\n2S\u00a3^S\u00a3ffi\u00a3t    ''ThesllghUstlossinhue.tho   equally important in your very gffi\u00ab\nTWO: Keep those colours\n>  fresh and new and vital, \u00ab^ot oniy ;n your t.^ and\njust as you keep your ^,.3^^ such  as  gloves, (r\\sU)We,hedlS\ntlnngscleananddamty. Bcarfs and handkerchiefs,.but I'^SW1\nNot nctually ruined, jr\u00abt allure of\njoyoua colour lost.\nproblem ... when you realize \"lne BUgnwsi loss in nuc, <.uU\nwhy clothes are so important. J^4 deviation from the ong-\naiv     1    _. .a. .. .   . 1\u20141. mal tint, spoil the effect . . .\nYou know that you look       ,   , \u00bb r    .,    ,   ...\nbcstincertaincolours.Thereis Sl^itUt\ntheclue...foritiscolourthat the gown or frock brmgs.\nmakes clothes charming, allur- 'T have found that the allure\ning, expressive of you. that lies in colour is protected\n\"So if you would be success- by Lux.   Repeated washings\nful in romance or in married leave things colour-fresh and\nJfit's safe in water its safe in LUX\nLcTcr Brother. Limited. Toronto\u2014Soap-maker, hy .ppotntroent to tiaclr BxccUeodM\ntha Qovemor-acner.l .ud Vlacounte.. WUUruJoo\nOcft) etexei M\nit'm\u00ab-colours unladed, \"live,\" vibrant aa the day\ntha drmi.1 wu\n|mliKlit.It.nl ill Iim\ntUodiariuofuovf.\nI\n 0U>v5a\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS    ; MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1980.\nPaps Five\nI\nSturdy\nSHOES\nfor\nSturdy\nBOYS'\nDurable, good looking,\njust the kind of shoe\nyou have been looking\nfor for that son of yours\nabeut to start school.\nBring him in and let us\nfit him. Fine values\nfrom\n$2.50t0 $4\nR. Andrew\n&co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNELSON PEOPLE\nVISIT IN KASLO\nKASLO, B. C, Aug. 31.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs  Sedgwick   arrived   ln  tjje   city\nWednesday  from  Nelson,\ni-jjj W.  Graves  haa  returned, from  a\nTlslt to Poplar.\nMiss Marjorie McGregor has left\nto resume her teaching duties near\nCalgary.\nW. Pnunpton was a, Kaslo visitor\nWednesday.\nMiss Elizabeth Glegerlch returned\nhome Thursday after a month's\nholiday spent at Vancouver, Prince\nRupert  and   Alaskan  points.\nWilliam McGregor of Lethbridge\nIs a visitor in  town.\nA. II. Lund, liquor auditor, arrived Jn the city Thursday (from\nVictoria.\nGordon Moore, who haa spent the\npast few weeks In Kaslo, has left\n\u25a0 for Vancouver.\nT. Russell Ladd of Nelson visited\nKaslo Thursday.\nWalter Hendricks has returned\nfrom a visit to Nelson.\nCaptain and Mrs. West of Shutty\nBench wero Kaslo visitors Wednesday.\nP. A. Baker and son of Nelson\nwere Thursday visiters in town.\nMr.   and   Mrs.    William   McLeod\n\\ and daughter, who have been holidaying in town, left for their home\nin Trail.\nP. W. Mitton of Nelson spent\nThursday In tho city.\nA, P. Adams has returned from\nNew Denver, where he went to attend the funeral of the late OBcar\n'\u25a0 White.\nMr, and Mrs. Y. Gwyl arrived In'\nthe city Wednesday from Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. James McGregor of\nNelson were Kaslo visitors Wednesday, coming in to attend the Bow-\n, ker-Garland   wedding\nELECTRICAL\nCONTRACTING\nSUPPLIES\nFRIGIDAIRES\nRADIOS\nWASHING   MACHINES\nEVERYTHING\nELECTRICAL\nColumbia Electric\n\u2014   Limited   \u2014\nNelson Kimberley\nAfter We SelU-We Serve\nSociety\n\u201eThiH column \\k conducted by\nMrs. m, J. Vlgneux. All news\nof a social nature, including receptions; private entertainments.\npersonal Items, marriages, etc,\nwill appear ln this column.\nTelephone Mrs. Vlgneux at her\nhome, 619 silica street-\nMACBEV-rOTHERINGUAM\nSt. Saviours Pro-Cathedral was\ntho scene of an Interesting wedding\non Saturday. August 80 at high\nnoon when the Ven Archdeacon\nFred H. Graham united ln marriage\nGladys Mary, only daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. T. Fotherlngham of\nNelson and Carless Wharton Mac-\nBey of Trail, older son of R. W.\nMacBey of Renfrew, Ont., and nephew of his honor the lieutenant\ngovernor of British Columbia. The\nchurch waa simply and effectively\ndecorated with tall standards of\ngladioli, asters and dahlias, while\nthe chancel was banked with roses\nand other early autumn blooms in\ncolorful shades. The guests pbws\nwere marked with bows and stlln\nribbon and marguerites. Given ln\nmarriage by her father the bride\nwas charming Jn her gown of traditional bridal satin, made princess\nstyle and featuring the long sleeves.\nThe bodice had a yoke of rose pointe\nlace embroidered ln seed pearls and\ndiamante. Ruffles of satin gave\nfullness at the hip line and tho\nskirt fell in folds to form a train.\nHer long veil arid embroidered silk\nnet was arranged ln cap style and\nheld ln place with a wreath of\norange blossoms. She wore white\nsatin slippers and carried a shower\nbouquet of orphelia roses, illy of\nthe valley and heather. Her only\nornament was a sapphire and platinum pendant, the gift of the -groom.\nMiss Dorothy Partington of Vancouver, cousin of the bride, was\nthe only attendant. She wore a\nstriking gown of green silk fish net\nsilhouette style and ankle length.\nIt was accentuated by long sleeves\nand a wing cape, A soft felt hat\nof the same shade turned off the\nface and drooping at the bnrk,\ngreen moire slippers stockings and\npearls in matching tones completing her costume. She carried an\narm bouquet of sweet peas In pastel shades. George A. Meeres presided at the organ and during the\nsigning of the register Mrs. John\nGansner sang, \"O promise Me\".\nNorman C. B. MacBey of Regina\nwas best man to his brother and\nthe ushers were E. W. Campbell\nof Trail and Fred Irvine. Only\nrelatives and Immediate friends attended the wedding breakfast which\ntook place at .the home of the\nbride's parents on Silica street. Mr.\nand Mra. Fotherlngham receiving\nthe guests. The bride's mother\nwore a beach sand ensemble of\nsuede crepe fashioned ln long lines.\nA hat of French felt in matching\ntones and a corsage of pink rose\nbuds completed her costume. The\nliving rooms were decorated with a\nprofusion of garden flowerB while\nthe bride's table was centered with\na three tier cake embedded ln pink\ntulle and topped with a small silver\nvase holding pink rose buds. The\ntea table had as a center a bowl\nof pink roses, sweet peas and maiden\nhair fern, arranged with lighted\ntapers in silver sconces. Mrs. Fred\nH. Graham presided over the coffee\nurn and Mrs. L. E. Borden cut\nthe Ices. Mr. and Mrs. MacBey\nleft later on a motor trip to the\nWindermere, Lake Louise and Banff\nwhere the honeymoon will be spent\nand on return will take up their\nresidence In Trail. For travelling\nthe bride chose a suit of linen\nblue silk pique with a tuck in\nblouse of sliver wing crepe. With\nthis she wore a close fitting hat of\nblue felt, trimmed with a bow of\ncorded ribbon at the back, and\ncarried a gray travel coat with Gal-\npin fur collar and cavalier cuff.\nBlue shoes and gray stocking with\npurse and gloves ln matching shaded   completed   her   outfit,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMis Loutee Cunllffe made a\ncharming hostess Saturday night\nwhen she entertained at a small\ndinner party at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Cunllffe,   Observatory   street.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Janet Rankin of Ymir has\narrived In town and taken up residence at St. Joseph's academy,\n\u00ab   \u2022   *\nF. A. Whitfield has returned from\na few weeks spent camping at\nKokanee with his family, who are\nremaining   there   for   a   time.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Atkinson, formerly of Rossland and now of Vancouver, who\nhas been holidaying In Rossland,\nTrail, Was In the city Saturday,\nthe guest of Mrs, C. V. Gagnon.\nShe left later in the day for Kaslo\nwhere she will visit at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. J. j. Bunns, Mrs.\nAtkinson wns accompanied to Nelson by her son, Stephen.\nMiss Isabellc Nixon of Perry Siding\nhas returned from Loa Angeles,\nCalif., where she haa been attending school.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. D. T. Fotherlngham\nand their baby, who have been holidaying at the home of Mrs. Pother-\ningham's parents, Mr. and Mra.\nGeorgo A. Hunter, have returned to\ntheir home In Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. B. Fartlngtdn and daughter Dorothy, who came to Nelson\nto attend the MacBey-FotherIngham\nweddlnK Saturday left that night\nfor their homo in Vancouver.\n\u25a0\u00bb*\u25a0\u00bb\u2022\nMiss   Mayme   Currle,   formerly   of\n\"It's Safe Because It's Pasteurized\"\nCURLEW\nPasteurized\nMILK\nDon't tirink it! Eat it! Take as much time with\na glass of milk as you would with a quarter\npound of beef steak. Both have the same\nfood value.\nCurlew Creamery Co.,Ltd.\nIOBS   CREAM BUTTER MILK\nALL   PERFECTLY   PASTEURIZED   PRODUCTS\nthe High School staff here who has\nbeen visiting frlenda in the city,\nhas left for  Vancouver.\n, - *   *. \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. James McGregor,\nhave had as their house guests at\nthe summer place on the north\nshore Miss Marguerite (Mike) Adams\na popular teacher of the Nelson\nhigh school, who has been visiting\non the prairie. Miss Adams was\naccompanied by the Misses Elizabeth McGee and Ethel Pakeman,\nboth of Vancouver.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs.   Bartlett   of   Nine   Mile   Is\nspending  a  few  days  In the  city.\n\u2022 *   *   *\nMrs. William Waldle and Miss\nJean Waldle leave this morning by\nmbtor .for Vanoouver, where they\nwill vlBlt Mrs. Waldle's two daughters, Mrs. Benjamin McGregor and\nMrs. George Elley. They will be\nacoompanied on the trip by Mrs.\nWaldle's mother, Mrs. fi. P. Vasey\nof Montreal, who has been spending\nthe summer at Mrs. Waldle's home.\n* *   *\nMiss Marlam Hughes, who has\nbeen spending the holidays in town\nat the home of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Hughes, Victoria street,\nleft last night to resume her duties\nas teacher at Fauquier.\n*****\nThe Misses Marion Skill, Janet\nBowser and Alice Ulloch of Vancouver, who are guests at Bonnington of Lome A. Campbell^ spent\nSaturday   in   town.\n\u2022 *   *    .   .\nMr.  and  Mrs.  C.  White of Trail\nwere In Nelson Saturday to attend\nthe   MacBey-Potheringham   wedding\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. F. Dennlson, Carbonate street, left Saturday for\nVancouver where they went to be\npresent at the wedding of Mrs.\nDennison's sister, Miss Frances\nDrummpnd, late of Cranbrook to\nGeorge Walsh, which takes place in\nVancouver ln the Holy Rosary cathedral Wednesday morning.\n'* * *\nMrs. W.,C. Mawhinney leaves tonight for the coast. She will recuperate at the home of her.mother\nnear Nanaimo.\n* *   *\nMrs. J. Ritchie, who has been\nholidaying on the north shore, left\nyesterday for hei' home ln Lethbridge.\n* \u2022   *\nM. M. Reigh of Longbeach was a\nrecent   visitor i to   town.\n* *   *\nMrs. Cy W.  Peck  and her small\nson of Victoria who have been ln\ntown to attend the MacBey-Fothor-\nlngham wedding Saturday, left that\nnight for their home.\n* *   *\nMrs. P. W. Johnson and daughters\nAlphlld and Ina have recently returned from two weeks' motor trip\nto Washington and Idaho, where they\nvisited relatives and friends. They\nwere accompanied on the trip by\nMrs. W. S. Culver and children.\nMr. and Mrs. W. O. Rose. Vernon\nstreet, had as their house guests\nover the week end, MrB. O. E.\nDalgas of Christova and son John,\nwho are en route home from a\nholiday  spent  in  Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. Frederick Niven ot\nWillow Point, and also Warden\nand Mrs. W. R. JarvlB, were guests\nrecently at the home of Dr. and\nMrs. W.  O. Ros\u00a3\n' Miss Johnston, who has been at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. A. LePage,\nVictoria street, for the past couple\nof months, has returned to her\nhome ln Creston.\nW. R. Diamond of Trail spent the\nweek end with him family; who are\nsummering oh the north shore.\n* *   \u2022\nMrs.   William   Rutherford   of   the\nnorth shore has recently been in\nNew Denver, where he was Judging\nflowers at the fall fair. While there\nshe was a guest at the home of\nClarence Cunningham\n\u2666 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMiss Mary Santor ls spending the\nweek end ln Trail with friends.\n* *   *\nS, H. Kyle of the legal department of the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting company in Trail,\nwas a city visitor Saturday en\nroute to Kaslo, where he spent the\nweek end.\n\u25a0   *   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. R. Redpath leave\nthis morning on a brief visit to\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Mclnnes at Wynndel.\nMr. and Mrs. Donald McDonald\nof Trail were visitors ln town Saturday.\n*   *   \u2022\nAmong week-enders in town from\nSpokane were Mr. and Mrs. John\nDeKinder who were guests of Mr.\nDeKlnder's parents. Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn   DeKinder,   Rosemont.\n* *   *\nPeep    O'Ony.    the    north    shore\nhome of Mrs. William Rutherford,\nwas a pretty scene recently when\nMrs. Rutherford entertained a number of friends at the tea hour.\nUsing for her table center where\nMrs. W. J. E. Biker did the honor,\nan old fashioned nose gay of\ngarden blooms. Mrs. W. E. Wasson\nand Mrs. Frank Willis asslted ln\nserving. Those invited Included Mrs.\nC. R. Hamilton, Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mrs. Alex Leith, Mrs. John\nOansner, Mrs. R. W- Diamond, Mrs.\nE. W. Hazelwood. Mrs. J. Buchanan,\nMrs. R. C. Crow, Mrs. S. G. Blaylock, Mrs. Donald McDonald. Mrs.\nBruce Ritchie, Mrs. Wallinger, Mrs.\nB. A. Stimmel. Mrs. W. J. E. Biker,\nMrs. Bcrnal Biker of Wallace, Idaho,\nMrs. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs. Peters,\n.ind   Mrs.   Frank   Willis.\nYesterday morning Mr, and Mrs.\nJ. A. Irving and their children,\nStewart and Msfc-Jorlc Lois and also\nBabs McDonald leave by motor for\na visit to Spokane.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nR. O. Oscarson mining man or\nErie, paid a visit to town Saturday.\nAmong shoppers to thc city Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Otis Hawkins of Nelway.\n* *    \u2022\nE. Nelson. Annable block, lias\nleft to reside  in  Spokr,ne.\n* *   *\nMrs. Guy Wright and her two\ndaughters the -Misses Eleanore and\nCarol have returned from a week\nspent In Spokane. Miss Carrol\nhas left to visit in Castlegar the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. McAuley.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. H. M. Whimster and her two\ndaugters Lois and Muriel have returned from Balfour, whero they\nhave   been   holidaying.\nMr. and Mrs. David Kerr, Vernon\nstreet, have as their guests Mr.\nand Mrs. I. R. Pool of Calgary, and\ntheir youngest , son Donald, who\nhave been holidaying at Fire Valley\nWith Mrs. Pool's sister, Mrs. Bangs,\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMIbs Swanson has arrived from\nKimberley to Join the teaohlng tiff\nof the Nelson high school.\n* *   *\nMrs.  W.  O.   Rose,  Vernon atrefct,\nwhen ln honor of Mrs. Charles\nOuimette of Vancouver and Mrs.\nVasey of; Montreal, were entertained at a small bridge tea. Mrs.-\nH. H. Pitts presided at the tea urn\nand was assisted in serving by Miss\nHelen Murphy. The living rooms\nwere gracefully adorned with quantities of multi-colored gladioli. Those\ninvited were Mrs. Ouimette, Mrs.\nN. Murphy, Mrs. W. W. Ferguson,\nMrs. W. J. Grove, Mrs. Robert\nThompson, Mrs. William Taylor, Mrs.\nG. B. Matthew, Mrs. William Waldle,\nMrs; H. H. Pitts, Mrs. Ollbert\nHartln, Mrs. Vasey, Mrs. Walter,\nWright, Mra. G. B, Matthew and\nMiss Helen Murphy.\n*   *   *\nF. W. Jarvls, customs officer at\nWaneta, was a Nelson visitor, recently.\n.*   *   *\nMrs. F. E. Dockerill and daughter, Miss Frances were week end\nvisitors in tl\\ city.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Schwartz\nof Texas, former resident of Trail\nand Nelson, spent the week end in\ntown.\n*,-.**-*\nMiss Evelyn Christian of. Greenwood, who ia a guest at,the home\nof Mr, and Mrs. E. Creed Johnston\nat Bonnington, Datd a visit to town\nSaturday.\nMr. and Mrs. H. A. Powell of\nYahk    are    city   visitors.\nMiss Laura Parkinson of New Denver is the guest of her sister, Mrs.\nHeath,  Falrvlew.\nP. Talbot of Salmo paid a visit\nto town over the week end.\nMrs. W. B. Baxendale of Tr0.il,\nwho is summering at Procter, was\na recent visitor to tbe qlty.\nJudge W. A. Nlsbet and Mrs.\nNIsbet and family have returned\nfrom spending the summer at Mirror lake. They have as their gt|st\nover the week end, Miss Eleanor\nGreen   of  Cranbrook.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 31\u2014Miss Dorothy McKay.and Miss Sarah McCallum returned Friday evening from\na holiday spent at the coast.\n* #   *\nMiss Peggie Laurie, who spent the\npast week at Beaver Falls, the guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Stewart, returned Friday afternoon.\n* *   \u2022\nMrs. H. E. Webb and daughter\nDelia have returned from a short\ntrip to Spokane,\n* *   *\nMiss Phyllis Howard left Saturday\nevening for her home at Okanagan\nLanding, where ahe will be married\nSeptomber 10.\n* *   * .\nMr. and Mrs. Denis H. Bayley and\nson Howard left today by car for a\ntrip through Portland, San Francisco\nLos Angeles and up the Paclflo\ncoast   highway   to   Vancouver.\n* *   \u2022\nMiss Doris Anthony left for Nelson Friday to take part In the\ntennis  tournament.\nMrs. R. Somerville and daughter\nEllleen   are   spending   a   few   days\nWEDDING A PRETTY\nAFFAIR,_ROSSLAND\nMiss Marion  M.  Bisson  Is\nUnited in Marriage with\nCharles Daly\nSON OF MR. AND\nMRS.. RICHARDSON\nIS BURIED HERE\nDavid Richardson Is Laid at\nRest; Many Floral Of.\nferings Received\nFuneral of David Richard-son, the\nyoung son of Mr. and Mrs. D.\nRichardson, was held from the family residence, Rosemont, Saturday\nafternoon, Rev. T. J. 3. Ferguson\nofficiating. TJio funeral was attended by a large number of friends\nand many floral offering?; were received.\nPall bearers, young pals oi David\nRichardson, were: Albert Hooker, Ernest Defoe, Walter Thompson and\nRichard   Holmes.\nFloral   offerings:\nFloral offerings from Dad, Mother and Sisters, pillow; Uncle and\nAunt, Tomklns, Sask., wreath; Captain Douglas Brown, Mrs. Les Pickard, crosses; Mr. and Mrs. J. Ivan\nMcKay, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Younger, Mr, and Mrs. J. P. Morgan and\nfamily; Mr. and Mrs. Gow and fatally; Mr. and Mrs. A, G. Lane; Mr.\nand Mrs. D. Klein; Laura, Susie\nand Margaret; Mr. and Mrs. A.\nLang and family; Mr. and Mrs. A,\nKerush and family, wreaths; Mr.\nand Mrs. J. S. Allan and family,\nbasket; Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Lindsay, Captain and Mrs. F. Locke\nPaddon, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Armstrong, Mrs. Cameron, Granite\nRoad: Mr. and Mrs. Latta and family, Mr. and Mrs. George Atkinson,\nMiss Rodger, Mr. and Mrs. A. Sta-\nsyn, Mr. and Mrs. DeKinder ai>d\nLena, Mrs. Walter Fisher and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Riley, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. P. Morgan and family,\nMr. and Mrs. H. J. McLean, Nor-\nene Sewell, Mr. and Mrs. F. T.\nGriffiths, Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Francis, Mr. nnd Mrs. P. Defeo and\nfamily, Mrs. W. Mlddleton, Mr. and\nMrs. C. E. Mansfield, Mr A. T. Richards, Mr. and Mrs. H. Stanton. Mr.\nand Mrs. George Allen and family,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Dronsfleld, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. C. Hlclschcr, and family; Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Hunden,\nBessie Hooker, Mr, and Mrs, Bach-\nynskl and family, Mr. and Mrs. D.\nT. Heddle and family, Mr. and Mrs.\nDoyle and family, Mr. and Mrs. T.\nW. Slader, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hooker, boys, Mr. and Mrs. Lund, Mr.\nand Mr$. Medwid, Mr. and Mrs. William Squires, Mary Mcdwtd, Mr. and\nMrs, W. H. Mawer, Mr. and Mrs.\nMarskl and family, Mr. and Mrs.\nLouts Choquette, Mr. and Mrs. S.\nVingo and family, Mrs, M, Scally,\nMrs. Duncan A. Mclean, Mr. Rucck-\nert, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thomuson,\nMr. and Mrs. L. Grodrzl, all of\nNelson: Pete Hominlck. Trail; Mr.\nand Mrs. Tom Irvine and family,\nVnncouver.\nYMIR INSTITUTE\nTO  HEAR PAPER\nNEXT MEETING\nYMIR, B. C. Aug. 31.\u2014The directors of the Ymlr Women's Institute\nheld a meeting on Thursday afternoon nt the home of Mrs. J, M.\nGille. Thoso present were Mrs. H.\nStevens, the president, Mrs. J. M.\nGille and Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac. Visitors at this meeting were Mrs.\nWilliam Smith of Seattle and Mra.\nE. M. Gille. It w\u00bbs decided to\nhave a paper on a bird at the next\nregular meeting by Mrs. H. Stevens.\nRefreshments were served by tha\nhostess, assisted by Mrs. W. Smith.\nMr. and Mrs. H..Stevens and family motored to the Emerald mine on\nFriday where they will be the weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. James\nFraser.\nJames O'Brien, Pat OBrlcn and Mr,\nCrawford of Spokane were visitors\nto Ymlr and the Goodenough mine\non Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. A, B, Clark and family and Mrs. W. Clnrk attended the\nflower show  in Salmo on Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Curwen and\nMrs, Walter Keel spent Thursday ln\nNelson\nMrs. Grace Grant and Mrs, E,\nEmilson were sKoppers in Nelson on\nThursday.\nA, . Burgess, Jr., William Jones\nand Raymond Gille wero Nelson\nvisitors.oh Thursday, W. Jones going\nIn for medical attention for an Injured hand.\nL. P. Bond and Johnny Daly were\nTrail visitors on Friday.\nH. E. Dill of Nelson was a Ymlr\nvisitor   on   Thursday   and   was   the\n('made   a   charming   hostess  recently 'guest of Mrs M, Peters.\nTRAIL   HOUSES   AND   LOTS.     IN-\nsurance.    Notary.    J.   D.   Anderson,   TraU. (1268)\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Armstrong of Rossland was\na visitor to the city Friday.\nMrs, J. H. Young and family\nhave returned from their summer\nhome, Idle Hours, at Syrlnga creek.\n* w \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. W. Swartz left Friday evening for Nelson for the\nKootenay open tennis tournament.\nThey will leave the first of the\nweek for Gulf, Texas, Mr. Swartz\nis an accomplished player.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Mclnnls left\nFriday evening to spend a few\ndays ln Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. H. C. Caldlcott left\nthis week end by car for a trip\nto Kamloops and over the Cariboo\nhighway.\n* *   *\nMiss Dorothy Hall, who has been\nspending a vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hall, returned Saturday evening to Chapman  Camp.\nMrs. H. Hankln, Mrs. Relmann\nand Miss Seima Relmann returned\nSaturday from Willow Point, where\nMrs. Hankln spent the summer and\nMrs. Relmann and Miss Relmann\nthe past two weeks.\nMr.   and   Mrs.  T.   Page   and   two\nshlldren    are   spending    n    holiday\ncamping at Frultvale.\n*. *   *\nDANCE \u2014 Castlegar Pavilion,\nWednesday, Sept. 10th. Music by\nSvenscn and Wnldie. Gents $1.00\nLadles   Free. (1564)\nSylvio Murrard and party of Nelsonites were in Trail Friday visiting\nfriends.\nMrs. Carl Anderson entertained\nWednesday at a lunch party, the\noccasion being her birthday. Living\nrooms were decorated with a profusion of early fall f*>wers, and\nthe table was spread with a lovely\nItalian lace cloth. Those present\nwere Mrs. S. Hermlston, Mrs. A.\nFletcher, Mrs. W. Mutch. Mrs. J.\nMcGovan, Miss Polly Aitken, Miss\nTaube, Miss Je,i# McGovan, Miss\nViolet Fletcher and Miss Eileen\nFletcher. Mrs. Fletcher assisted In\nserving.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Shields\nleft today for a motor trip to Banff\nand Calgary, and districts ln Alberta.\nMiss Marjory Bingay Is attending\nthe   tennis   tournament   In   Nelson.\nD. B. Grey left Saturday to\ntransact  business  ln Nelson.\nRoy Wiley, Cecil Sanderson, and.\nLeonard Negus left Saturday \/v\ncar for a trip to Vancouver and\nother cities.\nP. Lennon, who has been spending the past two weeks in Spokane\nand    points    in    Oregon,    returned\nFriday.\nMrs. J. Lamb and two children\narrived in the city today to make\ntheir home. J. Martin and J- Lamb\nmotored over to  bring  them In.\nMrs. A, Fredrirlcs of Fruitvale was\na  city   visitor Friday  evening.\nT. Davy and J. Gopp left Saturday\nby Mr for Spokane, where they will\nspend   &   short   vacation.\nMrs. A. Wallace t|pd daughter, accompanied by Mrs. Wallace's mother\nwere visitors from Nelson Friday.\n*****\nMrs. R. Barber and daughter, f|\\d\nD. Wilson motored to spok.me to\nspend  a  few  days.\nMrs. Cecil MqOallum returned\nhome last week following an operation at the Trall-Tadanac hospital\nearly in the month. She is much\nimproved.\nHeber Ollls returned Friday evening from Paulson, where lie has\nbeen spending a few days vacation\nos   the   guest   of   Mr.    and    Ifa.\nBllson Merry at their summer home.\nJames Ferguson of Klmberley returned to his home Inst week, having spent a short holiday with his\nbrother,  Ii.  J. Ferguson,  Trail.\nMiss A. R. Mitchell, who has been\nspending the post two months at\nVictoria, returned Friday evening\nand la spending, it few d,iys as tho\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Merry\nprior to leaving for South Slocan,\nwhere   she   will   teach.\nMrs. Peter McCallum and daughter\nof Grand Forks are spending a few\ndays In Troll, the si?st of Mrs.\nMcCollum's son and d.iughter-ln-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil McCallum,\nMiss Dorothy and Master James\nMcCallum returne-i with them, having spent the summer in Grand\nForks.\nMr, and Mrs. W. Coleman of\nNelson are visiting in the city for\na   few vdoys.\nMr. and Mrs. H. McLoren Sr., leavo\nMonday for Rochester, New York,\nwhero they will reside with their\ndaughter, Mrs. W. E. Wright.\n*  \u2022   \u00bb   \u2022\ni Mrs.. J. DeVlto, a patient ln Trail-\nTadanac hospital, following a recent\nserious operation, Is reported to be\non the rood to recovery.\nAn international detective agency\nbranch at Momphia, Tenn.. Is managed   by  MIbs  lima  Franks.\nROSSLAND,    B.     0.,     Aug.    81.\u2014\nArches of green, brightened with\nsweet peas, carnations and baby\nbreath, hanging baskets of ferns,\npotted plants and the chancel banked, with green, helped to make St.\nAndrew's United church an attractive setting on Thursday afternoon, for the ceremony which\nunited Miss Marlon Marguerite\nBisson, elder daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Oswald Bisson, and Charles\nFrederick Daly, eldest son of Rev.\nand Mrs. C. H. Daly. Rev. C. H.\nDaly was the officiating clergyman.\nEntering the churoh on the arm\nof her father, to the strains of the\nwedding march played by Mrs, C.\nH. Crowe, the bride was pretty ln\nher wedding gown of Ivory crepe\nchiffon, with touches of silver,\nfeaturing the Queen Eugenie silhouette, with full shirred skirt,\nopening over a panel of lace, and\nGrecian sleeves. Hen veil of French\nembroidered net was -worn cap\nfashion, held close to the head\nwith orange 'blossoms and falling ln\ngraceful folds to the hem of her\nfloor-length frock. She wore white\nkid slippers with hose to match\nand carried a bouquet of sweetheart\nroses and fern.\nMiss Dorothy Bisson, as maid of\nhonor, wore a floor-length frock of\ncoral georgette, with soft flounces\nfalling over a panel of silver laco.\nSliver slippers completed the costume and she carried a sheaf bouquet of maiden blush gladlolas and\nsweet peas.\nThe bridesmaids were Miss Verna\nShilvock of Vancouver, cousin of\nthe bride, and Mrs. W. J. Ternan of\nthis city. Miss Shlvloclc wore figured net over yellow silk with yellow moire slippers and carried yellow und mauve gladiolfls and sweet\npeas. Mrs. Ternan's frock was figured net over pale green silk, with\nslippers to match and her bouquet\nwas salmon colored gladiolas and\nsweet peas. All three wore hats ln\ncolors to match their frocks, trimmed with flat flowers. They wore\ncrystal necklaces, the gift of the\nbride.\nThe flower girl, little Miss Jean\nErsklne, was prettily dressed in a\nlong frock of baby blue net over\nblue silk, with pink ribbons, and o\npoke bonnet of pale blue with\ntouches of pink, and carrying an\nold fashioned basket of pink sweet\npeos   and   forget-me-nots.\nDr. J. S. Doly attended the groom\nand tho ushers were Russel Bisson\nand Edward Daly.\nThe decorations wero arranged by\nMrs. A. E. Wright, and the wedding\nmusic waa furnished by Mrs. J. H.\nCrowe.\nAfter the bridal party entered the\nchurch the Junior choir sang \"Oh,\nPerfect Love,\" and during the signing of tho register. Miss Mabel\nWilkie sang \"O, Joy bo Thine.\"\nAt the conclusion of the ceremony\nthe bridal party received their\nfriends ln the church parlor. Assisting ln receiving was Mrs. O\nBisson, gowned in dull French blue,\nwith a blue hat in pa\u00bbcei shades,\nand Mrs, C. H. Daly, wearing Dlack\nchiffon and lflce and nat to match\nAmong the out-of-town guests waa\nMrs. V. Shilvock, aunt of the bride\nOver the tea table was suspended\na white wedding bell from which\npink and white streamers were carried to the corners of the table,\nflaming pink tapers and baskets\nof pink and white sweet peas helping to carry out the color scheme.\nMrs. O. C. Cobb and Mrs. A. Kelly\npoured, and the Ices were cut by\nMrs. W. Y. Palmer and Mrs. V.\nShilvock. The three tier wedding\ncako which stood on pillars on a\nsldo table, surrounded by white\ntapers, \\vas cut by Mrs. G. W. Ur-\nquhart. The servlteurs were Mrs.\nJ. B. Taylor of Nanaimo, Mrs.\nMarjorie Pctrie, Misses Catherine\nUrquhart, Betty Wright, Eleanor\nErskine, Grace Freeman. Vera Hayden. Bessie Hayden Mary Rogers,\nRuby Rogers, Dons Lefevre, Effle\nMitchell, Isabelle Scuffhand and\nJosephine  Roscorla.\nThe toast to the bride was proposed by V. Shilvock of Vancouver\nnnd responded to by the bridegroom. W. K. Esling, M.P.. Bpoke in\nhappy vein, expressing the good\nwishes of those present for the\nbride whom they hod long known.\nThe happy couple left for a\nhoneymoon at the coast, travelling\nvia the Arrow Lakes, o number of\nfriends accompanying them as far\nas Castlegar. Mrs. Daly chose for\ntravelling an ensemble of leaf green\ngeorgette, with hat to match, and\na coat of darker green, trimmed\nwith fox fur and featuring tho high\nwaist line. Blonde shoes, hose,\ngloves, and purse to match, were the\naccessories. Her only ornament was\na platinum and diamond pin, tha\ngift of tho groom.\nOn their return, Mr. and Mrs.\nDaly will take up their residence\non St. Paul street. Mr. Doly is\nemployed ln the offices of the\nC. M. & S. Co. at Troll, and Mrs,\nDaly has heen until recently on tho\nteaching Riaff of the McLean school\nof this city.\nrwWmmWwMmmwWmrrmm\nMeagher's\nPhone 200\n607 Baker St.\nLABOR\nDAY\nStore Ck sed\nAll Day TODAY\nMRS. R. J. LONG IS\nPRESENTED WITH\nLIFE MEMBERSHIP\nHonored    by    Members    of\nBonnington W. A. for\nLong Service\nNURSES PAY VISIT\nTO SOUTH SLOCAN\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, Aug. 31,\nMiss Olga Melnezuch and Miss Eva\nHowe, nurses on the staff of the\nInfants' hospital, Vancouver, who\nhave been the guestB of Mrs. O. W,\nHumphry at Summerhill during the\nweek, have returned to Nelson\nwhere they ore visiting Miss Melne-\nBUQh'fl parents. Mr. and Mrs. W, B,\nMelnezuch, Chatham street.\nMiss E. Mitchell, of Annable, was\na visitor here on Friday.\nMiss Muriel Harrop and Miss Win-\nnlfred Hcrrop, of Harrop, wero visit'\nOfl here during the week, the guests\nor Mrs. E. Watte.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Tlndale and sons\nwere visitors In Nelson.\nMr, and Mrs. Mac Bennett of\nWillow Point have taken a houso\nhere whero Mr. Bennett has a post\ntlon on construction for tho West\nKootenay Power and Light company,\nNEW DENVER NOTES\nBONNINGTON PALLS, B. C, Aug.\n31.\u2014The Women's Auxiliary resumed\nIts monthly meetings for the season\nat the homo of Mrs. W. C. Elsdon\non Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Turner\nLee, the president, in the chair.\nSeveral articles of finished needlework done by the members during\nthe summer vacation were turned\nIn as a nucleus for the midwinter\nsale of work.\nMrs. Wilson Whlteley read a most\nInteresting letter on the work and\ntravels of the Sunday school van.\nAfter tho business of the meeting,\na very pleasing part of the session\nwas the presentation to Mrs. R. G,\nLong of a Ufe membership in the\nWomen's Auxiliary, from the members and friends of the Bonnington\nW. A. and the South Slocan W. A,\nrespectively. Mrs. Lee, who presented the certificate and pinned on the\ngold badge, spok0 very eloquently\nof the honor and privileges a life\nmembership carried and as an offering of affection and appreciation\nto Mrs. Long for her loyol and active\nservice as a member of the W. A.\nsince Its inception in tho Bonnington parish. 19 years ago and one of\ntho first members of St. Mary's\nbranch when It was formed 10 years\nago.\nMra. Lee emphasized the fact that\nthe W. A> looked  after the body as\nsented a box containing a silver\nsugar basin and cream Jug, Mrs.\nLong, who was taken by surprise, expressed her thanks and appreciation\nand Invited the members to drop\nIn to see her ln Nelaon and have\nthe benefit of the use of the sugar\nand cream set. Mrs. Elsdon served\ntea, assisted by Mrs. Reld and Mrs.\nRidge.\nThoso attending were Mrs. J. C\nYeatman, Mrs. G. G. Fenwick, Mrs.\nM. Downle, Mrs. O. W. Humphry,\nMrs. W. Whlteley, Mrs. P. O. Bird,\nMrs. W. D. Ridge, Mrs,, W,, C.\nMotley, Mrs, E. Gordon, Mrs. Colllngwood Gray, Mrs, R. Elliot, Mrs. Turner Lee, Mrs. W. G. Elsdon, Mrs.\nJ. Hold and Mrs. R. G. Long.\nPAVED   WITH   GOLD\nFinding of gold particles ln the\nsand Pit from which Milwaukee obtains Its supply for street paving\nand sidewalks caused City Engineer\nWilliam onion to make a test. Tbe\nsand in the pit Is found to average three cents' worth of gold to\na cubic yard, whloh means that\nabout $48,500 worth of gold has\nbeen put Into the street paving of\nthat  city.\nTook Soda for Stomach for 20 Years\n'\u25a0For 20 years I took soda for indigestion and stomach gas. Then I\ntried Adlerlka. One bottle brought\ncomplete relief.\"\u2014Jno. B. Hardy.\nAdlerika relieves GAS and sour\nstomach in TEN minutes! Acts on\nBOTH upper and lower bow-.il, removing poisons you never knew\nwere there. Don't fool with mecl-\ncine which cleans only PART ol\ntho bowels, but let Adlerika give\nstomach and bowels a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel I\u2014\nwell  as  the soul.    Mrs. Elsdon pre- Mann.  Rutherford   Co.,  Drugjlst.\nScreen Doors\nKeep out the flies and live in comfort. Put\nscreens on all doors and windows.\nNo. 20 plain doors in all standard sizes.\nNo. 48 square panelled door in standard sizes\nNo. 72 oval panelled door in standard sizes.\nNo. 15 combination door in standard sizes.\nNNWood frame adjustable window screens.\nSteel frame adjustable window screens.\nBlack    wire cloth,   galvanized    wire cloth,\nbronze wire cloth.\nHippersonHdwreCo.,Ltd\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497       NELSON, B. Box 414\nNEW DENVER. B. C. Aug. 31\u2014Mr\nand Mrs. S. C. Mitchell, who have\nbeen tho guests of Mrs. R. B. Kirk\nleft on Thursday by motor for their\nhome in Vancouver.\nMrB. Wm. Gunn, who has' been\nspending a holiday ln Seattle, has\nreturned home.\nft\nKeep\nInformed\nRegarding Local and\nWorld Wide Events\nYou can be by subscribing to the. .   .  ,\nNelson Daily News\n25c PER WEEK DELIVERED BY CARRIER.\n$6 PER YEAR OUTSIDE NELSON.\nT\n Page Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   , MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1930.\nThe World's Delight\nPART II\nCHAPTER    XIII.\n(Continued)\nSo fell the curtain, and there\nwere tumult and a fervor In all the\ntheatre; Gut on to the dark,\nfamiliar sidewalk of the Bowery\nstraggled men. Such a woman\u2014\nthis Menken! Could legs really be\nas shapely:.afi_h\u00abs. seemed? But no\nsymmetricals-coul'u s:ve such subtleties of grace! *\nAll that had been said of Dolores\nIn front of the Varieties theatre In\nNew Orleans was said of her again\nthis night\u2014but magnified a thous-\nandfbld. These bouievardlors knew\nof the divorce of Isaacs Menken and\nthe fcrime of Buddy Durand\u2014they\nknew even the detail that his wife\nBad run off with a barber. New\nYork is, and always has been, the\nmost' insatiable ana inaccurate gos-\nt\\p in the whole-sewing-circle of\nAmerican cities. She wants aU the\nfacts, and generally gets them\nWrong. It was whispered that\nMenken had had seven husbands\nattd as many divorces\u2014one was a\nclown, one a muaic teacher, the\nthird -a Jew; there were a manager named Tupper and a manager\nnamed' Crisp, ood alone knew\n\u2022ir their names. Tney said she had\n* rihild in Tmus, and it died from\nneglect;, another avouched that she\nhad : staggered on the stags In\nNashville end tried to murder the\nfamous Mr. Muraocn because he\nwould not give her another drink of\nwhiskey: Yet in the eyes of those\nchirping men, warbling their scandal, not one distortion, not one\nabomination charges up to this\ngirl's character ma uttered as a\nreproach. All or it gave her\nplcquancy in their eyes, and every\nJack of them wss reserved to make\nher .acquaintance. The women's\ntongues were not on strike, either.\nThey debated Adah Menken with\ntheir mammas, their husbands and\neven their escorts\u2014but in shocked\nMi\u00a3es and swift, beaming glances,\n\"So they were to strip the vile\n*Vtar!\" they cackled. \"On the back\nof a. horse,\" whispered the men.\n\"They. were going to strip the vile\nTartar,'\" repeated the women in\nhushed honor.\nWhat wero they to see?\nAll the audience was seated and\nexpectant When the curtain roee on\nthe great scene\u2014in the middle of\nthe-play. The stage was set as the\nouter terraeo of the castle, overlooking a tract of desolate mountain \u25a0 country.\nFrom the gaslights to the farthest reach of the files rose a rocky\npathway that zlgj\u00bbrted from stage\nright to stage left, going back\nand high up. ever climbing until\nlt lost Itself above the arch of\nvision. Under that soaring, dizzy\npathway rushed cascades and mountain Btreams and one stupendous\nwaterfall\u2014Colonel Pender had insisted on real water\u2014and to thl3\npoint above the cataract was a\nnarrow and dar^gerous wooden\nbridge.\nAll was ominous and threatening\n\u2014the people of the castle gathered\nhere to see the execution of Maz-\neppa's dreadful sentence.\nTwo groomsmen led on Belle\nBeauty.\n*The stamping charger was black\nas a messenger of death\u2014like the\nTartar of tho Ukraine breed ln\nByron's poem, the sped of thought\nwas In his limbs; as If but a day\nhad he been caught^ \"snorting, with\nerected mane, and struggling fiercely\nHut   in  vain.\"\nWould they really tie this lovely\ngirl\u2014bind her banera and feet\u2014and\nhuh. her, .helpless, to the back of\nthis wild-looking horse?\u2014so chattered the quidnuncs. But the wiseacres said they would use a dummy\n\u2014wait and see.\nThe stillness was like a spell\nuntil Dolores was ied in by her\nguards\u2014until they loosed her from\ntheir grasp and she stood bravely\nforth. Then all the tranced silence\nbroke ln a murmurous note of\nwonder. Yes\u2014Dolores seemed almost naked\u2014she was. Indeed, all\nhut stripped, such audltly had never\nbefore been seen in the theatre.\nYet ae they looked upon that girlish figure and sweet face, all uplifted yearning, they knew her for\na thing of fire\u2014of an Imperishable innocence, ln which burned\nall the mystery of pain and the\ncomplication of experience. The old\nest and the youngest rake among\nthem were touched by some divine mystery in Dolores\u2014Someth-\nthlng that rose from the springs of\nlife that lie beyond the flesh. In\nher were that night all the strangeness and the poetry of -woman; as\nIf her very presence were an incantation, she raised in them, not\nan accentuation of appetite, but a\ncrying passion or tne imagination,\nlifted willy-nilly out of grossness.\nLooking upon her, the roue and the\nsensualist could feet iheir tragedy\u2014\nfor they had known only the desire\nthat exhausts Itself so quickly, and\nhere was a shining one, whose summons was- that insatiable passion\nwhich would leave the ground and\nlose itself in the sky. Who, seeing\nher thus, did not comprehend all\nof her that never found utterance?\nWho could not feel that here waa a\nwoman who must forever remain\nunpossessed\u2014one who aimed to give\nand yet who would never be altogether taken\u2014one tfho was born to\nbe unattainable. The lightning of\nthe soul was on her features, and\nin her pleadlhg eyes was all the\nmystery of a divided nature; the\npuzzled wonder of one cast Into a\ndisorderly kind of life, though she\nwas never meant for it\u2014one meant\nfor another kind of creature\u2014a girl,\nso soon hopeless of slaking the\nthirst for life and. who seemed now\nsomberly and terribly and beautifully to pray for something better.\nThey saw her heartbroken smile,\nand they trembled for her fate\nwhile she wss being bound\u2014for lt\nwas the smile of one who really\nwanted death.\nWhat was this? They were not\nlashing.a dummy to the back of\nthe horse? Nol They were lashing\nAdah Isaacs Menken to the back of\nthe horse, lashing her there so that\nshe was truly helpless, having the\nuse of neither arms nor legs, all\nbound, stlf and motionless, trusting\nher life actually, t\u00bb the steed.\nAnd now, to the horrified astonishment of thai immense audience,\nthe home was released and darted\noff. Zigzag Tip the rocky path,\nright and left, back and up, through\ncanvas foliage, by rasteboard trees\nand rocks\u2014a treacherous 18-inch\ntrack, a slippery, steep ascent\u2014\nup, up, galloped the dark horse\nwith his white and tender burden.\nUp the mountain, across the precipice\u2014over the bridge-so real was\nthe mad Illusion! Bo actual the\ndanger of the girl! At last the\nhorse and its captive were lost In\nthe dizzy heights beyond the high\nproscenium, and aa one being the\naudience rose and shouted and cried\nand thundered its applause.       ;'\nFrank Queen grabbed Colonel\nPender's srm and nnook it fren-\nzledly. The colonel nodded his\nhead, a wild light in his eyes.\nNeither could speak\u2014for they, too,\nwere lost in the general madness\nof that absurdly exalted hour.\n(End  of  Part  Two)\nIRRIGATION IN\nB.C.TOBEPUT\nON NEW BASIS\nMeeting   of   Growers     and\nDelegates and Government Officials Called\nREDUCE INTEREST\nFOR USE SYSTEM\nEach    Locality    Will     Be\nCharged  According  to\nAbility   to   Pay\nVICTORIA, Aug. 31.\u2014The next\nstep in tho solution of British Columbia's fruit problems, following\nan increase ln tariffs, and a reduction in export rates, will be taken\nat a conference of leading officials\nof the government, and representatives of irrigated districts In Vernon on September 9, lt was announced today.\nE. D. Johnson, deputy minister of\nfinance, on wnose advice the government will finally depend, and\nSanford Evans;- \"Trait Industry investigator, will attend this meeting with the growers' delegates.\nTogether thes*; will crystallize a,\nscheme for putting, irrigation on an\nentirely new financial basis, to protect the irrigationlsta and the treasury also.\nREDUCE  INTEREST\nBroadly, the scheme Is expected to\nbe along thru lines; the present\nhigh interest rates charged to growers on their irrigation loans will be\nreduced to something below five per\ncent, or to a figure at which the\ngovernment may be sure of borrowing money . itself. The interest\ncharges will continue after' the retirement of the loans in order to\nrecoup the government for its large\nirrigation advances.\nIn addition to the interest charges\nthe growers will pay the actual cost\nof maintaining water services.\nVITAL  CHANGE\nThe vital change in the system\nwill be the fact that the total levy\nannually on each district will be\naccording to its ability to pay. That\nIs, the growers must meet the Interest and maintenance charges, and\nanything over that will go towards\nh. fund to be used for capital expenditures on irrigation .works from\ntime to tim*.\nThis project adopts the essential\nfeatures of Mr. Evans' recommendations, without his proposal that the\nannual levy be based automatically\non the income of the growers, an\narrangement considered by the government to be too cumbersome.\nAfter the conference of September\n9, lt Ib expected the government\nwill take final action on theee matters  by   order-ln-councll.\nLADIES AID, YMIR\nPLAN TO REPAPER\nCHURCH 6HORTLY\nYMIR, B. C. Au. 31.\u2014Thc Ymir\nadies' Aid of thc nlted church\nheld a special meeting at the home\nof Mrs. w. Clark on Thursday evening. The members present were\nMrs. J. H. Clarke, the president,\nMrs. W. $lark, Mrs. A. B. Clark, Mrs.\nJ. M. Gille and Mrs. L. P. Bond.\nAt this meeting lt was decided to\nhave the church repapered, the labor\nbeing donated. It was also decided\nto have an anniversary social ln\nSeptember, this being the 32nd anniversary of the opening of the\nchurch. Refreshments were served\nby the hostess, assisted by Mrs. A. B.\nClark.\nWHALE FINDS MATCH\nPassengers on the liner Samaria\ntell a strange fish story enacted before their eyes on the last voyage\nover. A whale or mammoth proportions swam alongside the ship,\ndove below the surface and bumped its head violently against the\nship's sharp prow. In a second thc\nsea for hundreds of feet around wh,*\nred with blood. Tho passengers believe the whale was killed.\nVANCOUVER MAN\nIS WED, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 31\u2014A very\npretty. wedding was celebrated at\nSt. Andrews church Friday ' after-'\nnoon, when Mllllcent, only child\nof the late O. R. McNaughtr-Davls\nof the Orange Free State government\nservice, South Africa, and of Mrs.\nRobertson of Tabcr, Alta., was\nunited in marriage to James, only\nson of. Mr. and Mrs. J. Mulrhead\nof  Vanoouver.\nRev. N. D. B. Larmouth officiated\nat the ceremony, and Mrs. it. S. O.\nAnthony. played. the. wedding music.\nThe bride, who was given In marriage by H. E. R. Bedford, looked\nlovely In an ensemble of white:flat\ncrepe, with close fitting bodice and\nlong lines, the coatee having a\ncape effect, A. white felt hat and\nwhite . shoes and hose completed\nher costume, a bouquet of 'deep\ncrimson roses giving the only touch\nof color. She wore a filigree i pendant set. ln dtmohds, the gift of\nthe   bridegroom.\nMiss. Jeana Motherwell and Miss\nMargaret Motherwell made, charming bridesmaids in dresses.of:white\nflat.crepe, with colored coatee,and.\nhats to tone. They carried sheaves\nof  gladioli.\nThe bridegroom was supported by\nJ. D. Hartley, and W. j. Masterson\nperformed ,the  duties of usher.    ,\nMrs. Robertson; mother of the\nbride, chose an \u25a0 ensemble of flowered . nirioh, the -; coatee being in\nblack, and a bhyk hat. She carried\ngladioli. '    '    *\nImihedlately after the ceremony a\nreception was held at the Columbia\napartments. Asters were used in\ndecorating the. rooms, while a side\ntable holding the three tier wedding cake \u25a0 was banked with et-4?-\ndragons.\nMrs. Robertson was assisted in\nreceiving by Mr. V. McNaught-Davis\nof Spokane,  aunt of the bride.\nA buffet-lunch was served, and\nImmediately after Mr. and Mrs\nJ. Mulrhead left,on a motor'trip\nto the coast vfaere they will visit\nMr. Mulrhead's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Mulrhead, of Vancouver.\nThe, groom's gift to the bridesmaids were a pendant and bracelet,\nand \u25a0 to the broomsman a pair of\ngold cuff links. Other guests were\nMiss Gwyneth Vincent, Miss M.\nMartin, Miss N. Wise, Mrs. M. K.\nBastln, Mrs. C. Hall, Mrs. W. McKay, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Hopkins,\nG. W.. Williams and, P. Snowball.\nOn their return Mr. and Mra.\nMulrhead win take up .residence in\nthe Columbia apartments.\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\nDEATHS\n<2>\nTears ago a dentist sent out by\nthe Hudson's Bay company had for\nhis mechanic an Eskimo known as\n\"Siberian Mike.\" Watching the dentist pull the teeth of his victims,\nMike soon learned to do lt himself.\nWhen the dentist left the Arctic,\nMike remained and became an Itinerant tooth puller. In all these\nyears he has wandered from place\nto place with his kit of forceps,\npulling out teeth for anyone needing such ministrations. Mike died\nrecently in the Perry river region,\nhis passing mourned ln every settlement which knew him.\nHENDERSON \u2014 FLORENCE,, AGE 5\n* montihs, \u25a0 of Alnsworth. Body\nrests at the Howell Funeral Home\n. .until Tuesday at 10 a.m., when\n.It will be.removed to Alnsworth\nwhere services will be held Jn\n2 p.m., Rev. E. L. Best officiating.. WW)\nHELP WANTED\n_\u2022)\nWANTED \u2014 CAPABLE OIRL FOR\ngeneral housework. Apply Box\n565 or Phone 583R. (1636)\nWANTED\u2014AN EXPERIENCED WAITr\nress. . Apply at once.   The prill.\nWANTED \u2014 SCHOOL QIRL1 PART\nboard and care of Children. P. p.\nBox. 236.. (1503)\nWANTED \u2014 RELIABLE YOUNO\ngirl to take charge, of children\nln afternoons.   Phone 654Y\n(1569)\nWANTED-A' RESPONSIBLE HIOH-\nschool girl to look attar child ln\nreturn for board. Dally News\nBox 1515.    \u25a0 al515)\nPREPAREBEES\nFOR WINTER AT\nEND, OTEMBER\nPreparing Food Cha'mfcer Is\nImportant   Thing.\nfor Winter\nOne of the strangest things to\nthe ordinary Individual is that the\nfeeding of bees for * the winter\ndiffers from that of other live\nstock in that-bees are given ther\nwhole supply of winter food at one\ntime, while other stoats receive\ntheir rations day by day. Toward\nthe end of September, the bees\nshould receive sufficient food to\ntide them over the fall, the winter\nand the spring until the warm days\ncome and they can gather nectar.\nBorne beekeepers feed their bees\nsugar syrup; others give them natural stores\u2014honey. When natural\nstores are given, the food chamber\nmethod is usually employed, to get\nand Idea of what the food chamber\nis. let us look at tlfe hive and we\nwill see that it ls built up like\n\u00bb large building\u2014story by story.\nThe lower or ground story is called the brood chamber and It ls\nhere that the queen reigns. The\nstories above this are the ones ln\nwhich the honey ls placed by the\nbees.\nAs the first honey brought In\nat the beginning of the main flow\nls considered the best, and as the\nbees which are sometimes confined to the hive without the chance-\nof  a  cleansing flight for close  on\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(H)\nWILL LIGHT AND ATTEND .TO\nyour furnace this winter, small\nmonthly  charge.    Phone  269.   \u25a0\n(1550)\ntaJHNlBUEl) BOOMS Tor ltent (lj\u00bb\nLIGHT    HOUSEKEEPING    SOTTE\u2014\n1132   Josephine. U5S6)\nWANTED-FOUR   OR   H^a\u00b0P$:\ned house.   P. 0. Box 465.    _>3_>\nPOULTRY AND EGOS        . (26) ..\nJUNE   HATCHED   LEGHORN   tVh-\\'.\nleto   81   each.     Appleton   Bros.,\nR. R. 1, NelBon. ttb-l)\nFOR      RENT\u2014TWO      FURNISHED\nbedrooms.    611  Carbonate  St.\n(1645)\nROOM   AND  BOARD\n(17)\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\nschool girls in nice home. Phone\n306.Y.1.   Box 1228. .     (1481)\nCOMFORTABLE BEDROOMS WITH\nBoard. Private family, near Central   Sohool.     P.   O.   Box   573.\n' (1483)\nBUSINESS   MEN   OR   WOMEN   OR\nCollege Girls can have Board and\nroom in good home.   Phone 606.L.\n(1640)\nROOMS\u2014To Rent\n(19)\nLARGE BRIGHT ROOMS. HOUSE-\nkeeping or with board for teachers ln \u25a0 private family. Phone\n392Y1. (1665)\nBOUSES FOR RENT\n(Zl)\nHOUSE    EDGEWOOD     AVE..     SIX\nrooms, garage.   Phone 271R.\n(1528)\nFOR RENT\u2014MODERN SIX ROOM\nhouse. Sleeping porch. On car\nline.   Phone 416X. (1450)\nSEVEN ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE\nfor rent. Oak st. Phone 748 X.\nor Mrs. Oliver, Oak 8t. (1604)\nLIVESTOCK  FOR  SALE (23)\nONE MARE. QUIET. GOOD WORK-\ner, in good condition. Cash or\nterms.   Box 9. Gray Creek. (1513)\nFOR SALE\u2014FOUR YEAR OLD AYR-\nshlre cow. Very quiet Mrs.. Oaks,\nR. R. No.  1 or phone 471R8.\n(1474)\nHOLSTEIN COW THREE YEARS\nold, due to freshen ln a few days.\nPrice $90. Thomas Wall, La France\nCreek, Kootenay  Lake.      \u25a0 (1542)\n22 weeks, must have th\u00a9 best, this\nhoney Is 6et aside for them. This\nstory or box full of honey ls call-\nol the food  chamber.-\nThe advantages of this food\nchamber method of wintering are:\nthe market Is relieved of a certain\namount of' honey and the mess-\nlness of pall feeding Is done, away\nwith, for all that Is necessary ls\nto reduce the hive to one story\nand   give  the   food   chamber.\nAnyone thinking of wintering by\nthis method should be sure that the\nhoney to be given ia of good quality, for if lt Is not of the best,\nIt would be better to winter on\nsugar Byrup and to give the poor\nquality honey ln the spring when\nthe beeB can fly freely and get*\nrid of Its HI effects.\nSuch a food chamber which\nweights 56 pound will contain approximately 40 pound of stores.\nHOUSES WANTED\n(20)\nBusiness Fror-sbionai\nDirectory\nAccounting\n_ U,CHAS.   F,   HUNTJSB\npublao Accountant and - Auditor\nMcDonald Jam HJdir., Nelion\noaiti;\nMISCELLA\\EOUS^F01t_BAij_^(27)\n12 GAUGE wmOH-fpBB g^*T;\ning shot gun. Phono 405.L. or\nwrite   Box   666. (1614)\nArchitects\nFOR SALE-ONUS WILLIS PIANO\niu good condition, also Ford lliiht\ndelivery truck., C. W.-' -t,..\\-:vr\nWestley,  B.. C. (W77)\nArchitect, Land .Surveyor, iUI'lsMaiaajl i\n' \u25a0\u25a0-'-'''.'   GSM,\n\u2022 Assayers\nE- W. Wludowson, Box A1108, Nelson\nB. C.   Standard western charges.\nFOR    SALlfcr-ONE    KUESOHE3     O\nmelody saxophone au- case a'tiO.ou.\nBox iaa, city. i\"\"\")\n(1215)\nCiiAO 11    FAKLORS\nFOR SALE\u2014 PARREL\",. SS3SH. BUR-\nlap aaek3. white sua,- sacks, MacDonald Jam Co, >1208j\nSociety     Beauty     Shop.    Gllkew\nBlutat.   jiii-a. t-. laaagai, ^none i.i.\n(1246)\nCANARIES FOR BALE - K1SGKRS S3\nHens 61.50. Mrs. a'tiUn Grieve,\nFrultvale,   B.   O. (1408)\nSLIGHTLY\n.-.tl pipe, all\n;   per   foot;\niack   Pipe   7Vj\n\" .rce Stock or\npa fittings,\n.---First Ava.\nC.       111415 a\nChiropractors\n25,000 PEBT i-vi.\n' , used galvi r\nfull lengths, 12 ci-\n20,000 ft, lVi-ln. e\ncents, per foot: also\nother, sizes and\nSwartz Pipe Yard, :\nEast,   Vancouver.   S,\nDR. MITTUIa. X-RAY, CRANBROOK\n_..____ (1218)\nDR.   GRAY,, GILKER BLK,  Nelson.'\n _____ (1217) ,\nDentists\nOS.   G.   A., C.   WALUSY   _  <_u\nBlock,   X.-I-},   fceiaun,   B.   o.\nCoal Coal Coal\nWhy not fill up your bins\nwith our Coals?\nBest on, the market;\nPHONE 106\nEngineers\nB. D. DAWaON\u2014LAiaD-HURVEYc\naaimmg nut.--Civil fcusiuear. kS.\n :    U2191\nA, a.   Cjiajili_   CO\u2014COraTRAUTOttaj'l\nfe\u00b0f\u00a3?.\"V u,ice\"   ta-raH\nNtlsou,  Civil ana Mining e\u00a33SS\nLand Surveyors. (laaij\nFlorists\nTRANSFER\n(1567)\nLOST AND FOUND\n(31)\nGRIZZELLrl a   i-t-*wc-StiouSB      rjr.i\nbou     cut ilowtnn ana ,rI0'ral  del\ntlim-       uaaaj\nWM. S. JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   342.     Out   flowers    Pr,t*.ei\nPlants and Floral EmbS!*   11233*\nLOST \u2014 RED, FLAT-BOTTOMED\nboat. Two pairs or oars. Reward.     W.    Ruthel'[i:d.        (1580)\nLOST\u2014WHITE AND VAN COCK-\nerel spaniel pup. Female. Return\n509   Victoria  Bt.    Reward.\n(1566)\nPROPERTY   FOR   SAl.p\n(34)\nFOR SALE\u2014HOTEL WITH BEER\nParlor and 12 acres of garden\nground. Apply to A W. Johnson,\nR. No. 2, Lynch Creek, Grand\nForks,   B.   C. (1533)\nAUTOMOBILES FOB.S--M.B,     ..(40)\nPONTIAC COUPE 1*928. EXCELLENT\norder, $750. 8150 cash, balance,\nterms for 12 months. J. JenklnB,\nTrail.  B.  C. (1492)\nFURNITURE   FOB   SALE\n(48)\nMODERN     PLAYER    PIANO     FOR\nsale.   Phone 662Y. (1518)\ninsurance and neui fstai-J\nR. W.. DAWSON\u2014Real EstatT in.l\nflurunce. Rentals, Next HiDi)ersn\u00bbl\nHardware, Baker St. 71234)I\nPhotographers\nGEORGE  A.  MEEatHS  - Artist and '\nPhotographer,   716   Baker   gt\n.  (1235)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE, COAL AND WOOD\n Phone 106 (1335,\nATKINSON  TRANSFER \u2014 Coal  and\nWood.   Long distance hauling ^^\n(1237)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St., Carpenter ants.\nJoiner.    Sash  and  HartwooO,\ntwin\nSummer\nExcursion\nON SALE MAi  15 TO SEPT. 30\nVICTORIA      SEATTLE       VANCOUVER\n$37-30      $41.75        $32.90\nVia Kettle Valley Route ln each direction.\n>    Limit, October 31 lor return.\nCircular Toms, Pacific Coast Points:\nVancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland.\naJoD.45 via. Arrow Lakes, .Vancouver, .Victoria, Seattle\n\u2022    Spokane.\n$37.85 via.Kettle Valley, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle,\nSpokane.\n\u00a744.65 via Kettle Valley, Penticton, Okanagan Lake,\nVernon, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Spokace.\nAt $7X10 RdtlitlonAl. the above circular toure can be\nrouted Tie Portland between Seattle and Spokane. These\ncircular tours can be routed going Journey via Vancouver, returning through Spokane or In reverse direction.\nCircular Tours available from any point on the\nCircle. Sold Daily, May 16 to September SO. Return\ntill October 31. Good for stop-over at pleasure within\nlimit. Fares quoted through Arrow, Okanagan, or\nWindermere Lakes, Calgary, Banff, Lake Louise. Ask\n' any agent for details,,or write\n4. S. CAETEE, District Passenger Agent, Nelson, B. C.\nCanadian Pacific\nBringing Up Father\nBy Geo. McManus\nBV GOUCr. rrSNUCETOeEABLK\nTO LflCV ^ COOPUEOP HUNWRBD\nFEET IW FRP-NST OF VOU -\u00bb|N'       H\nNtOT SBKA NflMAvTU^E \u00abSOLF j\nIT, A,a.<bO aSOOO MOT TO HEAR\nAlaJV <5\u00a9L.F TALK- IF I AIN'T WROMaV\nTHER\u00a3=>-t-HKE ROBE- I HAV-KN'T\n5EEVJ HIM \u00abMCE HEVJEMT\n.V\/JITH THE\nCWtCaJ%\nOH-1 a-SFT THE ORCO^>\nSOME TIME At50jl<5HV\nIVE <feTA <3\\W-EU_  \t\nJOS MOW- RIGHT\nWERE ItU TOWU'\ncome am' see\nME\nTH6,TS FINE-\nWILL-\nV\/HATARE\nYOOOOIN'?\nI'M MlaWT-V\/aXtCHMeNM\nOSJ A MINIATURE\nGOLF COURSE\nT1LLLE THE TOLLER\ni   -^OF-noseD\nYou  fci-i5.e_>\nVAJHIPRLE     the\nOTHsa MieHT\nW-IODIMcS  HIM\n\"IHE   SAME   a\/ajAy\nI VOU   Cjio   \\M,TH\nJ\nBy Westovel!\nIt\u00bb. ww, fe-we* l|i\u00ab.ni Ua. Cemt tU-mrw^e\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1930.\nPage SflveK\nKootenay Temus,   Qolf   Tourneys   Near   Finals   Here\nIcINTYRE AND\nTOWNSHEND IN\nGOLF FINALS\nFLIGHT FINALS ON\nTHIS  AFTERNOON\nMatches on Weekend Move\nWith Rapidity Through\nLarge Entry\nrs. Roy Pollard and Mrs.\nB. Townshend in Finals of\nLadies' Event    V\nYesterday at the NelBon Golf and\nCountry club aaw all flights in\nthe Leith and Oosnell cup competitions proceeding smoothly in spite\nof the bumper entry that qualified\nlast week.\nIn the championship flight for the\ntelth cup P. Molntyre of Trail and\nB..' Townshend of Nelson meet in\nthe finals today.\n\\ The first flight has G. Shaw of\nNelson and W. R. Baxendale, Trail\nIn the finale, while ln the second\nflight, J. J. Fingland of Trail and\nH. E. Appleyard of Nelson hold the\nfinalists positions. In the semifinals of the third round P. Lincoln plays B. M. Whlmster and J.\nGordon plays Q. Lambert.\nIn the seml-finala of the consolation flig&t R. L. McBrlde plays\nA. B. Murphy and A. D. MoLeod\nplays   L.   S.   Bradley.1\nIn the finals of the championship flight for the Gosnell cup Mrs.\n\u00aboy Pollard plays Mrs. B. Townshend, In the seml-finala of the\nfirst flight Mra. A. M. Richmr. d\nplays Mrs. W. J. Gore and Mrs.\n0. D. Bltvclcwood and Mrs. C. W.\nAppleyard.\n(I-KITH    COT\nChsmplonshlp, flight Leith cup\u2014\nFirst  round\u2014B.  Qlarjc beat  A.  M.\n.Richmond;   H.   Lakes   beat   c.   C.\n'\u25a0Ternani   P.   Molntyre   beat   F.   0.\n\u25a0Whltehouae;    T.   R.   Wilson   beat\nIwii R. Baxendale; R. J. Hewitt beat\nII. L. Robinson; B. Townshend beat\njj. G. Bunyaii;  A. E. Allison beat\nIR.   T.   Thorbufn;   W.   J.   Meagfier\n,beat G. Shaw.\n't Seoond round\u2014Clark beat Lakes;\n'Molntyre bent Wilson; Townshend\nbeat Hewitt; Allison beat Meagher.\nFIRST  FLIGHT\nMen's first flight\u2014First Round\u2014\nTernan beat Whltehouse; Shaw heat\nBunyan; Robinson beat Richmond;\nBaxendale beat Thorburn.\nSecond round\u2014Shaw beat Ternan;\nBaxendale  beat  Robinson.\nMen's second flight\u2014First round\u2014\nL. V. Rogers beat A. E. Murphy;\nJ. J. Fingland beat J. Cartmei;\nH. C. Davison beat R. L. McBrlde;\nL. Craufurd beat W. V. P. Clery;\nW. Blaln beat F. Meagher; H. E.\nAppleyard beat A, D, McLeod; J.\nD. Kerr beat P. Fraser; C. W.\nAppleyard beat T. R. Pickard.\nSecond round\u2014Fingland beat Rogers; Davison beat Craufurd; H. E.\nAppleyard boat Blaln; Kerr beat\nC.   w.  Appleyard.\nThird round\u2014Fingland beat Davison; H. E. Appleyard beat Kerr.\nTHIRD  FLIGHT\nMen's third fllght_C. D. Stark\nheat a. S. Godfrey; o. Grey beat\nH. B. Gilker; C. Mansfield beat D.\nMcDonald; J. Gordon beat E. Jaun-\nIdrell; 3. CVenes, beat L. S. Bradley;\n|R. Pollard beat A. Strickland.\nSecond round\u2014W. M. Walker beat\n;W. Rutherford: P. Lincoln beat\nP.   H.   Shelfleld;   H.   M.   Whlmster\n{beat C. Stark; Mansfield beat Grey;\ni Gordon beat O'Shea; Pollard heat\nA. h. MoOullcja'.i: A. Lambert heat\n\u25a0E. W. Hazelwood; G. N. Brown\n.beat p. Shroder.\nThird round\u2014 Whlmster beat\nMansfield; Gordon beat Pollard;\nLambert beat Brown.\n, Men's Consolation, preliminary\nround\u2014Murphy beat Plchard; McLeod beat Cartmei.\nFirst round\u2014McBrlde beat Schro\nder; Jaundrell beat McDonald; Fraser beat Rutherford; Murphy beat\nSheffield; McLeod beat Godfrey;\nClery beat Strickland Bradley beat\nMeagher; Gilker beat Hazelwood.\nSeoond round\u2014McBrlde beat Jaundrell; Murphy beat Fraser; McLeod\nbeat Clery; Bradley beat Gilker,\nGOSNEL    CUP\n.... Championship flight, Gosnell cup\n\u2014First round\u2014Mrs.. R. Pollard Veat\nMrs. F. F. Payne; Miss J. Hunter\nbeat Mrs. A. M. Richmond; Mrs.\nJ. Cartmei beat Mrs. R. L. McBrlde;\nMiss A. Baxendale beat Miss L. V.\nRogers; Mrs. H. Lakes beat Mrs.\nC. W. Appleyard; Mrs. E. W. Keyt\nbeat Mrs.  H.  Rosling;   Mrs.   James\nO'Shea beat Mrs. W. J, Grove; Mrs.\nB.   Townshend   beat   Mrs.   C.   D.\nBlackwood.\nSecond  round\u2014Mrs.  Pqllard   heat\nMiss J. Hunt!*;   Mfejs A. Baxendale\nbeat Mre. J. cartmei; Mrs. H. Lakes\nbeat Mrs. E. W. Keyt; Mrs  Townshend  beat  Mrs.  O'Shea.\nThird   dound\u2014Mrs.   Pollard   beat\nMiss A. Baxendale; Mrs. TownBhend\nbeat Mrs. Lakes.\nWOMEN'S   FIRST   FLIGHT\nPreliminary   round\u2014   Mrs*.   Grove\nbeat Mrs. R. L. McBrlde; Mrs. F. F.\nPayne beat Mrs. G. S. Godfrey.\nFirst round\u2014Mrs. A. M. Richmond\nbeat Mrs. L. S. Bradley; Mrs. Grove\nbeat   Mrs.   H.   ljosllng;   Mrs.   C.   D.\nBlackwood  beat  Mrs. F.  F.  Payne;\nMrs. C. W. Appleyard beat Mrs. L.\nV. Rogers.\nTODAY'S  DRAWS\nGEORGE SIMPSON SETS NEW RECORD .\nFOR CANADA IN THE 220 YARDS AT\nTORONTO; BEATS TOLAN TWICE, DAY\nMakes New Mark of 20 9-10\nSeconds; Also Wing in\nthe 100 Yards\nMen's:\nChampions\/rip, flight, Leith cup\u2014\nMclntyre   vs.   Townshend,   10   ajm.\nFirst flight\u2014Shaw vs. Baxendale,\n2:20  p.m.\nSecond flight\u2014Fingland vs. H. E.\nAppleyard, 2:30 p.m.\nThird flight\u2014P. Lincoln vs, Whlmster, 9 a.m.; Gordon vs. Lambert.\n9:05 ajn.i winner of Lincoln-Whiai-\nster vs. winner Gorden-Lambert,\n2:50   p.m.\nConsolation\u2014MoBride vs. Murphy\n9:20 a.m.; McLeod vs. L. P. Bradley,\n9:25 a.m.; winner McBrlde-Murphy\nvs.  winner McLeod-Bradlcy,  3   p.m.\nMixed foursomes\u2014H. E. Davidson\nand Miss Baxendale vs. Mr. and\nMrs. J. O'Shea, 9:30; Mr. and Mrs\nH. Lakes vs. Robinson and Miss\nOreen. 9:35; W. J. Meagher and\nMrs, Payne vs. Mansfield and Miss\nGilker, 6:40 a.m.; Mr. and Mrs. Mc-\nCullouch va. C. W. Appleyard rind\nMrs. Rojers, 9:46; T. R. Wilson and\nMiss Cunllffe vs. Mr. and Mrs. Cartmei, 9:60; Mr. and Mrs. Clery vs.\nThorburn and Miss Appleyard, 10:10;\nMr, and Mra. Bunyan vs. w. Blane\nand partner, 10:16; Mr. and Mrs.\nGodfrey vs. GUker and Mrs. Bradley 10:20; Whltehouse and Mre.\nRosling vs. L. Craufurd and Mrs.\nMoBride,   10:26.\nChampionship flight, oosnel cup\n\u2014Mrs. Pollard vs. Mrs. Townshend\n2:10  p.m.\nFirst flights-Mrs. Richmond vs.\nMrs. Grove, 6:10 a.m.; Mrs, Blackwood vs, Mrs, Appleyard, 9:15;\nwinner Richmond-Grove vs. winner\nBlackwood-Appleyard, 2:40 p.m.\ntenn\u00a5andgolf\ntourneys to be\nhlmedmonday\nTwo of    Kootenay's    Major\nSporting Events to Appear in Newsreel\nTORONTO, Ont., Aug. 31.\u2014(CP>\u2014\nOno Canadian record went Into the\ndiscard and two world famous athletes went down to defeat In the\ntrack and field meet. held hy the\nCanadian National exhibition on\nSaturday.\nAfter winning tho 100-yard event\nin which he triumphed over Eddie\nTolan, \"the midnight express'' of\nDetroit, Mich., and claimant of the\nworld's rcoopi for tho' distance,\nGeorge Simpson, Ohio State University flash, smashed the Canadian\nmark for the 220 yards. The fleet\nSimpson hurtled over the track in\n20:9.10 seconds, leaving Tolan to\ntake his dust for the second time.\nFor the greater part of the distance, the Ohio star was closely\npressed by Tolan but the- latter's\nfinal challenge failed and Simpson\nbroke tho tape with a lead of more\nthan a yard.\nThe 100-yard dash again found\nthis same pair battling for (supremacy and again Slmpaon'6 flying feet\ncarried him to victory by Inches.\nHis  time  waa 0   7-10 seconds,   1-5\nsecond slower than tho record for\nthe exhibition dirt track.\nAnother startling upset came\nwhen Lord Burghley, titled English\nrunner, who first won fame at the\nOlympics, was disqualified li\\ tho\n120-yard hurdles, In quick succession he knocked down three hurdles and he finished second to\nJohnny Morris of Louisiana.\nThe event was a special Inv!*ita-\ntion race and lt waa suggested the\nEnglish peer had suffered from tho\neffects ci his strenuous week at\nHamilton, where he took part In\nthe British Empire games. He also\ncompeted at the British Empire-\nAmerica meet ln Chicago on Wednesday night.\nAnother upset was the result of\nthe C. N. P. \"modified marathon\"\nover a 12-mile course, when Harold\nWebster, of the Hamilton Olympic, came from 20 yards behind in\nthe last lap to win by as much\nfrom W. J. Savldan of New Zealand, the little black shlrted man\nwho won the Blx-mlle championship at  the British Empire  games.\nAustralia figured ln the meet\nwhen G. A. Golding annexed the\n440-yards open event ln 49 9-10\nseconds. H. A. Bascombe coming\nthird, Richard Pomeroy, of Los Angeles,  Calif.,  took second  place.\nRoth Dopes \"Hit\nand Run\" Sign\nHalf a eewT\nA Point?\nOK. MAKE\nit lisht on\nYourselves\"\nACADEMICALS IN\nFIRST PLACE IN\nFIRST DIVISION\nRangers  Fall  From  Tie  as\nThey Draw With Mother.\nwell at Hampden\nACADEMICALS BEAT\nTHE AYR UNITEDS\nPartick Thistle Scores Surprise to Beat Falkirk 4\nGoals to 2\nSETS RECORD ON\nWINNIPEG TRACK\nDouble\nMr, 6h ?\nWHERE PIP\nYou LEARN\nTo\nPJ.AY THIS\n(SAME -IS\nCHICAGO\"?\nTENNIS TOURNEY\nSEES EXCELLENT\nBRAND OF PLAY\nEvent Is Thought to     Be\nBest Ever Staged in the\nKootenays\nFINALS WILL BE\nPLAYED TODAY\nOfficials Rule That Players\nMust Appear According\n\u25a0   to Schedule\nWeu.Parpn-ei?,\nThat Gives\n09 A RU0BER-\nPo You Two\nBIRPS pla-v\n\/WY OTHBR\n(SAMa-S \u2022?\"\nyfii.^AVlW\/riS^r\nBy AL DEMAREE\nWINNIPEG,   Aug.   31\u2014McQoiitgle, (Former Pitcher New  York  Giants)\nrecently   imported   by   Prank   Shea Noxt to the gentle art of slapping\nfor hla Green Brier stable, wora the \u25a0\nPolo   Park   handicap,   feature   even baseballs   over   fonces,   Babe   Ruth\nof  the  opening of the  fall  racing loves to finesse a Jack through an\nseason ln WlnnVB BM\u2122*>->, \u00abIt\u00abr; opponent's King.    And tho Babe Is\nnoon,  ln  a  manner which left  no W\"               .,,.,..\ndoubt   ho   was   the   best   horse   ln K^V   *   8<\u00bbd   bridge   player   and\nthe race.    McGonlgle hnd to break plays whenever no gets a chanco to\ntho   traok   record   to   win   out   ln\n1:44  flat.\nCOMPLETE\nMINING\nEQUIPMENT\nWe  Handle\nPetter   Oil   Engines\nGardner-Denver\nCOMPRESSORS\nROCK  DRILLS\nOIL FORGES\nSHARPENERS\nMINE CARS\nRAILS\n8.  II. F. DRILL STEEL\nSTEEL 1MLLS\nBALL MILLS\nCONVEYORS\nFANS\nPUMPS\nBOWERS\nELECTRIC LOCOS\nTOOLS, AIR RECEIVERS\nETC.\nB.C. EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n614 Baaker .. 551 Howe\nNelson Vancouver\nThe announcement waa made here\nlast night the \"kootenay tennis and\ngolf tournament being staged this\nweekend have drawn bo much attention tha t on Mond ay a Paramount newsreel cameraman will be\non hand at the Nelson Golf and\nCountry club to film the flfials In\nboth   events.\nHugh Wallace, manager of the\ntheatre here, has arranged for this\nunique attraction on Monday\nthrough his headquarters ln Vancouver..\nLOCAL BALL NINE\nAND SOCCER TEAM\nBATTLE AT TRAIL\nNelson footballers leave for Trail\ntoday to play thc final game ln\ntho Weat Kootenay Soccer league.\nThe local boys have a strong abrogation and ore hoping to bung\nhomo thc honors. Included in their\nnumbers are several of tho baseball nine, which will also play\nin Trail.\nI Nelson soccer team Is composed\nof: II. Glllett, goal: 0. Jeffe. H.\nWord. T. Arcure, P. Indrewa, St.\nDenis, backs; M. Adams, center forward; E. Welsh, G. Campion, H.\nIiothcry, forwards.\nGLASGOW, Scotland, Aug. 3L\u2014\n(CP cable)\u2014The visiting clubs lot'\nthe most part had a good day in\nScottish soccer on Saturday, winning four matches and drawing\none. Hamilton Academicals, who won\nagainst Ayr United, broke their tie\nwith Glasgow Rangers for first place\nIra tho first division standing. Tho\nBangers could only draw with\nMotherwell at Hampden park.\nSome 40,000 saw the affair at\nHampden. Marsall scored for the\nRangers in 26 minutes and Perrier\nequalized eight minutes later. That\nwas all the scoring whloh took\nplaco. though both sides tried l>ard\nfor a winning goal.\nHamilton Academicals scored\nthrough D. Wilson, two, and Moffat had an easy time. Ferguson\nnetted  for Ayr.\nClyde were In a scoring mood,\ngetting flvo goals against Cowdenbeath. Clyde scorers woro: Jackson,\nRankin, two: and Borland, two. This\nwas Clyde's first win of tho season. Paterson had Cowdenbeath's\ntwo goals.\n\u25a0 Due largely to an excellent first\nhalf, Aberdeen beat Alrdrle by two\ngoals to nil. \u25a0\nPartick Thistle surprised Falkirk\nat Bockvillc. Simpson and Board-\nman each scoring twice for tbem.\nStevenson and Dyer goaled for Falkirk. >\nLeith Athletics also ;cored their\nfirst win of tho season, their victims being their follow Edinburgh\nclub, Hibernian. Nicol had tho only\ngoal.\nHearts pulled off an excellent victory over Kilmarnock by ono goal\nto nil. R. Johnstone was tho lucky\nmarksman.\nMorton kept going strong and\nboat Dundee by tha odd goal out\nof three. Lyle and McRorle netted\nfor Morton and Campbell for rtyin-\ndee.\nQueen's Park had a field day\nagainst St. Mirren, winning by four\ngoals to one. McAlplne showed form,\nfor the amateurs, getting two gouls,\nMcLellan and Gillespie having the\nothers. Preston goaled for tho\nSaints.\nGIANTS ARE HELD\nEVEN BY BOSTON;\nBROOKLYN WINS\nDefeats Phillies    by    14-3;\nCincinnati Takes Pittsburgh, 4-1\nA crazy quilt 75 inches square,\nrepresenting 44 yearB* work, was finished thia summer by Mrs. F,\nGrlenern of Indianapolis.\nLOGAH 6c BRYAN\nBTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTON\nNew York. Montreal and VanoenTer\nflock  Excitants.,   Chicago  Board   af\nrnado.  WlBnlpe*  Oram  Exchange\nand   ether   trading   exchanges\nrniVATE WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver, Spokane and Seattle)\nThe Consolidated  Mining  and\nSmelting Co. oE Canada, Ltd.\n'   omce.  Smelting  and  Refining  Dopartanent\n-v**\"* n-aMUBRrriBH   COLUMBIA     \u2022\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nruiilwiiiiii of Gold, Silvw, Copper, Lead and SHnc Ore\nPzodBoen of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC,   THAU\nWEST WINS IN\nC. N. R. TRACK,\nFIELD EVENTS\nMONTREAL, Aug. 31\u2014The western\ndivision yesterday took the track\nand field championships of tho Ca.\nnadlan National Railways away from\nMontreal who held lt last year. The\nAtlantic division finished a close\nthird and central, whloh includes\nToronto and Stratford, Ont., wero\nIn  last place.\nPoint totals woro: Western 29,\nMontreal 16, Atlantlo 14 and central 13.\nThc victorious western division\nsecured four first places ln tho\neight ovonts, W. A. Brown, Fort\nRouge, Winnipeg, taking the 440\nyards run; 1. P. Walberg, Saskatoon,\ntho ono mile, J. A. Kler, Winnipeg,\nthe 18 pound shot put. The ono\nmile medley relay race went to the\nwesterners represented by Brown,\nj. J. Grant, K. E. Yost and Wahl-\nborg.\nCentral division, though llnlshlng\nlast in the point score, had two\nfirst places to Its credit. O. Shaw,\nStratford, oontr.red the aJO-yard\ndash, and G. A- Life, Toronto, won\nthe half mile. R. G. White of\nMonoton, N. B., was bset ln the\nrunning high Jump and H. Wass, of\nMontreal, gave the Montreal district\nIts only win, taking the 100-yard\ndash.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 31.\u2014With the\nopportunity of picking up a . game\nand a half on the league leading\nCubs, tho Giants could only break\neven in a doublo header with the\nBraves here this afternoon as they\nBquoozed thrbugh to win tho first\ngame 4 to 3, but dropped the second  14 to 10.\nFirst game R. H. E.\nBoston     210 000 000-^3   7   0\nNew York   000 400 OOx\u20144   0   1\nSeibold, Frankhouse and fapohrcr;\nPruett.   Hevlng   and   Hogan.\nSecond game R. H. E.\nBoston     000 010 331\u201414 18   0\nNew YorX   101 140 210\u201410 15    1\nZachary, Cantwell and Cronln;\nChaplin, Donohue, Pruett, Parmnlco\nand  O'Farrcll.\nROBINS ROMP HOME\nBROOKLYN. N. Y., Aug, 31.\u2014Tho\nRobins fell on Sweetland and Hansen for a total of 23 hits hero this\nafternoon and easily beat the Phillies by the score of 14 to 3.\nR. H. E.\nPhiladelphia 000 002 001\u2014 3 7 2\nBrooklyn   303 131 21x\u00bb-14 23   2\nSweeland, Hansen and Rensa;\nLuque  and  Lopez;   Ptclnlch.\nREDS   TRN   TABLES\nCINCINNATI, Ohio, Aug. 31.\u2014After taking four straight drubbings\nat the hands of tho Pirates, thc\nRods arose today and took a 4 to 1\ndecision Ivor Pittsburgh behind tho\nsplendid pitching of Eppa Rlxey.\nR. H. E.\nPittsburgh      000 010 000\u20141    t>    1\nCincinnati     003 101 OOx\u20144   0   0\nBrame and Hemsley; Rtxey and\nSukeforth.\nCOBS   HELD  BY  HALLAHAN\nCHICAGO, 111., Aug. 31\u2014Wild\nBill Hallahan held the Cubs tp\nfour hits today and tho St. Loulfi\nCardinals trounced the National\nleague champions, 8 to 3. to even\ntho series at two each. The gamo\nwas tho final ot tho Cubs' homo\nand home stand, and sent them\naboard with a record of 16 viotorlea\nand sevon defeats Mnce the llr.it\nof   the   month,   Score:\nR. H. E.\nSt.   Louis     201 140 000\u20148 18   0\nChicago   000 100 011\u20143   4   0\nHallahan and J. Wilson, Petty,\nBush, Nelson, Sheoly and J. Taylor.\nSATURDAY GAMES\nIN BASEBALL\nstairt a game.\nBabe was telling \u00ab brldgo story\nabout \"Braggo\" Roth, the old Yankee\noutfielder, as his partner. \"We\nwero playing for a cent a point,\"\nsaid Babe, \"and 'Braggo' raised my\nbid ot one heart to four hearts, and\nwe were doubled. When he laid his\nhand down, he only had about two\nhearts and very poor outside cards.\n'^What did you raise me for?\" I\nasked-him.\n\"I saw you put your hand on your\nheart and I thought it was a\nsignal to keop golngl\" he answered.\n\"I had unconsciously rubbed or\nscratched my left sldo and Roth\nthought \u25a0 lt was one of tho brldgo\nsigns or Inferences ho had heard\nabout. Our opponents set us about\nseven hundred points.\nNATIONAL LEEAGUE\nBrooklyn  4.  New  York  7.\nBoston   4.  Philadelphia  6.\nCincinnati    0-2,    Pittsburgh    5-3,\nSt. Louis 4, Chicago 18.\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nDetroit   6,   St.   Louis   6   (13   In\nnines.)\nChicago  6. Cleveland ,7.\nNow  York  8,  Washington   12.\nPhiladelphia   11.   Boston   0.\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nNewark 1, Buffalo  ll.;\nBaltimore 1, Rochester 2, (10 Innings.)\nReading 7-3, Toronto 2-1, (second\ngome   7   innlngB).\nJersey   Olty  0,  Montreal   5,\nOld Country Soccer\nResults\nLONDOON,   Aub.   31.\u2014Results   of\nfootball    matches    played    In    the\nBrltlBh  Isles  Saturday   were:\nSCOTTISH  LEEAGUE\nFIRST DIVISION\nAberdeen   2,   Airdrio   0.\nClydo   fi.  Cowdenbeath   3.\nEast  Fife  2,  Celtic  2.\nFalkirk   3,   Partick   4.\nHamilton 3, Ayr  1.\nHibernians  0,  Leith   1,\nKilmarnock 0, Hearts 1.\nMorton  2,   Dundeo   1.\nQueens Park  '1.  St.  Mlrren   1.\nRangers 1. Motherwell  1.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nAlbion 3, East Stirlingshire  1,\nArbroath    1.    Stej\/iousomulr    0.\nBo'ness 6, Clyde Bank 3.\nBrechin  2,  Third   Lanark  2.\nDumbarton   3,   St,   Johnstone\nDundee United 4. Montroso 1.\nDunfermline   3,   Ualtli    1.\nKlnss   Park   1.   Alloa   1.\nQueen of South 3   Armadale 2.\nSt. Bernard  0, Forfar 2.\nENGLISH   LEAGUE\nFIHHT   DIVISION\nBirmingham   3,   Sheffield   United\n1.\nBlackpool    1.   Arsenal    4.\nBoltoil   3.    MIcldleboioURh    0.\nGrimsby   0,   Chelsea   ],\nLeeds 2, Portsmouth 0.\nLeicester   I,   Derby    1.\nManchester United  3, Aston  Villa\n4.\nSheffield   2,   Newcastle   1.\nSunderland   3      Manchester   City\n3.\nWctham  2,  Iluclclcrr.IIcld   1.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nBradlorcl  3.   Charlton   Athlotlo  2\nBurnley 0, Bury 3.\nMJlwall  1, Stoke  3.\nNottingham   3,   Bradford   0.\nOldham  2,   Bradford   0.\nPlymouth  2.   Everton   3.\nl'oitvulo   0.   Barnsley, 2.\nProston  fi,   Southampton   0.\nSwansea  3,  Cardiff  2,\nTottenham   7,   Hooding   1.\nWestbromwlch 3. Bristol  0.\nTHIRD   DIVISION\nSOUTHERN   SECTION\nBristol   1.  Northampton  4.\ncovently   1.   Notts   2..'.\nExeter  1, Norwich  0.\nPullham   3,   Watlord   3.\nGllllngliam 0. Brighton and  Hovo\nAlbion   0.\nLuton   1,  Brentford   1.\nNewport   2,   'IVaruquay    1.\nQueens  Park   3,   Thames   0.\nSouthend 2, Crystal  Palace  4.\nSwindon     4.     Bournemouth   and\nBoacombe  1.\nWalsall   4,   Clapton   2.\nTlllltD  DIVISION\nNORTHERN    SECTION\nAccrlngton   3,    Crewo    Alexandria\n1.\nBarrow 1, Tranmere 3,\nChesterfield  2,  Carlisle   United  1.\nDarlington   2,   Wlnganboro   3.\nGateshead 2.  Doncaster   1.\nHalifax 3, Hartlcnools  1.\nNow   Brighton   2.   Lincoln   1,\nRochdale   5,   Nelaon   4.\nRothcrhom  2,   York   1.\nSouthport 1. Wrexham 1.\nStockport 3,  Hull  2.-    \u25a0\nMuoh attention centers upon the\nelaborated ileeves of both the new\ncoata and caresses, reports Indicate,\nwith Icg-o'-mullon types especially\nprominent.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nToledft   6,   Columbus   4.\nMilwaukee  6,  Kansas  City  4.\nSt.  Paul   14,  Minneapolis   10.\nLouisville  7, Indianapolis  8.\nPACWIC   COAST   LEAGUE\nLos  Angeles  2,  San  Francisco   7.\nOakland   9,   Seattle   10.\nSacramento   4,   Portland   7.\nMissions 8. Hollywood 10.\nPrincess Mary recently sat ln the\npeeresses' gallery through the two\nhours for which tho coal debate lu\nthe house of lords lasted recently,\nbut hor Interest wag probably not\nln tho details of the coal bill, but\nin a motion moved by the Karl of\nHarewood on the parlous state of\ntho Veterinary college, ln which he\nploadod for the college eloquently,\nlike tho lovot of animals that ho\nIs, and mado his maiden speech\nfrom tho opposition side of the\nhouse.\nTho 16th annual tournament of\nthe Kootenay Tennis association being played on the Nelson Golf and\nCountry olub courts here ls thought\nto be the best ever staged Horn\nthe point of view of entry and brand\nof  play  being produced.\nPlay Saturday and Sunday proceeded with unusual smoothness\nduo to the excellence of the schedule system used by tho officials.\nThe huge entry constituting approximately 137 matches has necessitated steady play on five courts\nfrom 8 o'clock hi the mornlrg,; until\nearly evening. \"*\"\"\nOfficials expect to have all final\nmatches well under way early this\nafternoon.\nThe committee ln charge stated\nlast night that competitors mu\u00abt\nappear when scheduled today or\notherwise be scratched.\n\u25a0 Results to date\u2014Men's A singles-\nfirst round\u2014T. Malahoff beat W.\nO. Green, 7-9, 6-3, 7-5; G. Hamson\nbeat E. Swanson, 6_4, 6-3; D. Mac-\nAllster beat W. O. Wllliarjw, 6-3,\n6-4; N. Rhodes beat E. Randall,\n6.2, 3-6, 6-4; M. Harrison beat\nR. Schwartz, 7-5. 6-1; R. Taylor\nbeat P. Halllwell, 6-2, 6-3; L. Simp\nson beat R. Arrowsmlth, 6-1,' 4-8\n6-0; A. Idlens beat K. Cllthcrow\n6-3, 6-4; A. Idlens beat A. Eldridjo,\n6-1, 11-0: T. Romano beat H. Mc.\nlnnis, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4; W. Hunter\nbeat   S.   Atkinson,   6-1,   7_5.\nMen's B class singles, first round\u2014\nW. A. Manson beat A. Chadzko, 6_3,\n6-1; M. Turner boat P. Dewdney,\n6-3,  8-4;   O.  Shugg  beat O.  Halre,\n\u25a03, 6.3; J. Kwaanie beat N. Bradley, 8-3, 6-1; Dr. R. Maurer beat\nJ. Curtlss, 6-2, 4-6. 6-2; B. Bunyan\nbeat F. Phillips. 6.4, 6-0; A. Gll-\nflllan beat N. German, 6-2. 6-1;\nT. West beat L.  Fielding 8-3, 6-3;\nC. McDougall beat O. Greer 6-2,\n5-7, 6.4; A. Mills boat W. Bush,\n6-4,   6-3.\nSecond round\u2014Turner beat Man-\nson, 6-3. 6-4; Kwasnle beat Shugg,\n6.0, 8-2; Gllflllan beat West. 8-0,\n6-3;  McDougall  boat Mills, 7-5. 6-4.\nLadles' A\" singles\u2014Miss M. Bini;ay\nbeat Miss E. Ritchie. 7-5, 6-1; alss\nD. Anthony beat Mis M. Benson,\n8-6, 6.4; Miss D. Fingland beat Miss\nA. Johnston, 6-4. 6-Q; Miss K.\nBingay beat Mlsa I. Benson 6-4, 6-J.\nSecond round (two matches played)\u2014Miss Fingland beat Miss Btn_\njoy,   6-3,   6-3.\nMiss   D.   Anthony   beat   Miss   S.\nWright.   7-9.   6-4,   6-1,\nLADIES' II  CLASS  SINGLES\nLadles' B class singles\u2014Mlas D,\n.Dunnett beat Mrs. E. Marsden 0-2,\n6.3: Mis B. Wright beat J. Waldle,\n6-3, 6-3; Mrs. Tawso beat Miss J.\nNlsbett, 6-3. 6-0: Miss M. Campbell\nbeat Miss E. Green, 6-0. 6-0; MIsb\nG. Freeman beat Mies R. Cnufurd,\n7.6, 6-8. 1-8; Miss Truman beat\nO. Wragge, 5-7, 6-1, 6-0.\nSecond round\u2014Miss Dunnett beat\nMiss D. Graham, 6-4, 6-2; Miss\nWright beat Mra. Tawse, 6-3, 8.4;\nMiss Truman beat Mrs. W. Elsdon,\n4-6,   6-0,   6-3.\nMixed doubles\u2014Miss K. Bingay\nand E. Randall beat Miss D. Fingland and 8. Atkinson 2-6. 8.6, 7-5;\nMiss D. Anthony and G. Hamson\nbeat Miss M. Bingay anti H. Mclnnes, 6-4, 6-3: Miss M. Bonson and\nT. Malahoff beat Miss E Ritchie\nand P. Halllwell, 6-2. 6-4: Miss B.\nWright and D. H. Macallstcr beat\nMiss J. Nlsbet and J. West, 6 1\n6-0: Mlas 8. Wright and R. w.\nSchwartz beat Miss N. Blackwood\n6-4. 6-2; Mrs. w. Elsdon and E.\nSwanson beat Mrs. e. Marsden\nand O. Halre. 6-4. 6-1; Miss D\nDunnett   and   R.  Taylor  beat  Mlas\nE. Green and E. N. Rhodes. 6-2.\nB.6; Mrs. W. Hunter and W o\nWilliams beat Mlsa M. Campbell\nand N. Bradloy. 1-6, 6-4. 7-5; M|ss\nH. Eldrldge and A. Eldrldgc boat\nMiss I. Benson and T. Romano, 4-6\n0-7, 6-3: Miss J. waldle and L.\nSimpson beat Mrs. R. Maurer and\nR. Maurer, 6.2, 7-5; Miss G. Freeman and W, R, cllthcrow boat\nMlas o. WraiRO mid o. shugg, 8-4,\n8-8; Miss Truman and E. E. L.\nDewdney beat Miss Freeman and\nW. R. Cllthcrow, 8-8. 6-4; Miss A.\nJohnston and W\u201e O. Green beat Miss\nR. Craufurd and T. West. 8-6, 6-3.\nSecond round\u2014Mlas Anthony and\nHamson beat Miss Blngoy and\nRandall, 8.6, 0-2; Mlsa M. Benson\nand' Malahoff beat Miss S. Wright\nand Schwartz, 9-7, 6-2; Miss Truman and Dewdney beat Miss Johnston,  6-1.   6-3.\nMen's doubles\u2014E. E. L. Dewdney\nand P. Dewdney boat J. Curtlss and\nW. R. Cllthorow, 4.8. 6-4. 6-4' o\nShugg and L. Fleldlnu beat' W*.\no. Green end A. chadzka. 8-1, 6-4-\nT. Milahoff and T. Romano beat\nW. Bunyan and M. Turner, 6-3,\n6-4;   T.   Greer   and   o.   Halro   beat\nF. Phillips, B-6. 6-2; G, Hamson\nand W. o. Williams beat D. R. R.\nMaurer nnd N. Rhodes, 6.1, 1-6,\n6-4; J. Kwasnio and W. A. Manson\nbeat R. W. Schw^lz and F. S\nWillis, 6-4, 6-3; R. Taylor Bnil T.\nWest beat C. McDougall and E\nSwanson, 7-5. 6-4; A. Eldridjo and\nL. Simpson beat P. Halllwell and\n8. Atkinson, 6-4, 8.3; A. W. Idlens\nand M. Harrison beat D. K. Mac-\nallster   and   Gllflllan.   6-3,   8-2;   W.\nB. Hunter and H. Mclnnls beat R.\nArrowsmlth and E. Randall, 6-4,\n8-3.\nSecond round \u2014 Dowduoy and\nDewdney beat Shugg and Fielding,\n6-3, 4-8. 6-4; Malahoff and Romano\nbeat West and Reid, 6-1, 6-4; Hamson and Williams beat Greer and\nHalre 8-1 6-2; Idleno and Harrl.' f i\nboat Hunter and Molnnes, 7-6, 6-4\nLADIES'   DOUBLES\nLadies doubles\u2014first round\u2014Miss\nD. Anthony and HHss E. Ritchie\nbeat Mrs. E. Marsden and Mrs. R\nMaurer, 6-1. 6-4; Miss Truman*\nand Mrs. Tawae beat Miss E. Green\nand J. Nlabot, 6-0, 8-0: Miss D.\nPlngland and Miss S, Wright beat\nMrs. T. Brown and Mrs. W. Eldson\n(by default); Mlas B. Freeman and\nMlas B. Wright beat Miss D. Dunnett\nnd Miss O. Wragge. 6-3, 6-4; Miss\nIt. Craufurd and Miss D. Graham\nbeat Miss  N.   Blackwood  and  Mra.\nW. Hunter, 6.3, 6-9: Miss K. Bingay and Miss M. Bingay beat Miss\nP. Campbell and Miss M. Campbell,\n1-Si  6-4.\nTENNIS   FOR   MONDAY\n8 a.m.\u2014Mlsa D, Anthony and Or.\nHamson vs. Miss M. Benson and T.\nMalahoff; A. W. Idlens vs. T.\nRomano;   M. Turnar vs. J. KwasnI.\n9 a.ra.\u2014G. HaSnaon vs. T. Malahoff; R. Taylor and T. West vs.\nW. A. Manson and J. Kwasnl; Miss\nR. Crawford and Miss D. Graham\nvs. Miss I. and M. Benson; Miss M.\nBingay vs. Miss D. Anthony; D.\nMacallster vs. M. Harrison; Miss M.\nCampbell vs. Miss G. Freeman; Miss\nD. Dunnett v. Miss B. Wright; C.\nMcDougall  vs.   A.   Gllflllan.\n10 ajn.\u2014R. Taylor and Miss D.\nDunnett vs. MIbs H. Eldrldge and\nA. Eldrldge; winner Kwasnl, Man-\nson-Taylor, West vs. A. Eldrldge and\nL. Simpson; winner Malahoff, Ham_\nson vs. winner Macalister. Harrison:\nMiss D. Fingland and Mlas S. Wright\nvs. Miss G. Freeman and Mis B.\nWright; Mlas Anthony and Miss\nRitchie va. Miss Truman and Mrs.\nTawse.\n1J a.m.\u2014Winner Taylor, Miss Dunnett;    Eldrldge,   Miss   Eldrldge    vs.\nE. E. L. Dewdney and Mlsa Truman;\nMalahoff and Ronfino vs. Hamson\nand Wllllama; winner Miss Freeman.\nMiss Wright; MIbs Fingland, Miss\nWright vs. winner ajjss Crawford,\nMlsa Graham; Miss I. and M. Benson.\n12\u2014JWlnner .jafalahoff, Romano;\nHamson. Williams, vs. Dewdney and\nDewdney; winner MIbs Ritchie, Miss\nAnthony; Miss Truman, Mrs. Tawse,\nvs. Miss K. and M. Bingay.\nATHLETICS WIN\nPITCHING DUE;\nWHITEPOX LOSE\nCleveland      Trounces      St.\nLouis  17 to 6; Yanks\nAre Beaten\nSALMON BELLIES\nARE BEATEN BY\n8-1ATT0R0NTO\nBrampton  JSxoelsibrs  Score .\nTriumph in First of\nFinal Series\nBEST TWO OUT\nOF THREE WINS\nNew     Westminster     Team\nLacks Its Usual Finish;\nBig Crowd\nIllation of\n'.test, but\nover their\nwere   fcw\nBOSTON, Mass.. Aug. 31. \u2014 The\nAthletics defeated tho Boston Red\nSox 2 to 1 here today behind tho\nthree-hit pitching ot Bill Shorts,\nwho had slightly tho better of\nDanny MacFayden In a pltohens'\nduel.\nR. H. B.\nPhiladelphia .. 010 001 000\u20143 7 0\nBoston  100 000 000\u20141   3    1\nShores and Cochrane; MacFayden\nand Berry.\nROOKIE noLDS WHITE SOX\nCHICAGO, UI., Aug. 31. \u2014 Tom\nBridges, sensational Detroit rookie,\nheld tho Whlte Sox to four scattered hits today, pitching tho Tigers to a 4 to 1 victory ln the\nseries opener.\nR. H. E,\nDetroit  100 000 300\u2014.   9   1\nChicago     010 000 000\u20141   4   0\nBridges and Hayworth; Moore,\nWalsh and Crouso.\n13   TO   BAT.   ONE   INNING\nST. hpUIS, Mo.. Aug. 31.\u2014Ono\nbig inning in which 10 runs were\nscored was more than enough to\ngive tho Cleveland Indians a 17\nto 6 victory over the St. Louis\nBrowns tn the opening gamo ot\nseries hero today. Thirteen mon\nwent to bat for Cleveland ln the\nbig 17th Inning. Hodapp and Mor\ngan contributed homo runs lu that\nframe, besides getting another bit\neach.   Score:\nR. H. B.\nCleveland      102 030 101\u201417 17   2\nBt,   Louis     110 202 001\u2014 6 11   4\nLawson. Jablonowskl. and L. Sewell; Stewart, Collins, Holshauscr and\nFerrell.\nRUTH  STILL  OUT\nWASHINGTON, D. c, Aug. 31.\u2014\nHadley pitched strongly all the way\ntoday and Washington dofeated New\nYork 5 to 1, sweeping a three,\ngame   series.\nBabe Ruth's sprained back kept\nhim out of ttho New York lineup\nagain.\nR. H. E.\nNew   York      000 OOO 010 \u20141    5    2\nWashington   .... 000 102 03x\u20145 10    1\nPennock, Sherld and Dickey; Had\nley and, Spencer.\nTORONTO, Aug. 31\u2014Scaring a\nbi'ace of goala In eacU quarter,\nBrampton Excelsiors. Ontario anfa-\nteur Lacrosse asaoolation and eastern\nCanada champions, registered a 'decisive eight to one triumph over\nthe Salmon Belllea of New Weat^\nminster, British Columbia, to tho\nfirst game Saturday of tha two\nout of three series for- tbe Maim\ncup, emblematic of the Canadian.\nAmateur Lacrosse asso-iatlon crown.\nMore than 6,000 fa- rarneyed to\nVarsity stadium In\nwitnessing a apusln.\nthe easterners' superio\nleg-weary opponents w\nand consequently the\nexciting   moments.\nIt was Brampton's powerful' defence, composed of Teddy Reeves,\nBert Surry, Pete Ella and OHJo\nBurtno, that proved the downfall\nof the Salmon Bellies who failed\niVmvptetely ln their effdrts to\noutguess this might; quartette.\nWhen ther did succeed ln working\nthrough on clever quick passing\nplays they encountered an almost\nInsurmountable obstacle ln Bars\nLarge, the* cooL Excelsior natmlnder.\nEXPECT   REVEBSAL\nThe Paclflo coast roprctwntatlvoa\nappear on a par with the eastern\nchampions In other positions anal\nIt Is expected they will show a reversal of f<trm on Monday when\nthe seoond tussle will be played.\nDuring the early part of the opening quarter, New Westminster displayed a flash ot sparkling lacrosse\nand led by Johnny Vernon and\nGeorge Fccnoy, gave tht Brampton\ndefence considerable worry. Whether it waa the ccorohlng sun that\nshone down on Ahe, field or whether\nthey were still tlrer* from their\nlong train Journey, the Salmon\nBellies for some reason faded then\nand thereafter never showed tlie\nlacroBse  they   are  capable  of.\nDuring the halt time period\nGeorge Spoule, one of the oldest\nactive players ln the game, was\npresented with the Jimmy Murphy\ntrophy, awarde-a,', annually to the\ncleanest and nest* player in the\nC. A. L. A. senior series. Athletes\nof various Brampton organizations\naccompanied by' the Dufferin and\nPeel regimental band, paraded the\npopular veteran to center field for\nthe   ceremony.\nLONDON. Aug. 31\u2014(C P cable)\nA fine century by A. F. Kippax\nredeemed an otherwise poor showing\nby the Austrojians against Sussex\nin ihelr cricket match at Brighton.\nHo hit up 158 and tho Australians\nwero 348 for nine wickets when\nstumps   were   drawn.\nScores in other matches wore:\nMiddlesex versus Surrey nt laird's.\nMlddlexes.  '204.\nAt Ley ton: Warwick 237; Essex\n43  runs   for  no wickets.\nAt Gravesend:Kent 187- York, 170\nfor   two   wickets.\nAt Bristol: Derbyshire, 173; Gloucester,   122  for six wickets.\nAt Nottlnglvn: Worcester, 117\nNotts. 24   run\u00bb  tor one wicket.\nSomersetshire versus Hampshire at\nTaunton; Somerset, 379 for seven\nwickets.\nBASEBALL\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\n(SUnday)\nBoston 3-14, New York 4-10.\nPhiladelphia 3, Brooklyn 14.\nPlttabuTB-h'  1,   Cincinnati  4.\nBt. Louis 8, Chicago 3,\nAMERICAN   aJEAGUE\n< Sunday)\nPhiladelphia 2, Boaton 1.\nDetroit 4, Chioato 1.\nCleveland   17,  Bt. Louis 6.\nWashinffton 6. New Yortc L\nINTERNATIONAL  LEAGUE\n(Sunday)\nNewurk 0, Buffalo 4.\nJersey   City   3-11,   Montreal   1W.\nRochester 0, Baltimore 6.\nOnly  three games scheduled.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\n(Sunday)\nMilwaukee   4.   Kansas   City   8.\nMinneapolis  2,  St. Paul  4.\nLouisville   4,    Indianapolis   L.\nOnly three same*.\nPACIFIC   COAST   LEAGUE\n(Sunday)\nOakland   2-2,   Seattle  3-6.\nMissions    1-9,   Hollywood  4-8.\nPortland 5-6, Sacramento 1-6 (aao-\nond gome tie, called end of 15th\naccount    darkness).\nLoa Angeles 10-6, San Franoiaco\n8-6.\n11ETAINS    TITU1\nKANSAS CITY. Mo., A\\Ufc 81.\u2014\nMrs. W. M. Tyson of Kansas Qlty\nremained the women's weatem\ngolf championship yesterday by defeating Miss Dorothy Pnaa. of Madison, Wis., S and 4, ln the final\nmatch of the 28th annual golf\ntournament at the Hillcrest Country club.\nLOOSELEAF BINDERS\nto fit any sheet\nLOOSELEAF SHEETS\nto fit any binder\nWo carry in stock or make up to order any\nsize q\u00a3 Looseleaf Binder either straight post or\nsectional. The workmanship is excellent and the\nprice is right.\nTHE NELSON DAILY\nNEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\n ;\u2014\u2014\u2014T-\n .Page Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1980.\nSCHOOL\nSUPPLIES\nMann, Rutherford\nCo.\nMEN'S sums\n-Hade to Measure\n$30 to $52\nC. TING\nLadles'   and   Gents'   Tailor\n60S Vernon Street\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemists\n,      Films,   Kodaks,   Dross,\nStationery\nMall   Orders   Promptly\nDispatched\nCome and set your\nwelRiit  free\nBox   1083   Nelson.   Phone   34\nPhone Taxi\n77\nI'reieiit    schedule\nDully to Rossland\nand  '\"mil lo a.m.\nBUD    STEVENS,\nProp.\nTraU   Phone   MB\nQ\nThe Iron Fireman\ndoes the work\nSee it at\nB.C. Plumbing\n& Heating Co.\n!?0\".e TAXI\n35\nThe   Best   of   Service\nCareful,   Courteous\nDrivers\nNelson Transfer Co\u201e Ltd.\nNelson Business\nCollege\nNew Term Commences\n- TOMORROW -\nClasses commence at 9:00 a.m. No\nDelays\u2014No long holidays \u2014 intensive\ncommercial training.\nFees $20 a Month\nLOMBEl\nWhen you select your lumber at\nPowells you are building for long life\ngoodlooks and Economy\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nTHE  HOME  OP GOOD  LUMBER\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nInstall an\u2014\nElectric Range\nthis Sail\nGet away from having to bother\nwith coal and the taking out of ashes\nafterward . . . Avoid the dost and dirt\nwhich comes from old fashioned cooking methods.\nUse electricity, which will do the\nwork better and more efficiently and\neconomically  and  save  yon  a  lot  of\ntrouble, too.\nThe modern kitchen is the electrified kitchen.\n\u2014The City o\u00a3 Nelson\nEUROPE HAS 11 MONARCHS DESPITE\nTHE RED REVOULTIONS AND GENERAL\nUNREST; SEVERAL PRINCES IN POWER\n<S(-\nMend That Roof Now\nBefore the Wet Weather Starts\nWOVALOID\nIs the Best Quality Ready Roofing for the Purpose.\nWE CARRY THS IN ONE, TWO AND THREE PLY.\nSamples and Quotations on Request\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany -o~ Limited\nWHOLESALE - Nelson, B.C. - RETAIL\nRumored  18-year-Old  Archduke Otto May Seize\nHungarian Throne\nKING GEORGE MOST\nBELOVED OF RULERS\nMonarchism Is Still Strong\nThroughout  the  German\nNation\nIt Is Interesting to note that despite Red revolutions, and general\nworld unrest Europe \"still has eleven\nmonarchs and several ruling princes.\nNot Tor centuries \"has a British\nking been more beloved than King\nOeorge V., nor an heir to the throne\nso universally popular as the present Prince of Wales.' Nowadays not\neven the Labor ministers make any\nexcuses to their supporters about\ndressing up ln court suits and attending levees at Buckingham Pal-\naoe. In Belgium, King Albert, a\nwar hero ln the eyes of his people,\nhaa never had a moment's anxiety,  despit  the socialist  character\nTHE AGE OF\nEFFICIENCY\nThis la the age of efficiency,\nbut the habit of careful and accurate work must be formed in\nchildhood or efficiency can never\nbe   acquired.\n\u2022 If the children's eyesight la defective and glasses are prescribed,\nIt may change the entire course\n>f their lives.\nJ.O.PATfeNAUDE\nOptometrist & optician\nExpert Optical Service\nof governments in that land. The\naamo remark applies to the King of\nDenmark, whose nephew, Prlnco\nErik, married MIbs Lois Booth. of\nOttawa. It likewise applies to the\nsovereigns of Holland, Norway and\nSweden who sit secure on their\nthrones.\nSPAIN'S   JAUNTY   KING\nPoland would' like to have a\nking but cannot find one suitable\nso gets along as best lt can under\nDictator Pilsudski, keeping a watchful eye on its huge neighbor, red\nRussia. In Bulgaria there have been\nriots, resolutions and political assassinations, hut the bachelor King\nBoris firmly site his throne amid\nthe tumult. In Spain Alfonso XIII\nhangs on although republicanism\nhas been prophesied there for years.\nLean, sunburned and debonair, the\nKing when abroad, plays polo ln\nEngland or has confidential and\nfriendly talka with Senor Alba, the\nexiled socialistic politcal leader ln\nParis, with a view to making better relations with the people In\nSpain.\nFRANCE TAKES NO CHANCES\nIt looked like good-bye to King\nVictor Emmanuel when the Fascists\nmarched on Rome after the Oreat\nWar. But the lawless Fascists under\nMussolini stamped out Bolshevism in\nItaly and when the puce passes the\nroyal House of Savoy may be\nstronger than ever. There is a royalist party ln France which although\nsomewhat in the nature of 9 comic\nopera affair, has potentialities sufficiently alarming for the Pretender\nto the throne to be kept in exile\nby the government,. while his son\nls refused admission to a French\nuniversity or to the army. France,\nwhich has had good oause to fear\nthe \"man on horseback\", wants no\nyoung Bourbon or Bonaparte princeling to popularize himself with 1\nvolatile people. She remembers the\ncoup d'etat by which Louis Napoleon, who had been teaching French\nNOTICE TO MARINERS\nAND ALL PERSONS NAVIGATING\nTHE WEST ARM KOOTENAY  LAKE\nOn behalf of the Department of Marine, I hereby give notice that\nrepairs will be carried out, commencing In early September, to\nall buoys In the West Arm of Kootenay Lake, including one at\nProcter Outlet. These will be taken out of the water for approximately one month, and will be replaced temporarily by buoys\nmade of unpainted cedar logs.\nP. E. DONCASTER,\nDistrict Engineer,\nPublic Works, Canada.\nModern Equipment Makes Flat Rate Possible\nComplete\u2014Careful\u2014Reliable\nffcpeHr\nHands\nQarage\nService\nWhatever form of\ngarage service you\ndemand for your\ncar . . . storage,\nwashing, tire, battery or repair, here\nyou'll find expert,\nconscientious attention at' reasonable\nrates.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO., LTD.\nPHONE 35\nSchool Supplies\nBooks for PUBLIC,\nJUNIOR and\nHIGH SCHOOLS\n_  40^\n&fJ, lOtti and 25^\n ~   ty,   10^\n5*\nPAINTS  \t\nRULERS    u.\t\nERASERS    \t\nPEN NIBS, 4 for \t\nCOMPASSES ...-    15\u00ab>, 25.j>\nPENCILS   3 for 5<, 2 for St* and 5&\nPAINT BRUSHES, 4 for     15*\nCRAYONS  _ - \u2014  5< and IO*\nPORTFOLIOS  _ .\u2022. 1  10*\nVENUS PENCILS, 2 for    \u201e.... 25*\nELDORADO PENCILS, 2 for  _  25*\nSET SQUARES,  3 for ..._.._  25*\nDRAWING PADS    10*\nSCHOOL BAGS  -  75* and 81\nPENCIL BOXES  -  15* and 25*\nEVERSHARPS    -. 25* and $5\nFOUNTAIN PENS  _  50* and $10\nINDIA INK  15* and 35*\nPEN HOLDERS  10* and 35*\nFOUNTAIN PEN INK   15*\nFREE BLOTTERS\nPhone' and Mail Orders Promptly Attended To\nTHE\nPOOLE DRUQ\nln New ^ork city, came home, was\nelected president and then overnight\nmade himself emperor. Monarchist\nsentiment is sufficiently strong In\nGermany to keep the Crown Prince\nout of the country. The royal\nprinces stjll hold some estates and\nthe nobles have never been dls-\naessed. An attempt at restoration of Hohenzollerns Is a possibility to be reckoned with,,\nQUEEN  MARIE  AMBITIOUS\nKing Zogu the First, autocrat of\nAlbania, a wild mountainous little\ncountry across the Adriatic from\nItaly, is really the newest of Europe's sovereigns. Reining for several years now, he was Bhoved Into power by consent of Mussolini\nwho trains his army and finds\nAlbania a convenient buffer to keep\nJugoslavia from acquiring a port on\nthe Mediterranean, Queen Marie of\nRoumanla, who visited Toronto and\nthe United States, wrote columns fo\nthe newspapers at so' much per\nword,' and had a fling ln Hollywood,\nis said to be Intriguing with rich\nfinanciers for the restoration of the\nthrone ln Greece. She would like\nto see King Oeorge back ln Athens,\nGeorgo Is the moat Angllcanlzed\nmember of royalty ln looks and\ntastes, and served once ns midshipman m the British navy.\nKING   CAROL'S   COUP\nIt was Queen Marie's son, of\ncourse, Carol, the weak and amorous prince, who lately came flying\nback from Paris to seise tbe throne\nof Roumanla. Oddly enough, this\nRupert of Hentzau drama was aided\nand abetted, not by tbe nobles\nand other interests normally associated with royalty, but by the\nRoumanian peasants, who welcomed\nCarol home to hold the aristocrats\nln   plaoe.\nEarly last month, Count Bethlen,\nPrime Minister of Hungary, Journeyed to London. \u00a5e looked very\ngrave. He had come to consult\nthe British government regarding\nthe ultimate disposal of the Hungarian throne. Archduke Otto will be\n18 ln November and no longer a\nminor under the laws of Hungary.\nAll his life he has been brought up\nto consider himself a future king,\nand it ls expected that the lad,\nwho has been' living with his mother, ex-Empress Zlta, will presently\nclaim the throne from which his\nfather, the late Charles, Emperor\nof Austria and King of Hungary,\nwas deposed and exiled following\nthe Great-War. As a Hapaburg, he\ncomes of the ancient family, whose\nname, taken from their eleventh\ncentury stronghold on the Rhine,\nmeans Hawk's castle. From 1483\ntill 1806 the Hapsburgs were emperors of the Holy Roman Empire\u2014\na vast expanse of European states.\nWHAT   WILL   OTTO  DO?\nHeading one of the proudest and\nmost cutely courts ln Europe, Emperor Francis Joseph, born in 1830,\nfirst smelt powder at the Battle of\nSt. Lucia, ln Italy, in 1848, yet\nlived to unite himself with the\nKaiser against the allies ln 1914.\nBereft of his beautiful wife, who\nwas assassinated, and of his only\nson, a talented young man, who\ncommitted suicide. Francis Joseph\nwas a tragic old man when he died\nin 1916. His people loved the\nmonarch who had ruled the country\nfor 67 years, and would never have\ndeposed him. The youthful Archduke Otto Is his great-grand-nephew,\nwould like to see him on the throne\nand 'Tls said that many Hungarians\nof his Hapsburg ancestors. Rumor\nsays that Otto plans to pay an\nostensibly harmless visit to Hungary,\nwhich will culminate ln a grand\ncoup.   At Budapest he will be pro-\nFAINTING FANS\nMANY, ENGLISH\nSOCCEROPENING\nAmbulance    Busy   as Temperatures Soar in the\nOld  Country\nNews of the Day\nFurnished   suite   for   rent.     Annable Block. (1636)\nFURNISHED   SUITES\nKERR   APARTMENTS\n11212)\nGet your children's school hose\nat Fleming's store, 26 cents a pair\nwhile   they   last. 0659)\nIna M. Btped will resume pianoforte teaching September 4th. Studio Room 9, Gilker Block.        (1632)\nHarrop Long Beach Ferry on\nTues.. Sept, 2nd. Service of this\nferry will revert to Ite 7 am.\n7   pjm.  schedule. (1663)\nBUGLE   BAND   DANCES\nEvery Wednesday and Saturda;\nat   LakeBide   pavilion (1209\nDANCE\u2014Oddfellows hall. Tuesday,\nSeptember 9. Muslo by Ted Sven-\nson   and   Rasmuss   Waldle.     Gents\n$1.00, ladles free. (1553)\nNoble F. Key, Teacher of Piano\nand Theory, resumes teaching September 8th. Visits the home. 812 ft\nBaker\u2014Phone 577L8. (1546)\nTeacher of piano and theory. Pupils prepared for the Toronto Conservatory of music Mrs. Weaver,\nPhone  275Y. 0606)\nclaimed king and an Italian army\nsmuggled in civilian clothes into\nHungary, is to support his Hungy-\nian. partisans. If so, sparks may fly\nin Europe and conflagration result\nLONDON, Aug. 3L\u2014(By thc Canadian Press Cable)\u2014 Midsummer\nconditions welcomed the opening\nof the soccer, season in England on\nSaturday. Throughout the south\nand midland the temperatures hovered between 70 and 50 - ln the\nshade and even in the north, where\na tropical storm relieved conditions\nduring the night, lt was far from\nfootball weather. Ambulances were\non hand at all grounds and first\naid officers were kept busy with\nfainting  fans.\nFirst place ln the attractions In\nthe first division was afforded the\nmatch at Blackpool, where the\nnewly-promoted first division team\nran into Arsenal, the cup-holders.\nTwenty-five thousand people saw\nthe struggle, which swung In favor of Arsenal at the end of the\nfirst half and ended ln a four to\none win for them.\nThe other second division team\nmaking its debut in the senior\nsection, Chelsea, fared better, beating Grimsby Town by the one goal\nscored.\na glut of goals marked, the game\nat Manchester between the local\nUnited club and Aston Villa, the\nlatter winning by four to three\nThe match was played at a fast\nclip.\nWhile Everton beat the Argyls\nat Plymouth by three goals to\ntwo, they got a bad scare right\nat the beginning when Grosler scor-\ned on a header. Plymouth played a\ntremendous speed, while their defence admirably supported, the for\nwards.\nPreston North End, who were\nunimpressed last year, showed distinct promise when they crushed\nthe Southampton team by five\ngoals   to   nothing.\nPortvale, mkalng their debut in\nthe second division after a year\nln the third division, opened\nstrongly, defeating Barnsley by five\ngoals to two.   They played at home.\nLOTT AND DOEG\nHAVE HARD TIME\nBEAT BRITONS\nBROOKLINE, Mass., Aug. 81\u2014Bard\ndriving George Lott,' of Chicago,\nand Johnny Doeg, the blonde Call,\nfornlan giant, wasted all of their\nfury against Wllmer Allison, Austin,\nTexas, and Johnny Van Ryn, East\nOrange, N. J., before resorting to\nlobs to retain their national doubles\ntennis championship by defeating\nthe stubborn British tltllsts, 8-6,\n6-3, 4-6. 13-15. 6-4, here yesterday\nin the final round at Longwood.\nThe other Bet of title defenders\nwas successful and two pairs fell\none ln the final and the other\nln  the  seonod-last  round.\nJ. D. E. and Arnold Jones of\nProvince, were the other successful\nchampions and they obtained their\nfifth national father and son doubles title ln eight years by defeating Donald M. and Malcolm T. Hill.\nBoston, 6-2, 6-1.\nEdith Crocs, San Francisco, and\nAllison won the mixed finals from\nMarjorie Morrill, Dedham, and Frank\nShields, New York, 6-4, 6-4, and\nS. J. Adams and H. H. Bashford, of\nNew York, overcame Dr. William\nRosenbaum and Fred C. Baggs, the\ntwo-time winners of the veteran'B\ntourney    1_6,    6-4,    6-8.\nC. N. R. FOOTBALL\n'TEAM IS BEATEN\nBY COAST ELEVEN\nCORRECT\nfor FALL\nThe new colors,\nthe new weaves, the\nnew designs in suits\nand topcoats are\nready for yon here\nwith quality and correctness as your\nguide to smart\ngrooming.\nSUITS\n$30\u2014$35\u2014$40\nTOPCOATS\n$25\u2014$30\u2014$35\nALL TODAY TAKEN\nFOR TRACK, FIELD\nEVENTSAT BANFF\nRain Causes    Postponement\nof Saturday's Events to\nThis Morning\nBANFF SPRINGS HOTEL, Alt*,\nAug. 31.\u2014The weather man took a\nhand la the Hlgbftnd gathering\nprogram on Saturday afternoon,\nmH.king it necessary to hold the\nlast few events of tho day under\nthe roois of Banff halls. This morning, however, Banff awoke to brilliant sunshine and blue skies, but\nsome changes In tbe program had\nbeen  foroed.\nThe Covenanter service scheduled\nto be held at 10:30 a. m in the\nDevil's Cauldron at the foot of\nBundle mountain was postponed\nuntil 3 p. m. Tbe athletlo events\nscheduled for Saturday afternoon\nalso were perforce postponed owing\nto the ram. Theee will be held on\nMonday morning commencing at\n\u00a3\u00bb a. m., and the Monday afternoon\nmeet will be held as scheduled.\nThis will give the athletics a serious day. **'\nTbe Saturday afternoon pipers\nand  dancing  events  results  were:\nPiping marches (open) \u2014 First,\nDoug McFivrlane, Seattle, Wash.;\nsecond, Pipe Major A. McNeill, Montreal, Que.; third. Pipe Major S.\nMacKinnon,   Montreal,   Que.\nSpecial inter regimental compe-\nCitons for delegate pipers from Canadian highland regions, for silver\ncup presented by E. W. Beatty,\nchairman and president of the O,\nP. B*\u2014First, Piper Sergeant J. McFarlane, Windsor, Ont.: second, Pip-\ner Peter Flnlayson, Toronto, Ont;\nthird, Pipe MaJ or A. McPherson,\nToronto.\nspecial Brltisb Empire competition, strathspeys and reels, open to\npipers in any part of the British\nEmpire\u2014First, Pipe Major S. MacKinnon, Montreal; second, Piper\nHector McDonald, Montreal; third,\nPipe Major John CJark, 1st battalion Royal Scots, Edinburgh, Scotland; fourth, Piper J. S. Williamson,  Montreal,  Que.\nHighland dancers, Irish -Jig competition,   13   to   under   16   years\u2014\nFirst,   Gladya   Forrester,\nMan.;   second,  Elma  Angus,\nto;  third, Eleanor Armstrong,\ncouver. y\nIrish  Jig  special   event,\nton   10   to   under   16   yet\nVancouver team led by Marr\nlor;   second,   Calgary   team  led]\nAgues Peters.\nScots Reel,  16  yean and\nFirst,    Helen    Shirlan,\nAlta.;   second,  L. W. Wilson,\ncouver;     third,    Katherlne\nCourtenay, B. 0.\nFrom  far  away   bonnle   Scotl\nand from Toronto Highland gatl.\ning greetings have been received |\nHis Honor Lieut.-Governor R.\ndolph  Bruce  of B.  0., whose\ntlngulshed  patronage  and: pra\nhas been given the  trihianrt ga\nerlnge since  their  inception.\nHunter Electric\n6c Plumbing\nEvery Description of\nF-I-X-T-U-R-E-S\nand Material for\nELECTRICAL\nand\nPLUMBING\nWork at Lowest\nPrices\nFOB\nSchool Opening\nBoy Your\nSCRIBBLERS,     PENS,    PAD\nERASERS,    RULERS,    PUNCH\ntt\nSMYTHE'S PH ARM AC\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton R.C\nOPTOMETRIST    ana    OPTIOU\nRoom   t   \u2014   Griffin   Block\n44 TAXI AND 44\n\u2122 TRANSFER^\nTRAIL   AND   ROSSLAND\nJPRElUH'l'   AND  KXrWiaUl\nSchedule\nDally to Trail. leaves  10 A. M.1\nTAXIS    DAY    AMD    NIOHI\nPHONE 25\nBOX 505\nLouise Peebles, graduate ln Expression, of Brandon College, ls now\nready to enroll pupils in Dramatic\nArt. Special attention to Introductory  pupils,    Phone 648L. (1564)\nUse Cummins' 25 cent per person\ntaxi service to Golf Club during\nTennis Tournament. Go to Cummins' office on Baker Street, or\nphone 44 and meet taxi on Stanley\nStreet. _____ (1619)\nJack Worthlngton, teacher of\nviolin, saxophone and clarinet, announces that ho will resume his\nclasses September 1st. Intending\npupils may now enroll. Reeldence\n810 Victoria street. Phone 653.R.\n(1466)\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 31\u2014Giving St.\nSaviours all f\\ey could do until\nseeminjily tired near the end of the\ntussle, Edmonton's Canadian National Railways football eleven was\ndefeated five to two ln an exhibition game at Con Jones park here\nSaturday,\nBradbury was the star ot the\ngame, acorlng three goals for the\nlocals and assisting Kerr In a\nfourth.\nEdmonton had the edge through\nmost of the first half, playing a\nsmooth combination game. After\nfifteen minutes they scored on a\npenalty through Flndler after Hendry had fisted the ball over the bar\nto prevent a certain tally. Bradbury hooked one ln to equalize\nand ten minutes from half time\nCawker put the Saints ahead.\nEdmonton evened the score early\nln the seconl half when Piatt\nheaded the ball through on a cross\nfrom  Flndler.\nEleanor F. Squires, pupil of Prof\nWright, Brandon College, teaoher\nof pianoforte and theory. Pupils\nprepared for Toronto Conservatory\nexaminations and musical festival.\nPhone 667 for appointment. P. O.\nBox    864. (1661)\nWhen    you   think    of\nFUEL\nThink of us.\nAlso\nSAND  AND  GRAVEL\nTrucking and  Teaming\nPhone 797\n*\nRenwick's Transfer\nCompany\nLOCAL BLAKEBURN\nFUND NEARS $200\nSubecrlptlons to the local Biakeburn fund ls now only \u00bbli short\nof the $200 mark. The week-end\ncountrlbutlon* were received Iron.\nCompanies of McDonald Consolidated 4U2.50; Joan and Bobby Kerr\n\u00ab6;   Robert     Hill   (2.50,  Longbeach.\nNEWY0RK MARKETS\nCLOSED\nNEW YORK, Aug. 81.\u2014The\nfinancial district was a lonesome place yesterday, enjoying\nthe first day of a three-day\nweek-end over Labor day as It\ndid also on Memorial day and\nthe Fourth of July. The stuck\nexchange, other security exchanges and commodity markets were closed yesterday, as\nwere most of the offices ln the\ndistrict, and will not resume\nactivities until Tuesday.\nVIC. GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\n18 Years Practical Expenenoi\nNELSON,   11.   C.\nP.  O.  Box  217     '   phone  111\nTWO\nShows\nNightly\n7-9 P. M.\nNOW\nSHOWING!\nA Sensational Feature Full of\nExcitmeut and Smashing\nAction\nGeorge Bancroft\nin\nLadies Love Brutes\nwith\nMARY ASTOR and\nFREDERIC MARCH\nGeorge 'Bancroft, whose blunt manners\nand lusty laughter have won him mii-\nlatus of friends, will give you plenty\nof thrills and plenty nf laughter IS\n\"Ladles    Love    Brutes.\"\n\\\nSPECIAL MATINEE\nTODAY (Labor Day)\nat 2 P.M.\nlatince\nednesday\nnd\naturday\n- P. M.\nCOMEDY\nNick   Stewart\nJn\n\"Hello\nTelevision''\n20   Minutes   of K\nReal   Enjoyment\nPhil Baker\nThe\nBroadway\nComedian\nana]\nAccordion\nHawr\nlAucnro\nCAKTOOW\n\"Dtay\nDishes\"\nTheee    Caartotani\nMerer   WatoppljetXat\nS\"ou\nComing Wednesday-Thursday\nThe Return of Dr. Fu. Manchu'\nThis Is the First Time This Feature Has Been\n'Shown in Nelson\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_09_01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0400535","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}